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Doctors took part in a candle march to condemn the rape and murder of a trainee doctor at RG Kar Medical College in Kolkata. (Ministry of Public Transport)
The victim mentioned in her diary that she had been under great pressure and intense work over the past few weeks.
The trainee doctor was raped and murdered while on duty in the seminar hall of RG Kar Medical College and Hospital in Kolkata, and several of his colleagues feared that the victim might be targeted because she knew something she was not supposed to know.
Parents and colleagues of second-year PG students at RG Kar Medical College and Hospital also insisted that Sanjoy Roy, who has been arrested so far in the case, could be “just a gangster or even a scapegoat and the real culprit is” Not yet arrested.”
The victim is under tremendous pressure
The victim mentioned in her diary that she had been under great pressure and intense work over the past few weeks. As a second-year student, she spent a year at the institute, and as a junior doctor, working 36 hours straight was common.
According to the report times of indiaColleagues said that punishment for working and rotating shifts is common in state-run hospitals. Some claim the victim tried to expose a possible “drug” scam and was murdered to silence her voice.
“We suspect this is not a simple rape and murder case? She was targeted. How did the citizen volunteer know that she was alone in the seminar room at that time? A colleague said.
Probably a drug racket
Another colleague claimed the victim may have known too much that she shouldn't have known. “She was trying to expose rumors of possible drug abuse in her department,” he said.
Shortly after learning of her death, the doctor's parents told police that she complained to them of the intense work pressure. They also told police she may have learned something at the department.
Several colleagues said “punishment for overwork” was a standard operating procedure at the institute and was strictly monitored by former principal Sandip Ghosh.
Insiders said that the trainee doctor worked very hard and focused on his career. Reports say she always wanted to be a doctor and chose medicine, although she also passed the engineering entrance exam.
The horrific incident has shocked the country, with protests continuing across the country demanding immediate action to investigate. Junior doctors and medical students staged protests at hospitals and medical colleges in Delhi, Kolkata, Hyderabad and other cities, demanding speedy justice.
Health services were affected for the tenth day in a row in West Bengal on Sunday as junior doctors at government hospitals continued their work stoppage to demand justice for the victims.
The Calcutta High Court on August 13 ordered the transfer of the investigation of the case from the Kolkata Police to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), which began investigation on August 14.