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Ghaziabad Tragedy: 3 Sisters Jump to Death from 9th Floor; 8-Page Suicide Note Found

A quiet neighborhood in Ghaziabad's Bharat City Society was shattered in the early hours of February 4th when three minor sisters jumped to their deaths from a ninth-floor balcony. The incident, occurring around 2:00 AM, has left the community in shock and investigators grappling with the dark side of digital isolation.

A Life Defined by "Korean Love"
Initial investigations by the Uttar Pradesh police, led by DCP Nimish Patil, suggest the sisters-two biological and one half-sister-were deeply entrenched in a "Korean love game" and an all-consuming obsession with Korean pop culture. This fascination wasn't a mere hobby; it had effectively replaced their reality. According to their father, Chetan Kumar, the girls had even adopted Korean names and viewed the country and its culture as their "biggest love."

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On February 4th, three minor sisters died by suicide in Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh, after jumping from their ninth-floor apartment due to their obsession with Korean pop culture and a restricted digital life, as revealed by DCP Nimish Patil and a suicide note.
Ghaziabad Tragedy 3 Sisters Jump to Death from 9th Floor 8-Page Suicide Note Found

The depth of this detachment became clear two years ago when the sisters stopped attending school entirely. Their world shrunk to the confines of their bedroom, where they did everything in unison-eating, bathing, and gaming, according to a report in NDTV.

The Warning Signs
The physical remnants of their struggle were etched into the very walls of their home. Jottings in their bedroom revealed a profound sense of loneliness, with phrases like "I am very very alone" and "make me a hert of broken" (sic) painted on the walls, the report said.

The tragedy appears to have been triggered by a recent attempt at intervention. Distressed by their total withdrawal from society, their parents had restricted their mobile phone access. This digital "detox" seemingly backfired, fuelling a sense of desperation that culminated in their fatal decision.

The Final Message
Police recovered an eight-page suicide note written in a pocket diary. The note, marked with a hand-drawn crying emoji, was a haunting plea for understanding: "Read everything written in this diary because all of it is true... I'm really sorry. Sorry, Papa."

As per the girls' father, the addiction began during the COVID-19 pandemic. Gradually, they became irregular at school and eventually stopped going altogether.

The sisters did everything together, bathing, eating, allegedly as part of the game. They had even adopted Korean names and wanted to be called by those names only.

While a specific game title has not yet been identified, the note details their mobile activities and reaffirms their devotion to the virtual world they inhabited. Their father has issued a stark warning to other parents, admitting he was unaware of the extent of the "game" until it was too late.

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