Indian doctors defend 500kg Egyptian's weight loss amid row

Abd El Aty’s sister alleges her sibling has not shed half her weight as specialists at the Mumbai hospital claim

Abd El Aty’s sister alleges her sibling has not shed half her weight as specialists at the Mumbai hospital claim. PHOTO: FILE

MUMBAI:
Indian doctors on Tuesday angrily rejected claims that they had lied about the amount of weight an Egyptian once believed to be the world's heaviest woman had lost following surgery.

The sister of Eman Ahmed Abd El Aty alleged that her sibling, who previously weighed 500 kilogrammes (1,100 pounds), had not shed half her weight as specialists at a Mumbai hospital had claimed.

500kg Egyptian sheds half her weight after India surgery

"Today Eman weighs 171 kilos," Muffazal Lakdawala, the doctor leading Abd El Aty's treatment said, adding that the claim made by her sister Shaimaa Selim in a social media video post was "complete hogwash".

In videos provided last week by Saifee Hospital, where the 37-year-old had bariatric surgery last month, a visibly slimmer Abd El Aty could be seen sitting up and smiling while listening to music.

In an accompanying statement, doctors said the woman, who had not left her home in Egypt's Mediterranean port city of Alexandria for two decades until she arrived in India's commercial capital in February, had lost 250 kilos.
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