Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Student collapses at CUP, dies; probe on after protest

- HT Correspond­ent

BATHINDA: A 22-year-old student, Sushant Sagar, from Bihar collapsed during a basketball match at the Central University of Punjab (CUP) here and later died on Monday night, sparking a protest on Tuesday by students who alleged mishandlin­g of the situation by the university. After a probe was ordered by the district administra­tion to submit a report in two weeks, the protesters lifted the blockade on the Bathindama­nsa road after three hours.

Sagar, who belonged to Saharsa district and was a student of MSC (biochemist­ry and microbial science) here, collapsed around 8.20 pm on Monday and was taken to the university dispensary first. He was referred to a private hospital where doctors declared him dead. The exact cause was not known immediatel­y.

Protesting students said the university dispensary lacks basic facilities and that Sagar died due to delay.

“He couldn’t be taken to the hospital for nearly 45 minutes. When the university doctor referred him to a private hospital, the authoritie­s couldn’t find keys to an ambulance. We asked the officials to let him be taken in a car, but they didn’t allow that,” alleged a student on the condition of anonymity fearing persecutio­n, adding, “There was no driver on duty and one had to be called on the phone; he came all the way from his house in the city, six kilometres away, to drive the ambulance.”

Students demanded that a case be registered against “those responsibl­e for delay” and that compensati­on be given to the family.

Shali Gram, identified as Sagar’s relative who came from Delhi, said no university official called the family and he was informed by a student. The parents were yet to arrive.

Vice-chancellor RK Kohli partly denied the allegation­s. He said the key was in the ambulance and a faculty member even tried to start it. On the absence of the driver, Kohli said he has been suspended as he was not on duty, “but it is yet to be verified where he was”.

The ambulance reached the hospital, around four kilometres away, “at 9pm,” according to inspector Narinderpa­l Singh, station house officer (SHO) of Kotfatta area under whose jurisdicti­on the campus falls. Postmortem was conducted by a panel of two doctors at the Bathinda civil hospital and the report was awaited, police further said.

Earlier, sub-divisional magistrate (SDM) Balwinder Singh visited the protest site with the assurance of a time-bound inquiry, and Kohli too promised a thorough probe, at which the protest was suspended.

Kohli said the district administra­tion set up a six-member inquiry committee, comprising deputy superinten­dent of police (DSP), rural; registrar of MRS Punjab Technical University, a lawyer, the registrar and security officer of CUP; and a senior medical officer of the civil hospital, that will submit a report within two weeks. “Action will be taken accordingl­y,” he said.

 ?? SANJEEV KUMAR/HT ?? RK Kohli (right), VC of Central University of Punjab, talking to Shali Gram, a relative of the victim, at the protest site on the Bathindama­nsa road on Tuesday.
SANJEEV KUMAR/HT RK Kohli (right), VC of Central University of Punjab, talking to Shali Gram, a relative of the victim, at the protest site on the Bathindama­nsa road on Tuesday.

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