New Delhi:The Supreme
Court asked the Centre to explain the criteria for engaging the NGOs in family
planning programmes, including birth control camps.
“On what basis NGOs are given authority for
organising the family planning camps. What is the criteria? Is it based on a
principal or a decision of an individual officer,” asked the bench of Justice
Madan B. Lokur and Justice U.U, Lalit as the Centre told the court that it has
a plan to do away with such family planning camps.
The court was informed about the botched up
sterilisation camps organised by the NGOs. The bench then asked whether
compensation was paid to the families of the victims.
The court was hearing a PIL by activist Devika
Biswas who drew attention to the unsafe sterilisations being carried out at
these camps.
The petitioner referred to unhygienic conditions
at the camps organised in Maharashtra, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh,
Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Jharkhand.
The bench reserved its verdict after Centre
opposed the plea for setting up of a separate Court of Commission, saying it
would create a parallel monitoring mechanism which may confuse the field
workers.
Appearing for the petitioner, Senior Counsel
Colin Gonsalves appreciated the guidelines, standards and norms set by the
Centre but said they were just on paper and not being enforced.
Gonsalves told the court that in case of botched
up sterilisation, the NGO is blacklisted, doctors are placed under suspension
but nothing happens to the government officials “who allow such things to
happen”.
Additional Solicitor General Pinki Anand said the
Centre was executing a plan to do away with the birth control camps for
undertaking male/female sterilisation and it would be done at the district,
sub-district hospitals and primary health centres.
She said the plan was set into motion in 2015 and
would take three years to cover the entire country.
Anand informed the court that Maharashtra, Goa,
Tamil Nadu and Sikkim have already phased out such camps.
She told the bench that India had the lowest
death rate in Asia on account of sterilisation.
“India conducts over 40 lakh sterilisations in a
year and the death rate is below three per lakh, which is similar to the
neighbouring Asian countries and one of the lowest in the world,” she said.
Anand said the entire administrative machinery
involved in the execution of plan had been firmed-up, additional allocations
have been made and there is monitoring at all levels by the officials.
S.K. Sikdar, Deputy Commissioner of the Family
Planning Division of health ministry, clarified on specific queries from the
bench.
No comments:
Post a Comment