Dead forgotten at New Delhi's decrepit state-run morgues
A court-ordered investigation found the city’s morgues to be in crisis with decrepit conditions, outdated equipment, sick staff and poor storage of bodies

A rusted carving knife and a mallet lie on a steel table, while inside the cold storage rooms, bodies take up every square inch of the blood-stained floors.
More than 2,500 autopsies are carried out every year at New Delhi's oldest and busiest morgue, but the air purifiers have long been broken and disinfectant supplies for washing floors ran out two months ago.
“The mortuary is compromised at every level,” Sabzi Mandi mortuary's chief doctor, L.C Gupta, said of the dearth of resources.
The decrepit state of the Indian capital's dozen-odd morgues, mostly state run, recently stunned the High Court which ordered the city's government to take action.

From outdated equipment to poor storage of bodies and sick staff, the results of a court-ordered investigation made disturbing reading and shocked many in this deeply religious country.