
My life is very alone: Last scribbles of Ghaziabad sisters, and a diary mention
India Today
A suicide note was recovered in which the sisters apologised to their father and asked their parents to read a diary. Scribbles on the wall of a room were also found that read, "I am very, very alone."
A suicide note has been recovered in the case of the shocking triple suicide in Uttar Pradesh's Ghaziabad, in which three minor sisters jumped from the ninth floor of their residential building late on Tuesday. Scribbles have also been found on the wall of the room inside the building. "Whatever is written in this diary is true, read it now," the note, with a crying emoji, read.
The sisters, identified as Nishika (16), Prachi (14) and Pakhi (12), also apologised to their parents.
"True life story. Is diary mei jo kuch bih likha hai vo sab padhlo kyunki sab sach hai. Read now. I'm really sorry, sorry Papa," the note read. The one-page suicide note recovered from the scene. (Photo: India Today)
Meanwhile, the scribbles read, "I am very, very alone. My life is very, very alone."
Police sources said they were probing the matter from multiple angles, including the sisters' alleged addiction to a Korean online gaming app that consisted of tasks.
Police said the sisters were influenced by Korean culture and had been spending a considerable amount of time on the app. Their father, Chetan Kumar, was unaware of any such app. Speaking to India Today TV and sounding understandably shaken by the incident, he however, said there were 50 tasks in the gaming app and yesterday was the final one.

This moment comes days after the Supreme Court allowed Harish Rana to die with dignity – a historic first court-ordered case of passive euthanasia in India. The court acknowledged the medical opinion that Rana will never recover and that the tubes that feed him and keep him alive are only prolonging his pain.












