Odisha: Dead woman’s legs, hip broken for easy transport; probe ordered | Latest News India - Hindustan Times
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Odisha: Dead woman’s legs, hip broken for easy transport; probe ordered

ByK Mohanty, Bhubaneswar
Aug 26, 2016 03:34 PM IST

The Odisha Human Rights Commission has started a probe into a case of hospital workers in Balasore district breaking a body at the hip so that they could carry it in a bundle.

The Odisha Human Rights Commission has started a probe into a case of hospital workers in Balasore district allegedly breaking a body at the hip so that they could carry it in a bundle.

People carrying the body of Taramani Barik, an 85-year-old widow, who died after she was run over by a goods train near Soro railway station in Balasore district.(HT Photo)
People carrying the body of Taramani Barik, an 85-year-old widow, who died after she was run over by a goods train near Soro railway station in Balasore district.(HT Photo)

On Thursday, the panel’s chairperson, justice BK Mishra, issued summons to the inspector general of railway police and the Balasore district magistrate over newspaper reports and TV images that showed two hospital sweepers breaking the bones of a body and wrapping it in a sheet.

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District magistrate Pramod Das said he asked for a report from the railway police over the incident, which comes on the heels of outrage over a tribal man being forced to carry his dead wife on his shoulders in Kalahandi district.

Read: Odisha: Denied a mortuary van, man carries wife’s body on shoulders

The body was of Taramani Barik, an 85-year-old widow, who died after she was run over by a goods train near Soro railway station in Balasore district. The doctors at the Soro Community Health Centre declared her dead.

Railway officials, who wanted to take the body to the district headquarters hospital in Balasore town (30km away) for an autopsy, found no ambulance or vehicle.

A junior railway police official asked sweepers at the health centre for help. As the body had stiffened, sweepers allegedly broke the leg and hip bones so that it could be neatly packed into a bundle. They then carried the body in the sack all the way from the hospital to the railway station on their shoulders on a bamboo pole.

The woman’s son, Rabindra Barik, alleged that the railway police treated her mother in the most inhumane way after her death. “They should have shown some dignity. The sweepers who broke the bones should be punished,” he demanded.

The Kalahandi incident

In Kalahandi, Dana Manjhi had to wrap his wife’s body in a cloth and walk to his village Melghara in Rampur block, about 60 km from Bhawanipatna district headquarters, after hospital authorities did not provide a mortuary van or an ambulance.

Manjhi, who was accompanied by his 12-year-old daughter, was spotted by some local reporters who called up the district collector and arranged for an ambulance for the remaining journey.

Read: Odisha incidents remind us that State expenditure on public health needs to improve

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