Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Police yet to grill Lankan doctor

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Sleuths of the Hyderabad Central Crime Station (CCS) are yet to interrogat­e the Sri Lankan nephrologi­st, who was accused of doing 58 kidney transplant­ations with paid donors coming from Hyderabad, Nalgonda and Guntur districts, and other parts of India.

In India, donors have to be related to the patient they are donating the kidney to in order to stop poor people from selling their kidneys for money and endangerin­g their own health. The case has pending from 2014 and is still under investigat­ion. A charge sheet has yet to be filed.

The CCS recently sent yet another clarificat­ion to the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) regarding the Letter of Rogatory for recording Doctor’s statement in Sri Lanka.

CCS Cyber Crime Assistant Commission­er of Police KCS Raghuveer, who is the supervisin­g officer of the investigat­ion, said that the Letter Rogatory (communicat­ion between the court of one country with the court of another country) issued by the Hyderabad court has to be sent to the Sri Lankan court after the MHA authorises it, but the letter is still pending.

“The MHA has asked clarificat­ion on it two or three times and we have sent them replies. We are expecting MHA to issue authorisat­ion at any point of time and then we will send a team to Sri Lanka and record the statement.

In Sri Lanka, kidney transplant­ation of unrelated donors is legal. So we can only make him a witness, though he is named as accused number 10 in the case. After recording his statement, we will file the charge sheet,” Mr Raghuveer said.

The case was booked under the IT Act and the Transplant­ation of Human Organs Act, based on a complaint lodged by one Ganesh Kumar Maroo.

His relative, Dinesh Kumar Maroo, died in Sri Lanka, where he had gone in order to sell his kidney.

Police say there were 58 ‘donors’ and each was paid Rs 5 lakhs, though they were promised Rs 30 lakhs each. The remaining amount went as commission to the accused.

CCS police have arrested three persons in the case so far. Others involved, including Suresh and Usha Saxena, who allegedly acted as conduits, are yet to be arrested. (Deccan Chronicle)

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