An Inquiry in to the Anti-Muslim Violence in Northeast Delhi by aTeam of Doctors that Visited the Affected Area”.

“An Inquiry in to the Anti-Muslim Violence in Northeast Delhi by aTeam of Doctors that Visited the Affected Area”.   https://drive.google.com/open?id=1_VvnTi9Z-XgnzV00zJr_qGk9vqgtLbwK  The documents includes- horrific photographs of the massacre, do not watch if you have a weak stomach. The ferocity and barbarity of this demands that International bodies take IMMEDIATE ACTION and NOTICE (although I see a slim chance of that happening) the savagery of this massacre should   prompt Indians to take action, if they don’t they will rue this fact.

Rape was used by India as an instrument of war in: Partition; Indian Occupied Kashmir; Indian Punjab, in Naxal Maoist hit regions of the North West and elsewhere in India. This resulted in rape being an accepted way of life; Indian became the rape capital of Asia.

If this massacre is unpunished the savages who did this will repeat this and the victims could well be the 30% Indians who do not support BJPs Muslim hate thesis and actions.

The ferocity of this massacre resembles the Pol Pot actions and need to be investigated and people punished. Perhaps Government of Pakistan should take this to UNHRC, even a citizen, say an Indian Muslim   could also report this to UNHRC ( IF ANY ONE WISHES TO DO THAT I WILL ASSIST AND PROVIDE FORMATS   AND PROCEDURES)

Members of the medical team1:

  1. Dr Vikas Bajpai – Assistant Professor, Centre for Social Medicine and Community

Health, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi (Ph: 9717820427).

  1. Dr Harjit Bhatti – Former President, Resident Doctors Association, All India

Institute of Medical Scientists (AIIMS) (Ph: 8586848479).

  1. Dr Sumitran – A consultant radiologist with a government hospital in Delhi.
  2. Five doctors from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences

 

It took a 25 to 30 km drive from AIIMS (All India Institute of Medical Sciences), to the

violence affected areas of Northeast Delhi. We were visiting the area in the context of

the massive communal violence, primarily directed against Muslims living in the area,

in the wake of their resistance to the CAA Act passed recently by the parliament along

with NRC-NPR which threaten to rob millions of Muslims of their Indian citizenship

and render them illegal in their own country.

The effort to send this medical team was initiated in the context of massive scale of

medical emergency that arose as a result of this violence. In this report, apart from

reflecting on the medical suffering of the people, we shall also try to provide a snapshot

of the violence that was unleashed and the role of the political-administrative

machinery to address the same and its consequences, as were narrated to us by the

people we met.

This report is constituted in four sections – ‘Constitution of the medical team’ and

methodology of data collection; ‘Medical emergency and the relief work’; ‘How the

 

1We have deliberately concealed the identity of five doctors from All India Institute of Medical Sciences

on a precautionary note to avoid trouble from the administration. However, we wish to acknowledge

that this effort could never have succeeded without their yeoman service and support.

Dr Harjit Bhatti (National Convener) and Dr Vikas Bajpai are members of PMSF. Dr. Sumitran and

others went with the team though they are not members of PMSF.

 

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violence happened’ and the ‘Role of the political parties’; and ‘Observations &

Recommendations.’

Constitution of the team and methodology

Violence broke out in Maujpur, Bhajanpura and Chand Bagh areas of Northeast Delhi

on the evening of Sunday the 23rd of February, 2020. Since the breaking out of the

riots, especially since the 24th of February, there were reports of people having suffered

grievous, or rather ghastly injuries, and that there were several deaths due to

widespread arson, looting, stone pelting and houses being set on fire. There were

several calls and appeals for urgent medical aid to be reached to the affected area, as

the local health practitioners were neither capable of nor did they have the

wherewithal to deal with the nature of medical emergencies being reported. The

situation was particularly precarious in the absence of no outside ambulances or

medical supplies being able to reach the violence affected areas, as also the fact that

ground situation prevented people from accessing the nearby government hospitals

like the Delhi government run GTB hospital and the Swami Dayanand Hospital

managed by the East Delhi Municipal Corporation, which were equipped to handle

such emergencies.

The Al Hind hospital in Old Mustafabad locality of Northeast Delhi was one medical

facility that had been totally overwhelmed by this tragedy. It is important to remember

here that it was after talking to Dr M A Anwar, the proprietor of Al Hind hospital that

the special bench of Hon’ble Justices Muralidhar and Bhambani of the High Court of

Delhi, ordered Delhi Police to provide safe passage to the injured patients to various

government hospitals.

We had tried to reach the area on the 24th February itself, as the reports of violence

and casualties started arriving; however, the police stopped our hired private

ambulance on the Signature bridge and instructed that only government ambulances

shall be allowed. Finally, when we could manage to get a government ambulance after

repeatedly dialling 102 number for emergency ambulance services, even that

ambulance was stopped by the police from entering the area and the driver was

roughed up. On the 25th February, upon receiving another SOS for urgent supply of

medicines, dressing material, stapler stiches and the like, we again attempted to have

some medical supplies sent to the violence hit Old Mustafabad, but the ambulance was

stopped by fifty to sixty persons raising slogans like ‘Jai Shri Ram’ and others of the

 

kind that are identified with the Hindu right wing, at the Brijpuri T point on the Delhi-

Meerut highway and the driver of the ambulance was threatened with dire

 

consequences if he insisted on entering the area. Fortunately for us, it could be possible

for us to contact people at Al Hind hospital in Old Mustafabad, who sent persons on

motorcycle to pick the medical supplies from another point on the highway. The full

team could reach the violence affected area on 26th February. Ours was in fact the first

medical team which could actually enter the area.

 

3 | P a g e

Considering the poignancy of the situation, on the 25th February evening PMSF

(Progressive Medicos and Scientists Forum) assembled a medical team to reach Al

Hind hospital in Old Mustafabad area of Northeast Delhi, the next day i.e. Wednesday,

the 26th of February. It took a while for us to arrange medicines and other

consumables. Finally, a team of eight doctors was mustered which included doctors

from AIIMS and those associated with JNU. The team set out for Al Hind hospital by

10.30 am on the 26 February.

Some other doctors (1 from Jamia Hamdard Medical College Hospital and 2 senior

resident doctors from AIIMS) of PMSF, under the leadership of Dr Harjit Bhatti again

visited Old Mustafabad on 28th February, where they first attended to violence victims

at Al Hind hospital and later went to the Idgah located in the adjacent Shiv Vihar area.

It needs also be noted here, that PMSF doctors and volunteers have been going to

various 24 x 7 protest sites in Delhi, including Shaheen Bagh and Jafarabad, to provide

medical relief. However, this report concentrates on the visits after riots.

Methodology adopted for collecting information

This report is largely based on what we saw at Al Hind hospital and the testimonies

collected from the doctors, patients and their relatives and the local residents who

were in the said hospital. The testimonies included personal narratives, the videos and

pictures of the violence and arson in and around their homes, taken by the people

themselves or their neighbours and friends and shared with them. Often times, the

people supported their narrative by showing these pictures and videos. Where ever

possible every attempt was made by us to triangulate the information given by one

person by asking about it from another person or trying to confirm the reported fact

from other sources such as the news reports and hospital data. In times when rumours

and fake news could be flying thick, we tried our level best to avoid these getting

incorporated in this report.

Efforts were also made to collect hospital specific data regarding the number of injured

or dead brought to different hospitals, the kind of treatment given, and post-mortems

performed. Some of the secondary sources were consulted from the net.

It need be remembered here that on the day of our visit, curfew had been imposed in

the various violence affected areas, and that it had not been possible for us to speak

with any authority of the civilian or police administration to seek any kind of help from

them. All that we had in terms of police protection was the number of the area DCP

(Deputy Commissioner of Police) just in case there be any emergency. As we confined

ourselves to the hospital, we do not make any claim to the findings being

representative of all areas where violence had been unleashed. But from the

information that is already in public realm, we can assert that our findings here may

only present a milder picture of the consequences that this violence has led to.

Another handicap of the data presented here is that the doctors and other staff at Al

Hind hospital were so overwhelmed by the humongous tragedy that they simply could

not maintain any record of the patients they attended to, in order to facilitate

 

4 | P a g e

identification of the photographs (taken by the doctors or the hospital staff) of either

the dead bodies or those with ghastly injuries who were brought to their hospital.

Though some effort was made by the doctors at Al Hind to get the MLC details of some

patients shifted from their hospital to the GTB Hospital at Dilshad Garden, it was still

insufficient. As the doctors at Al Hind told – ‘Sir, believe it or not, we have handled all

these grievous injuries, even though we neither have the training or the infrastructure

to handle this kind of emergency.’

Barring the name of Dr Anwar, the proprietor of Al Hind hospital, whose name had

already been mentioned by the Hon’ble High Court in its order, we have changed all

of the names of the patients and those who provided us the information, since it is far

beyond our capacity to defend them lest they be troubled in any way on this count.

Medical emergency and the relief work2

Old Mustafabad is a Muslim majority locality, lying in the Mustafabad assembly

constituency, which is surrounded on all sides by Hindu majority localities.

After crossing the Signature bridge across river Yamuna, the highway leading up to the

Brijpuri turning, from where we turned inside to reach our destination, Al Hind

hospital in Mustafabad, was nearly completely deserted except for the police and

paramilitary pickets in between. However, there were tell-tale signs of violence on

either side of the highway, with a burnt-out petrol pump in Bhajanpura, burnt

buildings and mangled steel frames of burnt out vehicles all along the route. In large

tracts the road had turned brick red under the cover of crushed bricks that had been

deployed in brick-batting on previous days.

As we turned into the inner localities from the Brijpuri turning on the main highway,

Police pickets apart, what caught our immediate attention were groups of men, women

and children, carrying their bags and baggage and walking furtively to traverse

through the narrow lanes in search of safe passage out of the area. We stopped to talk

to a few of them, but the only brisk reply we got was ‘going to our village’ or ‘to the

relatives.’ The other set of people who were to be seen in small groups were young

journalists, many of them women.

While the burnt homes and shops, mangled metal frames of burnt vehicles and hand

pulled trolley carts owed their hapless destiny to the exertions of the goons who had

run riot, the pot holed, unravelled state of the inner roads with overflowing open

drains on either side, putrid effluents overflowing from the closed caps of underground

severs, that is where they existed, and collections of garbage, which by their size,

seemed to date back to before the violence, were some of the other characteristics of

the area which peeled off, layer by layer, the onerous honorifics alluded to India, to

 

2 All figures are given in Annexure 1.

 

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reveal the existential reality. In the middle of all this is located the Al Hind hospital in

gali number fifteen on Pachees futa (twenty-five feet) road.

Al Hind hospital – the establishment and its people

Al Hind hospital is a tiny nursing home located on the lower two floors of a four-storey

building. Established around two and a half years back, in normal times Al Hind

hospital operated from the ground floor only which is a partitioned into a pharmacy,

a receiving area for patients, a doctor’s chamber and a ward on the back side which

has space for around fifteen beds. But during this violence, the massive flow of injured

and dead victims led to the first floor of the building also being incorporated into the

hospital by turning it into a makeshift ward by simply spreading mats on the floor. The

infrastructure and the medical expertise of its doctors is too short to cope with the rush

of patients witnessed on 23rd, 24th and the 25th of February when the violence was at

its peak. It is simply a general practitioner’s clinic.

In this trying time the proprietors of the hospital Dr M A Anwar, his three brothers –

one of whom is a BDS, the other a bachelor of Unani medicine and the third a

pharmacist played praise worthy role. Around six to seven general practitioners of the

area, with degrees in alternative systems of medicine, or just RMPs (registered medical

practitioners) also lent round the clock efforts in rising up to the challenge along with

untiring commitment of twenty-one volunteers who worked day and night for tending

to the injured victims. Most of the doctors and many of the volunteers had not slept

since the night of 23rd February when we met them on 26th afternoon. Apart from this

the common people of the locality pitched in with their meagre resources to not just

support the medical services at the hospital, but also to host scores of persons and

families uprooted from their homes in the nearby areas.

The 38 years old proprietor of Al Hind hospital, Dr Anwar is an extremely soft-spoken

person with a rural background from East Champaran district of Bihar. He completed

his MBBS degree from a Medical college in Meerut.

When all hell broke loose over Al Hind hospital

Going by the photographic record and the oral testimonies of the doctors, volunteers

and common people at hand, we can only make an estimate of what must have been

the scene at the hospital on two days since the evening of 23rd February. Reliance need

be placed here on what Dr Naseer Ahmad narrated about the situation at his hospital.

He said:

These people (referring to the attackers) had so severely assaulted the

victims that they were dying of agony, and we had nothing in our hands.

Despite being medical doctors, we couldn’t do much because some had had

their heart punctured, someone’s lungs had been punctured, while kidneys

of others – all vital organs of the body. Some had had their skull pried open

from both sides with knives. Some patients presented with iron girdles

inserted into their skull. Police had laid down a three-month pregnant

 

6 | P a g e

woman and beaten her up brutally. The Imam of Farooqia Masjid was pulled

out from his chamber and beaten up by the police. Acid was thrown on the

face of the Imam of the Masjid in Shiv Vihar. We were helpless in providing

any treatment to him due to lack of infrastructure; still we sent him from

here after stabilizing his condition. We did not know whether he is living or

dead.

The condition was very bad. At the time when we needed ambulances to

ferry the patients, no government body came forward to help, and there was

no help from any Muslim organization either. Now that the condition has

improved somewhat, the local influential people came to meet with starched

sleeves and scented overalls. We did not allow them in, as we don’t need

them now. ……………. Live people, writhing with agony had come to the Al

Hind hospital. We did not even have the courage to look at them; we were

becoming dispirited. But it is the local people of this area who gave us

courage. They said – ‘Doctor sahib if you lose heart like this then we will die;

We shall lose all hope.’ It is the people of this area who have assured us that

– ‘Doctor sahib we are there with you. People have died, yet the tears you

shed are the testimony to your commitment for humanity.’

We do not even know that those who died were Hindus or Muslims. We were

weeping because we were seeing people die of their agony and that we were

feeling helpless. (Translated from Hindi)

Referring to the chaotic situation, especially the role of the police, Dr Anwar added:

On 25th evening we spoke to the civil society people, it is through their

intervention that we could converse with the High Court judges and

appraise them of the ground situation. It is only after the High Court

ordered that ambulances came to this area. When the government

ambulance was not coming, we tried to get in private ambulance, but even

those were not allowed in. (Translated from Hindi)

Dr Anwar also informed that repeated calls were made from the hospital at 100 number

(for police assistance) and 112 number (all in one emergency number launched by

Union Home Ministry during the first term of the present government). Initially, these

calls received evasive response from the other end, but later the calls were not even

taken. Calls to the emergency number of CATS (Centralized Ambulance and Trauma

Services) for sending their ambulances also met the same fate. Describing the

conditions, another RMP of the area who was assisting in relief efforts at Al Hind

hospital stated:

The oxygen supply with us had run out completely. A patient came to us who

desperately needed to be oxygenated. Dr Anwar had spoken with the local

authorities at 11.30 am to provide an ambulance. The ambulance was

stationed at a distance of around a kilometre from here; even though there

is a way for the ambulance to reach here through the colony, but the

 

7 | P a g e

ambulance was stopped there only. The patient ultimately died after

struggling between life and death for about one and a half hours. (Translated

from Hindi.)

The numbers of patients received at Al Hind hospital from 23rd night onward, speak

for themselves. A hospital that catered to between 30 to 40 patients daily, and that too

suffering from common ailments, was simply overwhelmed with more than 200

patients who came on the 24th February itself. By 25th February, this figure is estimated

to have rested between 350 to 400. But the expanse and depth of the horrendous

catastrophe befalling these brave-hearts becomes evident only when we look at some

of the pictures of the victims (See Annexure 1). Nearly seventy-five percent of the cases

were those who had sustained piercing injuries either from charras (pellets), or bullets.

Of the rest, majority were orthopaedic injuries consisting of fractured limbs or skull

etc. A small proportion of cases were those of simple blunt injuries or grievous injuries

of various kinds, for example burn injuries. As per the various persons we talked to,

the use of firearms in this violence was common.

Sampling the cases of different types of injuries sustained by victims of the

violence

By the time our team of doctors reached Old Mustafabad on 26th February, the

mayhem had subsided, though there still were some fresh cases of those with injuries

coming to the hospital. According to various doctors and medical volunteers working

at Al Hind hospital at that time, on 26th February morning itself, after the ambulances

had become available, around fifty seriously injured patients had been shifted to

different government hospitals, with maximum number being sent to the nearest

tertiary care GTB hospital. Most of the patients attended to by the doctors of the team

were those who had sustained blunt injuries, and by the latter half of the day maximum

patients started presenting with common ailments for which they had not been able to

take treatment for past three days.

Nonetheless, some of the cases that presented were remarkable both for the

grievousness of the injury and as a telling comment on the situation as it prevailed in

the area. Two male patients, both young unorganized sector workers, presented with

bullets lodged in their bodies, a good two days after sustaining the injury. They had

been hiding for more than forty-eight hours out of fear of the police, which they said

would more likely treat them as rioters rather than as victims. One of the patients was

22 years old, and presented with a bullet lodged in his left axilla (Figure 6). He had

sustained the injury on 23rd evening when a mob attacked him as he was returning

from work in the evening. The other person (Figure 7) had sustained a bullet injury in

the abdomen.

In medical terms, such delay in treatment could potentially be lethal as the situation

is prone to develop many complications. This information was shared with the patients

and they were suggested to go to the nearby GTB hospital for further treatment, which

they refused on the plea that they had little trust left in that hospital given the manner

 

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of treatment of riot victims in GTB, of which they had heard from people in the

neighbourhood. It was better, in their opinion, to die an honourable death at home

than be ill-treated in the hospital, especially as they felt that as Muslims they would be

suspect.

PMSF convener, Dr Harjit Bhatti, assured the patients that he would personally

accompany them to the hospital and talk to the doctors there to ensure that they are

treated properly. Both of them were shifted to our ambulance and they set out for GTB

hospital with Dr Bhatti accompanying them. The distance between Al Hind hospital

and the main highway leading to GTB hospital is barely a kilometre or so; but in the

process of traversing this much of a distance, the policemen stopped the ambulance

four times, and each time they removed the dressing over the bullet wound to check it

for themselves, despite Dr Bhatti assuring them that he is a former specialist doctor of

AIIMS. Most shockingly, the policemen insisted that ‘you can only transfer the patient’

and made the victim’s relative disembark from the ambulance. It needn’t be left to

imagination as to how a patient, with a bullet embedded in the abdomen and awaiting

an operative procedure to take the same out, could manage all by himself in a hospital

where the doctors and other staff are overstretched and overburdened even in the

normal times, let alone at the time of such a calamity as had befallen the people of

nearby areas.

The criminality it seems defies all depths

The pictures of the victims (Figures 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14 & 15 in Annexure 1) and the

statistics speak louder than all the words that can be used to describe the violence

unleashed in Northeast Delhi.

Some cases of grievous injuries which were received at Al Hind hospital before our visit

The pictures of the injured victims referred to in this section here had all arrived on

the days when our repeated attempts to reach out to the victims had failed. The person

in Figure 8 is the Paish Imam of a Mosque in Shiv Vihar of whom Dr Naseer Ahmad

has talked above.

The victim pictured in Figure 13, a resident of C block, Yamuna Vihar, was returning

from the Ijtima along with several others, when they got beaten up by RSS-BJP goons

shouting slogans like – ‘Musalman murdabad’, ‘Katua murdabad’ and ‘Mulla

murdabad’ etc. This man had been hit on the head with rods and his brain was popping

out from the fractured skull. There were several other young men who had sustained

injuries in various parts of the body; some of these had brought this victim to Al Hind

hospital.

A government ambulance, it was known, was stationed on the main highway barely a

kilometre away at the place where the police had put up a barricade on the road turning

in to the inhabited area. Doctor Anwar made several attempts on his part to talk to the

local administrative authorities over phone to send this ambulance for shifting this

 

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patient to the GTB hospital; however, they were instructed to get the patient to the

ambulance on the main road instead. The patient was put on a stretcher and trolleyed

right up to the police barricade on the main road. Considering the nature of injury to

the patient, pulling the patient along on a bumpy ride on potholed lanes strewn with

rocks and brickbats was highly risky and adventurous to say the least. This however,

was still not a disaster.

When the team of young men pulling the patient trolley, accompanied by Firoz Khan

and Dr Naseer reached the barricade, the police refused to let them put the patient in

the ambulance. The young injured and bandaged men accompanying the patients were

severely beaten up by the Delhi police men stationed there whose constant refrain was

– ‘inhone hamaare do-teen log mare hain; das-pandrah inke bhi marne do.’ It was only

upon persistent pleading by Dr Mehraj, and intervention by the CRPF personnel that

the police ultimately allowed the patient to be taken to GTB hospital. Dr Naseer and

Firoz Khan accompanied the patient to the hospital.

The viciousness of those unleashing this gruesome violence is self-evident from Figure

  1. This young man’s testicles were chopped off by men reportedly shouting ‘Jai Shri

Ram’, and the attendants accompanying the man had told the doctors that the

attackers first pulled his legs apart stretching the area where the lower limbs converge

(the perineum), causing a massive tear and then deepened it with a sharp edged

weapon. To stop the bleeding the person was given more than 90 stitches, and later

transferred to the hospital once the ambulance could be accessed.

The reported deaths

Of all the deaths reported in this violence, 38 deaths have been reported from the Guru

Teg Bahadur Hospital, 3 at Lok Nayak Hospital, 1 at Jag Parvesh Chander Hospital &

4 at Dr. Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital’. Annexure 2 gives the list of dead persons as of

2nd March, 2020. While the youngest person reported dead was aged 15 years, the

oldest victim was a woman aged 85 years. Among all the reported casualties, only 2

are women. Up to 4th of March 11 highly decomposed bodies were reported to have

been fished out from the drains. The official acknowledgement till date is of 53 deaths.

Table 1 below gives the age distribution of the deaths as of 2nd March, 2020.

Table 1: Age distribution of the persons who died in the violence as of 2nd March.

Age group 15 to 20 years 21 to 40 years 41 to 50 years >50 years

Number of deaths 6 31 6 5

 

Figures 15 shows the two dead bodies that were brought to Al Hind hospital. There

isn’t any proper facility at the hospital to keep the dead bodies safely, and yet the dead

bodies kept lying in the hospital for nearly two days due to non-availability of any

ambulances. Both the bodies, it was reported, bore the marks of bullet injuries as also

stab wounds. It was only when the ambulances became available after the orders

 

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issued by the Hon’ble High Court of Delhi, that it could be possible to finally shift the

dead bodies to the GTB hospital at around 3 am on 26th February. Along with these,

one dead body from another nursing home situated on 35-foot road in the same

locality, and another one that was lying on the road in gali number 5, near the Mosque

close to Brijpuri pulia were also shifted to the hospital. 21 seriously injured patients

were also shifted in three ambulances to GTB hospital on the intervening night

between the 25th and 26th February under the escort provided by 7 to 8 CRPF personnel

and 3 Delhi police gypsies.

We were informed that even after the High Court orders, the police told the doctors at

Al Hind to arrange private ambulances, and that they will provide protection to them.

The DSP (deputy superintendent of police), who was present in nearby Bhajanpura

locality also expressed helplessness in providing ambulances. The ambulances were

finally arranged at 3 am when doctors at Al Hind hospital firmly refused to send

patients in private vehicles as these were being attacked and burnt by the mobs.

Some hospital statistics

We have already presented the total number of casualties reported from different

Hospitals. Of these, the Guru Teg Bahadur Hospital & University College of Medical

Sciences at Dilshad Garden in East Delhi was the mainstay of providing specialist

services required by the victims. As per the information collected by us from GTB &

UCMS, more than 200 injured patients had either been treated in the casualty or were

admitted to the hospital for treatment. Annexure 3 shows that of the 38 deaths

reported from the hospital, 22 (58 percent) were brought dead. Table 2 gives the

distribution of the brought dead cases by cause of death.

 

Table 2: Distribution of brought dead cases by cause of death.

Cause of death Gunshot Stabs Assault, burns

or both

 

Gunshot and

stab injury

 

The number of dead due to

the specific cause

 

9 3 9 1

Source: Office of the medical director, Guru Teg Bahadur Hospital.

 

Table 3: Admissions and deaths of violence victims in the neurosurgery dept.

Victims of violence admitted in

department of neurosurgery till

 

27th Feb.

 

Deaths reported among the

victims of violence admitted in

neurosurgery

 

Case

fatality rate

(percent)

10 7 70

 

Annexure 4 gives the list of patients admitted in the neurosurgery department of GTB

Hospital (most of whom sustained injury to the head) and the number of deaths

reported until the 27th of February. Based on this data, Table 3 shows that the case

 

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fatality rate among this group of patients was as high as 70 percent, which further

attests to the viciousness of the violence unleashed on the people.

Annexure 5 is the list of surgeries performed in GTB hospital on the victims of the

violence unleashed in Northeast Delhi. Given the diagnosis for which these surgeries

were performed, all of the surgeries were very high-risk surgeries in terms of the risk

to life, as also risk of permanent impairment of a part or organ of the victim’s body. A

total of 24 such surgeries were performed on the 24th, 25th and the 26th of February,

2020 and all of them were performed on male patients. Annexure 6 gives the list of

patients admitted in the orthopaedic department of GTB hospital between 24th to 27th

February. Again, all of these patients were male, with most of them suffering from very

serious injuries like crushed hand or limbs with ruptured arteries, slashed tendons and

compound fractures where the fractured bones are exposed rendering the patient

liable to develop deep seated infections of the bones which are particularly difficult to

treat even though the patient may be discharged after operation. Such injuries

obviously have serious repercussions for the person’s ability to work and be

economically and socially productive.

The other hospital to have received a large number of violence related cases was the

Lok Nayak hospital where a total of 56 cases had been referred as of 27 February. 1

person was brought dead and 2 died in the course of treatment. Barring 10 patients

who were admitted for treatment the rest were discharged after treatment in the

casualty.

4 patients with orthopaedic injuries had been referred to the Safdarjang hospital in

south Delhi from GTB hospital emergency. No casualty was reported among these

patients. However, at least 2 deaths were reported from Burns ward of Safdarjang

Hospital, all of whom had suffered from burns due to acid attacks. Annexure 6 gives

details of one of the victims who died in Safdarjang Hospital from burn injuries. AIIMS

Trauma centre received a total of 5 riot injured patients till 27th February, of which 4

were gunshot injuries, while 1 presented with stab wounds in the abdomen. No death

among them was reported. These numbers increased by the 3rd of March, 2020.

Annexure 6 gives the details of some of the patients operated upon in the surgery

department of AIIMS Trauma Centre, all of whom suffered from injuries of very

serious nature.

The sincerity and quality of medical response of the government

A word need be reserved here for the kind and quality of care received by these

patients, especially those who had gone to the GTB hospital. Even at the best of times,

public hospitals in India cannot really be said to be welcoming of the patients, most of

whom belong to the poor sections of the society. The many reasons for this need not

be gone into over here. However, when human tragedies are manufactured by design,

by the powers that be, the malaise seeps down to the deepest caverns of our social

attitudes.

 

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When we asked some senior doctors at the GTB hospital over phone, if they could

facilitate our being able to talk to some of the riot victims admitted in the hospital, we

were told that there were policemen in plain clothes sitting inside and outside the

wards to keep a watch on the patients as also those who came to meet them. They were

being especially watchful of the members of the press and civil society. This situation

seemed designed to intimidate the victims and their family members lest they speak

out to the press or civil society, and least of all to provide comfort or allay anxieties of

the people.

Even as the dead bodies in the GTB hospital mortuary were mounting, the hospital

authorities had not performed the post-mortems of these bodies within time, as they

were waiting for “instructions” from the government. This was read as possibly an

attempt to tamper with the cause of death. That these fears were not entirely

unfounded, is borne out by the fact that in an order dated 26 February, 2020

(Annexure 7), the Delhi Minorities Commission instructed the Superintendent of GTB

hospital that – “You are directed to conduct post-mortem procedure on all these

bodies and on any fresh cases within 24 hours of arrival of each dead body.”

Even in the community, we came across victims with complicated fractures of their

limbs who had simply been returned from the GTB hospital emergency with a plaster

cast without setting the fractured bones in proper anatomical position. On 28th

February our team treated a patient with a bullet injury in the left thigh. The patient

told that he had earlier been treated at GTB hospital. The bullet had entered through

the medial aspect (inner side) of thigh and large exit wound on other side with area

surrounding wound being swollen. The wound was infected and copious amount of

pus was oozing from the wound giving out a foul smell. Our team of doctors

immediately started debridement (removing the dead tissue from the wound) of

wound and stapled from outside. Patient told that after initial treatment from GTB

hospital he was discharged early without proper care.

There are numerous reports available of how victim’s relatives were fending from pillar

to post to find their loved ones in the hospital. Relatives had to wait for around more

than 2 days to be able to confirm whether their son, daughter, parent etc were among

the dead in the mortuary. Nobody at the hospital, it seems, had the time to properly

guide the relative of different victims. Even though it is a routine practice during train

and air-plane accidents that the authorities put up a notice board informing of those

who died, those who were alive and are under treatment etc., but somehow this was

not to be the case at GTB hospital, which received the maximum number of dead and

persons injured in violence.

Despite this, when told that people were forced to go to small, ill-equipped private

nursing homes for treatment as they were trapped in the violence hit areas, the Delhi

Chief Minister, Kejriwal had the temerity to tell a group of prominent women from the

civil society, who met him on the 25th evening, that:

 

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‘Voh wahan quyon gaye; Dilli Sarkar ke aspatalon mein aate to ham unki

sewa karte.’ (Why did they go there [to the private nursing homes]. Had they

come to the Delhi government hospitals; we would have served them.)

A few days later, when it faced the line of fire from various quarters, along with

announcing monetary compensation, the Delhi government made the gesture of

converting 9 night shelters into relief camps for the victims of the violence, but it

couldn’t make provision for tents to be pitched or special counters to be opened, and

social work volunteers to be stationed in its hospitals to facilitate a coordinated, speedy

and effective relief for the agony of violence victims.

In fact, the morass afflicting the social and political canvass of our society, as also its

health system couldn’t be better epitomized than the fact that it took the intervention

of Delhi High Court, and two conscientious judges who were willing to listen to a

special plea at their home at 12.30 am on the night of 26 February, to actually force the

authorities to reach out to the victims in the violence affected areas. The court in its

brief order stated:

The Court at this stage is primarily concerned with ensuring the safety of

the lives of the injured and immediate medical attention that they require

and for that purpose to ensure the safe passage of the injured victims to the

nearest available government hospitals. The Court accordingly directs the

Delhi Police to ensure such safe passage by deploying all the resources at its

command and on the strength of this order and to ensure that apart from

the safe passage, the injured victims receive immediate emergency

treatment ……..

As we learnt from our own experience in the process of reaching out medical relief to

the victims, as already narrated above, none of these impediments were inadvertent

consequences of the situation on ground.

We inquired from many people in Mustafabad whether any representatives of the

central government or Delhi government had actually reached out to the people in the

affected areas. The response from all had been categorical – there had been no such

attempt. On being asked about the availability and the role of ‘Mohalla Clinics’ in this

situation, Rafiq Alam, a volunteer at Al Hind hospital responded that there was no

‘Mohalla Clinic’ in the whole of Mustafabad. Likewise, not many in his opinion had

coverage under any kind of government funded health insurance schemes. At least he

did not know of any of his acquaintances to be covered under such schemes. Another

of the volunteers, Shamshudzzaman remarked that:

“Many of the poor people in the area are migrant labourers who have come

from other states; they neither have the documents required for coverage

under such schemes, nor are they actually covered. Anyways, which private

hospital will be willing to provide ‘world class treatment’ to these victims of

violence who have been pouring in to Al Hind hospital over last three days.”

 

14 | P a g e

What have been discussed above are only some of the most glaring cases, but a larger

public health tragedy is as yet only unfolding in the wings, and which unfortunately is

never going to attract the attention of the government. In the medical camp which we

set up at Al Hind hospital on the 28th February, most of the patients, specially females,

presented with general anxiety symptoms like restlessness and palpitations. They told

that they were feeling insecure and didn’t really know where to go. Many patients of

chronic diseases like diabetes and hypertension also came whose medication had been

disrupted due to violence and disaster that had struck their lives. The mental and

psychological trauma suffered by these people knows no bounds, and yet these are

precisely the kind of problems which are likely to be ignored by the government,

especially as they lack the ‘shock and awe’ appeal that goes with ghoulish physical

injuries.

Another aspect of relief which we think need be thought of aloud is the fact that direct

agencies of the government were absent from providing relief and rehabilitation

measures on the ground. On the 28th when we visited the Idgah in Shiv Vihar area of

Old Mustafabad, we found that a large relief camp had been set up by the Delhi Waqf

Board by pitching in tents within the Idgah premises. Our medical camp was set up

within this compound, as indeed were other medical relief camps by the St. Stephens

Hospital, Holy Family Hospital and some other NGOs.

It is our considered opinion that the government and its relevant agencies should be at

the forefront of relief work, while that of other agencies could come in as a

 

supplementary to that, because in any society that claims itself to be secular and non-

discriminatory towards any section of its people, it is the government that is looked

 

upon as the principal guarantor of these values. More than its words, it is its actual

actions on ground that shall enable the government to command the loyalty and

confidence of the citizens in restoring the secular fabric of the society.

It is in this context that we need think aloud, that if private missionary hospitals and

civil society organizations can reach out to the people, then what prevented the

government from pressing its own medical and relief teams into action, where in they

could have also sought the help and participation of private organizations and

individuals. Provision of relief through religious organizations ultimately reinforces

the belief We think that Indian polity need learn some useful lessons from the New

Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, who left no stone unturned to reach out to the

families and survivors of the attack on two mosques in Christchurch a year back.

Indeed, she led the entire nation in not only reassuring the Muslim community in New

Zealand of the abiding support of the entire country in their moment of grief, but also

that it was entire society’s grief.

 

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The political establishment and the violence

Exploring the political factors behind this violence was not the objective of our visit.

However, the difference of course is that the causes of the kind of medical emergencies

described above are not biomedical, but are socio-political. Without making any claim

of doing a thorough investigative work, we still feel obliged to state briefly our

impressions in this regard.

It was in 1992 that massive violence had rocked these very areas in the aftermath of

the demolition of Babri Masjid in Ajodhya. At that time as well, as part of the then

Delhi Medicos and Scientists Forum (DMSF) we had sent a medical relief team for

nearly a week to different localities of Northeast Delhi that had been pulverized by

massive anti-Muslim violence. One of the consequences of our relief effort was a report

that we brought out on how the violence was perpetrated and the suffering it

unleashed. The then Congress government at the Centre instituted a witch-hunt

against the doctors of the DMSF team. In the 28 years since, little seems to have

changed, except that as a society we seem mired even deeper in the quicksand of

majoritarian communalism.

The AAP (Aam Admi Party) appeared with its ‘plaster bags’ once the lives had been

lost and homes and hearth ruined.

If it was their stark absence on part of others, as was widely believed by the people we

interacted with and the observations made by other reports on this violence, the

imprint of the well-oiled Sanghi Communal machine in engineering the anti-Muslim

violence was equally stark.

It need be emphasized that nothing about this violence was spontaneous. There were

tell-tale signs of prior planning and preparation to unleash this violence. Figures 1 and

2 show that the roads had virtually turned brick red with crushed bricks, and this was

the case not with isolated roads, but with large tracts as we drove through the area.

These had of course been reached to different points in the entire area, and where the

supply chain was hampered, the police facilitated collection of whatever material could

be made good on the spot (Figure 16). Gas cylinders which were used to trigger blasts,

smoke bombs, and of course firearms were some of the other accessories that were

part of the supplies. All of this cannot be arranged spontaneously, and was not

arranged spontaneously. Firoz Khan, the tailor master referred to above, told while

speaking to us at Al Hind hospital, that – ‘trollyion se malba utarvaya gaya – Maujpur

mein, Bhajanpura mein; aur sab RSS ke log the’ (debris of construction material was

unloaded from trollies at many places – in Maujpur, in Bhajanpura, by RSS men.)

The opinion on the ground was unanimous, that it was the speech given by Kapil

Mishra, the defeated BJP candidate from Model Town constituency, on the 23rd

February afternoon at Maujpur, in Northeast Delhi which started it all. Mishra

threatened to forcibly have the roads vacated of the sit-ins by Muslims, in the presence

of the Northeast Delhi DCP, Ved Prakash Surya.

 

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The local people categorically remarked that barring a few known local elements of

Sangh, the rioters in their area were from outside. Name of Jagdish Pradhan, the

previous BJP MLA from Mustafabad who lost the elections this time, came up

prominently in conversations with different people as the person who had mobilized a

large number of people from area of western Uttar Pradesh like Bhagpat. Another local

BJP leader, Bishan Sharma, is also said to have played prominent role in mobilizing

people for attacking Muslims.

The ferocity and viciousness of the violence can be made out from Figures 17, 18, 19

and 20.

We needn’t say much about the role of Delhi police in this violence, which has already

been extensively written about and commented upon in other reports on this violence,

except to reiterate that from all accounts gathered by us, the police were complicit in

the whole affair. In fact, now a pattern of sorts seems to have been established where

ever BJP is in power, that is, either the police have been allowed to side with the

attacking mobs, or it has turned into a mob itself, with impunity.

Observations & Recommendations

This he said despite the fact that his own house had been attacked and he had been

lucky to escape with minor injuries on his face due to an acid attack. Towards the end

of our visit, there was some commotion outside Al Hind hospital at around 5 pm.

Around a dozen men, women and children had been rescued from their homes in Shiv

Vihar and brought to Al Hind hospital in Old Mustafabad. These Muslims had been

sheltered by their Hindu neighbours in their homes, even as their houses had been

consumed in the violence. A young man who had actually been part of the rescue,

announced loudly to the crowd that had gathered:

‘Bhaiyon, ek baat hai ki Shiv Vihar ke Hinduon ne hamari bahut madad kari

hai. Wahanki Hindu behne, chalet waqt in auraton se aisa chipat-chipat ke

roi hain ki bata nahi sakta’ (Brothers, I wish to let you know one thing, that

the Hindu families in Shiv Vihar have really helped us a lot. When these

women were departing from their homes, it is beyond description how our

Hindu sisters embraced them and wept profusely, as to why you are going).

Likewise, Jaan Muhammad, a resident of Rajiv Gandhi Nagar in New Mustafabad

narrated the tales of how Muslim neighbours saved the homes of their Hindu

neighbours and their temples in Nehru Vihar, Bhagirathi Vihar and Guru Nanak Nagar.

In E block of the adjacent Nehru Vihar, Gali No. 15 is the only lane with Hindu

households. Hindutva Mobs came from outside in the name of protecting the local

Hindus, but the local Hindus of E block, Nehru Vihar, told them to leave as they felt

perfectly safe in the protection of Muslim neighbours. The attempt to harm the local

temple in Nehru Vihar was foiled by the Muslims of the area.

 

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The narration of these examples is no doubt simple, but we dare not interpret it

simplistically. These examples had weathered the challenge of criminal mendacity that

threatened to consume all and everything that is good and beautiful about humanity.

 

The findings presented above, enable us to conclude the following:

  • We would like to iterate our deep conviction that loss of human lives on such scale

and in the manner in which they were inflicted is a matter of utter shame for any

civilized society. As is typical of all communal violence, the minorities have

constituted an overwhelming proportion of the casualties and the victims.

  • It is indeed remarkable that such a high number of casualties occurred due to

gunshot wounds. For such casualties to occur firearms and bullets needed to be

available at hand in large numbers, and that they were indeed available, shows

that quite some preparation seems to have gone into staging this violence.

  • A big consequence of when the agencies of the state are seen to be acting with

partiality, is that it sends a clear message to the marauders that they can wreck any

level of violence on the innocent masses and count on the state to protect them.

  • Despite being the National Capital Territory of India; despite the fact that some of

the best medical institutions of the country of national and international repute,

as also the fact that Delhi has hospitals which attract a large number of

international patients by way of medical tourism, none of this stands any

guarantee of easily accessible, effective medical care for the people in the times

when medical catastrophe strikes, given the fact that the victims of such

catastrophe are invariably the poorest segments of the society.

  • Lofty proclamations regarding government schemes like ‘Mohalla Clinics’,

‘Ayushman Bharat’ and the like notwithstanding, these schemes not only fail to

 

reach those who need them the most, but actually prove to be particular non-

starters in times of such catastrophe.

 

  • Instead of reaching out to the people in the most testing of the times, the public

health institutions, let alone the private ones, fall much short of what is expected

of them.

  • The tertiary care GTB Hospital is barely a few kilometres away from the violence

affected areas, and yet in terms of being actually accessed by the victims, the

distance seemed insurmountable. Just as there is behaviour of the people with

respect to seeking health care, which we call as ‘health seeking behaviour’ in

public health terms, there is also the behaviour of health institutions. The

experience of this violence directed primarily against the Muslim minority,

 

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actually shows that dominant social and political attitudes can make health

institutions inaccessible to the suffering masses even though these may be

physically located right in the midst of the people.

  • The salience of this violence obtains from the context in which it has been played

out, which is that of a state sponsored effort against Muslims in India. The

majoritarian communal forces have had the highest anxieties about the ongoing

sit-ins by women, in various Muslim majority areas against CAA, NPR and NRC.

Some recommendations for alleviating the immediate suffering:

Winning back peoples’ confidence by providing them effective relief and assuring them

that the society at large does not share the world view of those who attacked them and

that of their political sponsors, remains a big challenge for all of us. Anyone who has

visited the area would know that the tragedy is too huge to be mended by the efforts of

civil society alone, howsoever spirited these may be. There has to be a large-scale

organized effort on part of the government to heal the physical, mental, psychological,

social and financial wounds which have disfigured the lives of people in the violence

affected areas of Northeast Delhi. Provided the government has the will to implement

them, we feel the following measures can be of immense help in providing medical and

other relief to the affected people. Our recommendations in this regard are:

  • There clearly is a need for medical services to proactively reach out to the

community in the violence affected areas, seek out the patients and provide them

effective treatment for physical injuries, mental and psychological trauma in

facilities existing or created closest to their homes. Only those cases requiring

specialized care in hospital settings need be shifted to hospitals.

➢ In order that this can be done effectively, outreach teams constituted of doctors,

and other paramedical staff, equipped with necessary equipment, medicines and

other consumables be constituted forthwith.

➢ The teams should have appropriate mix of doctors including specialists in

general surgery, orthopaedics, paediatrics and internal medicine. Apart from

some senior doctors, resident doctors and interns need also be included in the

teams.

➢ The population to be covered by each team should be decided depending upon

the size of the population and the density of violence in different localities.

➢ Existing public infrastructure in different localities be used to create field

hospitals, may these be government dispensaries, urban Primary Health Centres

or the schools and other such places.

➢ Social workers and civil society volunteers need to be deployed in large numbers

to reach out to the people house to house and inquire about the injured or those

 

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sick and requiring help. Help need be taken in this regard from departments of

Social Work in universities in Delhi.

  • In the hospitals nearest to the affected areas, a ward need be separately designated

for some time to expeditiously deal with cases of serious injuries due to communal

violence.

In the outbreak of violence of the kind Northeast Delhi has been a witness to, death

could sometimes be far more imminent than in case of an outbreak of a dreaded

infectious disease. The high case fatality among victims of violence pointed to above

clearly establishes this. Hence, if separate facilities can be established in the

hospitals to deal with cases of such infectious diseases, the same needs to be done

with respect to treating the victims of such communal violence as well.

  • Mental and psychological health, even though a most pressing need in such

situations, falls by the way side when it comes to dealing with the victims of such

violence. We feel that teams of psychologists and mental health experts shall have

to be created to provide the necessary counselling and medical relief in this regard

on a more long-term basis. This certainly should not be treated as a substitute for

all other material and physical help required by the victims, but constitutes a

necessary measure to fortify the healing touch.

 

-Sd- -Sd –

(Dr Harjit Bhatti) (Dr Vikas Bajpai)

Convener, PMSF Executive member, PMSF

(Contact: 8586848479) (Contact: 9717820427, 9810275314)

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