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Court rules against OCI students’ right for admission to professional courses

Karnataka HC upholds Centre’s notification limiting OCI students’ right to seek admission in professional courses only through NRI quota

 

The Karnataka High Court has upheld the March 4, 2021, notification by the Central Government under the Citizenship Act that only NRIs (non-resident Indians) and not OCI (Overseas Citizens of India) students are eligible to apply for professional courses under the (NRI) quota, a report in The Hindu says.

However, prima facie the court has allowed the petitioner-OCI students to stake claim for admission to engineering and other professional courses in Karnataka only for the academic year 2021-22.

This follows an interim order passed by the apex court, which had recently allowed OCI students to seek admission to medical and dental courses even under general merit category only for the academic year 2021-22.

Justice Krishna S. Dixit had delivered the verdict while rejecting the challenge by Alekhya Ponnekanti and 123 OCI student-petitioners to the March 4, 2021 notification.

The court says petitioners could only seek admission for the year 2021-22 consistent with the interim order passed earlier in the petitions, allowing them to participate in the selection process initiated by the Karnataka Examinations Authority (KEA), subject to their individual eligibility and qualification.

 

 

The petitioners had claimed that alhough they have foreign citizenship by virtue of their birth in foreign countries when their parents were working abroad, they should be treated on par with Indian citizens for admission to professional courses as they have domicile in India and studied minimum of seven years in Karnataka to stake claim for admission under government quota seats.

The court says petitioners could only seek admission for the year 2021-22 consistent with the interim order passed earlier in the petitions, allowing them to participate in the selection process initiated by the Karnataka Examinations Authority (KEA), subject to their individual eligibility and qualification.

Refusing to accept their argument, the court agreed with the Central Government’s contention that the condition imposed on OCI students that they would be eligible for admission only through NRI quota was ‘consciously incorporated with intent to protect the interest of Indian citizen.

“Both these classes, that is the OCI and the NRI who are now equated to each other, obviously have greater exposure to the outer world, by virtue of birth and upbringing in the case of former, and by virtue of residence in the case of the latter. The classification between the natives on the one hand and the OCIs and the NRIs on the other cannot be faltered by invoking equality clause…”, the court observed.

While upholding power of the Centre to issue such a notification under the Citizenship Act, the court also said: “It hardly needs to be stated that the foreigners and the native citizens apparently belong to two different classes, and therefore, treating them alike would fall short of the principle of equality.”

The court did not find merit in petitioners’ contention that the March 4, 2021 notification was contrary to judgments of the High Court on the right of OCI students to seek admission under general merit seats under government quota based on the 2005 and 2009 notifications issued under the Citizenship Act.

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David Solomon
David Solomon
(For over four decades, David Solomon’s insightful stories about people, places, animals –in fact almost anything and everything in India and abroad – as a journalist and traveler, continue to engross, thrill, and delight people like sparkling wine. Photography is his passion.)

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