Varavara Rao’s family says his health declining
Mumbai, July 12
The health of poet and activist Varavara Rao, an accused in the Elgar Parishad case, is deteriorating and he is “hallucinating and is in a delirious state”, his family claimed on Sunday and urged the authorities concerned to provide him better medical aid.
The 81-year-old activist is currently lodged at the Taloja jail in Maharashtra’s Navi Mumbai township.
Addressing an online press conference, Rao’s wife, daughters and other family members said they wereworried about his “deteriorating health”.
They claimed his health condition has been deteriorating ever since he was shifted to the state-run J J Hospital in Mumbai in an unconscious state on May 28, 2020.
Three days later, he was discharged and sent back to the jail even as there was no improvement in his health condition, they said.
“We were very much disturbed as during his routine calls (to family members) allowed by police, his voice was weak, he was incoherent, mumbling and unable to speak,” Rao’s wife said.
On Saturday, Rao did not answer straight questions on his health and went into a kind of “delirious and hallucinating state”, she claimed, adding that he talked about the funeral of his father and mother, the events that happened decades ago.
She said Rao’s co-accused informed them that the activist was unable to walk on his own.
“We were also told he is always hallucinating that the family members were waiting at the jail gate to receive him as he was getting released,” she said.
“The confusion, loss of memory and incoherence are a result of the electrolyte imbalance in the body and fall in sodium and potassium levels, leading to a possible brain damage,” she claimed.
The family also said the Taloja jail is “not equipped to handle his medical condition”.
“Thus, it is highly required that Rao be shifted to a better hospitalto save his life,” his wife said.
The family said at the present juncture, they were keeping aside all the pertinent facts of the case registered against Rao.
“His life is the topmost concern for us right now. Our present demand is to save his life. We demand the government to shift him to a better hospital or allow us to provide the required medical care,” Rao’s wife said.
“We want to remind the government that it has no right to deny the right to life to any person, much less an undertrial prisoner,” she added.
Rao has been in jail for over 22 months.
His bail pleas, including thosefiled for relief on the ground of his age, ill-health and risk of COVID-19, have been rejected on multiple occasions.
Rao and 10 other activists were arrested in the Elgar Parishad-Maoist link case, which was transferred to the National Investigation Agency (NIA) by the Centre in January this year.
The case pertains to alleged inflammatory speeches made at the Elgar Parishad conclave in Maharashtra’s Pune on December 31, 2017, which the Pune police claimed triggered violence the next day near the Koregaon-Bhima war memorial in the district. PTI
Here’s the full text of the press release
‘We, the family members of Varavara Rao, world-renowned Telugu revolutionary poet and public intellectual, who is incarcerated in Navi Mumbai’s Taloja Jail, are very much worried about his deteriorating health. His health condition has been scary for over six weeks now, ever since he was shifted in an unconscious state to JJ Hospital from Taloja Jail on May 28, 2020. Even as he was discharged from the hospital and sent back to jail three days later, there has been no improvement in his health and he is still in need of emergency heathcare.
The immediate cause of concern now is that we are very much perturbed at the routine phone call we received from him on Saturday evening. Though the earlier two calls on June 24 and July 2 were also worrying with his weak and muffled voice, incoherent speech and abruptly jumping into Hindi. As an eloquent and articulate public speaker and writer in Telugu for over five decades, a Telugu teacher for four decades and known for his meticulous memory, this fumbling, incoherence and loss of memory were in themselves strange and frightening.
But the latest call, on July 11 is much more worrisome as he did not answer straight questions on his health and went into a kind of delirious and hallucinated talk about the funeral of his father and mother, the events that happened seven decades and four decades ago respectively. Then his co-accused companion took the phone from him and informed us that he is not able to walk, go to toilet and brush his teeth on his own. We were also told that he is always hallucinating that we, family members, were waiting at the jail gate to receive him as he was getting released. His co-prisoner also said he needs immediate medical care for not only physical but also neurological issues. The confusion, loss of memory and incoherence are the results of electrolyte imbalance and fall of Sodium and Potassium levels leading to brain damage. This electrolyte imbalance may be fatal also. Taloja Jail Hospital is not at all equipped to handle this kind of serious ailment either in medical expertise or equipment. Thus it is highly required that he be shifted to a fully equipped super specialty hospital to save his life and prevent possible brain damage and risk to life due to electrolyte imbalance.
At the present juncture we are leaving aside all the pertinent facts like, that the case against him is fabricated; he had to spend 22 months in jail as an undertrial with the process turned into punishment; his bail petitions got rejected at least five times now and even the bail petitions with his age, ill-health and Covid vulnerability as grounds were ignored. His life is the top most concern for us right now. Our present demand is to save his life. We demand the government to shift him to a better hospital or allow us to provide required medical care. We want to remind the government that it has no right to deny the right to life of any person, much less an undertrial prisoner.’
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