As the victims of communal violence narrate their harrowing tales at District Hospital here, nature of their injuries indicate that rioters mostly used household objects like sickles, heavy sticks and country-made pistols in the attack.
Dr VK Johari, Chief Medical Officer of District Hospital Muzaffarnagar, said the victims were hit by blunt objects, sticks and sharp tools like sickle. Local made pistols were also used.
Meanwhile, the curfew in the strife-torn district relaxed between 3.30 PM and 6.00 PM in three parts of the city-- Kotwali, Civil Lines and Nai Mandi area.
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And out of that, 68 injured, including 59 males, five women and four children, have been brought to the hospital here, a senior doctors said, adding that many of them have been discharged or referred to Medical College in Meerut, while 15 are still recuperating.
The CMO said,"27 bodies have been received by the hospital and 17 autopsies have been conducted."
The victims, brought for treatment, are from Bawari, Bhora Khurd, Nath, Karana, Sohram and other adjoining villages.
A 10-year-old girl, Azra, has received severe injuries in her right hand and stomach from a sharp object which is used to cut sugarcane, claimed her mother Herunisa a resident of Bawari village.
She said that three of her family members including mother-in-law (60), brother-in-law (40) and 11-year-old daughter died when their house was attacked on Sunday.
Herunisa received injuries on her face by bullet sharpnels and her 5-year-old daughter, Aksa, also received injuries on her face and hand.
MG Siddiqui, a nurse in the eye department, said that due to the curfew people can neither go out of the city nor enter.
Prices of various commodities have gone up and there is a scarcity of essential items.
"The situation will not improve until things become normal in villages," she said.