logo
Newlywed wives accused of murdering husbands stun India: ‘men as victims'

Newlywed wives accused of murdering husbands stun India: ‘men as victims'

What happens when women become the accused in a society accustomed to viewing them as victims? A recent spate of spousal killings involving newlywed brides in
India has upended social assumptions and sparked debate over gender, justice – and the price of compulsion.
Advertisement
The latest case – a chilling murder on a honeymoon – has riveted the Indian public. Earlier this month, police in Madhya Pradesh accused 25-year-old Sonam Raghuvanshi of conspiring with her boyfriend to hire assassins and murder her husband Raja Raghuvanshi, 30, while the newlyweds were travelling in the northeastern state of Meghalaya. Their marriage, like most in India, had been arranged.
It was late May when Raja's decomposed body was found following an extensive search. Investigators allege that Sonam orchestrated the killing. Her father has vehemently denied the claim, accusing authorities of 'making up stories' and demanding a federal inquiry.
Sonam Raghuvanshia and Raja Raghuvanshi. Photo: Facebook
As the investigation unfolds, the case has become emblematic of what some legal experts describe as a disturbing new trend: wives accused of plotting to kill their husbands, often in concert with lovers from before their marriage.
'The phenomenon of newlywed brides murdering husbands in conspiracy with boyfriends is not entirely unprecedented, but its increased frequency, boldness and brazenness make it a disturbing emerging pattern in recent times,' said Bhargav Baisoya, a lawyer at Jotwani Associates in New Delhi.
The headlines have come in quick succession. In March, a 22-year-old named Pragati, barely two weeks into her arranged marriage in Uttar Pradesh, was accused of collaborating with her boyfriend, Anurag, to hire contract killers to murder her husband, Dilip.
Saurabh Rajput's body was found stuffed inside a cement-filled drum. Photo: X
That same month in Meerut, police discovered the remains of former merchant navy officer Saurabh Rajput, his body stuffed inside a cement-filled drum. Investigators allege his wife, Muskan, and her lover, Sahil Shukla, drugged him and then stabbed him to death.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Indian police find Russian woman, 2 daughters living in isolated forest cave
Indian police find Russian woman, 2 daughters living in isolated forest cave

South China Morning Post

time5 days ago

  • South China Morning Post

Indian police find Russian woman, 2 daughters living in isolated forest cave

Police in India's southern Karnataka state said on Wednesday they found a Russian woman and her two young daughters living in isolation in a remote forest cave. Advertisement The woman, identified as Nina Kutina, 40, and her daughters, aged six and four, were found by police during a routine patrol to Ramatirtha Hill, a popular tourist site on the coast of Karnataka, on July 9. Police officer Sridhar S.R. said the family had been living in the cave for more than a week. Police said they were taking steps to repatriate Kutina to Russia for overstaying her visa. She and her children have been moved to a nearby detention facility for foreigners living illegally in India. Police said in a statement that Kutina spent her time in the cave meditating by candlelight, and that she told investigating officers she was 'interested in staying in the forest and worshipping God'. Sridhar said Kutina told police that she had worked as a tutor of Russian language in Goa, a coastal tourist state in southern India. Advertisement 'It is nothing but her love for adventure that brought her here,' Sridhar said.

‘Turbaned Tornado' marathon runner Fauja Singh dies at 114 in India
‘Turbaned Tornado' marathon runner Fauja Singh dies at 114 in India

South China Morning Post

time6 days ago

  • South China Morning Post

‘Turbaned Tornado' marathon runner Fauja Singh dies at 114 in India

A British-Indian man aged 114 and widely considered the oldest marathon runner ever has died after being hit by a car while crossing a road in India. Fauja Singh died in Punjab, according to local reports, which stated that he suffered fatal injuries in the accident at his birth village of Beas Pind. His death was confirmed by Khushwant Singh, Punjab's former state information commissioner, who wrote the runner's biography, The Turbaned Tornado. 'My Turbaned Tornado is no more,' he posted on social media. In an article by The New Indian Express, Singh's son Harvinder was quoted as saying: 'My father was going for a walk when an unidentified vehicle hit him. He suffered head injuries. We immediately rushed him to a private hospital; however, he succumbed to his injuries.' Singh, who lived in London, was known to have held multiple marathon records across age categories and became renowned only after joining races at the ripe age of 89 in 2000, finishing his first London marathon in six hours and 54 minutes – a record for his age group at the time. Fauja Singh, then 101, shows his passport in Causeway Bay ahead of a 10km race at the Hong Kong Marathon event. Photo: K. Y. Cheng His personal best was at a marathon in Toronto in 2003, which he completed in five hours and 40 minutes, according to Yahoo News.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store