Friday, October 3, 2025
31.1 C
New Delhi

Delhi ‘godman’ case: Chaitanyananda remanded to 14-day judicial custody; accused of molesting students

Delhi Molestation Case: Chaitanyananda Saraswati Quizzed at Sri Sharda Institute

Chaitanyananda Saraswati in police custody (ANI)

NEW DELHI: Self-styled godman Swami Chaitanyananda Saraswati, also known as Parth Sarthy, was remanded to 14 days’ judicial custody by a Delhi court on Friday after the completion of his five-day police custody, reported news agency ANI.The 62-year-old, Chaitanyananda, was produced before a judicial magistrate Animesh Kumar at Patiala House Court. Arrested by Delhi police from Agra on September 28, Saraswati faces allegations of molesting 17 female students pursuing PGDM courses under the EWS scholarship at a private institute in Delhi.Meanwhile, the court has sought a response from Delhi police on three applications filed on behalf of Chaitanyananda. The accused has sought access to the seizure memo, permission to sign the case diary, and provision of specific items including Sanyasi food, traditional attire, prescribed medicines and religious books.Earlier this week, Delhi police informed the court that during a recent search at the premises of the Sri Sharada Institute of Indian Management Research (SRISIM) in Delhi – which was occupied by the accused – they recovered objectionable materials and allegedly forged photographs, reported the agency. According to the FIR, Saraswati allegedly forced students to visit his quarters late at night, sent inappropriate messages at odd hours, and monitored their movements via his phone. Investigations also revealed that he operated multiple bank accounts under false names, withdrawing over Rs 50 lakh after the FIR was filed. Earlier, the police froze around Rs 8 crore linked to him in various bank accounts and fixed deposits.Fake visiting cards claiming association with the united nations and Brics were also found during the probe.

Go to Source

Hot this week

Explained: Why Elon Musk is under-fire for his emoji on British colonial rule in India; sparking social media fury

Elon Musk has a habit of dropping cryptic emojis and letting the internet do the rest. On October 2, one such gesture — a “🤔” in reply to a post claiming that “there is no such thing as colonisation” — set off a storm in India. Read More

Nikki Haley’s son shuts down troll shaming him for his Indian looks, posts shirtless photo

Nikki Haley’s son takes down troll who questioned if any child born from a White-Indian relationship ever turned out attractive. Read More

UAE issues travel safety alert for citizens in Spain, Italy, and Vietnam amid protests and extreme weather

UAE warns citizens in Spain, Italy, and Vietnam to stay safe amid protests, heatwaves, and tropical storm Matmo alerts. Read More

How Germany plans to fix its drone problem

A police man demonstrates the new police drone defence unit (Image credits: AP) “We’re really behind when it comes to defending against drones,” defense minister Boris Pistorius recently admitted. Read More

Why is facial recognition not as harmless as it seems?

Joanne Orlando, Western Sydney University Walk into a shop, board a plane, log into your bank, or scroll through your social media feed, and chances are you might be asked to scan your face. Read More

Topics

Explained: Why Elon Musk is under-fire for his emoji on British colonial rule in India; sparking social media fury

Elon Musk has a habit of dropping cryptic emojis and letting the internet do the rest. On October 2, one such gesture — a “🤔” in reply to a post claiming that “there is no such thing as colonisation” — set off a storm in India. Read More

Nikki Haley’s son shuts down troll shaming him for his Indian looks, posts shirtless photo

Nikki Haley’s son takes down troll who questioned if any child born from a White-Indian relationship ever turned out attractive. Read More

UAE issues travel safety alert for citizens in Spain, Italy, and Vietnam amid protests and extreme weather

UAE warns citizens in Spain, Italy, and Vietnam to stay safe amid protests, heatwaves, and tropical storm Matmo alerts. Read More

How Germany plans to fix its drone problem

A police man demonstrates the new police drone defence unit (Image credits: AP) “We’re really behind when it comes to defending against drones,” defense minister Boris Pistorius recently admitted. Read More

Why is facial recognition not as harmless as it seems?

Joanne Orlando, Western Sydney University Walk into a shop, board a plane, log into your bank, or scroll through your social media feed, and chances are you might be asked to scan your face. Read More

Bangladesh’s Yunus Rejects Anti-Hindu Violence Claims, Says ‘Fake News Is India’s Specialty’

Curated By : Last Updated:October 03, 2025, 18:10 IST Yunus claimed his administration was “very alert” to any signs of communal tension and accused India of using minority issues to apply political pressure Bangladesh’s interim l Read More

‘Something fishy’: Congress seeks ‘truth’ about Operation Sindoor; flags ‘different statements’ by CDS & Army chief

NEW DELHI: Congress on Friday expressed doubt over Operation Sindoor, saying “something is fishy” and raised questions alleging conflicting statements from top defence officials. Read More

‘Justice within 3 years’: Amit Shah hails new criminal laws; slams Congress for unemployment

Amit Shah with Nayab Singh Saini (PTI) NEW DELHI: Union home minister Amit Shah on Friday said the conviction rate in Haryana has doubled to 80 per cent following the implementation of the country’s newly introduced criminal laws. Read More

Related Articles