Chennai:Once again, the National Entrance Cum Eligibility Test (NEET) has come under scrutiny in Tamil Nadu. In the backdrop of three more suicides, this time the crusade against NEET is armed with the Justice Rajan Committee report, which has recommended its scraping. Besides other findings of the panel, what is of significance is that it provides a chronology of how NEET, which was held unconstitutional by the Supreme Court earlier had been upheld as mandatory. As such, the panel maintains that the verdict appears to be a 'judgment per incuriam'.'
When the Medical Council of India (MCI) and the Dental Council of India issued notifications in December 2010, making NEET mandatory for UG medical programmes, the Christian Medical College, Vellore, had challenged them. A number of states including Tamil Nadu also approached the High Courts and all the cases were transferred to the Supreme Court. In July 2013, a three-Judge bench, by a majority of 2-1, declared that the notifications were void and 'ultra vires of the constitution'. Both the MCI and DCI have no power to regulate admissions to medical and dental colleges, the bench further made it clear.
The majority judgment read, “...we have no hesitation in holding that regulations are ultra vires the constitution, since they have the effect of denuding the States, State-run universities.” The dissenting judgment was given by Justice Anil R Dave. The MCI filed a review petition and by 2016, the two other judges had retired. And the plea came up before a five-judge bench headed by Dave, which recalled the 2013 judgment.