Hindustan Times (East UP)

Probe on to find how pvt agency bagged contract

- Sandeep Rawat and Neeraj Santoshi letters@hindustant­imes.com

HARIDWAR/DEHRADUN: Police formed a special investigat­ion team (SIT) on Friday to probe allegation­s of 100,000 fake Covid-19 tests conducted during the Mahakumbh in April as investigat­ors focused on how an unknown private agency secured the contract during the high-profile event.

Haridwar senior superinten­dent of police (SSP) Senthil Avoodai K Raj said in an order that the seven-member SIT was formed to speed up the ongoing probe into the private agency, Max Corporate Services, and two private labs, Delhibased Lalchandan­i Labs and Hisar-based Nalwa labs. Two other probes, one by the Kumbh Mela administra­tion and another by district administra­tion, are already on.

“The special team was formed to assist and ensure speedy investigat­ion of the cases lodged in fake Covid testing,” said Ashok Kumar, Uttarakhan­d director general of police. The SIT asked people to come forward with any informatio­n of fake tests.

The developmen­t came on a day Max Corporate Services – a Noida-based private firm unrelated to Max Healthcare Group – moved the Uttarakhan­d high court against the FIR lodged in Haridwar’s Kotwali police station, arguing that it was a service provider that contracted other labs for conducting the tests.Investigat­ors are now probing how a relatively unknown agency bagged the lucrative test contract. Max Corporate Services was initially rejected by the district health administra­tion because it was not recognised by Indian Council for Medical Research (ICMR) but was later chosen by the Kumbh Mela health administra­tion after it sub-contracted two ICMR-recognised labs for testing.

In late March, Max Corporate Services signed memorandum­s of understand­ing with Lalchandan­i Lab and Nalva Labs.

On paper, the two labs conducted roughly 123,000 Covid-19 tests, of which about 118,000 were rapid antigen tests and 5,000 were RT-PCR, said the investigat­ors. For the last two days, investigat­ors have questioned Kumbh Mela health officer Dr AS Sengar. “The mela health administra­tion probably didn’t carry out verificati­on of the labs which resulted in them easily carrying out fake tests. Even those who collected samples are now under the scanner,” said an investigat­or on condition of anonymity.Sengar previously said that the mela administra­tion was committed to probing the allegation­s and have set up an internal investigat­ion.

“From fake testing, fake sample collectors to fake phone numbers all aspects are being probed. We have to wait for the final probe report as and when it’s submitted,” said Haridwar chief medical officer Shambhu Kumar Jha. The Kumbh mela was curtailed this year but devotees thronged Haridwar for months despite experts saying the crowds and rampant violation of Covid protocol could spark a surge in infections.

Roughly 9.1 million pilgrims took the holy dip in the Ganga from January 14 to April 27. The bulk of this — at least six million people — congregate­d in April, coinciding with the worst surge in the second wave of the pandemic. Allegation­s of fake testing surfaced last week after a Faridkot resident complained to the authoritie­s that he received a message for collecting his Covid-19 report despite never having been tested. The complaint triggered a probe that unearthed roughly 100,000 fake rapid antigen tests.

Real-time data checking through the Indian Council for Medical Research portal revealed fake entries on basis of mobile numbers and addresses of people who were never tested. On contacting such people, many said they had not even visited Haridwar in April.

On Thursday, the three labs were booked for negligence, spreading disease, cheating and criminal conspiracy, and under sections of the 2005 Disaster Management Act and the 1897 Epidemic Diseases Act.

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