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టీచర్​పై నుంచి దూసుకెళ్లిన లారీ- ప్రమాదమా? హత్యా? - క్రిస్టే అగస్టారాణి

తమిళనాడు సేలంలో వేగంగా వచ్చిన ఓ లారీ ఢీకొనడం వల్ల క్రిస్టే అగస్టా రాణి అనే ఉపాధ్యాయురాలు అక్కడికక్కడే మరణించారు. ఈ ఘటన వెనుక హత్యకు కోణం ఉందన్న అనుమానాలు వ్యక్తమవుతున్నాయి.

టీచర్​పై నుంచి దూసుకెళ్లిన లారీ- ప్రమాదమా? హత్యా?
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Published : Jun 20, 2019, 3:11 PM IST

Updated : Jun 20, 2019, 3:29 PM IST

టీచర్​పై నుంచి దూసుకెళ్లిన లారీ- ప్రమాదమా? హత్యా?

తమిళనాడు సేలంలో టిప్పర్​ లారీ రోడ్డు పక్కన నడుచుకుంటూ వెళ్తున్న ఓ ఉపాధ్యాయురాలిపై నుంచి దూసుకెళ్లింది. ఆమె అక్కడికక్కడే మరణించారు.

సేలంలోని ఒమలూరులో జైసింగ్​, అతని భార్య క్రిస్టే అగస్టా రాణి కలిసి జీవిస్తున్నారు. క్రిస్టే ఓ పాఠశాలలో ఉపాధ్యాయినిగా పనిచేస్తున్నారు. ఇవాళ ఆమె ఓ విద్యార్థితో రోడ్డు పక్కగా నడిచివెళ్తున్నారు. ఒక్కసారిగా వెనుక నుంచి దూసుకొచ్చిన టిప్పర్ లారీ ఆమెను బలంగా ఢీకొట్టింది. క్రిస్టే బండి చక్రాల కింద నలిగిపోయి, అక్కడికక్కడే ప్రాణాలు విడిచారు.

కుట్ర జరిగిందా..?

ఈ ప్రమాదానికి డ్రైవర్ నిర్లక్ష్యమే కారణమని పోలీసులు ప్రాథమికంగా తేల్చారు. అయితే ఈ దుర్ఘటన వెనుక కుట్ర దాగి ఉందని అనుమానాలు వ్యక్తమవుతున్నాయి.
మృతదేహాన్ని పోలీసులు ఆసుపత్రికి తరలించి, ఘటనపై దర్యాప్తు చేస్తున్నారు.

ఇదీ చూడండి: వైరల్​: పూజ చేస్తుండగా చీరకు నిప్పు

టీచర్​పై నుంచి దూసుకెళ్లిన లారీ- ప్రమాదమా? హత్యా?

తమిళనాడు సేలంలో టిప్పర్​ లారీ రోడ్డు పక్కన నడుచుకుంటూ వెళ్తున్న ఓ ఉపాధ్యాయురాలిపై నుంచి దూసుకెళ్లింది. ఆమె అక్కడికక్కడే మరణించారు.

సేలంలోని ఒమలూరులో జైసింగ్​, అతని భార్య క్రిస్టే అగస్టా రాణి కలిసి జీవిస్తున్నారు. క్రిస్టే ఓ పాఠశాలలో ఉపాధ్యాయినిగా పనిచేస్తున్నారు. ఇవాళ ఆమె ఓ విద్యార్థితో రోడ్డు పక్కగా నడిచివెళ్తున్నారు. ఒక్కసారిగా వెనుక నుంచి దూసుకొచ్చిన టిప్పర్ లారీ ఆమెను బలంగా ఢీకొట్టింది. క్రిస్టే బండి చక్రాల కింద నలిగిపోయి, అక్కడికక్కడే ప్రాణాలు విడిచారు.

కుట్ర జరిగిందా..?

ఈ ప్రమాదానికి డ్రైవర్ నిర్లక్ష్యమే కారణమని పోలీసులు ప్రాథమికంగా తేల్చారు. అయితే ఈ దుర్ఘటన వెనుక కుట్ర దాగి ఉందని అనుమానాలు వ్యక్తమవుతున్నాయి.
మృతదేహాన్ని పోలీసులు ఆసుపత్రికి తరలించి, ఘటనపై దర్యాప్తు చేస్తున్నారు.

ఇదీ చూడండి: వైరల్​: పూజ చేస్తుండగా చీరకు నిప్పు

RESTRICTION SUMMARY: NO ACCESS AL JAZEERA
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - NO ACCESS AL JAZEERA
Bar Elias - 20 June 2019
1. Various of people working in a dress workshop
2. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Em Fawzi, Syrian refugee:
"When we first got here we stayed for four years without work at all. There was no food and no drink and we couldn't utilize the talent in our hands. Then Sawa brought us together and we started afresh. I felt like my work was resurrected."
3. Various of workers in workshop
ASSOCIATED PRESS - NO ACCESS AL JAZEERA
Beirut - 19 June 2019
4. Setup of Mireille Girard, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) representative in Lebanon
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Mireille Girard, UNHCR representative in Lebanon:
"Two-thirds of the refugee population in Lebanon is living below the poverty line of four (US) dollars a day, and more than half under the extreme poverty line, which is less than three dollars a day. That means for families that you have to make hard choices between, you know, feeding your kids that month or buying fuel in winter to keep your family warm; this is the kind of choices people are making. In Lebanon, particularly because of the concentration of refugees per capita, the situation is very dire."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - NO ACCESS AL JAZEERA
Bar Elias - 20 June 2019
6. Various of workers
ASSOCIATED PRESS - NO ACCESS AL JAZEERA
Arsal - 16 June 2019
7. Various of a refugee camp
ASSOCIATED PRESS - NO ACCESS AL JAZEERA
Beirut - 19 June 2019
8. SOUNDBITE (English) Mireille Girard, UNHCR representative in Lebanon:
"The compelling feeling that people are here for a reason, they fled a war and they are protected in Lebanon, remains very much the prevailing feeling. At the same time, you start to see, and you see that in other parts of the world as well, you see that in Europe, you see that in the United States, you see that to an extent in Australia as well, you see hospitality fatigue for Syrian refugees, because it's been eight years that the crisis started."
ASSOCIATED PRESS - NO ACCESS AL JAZEERA
Arsal - 19 June 2019
9. Various of Syrian refugees demolishing their quarters
10. Demolished structure
ASSOCIATED PRESS - NO ACCESS AL JAZEERA
Arsal - 19 June 2019
11. SOUNDBITE (Arabic) Em Fawzi, Syrian refugee:
"It is really good here. We revived our work and we give some of what we have. We benefit and earn our living as well as use our talent, to pass on to others who can benefit from after we had to stop for three or four years because of the difficult conditions we went through and no one trusted our good work."
12. Various of workers in workshop
STORYLINE:
Lebanon has the highest number of refugees in the world relative to its size, some one-fifth of the population.
While many Syrian refugees are still stuck in camps after eight years of their country's crisis, others live in urban areas, surviving on work or handouts, over half of them live under the extreme poverty line at a time when anti-refugee feelings are on the rise in Lebanon.
Among them is Em Fawzi, from Homs province who has lived in Lebanon since 2014.
She is working as a trainer at an embroidery workshop set up by an aid organization, Sawa, with about 30 other women.
She is grateful to Lebanon for providing her with refuge from the civil war at home and is emphatic that they are not taking work from the locals but are contributing to the country's economy while looking after themselves.
UNHCR believes the situation of the Syrian refugees, about a million in Lebanon, may be the worst in the whole region.
This reflects the tiny size of the country, its underdeveloped infrastructure and its economic woes, the latter itself partly caused by the conflict raging next door that has affected everything from trade to investment and tourism.
Most of the Syrians who came to Lebanon since 2011 were impoverished and dispossessed.
Despite years of receiving aid, 51 percent of Syrian refugee families survive on less than 3 US dollars a day and 88 percent of households are in debt.
Of more than 660,000 school-aged Syrians in Lebanon, 54 percent are not enrolled in formal education and an estimated 40 percent remain out of any kind of certified schooling.
Many Lebanese, in turn, complain that despite 6 billion US dollars of foreign aid invested to support Lebanon, the flood of refugees has overwhelmed schools and the already debilitated infrastructure, increased rents and forced Lebanese to compete with cheap Syrian labour.
Some are resentful of aid stipends some Syrians receive, pointing out that they don't pay taxes and often work illegally as well.
This has led to rising anti-refugee sentiment that political factions have latched onto, calling for the refugees' repatriation and beginning to enforce laws previously rarely implemented, shutting down shops owned by or employing Syrians without permits and ordering the demolition of anything in refugee camps that could be a permanent home.
At the town of Arsal, near the Syrian border, where 60,000 refugees live in informal camps set up in the fields, Syrians have been tearing down brick and concrete walls they had built trying to make their shacks of canvas, sheet metal and plastic able to withstand the elements in the mountainous are that sees harsh winters.
The military gave them until July 1 to remove any wall taller than waist high.
Some have succumbed to pressure and also the changing direction of Syria's war.
A small but increasing stream of Syrians are returning home, altogether some 170,000 in the last year-and-a-half, according to the Lebanese authorities.
But for most people, including the women in this workshop, the time is not ripe yet.
They, too, want to go home but most think it is not safe to do so, or there may simply be nowhere and nothing to go back to.
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Last Updated : Jun 20, 2019, 3:29 PM IST
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