The Supreme Court on Friday rejected a review petition filed by six cabinet ministers from six states against the August 17 order allowing JEE, NEET exams scheduled in September. Filed through advocate Sunil Fernandes, the petition stated that the court order fails to "secure the safety, security and Right to Life of the Students/Candidates appearing for the JEE, NEET exams."
The plea came up at 1.30 pm today before Justices Ashok Bhushan, Bhushan Gavai and Krishna Murari. The hearing was held "in chamber" private hearing and not in an open-court. Only judges were present. No lawyer was allowed to attend or argue.
Earlier on August 17, a bench comprising Justices Arun Mishra, BR Gavai and Krishna Murari had dismissed the writ petitions. As Justice Arun Mishra retired on Wednesday, the
matter will be heard by a bench headed by Justice Ashok Bhushan.
The petitioners mentioned that the apex court "ignore the teething logistical difficulties in conducting the exams at the proposed dates" and "failed to balance the competing but equally important aspects of conducting the examination and security safety of the students."
The review petition was filed in the apex court by West Bengal minister Moloy Ghatak, Jharkhand minister Rameshwar Oraon, Rajasthan minister Raghu Sharma, Chhattisgarh minister Amarjeet Bhagat, Punjab minister BS Sidhu and Maharashtra minister Uday Ravindra Sawant.
The review plea also said that the August 17 order is "cryptic, non-speaking" and does not discuss various aspects and complexities involved in the matter of this magnitude.