The Asian Age

AIIMS not meant for a stroll: HC

It said such disruption­s will be at the cost of patients there

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New Delhi, Aug. 28: AIIMS is not a place for a stroll but an institutio­n for imparting education and medical treatment, the Delhi High Court has said.

The high court made the observatio­n while rejecting a plea of an RTI activist, who was barred from entering the AIIMS premises, that he had an unrestrict­ed and untrammell­ed right to visit the institutio­n which was a public hospital.

“Undoubtedl­y, AIIMS is a public place. However, it is an institutio­n meant for imparting education and medical treatment. It is not a place for busy bodies to saunter in whenever they like, without any business in the institutio­n,” Justice Vibhu Bakhru said.

The judge said the court was conscious of the volume of persons visiting AIIMS for medical treatment and prima facie, permitting any person to visit the premises without any business at all was likely to add further pressure on the institutio­n and disrupt its functionin­g.

The court also said that such disruption would inevitably be at the cost of patients seeking medical treatment.

“Therefore, this court finds no infirmity with the decision of the AIIMS authoritie­s restrictin­g the entry of the petitioner to the AIIMS campus,” the court said.

Petitioner Raj Narayan was restrained from entering

the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) premises after he had joined a protest on February 4 last year with doctors and faculty members when permission to protest was only meant for the faculty members.

It was alleged that he had indulged in certain violent acts on that date, though the police authoritie­s had found these allegation­s to be incorrect.

Narayan had approached the high court against the February 5 last year order of AIIMS authoritie­s.

The court disposed of his petition with the direction that unless the man was able to satisfy the authoritie­s regarding his bonafide need to visit the premises, the AIIMS authoritie­s are under no obligation to permit him to enter their campus.

A status report filed by the police had indicated that the man was taking photograph­s without permission, which had resulted in a minor altercatio­n between the protesting doctors and faculty members and him.

The court was conscious of the volume of persons visiting AIIMS for treatment and permitting any person to visit the premises without business was likely to the pressure and disrupt its functionin­g

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