Most of you would have run into this news, even if you didn't want
to. In my case, someone gobbling a rice-plate two tables away was
playing it very loudly at my favourite prawn-curry rice place on
Saturday. It relates to the Goa Medical College.
Soon,
the video went viral. Most viewers were shocked to see how a
doctor-on-duty was being addressed, that too video-recorded and shared,
and for what apparently was no fault of his. (He supposedly declined to
administer a B12 injection in the Casualty on a day when the OPDs were
shut.)
All kinds of questions came up. Who was the
journalist? (Subsequently named.) Who had shot the video (not clear,
some suggestion that the minister takes his own camera persons with
him...)
The IMA-Indian Medical Association came out with a strong statement.
Journalist
Devika Sequeira wrote: Real culprit in health minister Vishwajit P
Rane's unwarranted outburst against the chief medical officer at GMC is a
self-important Marathi journalist who insisted his mother-in-law be
given an injection. When the CMO directed him to the health centre, he
called the dean and then Rane. Lapdog journalists are worse than
politicians these days."
A doctor posted this
on another group: "We had this ALL the time in the UAE. A 'local' would
breeze into the hospital and demand any shit - B12 inj, CT, anything. We
just moved out of the way and called the 'PRO', a local, who would
intervene and try to direct them appropriately. Nightmare! If - if -
this was over a B12 inj., I feel like vomiting 🤢. Rane would have to
resign in the UK I'm pretty sure."
Journalist
Kishore Naik Gaonkar put out another video, where he talks about Rane
coming under some family property allegations, and him dismissing a
number of Rane employees from some government undertakings:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IXvoL6m9c54&feature=youtu.be
This doesn't seem directly connected with this case, but Gaonkar (in
his Gaunkari channel on YouTube) was making the point of possible misuse
of government departments for personal battles.
Finally, Vishwajit came out with some form of an apology:
https://www.youtube.com/live/uYqHc-0B9o4?si=gGAmer17dsy9ae3B
But the issue left behind many questions -- who was right and who was
wrong? Should media persons be expecting special treatment in cases like
this? Who shot the videos? And who shared the same? With what
intentions?L How did it all go so badly wrong? Finally, what is the
proper relationship between the Press and politicians, between
politicians (even ministers) and the technical departments they run?