Drain fall an accident, need safety protocol during VIP visits: Civic probe report | Mumbai News

Drain fall an accident, need safety protocol during VIP visits: Civic probe report
The report called a BMC worker’s fall into an open channel an accident

Mumbai: Days after a BMC worker fell into an open stormwater channel during mayor Ritu Tawde’s inspection of a chronic flooding spot at King’s Circle, a civic inquiry termed it an accident and called for better crowd management during VIP visits.Eyewitnesses told BMC officials that the worker was rushing towards media cameras when he fell into the channel.The inquiry report, prepared by the local ward office and the stormwater drains department, was submitted to the BMC chief’s office on Monday. It recommended that areas where civic staff carry out desilting or drainage operations be clearly demarcated and kept separate from spaces accessible to visitors and the public, “particularly during inspections by public representatives such as the mayor”, said a senior BMC official.The recommendations include mandatory barricading of open channels and work sites, and installation of warning signboards and standees. Officials also proposed a separate safety protocol for inspections at active drainage works.A day after the worker’s fall on June 24, Tawde had called it “fishy” and had sought a detailed inquiry from the BMC administration.

Cops: Man behind ‘poisoning plot’ destroyed some chemicals | Mumbai News

Cops: Man behind ‘poisoning plot’ destroyed some chemicals
Some of the seized capsules

Mumbai: The Pune man arrested for allegedly passing out pills filled with zinc phosphide at a Muharram procession last week had destroyed some of the poison he had ordered online, said police.The probe has shown that the suspect, Fayyaz Premji (39), had ordered 30,000 capsules and 50kg of zinc phosphide, often used as rat poison, from an online platform. It isn’t clear how much of it was destroyed. A team is working on the order’s digital trail. “A letter seeking his account statement has been sent to his bank,” said a police officer. Police had seized 14,900 capsules filled with the poison from Premji and are awaiting a chemical analysis report.The motive behind the mass poisoning plot is yet to be ascertained.The officer said Premji appeared to be “disturbed” and claimed that some people from the Khoja Shia community, to which he belonged, had “made his life miserable”. “His wife left him in 2016-17 and moved in with her parents. The couple had no children. His brother’s wife too left the marital home. Premji’s two sisters—an accountant and a physiotherapist—are settled in Iran, along with their mother. The two brothers and their father stayed in Pune.” Premji contested and lost an election within his community in 2015, said the officer. “He claimed that some people used to harass his grandfather as well.”A community leader said he initially questioned many religious practices, but over time, he turned more “destructive”. A leader of Khoja Shia Isnaashri Jamaat in Mumbai said Premji led a campaign against some long-held customs and revered figures in the community. “He began a campaign against Maulana Ahmed Ali Abdi, who is a representative of our Iraq-based marja (a very senior cleric) and spiritual head Agha Syed Ali Sistani in India. He said instead of self-flagellation, Shias should donate blood on Ashura. We do hold blood donation camps, but cannot abolish rituals.”A court on Monday extended Premji’s police custody till July 4.Habib Hospital in Dongri said four persons who had taken ill after consuming the pills are recovering. Javed Shroff, chairman of the hospital trust, said the patients are out of danger.