Mangaluru, Nov 26: Showing no sympathy to the 17 students of Mangaluru-based Milagres College, who were denied end-semester examination hall tickets on account of attendance shortage, the Karnataka High Court has dismissed their writ petitions.

The high court clearly said that it cannot direct the college or the university to permit the petitioners who do not have the required minimum attendance to take exams by condoning the shortage of attendance.
The college had not issued hall tickets to 22 students due to shortage of attendance and 17 of them had filed a writ petition in the high court seeking directions to the college principal for issue of hall tickets. The students were studying BCom/BBM/BBA.
The students had claimed that they have paid the requisite fee and completed their 1st to 4th semesters in the college. The petitioners had contended that they were bright and intelligent students hailing from poor families and had attended all the classes.
However, when their parents came to college for collecting hall tickets on October 24, 2016, the principal refused to issue hall tickets on the ground that they were short of attendance. The students had specifically contended that the college had not informed them about shortage of attendance at regular intervals.
Countering the contentions of the petitioners, the advocate for the college produced documents before the court to establish that the students and their parents had been informed about the shortage of attendance.
It was pointed out that the names of students who were short of attendance were displayed at the college notice board every month. The advocate also produced the letters/memos sent to the parents informing them about the shortage of attendance of their children.
The students also alleged that even though 90 students were facing attendance shortage and their names were displayed at the notice board, the college exhibited communal bias and denied hall tickets only 22 students among whom 21 are Muslims.
The college claimed that it conducted special classes to enable students make up for attendance shortage. As a result, 68 students could cross the mandatory 75 % attendance while 22 students reportedly did not take the issue very seriously.
Elizabeth Neeliyara, the advocate and legal advisor to Milagres College, said that court order should be a warning to students who do not care to follow the college rules.
Also Read:
Milagres College accused of anti-Muslim bias; 22 students denied hall tickets
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