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Narayanan backs relaxation for SCs/STs
By Our Staff Correspondent
BHOPAL, JUNE 12. The President, Mr. K.R. Narayanan, has supported
the contention of the Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister, Mr. Digvijay
Singh, regarding the need for relaxation in the qualifying mark
in entrance examinations for medical colleges in respect of
candidates belonging to the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled
Tribes. The President has written to Mr. Singh, saying he was in
agreement with the point raised by him in an earlier letter
regarding the need for lowering the qualifying mark for SC/ST
candidates for admission to post-graduate medical courses. The
President said he was taking up the matter with the Prime
Minister.
Mr. Singh had written to the President as well as the Prime
Minister in April, drawing attention to the ``anti- reservation
attitude of bodies such as the Medical Council of India''. In his
letter, he said that 16 per cent of the population of Madhya
Pradesh consisted of the SCs and 20 per cent of the STs. Most of
them were residents of non-urban areas that were yet to see the
first rays of modern civilisation. These students, especially the
ST candidates, might be having a higher level of intelligence and
knowledge but they lacked modern competitive techniques and
concepts.
Hence they were handicapped when compared to students from urban
institutions. It was to meet this handicap that the framers of
the Constitution and policy-makers had given them leverages such
as reservation to balance social inequity. These included
relaxations to qualify on the basis of marks obtained in
competitive examinations for entrance to professional courses.
Mr. Singh said the Constitution-makers had directed the States
through Article 46 to protect the weaker sections, especially
those belonging to the SCs and STs, from social injustices and
all kinds of exploitation. This, read with Article 335, enjoined
the lowering of standards of evaluations and relaxation in
qualifying marks in entrance examinations. Even the Supreme Court
had observed in P. Shrivastava's case (AIR 1999SC2894) that the
``disparity between marks fixed for the reserved and general
category should not be big''.
However, the court had left it to expert bodies such as the
Medical Council of India to determine what this difference should
be. The Council in its first directions on August 17, 1999 had
clarified that the percentage of qualifying marks for SC and ST
candidates may be lowered by 10 per cent, up to 40 per cent of
the total.
But unfortunately, Mr. Singh wrote, the Council had not only
failed in complying with the Directive Principles enshrined in
the Constitution but also fell prey to the ``anti-reservation
forces'' in framing the Post-Graduate Medical Education
Regulations, 2000, which stipulated that the minimum marks for
admission to the courses should be 50 per cent. Consequently,
most SC and ST candidates might not qualify for entrance to the
post-graduate courses.
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