11 years since the twin-blasts at Dilsukhnagar, survivors recount horror
The Hindu
Survivors recount the tragic Dilsukhnagar twin blasts of 2013, which left 18 dead and 126 injured, changing lives forever.
On the evening of February 21, 2013, P. Yadaiah Goud, a marketing executive, went to collect the monitor of his PC from a repair shop located beside Dilsukhnagar bus stop. Instead he ended up with a vertebral fracture, injuries on his left thigh and left forearm. Now paralysed from the waist down and has been unemployed ever since, Goud is among the 126 survivors, out of whom 78 sustained grave injuries, in the Dilsukhnagar twin blasts of 2013. He was lucky, 18 others were killed on that day.
The two blasts, with improvised explosive devices (IEDs), within a span of six seconds at 6:58:38 p.m. and at 6:58:44 p.m. at Dilsukhnagar changed the fate of over hundred families. It resulted in the death of 18 persons, and injured 126 others. While the first blast took place at 107 bus stop in Dilsukhnagar, the second was near A1 Mirchi Centre. Both located about 100 metres apart.
Speaking to The Hindu, the survivors of the ghastly mishap recounted the horrific day and the trauma they have to live with to this day.
A father of two, Yadaiah Goud, who was aged 40 at the time of the blast, regained consciousness at a private hospital, where the doctors removed a nail from his backbone and treated him for vertebral fracture, injuries on his limbs. “The injuries rendered me paralysed from the waist below. I cannot walk or stand at a place for a long time. I have not received any employment as promised by the then-government or when Telangana was created. They compensated the next of kin of the deceased but the survivors who are living with ailments like me need more support and help,” he said. Mr. Goud still remains unemployed.
Another survivor of the blast was Sravan, who was pursuing B Tech and was waiting for his father to pick him up from the bus stop. He sustained injuries on his head, right ear, both hands and lost the index finger on his left hand. He now works as a private employee in the city.
Srikrishna Sundara Sharma, a tax consultant, was fasting for Bheeshma Ekadashi Day on that day was standing near the bus stop to go to Amberpet when he heard a big explosion. Then he saw people running helter-skelter. Sharp objects from the blast pierced his right leg and was treated at a private hospital for a week.
Ram Murthy, who was 22, sustained moderate conductive hearing loss in both ears, a penetrating injury to right flank, right iliac crest, right thigh, right leg, left leg, left thigh, laceration on tip of tongue and lower limb and lost his lower central incisors. He was treated and discharged on March 6, 2013.
The girl, who was admitted to Aster CMI Hospital with alarming breathlessness and significant pallor, was diagnosed with Wegener’s Granulomatosis (now known as Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis or GPA), a rare autoimmune condition that causes spontaneous bleeding in the lungs, leading to acute respiratory failure.
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