Woman's death jolts water-starved Dolhara

May 10, 2012

water_copy

Dolhara (Thane District), May 10: Many myths surround the death of 41-year-old Parvati Jadhav, an adivasi woman in Dolhara. Officials attribute it to a heat stroke, and some say it was a cardiac arrest, but people in the village have no doubts about the reason. “Parvati was a sacrifice to the severe shortage of water here,” says Yashoda Wargade.

“Why don't they just poison us instead of killing us without water,” she laments. “Parvati was breathless when she was brought back from the well and couldn't even drink water,” she adds. At home, Parvati's husband Ramu, son Hiraman and four young daughters, the eldest Savita is 14 and youngest Sandhya, eight, try to reconcile with her death. A garlanded photograph of Parvati is brought out to show visitors. Her daughter-in-law Madhuri has given birth to a second daughter only a month ago.

Shocking incident

Filling water occupies most of the women's lives and the incident has come as a severe shock. They wait for six to eight hours sometimes for their turn at the well and even the men chip in at night since it is dangerous to be out alone. “Parvati made several trips in the heat and she died because of that,” says Shakuntala Jadhav.

Parvati like other women used to spend most of the mornings waiting for the elusive tanker which empties about 4,000 litres into the well, about one kilometre from her house. That Sunday morning on April 22, she rushed as usual to the well and made two trips in the baking heat carrying several steel pots each time. She was in the middle of preparing lunch for her family.

The heat and stress became a fatal combination for her. There is never enough water and it was during her third trip that she fell in a faint. Women bringing her back to the house recall that her pulse was fading and her eyes had rolled upwards. Her nephew Pundalik Jadhav says filling water repeatedly sapped her life.

She had no known ailments, confirms Kailash Jadhav, Additional Collector, Thane, who submitted a report to the Maharashtra government saying Parvati died of a heat stroke and her death was not due to water scarcity or a stampede.

Mokhada taluka in which Dolhara is situated has faced acute scarcity conditions since March this year and tanker supply has been erratic. There is chronic water shortage here. Yet, Thane is not on the government list of 15 scarcity-affected districts. People spend all day and night collecting water which forms a trickle at the bottom of bone dry wells.

The village had asked for a well closer to the village and a dam. The police patil Shankar Patil had even donated some land for a dam near the village. It was approved 10 years ago at a cost of Rs. 1.5 core but no one came forward to construct it, he rues. Villagers in disgust had boycotted elections but it was of no use. “How many more must die for water?” asks Yashoda.

The women have to amass bundles of unwashed clothes every week and wait for a State transport bus to ferry them 10 km away to a rivulet for washing. “The conductor does not let us enter with these smelly clothes even though we pay Rs. 7 per head,” says Ms. Jadhav.

The men also fetch large blue drums of water by bullock cart from another well about five km away from the village. The women scoffed at the Maharashtra Navnirman Sena (MNS) which distributed sealed plastic glasses of water to the village after Parvati died. Crushed cups are strewn in the village but in Shakuntala's house, the children have kept them untouched. “Look at these cups of water. Of what use can they be. We refuse to drink this water,” laughs Yashoda. In the village, a large hexagonal water tank stands as a testimony to the futility of government schemes. It was built many years ago for storing water but it used to leak and there is no earthly use for it now, people say amid demands of tearing it down.

‘Unfortunate event'

Immediately after her death which Mr. Jadhav termed “an unfortunate event,” a bore well was dug in the village which yielded water. And in addition, a long-pending demand for a small dam on a nearby rivulet has been sanctioned with alacrity. “Work will begin in September and it will be completed next year and then Dolhara will be out of scarcity,” declares Mr. Jadhav.

The two wells in the village are dry and two tankers supply water once in a while. Now the government sends up to three tankers for a population of 1200-1500 in the village. The two hand-pumps don't work and a new one was installed now and one last year.

No post-mortem

Sanjay Dahale says his aunt was taken to Khodala for treatment but they couldn't do much and she was taken to a private hospital in Nashik. The police are investigating her death. The doctors charged Rs. 45,000 for a day's treatment. There was no post-mortem conducted after she died.

Mr. Jadhav clarified that Parvati's condition was critical and the doctors at the Nashik hospital said they would not be able to revive her and advised the relatives to take her home. She died on the way back. While going to fill water, she fell about 200 metres away from the well and did not sustain any injuries. There was no blood supply to her brain, he said, adding that she may have been unwell or not had anything for breakfast. He said women used the well all year round and there had been no such incidents so far.

Parvati's death is a warning to an apathetic administration. The question is will it wake up.

Comments

Add new comment

  • Coastaldigest.com reserves the right to delete or block any comments.
  • Coastaldigset.com is not responsible for its readers’ comments.
  • Comments that are abusive, incendiary or irrelevant are strictly prohibited.
  • Please use a genuine email ID and provide your name to avoid reject.
Agencies
March 15,2020

New Delhi, Mar 15: The new rules for debit and credit cards to increase security and reduce frauds kick in from Monday. In January, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had issued new rules to improve user convenience and increase the security of card transactions. These rules will help in curbing the misuse of debit and credit cards.

RBI has directed banks to allow only domestic card transactions at ATMs and PoS terminals in India at the time of issuance/reissuance of card. For international transactions, online transactions, card-not-present transactions and contactless transactions, customers will have to separately set up services on their card.

These rules will be applicable for new cards from March 16. Those with old cards can decide whether to disable any of these features.

As per the existing rules, these services used to come automatically with the card, but now it will start at the request of the customer.

Debit or credit card customers who have not yet done any online transaction, contactless transaction or international transaction with the card, then these services on the card will automatically stop from March 16.

The Reserve Bank has asked all banks to provide mobile banking, net banking option to enable limit and enable and disable service 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

If the customer makes any change in the status of the card, the bank will alert the customer through SMS/email and send the information.

Issuers shall provide to all cardholders facility to switch on/off and set/modify transaction limits (within the overall card limit, if any, set by the issuer) for all types of transactions -- domestic and international, at PoS/ATMs/online transactions/contactless transactions, etc.,

The provisions, however, are not mandatory for prepaid gift cards and those used at mass transit systems.

The latest instructions come in the wake of rising instances of cyber frauds and the huge increase in the use of cards.

Comments

Add new comment

  • Coastaldigest.com reserves the right to delete or block any comments.
  • Coastaldigset.com is not responsible for its readers’ comments.
  • Comments that are abusive, incendiary or irrelevant are strictly prohibited.
  • Please use a genuine email ID and provide your name to avoid reject.
Agencies
June 17,2020

New Delhi, Jun 17: AAP MLA and national spokesperson Atishi has tested positive for COVID-19, her party colleagues said on Wednesday.

Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal took to Twitter to wish her speedy recovery.

"Atishi ji has played an important role in the fight against corona. I hope that she will get healthy soon and again get involved in serving the people," Kejriwal tweeted in Hindi.

According to sources, Atishi was tested on Tuesday for COVID-19 and her report came positive today.

She is presently under home quarantine, the sources said.

"Get well soon Atishi, recover soon from Corona," AAP MLA Saurabh Bhardwaj tweeted.

Atishi represents Kalkaji assembly constituency.

Comments

Add new comment

  • Coastaldigest.com reserves the right to delete or block any comments.
  • Coastaldigset.com is not responsible for its readers’ comments.
  • Comments that are abusive, incendiary or irrelevant are strictly prohibited.
  • Please use a genuine email ID and provide your name to avoid reject.
Agencies
April 24,2020

New Delhi, Apr 24: Congress leader Rahul Gandhi has termed the government decision to freeze Dearness Allowance of Central government employees for a year as "insensitive and inhuman."

The former Congress President in a tweet said: "Lakhs and crores are being spent on the Bullet Train and New Delhi's Central Vista which should have been suspended, but the government has deducted DA of Central government employees and pensioners... It is insensitive and inhuman."

"The tragic part is that by deducting this amount from January 1, 2020 up to 30th June, 2021 for a period of 1.5 years, the government of India proceeds to deduct almost Rs 38 thousand crore from the income of these middle class government employees and pensioners, who rely completely on the pay and pensions that they receive," said Randeep Surjewala, chief spokesperson of Congress.

There are about 50 lakh such serving government employees and about 62 lakh pensioners.

"Even more tragic and objectionable is the fact that the government of India has not even spared our armed forces. The government has deducted Rs 11 thousand crore of the 15 lakh serving armed forces personnel and nearly 26 lakh military pensioners. What is their fault? They are serving the nation in times of all types of crises," said Surjewala.

The Congress alleged that the government did not spare the savings scheme.

Instead of curbing the wasteful expenditure, the government has been constantly hitting at the income of government employees and the middle class, it added.

Comments

Add new comment

  • Coastaldigest.com reserves the right to delete or block any comments.
  • Coastaldigset.com is not responsible for its readers’ comments.
  • Comments that are abusive, incendiary or irrelevant are strictly prohibited.
  • Please use a genuine email ID and provide your name to avoid reject.