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Home  » News » Payal Tadvi suicide: 3 accused docs in police remand

Payal Tadvi suicide: 3 accused docs in police remand

Source: PTI
Last updated on: May 29, 2019 18:01 IST
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IMAGE: The three doctors accused in Payal Tadvi suicide case arrive at session court, in Mumbai, on Wednesday. Photograph: Shashank Parade/PTI Photo

Two more doctors at a state-run hospital in Mumbai were arrested for allegedly abetting the suicide of a junior colleague by passing casteist slurs at her, police
said on Wednesday.

An accused doctor was arrested Tuesday in connection with the suicide. All the three accused were produced in a court here which remanded them in police custody till May 31.

The court accepted the argument by police that the custody of the three accused -- Bhakti Mehere, Hema Ahuja and Ankita Khandelwal -- was required to ascertain if the victim left a suicide note and if the accused destroyed or misplaced it.

The police told the court that while the mobile phones of the accused were seized, more time was required to recover their WhatsApp chats with the victim.

The police claimed that the victim's body had a few injury marks which needed to be probed further. The postmortem report was awaited, they said.

While Mehere was arrested after initial interrogation, Hema Ahuja and Ankita Khandelwal were nabbed in the early hours on Wednesday, a police officer said.

"The two were arrested from Pune and Mumbai," Deputy Commissioner of Police (zone III) Avinash Kumar told PTI.

The three doctors were booked after their 26-year-old junior colleague Payal Tadvi at the Mumbai civic body-run BYL Nair Hospital allegedly hanged herself at her hostel room last Wednesday, a senior police official said.

Her family alleged that the doctors taunted her by ragging and hurling casteist abuses as she belonged to a Scheduled Tribe.

The accused were booked under the Scheduled Castes and Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, Anti-Ragging Act, IT Act and section 306 (abetment to suicide) of the Indian Penal Code.

Advocate Nitin Satpute, appearing for the victim's family, claimed that the injury marks revealed Tadvi was killed and demanded that the three accused should be booked under Indian Penal Code Section 302 (murder).

However, the accused's lawyer, Aabad Ponda, argued that the three doctors were not even aware of Tadvi's caste.

He said, "Abetment of suicide is when someone intentionally wants to harm the person, but the accused had only pulled her up for work and there was no mens rea (the intention or knowledge of wrongdoing) to harm her."

If the victim found no other option, she could have walked out of her job or lodged a complaint with the higher authorities (of the hospital), which she did not, he said.

Relying on a WhatsApp chat, Ponda said Tadvi had told her mother that no one in the hospital knew which caste she belonged to.

He said the police was merely relying on the complaint of the victim's mother who did not attribute any specific role of the three accused in connection with the incident.

Another lawyer of the accused, Sanjeev Bahl, told the court that the victim was married to a doctor, but instead of staying with him, she was residing at a hostel.

"There might be a family issue that could have led her to take the extreme step," he said.

The defence lawyers also said that the room where Tadvi was allegedly found hanging was locked from inside, so there was no possibility of someone else being there.

The accused persons did not have access to Tadvi's room and it was the police who broke open the door and found the body, they said.

The three accused told the court that after the alleged incident last Wednesday, they went to the hospital dean's office where they waited for about two to three hours to record their statements.

On Tuesday, Tadvi's parents protested at the hospital in Mumbai where she worked. Other protesters also joined her mother Abeda and husband Salman, demanding stringent action against the three seniors.

The Vanchit Bahujan Aghadi and other Dalit and tribal organisations also held protests outside the hospital. Tadvi's mother said she used to tell her about the 'torture' she was facing by her seniors on petty issues.

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