Woman in UK watched lover in Delhi slash himself to death over 10 hours

April 19, 2012

Delhi


New Delhi/London, April 19: This bizarre deathwatch occurred across continents 11,000km apart over four months back, but few knew about it until now. A British automobile consultant slashed his throat and wrists in his rented Green Park flat in South Delhi while his girlfriend watched in horror on Skype from Reading in the UK.

The consultant, Adrian Rowland, 53, was video-chatting with his partner, Julie Zalinski, when he suddenly slashed himself with a broken bottle.

Speaking for the first time about the shocking experience at an inquest on the death in Oxford, UK, Julie Zalinski said on Tuesday that she had informed the British police which, in turn, alerted Delhi Police via the British High Commission, but at the end of it all her partner could not be saved and she was left watching helplessly for over 10 hours as Rowland bled to death.

On Wednesday, Delhi Police confirmed the death. It said the police had rushed to Rowland's second-floor flat with paramedics on November 27 after being alerted but they could not enter as Rowland did not open the door. The Oxford inquest was told that Indian laws, unlike British laws, prevented police from breaking into the flat.

The Delhi Police version is different. It said policemen had reached the flat even before the high commission alert because a neighbour called up to say Rowland was throwing things about inside his house and something seemed wrong. A police officer had knocked on the door but Rowland told him to "go away".

Actually, a lot was going wrong with Rowland, making him suicidal. Zalinski told the inquest from the witness stand that her boyfriend was in "complete state".

Zalinski said he was sweating profusely and kept saying, "They are going to get me, they are going to get me."

At an inquest in Oxford, she added that Rowland said there were people in the room when she could see there were none.

Zalinski said, "He started bashing everything around in his flat (which corroborates the neighbour's complaint). "He walked into the kitchen, grabbed a glass and smashed it on the table and then stuck it straight into his neck."

A little earlier, a friend of Julie's had come visiting her. "We couldn't believe what we had seen," she said.

UK tabloid Daily Mail has reported that Julie called the police and a constable, Victoria Blaszko, arrived and saw on Skype Rowland with a deep wound on his neck. They convinced him to wrap a towel around his neck.

Julie also told the coroner that Rowland hadn't opened the door when the police arrived: "He didn't believe it was the police, he thought it was the people who wanted to get him."

Rowland had been hallucinating the day before too. Julie said the previous day he had told her that he couldn't talk because he had guests for dinner. At first she was happy that he was socializing but then became worried when he indicated that the guests were already seated although the camera behind him showed that the dining table was empty.

After the British high commission called up the police here urging them to save Rowland, the police reached the house and broke open the window of his second-floor flat and entered it. But by then it was too late - Rowland was lying in a pool of blood. He was rushed to the hospital but doctors declared him brought dead. The police version is obviously at variance with what was said to Oxford coroner Nicholas Gardiner about Indian laws preventing the police from forcibly entering someone's house to save a life. (Late last month, police entered the flat of a doctor couple in Dwarka, southwest Delhi, to bring out a maid who claimed to have been locked in.)

Rowland had come to India a few weeks before he killed himself and was looking for business opportunities as a consultant in the automotive industry. Daily Mail has reported that Zalinski and Rowland were reportedly together for almost two and a half years before Rowland's suicide. She was quoted as saying, "We both really loved each other. We were so happy together. It was taken away."

Just a month earlier, Julie had come down to India and the two of them had gone to Agra to see the Taj Mahal, which Julie described as "the palace of love". Daily Mail quoted Rowland's friend as saying that Rowland "just loved being the centre of attention and having fun. He really loved Julie...He was the happiest he had ever been."


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Agencies
May 6,2020

A man posed as Superintendent of Police (SP), called up a subordinate police official and asked him to get his mobile phone repaired or face the consequences. But, his bluff was later called and the man landed in lockup.

Azamgarh SP Triveni Singh said the 23-year-old youth, Shubham Upadhyay, is the son of a farmer. He was preparing for competitive exams when his phone developed a snag on Saturday. He tried to reach out to local mechanics, but they were unavailable to fix it due to the lockdown.

Upadhyay used a free caller identification app to call up the in-charge of the Kotwali police station, K. K. Gupta, and threatened to shunt him out, if he failed to swiftly get the work done. Gupta grew suspicious and eventually caught the youth.

n his statement to the police, Shubham Upadhyay said, "On Sunday noon, I tried to breach the district borders to reach Lucknow to repair my phone, but since there was heavy police presence and barricading, I returned home. Later, I installed a free caller identification app in my handset and mentioned the name as SP Azamgarh and even uploaded a photo of the cop to appear genuine."

He first called SHO, Kotwali to get the phone repaired and was told the handset would be picked up from the SP office in an hour. Then, he called a businessman to bring his SUV and hand over his mobile to the SHO.

But when Upadhyay called the police again to suggest a separate meeting point, he raised suspicion. When the SHO tried to confirm the venue, Upadhyay got hesitant and said he would send a peon.

"I suddenly realised something was fishy and rang up the public relation officer of SP Azamgarh, who denied any such order from the SP. When the caller's number was scanned, it displayed the name of SP Azamgarh," said SHO Gupta.

A trap was laid and when the SHO reached the venue, he found one Praveen Shukla sitting in the vehicle. Police got the address of the accused from Shukla and reached Upadhyay's home in Bilariya locality and arrested him.

Upadhyay has been booked under IT Act and for threatening a public servant.

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News Network
February 20,2020

Nagpur, Feb 19: The Central Bureau of Investigation said that it has arrested a former employee of Union Carbide Bhopal, who was absconding since 2016.

A senior CBI official said on Wednesday that the agency sleuths arrested S I Qureshi from Maharashtra’s Nagpur on Tuesday, who was convicted by a local court here in connection with the Bhopal gas tragedy case.

The official further said that he had been absconding since 2016.

He added that the convict would be produced in a district court.

On December 3, 1984, forty tonnes of methyl isocyanate leaked from the Union Carbide pesticide factory and settled over slums in Bhopal

A Bhopal court convicted eight people in 2010 to two years each in jail over the gas plant leak that killed thousands of people.

The eight convicted included the Chairman of the Indian arm of the Union Carbide (UCIL) Keshub Mahindra, Managing Director V P Gokhale, Vice-president Kishore Kamdar, Works Manager J Mukund, Production manager S P Chowdhury, Plant superintendent K V Shetty and Production Assistant Qureshi.

The CBI had taken over the Bhopal gas tragedy case on December 12, 1984.

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News Network
May 12,2020

May 12: A Madhya Pradesh Police sub-inspector was fined Rs 5,000 after he performed a daredevil act of balancing himself on two moving cars, copying the famous stunt from Ajay Devgn-starrer 'Singham'.

Manoj Yadav, the in-charge of Narsinghgarh police post in Damoh district, was also warned against any such daredevilry in future, police sources said on Monday.

Sporting shades as the hero of the cop drama film and wearing his police uniform, Yadav got the entire episode video-graphed, they said.

As the video of the stunt went viral on social media, senior police officials took serious note of it as it will send wrong signals to youngsters, the sources said.

Inspector General, Sagar range, Anil Sharma directed Damoh Superintendent of Police Hemant Chauhan to probe the matter.

After an investigation, Chauhan imposed a fine of Rs 5,000 on the sub-inspector and warned him not to repeat such mistakes.

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