Agony of a community that lost its friends in a flash
The Hindu
The barren and uneven dust bowl of sorts stretched across the campus of NeST Electronic City in Kalamassery has a feel of foreboding about it.
And so it proved on Friday when it turned a graveyard for four migrant workers, as it buried them under soil while nearly doing the same to two others.
“He is gone, dead,” said Jalaludheen with a face as cold and lifeless as death itself. It had been hours since his brother Noujesh Mandal vanished in a pit he was digging as if fated to dig his own graveyard.
Sitting next to Jalaludheen with his back to an iron fencing, the grief-stricken Minazum was in a state of delirium unable to stop what appeared to be anguished cursing. There was no way to know as he kept telling everyone what went wrong for his brother in Bengali.
Ali Amir Mandal was inconsolable having seen his younger brother who was by his side till a few moments ago being simply swept away right in front of his eyes. He was crying hoarse and running up to the ambulance every time a body was fished out. Then eventually his worst nightmare turned true, as his brother’s lifeless body emerged from the earth.
Limping on an injured leg, Moni Mandal had no clue whether to thank his stars or curse his fate that left him alive to live through the nightmare. “I was almost buried and had the soil up to my chin when I was dragged out by someone,” he said. But there was nothing to rejoice, and he buried his face in his hands as it emerged that four of his friends were not as fortunate.
Kabir, a worker who was among the first to come to the rescue, was furious that there was zero safety measures for such a dangerous work, while Abid Biswas, another worker, said they would not have accepted the work had they realised how dangerous it was.
The Congress government including controversial farm legislations that had been brought in and later withdrawn by the BJP-led government at the Centre as the reference points for the Karnataka Agriculture Prices Commission (KAPC) has ruffled the feathers of farmers’ leaders and agricultural economists who had expressed their ideological support to the Congress.