I Couldn’t Save My Son”: Union Minister’s Emotional Appeal On Alcoholism
Sultanpur:
A rickshaw puller or a labourer will prove to be a better bridegroom than an alcoholic officer, Union Minister of State for Housing and Urban Affairs Kaushal Kishore said as he appealed to people not to get their daughters and sisters married to alcoholics. “The lifespan of an alcoholic is very less,” Mr Kishore reasoned, while addressing a programme on de-addiction in the Lambhua assembly constituency here on Saturday.
Narrating his personal experience, he said, “When I as an MP and my wife as an MLA could not save the life of our son, then how will the common public do so.” “My son (Akash Kishore) was into the habit of consuming alcohol with his friends. He was admitted to a de-addiction centre. Assuming that he will quit the bad habit, he was married after six months. However, he started drinking again after his marriage, and that eventually led to his death. Two years ago, on October 19, when Akash passed away, his son was barely two years old,” the Union minister said.
Kaushal Kishore told the gathering, “I could not save my son, due to which his wife became a widow. You must save your daughters and sisters from this.” “In the freedom movement, 6.32 lakh people had sacrificed their lives fighting the British in a span of 90 years, while due to addiction, every year around 20 lakh people die,” the minister noted.