Jammu Tawi, Nov 22: After initial hiccups, the Administrative Council of J&K Union Territory today released a compensation of Rs. 36 lakh – Rs. 3 lakh to the each family of victim of spurious drugs that caused death of 12 infants in Ramnagar Block of Udhampur District in Jammu Division.
As usually a government does, J&K Administration resisted the orders of National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) that took cognizance of the deaths of 12 children due to spurious drugs that were openly sold in District Udhampur and elsewhere. The NHRC recommended compensation in this case related to infant deaths linked to consumption of spurious drugs in Udhampur district.
Jammu and Kashmir administration has released Rs 3 lakh each for the 12 bereaved families.
Early this year, the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) ordered the payment compensation to the families who lost their children in Ramnagar block between December 2019 and January 2020, observing that there is no denial of lapse on the part of Drugs Controlling authorities who failed to control sale of such spurious life saving drugs. However, the drugs department of Jammu and Kashmir fully attempted to absolve itself to “own the responsibility” for it.
The complaint about the infant deaths due to the consumption of spurious drugs was lodged before the Commission by a local social activist Sukesh C Khajuria.
In an order issued on November 16, the Health and Medical Education Department said in compliance to order passed by NHRC, a sanction was being accorded to the release of Rs 36 lakh for 12 infant victims of spurious drugs in Ramnagar following approval by the Administrative Council headed by Lt Governor Manoj Sinha in its meeting held on October 7.
The department has ordered the release of the compensation amount to the State Drug Controller for further payment as a special and exceptional infant mortality case subject to the outcome of the Special Leave Petition (SLP) pending before the Supreme Court, the order issued by Additional Chief Secretary, Vivek Bharadwaj read.
Sharing the copy of the government order here on Monday, Khajuria who raised the issue for the victim families said it is only a small step in the direction of providing succour to them and also a victory for common masses who suffer due to lack of medical care and official negligence day-in-and-day-out throughout the country.
He said the J&K administration was forced to pay compensation following orders by the NHRC on January 18 and July 19 after the government challenged the initial order in the J-K High Court which, however, upheld the NHRC recommendations in the case.
The case is a landmark in the history of judicial activism where the government has been ordered to pay compensation for the utter neglect and alleged callous connivance of the state drug authorities in checking the sale of spurious drugs in the remote mountainous areas, he said.
The release of compensation amount has a rider on the outcome of SLP of the J&K government in the Supreme Court but I am confident that the apex court will also provide complete justice to the infant victims, he said.

