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SC refers to constitution bench plea seeking probe into medical college admission scam case (Second Lead)

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New Delhi, Nov 9 (IANS) The Supreme Court on Thursday referred to a five-judge constitution bench a petition seeking probe into the alleged role of a retired Orissa High Court judge in a scam involving an Uttar Pradesh-based medical institution that has cast its shadow on the functioning of the top court.

The former High Court judge was allegedly trying to help the Lucknow-based Prasad Educational Trust to overcome a bar on admitting students in its medical college for two academic years (2017-2018 and 2018-2019).

The Trust runs the Prasad Institute of Medical Sciences that was barred from admitting students for two academic years.

The bench of Justice J. Chelameswar and Justice S. Abdul Nazeer directed the CBI Director to keep the entire record of its investigations into the matter and the case diary in a sealed cover and place it before the constitution bench that will hear the matter on Monday (November 13).

The Central Bureau of Investigation is the second respondent with Union of India being the first respondent in the petition filed by Advocate Kamini Jaiswal.

Recounting the sequence of developments starting with the mentioning of the petition in the morning by senior counsel Dushyant Dave, the bench in its order said, “Having regard to the totality of the circumstances, we deem it appropriate that this matter be heard by the Constitution Bench of the first five Judges in the order of seniority of this Court.”

The order said, “Having regard to the importance of the matter, we also deem it appropriate that the matter be listed on Monday, the 13th November, 2017.”

The order also referred to the xerox copy of the proceedings “purportedly” issued by the Chief Justice of India, that was placed before the bench by an official of the registry when the hearing was in progress.

The court did not say anything on a plea by senior counsel Dushyant Dave that the constitution bench should not include Chief Justice Dipak Misra as the matter relating to the medical institution in question was heard by the bench headed by him.

The top court order came on a petition by advocate Kamini Jaiswal seeking probe by the Special Investigation Team headed by a former Chief Justice of India and its monitoring by the top court.

Earlier on Wednesday, a petition was mentioned before Justice Chelameswar seeking a SIT probe into the matter and he had agreed to hear it.

However, in the post lunch session on Wednesday, it surfaced that the matter that Justice Chelameswar had said he would hear was assigned to another bench by Chief Justice Dipak Misra.

Referring to the FIR filed by the CBI, Dave said that it indicates that attempts were being made to “unduly and illegally influence the outcome of the petition” which was pending before the top court.

Drawing attention to the trajectory of the dates and the order passed, including September 18 when the top court passed the order and September 19 when CBI registered the FIR, Dave told the court that it seems that the CBI was on the trail of the matter for a long time.

“I pray to almighty that the allegations that are sought to be levelled against the institution (Supreme Court) are false and are bound to be false at the end of an independent investigation,” Dave told the court drawing its attention to the contents of the FIR filed by the CBI.

The petition by advocate Kamini Jaiswal says that the “FIR lodged by the CBI names a retired judge of a High Court as an accused, who was allegedly negotiating through a middle man to get the favourable order in a petition pending in this Court. The said petition was being heard by a bench headed by the present Chief Justice of India.”

In September, the CBI had arrested retired Orissa High Court judge Ishrat Masroor Quddusi and five others, including the chairman of a private medical college in Lucknow, which was barred from admitting students for two academic years 2017-2018 and 2018-2019.

Quddusi, B.P. Yadav, Palash Yadav, Biswanath Agrawala, and Ram Dev Saraswat were arrested on September 20 by the CBI on the charge of helping an educational trust that was barred from admitting medical course students for two years.

Quddusi was granted bail on September 27. Bhawana Pandey – the lone woman accused – was granted one-week interim bail on humanitarian ground.

Other four accused – B.P. Yadav, Palash Yadav, Bishwanath Agrawala, and Ram Dev Saraswat – were granted bail by a local court on October 6.

–IANS
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As many as six new nursing colleges to be functional in Haryana soon

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Haryana Chief Secretary Sanjeev Kaushal shared that the construction work of six nursing colleges in the state will be completed soon and classes will commence in the month of July. Not only this, the new building of the National Institute of Fashion Technology, Panchkula has also completed its construction work.

Adding on to this, he shared that, till now, the classes are being held in another building, the chief secretary said while presiding over the review meeting of development projects worth more than Rs 100 crore here.

CHIEF SECRETARY REVIEWED MAJOR PROJECTS

The Chief Secretary reviewed several major projects, including power, health, medical, and technical education in the state, and directed the concerned officials to complete them within the stipulated time period.

COLLEGES UNDER CONSTRUCTION

He said that the construction of nursing colleges in Dherdu village of Kaithal, Khedi Ram Nagar village of Kurukshetra, Kheranwali village of Panchkula, Aura and Dayalpur village of Faridabad, and Sadatpur village of Rewari is under construction.

The construction work of Medical college in Koriawas in Narnaul, Medical College at Jind, Bhiwani, and Dental College at Nalhar is being completed at a fast pace. The work of the second phase of Kalpana Chawla Medical College is also undergoing.

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