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RIP: 12-year-old dies inside the house after stepping on f… See more

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Emergency responders arrived within minutes. Paramedics administered CPR on the scene and continued life-saving efforts during transport to the hospital. Doctors worked urgently to stabilize the child, but the electrical current had already inflicted catastrophic internal damage. Despite every intervention modern medicine could provide, the young life could not be saved.

The news spread quickly, leaving neighbors stunned and grieving. On the sidewalk outside the family’s home, candles flicker beside stuffed animals and handwritten notes. Teachers describe a bright student with a contagious smile. Friends struggle to comprehend how something so ordinary—a home floor, an electrical outlet—could become fatal.

“It just doesn’t make sense,” one neighbor said quietly. “We worry about strangers, about traffic, about the outside world. But this happened at home. That’s supposed to be the safest place.”

The Invisible Danger
Electricity is so seamlessly integrated into modern life that it often fades into the background. Lights switch on at the touch of a finger. Devices charge quietly overnight. Appliances hum and cycle without thought. But behind walls, beneath floors, and inside outlets, a powerful force flows continuously—one that demands respect and careful maintenance.

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