Re: [AI] Unfortunate incident Blind individual got robbed at Howrah Station

2013-06-11 Thread vishal sharma
really sad ,I do not know what to say  ,how low can one go in his
greed for money?

On 6/11/13, Mohammed Asif iqbal asifmaiq...@hotmail.com wrote:
 Hi all ,
 It really breaks my heart to acknowledge how human beings could be so
 insensitive including police.
 Thanks and please read this article :

 http://www.telegraphindia.com/1130611/jsp/calcutta/story_16993727.jsp


 IIM's first graduate with blindness robbed at Howrah station


 The first student with blindness to graduate from IIM Calcutta was robbed
 at
 Howrah railway station on Monday morning by two men who had offered to
 escort him to the prepaid taxi stand.

 If being robbed on arrival wasn't enough of an ordeal, Suresh Reddy from
 the
 Class of 2013 had to ask around for an hour to reach a Government Railway
 Police booth located 50 metres from the platforms.

 The officer manning the booth allegedly refused to accept his complaint,
 saying any incident occurring beyond the station building was outside the
 GRP's jurisdiction.

 Andhra-born Suresh, a farmer's son who lost vision in both eyes when he was
 13, had arrived by the Chennai Mail and was headed for Joka to collect his
 belongings and bid farewell to the institute.

 He tells Metro why he does not intend returning to Calcutta.

 It was a little after 5am. I had just got off the train and was waiting for
 the crowd to disperse when two men came and offered to guide me to the
 stand
 for prepaid taxis.

 I had managed on my own at Howrah station on several previous visits, so
 there was no reason for me to ask for or accept any help unless I needed
 the
 services of a porter. But the two men were so polite that I couldn't bring
 myself to refuse them.

 When they offered to hold my solitary piece of luggage, I didn't allow them
 to. They didn't insist either. The duo walked alongside me. I had my
 walking
 stick but they guided me through the rush of commuters and we were soon
 outside the station building.

 I could make out that we were near one of the exits of the subway. There
 was
 commotion all around with vehicles speeding past where I stood.

 One of the men suddenly asked for my mobile phone, saying that he would
 call
 a taxi driver who was known to him to take me to Joka. I replied that he
 could tell me the number. He gave me a number starting with 13. No mobile
 phone number in India starts with 13, and that rang the alarm for me.

 I immediately tried to put the phone back into my trouser pocket but it was
 too late. One of the men tried to snatch it while the other grabbed my
 suitcase. I kicked and punched frantically but couldn't hold on to my
 mobile
 phone. The man who got it ran away but his accomplice was still trying to
 take away my bag. He repeatedly hit me on my left arm so that I would let
 go
 of the bag.

 This went on for more than a minute. The man fled when one of my kicks
 landed on his knee.

 I had been shouting Banchao! Banchao! (Help! Help!) all the while but
 nobody came forward. The place couldn't have been deserted because I could
 feel the presence of people filing past me.

 I stood there for over an hour, not sure where I was. I broke down and
 pleaded with passers-by to take me to a police booth or at least back to
 the
 station. I found a man who had been talking over the phone in English but
 he
 told me he was in a hurry. I followed him and got back inside the station
 building.

 The man left me near a police officer. The officer heard me out but didn't
 respond.

 I realised that I could be near a railway enquiry booth and started banging
 on a door.

 A man came out and took me to the GRP booth. I was told that since the
 incident had taken place outside the station building, I would need to
 lodge
 a complaint at the nearby police station. They didn't even heed my request
 to lend me a phone to contact someone on the IIM campus.

 I was trembling in anger but I was also tired of the ordeal. I didn't say
 anything as I was escorted out to the prepaid taxi booth, where a junior at
 IIM who had just returned from Varanasi spotted me. I was so glad to bump
 into Pratik; he was my saviour. We went together.

 For me, Calcutta was not just about IIM Joka but also a historic city I had
 grown up reading about. But I am sure this is my last visit here.

 I have travelled across the country and staff at railway stations have
 voluntarily helped me to the taxi stand. Calcutta is the only city where
 people demand money to help a visually-impaired person and, worse still,
 take advantage of. From temple priests to taxi drivers, I have been cheated
 so many times that I don't feel like trusting anyone.

 After getting into IIM Calcutta, I had thought that my visual impairment
 was
 no longer a hurdle in life. Today's incident has shattered my confidence.


 AS TOLD TO SUSHOVAN SIRCAR


   




 http://www.telegraphindia.com/1130611/jsp/calcutta/story_16993727.jsp


 IIM's first graduate with blindness robbed at Howrah station


 The first 

Re: [AI] Unfortunate incident Blind individual got robbed at Howrah Station

2013-06-11 Thread Vamshi. G
But I can't understand a person who is so knowledgeable, having
studied in I I M, develops such hatred towards a particular city.
Good and bad are everywhere in the world.  Recently, one of our Access
Indian friends got robbed in a Mumbai local railway station which was
reported on this very list.  I remember one of my friends on some
other list mentioning how he was exploited for having taken someone's
help in Chennai railway station.

Second, though irrelevant to the current context, Suresh Reddy is not
the first blind person to have studied in I I Ms.  He was potrayed in
the same way when he got admission into I I M kolkata.  Either the
media person reporting the story or Suresh Reddy himself should have
known about others who had been through I I Ms.  But having said this,
I fully empathise with Suresh for what has happened to him.  Incidents
like this really shatter the confidence of visually challenged in
independent mobility.







On 6/11/13, vishal sharma sharma1010vis...@gmail.com wrote:
 really sad ,I do not know what to say  ,how low can one go in his
 greed for money?

 On 6/11/13, Mohammed Asif iqbal asifmaiq...@hotmail.com wrote:
 Hi all ,
 It really breaks my heart to acknowledge how human beings could be so
 insensitive including police.
 Thanks and please read this article :

 http://www.telegraphindia.com/1130611/jsp/calcutta/story_16993727.jsp


 IIM's first graduate with blindness robbed at Howrah station


 The first student with blindness to graduate from IIM Calcutta was robbed
 at
 Howrah railway station on Monday morning by two men who had offered to
 escort him to the prepaid taxi stand.

 If being robbed on arrival wasn't enough of an ordeal, Suresh Reddy from
 the
 Class of 2013 had to ask around for an hour to reach a Government Railway
 Police booth located 50 metres from the platforms.

 The officer manning the booth allegedly refused to accept his complaint,
 saying any incident occurring beyond the station building was outside the
 GRP's jurisdiction.

 Andhra-born Suresh, a farmer's son who lost vision in both eyes when he
 was
 13, had arrived by the Chennai Mail and was headed for Joka to collect
 his
 belongings and bid farewell to the institute.

 He tells Metro why he does not intend returning to Calcutta.

 It was a little after 5am. I had just got off the train and was waiting
 for
 the crowd to disperse when two men came and offered to guide me to the
 stand
 for prepaid taxis.

 I had managed on my own at Howrah station on several previous visits, so
 there was no reason for me to ask for or accept any help unless I needed
 the
 services of a porter. But the two men were so polite that I couldn't
 bring
 myself to refuse them.

 When they offered to hold my solitary piece of luggage, I didn't allow
 them
 to. They didn't insist either. The duo walked alongside me. I had my
 walking
 stick but they guided me through the rush of commuters and we were soon
 outside the station building.

 I could make out that we were near one of the exits of the subway. There
 was
 commotion all around with vehicles speeding past where I stood.

 One of the men suddenly asked for my mobile phone, saying that he would
 call
 a taxi driver who was known to him to take me to Joka. I replied that he
 could tell me the number. He gave me a number starting with 13. No mobile
 phone number in India starts with 13, and that rang the alarm for me.

 I immediately tried to put the phone back into my trouser pocket but it
 was
 too late. One of the men tried to snatch it while the other grabbed my
 suitcase. I kicked and punched frantically but couldn't hold on to my
 mobile
 phone. The man who got it ran away but his accomplice was still trying to
 take away my bag. He repeatedly hit me on my left arm so that I would let
 go
 of the bag.

 This went on for more than a minute. The man fled when one of my kicks
 landed on his knee.

 I had been shouting Banchao! Banchao! (Help! Help!) all the while but
 nobody came forward. The place couldn't have been deserted because I
 could
 feel the presence of people filing past me.

 I stood there for over an hour, not sure where I was. I broke down and
 pleaded with passers-by to take me to a police booth or at least back to
 the
 station. I found a man who had been talking over the phone in English but
 he
 told me he was in a hurry. I followed him and got back inside the station
 building.

 The man left me near a police officer. The officer heard me out but
 didn't
 respond.

 I realised that I could be near a railway enquiry booth and started
 banging
 on a door.

 A man came out and took me to the GRP booth. I was told that since the
 incident had taken place outside the station building, I would need to
 lodge
 a complaint at the nearby police station. They didn't even heed my
 request
 to lend me a phone to contact someone on the IIM campus.

 I was trembling in anger but I was also tired of the ordeal. I didn't say
 anything as I was escorted 

Re: [AI] Unfortunate incident Blind individual got robbed at Howrah Station

2013-06-11 Thread srinivas bangalore_11
Hi,
It is so unfortunate to here like this kind of incedents.
If i would be the police, I would have punish them severely.
But here I have one doubt.
Now a days, CC cameras have put every where.
Some one should have monitor this situation.

On 6/11/13, Vamshi. G gvamsh...@gmail.com wrote:
 But I can't understand a person who is so knowledgeable, having
 studied in I I M, develops such hatred towards a particular city.
 Good and bad are everywhere in the world.  Recently, one of our Access
 Indian friends got robbed in a Mumbai local railway station which was
 reported on this very list.  I remember one of my friends on some
 other list mentioning how he was exploited for having taken someone's
 help in Chennai railway station.

 Second, though irrelevant to the current context, Suresh Reddy is not
 the first blind person to have studied in I I Ms.  He was potrayed in
 the same way when he got admission into I I M kolkata.  Either the
 media person reporting the story or Suresh Reddy himself should have
 known about others who had been through I I Ms.  But having said this,
 I fully empathise with Suresh for what has happened to him.  Incidents
 like this really shatter the confidence of visually challenged in
 independent mobility.







 On 6/11/13, vishal sharma sharma1010vis...@gmail.com wrote:
 really sad ,I do not know what to say  ,how low can one go in his
 greed for money?

 On 6/11/13, Mohammed Asif iqbal asifmaiq...@hotmail.com wrote:
 Hi all ,
 It really breaks my heart to acknowledge how human beings could be so
 insensitive including police.
 Thanks and please read this article :

 http://www.telegraphindia.com/1130611/jsp/calcutta/story_16993727.jsp


 IIM's first graduate with blindness robbed at Howrah station


 The first student with blindness to graduate from IIM Calcutta was
 robbed
 at
 Howrah railway station on Monday morning by two men who had offered to
 escort him to the prepaid taxi stand.

 If being robbed on arrival wasn't enough of an ordeal, Suresh Reddy from
 the
 Class of 2013 had to ask around for an hour to reach a Government
 Railway
 Police booth located 50 metres from the platforms.

 The officer manning the booth allegedly refused to accept his complaint,
 saying any incident occurring beyond the station building was outside
 the
 GRP's jurisdiction.

 Andhra-born Suresh, a farmer's son who lost vision in both eyes when he
 was
 13, had arrived by the Chennai Mail and was headed for Joka to collect
 his
 belongings and bid farewell to the institute.

 He tells Metro why he does not intend returning to Calcutta.

 It was a little after 5am. I had just got off the train and was waiting
 for
 the crowd to disperse when two men came and offered to guide me to the
 stand
 for prepaid taxis.

 I had managed on my own at Howrah station on several previous visits, so
 there was no reason for me to ask for or accept any help unless I needed
 the
 services of a porter. But the two men were so polite that I couldn't
 bring
 myself to refuse them.

 When they offered to hold my solitary piece of luggage, I didn't allow
 them
 to. They didn't insist either. The duo walked alongside me. I had my
 walking
 stick but they guided me through the rush of commuters and we were soon
 outside the station building.

 I could make out that we were near one of the exits of the subway. There
 was
 commotion all around with vehicles speeding past where I stood.

 One of the men suddenly asked for my mobile phone, saying that he would
 call
 a taxi driver who was known to him to take me to Joka. I replied that he
 could tell me the number. He gave me a number starting with 13. No
 mobile
 phone number in India starts with 13, and that rang the alarm for me.

 I immediately tried to put the phone back into my trouser pocket but it
 was
 too late. One of the men tried to snatch it while the other grabbed my
 suitcase. I kicked and punched frantically but couldn't hold on to my
 mobile
 phone. The man who got it ran away but his accomplice was still trying
 to
 take away my bag. He repeatedly hit me on my left arm so that I would
 let
 go
 of the bag.

 This went on for more than a minute. The man fled when one of my kicks
 landed on his knee.

 I had been shouting Banchao! Banchao! (Help! Help!) all the while but
 nobody came forward. The place couldn't have been deserted because I
 could
 feel the presence of people filing past me.

 I stood there for over an hour, not sure where I was. I broke down and
 pleaded with passers-by to take me to a police booth or at least back to
 the
 station. I found a man who had been talking over the phone in English
 but
 he
 told me he was in a hurry. I followed him and got back inside the
 station
 building.

 The man left me near a police officer. The officer heard me out but
 didn't
 respond.

 I realised that I could be near a railway enquiry booth and started
 banging
 on a door.

 A man came out and took me to the GRP booth. I was told that since the
 

Re: [AI] Unfortunate incident Blind individual got robbed at Howrah Station

2013-06-11 Thread Himanshu Sahu
Really a disheartening incident...
But I second Vamshi's opinion. Such incidents can happen anywhere.
Friends, railway stations, bus stops and mostly crowded areas are
breeding ground for such thieves and anti-social elements and we must
be highly alert at these places.
However, I am not surprised by the attitude of railway police at the
station. They have just demonstrated for what they are known for!
On 6/11/13, Mohammed Asif iqbal asifmaiq...@hotmail.com wrote:
 Hi all ,
 It really breaks my heart to acknowledge how human beings could be so
 insensitive including police.
 Thanks and please read this article :

 http://www.telegraphindia.com/1130611/jsp/calcutta/story_16993727.jsp


 IIM's first graduate with blindness robbed at Howrah station


 The first student with blindness to graduate from IIM Calcutta was robbed
 at
 Howrah railway station on Monday morning by two men who had offered to
 escort him to the prepaid taxi stand.

 If being robbed on arrival wasn't enough of an ordeal, Suresh Reddy from
 the
 Class of 2013 had to ask around for an hour to reach a Government Railway
 Police booth located 50 metres from the platforms.

 The officer manning the booth allegedly refused to accept his complaint,
 saying any incident occurring beyond the station building was outside the
 GRP's jurisdiction.

 Andhra-born Suresh, a farmer's son who lost vision in both eyes when he was
 13, had arrived by the Chennai Mail and was headed for Joka to collect his
 belongings and bid farewell to the institute.

 He tells Metro why he does not intend returning to Calcutta.

 It was a little after 5am. I had just got off the train and was waiting for
 the crowd to disperse when two men came and offered to guide me to the
 stand
 for prepaid taxis.

 I had managed on my own at Howrah station on several previous visits, so
 there was no reason for me to ask for or accept any help unless I needed
 the
 services of a porter. But the two men were so polite that I couldn't bring
 myself to refuse them.

 When they offered to hold my solitary piece of luggage, I didn't allow them
 to. They didn't insist either. The duo walked alongside me. I had my
 walking
 stick but they guided me through the rush of commuters and we were soon
 outside the station building.

 I could make out that we were near one of the exits of the subway. There
 was
 commotion all around with vehicles speeding past where I stood.

 One of the men suddenly asked for my mobile phone, saying that he would
 call
 a taxi driver who was known to him to take me to Joka. I replied that he
 could tell me the number. He gave me a number starting with 13. No mobile
 phone number in India starts with 13, and that rang the alarm for me.

 I immediately tried to put the phone back into my trouser pocket but it was
 too late. One of the men tried to snatch it while the other grabbed my
 suitcase. I kicked and punched frantically but couldn't hold on to my
 mobile
 phone. The man who got it ran away but his accomplice was still trying to
 take away my bag. He repeatedly hit me on my left arm so that I would let
 go
 of the bag.

 This went on for more than a minute. The man fled when one of my kicks
 landed on his knee.

 I had been shouting Banchao! Banchao! (Help! Help!) all the while but
 nobody came forward. The place couldn't have been deserted because I could
 feel the presence of people filing past me.

 I stood there for over an hour, not sure where I was. I broke down and
 pleaded with passers-by to take me to a police booth or at least back to
 the
 station. I found a man who had been talking over the phone in English but
 he
 told me he was in a hurry. I followed him and got back inside the station
 building.

 The man left me near a police officer. The officer heard me out but didn't
 respond.

 I realised that I could be near a railway enquiry booth and started banging
 on a door.

 A man came out and took me to the GRP booth. I was told that since the
 incident had taken place outside the station building, I would need to
 lodge
 a complaint at the nearby police station. They didn't even heed my request
 to lend me a phone to contact someone on the IIM campus.

 I was trembling in anger but I was also tired of the ordeal. I didn't say
 anything as I was escorted out to the prepaid taxi booth, where a junior at
 IIM who had just returned from Varanasi spotted me. I was so glad to bump
 into Pratik; he was my saviour. We went together.

 For me, Calcutta was not just about IIM Joka but also a historic city I had
 grown up reading about. But I am sure this is my last visit here.

 I have travelled across the country and staff at railway stations have
 voluntarily helped me to the taxi stand. Calcutta is the only city where
 people demand money to help a visually-impaired person and, worse still,
 take advantage of. From temple priests to taxi drivers, I have been cheated
 so many times that I don't feel like trusting anyone.

 After getting into IIM