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Rituraj Sahani, the 43-year-old NRI techie who discovered his mother's skeleton at their Andheri apartment two days ago, is not just grappling with the sudden confrontation with her death. He is also faced with the guilt of not having checked sooner on his mother, who has probably been dead for months. And now, Rituraj's building residents allege, the press has presented him with a third woe - oblivious to his circumstances, they've declared him an irresponsible son.
Residents said that 'Tony' was a loving son, and was facing a tumultuous time over his divorce petition with his wife. The couple's 10-year-old son was living with Rituraj, and it was impossible for the man to have left the child alone in the US, and fly to India to visit his mother.
"He did come once, but since his mother didn't answer the door, he left. This was late last year," said Madhu Kedia, a 59-year-old woman residing in the building,
Seconding the building residents’ revelations, a senior official from the Mumbai police, who did not wish to be named said:
The cops said that a few weeks before Rituraj had his last conversation with his mother, he had flown her to the US. He had hoped that his mother would live with him for a couple of months, but she returned within a week.
‘The climate doesn’t suit me,’ she told a neighbour upon returning to the city, ‘I have issues with my bowel movements there.’
Rituraj, an IT manager, moved to the US in 1997. He would visit his mother twice every year. Around 12 years ago, he got married to a woman from Bangalore, who was born and brought up in North America. The couple had a son, but their relationship was not stable. And soon after, Rituraj’s step-father (Asha’s second husband) passed away, leading to trouble with his mother.
Rituraj reached his tenth floor residence in Lokhandwala, Andheri’s Bellscot Towers at 4.30 pm on Sunday. After his mother did not respond to the door bell, he arranged for a duplicate key, and entered the apartment only to find his mother’s fully clothed skeleton lying on one of the beds. The police, upon reaching the apartment, deduced that the 63-year-old had probably been dead for months since all of her flesh had decomposed completely.
In another development, the police have recovered Asha’s suicide note from the apartment, where the deceased has written that she was taking the drastic step on her own accord, and that no one should be held responsible for her death.
Since the post mortem report could not confirm the cause of her death, her viscera has now been sent for chemical analysis. Investigators hope to determine Asha’s time and cause of death through this examination.
Asha’s last rites were performed at an Andheri crematorium on Monday. The police said that they do not suspect any foul play in the incident since the apartment was locked from inside, and there were no signs of robbery. The Oshiwara police will now record Rituraj’s detailed statement for further clarity. “He’s too shocked, hence, we’ve refrained from speaking to him so far,” said Khanvilkar.
Residents of Asha’s housing society said that after the senior citizen “went missing” following April last year, they would often wonder where she was. However, since she had mentioned that she was going to move to an old age home to her neighbours, they assumed she must have done just that. The only suspicious bit was that she didn’t intimate anyone before doing so. The smell of the decaying flesh was never a concern since the building stands next to a nullah, and foul stenches in the vicinity are routine.
Kedia, meanwhile, added, “Rituraj grew up with my son. I’ve seen him grow from a young boy, waiting for his school bus, to becoming this able, independent man, who still doted on his mother as much. It breaks my heart – when I read these press reports denigrating him, and his relationship with his mother. Don’t make a god out of him, and please, don’t make him a devil.”
Rituraj was not available for comment.
(The writer is a journalist, and author of the critically-acclaimed true crime book, ‘The Front Page Murders: Inside the Serial Killings that Shocked India.’)
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