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Indian toddler dies after being trapped in well for days

NEW DELHI — More than three days after a two-year-old boy slid some 100 feet into a tiny borehole in southern India, setting off a panicked round-the-clock mission to rescue him, his body was pulled from the opening early Tuesday morning.

Sujith Wilson, the two-year-old toddler, fell into the hole while playing near his house on Friday (Oct 25) evening.

Sujith Wilson, the two-year-old toddler, fell into the hole while playing near his house on Friday (Oct 25) evening.

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NEW DELHI — More than three days after a two-year-old boy slid some 100 feet (30.5m) into a tiny borehole in southern India, setting off a panicked round-the-clock mission to rescue him, his body was pulled from the opening early Tuesday (Oct 29) morning.

Officials said they had done everything they could to reach the boy, Sujith Wilson, who fell into the hole while playing near his house Friday evening.

Rescuers with India’s disaster management response team pumped oxygen into the muddy pit, a primitive well that measured a few feet wide and was thought to extend more than 500 feet into the earth. They lowered a rope and managed to get it tied around the boy’s hands several times before the knots slipped.

As Sujith sank deeper into the pit, the workers used a drilling machine to dig a larger, parallel hole, hoping to merge the two and lower men down to help. Over the weekend, Sujith’s mother, Kalairani, started stitching a white cloth pouch for rescuers to put her son in.

With a microphone, she and her husband leaned over the opening many times in the initial hours and told him not to cry, bursting into tears when they stepped away, according to people at the scene.

Later, a camera lowered into the hole showed that the toddler had fallen unconscious: He was jammed in the dark cavity, his arms caught above his head.

The urgency rose as rain started to wash over their village, Nadukattupatti, in the state of Tamil Nadu. More than 1,000 people had gathered.

“My prayers are with the young and brave Sujith Wilson,” India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi wrote on Twitter. “Every effort is being made to ensure that he is safe.”

But the authorities were unable to rescue him in time. Mr J Radhakrishnan, the transportation department’s principal secretary, told Asian News International that a bad smell had started coming from the hole late Monday. By early Tuesday morning, Sujith’s body was pulled out in a “decomposed state,” he said.

It is unclear whether the hole was covered at any point before Sujith started playing near it Friday evening.

Earlier this year, the state government of Punjab ordered criminal action against those who do not plug boreholes, a common feature on India’s farms, where they are used to extract water. Many sit dry and abandoned.

In June, a two-year-old child fell into a pit in Punjab and remained trapped for 110 hours without food and water before rescuers pulled out his lifeless body.

On Tuesday morning, as a crowd gathered for Sujith’s funeral, officials vowed to fill the hole with concrete before leaving. Mourners from several villages covered the boy’s coffin with bright flowers. THE NEW YORK TIMES

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