Indian law requires visa
applicants to allow immigration police to take their fingerprints.
They only backed down when
surgeon Dr Muffazzal Lakdawala used Twitter to contact India's External Affairs
Minister Sushma Swaraj to ask for help.
The woman who weighs nearly
80 stone is leaving her home for the first time in 25 years to have life-saving
weight reduction surgery.
Iman Ahmad Abdulati, 36 -
who tips the scales at over half a tonne (over 78.7 stone) - is to fly to India
from her home in Alexandria, Egypt, after one of the world's leading bariatric
surgeons volunteered to treat her.
But her operation was
almost grounded before it began after immigration officials at India's embassy
in Cairo refused to believe Iman - believed to be the fattest woman in the
world - was too big to visit to make her visa application.
Doctor’s tweet read:
'Ma'am, Eman Ahmed (Egypt) 500kgs requested me 2 save her pls help me get her a
medical visa as refused thru normal process @SushmaSwaraj'
He explained later: 'Iman
can't move because of her condition, and due to her weight, it is near impossible
to move her.'
He added: 'But the Indian
Embassy in Cairo wasn't ready to accept it.
'The officers thought that
the family was bluffing and kept asking the family members to bring Iman to the
embassy to scan her fingerprint.
'They didn't pay any heed
to the family's requests and, as a result, Iman's visa was rejected.'
The Minister replied to the
doctor's tweet immediately and the visa request was granted. She said: 'Thanks
for bringing this to my notice. We will definitely help her.'
Now, however, the medic is
struggling with the mammoth problem of getting Iman to Mumbai this week for a
series of operations that could last a year.
He told local media he
plans to - at first - use a bariatric balloon to fill up part of Iman's
digestive tract.
The doctor reckons she
could lose as much as 400kg (62 stone) in two years.
He said: 'Due to her heavy
weight, we can't bring her in a normal plane, so we are trying to arrange a
private chartered flight instead.'
The plane will have to be
refitted with a reinforced bed because Iman's weight makes it impossible for
her to sit upright in a chair.
At home, she relies on her
mother and sister Chaymaa Abdulati to help her with everyday tasks like eating,
getting dressed, washing and going to the bathroom.


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