Babasaheb Khidrapure who runs Bharti Hospital at Mhaisal village in Sangli was arrested a day after 19 aborted foetuses were found alongside a road, within a walking distance from the hospital.
The doctor was absconding and nabbed by the Miraj police from Belgaum in Karnataka. Five teams were deployed for this task, police said.
"We have sent DNA samples of the 19 foetuses to the lab to ascertain their gender," Sangli SP Dattatray Shinde said.
Jamdade was allegedly forced to abort her third female foetus after giving birth to two girls.
On the investigation trail, policemen found the 19 foetuses and busted the abortion racket.
They were found alongside the Miraj-Belgaum road in Mhaisal village, where Bharti Hospital is located.
While some of them were buried, others were thrown carelessly in blue plastic bags along with animal and sewage waste, police said.
Bharti Hospital, where the abortions were were taking place, was being run by Khidrapure. The hospital is around 7 km from the Karnataka border, and had two hidden basement rooms to terminate pregnancies in advanced stages.
At one end of the room is a fridge stocked with medicines used to induce abortion. On the other, there is an opening that led out of the building to a drain where blue plastic bags, half-destroyed medicine bottles and charred bio-medical waste was found, police said.
said the state government will work with the Karnataka government to put a stop to female foeticides.
He also said that a committee headed by Maharashtra Chief Secretary Sumit Malik has been set up to conduct an investigation into the matter and co-ordinate with various departments to curb such practices.
(REOPENS BOM 2)
Meanwhile, the foeticide issue also figured in the Maharashtra Legislative Assembly today with Opposition members demanding the resignation of Health Minister Deepak Sawant and Women and Child Welfare Minister Pankaja Munde.
Leader of Opposition Radhakrishna Vikhe Patil, NCP leaders Jayant Patil and Dilip Walse Patil said that the government must take moral responsibility for its failure to detect and prevent female foeticide in the state.
Sawant told the House that the abortion racket was functioning since 2009.
"The women who used to come for abortion already had one or two daughters and were not keen on another girl child. The sonography reports of these women would be sent to Karnataka and after confirmation, the foeticide would be carried out in Sangli. The racket involves doctors, radiologists, sonographists, gynaecologists, general surgeons and anaesthetists from Satara, Sangli, Miraj and Kolhapur," he told the House.
Finance Minister Sudhir Mungantiwar said the incident was unfortunate and the government has taken a serious note of it. "The culprits would be punished severely," he said.
"I will make a detailed statement after coming back on Thursday," he said.
Earlier, as soon as the House assembled for the day, Vikhe Patil moved an adjournment notice seeking discussion on the Sangli issue but Speaker Haribhau Bagde rejected the demand.
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