Bengaluru, September 2: Magsaysay awardee P Sainath said that as there was a close relationship between the media, BJP and corporation companies, more than 90 per cent of the news appeared in the media were related to BJP.

Speaking at a special lecture on Media and Rural India organized by Suchitra in memory of Dr U.R Ananthamurthy here on Sunday, he said that the BJP has been implementing the laws to support the corporate companies. By privatizing the mining, banking and education, the BJP has encouraged the corporate companies to make huge profits. In gratitude to this, the media houses have been telecasting news in favour of the BJP, he said.

Majority of the media houses were in the hands of corporate companies. So, they telecast the news which suits their interests as the news for the people of the country. So, the farmers suicides, death of hundreds of people and damage due to flood in Kerala would not become the major issues for media, he said.

When there was plague outbreak in the country during 1920s, the media had played a major role in creating awareness among people. But nowadays, the media houses have restricted themselves to the news and stories of industrialists or businessmen, religious institutions and political parties and their leaders. Major leaders and social reformers like Raja Ram Mohan Rai, Gandhi, Dr BR Ambedkar, Bhagat Singh had become the journalists. Besides the social revolution, they had also enhanced the knowledge of people. In view of this, the main characteristic of a journalist was to go hand-in-hand with the social change, he said.

“During 1990, there was no billionaire. But in between 2000, and 2018, hundreds of billionaires were born. Though crores of farmers and labourers worked day and night, they could not live their life and were committing suicide. But what is the reason for increasing the number of billionaires year on year?”

- P Sainath, Senior Journalist

 

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Palghar (PTI): A 26-year-old pregnant woman from Maharashtra's Palghar district died while being taken to hospital in an ambulance which was not equipped with oxygen and other necessary facilities, authorities said on Wednesday.

Palghar's Civil Surgeon Dr Ramdas Marad said the health department has repeatedly raised concerns with authorities about the lack of specialised ambulances in the region.

The woman, who was in labour pain, was brought to a rural hospital here in a critical state on Tuesday evening.

"If she had come earlier, we could have saved her," the health official said.

Palghar Lok Sabha member Dr Hemant Savara said the health department should take necessary action into the matter and ambulance services should have adequate facilities.

Pinki Dongarkar, resident of Sarni village, went into labour on Tuesday evening.

Her family immediately rushed her to Kasa rural hospital, but due to the critical nature of her condition, the staff there referred her to neighbouring Silvassa city (in the Union territory of Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu) for further medical attention.

However, despite frantic attempts by her family to secure an ambulance equipped with oxygen and necessary medical facilities through the '108' emergency service, their requests went unanswered, a health official said.

They were eventually provided with a regular ambulance by the Kasa rural hospital.

While en route to Silvassa, the woman succumbed to complications and the foetus also did not survive, health officials confirmed.

Dr Marad said the woman was brought to the Kasa rural hospital in a critical state.

According to him, the woman suffered from a condition called Intrauterine Fetal Death (IUFD), where the foetus died in the womb. The exact time of the foetal death could not be determined.

Upon arrival at the hospital, the woman was semi-conscious and showed signs of severe infection.

On issues with the 108 emergency ambulance services, which are privately operated, Dr Marad said the ambulance might have been unavailable due to high demand.

The health department has repeatedly raised concerns with authorities about the lack of specialised ambulances in the region, he said.

Talking to PTI, Palghar BJP MP Savara said, "This is a very sad incident. The health department should take necessary action in this connection. Also, such an incident should not happen in future for this reason."

"The ambulance services should have adequate oxygen and cardiac support facilities. Also, a doctor is required to accompany the patient. I will follow it up with the government," he said.

CPI (M) leader Vinod Nikole, the newly-elected assembly member from Dahanu in Palghar, said he had raised the issue in the House during his last term, but no action was taken.

He criticised the government over "indifference" towards improving healthcare facilities, particularly in tribal areas, and accused the state of prioritising other programmes, such as the Ladki Bahin Yojana, over the urgent needs of healthcare in rural regions.