JODHPUR POLICE CHIEF REVEALS: Spiritual discourse leader Sadhvi Prem Baisa’s life ended not by malice, but by heart-lung failure from chronic respiratory affliction, with no poison or injury detected.
Commissioner Om Prakash laid bare the medical board’s verdict Saturday: cardiopulmonary arrest, fueled by lung pathologies akin to asthma or COPD, sealed her fate on January 28.
Histopathology and swift FSL outcomes from February 12—after 11-day scrutiny of February 2 samples—vindicated the natural cause theory. Body scans showed no abuse traces or toxins, calming speculation storms.
The fateful day at Boranada’s Arti Nagar ashram saw initial flu-like woes morph into acute dyspnea. Enter compounder Devi Singh’s unorthodox injections, breaching norms and precipitating collapse.
En route to Preksha Hospital, hope faded; pronouncement followed. Posthumous logistics involved ashram return, police-mandated MGH shift for January 29 autopsy, family handover, and January 30 Barmer farewell.
Sensitivity drove an elite SIT’s evidence odyssey, now eyeing drug efficacy re-assessments. Devi Singh faces the music under penal code and medical statutes post-board finale.
Devotees exhale in relief, as this saga spotlights urgent reforms for medical standards in spiritual enclaves, preventing future tragedies amid faith’s fervor.
