Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Rusty truck is autopsy table in this Jaipur police station

- Deep Mukherjee letters@hindustant­imes.com

JAIPUR: The sight of lifeless bodies strewn across a rusty truck might seem gruesome and inhuman but it’s quite common at Bassi police station in Jaipur.

In the absence of a mortuary, for the last three decades the post-mortem of bodies has been conducted inside a truck confiscate­d a long time back by the police.

Replete with dried leaves, bloodstain­s and pieces of torn cloth, the truck stands in the middle of the compound where the police station is situated.

“The post-mortem of bodies has to be conducted inside the truck because there is no mortuary . Unknown bodies which can be kept for 3-4 days are sent to the SMS Hospital which is around 25 kilometres away,” Virendra Singh, station house officer, Bassi police station, told HT.

Singh added that when it came to instances where the relatives needed the body to be released for last rites, the situation became difficult. “In such a case, the post-mortem has to be done early so that the body can be handed over to the relatives. In absence of a mortuary, the post-mortem is conducted over the open truck,” said the SHO.

The police say that the foul smell coming from the body often results into inconvenie­nces for their families living in the quarters adjacent to the police station.

“The smell is definitely bothersome as a post-mortem is supposed to happen inside a mortuary not in the open. After a period of at least 30 years, a room in the local community health centre (CHC) has been zeroed in by the health department where the post-mortem will take place in the future,” said the SHO.

However, when HT contacted Dinesh Mittal, the in-charge of the CHC in Bassi, he said that the decision is facing flak from residents living nearby.

“It has been almost finalised that the postmortem­s will take place at a room in the CHC. But the centre is located in a very crowded area and the local residents are opposing this decision as they are against shifting of a mortuary near their houses owing to foul smell,” said Mittal.

“The decision has been taken to shift the mortuary and a room has been identified. We have assured the opposing residents that the height of the wall near their house will be increased so that they are not bothered by the smell,” Prabhudaya­l Sharma, sub divisional magistrate, Bassi told HT.

He added that postmortem at the new facility are scheduled to start in a few days.

The smell is bothersome as a postmortem is supposed to happen inside a mortuary and not in the open. A room in the local community health centre has been zeroed in by the health department where the postmortem will take place in the future.

PRABHUDAYA­L SHARMA, sub divisional magistrate, Bassi

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? The truck in which autopsies are conducted is replete with dried n leaves, bloodstain­s and pieces of cloth.
HT PHOTO The truck in which autopsies are conducted is replete with dried n leaves, bloodstain­s and pieces of cloth.

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