Chennai:The Madras High Court on Tuesday posed a series of questions to the Tamil Nadu government over its setting up of a committee to look into the impact of NEET, asking if it had obtained the permission of the Supreme Court and whether the move would not violate an apex court ruling.
Abolition of the National Entrance cum Eligibility Test (NEET) is a poll promise of the ruling DMK and it had recently set up a high-level committee led by a retired judge of the Madras High Court, A K Rajan, to study the impact of NEET on aspirants from the socially disadvantaged sections in medical admissions. "Have you obtained the permission of the Supreme Court (which had upheld the NEET). Would it not amount to a violation of the ruling of the apex court?" were among the questions raised by the first bench of Chief Justice Sanjib Banerjee and Justice Senthilkumar Ramamoorthy.
The bench made the observations when a PIL petition from BJP State general secretary K Nagarajan came up for hearing today before it. The constitution of the panel appears to be an exercise in futility since the SC had made it clear that Tamil Nadu must fall in line and accept NEET, the CJ orally observed, adding, the state government must have obtained the leave of the top court before constituting the panel.
Read: Tamil Nadu NEET panel will give its report in a month, says govt
Advocate-General R Shanmugasundaram told the judges that the constitution of the committee was a policy decision of the state government in consonance with its election promise, to protect the interest of the poor students in rural areas. "Maybe. But if it is contrary to the Supreme Court order, then it cannot be permitted," the bench remarked.
The judges, however, ordered notice to the state and the Central governments returnable by a week. The petition sought to quash an order dated June 10 this year of the Secretary, Health and Family Welfare (MCA-1) department, on the constitution of the commission, saying it was 'unconstitutional, illegal, unfair' and without legal justification.