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How Indian man’s hair transplant turned fatal

  • TV executive Athar Rasheed, his family’s sole breadwinner, suffered terrible agonies and died after undergoing the procedure at a Delhi clinic
  • The incident highlights pressure felt by prematurely balding Indian men to look young and mushrooming number of clinics offering often subpar service at low prices

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An operation theatre technician attends a patient before a hair transplant at a clinic in New Delhi. Photo: AFP

All that balding Indian television executive Athar Rasheed wanted was to look handsome and get married. But the 30-year-old’s seemingly harmless hair transplant went fatally wrong.

Women have been judged on their appearance for millennia, but in an increasingly materialistic Indian society, men are also feeling pressure to look young and presentable for fear of losing their social standing.

More prematurely balding men are opting for hair transplants as disposable incomes rise and an emphasis on personal appearance becomes stronger.

But in a weakly regulated sector, the procedure – sometimes performed by amateurs self-trained on YouTube – can have deadly results.

I lost my son but I don’t want any other mother to lose their child because of fraudulent practices of a few people
Asiya Begum

Rasheed was the sole breadwinner for his family and aspired to a better life – owning a house and getting his two sisters married.

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