Ghaziabad (UP), Feb 4: Three sisters, the youngest just 12, allegedly addicted to an online Korean game that involved a series of tasks died after jumping off the balcony of their ninth floor home in the early hours of Wednesday, police said.
Nishika, 16, Prachi, 14, and Pakhi left behind a chilling note that said, “Read everything written in this diary, it is all here…” It was accompanied by a crying face emoji and a handwritten message, “Sorry papa, I am really sorry.”
The diary was recovered from the girls’ belongings. The three did not go to school and had been home for the last two years, police said. Their father Chetan Kumar, a forex trader, has two wives, both sisters, and there were five children in all – four daughters and a son. The entire family lived together.
Police received information that three girls had jumped from the balcony of their home in Bharat City in Sahibabad area in Ghaziabad, the busy satellite town abutting the national capital, around 2.15 am.
They were rushed in ambulance to a hospital in Loni close by where doctors declared them dead on arrival, the tragedy jolting the middle class neighbourhood and highlighting the perils of online addiction and the impact on young minds.
Uttar Pradesh Director General of Police (DGP) Rajeev Krishna told PTI in Lucknow, “We are getting the whole case examined in detail.”
The state police chief also stressed the need for cyber awareness, saying the police department holds regular awareness drives and people can reach out to local police stations for issues related to online addiction.
Though details were sketchy, Deputy Commissioner of Police Nimish Patil said preliminary investigation revealed the girls were influenced by Korean content and spent a significant amount of time on their mobile phones.
He said the girls’ education had been irregular and their academic performance was below par.
“But it is evident that the girls were highly addicted to mobile phone usage,” he said.
Assistant Commissioner of Police (Shalimar Garden) Atul Kumar Singh added that the sisters were addicted to a Korean task-based interactive “love game”.
“Their parents had restricted their mobile phone usage for the past few days, which left them distressed. This may have triggered the decision (to take the extreme step),” he said.
The sisters got addicted to online gaming during the pandemic years and played it almost without break.
They had been playing the game for the last two-and-a-half to three years, said the father.
His face masked and his voice tearful, Kumar said he was unaware that the game involved tasks. He also added that his daughters had repeatedly said they wanted to go to Korea.
“They often said they wanted to go to Korea. I did not know that this game involved such tasks. I came to know about all this only after the police forensic team examined their mobile phones,” Kumar told PTI.
“If I had known that such tasks existed, I would have stopped it. No father would ever allow his children to be part of it,” he said.
Recounting the sequence of events, Kumar said the family was asleep at the time. “My wife was sleeping in the inner room. The girls woke up on the pretext of drinking water, bolted the door from inside and jumped from the balcony.”
He said the girls threw their mobile phones outside the room. “The police later seized them for investigation.”
According to Kumar, Prachi, the middle sister of the three, once told him she was the ‘boss’ and that her sisters followed her directions.
Kumar said the three sisters did everything together — eating, bathing and spending time — and mostly remained confined to their room.
He added that the girls had not attended school for the past two to three years after their academic failures. This made them feel embarrassed and increasingly withdrawn.
“When we are looking at gaming, what has been also identified is that instead of the real identity, lot of adolescents these days identify themselves more with their gamer identity or the avatar that they take on. And so, their entire psyche is moving around their competency in that game rather than in real life,” Mumbai-based forensic psychologist Deepti Puranik told PTI. (PTI)



