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Expressing dissatisfaction over lack of coordination between authorities and concerned over the ‘alarming situation’ in the district, Aurangabad bench of the Bombay High Court, in a significant order said it may visit Covid-19 quarantine facilities and hospitals to see whether discipline was being maintained. It further said the bench may give directions to register a case against those not discharging their duties regardless of their ranks.
A division bench of Justices Tanaji V Nalawade and Shrikant D Kulkarni made the observations Friday while hearing, through video-conference, a suo motu public interest litigation (PIL) expressing concerns over administrative decisions to contain Covid-19 in Aurangabad region. The court had also referred to reports related to Covid-19 deaths at the civil hospital in Jalgaon among others.
Earlier, on June 26, the HC took suo motu cognisance of news reports related to spike in Covid-19 cases in Aurangabad and filed the plea through its registry and appointed senior advocate Rajendra S Deshmukh as Amicus Curiae to assist the bench with the PIL. The court had observed lack of coordination and non-cooperation among various authorities of Aurangabad region and had said that all of them, including the police machinery need to work together. The bench had said that while most of the health staff at public health centres are working with ‘devotion’ and have sacrificed lives of their families, “a few public servants are not working diligently”.
On Friday, public prosecutor D R Kale told the court that action was being taken against public servants and submitted a compilation of details as sought by the court. Deshmukh, also submitted that there was still no discipline among public servants and many in Covid-19 control programme were absent on duty.
Noting that such ‘unfortunate’ incidents were happening despite its directions, the court said that such persons were required to be suspended immediately and criminal action needed to be taken against them. “It can be said that in our country, only poor and middle-class persons are sufferers and they suffer when there is such calamity. They have no other alternative than to go to public institutions for treatment, help and protection. This circumstance needs to be kept in mind by these officers,” the HC observed.
The bench, led by Justice Nalawade, said, “We have expressed that this court may visit the sites to see that there is discipline in the staff employed. That they are discharging their duties seriously and there are no lapses whatsoever. The visit will be paid as surprise visit to the hospitals, to the quarantine institutions and even to the isolation wards and the containment zones.”
It went on to warn the “errant” officials. “This court is making it clear that if it is found that the persons who are expected to discharge the duty are not present on the spot and due to that the spread of virus is going on, this court will be giving directions specifically in respect of those persons to register the crime against those persons immediately and those persons may be of any rank.”
Seeking further responses from the Centre, state and civic bodies in the matter, the bench posted further hearing on July 7.
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