Injured Rai of Zen-ji movement returned with bullet in his body

Nine bullet and shrapnel wounds in different parts of his body have not fully healed yet. The pellet lodged in the stomach was not removed.

आश्विन २२, २०८२

रमेशचन्द्र अधिकारी

Injured Rai of Zen-ji movement returned with bullet in his body

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20-year-old Avinash Rai of Dhankuta-5 Bologhar toll, who was injured during the Gen-G movement on August 23, has now returned home with a bed of wounds. The nine bullet and shrapnel wounds in different parts of his body are still not fully healed. The pellet lodged in the stomach was not removed.

Rai, who is preparing for graduation, went to Mamaghar located in Kamal Rural Municipality-5 of Jhapa. He says that he also participated when he came to know that there would be a Zen-G movement at Damak Chowk. The crowd reached the Damak Municipality office with slogans. At that time, when the municipal building was on fire, he suddenly heard the sound of gunshots and then he did not know his condition for a long time. The body was bloody when opened. Bullets were buried in stomach, chest, arms, thighs and other places.

After first treatment at Lifeline Hospital in Damak, he was further treated at Nobel Medical Hospital in Biratnagar. There were seven surgical operations to remove the bullet fragments and the bullet in the arm. After staying in the hospital for eight days, he returned home last week after resting with his relatives. The bullet buried in his stomach has not yet been removed. "It was left as it was because the doctor said it could not be removed because it was buried deep in the stomach," he said. 

He says that he is very worried about the future at this time. He says that when he was eight years old, Buba Diwas also lost his life in the movement against corruption and corruption. It has been 13 years since mother Yograni went to Dubai for foreign employment. Mother has not returned home since she left. Deprived of his parents' presence, he has been living with Baju, Phupu Aju and Grandpa Sundar. 

His sister-in-law Anu expressed her concern that stomach pellets could cause future problems for her daughter. Avinash has the same concern. "I suffered from an unexpected incident," he said. He said that apart from treatment and surgery in the hospital, he had to spend more than 10,000 on his own for medicines and food arrangements. He says that since the government will provide free treatment, follow-up treatment should also be provided free of charge. "Let's not waste our blood in vain for the future of the country," he said.

रमेशचन्द्र अधिकारी अधिकारी कान्तिपुरका धनकुटा संवाददाता हुन् ।

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