New Delhi:Slain photojournalist Danish Siddiqui, who was killed in Afghanistan, was on Sunday laid to rest at the Jamia Millia Islamia graveyard where a sea of mourners gathered to pay their last respects.
His body arrived at the Delhi airport in the evening and was later brought to his residence in Jamia Nagar where a huge crowd, including his family and friends, had gathered. Police was deployed in the area and its personnel kept urging the gathering to follow Covid-appropriate behaviour. Siddiqui's body was taken to the graveyard where it was buried around 10.15 pm. There was a sea of mourners at the burial site to pay their respects.
His friends recalled their last conversations with him and his promise of meeting them once he returned from his assignment. Some people remembered him as their childhood friend, some as their mentor but what was common in their memories of him was that he was a simple person who was passionate about photography.
Bilal Zaidi (37), a friend of Siddiqui, said, "I met him before Covid as he was always on field and then met him last month when he was here. We exchanged a hellos." "He was a very reserved and shy person and that's why when he started his career as a TV journalist, we felt there was a mismatch. He was somebody who always carried a camera with him whenever he was on field. He enjoyed taking photos and had a passion for still photography. He won Pulitzer for this," Zaidi said.
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Shahdab Alam (37), his childhood friend, said Siddiqui's death was not only a loss for his family but for the entire nation. "He was passionate about photography and loved playing cricket. I met him last month for a couple of minutes and had a word with him when he was leaving for the assignment," he recalled.