27 July,2021 12:17 PM IST | Mumbai | PTI
NDRF personnel conducting search and rescue operations at the site of a landslide at Kumbharwadi village in Chiplun district of Maharashtra. Pic/PTI
Amid the heavy rains in Maharashtra's Chiplun town last week, the manager of a state transport bus depot showed immense courage as he sat atop a submerged bus for about nine hours to prevent Rs 9 lakh cash collected as daily revenue from getting destroyed in the floodwaters.
This act of depot manager Ranjeet Raje-Shirke is being widely praised by his colleagues and other people.
The Chiplun town in Ratnagiri district of Konkan region was pounded by heavy rains last Thursday, causing severe flooding in the area.
The water level at the Maharashtra State Road Transport Corporation's (MSRTC) depot there also kept rising, submerging buses parked in the premises.
ALSO READ
Mercury drops below 20 in Mumbai, minimum temp recorded at 19.1 degrees Celsius
Shivaji Maharaj statue collapse: Court grants bail to consultant Chetan Patil
In Ratnagiri, refinery project a poll issue for its opponents and supporters
Industries left Maharashtra as MVA govt did not support them: CM Shinde
Law enforcement agents seize goods worth Rs 52 crore in 24 hours ahead of polls
However, undeterred by the weather fury, Raje-Shirke, climbed the roof a submerged bus and sat there for around nine hours to save the cash from getting damaged, before he was rescued by police.
Recalling the tense period, Raje-Shirke told PTI on Tuesday that as the water level started going up at his office after heavy showers, the depot watchman called him up around 3.30 am.
Also read: Maharashtra floods: 251 dead, 100 missing, says Nawab Malik
"When I reached the premises around 3.45 am, my office was under neck-deep water. I still decided to enter the office and recovered Rs 9 lakh cash kept there, which was collected as daily revenue," the official said.
However, he could not leave the depot premises because of severe flooding all around.
"To prevent the cash from getting damaged, I wrapped it in a plastic bag and me and another colleague climbed on one of the submerged buses around 6 am," the official said.
Five other ST staffers climbed on another flooded bus, he said.
"The buses were shaking due to the force of water and we were scared of falling down, but we still tried to sit firm atop the submerged vehicles," he said.
"All of us kept sitting on top of the buses in the heavy rain till 3 pm, when a police team arrived and rescued us," he added.
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever.