...
...
Next Story

Kidney racket: Two dental college officials ‘bribed’ by kingpin held

The Dehradun police has now tightened noose around the senior administrative officials of the dental college from where the inter-state kidney racket was allegedly

Updated on: Sep 22, 2017 07:53 PM IST
Neha Pant, Hindustan Times | By , DEHRADUN
Prefer HTon Google
Advertisement

The Dehradun police has now tightened noose around the senior administrative officials of the dental college from where the inter-state kidney racket was allegedly being run near Dehradun.

Gangotri Charitable Hospital on Uttaranchal Dental and Medical Research Institute premises near Dehradun. (HT Photo)
Gangotri Charitable Hospital on Uttaranchal Dental and Medical Research Institute premises near Dehradun. (HT Photo)

Continuing with its series of arrests, the police arrested Arun Kumar Pandey, director of Uttaranchal Dental and Medical Research Institute (inside whose campus the Gangotri Charitable Hospital was being run) and his associate Dr Ashok Yogi, who allegedly helped in arranging the facility to the racket kingpin Dr Amit Kumar. Twelve people have been arrested so far in the case.

The hospital, situated inside the dental college premises, had been leased out to the racketeers last year and continued to function even though its agreement had got over in July.

“The college authorities were in the know of the shady activities going on inside the hospital. We arrested the college director along with an associate after their names came up during probe,” said Dehradun superintendent of police (rural) Sarita Dobhal, who is leading the investigation team.

Arrested late on Thursday night, the duo reportedly told the police that they were aware of the nefarious activities going on at the hospital and were bribed by Dr Amit to keep quiet.

College director Pandey told his interrogators that they had leased out the hospital to Dr Amit in 2016. “I grew suspicious when foreign patients began arriving and confronted Dr Amit, who then promised to give me Rs 5 lakh per month for not revealing the activity (illegal surgeries) going on at the hospital,” the police quoted Pandey as saying.

Alarmed by the police action against the college owners, the state medical education department has sprung up to take action. “Till now, we only knew that the racket was being run from the premises of the dental college but now the involvement of the college authorities, too, has emerged. We will study the details and take appropriate action,” medical education director Ashutosh Sayana told HT.

On leasing out of a part of the dental college - which is not permitted under the Dental Council of India norms – Sayana said, “It will have to be checked whether they (college) had shown it (the said hospital) as a part of the college to the DCI or not, based on which further action will be taken.”

Congress demands CBI probe into the racket

Congress leader Suryakant Dhasmana demanded a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) probe into the kidney racket. In a letter to chief minister Trivendra Singh Rawat, Dhasmana stressed it was a “matter of grave concern” as the racket was not only being run within the CM’s constituency (Doiwala), but also because Rawat himself holds the health and medical education portfolios.

“Also, kidney donors as well as recipients hailed from different states and even abroad,” the Congress senior vice-president said.

 
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
Hindustantimes wants to start sending you push notifications. Click allow to subscribe