The deceased, a Class 12 student of a private school and the only child of a RBI official. She used a knife with a stone blade to harm herself
By: India Weekly
A 17-YEAR-OLD girl in Nagpur allegedly committed suicide after searching online about “what happens after death”, police said on Tuesday.
The deceased, a Class 12 student of a private school and the only child of a RBI official, frequently searched for information about death and foreign cultures, they said.
She allegedly first slashed her wrist, making cross marks with a ‘stone blade knife’ which she had apparently ordered online, and then slit her throat to end her life, the police said.
Her mother, a homemaker, found her lying in a pool of blood in her bedroom at their home at around 5.45 am on Monday (27) and raised an alarm, the police said.
The police reached the spot and seized her mobile phone. They found that she had been searching on Google for information about “what happens after death”, an official from Dhantoli police station said.
She had written extensively about foreign cultures in her diaries, he said.
The police learnt that the girl was particularly interested in the European culture and had been researching on death for some time.
This suggests that she was planning suicide for several weeks, the official said.
During inspection of the body, the police noticed the girl had made five cuts on her wrist, including two cross marks, and also slit her throat, he said.
Investigations suggested the girl was also addicted to online gaming, the official said.
The knife with a stone blade and wooden handle, which she allegedly used to end her life is not available in the local market, he said.
Police suspect the girl might have ordered the knife online and authorities were checking her social media account, the official said.
The girl lived with her parents on the ground floor of their house, while the first floor was occupied by her uncle’s family and grandmother.
The police have registered a case of accidental death and conducting further probe. (PTI)