New Delhi: Activist Anna Hazare meets today with his core group
in Delhi to take stock of the team's hunger strike against corruption,
which has completed a week. Anna, who is 75, joined the fast on Sunday.
His aides like Arvind Kejriwal, Manish Sisodia and Gopal Rai, have not
eaten for a week.
The Delhi Police has written to the
activists reminding them that when the activists were given permission
to hold their protest, they had agreed in writing to move to hospital if
their health was in danger.
Doctors from the government-run RML
Hospital say they must be moved to hospital immediately. But the
activists have refused and have warned the government against trying to
force-feed them. They say their own doctors have indicated that there's
no urgent need for them to end their fast just yet.
Congress General Secretary Digvijaya Singh said today "The government
cannot be allowed to let people die without being called insensitive."
He also said that the government should engage with the activists, but
"not at gunpoint." About reports of the deteriorating health about those
who're fasting, he said, "Nothing will happen" and pointed to the
example of Irom Sharmila, the activist from Manipur who has been fasting
for 11 years; she is regularly force-fed by the government via a drip.
Last
August, Anna's health dipped precariously when he spent 16 days fasting
in Delhi, a pressure tactic to force the government to work on new
landmark legislation against corruption. The Prime Minister and others
urged Anna formally to call off his strike; he agreed only when
parliamentarians promised to urgently debate the Lokpal Bill, named for
the new national ombudsman agency that it creates.
This time
around, the government has decided not to intervene. Sources say no
appeal will be made for the activists to end their fast. "Those that
gave permission for the camp at Jantar Mantar will decide how to deal
with issues like deteriorating health," said government sources, who
also ruled out any backroom discussions with Anna and his aides.
Earlier
this week, Minister of State in the Prime Minister's Office V
Narayanasamy described the hunger strike to NDTV as "a drama." Senior
government sources who did not want to be named said that Anna's own
team should take responsibility for the health of its members. They
pointed out that the ruling coalition introduced the Lokpal bill in
parliament in December- it was passed by the Lok Sabha but is now
stalled in the Rajya Sabha, where opposition parties have asked for more
than 200 amendments.
The government's stark attitude towards Anna and his team is at least
partly provoked by the activists' blacklisting of the Prime Minister and
14 senior ministers. Team Anna says it has documented evidence to
prove how through corruption or by sheltering other venal parties, they
hurt the nation's interests. The activists demanded an independent
inquiry against the ministers.
The government said that the
unsubstantiated charges did not merit a circumvention of established
processes. Many ministers replied individually to Anna, explaining why
his team's allegations were factually incorrect.
Wednesday, 1 August 2012
Fasting Team Anna members refuse police request to shift to hospital
Wednesday, August 01, 2012
India News, Political News