http://m.indiatoday.in/story/electrocution-couldnt-rob-little-raman-swami-zeal-towards-life/1/292132.html

Asit Jolly
Friday, July 19, 2013 | 17:21 IST




Raman (left) with sister Khushi.
Raman (left) with sister Khushi.


The animated antics of Chhota Bheem and Doraemon never fail to delight
him. And he almost stops breathing in bated anticipation every time
Mahendra Singh Dhoni lunges to stump a batsman. Potato wafers, Pepsi
and Maggi noodles make for his dream meal. In fact the last thing on
five-and-a-half-year-old Raman Swami's mind is the fact that he is
missing both arms and his left leg.

November 3, 2011, was the last time Raman used his limbs, running and
tripping all the way back from nursery school to his home in Haryana's
Sanauli Khurd village. Like other afternoons, he quickly ate lunch
before bounding up the narrow stairwell to the roof, his favourite
spot in the house. Minutes later, a neighbour rushed in screaming:
"Raman ko bijli ne pakkad liya (Raman has been electrocuted)! The
forever-curious toddler lay burnt, bleeding and unconscious in the
neighbour's house, 15 feet from the spot he last stood-thrown by an
11,000 volt power line, installed by state-owned power utility Uttar
Haryana Bijli Vitran Nigam (UHBVN), just two feet above the roof.

On June 27, 2013, twenty months after his life-changing encounter, the
Punjab & Haryana High Court stepped in as Raman's saviour. Justice
Rajiv Narain Raina took the unprecedented step of exercising his
extraordinary jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution in
awarding the child 'exemplary damages'-Rs 62 lakh and litigation costs
in addition to all medical costs, including those on prosthetics and
future medicinal advances like stem cell therapy, until Raman is 21.

Breaking from the confines of the Victims Compensation Scheme brought
about through an amendment to the Criminal Procedure Code (CRPC357A)
in 2008, Justice Raina not only saved Raman and his father the
vagaries of prolonged civil litigation but may have also opened doors
for other similarly placed victims for whom such remedial compensation
could ensure survival. "The judge has created a precedent for rape
victims, sufferers of acid attacks, victims of human trafficking,
child abuse and kidnapping where protracted trials can be tedious and
cumbersome, says Chandigarh lawyer Anil Malhotra, who advised the
court as amicus curiae in the case.

After more than a month at the Burn Injuries Unit of Delhi's
Safdarjung Hospital, Raman came home, definitely tired and wondering
why he could not bring himself to scratch at the infernal itch on his
ear lobe. "They saved his life and I cannot stop thanking them for
that, but I got only half my son back, says Manoj Sharma, 42, Raman's
inconsolable father who runs an autorickshaw and tractor spares shop
on the Panipat Road heading out of Sanauli Khurd. "My boy wanted wings
to fly, instead they took away his limbs, he says with eyes brimming
over at the horrifying memory of seeing portions of his son's charred
fists still smoking on the 'killer cable'.

The promise of money, which will be held in two bank accounts until
Raman turns 21, has changed little in Sharma's bleak existence. The
poor shopkeeper must contend with the unsettling prospect of paying
back nearly Rs 15 lakh he borrowed for his son's treatment over the
past 20 months. But more than the money, it bothers him that the court
"failed to punish even one of those responsible for Raman's condition.

Sharma told the court that after objecting to the proximity of the
11,000 volt power line when it was first installed almost touching his
roof in 2006, he made several verbal and at least one written
complaint to uhbvn officials over the years. "I had a foreboding that
something terrible would happen. They did nothing. And our whole world
fell apart, he says.

Up in the two-room house above his father's ramshackle auto parts
shop, little Raman is quite oblivious to the commotion over the high
court's verdict and compensation package. A trifle shy at first, he
quickly warms up to the presence of new visitors. Ten short minutes
later you forget the boy has just one 'good' limb.

"He has become surprisingly self-sufficient, his mother Beena, 38,
says with a conflicting mix of doting pride and apprehension about her
only son's future. Raman incredulously employs his five remaining toes
and a combination of muscles from his jaws, chin, torso and lower back
to write, give himself a bath, switch to Doraemon on tv and even use
the video app on his father's Nokia touchscreen phone to shoot movies
with a steadier 'right foot' than most veteran cameramen.

"Itches are my biggest problem, he says with a sheepish smile. "But
didi (sister) is always by my side. Raman uses a pen held between his
toes to indicate the precise spot on his back to older sister Khushi,
9.

Can he use his foot to draw? "Sure I can, he unhesitatingly replies,
proceeding immediately to sketch a face using chalk on a slate. The
picture is done but Raman isn't happy: "That does not look like you,
he says. "I will practise and the next time you come I shall draw you
better,
", he smiles.

A year before he touched the wire on the roof, he broke his right arm
in a fall. "When he asks, I tell him his leg and arms will grow back
just like his arm healed after the fracture, says Beena. "He is
already suffering and I cannot bear to tell him the truth, she says.

"Don't go close to the wire... it will hurt you, the boy cautions
anyone going up to the roof. And yes, a fortnight after the
path-breaking high court verdict, uhbvn's offending power line still
looms over the Sharma home.

Raman says he wants to grow up to be a Dhoni or a Sehwag. Looking down
at his absent limbs he quickly assures you: "Don't you worry, they
will grow back. My mother said so. And my mother never lies.

And so what if his arms haven't 'grown back', the little fellow can
give you a farewell jhappi (hug) like none other: Simply putting his
beautiful head over your shoulder and sighing. You come away with the
feeling of being held tightly in his 'arms'.

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