Shiv Sena corporator assaults women doctors in Kalyan-Dombivli hospital, Opposition demands arrest
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
A Shiv Sena corporator, identified as Ramesh Mhatre, allegedly assaulted women doctors and hospital staff at a Kalyan-Dombivli Municipal Corporation hospital in Maharashtra on 6 July, triggering a fierce political storm and widespread condemnation from across the spectrum. Maharashtra Police have since arrested three people in connection with the incident, with officials confirming that Mhatre himself would also be taken into custody.
What Happened at the Hospital
According to hospital officials, the violence erupted after doctors informed the family of a pregnant woman that all Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) beds in the facility were occupied, and advised them to shift the patient to another hospital with available capacity. The doctors had flagged the possibility of complications involving both the mother and the newborn.
CCTV footage, which went viral on social media, showed the corporator and several men entering a room inside the hospital and allegedly punching and slapping doctors and staff. The assault continued for more than three minutes. One woman doctor was seen attempting to call for help on her mobile phone; the corporator was captured on camera striking her from behind with sufficient force to knock the phone from her hand before allegedly continuing to assault other staff members.
An FIR has been registered against Mhatre. Assistant Commissioner of Police Suhas Hemade confirmed that legal action would be initiated against the corporator and that he would be taken into custody. At the time the three other accused were arrested, Mhatre had not yet been detained.
Opposition Demands Disqualification and Arrest
Shiv Sena-UBT MLA Aaditya Thackeray called on the Chief Minister to act decisively. 'I have asked the government and I have asked the Chief Minister to take action not only to arrest that corporator Ramesh Mhatre... but also to disqualify him from the post of the corporator, arrest him and parade him across Dombivli and Kalyan so that everybody knows that you cannot attack anybody like this, especially a doctor or a nurse, be it a female doctor or a male doctor or a nurse...' he said.
NCP-SP leader Rohit Pawar labelled the episode outright 'hooliganism' and alleged that those in power bore responsibility for such conduct. 'This is hooliganism, and it is being carried out by those in government. MLAs and corporators from the ruling party are engaging in such behaviour,' he said, adding that the doctor had acted correctly in advising the family to seek an alternative facility given the unavailability of NICU beds.
Congress MLA Nana Patole linked the incident to what he described as the ruling alliance's arrogance following its electoral majority. 'This is the Maharashtra of Savitribai Phule, where respect for women has always been a matter of pride. Even Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj upheld these values. We will raise this issue and demand immediate action from the government,' he said. Congress leader Aslam Shaikh went further, alleging the government was 'intoxicated with power' and that attacking women and doctors was shameful.
What the Ruling Side Said
Maharashtra Minister Meghana Bordikar described the incident as unfortunate, stating that no public representative should conduct themselves in such a manner. She confirmed that an FIR had already been registered and assured that steps would be taken to prevent recurrence. Minister Prakashrao Abitkar said action would be taken against whoever was found responsible, while Minister Yogesh Kadam called any assault on doctors 'completely wrong and unacceptable', even as he noted he had not yet received full details of the case.
Shiv Sena MLA Sanjay Gaikwad, however, said the footage he had seen showed only a scuffle and not a clear assault on a woman doctor. He also raised a broader concern about the functioning of civil hospitals in Maharashtra, suggesting that some government employees displayed indifference toward patient care. Minister Bharatshet Gogawale said Deputy Chief Minister Eknath Shinde would first review the full circumstances before taking a decision.
NCP MLA Saroj Ahire also condemned the incident, stating that raising a hand against a woman was unacceptable under any circumstance and that grievances must be channelled through proper legal and administrative processes.
Political and Medical Community Fallout
The assault has drawn condemnation from medical professionals across Maharashtra, with doctors' associations calling for swift and strict action. This comes amid a recurring national debate over the safety of healthcare workers in government hospitals, a concern that gained particular urgency following the RG Kar Medical College case in Kolkata in 2024. Notably, this is not the first time a political functionary has been accused of intimidating hospital staff over bed availability or treatment decisions — a pattern that critics argue reflects systemic disregard for medical protocols and frontline workers.
With the Maharashtra legislature session approaching and the Opposition already mobilised, pressure on the ruling Mahayuti alliance to take visible punitive action against Mhatre is expected to intensify in the days ahead.