Another Borewell Kills India's Child: 5-Year-Old Dies In Karnal After Doctors Fail To Resuscitate Her
According To The National Disaster Response Force, Over 40 Children Have Died After Falling Into Borewells Since 2009.
A five-year-old girl died after she fell into a 50-feet-deep borewell in Haryana’s Karnal on Monday. The officials had started the rescue operations in Karnal’s Gharaunda area on Monday. However, the doctors were not able to save her. Haryana Chief Minister Manohar Lal Khattar took to Twitter to inform about the incident and express anguish over toddler’s dead. “Deeply saddened to know that 5yr old Shivani,who had fallen into a borewell in Gharaunda,has passed away. Though she was rescued by @NDRFHQ & district teams & rushed to the hospital,she is very unfortunately no longer with us. My prayers are with her family in this time of need,” Khattar said on micro-blogging site.
This is yet another incident involving a toddler getting trapped inside a borewell. In fact, business tycoon Anand Mahindra also commented on the disturbing trend. “This is happening far too often. Are there regulations for safety provisions around borewells? Can our engineering colleges prepare templates for how to swiftly excavate an escape route? May our collective prayers for the little girl help the rescuers lift her out to safety,” Mahindra said on Twitter.
This is second such incident within 10 days. Last month on October 28, a three-year-old boy died after being stuck in an abandoned borewell near Tiruchirapalli in Tamil Nadu. Commissioner of Revenue Administration J Radhakrishnan said the body of the child was “dismembered” and in a “highly decomposed” state. “Efforts are on to retrieve the mortal remains of the child,” he said. Prayers were held by various sections of society for the child’s early rescue, while leaders such as Prime Minister Narendra Modi and former Congress chief Rahul Gandhi wished the wellbeing of the child. Sujith Wilson is not the only child to have met with a tragic end after falling into an abanbdoned borewell as at least 10 other children had died in a similar manner in Tamil Nadu over the past 15 years.
This is not first such incident. According to the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), over 40 children have died after falling into borewells since 2009, and rescue operations failed at least 70 per cent of the time. India now has approximately 27 million borewells, but several of them have been abandoned because they no longer supply water, The Print reported last week. In the past few years, several children have fallen into these open wells, most of which are illegally drilled in order to extract water in areas where groundwater is depleting, an Al-Jazeera report said. At the root of India's borewell deaths, analysts say, is the illegal extraction of groundwater by mafia-style groups, builders and landlords, the report added.
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