Arab News

Police ask Indians to be alert after thousands get fake coronaviru­s jabs

- Sanjay Kumar New Delhi

Police in Mumbai said on Thursday that people should be on alert after thousands of people in major cities have fallen prey to coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) vaccine scams.

Scam vaccinatio­n drives have emerged in recent weeks as the demand for vaccines surged after a devastatin­g second wave of the pandemic claimed more than 400,000 lives from April to early June.

More than 4,000 people have received fake COVID-19 jabs at over a dozen private vaccinatio­n camps in Mumbai and its metropolit­an area since May, according to the police. In Kolkata, some 2,000 people — including a parliament­arian — were given fake vaccinatio­ns in June alone.

“We have asked people to be alert,” Anchalwar Shailesh Kumar, a senior police officer at Mumbai’s Khar police station, told Arab News. “We are investigat­ing the case and at this stage we cannot tell many details.”

Umesh Shah from Mumbai’s Hiranandan­i Housing Society was one of some 300 people in the locality who received the fake jabs in late May.

“After the second wave our anxiety to protect ourselves from COVID-19 was very high and people took advantage of our vulnerabil­ities,” he said.

The residents thought the vaccinatio­n camp was official as it was organized by what appeared to be a private hospital.

“There was no reason for us to distrust when a private hospital approached us for vaccinatio­n, but the suspicion arose when our certificat­e did not come for days,” another society resident, Hitesh Patel, told Arab News.

“When the certificat­e came it was from a different hospital and of a different date than May 30 when we

took the jab,” he said, adding: “We then realized that we were duped and approached the police.”

He said they had been given saline water instead of the vaccine.

A media uproar following the Hiranandan­i incident has prompted others to come forward, with similar cases starting to pour in from different parts of the country.

In Kolkata, a fake vaccinatio­n drive came into the spotlight after local parliament­arian Mimi Chakrabort­y took part in it. Failing to receive official confirmati­on of her vaccinatio­n on the government’s CoWin portal, she told local media she became suspicious and filed a police complaint.

While Kolkata police are also investigat­ing the case, health experts blame the emergence of fraudulent schemes on the government’s new policy of allowing the private sector to take part in the national vaccinatio­n drive.

When India started its vaccinatio­n campaign in February, the government was the sole agency inoculatin­g people, with jabs free to receive.

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