It started with a block.
It ended with a body.
In a chilling reminder of how digital obsession can turn fatal, a young woman allegedly stabbed her boyfriend to death after he cut off contact—no calls, no messages, no replies. What should have been a private breakup escalated into public horror in Bilaspur, leaving a 25-year-old man dead and a family shattered.
🧨 THE TRAGEDY, STEP BY STEP
1️⃣ A Relationship Born Online
Police say Kamta prasad Suryavanshi (25), who worked at a local hotel and lived in a rented house, met Roshni Suryavanshi (22) on instagram six months ago. What began as a modern romance soon spiraled into suspicion and rage.
2️⃣ The Trigger: Silence
Over the past two to three days, Kamta allegedly blocked Roshni’s calls and messages. The silence fueled anger and suspicion that he was seeing someone else—an assumption that would prove deadly.
3️⃣ The Knife Comes to the Door
Roshni allegedly went to Kamta’s room carrying a knife. As soon as he opened the door, she demanded his phone. When he refused, a heated argument erupted.
4️⃣ One strike to the Chest
During the confrontation, police allege Roshni stabbed Kamta in the chest. The wound was catastrophic. His roommate, drawn by the noise, found him collapsed and bleeding.
5️⃣ Death Before Help
Kamta died while being rushed to the hospital. A life ended not by accident—but by impulse sharpened into violence.
6️⃣ arrest and murder Charges
Police officer Summat Sahu confirmed the arrest and said a murder case has been registered. The accused claimed she brought the knife only to scare him; investigators are examining intent, the nature of the relationship, and the precise sequence of events.
7️⃣ A Political Footnote—And More Questions
Police sources say Kamta was the nephew of Bharatiya Janata Party leader and district panchayat president Rajesh Suryavanshi. Authorities insist the probe will proceed on evidence alone.
8️⃣ Post-Mortem and Ongoing Probe
The body has been sent for post-mortem. Investigators are piecing together messages, timelines, and witness accounts to determine premeditation versus escalation.
🧯 THE BOTTOM LINE:
Blocking someone is not a crime.
Killing them is.
This case is a grim warning about unchecked obsession, poor conflict boundaries, and how quickly rage can turn lethal when weapons enter domestic disputes. wallet PLATFORM' target='_blank' title='digital-Latest Updates, Photos, Videos are a click away, CLICK NOW'>digital relationships don’t just end on screens—they end in real rooms, with real consequences.
One block should never cost a life.
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