India

A life gone too soon, did Anissiya commit suicide or….


“Don’t Spare Him,” Delhi Air Hostess Texted Family before Death. Anissiya Batra was in her 40s and worked with a German airline. She allegedly jumped from the terrace of her house on Friday. Friends and family allege dowry harassment

New Delhi: “It was what it was, It will be what it will be. Don’t stress it!” reads the Facebook cover photo on Anissiya Batra asking friends and fans to visit her page to remember the person she was. Her friends are in a state of shock, still to come to terms with her sudden suicide on Friday. Anissiya, a female flight attendant allegedly committed suicide after jumping from the terrace of her residence in south Delhi’s Hauz Khas.

Close friends have also revealed tales of her abuse at the hands of her husband and in-laws to TIO. The couple does not have any children.

Anissiya studied at Lawrence School Lovedale and hailed from Chandigarh. She was married two years back to Mayank Singhvi and settled in New Delhi. Some of her friends, speaking on condition of anonymity have revealed to TIO that she was often disturbed and depressed because of the abusive nature of her husband and the attitude of her in-laws.

Anissiya had been married for over two years and used to live with her husband in Hauz Khas. Before jumping off the terrace, Anissiya had sent a message to her husband that she would kill herself, police said. Her husband, a software engineer in Gurgaon, told police that they had regular fights as there were “compatibility issues”.
Anissia Batra had been physically and mentally tortured by her husband Mayank Singhvi for dowry, her family has alleged. The family had even filed a complaint with the police last month.

Three days after a 32-year-old flight attendant died after she allegedly jumped off the terrace of her home in south Delhi, the police are carrying out a second post-mortem that will be videographed on the demand of her family, which suspects murder.

On Friday, after Anissia Batra jumped from the terrace of her home in Panchsheel Park, the police received a call from her husband. Mayank Singhvi told the police that he received a text message from his wife on Friday evening threatening to kill herself. He claimed he was home at the time, but by the time he reached the terrace, she had jumped. He told the police that he took her to a hospital where she was declared dead.

The two had married two years ago.

Ms. Batra’s brother Karan Batra said she had sent a series of messages to them before she died.

“My sister messaged us to call the police. She said Mayank had locked her in a room. ‘…because of him my life is going to go, please don’t leave him,’ she wrote. We don’t know if he pushed her or she jumped, but we have been trying to get them arrested and police aren’t helping,” he told reporters.

“Nobody from his family called us. Her post-mortem on Sunday was to be videographed. When we went to AIIMS, the police in charge assured us it was being done, but the doctors told us otherwise. The cops aren’t doing anything,” he added.

In the complaint filed in June, Ms. Batra’s father, a retired Major General, had alleged that she was tortured by her husband and in-laws. “If she is physically harmed, her husband and his parents should be held responsible,” Major Gen (Retd) RS Batra had written in his complaint.

A case has been registered and her family members are being questioned, the police said.

The family alleged that Ms. Batra had been tortured since she married Mayank Singhvi in 2016. He is an alcoholic who often beat her up and demanded money, claims the family.

“Last month, my parents had to come from Chandigarh. Mayank even hit my mother. My father, who served in the Army for over four decades, filed a complaint on June 27. They had to go back because of my mother’s medical condition,” Karan Batra told reporters.

He also said they “thought the police have sealed the apartment and locked the room,” Mayank Singhvi went on Saturday night using a spare key and removed all the evidence.”


Shirin Abbas

Dr. Shirin Abbas is the Bureau Chief "TheIndiaObserver.Com". She is a world-renowned journalist, winner of several national and international awards for her contribution to Media Research.The first recipient of the prestigious British Chevening Scholarship for Print Journalism in 1999 from her state of Uttar Pradesh. Under the same, she studied at the School of Media, Communication, and Design at the University Of Westminster, London and interned with The Irish Times, Dublin. She has been a journalist for over three decades, working at several national English dailies in North India. She completed her PhD. in Mass Communication in 2016.

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