Residents of the Gharkool Society in Juinagar said Mr Nair rarely opened his house’s door and almost never took out the garbage. He often had to be persuaded by his neighbours to dispose off household waste.
SEAL workers reached his residence after being alerted by one of the apartment complex’s resident. He was then taken to the NGO’s Ashram in Panvel, where he was treated for the infection in his legs.
Mr Nair was a computer programmer by profession, his mother worked in the telecommunications branch of the Indian Air Force and his father was employed at Mumbai’s Tata Hospital.
Residents of the Gharkool Society in Juinagar said Mr Nair rarely opened his house’s door and almost never took out the garbage. He often had to be persuaded by his neighbours to dispose off household waste.
SEAL workers reached his residence after being alerted by one of the apartment complex’s resident. He was then taken to the NGO’s Ashram in Panvel, where he was treated for the infection in his legs.
Mr Nair was a computer programmer by profession, his mother worked in the telecommunications branch of the Indian Air Force and his father was employed at Mumbai’s Tata Hospital.