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Weird/Crazy Incidents Worldwide Thread

sweep_shot

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I am making this thread to post about various weird/crazy incidents worldwide.

=============================

Starting off with this one:

Source: https://www.cnn.com/2020/08/31/asia/taiwan-child-kite-intl-hnk-scli/index.html.

A child in Taiwan was caught in a kite and swept high into the air​


A kite-flying festival turned terrifying in Taiwan on Sunday when a 3-year-old girl became entangled in tail of giant kite and sent flying high into the air.

The international kite festival was being held in the city of Hsinchu, south of the capital Taipei. Video of the accident, which circulated widely on social media, show several people preparing the large long-tailed pale orange kite for flight next to a crowd of viewers. The kite is already billowing from the strong wind.

Then, the organizers let the kite go – and it flies up, along with a toddler dangling from its tail. It’s not clear how close she was to the kite on the ground, or how she got caught in it.

Screams can be heard in the video as the child is lifted high into the air, being swung about wildly by the kite and wind. She was airborne for about 30 seconds before the kite was pulled low enough for audience members to grab and release her.

The child was in the air for about 30 seconds before she was lowered to the ground.

The child was in the air for about 30 seconds before she was lowered to the ground.
Facebook/@visasblog.tw via Reuters

She was immediately rushed to the hospital with her mother and festival staffers, but miraculously only suffered minor injuries with abrasions to her face and neck, according to Taiwan’s government-run Central News Agency. She has since been discharged and is home with her family.

In a statement on Facebook, Hsinchu Mayor Lin Chih-chien apologized for the incident, and said the festival was immediately suspended to ensure attendees’ safety.

“We will review the circumstances to prevent accidents like this from happening again, and hold people accountable,” he said.

The wind at the festival on Sunday afternoon was unusually strong, reaching a 7 on the Beaufort Scale – meaning wind speeds ranged from 32 to 38 miles per hour (50 to 61 kilometers per hour), according to CNA. That’s just one tier below one tier below gale-level winds on the scale.

 

Overdue book mysteriously returned to N.D. library after 51 years​



Overdue-book-mysteriously-returned-to-ND-library-after-51-years.jpg

A book was anonymously returned to the Enderlin Municipal Library in North Dakota 51 years past its due date, along with a $20 bill. Photo courtesy of the Enderlin Municipal Library/Facebook

March 26 (UPI) -- A North Dakota library said a copy of Rebecca by author Daphne du Maurier was returned anonymously through the mail 51 years after its due date.

The Enderlin Municipal Library said on social media that the book arrived recently in a media mail package with no return address, and the librarian who found the item soon determined it was checked out 51 years earlier and had been due back on Oct. 6, 1973.

"The exact number of days it would be overdue is actually 18,783 days, and if we charged a standard .10 cents per day would actually equal out to $1,878.30," the post said.

The librarian wrote that the library's board voted to do away with late fees just last month, so the return doesn't require any payment.

"This anonymous person was even nice enough to throw in a $20 bill with the book! How cool is that? According to the technical aspects of this case, I actually owe this person $20 now," the librarian wrote.

Source: https://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2025/03/26/Enderlin-Municipal-Library-overdue-51-years/2281743021165/.
 

Thai woman found alive in coffin after being brought in for cremation​


BANGKOK (AP) — A woman in Thailand shocked temple staff when she started moving in her coffin after being brought in for cremation.

Wat Rat Prakhong Tham, a Buddhist temple in the province of Nonthaburi on the outskirts of Bangkok, posted a video on its Facebook page, showing a woman lying in a white coffin in the back of a pickup truck, slightly moving her arms and head, leaving temple staff bewildered.

Pairat Soodthoop, the temple’s general and financial affairs manager, told The Associated Press on Monday that the 65-year-old woman’s brother drove her from the province of Phitsanulok to be cremated.

He said they heard a faint knock coming from the coffin.

“I was a bit surprised, so I asked them to open the coffin, and everyone was startled,” he said. “I saw her opening her eyes slightly and knocking on the side of the coffin. She must have been knocking for quite some time.”

According to Pairat, the brother said his sister had been bedridden for about two years, when her health deteriorated and she became unresponsive, appearing to stop breathing two days ago. The brother then placed her in a coffin and made the 500-kilometer (300-mile) journey to a hospital in Bangkok, to which the woman had previously expressed a wish to donate her organs.

The hospital refused to accept the brother’s offer as he didn’t have an official death certificate, Pairat said. His temple offers a free cremation service, which is why the brother approached them on Sunday, but was also refused due to the missing document.

The temple manager said that while he was explaining how to get a death certificate when they heard the knocking. They then assessed her and sent her to a nearby hospital.

The abbot said the temple would cover her medical expenses, according to Pairat.

Source: https://apnews.com/article/thailand-coffin-temple-woman-alive-c8463969db288c356d76ec189b3c3cec
 

Horrific video shows teen powerlifting champion being fatally crushed under 600-pound weight​



Horrific video shows a teenage powerlifter being crushed to death while failing to squat 600 pounds during a training session in India.

Yashtika Acharya, a 17-year-old gold medal winner, was seen trying to lift the massive weight out of a squat rack Tuesday with a trainer standing behind her as a spotter, according to NewsX.

But her legs almost immediately buckled, with her spotter powerless to stop her from falling backward — while the bar fell down and snapped her neck as she was bent over double under it.

“During the attempt, she suddenly lost balance, and the bar came crashing down on her neck,” local officer Vikram Tiwari said of the tragedy during a training session at the gym in the Bikaner district of Rajasthan, close to India’s border with Pakistan.

“Fellow gym members quickly rushed to remove the weight, while her coach tried CPR, but she showed no signs of life.”

Acharya, a gold medalist in the National Bench Press Championship in the southern Indian state of Goa last October, was declared dead shortly after being rushed to a nearby hospital Tuesday,

:cry:

 

A Man Survived Two Atomic Bombs (1945)​


Source : https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-08...ived-both-atomic-bombs-80-years-ago/105630948


Tsutomu Yamaguchi was in Hiroshima on business when the first atomic bomb exploded, suffering severe burns but surviving the blast.Incredibly, he returned to his home in Nagasaki just in time to experience the second atomic bombing three days later.
Yamaguchi survived both nuclear attacks and lived until 2010, reaching age 93.
His story highlights human resilience and the civilian impact of nuclear weapons, making him an unlikely double survivor of humanity’s most destructive weapons.here are not many people who have survived a nuclear attack.

There is only one person who officially survived two.
On this day, 80 years ago, young engineer Tsutomu Yamaguchi was telling his boss about the horrors he had seen in the Japanese city of Hiroshima when the room went blindingly white.

"I thought the mushroom cloud had followed me from Hiroshima," he told UK Newspaper

Yamaguchi was an engineer with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries when the United States dropped atomic bombs on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.Yamaguchi, then 29, was in Hiroshima for a business trip when the bomb known as 'Little Boy' was deployed, killing tens of thousands in a flash, and leaving scores with burns so severe their skin draped off their bodies.
The young engineer was around 3 kilometres from ground zero and suffered temporary blindness and deafness in one eardrum.After staying in a bomb shelter the first night with other survivors, he quickly made his way back to his hometown of Nagasaki.

Then on August 9, 1945, he went to work and told his colleagues about the horrors he saw.

"When they realised that I had returned from Hiroshima, everyone gathered around me and said, 'I'm glad you're alive,' and 'great that you have survived,'" he recounted to Japanese broadcaster NHK.

But his boss did not believe him.

"He replied, 'you're badly injured, aren't you? Your head must be damaged too. I can't believe what you're saying. How could a single bomb destroy such a vast area like Hiroshima?'"

Just at that moment, the United States dropped its second atomic bomb, known as 'Fat Man', killing some 40,000 people instantly.

"I immediately recognised it as an atomic bomb," he told NHK.

"I hid under a desk right away."

Too 'healthy' to speak out​

The city of Nagasaki will pause today to remember the atomic blast that inflicted so much horror on the unsuspecting city.
Within months, 74,000 people were dead after radiation sickness took hold.The bombing of Nagasaki is often overshadowed by the deadlier and earlier attack on Hiroshima, which killed some 140,000 people by year's end.Part of the tragedy of Nagasaki is it was not the original intended target.

Two B-29 bombers were sent to destroy the industrial city of Kokura, which was a major hub for ammunition manufacturing.
But the city was hidden under cloud cover, so the pilots diverted to their secondary target: Nagasaki.About 165 people are thought to have survived both atomic blasts, known as nijyuu hibakusha.But Yamaguchi is the only person to be officially recognised by the local governments of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.For decades, he kept his unique story under wraps and worked a blue-collar job.

Many atomic bomb survivors, known as hibakusha, feel compelled to speak out, hoping their experiences will spur the world to abandon nuclear weapons.But the family of Yamaguchi feared he looked too healthy, which would undermine the message of survivors."My entire family opposed it," his daughter Toshiko Yamasaki explained at a peace conference in 2011."If my father, who had survived two atomic bombings, engaged in peace activities, people might think, 'even after being exposed to radiation twice, he's still healthy, so the atomic bomb isn't scary.

But Yamaguchi did suffer a lifetime of health problems, as is often the case for hibakusha due to radiation exposure.

"My father had cataracts, was deaf in one ear, suffered from leukopenia, lost his hair for 15 years after the war, and had after-effects from burns," Toshiko explained.

His family endured sickness, too. His wife and son died of cancer.

t was only in his final decade that Yamaguchi started to speak more openly, hoping his ordeal would help in the fight against nuclear weapons.

"I have walked and crawled through the bottom of hell," he told the ABC in 2009.

"I should be dead. But it was my fate to keep on living."

Irish journalist David McNeill was one of the last journalists to interview him before his death.

"What struck me was how modest he was," he explained.

"Like many hibakusha, he really didn't want to discuss his extraordinary life. He had to be pressed into it because he thought he was better off than many of the people who surrounded him, who were getting sick and dying from cancer."

Yamaguchi died in 2010, aged 93.

The legacy of the twin bombs​

The atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were one of the final and most devastating acts of World War II.
After the first nuclear attack, Japan would still not surrender, instead deciding to send a fact-finding team to the city after communications went dark.
The second attack on Nagasaki was part of the American strategy to make Japan believe it had unlimited supplies of such bombs.Many historians argue the Soviet Union declaring war on Japan was more influential in securing Japan's surrender, as it suddenly exposed its entire unprotected north.
Making a single uranium bomb that exploded over Hiroshima was incredibly challenging and chewed up much of the budget and resourcing of the multi-year Manhattan Project.
Japan knew how challenging it would be.

But the United States had also developed a plutonium bomb — far easier and cheaper than a uranium bomb.This is what detonated over Nagasaki.And the commander of the Manhattan Project boasted the United States could then create two or three atomic bombs a month to assist in the planned land invasion of Japan, scheduled for November 1945.

"They had the capacity to make two or three bombs a month by that point," Professor Mordecai Sheftall from Shizuoka explains.

"Because the plutonium production facilities in Hanford, Washington State, were going at full tilt."

Japan finally surrendered on August 15, but only after the emperor intervened and broke a deadlock in his war council.
The army still wanted to fight on.There are few hibakusha left old enough to remember the blasts of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.But the survivors are still determined to keep telling their stories.

After all, those who forget history are doomed to repeat it.

"As a double atomic bomb survivor, I experienced the bomb twice," Yamaguchi told The Independent in 2010.

"I sincerely hope that there will not be a third."
 

A Man Survived Two Atomic Bombs (1945)​


Source : https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-08...ived-both-atomic-bombs-80-years-ago/105630948


Tsutomu Yamaguchi was in Hiroshima on business when the first atomic bomb exploded, suffering severe burns but surviving the blast.Incredibly, he returned to his home in Nagasaki just in time to experience the second atomic bombing three days later.
Yamaguchi survived both nuclear attacks and lived until 2010, reaching age 93.
His story highlights human resilience and the civilian impact of nuclear weapons, making him an unlikely double survivor of humanity’s most destructive weapons.here are not many people who have survived a nuclear attack.

There is only one person who officially survived two.
On this day, 80 years ago, young engineer Tsutomu Yamaguchi was telling his boss about the horrors he had seen in the Japanese city of Hiroshima when the room went blindingly white.

"I thought the mushroom cloud had followed me from Hiroshima," he told UK Newspaper

Yamaguchi was an engineer with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries when the United States dropped atomic bombs on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.Yamaguchi, then 29, was in Hiroshima for a business trip when the bomb known as 'Little Boy' was deployed, killing tens of thousands in a flash, and leaving scores with burns so severe their skin draped off their bodies.
The young engineer was around 3 kilometres from ground zero and suffered temporary blindness and deafness in one eardrum.After staying in a bomb shelter the first night with other survivors, he quickly made his way back to his hometown of Nagasaki.

Then on August 9, 1945, he went to work and told his colleagues about the horrors he saw.

"When they realised that I had returned from Hiroshima, everyone gathered around me and said, 'I'm glad you're alive,' and 'great that you have survived,'" he recounted to Japanese broadcaster NHK.

But his boss did not believe him.

"He replied, 'you're badly injured, aren't you? Your head must be damaged too. I can't believe what you're saying. How could a single bomb destroy such a vast area like Hiroshima?'"

Just at that moment, the United States dropped its second atomic bomb, known as 'Fat Man', killing some 40,000 people instantly.

"I immediately recognised it as an atomic bomb," he told NHK.

"I hid under a desk right away."

Too 'healthy' to speak out​

The city of Nagasaki will pause today to remember the atomic blast that inflicted so much horror on the unsuspecting city.
Within months, 74,000 people were dead after radiation sickness took hold.The bombing of Nagasaki is often overshadowed by the deadlier and earlier attack on Hiroshima, which killed some 140,000 people by year's end.Part of the tragedy of Nagasaki is it was not the original intended target.

Two B-29 bombers were sent to destroy the industrial city of Kokura, which was a major hub for ammunition manufacturing.
But the city was hidden under cloud cover, so the pilots diverted to their secondary target: Nagasaki.About 165 people are thought to have survived both atomic blasts, known as nijyuu hibakusha.But Yamaguchi is the only person to be officially recognised by the local governments of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.For decades, he kept his unique story under wraps and worked a blue-collar job.

Many atomic bomb survivors, known as hibakusha, feel compelled to speak out, hoping their experiences will spur the world to abandon nuclear weapons.But the family of Yamaguchi feared he looked too healthy, which would undermine the message of survivors."My entire family opposed it," his daughter Toshiko Yamasaki explained at a peace conference in 2011."If my father, who had survived two atomic bombings, engaged in peace activities, people might think, 'even after being exposed to radiation twice, he's still healthy, so the atomic bomb isn't scary.

But Yamaguchi did suffer a lifetime of health problems, as is often the case for hibakusha due to radiation exposure.

"My father had cataracts, was deaf in one ear, suffered from leukopenia, lost his hair for 15 years after the war, and had after-effects from burns," Toshiko explained.

His family endured sickness, too. His wife and son died of cancer.

t was only in his final decade that Yamaguchi started to speak more openly, hoping his ordeal would help in the fight against nuclear weapons.

"I have walked and crawled through the bottom of hell," he told the ABC in 2009.

"I should be dead. But it was my fate to keep on living."

Irish journalist David McNeill was one of the last journalists to interview him before his death.

"What struck me was how modest he was," he explained.

"Like many hibakusha, he really didn't want to discuss his extraordinary life. He had to be pressed into it because he thought he was better off than many of the people who surrounded him, who were getting sick and dying from cancer."

Yamaguchi died in 2010, aged 93.

The legacy of the twin bombs​

The atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were one of the final and most devastating acts of World War II.
After the first nuclear attack, Japan would still not surrender, instead deciding to send a fact-finding team to the city after communications went dark.
The second attack on Nagasaki was part of the American strategy to make Japan believe it had unlimited supplies of such bombs.Many historians argue the Soviet Union declaring war on Japan was more influential in securing Japan's surrender, as it suddenly exposed its entire unprotected north.
Making a single uranium bomb that exploded over Hiroshima was incredibly challenging and chewed up much of the budget and resourcing of the multi-year Manhattan Project.
Japan knew how challenging it would be.

But the United States had also developed a plutonium bomb — far easier and cheaper than a uranium bomb.This is what detonated over Nagasaki.And the commander of the Manhattan Project boasted the United States could then create two or three atomic bombs a month to assist in the planned land invasion of Japan, scheduled for November 1945.

"They had the capacity to make two or three bombs a month by that point," Professor Mordecai Sheftall from Shizuoka explains.

"Because the plutonium production facilities in Hanford, Washington State, were going at full tilt."

Japan finally surrendered on August 15, but only after the emperor intervened and broke a deadlock in his war council.
The army still wanted to fight on.There are few hibakusha left old enough to remember the blasts of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.But the survivors are still determined to keep telling their stories.

After all, those who forget history are doomed to repeat it.

"As a double atomic bomb survivor, I experienced the bomb twice," Yamaguchi told The Independent in 2010.

"I sincerely hope that there will not be a third."

He is the only person in human history to survive 2 atomic bombs. Incredible.
 

The TERRIFYING Khamar Daban Hiking Disaster | Korovina Incident​




@sweep_shot ^ - which theory

This is yet to be resolved after all these years.

Here is from Google:

The Dyatlov Pass incident is the mysterious 1959 deaths of nine experienced Soviet hikers in the Ural Mountains, who fled their tent in extreme cold, poorly dressed, to die from hypothermia, trauma (skull/chest fractures), and unusual injuries (missing tongue/eyes), leading to decades of speculation about a "compelling natural force," with recent scientific analysis pointing towards a rare, powerful slab avalanche triggered by wind, explaining the strange injuries and panic.

Missing tongue and eyes. Were they attacked by other humans, other animals, or maybe something supernatural happened?

Many unanswered questions.
 
I think they encountered jinns. That's my theory (if this is true).
that could be

I've just watched the 1hr YT video, and i think they made it all up, and some issues, personally think that jumped the fashion on alien conspiracy - didn't want all the attention, hence the husband was quiet, i think they wanted soe local news media attention thrill but are also oddly weird personalities themselves,


just like how they went for hypnosis - is was a beginning of a fashion craze at that time.

They would fit into India society with thr strange claims = be considered as normal people in India :ROFLMAO:
 

Former US Army Shares INSANE Paranormal Experience At HAUNTED Iraq Prison​





@sweep_shot

Hmm. Paranormal is most likely tied to jinns/demons.

I recently saw a documentary regarding people who live underneath Las Vegas. One of the guys said he saw a dark figure which looked demonic. He also mentioned temperature dropped when he saw that shadow being.

 
Hmm. Paranormal is most likely tied to jinns/demons.

I recently saw a documentary regarding people who live underneath Las Vegas. One of the guys said he saw a dark figure which looked demonic. He also mentioned temperature dropped when he saw that shadow being.

Hmm. Paranormal is most likely tied to jinns/demons.

I recently saw a documentary regarding people who live underneath Las Vegas. One of the guys said he saw a dark figure which looked demonic. He also mentioned temperature dropped when he saw that shadow being.

yeh ive seen the las vegas mole people,


i really dont understand how governments like the US cannot give these people another chance, at least start building small apartments / houses - just to cater for 1 person, in order for them to have a address - so they can start having a bank account which will leads to employment, once employed - pay rent back to the government
 
Video: 77-year-old man killed as stray bull tosses him on Bengaluru road
https://www.indiatoday.in/author/india-today-video-desk

https://www.indiatoday.in/author/india-today-video-desk




A 77-year-old man, identified as Ram Reddy, was killed after being lifted and thrown by a stray bull while walking along the road in Hulimangala, under Hebbagudi Police Station limits in Anekal taluk on the outskirts of Bengaluru. The incident occurred around 3 pm today, was witnessed by locals and captured on a CCTV camera installed at a nearby shop. Ram Reddy, who regularly walked on the same road, died on the spot after being tossed into the air.



@sweep_shot @Bhaag Viru Bhaag

@uppercut - be honest, if that happened to me, i'll come back for the bull and make sure it ends up on my plate and the head hunged up in my house
 

Baby found inside minor boy's chest in ultra-rare case in Rahim Yar Khan​

A highly unusual medical case has come to light in Rahim Yar Khan, where surgeons at Sheikh Zayed Hospital successfully removed an underdeveloped foetus from the chest of a five-year-old boy.

Hospital officials said the delicate operation was carried out by a specialised surgical team led by thoracic surgeon Dr Sultan Mahmood Owaisi. The foetus, described as a case of fetus in fetu, a rare condition in which a malformed twin develops inside the body of its sibling, was found near the child’s main heart artery.

The foetus was premature and could not survive.

A spokesperson for Sheikh Zayed Hospital told Geo News that the surgery was completed successfully and that the boy’s condition after the operation was satisfactory.

"The patient is being provided with the best possible medical care," he said.

Speaking to the BBC Urdu, Dr Sultan explained that such cases are usually discovered in the abdomen, making this case particularly rare because the foetus was located in the child’s chest.

"Several of the foetus’s organs had formed, but it went undetected for five years," he said.

According to the surgeon, the child had suffered from breathing difficulties, chest infections, coughing and frequent fevers since he was just 18 days old. Despite visiting multiple doctors over the years, the condition was only correctly diagnosed after a CT scan was carried out recently.

“The foetus had a spine, hair, teeth and other body parts. Everything was present except the head,” Dr Sultan said, adding that it weighed about one kilogramme.

Source: GEO
 

Baby found inside minor boy's chest in ultra-rare case in Rahim Yar Khan​

A highly unusual medical case has come to light in Rahim Yar Khan, where surgeons at Sheikh Zayed Hospital successfully removed an underdeveloped foetus from the chest of a five-year-old boy.

Hospital officials said the delicate operation was carried out by a specialised surgical team led by thoracic surgeon Dr Sultan Mahmood Owaisi. The foetus, described as a case of fetus in fetu, a rare condition in which a malformed twin develops inside the body of its sibling, was found near the child’s main heart artery.

The foetus was premature and could not survive.

A spokesperson for Sheikh Zayed Hospital told Geo News that the surgery was completed successfully and that the boy’s condition after the operation was satisfactory.

"The patient is being provided with the best possible medical care," he said.

Speaking to the BBC Urdu, Dr Sultan explained that such cases are usually discovered in the abdomen, making this case particularly rare because the foetus was located in the child’s chest.

"Several of the foetus’s organs had formed, but it went undetected for five years," he said.

According to the surgeon, the child had suffered from breathing difficulties, chest infections, coughing and frequent fevers since he was just 18 days old. Despite visiting multiple doctors over the years, the condition was only correctly diagnosed after a CT scan was carried out recently.

“The foetus had a spine, hair, teeth and other body parts. Everything was present except the head,” Dr Sultan said, adding that it weighed about one kilogramme.

Source: GEO

Wow!

Never heard of something like this.

Glad the boy is safe.
 

Haryana youth dies on 'Dunki route' to US; family alleges traffickers killed him in Guatemala​


Authorities have been cracking down on such illegal migration networks, with Haryana CM Nayab Singh Saini vowing strict action against agents exploiting youths with false promises of jobs abroad.



New Delhi:
A tragic case has emerged from Haryana’s Kaithal district, where an 18-year-old youth, Yuvraj, reportedly died while attempting to reach the United States through the illegal and perilous “Dunki route.” His family claims he was kidnapped and killed by human traffickers — known as “donkars” — in Guatemala.

Left home to support his family

Yuvraj, a resident of Mohna village in Kaithal, had passed his Class 12 exams and wanted to go to the US to find employment and support his family. His father is a farmer. According to his uncle, Gurpreet Singh, Yuvraj left home in October last year after three travel agents from Haryana promised him safe passage to the US in exchange for a large sum of money.

Trafficked and held hostage in Guatemala

After leaving India, Yuvraj lost contact with his family. Months later, the family received disturbing videos showing Yuvraj and another youth from Punjab being held hostage in Guatemala. The traffickers allegedly demanded ransom for their release. The family believes the money they sent through local agents never reached the donkars.

Recently, one of the traffickers contacted the family again, claiming Yuvraj had been killed and demanded ₹3 lakh for “proof.” After receiving the payment, he sent a death certificate and photos showing Yuvraj and another victim.

Family paid nearly Rs 50 lakh to agents and traffickers​

According to Gurpreet Singh, the family ended up paying between Rs 40 and Rs 50 lakh to travel agents and traffickers combined. The agents, who operated through international networks, had initially assured safe travel. “We had filed a police complaint earlier, and two local agents were detained. But now we’ve received confirmation of Yuvraj’s death,” said Singh.

Human trafficking through 'Dunki route' under scrutiny

The “Dunki route” — a dangerous and illegal pathway used by human traffickers to smuggle migrants to countries like the US and Canada — has been under increasing scrutiny. Migrants often travel through multiple countries in Latin America, including Ecuador, Colombia, Panama, and Guatemala, facing extreme hardship, violence, and exploitation.

Authorities in India have been cracking down on such networks after multiple cases of deaths and disappearances of Indian youths abroad. Haryana Chief Minister Nayab Singh Saini has recently vowed strict action against agents facilitating such illegal migration.

Growing concern over illegal migration

Yuvraj’s death adds to the rising number of Indians who lose their lives attempting to enter the US via the Dunki route. Many others who survive are deported after suffering severe abuse and financial ruin.

The family has urged the Haryana government and the Ministry of External Affairs to help repatriate Yuvraj’s remains and take strict action against those responsible.

“Our boy just wanted to help his family. Instead, he became a victim of deceit and brutality,” said Gurpreet Singh, his uncle, urging others not to fall for false promises of overseas jobs.


Source:
 

Haryana youth dies on 'Dunki route' to US; family alleges traffickers killed him in Guatemala​


Authorities have been cracking down on such illegal migration networks, with Haryana CM Nayab Singh Saini vowing strict action against agents exploiting youths with false promises of jobs abroad.



New Delhi:
A tragic case has emerged from Haryana’s Kaithal district, where an 18-year-old youth, Yuvraj, reportedly died while attempting to reach the United States through the illegal and perilous “Dunki route.” His family claims he was kidnapped and killed by human traffickers — known as “donkars” — in Guatemala.

Left home to support his family

Yuvraj, a resident of Mohna village in Kaithal, had passed his Class 12 exams and wanted to go to the US to find employment and support his family. His father is a farmer. According to his uncle, Gurpreet Singh, Yuvraj left home in October last year after three travel agents from Haryana promised him safe passage to the US in exchange for a large sum of money.

Trafficked and held hostage in Guatemala

After leaving India, Yuvraj lost contact with his family. Months later, the family received disturbing videos showing Yuvraj and another youth from Punjab being held hostage in Guatemala. The traffickers allegedly demanded ransom for their release. The family believes the money they sent through local agents never reached the donkars.

Recently, one of the traffickers contacted the family again, claiming Yuvraj had been killed and demanded ₹3 lakh for “proof.” After receiving the payment, he sent a death certificate and photos showing Yuvraj and another victim.

Family paid nearly Rs 50 lakh to agents and traffickers​

According to Gurpreet Singh, the family ended up paying between Rs 40 and Rs 50 lakh to travel agents and traffickers combined. The agents, who operated through international networks, had initially assured safe travel. “We had filed a police complaint earlier, and two local agents were detained. But now we’ve received confirmation of Yuvraj’s death,” said Singh.

Human trafficking through 'Dunki route' under scrutiny

The “Dunki route” — a dangerous and illegal pathway used by human traffickers to smuggle migrants to countries like the US and Canada — has been under increasing scrutiny. Migrants often travel through multiple countries in Latin America, including Ecuador, Colombia, Panama, and Guatemala, facing extreme hardship, violence, and exploitation.

Authorities in India have been cracking down on such networks after multiple cases of deaths and disappearances of Indian youths abroad. Haryana Chief Minister Nayab Singh Saini has recently vowed strict action against agents facilitating such illegal migration.

Growing concern over illegal migration

Yuvraj’s death adds to the rising number of Indians who lose their lives attempting to enter the US via the Dunki route. Many others who survive are deported after suffering severe abuse and financial ruin.

The family has urged the Haryana government and the Ministry of External Affairs to help repatriate Yuvraj’s remains and take strict action against those responsible.

“Our boy just wanted to help his family. Instead, he became a victim of deceit and brutality,” said Gurpreet Singh, his uncle, urging others not to fall for false promises of overseas jobs.


Source:

Why don't these people stay in NUMBER ONE INDIA? Why are they taking such big risks? :inti
 

Gas-Filled Balloons Explode in Mumbai Lift With 2 People Inside - WATCH​


In Mumbai’s Goregaon, a bunch of balloons exploded inside a lift at Anmol Tower on February 2, trapping three people. CCTV footage shows a sudden fireball, forcing the occupants to flee. The shocking visuals have gone viral on social media, highlighting the dangers of carrying gas-filled balloons in enclosed spaces.



In a horrifying incident, a bunch of balloons exploded inside a lift of a building in Mumbai's Goregaon, with three people inside that lift at the moment of the explosion. According to the CCTV footage of the incident, a fireball erupted after the balloons exploded.


According to reports, two people sustained minor injuries in the incident at Anmol Tower in Goregaon, Mumbai.
The incident happened on February 2 (Monday) in the Goregaon West area of Mumbai in Anmol Tower. The incident was caught on CCTV camera, with shocking visuals going viral on social media.

What Does The CCTV Footage Show?​


The footage shows a woman entering the lift with a suitcase, followed by a man carrying balloons wrapped in plastic. Moments later, as another man stepped into the lift, flames suddenly erupted, forcing all three to rush out in panic to save themselves.

A young man and a woman who were inside the lift at the time suffered injuries in the incident.

Helium-Filled Balloon Explodes in Temple​


In a separate incident in Bhubaneshwar, three people were injured after a gas balloon exploded at a temple in Sundargarh on Sunday. The helium-filled balloon, which was first flown in front of Govt College, Sundargarh, on the occasion of a celebration, was then brought to the temple premises and flown again.
On Sunday, a few devotees noticed the balloon didn't have much gas and lowered it. Later, when two people were refilling the balloon, it exploded and caught fire.
The injured people were rushed to the hospital in Sundargarh and later shifted to the Govt Medical College & Hospital, Sundargarh.

Both incidents highlight the dangers associated with gas-filled balloons, especially in crowded or enclosed areas. Experts have repeatedly advised against using helium or other flammable gases in public gatherings without proper safety measures.
Authorities in Goregaon are investigating the incident to determine the exact cause of the explosion and to ensure proper safety measures are enforced in residential and commercial buildings.


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Karnataka Biker Dies after Kite String Slit His Throat, His Last Call Was to His Daughter​


A 48-year-old motorcyclist died in Karnataka’s Bidar district after a kite string left him critically injured.


A 48-year-old motorcyclist was killed in Karnataka’s Bidar district after a kite string cut deep into his neck while he was riding near the Talamadagi Bridge. The death has once again brought the lethal danger posed by banned nylon kite strings in light, raising questions over delayed emergency medical response.

Sanjukumar Hosamani, a 48-year-old from Bidar district, was passing by the Talamadagi Bridge as per a NDTV report, when tragedy struck without warning. A taut kite string stretched across the road slashed into him, inflicting a deep, grievous wound. The string cut so severely that Hosamani began bleeding profusely and soon lost control of his motorcycle, collapsing onto the road.
What followed was a haunting sequence of moments that has shaken many who watched the video later circulated online asd per the NDTV report. Drenched in blood, Hosamani as per reports, is seen struggling to stay conscious, his hands trembling as he tried to dial his daughter’s phone number.

A passerby noticed Hosamani lying injured on the road and rushed to help. The man attempted to stop the bleeding by pressing a cloth against the wound, while locals called for an ambulance. According to residents, precious minutes slipped by before emergency services arrived. By the time the ambulance reached the spot, Hosamani had already succumbed to his injuries.

Anger and grief quickly followed. Hosamani’s relatives and local residents staged a protest at the accident site, blaming both the rampant use of nylon kite strings and delays in emergency response for his death. They alleged that timely medical help could have saved his life and demanded stricter enforcement against the sale and use of banned kite strings, along with improvements in emergency services.
Police have registered a case at the Manna Ekhelli Police Station and said an investigation is underway.



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Went Out to Eat Chowmein, Lost His Life: Open Drain Leads To the Death of 12-Year-Old’s in Ghaziabad


A tragic incident in Jhundpura, Ghaziabad, resulted in the death of 12-year-old Ahil, who fell into an open roadside drain while returning home from a food stall. His family and villagers expressed deep sorrow and frustration over persistent civic negligence, as uncovered drains pose significant dangers, especially to children.


Ghaziabad: A 12-year-old boy from Jhundpura village in Ghaziabad died after slipping into an open roadside drain while returning home from a food stall, triggering anger and grief in the village and renewed questions over civic neglect and safety.
The deceased, Ahil, had stepped out on Wednesday evening to eat chowmein, unaware it would be his last meal. Barely 500 metres from his home, he tried to navigate past a tractor on a narrow village road when he lost balance and fell headfirst into an open drain that runs parallel to the road.

Residents said the drain was deep and uncovered, leaving little margin for error on the cramped stretch. By the time villagers pulled him out and rushed him for treatment, it was too late.

Inside the family’s modest home, Ahil’s mother Mohsina sat inconsolable, looking at her two younger children, a son and a daughter, while struggling to accept that her eldest is gone.

Open drains line much of the village, and residents fear other children could be next.

‘He Fell Head First, His Legs Were in the Air’​

Ahil’s grandmother Sanjo held up the boy’s clothes as she spoke, accusing authorities of failing the village despite earlier warnings.
“This is an old incident. A kid died previously and now our child. The Pradhan and government are responsible for not doing their job. No one is ready to listen to us. I don't want any compensation, just want development in this village so that others don't meet with the same fate. He fell head first and his legs were in the air after he fell in the open drain. The government never takes note of such incidents. We are staying here neglected. This is so deep that a 12-year-old drowned. He came out to eat chowmein and returning home, when a tractor on a narrow road was passing and he had little space when he fell inside.”

She also alleged delays in medical care, “The hospitals also asked us to deposit money first and we later had to shift him to another facility due to lack of beds. By that time he was dead. We want a good future for the people of this village.”

‘Today My Child Is Gone, Tomorrow It Will Be Someone Else’​

Mohsina said the system had failed her family, “Today my child is gone, tomorrow it will be someone else. My husband is a labourer,” she said, choking up.
Villagers said they pulled Ahil out of the drain and rushed him to Rama Hospital, where he was declared dead on arrival.
Residents claim they had raised concerns earlier, pointing to a January incident in which a five-month-old child died, allegedly after similar civic lapses. They say repeated requests to clean or cover the drains went unanswered.
The family says they are not seeking compensation but basic development and safety measures—covered drains, wider roads and timely maintenance—to ensure no other child meets the same fate.



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A Truck Fell Into Same Pit 2 Weeks Before Noida Techie’s Death: Did Official Inaction Cost Him His Life?​


A 27-year-old techie’s death in Noida after his car fell into an unbarricaded pit has raised serious questions over authority inaction despite repeated complaints and a prior accident.



Noida: What should have been a routine drive home turned fatal for 27-year-old software engineer Yuvraj Mehta, and residents now allege that his death was not just an accident but the result of prolonged official inaction by Noida authorities despite repeated warnings, complaints and even a prior near-fatal incident at the same spot. Adding to the outrage is the fact that just two weeks before Mehta’s death, a truck had fallen into the same pit, and the driver had to be rescued. Residents allege that even after that incident, nothing changed on the ground.
The tragedy took place late Friday night near Sector 150, where Mehta’s car plunged into a deep, water-filled pit at an under-construction mall site. Dense fog reduced visibility, but residents insist the real danger lay in what was missing on the ground, proper barricades, boundary walls, warning signs and lighting.

Residents say their concerns were also formally raised by Gautam Buddh Nagar MP Mahesh Sharma and MLA Tejpal Singh Nagar, who wrote to the authorities seeking urgent action. Despite this, no corrective measures were taken.

Disputed Land, Deadly Negligence​


As per reports, the land parcel where the pit was dug is disputed and currently under litigation in the Supreme Court. The pit was excavated for a proposed mall, but the site allegedly lacked even basic safety measures such as boundary walls or reflective barricades.
On Friday night, as fog engulfed the area, Mehta’s car lost control at a turn and plunged straight into the waterlogged pit. Trapped inside the sinking vehicle, he made a desperate call to his father.
“Dad, I've fallen into a deep pit filled with water. I'm drowning. Please come and save me. I don't want to die.”

A nearly five-hour rescue operation followed, involving police, divers and NDRF teams. A delivery agent, Moninder, even risked his life by entering the 70-foot-deep pit, later alleging that officials hesitated to act decisively. By the time the car was pulled out, Mehta was dead.
Mehta’s family has now accused the authorities of negligence, saying the absence of reflectors and safety barriers on a fog-prone road directly led to the tragedy. Police have said any lapse will be investigated.


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Female Israeli soldiers rescued after being chased by ultra-Orthodox men​



Two female Israeli soldiers had to be rescued by police after being chased by a crowd of ultra-Orthodox Jewish men.

Footage from the city of Bnei Brak showed the women running through streets strewn with rubbish and overturned bins as police officers formed a protective barrier. More than 20 people were arrested.

Reports suggest the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers were wrongly believed to be trying to deliver army conscription orders. Military service is mandatory for most Jewish Israelis, but ultra‑Orthodox Jews have long been exempt. Moves to reform this have caused outrage among the community.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned the incident as "unacceptable".

This is an extreme minority that does not represent the entire Haredi [ultra-Orthodox] community," Netanyahu said in a post on X.

"We will not allow anarchy, and we will not tolerate any harm to IDF servicemen and security forces who carry out their duties with dedication and determination."

Jewish religious leaders also condemned the actions of those involved in the unrest.

Riot police in Bnei Brak, on the edge of Tel Aviv, used stun grenades against the crowd and arrested 23 people, police said in a statement.

Three officers were injured and several police vehicles damaged, including a patrol car that was overturned and a police motorcycle that was set on fire, police added.

The IDF servicewomen had been on an official home visit to another soldier when the confrontation broke out, Israeli broadcaster Kan reported.


Late last year, hundreds of thousands of people took part in of one of the biggest anti-conscription protests by ultra-Orthodox Israelis in years.

The issue of conscription has become increasingly contentious during the war in Gaza, with the Israeli government now debating draft legislation that would require ultra-Orthodox men not in full-time religious study to serve.

Since the State of Israel was declared in 1948, students enrolled full-time at a religious school, or yeshiva, have been exempted from conscription.

That exemption was ruled unconstitutional by Israel's High Court of Justice more than a decade ago. Temporary arrangements to continue it were formally ended by the court last year, forcing the government to begin conscripting the community.

The ultra-Orthodox population has more than doubled its share of Israel's population over the past seven decades, and now accounts for 14%.


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Hindus for non-Indians:

Practicing Muslims, especially Imams and scholars are regularly asked by Hindus for duʿāʾ, blessings, and spiritual help. In many places, Hindus request water to be recited over, prayers for healing, or bring their children after Jumuʿah for duʿāʾ.

In Manchester and Bradford, some Muslims provide services like blowing on water or giving “healing” stones something @KingKhanWC and @ElRaja may be aware of. In India, many Hindus visit mazārs sometimes more than Muslims as @Justcrazy and @shamaan may have seen. Similar situations may also occur in Bangladesh (@sweep_shot and @Suleiman may know this), and even in Western hospitals, Hindu patients sometimes ask Muslims to pray for them (@BunnyRabbit may have witnessed this).

At the same time, many of these same Hindus politically support discrimination against Muslims.

It should also be said that much of this is not Islamically legitimate, and some individuals exploit it for money.

When I am asked, I avoid questionable practices. I make duʿāʾ, advise removing superstitious taʿwīz, and instead encourage listening to Qurʾān, sometimes sharing YouTube recitations or suggesting it be played in the home for blessing.

In UK, I have Muslim chaplain friends and they are regaulrly approached in the Hospitals by Hindus and I think its a good thing.​
 

Karnataka man dies after throat slit by Chinese manjha, was going to meet daughter for Sankranti​


48-year-old Sanjaykumar Hosanamni was en route to bring his daughter home from her hostel to celebrate the Sankranti festival when tragedy struck. He died on the spot after his throat was slit by a stray kite string, also known as manjha.



Bengaluru:
A tragic incident was reported from Bidar district on Wednesday morning, where a motorcycle rider died on the spot after a Chinese manja slit his throat, a banned kite flying string.


The deceased has been identified as Sanjaykumar Hosanamni, a 48-year-old resident of Bambulgi village in Bidar taluk. The incident occurred near Talamadgi village in Chitgoppa taluk when a strand of Chinese manja lying on the road suddenly got entangled around his neck while he was riding his motorcycle.

He reportedly lost balance and fell from the bike, suffering severe bleeding, and died at the scene. Sanjaykumar was travelling to Humnabad to bring his daughter back from her hostel for the Sankranti festival.

His body has been sent to the mortuary of Mannekhelli Government Hospital for post-mortem. The case falls under the jurisdiction of Mannekhelli police station and further investigation is underway.

Bidar Superintendent of Police Pradeep Gunti said the incident took place at around 11 in the morning on a national highway in the district. He said the victim, identified as a 48-year-old man, was riding a motorcycle when a manja thread cut his throat, leading to his immediate death.

The SP said the manja thread lying on the road got caught around the rider's neck, causing a deep cut. He fell and succumbed to his injuries.

He added that the police have been conducting a district-wide drive for the past 3 days in view of the Sankranti festival, during which the use of manja thread for kite flying has already been banned. Despite the ban, information has been received that some shops are still selling the prohibited thread.

“We have seized the banned manja from 2 to 3 places and once again warn all shop owners that strict legal action will be taken against anyone found selling or using banned manja,” the SP said.

Police also said the deceased worked as a lorry cleaner and was on his way to bring his children home from a hostel. Further details are being ascertained.



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Hindus for non-Indians:

Practicing Muslims, especially Imams and scholars are regularly asked by Hindus for duʿāʾ, blessings, and spiritual help. In many places, Hindus request water to be recited over, prayers for healing, or bring their children after Jumuʿah for duʿāʾ.

In Manchester and Bradford, some Muslims provide services like blowing on water or giving “healing” stones something @KingKhanWC and @ElRaja may be aware of. In India, many Hindus visit mazārs sometimes more than Muslims as @Justcrazy and @shamaan may have seen. Similar situations may also occur in Bangladesh (@sweep_shot and @Suleiman may know this), and even in Western hospitals, Hindu patients sometimes ask Muslims to pray for them (@BunnyRabbit may have witnessed this).

At the same time, many of these same Hindus politically support discrimination against Muslims.

It should also be said that much of this is not Islamically legitimate, and some individuals exploit it for money.

When I am asked, I avoid questionable practices. I make duʿāʾ, advise removing superstitious taʿwīz, and instead encourage listening to Qurʾān, sometimes sharing YouTube recitations or suggesting it be played in the home for blessing.

In UK, I have Muslim chaplain friends and they are regaulrly approached in the Hospitals by Hindus and I think its a good thing.​

Yes .

Also I have seen Hindus and Muslims both taking new born children to prostrate in Mosques.

In India in the urs done by Muslims , the Hindus also actively participate and even donate money for such gatherings.
 

Died After Hundreds of Stings: How an MP Anganwadi Cook Gave Her Life in a Bee Attack to Save 20 Children​


Anganwadi worker Kanchan Bai Meghwal died in Madhya Pradesh’s Neemuch after saving around 20 children from a bee attack. She shielded the children using tarpaulin and mats, drew the bees toward herself, and collapsed after suffering hundreds of stings.



In a heroic act to save children, an anganwadi worker in Madhya Pradesh's Neemuch died while saving 20 children from a bee attack. According to a report, a swarm of bees descended on playing children, and the woman immediately stepped in to protect them and sacrificed her own life.
The woman, identified as Kanchan Bai Meghwal, was leading the self-help group that prepared meals at the centre. As she saw the bees attacking the children, she immediately wrapped the children in tarpaulin and mats and pushed them to safety. However, while doing so, she collapsed from hundreds of stings, TOI reported.

Kanchan Bai's prompt action saved more than a dozen lives as she ran towards the children, grabbed whatever she could find, and wrapped them to protect them outside the anganwadi building. She then took them away into a room, where she stood in the open to draw the bees away from the children.

As the villagers also saw the bee attack, they rushed to the spot. However, by the time they reached, the woman was badly. She was then rushed to the hospital in a critical condition, where doctors declared her dead.


Later on Tuesday, a postmortem was conducted before handing over her body to the family, according to the TOI report.

Kanchan was the Sole Bread Earner, Husband Paralysed​


According to the report, Kanchan Bai's husband, Shivalal, is paralysed and she was the sole bread earner of the family. She managed to feed her family and take care of all expenses, including the upbringing of her son and two daughters.
Now, the villagers have urged the district administration and the officials to remove the hive from the tree in the Anganwadi premises immediately and extend financial help to the woman's family.
They stressed that the heroic act saved the lives of 20 children, while the act claimed her own life.



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Kanpur Woman Pretending to Hang Herself in Instagram Reel Dies After Foot Slips​


A tragic incident occurred in Banda district, Uttar Pradesh, where a 27-year-old woman named Mohini accidentally died while filming an Instagram reel.



Kanpur: A 27-year-old woman died accidentally while filming an Instagram reel in which she pretended to hang herself at her home in Karuiya Purwa in Baberu town of Uttar Pradesh’s Banda district, police said on Saturday.
The woman, identified as Mohini, wife of Jagdish, was fond of making social media reels, her family members told the police during the investigation, according to a Times of India report.

What Happened During the Shoot​

According to the family, the incident took place on the evening of February 6. Mohini was recording a video inside a room of her house. For the reel, she had tied a noose to a hook on the ceiling and stood on a stool, acting out a hanging scene while filming on her mobile phone.


During the recording, she either lost her balance or her foot slipped from the stool. As her feet left the stool, the noose tightened around her neck, turning the act into a real and fatal incident. She reportedly died within seconds.

Child Finds her Mother​

The incident came to light when Mohini’s four-year-old daughter entered the room and saw her mother hanging. The child began screaming, alerting family members and neighbours, who rushed to the spot.
Initially, the family suspected that Mohini had died by suicide. However, further inquiry revealed that she was shooting a reel at the time of the incident, police said, as per TOI report.

Police Investigation Underway​

After receiving information, personnel from Baberu police station reached the spot along with Superintendent of Police Palash Bansal. The body was taken into custody and sent for post-mortem examination.
SP Palash Bansal said, "In preliminary investigation, this case appears to be an accident that occurred while making a reel. Police are investigating the matter from every angle."
Police said further investigation is ongoing to rule out any other possibility.



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@sweep_shot ^
 

Faridabad Surajkund Mela Tragedy: Tsunami Swing Collapses; Haryana Cop Killed, 13 Injured - VIDEO​


A tragic accident occurred at the Surajkund Mela in Faridabad after a ‘Tsunami’ swing collapsed during operation. A Haryana police personnel died, while several others were injured. The incident triggered panic at the fair. Authorities have launched an investigation, and a video of the collapse has surfaced online.


A tsunami swing collapsed at the Surajkund Fair in Faridabad on Saturday (February 7), leading to a fatal accident. According to initial reports, a Haryana police inspector deployed at the site was killed, and several others were injured in the incident. The accident occurred when the swing broke, injuring multiple visitors at the fair.
Prima facie, the police inspector has been identified as Jagdish Prasad, who rushed in to rescue the injured, but, suffered serious injuries and later died during the rescue operation.

The officials so far have confirmed that a total of 13 people were injured in the accident. Meanwhile, senior district officials, including the Deputy Commissioner, Managing Director of Tourism, and senior police officers, are at the spot. Moreover, the entire affected area has been barricaded to prevent further mishaps.

DCP Maqsood Ahmed told PTI news agency that the injured have been taken to the hospital and are undergoing treatment.

“An accident occurred after a swing collapsed at the mela. We are currently assessing the situation. Some people were injured and have been shifted to the hospital, where they are undergoing treatment. Two police personnel were also injured and are receiving treatment," he said.
"A proper investigation will be conducted, and action will be taken against the swing operator. The exact number of injured is being ascertained", the DCP added.
Earlier, a gate at the food court had reportedly collapsed due to strong winds.

Haryana CM Reacts​


Haryana chief minister Nayab Singh Saini expressed grief over the incident and said, "I express my heartfelt condolences to the family of the person who lost their life in this incident."


(I am deeply saddened by the accident that occurred during the Surajkund Fair in Faridabad. I express my deepest condolences to the family of the deceased. Necessary guidelines have been issued to the concerned authorities for the immediate and proper treatment of the injured.The Haryana Government is engaged in providing all possible assistance to the injured and their families with full promptness and sensitivity.)

He shared a post on X, and wrote, "At the same time, necessary directions have been issued to the concerned authorities for the appropriate and immediate treatment of the injured individuals. The Haryana government is fully committed, with utmost promptness and sensitivity, to providing all possible assistance to the injured and their families."


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Gurugram Midnight Mishap: 7 Labourers Dead, 4 Critical After Under-Construction Wall Collapses​


Seven workers died after an under-construction wall collapsed at Signature Global Society in Gurugram on Monday evening, trapping up to 15 labourers under rubble. All were rushed to hospital.



Seven workers died after a wall collapsed at a construction site in Gurugram, Haryana, officials confirmed on Tuesday. The wall came down on Monday evening at around 8 pm at the Signature Global Society in the Sidhrawali area. Between 12 and 15 labourers were trapped under the rubble. Rescue teams pulled the workers out and took them to a hospital in Bhiwadi. Doctors declared seven of them dead on arrival. Officials are investigating the cause of the collapse.
Police have identified the deceased individuals as Satish, Bhagirath, Milan, Shiv Shankar, Mangal and Parmeshwar. They added that the condition of four -- Chotelal, Deendayal, Shivkant and Indrajeet -- is critical.



Compensation Announced​

Meanwhile, Haryana Chief Minister Nayab Singh Saini announced a compensation of Rs 5 lakh each for the families of those who lost their lives in a tragic fire at a factory in Safidon, Jind. The Chief Minister also sanctioned Rs 2 lakh for those who sustained injuries in the incident.



According to the Haryana detailed project report, CM Nayab Singh Saini expressed deep condolences over the tragic accident at the Safidon factory. Praying for departed souls, he expressed his deepest condolences to the bereaved families. The Chief Minister wished for the speedy recovery of the injured.
The Chief Minister directed the district administration to conduct a detailed investigation to determine the cause of the accident. The administration must ensure that such incidents do not recur in the future.

Four women had died after a fire broke out at a paint factory in Haryana's Jind, according to officials. Jind Superintendent of Police Kuldeep Singh has said that a case has been registered against the factory owner, while the cause of the fire is under investigation.



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