Firecracker victims share how life is without limbs
>> Tuesday, January 3, 2017
DAGUPAN CITY – In a
soft voice, two amputees shyly appealed to their audience: “‘Wag nyo kaming
tularan (Don’t emulate us).”
Nervous, the two
confessed that they continue to regret their stubbornness and acts of
indiscretion in their younger years.
They recalled that
during the New Year revelries some years back, they set out to pick up firecrackers
which failed to go off.
Seconds later, the
same firecrackers almost blew off their upper limbs, which were later
amputated.
Jemmar Llamas, now 36,
of Barangay Bonuan Gueset, and Jomari Rosario, now 15, of Barangay Malued,
survived the incidents that nearly cost them their lives.
They said they have
moved on, though they believe that life would have been kinder to them had they
not lost one arm each to the firecracker explosion.
At about 8 a.m. on
Jan. 1, 2006, Jemmar, then 24, and six cousins greeted the new year by walking
along Paras St. in Bonuan Gueset, searching for pyrotechnics that did not
explode the previous night.
Jemmar stumbled upon a
rare firecracker that seemed to have not exploded.
He showed his cousins
his find, but when they gathered around him, the firecracker suddenly
exploded, badly injuring them.
The victims’
relatives were speechless and only one kin, Rod Ibasan, had the presence
of mind to call for help.
“That was a ‘thermal
bomb’, an imported kind of pyrotechnic,” recounted Jemmar during a talk with
newsmen during the launch of this year’s “Oplan: Iwas Paputok,” a yearly
project of the Department of Health (DOH) with DOH Undersecretary and
concurrently DOH-Ilocos Region director Myrna Cabotaje, and Mayor Belen
Fernandez as guests.
At Region 1 Medical
Center (R1MC), doctors advised Jemmar’s parents that his badly mangled left arm
needed to be amputated. His six cousins were luckier as they only sustained
minor injuries and were discharged after a few hours.
In the case of Jomari,
he was only 12 when his right arm was amputated on Jan. 4, 2014, a few minutes
after he and some friends exploded a “Super Lolo” they found in their
neighborhood.
Both Jemmar and Jomari
were tapped by Dagupan’s local government to speak in various school forums in
a bid to discourage students from exploding firecrackers. Instead, they endorse
the use of toy horns, trumpets and drums – makeshift or otherwise – in creating
noise to welcome the New Year, in keeping with the Filipino tradition. -- PNA
0 comments:
Post a Comment