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Chapter 92 - Chapter 86.5 – The People Rise Against WHO

May 16–May 20, 2018

The island was quiet — the hum of the arc reactors blending with the sound of ocean waves. From a distance, it looked like paradise: white sand, palm trees, the gentle shimmer of solar panels and wind turbines complementing the reactors. But inside the glass-walled villa, the air was anything but calm.

Aarya's holographic projections filled the main hall — live news feeds, trending hashtags, and snippets of global protests.

> "WHO still hesitates," Aarya reported, his digital voice calm yet edged with tension. "But the people… they don't care anymore."

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The Global Backlash

Across Asia, hashtags dominated every screen:

#WeWantSanjeevani surged past cricket and Bollywood in India.

In Africa, marches erupted outside UN compounds, crowds chanting: "Life over politics, cure over profit!"

In Brazil, a video went viral — a mother cradling her child cured of cancer in Sanjeevani's early trials: "WHO gave us warnings. India gave us life."

Even in Europe and America, cracks appeared. Petitions flooded government portals. Underground forums buzzed with people demanding their leaders stop blocking access.

In Geneva, outside WHO headquarters, protestors shouted so loud their voices seeped into the sterile conference halls:

"We don't care what WHO says — give us the cure!"

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Inside WHO's Halls

The officials met behind closed doors. Pharma representatives spoke in whispers but with venom.

> "If Sanjeevani spreads unchecked, our markets collapse overnight."

An American delegate barked:

> "Delay it. Question its safety. Keep it under review. Whatever it takes — but do not let India control global medicine."

Yet outside, the chants grew louder. WHO's walls had never felt so thin.

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On the Island

MC stood before the vast ocean, hands folded, his reflection caught against the glass wall of the villa. Aarya hovered nearby, projecting the real-time feeds into the evening air.

"The system is breaking," Aarya said. "WHO's authority means little when the people themselves demand Sanjeevani."

The MC's eyes stayed fixed on the horizon. A slow smile formed.

"They've chosen already," he murmured. "This is no longer about institutions. This is about survival. And survival always wins."

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Ananya's POV

From the balcony, Ananya scrolled through the incoming messages — desperate families from every corner of the globe. Her heart ached as she read one from Nairobi:

"My daughter has weeks to live. We don't care about approvals. Please, just send Sanjeevani."

Her hands trembled as she set the tablet down. The weight of their trust pressed against her chest.

For the first time, she truly saw how her partner's mission was no longer about innovation. It was about life itself — millions of lives hanging on his decisions.

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The Data Surge

By the end of that week, the numbers stunned even Aarya:

Saraswati Search recorded 120 million Sanjeevani-related queries in three days.

Bharat Mail received over 5.4 million international applications, many bypassing their own governments.

Indian embassies across 40+ nations reported crowds outside their gates, waving medical files and chanting India's name.

The world was no longer waiting for WHO. They had made their choice — and they chose India and Sanjeevani.

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Closing Scene

That night, as the tropical sky lit up with stars, Ananya leaned against the railing of the villa, watching the waves glitter under moonlight.

Behind her, MC stood with quiet determination.

"WHO may stall. Pharma may rage," he said, voice steady. "But no wall can stop the tide once the people rise."

And as if the world itself agreed, the distant horizon suddenly glowed — villagers on the Indian mainland had set off fireworks, celebrating hope.

From their island sanctuary, they watched the sparks in the sky.

The tide had turned.

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