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Video Editor: Mohd Irshad Alam
A mother is relentlessly searching for her son, who disappeared from one of the country’s premier universities, nearly two years ago.
A son lost his father in a brutal mob lynching incident by gau rakshaks, for allegedly transporting beef.
A doctor accused of medical negligence in the deaths of 45 infants in Gorakhpur’s BRD hospital.
Speaking to The Quint, on the sidelines of the ‘Freedom Without Fear’ event on Monday, 13 August, they all had one question each for Prime Minister Narendra Modi and hoped that this Independence Day, they would get their answers.
For nearly two years now, Fatima Nafees has been waiting for her son, Najeeb Ahmed, who went missing from the Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) in New Delhi on 15 October 2016.
According to Fatima, her son went missing right after an alleged attack by a group of students affiliated with the Akhil Bharatiya Vidya Parishad (ABVP).
In May 2017, the case was transferred to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) from the Delhi police. Fatima claims there has been no progress in the search of her son, but is unwilling to give up. However, she has a question for Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has remained silent about Najeeb’s mysterious disappearance despite her many attempts to reach out to him for intervention.
Alimuddin Ansari was lynched by a brutal mob on 29 June 2017 for allegedly carrying beef. They reportedly beat him with sticks, formed a ring around the man and kicked him repeatedly. Alimuddin succumbed to his injuries soon after.
A Special Fast Track court in Ramgarh’s Jharkhand, in March 2018, awarded life imprisonment to 11 of the 12 accused. But within months, they were out on bail and Union Minister Jayant Sinha garlanded them and fed them sweets.
Alimuddin’s son Shahzad Ansari was working when he first heard the news of bail being granted to the convicts. He was “shocked” and “clueless” about breaking it to his mother. “I knew it would break her,” says the young Ansari.
Dr Kafeel Khan, who was booked in connection with the death of over 45 infants due to lack of oxygen at Gorakhpur’s BRD Medical College, was granted bail by the Allahabad High Court on 25 April.
Citing that there was no evidence against Dr Khan, the Allahabad HC noted in its order, “…there is no material on record, which may establish medical negligence against the applicant individually. This quite apart from the fact that no inquiry was also undertaken or initiated.”
The doctor was booked under the charge of ‘attempt to murder’, and spent 8 months in jail. But the case against him still remains.
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