BABY SUNAINA UK DEATH INVESTIGATION

GMC persecutes family for complaint against 22 doctors

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The family of baby sunaina complained to the General Medical Council on 23 July 2001, against twenty two doctors, including a GP, hospital doctors, paediatricians, pathologists, Coroner and consultant specialists at a London children's hospital for prescribing drug overdoses, denying oxygen, unlawful "Do Not Resuscitate" and "withhold withdraw", unlawful organ removal and failure to investigate the drug overdoses and organ removal.   The family was told that the GMC screeners did not consider the case was "provable".    The family submits, far below, evidence that the General Medical Council, instead, conspired with the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain to invent disciplinary action against a family member.

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Baby Sunaina died suddenly on 26 October 2000, aged 5 months, in a UK hospital, after UK paediatricians decided it was in "her best interests to die" against the parents wishes and without a High Court Order.  Pathologists found three needle marks on each hand, white food material in the airways and a wound in the arm, yet an Inquest concluded she died of natural causes.  The family expatriated the body to India after UK authorities hid the body for several years and threatened to destroy the body.  There is evidence that all internal organs including eyeballs were removed unlawfully to hide the cause of death.  Police appointed paediatrician took 4 years to admit doctors, pharmacists and nurses gave deliberate drug overdoses over a period of a month preceding death.  The family want the body brought back to the UK for a second Inquest after UK Police refused to make a request to India authorities to investigate.  A needle puncture in the neck has been omitted from all UK investigations.