Critics say the action against Kejriwal and several other opposition parties in the run-up to the election is politically motivated and denies them a level playing field in the parliamentary election.
The UK-based Telegraph reported on December 2 that Apollo Hospitals Group was enticing young villagers from Myanmar to their Delhi hospital to sell their kidneys to rich patients around the world.
BENGALURU/HYDERABAD (Reuters) - (This Dec. 5 story has been corrected to clarify that the Telegraph report said that Apollo was embroiled in a 'cash for kidneys' racket and to remove reference to Apollo Hospitals Group enticing young villagers from Myanmar to sell their kidneys to rich patients around the world in paragraph 2)
BENGALURU/HYDERABAD (Reuters) -India's Indraprastha Medical Corp, which manages two Apollo hospitals in the national capital of Delhi, said on Tuesday allegations regarding its involvement in illegal kidney transplants are false. Britain's The Telegraph newspaper reported on Saturday the Apollo Hospitals Group was enticing young villagers from Myanmar to their Delhi hospital to sell their kidneys to rich patients around the world. The newspaper said it first learned of the "cash-for-kidney" racket through a case at the Indraprastha Apollo, which is the Apollo Hospitals Group's flagship hospital in Delhi.