A deafening sound, silence, then another crash

West Midnapore, May 29 — Sukumar Banerjee’s five relatives, including two children aged five and ten years, died in Friday’s mishap. They were all in S5, one of the four derailed bogies of Gyaneshwari Express that were crushed by the goods train, but Banerjee was some distance away from them, at one end of the bogie. That’s why he is alive. Banerjee (49) along with the family members of his two brothers-in-law was going to attend a sacred thread ceremony of another relative in Rourkela. While Banerjee is a resident of Nadia district, his relatives were from Domkol in West Bengal’s Murshidabad district. “My younger brother-in-law had booked all their tickets in April while I booked it in May. This made the difference,” he said. “While they got their berths together I was separated. Their berths were from 33 to 36, while mine was 63,” Banerjee said, with bleary eyes. “They are all dead.” Like most other passengers they had gone to sleep before 12am. Around 12.35 am, the train reached Kharagpur. Everything seemed normal. Around 1.15 am, Banerjee heard a loud sound and fell off his seat. “I could feel that the train had turned on its side and was dragging along the tracks,” he said. Passengers screamed for help. The bogie dragged for what seemed like a couple of minutes before it came to a halt, he said. Then, a few seconds of silence, Banerjee recalled.

It was after many more minutes that he would start counting those he had lost.

Survivor turns saviour for 14 passengers

Kolkata, May 29 — Habibul Gazi, 24, with his frail five-and-a-half-foot frail frame, does not look capable of saving more than a dozen passengers from the jaws of death. But his blood-stained shirt tells the story of his valiant effort.

A passenger of the S7 compartment of the Gyaneshwari Express, one of the worst hit in Friday’s accident, Gazi stood at Howrah station lamenting his inability to save a four-year-old who died in front of his eyes. If he had his way, Gazi could have saved 15 lives.

“I could not save the kid. He died in front my eyes and I was standing like a spectator.

I did pull out the child from the heap of flesh, but by that time, he was already dead,” said the man, breaking into tears. But Gazi was a man of steel as, about 12 hours ago, he worked among mangled steel and flesh and blood to rescue 14 co-passengers in complete darkness.

According to him, the rescue team around 3.30 am, while the train derailed at 1.30 am. “As I reached compartments S3, S4 and S5, I saw people lying in pools of blood.

Some of them were frantically trying to extricate themselves from the wreckage but couldn’t,” said Gazi, who works as a driver at a construction company in Mumbai. “I saw a woman lying outside the compartment and helplessly crying for help.

She was pleading with anyone she met to rescue her son who got stuck inside. I entered the bogie and brought out the child.

But when I handed the child to the lady, she fainted,” he recalled.

Bharatiya Janata Party criticises austerity drive

New Delhi/Patna, Sept 16 (ANI): The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has criticised the austerity measures mooted by the Central Government in view of the economic downturn and drought-like situation prevailing in the country.

Addressing the media persons here on Tuesday, spokesperson of the BJP, Rajeev Pratap Rudy, said the austerity drive would not impress the masses.

He said that the government has not cared to check the skyrocketing prices of essential commodities.

“The euphoria of austerity is a suspect. The futile chest beating will not impress a common man who is faced with high prices for food and other essential commodities,” said Rudy.

The BJP was also critical of journeys undertaken by Congress president Sonia Gandhi and Rahul Gandhi’s travel by train to Punjab on Tuesday.

“We want the Congress family would undertake a journey on Shatabdi in future also. We welcome it. Sonia Gandhi undertook a journey in economy class and we welcome it. But somewhere this has to be studied as to what is the cost that the country is paying for her austerity,” added Rudy.

Meanwhile in Patna, Rashtriya Janata Dal chief Lalu Prasad Yadav said that the Central Ministers ought to travel by the three-tier sleeper class.

“Journeys should be undertaken in a three-tier bogie of a train, which would lay an impact on the masses that our leaders are following the path of Mahatma Gandhi. They would see that the Congress is taking the austerity drive to meet the financial crisis. This is my advice,” said Lalu. (ANI)

‘Contest between Asad and I’

HYDERABAD: Grand Alliance candidate for Hyderabad Lok Sabha seat Zahid Ali Khan said on Saturday that Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen (MIM) is raising
the BJP bogie to scare Muslim voters and pocket their votes.

“After delimitation, Hyderabad has become a Muslim majority seat from where only a strong Muslim candidate can win. There is no question of BJP candidate winning from here. The MIM is using its old tactics of scaring the Muslim voters with the slogan of `threat to Islam.’ Fearing the victory of BJP, the Muslims have always given vote to MIM. This time the contest is directly between MIM candidate Asaduddin Owaisi and me,” he said.

Explaining his reasons of giving up on fighting as an independent candidate and accepting TDP ticket at the last minute he said he did it to counter the MIM mischief. The MIM had fielded one little-known person who carried the name of Zahid Ali Khan and whose father’s name was Abid Ali Khan, like his own. “The MIM had brought this person on scene to create confusion among the voters. To check this move, I had to have a well known symbol that is of TD’s cycle. Also, I have known Chandrababu Naidu for several years and helped him in bridging the TD misunderstandings with the Muslims. I believe Naidu, as in the past, would change the face of Hyderabad and the state as such,” he said.

After working as a journalist for 42 years, Khan said, he realized that if the situation of the people in the Old City had to be changed it could be done only through politics. “I have entered politics with a mission. I want to bring about a change in society. I want to give education to every child and employment to every employable person. MIM has been in power in the Old City for the last five decades but did nothing to uplift the conditions of the people,” he said.