Hyderabad(Agencies): Telangana
Police busted an international kidney racket that was spread across foreign
shores as far as Sri Lanka and Turkey for a hefty amount by luring poor and
unsuspecting people.
The police said one person had
been arrested and “it seemed that the racket had been operating since long”.
The incident came to light
when a family who had paid Rs 34 lakh for a kidney complained to the police.
Police in Hyderabad arrested
25-year-old DS Pavan Srinivas, a native of Guntur in Andhra Pradesh and a
resident of Hyderabad, who himself had donated a kidney and after realising the
huge money potential, started arranging kidney donors.
Joint Commissioner AR Srinivas
said the accused, an MBA graduate, facilitated around nine kidney transplants.
For each transplant, the accused used to earn a commission of around Rs 6 lakh.
After a family paid Rs 34 lakh
towards the cost of a kidney transplant surgery, accommodation, and payment to
a kidney donor in Sri Lanka or Turkey, the accused failed to fulfil his
promise.
As a result, a complaint was
lodged with the Banjara Hill police station that registered a case of cheating
and criminal breach of trust against Pavan.
The police said after
collecting the money, the accused had cut off contacts with the family and was
missing.
Bijjala Bharathi had
complained to Banjara Hills police station that they came in contact with
Srinivas at a hospital in the city where her husband, a dialysis patient, was
undergoing treatment.
He promised them to provide
donor and get the transplantation done through his known sources in Sri Lanka
or Turkey for which he collected the money, police said in a statement.
The police investigations
revealed that the accused spent the amount lavishly in casino games in Sri
Lanka and cheated the family by not arranging the donor and transplant.
Copies of the passports, which
were obtained from the complainant and other donors for travel to Turkey and
Sri Lanka were also seized.
Police further said the
accused had donated his kidney a few years ago in Sri Lanka to tide over a
financial situation and come in contact with some doctors there.
To make easy money he came up
with a plan to work as an agent to provide donors for needy patients. He ran
campaigns on social media to lure gullible people willing to sell their kidneys
for money and paid them very less after extracting the organ. He would collect
anywhere between Rs 30 and 50 lakhs from rich patients for the surgery,
Srinivas said.
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