Mumbai: The Aurangabad bench of the Bombay High Court on Friday slammed the Centre for its "insensitive" approach over the issue of supply of more than 100 dysfunctional ventilators to hospitals in the Marathwada region of Maharashtra.
A vacation bench of Justices R V Ghuge and B U Debadwar noted that the Union government was more concerned about the company that manufactured and supplied the dysfunctional ventilators than the lives of citizens.
The bench was hearing petitions pertaining to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Earlier this week, deans of the government-run hospitals in Aurangabad and a few private hospitals had told the court that 113 ventilators, out of 150 devices supplied from the Centre under the PM CARES Fund, were defective.
The court had then sought to know from the Union government what action it proposes to take on the issue.
On Friday, assistant Solicitor General Ajay Talhar submitted an affidavit filed by G K Pillai, undersecretary of the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, which stated that the ventilators were not supplied under the PM CARES Fund.
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The affidavit further said the Gujarat-based company, from which the ventilators were procured, had said that there was nothing wrong with the devices and ventilators it had supplied to other states were functioning properly.
"The hospital staff must have been inadequately trained and must have not been able to use the ventilators,"Talhar told the court.
The bench, however, said it was surprised as to how the Centre had accepted the company's claim at face value and has not said in the affidavit that it would look into the issue.