Around 80 law graduates in Telangana who completed their education through recognised distance-learning, correspondence or open-schooling systems continue to await enrolment as advocates despite repeated clarifications issued by the Bar Council of India (BCI) recognising the validity of such qualifications. So far, only four candidates have secured enrolment, all after obtaining judicial intervention.
Under Rule 5(a) of the Bar Council of India Rules of Legal Education, 2008, candidates possessing a graduation degree are eligible for admission to the three-year LL.B. programme, while Rule 5(b) governs admission to the five-year integrated law course for students who have completed Class 12. The Rules expressly recognise qualifications obtained through distance education, correspondence and open-schooling modes, provided candidates have followed the prescribed educational progression and have not bypassed the basic qualifying stages.
To remove ambiguity, the BCI’s Legal Education Committee issued a clarification in 2017 stating that Class 10, Class 12 and graduation qualifications obtained through distance, correspondence or open-schooling methods are valid for legal education. The Council reiterated this position in 2025, clarifying that graduation degrees awarded by recognised institutions such as the Indira Gandhi National Open University (IGNOU) satisfy the eligibility requirements for admission to the three-year LL.B. programme.
The clarification further emphasised that the prohibition applies only to candidates who obtained qualifications directly through an open-university system without first possessing the requisite preceding educational qualification.
Despite these clarifications, nearly 80 enrolment applications remain pending before the Bar Council of Telangana (BCT). The BCT has maintained that the applications are being withheld in view of a 2021 Division Bench judgment of the Telangana High Court in M Naveen Kumar v. State of Telangana.
However, legal experts and affected candidates contend that the judgment primarily dealt with non-standard or “single-sitting” degrees that bypassed the conventional educational framework and did not directly concern candidates who pursued recognised distance-learning or open-schooling programmes while adhering to the prescribed academic sequence.
The controversy particularly affected students who completed their schooling through the National Institute of Open Schooling (NIOS) before pursuing regular law degrees. One such student, M Navneeth Chowdary, completed his Class 10 and Class 12 education through NIOS, subsequently obtained a five-year integrated law degree and later applied for enrolment as an advocate.
His application was not processed by the BCT, leading him to approach the Telangana High Court. The matter is presently pending before a Division Bench, which is examining whether candidates who completed their 10+2 education through NIOS and thereafter pursued a five-year integrated law course are entitled to enrolment under Rule 5 of the Rules of Legal Education, 2008.
The issue has acquired wider significance because other High Courts have taken a contrary view. Both the Madras High Court and the Karnataka High Court have recognised the eligibility of NIOS students for integrated law programmes, relying on the BCI’s 2017 clarification and the statutory framework governing legal education.
The continuing uncertainty has raised concerns among prospective law students and graduates. Telangana student Shubhakar Reddy Sama, who completed his schooling through NIOS and is considering pursuing legal education, said students and parents require clarity regarding enrolment eligibility before seeking admission to law courses rather than facing uncertainty after investing years in legal education and obtaining a law degree.
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