Footage shows crowds gathering outside
the home of a 35-year-old who took his own life after going on rampage at
family gathering.
A 35-year-old man allegedly murdered 14
members of his family including seven children with a butcher's knife before
killing himself outside the Indian financial capital Mumbai, police said on
Sunday.
The attack happened after family members
gathered late on Saturday at one of their homes in Thane, 20 miles from Mumbai,
for a family function, police said.
"The attacker, Hasnin Anwar
Warekar, hung himself after slitting the throats of all other family members
including his parents," a Thane police spokesman, Gajanan Laxman Kabdule,
said.
The sole survivor of the attack -
Warekar's sister - was taken to hospital after neighbours heard her screaming
for help after midnight and alerted police.
"We still haven't been able to
speak with the attacker's 21-year-old sister, the lone survivor of the attack,
who is in deep trauma at a city hospital," Mr Kabdule said.
Warekar attacked his family after
apparently lacing their food with a sedative, according to several local media
reports.
But the Indian Express newspaper said
the chartered accountant stabbed his victims after they went to bed, having all
decided to spend the night at the house.
"Prima facie evidence suggests that
the accused bolted all the doors of the house and murdered his family while
they were asleep with a knife that we found near his body," Ashutosh
Dumbre, joint commissioner of Thane police, was quoted saying.
"The accused then hung himself
after killing his family. There were three rooms in the house, while he was in
a room with his wife and two daughters on the first floor, his parents and
sisters were in separate rooms on the ground floor,” Dumbare said.
A senior Thane police officer told the
paper that the family was well known in the area.
"Initial inquiry does not suggest
that there was any trouble within the family to coerce Hansil to take this
extreme step,” said a senior Thane Police officer.
Police are investigating the case.
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