Sonapur:
The brutal killing of a family near Guwahati is being linked to a controversial doctor after body parts of the deceased children were allegedly found near his research centre. However, the doctor was out of station at the time of the incident.
It was a pet dog Bholu who helped locate the severed heads of the two children brutally killed in Jogdol village on last Sunday. The rest of the family member were also killed in the mysterious attack which people initially blamed on witchcraft.
In the search for the witch, villagers broke in to the controversial Dhaniram Baruah Heart Research Centre and damaged the research facility centre after that news that the two missing heads were found the doctor's research centre campus.
The deceased house is located just opposite to the heart centre.
"Where were the body parts? In Dhaniram's campus. And where did the organs disappear," said a resident of the locality.
"He keeps 500-100 dogs and does not allow anyone to enter. He sets these dogs on anyone who tries to get in." said another resident of the same area.
Dr Dhaniram Baruah, a cardiac surgeon, was arrested after transplanting a pig's heart into a dying man in 1997. But he continued to advocate and experiment on organ transplant from animals to humans.
It was a pet dog Bholu who helped locate the severed heads of the two children brutally killed in Jogdol village on last Sunday. The rest of the family member were also killed in the mysterious attack which people initially blamed on witchcraft.
In the search for the witch, villagers broke in to the controversial Dhaniram Baruah Heart Research Centre and damaged the research facility centre after that news that the two missing heads were found the doctor's research centre campus.
The deceased house is located just opposite to the heart centre.
"Where were the body parts? In Dhaniram's campus. And where did the organs disappear," said a resident of the locality.
"He keeps 500-100 dogs and does not allow anyone to enter. He sets these dogs on anyone who tries to get in." said another resident of the same area.
Dr Dhaniram Baruah, a cardiac surgeon, was arrested after transplanting a pig's heart into a dying man in 1997. But he continued to advocate and experiment on organ transplant from animals to humans.