Bengaluru, Sept 29: A boy celebrating his ninth birthday and one of his friends diedon Wednesday night after they mistook sulphuric acid for cold drink, and drank it in Bengaluru.
Sahil Shankar, whose birthday it was, and his goldsmith-father Shankar had invited friends and relatives from the neighbourhood for a party at their Kilari Road residence off Kempe Gowda Road.
After the cake was cut and the guests sat down for dinner, Sahil and his friend Aryan went into a room where Shankar had stored sulphuric acid in a glass bottle for jewellery-related work.
"The children mistook it for a soft drink and drank it. Soon, they collapsed. The guests rushed the children to a private hospital, which referred them to Victoria hospital, where doctors declared them brought dead," a police officer said. The bodies of the boys were handed over to the parents after a postmortem examination on Thursday.
According to police, Sahil was in Class III and Aryan a Class II student. Both studied at a private school in Chamarajapet. Shankar was not in the house during the party, and his wife Sunita was attending to the guests.
Police said Shankar's family hail from Maharashtra, and moved to Bengaluru three decades ago. Sahil was the couple's elder child. Aryan too was the elder child of his his goldsmith father, a native of Uttar Pradesh.
Welcoming the move Dr Arathi Krishna told coastaldigst.com that Indians stranded in any foreign country can utilize this facility. "Initially, I was approached by Mr Zakaria and Mr Sheik who wanted chartered flights to help their employees fly back to India. I asked them to write to the Indian Ambassador in Saudi Araia Mr Ausaf Sayeed. Then I requested the ambassador to forward the request to Joint Secretary Dr Nagendra Prasad, who is in charge of gulf division in the Ministry of External Affairs, and then to Secretary on charge of Gulf and then I requested Secretary of Economic Relations Mr T S Tirumurti who was also in charge of Gulf to follow this up," she said.
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