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India: Activist Tied to Cockroach Party Rushed to Hospital After 20-Day Fast

India: Activist Tied to Cockroach Party Rushed to Hospital After 20-Day Fast

Delhi Police Move Activist Sonam Wangchuk to Hospital After Hunger Strike

What Happened?

Imagine someone decides not to eat food to show they are very serious about a problem. That is called a hunger strike. Sonam Wangchuk, a 59-year-old activist, did exactly this. He stopped eating for 20 days to protest against India’s examination system.

On Saturday, the Delhi police took him to a hospital by force because they were worried about his health.

Important Point: Police said they acted because of a high court order and advice from doctors who said his health was getting worse.

Why Was He Protesting?

Wangchuk started his fast on 28 June. He wants India’s education minister, Dharmendra Pradhan, to resign. Why? Because there were problems (called irregularities) in the exams students take to study medicine.

A few hundred students joined him at a place in New Delhi called Jantar Mantar. Other protests were organized online by a funny-named group called the “Cockroach Janta party” (a satirical movement that uses humor to protest).

How Did the Police Explain It?

A deputy commissioner of Delhi police shared a statement. Here is what they said in simple points:

  • As per high court orders and expert medical advice, Wangchuk was shifted to hospital for needed medical care.
  • While police followed orders, some protesters tried to block them, causing a small commotion (pushing or confusion).
  • Police requested the protesters at Jantar Mantar to leave the place peacefully soon.

A video from that morning showed his supporters looking confused as police, carrying white sheets, quickly moved him from the stage.

What Did the Courts Say?

A New Delhi court and the Delhi high court stepped in to help:

  1. On Thursday, a New Delhi court ordered government doctors to check Wangchuk’s health every day.
  2. The court said, “The life of any citizen is precious,” after a lawyer named Rakesh Kumar Saini warned Wangchuk might not live long if he kept fasting.
  3. The Delhi high court ordered: “Whatever medical help is needed to save Sonam Wangchuk’s life should be done.”

Who Is Sonam Wangchuk?

Wangchuk is an engineer (someone who builds or designs things using science). He is famous for creating smart ways to save water in the Himalayas (big snowy mountains). A few hours before police took him, he said: “Smaller movements have brought down many governments in India … and here it is about education.”

Why Are Students So Upset?

Let’s break down the exam problems:

  • Last month, about 2.2 million students who want to study medicine took a re-exam with tight security.
  • They had to redo it because the first test was cancelled after someone leaked the paper (a “paper leak” means the secret test answers got out early).
  • Also, a separate mistake in grading high school tests made things worse.
  • These failures caused a big outcry (people shouting in anger) and youth protests.

Several opposition party members (people from other political groups) said they support Wangchuk and the student activists.

Summary

Sonam Wangchuk, a well-known water engineer, went on a 20-day hunger strike to protest exam problems in India’s medical admissions. His health dropped, so police moved him to a hospital following court orders. Courts said his life must be saved. The protest links to bigger issues about unfair exams that angered millions of students.

FAQ

1. What is a hunger strike?
It is when a person stops eating food to peacefully show they strongly disagree with something and want change.

2. Why did police take Wangchuk to a hospital?
Because doctors and a court said his health was dangerously bad after 20 days without food, and they needed to care for him.

3. What is Jantar Mantar?
It is a public place in New Delhi, India, where people often gather to protest.

4. What does “paper leak” mean?
It means the secret questions and answers of an exam were shared before the test, making it unfair.

5. Who supports Wangchuk?
Some students, a lawyer named Rakesh Kumar Saini, and several opposition party members support him and the student protests.

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