Papa you go ahead, I will come: The last words of Mumbai stampede victim

Varpe sat in a corner of the mortuary's waiting area, remembering his daughter's last words and crying.

Update: 2017-09-29 19:47 GMT
A slipper of an injured commuter is seen stuck on the railing of a pedestrian bridge where a stampede took place at the Elphinstone station in Mumbai on Friday. (Photo: PTI)

Mumbai: “Papa, you go ahead, I will come, let the crowd thin out,” 25-year-old Shraddha Varpe told her father as the two tried to make their way out of the Parel railway station in central Mumbai on Friday morning.

Those were her last words. Kishore Varpe (57), her father, managed to cross the footbridge connecting the Parel and Elphinstone Road railway stations when a deadly stampede began.

He searched for her frantically, only to find that she was among its victims, said a tearful Bhimrao Dhulap, Varpe’s close relative who accompanied him to the mortuary of KEM Hospital in the afternoon. At least 22 lives were lost in the tragedy.

Varpe sat in a corner of the mortuary’s waiting area, remembering his daughter's last words and crying. Both Shraddha and her father worked at the Labour Welfare Board on the Elphinstone road. They travelled to the office together from their house in distant Vitthalwadi in neighbouring Thane district. They alighted at the Parel station around 10.15 am Friday and headed for the footbridge which was as usual overcrowded.

Suddenly it started raining, and the crowd on the bridge swelled. Kishore was propelled forward while Shraddha was stuck behind, Dhulap said.

Kishore called out to her, and she told him to go ahead, saying she will wait for the crowd to disperse. After getting out on other side, Kishore called her mobile phone, but there was no response. “It was all over in 10 minutes,” he said, sobbing uncontrollably.

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