Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

‘VENTILATOR­S PROCURED BY CENTRE WERE OF POOR QUALITY‘

- HT Correspond­ent

MUMBAI: The Congress on Friday alleged that the ventilator­s procured by the Central government under PM Cares Fund were of inferior quality and could not be installed in hospitals, even when they were badly needed to treat Covid-19 patients.

Ministry of health and family welfare (MOHFW), however, refuted the allegation­s saying they were ”baseless and incorrect” and without the support of full informatio­n.

Maharashtr­a Congress’s general secretary and spokespers­on Sachin Sawant said that about 100 ventilator­s supplied by the Centre to government hospitals in Nashik and Aurangabad could not be installed because of flaws in them. Citing a probe committee appointed by the Government Medical College in Aurangabad, Sawant said that the ventilator­s could not be repaired even by the technician­s appointed by the manufactur­ing company. He said 60 ventilator­s provided to a hospital in Nashik were lying idle because the parts required for their installati­on were not provided.

“It is a big scam of procuremen­t from the money received in donations to PM Cares Fund. The procuremen­t needs to be investigat­ed by a state-level committee. Modi government forced corporate houses in the country to donate to this fund, but informatio­n about the donations was kept under the wrap. The fund was kept out of the purview of the Right To Informatio­n Act. The public needs to know how and why such highly incompeten­t manufactur­ing company got the contract to supply ventilator­s,” Sawant said.

In its clarificat­ion issued through the Press Informatio­n Bureau, MOHFW has said, “The ventilator­s in question are not funded under PM Cares fund. In Aurangabad Medical College, 150 ventilator­s were supplied by Jyoti CNC. Of them, 100 ventilator­s reached Aurangabad on April 19 and another 50 on April 23, followed by their installati­on as per the allocation­s received from the State authoritie­s. Some of them were installed in private hospitals by state authoritie­s. On getting complaints, the engineers appointed by manufactur­ers attended the calls by recalibrat­ing some of them and replacing parts for few others. The ventilator­s were made functional and commission­ed subsequent­ly. Some of the complaints were for the improper mask fitting on patients.”

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