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The Punjab and Haryana High Court has rejected a writ petition seeking permission for a medical aspirant to withdraw from the Punjab state quota and apply instead under the Chandigarh pool for MBBS admissions in the 2025 session.
Bansal had already applied for admission to Baba Farid University of Health Sciences, Faridkot, under the Punjab quota, showing his place of residence as Punjab. He now wanted to switch to Chandigarh’s pool.
The court noted that Clause 6 of the Chandigarh MBBS prospectus required all candidates to give an undertaking that they had “not opted and claimed benefit of residence in any other State/U.T. other than Chandigarh after the declaration of NEET result”.
“Undisputedly, the petitioner has already made an application for admission to the MBBS Course in Baba Farid University… showing his residence at Punjab,” the bench observed, adding that this made him ineligible under the clause.
The judges held that the prospectus condition was not challenged, nor was any illegality shown in its inclusion. “Perusal of the prospectus of both respondents No.5 and 6 makes it abundantly clear that one person cannot claim for State quota in two different States,” they wrote.
Rejecting the plea, the court said, “The petitioner cannot be permitted to blow hot and cold in one breath. Having taken a conscious decision to claim his residence as the State of Punjab and having applied for admission in such category, the petitioner would clearly be stopped from taking a contrary stand now.”
It emphasised that the last date for applying in Chandigarh was July 24, 2025, and that “there was nothing to stop the petitioner to make such an application if he so intended”.
Bansal’s lawyers relied on Supreme Court orders in a pending matter regarding the introduction of OBC reservation in Chandigarh’s admissions. The apex court, on July 22 and July 30, had directed the Union Territory to provide 3 per cent OBC reservation in 2025–26, to be raised to 27 per cent in a staggered manner over six years.
However, the bench said the petitioner was from the general category, so “what orders are passed in respect of reservation for OBC category… would not constitute any cause for the petitioner to approach this Court” seeking alteration of the admission process.
Finding “no reason to interfere,” the bench dismissed the writ petition and disposed of pending applications.
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