Gulf News

Body of teen swept away in floods found in Oman

Family wants to have his funeral in their hometown in Kerala

- BY AGHADDIR ALI Staff Reporter SAJILA SASEENDRAN Senior Reporter

The grieving father of an Indian teenager swept away in flash floods in Khor Fakkan last Thursday finally saw the body of his son yesterday after it was recovered from a dam in Oman following a massive search operation.

The body of Albert Joy, 18, was retrieved from the dam in Oman’s Madha area, 20km from Wadi Shis from where he went missing, police and relatives said yesterday.

The body was found in a joint operation by the UAE Police and the Royal Oman Police.

Joy’s father went to Oman for identifica­tion.

The body was then handed over to the UAE police and later shifted to Fujairah Hospital, said a family friend.

“The family wants to have his funeral in their hometown in Kerala as his grandparen­ts live there. We are waiting for the approvals,” he told Gulf News last evening.

Joy, an engineerin­g student in Ras Al Khaimah, was among six Indian friends in his father’s car that got trapped in a flooded valley.

An Emirati man and his employees rescued five of the friends, aged between 22 and 23.

A fter a massive combing operation that lasted six days, the body of 18-year-old Indian Albert Joy, who was washed away in a flash flood in Khor Fakkan, was found in Oman yesterday.

Joy’s decomposed body was fished out from a dam in Oman’s Madha area, 20km from Wadi Shis from where he went missing on November 16, police and relatives said.

The body of the engineerin­g student in Ras Al Khaimah was retrieved in a joint operation of the UAE Police and the Royal Oman Police.

Lieutenant-Colonel Waleed Al Yamahi, director of Khor Fakkan Police, told Gulf News that the body was found near Madha dam in Oman, 20km from Wadi Shais around 11.30am.

The UAE rescue team of 75 members were able to find the missing teen in Madha Dam in Oman, in cooperatio­n with the Royal Oman Police, he said.

A relative of Joy said the boy’s father went to Oman for the identifica­tion of the body following which the Oman police handed it over to the UAE police.

A family friend, who accompanie­d the grieving father, said the body was taken to Fujairah Forensic Department for post mortem.

“The family wants to do his funeral in their hometown in Kerala as his grandparen­ts live there. We are waiting for the approvals,” he said.

As reported by Gulf News, the parents on Tuesday requested authoritie­s to extend the search for his son in Oman after a massive search by police teams of Sharjah, Dubai and Abu Dhabi — including air wing and sniffer dogs — had not been fruitful. Though the car was found, they were not been able to find the missing boy.

They had made this request to Vipul, Indian Consul-General in Dubai, when he visited them at their home in Ras Al Khaimah on Tuesday.

Yesterday, Vipul said the Indian Embassy in Oman had also sought the help of Omani authoritie­s after he took up the matter with the mission.

He said the consulate would further assist the family for repatriati­ng the body.

Colonel Mohammad Abdullah Al Obaid, director of the Eastern Region Police, praised the efforts and coordinati­on between police department­s.

Joy was among six Indian friends in a four-wheeler trapped in a flooded valley. An Emirati man, Khalifa Ali Bin Saeed Al Naqbi, and his employees rescued five of the friends, aged between 22 and 23. Al Naqbi earlier told Gulf

News that Joy refused to jump into the water surroundin­g the vehicle because “he was scared and he said he could not leave his father’s car”, which was swept away.

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