Sunday, January 19, 2014

HC asks ‘insensitive’ Rly authorities to wake up. Death Trap Gap Ghatkoper


Sunil.Baghel @timesgroup.com TWEETS @baghels 


    Just a day after converting reportsfromthisnewspaperintoa suo–motu public interest litigation, the Bombay High Court gave an earful to the Railway authorities on Saturday. 
The division bench headed by Chief Justice Mohit Shah termed the Railway authorities insensitive and said they needed to wake up at least now. 
The court was referring to the newspaper report published on January18about21-year-oldKharresident Zia-Ul-Aminuddin Shaikh, who died due to a cardiac arrest, hours after losinghisleftleginanaccidentatAndheristation.Theaccidentwasblamedon the gap between the platform and the compartment he was trying to board. Addressing Suresh Kumar, advocate for the Railways, the bench said, “Saturday’s newspapers report a third accident (that took place) in a similar 
manner. Your clients must wake up now at least. It appears that your officials don’t care for the life and limbs of people.” 
    The court further added that lives were being lost almost on a daily basis and the Railway authorities seemed to 
have become insensitive. 
    Since the January 11 Monica More incident,thishasbeenthirdsuchincident where a person met with an accident due to the uneven gap between the platform and the train’s footboard. While 16-year-old Monica lost 
both her arms, in the second incident in this series, 31-year-old electrician Tanvir Sheikh lost both his legs when he slipped through the gap between the platform and a coach at Kurla station on Wednesday evening. 
    The Railways’ advocate was present before the court as an activist had moved an application beforethebenchseekingtotaghisPILfiled on the issue ‘Railway passengers’ safety’ with the suo–motu PIL taken up by the Chief Justice on Friday. The HC rejected the application. 
    It also made clear that the main focus of the suo–motu PIL would be the gap between the platform and the train and autonomy of Mumbai Railway Vikas Corporation. 
    Reproducing four Mirror reports – Mind the gap, Mumbai (January 14); Timeforsuburbannetworktosecedefrom rail ministry (January 15); Ambernath platforms pose daily risk for commuters 
(January 15); and City’s death-trap stations (January 17) – the court converted the matter to a PIL and posted its next hearing for February 13. 
    Chief Justice’s division bench has made the Union Railway Ministry, theRailwayBoard,Mumbai Railway Vikas Corpo
ration, and General Managers of Central, Western and Konkan railways respondents to the PIL. 
    Mumbai Mirror launched a sustained campaign against the railways’ failure to raise the height of suburban platforms and the absence of emergency medical care at stations. Noting thatthesuburbanrailwayservicescarry over 70 lakh passengers every day, the HC notice quotes from a report in this newspaper on how a Central Railway’s request to raise the height of platforms over and above the nationally prescribed parameters has been pending with the Railway Board for four years.




(From left) The spot at the Ghatkopar station where a girl fell and lost both her arms last week; Mumbai Mirror reports on the issue

Friday, January 17, 2014

CITY’S DEATH-TRAP STATIONS Mirror visits Kasara, Khardi and Atgaon and finds that none of the platforms meet the prescribed norms


Yogesh Sadhwani and Virat A Singh mirrorfeedback@timesgroup.com TWEETS @_MumbaiMirror 



    Days after the Monica More accident at Ghatkopar, Central Railway officials continue to pass the buck, blaming railway ministry policies for not being able to reduce the gap between platforms and rakes. While citing restrictions on raising the height of platforms, the officials have also blamed commuters for being reckless and try
ing to board running trains. 
    Mirror, however, visited Kasara, Khardi and Atgaon stations, and nailed CR’s lie. At all three stations, located on the Kalyan-Kasara route, the gap between rakes and platforms measures 18 to 20 inches, and at some spots even goes up to 21 inches. 
    While the prescribed gap should be between 13.46 inches and 17.2 inches, officials say they try to ensure it does not exceed the acceptable 14 inches. However,atallthreestations,thenorm is violated, making them the most dangerous stations on the suburban route. 
    What’s more, the gap is not just in terms of height between the platform and rakes, but also the distance forward of the footboard from the platform. Thus, while negotiating the height,passengershave to also make sure they take a huge step forward to reach the footboard, thereby magnifying their risk of falling in the gap. 

    The incidents of commuters falling into the gap at these stations have been numerous. In 2013 alone, eight cases of people falling into the gaps and either losing their lives or getting badly injured were reported at Kas
ara. Several such incidents occurred at Khardi and Atgaon too, but went unreported as no one was seriously injured. 
Kasara, which caters to over 10,000 commuters each day, has four platforms. The gap between the rakes and platforms here is between 18 to 20 inches, and at some stretches, goes up to 21 inches. 

At Atgaon which has two platforms and caters to around 3,000 commuters daily ,the gap is 18 inches. And so is the case at Khardi, which caters to over 3,000 commuters 
on an average day. With people falling into gaps at these three stations not all that rare an occurrence, the regular commuters here have turned vigilant to such incidents. “With the Railways not bothered to do anything about the gaps,dailycommutershavelearnttobe very alert,” said Vijay Manohar, a 25-year-old vendor who helped pull out at least a dozen people last year. 
    “As soon as someone falls into the gap, one of us rushes to alert the guard or motorman not to start the train until the person is brought up. Fortunately, in most cases last year, people escaped with bruises because this is a starting point for trains,” he added. 
    Khardi resident Vishal Jadhav, a member of the local passenger association, said that barely a week passes 
without someone falling into the gap. “Over here, it’s not just the gap between rake and platform in terms of height, but also the distance between the platform and the rake that poses a threat,”Jadhavsaid.“Thankstothecallous approach of the Railways, our commuters have all become boarding specialists,” he added with sarcasm. 
    So what has the Railways done about these death trap? Nothing, if you ask Rajesh Ghanghav, advisor of the Kalyan Kasara Railway Passengers Welfare Association and vice-president of the Mumbai Suburban Railway Passenger Association. 
    Ghanghav told Mirror that in the past two years the associations have taken up the issue of gaps at Khardi, Atgaon and Kasara with senior Railway 
officials a dozen times. “We have given them multiple representations. Even station masters have given submissions to their superiors, asking them to do something since so many accidents take place here,” said Ghanghav. 
    “This is nothing short of criminal negligence on the part of CR. People are getting injured, maimed and even losing their lives because of CR’s insensitive approach. If only they pay heed to our pleas and raise the height of platforms, it will be a huge relief for us and scores of accidents both minor and major can be averted,” Ghanghav added. 
    Of the 11 stations the lie between Kalyan and Kasara, eight have been fixed in the past five years. But Khardi, Atgaon and Kasara have been left untouched. The platforms of all three stations have not been raised, and the gaps have remained as they are for years. 

    But CR officials are busy defending themselves by claiming that the platforms of these three stations meet the norms and their height is as per rules laid down by the Railway ministry. 
    Atul Rane, CPRO of CR, claimed that height of the platforms is as per rules laid down by Railway ministry. “At Atgaon the height is between 810 mm and 950 mm, at Kasara it is 770 mm to 920 mm, and at Khardi it is around 850 mm. We thus meet the standard of keeping the platforms between 760 mm and 840 mm,” said Rane. 
    CR is unable to explain that if the height of the platforms is as per norms, how is it that the platforms do not meet the norms pertaining to the gap between rakes and platforms. The numbers just do not add up.




Members of a commuters’ association measure the gap between coaches and platform at Atgaon (L), Kasara (top R) and Khardi

Make all platforms safer in 2 weeks, CR told


Manthan K Mehta & Manoj Badgeri TNN 


Mumbai: Not just Ghatkopar and Thane, Central Railway’s Mumbai division has been directed to ensure that there are no abrupt discontinuation (like gaps) or any infringement (like signal poles) on platforms that can endanger the lives of commuters. 
    The Commissioner of Railway Safety (CRS) of Central Circle has asked the authorities to comply and submit a report within two weeks. 
    Central Railway has finally begun work to fill up the pit at Ghatkopar’s platformNo2throughwhichstudent Monika More, 16, fell and lost both arms. “We have decided to shift the signal horizontally by 1.5 meters and the junction box from the pit can be shifted to the 
middle of the tracks,” said CR’sdivisional manager Mukesh Nigam. 
    Safety commissioner 
Chetan Bakshi told TOI: “There is no violation of the Schedule of Dimension (of platforms) in the case of Ghatkopar as the train was stopping well short of the signal. However, such discontinuation of platform is not desirable.” 
    At Thane, another pit lying unattended for close to two years was finally covered. Workers from the railways’ civil works department filled the ditch with debris and levelled it off with cement blocks. By Thursday afternoon, the signal box was also shifted, leaving behind a smooth platform surface. 
    The10ftx3ftditchwascreated after signal pole S68 was shifted following a mandate that equipment on platforms must be 4.7m away from the centre of the track. 
    Epitomizing railways red tape, the department relocating thesignalshiftedthe pole but didn’t move the allied equipment from the platform. It also didn’t inform the civil works department and thus the gap was left unattended for almost two years.

Pits on platforms are filled up at Ghatkopar and Thane stations

Now, 31-yr-old loses legs at Kurla station


Sumitra Deb Roy & Manthan K Mehta TNN 


Mumbai: A 31-year-old electrician lost both legs when he slipped through the gap between the platform and a coach at Kurla station on Wednesday evening while trying to board a moving train. 
    Barely four days 
ago, 16-year-old Monika More lost both her arms when she fell into an unguarded signal pit while trying to board a train at Ghatkopar. 
    Tanavir Sheikh was rushed to Sion Hospital within 
30 minutes of the accident, but his limbs could not be saved because of the nature of his injuries. Eyewitnesses told TOI that around 10.30pm on Wednesday, Sheikh came in from the Ghatkopar-end of platform 6 and tried to board a CST-bound fast local train that was pulling out. “He tried to get a hold on to the door handle of the coach but lost his balance and fell through the gap between the platform and the rake,” said a commuter Shankar Iyer. Kurla platform gap widest where man fell on tracksLegs Couldn’t Be Reattached, Family Worried About Future 
    Tanavir Sheikh, who fell while trying to board a local at Kurla on Wednesday, was bleeding profusely as one leg had been cut off below the knee and the other was dangling only by the skin when he was brought to hospital by 11pm. 
    “His legs were completely amputated near the knee and 

there was no stump left to carry out a reattachment surgery. Reattachment is always tricky in accidents where patients suffer serious crush injuries. Once the bones have healed, we will think of prosthetic limbs,” said Dr Ashok Rathod, professor, orthopaedic department, Sion Hospital. 
    “He lost balance while trying to board the train. We will know the exact cause of accident only after checking the CCTV footage,” said P D Babar, inspector, Kurla GRP. 

    At Kurla station, the height of platform 6 varies from 760mm to 920mm with the gap the widest towards the Ghatkopar-end. “Platform designing is a complicated process as we have to take into account track geometry and topography of the land. Kurla is like a bowl where water from surrounding areas get accumulated, impacting the track geometry,” explained a railway official. 
    “It is a risky platform and last year, too, one of our personnel had died because of the huge gap,” said a GRP official. 
    “Fortunately, the train stopped soon and passengers pulled up Sheikh from the tracks. The hamals and GRP officials took him to hospital,” added Nitin Shukla, who also witnessed the accident. 
    Sheikh’s brother-in-law Kasam Saiyyed had reached the hospital soon after he was brought in. Sheikh was conscious and kept worrying how his family would survive as he was the only one who earned before the doctors sedated him and started treatment, he said. 
    Sheikh’s wife Asma, 22, said he had said he would be home for dinner. “Our lives are doomed now as he is the sole bread-earner of the family. We have no finances to take care of his treatment,” she said. 
    Shaikh, a resident of Govandi, earned about Rs 3,000-5,000 a month from odd assignments. The couple has three children, aged six, five and one and a half years. They were preparing to send their second son to school in the next couple of months. 
    The family has begun battling problems already — their first one was unavailability of blood. “All night we scouted for B negative blood and finally managed to get it only in the morning from a Dahisar blood bank,” said Saiyyed. They have not heard of the state’s recently launched blood-on-call service. 
    “We do not know the circumstances under which he met with an accident. We are ascertaining the fact before a conclusion can be drawn,” said Central Railway divisional manager Mukesh Nigam. 
UNEVEN STATION PUTS PASSENGERS AT RISK 
TANAVIR SHEIKH, 31 Lives in Govandi Is an electrician Earns Rs 3,000-5,000 a month Has a family of four: wife Asma (22), and three children 
WORK DAY | Sheikh was headed home from work. He was in Kurla to make electrical arrangements for a social gathering 
    He is usually home by 9pm 
    On Wednesday, he worked longer 

Sheikh tries to board train as it starts pulling out of platform He loses balance and slips into gap between footboard and platform His legs are crushed under the train He is brought to Sion Hospital by 11pm by railway officials, who also inform his family members In hospital, his parameters are stabilized On Thursday, his crushed legs are surgically removed knee down 
PROSTHETIC LEGS PROSTHESES WIDELY USED IN INDIA 
    Tanavir Sheikh may be able to lead a near normal life with below-knee prosthetic legs 
    Below-knee artificial legs are easy to handle because of control with natural knees 
    The stump goes into a socket and is held in place with suction 
    The socket, foot and shin of a prosthetic leg is designed in a way to efficiently bear the wearer’s body weight 
Jaipur foot | Made of wood and sponge rubber moulded at high temperature. Rubber on the outer surface gives the leg a natural look. The leg can bend in all directions that a natural leg can and offers high flexibility to users, who can walk on uneven surfaces and even squat COST | Available for free 
Solid ankle cushion heel (SACH) foot 
Speciality is soft rubber heel that compresses under weight just like a natural heel does COST | Rs 1.5-1.75 lakh 
OLD RAKES Number | 23 Footboard height | 1.22 m 
from top surface of rail 

NEW RAKES Number | 51 Footboard height | 1.18-1.2 m from top surface of rail 

What explains height difference 
Air springs in newer rakes are less compressed than that of old rakes 
PLATFORMS Height raised to 0.84 m | 500 platforms on CR Height of 0.76 m to less than 0.84 m | 50 platforms on CR PLANS TO INCREASE PLATFORM HEIGHT CR plans to increase height of 50 remaining platforms ‘soon’ Platforms at Chembur and Kurla stations, and platform No 5 at Dadar will be taken up on priority CST EXPERIMENT Height of platforms at CST | 0.92 m This is considered to be comfortable for commuters Western Railway has sought permission from railway board to raise the height of its suburban network platforms to 0.92 metres Ideal footboard-platform gap | 3.4-4.35 cm 
TIMES VIEW: Work on raising platform height needs to be finished on an emergency basis. Funds should not be a roadblock in a matter like this; if need be, money meant for other work should be diverted here. Every accident is a human tragedy and accidents, where one contributing factor may be the gap between the footboard and the platform, are avoidable human tragedies. Commuters also need to understand that nothing — even reaching their destination a few minutes late — is more important than life or limb. The railways cannot shake off the responsibility of ensuring a safe journey but this is one responsibility that should also be shared by commuters.


Thursday, January 16, 2014

Lost your arms? Here’s a band-aid

http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Archive&Source=Page&Skin=MIRRORNEW&BaseHref=MMIR/2014/01/16&PageLabel=14&EntityId=Ar01400&ViewMode=HTML



    If a headache struck you on a local train or the spicy breakfast you had caused acidity, where would you go? We suggest the station master’s room at any station. 
    The medical aid boxes at stations on Mumbai’s suburban network are equipped to handle only minor aches and injuries, but they have nothing to help in case of an accident like last Saturday’s mishap at Ghatkopar station, where a 16-year-old lost her arms after falling off a train. 
    At close to 15 stations Mumbai Mirror team visited on Wednesday, these emergency medical aid boxes -- full of pills, lotions, injections, and bandages -- had not been used even once. It is obvious that these boxes are there only to fulfill compliance with a 2004 Bombay High Court ruling, which put the onus of providing medical aid to a person injured in a train accident on the concerned station master. 
    Though the medical aid boxes 
are crammed with 66 items, very few of them are of any use in the kind of accidents that take place on railway tracks. Dr Rita Savla, director of Radhee Disaster and Education Foundation, calls these medical aid kits a sham. 
    Dr Savla, who at one point was involved in training hamaals in administering emergency medical aid, said nearly half the items in the boxes can be done away with. “They have injections and IVs in the box. Who will administer in injections and IVs? And what is required in not there -- ice boxes to carry severed limbs, cervical collars to make sure the victims don’t suffer aggravated injuries when being transported to hospital, and gauzes of good quality to stem the flow of blood.” 
    Savla said the railways run fullfledged hospitals for its employees and they should 
align these with its trauma care programme at stations. “Their doctors should work closely with the station staff to improve facilities,” Savla said an untrained person helping an accident victim can cause more harm. Citing the example of ‘torniquet’, one of the items in the medical box, Savla said ‘torniquet’ is no longer used in trauma care worldwide. “It is a misconception that a torniquet is to be tied above a severed or injured limb tightly to prevent blood loss. In fact, it needs to be loosened every 30 seconds for fifteen seconds or else it can only aggravate the injury.” Dr Savla has organized a group of volunteers who want to train porters, station masters and cops, who regularly deal with accident victims, so as to minimise deaths. She has already held a workshop with Government Railway Police and hopes to conduct many more in future. —MMB




MUMBAI’S ‘JUGAD’ EMERGENCY CARE Porters to pick up the injured, medical aid kit with aspirins and band-aids, ambulances with no drivers


Yogesh Sadhwani, Virat Singh and Lata Mishra 


    Of the 108 stations on Mumbai’s suburban network, that carries nearly 75 lakh commuters every day, only Dadar 
could have managed to save Monica More’s arms. 
    A test-drive of stations across Western, Central, and Harbour lines carried out by this newspaper on Wednesday revealed that not one of them, with the exception of Dadar, is equipped to handle victims of seri
ous accidents. 
    Monica, who fell off a crowded train in Ghatkopar last Saturday, lost her arms for two main reasons: one, there was an inordinate delay in taking her to KEM Hospital, where doctors tried unsuccessfully to 
reattach her arms; two, in absence of any emergency medical care, she was carried to the nearest hospital in an auto by two young men, who wrapped her severed arm in a piece cloth borrowed from a fellow commuter. 
    The scary reality is that Monica would have got the same care at any other station, small or big. Only Dadar has a trauma care centre and doctor on duty round-the-clock. But even Dadardoesnotstockonice,criticalintransporting severed limbs to a hospital. 
    The test-drive revealed that whatever emergency care facilities have been created at stations are not aimed at helping accident victims. They are aimed at complying with a 2004 Bombay High Court ruling, which put the onusofprovidingmedicalaidtoaperson injured in a train accident on the concerned station master. In Mumbaiya, it’s called ‘jugad’. 

    Other than first-aid kits with 66 items, many of them of no use in the sort of injuries that train accidents throw up, all stations across the city now have stretchers and wheelchairs. But the problemisthatnoneofthem have trained staff. Every time an accident is reported, the station master must beg, plead and bribe hamaals (casual labourers) to rush to the spot, pick up the victim. 
    The world over, extreme care is advised in handling accident victims as untrained hands can aggravate injuries. But on Mumbai’s stations, it’s the baggage handlers that are sent to take care of the injured. 
    And it doesn’t end here. Only six stations of the 108 have dedicated ambulances. All other stations must call for an ambulance. On Wednesday at Parel station, it took an ambulance half an hour to reach the spot after S K Patil, 50, a railway employee on his way home, fell off the train (see picture on page 1). 
    Thankfully, he had not suffered any serious 
injuries. 
Not that the situation is any better at those handful of stations where there are ambulances. A railway officer, who did not wish to be identified, said while the ambulances are parked at the station, their drivers are never around. “It can take anything between 20 minutes to an hour to trace the driver and get him to the ambulance,” he said. 
Theproblemisthatmostoftheseambulances are donations from social groups. Thus, their drivers are not accountable to the railways. “TheygettheirsalariesfromtheNGOsthatown the vehicles, they don’t need to report to us,” the railway officer said. 
At Airoli, which caters to over 50,000 season ticket travellers and another 25,000 ticket buyers each day, every timethereisanaccident,the station master calls porters from Thane or Vashi to attend to the victim. That itself takes half an hour. 

Doctors say that the first 45 minutes after an accident are critical in saving an accident victim’slife.“Theinjured must be attended to by paramedics and stabilized in the first45minutes,”saidaKEMdoctor. 
But forget paramedics, the station masters are not given enough money to even pay the porters. Each station master has a budget of Rs 1150 to attend to an accident victim -- Rs 400 to pay porters to pick the injured, and rest for the ambulance.“Tryaskingfourporterstopickupa bleeding man off the track for around Rs 100 each. At many suburban stations there are no porters, so we end up asking drug addicts languishing around to help,” said another station master. For a rail network that earns Rs 1225 crore annually, it’s clearly the passengers that are important, not their lives.



SK Patil, 50, fell into the gap between the platform and the tracks at Parel on Wednesday. After commuters pulled him out, it took 30 minutes to take him to a hospital

THANE STATION Though almost all stations have stretchers, wheelchairs and first-aid kits with 66 items, they are of no use when it comes to major medical emergencies


Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Consumer court can hold railways guilty of negligence Teen Who Lost Arms Entitled To Damages


Rebecca Samervel TNN 


    Consumer law experts say Monika More has a more than even chance of making the railways eat its words (calling her accident a case of trespassing) if she approaches the consumer court. The 16-year-old college student lost her arms under a train after falling into a gap on platform No 2at Ghatkopar station on Saturday. 
    As a service provider, the railways are in a consumer relationship with commuters and so Monika’s case has valid ingredients for admission in a consumer forum, said consumer activist M S Kamath. “All she needs is a valid daily or season ticket. This will prove that she is aconsumer. If a gap on the platform was the reason she fell on tracks, the railways can be held guilty for deficiency in service,” he said. 

    Kamath said that in recent cases of theft and dacoity, consumer commissions have held the railways guilty of negligence and not providing adequate security on trains. 
    In a landmark case, the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission in 1995 upheld a state commission order and directed the railways to pay Rs 2.25 lakh to the parents of a 21-year-old, Kabita Hansaria, who died in 1990 while passing through interconnecting com
partments on a long-distance train. The Hansarias told the commission that the vestibule connecting the compartments did not have safety grills. The railways had contended that according to the provisions of the Railway Claims Tribunal, the complaint was not tenable before the commission. But the commission made a clear distinction between a train accident and accidental death, and observing that Kabita's death was the latter case. “The state commission is right in pointing out that a railway passenger is a consumer,” the national commission had said. 
    Consumer lawyer Uday Wavikar said cases like Monika’s fell under the purview of the Consumer Protection Act. ‘‘There are instances when the national commission awarded compensation to people injured after falling off railway bridges. In a recent order, an airliner was ordered to pay compensation 
to a passenger who died in an escalator mishap.” 
    In 2011, the national commission ruled in favour of a woman whose husband was run over by a goods train in 2003 while he was crossing tracks at a spot where there was no railway bridge. The commission rejected the railways’ defence that such cases fell under the provisions of the Railway Claims Tribunal Act and that consumer fora did not have jurisdiction. 

COMPENSATION 
POSSIBILITIES 
RAILWAY CLAIMS TRIBUNAL Compensation for accident victims 4 LAKH | Death, loss of both hands or legs, deafness, disfiguring of face 
32,000 TO 3.6 LAKH | Other injuries 
Interim Relief | Pending settlement of claim, the railways are required to meet victim’s emergent expenses and afford her immediate relief. The amount is adjusted against final settlement 
CONSUMER COURT A complaint can be filed in any of six ‘district consumer disputes redressal’ forums in the Mumbai Metropolitan Region | South Mumbai, Central Mumbai, Mumbai Suburban, Mumbai Additional (suburban), Thane, Thane Additional (Navi Mumbai) 
Forum admits complaint within 21 days and issues notice to the service provider (in Monika More’s case, the railways), who must reply in 30 days. Grace period of 15 days can be given. If there 
is no reply, forum can hear matter ex parte and pass order If order is unsatisfactory, file appeal at state and then national commission LEVELS AS PER COMPENSATION 
Above 1 crore Complaint heard by national commission 

20 lakh to 1 crore 
Complaint heard by 
state commission 

Below 20 lakh Complaint heard 
by district forum 
HIGH COURT To expedite hearing at Railway Claims Tribunal, the high court can be approached PROSTHETIC ARMS Bebionic 3 | Most advanced myoelectric arm. Controlled by electrical impulses from amputee’s stump muscles. Can perform complex tasks like tying shoe laces and holding heavy objects Cost of arm | 50L Cost of fitting and follow-ups 
30-50L




CCTV footage of Monika More (circled) on the platform, seconds before her accident at Ghatkopar station on Saturday

Ambernath platforms pose daily risk for commuters Uneven surfaces, craters and inconsistent height of platforms have made boarding and alighting from suburban trains in the township difficult as well as dangerous


Virat A Singh virat.singh@timesgroup.com TWEETS @singhvirat246 


    If the hazard of gaps between footboards of local trains and platforms across the city was not enough, commuters at Ambernath are risking their lives every day due to uneven surfaces, inconsistent height, as well as huge craters on all three platforms there. 
    Almost daily, several commuters trip and fall while boarding or alighting from trains, some narrowly escaping landing on the tracks. 
    At platform No 2 for instance, a part of the platform is paved and is ata proper height to the foot board of trains. But a section of the platform, spanning over two compartments, has not been paved. When the height of platforms was raised a couple of years ago, the contractor did not care to install tiles but simply paved the surface with cement. This has resulted in the cemented stretch being at least two inches lower than the tiled portion. 
    The situation is no different on platform No 1, where a long stretch has not been tiled and is a few inches lower than the rest of the platform. Even in the section where tiles have been laid, the flooring is uneven at certain spots. 
    With the population of Ambernath rising sharply over the years, a lot more commuters travel by locals each day. A decade ago, the population of the township was around 1.5 lakh, but it has risen to well over 3.5 lakh today. On an average, one member from each family travels by train everyday. 
    “The situation is so bad that everyday somebody or the other fallsdue to the uneven platforms. The gaps and unevenness has made 
alighting difficult and dangerous,” said S Murughan, a daily traveller. 
    Satyajit Burman, a regular commuter, said, “We have made several complaints to the station officials, but there’s been no action. Platform No 3 does not even have anti-skid tiles. Will the authorities wake up only after someone falls in the gap and dies or is left handicapped for life?”
    Another resident, Deepak Singh, said, “The distance between the footboard and platform varies across platform No 1 and 2. This shows that the work of raising the height of platforms was not carried out in a proper manner and is now causing problems for commuters. What’s more, these gaps are at their worst at the spots where the ladies compartment and senior citizen’s special coaches halt.” 
    When Mumbai Mirror contacted CR officials for their comment, they said that they will send a team to Ambernath on Wednesday and get the platforms fixed immediately. 

SLIPPERY GRAB POLE Rail commuters across the city have also been complaining about the stainless steel grab poles that were introduced in the current Siemens rakes. They say the poles are slippery and cannot be gripped easily. 
    Commuter Zeeshan Ansari said that the old rakes, which had painted iron poles, afforded a firm grip. 
    “But the stainless steel grab poles are extremely slippery and can cause someone to slip and fall if he tries catchingthetrainwhilerunning,”he said. 
    While Railway officials agree that the poles could be slippery, they say that these poles are strong and durable and require low maintenance. 
    “Using a rubber covering to improve the grip would make it a hygienic issue as sweaty palms will only cause it to emit a foul smell,” an official said. “However, some modification could be brought about,” he agreed.

A commuter boards a train at Ambernath station on Tuesday. This is the spot where several commuters have slipped because of the gap between the train’s footboard and the platform and the crater; According to daily commuter S Murughan, everyday somebody or the other falls due to uneven platforms



Tuesday, January 14, 2014

CASE STUDY Death took him to his beloved hometown Abraham planned retirement to his native town, but had his funeral there


Aditya.Anand @timesgroup.com TWEETS @_anandaditya 


    Just a week ago, fifty-four-year old Ulhas Abraham, a journalist with a Saki Naka-based English publication, had been planning his retirement to Kottayam in Kerala. He hoped to stitch up some writing assignments to keep him busy there. But all his dreams of an idyllic life back in his home state were waylaid by a tragic suburban railway accident on Friday which killed him. This Monday, his funeral was held at the Pambady Orthodox Church in his beloved Kottayam. 
    Kalina-resident Abraham became another victim of Mumbai’s over-crowded suburban railway system when he fell out of his train near Kurla. “Despite the train being packed, they boarded it as they were very eager to meet their friends in Kalyan,”Abraham’s son Philip told Mirror. 

    Philip, 24, who works in the operations department of a Pune-based company, said that it was about 3:30 pm when the incident occurred. “It was not peak time.My parents had always been mindful about not getting into crowded trains,” he said. On Fri
day, the Kalyan-bound fast train that Abraham boarded was crowded as a preceding fast train had been cancelled. 
    Philip recalled that his father, who had been a journalist for 20 years, relocated from Ulhasnagar to Kalina only to avoid doing the commute in overcrowded suburban trains. “It was a terrible situation on Friday. The train was full. While Beena (Ulhas Abraham’s wife) got into the ladies’ compartment, Ulhas and I were at the door. As the train left Kurla, passengers started getting restless and trying to re-adjust themselves and suddenly there was a scream. Someone had fallen off,” Ulhas’s 
brother-in-law N G Alwyn said. 
    Alwyn who could not look behind him because of the crowds, called out for Ulhas. But there was no response. “I then got off at Ghatkopar. Ulhas was not there. I immediately rushed back to the spot, and we rushed him to hospital,” Alwyn said. 
Abraham was taken to Sion hospital, but was declared dead before admission. An autopsy was conducted and the family left for his hometown of Kottayam in Kerala for the funeral. Philip said the Railways have not got in touch with him so far. “Mumbai is growing very fast and its infrastructure growth is not in proportion. But while the railways cannot be blamed entirely, some actions pointing to change should be evident,” said a gracious Philip. “My father will never come back, but I hope his death will highlight the need for better service and station standards,” “Increasing capacity is the key to reducing deaths on the Mumbai suburban section. If this means an increase in fares, that will not be an issue to most people. Better connectivity while keeping safety in mind will bring in a change,” Alwyn said.

Ulhas Abraham

MIND THE GAP, MUMBAI All Mumbai platforms are designed for passenger trains, that’s why the dangerous gap between local trains’ footboards and platforms. With new taller rakes coming in, this gap will only grow and gobble up more lives


Virat A Singh and Yogesh Sadhwani mirrorfeedback@timesgroup.com 
TWEETS @singhvirat246 


    Asolution to prevent a mishap like last Saturday’s, when 16-year-old Monica More lost her arms after falling off a local train at Ghatkopar station, is sitting in a file with the Railway Board for four years now. 
    Monica slipped onto the tracks after falling off a crowded train because of the gaping hole between the train’s footboard and the platform. The Central Railway had four years ago written to the Railway Board, seeking permission to raise the height of platforms in Mumbai to 92 cm (36.22 inches) as against the nationally prescribed 76-84 cm (30-33 inches). 
    The logic was simple – prescribed height of platforms across the country was decided with passenger trains in mind. But Mumbai locals are very different on two counts – one, like passenger trains, locals don’t have steps to board and alight; two, locals stop at a station only for 15 seconds, leading to a mad frenzy to board and alight, and that is when a lot of accidents occur. 
    In the four years that the Railway Board has been sitting on the proposal, nearly 10,000 lives have been lost to accidents on the tracks in Mumbai and probably an equal number have suffered grievous injuries. According to a senior railway official, who did not wish to be identified, at least 10 per cent of these accidents involved the killer gap between local trains’ footboards and platforms.
During peak rush hour, a Mumbai local carries 5,500 passengers, that’s nearly3,500passengersexcess.People falling off the trains because of overcrowdingisnotuncommon.Butamajority of accidents take place while boarding and alighting. 
    The average gap between a local’s footboard and the platform is 14 to 18 inches.Withanaveragestepinhouses and offices measuring 5 to 8 inches, the killer gap on Mumbai locals is as large as three to four steps. 
    The old trains with spring-coil suspension took care of the gap to a certain extent as Mumbai’s crazy passenger overload would push the trains down,closertoplatforms.Butthenew 
    Siemens rakes are not only taller, but 
their air-suspensions can take a lot more load and do not squat. Aquick survey carried out by Mumbai Mirror on Monday revealed that the gap between thefootboardandtheplatform in old rakes was an acceptable eight inches. But for Siemens 
    rakes, that are taller than the old trains, this distance is over 14 inches. 
    TheBombardierrakes,thatarecurrently undergoing trials, will only aggravate the problem because they are taller than even their Siemens counterparts. The Western Railway, which will soon have both Seimens and Bombardier rakes, recognised the gravity of the problem last year and sought a condonation for Mumbai from the Railway Board – in common English that’s a request that an exception be made ignoring all norms and procedures. That request now has been pending for five months. 
    “WR is concerned about the commuter inconvenience and safety. As 
we have Siemens rakes and will soon introduce Bombardier rakes too, we have requested Railway Board for condonation. We have carried out trials with help of Research, Designs and Standards Organisation with 92 cm platforms last year,” said WR chief PRO Sharat Chandrayan. 
    But the Railway Board can’t also be blamed alone. Almost all stations in Mumbai service both local and longdistance trains. Raising heights of platforms could create risks for passenger trains. 
    The Central Railway, in fact, raised the height of platforms at CST station to 92 cm and the results have been excellent. “We were able to do it at CST because here there are dedicated suburban platforms,” said an official, explaining that a durable solution to the problem will be a complete segregation of platforms for long-distance trains and local trains. 
    But that may take years. Till then Mumbai seems to be condemned to live with the killer gap.

A woman tries to board a train at Churchgate station on Monday. (Inset) Monica More, 16, who lost her arms when she slipped onto the tracks through the gap between the train and the plotform at Ghatkopar last Saturday

MP Kirit Somaiya measures the gap between a train’s footboard and the platform at Ghatkopar station


Railways faces FIR over college girl’s accident

TIMES NEWS NETWORK 


Mumbai: The Government Railway Police (GRP) has been given a seven-day ultimatum to file an FIR against the railways for letting a signal pole and a gap remain on Ghatkopar station’s platform No 2. On Saturday, junior college studentMonika More (16) lost her arms under a train after falling into the gap. 
    On her part, Monika is showing remarkable spunk in coming to terms with her tragedy. On Monday, she was talking to her friends and relatives. “I am in pain and feeling weak. I ate normal food but don’t have 
an appetite. I hope this passes quickly,” Monika told TOI. “She is trying to forget about the accident,” a cousin said. 
    Monika’s college has decided to provide her with a writer for her exams. Also, she can be fitted with advanced prosthetic arms that are controlled by brain impulses. The only hitch is their 
cost: between Rs 10 lakh and Rs 1 crore, depending on sophistication. BJP leader Kirit Somaiya has promised a Rs 12 lakh aid. 
    Before she is fitted with prostheses, Monika’s injuries have to heal, which will take at least two months.



Girl to get writer for exams, funds needed for prosthetic arms

Train Accident Victim At Great Risk Of Infection: Docs

Sumitra Deb Roy & Shreya Bhandary TNN 



    Monika More, who lost her arms under a train at Ghatkopar station on Saturday, was much stable two days later and putting up a brave fight. Surrounded by friends and family members, she said she wanted to forget about the accident and move on. The immediate challenge for her is to beat infections that may slowdown her recovery andthreaten her rehabilitation. 
    On Monday, the 16-year-old was shifted to a separate room in KEM Hospital’s orthopaedic ward. Doctors are planning to give her a blood transfusion to acceleratehealing and remove weakness. Monika’s wounds may take at least two months to heal, 

following whichthe processof fitting her with prosthetic armswillbegin. 
    “This is a trying period for Monika andher family and morethan anything else, she needs emotional support right now. Her classmates and some of her teachers visited her on Monday to cheer her up,” said Lina Raje, principal, TD Mehta Junior College,whereMonika is a studentof Class XI. The college has decided to provide her with a writer so that she may appear for her finalexams.Also, the papers will be scheduled as per her convenience,saidRaje. 
    Monika’s family wants the railwaysto rehabilitateher. “Sheis pursing commerce. Her parents have 
pinned all their hopes on her. Her father has a monthly income of less than Rs 10,000 and may not be able to affordthebestof medicalcare and rehabilitation for her,” said her uncle Vishwas Jadhav. The family will be in need of funds for prosthetic arms, a pair of which costs Rs 10-100 lakh. Thesophistication andfunctionality of prostheticdevices aredirectly proportionaltothecost. 
    Doctors at KEM said they are being extra careful to keep infection at bay. “The wound was contaminated with oil and dirt, worsening already complicated injuries. We are cleaning the wounds daily,” said Dr Pradeep Bhonsale,headof thehospital’s orthopaedic department. For a good prosthetic fitting, long stumps are 
ideal. “But the sizes of her stumps are not much. We are trying hard to preserve whatever remains,” the doctor said. 
    The hospital’s plastic surgery departmenthadtriedto reattachMonika’s arms, but failed in their efforts, mainly because much time had lapsed and also the injuries were extensive. 

GRP to study CCTV footage 
    
The Kurla GRP will go through CCTV footage from Ghatkopar station to study Monika More's accident."Shesaysshe gotintotheladies’ compartment, but overcrowding caused her to lose balance and fall off,” saidconstable S Morewhospoke toMonika. 

DID RLYS, GRP, HOSPITAL FOLLOW RULES? 
HOPE AHEAD Monika can be fitted with artifi cial arms 
TYPES | Available according to functionality and sophistication 
BEST |Myoelectric arms, which work by reading brain impulses COST | Thousands to lakhs of rupees COST | 10-50 lakh TRAINING | 1-2 years of rigorous training to perform basic functions like holding things REATTACHMENT SURGERY 
Reattachment of limbs needs to be carried out within six hours of an accident for best results 
The time window for amputated fingers is 12 hours 
First bones are reattached, followed by blood vessels, nerves, muscles and skin 
Nerves take the longest to regain functionality 
WHY MONIKA’S ARMS COULD NOT BE SAVED 
Rajawadi doctors did not preserve the severed arms in an ice box Crucial four hours were lost before surgeons could start working on the severed limbs The injuries were so severe that there was a high possibility of 
dead tissues leading to infection and endangering Monika’s life 
Contamination of the wound site was severe 
Monika’s arms were badly crushed, forcing doctors to amputate higher up
ACCIDENT 
    
On Saturday, around 1.45 pm, Monika More (16) lost both arms under a train after falling into a gap on platform No 2 at Ghatkopar station 
    Two brothers pulled Monika out of the gap and walked her 500 metres out of the station. They hailed an autorickshaw and took her to the civic-run Rajawadi Hospital, the nearest from the station 
    All this while, Monika was bleeding profusely and was in a subconscious state. One of her arms had been cut off on the spot and the other was hanging by the skin
    After being stabilized at Rajawadi, she was referred to KEM Hospital, Parel, where doctors tried a reattachment surgery around 6pm, but failed 
PROTOCOL BREACH 
    A stretcher and an ambulance were not available at the station 

    Railway police personnel were not around to take Monika to hospital 

    At Rajawadi, doctors showed no urgency in shifting her to a tertiary care hospital 
RULE BOOK 
    If someone meets with a serious accident at a railway station, the station master has to call an ambulance or a taxi 
    Station staff are supposed to provide fi rst aid before rushing the victim to the nearest hospital 

    The Bombay high court ruled in 2006 that the railways must foot a victim’s private hospital bills 
    The court directed railway authorities in 2004 and 2006 to provide immediate medical attention to victims 

HELPING VICTIMS Put the severed limb in a clean plastic bag and tie its mouth tightly or seal it Don’t wash or clean the limb and ensure it does not come in contact with water Fill another plastic bag with ice and put the bag with the severed limb in it If ice is not to be found, don’t waste time looking for it and rush to a hospital with the severed limb 
With inputs from Nitasha Natu

A basic, cosmetic arm (above) and a myoelectric arm (right). The accident spot (below) on Monday



Monika More in hospital



Sunday, January 12, 2014

25000 Volts, Danger of rooftop travel,


IN ABSENCE OF MEDICAL AID OR AMBULANCE AT GHATKOPAR STATION BROTHERS RUSH GIRL WITH SEVERED ARMS TO HOSPITAL IN AUTO Doctors at KEM, where she was moved from Rajawadi, said they were not able to reattach her arms as a lot of time was lost in bringing her to the hospital


Lata Mishra and Aditya Anand @timesgroup.com 
TWEETS @_MumbaiMirror 


    KEM doctors late on Saturday evening failed to reattach a 16-year-old girl’s arms severed in a fall from a train at Ghatkopar station earlier in the afternoon. 
    Since there was no emergency medical care or ambulance available at the station, an unconscious Monica More, an SNDT student, was rushed to the Rajawadi Hospital in 
an auto by two brothers PAGE 6 who saw her fall from the adjoining platform. The brothers – Amjad and NaseemChawdhary–carriedthegirl’s left arm, that had come off entirely, wrapped in a cloth borrowed from a fellow commuter; while they tied her right arm, barely hanging from the elbow, with a handkerchief. 
    Since Rajawadi was not equipped to handle such a complicated case, Monica was taken to KEM Hospital where a team of doctors undertook a lengthy surgery, but failed to reattach the limbs, their job made difficult by the time lost in bringing the girl to their care. 
    Monicafelloffthecrowdedtrainat 1.50 pm and she was admitted to KEM at 4.30 pm. Had she been rushed from the station directly to KEM and the severedlimbwascarriedinanice-box,as it was eventually from Rajawadi Hospital, the chances of a successful re-attachment would have been higher, doctors said. 
    The doctors, however, were full of praise for Amjad and Naseem who rushedMonicatoRajawadi.“Itwasin
credibly brave on their part. 
    Had the brothers not helped, the girl would have died of excessive bleeding. It’s regretful that there was no emergency medical help at the station to take the right decisions,” said a KEM doctor who did not wish to be identified. 
    Eyewitnesses said Monica and her friends were boarding the ladies compartment next to the motorman’s cabin of a CST-bound train when she fell off due to overcrowding. Since the train had begun moving and the gap between the train footboard and the platform was large, she slipped through onto the tracks. As commuters raised an alarm and someone 
pulled the chain, the train came to a halt in a few seconds. 
    Amjad, 22, and Naseem, 24, residents of Saki Naka, saw Monica falling from the adjacent platform and rushed to her help. 
    Amjad, a third-year BA student of Jhunjhunwala College, Ghatkopar, said when he pulled Monica out, she had passed out. “While her left arm was completely severed, the right was hanging just by the skin,” he said. 
    The brothers said though a crowd gathered around, nobody volunteered to help. 
    Amjad and Naseem waited for the train to leave the platform to collect the severed arm lying on the tracks. “Having heard severed limbs can be rejoined, we picked it up and wrapped it in a piece of cloth borrowed from a commuter,” Naseem said. They then picked up Monica, hailed an auto and took her to Rajawadi Hospital. 
    Rajawadi doctors cleaned up the wounds and stabilised Monica’s blood pressure which had plunged because of the bleeding, but decided to shifthertoKEMforthespecialisedsurgery. 

    Her friends by then had informed the family. Monica’s father Ashok More, who runs a transport business, said he did not have words to thank Amjad and Naseem. “Rajawadi doctors said that the two boys saved Monica’s life,” he said. 
    Government Railway Police officials said that they are investigating the matter and will speak to the victim once she recovers. A Central Railway spokesperson said that stretchers and attendants are available at the Ghatkopar station and are “made available as and when a message about a requirement reaches the station master.” 
    KEM Dean Dr Shubhangi Parkar saidthoughitisacomplexsurgery,the doctors tried their best. “When the patient was brought to the hospital, she had already lost a lot of blood. Our first priority was to save her life. We stabilised her and put her on life support. A team of plastic surgeons and orthopaedic surgeons was formed together to operate upon on her to reattach the severed arms. We took around two hours to stabilize her. That’s a lot of time lost for such a complex surgery.


Victim Monica More, 16, an SNDT student; her weeping mother


Brothers Amjad and Naseem Chawdhary, who saw Monica falling and rushed to help her

The brothers carriedher left arm, that had come off, wrapped in a cloth