Chennai: Meeting of all legislative parties chaired by Minister M K Stalin on Saturday decided to take legal steps needed to eliminate NEET.
The meeting also decided to take the confidence of other countries and make a collective battle against Neet.
MLAS said the joint entry test has destroyed the dream of poor and rural students and affects state autonomy.
The meeting saw 12 parties support resolution, including the main DMK and opposition, AIADMK.
The BJP leader Vanathi Srinivasan came out of the meeting, protested the resolution.
“Tamil Nadu is a model for other countries in Medical Education, but the Law of the NEET and National Medical Commission introduced by the Workers Government has affected the students.
The Union Government has taken the rights of countries in deciding to enter college Their own medicine is funded, “said the resolution.
The parties accused the governor’s actions sitting on the bill, which was continued in a round voice by the Assembly in September, without continuing it to the president, questioning legislative sovereignty.
NEET only benefits students who have access to special training.
This creates the impression that 12 years of school is not used in medical acceptance and makes the education system meaningless, they said.
The head of the minister himself visited the governor and urged him to send bills to the President, while the delegation of parliamentarians representing all parties could not meet with the president and submit a representation to his office, which was then forwarded to the minister of the United States.
The meeting decided that the delegation of all parties could meet with the Union Minister if there was an invitation before, overcoming the meeting, said Stalin, “the principle of democracy is that when the legislature passes the bill, the governor must respect and give the agreement.” Former Health Minister C Vijayabaskar told TII that AIDMK will support the state government in the legal battle against NEET.
MA Health Minister Subramanian said that the education minister Union Dharmendra Pradhan himself had acknowledged him that there was an opposition to NEET in his home country Odisha, but he could not do anything.
“Law experts will be consulted on what legal actions can be initiated against the governor who has postponed the reference to the president’s bill, in addition to removing net,” Subramanian Toi said.