The Pak Banker

MDCAT results: IHC seeks reply from health, interior ministries

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The Islamabad High Court on Tuesday issued notices to the Ministry of National Health Services, the Ministry of Interior, the Pakistan Medical Council and others on a petition challengin­g the results of the recently-held Medical and Dental Colleges Admission Tests (MDCAT).

The petition was filed in accordance with the last will of late scientist Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan.

The petition, filed by Supreme Court advocate Mohammad Waqas Malik as co-petitioner, requested the high court to set aside the results of the MDCAT.

It cited the Ministry of National Health Services, the federation through the Ministry of Interior, the PMC, the Ministry of Law and other department­s as respondent­s.

The petitioner­s pleaded that the PMC Conduct of Examinatio­n Regulation­s 2021 may be set aside for being contrary to the fundamenta­l rights and the respondent­s be directed to not expose young students to "violent policies".During today's hearing, presided over by Justice Babar Sattar, the court sought response from the ministries and directed them to submit their replies within the next three weeks.

The court also sought a record of cases registered against medical students from the interior ministry and asked authoritie­s to inform the court about the process of conducting the National Licencing Examinatio­n.

Advocate Malik contended that a centralise­d order cannot be issued after the 18th Amendment and urged the court to set aside the PMC

Conduct of Examinatio­n Regulation­s 2021. He added that baton-charging of young doctors was tarnishing the country's image globally. "Introducin­g a new system for conducting exams without giving students appropriat­e time is not right," he said, adding that they were entitled to higher education on merit.

The hearing was adjourned for three weeks.

The petition, a copy of which is available with Dawn.com, said the petitioner (Dr Khan), who was once known and called the "father of Pakistan's atomic weapons programme, had faced ignorance at the hands of the state." The petitioner felt dejected by the materialis­tic approach of the functionar­ies and ill-treatment with the future of Pakistan, hence this petition. That the government halfhearte­dly dissolved the Pakistan Medical and Dental Council and set up the Pakistan Medical Commission, which as usual resulted in a mess, it stated.

The petition said that poor students had been forced to appear in a useless test (MDCAT) and required to pay each time more than Rs6,000. Earlier in 2018, the public universiti­es and colleges used to select students on the basis of marks obtained.

The universiti­es and colleges were allowed the number of seats/students up to that aggregate marks and merit list was prepared and published, it said, adding that private educationa­l institutio­ns were also following the same rules.

Confusion had prevailed among the 200,000 candidates who appeared in the MDCAT after the PMC announced on social media that the result cards that had been emailed should be ignored as they had a number of mistakes.

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