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For Babita Sharma it was a nightmarish experience on February 22 at NH-1 when, at around 3 am, a mob pounced on her family and others, beat them up, damaged their car and compelled them to chant “Jai Jat”.
Babita beseeched the hooligans with folded hands to spare their lives. “Burn our car, but please for god’s sake don’t harm us,” she implored.
The incident took place at Murthal in Sonepat district while Haryana was convulsed for over a week by the Jat community’s agitation for reservations in education and jobs.
The violence that took place during the agitation claimed the lives of at least 16 people and is estimated to have caused property losses of Rs.20,000 crore ($3 billion).
Babita is now at Guru Teg Bahadur (GTB) hospital here, looking after her injured husband Satish Kumar Sharma who has multiple fractures in his hands, who is now awaiting surgery.
Her nephew Harjinder received 25 stitches in his head. Her son and another nephew were traumatized by what they experienced but were, thankfully, unscathed, she said.
Babita also sustained injuries due to broken glass.
The Delhi-based family was returning home after conducting a pilgrimage to Naina Devi in Himachal Pradesh. They knew about the Jat agitation and would have avoided taking the route through the troubled areas.
Passing the “Sukhdev Dhaba” near Murthal at about 3 am, the family saw cars halted due to a protest.
There were many cars on the highway at that time and the rioters kept targeting them as they moved on, Satish said.
The rest of the family followed him and stayed hidden for about an hour.
“From the fields, we kept hearing terrible noises. People were screaming and shouting. The mob was also setting some vehicles on fire and poking the tyres to deflate them,” he said.
They then moved towards a farmhouse, where a farmer, Master Om Singh, helped them, gave them some painkillers, got their car fixed, accompanied them to the police station and then escorted them out of the area.
Om Singh is, interestingly, a member of the Jat community.
“These people were very frightened and stayed hidden in a field until one of them approached our house for help. I called them in as it was not safe out there; we too feared that the mob might attack our house,” Om Singh told IANS.
Satish said the police in Murthal, when approached, asked them to “collect a copy of the FIR later”. The police also did not bother to arrange for any medical aid for the victims of the violence.
She said she was doubly thankful to god about her family’s safety after looking at the deluge of media reports that said gangrapes and other terrible things might have taken place at Murthal.
Her husband started receiving proper medical treatment four days after the incident, on Saturday, only after Delhi Commission for Women (DCW) chief Swati Mailwal arranged to get him to admit to GTB hospital, she said.
Earlier, the family also had face the insensitivity when they went to Lal Bahadur Shastri (LBS) hospital, for their initial medical treatment. The officials of the city-based hospital told them not to divulge the actual incident as the cause of their injuries.
The family was received with neither sensitivity nor urgency at LBS hospital, even though the doctors did their part, she said.
“My husband with multiple fractures and injuries stood in the queue for hours waiting for reports, which are yet to come. It seemed like they didn’t care; we had to take our nephew to a private hospital where he received 25 stitches on his head,” she said.
Asked about Babita’s experience, official of the LBS hospital refused to believe it.
(Kushagra Dixit is an IANS correspondent. He can be contacted at kushagra.d@ians.in. This article has been published in a special arrangement with IANS.)
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