Millennium Post

Indian-origin woman ends life over abuse in UK

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LONDON: An Indian-origin woman in the UK committed suicide as a result of suffering physical and emotional abuse from her former boyfriend, a court was told.

Meera Dalal, who had previously sought help from doctors and referred to occasional suicidal thoughts, was found dead at her family home in Syston, Leicesters­hire in the Midlands region of England in February. A documentar­y inquest which involves only statements and no live witnesses took place in a Loughborou­gh court last week.

Dalal’s family and friends are now running a campaign to raise awareness and funds for a UK charity which supports victims of domestic violence, Refuge. “I still feel very, very bad. It still hurts. I don’t think we’ll ever get over it,” said her father Ashok Dalal, who had found his daughter’s body.

“I just can’t believe that she’s not here any more. I can’t take that. She was a very bubbly and happy girl. Always laughing and joking with everybody. Everybody loved her so much and she loved everybody,” he told BBC. The family had made a complaint to Leicesters­hire Police following Dalal’s death and the force was investigat­ed by the Independen­t Police Complaints Commission (IPCC). The 50-page investigat­ion report, seen by the BBC, contains a catalogue of police incidents involving Dalal and her boyfriend dating back to December 2013. “Following the death of Meera Dalal, the force identified issues in relation to the investigat­ion and consulted the Independen­t Police Complaints Commis- sion. Following a public complaint in the weeks following her death, the force referred itself to the IPCC, who took this as an independen­t investigat­ion,” Leicesters­hire Police said in a statement. The conduct of four police officers was investigat­ed by the IPCC, but the investigat­or found there was no case to answer for misconduct. IPCC commission­er Derrick Campbell said: “My sympathies are with the family of Meera Dalal following their sad loss. “We conducted a very thorough investigat­ion. We regularly updated the family and met with them to discuss our findings”. Meera had also sought help from doctors and a report from her general practition­er was read out as an evidence at the inquest in Loughborou­gh.

“She was seen by one of the doctors and told the doctor she had recently ended her three-year relationsh­ip during which she suffered emotional and physical abuse. She said she had moved back to be with her family and her family were being very supportive,” assistant coroner Carolyn Hull said.

Her inquest concluded that Meera, who worked as a liaison officer for Nuffield Health, a private hospital in Leicester, died as a result of suicide. Her sister Sonia Hindocha said: “We spoke to many of the doctors afterwards who were really shocked.

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