Jayalalithaa 'responding' to treatment: AIADMK
Tamil Nadu chief minister J Jayalalithaa, who suffered a cardiac arrest and is in a critical condition, is "responding" to the treatment being given by experts, who include a four-member AIIMS team, her party AIADMK said on Monday.
"The AIIMS team... they have come and are treating (Jayalalithaa). She is responding to it," a spokesperson from the ruling party said on Monday night without elaborating.
The senior leader's remarks came even as
Apollo Hospital , where Jayalalithaa is admitted, said its specialists and those from AIIMS were constantly monitoring the 68-year-old chief minister very closely.
The Centre had earlier in the day dispatched a team of specialists from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences to the Apollo Hospital where Jayalalithaa is undergoing treatment after suffering cardiac arrest late yesterday.
The team of AIIMS doctors include pulmonologist Dr G C Khilnani, anaesthetist Dr Anjan Trikha, cardiac surgeon Dr Sachin Talwar and cardiologist Dr Rajiv Narang.
Tamil Nadu on edge
A near total shutdown like situation prevailed in Chennai with shops and other establishments downing shutters and office goers returning home early as chief minister J Jayalalithaa's health condition continued to remain critical on Monday.
The entire area in and around Apollo Hospitals , where she is being treated since September 22, resembled a fortress with traffic completely halted on the road leading to the hospital and a heavy police posse deployed.
At the hospital hundreds of AIADMK party workers continued to stay put and raised slogans saying their beloved 'Amma' should recover.
Some were seen protesting against some TV channels, which aired wrong news of Jayalalilthaa's health condition earlier in the evening.
Elsewhere in the city, a bandh-like situation prevailed with relatively less traffic on the roads.
Educational institutions sent students home early in the afternoon, while several offices asked their staff to leave early.
By dusk, roads started wearing a deserted look, even as groups of anxious people huddled in discussions over the condition of 68-year-old AIADMK supremo.
Shops, including petty outlets, eateries and departmental stores, closed shutters, even as people stocked essentials.
Many bus and suburban rail stations wore a near deserted look by 7.00pm itself while the number of private vehicles was also less on many roads.
The usual weekday peak hour rush was absent with comparatively less number of commuters seen travelling on the Tambaram-Beach suburban train route.
The busy Rangananthan Street in the commercial district of T Nagar also emptied soon.
A report from Madurai said similar situation was witnessed in the temple city and many other towns in south Tamil Nadu where shopkeepers downed shutters and people scurried home.
Office goers had a tough time when they left early as many bus services were withdrawn.
The atmosphere in many towns and cities turned eerie and silent in south Tamil Nadu. AIADMK men and women looked sad and sobbing in the party offices in Madurai.
Police were guarding all vantage points including lanes and by-lanes as a precautionary measure.
Tourists in pilgrims centres such as Palani, Madurai and Rameswaram were stranded with very few buses plying and were forced to go for roadside hotels for their dinner. Even the temples were less crowded.
A city bus was damaged when some anti-social elements pelted stones near the district court in Madurai.
Railway stations witnessed thin crowd with many cancelling journeys even as Railway sources said all trains would be operated with sufficient security.
Though there were no major untoward incident, reports of stones being pelted at a state transport corporation bus came in from a locality in Chennai.
The city has come under a thick security cover with large number of police personnel being deployed at vital junctions.
As traders hotels and commercial houses remained shut, supply of milk and food had been affected.
Jayalalithaa: Jayalalithaa 'responding' to treatment: AIADMK - Times of India