Media smells Nithari in Etah bones recovery

Viay Upadhyay
Agra. Following the Nithari incident, Agra has come under media scanner with human bones and visceral remains being recovered from quite unlikely places in Agra, Mathura and now Etah.

Although every time the local authorities have denied the repeat of a "Nithari" in the region, they blame it on the exaggerated reporting by the media.

On Sunday, the sleepy town of Etah, about 80 km from Agra, was jolted when a private news channel reported the recovery of numerous human bones and skulls from a partially dried pond, fuelling speculations of another "Nithari" taking place in the town.

After a police investigation, it was revealed that the heap of bones and skulls recovered from the pond and a nearby dilapidated building were as old as 125 years.

And the bones had been stored in the building, which was, in fact, an old mortuary, which had been discarded for the new building back in 1998.

Since then, the viscera and bones stockpiled in the post-mortem house for further analysis had been left lying inside the slowly crumbling building.

The growing tendency to dig out the "old skeletons" from the ground in the name of "creating" new stories among the electronic media was aptly named "rumour-mongering" by the Etah district magistrate on Monday.

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