Home WebMail Saturday, November 2, 2024, 05:33 AM | Calgary | -2.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Posted: 2019-10-21T10:11:11Z | Updated: 2019-10-21T10:11:11Z St Stephens Professors Body Found On Railway Track, Mother Found Dead In Apartment | HuffPost
This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, whichclosed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questionsor concerns about this article, please contactindiasupport@huffpost.com .

St Stephens Professors Body Found On Railway Track, Mother Found Dead In Apartment

According to the police the mother and son were depressed because of an abetment-to-suicide case pending against them in Kerala
Open Image Modal
code6d via Getty Images
"New Delhi, India - January 16, 2011: A Police car in New Delhi, India. Close-up photo of the windscreen and siren. It is decorated with flower bands and is parked near a tourist attraction. Delhi is under a high alert level especially near tourist sites due to terrorist threats. Delhi\'s police force is one of the largest in the world with over 80.000 officers."

NEW DELHI — The decapitated body of a professor of Delhi University’s St Stephen’s Collegew as found on railway tracks in Sarai Rohilla and his mother was found hanging from a ceiling fan with her mouth stuffed with cloth at their flat in Pitampura, police said on Sunday.

Allen Stanley (27), who hailed from Kottayam in Kerala, was found dead on Saturday. Earlier that day, his mother Lissy (55) was found hanging at the flat in Ashiana Apartment. 

For the latest news and more, follow HuffPost India on TwitterFacebook , and subscribe to our newsletter .

Police suspect Stanley died by suicide after killing his mother. However, no suicide note was recovered with Stanley’s body, but a note written in Malayalam was found at the flat.

Police said the bodies have been sent for post-mortem and they are probing all angles.

They have registered a murder case under section 302 of the Indian Penal Code at Rani Bagh police station after they found his mother dead at the flat.

Stanley did his graduation from St Stephen’s College and his masters from Hyderabad Central University. He was pursuing Phd from IIT-Delhi and had joined as an ad hoc professor at St Stephen’s College over a year ago where he taught Philosophy, a close friend said.

According to the police the mother and son were depressed because of an abetment-to-suicide case pending against them in Kerala, and both were on anticipatory bail. A few days ago, Stanley had spoken to his friends who tried to convince him to not take any extreme step, a police officer said.

Stanley was living in Delhi for five years and his mother came to stay with him seven months ago.

We still dont know what they went through. But the media trial was responsible for this unfortunate incident"

Some of his friends said Stanley showed suicidal tendencies and five days ago told them that he had tried to force his mother to kill herself but she had refused, according to police.

“We learnt about the tragic news this morning. We are in shock. I interacted with him when we were speaking to teachers in the lead up to Delhi University Teachers’ Association polls. We do not know what prompted him to take such a step,” said professor Nandita Narain, Stanley’s colleague at St Stephen’s College.

A Delhi University professor requesting anonymity said, “Articles were published in regional media in Kerala comparing Stanley’s case with the Kerala serial murders. Stanley and his mother were targeted by trolls and misogynistic comments were made against his mother.”

The professor said the fact that they were pronounced guilty in public without even a legal trial may have led to this tragedy.

“We still don’t know what they went through. But the media trial was responsible for this unfortunate incident,” he added.

One of Stanley’s friends shared a post on Facebook , criticising the regional media for a news report published on October 15 and portraying Stanley’s mother in a bad light, because of the abetment-to-suicide case, by apparently comparing her to the prime suspect in the Koodathai serial murder case.

“For the past six months, Alan and his mother were facing legal battles on property dispute and an investigation regarding the suicide of Alan’s step-father. These cases had broken them down. However, since they were sure of their innocence, they decided to fight it legally and keep their trust in the judiciary. They sought legal advice and stood firmly for the truth.

“This public humiliation was unbearable for Alan and his mother. Alan, who used to talk to us, stopped communicating after October 15th. Our friends in Delhi reached out to him, only to see that he and his mother had lost all hope,” he stated on his social media account.

Another friend stated that Stanley had spoken about the case with him only recently.

“After Stanley’s father passed away two years ago, her mother married again. Some seven months ago, her step-father committed suicide at his Kottayam house. Aunty was at her mother’s place in Thodupuzha village in Idukki district while Stanley was in Delhi,” the friend, who did not wish to be named, said.

“The relatives of step-father tried to cover up the death. But later, his mother got to know that it was a suicide and that her husband had left the property in their name. Learning this, the relatives filed a complaint against the mother-son duo,” he added.

-- This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, whichclosed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questionsor concerns about this article, please contactindiasupport@huffpost.com .