Showing posts with label society. Show all posts
Showing posts with label society. Show all posts

What killed Supriya Lamgaday?

11:08 AM
 What killed Supriya Lamgaday? - Apathy of Delhi Police or Medical Negligence of Government doctors or Racial Discrimination! 
Some accidents are considered too insignificant to be mentioned anywhere or covered by the media. The bigger tragedy, apart from the irreparable loss of life, is the multi-layered nature of marginalisation, racial discrimination, injustice and negligence from the part of the police and the hospitals that are involved in the post-accident handling of many cases. For the relatives of the victim, the trauma of losing a loved one is also coupled with the jolting awakening to the feeling that-
‘I am nothing. The pain that I am going through, the threat to my life and the life of my near ones means nothing to those whose prime duty is to protect me and save me.’

Supriya’s family and close ones are haunted each day with these questions. ‘Am I, as` an Indian Gorkha, not even entitled to the basic rights enjoyed by other fellow ‘Indians’?” ‘Is my life not worthy of being saved in my own country? ’

This loss of faith massively erodes ones self-worth and confidence. It leaves a shock of hollowing insecurity that even time may never heal. Her family’s dissatisfaction towards the police and the hospitals they approached has been so stifling that they approached the Gorkha`Students of JNU to write about the ordeals and injustices they faced. It is indeed one of the starkest forms of blatant racial discrimination, negligence and highhandedness of Delhi Police and the staff some of renowned hospitals in New Delhi.
What killed Supriya Lamgaday?
What killed Supriya Lamgaday?
Supriya, daughter of Chandra Bahadur Lamgaday, was a resident of Ward no. 9, Mirik, Darjeeling. She was 21 years old and had been working in Delhi for some time. On 3rd September, 2014 around 7:30 pm, while returning home from work with one of her colleagues in his motor cycle, they met with an accident at NH-8 Devarana farm near Mahipalpur, Vasant Kunj police station, New Delhi. As a car ahead of them came to a sudden halt without any signal, the car behind them also suddenly stopped causing their motor cycle to lose balance. The sudden brake caused Supriya, who was riding pillion, to be thrown off the bike. Upon falling, her head was hit by the car that was in front of them. Despite seeing Supriya lying injured on the road, the drivers of both the cars fled from the scene. Her friend, Vished, who was driving the motor cycle lifted up Supriya with the help of a couple on the road and put her into a car. She was rushed to the closest army hospital near Palam airport. There she was only given a bottle of glucose and some first aid for her external bruises. The doctor from the Army hospital (The Base Hospital) suggested she be taken to another hospital as the required machines (for ECG, CT Scan) was not available there. Supriya was then taken to Deen Dayal hospital at around 9.30 pm.

Precious time which could have saved a life was continuously lost even after reaching the hospital. When Supriya's mother reached Deen Dayal Hospital, she saw that her daughter was lying down in the emergency ward. She had not been attended by any doctor. The hospital took around half an hour to complete all the formalities before examining her as the accident had to be first reported to the police. While Vished was giving the FIR, one of the police personnel offered to hush up the case and help him escape from it if Vished agreed to pay Rs 30,000! How much more could the Delhi Police trivialise a fatal accident and try to capitalise from somebody’s tragedy? Supriya’s mother still remembers the smirk in the face of the police as he made a horrifically insensitive comment - ‘Teri beti to gayi!’

After much pursuance, the doctor from Deen Dayal Hospital declared that Supriya was in a critical condition. Despite this she was not given the required care and attention. Instead of the nurses, her friends were made to pump oxygen to make her pulse stable and had to repeatedly run after the doctors to get updates about Supriya's condition. Where were the trained nurses and technicians?

The doctor then informed that Supriya had to be yet again taken to some other hospital for a CT scan as the machines were not available in the hospital. Couldn’t this be told earlier?
The doctor wasn’t even willing to refer Supriya to another hospital. It was after many requests that the doctor agreed and referred Supriya to Safdarjung Hospital.

Until then, time was only lost with nothing concrete done to take her out of danger. Couldn’t a ‘qualified’ doctor immediately refer Supriya to the ‘AIIMS Trauma Centre’ instead of Safdarjunj Hospital?

Supriya was brought to Safdarjung Hospital at around 2 pm (or 12am???). Without proper instruction and guidance, time was further lost in taking the patient up and down the elevator more than 3 times just to do the X-Ray. In Safdarjung too, they were only informed that Supriya was in a critical condition but the doctors were neither willing to attend the patient nor do an ECG or any other tests. Out of utter desperation, Supriya's mother literally caught hold of a doctor. She shouted, screamed, cried and requested, all at the same time to get the ECG and other tests done.

All this while, Supriya – who had been twice declared to be in a critical condition- had not even been provided with a bed. She was kept in the corridor until the test reports arrived. After checking her reports she was provided a bed in the emergency ward instead of the ICU. The doctor then kept her in a ventilator and glucose.

Despite having a severe head injury, Supriya was not provided constant monitoring and observation by the doctors and nurses. Her family and friends again ran after doctors to get updates about her condition. The nurses were formidable and rude when approached. In such an alarming situation when the fear of losing her was driving them mad, the nurses asked Supriya’s family and friends to maintain silence. In one of the most renowned hospitals in India, Supriya was lying down battling for life with Only her friends to constantly check her pulse and heart beat. She still kept the hopes of her family and friends ignited by nodding her head to respond to their questions.

The next morning, all of a sudden, Supriya had difficulty in breathing. The doctor was called and he removed the ventilator without informing her family. Her attendants could not understand why he did so! Had she been left to die? They were asked to pump the oxygen manually without even clearly demonstrating to them the correct way of doing it. As her family frantically continued to pump oxygen, Supriya collapsed never to wake up again. It was 11:30 am, the 4th of Sept.

As Supriya’s mother, Ms Euden Ghissing and her relatives narrated the incident, we experienced the same hollowness of insecurity and extreme grief. Grief mixed with regrets, questions and wrath. The more we began to think, the more questions we asked to ourselves.

How ironical it is! Are the hospitals so busy that it can’t stop to save a life? Or is it too busy to stop and care for a patient from the North East? Who is the hospital for? Who are the doctors for? Who are the nurses for? Wasn’t Supriya Critical enough, Indian enough, Affluent enough, Important enough, Well-connected enough? To the police and hospital staff she wasn’t any of these, but she was definitely Critical and in dire need of Immediate Medical help! Shouldn’t that suffice enough for the doctors to get into action and for the police to extend all possible support to her family?

We strongly believe that although Supriya met with a serious accident on that fateful day, it was delay, apathy and medical negligence that took her life. Our deepest condolences are with her family and friends for their great loss. We appreciate their strength in standing up to recount every detail of the heart-rending incident so that we may be made aware of how little some hospitals in Delhi care about patients like us in grievous calamities such as this.
Is this kind of discrimination and vulnerability the fate of most of us who are migrant students and workers from the North East and Darjeeling?

We also offer our deepest condolence to the family of Deepali Kanwar (PhD scholar, School of Arts and Aesthetics, JNU). Deepali was a resident of Dharamshala, Himachal Pradesh and did her schooling in Loreto Convent, Darjeeling. Deepali met with a fatal bus accident in Chandigarh on 24th August, 2014. She suffered from brain haemorrhage and her condition was declared critical when she was taken to the hospital. She succumbed to her injuries in 5th September. She received medical treatment from Sector 32, Government Medical College and Hospital in Chandigarh. Her family believes that her chances of survival could have been stronger had the medical staff been more receptive to their complaints and cautious in their treatment.

The impending question in health care in India is – ‘Whose Life?’ ‘Is it worthy enough to be saved?’


Submitted by Dawa Sherpa

Tankers that supply water in Darjeeling town will not operate in Dashain

10:36 AM
Darjeeling town will once again face the water crisis in the midst of festive and peak tourist season while Rs 55.86 crore drinking water project awaits  completion.

Eighty tankers that supply water to homes and hotels in Darjeeling town will not operate from October 2-4 in the peak tourist season as the drivers want a three-day break for Dashain.
A water truck in Darjeeling
A water truck in Darjeeling
Dashain is the hill equivalent of Dussehra.

Kalu Subba, the president of Darjeeling Truck Chalak Sangathan, said: “Our drivers have decided not to operate tankers from October 2-4 as they want to celebrate Dashain with their families. This is not a strike but a collective decision taken by all the drivers.”

While some residents said they would be able to tide through the three-day break with stored water in their homes, hotel owners were not so sure.

Some hotel owners Metro spoke to said they would be able to supply water to guests for the first day of the break but they were sceptical about October 3 and 4.

Samir Singhal, the treasurer of the Janmukti Hotel Owners’ Association, said: “We will have a tough time at least for two days. We have no solution yet and will probably have to supply water in buckets to tourists.”

Singhal, who owns Hotel Sunflower at Chowrasta, said: “I have 15 rooms and since it is the peak tourist season, during which most of the rooms have been sold, I would need around 5,000 liters of water daily. I have a storage capacity of only 8,000-9,000 litres.”

A tanker supplies 6,000 litres of water. The water is brought from Rangbull and 3rd Mile areas, which are situated at a radius of about 12km from Darjeeling town. The trucks charge anything between Rs 800 to Rs 1,200 depending on the location of a hotel in the town.

The owner of a high-end hotel at Chowrasta, that he did not want identified, said: “We have 24 rooms and we need around 10,000 litres of water daily. Our storage capacity is about 15,000 litres.”

Most of the 300-odd hotels in Darjeeling are sold out between October 1 and 10. Even though the tourist season stretches till November-end, the rush is usually for these 10 days as they coincide with the Puja time, and another 10 days during Diwali.

“I guess we will have to hire other vehicles to ferry water. However, we are not sure whether other vehicles, such as pick-up vans, will want to carry water during the festival period as everyone will be celebrating. Moreover, many pick-up vans do not have water containers. We are at a loss. The only way out is to advise the tourists to use less water,” said a hotelier.

Darjeeling requires about 15-18 lakh gallons of water daily.

During the dry months — all months except the monsoon season — the municipality supplies only about 7-8 lakh gallons of water.

Residents and hoteliers have to turn to tankers — trucks with storage containers in the rear — to bridge the shortfall.

The Balasun water project is believed to be the answer to Darjeeling’s water woes.

The Rs 55.86 crore drinking water project, which was inaugurated by chief minister Mamata Banerjee on July 17 this year, however has not yet been completed.

Source: Telegraph

Death toll reaches 35 in closed Red Bank Tea Estate in the Dooars

9:34 AM
Sept. 24: A worker of the closed Redbank Tea Estate in the Dooars died last night taking the death toll in the garden to 35 since November when the management left the estate.
Death toll reaches 35 in closed Red Bank Tea Estate in the Dooars
Death toll reaches 35 in closed Red Bank Tea Estate in the Dooars 
Albis Nag, 40, a resident of Dokan Labour Line died of suspected malnutrition.

“The state is paying a monthly assistance of Rs 1,500 to each worker since February and it has made some other arrangements, like distribution of free food grains and holding health camps. But there are workers and residents who are suffering from malnutrition and other diseases. Some have been treated in government hospitals but many like Albis are in their houses,” said garden worker Rajesh Lakra.

In November, Redbank Group had left the garden along with two other estates that it owns — Dharanipur and Surendranagar,

“It is not possible to survive on relief for months and years. Despite instructions from the chief minister, distribution of food grains and medicines and health camps are irregular,” Lakra said.

The Jalpaiguri district health administration has decided to conduct an inquiry into the death of the worker. “The BMOH of Dhupguri (Redbank is in Dhupguri block), has been asked to conduct an inquiry and submit a detailed report,” Prakash Mridha, the CMOH of Jalpaiguri, said.

In another development today, the labour department disbursed Rs 1,500 as bonus to workers of five closed gardens in the Dooars and Raipur Tea Estate that re-opened recently. “The state had announced that along with FAWLOI (Financial Assistance to Workers of Locked Out Industries), workers of shut gardens will get Rs 1,500 bonus before Puja,” Sourav Chakraborty, Jalpaiguri district Trinamul president said. “They will get it soon.”

In total, 3,240 workers, from five shut Dooars estates and Raipur garden that re-opened recently, would get the bonus.

The state government, however, is yet to pay bonus at the rate of 20 per cent to 3,000-odd workers from the five gardens owned by the West Bengal Tea Development Corporation.

Madhu estate official

The financer of Madhu Tea Estate, Gopal Goyel, whose house was gheraoed by workers demanding full bonus on September 27, has been admitted to a Siliguri nursing home.

Source: Telegraph

Trade unions of the hills and plains united for Minimum Wage Act

11:23 AM
Trade unions of the hills and plains comprising the United Tea Workers’ Forum, the Coordination Committee of Tea Plantation Workers and the Defense Committee for Plantation Workers’ Rights today united under a single platform to demand the implementation of the Minimum Wage Act in the region’s tea gardens and threatened to launch an agitation if the state government fails to take heed.

Trade unions of the hills and plains united for Minimum Wage Act
Trade unions' representatives meeting in
Darjeeling over wage issue.
Twenty-one trade unions from the Darjeeling hills and the Terai and the Dooars barring those of the TMC and the GNLF convened a joint conference in Darjeeling that was a follow up of the June 21 meeting in Chalsa.

“There are myriad problems plaguing the tea industry, but the primary one is that of workers’ pay, which is out of sync with the present times. We have already held four bipartite and tripartite meetings with the state government and garden managements, but nothing has materialised so far,” said Zia-ul-Alam, general secretary of the CPM-affiliated Chia Kaman Majdoor Union.

The trade unions said they will hold gate meetings for an hour at their respective gardens on July 24 and 25 to press forward the demand.

“We hear that the fifth round of the talks has been postponed and we condemn this because it is part of the state government’s ploy to create friction between unions. If we don’t get a positive response from the state government after the gate meetings, we will be forced to take recourse to strikes,” threatened Alam, adding their demand will also be placed in Parliament through the respective parties of the trade unions.

Accusing the state government of aligning with the garden managements, the trade unions demanded the minimum wage be fixed on a systematic basis for all worker categories.

“After the deaths of workers due to starvation in six closed tea gardens, the state government has finally accepted gardens have problems. The state government must work for the “majdoor” and not the management,” said Alam.
He added, “A pattern has to be followed while fixing the wage of workers. We want a basic pay system along with VDA, which is presently not being followed.”

The unions want the basic wage of workers to be fixed at Rs322 per day with ration facilities unlike the negotiable Rs90 and Rs95 the hills and plains garden workers are getting at present, respectively. However, the TMC-affiliated

Indian National Trinamool Trade Union Congress wants the basic wage to be kept at Rs206.

“What the TMC trade union is demanding applies to the agriculture sector, but we fall under the industrial skilled sector and therefore, the rate of Rs206 cannot be applicable to us,” said PT Sherpa, president of the Gorkha Janmukti Morcha-affiliated Darjeeling Terai Dooars Plantation Labor Union.

Incidentally, INTTUC president Dola Sen on her maiden visit to Darjeeling on July 15 had made it clear that any rate above Rs206 may not be possible even as she admitted the amount was low. Meanwhile, Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee recently announced in Darjeeling the state government would give Rs1,500 to each worker of closed tea gardens till the time the gardens reopen.

Source:EOI

Mirik BDO conducted plantation drive around Mirik lake

9:18 AM
The Mirik Block Development Office staff led by BDO Raju Sherpa today conducted a plantation drive around Mirik lake. The BDO said the plantation drive was part of the office’s efforts to support the renovation and beautification process of Mirik Tourism Center and to promote green initiative in the region. The BDO and his team planted tree sapling in vacant spaces around the lake.

Mirik BDO officials planting tree saplings around Mirik Lake on Thursday
Mirik BDO officials planting tree saplings around Mirik Lake on Thursday
The plantation drive was also joined by various other organisations, including Harijan department, hydro and forest department, Gumba Sanchet Manch, Mirik Municipality, NEPA Mirik, Agam Singh Gram Sudhar Saamaj, Thana Line, Mirik Gaon, Kirat Sangh, Himal Club, Chalak Mahasangh and Nari Sewa Samiti among others. The tree sapling for the plantation drive was donated by Kumar Pradhan from Soureni and DP Rai from Bigalay. The plantation drive will continue till July 9.

Source: EOI

MARG conducts awareness programme on Human Trafficking in Kalimpong Villages

7:58 PM
26th to 28th July 2014, MARG with the support from Glenn Family Foundation Kalimpong carried four awareness programmes about  Human Trafficking at Chibbo Busti, Pudung Busti, Bom Busti (Deowrali) and Pranami Girls High School Kalimpong.

 MARG conducts awareness programme on Human Trafficking in Kalimpong Villages
 MARG conducts awareness programme on Human Trafficking in Kalimpong Villages
In the past MARG had recovered girls from Kalimpong Sub-division who were a victim of Commercial Sexual Exploitation in other states. Many of the girls were also lured into massage palour in Goa and were a victim of this trade. Recent rescue in Goa by ARZ, Goa Crime Branch and MARG speaks about this flourishing trade.

This awareness would not have been successful without the support from Glenn family Foundation as they have been doing mammoth development works in the far of villages of Kalimpong. Together we felt that there was a dire need of these awareness camps. 

In all the four camps students, parents and the local leaders participated with a great zeal to save daughters and sisters of their locality but unfortunately there was no participation from Darjeeling Police as we used to have earlier. This was indeed sad.

The youth and some students came forward to set up Students Against Trafficking Club (SATC) and very soon there will be 4 vibrant clubs with 20 to 25 members who will be trained to combat this menace which has been engulfing our society rapidly.

Source:  MARG

Siliguri Police busted a sex racket operated through a website

10:08 AM
 The Siliguri Metropolitan Police (SMP) has busted a sex racket, which was being operated through a website in Siliguri and in an apartment in a township here.

Siliguri Police busted a sex racket operated through a website
Siliguri Police busted a sex racket operated through a website
After receiving information that the racket was being operated, officials from the detective department conducted raids at some places in Siliguri last night and arrested 10 persons, including five women, who were allegedly involved in the trade. "We had been receiving reports from different sources that a website- www.siliguricallgirls.com had been luring women to jobs. Accordingly, we conducted raids and arrested 10 persons, including five women. Among the males, one student used to supply the girls, and two of them are clients. Two women hail from Dum Dum in North 24 Pargana district, another hail from Habra in the same district and two from Cooch Behar district," said SMP commissioner Jag Mohan here today. 

According to him, police first arrested the student from Tin Batti area and they nabbed the others after his interrogation. 

"The trade was going on in a flat at Uttarayan Township for the past two years.  Action will also be taken against the website," he said.

Source: thestatesman
 
Copyright © Indian Gorkhas. Designed by Darjeeling Web Solutions