A woman who suffered a stroke inside a train station in Mexico City was picked up and dumped in the street by five cops before dying in hospital three days.

María Guadalupe Fuentes Arias entered the Tacubaya Metro station at 7am local time February 16 before she had the stroke.

In a CCTV video obtained by Mexican news outlet Reforma, five police agents were seen responding to the sick woman.

María Guadalupe Fuentes Arias suffered a stroke on February 16 at a train station in Mexico City. Instead of police officers calling for an ambulance, they took her to the police precinct at the transit hub before abandoning her body in the street

Four police officers in Mexico City appear in a CCTV video carrying María Guadalupe Fuentes Arias (pictured on the stretcher)

A surveillance camera captured the moment María Guadalupe Fuentes Arias was dragged out of a police station at the train station after three hours of not receiving medical aid

They placed Fuentes Arias on a stretcher and carried her body to the police department's precinct located at the Line 1 station, where she spent three hours.

Another video clip showed four male cops then leading the sick woman out of the police station while she struggled to stay on her feet.

Fuentes Arias was then deserted near the steps of the train station's entrance and spent a further 26 hours unattended.

According to Mexican newspaper El Diario, a street vendor mistook her for a drunken person.

Three police officers struggle to keep the woman on her feet as they dragged her through the train station's concourse before abandoning her hours after she suffered a stroke

The Tacubaya Metro station in Mexico City was the scene of a shocking turn of events in February which were uncovered by news outlet Reforma. A 56-year-old woman suffered a stroke and cops responding to her failed to call for an ambulance, instead transferring her to the police department's office inside the station before they abandoned her outside near the entrance stairs

The witness, whose name was not reported, said cops near the station were advised of the woman's condition and were asked to call for an ambulance.

'The first time I saw her I thought she was drunk because they usually drink and stay there,' the man said.

'But the day after I arrived and I saw her again, I said 'no, this lady is not drunk, she is sick, something happened to her, she fell, she got hurt, but she has something because it has already been too long for her to be drunk and passed out".

An ambulance arrived at midday Sunday, February 17 and emergency service personnel transported her to a local hospital where she was promptly taken in for treatment.

Fuentes Arias was tragically declared dead February 19.

The transportation agency turned over the investigation to the local district attorney's office and terminated the train station's supervisor.

The cops are currently being investigated by the Mexico City Honor and Justice Council.