Expose Cross-Border Abuse & Institutional Negligence


Expose Cross-Border Abuse & Institutional Negligence
The Issue
For over a decade, an Indian citizen by birth and a breast cancer survivor has been trapped in a cross-border human rights crisis spanning the UK and India.
Her life has been defined by medical negligence, identity interference, grave humiliation, institutional abandonment, and coercive control.
Her communication has been controlled or restricted, forcing isolation and dependency, and leaving her without social support or access to help.
In 2019, she underwent a right-sided mastectomy in the UK.
Despite clinical eligibility, she was denied reconstructive surgery, psychological support, and ongoing cancer aftercare.
During the same period, she suffered severe domestic abuse while residing in the UK, at the hands of her ex-partner. Despite reporting multiple incidents, no effective safeguarding or intervention was provided and was left homeless amid COVID lockdown in August 2020 without sufficient resources while she was still suffering side effects of the treatment.
Despite repeated distress and evidence, no safeguarding or meaningful police response was provided.
She was forced into 15–20 unstable from 2019 to 2024, unhygienic living arrangements. Deliberately financially stripped, isolated, similar abusive behaviour lingered everywhere and blocked from working while her citizenship process was pending in September 2024, she became fully dependent and vulnerable.
Her legal records were tampered with, including false co-residency claims suggesting immigration or financial fraud. Communication was controlled or halted to prevent her from seeking help.
Under the guise of employment in September 2024, she was lured back to India.
She faced sexual harassment, coercion, and exploitation.
Despite submitting evidence for 7–8 months, no First Information Report (FIR) is filed yet in India. Despite reaching police stations, government women organisations and Gujarat High Court- India, eventually she had to leave the state to escape humiliation and torchure.
The Indian Embassy in Birmingham issued a passport in September 2024 that appears digitally manipulated or artificially generated.
Two separate confiscation incidents further immobilized her.
Conflicting departure records and reasons across UK and Indian systems point to institutional tampering.
Since 2022, she has had no access to reconstructive surgery or cancer follow-up.
Reports suggest possible unauthorized medical procedures targeting reproductive health—without consent.
This pattern is compounded by complex financial, medical and immigration frauds supported through honour-based coercion, forced isolation, sophisticated slavery and total economic stripping.
This is not a misunderstanding, nor an isolated incident.
It is a life-threatening crisis involving systemic neglect, institutional silence, and gross violations of human rights—especially for a woman and breast cancer survivor with a history of domestic abuse.
These events raise critical questions:
Who benefits from suppressing and misrepresenting her identity, destroying her access to recovery, and devoiding her even minimal financial resources ?
Is her suffering being exploited for immigration fraud, surveillance, financial frauds and gain, aimed at honour based killing or unauthorized research?
We urgently demand intervention:
• Ministry of Home Affairs & Ministry of External Affairs (India):
Independent verification of passport issuance, digital manipulation, and cross-border identity tampering.
• UK Home Office & Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC):
Review of domestic abuse handling, safeguarding failures, and forced isolation from 2019 until now. Investigation into denial to provide the right to information and occurances of these events.
• National Human Rights Commission & National Commission for Women (India):
Investigation of prolonged denial of healthcare, FIR obstruction, financial exploitation, doctored financial authorisations or non consentual raised funds or loans in joint names and honour-based coercion.
• UN Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women & the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Health:
Assessment of systemic risks to her safety, identity, autonomy, and medical recovery.
• Care Quality Commission & NHS Resolution (UK):
Investigation into clinical negligence, denial of reconstructive treatment, and post-right breast mastectomy care failures.
Sign this petition to demand justice and bring an end to cross-border systemic abuse and institutional negligence. Together, we can expose the truth, enforce accountability, and pave the way for a safer and more just world for everyone.
I have gathered the necessary documentation to support my request. If you need any additional evidence or relevant information that could further strengthen the case, please reach out to me.
Thank you for your support and for standing with truth and justice.

37
The Issue
For over a decade, an Indian citizen by birth and a breast cancer survivor has been trapped in a cross-border human rights crisis spanning the UK and India.
Her life has been defined by medical negligence, identity interference, grave humiliation, institutional abandonment, and coercive control.
Her communication has been controlled or restricted, forcing isolation and dependency, and leaving her without social support or access to help.
In 2019, she underwent a right-sided mastectomy in the UK.
Despite clinical eligibility, she was denied reconstructive surgery, psychological support, and ongoing cancer aftercare.
During the same period, she suffered severe domestic abuse while residing in the UK, at the hands of her ex-partner. Despite reporting multiple incidents, no effective safeguarding or intervention was provided and was left homeless amid COVID lockdown in August 2020 without sufficient resources while she was still suffering side effects of the treatment.
Despite repeated distress and evidence, no safeguarding or meaningful police response was provided.
She was forced into 15–20 unstable from 2019 to 2024, unhygienic living arrangements. Deliberately financially stripped, isolated, similar abusive behaviour lingered everywhere and blocked from working while her citizenship process was pending in September 2024, she became fully dependent and vulnerable.
Her legal records were tampered with, including false co-residency claims suggesting immigration or financial fraud. Communication was controlled or halted to prevent her from seeking help.
Under the guise of employment in September 2024, she was lured back to India.
She faced sexual harassment, coercion, and exploitation.
Despite submitting evidence for 7–8 months, no First Information Report (FIR) is filed yet in India. Despite reaching police stations, government women organisations and Gujarat High Court- India, eventually she had to leave the state to escape humiliation and torchure.
The Indian Embassy in Birmingham issued a passport in September 2024 that appears digitally manipulated or artificially generated.
Two separate confiscation incidents further immobilized her.
Conflicting departure records and reasons across UK and Indian systems point to institutional tampering.
Since 2022, she has had no access to reconstructive surgery or cancer follow-up.
Reports suggest possible unauthorized medical procedures targeting reproductive health—without consent.
This pattern is compounded by complex financial, medical and immigration frauds supported through honour-based coercion, forced isolation, sophisticated slavery and total economic stripping.
This is not a misunderstanding, nor an isolated incident.
It is a life-threatening crisis involving systemic neglect, institutional silence, and gross violations of human rights—especially for a woman and breast cancer survivor with a history of domestic abuse.
These events raise critical questions:
Who benefits from suppressing and misrepresenting her identity, destroying her access to recovery, and devoiding her even minimal financial resources ?
Is her suffering being exploited for immigration fraud, surveillance, financial frauds and gain, aimed at honour based killing or unauthorized research?
We urgently demand intervention:
• Ministry of Home Affairs & Ministry of External Affairs (India):
Independent verification of passport issuance, digital manipulation, and cross-border identity tampering.
• UK Home Office & Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC):
Review of domestic abuse handling, safeguarding failures, and forced isolation from 2019 until now. Investigation into denial to provide the right to information and occurances of these events.
• National Human Rights Commission & National Commission for Women (India):
Investigation of prolonged denial of healthcare, FIR obstruction, financial exploitation, doctored financial authorisations or non consentual raised funds or loans in joint names and honour-based coercion.
• UN Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women & the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Health:
Assessment of systemic risks to her safety, identity, autonomy, and medical recovery.
• Care Quality Commission & NHS Resolution (UK):
Investigation into clinical negligence, denial of reconstructive treatment, and post-right breast mastectomy care failures.
Sign this petition to demand justice and bring an end to cross-border systemic abuse and institutional negligence. Together, we can expose the truth, enforce accountability, and pave the way for a safer and more just world for everyone.
I have gathered the necessary documentation to support my request. If you need any additional evidence or relevant information that could further strengthen the case, please reach out to me.
Thank you for your support and for standing with truth and justice.

37
The Decision Makers
Petition created on 9 July 2025