http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/coimbatore/We-are-lucky-to-stay-alive/articleshow/7689714.cms
 
 'We are lucky to stay alive'
 A Subburaj, TNN | Mar 13, 2011, 02.56am IST
 
 COIMBATORE: The pastoral quiet in Kumarapalayam hamlet, 18 km from
 Coimbatore city, is shattered. As official cars vroom into the dusty
 hamlet, the shocked villagers heave a collective sigh of relief. "We
 are lucky to be alive. The poisonous water could have easily wiped out
 all the villagers in Kumarapalayam," says 30-year-old M Chellamal, a
 farm worker.
 
 Before the crack of dawn, Chellamal woke up to fill her tank with
 drinking water. As she drank a few sips of water, she immediately
 suffered from irritation in her throat and headache. By then word had
 got out that the water was contaminated as a few villagers were on the
 streets spreading the word around. Chellamal was rushed to the
 hospital. She was put on drips and given detoxification shots. Back at
 home on Saturday afternoon, Chellamal said, "I am feeling a little
 better. But it is a miracle that I am alive."
 
 Most of the villagers in this hamlet are agricultural labourers from
 the Vanniar caste and about 10 per cent of them are Dalits. Both
 communities live in harmony and are supplied water from the same
 borewell. This is the first time that something like this has
 happened. "There is no communal enmity in our village and we live
 harmoniously. We don't know why they have poisoned our drinking
 water," says 34-year-old farmer S Muniappan.
 
 The panchayat president M Lakshmi said a piece of paper claiming that
 Nataraj was responsible for the incident' was found near the borewell.
 "But there are five people with the same name in our village. And one
 of them had even consumed the water and fallen sick," she said.
 
 Another victim, A Palanichamy, an agricultural labourer, who was
 walking to the fields in the morning, stopped at the public tap to
 drink water. "After drinking the water, I went to the farm for work.
 But I could not hold the shovel and nearly swooned. Then, I staggered
 back home and was rushed to the hospital."
 
 Doctors from the primary health centre will be camping in the village
 for the next one week. "Fortunately, most villagers had not consumed
 the water. So, there was no casualty," said Dr D Anuradha from the
 primary health centre at Sokkanur.
 
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