PANAJI: The Bombay High Court in Goa on Monday refused to enter the edition of the appointment of each Judicial Commission to ask the deaths at the Goa Medical College (GMC) in May this year or the issue of payment of compensation to the victims.
It also rejected the need for death audits stating that no serious cases reported Covid-19 death.
Dealing with petitions who are looking for the Judicial Commission to see death in GMC, the court stated, “There is no lagging about whether one of the victims has allowed one of the applicants to increase the claim.
In such a state of application, we refrain from leaving.
In the issue of the appointment of the Judicial Commission, or the issue of compensation payment.
“This also considered the submission of the Advocate General that the Supreme Court had been confiscated by the issue of ex-Gratia compensation to victims of Covid.
Replying to the request that seeks a death audit, Advocate General Devidas Pangam convinced the court that at least in Goa, there are no cases under reporting and delivered that there is a matter of private hospitals that do not accurately report death.
He showed that in some cases, even the notification of the show has been spent for violators and such notice will be disposed of in accordance with the earliest law.
“This is another reason why we don’t feel that it is appropriate for us to enter into this problem, at this stage and that too, at the command of the applicants today.” But the court is directed at performance audits with respect to ventilators and other medical equipment in Goa.
“State authorities are also required to take immediate steps to see that ventilators and other medical equipment are in working conditions so that there are no logistical problems in the future,” said the High Court.