Barisal Correspondent :
Admission has been going on at Barisal Sher -e- Bangla Medical College amid protest .
Dr. Prof. Bhaskar Saha, Principal, SBMC, said ninety percent of 197 seats (including 145 for MBBS and 52 for BDS) got admission in their courses.
The admission will continue till 2:00 PM October 8 and admission of rest ten percent would be completed within scheduled time, principal SBMC hoped.
On other hand failed participants of intake test of medical and dental colleges taking position in front of administrative section of SBMC holding rally protested question leakage on Wednesday.
They locking different entrance gates of the college held sit-in strike and rally in front of administrative section of the college.
The participants of the programme demanding cancellation of admission procedure and re-exam vowed to continue their movement and threatened to start hunger strike till death if the government failed to response in their demands.
Police deployed in the campus and staffs cutting locks opened the gates, but no unhappy incident was happened.
A total of 82,964 students took part in the intake test held on September 18 to vie for 11,049 seats in the 95 governments and private medical and dental colleges. Results of that published on September 20 in which 48,448 students passed with 58.4 per cent success.
Admission has been going on at Barisal Sher -e- Bangla Medical College amid protest .
Dr. Prof. Bhaskar Saha, Principal, SBMC, said ninety percent of 197 seats (including 145 for MBBS and 52 for BDS) got admission in their courses.
The admission will continue till 2:00 PM October 8 and admission of rest ten percent would be completed within scheduled time, principal SBMC hoped.
On other hand failed participants of intake test of medical and dental colleges taking position in front of administrative section of SBMC holding rally protested question leakage on Wednesday.
They locking different entrance gates of the college held sit-in strike and rally in front of administrative section of the college.
The participants of the programme demanding cancellation of admission procedure and re-exam vowed to continue their movement and threatened to start hunger strike till death if the government failed to response in their demands.
Police deployed in the campus and staffs cutting locks opened the gates, but no unhappy incident was happened.
A total of 82,964 students took part in the intake test held on September 18 to vie for 11,049 seats in the 95 governments and private medical and dental colleges. Results of that published on September 20 in which 48,448 students passed with 58.4 per cent success.