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This Article is From Sep 14, 2024

Agitating Doctors Write To President Murmu, PM Modi Over RG Kar Impasse

Agitating Doctors Write To President Murmu, PM Modi Over RG Kar Impasse
Members of West Bengal Junior Doctor's Forum march towards 'Nabanna' (State Secretariat) after the Forum's leaders left by bus, for a meeting with West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee, in Kolkata, on Sept 12. (Source: PTI)

Agitating junior doctors in West Bengal have written to President Droupadi Murmu and Prime Minister Narendra Modi, requesting their intervention in the RG Kar hospital impasse.

Copies of the four-page letter written by the West Bengal Junior Doctors' Front were also sent to Vice President Jagdeep Dhankhar and Union Health Minister J P Nadda.

Junior doctors in the state have been on a 'cease work' protest since a post-graduate trainee was raped and murdered in state-run RG Kar Medical College and Hospital on August 9.

'We humbly place the issues before your esteemed excellency, as the head of state, so that our unfortunate colleague who has been the victim of the most despicable crime shall receive justice, and so that we, the healthcare professionals under the West Bengal Health department, may be able to discharge our duties to the public without fear and apprehension.

'Your intervention in these trying times will act as a beacon of light to us all, showing us the way ahead out of the darkness that surrounds us,' they wrote.

One of the agitating doctors, Aniket Mahato, told PTI that the letter was drafted earlier this month and sent on Thursday night.

“In the light of these extremely unfortunate events, the head of the institute in question, along with the state police and certain state government officials had allegedly mishandled the entire forensic and legal proceedings with little regard for either the sanctity of the crime scene that was mobbed by several people of infamous repute within the West Bengal medical fraternity, or for the victim's parents…” the letter said.

In view of these circumstances, the sense of “deep mistrust and fear that we feel towards the authorities remain unallayed so far, and we desperately implore that these noxious elements within the health system be weeded out to assure us of a truly safe workplace”, it said.

“In this turbid atmosphere of fear, distrust and hopelessness”, the junior doctors in West Bengal have been “forced” to avoid working within the hospital premises and instead, have taken alternative modes to discharge the duty of providing health care services to citizenss, it added.

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