04 April,2015 12:58 PM IST | | Dharmendra Jore
Mahadev Jankar, a member of legislative council, says his workers scoured the entire city to find drug, since clinic he went to didn’t have it; he was bitten by dogs outside his Goregaon home
A Legislator realised what the common man has to go through in times of emergencies, when he was bitten by stray dogs and his aides were unable to find anti-rabies drug in the city. It was only when a host of his workers spread out over the city that a primary dose was found but the leader now requires a more powerful drug, which has to be imported from the USA.
Jankar was bitten by stray dogs outside his Goregaon residence on Thursday night when he tried shooing them away. File pic
The incident occurred with Mahadev Jankar, a member of legislative council (MLC) and the national president of the Rashtriya Samaj Paksha (RSP), an ally of the BJP. At 10 pm on Thursday, Jankar was out for a post-dinner walk outside his residence in Nivara Hakka Samiti in Goregaon (East).
"I spotted an elderly man being attacked by 7-8 strays. I tried to shoo the dogs away. Instead of running away scared, some strays attacked me and bit me on my thighs," Jankar told mid-day from Astha Hospital in Kandivli. He was discharged from the hospital late in the afternoon yesterday.
Jankar's aide, Vaibhav Borade, said he rushed to the spot when he heard Jankar shouting from a distance. "We had dinner together. Before I could reach the spot (not far from the home), Jankar was bleeding profusely. His shorts were torn and soaked in blood," he said.
Dogged pursuit
According to Jankar, his tribulations started when he was rushed to a nearby clinic. "Since the clinic didn't have the anti-rabies drug available, my desperate workers travelled across the city in four separate vehicles to get it.
Somehow, they managed to get the medicine and I was given the first dose at 3.30 am," said the MLC, who was shifted to the Kandivli hospital on Friday morning. Due to this incident, it dawned on Jankar that a common man could've been in worse trouble.
"One can imagine the plight of a common man in a similar situation. I could get the drug because I had help and resources at hand. What will the poor do in such cases?" said Jankar, who hails from rural parts of western Maharashtra.
He also demanded a permanent solution to the stray dog menace. This administered dose, however, is a primary one. The legislator said he was advised to get a high-power âAlbumin Anti-Rabies 1400IN' drug because of the nature of the injury.
This drug is not recommended for all and a senior drugs department official told Jankar that it is not available in India. "The drugs department officials have assured me that they will help me get the drug from America. I have been given one dose of anti-rabies and will need six more shots," he said.