The investigation into the tragic suicide of three minor sisters in Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh, has uncovered a series of shocking revelations. According to the police, the girls were reportedly addicted to a Korean online game. The tragedy was triggered when their father, Chetan Kumar, deleted their social media accounts and confiscated their mobile phones, even selling them to prevent the girls from accessing the platforms. Distraught by this and their inability to use the apps on a new device, the sisters took the extreme step.
Beyond the immediate cause, the investigation into the family background has surfaced bizarre details. It was revealed that the father, Chetan Kumar, has three wives, all of whom are sisters. Furthermore, authorities discovered that a woman he was in a live-in relationship with died under suspicious circumstances in 2015 after falling from a building; while that case was previously ruled a suicide, it is being viewed in a new light. These findings paint a picture of a highly complex and unconventional domestic environment.
Police have recovered a nine-page pocket diary from the girls’ room, which is being treated as a suicide note. Surprisingly, the notes suggest that despite the strictness, the girls felt more affection toward their father than their mothers. Currently, investigators are using IMEI numbers to track and recover the mobile phones sold by the father to examine digital evidence. The case highlights the dangerous intersection of digital addiction and volatile family dynamics.




