City
Epaper

SC asks Centre to put NEET-PG counselling on hold

By ANI | Updated: October 25, 2021 11:55 IST

New Delhi [India], October 25 The Supreme Court on Monday directed the Centre to put the counselling for ...

Open in App

New Delhi [India], October 25 The Supreme Court on Monday directed the Centre to put the counselling for National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (PG) on hold until it decides the validity of the Centre's decision to introduce Other Backward Classes (OBC) and Economically Weaker OBC and EWS reservation in the All India Quota (AIQ).

As the Supreme Court was informed that the full schedule for the counselling starting from October 24 and ending on October 29 has been announced, the Apex Court said the counselling should not proceed till the court decides the issue.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: indiaobcNew DelhiSupreme CourtThe new delhi municipal councilDelhi south-westIndiUk-indiaRepublic of indiaIndia india
Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessAnil Ambani's Reliance Power and Reliance Infra Stocks Fall After SC Issues Notice on Plea for Probe Into Alleged ADAG Bank Fraud

BusinessVodafone Idea Shares Jump 3% Today as Telecom Stock Rises 75% in Three Months Amid Strong Market Momentum

BusinessVodafone Idea Shares Rise 2% as Global Brokerage Sees 36% Upside, Maintains ‘Buy’ Rating

BusinessVodafone Idea Share Price Jumps 5% in a Single Day After Strong Q2 Results; Stock Hits ₹10

MumbaiMumbai: 90,000 Stray Dogs, Only 8 Shelters - City Faces Crunch After SC Relocation Order

National Realted Stories

NationalMumbai Police detain three linked to Delhi blast accused

NationalGovt launches National Action Plan on Antimicrobial Resistance 2.0

NationalTelangana CM seeks Centre's help for mega projects

NationalNIA chargesheets 10 accused for trafficking minor Bangladeshi girl into Odisha 

NationalRahul Gandhi’s priority is not winning elections but protecting nation's secular fabric: Robert Vadra