Representational CHANDRAPUR: A pan-India kidney trafficking syndicate with alleged links to Cambodia and China has been uncovered in eastern Maharashtra, exposing an illicit market where transplants fetched up to Rs 80 lakh while impoverished donors were allegedly paid as little as Rs 5 lakh, police said Wednesday. Police have named two specialists – Dr Ravinder Pal Singh of New Delhi and Dr Rajratnam Govindswamy of Trichy – as key players in the network, unearthed by a Maharashtra govt-appointed SIT after farmer Roshan Kule, from Minthur village in Vidarbha region, said he was forced to sell a kidney in Cambodia to escape loan sharks. Singh was arrested in New Delhi recently and produced before a city court for transit remand but received interim bail after the Maharashtra team’s flight was cancelled. He has been directed to appear before the Chandrapur chief judicial magistrate on Jan. 2. Govindswamy, MD of the Trichy hospital, is on the run. Chandrapur SP Mummaka Sudarshan said investigation points to several surgeries being conducted at STAR KIMS Hospital in Trichy. Investigators said each transplant was priced between Rs 50 lakh and Rs 80 lakh. Singh allegedly received about Rs 10 lakh for each surgery, travelling from New Delhi to Trichy to operate. Govindswamy allegedly charged nearly Rs 20 lakh for treatment and hospital arrangements.End of ArticleFollow Us On Social MediaVideosKhaleda Zia’s funeral: EAM Jaishankar Hands Over Modi’s Letter To BNP Chief Tarique Rahman In DhakaThrowback 25: Five Indian Weapons That Crushed Terror And Dominated Pakistan in Operation SindoorTerror, Tariffs, Polls: PM Modi’s Mic-Drop Moments That Set The Agenda In 2025Top Moments Of 2025 When Indian Diplomats Took On Pakistan, Tore Apart Lies & Hypocrisy At UNThrowback 2025: Five Big Moments When India Defied Pressure And Delivered Diplomatic MasterstrokesAyodhya Faced Conspiracies But Sanatan Prevailed, UP CM Yogi Adityanath Says At Ram Temple EventIndia’s Backyard In Flux: Nepal’s Gen Z Revolt To Pakistan’s Court Chaos Shakes South Asia In 2025Army Trains Village Defence Guards In J&K In Automatic Rifles, Self-Defence | WatchLeT Deputy Saifullah Kasuri Admits India Hit Terror Camps, Threatens Kashmir After Op Sindoor StrikeTwist in Osman Hadi Murder Case: Prime Accused Blames Jamaat From Dubai, Clears India’s Role123Photostories10 South Indian breads that are so soulfulWalking through 2025: The year we put our best foot forwardSkip the crowds in 2026: 10 offbeat destinations in India for New Year travel5 relationship habits to inculcate in 2026 to make it the best year of your lifeFrom soldier to supermodel: 5 looks that made BTS’ V the ultimate fashion muse of 20258 traditional Bengali snacks that are best enjoyed during winterCustard apple: 5 benefits of this creamy seasonal fruit5 common foods that are unhealthy and their alternative usesMalala Yousafzai once said, “If we want to achieve our goal, then let us…”: 5 lessons it teaches studentsHrithik Roshan’s girlfriend Saba Azad’s luxe choga suit is the traditional trend to watch this season123Hot PicksSaudi Strike YemenPAN-Aadhaar link statusBank holiday New YearGold rate todayIncome Tax RefundBahrain Golden Visa 2025Bank Holidays DecemberTop TrendingJustin Thomas Net WorthWWE Star Nikki BellaCardi BCeeDee Lamb Luxury Car CollectionStefon DiggsCaitlin ClarkTom BradyMicah Parsons vs CeeDee Lamb Net WorthNHL Injury UpdateVanessa Bryant
CHANDRAPUR: A pan-India kidney trafficking syndicate with alleged links to Cambodia and China has been uncovered in eastern Maharashtra, exposing an illicit market where transplants fetched up to Rs 80 lakh while impoverished donors were allegedly paid as little as Rs 5 lakh, police said Wednesday. Police have named two specialists – Dr Ravinder Pal Singh of New Delhi and Dr Rajratnam Govindswamy of Trichy – as key players in the network, unearthed by a Maharashtra govt-appointed SIT after farmer Roshan Kule, from Minthur village in Vidarbha region, said he was forced to sell a kidney in Cambodia to escape loan sharks. Singh was arrested in New Delhi recently and produced before a city court for transit remand but received interim bail after the Maharashtra team’s flight was cancelled. He has been directed to appear before the Chandrapur chief judicial magistrate on Jan. 2. Govindswamy, MD of the Trichy hospital, is on the run. Chandrapur SP Mummaka Sudarshan said investigation points to several surgeries being conducted at STAR KIMS Hospital in Trichy. Investigators said each transplant was priced between Rs 50 lakh and Rs 80 lakh. Singh allegedly received about Rs 10 lakh for each surgery, travelling from New Delhi to Trichy to operate. Govindswamy allegedly charged nearly Rs 20 lakh for treatment and hospital arrangements.