Tuesday, March 4, 2025
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Before Sujith, at least 10 kids died after borewells in last 15 years

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Chennai: Two-year-old Sujith Wilson is not the only child to have met with a tragic end after falling into an abanbdoned borewell as at least 10 other children had died in a similar manner in Tamil Nadu over the past 15 years.
The toddler’s death brought to the fore the lack of awareness on sealing unused borewells and public apathy towards taking safety measures.
Unexplicably, April 2014 saw repeat incidents of innocent children becoming victims of uncovered borewells in the state.
In September 2013, a six-year old girl child died after falling into a borewell in Pulavanpadi village in Tiruvannamalai District.
A three-year-old girl, R Madhumita, got stuck at about 30 feet of a 500-feet borewell at her father’s farm at Pallagaseri village near Villupuram in April 2014.
She fell into the borewell – covered with a polythene sack – when she stepped on it accidentally while playing.
After a 19-hour long struggle, she was rescued alive by multiple teams working in tandem,but later died in a hospital.
Days after this mishap, a four-year-old boyHarshan fell into a borewell, also located in a farm at Kuthalapuri in Tirunelveli district.
Rescuers battled for more than five hours and brought the child out alive.
A day after the successful rescue,an 18-month old toddler fell into an unused borewell at Kidampalayam village, about 50 km from Tiruvannamalai.
Sujith’s fall into the borewell was the third such mishap in April 2014 in Tamil Nadu. While Harshan was saved, Madhumita and Sujith were not lucky enough.
It was a “borewell robot”,an indigenous device developed by a Madurai-based social worker, that saved Harshan. In an interview to PTI, social worker M Manigandan had said that the trigger for developing the device was his son’s accidental fall into a borewell in 2003 and the painful rescue efforts.
In the past about 15 years, at least 13 children have fallen into unused borewells in Tamil Nadu alone and only three of them were rescued alive. As early as 2010, the Supreme Court had framed guidelines to prevent children from falling into unused borewells. (PTI)

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