logo
Usne Shyd Kuch Spray Kara Content Creator Alleges Drugged, Robbed On Train To Guwahati

Usne Shyd Kuch Spray Kara Content Creator Alleges Drugged, Robbed On Train To Guwahati

India.com3 days ago
Travel vlogger Kanika Devrani has alleged she was drugged and robbed of her phone while travelling in the 2AC coach, raising concerns over railway security.
New Delhi: A travel vlogger and social media influencer has alleged that she was drugged and robbed while travelling in a 2AC coach of the Brahmaputra Mail, sparking fresh concerns over passenger security on Indian Railways.
Kanika Devrani, a YouTuber with more than 479 thousand Instagram followers, detailed the incident in a video shared on social media. The alleged theft took place during her journey from Delhi to Guwahati.
In the video, Devrani claimed she lost consciousness mid-journey and later discovered that her iPhone had been stolen by the time the train reached New Jalpaiguri station in West Bengal. "Usne shyd kuch spray kara, jisse shyd mereko kuch sense nahi hua, kyuki koi bhi agar asie travel krta hai toh mind toh alert rehta hi hai," she added. She alleged that an unauthorised individual entered her coach, possibly sprayed a sedative, and stole her phone.
'First-class AC tickets weren't available, so I booked a 2AC ticket, thinking it would be equally safe. But I was wrong,' she said in Hindi, adding, 'Maine socha first AC aur second AC dono mein safety toh hoti hi hai.'
She raised concerns about security lapses, questioning how someone without a valid ticket could gain access to a reserved compartment. 'How can someone just enter the train without a ticket? Maybe it was someone local, or someone posing as railway staff, I have no idea,' she said.
According to Devrani, a fellow passenger seated near her also reported a similar experience. 'The uncle next to me said his phone was also stolen. He was awake for the past four hours and was shocked that he didn't notice anything happening,' she added.
Devrani claimed the coach warden downplayed the issue, allegedly saying, 'Train mein toh koi bhi chala jata hai,' implying bad security on board.
She further alleged that Railway Protection Force (RPF) officials were uncooperative, even after she was able to trace her phone to Malda district in West Bengal using a tracking app. 'Initially, the phone wasn't traceable. But around 9:30 am, someone answered my mother's repeated calls and kept asking for the password,' she said.
Watch The Video Here:
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Kannu Priya (@kanika_devrani)
Despite the alarming experience, Devrani later posted an update on her Instagram Stories, reassuring her followers: 'I am safe, guys. I've also tweeted about the issue. Thank you for your concern.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bride, betrayal and bloodshed in Telangana
Bride, betrayal and bloodshed in Telangana

The Hindu

timean hour ago

  • The Hindu

Bride, betrayal and bloodshed in Telangana

The jasmine garlands on the gate had barely withered when the mourning began. Just weeks after a grand wedding in Gadwal, about 190 kilometres from Hyderabad, Ganta Tejeshwar vanished without a trace, and his bride wept the loudest. She held her mother-in-law's hand, filed a missing person's report and prayed fervently, pleading for the safe return of her 30-year-old husband. But the truth, as it would soon unravel, was far darker than anyone could imagine. Today, the dirt road that snakes past Gadwal Fort into Ganjipet lies heavy with silence. It's late June — hot, humid, and unnervingly quiet. Not long ago, the same lane rang with wedding songs, laughter and the clink of bangles. Now, only hushed murmurs and the occasional sob of the youth's grieving parents punctuate the air. At the edge of a dusty, unpaved lane, Tejeshwar's bungalow — once the centre of celebration — stands shrouded in sorrow. Neighbours and villagers arrive in trickles, whispering the same question: How could a newlywed bride plot something so brutal? Inside, his parents — 63-year-old Jayaramulu, a retired land surveyor, and 56-year-old Shakuntala — sit side by side on a single bed in their spacious living room, their backs against a wall that gleamed with wedding silks just weeks ago. Between them, they clutch a framed photo of Tejeshwar, their fingers trembling, the glass misted with tears. 'We waited so long to see him married,' Shakuntala whispers, her voice cracked and eyes downcast. 'And now, this is all we have left.' Beside them sits his twin, Tejavardhan, face lit only by the glow of his phone screen. He scrolls through old Instagram reels, of Tejeshwar dancing to a Telugu song in a park. In another, he is seen leading a group of children. 'Dancing was his passion,' Tejavardhan says, his voice low. 'It never worked out as a career, but he never stopped. He danced for the love of it.' Tejeshwar was more than a brother, more than a son. He was the family's pride: a private land surveyor waiting on a long-anticipated government posting, and a self-taught dance instructor loved by local children. From cold feet to a cold plot The match had come through mutual acquaintances. Ishwarya, from Kurnool in neighbouring Andhra Pradesh, was poised, well-spoken and a seemingly perfect fit, matching Tejeshwar in height. The engagement was celebrated on December 26, 2024, and the wedding was finalised for February 13 this year. The family spared no expense — 1,000 invitations printed with intricate gold detailing, maroon accents on beige paper and a gleaming Lord Ganesha motif at the centre. The K.S. Function Hall on Kurnool Road was booked, the caterers finalised, the menu planned down to the last sweet. But just a week before the wedding, Ishwarya disappeared. 'She stopped answering calls. Her phone was switched off. Tejeshwar waited and then finally called her mother,' recalls Boya Srinivas, his brother-in-law. The news that followed shocked everyone — Ishwarya had fled to Chennai. No explanation, no warning. The wedding was called off. The family lost thousands to vendors, priests and decorators. More than the money, it was the embarrassment and heartbreak that stung. And then, just as suddenly, she returned. 'She told Tejeshwar that her mother had pressured her to back out because they couldn't handle the financial strain,' Srinivas says. 'She cried, begged him to take her back.' Against the advice of his family and the pleas of his twin, Tejeshwar forgave her. Tejavardhan, unable to accept his brother's decision, moved out of the family home and rented a house nearby. 'I told him she was already in a relationship. I had done a background check and warned him,' he says, shaking his head, disbelief still fresh in his voice. 'But he wouldn't listen.' 'He said she loved him, and that was enough,' his father Jayaramulu adds, now bedridden after a recent accident. He recalls how Tejeshwar went from one relative to another, asking them to help convince the family. He was determined to make it work. The wedding eventually took place on May 18 this year, at the Beechupally Temple on the banks of the Krishna River, just 15 kilometres from their house. Though unconvinced, the family attended, choosing Tejeshwar's happiness over their doubts and suspicion. They welcomed Ishwarya into their home. But things never felt right. 'She didn't behave like a new bride,' says Tejeshwar's sister, Susheela. 'She barely interacted with us. She never helped with chores, always stayed locked in the room, always on the phone. She only waited for him to return from work to take her out.' There were brief moments — she made tea once for everyone — but for the most part, Ishwarya remained aloof. She avoided meals cooked by her mother-in-law, ordered junk food instead, and rarely sat with the family. Still, Tejeshwar didn't complain. He continued working, teaching dance, trying to bridge the gap between his family and his wife. But unease hung in the air. Then came June 17. That afternoon, Tejeshwar had called home. He was just 15 minutes away, he said, and asked Ishwarya to have lunch ready. But he never returned. As night fell, panic set in. His phone was unreachable. Calls went unanswered. The next morning, the family rushed to the police station, and Ishwarya went with them. She wept, she prayed, she held her mother-in-law close and stroked her hair. But all along, she knew. Ishwarya had helped plan the murder. The murder plot As suspicion mounted, police turned to call records, and what they uncovered shattered the facade. Over 2,000 calls and messages had been exchanged between Ishwarya and 35-year-old Tirumala Rao, a bank manager with Canfin Homes, totalling more than 20,000 seconds of conversation. The digital trail revealed not just intimacy, but coordination. The affair had begun months earlier in Kurnool. Ishwarya's mother, Sujatha, who worked as a sweeper at Rao's bank, introduced them. Rao, a married man, had helped both mother and daughter secure home loans and slowly tightened his grip. But when Ishwarya's wedding threatened the affair, a chilling decision was made. Rao enlisted a former driver, Kummari Nagesh, and a friend, Parashuramudu. Masquerading as land buyers, they spent time with Tejeshwar, gaining his trust and mapping his movements. As the wedding approached, Rao escalated the plan — a GPS tracker was secretly installed beneath Tejeshwar's bike, says Jogulamba Gadwal Superintendent of Police T. Srinivasa Rao. On June 15, the trio tried to locate him near Gadwal Fort and Sangala Cheruvu but failed. They returned two days later, this time with a rented SUV, black-tinted windows and weapons — two sickles and a knife —stashed under the seat. At 8.30 a.m. on June 17, they called Tejeshwar again. He agreed to meet them near Kistareddy bungalow. He had no idea what awaited him. He climbed into the front seat, and the group drove toward Mogali Ravula Cheruvu, pretending to scout land. After a stop for breakfast, they steered the car towards Kurnool. Around 20 kilometres out, they abruptly turned back. It was just past 11 a.m., as they passed a temple, Parashuramudu moved to the back seat, feigning fatigue and then attacked. A blow to the head with a sickle. Tejeshwar screamed. The car stopped. What followed was brutal: slashing, stabbing and finally, strangulation. His body was shifted to the middle row and covered. The men crossed the Krishna River to Panchalingala, disposing of his phone and bag in the water. Then they met Rao and handed them ₹1 lakh and instructed them to disappear. Later that night, they moved the body again — this time dumping it near the newly-constructed Galeru Nagari Sujala Sravanthi canal. The killers returned to Kurnool and celebrated with drinks. Two days later, another ₹2 lakh was paid through an intermediary. Back in Gadwal, Ishwarya kept up her act, playing the grieving bride. But the police were closing in. CCTV camera footage, mobile data and relentless sleuthing led them to the getaway vehicle. On June 20, at a checkpoint in Pulluru, the car was intercepted and the conspirators were finally arrested. The murder of Tejeshwar is not an isolated tragedy, it is part of a grim and growing pattern. Across India this year, newly-wed men have been killed in eerily similar plots involving married women and their lovers, leaving families shattered and the public rattled. In May, Indore resident Raja Raghuvanshi, just 11 days into marriage, was allegedly murdered by contract killers hired by his wife Sonam and her partner, while honeymooning in Meghalaya. In Uttar Pradesh's Meerut, Saurabh Rajput, a former merchant navy officer, was drugged, chopped into pieces and stuffed into a cement drum by his wife Muskan and her lover, Sahil Shukla, in March. The same month, in Auraiya (U.P.), 25-year-old Dilip Yadav was stabbed to death two weeks after his wedding — another victim of a conspiracy led by his wife Pragati and her lover. Background checks the new norm These chilling cases have triggered a surge in pre-marital background checks across the country. 'We have seen a 30-40% rise in background verification requests over the past five years — and a clear 10–15% spike just in 2025,' says Kumar from Scout Detective Agency in Hyderabad. 'Most marriages today are arranged through online platforms where families barely know each other. Now, background checks have become routine. Families want to know everything — character, job conduct, financials and even romantic history. If the person's behaviour or body language seems off, they ask us to dig deeper.' Captain D.K. Giri, who founded Sharp Detectives in Secunderabad in 1978, confirms the trend. 'Back then, these checks were rare. Today, I get five to seven requests a day — both pre- and post-marital,' he says. Even within his own home, the shift is stark. 'Three of my five sons, aged 44, 32 and 30, have decided not to marry at all. They say it's not worth the risk,' Giri says. He believes societal pressure is partly to blame. 'Children are pushed into marriage without emotional alignment. The heart is elsewhere, but they go through with it to please the family. That dishonesty often leads to devastating outcomes.' Diana Monteiro, a counselling psychologist in Hyderabad, sees this pressure play out often in her practice. 'Arranged marriages aren't inherently the problem. Forced ones are,' she says. 'Once a match is approved by elders, the emotional or logical concerns of the bride or groom are dismissed. Emotional blackmail and abuse are commonly used to pressure them into agreeing. But when problems arise after marriage, the same families ask, 'Why did you marry if you didn't want to?' or they blame the child for not fighting hard enough,' she adds. She notes growing fear among young people. 'I find people more cautious, more sceptical. I have heard half-anxious, half-joking remarks like, 'Hope they don't kill me',' she shares. She highlights to the pressure around past relationships. 'Many young men expect their wives to have no history, no baggage. That creates secrecy. If the truth comes out and the man reacts violently, it can lead to unimaginable consequences.' But even as men are increasingly at risk in such headline-grabbing cases, the larger picture still reveals a society where women continue to suffer in silence. This is just one layer of a much deeper issue, says Purnima Nagaraja, therapist and consultant mental health expert, pointing to widespread dowry deaths and crimes against women in the country. 'Our society continues to expect women to be submissive, tolerant and silently endure suffering. The idea that women themselves could be behind such violent acts is a bitter pill to swallow,' she says. According to her, the root problem lies in how marriages are still arranged — more as alliances between caste, class, and income brackets than between compatible individuals: 'Elders often hold the belief that love can happen after marriage. But today's generation lives in a world shaped by social media, dating culture and conversations around choice and intimacy.' Back in Ganjipet, the wedding album gathers dust on the shelves. In the flickering light of a corner room, Tejeshwar's father stares at his son's photograph — the last one taken before the ceremony. His hands tremble as he touches the frame, his voice barely a whisper. 'Why him?' he asks. It is a question no one can answer.

Karkala resident arrested for malicious post
Karkala resident arrested for malicious post

The Hindu

timean hour ago

  • The Hindu

Karkala resident arrested for malicious post

The Mangaluru City police booked Ashiq S. Kotian, 25, of Irvattoor village, Karkala taluk, Udupi, for malicious post on Instagram. The Mangaluru South police, suo motu registered a case on May 2 on the status of holder of 'hindu_dharma_006' Instagram account for posting objectionable communal content. The police found that the post was by Kotian and arrested him on Thursday for offences punishable under Sections 196, 353(2) and 351(3) of Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita. He was produced before the jurisdictional magistrate, the police said.

Viral video shows Lalit Modi, Vijay Mallya singing together at lavish London party
Viral video shows Lalit Modi, Vijay Mallya singing together at lavish London party

India Today

time3 hours ago

  • India Today

Viral video shows Lalit Modi, Vijay Mallya singing together at lavish London party

Former Indian Premier League (IPL) commissioner Lalit Modi and fugitive businessman Vijay Mallya were seen singing Frank Sinatra's classic 'I Did It My Way' at a lavish party hosted by Modi in London. The video, shared on Instagram by Modi himself, quickly went viral, sparking curiosity and criticism alike due to the legal controversies surrounding both extravagant celebration reportedly drew over 310 guests, including friends and family members who flew in from different parts of the world. One of the attendees was former Royal Challengers Bengaluru cricketer Chris Gayle, who shared an Instagram story featuring a photograph with Modi and Mallya, captioned, 'We living it up. Thanks for a lovely evening,' tagging both hosts.\advertisementLalit Modi captioned his video with a tongue-in-cheek remark, 'Had an amazing night with 310 friends and family... Thank you to one and all who attended this evening and made it one of the most special nights for me. Hope this video doesn't break the internet. Controversial for sure. But that's what I do best.' View this post on Instagram A post shared by Lalit Modi (@lalitkmodi) Modi, once credited for revolutionising Indian cricket through the IPL, has lived in self-imposed exile in the United Kingdom since 2010 after being suspended by the Board of Control for Cricket in India. He faces multiple allegations, including bid rigging, accepting kickbacks, and money laundering, as well as suspected violations of the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) amounting to hundreds of Mallya, often referred to as the 'King of Good Times,' has also been embroiled in legal trouble. He is wanted in India for defaulting on loans worth 9,000 crore and faces fraud and money laundering charges. Mallya, arrested in London in 2017 on India's extradition request, is currently out on bail while legal proceedings continue. He maintains that the allegations are politically motivated and has denied any men, despite their legal battles, appeared at ease as they belted out a song symbolic of defiance and self-assurance. The moment, captured on video, became a talking point not only for its entertainment value but also for the irony it represented—two high-profile fugitives celebrating their lives while evading justice in India.- EndsMust Watch

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