Locals complain that the Indian government has not been able to protect the ambulance provided free of charge.
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The ambulance which was brought a decade ago on the initiative of former minister and Maoist deputy general secretary Varshman Pun is lying idle. An ambulance was stopped because a club in Madichour, a village in Pune, could not operate.
On the initiative of Pun, the Indian government provided the ambulance free of charge. Madi Jaljala Youth Club was operating the ambulance provided by India on the occasion of Republic Day in 2069. Ambulance No. Ra 1 Ch 152 is currently stranded near Jaljala Multipurpose Campus in Libang. 'This ambulance has been lying idle on the road near our room for a few years,' said young Vishal KC. According to
sources, the club drove the ambulance until the condition was good. He was left bereft after the situation weakened. Although Jenten Ambulance ran for about 10 years, recently the club entrusted the driver to run it on a contract basis. Currently, the ambulance is left unattended on the road as the driver will also suffer loss. Dhruvchandra Pun, president of
club, said that the ambulance stopped running after the club was unable to repair it.
When former minister Pun brought an ambulance for the first time, election slogans were made throughout the village. He is a Federal Member of Parliament elected from Rolpa. But the leader is again unaware when the ambulance is being hired and contracted. In the beginning, this situation happened when the club did not deposit the fees collected when the ambulance was running. Locals complain that they are not able to protect the ambulance provided free of charge by the Indian government due to not being able to use the public vehicles.
There is no situation in which other ambulances are utilized in the district. Although there is a provision to form an ambulance operation and protection committee under the leadership of the chief district officer, the said committee is unaware. It is not possible to get an ambulance to bring patients from the village to the district hospital. Some ambulances bring their own fare. Initially, there were around two dozen ambulances in operation across the district, but the current situation is not good.
