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Shakereh Namazie (born August 27, 1947 - missing April 1991 and declared deceased May 1994 when her body was exhumed). Shakereh was the daughter of Gulam Hussain Namazie and Gauhar Taj Begum Mirza, the youngest daughter of Diwan of Mysore and Jaipur, Sir Mirza Ismail). Shakereh's first husband, Akbar Mirza Khaleeli, is a retired Senior IFS officer who was the Indian Ambassador to Iran, Italy and High Commissioner to Australia. They have four daughters; Zeebundeh Khaleeli, Sabah Bakache, Rehane Yavar Dhala and Essmath Khaleeli. In 1991, Sabah, Shakereh's second daughter, found that she was unable to locate her mother. Despite repeated requests about Shakereh's whereabouts to her mother's second husband Murali Manohar Mishra, also known as Swami Shradhananda, he consistently avoided giving a proper answer. In 1992, Sabah's anxiety grew and she filed for a ''habeas corpus'' at the Ashok Nagar Police Station in Bangalore, Karnataka. For three years, the Swami evaded questions from the family, friends and legal authorities of the state. He lived in Bangalore like a king, pretending his wife was on a perpetual holiday. In May 1994, the police of Karnataka finally found Shakereh's body (rather skeletal remains) buried deep in the courtyard of her own house. Shakereh's murder was one of the most heinous crimes of Indian criminal history. When the murder was disclosed, it shook the nation. ==Death== Shakereh was placed in the coffin-like box on April 28, 1991. She had been drugged asleep, placed on a mattress within the coffin-like box and covered with another mattress, suffocating her to death. She died unconscious, confined to a constricted space and buried by the man whom she trusted implicitly. When Shakereh's skeletal remains were recovered and the mattress was removed, one of her hands was found clutching the mattress which lay below her. The side of the box was scratched with her nails, perhaps in an attempt to get out, probably suffocating in the last pangs of breath. The Swami was taken into judicial custody after accepting the crime. The case also became an important milestone in the Indian judicial system as it was the first case where the exhumation process was recorded on video. The case was also the first time that DNA tests and videotapes of the exhumation were taken as evidence in India. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Shakereh Khaleeli」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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