"Had the resident doctors not been on strike, eyes of my brother Rajendra, who died on March 20, could have been donated and someone would have been able to see the world," Pande, a resident of Aurangabad, said.
Rajendra, who died on March 20 following a heart attack, had pledged to donate his eyes.
"I have so far taken the initiative in making around 50 people undertake eye donations. However, I am sad that I could not do so in the case of my brother, due to the resident doctors' strike," Sandesh said.
"However, other (resident) doctors reached there, saying they are on strike and took him away," he said.
Asked about the complaint, acting Dean of the hospital, Dr Ajit Damle, said no such information had reached him so far.
As the strike by junior Maharashtra's doctors, who are protesting a spate of assaults on colleagues by patients' relatives, entered the fourth day today, Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis and the Bombay High Court asked them to resume work immediately.
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