24 x 7 World News

Delhi: DMRC Employee Suffers Cut in Throat Due to Kite String While Driving in Shastri Park Area

0

New Delhi, March 29: A 36-year-old woman was hospitalised after her throat was slit due to a ‘maanjha’, or kite string, in northeast Delhi’s Shastri Park area, police said on Wednesday. The incident took place Tuesday when the woman, a Delhi Metro Rail Corporation employee, was returning home on her scooter, they said.

A senior police officer said that Shastri Park Police Station received information at 8.20 pm from Sant Parmanand Hospital that Vinki Bhardwaj, a resident of Vasundhara in Ghaziabad, UP, had her throat cut by a maanjha near Shastri Park flyover. She was rushed to Max Hospital, Vasundhara, where her condition was stated to be stable. Gujarat: Three Kids Among Six Killed, 176 Injured in Kite Flying Incidents During Uttarayan.

A case under sections 336 (act endangering life or personal safety of others) and 337 (causing hurt by act endangering life or personal safety of others) of the Indian Penal Code was registered on Wednesday at Shastri Park Police Station and investigation is in progress, the officer said.

On August 11 last year, a 34-year-old man died in Shastri Park area in a similar incident when he was on his way to celebrate Raksha Bandhan at his in-laws’ house in Loni.

In another incident, Vipin Kumar, a resident of Rajdhani Park in Mundka, was injured when he was on a motorcycle with his wife and daughter. On Shastri Park Flyover on the ISBT- Seelampur road, he drove into a stray ‘Chinese maanjha’ which sliced his neck.

On August 14, 26-year-old businessman Abhishek Kumar died after his throat was slit by a ‘Chinese manjha’ in Shahdara’s Mansarovar Park area. Kumar ran a tent business. He was on his way home on a scooter when a stray kite got stuck around his neck. Mumbai: Man Undergoes Plastic Surgery, Receives Stitches Due to Kite String Injuries.

Four people were killed in a similar manner last year till August 14, according to police. In 2017, the National Green Tribunal (NGT) banned Chinese maanjha in the national capital terming it dangerous for animals and human beings and also citing its being a good conductor of electricity.

(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, Today News 24 Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)

Leave a Reply