There's a familiar, damning silence that echoes from the corridors of Indiaβs drug regulators and pharmaceutical boardrooms. Even as a paediatrician in Uttar Pradesh has been arrested, following the tragic deaths of 16 children from contaminated cough syrup.
No, this is not a plot of a dystopian novel. It is the grim reality playing out in Chhindwara and Betul in Madhya Pradesh, the latest epicentre of Indiaβs recurring cough syrup crisis. The toxic cough syrup in question this time is Coldrif, manufactured by Sresun Pharmaceuticals, which has now been found to contain 48.6% Diethylene Glycol (DEG), a known industrial solvent responsible for kidney failure and death.
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Weβve seen this story unfold before. And every time, it ends the same way: the doctor becomes the scapegoat, the system escapes scrutiny, and the pharmaceutical-political nexus carries on β untouched and absolutely unaccountable.
According to doctors, this case shouldn't be taken as an anomaly. "It's a deliberate, cynical pattern of scapegoating that protects the powerful and punishes the vulnerable, leaving a trail of dead children and shattered trust," sums up Dr Piyush Majumdar, an endocrinologist in a top hospital in Gurgaon.
IS IT A MACABRE ENCORE?
Just hours before he was taken into custody, Dr.
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