Close X
Tuesday, January 28, 2025
ADVT 
India

How Delhi Ignored A Dying Man On The Road

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Aug, 2016 12:34 PM
    In New Delhi, there are few sidewalks.
     
    Thus, the man identified later by police as Matibool walked along the side of a wide road.
     
    CCTV footage that has since gone viral shows Matibool on his way home from an overnight shift as a security guard, carrying a cellphone in his hand. It is dawn. Suddenly, a speeding three-wheeled truck barrels down on him from behind, knocking him into the air.
     
    The driver gets out, sees Matibool's crumpled body and decides against even approaching him. In a matter of seconds, the driver is back in the truck, and away he goes. Had he checked, he would've felt a pulse.
     
    As Matibool lay bleeding for an hour, men and women riding in 140 cars and 82 rickshaws would avoid his dying body. So would 181 bikers and 45 pedestrians. At one point, an emergency response van used by the Delhi police drives by.
     
     
    The father of four may or may not have been alive when he was served the ultimate indignity. A cycle rickshaw passes his body and stops a little bit down the road. A passenger alights, walks by Matibool and picks up his cellphone, which has cracked in half. He gets back on the rickshaw and leaves.
     
    There are multiple hospitals on the road where Matibool eventually died.
     
    He was one of millions who have come to Delhi from India's small towns and villages, working around the clock to send home money.
     
    On Thursday, Delhi's government announced plans for an "incentive scheme" that would reward those who bring accident victims to hospitals.
     
    Many don't do so now because they fear harassment and questioning by police. Delhi police are notorious for demanding bribes, and submitting oneself as a witness to a crime can lead to years of headaches while India's syrupy-slow court system calls you to the stand again and again.
     
    The police say they are searching for the truck driver and the phone thief.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    India Revels In Sweet, Colourful Holi

    India Revels In Sweet, Colourful Holi
    India burst with colours and frenzied street dances by thousands of revellers on Thursday as the nation celebrated Holi, a seasonal festival joyously observed by all - young and old, rich and poor, Hindus and Muslims.

    India Revels In Sweet, Colourful Holi

    Arvind Kejriwal Celebrates Holi With Delhi's Auto-Rickshaw Drivers

    Arvind Kejriwal Celebrates Holi With Delhi's Auto-Rickshaw Drivers
    Played holi with my family, volunteers, ministers, MLAs, officers, autowallas and my dear junta. Happy Holi

    Arvind Kejriwal Celebrates Holi With Delhi's Auto-Rickshaw Drivers

    Man Throws Shoe At Kanhaiya Kumar In Hyderabad

    Man Throws Shoe At Kanhaiya Kumar In Hyderabad
    The incident occurred at Sundraiah Vignan Kendram, as Kanhiaya Kumar was beginning his address at the seminar on constitutional rights.

    Man Throws Shoe At Kanhaiya Kumar In Hyderabad

    Decks Cleared For Mehbooba Mufti To Head New J&K Government

    Decks Cleared For Mehbooba Mufti To Head New J&K Government
    Mehbooba Mufti has been nominated as the chief ministerial candidate of the PDP,

    Decks Cleared For Mehbooba Mufti To Head New J&K Government

    Kanhaiya Kumar Denied Entry Into Hyderabad University

    Kanhaiya Kumar Denied Entry Into Hyderabad University
    Police stopped Kanhaiya Kumar in the evening when he along with others reached the central university to address protesting students on the campus.

    Kanhaiya Kumar Denied Entry Into Hyderabad University

    Bhagat Singh's Book 'Why I Am An Atheist' Still Inspires Young Generation

    Bhagat Singh's Book 'Why I Am An Atheist' Still Inspires Young Generation
    He wrote the essay in 1930 in Lahore central jail as a reply to a religious man who accused Bhagat Singh of becoming an atheist because of his vanity.

    Bhagat Singh's Book 'Why I Am An Atheist' Still Inspires Young Generation