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Updated Jun 27, 2025 · 20:42
Delhi News Updated Jun 27, 2025

Transaction adviser being appointed for PPP model in 11 hospitals: Delhi Minister

Delhi's Health Minister Pankaj Kumar Singh is pioneering a transformative Public-Private Partnership model for 11 hospitals to enhance healthcare infrastructure. The initiative comes amidst ongoing investigations into alleged corruption in previous health projects by AAP leaders. Singh emphasized resolving existing hospital shortcomings and aligning with Prime Minister Modi's healthcare vision. The move signals a significant strategic shift in Delhi's healthcare management approach.

New Delhi, June 27

Delhi Health Minister Pankaj Kumar Singh said on Friday that the government is working to introduce the Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model in 11 hospitals and a transaction adviser is being appointed for the purpose.

Speaking to reporters after an inspection at Bawana's Maharshi Valmiki hospital, Singh said the government is committed to implementing the vision of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and address concerns of patients and the doctors.

"We have come across some lapses and shortcomings at Maharshi Valmiki Hospital and I have ordered their resolution within 15 days," said Singh.

He claimed that the Health Department was on the path of recovery after suffering due to mismanagement of the previous AAP government.

The Health Minister pointed to delays in construction of an operation theatre at the hospital which has not been completed for over a year, problems with civil works, and shortage of staff.

The Delhi Health Minister's visit to the hospital comes a day after the Anti-Corruption Branch (ACB) booked former health ministers and AAP leaders Saurabh Bharadwaj and Satyendar Jain for alleged corruption in health infrastructure projects involving 24 hospitals and expenditure of Rs 5,590 crore by the Delhi Government.

A cheating, breach of trust and conspiracy case was registered after the Centre, on the recommendation of Lieutenant Governor V.K. Saxena, granted sanction for proceedings against the previous government's minister under Section 17A of the Prevention of Corruption Act.

The financial embezzlement linked to the projects, mired in inexplicable delays and astronomical cost overruns, took place in 2018-19, said the official.

Massive irregularities, unexplained delays, and significant misappropriation of funds have been found in the construction of various hospitals, polyclinics and ICU infrastructure across the city, said an investigator.

Substantial deviations and cost escalations, amounting to several hundred crores, were observed. Not a single project was completed within the prescribed timeline, said the complaint filed on August 22 by the then Leader of Opposition, Vijender Gupta.

Gupta had highlighted grave irregularities and suspected corruption in various health infrastructure projects under the GNCTD.

The complaint named former Health Ministers Bharadwaj and Jain, alleging systematic manipulation of project budgets, misuse of public funds, and collusion with private contractors.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rahul K.

Finally some action against corruption in Delhi's health sector! The PPP model can bring efficiency if implemented transparently. Hope this helps improve patient care. Previous govt's mismanagement has cost taxpayers dearly. 🤞

Priya M.

While PPP may help, we must ensure private partners don't make healthcare unaffordable for common people. Government hospitals are lifelines for poor families. Quality shouldn't come at the cost of accessibility.

Amit S.

Shocking to hear about ₹5590 crore scam! Our tax money wasted while patients suffer. Hope the investigation reaches logical conclusion. Corruption in healthcare is worst kind - literally playing with people's lives.

Neha T.

Operation theatre incomplete for over a year? This is unacceptable! My mother had to wait 3 months for surgery at this hospital. Hope new measures bring actual change on ground level, not just announcements.

Sanjay P.

Why always blame game between governments? Just fix the hospitals! We need working facilities with proper staff and equipment. Political fights can wait, patients can't. ðŸ˜

Kavita R.

As a doctor, I welcome PPP if it means better infrastructure and reduced patient load. But government must maintain strict oversight on quality standards. Healthcare can't be run purely as profit-making business.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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