Protests erupt in TN a day after 17-year-old NEET petitioner Anitha commits suicide


Ariyalur, Sep 2 (Deccan Chronicle): Lamenting the death of his ambitious daughter, father of 17-year-old Dalit girl Anitha who committed suicide in Tamil Nadu on Friday said she had managed to study in difficult circumstances.

"Anitha was concerned about NEET. What wrong had she done, who will answer," he said, reported ANI.

Members of Students' Federation of India in Tamil Nadu protested at Chennai's Mount Road on Saturday over Anitha's death.

Plus-2 topper Anitha’s dream of becoming a medical practitioner to serve the poor was brutally cut short on Friday when she hanged herself at her home in Ariyalur after failing to make it to a medical college due to the NEET fiasco.

The 17-year-old girl, who scored 1176/1200 marks in plus-2 and knocked at the doors of the Supreme Court seeking to exempt students from Tamil Nadu like her from appearing before NEET, breathed her last on Friday afternoon at her village in Kuzhumur.

Anitha S who hailed from a Dalit family, could not land in a medical college despite securing an impressive cut-off of 196.75 out of 200 since the counselling was conducted based only on the score in NEET, which she did not perform well due to lack of coaching. She had scored only 86 marks out of 700 in NEET.

The young girl pleaded before the Supreme Court through a lawyer that her plus-2 marks should be the sole criteria for getting admission into medical college.

Anitha’s impressive score in plus-2 did not come that easy. She had lost her mother at a very young age; her father is a daily wage labourer and was brought up by her paternal grand mother at their modest house, which even lacked basic sanitation facilities like a toilet.

Her family members said Anitha was upset ever since the medical counselling began last week and was not interacting with anyone.

“She was keeping to herself for more than a week. She always wanted to become a doctor and we too encouraged by her calling her Dr Anitha every time we used to address us. It is quite hard to believe that she is no more. We will miss her,” a close relative said.

Immediately after news spread about Anitha’s death, father and relatives of the deceased girl resorted to a road roko at Senthurai near Ariyalur. They demanded that the state and Central governments take “moral responsibility” for her death.
Chief Minister Edappadi K Palanisamy on Friday exhorted students not to take ‘extreme steps’ of ending their life and promised to take care of students’ interests.

In a statement, Palanisamy also announced solatium of Rs 7 lakh for Anitha’s family and promised job for people from her family according to their educational qualification.

Actor Rajinikanth expressed his grief over the death of Anitha and conveyed his condolences to her family.

 

  

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Comment on this article

  • SMR, Karkala

    Sun, Sep 03 2017

    Since NEET seems to have a bias for the CBSE syllabus, it means all these students have to necessarily enrol themselves in corporate coaching centres to crack NEET – something many like Anitha cannot afford.
    In that sense, NEET strikes at the heart of social equity. You would end up having more students from urban centres getting through, creating a skewed demographic profile of medical practitioners. Which is why Tamil Nadu government officials say the Constitution of India has failed to protect the interests of the poor by creating a system where they cannot compete effectively.
    17-year-old Anitha, the daughter of a daily wage labourer, killed herself on Friday, agonised at how her dream to study medicine had gone up in smoke after the Supreme Court ruled on 23 August that NEET will be the sole criteria for admission to medical colleges.
    Last year, the cut off for Scheduled Caste students was 191.25 and with a score of 196.75, Anitha could have easily gotten into the best government medical college.
    Like many, Anitha was led to believe it will all get sorted when the Tamil Nadu government passed a bill in the Assembly to exempt aspirants in the state from appearing in NEET.
    Even senior BJP leaders, like Union Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, said the Centre would support the state’s position on a one year exemption. But inside the Supreme Court, the Centre bowled a googly, arguing one state cannot be exempted.
    Where Delhi fumbled was in its failure to understand that NEET may end up creating a pool of medical practitioners from the urban centres who would be reluctant to serve in rural areas.
    But beyond the politics, her passing away is a reflection on how distanced policy makers are from the realities on ground. This is why rules are framed by thinking of India as an utopia, without caring for the infirmities on ground.
    Anitha has slept forever, it is time India should wake up.
    Jai Hind

    DisAgree Agree [2] Reply Report Abuse

  • JayaPrakash Shetty, India

    Sat, Sep 02 2017

    What is her Dalit status got to do with this? Why is caste being brought into this? What if she was upper caste girl? Is it ok for upper caste girl to commit suicide? The story here is about how TN syllabus is not fit for purpose when it comes in comparison to CBSE curriculum. Change that. NEET is absolutely essential to curb the capitation fee mafia.

    DisAgree [1] Agree [7] Reply Report Abuse

  • sri_elder, Karkala

    Sat, Sep 02 2017

    She could have taken NEET exam again next year as a repeater. She would have become doctor...
    lost mind.

    DisAgree [15] Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse

  • sharan, Mangalore

    Sat, Sep 02 2017

    True that the girl should not have ended her life..but put yourself in her place..exposed only to state syllabus, no exposure to NEET coaching or books which are CBSE based This ambitious girl would have felt helpless,,after such a high state exams score.NEET could have been got in gradually after making whole Nation CBSE syllabus over 2years.It's not a joke to repeat one year when one has no hopes or access to coaching even after 1year..She.d have felt cheated.A tragic end to a lifetime dream.Very sad.

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  • Sethu, Mangalore

    Sat, Sep 02 2017

    99% in state +2 board examination and less than 12% in +2 based NEET test is quite mismatching. The candidate is having serious deficit of exposure and knowledge to make her unfit to pursue medicine in merit quota. This should be an eye opener for Tamilnadu Government. They should implement NCERT based national curricula for schools to lift the standards of education to national level. Ordinance route may not be always available to bail out their incompetence. Let the government support private management lobby but that shall not be at the cost of diluting objectives of NEET. Implementation of NEET and centralized counselling for all quota of medical seats across the country has choked major black and illegal money sources and conduits. And, Tamilnadu and Pondicherry top in corrupt practices in medical admissions. Politicians has many reasons to worry but progressive society shall guard the conscience of Nation....!

    DisAgree [3] Agree [9] Reply Report Abuse

  • sri_elder, Karkala

    Sat, Sep 02 2017

    very well said..
    otherwise we will end up with doctors conducting medical procedures reasons best known only to them.

    DisAgree [6] Agree [7] Reply Report Abuse

  • sharan, Mangalore

    Sat, Sep 02 2017

    True that the girl should not have ended her life..but put yourself in her place..exposed only to state syllabus, no exposure to NEET coaching or books which are CBSE based This ambitious girl would have felt helpless,,after such a high state exams score.NEET could have been got in gradually after making whole Nation CBSE syllabus over 2years.It's not a joke to repeat one year when one has no hopes or access to coaching even after 1year..She.d have felt cheated.A tragic end to a lifetime dream.Very sad.

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • sharan, Mangalore

    Sun, Sep 03 2017

    Centre DGHS has allowed the deemed Universities to have their own fees ranging anywhere from 10 L -, 25L per year.I don't know how it brings about any much change.That's why 50% of seats are vacant still.Now it will be sold to rich people who have just qualified.State counselling was much better.Fees fixed at 16,700 for Govt.college, 77,800 for Private & 6.33L/ yr across all private colleges.Quite transparent counselling.Seats left vacant after Govt.counselling will still be filled by respective colleges.NEET hasn't changed things much or drastically.Colleges have lost control of most seats.Fees still high.Minimum score enough to get admission via payment still.

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  • HENRY MISQUITH, Bahrain

    Sat, Sep 02 2017

    Most in the protesters don't even seem to know what NEET is?
    I'm sure Anitha would have been an excellent doctor if she has given the chance

    DisAgree [1] Agree [18] Reply Report Abuse

  • Jossey Saldanha, Mumbai

    Sat, Sep 02 2017

    Last 3 years everything is in a Mess ...

    DisAgree [10] Agree [14] Reply Report Abuse


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Title: Protests erupt in TN a day after 17-year-old NEET petitioner Anitha commits suicide



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