Vyapam scam: Journalist's viscera samples sent to AIIMS, Central Forensic Lab
Vyapam scam: Journalist's viscera samples sent to AIIMS, Central Forensic Lab
The journalist suddenly took ill and died after having interviewed parents of a girl who had been found dead near railway tracks after her name figured in the scam.

Bhopal: The Madhya Pradesh government complied with the journalist's family demand to send his viscera samples to All India Institute of Medical Sciences. A TV journalist with the India Today Group reporting on the Vyapam scam died under mysterious circumstances in Madhya Pradesh on Saturday.

Akshay Singh's viscera samples have been sent to AIIMS and the Central Forensic Lab in Hyderabad.

The journalist suddenly took ill and died after having interviewed parents of a girl who had been found dead near railway tracks after her name figured in the scam.

Jhabua Superintendent of Police Abid Khan said, "The post-mortem report says there are no external or internal injuries. The post-mortem report has reserved its opinion on Akshay's death and is waiting for report from AIIMS and CFL."

On Sunday, Dr Arun Sharma, the dean of a medical college in Jabalpur and suspected of having links to some accused in the Vyapam scam, was found dead under mysterious circumstances in a Delhi hotel.

The Vyapam scam has become a major political controversy with numerous witnesses and accused dying under mysterious circumstances. The Madhya Pradesh Professional Examination Board (MPPEB) scam relates to irregularities in admission in state-run medical colleges and recruitment in government jobs.

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