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Dr. AK 🇮🇳

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M.D General Medicine🩺 Patriot🇮🇳 Ex Army Doc⚕️ 🚫Tweets are not medical advice.

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What is this emergency procedure❓️

What is this emergency procedure❓️

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Ayush, a 24-year-old MBA student, was struggling badly after losing his father a few years ago. When his loan application was rejected, he fell into deep financial distress. In desperation, he joined an encrypted Telegram group that arranged illegal kidney sales to rich clients. He was offered ₹10 lakh for one kidney. Broker Shivam Agarwal, a school dropout posing as a medical facilitator, convinced him by repeatedly citing examples like 83-year-old actor Amitabh Bachchan, who lived a long life with only one kidney. Believing it would solve all his problems, Ayush agreed. He was taken to Kanpur by fugitive doctors Dr. Afzal and Dr. Vaibhav. The deal was finalized secretly in an apartment in Kalyanpur. Ayush lied to his mother, saying he was going for exams and would return in three days. The illegal transplant took place at night (around 29-30 March 2026) at Ahuja Hospital in Keshavpuram. No legal permissions were taken. CCTV was turned off, regular staff were sent away, and a specialist team flown in from Meerut and Delhi-NCR performed the surgery. Ayush’s kidney was transplanted into 43-year-old Parul Tomar from Muzaffarnagar, whose family paid ₹60-80 lakh. Afterwards, both were shifted between hospitals to destroy evidence. A dispute over just ₹50,000 left Ayush in severe pain and feeling cheated. He approached the police on 30-31 March. His complaint led to immediate midnight raids on three hospitals, exposing a massive kidney racket. Six people, including hospital owners Dr. Surjit Singh Ahuja and Dr. Preeti Ahuja, and broker Shivam Agarwal, were arrested initially. Later, logistics handler Parvez Saifi was also caught with ₹9-10 lakh cash. A shocking 19-second video recovered from Shivam’s phone showed Dr. Afzal casually counting stacks of ₹500 notes (around ₹15-20 lakh) in a hotel room, with Parvez smiling beside him. The syndicate lured poor young men via Telegram groups, paid them poorly, and sold kidneys for huge profits. Over 40-60 illegal transplants are suspected. Dr. Afzal and several other doctors remain fugitives. Police are conducting large-scale searches across Uttar Pradesh and Delhi-NCR. Ayush’s one desperate decision ended up blowing the lid off one of the biggest organ trafficking scandals in the country.

Ayush, a 24-year-old MBA student, was struggling badly after losing his father a few years ago. When his loan application was rejected, he fell into deep financial distress. In desperation, he joined an encrypted Telegram group that arranged illegal kidney sales to rich clients. He was offered ₹10 lakh for one kidney. Broker Shivam Agarwal, a school dropout posing as a medical facilitator, convinced him by repeatedly citing examples like 83-year-old actor Amitabh Bachchan, who lived a long life with only one kidney. Believing it would solve all his problems, Ayush agreed. He was taken to Kanpur by fugitive doctors Dr. Afzal and Dr. Vaibhav. The deal was finalized secretly in an apartment in Kalyanpur. Ayush lied to his mother, saying he was going for exams and would return in three days. The illegal transplant took place at night (around 29-30 March 2026) at Ahuja Hospital in Keshavpuram. No legal permissions were taken. CCTV was turned off, regular staff were sent away, and a specialist team flown in from Meerut and Delhi-NCR performed the surgery. Ayush’s kidney was transplanted into 43-year-old Parul Tomar from Muzaffarnagar, whose family paid ₹60-80 lakh. Afterwards, both were shifted between hospitals to destroy evidence. A dispute over just ₹50,000 left Ayush in severe pain and feeling cheated. He approached the police on 30-31 March. His complaint led to immediate midnight raids on three hospitals, exposing a massive kidney racket. Six people, including hospital owners Dr. Surjit Singh Ahuja and Dr. Preeti Ahuja, and broker Shivam Agarwal, were arrested initially. Later, logistics handler Parvez Saifi was also caught with ₹9-10 lakh cash. A shocking 19-second video recovered from Shivam’s phone showed Dr. Afzal casually counting stacks of ₹500 notes (around ₹15-20 lakh) in a hotel room, with Parvez smiling beside him. The syndicate lured poor young men via Telegram groups, paid them poorly, and sold kidneys for huge profits. Over 40-60 illegal transplants are suspected. Dr. Afzal and several other doctors remain fugitives. Police are conducting large-scale searches across Uttar Pradesh and Delhi-NCR. Ayush’s one desperate decision ended up blowing the lid off one of the biggest organ trafficking scandals in the country.

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What should be done here?

What should be done here?

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