Advertisement

Indian man carries dead wife’s body 10 km after hospital refuses to provide ambulance

Click to play video: 'Indian man carries dead wife’s body 10 km after hospital refuses to provide ambulance'
Indian man carries dead wife’s body 10 km after hospital refuses to provide ambulance
WATCH ABOVE: A heart-wrenching video shows a man in India carrying his wife's dead body over his shoulder after he was unable to afford for an ambulance to carry her back to their village – Aug 25, 2016

A man in India was reportedly denied an ambulance to carry his wife’s body back to their village because he couldn’t afford to pay for the transportation.

In the heartbreaking video, Dana Majhi was seen carrying his wife, Amangadei, 42, on Aug. 24 over one of his shoulders while their 12-year-old daughter, Chaula, walked beside him.

Amangadei died from tuberculosis, a disease that can be spread from person to person through the air, such as when a person coughs, sneezes or even talks.

According to Reuters, Majhi was unable to pay for an ambulance from the hospital, which was said to be in Kalahandi, a district of India’s eastern Odisha state, to his village of Melghar, so he decided to walk the 60 kilometres.

Story continues below advertisement

Amangadei can be seen wrapped in what appeared to be a long cloth or sheet and her feet covered.

Denied a form of transportation, Majhi carried his wife for about 10 to 12 kilometres before someone alerted officials to arrange an ambulance for the man, according to First Post, a news organization in India.

Pushpendra Singh Deo, Odisha state’s urban development minister, said those who are responsible would be held accountable.

“[An] inquiry is going on. We will get to know about the exact matter after the inquiry takes place. Actions will be definitely taken against the responsible person or the authorities,” said Deo to Reuters.

The BBC reported the family would be compensated to cover the costs of cremating Amangadei’s body.

“I have asked the local officials to provide 2,000 rupees (C$38) to the family under the Harischandra Yojana. [Also], the family would also get 10,000 [Indian] rupees (C$193) from the Red Cross,” Brunda D, the district collector for Kalahandi, told the BBC.
Story continues below advertisement

Sponsored content

AdChoices