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ICU to Election Night: Real-Life Incidents That Demand Reform

AI Summary:

  • Two frontline women—Niharika in an ICU and Chayanika during elections—face personal crises while institutions demand uninterrupted duty.
  • Systems exploit female labour: emotional caregiving, logistical burdens, and bodily indignities go unacknowledged and unsupported.
  • The narrative exposes systemic failures and calls for policy changes, humane protocols, and organisational accountability to protect dignity, health, and work-life balance.

Niharika stood at the doorway of the ICU, trying to steady her breath. Her cousin, Surjyo Dada, lay on the stretcher—his body still, his brain almost gone. The beeping machines were soft, as if even they were afraid to disturb the silence of that grief. For a moment, she forgot she was a senior ACS officer; she was only a daughter, a sister, a pehi of the clan, expected to hold an entire family together.

Her phone buzzed. It was her boss, an IAS lady officer, calling on WhatsApp. Niharika answered gently, explaining that she was in the ICU and that it was a medical emergency. But the voice on the other end did not soften.

He rose, sharp and angry, shouting and yelling at her for missing a meeting. The lady had already shouted at her twice earlier that day, enquiring about an important file that had, in fact, been pending with the senior officer herself since November 25, 2020.

They were different nights, different crises, the same unspoken demand: women expected to be unflinching pillars while the systems around them frayed. Niharika’s grief in the hushed ICU and Chayanika’s exhausted vigilance on a chaotic election night both reveal how duty overrides bodily needs, personal loss and dignity—how institutions lean on women’s labour without adjusting a single protocol to hold them back.

Chayanika stared at the order in disbelief: she was assigned to receive election materials. Enormously, visibly pregnant, she was stationed far from home, managing with only part-time domestic help.

Her husband, Prakash—an officer in the same service—was tied up with distant duties. Her first worry? Who would care for their child if she returned late? She convinced the maid to stay overnight.

Election day erupted in chaos. Two polling officers ignored announcements and vanished with the EVMs. Traced through the personnel cell, the OC found them: two drunk college lecturers, sprawled on campus, machines abandoned under their heedless watch, dragged in at dawn.

Advanced pregnancy brought quiet indignities—mild incontinence.

Toilets were remote; her clothes soaked in urine’s hush. “Did her staff notice the odour?” haunted her every moment.

Plenty of male officers for this risky night shift—and yet she was!

Picture design by AI

1 Comments Text
  • qwenart says:
    Your comment is awaiting moderation. This is a preview; your comment will be visible after it has been approved.
    The title’s reference to a journey from ‘ICU to Election Night’ suggests a powerful, albeit fragmented, narrative about how real-life crises are driving the demand for urgent political reform. Given the article’s broad scope covering everything from governance and human rights to activism, linking personal health struggles with systemic political failures creates a compelling argument for why the electorate is becoming more vocal on May 23, 2026.
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