WhatsApp reunites man with family after 20 years

TNN
January 7, 2019

Bengaluru, Jan 7: A WhatsApp message bridged 20 years and 2,000km of gulf separating a 48-year-old man from his family and facilitated their reunion here on Sunday.

It was an emotional moment for Mahaveer Singh Chauhan, from Jhab village in Jalore district of Rajasthan, when he embraced his 24-year-old son, Pradyuman Singh, on a Nimhans hospital bed. Pradyuman was four years old when he last saw his father and his younger brother Raghupal was just one.

Mahaveer, who suffered huge losses in a business he ran in Mumbai, severed ties with his family, abandoning his home in shame in December 1998. His father, Ganpat Singh Chauhan, and family members lodged a police complaint and looked for him, but gave up after five years of searching. Mahaveer moved to Bengaluru where he has been living for 20 years.

He was found unconscious on Saturday at a rose farm in Doddaballapura where he worked as a supervisor. Mahaveer’s friends Ravi and Kishore Kumar Daftary took him to a local hospital, from where he was referred to Nimhans as doctors suspected he had a spinal injury.

“Mahaveer rarely spoke about his family. What I got to know from him all these years was that he was married and had two children and that his father was a man of stature,” said Daftary, also from Rajasthan and works as a photographer in Bengaluru.

As Mahaveer’s condition worsened, his friends grew worried and felt a family member’s presence was essential in such circumstances. The duo took a shot in the dark — circulating a photograph of Mahaveer on WhatsApp in the hope it would come to the notice of his relatives. His driving licence, bearing the name of his village — Jhab — helped in the identification process.

The message was forwarded at 4pm on Saturday in multiple groups dedicated to Rajasthanis on WhatsApp, and what followed next was an incredible story of reunion.

Mahaveer was unaware of reunion until last moment

By 6 pm,Daftary was flooded with calls and messages enquiring about the man. “However, it was a call from a quaint village in Rajasthan that had me smiling. Mahaveer’s son Pradyuman was at the other end and he confirmed his identity and told me he was taking the early-morning flight to Bengaluru on Sunday,” Daftary said.

As Daftary and Ravi waited for Pradyuman’s arrival, hundreds of people from the Rajasthani community gathered on the Nimhans premises. However, Mahaveer was not informed about the whole thing as they feared it might upset him.

At 11am Sunday, when Pradyuman touched his father’s feet, it was a heart-stirring moment for many. A teary-eyed Mahaveer told his son, “I’m free of all my guilt today; take me back to the land where I belong.”

An elated Pradyuman said, “It’s unbelievable. We thought we had lost him. Destiny works in mysterious ways. My mother always believed he will come back one day.”

Mahaveer was shifted to Jayanagar’s Apollo Hospital on Sunday afternoon and is recuperating. “We are planning to take him back to Rajasthan once he is discharged,” said Pradyuman. However, doctors said they are awaiting his medical reports and will take a decision on his discharge after studying the same.

A polyglot who earned with his hands

Mahaveer speaks eight languages and is well versed in Kannada and Marathi. He worked as a chauffeur, photographer, gardener, salesman and a supervisor at a farm, during his stay in Bengaluru all these years,” said Goverdhan Giri, another of Mahaveer’s friends in Bengaluru.

Though Mahaveer had decided he would never to return to his family, he was, in fact, getting affectionate towards them over the past three years. “He had a social-media account under a pseudonym and closely followed his sons. He sometimes expressed his desire to see his family,” Giri added.

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News Network
March 26,2020

Bengaluru, Mar 26: Karnataka government has warned strict penal action against landlords or house-owners under provisions of law for forcing doctors, paramedical staff and healthcare professionals to vacate their rented residences citing COVID-19 spread through them as the reason.

Stating that lot of complaints have been received in this regard, an order issued by Additional Chief Secretary Health and Family Welfare department Jawaid Akhtar said such behaviour amounted to obstructing public servant in discharging their duties./

Noting that the state government has issued Karnataka Epidemic Diseases (COVID-19) regulations 2020 for prevention and containment of the virus, it directed Deputy Commissioners of the district, Commissioner and Joint Commissioner of BBMP (civic body in Bengaluru), Commissioners of Municipal Corporations and District Deputy Commissioner of Police to take action against such incidents.

"Strict penal action should be taken against such landlords or house-owners under relevant provisions of law and submit an action taken report on a daily basis to the office of Additional Chief Secretary, Home Department," the order read.

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coastaldigest.com news network
June 7,2020

Mangaluru/Udupi, Jun 7: Coastal districts of Dakshina Kannada and Udupi have recorded 17 and 13 new coronavirus positive cases between 5 p.m. on June 6 and 5 p.m. on June 7. 

16 among 17 new covid patients in Dakshina Kannada are returnees from Maharashtra, while one returned from Goa recently.

Maharashtra returnees comprise 14 males, including three teenagers t, and two females aged 32 and 41. The Goa returnee is a 32-year-old male.

All of them have all been admitted to the designated COVID hospital in the district.

With this, the total tally of coronavirus cases in Dakshina Kannada has risen to 203, out of which 47 are currently active. As many as 150 patients have recovered and been discharged, and seven have died.

Among the 13 in Udupi, 12 are Maharashtra returnees, while process of contact tracing of one patient, a 30-year-old woman, is going on.

The patients comprise eight males, including a 7-year-old boy, and five females. They have all been admitted to the designated hospital.

This takes the total number of coronavirus cases in Udupi district to 902, out of which 798 are currently active, 103 discharged, and one patient has died.

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News Network
May 28,2020

Mangaluru, May 28: A pregnant woman who returned from Dubai in a repatriation flight suffered miscarriage after she was allegedly denied entry to her apartment flat and also refused proper treatment in the institutional quarantine.

Fathima was put in a paid quarantine facility after she returned on May 12 flight for her first delivery.

On the second day of her return, she tested negative for Covid-19 in the first test. As per SOP (Standard operating procedures) for pregnant women, she was ready to shift to her apartment, Shivdeep Residency, located at Shivbhag in the city for home quarantine.

However, the members of the Resident Welfare Association of the apartment who got a whiff of her arrival, called an emergency meeting the previous night and reportedly informed the pregnant woman that her entry to the flat would put other residents in trouble and suggested that she stay away.

Sources said the RWA consists of some serving and retired police officials.

With no other go, the woman continued in the paid quarantine.

Treatment for a pregnant woman?

Fathima's father-in-law Azeez Bastikar said the doctors who attended her during the quarantine did not provide proper healthcare required for a pregnant woman and also refused to touch her, out of fear.

Many a time, they did not even check her BP, saying that they ‘forgot to bring the kit’. When her situation worsened, the family members contacted several hospitals in the city but all of them allegedly refused to admit her, fearing the sealing down of the hospital in case she tests positive on the 14th day COVID test.

Finally, the six and half months pregnant woman was shifted to a clinic on Wednesday after her 14th day test had turned negative.

The doctors who checked her found out that she had suffered a miscarriage and operated on her to remove the stillborn. The doctors said further delay would have costed the woman her life.

Meanwhile, on Thursday, Azeez Bastikar approached Deputy Commissioner Sindhu B Rupesh, seeking action against the doctors and hospitals who denied treatment and the RWA who refused her entry to the apartment.

Stating that the ill-treatment meted out to her daughter-in-law by doctors and others added to her trauma resulting in the miscarriage, he appealed to the authorities to ensure that no one else is treated in a similar manner.

He said that Fathima and her husband live in Dubai and that she came to India for a safe delivery as the situation was critical in Dubai.

The paid quarantine facility where she had to continue after RWA denied her access, charged her Rs 60,000 for her stay.

Meanwhile, the MCC commissioner Ajith Kumar Hegde on Thursday issued a notice to Shivdeep Apartment for refusing Fathima's entry.

The apartment has to respond within three days, failing which legal action will be initiated against it.

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