Kolkata rape-murder case: Court questions postmortem timeline, crime scene allegedly altered
India's supreme court has once again ordered protesting doctors back to work, assuring them that no action will be taken against them when they do so. Resident doctors in Rajasthan have resumed work in emergency wards and intensive care units, after the state government ordered medical colleges to form committees to enhance safety at their workplaces. But, other physicians are still on the streets, demanding justice for the 31-year-old doctor who was raped and killed while at work earlier this month. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court continues to grill the West Bengal government over the timeline of postmortem and the registration of the crime as an unnatural death. The Central Bureau of Investigation also reported that the crime scene was altered and the victim's family was misled about their daughter's death being passed off as a suicide. Ishan Garg reports from Kolkata.
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India's supreme court has once again ordered protesting doctors back to work, assuring them that no action will be taken against them when they do so. Resident doctors in Rajasthan have resumed work in emergency wards and intensive care units, after the state government ordered medical colleges to form committees to enhance safety at their workplaces. But, other physicians are still on the streets, demanding justice for the 31-year-old doctor who was raped and killed while at work earlier this month. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court continues to grill the West Bengal government over the timeline of postmortem and the registration of the crime as an unnatural death. The Central Bureau of Investigation also reported that the crime scene was altered and the victim's family was misled about their daughter's death being passed off as a suicide. Ishan Garg reports from Kolkata.
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