Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Five years later, Mayapuri is still as unsafe as ever

- Anonna Dutt ■ anonna.dutt@hindustant­imes.com

The last big radiation scare in Delhi was reported five years ago when one person was killed and eight others were hospitalis­ed after exposure to radioactiv­e substances at the Mayapuri scrap yard in west Delhi.

The radioactiv­e substance leaked from Delhi University equipment auctioned to scrap dealers in Mayapuri.

“Radiation detectors were installed in the area after the incident but they were removed around one- and- a- half years back,” said Anand Bansal, a scrap dealer and a friend of Deepak Jain, the victim.

Little else has changed since then. Himanshu Jain, who was only 19 years old when the incident took place, was back to dealing in scrap in his father’s shop after spending two weeks in hospital.

His mother, who suffered from paralysis, died of shock when told the radiation exposure could kill her son.

“Except for the fact that the road here has been cemented for VIP visits, our lives are still the same. Apart from that, we still do what we used to,” said Himanshu’s father Jai Kishen Jain.

Ajay Jain, whose right leg was severely affected because he kept a piece of Cobalt-60 in his right hip-pocket, had to undergo 11 surgeries, which cost the family ` 17-18 lakh.

“How can I accept ` 2 lakh as compensati­on? They should at least pay for my treatment,” he said adding that he was given an interim compensati­on of ` 4 lakh when he had filed a court case. The case is still being heard.

Ram Niwas, another scrap dealer who owns a shop in the same lane, said: “When something like this happens, important people come here and get their photograph­s clicked with a few dealers. Otherwise, no one cares.”

When the Cobalt-60 was traced to an equipment from DU, the victims were offered a compensati­on package of ` 2 lakh. Most of them refused it.

“They priced our lives and health at ` 2 lakh. What about all that we have lost?” said Himanshu Jain.

“In 2010, the government reacted to the radiation leak only because the Commonweal­th Games were taking place later that year and they needed to contain the situation. Otherwise, nobody thinks about us,” Jai Kishen Jain.

 ??  ?? People continue to work at the Mayapuri scrap market with hardly any safety mechanism in place on Friday. SANJEEV VERMA/ HT PHOTO
People continue to work at the Mayapuri scrap market with hardly any safety mechanism in place on Friday. SANJEEV VERMA/ HT PHOTO

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