Steps taken to prevent children from drowning in quarry pits

Licensed quarries told to fence their pits in the district at their own cost

May 24, 2018 12:03 am | Updated 04:43 pm IST - UDUPI

 The district administration has directed gram panchayats to install warning boards near quarries and pits, which get filled during monsoon.

The district administration has directed gram panchayats to install warning boards near quarries and pits, which get filled during monsoon.

Death, especially of children and also other people, in abandoned or unfenced quarry pits and percolation pits has been a cause for concern especially during the monsoon in Udupi district.

In 2012, 14 children lost their life by accidentally slipping or falling into either percolation pits or into pits created by stone, laterite or clay quarrying during monsoon in the district.

The administration subsequently issued orders to install boards near such quarries and percolation pits to prevent accidental deaths of children and people from falling into such pits. Despite these steps, there have been deaths almost every year, though their number has declined.

In April 2017, five-year-old Hanumanth accidentally slipped and drowned in a stone quarry pit at Alevoor village near here. His 30-year-old mother Neelavva also drowned trying to save him. This happened though a board had been installed near the 40-feet-deep pit prohibiting diving and swimming there.

Taking a serious view of such incidents, the administration has taken precautionary measures this year. Deputy Commissioner Priyanka Mary Francis told The Hindu that the Department of Mines and Geology had been directed to issue notices to all licensed quarries to fence their pits in the district at their own cost.

The gram panchayats and school headmasters had been told to identify unfenced abandoned quarries near residential areas and inform the administration immediately. Already, the administration has completed fencing in 10 such unfenced abandoned quarries in the district through funds released from the Department of Mines and Geology. “If such abandoned quarries are identified, we can seek funds and get them fenced,” Ms. Francis said.

The district administration has directed the gram panchayats to install warning boards near such quarries and pits, which get filled with rainwater during the monsoon. The Block Education Officers have been directed to urge headmasters to advise parents and children not to go near these quarries/pits to play or for any other reason.

However, Damodar Acharya, Executive Director, Concerned for the Working Children, a non-government organisation, said that mere putting up of boards outside the quarries/pits was not enough. The boards should also inform people about the depth of the quarries.

“Fencing of such quarries should be taken up immediately as mostly children are victims as they are prone to playing in water, without realising the depth of such pits,” he said.

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