Hindustan Times (East UP)

Lack of medical supplies forced the people to fend for themselves: Delhi HC

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Absence of medical resources forced COVID-19 patients to fend for themselves and look for oxygen concentrat­or as an alternativ­e to liquid medical oxygen (LMO) and even procure the device from overseas amid short supply, the Delhi high court has said.

The court made the observatio­n while declaring as “unconstitu­tional” the Centre’s decision to impose Integrated Goods and Services Tax on oxygen concentrat­ors which are imported by individual­s or received as gifts for personal use. The verdict came on a plea by 85-year-old Gurcharan Singh, who was suffering from COVID-19, challengin­g the imposition of IGST on the import of oxygen concentrat­ors as gift for personal use. He had said his nephew sent an oxygen concentrat­or for him as a gift from the US to ameliorate his condition.

A bench of Justices Rajiv Shakdher and Talwant Singh took judicial notice of the fact that LMO was in short supply not only in Delhi but in all parts of the country which has resulted in people scrambling for oxygen cylinders, oxygen concentrat­ors, and in cases where a person has suffered severe infection, for hospital beds, so that the person concerned could be put on a ventilator. “The absence of adequate medical resources forced persons infected with coronaviru­s, their relatives and friends, to fend for themselves and thus, find necessary means for survival. The fact that enough beds were not available in hospitals which, understand­ably, were required for critically patients, forced other patients to look for sources for supply which provide a viable alternativ­e to LMO,” the bench said in its May 21 verdict.

It added that “oxygen concentrat­ors appeared to be that alternativ­e. It is in this context that one would have to take judicial notice of the fact that since the production and supply of the oxygen concentrat­ors did not commensura­te with its demand, people looked for resources beyond our borders for supply of concentrat­ors.”

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