Indian child still trapped in well after four days
Indian emergency workers scramble to rescue a two-year-old boy trapped down a narrow, disused well for over four days in the western state of Punjab. Image Credit: AFP

NEW DELHI - A two-year-old Indian boy stuck in a narrow well for more than four days was pulled out dead on Tuesday, triggering protests over delays in reaching the toddler.

The case of Fatehveer Singh captured national attention after he fell into the 33-metre (110 feet) deep well in the Punjab state district of Sangrur while playing on Thursday.

The disused well was just 23 centimetres (nine inches) wide, complicating desperate efforts by dozens of rescue workers and volunteers as locals and television cameras looked on.

"The child is not alive anymore. He was pulled out at 5 in the morning by the NDRF (National Disaster Response Force) personnel," Vijay Inder Singla, a state lawmaker, told AFP.

Boy trapped in well Punjab
Two-year old fell into an abandoned borewell that was 150-feet deep, he was stuck inside for five days before being rescued on Tuesday

The toddler, who had oxygen supplies but no food or water, was flown in an air ambulance to a hospital in the capital Chandigarh where he was declared dead.

Authorities had dug a hole parallel to the well and inserted a 36-inch wide pipe into it, in an attempt to reach the trapped toddler.

Villagers angry about the failed rescue mission gathered at the site Tuesday and shouted slogans against the state government.

"Why was he taken to the hospital when he is no more," Rohi Singh, child's grandfather, told reporters on the spot before official confirmation came in hours later. He claimed that the body of the child had grievous wounds. "He was pulled out (of the borewell) by using strings."

Protesters also blocked a main road briefly before police were deployed to prevent further trouble.

The rescue operation was "delayed due to lack of required technical assistance," resident Kultar Singh was quoted as saying by local media.

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The borewell was dug by the child's family in 1984. They used to draw water from it to irrigate the fields but stopped using it after 1991.

Punjab Chief Minister Amarinder Singh has ordered a crackdown on open wells across the state.