Amid lockdown, Kerala govt boat ferries lone student to enable her to take exam
PTI, Jun 1, 2020, 3:19 PM IST
Representative image
Alappuzha: In a heart-warming gesture, a 70-seater boat of the Kerala State Water Transport department was sent to ferry a lone passenger, a 17-year-old student, to enable her to appear for the Class 11 examination on two days last month in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic.
Sandra Babu, who stays in a remote backwater island in Kuttanad in Alappuzha district, had to appear for the examination on Friday and Saturday at Kanjiram in Kottayam district.
Boats are the only means of transport in this region and due to the COVID-19 lockdown, the services had stopped plying when the dates of the examination, postponed earlier, were announced.
The Kuttanad region has the lowest altitude in India and is one of the few places in the world where farming is carried on around 1.2 metres to 3.0 metres below sea level (average level of the surface of one or more of earth’s bodies of water from which heights such as elevation may be measured).
Sandra’s parents, who are daily wagers, were wondering how to get her to the examination hall when she approached the department.
“On hearing about her plight, the department did not think twice but decided to extend a helping hand,” KSWTD Director Shaji V Nair said.
“However, there were two issues as two districts were involved. The student, from Alappuzha, had to write the examination in Kottayam district and they had to deviate from the normal route to pick and drop her. But this was the only option as it was the question of a child’s future,” Nair told PTI.
“Transport Minister A K Saseendran also supported the move,” he said.
Normally, the student has to take another boat to reach the embarkation point of the KSWTD.
“A five-member crew, which was entrusted the task of transporting the girl, took the boat to the nearest point from her home, and she walked about five km to reach this point,” another official said.
“The boat dropped her, waited for the examination to be over and dropped her back home on both days,” Nair, whose daughter also appeared for the plus one examination, said.
“I am also a parent and my daughter was also appearing for the examination. I can understand their situation,” he said.
Asked if it was a free trip, Nair said that the basic fare for students was only charged from her.
Another girl, Sreedevi, walked seven km, took a motorcycle ride, and travelled in an ambulance to cover about 150 km from a remote tribal hamlet to reach her examination centre at Thrissur and appeared for the Secondary School Leaving Certificate (SSLC) examination recently.
The 10th standard student travelled from a tribal hamlet situated in the midst of a forest, near Malakkapara, 90 km from the Tamil Nadu-Valpara Pollachi border, to appear for the examination.
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