National Testing Agency, NEET 2023, results
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Lowering NEET-PG qualifying percentile will benefit BJP ahead of polls: Cong

Congress leader Ajoy Kumar says the reduction in qualifying percentile for NEET-PG 2023 to zero is the Modi government’s ploy to collect donations from private medical colleges ahead of the polls


The Congress on Wednesday (October 4) attacked the government over the reduction of the qualifying percentile for NEET-PG 2023 to zero, while alleging that the move is aimed at benefitting private medical colleges and a select few.

The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare last month reduced to zero the qualifying percentile for National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET)-PG 2023. This made many students eligible for counselling across all categories.

The qualifying percentile earlier was 50 per cent.

Health ministry officials said that reducing the qualifying percentile to zero would increase the pool of qualifying candidates but not dilute the merit system for admission to postgraduate medical courses.

Addressing a press conference in Delhi, Congress leader Ajoy Kumar said, “The BJP's bumper loot offer has started in private medical colleges. The price of MD Radiology was ₹3 crore last year and this year it has become ₹11 crore. The price of MD Medicine increased to ₹5 crore and MD Dermatology costs ₹10 crore.”

Kumar said the move is aimed at befitting a few people and private medical colleges. “You may sleep, play ludo, listen to disco music, during the exam or even get minus 40, you would still be eligible for PG (admission in postgraduate courses) under NEET. Merit be damned, Modiji has ensured that the health system is destroyed while crores are reaped through private medical colleges for the upcoming elections,” the Congress leader alleged.

There are 68,142 postgraduate medical seats in the country. Till now, candidates scoring above the 50 percentile were eligible to participate in the counselling process for admission in postgraduate medical courses through NEET.

Last year, the qualifying criterion was kept at 20 percentile. Even then, 3,000 seats remained vacant under the all-India quota, officials had said.

(With inputs from agencies)


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