The specialists at the secretly run Max Hospital had articulated the child dead hours after his twin, who was stillborn on 30 November, at 22 weeks.
The guardians said the infant was alive while on their way to his memorial service.
Their dad told journalists that he would not take the tyke's body home unless the two specialists were captured.
The episode started shock and a level headed discussion over the nature of private medicinal services which is regularly expensive.
The two specialists were let go by the healing center on Sunday after a request. The clinic likewise sent its sympathies to the guardians in the wake of hearing that the infant had kicked the bucket.
"Our most profound sympathies are with the guardians and other relatives. While we comprehend that survival in extraordinary preterm births is uncommon, it is constantly excruciating for the guardians and family. We wish them the quality to adapt to their misfortune," it said.
The state wellbeing clergyman, Satyender Jain, has said the healing center's permit could be crossed out if a test thought that it was liable of therapeutic carelessness.
The Delhi police said on Wednesday that it had exchanged the case to its wrongdoing unit.
The occurrence became known when the guardians saw one of the children squirming inside the plastic pack that specialists had set the newborn children in.
As indicated by the twins' granddad, the shocked family hurried the infant to a close-by doctor's facility where they were informed that their infant was as yet alive, nearby media announced.
This was the second example lately where a private healing facility in India has been gotten out for careless care. A month ago, a young lady passed on of dengue fever in another doctor's facility and the guardians assert they were cheated for her treatment.

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