NMC withdraws MBBS permission to Vaishno Devi Medical college

Written By :  Kajal Rajput
Published On 2026-01-07 05:30 GMT   |   Update On 2026-01-07 05:30 GMT

National Medical Commission

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New Delhi: The National Medical Commission (NMC) has revoked the permission to Vaishno Devi Medical College for MBBS course.

The assessment and rating board of the apex medical commission noted non-compliance to minimum standards for MBBS education at the institute. With this, the order issued by the board called for the transfer of students admitted this year to other medical colleges in the state.

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The decision comes in the backdrop of the recent inspection conducted by the NMC team, amid the protests over the MBBS admissions at the college.

Medical Dialogues had earlier reported that controversy erupted across Jammu following admission of 42 Muslim students out of a total of 50 students in the first batch to the medical college.

Dozens of protesters gathered earlier outside Lok Bhavan and set ablaze an effigy of Lt Governor Manoj Sinha, demanding revocation of the MBBS admission list. The protests were started by right-wing Hindu groups which later led to the formation of the Sangarsh Samiti and its leaders have already held talks with Lt Governor and leaders of the central government including Union health minister.

Tensions further rose over the MBBS admissions row with protestors planning to step up agitation. At a core committee meeting in Srinagar, Samiti leaders, along with representatives of the Shri Sanatan Dharam Sabha, alleged that the Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Shrine Board acted unfairly and deviated from its mandate. They accused the Board of misusing shrine funds over the past two decades for infrastructure projects such as hospitals and universities instead of promoting Sanatan Dharma–related activities.

During the recent hunger strike call, the Protesters alleged imbalance in representation, claims that have been rejected by academic sources and student bodies, who maintain that the process is religion-neutral and fully merit-driven. Legal experts warned that cancelling merit-based admissions would violate constitutional principles and undermine the integrity of competitive examinations. Authorities are monitoring the situation, stating that admissions made under established rules cannot be annulled without valid legal grounds.

Amid all this, the National Medical Commission's Medical Assessment and Rating Board (MARB) has withdrawn the letter of permission granted to the Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Institute of Medical Excellence in Jammu and Kashmir's Reasi for non-compliance with minimum standards.

An order issued by the MARB on Tuesday said all students admitted to the college during the counselling for the academic year 2025-26 shall be accommodated in other medical institutions in Jammu and Kashmir as supernumerary seats by the competent authority of the Union Territory administration, reports PTI

This means no admitted student will lose an MBBS seat due to the withdrawal decision. Instead, they will be adjusted in other recognised medical colleges in Jammu and Kashmir over and above their regular sanctioned intake.

Also Read:Security tightened at Jammu Civil Secretariat as protests continue over MBBS admissions at Vaishno Devi medical college

The implementation of this relocation will rest with the Union Territory’s designated health and counselling authorities, who have been formally informed of the decision through copies of the order.

According to the order, the non-compliance came to light during a surprise inspection.

The NMC’s decision is effective immediately.

The institute had applied under the NMC’s public notices issued on December 5, 2024, and December 19, 2024, for establishing a new medical college with an intake of 50 MBBS seats for the academic year 2025-26.

After processing the application, the MARB granted a letter of permission on September 8, 2025, to start the MBBS course.

The letter of permission was subject to several conditions, including maintaining essential standards, allowing surprise inspections, providing accurate information and rectifying deficiencies before renewal, the order said.

The MARB had reserved the right to withdraw or cancel the permission in case of misrepresentation, non-compliance or failure to meet regulatory norms.

After the issuance of the letter of permission, the commission received multiple complaints alleging inadequate infrastructure, clinical material and qualified full-time teaching faculty and resident doctors at the college.

The complaints also pointed to an inadequate inpatient and outpatient load and poor bed-occupancy statistics, among other issues.

Acting under section 28(7) of the National Medical Commission Act, 2019, which empowers the MARB to conduct surprise evaluations of medical institutions without a prior notice, a team of assessors carried out an inspection at the college on January 2, 2026.

This inspection formed the basis of the subsequent adverse findings.

The assessment report highlighted extensive deficiencies in faculty strength, clinical material and infrastructure at the institute.

These included a 39-per cent deficiency in teaching faculty and a 65-per cent deficiency in tutors, demonstrators and senior residents against the prescribed requirement.

The patient load and clinical services were also found to be far below norms, with OPD attendance of 182 at 1 pm against the required 400 and bed occupancy at 45 per cent against the required 80 per cent.

Intensive care units reportedly had only about 50 per cent average bed occupancy, while the average number of deliveries was approximately 25 per month, which the MARB termed “grossly deficient”.

Further, student practical laboratories in some departments and the research laboratory were not available.

Lecture theatres did not conform to the minimum standard requirements, the library had only 744 books against a requirement of 1,500 and just two journals against the 15 required.

The report also recorded the absence of an ART centre and facilities for the management of MDR-TB, as well as gross infrastructure deficiencies in some departments, including the lack of separate male and female wards.

Only two operation theatres were functional against the requirement of five, there was no minor OT in the OPD area and the equipment for para-clinical subjects was deemed inadequate.

The MARB cited Chapter V (Sanction and Penalty), Regulation 29 of the “Establishment of Medical Institutions, Assessment and Rating Regulations, 2023”, which treats non-compliance by a medical college as an offence liable to be penalised.

The deficiencies enumerated in the inspection report were categorised as non-compliance under these regulations.

After considering the assessment, the commission concluded that the institute had failed to meet the minimum standard requirements specified in the UGMSR-2023 for establishing and running a medical college.

Consequently, with the approval of the NMC chairman, the MARB decided to withdraw the letter of permission with immediate effect, adds PTI

In addition to withdrawing the letter of permission, the MARB has decided to invoke the performance bank guarantee furnished by the college, in accordance with the terms of the original permission. This step underscores the financial and regulatory consequences of non-compliance for the institution.

Also Read:Vaishno Devi medical college MBBS admissions row intensifies, protests set to escalate

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