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Former wrestler helps budding singer pin down abusive harasser

By IANS | Updated: May 31, 2020 14:55 IST

A budding professional singer living in Delhi was helped by a former woman wrestler, now a law officer, in ...

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A budding professional singer living in Delhi was helped by a former woman wrestler, now a law officer, in reporting an abusive person who harassed the former on Bigo Live App to the police.

Navpreet (name changed) told on Sunday that she earned a living by singing on the app, but was harassed by a stalker who was abusive and used different IDs on the app during the lockdown.

She said she was about to quit the app when Deepika Deshwal, a former wrestler now working as a Deputy Advocate General in Punjab government posted in Delhi, came to her rescue.

Police has since traced the stalker to Amritsar in Punjab, who has a history of similar crime, she said.

"Due to Deepika Deshwal's help, I was able to muster courage to talk to police and submit a complaint to the authorities. A complaint has since been forwarded to the Crime Branch," the singer said.

In her complaint, the victim said: "The accused was misusing her personal picture taken from her Instagram account" to harass her.

Deshwal told that domestic violence cases had increased in the country during the lockdown and Navpreet's was not the one-off case she had helped.

She said she helped another young woman of west Delhi facing domestic abuse from in-laws to safely reach her patents' home.

Deshwal said there was an increase of around 20 per cent in crimes against women of late, whether domestic violence, stalking, or abuse.

"I basically help young girls and women in distress as women are mostly the victims of such crimes and don't even report the crime to police due to family pressure and fear," the law officer said.

Deshwal said that she had been into social activism since her student days and is helping out people even during the lockdown, adding that she and her mother made masks and distributed ration to the needy during the corona crisis.

The law officer said she was in a position to help because of her profession. "Otherwise, it's very tough for a woman to deal with police and take legal recourse," she said.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: Deepika deshwal
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