Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Cops in PPE on guard outside Covid wards as hospitals turn prisons

- Prawesh Lama prawesh.lama@hindustant­imes.com

THE BURARI HOSPITAL IN NORTH DELHI HAS BECOME A MINI TEMPORARY JAIL WITH AT LEAST 21 INMATES ADMITTED THERE

Outside a room in the Covid-19 wing at All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), four police personnel wearing PPE suits stand on guard round-the-clock. Unlike other Covid-19 patients, who are lodged in wards and share space with others, underworld gangster Chhota Rajan alias Rajendra Sadashiv Nikalje, 62, is lodged in a single room because of the threat to his life. Since April 24, when he was shifted from Tihar jail number 2 to AIIMS, the police’s quick reaction team (QRT) has also been posted at the AIIMS campus along with many others in plain clothes to keep an eye on suspicious movement in the facility.

In East Delhi’s Guru Teg Bahadur hospital, where at least 14 Covid-19 prisoners are lodged, police and hospital authoritie­s have dedicated one of the building gates only to the entry and exit of those going to the prisoners’ ward. This is where one of Delhi’s top gangsters, Gaurav Jhareda, was lodged until Thursday along with at least 13 other Covid prisoners.

Jhareda died of the infection on Thursday night. The entry to the building where the prisonerpa­tients are lodged is sealed by police barricades. Private security guards and Delhi police personnel monitor every suspicious movement.

As cases of Covid-19 continue to spread rapidly inside Delhi’s Tihar jail, prompting the jail administra­tion to shift some prisoners to hospitals outside, many hospitals across the city have turned into high-security zones, with police personnel in some cases donning PPE kits to guard them inside Covid wards.

Until last week, when gangster-turned-politician Mohammed Shahabuddi­n was admitted to the Deen Dayal Upadhyay Hospital, armed police officers in PPE kits guarded his room.

In north Delhi, the Burari hospital has been transforme­d into a mini temporary jail with at least 21 prisoners admitted there.

A GTB hospital security guard, who wished not to be named, said: “On Thursday night, that man (Gaurav Jhareda) died at the hospital. The following day, when his body was being taken for cremation in an ambulance, many of his friends had come and wanted to take photograph­s. It was very scary. Those men looked tough and insisted on opening the PPE kit to see his face. There were so many people recording the video of the body being transporte­d.”

Explaining the need for tight vigil at the hospitals, an officer from the Delhi police special cell, who wished not to be named, said: “Hospital is the most misused place to escape from custody. On March 25, gangster Kuldeep Fajja, who had come to GTB hospital for a medical check,fled from outside the hospital after a shoot-out with police. These gangsters are desperate and will try to escape the moment they are out. Because of the killings they have been part of, they are also targeted by rival gangs at the hospitals. The fear of Covid-19 prisoners spreading infection after fleeing the hospital is not so much, in comparison to the danger they possess if they escape.”

In September last year, a convicted criminal named Mehtab Ahmed, involved in over 10 cases of murder, snatching, kidnapping and robbery, who was admitted at the Lok Nayak hospital for Covid-19 treatment, escaped after breaking the window grille of the hospital’s bathroom. He was arrested again after a shoot-out.

Explaining the nature of threat to prisoners such as Rajan or Shahabuddi­n outside the jail, the officer quoted above said that even inside Tihar, the two men were lodged in solitary confinemen­t. Currently, Tihar has 249 active cases of Covid-19.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India