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NEET: A complex story of growing opposition in Tamil Nadu

Tamil Nadu has a long history of opposition to entrance tests to professional colleges. Ironically, former chief ministers J Jayalalithaa and M Karunanidhi, political rivals, were on the same side on this issue: against entrance tests.

July 11, 2024 / 18:57 IST
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The malpractices and irregularities in the conduct of NEET have provided the state government and major political parties an opportunity to argue for scrapping NEET altogether, but the political reasons are complex

Issues relating to caste, class, minority community rights, and regional autonomy have coalesced in Tamil Nadu into opposition to the NEET, the entrance examination for admission to medical colleges.

The malpractices and irregularities in the conduct of NEET have provided the state government and major political parties an opportunity to argue for scrapping NEET altogether, but the political reasons are complex. Rural students from state board schools and low-income households without access to coaching institutes have been the worst sufferers of the centralised exam.

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Students listed under the Scheduled Caste category see this as another barrier. Minority institutions consider it as running counter to their mandate of accommodating minority community students. Successive state governments view it as another encroachment by the Centre into domains that were under states.

The Tamil Nadu government on June 28 passed a resolution unanimously urging the Union government to “immediately” approve Tamil Nadu's NEET exemption bill and also make necessary amendments to the National Medical Commission Act so that  NEET is abolished at the national level. Chief Minister MK Stalin moved the resolution and except for BJP MLAs, who walked out, all other MLAs supported it, including BJP ally PMK.