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The gruesome murder of Shraddha Walkar, whose partner Aaftab Poonawala allegedly killed her in a fit of rage, chopped her body into 35 pieces, and disposed them off across Delhi, is a rude reminder of other cases involving brutal killings by intimate partners.
Rajesh Gulati, a 37-year-old software engineer, killed his wife Anupama Gulati reportedly after an argument, on 17 October 2022, in Dehradun. Gulati then used an electric saw to chop her body into nearly 70 pieces, stuffed the body parts into separate polythene bags and stored them in a deep freezer. He dumped the polythene bags, one at a time, at various locations across the outskirts of Dehradun.
Rajesh reportedly could not confirm Anupama's whereabouts and did not even let the brother inside the house, forcing him to file a missing report.
Acting on the complaint, when police raided the house, they recovered severed parts of the body and the severed head from the freezer. Gulati is currently serving life sentence.
Rajesh and Anupama's wedding photo
Anupama Gulati on her wedding day
Rajesh Gulati during trial
Rajesh Gulati during trial
Sushil Sharma, former youth Congress leader, shot his wife, Naina Sahni over suspicions of her having an extramarital affair, at their home in New Delhi on 2 July 1995. He then chopped her body into several pieces and tried to dispose off her body by burning it in a tandoor (clay oven) on the roof of his friend's restaurant.
Sharma was initially sentenced to death. That was later commuted to life imprisonment. But he walked out of jail in December 2018 after Delhi High Court ordered his release.
Naina Sahni
Sushil Sharma
The tandoor used to dispose off Naina's body
Sumit Handa, then employed with a travel firm, allegedly killed his wife, Niranjani Pillai, 27, a South African Lawyer, on 29 October 2011, in New Delhi. Following a fight on suspicion of infidelity, Handa reportedly stabbed her in the abdomen, strangled her with a laptop charging chord, and stashed the body in their bathroom.
Ashok Chand, Retired ACP (Crime Branch), who lead the investigation in the case, later recalled that Handa tried covering up the gruesome crime by changing the bathroom tiles, creating credible alibi, filing a missing report of Pillai, claiming Pillai eloped with her lover, and producing emails he told police he sent her, begging her to come back.
On 11 February 2011, Delhi Police found the body of a woman, dumped inside a suitcase, outside the New Delhi Railway Station. For almost a fortnight, the woman remained unidentified. They had just one clue: a peacock tattoo on her abdomen.
Neetu was still in Delhi and was living with her partner, Raju Gehlot, an Air India employee. Her parents claim they got to know only months before her death.
In 2019, a man named Rohan Dahiya called Raju's home. The police that had still kept Raju's family under surveillance, found out that Raju had been living as Dahiya for eight years. He was admitted to a hospital in Gurgaon with a liver ailment. He reportedly said he was on his deathbed and wanted to finally meet his parents.
Neetu Solanki and Raju Gehlot
Neetu Solanki
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