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Burari Deaths Exclusive -

The diary even had a contingency plan. A single person would be "selected" to remain alive to cut the others down. But in the final days, that note was crossed out. The voice had changed its mind. The ultimate trust required everyone .

The story, as the neighbors would whisper, was not of a single day, but of a slow, strange descent. It began three years ago, after the patriarch, Gopal, had died of a heart attack. The family’s hardware business floundered. They were drowning in debt. Then, one night, the youngest son, Lalit, claimed to have had a vision. Gopal had returned, he said. Not as a ghost, but as a "voice." A guiding spirit.

The horror began in the courtyard, under a metal scaffolding. Ten bodies hung in a neat, terrifying arc. Ten faces, covered in cotton cloth tied like makeshift shrouds. Eleven, they would find later—the grandmother, dead on her bed in the next room. burari deaths

Lalit was the oracle. A quiet, unassuming man in his thirties, he had been the most devoted to his father. Now, he spoke with a new authority. The voice gave instructions. It knew the lottery numbers. It knew how to fix the business. The family, desperate and bereaved, listened.

The door of the Bhatia family home at Sant Nagar, Burari, was a cheerful shade of turquoise. But on the morning of July 1, 2018, it looked like the entrance to a tomb. The diary even had a contingency plan

“Don’t be afraid,” the voice promised. “Your body will swing, but your soul will rise. For two hours, you will be in samadhi —a trance. Then, a miracle will occur. All debts will vanish. The business will flourish.”

On that hot, moonless night, the family of eleven—grandmother, two brothers, their wives, and six children between the ages of 15 and 7—gathered in the courtyard. They did it methodically. They taped each other's mouths. They tied the scarves. They placed the stools. They closed their eyes. The voice had changed its mind

The instructions in the diary were painstakingly detailed. Step by step. Cotton cloth, cut to a specific length. A stool for each person. A scarf tied in a precise knot to the scaffolding pole. Mouths taped. Eyes covered. The order of the hanging: youngest first, to build courage. The grandmother, due to her age, would lie down.

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