City
Epaper

RG Kar case: FAIMA calls to shut elective services across nation from tomorrow

By IANS | Updated: October 13, 2024 17:40 IST

New Delhi, Oct 13 The Federation of All India Medical Association has called for a nationwide "shutdown of ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Oct 13 The Federation of All India Medical Association has called for a nationwide "shutdown of elective services" on October 14 (Monday) in support of doctors in West Bengal, seeking justice for the young medic who was raped and murdered at R. G. Kar Medical College and Hospital in Kolkata.

This comes after the Indian Medical Association (IMA), earlier in the day, announced a 24-hour nationwide hunger strike on October 15, even as the fast-unto-death agitation by junior doctors in Kolkata entered the ninth day, with three hospitalised.

The doctors' body called for the shutdown in an open letter addressed to all National Medical Associations, State Resident Doctors' Associations (RDAs), and Resident Doctors' Associations (RDAs) from various State Medical Colleges and Institutes of National Importance (INIS).

The letter noted that since August 9, FAIMA has "stood united in demand for justice for our colleague Abhaya, and for the fundamental right to a safe and secure working environment for all healthcare professionals across our nation".

Even after "penning countless letters to ministers and bureaucrats", in the last two months, they continue to face "the same harrowing realities", with "voices ignored, safety compromised, and appeals dismissed", it said.

The letter said: "No satisfactory action has been seen" since their last letter to the Chief Minister of West Bengal that gave "an ultimatum for escalation" of strike if their demands were not met. This is "compelling us to request all RDAs and medical associations across the country to join us in our call for a shutdown of elective services across the country, beginning from October 14".

"We have been cornered, left with no alternative but to take a stand - not just for ourselves, but for the sanctity of the medical profession and the safety of all healthcare workers. We cannot afford to lose another colleague to violence or neglect. The government's apathy has left us with no other choice," it added.

The letter, however, "requested all RDAs and associations to keep emergency facilities open 24x7, since patients who need our urgent service must not suffer".

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIndia advises citizens to avoid non-essential travel to Iran

International"We're going to have access into India": Trump, as he announces trade deal with Indonesia

InternationalWhite House security breach prompts brief lockdown

InternationalIndia offers support to restore Satyajit Ray's ancestral home in Bangladesh

NationalDelhi Fire: 2 Dead, 2 Injured in Blaze at Building in Govindpura (Video)

Health Realted Stories

HealthFour new cancer hospitals to be set up in Maharashtra: Minister

HealthBengal CM not to implement Centre's directive on 'samosa-jalebis'

HealthCholera cases soar in Congo as outbreak hits ‘acute phase’

HealthTN: Pregnant Tribal woman goes missing after refusing hospitalisation, police search underway

HealthKerala: 5,500 crore condoms manufactured in six decades, mini-ratna PSU going strong