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Pak prisoner remains in deep coma

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Press Trust of India Chandigarh/New Delhi
The condition of Pakistani prisoner Sanaullah Ranjay, injured in a scuffle with another inmate in a Jammu jail, remained critical today but his metabolic parameters were settling down even as India granted permission to Pakistan High Commissioner Salman Bashir to visit Chandigarh to see him.

"His metabolic parameters are now settling. The arterial blood gases are satisfactorily maintained on moderate oxygen flow. He continues to be on ventilator. His blood pressure continues to be maintained with three inotropic drugs," a medical bulletin issued by doctors attending on him said in Chandigarh.

"He continues to be critically sick and in deep coma, almost in the same status as yesterday with no neurological improvement," it said.
 

Meanwhile, government sources said in Delhi that permission has been granted to the Pakistan High Commissioner to meet 52-year-old Sanaullah, who was airlifted from Jammu to the Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER) on Friday.

Bashir had earlier made a request to visit Chandigarh and meet the prisoner.

"Bashir's request was considered and he was granted permission this evening," the sources said.

Sanaullah, a resident of Sialkot in Pakistan, is serving a life term after being convicted under TADA provisions following his arrest in 1999.

He was injured during a scuffle with another inmate in high-security Kot Balwal jail in Jammu and was immediately shifted to Government Medical College Hospital and later rushed to PGIMR in Chandigarh in an air ambulance after doctors said his condition was critical.

Sanaullah was assaulted a day after the death of Indian prisoner Sarabjit Singh, who was brutally attacked by six fellow inmates in a Lahore prison.

The Pakistan High Commission said in a release that the doctors have conveyed to them that they will wait 48 to 72 hours trying to stabilise the patient before taking a decision on any major medical intervention.

The release said that Sanaullah's status/condition is unchanged since his arrival in the ICU and he continues to be critically sick.

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First Published: May 05 2013 | 7:10 PM IST

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