Due to the Russia-Ukraine war, the families of the students who returned home after leaving their studies in the middle, have appealed to the central government to save the children’s future.
Due to the Russia-Ukraine war, the families of the students who returned home after leaving their studies in the middle, have appealed to the central government to save the children’s future. Thousands of Indian students pursuing MBBS in Ukraine have returned. Due to their return and the devastation caused by the war, now their studies have been interrupted. This has increased the concern of the students doing MBBS and their parents that how and from where will the remaining studies of the children’s degree be completed?
Parents are now uniting to get this concern resolved. Parents of more than 20 medical students who had returned from Ukraine in the education city of Kota, organized a meeting and formed a parent committee. The committee has thanked the central government for the safe return of Indian medical students stranded in Ukraine to their homes. Along with this, the committee also paid tribute to the deceased Indian student Naveen.
Government should ban the arbitrariness of private medical colleges
Rishika Gothania of Kota returned home, Swapnil Sharma, Harshit Ahuja MBBS second year, Vishal Gupta, Ashish Nagar, Ajay Kumar, Yaduvendra Malav, Jai Tank, Muktika Verma, Ishika Gautam fourth year, Nitin Chaudhary studying in BSMU University, fifth year in Ukraine Huh. He said that after qualifying NEET in the country, due to reservation in government medical colleges, those with lesser marks get seats and they are denied admission even after getting more marks in NEET. In private medical colleges of the country, due to no control of the government on the collection of fees, arbitrary fees are being charged, due to which talented students have to go abroad for good studies. He urged that the Central Government should take concrete steps in this regard and stop the loot of private medical colleges.
Students returned from Ukraine narrated the tales of war
Dhriti Joshi, an MBBS second year medical student from Kota, who returned from Ukraine, told that she could not get a seat in the country’s medical colleges despite qualifying NEET from the general category. To do MBBS from private medical colleges here, a fee of more than one crore rupees was required, which Papa could not fulfill. In such a situation, he had decided to get MBBS from Medical College of Ukraine at low fees, but his future is now in trouble due to Russia-Ukraine war. Amidst the bombing, coming back safely from there is nothing less than a great miracle. Now she wants to complete her degree by staying in India.
Urge to complete the remaining studies in the country itself
The committee expressed special concern over the incomplete degrees of students pursuing MBBS from medical colleges of Ukraine at low fees and urged the central and state governments to make special arrangements to complete the remaining studies of the children in the country itself. So that, they can provide their services by staying in India. Diwakar Joshi, president of the Guardian Committee, said that on March 20, 2022, at 2 pm, an important meeting was held in Chhatra Vilas Udyan, Nayapura, Kota in Hadoti division, ie Kota, Bundi, Baran, Jhalawar districts, to all the affected children and their parents. in which further strategy will be discussed.