A civil rights organisation operating in the healthcare domain has sought the intervention of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) in the case of five maternal deaths in Kota, Rajasthan, following an ET report that found oxytocin injections administered to the women allegedly contained no active ingredient and were effectively only water.Jan Swasthya Abhiyan India (JSAI) has urged the NHRC to register the matter as a human rights case, order an independent probe, and ensure free lifelong medical treatment and rehabilitation for the affected women.It has also sought NHRC intervention on compensation and accountability.Also read | Rajasthan government orders three-layer drug testing after tragedyAs reported by ET on July 5, five young mothers died at Government Medical college, Kota and JK Lon hospital.“The complaint says laboratory testing by the Rajasthan Drug Control Department found the oxytocin lacked meaningful active content, and alleges violations of manufacturing and quality norms by the drugmaker, including fabrication of records and regulatory failures,” it said.Also read | US charges Lawrence Bishnoi, Goldy Brar for Nijjar's killing in Canada in 2023The organisation has further cited how families of the surviving women continue to face severe hardship, as reported by ET.
Rajasthan maternal deaths: Rights group seeks NHRC probe into Kota oxytocin case
In a plea for justice, a civil rights group has turned to the National Human Rights Commission concerning five maternal deaths that occurred in Kota, Rajasthan. These women were given oxytocin injections that were later revealed to contain no active substance—just water. The organisation is seeking not only compensation and accountability for the affected families but also an independent investigation and lifelong medical care for the survivors.







