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Furious Indian doctors mourn the rape and murder of a colleague

By Arunabh SAIKIA / AFP Published Aug 19, 2024 2:48 pm Updated Aug 19, 2024 2:49 pm

Trigger warning: This article contains mentions of rape.

Crowds of Indian doctors dressed in white coats came as if ready for work on Saturday, Aug. 17 but instead stood outside hospitals demanding justice after the rape and murder of a colleague.

"We just want to be safe while we are doing our duty," said Sapna Rani, a 27-year-old woman doctor in the capital New Delhi who took part in a 24-hour nationwide strike by medics.

"The hospital is the last place where we should have to worry about our safety."

The killing of the 31-year-old doctor, whose bloodied body was discovered on Aug. 9 at a state-run hospital in the eastern city of Kolkata, has focused rage at the chronic issue of violence against women.

At Delhi's Ram Manohar Lohia public hospital, usually one of the capital's busiest, Rani said the "doctor-to-patient" ratio was so abysmal that shifts often lasted 36 hours.

"And after that, there is no proper place to rest," she said, describing how doctors took breaks in "wheelchairs and stretchers."

Gruesome

The murdered doctor in Kolkata was found in the teaching hospital's seminar hall, suggesting she had gone there for a break during a 36-hour-long shift.

Hospital security staff say that they regularly witness violent behavior by angry patients and relatives who would run out of patience, waiting for hours in long queues in the heat. 

"Just the other day, an angry relative of a patient slapped a female guard," said Gopal Bisht, a security supervisor at Delhi's Lady Hardinge Hospital.

The usual busy hubbub of patients was replaced by protest chants on Saturday.

Women doctors held up placards outside hospitals, chanting slogans demanding justice. Male colleagues joined in.

Medical professionals and students shout slogans as they protest against the rape and murder of a doctor in India's West Bengal state, in New Delhi on Aug. 16.

The gruesome nature of the attack has invoked comparisons with the horrific 2012 gang rape and murder of a young woman on a Delhi bus.

It has sparked widespread outrage in a country where sexual violence against women is endemic.

An average of nearly 90 rapes a day were reported in 2022 in the country of 1.4 billion people.

The wider public has also marched in several cities this week, including at a candlelight midnight rally in Kolkata.

'Violence and molestation'

Doctors say the protests are also to highlight "systemic issues" plaguing India's overstretched public healthcare infrastructure.

Such issues, the protesting doctors said, compromise the "safety and security of healthcare workers."

Doctors working in public institutions say that violence against healthcare workers has become so commonplace that people have become "desensitized" to it. 

A laboratory coat covered with ink marks depicting blood is seen during a silent protest by resident doctors against the rape and murder of their colleague in India's West Bengal state, in Chennai on Aug. 17.

"What happened in Kolkata was not a one-off incident," said Pankhuri Sharma, 24, a doctor-in-training at a state-run hospital in Delhi.

"Violence and molestation is an everyday affair," she said. 

Her senior, 27-year-old gynecologist Akanksha Tyagi, said it was "deplorable" that "it took the life of a doctor" for people to take notice. (AFP)