The Sunday Guardian

Free from ISIS bondage, AP professors heap praise on Sushma

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Two Telugu professors, Tiruveedhu­la Gopalakris­hna and C. Balaram Kishan, returned to their homes in Hyderabad in the wee hours of Saturday after spending 414 days in captivity of terror outfit ISIS in Libya. They profusely thanked External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj for her constant support to them and their families back home and efforts to secure their release.

The two professors landed at the Rajiv Gandhi Internatio­nal Airport in Hyderabad at 4 am on Saturday and reached their respective homes in Nacharam and Alwal in the city by 6 am. They had reached New Delhi from Libya the night before. They were released from ISIS’ captivity on 15 September but were kept in the country for a few more days before being flown to India.

A small team of Ministry of External Affairs accompanie­d them to their homes and enough care was taken to keep them away from media glare in New Delhi and Hyderabad. When The Sunday Guardian visited their homes, both professors refused to dwell on what hap- pened during their captivity or what exactly led to their release.

“We have already explained everything to the MEA officials, and I am sorry, I cannot reveal or comment on this more. Please don’t ask me any questions regarding that,” said Gopalakris­hna. He was visibly shaken and emotionall­y exhausted and often broke into tears while thanking everyone who prayed for his release from captivity. “I am very happy to be reunited with my family again,” he said.

Same is the situation with Balaram Kishan, who too was unwilling to speak about his captivity or how he walked free. “Please don’t ask all these questions as I am unable to answer them at this stage,” he said. His wife Sridevi told the media including this newspaper that he would talk later.

She thanked Sushma Swaraj immensely for being with the families all through the ordeal and assuring her of her husband’s safety. “How can I express my words of thanks to Sushma ji, who was the only hope for us? We fully believed in her words. We virtually lived on her words,” said Sridevi.

The two professors were teaching at the University of Sirte in Libya since 2007, and they wanted to come back home after ISIS captured vast areas around their university campus. They, along with two other colleagues from the same university, Lakshmi Kant and Vijaya Kumar, were abducted by the ISIS men. Kant and Vijay Kumar were set free within a week.

Sources close to the Telugu professors’ families told this newspaper that a combinatio­n of measures through official and unofficial channels had worked and led to their release. Since some more persons are still in the captivity of ISIS, the detailed account of their release is not being revealed, the sources explained. Officially, they said, a commando operation had led to the two professors’ release. The Jammu and Kashmir High Court has rejected Kashmir Bar Associatio­n’s plea to ban pellet guns and has refused to prosecute officers who ordered the use of the non-lethal weapon, pointing out that the government has already appointed an expert committee on the matter and the court, hence, cannot ban the use of pellet guns in rare and extreme situations while a decision from the government is awaited.

As protests continue in Kashmir for the third consecutiv­e month, the 12-bore pump action gun remains in focus, with eight people killed due to pellet injuries and more than 1,200 injured with pellets in their eyes, according to police and hospital reports.

The latest injuries took place during an encounter at Aragam village of Bandipora on Thursday in which a large number of people were trying to break the security cordon. The protests were quelled by the CRPF who used pellet guns. While a young boy with multiple pellet injuries was taken to SMHS hospital, many other teenagers preferred to get treated at Sub-District Hospital of Bandipora in order to avoid police profiling.

 ??  ?? Sushma Swaraj
Sushma Swaraj

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