These are the first arrests in the case that had shaken the country.
"Dr. Rajiv Mishra and his wife, Dr. Purnima Shukla, who are named in an FIR lodged by the UP government, were arrested from Kanpur. They are being taken to Gorakphur," IG, Public Grievances, Vijay Singh Meena said here.
Mishra was suspended as principal of BRD Medical College on August 12 after the deaths, which occurred over a span of five days, were reported. He resigned the same day.
Mishra and his wife, as well as Khan, were among those named in the FIR lodged by the state government following a report by the state Chief Secretary Rajive Kumar, who headed a probe that went into the causes behind the child deaths.
An STF official said Mishra and his wife were being quizzed but declined to share further details.
"The STF team then left for Gorakhpur to carry out further interrogation there," Pankaj told PTI in Gorakhpur.
The FIR was lodged in the Hazratganj police station in Lucknow against nine persons, including Mishra, in connection with the deaths of children at the hospital attached to the college due to alleged lack of oxygen supply. The case was transferred to Gorakhpur.
The proprietors of M/s Pushpa Sales, the company responsible for the supply of liquid oxygen, have also been named in the FIR.
On Dr Kafeel Khan, the SSP said, "Police reached his residence for questioning. However, he was not there. His family members have been told to support the police, so that they do not face any legal action during investigations."
However, a group of doctors at AIMS-Delhi had come out in his support, alleging that he was being made a scapegoat by the authorities.
Cases were registered under various sections of the IPC, Prevention of Corruption Act and the Indian Medical Council Act against Dr Rajiv Mishra, Dr Purnima Shukla, Dr Kafeel Khan, Dr Satish, Chief Pharmacist Gajanan Jaiswal, Accountant Sudhir Pandey, Assistant Clerk, Uday Pratap Sharma of Pushpa Sales and Manish Bhandari.
The official report by the chief secretary, however, denied lack of oxygen as the cause of death.
Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath had formed the committee on August 12, a day after the deaths of children were reported at the hospital. The state government had also shunted out additional chief secretary medical education Anita Bhatnagar Jain.
The issue had acquired a political hue with the BJP government drawing flak from the opposition over the deaths in Gorakhpur, which Adityanath had represented five times in the Lok Sabha.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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