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6 Indians die in a crash
Donations
for the families of those killed in the crash
may be sent to Syntel Accident Fund, 525 E. Big
Beaver Toad, Suite 300, Troy, MI 48032.
DETROIT
(AP) — A minivan carrying a group of Indian
computer programmers and their wives on the way
to a Niagara Falls vacation flipped and crashed
in western Pennsylvania, killing six of seven
people on board, officials say.
Four of those killed and the lone survivor were
programmers who worked for Troy-based Syntel
Inc., an information technology outsourcing
company.
The van crossed a median on Interstate 90 and
was hit by an oncoming car about 4 p.m.
Saturday, police say. They said it was about
three miles inside the Pennsylvania-Ohio border
when it crossed the highway and began flipping
and rolling, coming to rest on its roof.
It was then struck by an oncoming westbound car,
whose driver was treated at a hospital and
released Saturday night, said Pennsylvania state
police Cpl. Kevin Havern.
The crash killed driver Kaushik Deb, 26, and
five of his six passengers — Manoj Jharia, 35;
his wife Mili Jharia, 28; Nitin Agarwal, 29; his
wife Swati Agarwal, 25; and Shubham Choudory,
24.
The sole survivor in the minivan, Nitin Gupta,
28, was sitting in the front passenger seat,
Havern said. He was also treated and released
from a hospital Saturday.
Calls to a
Farmington Hills telephone listing for Gupta
were not answered Sunday evening.
Deb, Choudory, Gupta, Manoj Jharia and Nitin
Agarwal worked as software writers for Syntel,
said Jonathan James, vice president for
marketing and investor relations.
"Our sympathies are extended to the families of
the victims on this very sad day," he told The
Associated Press by telephone Sunday. "Our
primary concern is ensuring the families get all
the care and support they need during this very
difficult time."
Like Gupta, the victims all lived in the Detroit
suburb of Farmington Hills, James said.
"Arrangements are being made for the bodies of
the victims to be transported back to India," he
said Sunday night.
The Jharias and Agarwals were from the city of
Jabalpur, Choudory was from Indore and Deb was
from Calcutta, James said. He did not know
Gupta's hometown in India.
Some had worked up to four years for Syntel and
others had worked as little as three months,
James said. The company has started a memorial
fund for the victims' families and is
considering whether to bring in grief
counselors, he said.
The seven were traveling with another van
carrying six people that was a few minutes ahead
of them. James said he did not know if any of
those in the other van were Syntel employees.
The two groups had just left a rest stop and
traveled about a quarter-mile when the accident
occurred, said Kranthi Bandaru, who was
traveling in the second van.
"We left them about 10 minutes before they drove
on," Bandaru told the Erie Times-News. "We
continued down the road when we received a cell
phone call from Nitin that there was an
accident. That's when we turned around."
State police said there was no apparent cause of
the crash. Erie County Coroner Lyell Cook said
he has ordered toxicology tests for minivan's
driver.
The car's driver, Melanie Cesnick, 25, of Avon
Lake, Ohio, was treated for non-life-threatening
injuries, the Times-News reported.
Syntel is an information technology company with
27 offices and 12,000 employees worldwide and
2007 revenues of $337.7 million, according to
its Web site.
The four employees who were killed had worked as
software writers at the offices of various
Detroit-area companies served by Syntel, James
said. He said the trip was a personal vacation
and not a company sponsored excursion or
business trip.
Tamilpakkam prays for their souls to rest in
peace!
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