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Sunday, September 01, 2013

A Tragic End of Ambition



A Tragic End of Ambition

Ashim Kumar Paul


This year the ending days of Shrabon in Bangla calendar were somehow different from its earlier days. The incessant falling of rain reminds us that it does not lose its supremacy albeit at the first phase of the month, the sight of rain was as almost invisible as fig flowers. The drops of rain were drenching the earth with its might. The symphony of raining has its own nature and appeal. Very few people can be found who don't like to associate themselves with the rhythm produced by the incessant fall of rain. But who knew that symphony of rain would be mingled with the ever flowing tears of the parents of Preeti Das? Even did Preeti herself know what was waiting for her? Had her husband accompanying her been aware of the fact that the night would bring a grief that he would have to bear throughout his life-time? In fact, no one can discern that he or she might go through fatality. Truly, death is an inevitable experience in human life. But despite the fact, it is also true that some deaths cannot be accepted.

The reports published in the dailies tell that Preeti Das, a young female engineer, was married about seventeen months ago. She was the only daughter of her parents. Given train journey a safer mode of transportation, Preeti and her husband Mintu opted for a train journey to set out from Chittagong for a four-day trip to Dhaka on this Eid vacation and thus boarded Turna Nishitha train with a view to spending the vacation with some members of their relatives. As the train reached Bhanga Bridge area of Bhatiari under Sitakunda upazila, the miscreants pelted stones that rocketed through the window next to Priti and hit her head while she was asleep. She screamed aloud and became unconscious. She was rushed to Sitakunda Health Complex and later shifted to Chittagong Medical College Hospital where attending doctors declared her dead.

After obtaining degree in Architectural Interior, Preeti was studying Civil Engineering in a private university. It is really a tough job for a married woman to continue studies and maintain family simultaneously. But it was her indomitable endeavour to meet her dream that prompted her to undertake her aspiration. She might have the dream to serve the country with her talent. Her parents could be proud of their daughter’s success and endeavour. She might appear as an ideal to be followed by many women who find a bar to pursue higher studies. But it was the hurled stone that hit Preeti ended the prospect of a luminous star.

The death of Preeti Das makes us ponder over some crucial matters which really need to be addressed well. It reminds us of callousness and corrupt mindset that are evident in the crimes done toward the victims. Though there are laws enough to punish the perpetrators, it is the absence of the implementation of law that often prompts such kinds of heinous crimes. Since no significant action is yet to be taken against those involved in hurling stones at the moving trains and no one is yet to be tried, no sense of apprehension and penitence have not been aroused in those perpetrators. “There is a tendency of some rowdy people who get morbid pleasure by breaking laws and violating human rights. In a word, Preeti is simply a victim of that tendency by some rowdy people who do not hesitate to break laws, no matter, how it really costs,” added Fahmida Ahmed, working in a daily newspaper.

When I read the news at the newspaper, what flashed up into my mind first was the fable of Aesop that tells some boys were playing one day at the edge of a pond in which lived a family of frogs. The boys used to amuse themselves by throwing stones into the pond so as to make them skip on top of the water. The stones were flying thick and fast and the boys were enjoying themselves very much; but the poor frogs in the pond were trembling with fear. At last one of the frogs, the oldest and bravest, put his head out of the water, and said, “Oh, please, dear children, stop your cruel play! Though it may be fun for you, it means death to us!” The similar things happen to some of mischief makers who get amusement by hurling stones at the moving train, especially some youngsters are found to engage themselves in this game. “In our boyhood, we also took part in this type of play. Sometimes, we bet for it! But now I know this is not a game; it acts as a weapon that can snatch away some valuable lives. Thus, we should motivate the boys especially who are five to fifteen years old and live in the shanties near to railway line. The boys do not even know about the ultimate result of this play, but the elders should motivate them not to do it and they should explain the dreadful consequence of it”, told Shamsul Alam, a senior official of a private bank.

Hurling stones at the running trains is neither a rare phenomenon nor does stick to happen in a particular place. It goes off at almost every corner across the country. Of such many incidents, very few come out in media reports. Jahid Hossain, a fourth year student of Dhaka University, shared one of his untoward experiences regarding the pelting stones at the trains. “The day before yesterday, I was travelling from Dewanjong to Jamalpur by train. While the train was passing by Malandaho Station, some children began to chuck big pieces of bricks at the train and one of those bricks hit my neck. I was seriously injured. If the piece of brick hit my head, I might face the fatality.”

Amjad Ali who works for an advertisement agency mentioned another terrible experience while he was boarding the train. He said, “The train had just crossed Comilla. It was near Cosba. I and one of my friends were seated on seat numbers13 and 14. Out of the blue, a stone was thrown towards window adjacent to seat number 6 which resulted in the huge glass completely broken. The stone just missed the lady who was sitting beside the window due to protected glass. This would have given rise to another disaster what has already been done like Turna. She was fortunate as she was travelling in Snigda A/C with the protected glass. Can you imagine the situation if the window was open like in Non A/C? Surely it would hit her head directly. Where do we live in? Why are we so uncivilised?”

The commuters travelling by train grumble that many passengers get wounded by stones hurled by passers-by at the moving trains, but very few of such incidents are reported to the railway authorities. However, no remarkable action has been taken against those responsible for such deeds. “Railway department has its own law enforcing personnel. But how much are they committed to their profession? The railway department has its own responsibility to make the people aware who are living in the shanties beside the railway tracks about not to make injury to passengers. But it is really a matter of disappointment that they do not perform their responsibility by the book. They are found on the go when an accident takes place. Government should take necessary steps against those officials who are not doing their job properly.” Tarun Tapan Chakravorty, a senior journalist, expressed his opinion in this regard.

Although Bangladesh Railway (East Zone), following the tragic death of Preeti das, has already launched a campaign from Pahartali in Chittagong to Feni to build awareness among people living beside railway tracks to stop throwing stones at trains, the news cannot, however, comfort us that such gruesome acts will not occur again. Can the death of Preeti stop the wanton game of pelting stones at the trains that leaves many commuters injured and often causes death who board the trains for its safe transport facilities? Who can ensure us that no more gleaming star would fall apart? As the citizens of the country, we must have the right to travel and reach our destination safe.