RAIPUR
Indian police announced Thursday they had detained the doctor
behind botched mass sterilisation surgeries that left 13 women dead, as
campaigners called for urgent reform of the government's family
planning programme.
R.K Gupta was seized for questioning amid
mounting anger over the tragedy in central Chhattisgarh state where
women were paid to undergo a procedure that also left dozens in
hospital, senior police officers said.
The doctor carried out 83
operations in just five hours on the impoverished women, who were paid
1,400 rupees ($23) at a state-run camp in Bilaspur district at the
weekend.
“He has been taken into custody. He will be produced in
the court in the afternoon today. He is likely to be arrested soon
after,” police inspector general Pawan Deo said from Bilaspur.
Police
were planning to seize equipment used during the operations, Deo said,
amid fears that it was contaminated before the operations were carried
out.
Gupta said he was under pressure from the state government to perform the operations, while also blaming the drugs used.
“It
was not my fault — the administration pressured me to meet targets,
“the doctor was quoted by a TV as saying as he was being detained on
Wednesday night.
“The surgeries went well but the problem was with the medicines given to the women,” he also alleged.
The
state government has banned the sale of six drugs used during the
operations over concerns they were substandard, the Press Trust of India
news agency said.
Sterilisation is one of the most popular
methods of family planning in India, and many state governments organise
mass camps where rural women can undergo the usually straightforward
procedure.
Although the surgery is voluntary, rights groups say
the target-driven nature of the programme has led to women being coerced
into being sterilised, often in inadequate medical facilities.
The victims had suffered vomiting and a dramatic fall in blood
pressure on Monday after undergoing laparoscopic sterilisation, a
process in which the fallopian tubes are blocked. Some 14 women remain
in hospital in a serious condition.
Sixteen-year-old Neelu Bai
said her mother Meera died after opting to have the surgery 10 months
after giving birth to her fourth child.
“She started vomiting
after she came back home. The doctor said she was vomiting because it
was hot. He asked her to take another medicine (to stop the vomiting),”
the teenager told
The government has suspended four health
officials and ordered an investigation into the tragedy, while angry
protesters took to the streets in the state capital Raipur on Wednesday
demanding the chief minister's resignation.
Gupta was rounded up
in Baloda Bazar district, close to where the camp was held, police
inspector general Gurjinder Pal Singh told
Human Rights Watch
said India has a long history of sterilisation-related deaths, in part
because health workers were under pressure to meet “informal” monthly
targets.
Health workers faced salary cuts or dismissal in at least
one Indian state if they failed to meet their quotas, HRW senior
researcher Aruna Kashyap said on the group's website.
“Access to
information, informed consent, and quality of services are often
sacrificed by this target-driven approach,” Kashyap said, calling for an
overhaul of the programme.
“Women may not find out about the
range of contraceptive methods available or the irreversibility or
potential medical complications of sterilisation.”
Family
planning programmes unfairly target women whose rights were often
ignored, another group, the National Alliance for People's Movement,
said.
“(The tragedy) is yet another instance of serious violations
of medical guidelines and brutal repression of reproductive rights and
health of women in India,” the Mumbai-based rights group said in a
statement.
India's programmes have traditionally focused on women, and experts say that male sterilisation is still not accepted socially.
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