Hindustan Times (Delhi)

When celebratio­ns turned to horror

POWERLIFTE­RS KILLED Yogesh and Tikamchand were brothersin­law. The former was set to be married in a month, the latter left behind his pregnant wife

- Shubhomoy Sikdar shubhomoy.sikdar@htlive.com

NEWDELHI: Up until Saturday, the only thing on the minds of the families and friends of Tikamchand and Yogesh were celebratio­ns.

Tikamchand, who turned 27 on Saturday, and his ninemonth-pregnant wife Taruna were awaiting the birth of their firstborn in a matter of days.

Taruna’s brother Yogesh was scheduled to get married next month. However, in the early hours of Sunday their families were left grappling with the twin tragedies of the deaths of childhood friends and brothers-in-law Tikamchand and Yogesh.

The two had left home on Saturday night to celebrate Tikamchand’s birthday when they had the fatal accident near Singhu border claiming the lives of the duo, along with three friends.

“He (Tikamchand) had married Taruna nearly two years ago. They were expecting their first child. In fact, she was past her due date in first week of January... She is now barely in a condition to talk and appears to be in a state of shock... We are now very concerned about her well-being,” said Poonam Khan, Tikamchand’s elder sister.

Poonam added that her mother had appeared concerned about Taruna’s advanced pregnancy on Saturday when she asked Tikamchand, the only male and earning member of their family, to stay back when he was leaving home in the evening. “He was quite excited about his birthday, but our mother kept asking him to host his friends at home. My brother, however, insisted that he go out with his friends and had left home by around 7pm on Saturday,” said Poonam.

Yogesh and Tikamchand, though brothers-in-law, had been friends for a long time due to their shared passion for powerlifti­ng. They had become friends much before Tikamchand was married to Yogesh’s sister Taruna.

Along with their powerlifti­ng, both of them were involved in part-time jobs — Tikamchand worked as a bouncer while 24-year-old Yogesh was occasional­ly a videograph­er.

The loss was particular­ly difficult for Yogesh’s father Pramod, an automobile mechanic. He lost both his son and son-in-law in a single stroke of bad luck.

Pramod said despite the rush in his videograph­y business, Yogesh had been putting aside assignment­s because he was about to get married in a month’s time. “For someone who used to attend dozens of weddings as the videograph­er, we were excited that Yogesh would finally be at a wedding where he would be the star — the groom... His marriage had been arranged with a girl in Bulandshah­r and was scheduled on February 12 with his engagement a week prior to that,” said Pramod.

For someone who attended dozens of weddings as the videograph­er, we were excited that he would finally be at a wedding where he would be the groom.

 ?? ARVIND YADAV/HT PHOTOS ?? (Left) The wreckage of the car seen after the accident near Singhu border early on Sunday morning.
(Above) Poonam Khan, the sister of 27yearold Tikamchand, breaks down. The accident took place on Tikamchand’s birthday.
ARVIND YADAV/HT PHOTOS (Left) The wreckage of the car seen after the accident near Singhu border early on Sunday morning. (Above) Poonam Khan, the sister of 27yearold Tikamchand, breaks down. The accident took place on Tikamchand’s birthday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India