Foreign students in India come to pursue MBBS or BDS courses either through an institutional quota system, like in government colleges, or by directly applying to private colleges.
But, due to the recent ruling of the Supreme Court on making the National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test (NEET) mandatory for admission to private and deemed institutes, they are now facing uncertainty as they do not fall under the NEET criteria.
The colleges have allegedly asked foreign students to leave the campuses by "next week".
Tilak Silva, father of Shenali, who came from Colombo to pursue BDS at Manipal University, said, "My daughter and other foreign students are suffering now only because there is this tricky NEET procedure.
"First foreigners cannot write NEET exam and now these students are being compared with domestic ones. Where should we go now as we have been asked to leave the campus by October 14. The career of our children has been jeopardised."
"How can the decision be so blanket. I have already intimated the Sri Lankan High Commission in Delhi and the Foreign Office in Colombo about this situation. We also appeal to the authorities and the Indian Prime Minister to allow some stop-gap arrangements for this 2016-17 batch so that their year is not wasted," he said.
When contacted DCI President Dr Dibyendu Mazumdar said, "It is the verdict of the Supreme Court, what can we do about it. Colleges have to abide by it."
however, said, foreign students in their colleges are admitted through embassy nominations and as such "their candidature should not be affected".
"We have foreign students from Maldives and Nepal. But these are nominated candidates and not coming through competitive examinations, so their situation is different," Medical Superintendent of Safdarjung Hospital Dr A K Rai said.
Vardhman Medical College is attached to Safdarjung Hospital for clinical teaching. The college is running under the umbrella of Guru Gobind Singh Indraprastha University.
Authorities at Lady Hardinge Medical College, which has about 15 foreign students, said, "These students are nominated and don't come through competitive procedure unlike NEET."
DCI monitors over 300 dental colleges in India a large number of which are private.
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