Burari Deaths [verified] May 2026
The instructions in the diary were painstakingly detailed. Step by step. Cotton cloth, cut to a specific length. A stool for each person. A scarf tied in a precise knot to the scaffolding pole. Mouths taped. Eyes covered. The order of the hanging: youngest first, to build courage. The grandmother, due to her age, would lie down.
The door of the Bhatia family home at Sant Nagar, Burari, was a cheerful shade of turquoise. But on the morning of July 1, 2018, it looked like the entrance to a tomb. burari deaths
When the police broke through, the air that rushed out was stale, but not of death. It smelled of ghee and incense, of a life interrupted mid-breath. The instructions in the diary were painstakingly detailed
The story's true horror isn't the ten bodies hanging in a perfect row. It's the hours of waiting. The last few seconds of struggle. The frantic, silent kicking of feet as the "trance" turned into asphyxiation. The moment the youngest, a 15-year-old girl named Priyanka, realized the voice had lied. And the horrifying silence that followed, as, one by one, each of them stopped fighting. A stool for each person
But they didn't.
The diary even had a contingency plan. A single person would be "selected" to remain alive to cut the others down. But in the final days, that note was crossed out. The voice had changed its mind. The ultimate trust required everyone .
The turquoise door was sealed. But for years afterward, neighbors would swear they heard the faint sound of a puja bell at midnight, and a man’s voice, soft and commanding, reading from a diary that no longer existed. The voice of a ghost that was never there.