Hindustan Times (Delhi)

ROHIT TIWARI’S WIFE KILLED HIM IN FRUSTRATIO­N, COURT TOLD

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: Rohit Shekhar Tiwari, the son of former Uttarakhan­d chief minister ND Tiwari, was murdered by his wife Apoorva Shukla “in frustratio­n when she did not succeed in her plans”, his mother told a Delhi court on Saturday.

The submission was made by Rohit’s mother Ujjwala Tiwari before Additional Sessions Judge Sandeep Yadav during recording of her statement as a prosecutio­n witness in the murder case.

Ujjwala alleged that Shukla, arrested in connection with Rohit’s murder, had married him as he was the son of the late veteran politician and she believed she would get a ticket to contest elections at Indore after marrying him.

Ujjwala, who was represente­d by advocate Tariq Nasir, further alleged that Shukla allegedly pressurise­d Rohit to not keep his mother with them at their house and get a separate bungalow for her in Delhi so that she could get her father treated here.

“When she did not succeed in her plans, she (Shukla) murdered him (Rohit) in frustratio­n,” Ujjwala alleged.

She claimed that after Rohit’s death, Shukla tried to stop the postmortem proceeding­s.

“Shukla said what was the necessity of postmortem. If postmortem was conducted, how will we bathe the body with holy water,” Ujjwala said.

The court has put up the matter for further hearing on February 26.

The court had earlier directed the Tihar jail authoritie­s to provide necessary treatment to Shukla at a good hospital other than the jail dispensary and Deen Dayal Upadhyay (DDU) Hospital for her psychologi­cal problems which include depression and sleep disorder.

The prison authoritie­s had told the court in their reply that she was already undergoing treatment from a psychiatri­st in the jail.

They had said she was undergoing psycho-therapy sessions in jail for her problems like inability to control her anger, poor quality of sleep, bad dreams.

Advocate Mehmood Pracha, representi­ng Shukla, had told the court that her condition was at the “threshold” stage and if allowed to become severe, she would not be able to recover from it. “Her symptoms are serious in nature. She might be suffering from bipolar disorder (mental health condition that causes extreme mood swings that include emotional highs and lows). She is already suffering from depression. Her condition is becoming worse day-by-day. If this crosses the boundary, it would be a point of no return,” the counsel had said.

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