Google – AFP, Adam Plowright (AFP), 16 april 2013
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Frame grab
from NDTV shows an accident victim consoling his son as
vehicles pass by in
Jaipur, India, on April 15, 2013 (NDTV/AFP)
|
NEW DELHI —
India embarked on a bout of soul-searching Tuesday over a shocking video
showing passersby ignoring the pleas of a desperate father after his wife and
daughter were killed in a road accident.
The CCTV
footage surfaced late Monday showing the man cradling his injured son next to
his overturned motorbike and calling for help from other motorists as his wife
and eight-month-old daughter lay bloodied on the road.
Police say
he was ignored for 40 minutes inside a newly built tunnel in the city of
Jaipur, 250 kilometres (150 miles) south-west of the capital, with a stream of
cars, buses and motorbikes driving past.
"That
kind of failure is very, very common on the roads," said campaigner Mridul
Bhasin who works for the Muskaan road safety group.
"This
is happening day in, day out every minute in our country. People die and we
turn blind eye and go where we need to go," Bhasin told cable channel
CNN-IBN.
The Mail
Today tabloid daily headlined "Callous India drives past mishap
victims," while The Hindu newspaper said the incident had "brought to
life civilian apathy".
"It's
the duty of all people to take such victims to hospital because lives could be
saved," Jaipur traffic police chief Lata Manoj said in a televised
interview.
A worker in
a toll booth noticed the stricken family and called the police, who arrived on
the scene and transferred the mother and daughter to the SMS hospital in
Jaipur.
Dr D.S.
Meena, in charge of the SMS emergency unit, said that they had died before
arriving.
"The situation
might have been better if they were provided medical help in time," he
said.
The man and
his son, who suffered light injuries, were discharged.
The
accident also spotlighted the routine flouting of traffic regulations -- the
motorbike was carrying four people without helmets and was travelling in the
tunnel despite a ban on two-wheelers.
The family
were knocked off the bike after a collision with a truck, which drove off
without stopping, police say.
Using the
CCTV footage which showed the registration plates, police are now hunting for
the truck driver.
Prabhu
Dayal, an uncle of the dead woman, blamed the deaths on public indifference.
"Her
husband cried for help for 40 minutes but no-one stopped. It's shameful that
apathy took two lives," he told AFP.
The
situation has echoes of similar incidents in neighbouring China. In 2011, a
toddler in eastern Zhejiang province was struck by two vehicles and lay dying
on the street while at least 18 people walked past.
Public
apathy in India was brought into sharp relief in December when a 23-year-old
gang-rape victim was also ignored by bystanders after she had been stripped and
dumped on a New Delhi street.
Many
pointed out that fear of the police was a major deterrent because anyone who
stops to help is often dragged into the legal case, or even implicated in the
crime.
"Following
the gang-rape we did an online survey about why people don't help victims of
violence and accidents," said Apurva Mahendra of the Delhi-based SaveLIFE
Foundation, which encourages bystanders to offer assistance.
"We
found legal issues such as being required to appear in court as witnesses are
major deterrents for good Samaritans to come forward to help such
victims," said Mahendra, who heads the privately run agency's emergency
response programme.
A total of
131,834 people died in road accidents in India in 2011 -- which works out at 15
an hour, according to the government's National Crime Records Bureau.

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