Monday, 19 September 2016

Won't interfere with NEET order: HC to NRI students

The Karnataka High Court on Thursday made it clear that it will not interfere with the Supreme Court’s order making it mandatory for NRIs and foreign nationals to clear NEET to obtain medical seats for the 2016-17 academic year. However, the court said the protection granted to genuine candidates already admitted under NRI/foreign national quota up to September 1, 2016 in petitioner institutions shall not be disturbed for two weeks to enable them to approach a superior court.

Full report

Police warn NRIs of phishing

With several non-resident Indians (NRI), especially from the US, complaining to the Cyberabad East police that their banking details were accessed by fraudsters by phishing, police have issued an advisory on Saturday urging citizens not to share passwords on email chats.
Full TOI report

Saturday, 17 September 2016

NEET mandatory even for admission under NRI quota: HC

In a setback to private medical colleges, the Karnataka High Court on Thursday upheld the circular issued by the Medical Council of India (MCI), which had asked all medical colleges to fill up seats under the NRI/foreign nationals quota only from the merit list prepared on the basis of marks secured by the candidates in the National Eligibility-cum-Entrance Test (NEET), from the academic year 2016-17.
Full story here

Tuesday, 13 September 2016

Vacant NRI-quota MBBS seats in Punjab colleges to be given to general category

The aspiring medical students of general category should be happy. Almost 90% of the NRI-quota MBBS seats in three government medical colleges that are set to fall vacant during the separate counselling on September 15 will come to them.
The 15% quota for the NRIs makes it 75 reserved seats in the government colleges — 15 in Faridkot and 30 each in Patiala and Amritsar. And only seven NRIs qualified in the August 9 separate test. So 68 seats might be added to the general pool. Allotment starts September 16.
Full story here

Sunday, 11 September 2016

Our diaspora has a lot to offer

A recent UN report says that India now has the largest ‘diaspora’ in the world, with more than 16 million persons of Indian origin living abroad. This Non Resident Indian (NRI) pool represents a little over 1 per cent of India’s population but is a crucial cog in the wheel of India’s development.
How does the Indian diaspora benefit India? The biggest way is through regular remittances. According to a World Bank report released in April, India was the largest remittance-receiving country in the world, with an estimated $69 billion in 2015.
This amounts to a whopping 3.4 per cent of India’s GDP, an amazing multiplier because just 1 per cent of the citizenry, which does not even live in the country, contributes more than three times its fair share to the nation’s wealth.
An interesting Column by RAJKAMAL RAO in Hindu Businessline
Full article here 

Tax queries


I have become a UK citizen now and am staying in London. Can I continue Public Provident Fund’s (PPF’s) till maturity? Can I continue investing in my PPF account even if I come back and stay in India on a British passport?
Find out the answer for this question and more here