SC says Kerala Covid situation 'alarming'; stays Class 11 physical exams

The class XI (Plus One) exam was scheduled to be conducted from September 6.

SUPREME COURT
Supreme Court of India | File photo
ANI General News
3 min read Last Updated : Sep 03 2021 | 4:48 PM IST

The Supreme Court on Friday in an interim order stayed the Kerala government's decision to hold the Class XI exam physically from September 6 amid rising cases of COVID-19 in the state.

A bench headed by Justice AM Khanwilkar said that situation in Kerala is alarming because of the continuing rise in COVID-19 cases and children of tender age cannot be exposed to risk while noting that around 35,000 cases are being reported daily from the state.

The class XI (Plus One) exam was scheduled to be conducted from September 6.

The Bench observed, "There is alarming situation in Kerala. It accounts for more than 70 per cent of cases of the country, with around 35, 000 daily cases. Children of tender age can't be exposed to risk."

In its order, the apex court stated, "we grant interim relief staying offline exam for till next date of hearing. List this matter on September 13."

The bench was hearing an appeal against the Kerala High court order refusing to interfere with the decision to hold offline exams.

The appeal filed by one Rasoolshan A stated that holding physical exams when the COVID-19 cases are at their peak in the state was a huge risk, especially since the children are not vaccinated.

Around three lakh students will take the exam scheduled to be held from September 6 and as the students pursuing class XI are largely unvaccinated, they are very vulnerable to the virus, argued advocate Prashant Padmanabhan appearing for Rasoolshan.

During the hearing, advocate CK Sasi, appearing for the Kerala government, defended the state government's decision to hold the exams offline and submitted that all safety protocols have already been taken care of.

"Assure us that no student will be infected. These are children of tender age. Even one case reported for a student, we will hold you accountable," the bench told Kerala government's counsel.

The apex court said that the Kerala government may think of alternate forms of assessment and inform it on the next date, September 13.

The Kerala High Court while observing that conducting Plus One examination was a matter of government policy and that much deliberation had gone into the same, refused to interfere in the matter.

The High Court's order had come on the plea of some students who had approached the court against the Kerala government decision to hold the Class XI exam offline. They had said that the decision was taken without considering the gravity of the COVID-19 pandemic situation prevalent in the State.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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Topics :CoronavirusSupreme CourtKerala

First Published: Sep 03 2021 | 4:47 PM IST

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