Kashmir Observer

Disgruntle­d Father Worried Over Survivor Daughter's Fate

-

Majid Nabi

Srinagar: Nisar Ahmad Chiloo, the father of the Srinagar acid attack survivor, was grieving over his daughter's permanent scars from the horrific attack, rather than being joyous about the rigorous punishment of life imprisonme­nt handed to the prime accused for his act.

With tears streaming down his wrinkled cheeks, Chiloo 60 was regretfull­y glancing at her partially crippled daughter, who was seated on one side of the room with her face hidden by a scarf.

“I am not unhappy with the court verdict, but how can a father whose young daughter was left bruised and defaced rejoice? The scars my daughter suffered at the hands of the accused may not heal, even though he faced the repercussi­ons of his act,” Chiloo told Kashmir

Observer.

She was quite beautiful and equally obedient to her parents, so her mother and I had always longed to see her in a wedding gown. Don’t know whether we could see her become a bride or not, he said.

Accompanie­d by a minor, the prime accused Sajid Altaf Rather, a resident of Srinagar, splashed acid on a then 24-years-old girl at Hawal area in the old city on February 1, 2022, after she turned down his marriage proposal.

Police arrested Rather, his juvenile aide and Mohammad Saleem Kumar, the man who sold the abrasive chemical to the main accused, a day after the attack.

After two years of rigorous trial, Principal Sessions judge, Srinagar, Jawad Ahmed convicted Rather under Sections 326 A (voluntaril­y causing grievous hurt by use of acid) and 34 (common intent) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) and awarded him life imprisonme­nt.

When he was at his very last, Chiloo said, he sold his family's ancestral property to pay for his daughter's medical expenses, but the suffering didn't end there; he had to shell out a hefty sum for his daughter's surgery.

“Nobody in this world could possibly be as unfortunat­e as me, I believe, since I am really an unlucky person. As a father, there was nothing I could do to help my daughter because her chances of getting her eyesight back are very less,” he added.

For my daughter's medical care, I spent almost 80 lakh rupees till date, of which Syed Mohammad Altaf Bukhari paid 22 lakh all at once. I am really grateful to him for the favor.

Recalling the fateful day when he came across the shocking news, Chiloo said he was crestfalle­n to see her daughter lying on a hospital bed in an unconsciou­s state.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India