
Woman missing for 34 years, treated for schizophrenia, reunited with family in emotional homecoming
'My sister was in her early 30s, when one day she left home. Complaints were lodged and searches carried out everywhere. But we gave up hope during the pandemic and thought she was no more,' Fakir, who has a small construction business, said. Fakir's elder brother Hussain, 82, also cannot believe his little sister is back. Overjoyed she has returned after 34 years, Fakir told The Indian Express, 'Meri behen mere paas rahegi (My sister will stay with me).'
Sohida, who would call herself 'Musamma', had undergone treatment for mental illness at Guwahati after marriage. Family members say most likely she had wandered off in that mental state. It was 27 years ago on December 12, 1998 that she was admitted to the Regional Mental Hospital at Thane. At the time, she was lodged as an undertrial at Arthur Road Jail and was sent to the hospital for psychiatric treatment following a court order.
However, despite receiving seven years of care and being diagnosed with schizophrenia, she was deemed unfit for discharge. Over the years, persistent follow-ups and communication with the help of a Bengali interpreter by a team from Thane Mental Hospital and then later with the Shraddha Rehabilitation Foundation, helped trace her origins to a village in Assam. According to Dr Archana Gadkari, psychiatrist at Regional Mental Hospital, Thane, she was brought to the hospital from jail. 'She had a history of aggressiveness, poor interactions, impaired self-care and sleep,' Dr Gadkari said. She added that later some of the criminal charges were dropped against her and due to the efforts of the hospital, she was converted from a criminal to a civil patient.
Varsha Warade, sister-in-charge at Regional Mental Hospital, when contacted, said it took a while for 'Musamma' to respond to medication and counselling. It was several years later that she started responding and spoke in Bengali with the interpreter. The search then began to reunite 'Musamma' with her family and the team at Regional Mental Hospital, reached out to the Shraddha Rehabilitation Foundation.
Set up by Magsaysay Award winner Dr Bharat Vatwani with his wife and others, the foundation in Mumbai and Karjat over the years has reunited more than 7,000 mentally ill persons with their families. Dr Vatwani said when she was admitted to hospital in 1998, it was likely that in her disturbed mental state, Sohida may have mentioned Bangladesh and hence there was a court order issued that she should be deported.
'The team of psychiatrists felt she belonged to Assam and reached out to us. Our team went with photographs and other details to Assam and were able to trace her relatives. What added to the challenge was a death certificate issued by the Dotoma block Primary Health Centre in Kokrajhar. However, our team contacted the police and after an identification process, she was sent to the foundation on April 29 this year. Our social worker Samar Basak accompanied her to Assam where she was reunited with the family on May 14,' Dr Vatwani said.
Anuradha Mascarenhas is a journalist with The Indian Express and is based in Pune. A senior editor, Anuradha writes on health, research developments in the field of science and environment and takes keen interest in covering women's issues. With a career spanning over 25 years, Anuradha has also led teams and often coordinated the edition.
... Read More
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
21 minutes ago
- Indian Express
‘No arrest, only lawful document verification': Odisha Advocate General tells Calcutta HC on migrant detentions
The Calcutta High Court on Wednesday asked the Advocate General of Odisha to submit an affidavit on the alleged detention of Bengali-speaking migrant workers who had travelled to the state for work. The division bench of Justice Tapabrata Chakraborty and Justice Reetobroto Kumar Mitra asked, 'Apprise us whether they were arrested, interrogated, or detained.' The Advocate General of Odisha, appearing virtually, denied any arrest. According to the petitioners' counsel, those detained were allegedly released only after the court intervened. Raghunath Chakraborty, appearing for the petitioners, said, 'The detention was illegal and thus compensation should be provided. Those who have been released have stated that many others like them remain in custody — detained illegally and not produced before a magistrate.' 'There have been no arrests. As per the Foreigners Act, 1946, Section 3, when the citizenship of suspected persons is in doubt, we investigate for lawful verification of documents. People from all over the country come to work here, and lawfully, on suspicion, their documents are verified,' the Odisha Advocate General submitted. Senior counsel Kalyan Banerjee, appearing for the petitioners, argued, 'There must be some grounds. Only on suspicion, they cannot declare someone a foreigner.' After hearing all parties, the court directed the Odisha government to submit its affidavit in opposition by August 20. The petitioners were directed to file replies by August 27, and the matter will be taken up on August 29. The court also directed Advocate General Ashok Kumar Acharya to be present in person for the next hearing. The court is hearing two habeas corpus petitions filed earlier this month against Odisha Police, accusing it of illegally detaining Bengali-speaking migrant workers. One of the petitions was filed by Nasima Mondal, mother of Rakhibul Islam Mondal who is a resident of Hariharpara in Murshidabad and was allegedly detained in Odisha's Jagatsinghpur district. She moved the High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution, claiming her son was held for more than 24 hours without being produced before a magistrate in violation of his fundamental rights. According to her petition, police allegedly picked up Rakhibul during an identity verification drive on June 25 and 'ignored valid documents' in his possession — including Aadhaar, voter ID, and ration card. The petitioner alleged he was targeted for speaking Bengali and suspected of being Bangladeshi, without any proper identity checks. Another petition was filed by Rajjak Sheikh, also from Hariharpara, seeking the release of his son, Sainur Islam. He claimed Jagatsinghpur police detained his son during a similar identity verification drive on June 30.


Indian Express
an hour ago
- Indian Express
‘Give us back last 20 years': Son of Mumbai blasts accused, who died in jail 4 years before acquittal
Abdullah Ansari was six years old when his father, Kamal Ahmed Mohammad Vakil Ansari, was arrested from Basopatti in Bihar's Madhubani district after being accused of involvement in the Mumbai train blasts of July 11, 2006, in which 189 people were killed. 'I don't remember much… At that age, children just about know how to walk properly,' he told The Indian Express on Tuesday. On Monday, nearly two decades after his father's arrest, the Bombay High Court acquitted all 12 men convicted in the case. This included a posthumous acquittal for Kamal Ansari, who died in jail in 2021 at the age of 50. 'The only thing I want to say is, give us back the last 20 years… Only we know what we went through during these years,' said Abdullah, who last met his father in 2017. He said the High Court judgment came too late. 'What was meant to be wrapped up by the MCOCA (Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act) court in two-four years dragged on for much longer, and then it took another decade in the High Court. My father died in jail.' According to official records, Kamal Ansari died of Covid at Nagpur Central Jail in 2021, during the height of the pandemic. 'What happened was wrong, not just to my father but also to the others whose lives were destroyed by this process. Can anyone give back those 20 years to us, or to the 11 other families that also suffered?' Abdullah said. In July 2006, 189 people were killed and 824 injured in a series of blasts that ripped through seven Mumbai local train coaches. Kamal Ansari had been accused of receiving arms training in Pakistan, ferrying Pakistani terrorists across the Indo-Nepal border, and helping plant explosives that detonated at Matunga station in Mumbai. However, his son said Kamal was a worker trying to make ends meet by doing odd jobs in Madhubani and nearby areas. In 2015, a special MCOCA court sentenced Kamal Ansari and four others to death on charges of organised crime, criminal conspiracy, spreading terror and murder, under the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA), the Indian Penal Code (IPC), the Explosives Substances Act, 1908, MCOCA, and Railways Act, 1989. After his father's arrest, Abdullah said that 'his mother and three brothers endured severe financial hardship'. The eldest among the siblings, Abdullah now works in a private company in Delhi, as does his brother Obedullah. Another brother, Abdul, works in Darbhanga, while the youngest, Sufian, is still studying.


Indian Express
2 hours ago
- Indian Express
8 drug addicts escape from Govt de-addiction centre in Punjab's Sangrur
Eight drug addicts allegedly escaped from a government-run de-addiction centre in Punjab's Sangrur district after reportedly attacking a policeman and a nurse with steel plates during dinner time on Tuesday evening, the police said. The police have formed multiple teams to trace and apprehend the escapees of the centre at Ghabdan village, said an officer. The policeman, identified as Malkeet Singh, was injured and is undergoing treatment at a hospital. 'I was attacked on the neck, and they tried to strangulate me, due to which I became unconscious. Many inmates tried to flee, but the staff managed to control some. A few still managed to escape,' he told reporters on Wednesday. Sartaj Singh Chahal, Senior Superintendent of Police, Sangrur, said, 'Follow-up is being done by the administration with the officials at the de-addiction centre. They were addicts, not criminals. Hence, it needs to be dealt with sensitivity.' SSP Chahal told The Indian Express, 'Several people come for rehabilitation. Some are a bit mischievous. That is what rehabilitation is for. It is essential to see the daily practical efforts at the ground level. The war against drugs is made up of daily battles, some obvious, some unobtrusive.' Most of the inmates were previously arrested under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act, but were sent to the rehabilitation centre as they were drug addicts, revealed sources. A similar incident was reported at the facility in January last year, where nine addicts escaped under almost identical circumstances — attacking the staff with steel plates during dinner.