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Indian medical students to sign return bond if going to the US

Very good step but yes if someone wants to pay back the subsidy in money then that should be allowed.
In any case better to be a little less rich and serve your own people than be richer and serve others.
'Fatherland is not a coat you can just take off'-Bismarck.
Anyway i have made up my mind to never immigrate ever,the public opinion in the west is already very polarized in this matter and in 20-25 years they might just deport all immigrants.Always trust your own people over foreigners.

US is totally different. Once you settled there, then no one will deport you because it is a mixed democracy and society from different countries.
 
the BAN is only going to effect j1 visa holders....H1b are spared from this ......or unless you marry to a US citizen and get a green card... then that doesnot hold ..
LOL! Just a bad day,for you and vsdoc :cheesy:
Anyway good luck mate :tup:
 
3000 qualified Indian doctors do not want to work in rising and shining India..haha!
 
they should know the reason why they are leaving for US and they should take appropriate steps so as to solve it .
 
Just curious, how would India be able to enforce this?

Lets say a prospective doctor decides he or she would rather stay in the US? What are the consequences with regards to family back home? what could India's government do to the person themselves (we are speaking legally of course, no poison or such lol)? Would it be worth the taxpayer's expense?

More importantly, would the US government deny the prospect permission to practice? This seems to hinge on that. I don't see any confirmation on that front.
 
Just curious, how would India be able to enforce this?

Lets say a prospective doctor decides he or she would rather stay in the US? What are the consequences with regards to family back home? what could India's government do to the person themselves (we are speaking legally of course, no poison or such lol)? Would it be worth the taxpayer's expense?

More importantly, would the US government deny the prospect permission to practice? This seems to hinge on that. I don't see any confirmation on that front.

I think its written in the OP itself:

From this year onwards, the United States is insisting on a government NOC from every student enrolling with an American institute. “No other country is asking for this NOC,” the Minister said. “If they don't fulfil the bond obligation, we can write to the US to deny the student permission to practise.”
 
This is good news. There are way too many indians here in the U.S. They should return back to their shining india. Doctors, engineers, grocery store workers, dunkin donuts workers, taxi drivers, they all should return back to their hindustan.
 
Any doctor travelling to the United States for higher medical studies from this year onwards will have to sign a bond with the government, promising to return to India after completing his / her studies.

This has been done to prevent doctors from leaving the country on the pretext of higher studies and eventually settling down there.

“Any student travelling for further medical education to the US will have to give us a bond that he will return after completing the studies. In the last three years, 3,000 doctors went abroad for studies and didn't return. If a student doesn't return from the US, he won't be allowed to practise there,” Union Health and Family Welfare Minister Ghulam Nabi Azad said here on Monday.

‘Bond obligation'

From this year onwards, the United States is insisting on a government NOC from every student enrolling with an American institute. “No other country is asking for this NOC,” the Minister said. “If they don't fulfil the bond obligation, we can write to the US to deny the student permission to practise.”

Vested interest

On the proposed three-year Bachelor of Rural Health Care course, which seeks to create a separate cadre of public health professionals to serve in rural areas, Mr. Azad hoped that the Medical Council of India (MCI) would approve the course. “Doctors' organisations are opposing the course. I have no hesitation in saying that they have a vested interest to increase their practice.”

“The curriculum is also ready. States are free to implement the course, as Assam is doing, but we want the MCI's recognition to provide uniform standards for the course across India. We hope the MCI will move fast,” he said.

Mr. Azad also favoured increasing the duration of the MBBS course from the existing 5.5 years to 6.5 years. The Medical Council of India was working on the proposal. “I don't mind increasing the duration of MBBS to 6.5 years. In the US, students have to go for six years of additional study to be able to prescribe medicines and practise,” he said.

Mandatory rural service

The proposed one-year increase in MBBS duration is being contemplated to set aside an additional year for mandatory rural service. The proposal is to award the MBBS degree only after the completion of 5.5 years of regular MBBS course and one year of rural posting, which would be linked to the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM).
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http://www.thehindu.com/news/national/article3345581.ece
:tdown::tdown:

I am so mad ...bloody Congressi idiots and that fucktard ghulam nabi azad chutyea .....is about to ruin my years of hardwork ....so depressed
....:guns:


YOU are a med student? :lol:
 
You moronic turd. I am a Parsi. We build schools and colleges. Without asking for a single seat as reservation in return.

I was USG 4 out of over 5 Lac students all India who sat for the AFMC entrance in 1990.

And the first from the non-reserved non-Army quota.

Not to mention BHU, JIPMER, and CBSE as well, which were rejected for AFMC.

Which college had the misfortune of spawning you?

Go lick paper-wiped gora azzes now. You have millions to make.

Crud!

Hey ideot , your posts simple reek of jealousy. What the hell is your problem if he wants to stay in the US. I bet you were one of those who just wasn't good enough to get a seat in any good US university or was denied a visa for what could be a 1000 reasons , your fuckin gawar language for instance.
 
Doctors serving in rural areas? That's just a joke, first let the government improve infrastructure in this places and then ask the doctors to go serve the people there, most of the places lack basic medication even in towns and cities.
 

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