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regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

Remove offending content: Delhi High Court to Ramdev on plea by doctors over Coronil

If the direction is not complied with, microblogging platform X (earlier Twitter) will take down the content, the court added

PTI New Delhi Published 29.07.24, 04:05 PM
Representational image.

Representational image. File

The Delhi High Court directed yoga guru Ramdev on Monday to take down certain "offending" social media posts in relation to the use of "Coronil" for COVID-19.

Justice Anup Jairam Bhambhani said he was "allowing" a plea moved by several doctors' associations against Ramdev.

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"There are directions for taking down of some of the offending posts and content. There are directions to the defendant to take down those set of tweets in three days," the judge said.

If the direction is not complied with, microblogging platform X (earlier Twitter) will take down the content, the court added.

A copy of the order is awaited.

The plea forms a part of a 2021 lawsuit filed by the doctors' associations against Ramdev, his associate Acharya Balkrishna as well as Patanjali Ayurveda.

Justice Bhambhani had reserved the order on the issue on May 21 after hearing the parties.

According to the lawsuit, Ramdev had made "unsubstantiated claims" with respect to "Coronil" being a cure for COVID-19, contrary to the licence granted to the drug for merely being an "immuno-booster".

Three resident doctors' associations of the All India Institutes of Medical Sciences at Rishikesh, Patna and Bhubaneswar as well as the Association of Resident Doctors, Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, Union of Resident Doctors of Punjab (URDP), Resident Doctors' Association, Lala Lajpat Rai Memorial Medical College, Meerut, and Telangana Junior Doctors' Association, Hyderabad moved the high court in 2021 against Ramdev and the others.

They alleged that there was a misinformation campaign and a marketing strategy to further the sales of the products sold by Ramdev, including "Coronil" that claimed to be an alternative treatment for COVID-19.

On October 27, 2021, the high court had issued a summons to Ramdev and others on the lawsuit, saying it was not frivolous and a case for its institution was "definitely" made out.

Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Telegraph Online staff and has been published from a syndicated feed.

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