Families mourn the deaths of 11 women in Chhattisgarh's Bilaspur on Tuesday. Photo: PTI
Bilaspur:
A team of doctors from Delhi's AIIMS hospital are in Chhattisgarh today for investigations after the death of 11 women after a government-run sterilisation camp. Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke to Chief Minister Raman Singh on Tuesday and expressed concern over the botched sterilisations, which was linked to target-driven mass surgeries by a suspended doctor. The Congress has called a statewide bandh today demanding the resignation of chief minister Raman Singh and health minister Amar Agarwal.
Here are the latest developments in this story:
The Supreme Court today refused to take suo motu cognisance, saying Chief Minister and Prime Minister Narendra Modi are are "looking into the matter'.
Medical negligence - a fallout of the rush to meet the government's sterilisation targets - is suspected to be behind the deaths. All 83 women had reportedly been operated upon within five hours at the government-run Nemi Chand hospital in Bilaspur's Pendari.
Amar Singh Thakur, Joint Director, Health, Bilaspur, said preliminary examinations suggest a septic shock may be the cause of death. This, he said, is triggered by infected surgical equipment.
One of the suspended medical officers admitted government sterilization camps have specific targets to meet. "April to March there are annual targets, this was done according to that," said RK Bhamge.Another suspended official, Block Medical Officer Pramod Tiwari, added that they had operated upon twice the number of women required. "The daily target of a team is 40 sterilisations," he said.
In his conversation with the Chief Minister, PM Modi expressed concern over the tragedy. A tweet from the Prime Minister's Office said, "The PM has asked @drramansingh to ensure a thorough investigation & action in the entire issue."
The United Nations, too, has expressed concern over the deaths, reported news agency Reuters. "If the facts are confirmed, then a grave human tragedy has occurred," said Kate Gilmore, deputy executive director of the UN Population Fund. "Where there is deviation from clinical standards, there must be consequences."
Admitting the possibility of negligence, the Chief Minister suspended four officials, including Dr RK Gupta, under whose supervision the surgeries were performed. He also ordered that a First Information Report be filed against him.
Free family planning camps are held between October and February as part of a larger programme to control India's billion-plus population. The state gives Rs 1,400 to each of the women who undergo the surgery.
The Chief Minister has hiked the compensation for the families of each of the deceased from Rs 2 lakh to Rs 4 lakh.
The state government has also come under fire from the Congress and the CPI(M), which demanded that state Health Minister Amar Agarwal, in whose constituency the incident took place, resign.
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