Indian Army medical teams begin providing round-the-clock services in quake-hit Venezuela as part of “Operation Amistad,” according to reports from India Today and Times of India. The deployment includes an Army field hospital that shifts to a 24x7 operating schedule to deliver free medical care to affected people in the aftermath of the earthquake. Both outlets describe the initiative as an assistance effort by the Indian Armed Forces focused on urgent healthcare needs during the emergency period. While the reports emphasize that the hospital is now operating continuously, they do not provide additional operational details such as the hospital’s location within Venezuela, the number of staff, or specific medical capabilities. The coverage consistently frames the action as a humanitarian response tied to Operation Amistad, with the key development being the expansion to continuous, free medical services for quake survivors. The reporting is aligned in its core facts: the Indian Army field hospital is operational 24 hours a day and provides care as part of this broader mission to support Venezuela following the earthquake.