Latest news with #MohammadSuhail


Time of India
4 days ago
- General
- Time of India
3 years ago he had not heard about NEET: Young e-rickshaw puller shares how he became a NEET rank holder
Mohammad Suhail, once an e-rickshaw puller from Muzaffarnagar, defied odds by cracking NEET with a remarkable rank of 609. Despite initial unawareness of the exam and financial constraints that halted his education, Suhail's determination led him to seek help from teachers and online resources like PhysicsWallah. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads A Humble Start in Muzaffarnagar An Unexpected Spark of Hope A Teacher's Shelter Becomes a Launchpad Studying With Limited Means Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Support from Meerut's PW Vidyapeeth Achieving the Impossible, One Ride at a Time Looking Ahead Once, he was unaware that there was a national examination named NEET . Today, this youngster has passed NEET with flying colours, holding an impressive rank of 609. Positivity portal The Better India recently shared the incredible journey of Mohammad Suhail from being an e-rickshaw puller to a NEET rank Suhail, a determined young man from Muzaffarnagar, had once never even heard of the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET). His life revolved around helping his family make ends meet, often by driving his father's e-rickshaw. Higher education seemed like a faraway dream, especially when financial hardship forced the family to make a painful decision—only one of the brothers could continue college. Suhail, without hesitation, paused his own academic journey so his sibling could pursue turning point in Suhail's life came when a friend mentioned NEET to him. The idea that this single exam could open doors to government medical colleges at affordable rates stirred something deep within. According to The Better India, which featured his story based on a report from India Today, no one in Suhail's family had studied beyond the 12th standard. For someone with no academic role models at home, setting his sights on a professional degree in medicine was a bold and brave modest home lacked the basic environment conducive to serious study. Realizing his struggle, one of his teachers, Hashir Sir, stepped forward and offered him a quiet room to study. That space, though small, became the bedrock of his dreams—a quiet refuge where he began to imagine a different the resources to join expensive coaching institutions, Suhail turned to online platforms. He enrolled in the Yakeen Batch offered by Alakh Pandey , founder of Physics Wallah. The course, priced at just ₹3,000–Rs 4,000, was within his limited budget. He appeared for NEET multiple times—scoring 369 in his first attempt. But he did not stop there. With each try, he gained more experience and finally achieved a score of 609 on his third a time when his motivation began to waver, Suhail received an unexpected call from the PW Vidyapeeth centre in Meerut. They offered him complete academic support—free enrollment, structured coaching, and expert mentoring. Suhail particularly benefitted from their AI/AR-based specialized batches and frequent mock tests that sharpened his year, Suhail successfully cleared NEET with 609 marks. He didn't come from a prestigious institution or a top-tier coaching institute. He studied on his own terms, often after long hours of pulling passengers around Muzaffarnagar in an e-rickshaw. His remarkable progress is not just academic but symbolic of how sheer determination can overcome systemic a NEET rank close to 11,000, Suhail knows that the path to a government medical college is now open. Though he may not enter the most elite institutions, the opportunity to become a doctor is well within reach. His current ambition is to pursue a specialization in surgery, though he remains open to discovering his true calling within the field of medicine in the coming years.


Indian Express
20-06-2025
- Indian Express
Wanted for 13 cases and on run for 2 yrs, ‘mastermind' of Goa land-grab scam arrested
The Goa Police on Friday arrested Mohammal Suhail, alleged to be the mastermind in a multi-crore land-grabbing scam in the coastal state. Police said in a statement that Mohammad Suhail (48), alias Michael, who had been absconding, was arrested at around 4.30 pm near a petrol pump in South Goa's Quepem by a Crime Branch team. Suhail, a resident of Pilar in Goa, is originally from Karnataka. Police said he is a 'habitual offender' and was previously arrested for his alleged involvement in at least 13 cases related to land-grabbing. 'He was absconding for the past two years,' an officer said. The Goa government formed an SIT on June 15, 2022, to investigate cases of illegal land transfer and land-grabbing. The SIT probed 44 FIRs involving more than 100 properties — nearly 1.5 lakh sqm of land — and made 56 arrests, including some officials from the Archives Department. The state government had appointed a commission of inquiry, headed by former Bombay HC judge Justice V K Jadhav (retd), on September 9, 2022, to probe the land-grabbing cases. The commission in its report detailed how government records had been tampered with in a 'systematic and organised' manner, and forged sale deeds with Portuguese-era calligraphy were inserted into the records, allegedly 'in connivance with the staff of the Directorate of Archives and Archaeology'. In several cases, the accused hatched a conspiracy and forged land records and documents in their own names or of their associates, often in collusion with officials in the state's archives department, and fraudulently executed sale deeds to third parties after illegally acquiring properties.


India Today
19-06-2025
- General
- India Today
UP boy drives e-rickshaw by day, studies by night, ends up cracking NEET
When the NEET UG results came out this year, a small house in Muzaffarnagar, Uttar Pradesh, erupted in celebration. Mohammad Suhail, a young man who once drove his father's e-rickshaw to help make ends meet, had scored 609 marks in his third in his family has studied beyond Class 12. And that is what made this achievement so name is Mohd Suhail, and I'm from Muzaffarnagar, Uttar Pradesh. I come from a lower-middle-class family where resources were limited but dreams were big,' he says. But it wasn't Suhail's dream at first — it was his mother's. 'Becoming a doctor was never my own ambition, it was my mother's dream. Her consistent support and belief in me are what inspired me to pursue this path and turn her dream into my goal,' he BY DAY, STUDYING BY NIGHTAfter completing Class 12 with his brother in 2021, the family could only afford to send one of them to college. His brother began a BCom course, and Suhail started pulling an e-rickshaw to support the family.'I began pulling an e-rickshaw during the day. My nights were spent studying, often staying up until midnight or later,' he didn't know what NEET was, but a friend told him about it, and the possibility of affordable MBBS seats through changed everything: 'I realised that if I could crack NEET, I could pursue MBBS without putting a financial burden on my family.' Sahil with his family THE SCHOLARSHIP THAT SAVED A DREAMSuhail prepared using PhysicsWallah's affordable online batch. 'Alakh Sir's Yakeen Batch was available for just Rs 3,000 – Rs 4,000, which I could manage,' he recalls. His first NEET score was 369. On his third try, he reached when he was about to give up, Meerut's PW Vidyapeeth centre stepped in. 'Meerut Vidyapeeth called and offered me full support — free admission, guidance, everything,' he coaching helped with regular tests and structured batches. 'They conducted regular rapid tests and formed AI/AR batches that gave me access to tailored content,' he ROOM, BUT LOTS OF DETERMINATION'I didn't have a proper space at home. One of my teachers, Hashir Sir, even offered me a room to study peacefully,' he didn't follow strict routines — just one rule: finish what you start. 'For me, the goal was more important than the clock.'His family made sacrifices too. 'My brother even dropped out of his studies to start working and support me,' he says. 'These sacrifices made me more focused and determined — I knew I couldn't let their efforts go in vain.'CELEBRATION IN A HOUSE WHERE NO ONE DREAMED OF MBBSWhen the result came, Suhail was at his grandmother's house. 'The moment we saw the score; the room burst with joy. People were shouting, celebrating, and hugging me,' he remembers.'Dholes were playing for a family where no one had ever even dreamed of becoming a doctor,' he NEXT'My NEET rank is 11,000 — it may not get me into the top colleges, but it's good enough for a solid government seat,' says hoping to study surgery during MBBS. 'I believe the coming years will help me discover exactly where my passion lies within medicine.'And his mother's dream? It's now his Watch