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'Her end came on the day she fell'

Updated on: 25 June,2012 07:02 AM IST  | 
Agencies |

Doctors say the four-year-old might have died on the day she fell or the next day since her body had decomposed; parents blame delay in rescue operations

'Her end came on the day she fell'

Mahi, the four-year-old girl who was trapped in a narrow and deep borewell here for 86 agonising hours, was yesterday declared dead after rescuers reached her through a parallel tunnel.



Mahi


Doctors said she might have died on the day she fell or on the next day since her body had decomposed. Gurgaon officials said she was dead even before soldiers, who had been working non-stop for days, finally made contact with the child just after noon yesterday. Doctors, after a post-mortem examination of Mahi’s body, said her body had decomposed.u00a0



Unfortunate:u00a0Mahiu00a0had fallen into the 70-feet deep borewell on Wednesday. When soldiers faced difficulty after hitting rocky patches, officials decided to rope in the Rapid Metro and Delhi Metro, both of who have specialised digging equipment

“She might have died the same or the next day,” said Deepak Mathur, who along with BB Agrawal, conducted the post-mortem. The examination report has not yet been prepared. However, the girl’s body has been handed over to the parents, an attendant said.

The girl accidentally fell into the 70-feet deep borewell at the IMT township just before midnight on Wednesday, sparking a major rescue operation involving the army and civilian agencies.

The news shattered the thousands of people who had gathered outside the hospital and at the site of the borewell for days, hoping and praying that the girl would somehow survive.

Mahi’s grieving parents were inconsolable. Her mother broke down on hearing that her daughter was no more. “Who will give us back our daughter now?” asked her father Neeraj Upadhhyaya. The parents accused the administration of delaying the rescue efforts.

A senior army officer admitted that the rescue operation was slowed down by the rocky terrain. “We could not dig as fast as we wanted,” said Brigadier SP Singh. “There were too many rocks. We couldn’t blast them for fear of hurting our own men or the girl. This slowed down our work.” he added.

According to Gurgaon police, a four-year-old girl had similarly fallen into a deep borewell in the same area on February 26, 2004. But she was rescued, thanks to the initiative of a police officer.u00a0

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