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The body of a victim of communal violence is brought home to Old Mustafabad neighborhood of New Delhi, India, Saturday, Feb. 29, 2020. On the eve of U.S. President Donald Trump's first state visit to India last Sunday, Hindus and Muslims in the Indian capital charged at each other with homemade guns and crude weapons, leaving the streets where the rioting occurred resembling a war zone, with houses, shops, mosques, schools and vehicles up in flames, more than 40 dead and hundreds injured. Authorities haven't said what sparked it, but the violence was the culmination of growing tensions since the passage of a citizenship law in December that fast-tracks naturalization for some religious minorities from neighboring countries but not Muslims. (AP Photo/Dinesh Joshi) Image Credit: AP

New Delhi: It has been a week since riots shook northeast Delhi, but the families of the deceased continue to wait outside Guru Teg Bahadur Hospital’s mortuary to collect the bodies of their relatives.

Salim Kassar (50), who has been sitting here since Monday, finally lost patience on Saturday, when a police personnel asked him to come the next day for collecting the corpse of his brother. “First, I lost my brother who was burnt alive in the riots and now you want me to keep running to the morgue? I don’t have money to come here again and again. I have lost everything in the riots,” said Salim to the policeman.

A woman, Nijma, whose son Monis went missing during the riots, visited at least four hospitals in her search for him and unfortunately found his body in GTB hospital’s mortuary on Friday. She fainted due to grief and tiredness here on Saturday.

Nijma told IANS: “I have made at least 7 to 8 rounds of the hospital but my son’s body has not been handed over. I have spent at least five thousand rupees on transportation during my search for him. Finally I found him here at the mortuary (of GTB) but they are yet to give me the body. I want to go back to my native place as soon as possible, for his last rites.”

The relatives of the deceased alleged that the delay was due to the investigating officers of the riot affected areas who were not doing the required paperwork for the postmortem.

Meanwhile, GTB officials told IANS that 25 postmortems had been performed since Monday. Only 13 bodies have been left for postmortem.

“25 postmortems have been done so far, 13 bodies are pending, six bodies are yet to be identified,” said the hospital authorities. “We will try to do as many postmortems as possible by today unless bound by legal limitations. What will we achieve by keeping the bodies here?”