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"That was not the first time my wife travelled by bus, but it was her last. If one person had the heart to give her a seat in the crowded bus, she would have been alive and well today," says Thaha, a native of Kottayam district.
His 34-year-old pregnant wife Nashida succumbed to her injuries on Wednesday, 3 January, after she fell from a moving bus last Friday, 29 December. Eight months into her pregnancy, Nashida was forced to stand in the crowded bus since all the seats were occupied.
Nashida boarded a private bus owned by the Vazhayil group last Friday, 29 December, to return to her residence in Erattupetta from the Akshaya Centre in Panchayat Padi, a distance of 5 km.
However, her journey was brutally cut short, when Nashida was thrown off the moving bus on to the road when it took a turn.
Speaking to TNM, Nashida's husband Thaha says fellow passengers, who refused to empathise with a pregnant woman, were equally to blame for what happened to her.
Nashida was, however, not alone on the bus, but had been accompanied by her younger daughter and elder sister Shanida.
Recounting the incident, Shanida says that it was at the end of a 30-minute long wait that they decided to board that particular bus.
Shanida recalled, “We could barely manage to stand properly in the bus since it was crowded. Even before we found a place to stand steadily, the driver started the bus. None of the other passengers paid attention to us and did not offer a seat to my pregnant sister. We thought we would ask someone to give her a seat if she felt tired. But hardly five minutes had passed by, when the bus took a sharp turn and a lot of us fell inside the bus."
"Never had I imagined that Nashida had fallen off. She was standing right beside me. It all happened in a matter of seconds. Once the bus came to a halt, I found her lying in a pool of blood on her back," Shanida recounts, her voice breaking.
The door of the bus was left open at the time of the incident. Shanida says that had the door been closed, her sister would have not fallen off the bus and injured herself so gravely.
Nashida's family is yet to come to terms with her untimely death. Thaha says that their 4-year-old daughter Haya continues to believe that her mother is undergoing treatment at the hospital.
Based on a directive by the State Human Rights Commission in 2016, the Kerala Motor Vehicle Act was amended to make it mandatory for at least one seat to be reserved for pregnant women in all KSRTC and private buses.
On Thursday, 4 January, the Commission sought an inquiry report from Kottayam SP and RTO on why this provision was not given to Nashida.
(The article was originally published on The News Minute and has been republished with permission.)
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