Tuesday, July 7, 2026
ADVT 
India

Rajasthan Man Who Pulled Rickshaw With Infant Daughter In Sling Dies

IANS, 30 Jun, 2017 02:19 PM
    The haunting image of a poor man pulling a pedal-rickshaw with his newborn daughter in a sling bag hanging from his neck in Rajasthan’s Bharatpur riveted the nation in 2012.
     
     
    Bablu Koli lost his wife during childbirth and had no one to take care of little Damini.
     
     
    The four-year-old child became an orphan this week as Koli, an alleged alcoholic, died in his rented home.
     
     
    Neighbours discovered his death two days after he died and Apna Ghar Society, a charity, cremated him after autopsy.
     
     
    Damini wasn’t by his side as she lives at a children’s shelter, where she was put four months after an outpouring of grief and support over the picture of Koli carrying two passengers on his rickshaw — holding the handle with one hand and clutching the baby sling with the other.
     
     
    A wealthy well-wisher donated Rs 23 lakh for the child and the money was deposited in the State Bank of Bikaner’s Jaipur branch. The fund swelled to Rs 35 lakh over the years.
     
     
    “We gave him money every month to care for the baby, but he spent it on alcohol,” said BM Bharadwaj, a member of the five-member committee that oversees Damini’s finances.
     
     
    As Koli failed to mend his ways and couldn’t take proper care of the baby, the district child welfare committee sent her to the government-run home.
     
     
    “We have sufficient fund and trying to send her to a boarding school,” Bharadwaj said.
     
     
    Bharatpur district collector Narendra Kumar Gupta suggested as much, saying they will do their best of the “baby’s good future” as the state government has several schemes for orphans.
     
     
    The Koli story underscores two of India’s biggest drawbacks. Despite being one of the world’s fastest-growing economies, about 30% of India’s 1.2 billion are abysmally poor.
     
     
    Besides, alcoholism is rampant among the poor who often try to douse the fatigue of a hard day’s backbreaking menial work and low pay in bottles of cheap bootlegged and homemade liquor. The moonshine kills many every year. Koli was along them.
     
     
    He was an incorrigible alcoholic, said Saroj Lohiya, chairman of the child welfare committee.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    A Tribute: Bhagat Singh was a humanist and innately secular

    A Tribute: Bhagat Singh was a humanist and innately secular
    Unfortunately, Bhagat Singh has been grossly commercialised or romanticized. A man who always placed reason far above emotion has been made to be the 'angry young man' of our freedom struggle.

    A Tribute: Bhagat Singh was a humanist and innately secular

    Congress fields Amarinder from Amritsar

    Congress fields Amarinder from Amritsar
    Congress Friday fielded former Punjab chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh from Amritsar to take on senior BJP leader Arun Jaitley in the forthcoming Lok Sabha elections.

    Congress fields Amarinder from Amritsar

    AAP expels two leaders for fraud

    AAP expels two leaders for fraud
    Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) Friday expelled two leaders as they allegedly tried to provide party tickets for monetary consideration.

    AAP expels two leaders for fraud

    1984 Anti-Sikh Riots: US court asks Sonia Gandhi to show passport

    1984 Anti-Sikh Riots: US court asks Sonia Gandhi to show passport
    Gandhi had filed a motion in a federal court in Brooklyn, New York, seeking dismissal of a human rights violation case against her relating to the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, asserting she had not been served the summons as she was not in the US during that time.

    1984 Anti-Sikh Riots: US court asks Sonia Gandhi to show passport

    Khushwant Singh: A Born Raconteur, A Vintage Sardar

    Khushwant Singh: A Born Raconteur, A Vintage Sardar
    A born raconteur, Khushwant Singh could shine across the literary spectrum, be it short essays - both travelogues and pen-portraits - short stories, novels and even plays with memorable settings and characters. I have not read all his published oeuvre but a considerable part of it though a long time ago and it has left a definite impression

    Khushwant Singh: A Born Raconteur, A Vintage Sardar

    Minus Malice: Grand old lord of fine print

    Minus Malice: Grand old lord of fine print
    "All that I hope for is that when death comes to me, it comes swiftly, without much pain, like fading away in sound slumber. Till then I'll keep working and living each day as it comes," he wrote in the book "Absolute Khushwant: The Low-Down on Life, Death and Most Things In-Between" in 2010. His wish was realized.

    Minus Malice: Grand old lord of fine print