This story is from January 19, 2022

Telangana: Nizamabad worker dies of heart attack in Oman, body brought home

The body of a 48-year-old gulf worker Chinnolla Narsaiah from Nizamabad in Telangana, who suffered a heart attack and died in Oman, was brought to the city on Wednesday.
Telangana: Nizamabad worker dies of heart attack in Oman, body brought home
The victim was working in Oman for the last five years
HYDERABAD: The body of a 48-year-old gulf worker Chinnolla Narsaiah from Nizamabad in Telangana, who suffered a heart attack and died in Oman, was brought to the city on Wednesday.
Chinnolla Narsaiah’s body was later taken to his native village Vempalli of Muipkal mandal in Nizamabad district.
According to social worker Muralidhar Reddy Gangula, the state government provided transport for taking the body to the village from the airport.
Narsaiah had worked in Dubai for 15 years and was working in Oman for the last five years with an international projects company. He died on January 14, 2022.
While the body was transported to India with help from Nizamabad MP D Aravind and the Indian embassy in Muscat, Oman, Gulf JAC representative and social activist Muralidhar Reddy Gangula has also urged the embassy to see that the deceased worker’s salary dues and other benefits are released by the company that he had been working for. Narsaiah is survived by his mother, wife, a 15-year-old daughter and 12-year-old son.
“There are companies which evade salary dues to the family of the deceased. This should not happen in the case of Narsaiah and we have written to the embassy about it,” Swadesh Parikipandla, president of Pravasi Mitra Labour Union and Muralidhar Reddy Gangula said.
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About the Author
Ch Sushil Rao

Sushil Rao is Editor-Special Reports, at The Times of India, Hyderabad. He began his journalism career at the age of 20 in 1988. He is a gold medalist in journalism from the Department of Communication and Journalism, Arts College, Osmania University, Hyderabad from where he did his post-graduation from. He has been with The Times of India’s Hyderabad edition since its launch in 2000. He has also done an introductory course in film studies from the Film and Television Institute of India, Pune, and also from the Central University of Kerala equipping himself with the knowledge of filmmaking for film criticism. He has authored four books. In his career spanning 34 years, he has worked for five newspapers and has also done television reporting. He was also a web journalist during internet’s infancy in the mid 1990s in India. He covers defence, politics, diaspora, innovation, administration, the film industry, Hyderabad city and Telangana state, and human interest stories. He is also a podcaster, blogger, does video reporting and makes documentaries.

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