Police authorities in India, on Friday, apprehended two medical doctors along with eight other suspects after a fake COVID-19 vaccination racket allegedly inoculated 2,000 people with fake COVID vaccine doses in Mumbai
This is just as top government officials disclosed that the police has launched an investigation following reports about 1,000 residents had been disabled in Kolkata.
Authorities in Mumbai said that around 2,000 people who thought they were being vaccinated were injected with a saline solution.
The two doctors worked at a private hospital in the financial hub, police told a news conference, with the scammers targeting residents of an upscale housing complex in one case
“We (then) discovered that eight more camps were organized by this syndicate,” said Vishwas Patil, joint commissioner for the law and order division.
Police have recovered Rs 12.4 crore ($16,700) in cash which was “fraudulently obtained” by the accused.
Police in Kolkata meanwhile have arrested a man posing as a civil servant with a master’s degree in genetics who reportedly ran as many as eight spurious vaccination camps.
Police said at least 250 disabled and transgender people were injected at one site, and that in total nearly 1000 people may have been given counterfeit jabs across the city.
Kolkata official Atin Ghosh said that the seized vials were falsely labelled as containing the AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine, branded in India as Covishield.
“It was found that the Covishield label was stuck over another label, that of Amikacin Sulphate 500 mg, an antibiotic used to treat bacterial infections of the urinary tract, bones, brain, lungs and blood among others,” Ghosh told AFP.
The scam came to light after an actress and politician, Mimi Chakraborty, who received a shot at one of the camps to raise awareness, became suspicious and alerted police.
Police seized fake ID cards from the suspect, one of an information ministry official and another as a municipal commissioner. His car sported Kolkata government stickers.
Debashis Barui, a Kolkata health official, said that many of those who had been injected were now “panicking” about the possible side effects.
“If any emergency arises, civic authorities will organise medical camps in the area to take care of those who have had fake shots,” Barui told AFP.
One of them, Ruma Sikdar, 35, said that she had been feeling drowsy and had discomfort in her arm.
“What I am worried about is how to get the real dose before the third wave hits,” the home-maker said.
“We didn’t think that this could happen when the world is battling the pandemic,” said student Debjit Majumdar, who also received the fake jab.