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Tejgaon train fire: 'Nadira was still holding onto her child's body'

Rtv news

  19 Dec 2023, 18:51

As soon as fellow passengers on Mohanganj Express screamed "fire", Nadira Begum Popy grabbed her three-year-old son, held him to her chest, and ran in an attempt to get out of the carriage and escape the blaze.

But tragedy struck as they were trapped in the billowing smoke. Both the mother and her son Yasin died in the fire.

Nadira was still holding her son when the rescuers recovered four bodies from the train.

Delwar Hossain Titu, Yasin's uncle, said, "Nadira couldn't get down and both were burnt to death ... She was still holding onto her child's body when rescuers found them."

Four persons including the mother and son were killed after arsonists torched the Dhaka-bound train from Netrokona near the capital's Tejgaon area around 5:00am (Dec 19). Three coaches were burnt before fire engines doused the flames.

Put in body bags, the four were taken to Dhaka Medical College Hospital morgue, and Yasin's body was kept with his mother's.

Nadira, accompanied by eight family members and relatives, was returning to Dhaka after a visit to her in-law's house in Netrokona. She went there on December 3 after the conclusion of her elder son Fahim's final exams in late November.


Fahim, 9, who was sitting beside his mother, escaped narrowly as his maternal uncle Habibur Rahman was able to take him out of the train immediately after the fire broke out.


"My sister was running to safety with Yasin and I was with Fahim. Although I managed to exit the train, the thick smoke made it impossible for me to locate my sister," Habibur said.

The five other relatives got down from the train at Airport Raileway Station, just minutes before the tragedy occurred.

But Nadira was going to get off at Kamalapur Railway Station, as decided in consultation with her husband Mizanur Rahman when the couple talked on the phone last night. It would be easier to get to their home in Paschim Tejturi Bazar in Tejgaon from Kamalapur, they thought.

Visiting the DMCH morgue, this correspondent saw an inconsolable Mizanur, his gaze vacant, as he sat near the morgue where bodies of his wife and son were kept.

At times, Mizanur was seen placing his hand on his head in deep frustration, agony and resentment.

"I want to cry. But I can't. I can't explain what's going on inside of me. Everything is destroyed," Mizanur who is a manager of a hardware shop at Karwan Bazar, said.

Mizanur went to bed on Monday night, overwhelmed with joy, anticipating the moment he would wake up to see the beloved faces of his sons and wife after nearly two weeks.

"My wife's world revolved around her two sons. How has my elder son Fahim survived without his mother?" asked Mizanur with deep sorrowness.

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