Accident at Neelam Shinde
Neelam Shinde accident: MEA takes up family's urgent visa request with US
Neelam Shinde has reportedly suffered severe injuries to her head, hand, and chest. Her family has sought an urgent visa to travel to the US to be by her side.
Indian student Neelam Shinde, who died in California due to a road accident, has requested an urgent visa for her family in the United States.
Neelam Shinde, a resident of the Satara district in Maharashtra, sustained severe injuries in the accident on February 14 and has been in a coma ever since. Neelam Shinde has reportedly suffered severe injuries to her head, hand, and chest. In order to be by her side, her family has applied for an urgent visa to visit the US.
The MEA has taken up the matter with the US. The US side is looking into the formalities for early grant of visa for the applicant's family,” the sources cited in the PTI report said.
Student Neelam Shinde has met with an accident in the USA and is hospitalized in a local hospital," she said in a post on X.
Her father, Tanaji Shinde, from Satara, Maharashtra, India, urgently needs to visit his daughter due to a medical emergency. Sule stated, "Tanaji Shinde needs assistance because she has applied for an urgent visa to the United States." Since February 16,
Neelam Shinde's family has been applying for a visa.
"We got to know about the accident on February 16 and have been trying for a visa since then. But we haven't got it yet," the report quoted Neelam’s father Tanaji Shinde as saying.
The family claims that the last time they spoke to their daughter was on February 12, two days before the tragic accident that put her in a coma.
Indian student Neelam Shinde critical after accident, family seeks urgent visa to US
Neelam Shinde, from Maharashtra, is in a coma after she reportedly met with an accident on February 14 in California.
The family of an Indian student, who is hospitalized in the United States after meeting with an accident, is seeking an urgent visa to visit her. The student, named Neelam Shinde, is from Maharashtra’s Satara district and her father, Tanaji Shinde, has requested an urgent visa due to medical emergency.
Nationalist Congress Party MP Supriya Sule raised the issue on social media and urged Indian foreign minister S Jaishankar to look into the matter and help Neelam’s family.
Through a post on X, formerly Twitter, Sule said, “Student Neelam Shinde has met with an accident in the USA and is hospitalized in a local hospital. Her father, Tanaji Shinde, from Satara, Maharashtra, India, urgently needs to visit his daughter due to a medical emergency. Tanaji Shinde requires assistance because she has applied for an urgent visa to the United States.
According to a report from NDTV, Neelam was involved in an accident on February 14 in California and is currently in a coma and in critical condition. According to the report, she was struck by a four-wheeler, sustaining serious head and chest injuries as well as multiple fractures.
According to a report from NDTV, Neelam was involved in an accident on February 14 in California and is currently in a coma and in critical condition. She was hit by a four-wheeler, the report says, and suffered serious injuries to her head and chest and multiple fractures.
Speaking about the responses to her social media post, Supriya Sule told the news outlet that Indian students in the US have reached out to her to extend help for Neelam. She also told NDTV that while she hasn’t been in touch with the family personally, she got somebody locally to contact and ensure the family.
Sule went on to express optimism regarding the assistance of the authorities for the family. Although we may disagree politically, I must declare that Mr. Jaishankar is extremely helpful and sympathetic when it comes to student issues. My interactions with
the Ministry of External Affairs, or MEA, have been extremely positive. They always go the extra mile to help,” she said.
The MEA has taken up the matter, news agency ANI reported citing unnamed sources. It also stated that the US side is investigating the requirements for an early visa grant to the applicant's family.


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