Author:
Publication: Sify.com
Date: January 30, 2008
URL: http://sify.com/news/fullstory.php?id=14597397
Bangladeshi writer Taslima Nasreen, who was
admitted to the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in New Delhi
for "suspected drug effect" on January 26, said Wednesday that she
had been administered wrong medicines by government deputed doctors leading
to the hospitalisation.
In her first telephonic interview from her undisclosed
address after she was discharged from the hospital Wednesday, the writer said:
"I was living under stress and that caused hypertension."
According to Nasreen, she was not seen by a
cardiologist when she felt uneasy. Instead, she was taken to some place where
a doctor deputed by the government gave her "wrong drugs."
"I immediately fainted from the poisonous
effect Saturday evening. Then I was taken to the AIIMS and there the doctors
saved me. I was in the CCU," Nasreen said.
"I am not yet stable. I cannot consult
doctor of my choice even now," said the writer who is also a physician
herself.
"My blood pressure is fluctuating. I am
not sure what to do. A wrong news that my visa has been extended is doing the
rounds too."
Y K Gupta, chief spokesperson of AIIMS, said
on Tuesday: "Taslima Nasreen was brought to our hospital January 26 night.
She was admitted after initial investigation found that she was suffering from
suspected drug effect. It could be the side effect of some drug as well."
He said the 45-year-old author was also "complaining
of uneasiness and hypertension."
The writer was forced to leave Kolkata after
a protest by a Muslim organisation against her continued stay in India turned
violent November 21.
She was taken first to Jaipur and then to New
Delhi by the Central Government and has since been kept in confinement at a
safe house.