Rs 5 Lakh For A Hospital Job: 50 People Conned In UP s Bareilly Rs 5 Lakh For A Hospital Job: 50 People Conned In UP s Bareilly The clerks told the victims in 2019 that recruitment was open for the posts of supervisor, computer operator, lab technician, driver, and ward boy.
Updated: January 30, 2021 4:47 pm IST
The jobs could be secured for Rs 5 lakh each, with Rs 3 lakh to be paid in advance.
Bareilly (Uttar Pradesh):
At least 50 people have been conned in a job racket operated by clerks working at the Bareilly s Chief Medical Officer and officials at a district women s hospital, the police said today. Using fake appointment letters and forged certificates, the applicants were promised jobs and lured into paying huge sums of money. The jobs, however, never materialised.
50 Youth Conned With Fake Job Letters For Govt Hospital Posts In UP s Bareilly
The youths were told that they will get jobs if they give Rs 5 lakh each for which they had paid an advance of Rs 3 lakh each after which they were made to fill an application form.
Representational image. Outlook Web Bureau 2021-01-30T16:35:27+05:30 50 Youth Conned With Fake Job Letters For Govt Hospital Posts In UP s Bareilly outlookindia.com 2021-01-30T16:43:07+05:30
As many as 50 youth in Uttar Pradesh’s Bareilly have complained that a clerk posted in the Chief Medical Officer’s office and a district women’ hospital duped them with fake job offer letters to posts at a government hospital.
Logo of Uttar Pradesh police.
| Photo Credit:
Twitter@Uppolice
Later using the coronavirus pandemic and the lockdown that followed as a ruse, the youths were told that their jobs were shelved as the hospital had been turned into a COVID care centre An inquiry has been ordered after 50 youth were duped with fake appointment letters to posts at a government hospital here allegedly by the clerks posted in the Chief Medical Officer s office and a district women s hospital, police said on Saturday. Acting on a complaint given in this connection by the affected youth, an inquiry has been ordered by the district police chief.