Tag: RG Kar Rape-Murder Case

  • RG Kar Rape-Murder Case: 50 Senior Doctors Resign In Support Of Protesting Junior Doctors |

    50 senior doctors from RG Kar Medical College and Hospital in Kolkata have resigned in solidarity with junior doctors, who have been protesting since October 5. The junior medics, demanding justice for a colleague’s tragic death, are calling for systemic reforms and improved working conditions. 

    The junior doctors’ protest, which includes a hunger strike, was ignited following the rape and murder of a postgraduate trainee doctor at RG Kar Medical College on August 9. The horrific incident, which occurred during her duty hours, has shocked the medical community and the city. The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has charged Sanjoy Roy, a former contractual staff member of the Kolkata Police, with the crime.

     Key Demands of Junior Doctors

    The protesting doctors are not only seeking justice for their late colleague but are also pushing for broader reforms within the healthcare system. Their primary demands include:


    – Implementation of a centralized referral system across all hospitals and medical colleges in West Bengal
    – A bed vacancy monitoring system to ensure better patient management
    – Creation of task forces to address the need for essential facilities such as CCTV, on-call rooms, and washrooms
    – Enhanced police protection in hospitals, with a focus on recruiting permanent women police personnel
    – Immediate recruitment to fill vacant positions for doctors, nurses, and other healthcare staff

     Senior Doctors’ Resignation 

    The resignation of 50 senior doctors has added weight to the junior doctors’ protest. Visuals shared on social media show students applauding as the senior faculty members submitted their resignations. The resigning doctors expressed their frustration, stating, “There has been no response from the appropriate authority to solve and to save our children from impending health disaster.”

    Earlier in the day, around 15 senior doctors had joined the juniors in a symbolic hunger strike, underscoring their support for the ongoing movement.

  • West Bengal Doctors To Decide On Resuming ‘Cease Work’ After SC Hearing Of RG Kar Case |

    RG Kar Rape-Murder Case: Junior doctors in West Bengal said on Saturday that they would take a decision pertainbing to resuming total ‘cease work’ in medical colleges after observing the state government’s submission on their safety and security at workplaces during the hearing of the RG Kar rape and murder case in the Supreme Court on September 30.

    The decision of medics was taken after three doctors and three nurses were assaulted following the death of a patient at the College of Medicine and Sagore Dutta Hospital near Kolkata on Friday night. The doctors alleged that the attacks at the state-run hospital show that the state government has “totally failed” to deliver promises to provide them security.

    Following the attacks, one of the junior doctors said that the Mamata Banerjee-led TMC government in the state totally failed in providing us safety and security.

    “The state government has totally failed in providing us safety and security, and that is the reason the attack took place in Sagore Dutta Hospital. We are giving the state some time and want to hear their submission regarding our security during the Supreme Court hearing on Monday, and then from 5 PM, we will start total ‘cease work’ at all hospitals across Bengal,” the junior doctor said, as quoted by PTI.

    “It seems that our meetings with the chief minister and the chief secretary were not taken seriously. How can patients’ family members threaten one of our female colleagues to repeat what has happened at the RG Kar hospital. We do not feel secure in the hospitals; we lost all hope in the state government,” he said.

    The decisions were announced following a junior doctors’ general body meeting held after the assaults on medics at the Sagore Dutta Hospital. Soon after Friday’s incident, junior doctors at the Sagore Dutta Hospital started “total cease work” there.

    On Sunday, junior doctors decided to organize a rally across the state, protesting the Sagore Dutta Hospital incident. “Where gone the assurances on our safety and security. We will go for a bigger demonstration,” Aniket Mahato, a doctor who was also present there, said, as quoted by PTI.

    Depending on the submission on the part of the Bengal government in the Supreme Court hearing on Monday, junior doctors might contemplate whether to go for “total cease work or not”, Mahato said.

    On September 21, medics rejoined their duties partially at various government-run hospitals in West Bengal after a hiatus of 42 days. They were on ‘cease work’ in protest against the rape-murder of an on-duty woman doctor at RG Kar Medical College and Hospital here.

    Junior doctors had on Thursday written an email to Chief Secretary Manoj Pant, reiterating their demands, which were “yet to be fulfilled” by the state government. In the two-page letter, representatives of the West Bengal Junior Doctors’ Forum referred to their meeting with him at the state secretariat on September 18 when their demands “were verbally agreed.”

    (With PTI Inputs)

  • Accusation Against Ex-RG Kar Principal Is Grave, Could Attract Capital Punishment If Proved: Court |

    RG Kar Rape-Murder Case: A designated Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) court denied bail to former RG Kar Medical College and Hospital principal Sandip Ghosh in the case pertaining to the rape and murder of a trainee doctor on the college premises. 

    A designated CBI court, while denying, has observed that the nature and gravity of the accusation against him is grave and could attract capital punishment if proved.

    The central probe agency had arrested Ghosh and former officer in charge of Tala police station, Abhijit Mondal, for alleged tampering of evidence and delay in filing of FIR in the doctor’s rape and murder case.

    In its order dictated on September 25, the court said that it appears from the case diary that the process of investigation by the central probe agency is in full swing.

    Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate S Dey, who denied the bail prayer of Ghosh, observed that the nature and gravity of the accusation is grave and, if proved, it may attract capital punishment, as reported by news agency PTI. It is handed in the rarest of rare cases.

    The judge said that the court is of the opinion that “it would be an injustice flouting the principle of equity to release the accused on bail.” He said in the order that a person may commit an offence with the help of others, and there is no need to be present for the other accused at the place of occurrence.

    The court also rejected the bail prayer of Abhijit Mondal. It granted the CBI’s prayer for judicial custody of the two accused till September 30.

    Ghosh’s counsel claimed before the judge at Sealdah Court here that he was falsely implicated in the case and there was no act on his part to commit the crime as alleged. The body of the 31-year-old postgraduate trainee medic was found with severe injuries in the seminar hall of the RG Kar Hospital on August 9.

    (With PTI Inputs)