The Daily Telegraph

Phantom barber of Delhi steals women’s hair as they sleep

- By Saptarshi Ray in Delhi

DOZENS of women across northern India have reported a “phantom barber” who cuts locks of their hair, leaving villagers panic-stricken and police scrambling to mount an investigat­ion.

The attacks started when Sunita Devi, 50, was accosted while walking home at night in Gurgaon, a satellite city of Delhi, earlier this week.

She reportedly told police that when she asked the man, said to be in his 60s, to leave her alone, he walked away. But she then claimed she fell unconsciou­s and when she woke up discovered a significan­t portion of her hair had been chopped off.

Since then, reports to police of similar incidents have flooded in. The complaints included reports that the acts were carried out by gangs of men, to “shadows” committing similar crimes, and in one case a victim alleging her attacker was “a cat that took the form of a woman”.

Officers are unsure if the whole phenomenon is a prank, a genuine mystery or a case of mass hysteria.

A victim named only as Sapna, 20, from the village of Devi Lal Nagar, claimed she was asleep beside her children, when she saw a cat enter her room in the early hours.

Sapna claimed that the cat transforme­d into a woman who pounced on her and cut her locks, reported the Times of India.

Several media outlets also reported a 28-year-old woman, Reena Devi, making similar claims.

While some of the details seem absurd, in a country where superstiti­on and panic can spread easily, the tale has a darker side.

A “low-caste” woman was allegedly beaten to death by a group in a village near Agra, around 125 miles north of Delhi, on Wednesday and police say the attack may have been spurred by claims of witchcraft against the woman, but cautioned against spreading false rumours.

The 65-year-old woman – known only as Mandevi – was allegedly beaten to death in Mutnai, with police immediatel­y launching a manhunt for two brothers, named as Manish and Song.

Supt Dinesh Chandra Dubey, of Agra police, said: “We will take action against people who are circulatin­g a false story that the elderly woman was murdered because people suspected her to be ‘a ghost who chopped off women’s braids’.”

Villagers along the border between the state of Haryana and the National Capital Region have been putting up religious symbols to ward off “evil spirits”, as rumours spread that the hair theft is linked to supernatur­al forces.

Some have even sent female relatives away from the region for safety.

Several academics and commentato­rs have described the events as a case of mass hysteria, similar to incidents in 2001 when people reported being attacked by a “monkey man” – claims that turned out to be false.

Similarly, in 2006, hundreds travelled to coastal areas to sample seawater that suddenly “tasted sweet”.

Forensic teams have visited the places where attacks are said to have occurred, but police are genuinely worried about a mob mentality taking hold, especially in rural areas where lower caste and mentally ill people are especially vulnerable to baseless accusation­s and tribal vendettas.

Dep Supt Durgesh Kumar Singh, of Ghaziabad police, said: “We have instructed all our police staff to take care that such incidents don’t create a panic.

“We have also asked them to speak to people so that they do not get carried away after hearing about the incident.”

‘We have instructed all our police staff to take care that such incidents don’t create a panic’

 ??  ?? Pick of the bunch: human hair is sorted in Chennai. India is one of the world’s main exporters, generating hundreds of millions of dollars
Pick of the bunch: human hair is sorted in Chennai. India is one of the world’s main exporters, generating hundreds of millions of dollars
 ??  ?? Factory workers process hair in Alinjivakk­am, Tamil Nadu
Factory workers process hair in Alinjivakk­am, Tamil Nadu

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