Tired but relieved, Rajdhani Express passengers reach Delhi
October 28th, 2009 - 10:06 pm ICT by IANS ( Leave a comment )New Delhi, Oct 28 (IANS) After a harrowing time when the Delhi-bound Bhubaneswar Rajdhani Express was held hostage by Maoists in West Bengal’s West Midnapore district Tuesday, passengers of the train finally breathed easy as they reached the national capital Wednesday.
As the train chugged to a stop at the New Delhi railway station here Wednesday evening, the tired but vastly relieved passengers jumped out of their coaches eagerly and made for the exit. The train was scheduled to reach New Delhi at 9 a.m. Wednesday.
“We boarded the train at 10 a.m. Tuesday. It looks as if we have been in the train forever,” Ashok Sharma, travelling to the national capital from Cuttack, said with relief.
“They were tribals and were carrying arms. But they did not harm us. They asked us to get down from the train. It was a horrible wait,” he told IANS.
“For more than eight hours, no one came to our rescue. We were on our own,” he said.
Similar sentiments were echoed by Harsh Kumar.
A resident of Hapur in Uttar Pradesh, Kumar boarded the train at Bhubaneswar.
“The police and railway police came so late. There was no one for our protection,” he said.
“They took away all the food. It looked like they were from the adjoining villages. They told us that they are our friends and didn’t want to harm us. They said that their fight is with the government,” Kumar said.
The New Delhi railway station’s platform number 1, where the Rajdhani Express stopped, was bustling with activity since evening when the news came that it will finally reach at 7.30 pm. Anxious relatives made a beeline to receive their loved ones at the train.
On Tuesday, the Maoist-backed People’s Committee Against Police Atrocities (PCAPA) held up the Rajdhani Express for more than four hours at Banstala Halt near West Midnapore’s Jhargram station.
The over 500-PCAPA members squatted on the tracks and forced out the train’s drivers at the halt station near the Antapani jungle.
After several tension-filled hours, which saw a police team proceeding to the spot ambushed by the Left wing rebels, Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) troopers and state policemen finally took over the train.
None of the passengers was injured.
–Indo-ASian News Service
ma-kbd/aj/vt
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Tags: anxious relatives, ashok, atrocities, beeline, eight hours, hapur, harsh kumar, hostage, jhargram, maoist, maoists, midnapore district, New Delhi, railway police, railway station, rajdhani express, s committee, sentiments, wednesday evening, west bengal