Similar to Atul Subhash case, no outrage?

Started by Cricfan, Jun 27, 2026, 11:56 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Cricfan

Tina, a 24-year-old from Nangloi, Delhi, died by suicide on the afternoon of June 23, 2026. She had been facing severe mental and physical harassment from her husband and in‑laws. After about two and a half years of marriage, she was found hanging from a ceiling fan at her marital home. No written note was left, but police recovered a three‑minute video on her phone that acts as her final statement. In the video, Tina cries to her father, says she is leaving, strongly denies the false accusations made by her in‑laws, and says she can no longer live with her husband. She pleads with her parents to take custody of her 1.5-year-old daughter Mona and begs that the child never be handed over to the husband's family. After her family approached the Sub‑Divisional Magistrate, the Delhi Police filed a criminal case for domestic cruelty and abetment to suicide under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, and her husband has been detained while investigations continue.

Where is India heading????

Source:
https://www.timesnownews.com/delhi/papa-i-am-leaving-delhi-woman-dies-by-suicide-video-alleges-harassment-by-in-laws-take-care-of-my-daughter-article-154752983

Benny

The reason male‑victim cases get so much attention is that they are fewer compared to women. They are often used to downplay the systemic subjugation women face every day. Female‑victim cases slip by unnoticed because there are so many and it has become normalised. Only 1‑2 out of a haystack get attention like Twisha Sharma's case.

PS: I'm not saying male victims shouldn't get justice - they should. A woman can commit a heinous crime just as a man can. I'm just pointing out what drives social‑media buzz.

Aftab

Towards a society that keeps debating the victim rather than confronting the abuse.

Parth

Some people will downplay this by asking, 'why didn't her parents take her home?' In this case they would need proof, because anyone can make false allegations.

Then men will get scared to marry. But they aren't scared; their sisters and daughters still get married despite the higher numbers of crimes against women by husbands and in‑laws.

Jignesh

Men's issues get a lot of attention because many men have a victim complex, and such news validates it.

Amar

On Facebook, someone commented that this article is just a way to divert attention from the Siya‑Chetan case. People are becoming so insensitive.

Saloni

Shhhhhh. They're focused on the Siya Goyal case right now. They'll come here after that one is settled.

Also, this case is getting a lot of misplaced anger towards women.

No one is even sad about the boy who died in the metro because of another guy's anger issues and underlying psychopathic tendencies.

No one is posting things like 'man, I travel the metro every day, now I can't even talk to men, they're so dangerous' or 'where are the men's‑rights activists now? A brother of ours was killed for no reason.'