The wounded say - 'It seems that those against whom we went in protest will come to power again. If that happens, the sacrifices we made and the blood we shed will not be wasted!
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When he reached the National Trauma Center in Kathmandu on Tuesday, 25-year-old Madan Karki of Sindhupalchok Balefi-8 was reading 'Bhagwat Gita' in the general ward.
Chang was seen in the book in his bed, being treated for his injuries during the Zen-Ji movement. At this time, I got used to reading books. I am also reading constitution and law books," said Madan.
Madan's left chest was hit by a bullet fired by the police during the Gen-G movement on August 23. He complained that while his health is gradually improving, the bullet wound is healing, but the wound in his heart is still burning.
The families of the injured and the injured have not received as much support as they should have from the government. On top of that, those who take advantage of Gen-G's shell are seen on the scene. How many friends lost their lives, we are collapsing here,'' Madan said angrily, 'It is like devaluing our contribution.' Even though he is recovering, he is worried about how the government will manage the seriously injured in the future.
Madan found this year's festival very exciting. He was with his brother in the hospital. But he didn't want to comment. 'Yetika's friends fell. How can the vaccine be applied?' he asks. How did Madan get involved in the movement that day? As a result, he started complaining about the 'frustration' with the government. Six years ago, Madan, a class 12 student, started a goat farm in his village Balefi in Sindhupalchok. There were as many as 40 goats. "But farmers like us, who want to do something in agriculture, can't run the farm because they can't get it no matter how much they try to do something in agriculture," says Madan, who says that farmers like him, who are just trying to start a business, will suffer losses if they don't get support from the government. He left the village with the disappointment of failure.
Came to Kathmandu from scratch and learned computer. At the same time, he was also interested in videography. He was seeing his friends leave one after another saying that there is no future in the country. He used to earn a living from videography. "I was determined to do whatever I did in my own country," said Madan. But due to the corruption and misrule by the ruling party, he was feeling that not only himself but the entire people were getting frustrated. 'I myself was a sufferer of how much a ground person is oppressed by not being able to speak. Therefore, in this movement, I went to the streets with a collective voice not only for myself but also for all the Nepalis who cannot speak," says Madan.
22-year-old Mukesh Awasthi from Dandeldhura, another injured member of the Gen-G movement, is currently motivating himself by reading spiritual books. During the protest, he had to lose his leg after being shot under the knee of his left leg. He also spent Christmas in the hospital. On October 12th, the mother who came to Kathmandu put the vaccine on the bed in the hospital. Mukesh became even more emotional when his mother blessed him, 'Becoming a big man, getting well soon'. Also, the mother's tears did not stop when she saw her son's condition. She breaks down every now and then.
Mukesh used to do sub-engineering at Parliament House recently. He was also preparing to go to Australia. "Now this is the situation, there is no way to go," says Mukesh looking at his own leg which was amputated during the treatment. Remembering the consequences of raising his voice against the corruption and injustice in the country still shocks him. It seems that those against whom we started a movement will come to power again. If that happens, then the sacrifices we made and the blood we shed were not wasted!' He is thoughtful.
He went to the streets as a student movement. But they did not think that the peaceful protest would be shot. "Sometimes I regret why I went," says Mukesh. Mukesh's wound was being operated on Tuesday due to an 'infection'. Liza Adhikari of Morang also spent her birthday at the trauma center this time. Father, mother and brother were together on the day of Tika. They did not have a Yopali Tika. They did not celebrate Dasain. "This is the first time that everyone in the family has been hospitalized during Dasainka," says his father. When Liza was leaving for the August 23 protest, her neighbor aunt reminded her, "Don't go today, Nani, they will shoot." Liza thought, "The students are having a peaceful protest." The government cannot shoot at that. Remembering the scene of that day from the hospital bed, Liza says, "What we did not expect happened. The government killed our friends. Crime rained on us.'
Liza BBA was a fourth year pass out. She took to the streets with the voices of the students. As soon as they reached Baneshwar, the police fired tear gas. At 2 o'clock in the afternoon, my mother called me home. She was about to return home. "At that time, I was talking to my sister who was wearing a helmet, while I was talking, I was shot," she remembers the terrible scene she experienced. The bullet pierced his bum. He was immediately taken to Everest Hospital. From there he was referred to a trauma center. That night she had an operation on her bum. Liza's bullet wound was undergoing surgery on Tuesday. She says that her health is gradually improving.
Liza's mother is a heart patient. Sitting beside her daughter, she says, "Now that my daughter is injured, I will not be happy to call myself sick." Liza was ignorant of many things about Parliament, laws and the constitution until she went to the movement. She was clear that only corruption should be fought. Now he is getting knowledge on new topics. "Now I am interested in law, constitution and system, I am learning more and more new things," she says.
Prakash Bohora of Dailekh, who was injured in the Gen-G movement, spent his Dasain at the trauma center this year. He was shot in the left leg. The 'iconic' shoe which became a symbol of the movement was also of the same light. Prakash's mother, wife and son were in the hospital on Dasain. Prakash's great father had passed away. We did not celebrate Dasain,” says his mother Nanda.
Prakash is currently sitting in the hospital reading various articles to understand literature and law to understand society. He is keeping the interest of the country on social media from his hospital bed. They are pressuring the government to take action against those who are corrupt and those who ordered to shoot at the protest. His hospital stay lasted a month. Mother Nanda does not know - how many more days will it last! "I am waiting for the day when my son gets fully recovered and goes home soon," she says. Most of the patients injured in the
movement returned home. At the trauma center, 11 injured people of Gen-G movement are still being treated. 27 injured people are being treated in Kathmandu, 5 in the Trivi Teaching Hospital, 3 each in KMC and B&B, 1 each in
Civil Service Hospital, Patan Hospital, Kirtipur Hospital, Hams Hospital and Nepal Police Hospital.
