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Lawrence Bishnoi gang member arrested in Udaipur: Gujarat Police
Lawrence Bishnoi gang member arrested in Udaipur: Gujarat Police

Indian Express

time3 days ago

  • Indian Express

Lawrence Bishnoi gang member arrested in Udaipur: Gujarat Police

The arrest of a man for illegal possession of a country made pistol led the Gujarat Police to an alleged member of the Lawrence Bishnoi gang, who was apprehended from Udaipur in Rajasthan on Wednesday, the Detection of Crime Branch (DCB) said. The accused has been identified as Manoj alias Chakki Shankarlal Salvi (21). According to the Crime Branch, on June 14, the Gujarat Anti-Terrorist Squad (ATS) had arrested Rupalal Bhanwarlaal Salvi from the road outside Shivalik Complex in Panchvati area of Ahmedabad. He was found in possession of an illegal country made pistol and a cartridge, police said. An FIR under the Arms Act was filed against him at Ellisbridge police station. During interrogation, Rupalal allegedly told the police that the weapon had been given to him by Manoj, leading to a manhunt and subsequent arrest from the neighbouring state. He was handed over to Ellisbridge police for further action. Police said that in the past, 11 cases were lodged against Manoj – nine in Rajasthan and two in Delhi. Previously, he was also arrested in the conspiracy and murder of Sukhdev Gogamedi, the then head of the Karni Rajput Sena, said a senior police officer. Notably, Bishnoi is currently in judicial custody at Sabarmati Central Prison in Ahmedabad.

India's efforts to rescue bonded labourers undone by delayed rehabilitation
India's efforts to rescue bonded labourers undone by delayed rehabilitation

Scroll.in

time5 days ago

  • Scroll.in

India's efforts to rescue bonded labourers undone by delayed rehabilitation

Manoj Kumar Anant and his wife Shakuntala Bai were rescued from bonded labour at a brick kiln in Uttar Pradesh's Kushinagar in 2022. He had told IndiaSpend in September 2023 that he was waiting for rehabilitation assistance under the Central Sector Scheme for Rehabilitation of Bonded Labour, 2021. Two years later Manoj is still waiting for the full rehabilitation assistance, he said, while bedridden in a hospital bed, his left arm paralysed after an accident in March this year. 'The first few weeks after a rescue are critical for released bonded labourers so that they do not slip into rebondage,' said Tina Kuriakose Jacob, senior research fellow, International Institute of Migration and Development. 'The Ministry of Labour's 2016 Rehabilitation Scheme for Bonded Labourers explicitly mentioned financial and non-financial support, so that they do not fall in bondage again.' Manoj's case is not unique. IndiaSpend travelled to Bilaspur in Chhattisgarh and found that 10 others – all from the Scheduled Caste Satnami community in the state – who were rescued with Manoj and his wife from the same brick kiln in 2022 were waiting for assistance. They each received Rs 30,000, which is supposed to be an immediate cash assistance, only after two years, and none of them have been rehabilitated as per the central sector scheme, under which cash allocations were revised in 2021. In addition to the immediate cash assistance, the scheme says they should receive a bonded labour release certificate, and between Rs 1 lakh and Rs 3 lakh based on the level of exploitation, age and gender for their rehabilitation. The scheme also entitles labourers to non-financial rehabilitation, including allotment of a house-site, low cost dwelling units, wage employment, animal husbandry etc. While the certificates, which are issued by the District Magistrate or Sub-Divisional Magistrate, were given to the 11 survivors in March 2022, Rs 30,000 as immediate assistance was transferred only around July 2024. 'I am more than Rs 1 lakh in debt due to the treatment and related requirements,' said Manoj. He has spent Rs 25,000 in a week since his hospital admission in Bilaspur, although some of the treatment is covered under the Ayushman Bharat health insurance scheme. 'I do not have a ration card and no money has come through since we received Rs 30,000.' Officials in the Bilaspur labour department told IndiaSpend that the remaining amount can be provided only after conviction of the accused because the full rehabilitation amount is linked to conviction according to the rehabilitation scheme. This, experts say, is one of the reasons why the rehabilitation of bonded labourers is held up. India is reported to have at least 11 million people in modern slavery, highest in the world, according to Walk Free's Global Slavery Index 2023. Bonded labour, a form of modern slavery, has been illegal for nearly five decades in India, since the enactment of the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1976. IndiaSpend had reported that the Union government would, at the current rate, miss its objective of rescuing and rehabilitating 18.4 million bonded labourers by 2030, by 98%. According to February 2025 data from the government, 297,038 bonded labourers have been rescued since 1978, with an expenditure of Rs 106.3 crore. 'Caught and locked up' In the morning heat, as road dust and noise from the traffic swirled around, the men and women who were rescued with Manoj congregated in the yard of one of the worker's homes, in the Satnami colony in Silpahari, 10 km from Bilaspur's collectorate. Jyothi Manhar, 28, was concerned about the rehabilitation amount. Jyothi, who has studied till class 9, was one of eight relatives rescued and provided release certificates with Manoj. She, like several others, has built a small home with loans, on land that her family does not own. Many of the workers' houses are unplastered, without basic facilities such as running water. Before the incident in Kushinagar, the survivors and their families had worked in different parts of Uttar Pradesh and Chhattisgarh. They would get about Rs 600-Rs 700 for every 1,000 bricks made, which would be paid at the end of six months of work. On a weekly basis a family – that is a husband and wife – would be given around Rs 1,500 for their daily needs. This amount would be adjusted against the six-month pay at the end of their stint. In the Kushinagar brick kiln, there were around 20 people, who had migrated with young children. Despite the government promising ration card portability which would help interstate and intrastate migrant workers access food, many are unable to use their cards at their work destinations. According to a December 2024 report by the Centre for Labour Research and Action on 1,012 seasonal migrant brick worker households in Rajasthan and Gujarat, 71% of respondents were aware of the scheme, but only 50% attempted to use it, and among them, just 59% successfully accessed rations. Often the children of seasonal migrant brick kiln workers do not attend school. While unpaid wages have always been a concern at kilns, the experience in Kushinagar had terrified the workers. Their ordeal began when the woman contractor – a relative of the labourers – fled with around Rs 5 lakh given by the brick kiln owner for labour payments in late 2021. The 11 of them had started work after Diwali, which is usually the practice, and worked for nearly two months into the winter, when the incident happened, the workers said. The owner was unconcerned that the contractor had cheated them of their wages, and said that the workers would now continue at the rate of about Rs 300 for 1,000 bricks, which was less than half the agreed wage. 'We tried to run away, but we were caught and locked up,' said Jyothi, who occasionally broke into Chhattisgarhi as she recalled their days in captivity. She had started working in brick kilns after her marriage to Binod Kumar, who was part of the group. The survivors said that nearly 20 of them, along with their children, were locked up in a room for about two weeks and allowed out in the morning to work or to go to the field to defecate. The women workers said that the watchmen would follow the women when they went to the field to defecate to ensure that they would not run away. It was humiliating, they said. 'We are scared to go outside the state and work in brick kilns again,' said Jyothi. 'They wanted to make sure that we did not run away and took our phones. We ate and had to urinate in the same locked room,' said Jyothi. Her sister-in-law, Ishwari Bai, was pregnant and had delivered her daughter in Kushinagar only a few weeks before the ordeal began. Ishwari, who has never attended school and had traveled with her parents to brick kilns since she was a child, said that the owner and his nephew were verbally abusive and even threatened to hit the women. 'I delivered in December and was given Rs 4,000 for medicine. It was a terrible experience,' said Ishwari Bai, whose daughter still does not have a birth certificate. 'In Chhattisgarh at least we know people. The entire system is theirs [employers'] in UP,' said Amrit Bai, Ishwari's mother-in-law, one of the others rescued. After two weeks, they were allowed to go back to their own rooms, but were kept under close supervision and paid reduced wages. Manoj, whose finger was broken during the violence by the owner, managed to hide a small mobile phone which he used to contact nonprofits and officials, following which they were rescued nearly a month into their captivity. They did not receive any wages for the work at the brick kiln. In all, 'we were given Rs 25,000 [by the DM/district officials] to get train tickets, food etc, and return to Bilaspur,' said Manoj. This amount was money that was taken from the brick kiln owner, Anil Singh, and not the 'immediate relief' which, as we said, was credited more than two years later. IndiaSpend had reported that the survivors, since their return, had made multiple visits to district officials to obtain their rehabilitation entitlements According to the Bilaspur labour department, release certificates of 11 workers – seven women and four men – have been filed. The rest of the money will be transferred only after the case ends with a conviction. Manoj claimed that he was informed by a social activist over a year ago that the abuser had been convicted. IndiaSpend has not been able to confirm this independently and the Bilaspur labour department says they do not have information about it. IndiaSpend has written and followed up with Kushinagar district collector's office on the status of the case and related information, including immediate cash assistance delays, and have copied the Uttar Pradesh labour department and chief secretary in the email. We will update the story when we receive a response. 'Delays happen because there is no conviction for a case,' said Jyothi Sharma, assistant labour commissioner in Bilaspur. 'We do reach out about cases with the concerned district for updates. We have sent four or five reminders to Kushinagar since 2022,' she claimed. Between 2000 and 2023, there have been more than 2,200 bonded labourers reported in Bilaspur district, according to information shared by the labour department. In seven years to 2023, 27 cases including 402 workers in bondage were reported in which there have been only two convictions. The central sector scheme provides Rs 4.5 lakh for a survey to identify bonded labourers in sensitive districts every three years and up to five evaluatory studies a year for the eradication of bonded labour. While a study was conducted three years ago, no bonded labourers were identified in Bilaspur, said the labour department. Nikhil and Nihal Dheeraj, minors at that time, were part of the group that had gone to the Kushinagar brick kiln, with an older brother and mother, Mamta. While their eldest brother Kunal was issued a release certificate, Nikhil and Nihal were not. 'I was also working with adults making around 400 bricks a day,' said 17-year-old Nikhil who has not completed class 10. While other friends are studying, he works. He plans to start working in nearby coal plants and factories on a daily wage of around Rs 300-350 like the others in the group. 'Studying is an additional expense. I can contribute to the family if I work.' He said that no one from the administration spoke to him when they were rescued. 'There is no mention of age in the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, 1976. They [officials] confuse them with child labour when they are bonded,' said Nirmal Gorana, the convener of the National Campaign Committee for Eradication of Bonded Labour, a national-level network for identification, rescue and rehabilitation of trafficked bonded labourers. 'If children are involved various provisions get invoked which means more work for the labour department.' More than four decades earlier, in 1982, the labour ministry had issued a blueprint with 15 components for the rehabilitation of bonded labourers, which included enforcement of minimum wages, dwelling units, psychological rehabilitation, skill training, allotment of housing sites and agricultural land, health, medical care and sanitation, education of children etc. The total subsidy per released bonded labourer at the time was Rs 4,000 and Rs 25 lakh was the outlay by the Planning Commission for 1980-'85 period. Rehabilitation process The Standard Operating Procedure for Identification and Rescue of Bonded Labourer and Prosecution states that the summary trial in bonded labour cases should commence within 24 hours of the rescue or identification, even if an FIR is not filed. The case should be completed within three months. While the initial bonded labour enquiry by the district authorities is an assessment to know if there is bondage, the summary trial finds evidence to convict the accused employer. Once the release certificates are issued by the district or sub-divisional magistrate, it is assumed that there is an offense of bondage and the burden of proof to prove otherwise falls on the accused employer. The eradication of bonded labour has three aspects – rescue, prosecution and rehabilitation, said David Sundar Singh, panel advocate at the Madras High Court Legal Services Committee, who has worked on multiple bonded labour cases in Tamil Nadu. 'The rehabilitation rests with the central sector scheme, although labour issues like bondage crimes are under the state's purview. The scheme is only a guiding document,' he said. But the implementation of summary trials varies by state. According to Section 21 of the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act, states may confer, on an executive magistrate, the powers of a judicial magistrate of the first class or of the second class for the trial of offences. This means that district executive heads may be allowed to deal with a judicial function that they may not be trained to perform. It also contravenes Article 50 of the Constitution that ensures the separation of judiciary from the executive functions. Jacob of the International Institute of Migration and Development said that although the labour ministry's scheme and the SOP mention that the district magistrate can conduct summary trials, there is a need to know the conclusion of such trials, and if district magistrates are trained to conduct it. The process of summary trial is not without concerns, highlighted by D Murugesan, former Chief Justice of Delhi High Court, in a 2018 National Human Rights Commission handbook on bonded labour. 'It is the only Legislation where an Executive Magistrate has been empowered with the powers of a Judicial Magistrate First Class to hold the Summary Trial but the country has seen very few Summary Trials conducted by the District Magistrates or their subordinate officers since they are not aware of the procedure to conduct the Summary Trial,' wrote Murugesan. The Madras High Court had struck down the clause saying that revenue divisional officers in the state will not have the powers of a judicial magistrate to conduct trial under the Act. Presently, the Union government-supported rehabilitation scheme says that in cases where the summary trial has not been concluded, but the district magistrate or sub-divisional magistrate has arrived at a prima facie finding and proof of bondage, the proposal for cash assistance shall not be stopped for want of details of conviction. But, final disbursement of cash assistance is to be made after proof of bondage and other legal consequences as per the judicial process. 'Rescued bonded labourers, particularly inter-state workers, usually do not know if they have won the case…The full compensation is given only after conviction. Rehabilitation has been linked to it, which is a problem,' said Gorana. 'But the DM has discretion when it comes to compensation,' and can approve an amount higher than the immediate cash assistance of Rs 30,000. Linking rehabilitation to conviction, said Singh of the Madras High Court Legal Services Committee, 'is a violation because if there is an acquittal, the prosecution has failed. The victims cannot be punished for it.' The problem of linking of conviction creating rehabilitation delays has been highlighted by the National Human Rights Commission too. A 2021 advisory said that efforts should be made to 'delink dependency' of rehabilitation on conviction in criminal cases. 'Once bonded labour is freed, he should be compensated and rehabilitated,' said the advisory. There has to be an emphasis on training and sensitising district administration, said Jacob, and there should be improvements in reporting, fund utilisation and transparency. 'The states are required to send the release certificates to the Union government to receive reimbursement of funds used for rehabilitation of bonded labourers, but we do not know how many are able to do that manually when there are no digital platforms,' she added. According to the March 2025 Lok Sabha Standing Committee On Labour, Textiles And Skill Development report, the labour ministry said that the status of the summary trial or conviction is available with them from states 'only at the time of the submissions of their proposal for availing final rehabilitation assistance.' If there are only a few convictions, which are required for final proposals to be sent to the Union governments, it is unlikely that there is collated information or data on conclusion of summary trials. In the case of Manoj and others, there has been no information on the conviction, said assistant labour commissioner, Sharma. 'When the employer or in this case the brick kiln owner is convicted by the court and we receive formal intimation, then we [will] send a proposal to the Union government [under the scheme], and the appropriate amount is transferred.' IndiaSpend spoke to Alankrita Upadhyay, the labour commissioner in Kushinagar. She said that she would check the status of the case. We will update the story when we receive more information. Not enough data When IndiaSpend reported on the rate of rescue and rehabilitation of bonded laborers in October 2023, the government had said that it had released 315,302 people since 1978 and 94% (296,305) of them were rehabilitated. According to the March 2025 Standing Committee report, since 1978, 297,038 bonded labourers have been rescued. The difference in the numbers (18,264) could be because of the difference in the use of 'rescued' and 'rehabilitated', an official from the labour ministry who did not want to be identified said, without giving more details. One of the reasons for rescuing bonded labourers at a rate slower than what is needed to rescue 18.4 million bonded labourers by 2030, was that the Union government said that scheme was demand-driven and that the target cannot be fixed. As in previous years, the ministry reiterated in the 2025 report that the scheme is 'demand driven in nature where funds are provided to the States/UTs on receipt of financial demand from them'. As on January 31, 2025, only 6% of the budgeted Rs 6 crore for the rehabilitation scheme has been used and 246 labourers had been rehabilitated in 2024-'25. They were all reported from Rajasthan and Tamil Nadu, with the latter reporting 196 rehabilitated bonded labourers. But based on the labour and employment ministry's 2024-'25 annual report, between April and December 2024, the scheme had only three beneficiaries who were given Rs 60,000 in all. Similarly the 2022-'23 annual report showed that between April and November 2022, there were no beneficiaries, which contradicted the Lok Sabha Standing Committee report which shows that 673 bonded laborers were rehabilitated during that financial year. According to the 2025 standing committee report, the proposals from the states/UTs for the 246 bonded labourers for the financial year of 2024-'25 were related to the payment of immediate cash assistance only. It also said that conviction and summary trial information had not been provided by Tamil Nadu and Rajasthan. For immediate cash assistance of Rs 30,000 released for 246 labourers, the total should be Rs 73.8 lakh versus the Rs 35 lakh that the report mentions. An official in the labour ministry, who did not want to be identified, clarified that the states send proposals from different years together including those before 2021 scheme revisions, which means that the immediate cash assistance would be Rs 20,000 instead of Rs 30,000. The data are recorded for the year of fund disbursement. It was for the same reason that the data in the annual report differs and that rehabilitation and rescue as a nomenclature were being used interchangeably. As per ministry's data on June 2, they had expended Rs 67.4 lakh in 2024-'25. While the standing committee found the ' persistent decrease ' in bonded labour in the three years to 2024-'25 'encouraging', it was concerned about the existence of the problem despite its abolition. It urged states to tackle bonded labour through stricter penalties and punishment, fast-tack courts, and improved awareness among workers. It also underscored the need to provide better rehabilitation through secure rehabilitation homes/centres, counseling and emotional support, immediate medical assistance, free legal aid, and provide rescued children access to formal education and financial support. In 2020, 2,837 victims were reported under the Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act in the National Crime Record Bureau data. Of these, 43% were members of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. While in the next year the number of victims fell to 667, by 2022, it had increased 140% to 1,600 victims where 86% were SC/ST. More than three in four of all victims were reported in Uttar Pradesh. The Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act data in the National Crime Records Bureau NCRB are much higher than reported by the Parliament committee with respect to rehabilitation. Bonded labour is reported by both the labour and home ministries depending on the case and basis of reporting, said Jacob. 'The DM can do a summary trial if it is a BLSA complaint, without an FIR. If an FIR is filed by the police, it is reported by NCRB. There is no clarity or reporting on summary trials in BLSA,' she said. There was initially a labour ministry proposal to create a National Portal on Bonded Labour. But, according to the December 2024 Parliament standing committee report, the ministry subsequently said the portal will be a comprehensive, unified portal for Child Labour, Bonded Labour and Women Labour, and that it should be functional in a year. The same report also noted the high unspent balance in the rehabilitation scheme due to 'non-receipt of documents and utilisation certificates.' The Committee asked the ministry to 'strengthen their monitoring and coordination mechanism for optimal utilisation of funds and reduce surrender of allocated funds to the minimum extent possible.' IndiaSpend has written to the labour ministry for comments on delays in rehabilitation, unspent funds, data gaps and monitoring of the scheme. We will update the story when we receive a response. Meanwhile, Manoj, who is worried about the rising hospitalisation cost, demands he be given the full rehabilitation amount, land, a Below Poverty Line ration card.

After Air India plane crash, flyers struggle with anxiety and doubts over safety
After Air India plane crash, flyers struggle with anxiety and doubts over safety

India Today

time14-06-2025

  • India Today

After Air India plane crash, flyers struggle with anxiety and doubts over safety

The devastating crash of Air India flight AI171 in Ahmedabad has not only claimed hundreds of precious lives but has also shaken people across India and around the world. Since the Boeing 787 Dreamliner began operating in India, this tragic incident marks the first catastrophic crash involving the aircraft, raising many unanswered investigation is underway to determine whether the cause was a technical failure or human error, but the horrific videos of the crash have left many sleepless and restless. Beyond the heartbreak of losing hundreds of lives and the personal stories of the victims, there is now a growing sense of fear and panic, especially among frequent flyers. While passengers have long accepted a certain fear of flying, trust in trained pilots, advanced aircraft, and rigorous safety checks usually offered reassurance, until spoke with several frequent flyers still grappling with shock and anxiety following the Ahmedabad crash. From business travelers juggling multiple cities every week to NRIs flying frequently to visit family, many are now questioning the safety of air travel. 'I kept thinking, that could've been me,' says Manoj Sharma, a Bengaluru-based IT consultant who flies domestically at least ten times a month. 'I've taken that exact aircraft model on that route. You always think flying is safer than driving, but when something like this happens, your brain doesn't process logic, it processes fear.' Manoj, who has a meeting in Delhi next week, admits he is now apprehensive about Gurgaon-based marketing executive Himanshu Gautam, who flies twice monthly across metros, the crash has 'broken the illusion of routine.' He shares, 'I get numb to the idea of risk until it hits so close to home. Next time I fly, I'll be thinking about those passengers and what their last moments might have been like. It's stomach-churning.'advertisementA Canada-based entrepreneur who travels frequently between the UK, Canada, and India also reveals he is experiencing 'a psychological block' about flying Air India again. 'I have always supported Air India despite delays and service issues, but now I feel betrayed. If this is a systemic problem, how can I feel safe on the next flight?'While data confirms that air travel remains one of the safest modes of transport, the AI171 crash has left passengers feeling that safety is no longer guaranteed. Since the tragedy, aviation-related anxiety has surged, with conversations about air travel safety spreading from morning walks to aviation insiders acknowledge that the crash has dented public confidence in the industry. There have been recent incidents involving cabin depressurisation, emergency landings, unusual turbulence, and mid-air disturbances.'People are now paying attention to aircraft safety, maintenance records, pilot fatigue, issues they never considered before,' says a senior airline official who requested Reel IN THIS STORY#Air India

Faridabad suicide case: Family of 6 cut down to 1 after father jumps before train with 4 kids — what we know so far
Faridabad suicide case: Family of 6 cut down to 1 after father jumps before train with 4 kids — what we know so far

Mint

time12-06-2025

  • Mint

Faridabad suicide case: Family of 6 cut down to 1 after father jumps before train with 4 kids — what we know so far

Faridabad Suicide Case: A 45-year-old man from Bihar who lived with his family in Faridabad allegedly committed suicide by jumping before moving train with his four children in Ballabhgarh on Tuesday. All the five family members died on the spot after Golden Temple Express crushed them. According to eyewitnesses, Manoj Mehto clutched onto the children and refused to let them go even as they pleaded with him to be released. Moments later, the train ran over them, dismembering their body. The deceased identified as Manoj Mehto was a daily wage worker from Bihar's Sitamarhi resided in Subhash Colony with his family. Manoj Mehto is survived by his 36-year-old wife. It is alleged that her husband took the extreme step over suspected infidelity. The railway tracks where the tragic incident took place was located around 300 metres from their residence. According to railway police, his three sons were aged five, nine, and ten years while the youngest was 3 years old, PTI reported. Following an altercation with his wife, the man left the house with his children at around 12:15pm and informed his wife that he was taking them to a nearby park. As per TOI report, the mother had prepared parathas for breakfast that day. "The train, which was coming from Mumbai, crushed them under its wheels around 1.10pm," The Times of India quoted Govt Railway Police unit SHO Rajpal as saying. Manoj bought chips and cola for his children and made them sit under Elson Chowk flyover for about an hour near railway tracks. The loco pilot alerted authorities at Ballabhgarh station after which the police identified Manoj through his Aadhaar card found at the site. Besides this, a note with wife's phone number was also found, indicating premeditated actions. The remains were taken to Badshah Khan Civil Hospital mortuary for medical examination. Narrating the happenings of that morning Manoj's wife Preeti said, 'It was a normal Tuesday morning' and added, 'But I wasn't feeling well and had a lot of work to do at home, so I refused (to go). I told him to take the children out. They all left and never returned….'

Chips and cola in hand, man waits with 4 sons on railway tracks till train crushes them in Faridabad
Chips and cola in hand, man waits with 4 sons on railway tracks till train crushes them in Faridabad

Time of India

time10-06-2025

  • Time of India

Chips and cola in hand, man waits with 4 sons on railway tracks till train crushes them in Faridabad

Gurgaon: A 36-year-old man led his four sons — the youngest aged three and the oldest nine — to the railway tracks and held them tightly by the arms till an express train ran all five of them over on Tuesday afternoon at Ballabhgarh in Faridabad. Witnesses said Manoj Mehto refused to let the children go even as they pleaded with him to be released as they watched a train – Golden Temple Express – hurtle down the tracks towards them. "The train that was coming from Mumbai crushed them under its wheels around 1.10pm," said Rajpal, the SHO of the Govt Railway Police unit. While leaving home near Subhash Colony around 12.15pm, Manoj — originally from Bihar — told his wife Priya that he was taking the kids to a nearby park to play. Instead, he took them to the tracks and sat under Elson Chowk flyover for about an hour, waiting for the train to arrive. He bought chips and soft drinks for the kids. After the incident, the loco pilot alerted authorities at Ballabhgarh railway station. Police identified Manoj through his Aadhaar card and found his wife's phone number scribbled on a chit in his pocket, indicating Manoj's actions were premeditated, not something that happened on the spur of the moment. "We initially received information that a woman and her children had jumped before the train. But when we reached the spot, we learnt that a father and his sons were run over on the tracks," a GRP official said. When Priya was called, she told GRP personnel her husband had taken the kids out to the park and would return home soon. Called to the spot, she fainted on seeing their bodies. The remains were taken to the mortuary of Badshah Khan Civil Hospital for autopsy. Police said they were investigating why Manoj, a daily wager, took the drastic step. Police sources said Manoj had a troubled marriage but it wasn't clear if that had anything to do with his act of ending his own and the children's lives. "The priority now is to establish Manoj's state of mind and circumstances that led him to take such a step. It is also important to support the bereaved family," a police officer said.

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