Key Points

Madhya Pradesh Minister Narendra Patel has squarely blamed Tamil Nadu for the cough syrup deaths, arguing that responsibility lies with the manufacturing state. He revealed that a police team is heading to Tamil Nadu to arrest the company owners while defending his position against resignation demands. Meanwhile, Congress leader Digvijaya Singh has accused MP drug officials of complete failure in their monthly testing duties. The political blame game continues as children's deaths become a state versus state accountability battle.

Key Points: MP Minister Blames Tamil Nadu for Child Cough Syrup Deaths

  • MP Minister claims Tamil Nadu factory solely responsible for contaminated medicine deaths
  • CM Mohan Yadav personally monitoring case with state covering medical costs
  • Police team heading to Tamil Nadu to arrest company owners
  • Congress accuses MP drug officials of failure to test samples monthly
  • Minister defends against resignation demands saying he'll comply if asked
  • Tamil Nadu government accused of negligence in quality control inspections
3 min read

MP Minister blames Tamil Nadu for cough syrup deaths, Congress hits out at state govt

MP Minister Narendra Patel shifts blame to Tamil Nadu factory for contaminated cough syrup deaths as Congress accuses state government of failure and corruption.

"The Madhya Pradesh government officials are not as responsible in this as the Tamil Nadu government system - Narendra Shivaji Patel"

Bhopal, October 9

Madhya Pradesh Minister of State for Public Health and Medical Education, Narendra Shivaji Patel, on Wednesday blamed the Tamil Nadu government for the deaths of children allegedly caused by contaminated cough syrup, saying that officials of the MP government were "not as responsible" as those in Tamil Nadu.

Speaking to ANI, Patel said that Chief Minister Mohan Yadav is personally monitoring the case and that the state government is bearing all medical expenses of the hospitalised children.

"The Madhya Pradesh government is committed to take strict action against all those responsible in this incident and ensure that no guilty person should be spared. This entire incident occurred because of a factory in Tamil Nadu. The Tamil Nadu government's system is responsible for it, but the media has not highlighted this accountability as much as it should have. Because the Madhya Pradesh government officials are not as responsible in this as the Tamil Nadu government system," Patel said.

He added that the responsibility for manufacturing and licensing lies with the state where the medicine is produced. "When a medicine is manufactured in a particular state and sold outside it, it is the state's responsibility to inspect and ensure its quality before it leaves," he said.

The minister stated that it had come to their notice that the Tamil Nadu government was negligent, and they were writing a letter to the Tamil Nadu government regarding this matter. "Where the Tamil Nadu government showed negligence, and which officials were responsible, has come to our notice. We are writing to the Tamil Nadu government regarding this matter, inquiring about how substandard medicine produced in their factory was allowed to leave the state. Also, arrests have begun based on the FIR filed in the case. Our police team is heading to Tamil Nadu, and the owners of the company will be arrested," he said.

On the opposition's demand for his resignation, Patel said, "If my resignation solves the problem, then whenever our top leadership asks, I will resign within two minutes."

Meanwhile, Congress leader Digvijaya Singh accused the Madhya Pradesh government of complete failure in the matter.

"It is such an incident in which the Madhya Pradesh government completely failed. It is the duty of the drug inspector and drug controller to collect medicine samples and have them tested monthly, but they failed to do so. The incident occurred due to the failure of these officials and corruption. You should have collected the samples of medicine here; if anyone is making poison, then it is only their responsibility to check, not yours. What were you doing?" Singh told ANI.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
The minister has a point about manufacturing state's responsibility. When medicines are produced in one state and sold across India, quality control should be strict at the source. Tamil Nadu government should answer for this negligence.
D
David E
As someone working in healthcare, I find this shocking. Both states failed in their duties - Tamil Nadu in manufacturing quality control and MP in regular testing of medicines available in their market. This needs systemic reform.
S
Shreya B
Why is the MP minister deflecting responsibility? Digvijaya Singh is right - local drug inspectors should have tested samples. This is basic protocol! Both governments need to work together instead of this political drama.
A
Arjun K
Heartbreaking to read about children's deaths. Instead of blame game, focus should be on compensation for affected families and strict punishment for all responsible officials, regardless of which state they belong to. 🙏
M
Meera T
This shows the urgent need for a centralized drug monitoring system. State-level quality checks are clearly failing. The central government should step in and create a robust national framework for medicine safety.

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