Distress Calls from Iran: Indian Medical Students Hide in Basements Amid Conflic

The All India Medical Students Association (AIMSA) has raised an urgent alarm after receiving more than 18 distress calls from Indian medical students currently trapped in conflict-hit Iran. An estimated 1,000 to 1,200 Indian students are stranded in the country. Many of these students stayed behind to appear for mandatory medical exams scheduled for March 5, which were abruptly cancelled after the conflict escalated.

Hiding in Basements and Dwindling Supplies

The situation on the ground is rapidly deteriorating. In Isfahan, 32 Indian medical students reported moving underground into a basement for safety following an attack near their hostel.  Students from Kerman have reported that their food supplies are running dangerously low, severely increasing their anxiety.

Meanwhile, students studying at Tehran University of Medical Sciences and other nearby institutions have been relocated to Qom by the Indian Embassy as a precautionary measure. However, with explosions now being heard near student areas in Shiraz, the medical fraternity remains deeply panicked.

AIMSA and Parents Demand Immediate MEA Evacuation

AIMSA President has urgently appealed to the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) to initiate an immediate evacuation. Back in India, terrified parents recently held a protest at Pratap Park, demanding that the Government of India safely bring their children home.

Dr. Pramod Dhakad

Dr. Pramod Dhakad is the founder and chief editor of MedSnaps, a dedicated news platform covering the medical community, healthcare policy, and the professional lives of doctors and medicos. Navigating the intense landscape of medical education themselves, they created MedSnaps to deliver fast, punchy, and relevant news that frontline clinicians, residents, and medical students actually care about.From breaking down NMC regulatory shifts and healthcare policy to reporting on critical campus updates, legal battles, and resident doctor welfare, Dr. Dhakad ensures the medical fraternity stays informed without the informational bloat. MedSnaps serves as a sharp, 2-3 minute daily news briefing for a community that doesn't have time to waste on generic reporting.

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