This Article is From May 09, 2017

After Student Asked To Remove Bra For Medical Exam NEET, Teachers Removed

A student had alleged that she was forced to remove her bra at an exam centre for the NEET or National Eligibility and Entrance Test in Kerala's Kannur.

After Student Asked To Remove Bra For Medical Exam NEET, Teachers Removed

A student had alleged she was made to change out of her jeans at a NEET exam centre in Kannur, Kerala.

Highlights

  • Exam-cheating fears prompt excessive action by Kerala school
  • Student asked to remove bra, hooks beeped in metal detector
  • 4 teachers suspended, school said dress code was being enforced
Kannur, Kerala: Four teachers in Kerala have been removed by a school where a student said she was made to remove her bra in public over exam cheating fears, minutes before sitting a crucial test.

Authorities issue strict dress codes to tackle widespread cheating on NEET or National Eligibility and Entrance Test, the entrance test for medical colleges across the country.

The student, who asked for her identity to be concealed, told NDTV she was at a school doubling up as a test centre in Kannur in Kerala on Sunday when a metal detector started to beep during a security check.

"At that time, they told that without removing my innerwear I cannot enter the exam hall since they (bra hooks) are made of metal. So, I took off my bra there itself and gave it to my mom, she was waiting outside," she told NDTV.

Four teachers have now been suspended for the controversy.

Another student's parent said his daughter was forced to remove the button on her jeans after it set off the metal detector.
"She was sent back, she came back and told me 'Papa, the jeans button has to be removed, the button is an objectionable item'. Promptly I removed the button," the father told NDTV.

"Then I went to a shop about three kilometres from the exam centre and bought a new dress for her after getting the shop opened."

CBSE, the educational board that conducts the exam, said that officials had crossed the line.  ""The incident reported at Kannur is unfortunate and a consequence of the overzealousness of a few persons involved in the process," said CBSE spokesperson Rama Sharma.
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