The move came after an appeal was made to the "Maharaja" of Indian skies, Air India, and its CMD Ashwani Lohani by a Mumbai-based neurosurgeon Alok Sharma, who has offered to treat Abdus (24), Rahinul (14) and Shorab (8), suffering from a form of muscular dystrophy.
The trio have been suffering from a rare disease Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy since their birth. This is a genetic disorder which causes progressive muscle degeneration and patients rarely live beyond 30 years of age.
A Mumbai-based organisation specialising in such diseases, Meditourz, in collaboration with NeuroGen, a brain and spine institute based in Navi Mumbai, has offered to provide treatment to them.
"The three patients and the three persons accompanying them took this evening's Air India flight from Kolkata to Mumbai and will also return by an Air India flight after treatment- entirely free of any charges," Air India said in a statement.
The national carrier made every attempt to make them comfortable, by offering them prompt wheelchair service and rosebuds in the flight, it said.
"We wish to thank Air India for its kind gesture of arranging the air travel for the three patients from Bangladesh and their family to come to NeuroGen Institute for treatment and for their return after initial treatment," Sharma said.