- All India Seat
- Article
- JKBOPEE-Jammu and Kashmir
- Medical Counseling Committee (MCC)
GMC Anantnag Round 1 Allotment: Official Warnings Ignored, Students Face Risk of Huge Financial Loss
The Government Medical College (GMC), Anantnag controversy during Round 1 allotment of NEET-UG 2025 has highlighted the negligence of the Medical Counseling Committee (MCC) and other authorities. Despite the college’s Dean formally alerting the concerned ministries, no corrective action has yet been taken.
Official Escalation Ignored
The Dean of GMC Anantnag has already written an official communication to the ADGME, DGHS, NMC, and MoHFW, pointing out the clear irregularity of double AIQ seat allotment (30 seats instead of 15) in Round 1. However, even after these red flags were raised through proper channels, the MCC has failed to rectify the result.
This silence is deeply concerning, as it shows how even direct intervention by institutional heads is being disregarded.
Risk of Financial and Social Damage
The delay in rectification may cause severe financial hardship to students, especially those from economically weaker sections (EWS), SC, ST, and OBC categories, who were allotted seats at GMC Anantnag in Round 1.
Key concerns include:
- Loss of travel and reporting expenses for poor families if the result is revised later.
- Psychological distress among students who may lose their seats due to faulty allotments.
- Violation of Supreme Court and NMC guidelines, undermining merit-based allocation.
Call for Urgent Action
The matter is not just administrative—it affects the lives of thousands of students across India. MCC and MoHFW must act immediately by:
- Rectifying the Round 1 seat matrix for GMC Anantnag.
- Issuing a revised result without further delay.
- Ensuring that no financial or academic damage is borne by students.
Conclusion
The GMC Anantnag Dean’s timely intervention proves that the issue was flagged early. Yet, the authorities’ inaction exposes systemic apathy. If corrective steps are not taken immediately, students from weaker sections across India will unfairly bear the cost of the MCC’s negligence.
True accountability demands urgent revision of Round 1 allotments and strict measures to prevent such lapses in future rounds.