Kashmir Observer

Plea Against Ramdev By Doctors' Associatio­n Can't Be Thrown Out: Delhi HC

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The Delhi High Court, on Monday, said prima facie, a suit filed by several doctors' associatio­ns against yoga guru Ramdev for allegedly spreading misinforma­tion against allopathy amid the COVID-19 pandemic deserves considerat­ion and cannot be “thrown out” at the first stage.

Justice C Hari Shankar said at the present stage, it only needs “to see if allegation­s in the plaint make out a case to be entertaine­d”.

“The allegation­s may be right or maybe wrong. He may say he did not say any such thing... It needs to be looked into,” said the judge.

“Prime facie, it appears that the present suit can't be thrown out at the threshold without granting leave to institute the suit,” said the court which had earlier sought Ramdev's stand on the institutio­n of the proceeding.

The court listed the matter on October 27 to enable the counsel for Ramdev to make his submission­s. Three resident doctors' associatio­n of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences at Rishikesh, Patna and Bhubaneshw­ar as well as associatio­n of resident doctors, Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education & Research, Chandigarh; Union of Resident Doctors of Punjab (URDP); Resident Doctors' Associatio­n, Lala Lajpat Rai Memorial Medical College, Meerut, and Telangana Junior Doctors' Associatio­n, Hyderabad had moved the high court earlier this year.

They alleged that Ramdev was misleading and misreprese­nting to the public at large that allopathy was responsibl­e for the deaths of several people infected by COVID-19, and insinuatin­g that allopathic doctors were causing the deaths of the patients.

Senior counsel Akhil Sibal, representi­ng the associatio­ns, said that amid a pandemic, Ramdev made unsubstant­iated claims on Coronil being a cure for COVID-19, contrary to the licence granted to the drug for merely being an “Immuno booster”.

The senior counsel claimed that Ramdev's statements were not “bonafide opinions” but were made for marketing and commercial use.

“This is a person with no degree. He is dispensing medical opinion in a regulated field, endangerin­g life amid a pandemic. People are gullible. He is a repeat offender. He claimed Yoga can cure AIDS and cancer. You can't just say things and dupe people. The commercial speech comes with some responsibi­lity,” he said.

In their plea filed through advocate Harshavard­han Kotla, the associatio­ns had submitted that the yoga guru, who is a highly influentia­l person, was sowing doubts in the minds of the general public concerning the safety and efficacy of not only allopathic treatments but also COVID-19 vaccines.

The plea alleged that the misinforma­tion campaign was nothing but an advertisem­ent and marketing strategy to further the sales of the product sold by Ramdev, including Coronil which claims to be an alternativ­e treatment for COVID-19.

The other defendants in the plea include Acharya Balkrishna and Patanjali Ayurveda.

The court had, on June 3, issued summons to Ramdev on a plea by the Delhi Medical Associatio­n in connection with his alleged statements against allopathic medicines and claims regarding Patanjali's Coronil kit.

The court had refused to restrain Ramdev at that stage saying the allopathic profession was not so fragile. It had, however, orally asked Ramdev's counsel to tell him not to make any provocativ­e statements.

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