‘Month-long stir, people’s support finally bear fruit’

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1 2 Kolkata: As CM Mamata Banerjee announced a shake-up in the police force and the health department after a marathon meeting at Kalighat late on Monday, junior doctors glued to the the news on handsets erupted in joy and chanted ‘We want justice’ slogan with renewed vigor. All of them felt their prolonged agitation and people’s support had finally borne fruit. “We are really happy that the CM has accepted our demands to replace the commissioner of police, DC-North and the DME and DHS in the health department.

They were among our core demands,” said a junior doctor, delight evident in the broad smile. The faces of nearly eveyone present had lit up on hearing the news of the administrative changes. But they were quick to point out that though their cease-work was likely to be called off once their colleagues reached the protest site and they held a meeting, their agitation for justice in the rape and murder of their colleague at RG Kar would continue unabated.



The announcement and the ensuing exuberance in the camp capped nearly six hours’ anxious wait. Through the evening, they kept the tempo and each other’s spirits up by singing songs and shouting slogans in turns. Some of the agitators painted fresh graffiti and slogans on the street before Nabadiganta Bhawan adjacent to Swasthya Bhavan.

But every now and then, a few of them betrayed the collective anxiety as they checked the mobile screens or tried to ring a colleague who was at the meeting for an update. “This meeting was significant not only for us but also for the citizens of Bengal at large. For this protest was no longer only confined to doctors.

It had become a people’s protest,” said Brahmajit Hazra, one of the agitating junior doctors. “All of us want to return to work now that most of our demands are met,” said a junior doctor. We also published the following articles recently United in our fight, say junior doctors after GB meet tape leak Trinamool's ex-MP Kunal Ghosh shared an audio tape highlighting differing views among junior doctors ahead of their meeting with CM Mamata Banerjee.

While they didn't contest the tape's content, they stressed unity in seeking justice. The demand for live-streaming discussions stemmed from the broader group of protesting doctors at Salt Lake. Kolkata protest: TMC MP calls agitating medicos 'unfit to become doctors' Senior TMC MP Kalyan Banerjee criticised junior doctors in West Bengal for their ongoing strike, calling them unfit to become doctors.

The strike began after a post-graduate trainee was found dead at RG Kar Medical College and Hospital. The doctors demand justice and increased security for women health professionals. It took 'Didi', not CM Mamata Banerjee to get junior doctors to Kalighat in Kolkata West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee visited a protest site, urging junior doctors to return to work and promising to address their demands with sympathy.

She assured no punitive actions against them for striking. Her intervention led to the first dialogue between the government and junior doctors since an RG Kar doctor was murdered..