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          Patna, March 18 (IANS) After being discouraged against seeking   mercy killing for his two sons, Mukesh Kumar now seeks Prime Minister Manmohan   Singh and Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar's help to save the teenagers, who   suffer from muscular dystrophy.
 
 |  The rare muscular disorder is characterised by the death of muscle cells and   tissue, reducing the victims' body to a mere skeletal form, with curved spines,   progressive loss of body muscle and respiratory difficulties.
 "We were   told that permission for mercy killing is impossible. If it is so, then the   prime minister and chief minister should provide financial help for their   medical treatment," Mukesh Kumar told IANS over telephone Friday.
 
 Nitin,   15, and Anshu, 13, cannot talk or stand on their feet. They are also paralysed   below their chest and are unable to eat or move without assistance.
 
 Their mother, Asha Devi, says her sons were born healthy, but gradually   started developing the condition when they were about two years   old.
 
 Mukesh says doctors and government officials have suggested that   they demand free medical treatment at Delhi's All India Institute of Medical   Sciences (AIIMS).
 
 Mukesh and Asha were informed that the Supreme Court   rejected the mercy killing petition for Aruna Shanbaug, a nurse who has been in   coma for 37 years in Mumbai.
 
 Some doctors have told them that there is no   cure for muscular dystrophy, while some have told to try their luck at   AIIMS.
 
 Others have made it clear that advances have been made, but the   treatment is available only in the US, and costs anywhere upwards of Rs.30 lakh   (Rs.3 million/about $60,000).
 
 Mukesh Kumar speaks of this sum with an   expression of helplessness. He also runs a small shop to supplement his income,   but manages to earn just Rs.3,500-4,000 a month.
 
 A poor farmer in Ratwada   village of Muzaffarpur district, some 70 km from Patna, he has sold off his   little piece of land and other valuables for his sons' medicines.
 
 "We   cannot see our sons' pain and helplessness any more. Both are in utter   discomfort," he said with a void in his eyes.
 
 "There is no temple or   mosque that I haven't visited to pray for my children. I've gone to Delhi,   Lucknow and Kolkata for their treatment, and tried everything from allopathy to   ayurveda... I've done everything I could," he said.
 
 For Asha Devi, her   children's condition is too much to bear.
 
 "I cannot tolerate such a   painful life for them. It is for the government to decide whether to grant   permission for mercy killing or help us with their treatment," she said, her   voice choking.
 
 
 
      
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