I am Vinod Kumar Saini, a middle-class father from Delhi. Like millions of Indian parents, I had one dream – to see my daughter succeed through honest hard work.
My daughter, Divyanshi Saini, worked tirelessly to become an Ayurvedic doctor. She cleared NEET and secured admission through the official counselling process conducted by Uttarakhand Ayurved University for the 2025–26 session.
What followed after her admission is not just a personal struggle. It is a warning for every student and parent in India.
The Admission: Trusting the System
Divyanshi was allotted a seat at Haridwar Ayurvedic Medical College and Research Centre, Padartha, Haridwar, in the second round of counselling.
We followed every official instruction and paid the full admission fees:
- 24 October 2025
- 27 October 2025
Every rupee – paid honestly, on time, and through proper channels.
We trusted the system completely.
The Legal Upgrade – And Beginning of the Problem
On 13 November 2025, during the official upgradation round by UAU, my daughter was upgraded to Aroma Ayurvedic Medical College, Roorkee.
This was not a withdrawal. This was a government-approved seat upgrade.
As per official counselling rules, we became fully eligible for a refund of ₹2,70,000 from HAMCRC.
We paid fees again at the new college. My daughter continued her studies. But HAMCRC never returned our money.
Fake Emails, Non-Existent Website: A Shocking Discovery
When we tried to request a refund, we uncovered something alarming:
- Email hamrc@gmail.com → does not exist
- Email info@hamcrc.com → domain does not exist
- Website domain hamcrc.com → not functional
The only response came from a person listed as Principal – but he had left the college 3 years ago.
This raises a serious question:
Why are outdated and non-functional contacts still being shown?
Five Months of Follow-Ups: Zero Result
We tried everything – patiently and respectfully.
Our Efforts Timeline
| Date | Action |
|---|---|
| 13 Nov 2025 | First refund email sent (bounced) |
| 14 Nov 2025 | Second email sent (bounced again) |
| 17 Nov 2025 | Email sent to owner — no proper response |
| 5 months | Continuous calls, messages, follow-ups |
| 4–5 visits | Delhi to Haridwar trips (₹4,000–₹5,000 spent on every visit) |
Every visit ended with the same line:
“Cheque will be ready next time.”
It never was.
The Breaking Point
After months of patience, the situation escalated.
The college accountant allegedly told us:
“Complain anywhere, we will not refund.”
The key individuals involved:
- Mr. Haroon – Owner (Repeated assurances, no action)
- Mr. Afjal – Accountant (Alleged refusal and threat)
This was the moment we realised – this was not delay.
This was denial.
The Human Cost Behind ₹2.7 Lakh
This is not just money.
- I took a loan at high interest
- I continue paying monthly EMI + interest
- Additional ₹4,000–₹5,000 spent on travel
- Multiple leaves from work
- Continuous mental stress on family
For a middle-class family, this is devastating.
Possible Legal Violations
The actions of the college may fall under:
- Violation of UAU counselling refund rules
- Breach of Central Council of Indian Medicine guidelines
- Violation of National Medical Commission regulations
- Deficiency of service under Consumer Protection Act, 2019
- Misleading/fake contact information
- Possible cheating and financial misconduct under IPC
Red Flags Every Student Must Know
Before taking admission, consider these facts:
- Non-functional official emails
- Non-existent website domain
- Outdated Principal details
- Lack of written communication
- Repeated verbal assurances without action
- Parents forced to travel repeatedly for refunds
A Direct Message to the Management
To the concerned authorities:
You took ₹2,70,000 from a family that trusted the system.
You delayed. You ignored. You denied.
This money does not belong to you.
Return it.
A Warning to Students and Parents
If you are considering admission to HAMCRC, Haridwar:
👉 Verify everything
👉 Do not rely on verbal assurances
👉 Confirm refund policies in writing
Because once money is paid – getting it back may not be easy.



