City
Epaper

Andhra man injects HIV-infected blood to pregnant wife

By IANS | Updated: December 18, 2022 13:35 IST

Amaravati, Dec 18 A man in Andhra Pradesh allegedly got HIV-infected blood injected to his pregnant wife to ...

Open in App

Amaravati, Dec 18 A man in Andhra Pradesh allegedly got HIV-infected blood injected to his pregnant wife to find an excuse to divorce her.

Tadepalli police arrested M. Charan after getting a complaint lodged by his wife that he injected HIV-infected blood to her with the help of a quack.

The victim told the police that Charan was looking for a reasonable excuse to divorce her and as per the plan he took her to a quack. She was told that the injection was to ensure good health during pregnancy.

She stated in her complaint that during a health check-up at a hospital, she was shocked to know that she was HIV positive.

The victim alleged that her husband had been harassing her for dowry and also insisting that she bear a male child. The couple has a daughter.

Police said they were questioning Charan and would take further action after medical examination of the victim.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalUN to host first high-level meeting on North Korea's human rights violations

InternationalHamas confirms release of US-Israeli soldier

InternationalChina jacks up military activity around Taiwan

InternationalIsrael warns civilians to evacuate Yemeni ports ahead of potential strike

MumbaiMumbai Local Train Update: Services to Run on Holiday Schedule on Buddha Purnima 2025, Some Trains Likely to Be Suspended or Short-Terminated

Health Realted Stories

HealthGlobal HIV market to cross $32 billion in 7 major markets in 2033: Report

HealthWeekly yoga podcast launched to promote holistic wellness

HealthStudy finds how obesity linked to long Covid

HealthAyushman Bharat turns lifesaver, Uttarakhand woman shares her story of treatment

HealthEarly-life growth proved important for height in puberty, adulthood