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Press Release: Release of second edition (digital) of ‘Less than Gay’ – A Citizens’ Report on the status of Homosexuality in India

    The AIDS Bhedbhav Virodhi Andolan (ABVA) is releasing the second edition of ‘ Less than Gay ’ – A Citizens’ Report on the status of Homo...

Friday 3 December 2021

Vaccine Hesitancy or Resistance?

 by

P. S. Sahni


  • Ever since COVID-19 pandemic appeared, the year 2020 saw advocates of Hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) vending it as a preventive and later curative medicine for Coronavirus infection. The Indian Government ‘gifted’ HCQ to sixty odd countries. Subsequent research found the drug to be useless.
  • Till date no curative medicine has been discovered. Whatever treatment is given in clinics/hospitals/ICUs qualifies only to be symptomatic management.
  • The year 2021 saw experts propagate COVID-19 vaccine as a mantra to end the pandemic. The experts emphasized that if 70% of population in a country is fully vaccinated, the rest of 30% will escape infection due to the ‘herd immunity’.
  • Recent developments indicate that developed countries in Europe; the USA – where about 70% population has been fully vaccinated – are seeing increase of cases often exponentially. Whither herd immunity? India with only 30% fully vaccinated people is seeing decreasing number of cases.
  • More people have died due to COVID-19 in USA for instance in 2021 than in 2020 – the year when vaccine was not even in existence.
  • Throughout 2021 there have been worldwide protests against compulsory vaccination seen in USA, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, Asia e.g. India (Nagaland) and Africa e.g. Morocco.
  • Everywhere the protesters have been dubbed as vaccine hesitant. No attempt has been made to enter into a meaningful dialogue with the protesters. The judiciary – in many countries as well as the European Court of Human Rights – is seen to have aligned itself with the political class, corporate press, drug industry and international medical establishment (WHO). Dissent is being stifled.
  • People with conscientious objection to compulsory COVID-19 vaccination have no redress. Under the garb of COVID-19 democratic, constitutional, legal and human rights of citizens of the world are being buried six fathoms deep.

[P. S. Sahni is a member of AIDS Bhedbhav Virodhi Andolan (ABVA) and has worked in six epidemics/infectious diseases – Cholera (1971) West Bengal, bordering Bangladesh; Small Pox Eradication Program (1974) Bihar; Leprosy (1984-89); Cholera (1988) Delhi; Plague (1994) Delhi; HIV/AIDS (1988 onwards).

He has stopped using the prefix Dr. with his name in a personal, principled protest against the ‘sarkari’ (read ‘durbari’) medical experts; a section of bureaucracy and politicians of all hues (opposition as well as ruling party) against COVID-19 management].

Email: aidsbhedbhavvirodhiandolan@gmail.com]

First published in Countercurrents.org on 02.12.2021. 

See link: https://countercurrents.org/2021/12/vaccine-hesitancy-or-resistance/

Sunday 21 November 2021

Friday 19 November 2021

Note for Interns/ Researchers/ Authors/ Writers / Film-makers

 

PHILOSOPHY AT ABVA

 

ABVA members numbering around 18 to 24 since its inception in 1988 volunteered to go and work with/learn from communities viz commercial sex  workers; professional blood donors; drug abusers; gay community. The enhanced consciousness thus gained is shared with others through citizens’ reports; petitions in court and parliament; engaging with bureaucrat and ministers; protest actions. Thus we learn from the communities and spread the message to the ‘outside’ world. All our reports have been prized between Rs. 5/- to Rs. 30/-. Lastly whatever we have to share with everyone is put on the ABVA’s blog which is constantly updated. Photographs, reports etc cannot be republished without explicit written permission from ABVA.


Thursday 28 October 2021

Lakhbir Singh’s Murder Notwithstanding – A Wake-up Call for the Sikh Community

 by P. S. Sahni


Thank you Vidya Bhushan Rawat for mincing no words in your piece “Sacrilege or blasphemy: The dirty attempt to cover up the caste prejudices against Dalits.” The underbelly of a progressive community stands exposed. It is a wake-up call for the Sikh community. The deathly silence of the Sikh leadership in not unequivocally condemning the ghastly murder is reminiscent of the silence by the Sikh intellectuals and senior retired army officials based in Delhi over the selective killings of minority (Hindu) community members in Punjab during the turbulent 1990s.

When I read Rawat’s piece the images which crossed my mind was the burning alive of Sikhs in 1984 in Delhi and northern India. Those images were no different from the image which get conjured up of butchering of a Dalit, Lakhbir Singh.

I am reproducing the comment (slightly edited) which I had sent to CC in response to Rawat’s piece. The left of the centre activists bends over backwards for rights of religious minorities; but are loathe to condemn their fault lines. (quote)

“Vidya Bhushan Rawat’s piece is an honest, courageous and an eye-opening one for Sikh community in particular and rest of the Indians in general…

During my medical student years in Delhi there used to be 150 students in the MBBS class in 1969; when attendance would be taken and names called out e.g. that of C.S. Kain, another student a Jat Sikh would yell out: “Scheduled Caste Hai”; when Sadia Din’s name would be called out the same gentleman would shout “gone to Pakistan”. No student or professor ever raised objection! Thus began my exposure to caste and communal bias; and also the anti-Pakistan feelings.

Reforms in the Sikh community would have to come primarily from within keeping the following in mind:

  • The Mazhabi Sikhs – untouchables – (Scheduled Castes) live in separate clusters in villages in Punjab; are forced to live in less desirable areas in the village.
  • This community accounts for 32% of population in Punjab as per 2011 Census.
  • Only 3.5% of private farmland belongs to Dalits as per Agriculture Census of 2015-16.
  • The Mazhabi Sikhs cannot use Gurudwaras frequented by higher caste Sikhs and
  • They must use special cremation grounds.
  • The Shiromani Akali Dal, a religio-political party founded in 1920 is dominated by Jat Sikhs. The SGPC (Shiromani Gurudwara Prabhandak Committee) is Jat controlled.
  • The British Raj system of land allocation in Punjab worked against the Mazhabis. The Jats received most of the 4,000,000 acres that became available between 1885 and 1940 while outcastes were excluded entirely. Thus the relationship of a Jat Sikh and a Mazhabi is invariably that of a farmer and landless labourer.
  • Marriages between Jats and untouchables does not even enter one’s mind since in very few reported cases beheading of such couples follows suit.
  • Such is the environment created by casteism that Kanshi Ram; Harkishan Singh Surjeet, Mayawati; Dr. B. R. Ambedkar opted to work outside of Punjab.”

Guru Nanak the founder of Sikhism had the courage and – if I may dare say the little space/freedom to mock at Brahminism over five centuries earlier. Such space should accrue for all times to come to those who interpret/analyze Holy Scriptures differently without disrespecting the holy books. Tolerance of diverse views would result in peaceful coexistence.


First Published in Countercurrents.org on 27.10.2021. 

See link: https://countercurrents.org/2021/10/lakhbir-singhs-murder-notwithstanding-a-wake-up-call-for-the-sikh-community/

Saturday 2 October 2021

THE STRUGGLE WILL CONTINUE TILL PARLIAMENT DEBATES - NAY CONCEDES - THE GAY MANIFESTO, 1991

 


This document titled The Struggle Will Continue Till Parliament Debates – Nay Concedes – The Gay Manifesto, 1991 New Delhi, India stresses that by way of partial repeal of Section 377, IPC, the apex court has merely thrown crumbs at the sexual minority community. Meaningful liberation will come if the whole section is repealed in toto and the Gay Manifesto conceded. 

Sunday 26 September 2021

ABVA COLLECTIVE’S WORK STOLEN/ HIJACKED/ SUBVERTED

This document titled “ABVA Collective’s Work Stolen/ Hijacked/ Subverted” gives a glimpse of how a pan India NGO SAATHII; author Siddharth Dube; Newspaper, The Hindu; & LGBT Studies, Yale University were instrumental in subverting ABVA Collective’s work.


Monday 6 September 2021

ON THE THIRD ANNIVERSARY OF GAY SEX JUDGEMENT: ABVA’s tryst with activists, lawyers & judges before, during and after its anti-sodomy law petition was filed

by

P. S. Sahni


In April 1994 ABVA filed a Civil Writ Petition no. 1784 of 1994 titled AIDS Bhedbhav Virodhi Andolan vs. Union of India and others in the Delhi High Court (DHC) asking for striking down inter alia entire Section 377, IPC. The petition was filed through ABVA member Shobha Aggarwal. ABVA was firm in its decision to annex its full report “Less than Gay” with the petition as also in its demand for full repeal of S. 377 IPC. Given below is an account of ABVA’s tryst with activists, lawyers, judges, before, during and after its writ petition was filed.

 

·        In 1991 while ABVA was preparing the report ‘Less than Gay’, it wrote to 80-odd prominent citizens and organizations from different walks of life in Delhi. Reminders were also sent. Only 19 replies were received. An appointment was sought with Manushi – a journal about Women and Society. When a two member ABVA team went at the appointed time, we were in for a shock as the editor, Madhu Kishwar made herself unavailable. So we wrote in their register about our visit and not getting any response returned back. No reply was received by Manushi to our questionnaire.

 

·        During the 2nd Asia Pacific AIDS Conference of 1992 at a session inter-alia on homosexuality wherein Anand Grover from Lawyers Collective was one of the chairpersons and rapporteur – Shobha Aggarwal and P. S. Sahni raised the issue of repeal of S. 377, IPC and suggested that house pass a resolution for repeal of S.377, IPC. Anand Grover refused. Despite his refusal Shobha & P.S. Sahni stood up during the session and asked all participants in favour of the resolution to raise their hands. The resolution was passed. Anand Grover, who was the rapporteur for the session did not include the resolution in the minutes of the session. ABVA members were shocked when he did not report it in the plenary session which was held every evening.

 

·        The day ‘Less than Gay’ was publicly released at the Press Club of India, New Delhi in November 1991 ABVA had sent a petition to the Parliament urging it to address the Gay Manifesto wherein a Charter of Demand has been enlisted. Right through 2014 till date we have been petitioning members of Parliament including Sonia Gandhi, Rahul Gandhi and people occupying public offices like Kiran Bedi on LGBTQIA issues. It is the Parliament alone which can get the Gay Manifesto debated and implemented. Unfortunately till date Parliament has stonewalled all attempts to let the issue be debated.

 

·        In 1994 after filing the writ petition in the Delhi High Court, ABVA members had split into small groups to gather support from the handful of Senior Advocates/ constitutional lawyers on the issue. We met in all about eight of them – including Mr. R.K. Jain; Mr. Rajeev Dhavan; Ms. Indira Jaisingh; Mr. Kapil Sibal, Mr. Soli Sorabjee. One of them suggested that we don’t affix the ABVA’s report “Less Than Gay” with the petition (perhaps the judges may not take kindly to it!); another suggested that we should limit our prayer to supply of condoms to jail inmates and not ask for striking down of Section 377, IPC (perhaps too radical for conservative judiciary)!! One of them just heard us out; another appreciated our work without volunteering his services. Mr. Rajeev Dhavan got us information on how S. 377 came about in British India and was kind enough to talk to six-seven ABVA members for over an hour. Mr. Sorabjee got us relevant case material from U.K.

 

·        In 1994 ABVA shared copy of the writ petition filed in DHC with the gay community through Saleem Kidwai (now since deceased). They agreed with the strategy and the demand for a full repeal of S. 377, IPC. ABVA’s strategy for the case was to emphasize that if gay people stood criminalized through section 377, IPC, the gay community would be hard pressed to cooperate in national anti-AIDS campaign launched by the Govt. of India. ABVA produced press clippings to emphasize that same-sex activity was happening in Tihar jail, Delhi but condoms were not being kept in the jail dispensary. ABVA’s prayer was for striking down of full section 377 IPC and provision of condoms in Tihar jail. Ironically the same strategy was used by other NGOs but with a diluted prayer for partial repeal of S. 377, IPC. No gay person volunteered to be involved in ABVA’s case; consequently no victim participated in court proceedings. The same mistake was made by these NGOs when they took up the case. So in the 21st century NGOs used the template originally painstakingly prepared by ABVA; however for about a decade and the half these NGOs replicated ABVA’s mistake of not having an LGBT victim member as a petitioner.

 

·        Navtej Singh and Ashok Row Kavi had attended ABVA meetings in early 1990s. Additionally ABVA had interacted with Ashok Row Kavi and other LGBT members like Giti Thadani at the International AIDS Conference in Delhi in 1992. But ABVA did not solicit them for intervening in the case as gay people who are victimized. This was the ethics followed in ABVA. On their own these activists didn’t volunteer.

 

·        In 1994 Soli Sorabjee wrote an edit page piece in the ‘Times of India’ dealing with AIDS, human rights and the superior courts. Two ABVA members Manoj Pande and P.S. Sahni went to his office and requested the staff for a meeting with Soli Sorabjee. When we finally got an audience with Mr. Soli Sorabjee, he was hesitant to talk with us and asked us to send our lawyer to meet him. We told him of our writ petition in the Delhi High Court (DHC) in one or two sentences. As highly qualified and experienced activists we were definitely put off by his attitude. When such lawyers write pieces in the newspapers they sound so accessible but our experience was otherwise. The fact is that both of us ABVA activists were in the forefront of the movement and had already read up everything that was available pertaining to our writ petition. Political history of ant-colonial movement in India is replete with examples where revolutionaries/ movement leaders would comment that lawyers should respect their views after giving them a patient hearing; and that lawyers should confine themselves to law and constitution. Eventually Soli Sorabjee appeared for one hearing in the entire proceedings till the case got admitted after a year-long period. Thereafter he never appeared.

 

·        Indira Jaisingh, as a senior advocate, had appeared for the case at one hearing on 26 April, 1994. However for another hearing she telephonically informed about her inability to be present in court. P. S. Sahni went to her residence-cum-office and respectfully took the case file back from her and attempted overnight to arrange for another lawyer to be present in court. Ironically her close associate Anand Grover filed a writ petition on the same issue in DHC in 2001.

 

·        Dr. S. Muralidhar had interacted with ABVA members on several occasions. He had additionally appeared on behalf of ABVA in the DHC on 26.5.1994 and 13.7.1994. Later he was a judge in a division bench hearing a petition on behalf of a heavily foreign funded NGO. It was brought to his notice by Janak Raj Jai, lawyer that he ought to recuse. It is pertinent to point out that ABVA’s petition was filed in response to Janak Raj Jai’s petition in 1994 and both were clubbed together. P.S. Sahni and others in ABVA feel that S. Muralidhar violated judicial ethics in refusing to recuse. It needs to be pointed out that lawyer S. Muralidhar – as he then was – appeared in two hearings and at other times would send only the junior. But after the case got admitted in 1995 both of them never made any appearance.

 

·        Rajesh Talwar left for a Commonwealth Scholarship of a year’s duration for U.K. perhaps courtesy Soli Sorabjee with whom Rajesh had been in contact for the ABVA case. P.S. Sahni requested Rajesh to prepare a draft of the final arguments for the case to which he said that he would not in be in a position to do so. Thereafter he left for U.K. and ceased to be associated with the case. Rajesh Talwar had appeared several times till the case got admitted.

 

·        Lawyers Soli Sorabjee, Indira Jaisingh, S. Muralidhar, Rajesh Talwar appeared till the case got formally admitted in early 1995; after that none appeared or participated in court proceedings or followed up the court proceedings or got back to ABVA.

 

·        During the court proceedings it was obvious that the judges had a homophobic attitude. Their queries on a typical hearing would include – Is ABVA for free sex? What is its Constitution? Is it a registered body? Is it mandated to fight for gay rights? The court was informed that ABVA stood for safe sex. ABVA members in full strength would attend the hearings and observed that the attitude of the judges and their tone and tenor would be different when say Mr. Soli Sorabjee & Indira Jaisingh made their appearances. ABVA members strongly felt that whatever the age of the lawyer the judiciary should not make a distinction in its pronouncements because that gives a feeling of bias. We at ABVA felt like a fish out of water in such courtroom environment.

 

·        How can gay sex be equated with free sex? ABVA debated such finer points in its weekly meetings and concluded that the best course for it is to use the writ petition as a campaign material for the repeal of S. 377, IPC. ABVA also wrote to 100 odd activists’ groups in India to flood high courts all over India with similar petitions. However, none came forward. ABVA was not oblivious to the fact that just a handful of gay people had gone public about their sexuality till the end of the last century. But participating in final arguments of the case after a decade of ‘Less than Gay’ being published and with not one LGBTQIA member volunteering to be a petitioner in our case was not acceptable either to us or for that matter even to the courts. After all human rights of individuals can be violated but not of any organization like ABVA.

 

·        Shobha Aggarwal had done extensive research on Public Interest Litigation by studying their outcome during the period 1982 to 2000 and had concluded by the year 2000 that PILs fail to provide justice to those who need it most. She had documented the well laid down principle of natural justice getting violated in PILs. In 2005, she brought out a report titled “The Public Interest Litigation Hoax – Truth Before the Nation; A Citizen’s Report on how PIL fails to provide justice to those who need it most”. She had shared her research findings with ABVA members on several occasions and ABVA was convinced about her path breaking findings. We also knew that since 1980 heavily funded NGOs and equally slick lawyers have dominated court proceedings through their PILs and the corporate press would highlight the proceedings putting a dozen odd lawyers in India – out of over one million lawyers –in public limelight. Funded NGOs and PILs have together harmed movements and andolans in India. Out of conviction that PIL subverts movements, ABVA has not filed a single PIL in this century. ABVA observed that in the last decade of the last century following the publication of ‘Less than Gay’ a sort of cottage industry of NGOs mushroomed around the issue of LGBT community. It is ironic that while ABVA was one of the pillars of Campaign for Lesbian Rights (CALERI) and participated in all its leafleting program in 1998, even in 1999 requests were being received by ABVA from Humsafar Trust – an offshoot of Bombay Dost – requesting us to conduct a fact-finding enquiry in Orissa where two lesbians had attempted suicide!! ABVA sent a fact-finding team and documented the same in its Report ‘For People Like Us’. The truth of the matter is that till the end of the last century the LGBT community was comfortable in social, cultural gatherings but street politics was anathema to it. The fight for rights in courts for a gay or lesbian then seemed an uphill task. Both Ashok Row Kavi and Navtej Singh Johar took three to four decades to affix their names to court battles.

 

·        The Delhi High Court dismissed ABVA’s petition in early 2001. Thereafter Anand Grover filed a writ petition in the DHC asking for partial repeal of S. 377, IPC (what a climb down it was my fellow LGBT members!). ABVA’s position stays unwavering – asking for full repeal of S.377. At a meeting within the DHC premises Anand Grover in the presence of Anjali Deshpande, a freelance journalist suggested that ABVA’s petition could be clubbed/taken up with his petition. Apparently he was not aware that ABVA’s petition had been rejected; there was some confusion even at the level of the court bureaucracy. But ABVA refused to be solicited. How could ABVA join hands with a petition which had toned down ABVA’s demand for a full repeal of S. 377, IPC?

 

·        A petition on behalf of Ashok Row Kavi and others was filed on 27.04.2018 – barely few months before the final arguments – only after the Supreme Court made public its intention to hear the final arguments in Navtej Singh Johar’s case which was filed in 2016. Johar was nowhere in the gay rights movement till 2016; even then he made it clear that he would not be the “poster boy” for the cause.

 

·        P. S. Sahni had got involved in a writ petition dealing with rehabilitation of leprosy patients in 1986. Lawyers Kapila Hingorani & Nirmal Hingorani fought the case before Supreme Court from 1986 onwards for years without charging a single rupee. These two lawyers fought the case relentlessly. In 1989 P S Sahni was checked by the security people thrice as he was entering the court no. 1 i.e. the court of the Chief Justice of India. At the third attempt on checking he walked out of the court premises and told the lawyers concerned that an apology is in order for checking a Sikh social activist thrice while all others were checked only once. P. S. Sahni had already attended dozens of hearings in the case. He made it clear that unless a written apology is offered he would not assist the court in the case. What followed was an oral apology much later by Justice Kuldeep Singh which was not acceptable to P. S. Sahni and he withdrew from helping in the case thereafter. The point is that if a Sikh social activist is being discriminated against right at the entrance of the court room of CJI what trust would the judiciary generate while dealing with the writ petition regarding discrimination faced by the leprosy patients all over the country?

 

·        During the freedom movement many revolutionaries including Shaheed Bhagat Singh used the court proceedings for a while to campaign on an issue and withdrew once it was abundantly clear that the judges and the courts then have nothing to offer by way of justice.

 

·        After ten years of campaign with ‘Less than Gay’ we at ABVA had come to a similar conclusion. No self-respecting activist could take it any longer with the rampant homophobic attitude of the judges. True, much later in 2018 the constitution bench which heard Navtej Singh Johar’s petition had already made up its mind to partially repeal S. 377 IPC.

 

·        The Supreme Court judgement of 2018 ignored ABVA’s pioneering movement for full repeal of S. 377, IPC. The lawyers and activists before the Supreme Court did not bring forth the contributions of ABVA to the movement. The same observation can be made about the Delhi High Court 2009 judgement. However Justice S. Muralidhar was aware of ABVA’s role from 1988 onwards; he had appeared for ABVA; he was aware of ‘Less than Gay’ (which was annexed with the petition); yet the judgement turns a blind eye to this crucial movement of the twentieth century. In fact lawyer Janak Raj Jai’s request for recusal of Justice S. Muralidhar perhaps created a dilemma. If the movement was to be brought on record in the DHC judgement then Justice S. Muralidhar would have had no option but to recuse from the case. ABVA felt that having a ‘converted’ judge to be part of the Bench could at best result in a pyrrhic victory by way of partial repeal of S. 377, IPC.

 

·        Anyone going through the above piece with the seriousness that it deserves would likely conclude that it was politically correct to abstain from court proceedings during the final argument in 2001. History bears testimony that it took the judges another 17 years to sensitize themselves on the issue. Meanwhile ABVA’s demand of Right to Privacy (as enshrined in Gay Manifesto 1991) got conceded in Puttuswamy’s petition in 2017; while transgender people got the third sex status in 2014 in NALSA’s case.

 

ABVA has tried to document lesser known facts for posterity. No offence is intended to anyone. The faith in judiciary got restored. The collective efforts of all concerned (individuals and organizations) – of about three decades – resulted in the Supreme Court’s judgement of 2018.

 

P. S. Sahni is a member of ABVA. This article is being written to mark the third anniversary of gay sex judgement of the Supreme Court of India which fell on 6 September, 2021.

First published in Countercurrents.org on 17.09.2021. See link: https://countercurrents.org/2021/09/abvas-tryst-with-activists-lawyers-judges-before-during-and-after-its-anti-sodomy-law-petition-was-filed/

Sunday 1 August 2021

The Right to be Public: India’s LGBT Movement Builds an Argument about Privacy

 

Australian Journal of Asian Law, 2019, Vol 20 No 1, Article 7: 87-101

16 Pages Posted: 21 Nov 2019

Mayur Suresh

University of London - School of Law

Date Written: November 20, 2019

Abstract

The 2018 India Supreme Court judgment that decriminalised consensual homosexual sexual behaviour was not a product of single petition; nor were the arguments presented to the courts the creation of individual lawyers. The judgment and the constitutional arguments that were presented were produced by the LGBT movement. The LGBT movement was a jurisgenerative community that, in arguing that s. 377 was unconstitutional, produced constitutional arguments. One of these arguments was the right to privacy. This position has been criticised by critics within the LGBT movement as being one that is elitist and male – the demographic that most likely have access to physical private spaces. Instead, this article argues, what the LGBT movement actually produced was a right to be public. The right to privacy was not aimed at separating one’s space from society. It was to stake a claim to live a full life, within the public sphere.

Sunday 13 June 2021

Incidents happening in Lakshadweep resemble the atrocities of Emergency

 Written by P.S. Sahni & Shobha Aggarwal



Incidents happening in Lakshadweep under the ruthless Administrator Praful Patel are very disturbing even during these unusual times. Memory goes back to June 1975 when under cover of Internal Emergency a similar exercise was carried out in Muslim dominated area of in and around Jama Masjid, old Delhi. It so happened that Sanjay Gandhi and the then DDA Vice Chairman Mr. Jagmohan (who was to become Governor of J & K later) lamented that they were unable to see Jama Masjid in view of tenements around Jama Masjid housing the Muslims. So the following plan of action was undertaken:

1. Bulldozing the tenements housing 70,000 Muslims (equivalent to the present population of Lakshadweep).

2. Change the pattern of land use.

3. Attempt was to beautify the area and make it a tourist spot. The truth is that it was a tourist spot already.

4. During this period preventive detention laws were strengthened.

5. Sanjay’s five point program included family planning which transformed into forcible vasectomy.

6. Muslims, poor and subordinate caste people were targeted.

Maneka Gandhi was instrumental in getting the Idgah abattoir out of old Delhi through judicial means.

A cursory look at the last few days media clippings show:

That Lakshadweep Administrator has the same proclivities e.g. converting Lakshadweep into a grand tourist spot akin to Maldives; preventing people with two plus kids from becoming Panchayat members; strengthening preventive detention laws; and change of land use pattern.

Our friend Inder Mohan of PUCL opposed the demolition; BBC covered his arrest under MISA. Inder Mohan was innocent enough to meet Sanjay Gandhi during the day and get arrested in late evening. Next day Muslims in old Delhi lined up along the lanes and by-lanes even as Inder Mohan was being escorted from Darya Ganj Police Station to Tis Hazari District Court, Delhi.

Is Lakshadweep the next target even without a formal emergency?


First Published: https://countercurrents.org/2021/06/incidents-happening-in-lakshadweep-resemble-the-atrocities-of-emergency/

Monday 7 June 2021

ABVA’s resolution on LGBT Studies, Yale University

 

ABVA at its meeting on 06 June, 2021 passed the following resolution:

 

“a. That LGBT Studies, Yale University stands blacklisted in view of its attempt to steal/hijack/subvert the collective work of ABVA, New Delhi, India.

 

  b. That recourse to other methods of redressal including legal ones would be initiated if Yale University fails to rectify its mistakes.”

 

Developments leading to this resolution have been documented in:

Open Letter to Yale University Authorities – Don’t Steal/Hijack/Subvert the Collective Work of ABVA, New Delhi, India. Scrap Brudner Prize 2019

 

Yale University in stealing the collective work of ABVA has carried forward the legacy of the infamous Elihu Eli Yale, after whom it is named, except that in the instant case it is our intellectual property that is stolen by Yale University. Elihu Eli Yale had in the eighteenth century donated a huge sum to Yale University (then known as the “Collegiate School”) out of the ill-gotten wealth made by him in South India.  So the loot continues!

Saturday 22 May 2021

Managing COVID 19 through timelines by Dr. Mathew Varghese


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bv9jDIKKUBg


Even now – sixteen months into the COVID-19 Pandemic in India – this video should be compulsory viewing for:

 

1.      Ministers in the Union Cabinet including the PM

2.      ICMR Director General

3.      AIIMS Director

4.      Corporate Press

5.   Section of the bureaucracy dealing with matters of health and home affairs

 

There should be no hesitation if the PMO invites over Dr. Mathew Varghese and puts any relevant questions which could have a bearing on treatment and financial resources, nay a fundamental quantum shift in the treatment policy.

 

Personally the undersigned stands humbled; after having written eighteen articles in Countercurrents.org in 2020 (individually and co-authored with Shobha Aggarwal), I had erroneously thought that it was pneumonia in the lungs. Now Dr. Mathew Varghese has clarified that it is blood clots in the lungs.

 

I have had the privilege of working with Mathew Varghese in 1980 at LNJPN hospital and later as part of the ABVA Collective. He is wedded and welded to his professional work with a missionary zeal often using a chunk of his pay for the welfare of the poor.

 

Why Dr. Mathew Varghese reminds me of Hugh Owen Thomas

 

Dr. Mathew Varghese has been involved in slum work right since the 1980s (apart from work in government/private hospitals). Presently at the polio ward, St. Stephen’s hospital, New Delhi – his very own brain child – one could see him examining patients with “a hammer in his hands to check the limb reflexes, a tape to measure the length of hands and legs and a goniometer to ensure precise measurement of angles…”; Thomas in his times carried a wrench in his apron pocket to fix the fractures!

 

Hugh Owen Thomas was a general practitioner in the slums of Liverpool most of his professional life, treating the poor rather than the affluent Victorian middle classes. He concerned himself primarily with orthopaedic surgery, and is considered the founder of orthopedic surgery in Britain.

 

His practice was so busy that he started his rounds at five or six in the morning and never left his home for other than professional purposes. The only exception to this were the three times a year when he visited his mother's grave.

 

Thomas would designate Sunday as his "free day", when hundreds of patients from all over the countryside besieged Nelson Street in the morning, filling the house to overflowing and the surrounding streets with carriages and invalid chairs.

(Extracted from: https://www.whonamedit.com/doctor.cfm/2947.html)

 

P. S. Sahni

 

(Why I have dropped prefix Dr. from my name see http://aidsbhedbhavvirodhiandolan.blogspot.com/2021/05/covid-19-pandemic-india-need-citizens.html)

 

 


Saturday 8 May 2021

CLARIFICATION

 

P.S. Sahni, member, ABVA has decided not to use the prefix ‘Dr.’ with his name w.e.f. May 3, 2021. For more details see: 

http://aidsbhedbhavvirodhiandolan.blogspot.com/2021/05/covid-19-pandemic-india-need-citizens.html.

References to his writings/work prior to May 3, 2021 will stay unaltered. 

Tuesday 4 May 2021

COVID-19 Pandemic India: Needed A Citizens’ Justice Committee To Fix Responsibility


by

P. S. Sahni


First the personal facts briefly:

 

I obtained MBBS degree dated 15th February, 1975 from University of Delhi.

Obtained Master of Surgery (Orthopaedics) degree dated 23rd March, 1979 from University of Delhi.

Worked in Bihar in 1975 in the Small-pox Eradication Programme under the joint Govt. of India-WHO Project. Testimonial dated 6 February, 1975.

Worked as Senior Research Fellow in an ICMR project from 26.11.81 to 30.11.82 under Dr. B. P. Yadav at Safdarjung Hospital, New Delhi.

Worked as Research Associate in an ICMR Project from 27.12.82 to 29.12.83 under Dr. S. K. Verma at AIIMS, New Delhi.

 

Work experience amongst 5 epidemics over a period of 5 decades:

 

1.  In 1971, worked amongst refugees from Bangladesh at the Indo-Bangla border. Cholera epidemic was in rage amongst the refugees. A group of medical students from Delhi (including me) had set up a dispensary right in the middle of this camp.

2.     In 1975 worked in Bihar in Small-pox Eradication Programme under a joint Govt. of India-WHO Project. Work involved moving on bicycle from village to village vaccinating all residents; and quarantining those afflicted with Small-pox in their village hut itself.

3.  In 1988 worked during the Cholera epidemic in Delhi as a member of Nagrik Mahamari Janch Samiti. We had documented the work in a Citizens’ Report: “Crime Goes Unpunished.” The Supreme Court of India took cognizance of the Report.

4.    As a co-founder of ABVA (AIDS Bhedbhav Virodhi Andolan) we were one of the first organizations to work during the AIDS pandemic in India. The work started in 1988 and continues till date. We documented our work through a series of Citizens’ Reports available on ABVA’s blog.

5.   As a member of Nagrik Mahamari Janch Samiti worked during the Plague epidemic in Delhi (September-October, 1994) and documented our work in a Citizens’ Report: “Is Plague Over?”

 

During 2020 (January to September), we had written a series of articles – 18 in all, including 5 co-authored with my colleague Shobha Aggarwal – on COVID-19 Pandemic which were duly published in Countercurrents.org. We had demanded then:

“… the politicians and bureaucrats in the Union Ministry of Home Affairs; as also Health and Family Welfare; and top-most doctors in the Indian Council of Medical Research as well as the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi should be asked to submit their resignations.”

 

However since early this year, the acts of omission & commission by the politicians – the full spectrum from all parties – has resulted in unprecedented surge in COVID-19 cases! Media reports indicate India registered 408,331 new infections and 3523 COVID deaths on 30 April, 2021! All political parties who fought the recent assembly elections maintained a deathly silence over the large election rallies.

 

By February, 2021 the number of cases reported per day in India had declined to a few thousand; the number reached about 11,000/day by 11-12th March, 2021. Medical scientists at ICMR & AIIMS would have learnt by then that a resurgence is at hand.

 

Either these medical personnel failed to grasp the available medical intelligence about the doom that awaited the country; or they were aware but did not have the courage to tell the truth to their political masters.

 

These scientists needed to urge the Indian Govt. to:

i.   Suspend the Kumbh mela where finally over 9.1 million pilgrims (official data) participated. This warning should have gone by 11-12th March for immediate action. Only symbolic ceremony – with full precautions – should have been allowed respecting the religious sentiments of the majority community.

ii.    Ensure that large gatherings at rallies during the assembly elections in 5 states were prohibited.

 

On both these counts the action was too late and too little to be of any consequence.

 

As one of the few living doctors to have worked (in the affected community & not in AC offices in metropolis) in epidemics since 1971, I feel the ‘sarkari’ medical experts let the people down. No one has owned up. No one has been punished.

 

A small personal protest

 

As long as I live I’ll never use the prefix ‘Dr.’ with my name. This is a personal, principled protest against the ‘sarkari’ (read ‘durbari’) medical experts; a section of bureaucracy and politicians of all hues (opposition as well as ruling party).


First published:  https://countercurrents.org/2021/05/covid-19-pandemic-india-need-a-citizens-justice-committee-to-fix-responsibility/