Tamil Nadu Govt under pressure to announce
regularly CM Jayalalithaa’s health condition!
-Dr. Abdul Ruff
_______
The Tamil
Nadu government is under increasing pressure to share regular information on
the health of J Jayalalithaa, who has been in hospital for nearly two weeks.
The Chief Minister's health 'continues to improve", Apollo hospitals said
on Tuesday, hours after the Tamil Nadu government was told that regular updates
"will reduce the anxiety of people".
Tamil Nadu
state government has been asked by the Madras High Court to reply tomorrow to a
petition by social activist Traffic Ramaswamy. Amid speculation that
Jayalalithaa, 68, is seriously unwell and her party is trying to keep it a
secret, Ramaswamy has asked for a statement on her health and the appointment
of an interim chief minister. On Monday, the hospital bulletin, for the first
time, referred to "continuation of respiratory support" to the Chief
Minister.
Jayalalithaa was hospitalized on September 22 with fever and dehydration. Days
later, the government said she had dictated her statement on the Cauvery river
dispute and briefed bureaucrats and ministers. The ruling AIADMK has vehemently
denied reports that Jayalalithaa is critically ill and also filed police
complaints against four persons for "spreading rumours" on social
media. Yesterday, when a group of AIADMK lawmakers marched in Delhi to protest
the centre's stand on the Cauvery river dispute, party leader M Thambidurai
said: "Jayalalithaa told us to come to Delhi and protest." The party
has been stubbornly dismissive of questions about who is in charge of the
state.
Opposition leaders like the DMK's M Karunanidhi have urged the Chief Minister's
party to release a photograph to prove she is not critical, but the AIADMK has
rejected the demand. The Governor visited the hospital on Friday but did not
meet her. A statement from his office said: "The Governor was happy to
note that the chief minister is recovering well and appreciated the doctors for
providing the best medical care and treatment."
Two SOS
calls went out from the Tamil Nadu chief minister's residence in Chennai past
10 pm on 22 September: one to Apollo hospital and another to Chennai traffic.
Within minutes, the ambulance arrived at Poes Garden to pick up a seriously
ailing CM Jayalalithaa and she was rushed and the Critical Care Unit (CCU) on
the second floor at the hospital was made ready. Security paraphernalia of the
Chennai police was rushed to the hospital and the 3 km distance from the CM's
home to Apollo hospital on Greams Road was converted into a green corridor.
Within 15 minutes, Selvi Jayalalithaa Jayaram, 68, was wheeled directly into
the CCU. She was immediately put on non-invasive treatment, with tests done
simultaneously to check different health parameters. Soon word spread that the
CM had been hospitalized and by morning, crowds began to swell outside Apollo
hospital. A press release on the Apollo hospital letterhead said the CM was
suffering from fever and dehydration.
The
intention was clear. Information to the public was to be given on a
need-to-know basis to ensure panic did not spread in the city and the state.
For a change, Tamil Nadu's political ecosystem behaved with dignity. All
Opposition leaders, otherwise at daggers drawn with Jayalalithaa, wished her a
speedy recovery. PM Modi and the acting Rao governor also sent her their good
wishes.
But
outside the hospital, the virtual world was fueling rumours overtime in the
real world. The first of them spoke about how she is critical and would be
flown off to Singapore or USA for further treatment. Apollo hospital and the
Tamil Nadu government denied the rumor the next day. The tone and tenor of the
press conference in which reporters were not allowed entry, was only to say all
is well and under control.
However,
the feeling that something was amiss and the truth was not being revealed
persisted. The CCU portion where Jayalalithaa was admitted was cordoned off to
ensure other patients and their attendants were not put to inconvenience. Three
rooms were allotted to the CM's accompanying team, among them Sasikala, her
trusted aide. Finance Minister O Panneerselvam, the senior-most Cabinet
minister in the ministry too has been camping at the hospital. Dr Shivakumar,
who is married into Sasikala's family, is also at hand. Care was taken to
ensure mobile phones were not allowed anywhere near the CCU to ensure no
pictures of the CM were leaked.
CM
Jayalalithaa was hospitalized when the dates for the local bodies elections in
Tamil Nadu were announced. The AIADMK released the first list of candidates for
the elections, as if to indicate it is business as usual. No one knows if it
had already been cleared by Jayalalithaa before she was admitted. Also, after
the Supreme court heard the Cauvery case, a government press release announced
that the CM chaired a meeting from her hospital room and even dictated her
speech to be read out by the PWD minister at the Karnataka-Tamil Nadu meeting
with Water Resources Minister Uma Bharathi in Delhi. Given what is now known of
her condition, the jury is out on whether the CM indeed presided over the
meeting. On Wednesday, the CM's condition deteriorated. "She went down and
the medical team had to put her on ventilator to help in breathing and start
invasive treatment,'' said the source. Well-known intensivist Richard John
Beale, who specializes in cases involving critically ill patients, flew down
from London to examine Jayalalithaa. An Intel report had been sent to the
political leadership of the country in New Delhi as well that Jayalalithaa's
health was cause for concern.
It was
then that those in Delhi realized that it was not just a case of fever and
dehydration but something more serious. In the absence of any confirmation or
denial officially from Apollo hospital or the government, conspiracy theories
began to gain traction through WhatsApp forwards. The more outrageous the
rumor, the more it lent itself to being shared on social media.
The
government announced Rs 476 crore as bonus for PSU employees on Wednesday. The
AIADMK's second list of candidates for the 17 and 19 October election was also
released in the week. While the attempt would have been to convey that the
leader is in-charge, doubts persist on who exactly is calling the shots. In his
rather sharp open letter last week, DMK chief M Karunanidhi quoted a report in
a Tamil daily to name Sasikala and Sheela Balakrishnan (advisor to the Tamil
Nadu CM) as the shadows who are trying to be the real person. Karunanidhi
warned against unauthorised people with access to Jayalalithaa trying to run
the state by proxy.
The
political leadership in Delhi is aware that Jayalalithaa is not completely out
of the woods yet, even though since Saturday she has been responding favorably
to the treatment. The Apollo hospital said treatment for her infection was on
while AIADMK leaders hoped she would be discharged in 2-3 days. After his visit
on Saturday evening, Tamil Nadu's acting Governor Vidyasagar Rao has sent a
formal report to the Prime Minister and the Ministry of Home Affairs on Jayalalithaa's
health condition and his own impression of the situation in the state. Delhi,
sources say, is keeping a close watch and coordinating closely to ensure the
systems are in place, even without a functioning head of the government.
The AIADMK
has been instructed to keep up with its 'all is well' narrative. Former
minister Valarmathi claimed Amma is in fact working from inside the hospital
but glared back when asked if she got an opportunity to meet her inside. CR
Saraswathi, AIADMK spokesperson said, "Amma works for 22 out of 24 hours.
Even those two hours, she only thinks of people's welfare. We want her to rest
for a few days in hospital because she has been working so hard.''
Supporters
of Jayalalithaa are indeed worried about the real status of her health. They
refuse to believe what is said or written in the media about her “stable’
conditions or improving health. AIADMK people are seen crying in many places.
In fact, some discussions also take place among the people as to who will
succeed Jayalalithaa if she succumbs to her sudden illness. How about the court
case regarding disproportionate wealth?- some ask.
Truth and
fiction confuse the people of Tamil Nadu.
The
condition of Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa at the Apollo Hospitals in
Chennai “continues to improve”, said a statement issued by the hospital on
Tuesday evening. “The same line of treatment is being continued. The Honourable
Chief Minister is under close observation by the team of doctors,'' the
statement said in an update on Ms. Jayalalithaa’s health. She has been advised
further stay for treatment, states a hospital statement.
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