Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

Bill to acquire medical college passed in C’garh

- Ritesh Mishra

RAIPUR: The Chhattisga­rh assembly on Thursday cleared a controvers­ial bill to acquire a private medical college 50 km from state capital Raipur amid loud protests by the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) which alleged the Congres government signed off on a sweet deal with the college management to bail out the loss-making institutio­n.

The Chandulal Chandrakar Memorial Medical College (Acquisitio­n) Bill 2021 was passed by a voice vote after a debate in the assembly where the Congress’ 70 members vastly outnumber the BJP’s 14 lawmakers. BJP MLAs later walked out, demanding that the government roll back the bill.

Health minister TS Singhdeo, who piloted the bill in the assembly, said the acquisitio­n of the college was a step towards providing health facilities to the poor and common people.

“This is the best option to start a government medical college in the state with limited resources,” Singhdeo told the assembly that it will annually cost the exchequer only ₹140 crore to run the college. He also countered claims by the BJP that the medical education regulator, the Medical Council of India, has cancelled the college’s recognitio­n, and said the MCI has sanctioned 150 seats. The medical college was set up in 2013 in memory of the veteran Congress leader Chandulal Chandrakar. The acquisitio­n, however, turned controvers­ial after it emerged that among those on the board of the college is a member of the joint family into which chief minister Bhupesh Baghel’s daughter is married.

During the two-hour-long debate on the bill, Congress leaders emphasised that the bill will not transfer the liabilitie­s of the college but only provide for the acquisitio­n of its assets.

The BJP, however, questioned section 8 of the bill that specified that the government would get an assessment of the college’s movable and immovable assets and then pay the owners, twice the assessed value.

The leader of the opposition in the assembly Dharamlal Kaushik said this did not stand to reason. “When the government is facing a financial crisis and has a debt of around ₹76,000 crores, an additional government expense of ₹140 crore is not logical. Secondly, why is the government is paying twice the amount of the valuation of the medical college through acquisitio­n? This could lead to corruption,” he said.

Former chief minister Raman Singh said the government should have upgraded an existing 600bed government hospital in Durg rather than acquiring a loss-making private medical college if the government wanted to expand health facilities. “The bill has been brought to ensure relief to directors from debts,” Singh.

Senior BJP MLA Brijmohan Agrawal said the bill is aimed at benefittin­g only some people. It is even against the interest of people who lent crores of rupees to the college and its employees.

 ??  ?? Bhupesh Baghel
Bhupesh Baghel

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