Over 1,000 kids died in Gorakhpur in 12 months: Akhilesh Yadav

Akhilesh declared he would soon release a list of the children who died in Gorakhpur

Gorakhpur infant deaths file [File] Children at a hospital in Gorakhpur | AFP

Amid a political storm over infant deaths in Kota, Samajwadi Party president Akhilesh Yadav on Friday alleged that over a thousand children have died in the last 12 months in Gorakhpur and asked the Uttar Pradesh government as to who was responsible for it.

Training his guns on the Uttar Pradesh chief minister, Akhilesh said "Yogi Adityanath is worried about Kota deaths. When will he be worried about the Gorakhpur deaths?”

Akhilesh told a press conference at Lucknow that the ailing children in Gorakhpur were suffering from encephalitis but were administered different medicines, so that the truth did not come out that they were dying of encephalitis.

"I will soon release a list of the dead children," he said. "Why wrong medicines were administered? Who is answerable?" he asked.

Adityanath had on Thursday targeted the Congress over infant deaths in Rajasthan, saying party leader Priyanka Gandhi should have gone there to console the children's mothers instead of "playing politics" in Uttar Pradesh.

At least 100 infants have died at a government-run hospital in Kota in the past month.

On Uttar Pradesh BJP president Swatantra Dev Singh's remark that the Samajwadi Party chief should stay in Pakistan for a month to understand atrocities being faced by Hindus there, Akhilesh said the saffron party has made this suggestion as it does not want any discussion on unemployment.

Akhilesh also said very soon SP workers will take out rallies all over the state against the National Population Register (NPR), noting that it would do no good to the people.

Nahi chahiye NPR, humey chahiye rozgar (We don't need NPR, we need employment) will be our slogan," he said.

The SP chief's remarks came against the backdrop of the Union cabinet approving Rs 8,500 crore for updating the NPR.

He accused the BJP of being silent on economic issues, rising prices of essential commodities, higher cost of cooking gas cylinders and costlier electricity. Referring to the recent clashes in Uttar Pradesh, the SP chief claimed that all the deaths during the anti-CAA protests were during police firing.

"All the deaths were caused by police bullets," he claimed.

Officials have maintained the death toll at 19, with some of the casualties in police firing, which took place in "self-defence".