Nine-Hour Rescue: 4-Year-Old Pulled Alive from Punjab Borewell

A four-year-old boy named Gurkaran Singh fell into a 30-foot-deep open borewell in Chak Samana village, Hoshiarpur, Punjab, on Friday evening. A nine-hour rescue operation involving NDRF, SDRF, police, and district officials successfully pulled him out safely early Saturday. Rescue teams dug a parallel pit and used cameras and oxygen pipes to monitor and sustain the child during the operation. Deputy Commissioner Ashika Jain and SSP Sandeep Kumar Malik supervised the mission, with Punjab Minister Ravjot Singh and MP Raj Kumar Chabbewal also present.

Key Points: 4-Year-Old Rescued from Punjab Borewell After 9 Hours

  • Child Gurkaran Singh fell into open borewell adjacent to his house
  • Rescue teams dug parallel pit 30+ feet deep to reach him
  • NDRF, SDRF, police, and district admin coordinated efforts
  • Child trapped at 4 PM on Friday, rescued at 12:40 AM Saturday
3 min read

Nine-hour rescue operation saves 4-year-old trapped in borewell in Punjab's Hoshiarpur

A four-year-old boy, Gurkaran Singh, was safely rescued after falling into a 30-foot-deep borewell in Hoshiarpur, Punjab, following a nine-hour joint operation by NDRF, SDRF, and local officials.

"The administration responded without delay after receiving information about the incident around 4 P.M. - Deputy Commissioner Ashika Jain"

Hoshiarpur, May 16

A four-year-old child who had fallen into a borewell in Chak Samana village of Punjab's Hoshiarpur was safely rescued after an intense nine-hour operation carried out jointly by teams of the NDRF, SDRF, Punjab Police, district administration officials, and residents, officials said on Saturday.

The child, identified as Gurkaran Singh, son of labourers Harinder and Asha, had fallen into the borewell at around 4 P.M. on Friday. After hours of continuous rescue efforts, he was finally pulled out safely at around 12:40 A.M. and was immediately shifted to a hospital for medical examination and treatment.

Deputy Commissioner Ashika Jain and SSP Sandeep Kumar Malik personally supervised the rescue mission. They later commended all teams involved for their determination and coordinated efforts that led to the successful rescue of the child.

After the operation concluded successfully, Deputy Commissioner Ashika Jain said that Gurkaran was immediately taken to the hospital in an ambulance, accompanied by a medical team, for further evaluation after being rescued from the borewell.

She said the administration responded without delay after receiving information about the incident around 4 P.M. Officials rushed to the village to begin rescue operations.

According to officials, Gurkaran had fallen into an open borewell situated adjacent to his house. The borewell had reportedly been dug only a day earlier.

Rescue teams subsequently dug a parallel pit more than 30 feet deep alongside the borewell and created a narrow connecting passage to reach the trapped child. After strenuous efforts and careful excavation, the teams managed to pull the child out safely.

Officials said the child had been trapped at a depth of nearly 30 feet inside the borewell.

Heavy machinery and other specialised equipment were brought to the site to accelerate the rescue work. The district administration also inserted a camera and oxygen pipe into the borewell shaft, enabling rescuers to monitor the child's movement continuously through live visuals while ensuring oxygen supply during the operation.

The Deputy Commissioner further stated that more than 40 members of the National Disaster Response Force participated in the operation and utilised their technical expertise to carry out the rescue safely during the critical situation.

Punjab Minister for Jails, Ravjot Singh and Hoshiarpur Lok Sabha MP, Raj Kumar Chabbewal also remained present at the spot throughout the operation.

SSP Sandeep Kumar Malik also thanked the rescue teams for successfully bringing Gurkaran out alive.

Officials also noted that several social, religious and local organisations extended support during the rescue mission by assisting the teams in multiple ways and boosting their morale throughout the lengthy operation.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Vikram M
Hats off to the rescue teams! 👏 Parallel pit digging, camera monitoring, oxygen supply - that's modern technology saving lives. Also kudos to Deputy Commissioner Ashika Jain and SSP Malik for personally supervising. This is how district administration should function - quick response, coordination between NDRF and SDRF, and community support. The poor labourer parents must have gone through hell for nine hours. Now we need strict action against whoever left that borewell open.
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Rohit L
Great news but why did it take nine hours? 😤 The borewell was dug just a day before next to a house! Where was the safety check? This is not the first such incident - we've seen similar tragedies in Rajasthan, Gujarat, and MP. Our village infrastructure needs urgent reform. Every open borewell should be reported and sealed within 24 hours. Otherwise we're just lucky this time that Gurkaran survived. The real heroes are the local villagers who helped dig that parallel pit - true Indian spirit!
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James A
Wonderful to see this kind of community effort in rural India. As someone from the US, I'm impressed by how quickly the administration mobilized - camera, oxygen, equipment within hours. But also heartbreaking that a 4-year-old working family's child faced this danger. I hope the Punjab government compensates the family and ensures borewells are securely capped across the state. Every child deserves safety.
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Siddharth J
What a miracle! 🙌 Nine hours of non-stop effort by NDRF, police, and locals - this is real seva. I'm particularly impressed they used camera to monitor the child's movement and kept oxygen flowing. That's smart thinking. But why does it always take a tragedy to act? This borewell was right next to the house! The owner should be held accountable. Also, MPs and ministers visiting is good but they should focus on making sure such incidents don't happen again. Still, today we

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