GMCH Principal transferred to Nalbari amid harassment probe, five months on
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Assam government on Monday, 7 July 2025, transferred Gauhati Medical College and Hospital (GMCH) Principal Dr Achyut Baishya to Nalbari Medical College and Hospital, nearly five months after a senior woman doctor filed a workplace harassment complaint against him, triggering a police investigation and a government-ordered inquiry. The administrative reshuffle, issued with immediate effect, comes while both proceedings remain pending.
The Transfer Order
According to a notification from the Medical Education and Research Department, Dr Baishya has been posted as Principal-cum-Chief Superintendent of Nalbari Medical College and Hospital with immediate effect. Replacing him at GMCH is Dr Babul Kumar Bezbaruah, who was previously serving as Principal-cum-Chief Superintendent at Nalbari. Notably, the transfer order does not cite the pending inquiry or offer any stated reason for the reshuffle.
The Harassment Allegations
In February 2025, an Associate Professor and former Head of the Department of Clinical Psychology at GMCH lodged an FIR at Panbazar Women Police Station, alleging workplace harassment, intimidation, and administrative victimisation during Dr Baishya's tenure as Principal. The complainant alleged that Dr Baishya repeatedly insisted she meet him alone in his office and made remarks she described as inappropriate and unprofessional. She further accused him of delaying administrative decisions, obstructing her department's functioning, and hampering efforts to strengthen mental health services at the hospital.
Government and Police Response
Following the allegations, the Assam government constituted a two-member inquiry committee headed by women officials to examine the complaint. Police simultaneously initiated a preliminary investigation into the matter. At the time, Dr Baishya denied any wrongdoing, stating he had been advised not to comment publicly, while maintaining that he possessed all relevant documents and would cooperate fully with the inquiry.
What Happens Next
The status of both the government inquiry and the police probe remains unclear following Monday's order. The transfer, silent on its rationale, is likely to draw scrutiny from women's rights groups and medical fraternity observers who have been tracking the case. This comes amid broader national attention on workplace safety mechanisms in government medical institutions, where harassment complaints have historically faced slow institutional responses.