Key Points

A Kashmiri doctor lost his super-specialty nephrology seat at a Coimbatore hospital after refusing to shave his beard. The Jammu & Kashmir Students Association has termed this religious discrimination and approached CM Stalin. The hospital allegedly imposed the clean-shaven rule after seat allotment without prior disclosure. The case highlights tensions between institutional dress codes and constitutional religious freedoms in medical education.

Key Points: Kashmiri doctor loses TN super-speciality seat over beard policy

  • Kashmiri nephrology doctor denied admission over beard policy
  • Students body cites Article 25 violation
  • Hospital allegedly demanded clean-shaven look post seat allotment
  • Rs 2 lakh security deposit now at stake
3 min read

Doc forced to leave super-speciality seat in TN over beard policy; students' body approaches CM Stalin

Dr Zubair Ahmad forced to quit KMCH Coimbatore seat after beard dispute; J&K Students Association approaches CM Stalin over religious discrimination

"Such appearance-based restrictions are unnecessary, discriminatory and exclusionary - Nasir Khuehami, J&K Students Association"

New Delhi, June 26

A Kashmiri doctor was allegedly forced to forgo a prestigious super-speciality seat at a Tamil Nadu hospital after being asked to shave his beard, triggering outrage and a call for intervention from the Jammu and Kashmir Students Association.

Dr. Zubair Ahmad, a practicing Muslim from Kashmir, had secured a DrNB (Nephrology) seat at Kovai Medical Centre and Hospital (KMCH), Coimbatore, through NEET-SS second counselling conducted by the National Board of Examinations in Medical Sciences (NBEMS).

Upon reporting for admission, he was allegedly told to shave his beard to comply with hospital dress code norms.

National Convenor of the Jammu and Kashmir Students Association Nasir Khuehami said that the hospital was unequivocal in its demand that Dr. Zubair shave or trim his beard in order to enroll.

“He was categorically asked to shave or trim his beard to be permitted to study at the super-speciality hospital,” the association’s letter stated.

The J&K Students Association has written to Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin, terming the incident as “religious discrimination” and a violation of Article 25 of the Constitution, which guarantees freedom of religion.

"The hospital’s insistence on a so-called ‘clean-shaven, corporate appearance’ is neither essential to medical education nor aligned with patient care, ethics, or hygiene, the core pillars of the medical profession,” the association argued.

Khuehami added, “Such appearance-based restrictions are not only unnecessary but are also discriminatory and exclusionary. The lack of prior disclosure and the imposition of this requirement after seat allotment is unjust and violates both the spirit and the letter of the Constitution.”

The letter further pointed out that had this beard policy been transparently disclosed during the counselling process, Dr. Zubair would not have opted for the institute.

"With no alternative left, Dr. Zubair was compelled to withdraw from the programme, despite having secured the seat on an all-India merit basis. He has since requested NBEMS to allow his participation in the third round of counselling and to refund his Rs 2 lakh security deposit submitted during the admission process", it said.

The Association urged CM Stalin to take urgent steps to ensure that religious freedoms are protected across educational and healthcare institutions in Tamil Nadu.

“We request your intervention to discourage discriminatory institutional policies that infringe upon constitutional rights and to help restore the confidence of students and professionals who look up to Tamil Nadu as a beacon of progress, tolerance, and justice,” the letter stated.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
This is really unfortunate. Medical institutions should focus on skills and knowledge, not appearance. Many great doctors have beards - it doesn't affect their ability to treat patients. Hope the authorities reconsider this outdated policy. 🤔
P
Priya M.
While I understand hospital dress codes for hygiene, this seems excessive. Many surgeons wear masks anyway during procedures. The bigger issue is losing a talented doctor over something so trivial. Tamil Nadu has always been progressive - this doesn't reflect well.
A
Arjun S.
Rules are rules. If the hospital has a dress code, everyone should follow it regardless of religion. There are many medical colleges in India - he can choose one that allows beards. Why make everything about discrimination?
S
Sunita R.
As someone from Tamil Nadu, I'm embarrassed by this incident. Our state has always welcomed people from all over India. The hospital should apologize and change their policy. Medical education is hard enough to get into without these unnecessary barriers.
V
Vikram J.
There must be some middle ground here. Maybe the hospital can allow neatly trimmed beards with proper hygiene measures? Complete ban seems unreasonable in today's times. After all, we have Sikh doctors with turbans and beards serving patients perfectly well.
N
Neha P.
The timing is the worst part - telling him after he got the seat! If this was in the rules, it should have been clearly mentioned earlier. Now a deserving candidate loses an opportunity. Hope the NBEMS helps him get another good seat without losing his deposit. 🙏

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