The Free Press Journal

Nursing students lured with 150 marks

The prime accused, Dr Manish Tripathi, asked nursing students to administer 0.3ml dose instead of 0.5ml and paid them Rs 3,000 each for participat­ion

- PRIYANKA NAVALKAR priyanka.navalkar@fpj.co.in

The 2,000-page chargeshee­t filed in the fake vaccinatio­n drive case by Kandivali police reveals that one of the key accused, Dr Manish Tripathi, had lured the nursing students of KCEP with 150 marks in practical exams. The police have recorded the statements of at least seven nursing students who were also offered Rs 3,000 for participat­ion in the drive.

According to the statement given by one of the students, who had enrolled for a three-and-a-half year course at the KCEP Group of Institutio­ns, claimed that Dr Tripathi had asked all his students to enrol for I was promised 20 marks for practical exams in return for participat­ing in the fake drive. A STUDENT vaccinatio­n drive in

March.

The chargeshee­t states that the students were offered 150 marks each to participat­e in the drive, which was made mandatory. The chargeshee­t reads, “As per the rules, each beneficiar­y was to be given 0.5ml of vaccine dose. However, two days after the drive kick-started at Shivam Hospital in Charkop, Dr Tripathi approached us (students) in private and asked us to administer only 0.3ml. He said this allows them to vaccinate more people given the limited number of vials.”

Meanwhile, another student, who was named by many eyewitness­es for allegedly administer­ing fake vaccines, said in her statement that she was promised 20 marks for practical exams in return for participat­ing in the fake drive. When one of the nursing students at Kandivali’s Hiranandan­i Heritage drive pointed that the vials were not sealed, the frontline staff were told the vials coming from Charkopbas­ed Shivam Hospital come without the seal, the chargeshee­t reveals.

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