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CS Radhika: From Tragedy to Leading the Cauvery Ambulance Service

Tuesday, May 19, 2026
5 min read
CS Radhika: From Tragedy to Leading the Cauvery Ambulance Service

When tragedy hit CS Radhika in 2002, it just… stopped everything. She was a homemaker from Mangaluru. Widowed at thirty. Her husband, Suresh, gone. Liver cancer had taken him after a brutal two-year fight.

But you don't just sit there, do you?

She found a way. She took that grief, that massive weight, and turned it into something real. She started running ambulances. A whole fleet. Across states.

Today, she’s running the Cauvery Ambulance Service . Twelve ambulances. They move people, emergency transport, everywhere in Karnataka and beyond. It’s a lot.

Back then, things were grim. Suresh was the only one making ends meet. He hadn't been much—just educated up to Class 6. Radhika was left with her two daughters, Bhoomika and Bhargavi. Seven and four years old. Just silence, mostly.

But even in that crushing space, one thing stuck. The ambulance her husband used to drive. That small, forgotten vehicle.

She never really thought about it. She just learned to drive, purely out of interest, watching him work. That skill. It became her lifeline, somehow.

“I never thought that the ambulance would help me earn for my family,” she said. That was the core of it. A simple, stark realization.

Encouragement came from friends. Determination. She got her license. Then she started the service up again. It wasn't easy.

She had that experience too. Working as a hospital assistant in Puttur. That taught her first aid. Emergency care. People started trusting her because she knew how to handle things.

Then the calls started. Suddenly.

They poured in. Patients needing transport. Bodies needing to move between states. Late-night emergencies. Radhika handled it all. She’d travel hundreds of kilometers. Sometimes, she left her daughters with relatives while she worked through the night.

“I cater to all types of requirements,” she mentioned. Interstate transfers. Mortuary services too. It just kept moving.

That single ambulance morphed. It grew. She took loans. Added more vehicles. Hired drivers. The business expanded, steadily, over the years. Her daughters, grown up now, they help manage things too. Pursuing their own lives, but involved.

It wasn't just about survival. It became something bigger. Her relentless spirit got noticed. The Mangaluru Press Club Award for service to society. That kind of recognition.

In a world where so much just crumbles under pressure, Radhika chose a different path. She steered through the wreckage. She rebuilt her life. And she became this symbol. For women across India. A symbol of just refusing to break.

Written by Gree News Team — Senior Editorial Board

Gree News Team covers international news and global affairs at Gree News. Our collective of senior editors is dedicated to providing independent, accurate, and responsible journalism for a global audience.

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