Tragedy struck Bhikupura village in Dewas, Madhya Pradesh, when a 17-year-old ended his life by drinking pesticide following the alleged sexual harassment of his mother by Sunil Malviya in their farmland. Police have taken the perpetrator into custody as public anger boils over.
Family rushed to Udaynagar station Friday evening with complaints, but the absence of a mandated female constable stalled proceedings. This bureaucratic hurdle, critics argue, amplified the boy’s emotional torment to fatal levels.
Saturday dawned with the teen’s fatal decision. Despite immediate medical aid to Bagli facility, poison claimed his life midway. What followed was chaos: grieving kin placed his corpse on Punjpura-Bagli highway, halting traffic and fueling anti-police protests.
Mobs descended on Malviya’s residence, pelting it with rocks, wielding hammers for destruction, and trying to torch his bike. Senior cops like ASP Batham, SDOP Bais, and TI Raikwar rushed in, quelling potential escalation through dialogue and force.
Protesters clamored for bulldozer action against the accused’s property. The standoff revealed procedural gaps—no on-site women officers for assault cases—sparking debates on police preparedness in remote areas.
As calm returns under heavy deployment, this incident exposes vulnerabilities in protecting women and families. It calls for policy overhauls, training enhancements, and 24/7 specialized units to avert future heartbreaks in India’s heartland villages.