
'Mujhe pareshan kiya...'; Tanushree Dutta breaks down, claims of being harassed after..., dials cop, files FIR, watch viral video
The actress has shared her video in which she is crying and saying, 'I am being exploited in my own house. I am being harassed in my own house. I called the police, and the police asked me to report to the police station. I will go tomorrow because I am not feeling well today. I have been harassed for the last 4-5 years as my health has deteriorated. I am not able to do any work, and my house is completely ruined. I cannot even keep a maid because they keep planning maids. I do not trust them because they steal from my house. I have to do all the work myself. I am being harassed in my own house. Please help me. Tanushree Dutta makes a shocking revelation- watch viral video
Sharing this video, Tanushree wrote, 'I am upset and tired of this exploitation. This has been going on since 2018 #MeToo. Please do something before it's too late.' Tanushree Dutta's health deteriorated, claims actress
After this, Tanushree has shared an audio in which some sounds are coming. Sharing this, Tanushree wrote, 'I have also faced such loud noises. Such loud noises keep coming from my terrace and outside the door at odd times, that too since the year 2020. I am tired of complaining to the building management. Now I listen to Hindu mantras with headphones. Today, my health is so bad, and I am feeling very stressed and anxious. Think, yesterday I posted, and today all this. Now everyone should understand what things I had to go through, and there are many more things which I will tell in the FIR.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
34 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Hindu temple defaced with racist graffiti in Melbourne's Boronia
A Hindu temple and two Asian-run restaurants were defaced with racist graffiti in Melbourne, raising concerns among the community members in Australia, a media report said on Thursday. Shree Swaminarayan Temple in Melbourne's Boronia was defaced with red-painted racist slurs.(Shri Swaminarayan Temple Melbourne) Shree Swaminarayan Temple on Wadhurst Drive, Melbourne's eastern suburb of Boronia, was defaced with red-painted racist slurs on Monday morning, the Australia Today web portal reported. Two restaurants located further on Boronia Road were painted with the same slurs on the same day, it added. Victoria Police confirmed the incident, saying that 'There is absolutely no place at all in our society for hate-based and racist behaviour', the report said. Shocked with the incident, President of the Hindu Council of Australia, Victoria chapter, Makrand Bhagwat, said it "feels like an attack on our identity, our right to worship and freedom of religion," the web portal reported. Victoria's Premier Jacinta Allan, in a private message to temple management, called the attack "hateful" and "racist", the report said. 'What happened this week was hateful, racist and deeply disturbing. It wasn't just vandalism – it was a deliberate act of hate, designed to intimidate, isolate, and spread fear," the report quoted from Jacinta's message. Meanwhile, the Hindu Community urged support from interfaith groups following the incident. The attack hints at the worrying rise in targeted hate incidents across Melbourne, the report said.


Hindustan Times
37 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Agra conversion racket network active in many states: Police
The conversion racket that the Agra police unearthed was allegedly targeting Hindu girls in Bareilly, Aligarh, Rae Bareli and Ghaziabad districts. The network was also active in states of Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttarakhand, Jharkhand and Delhi, police said. The kingpin, a resident of Firozabad, had converted from Hinduism to Islam in 1990 before moving to Delhi and changed his name from Mahendra Pal to Abdul Rehman. (For Representation) This was revealed by three of the accused arrested by Agra police from ISBT on Wednesday. All three were presented before a court in Agra on Thursday and were sent to judicial custody, they added. Commissioner, Agra Police Commissionerate, Deepak Kumar on Wednesday informed about their arrest. They were identified as Junaid Qureshi, 30, Abdullah, 20, and Abdul Rahim, 27. 'Abdullah and Abdul Rahim are sons of Abdul Rehman alias Rehman Chacha, the kingpin of the network, who was arrested on Monday from Delhi by Agra police,' the commissioner had said. The three arrested were interrogated by Agra police and gave out details about the task assigned of trapping Hindu girls for conversion to Islam. According to police, the network was actively involved in conversion in states of Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttarakhand, Jharkhand and Delhi. 'On the basis of information provided by the three accused, Agra police have established contact with victim girls and their families and efforts are on to trace other victims who never complained,' said a police official. The police commissioner said kingpin Abdul Rehman aka Rehman Chacha aka Mahendra Pal used to travel to different parts of the nation for conversion and had been to Kashmir and Siliguri in West Bengal to attend events organised for purpose. '14 people arrested till date are mostly well versed in computer technology,' Kumar said. The kingpin Abdul Rehman, a resident of Firozabad, had converted from Hinduism to Islam in 1990 before moving to Delhi and changed his name from Mahendra Pal to Abdul Rehman. The police are also investigating a widespread network involved in religious conversion having foreign funding from the USA and Canada.


Indian Express
an hour ago
- Indian Express
Explained: The border dispute, and the Hindu temples at the heart of deadly Cambodia-Thailand clashes
Thailand's army launched strikes on Cambodian military sites along their disputed border on Thursday (July 24), amidst recent deadly clashes which killed at least 11 Thai civilians. In a social media post, Thailand's 2nd regional military command said that it had deployed F-16 fighter jets and claimed to have 'destroyed' two Cambodian regional military support units. With ongoing fighting between the two forces at six locations along the border, Thai residents in the area were evacuated. The two nations had downgraded their diplomatic relations a day earlier, after accusing each other of inciting violence. The exchange of fire has roots not only in their colonial history, including disputes over Hindu temples, but also in recent events. Here is what to know. What is happening at the Thailand-Cambodia border? Earlier on Thursday, Thailand's foreign affairs ministry accused its southern neighbour of escalating the long-standing border conflict, and promised to 'intensify our self-defense measures'. 'The Royal Thai Government condemns in the strongest terms the violations of Thailand's sovereignty and international law, following the laying of anti-personnel landmines within Thai territory that caused injuries to Thai military personnel while Thai soldiers were patrolling on 16 and 23 July 2025,' it said in a statement. Thailand has claimed that Cambodia had recently laid land mines along paths that were supposed to remain safe under a common agreement. Five of its soldiers were reportedly injured on Wednesday. Cambodia has dismissed these 'baseless accusations,' and said that many unexploded mines and other ordnance remain in the area as a legacy of 20th-century wars and unrest. The Thai ministry claimed that Cambodia had resorted to heavy artillery shelling on Thursday morning into a Thai military base, as well as a hospital. Thailand has since closed its border to Cambodia, while Cambodia has accused Bangkok of using 'excessive force.' The Thai government has further claimed that Cambodia deployed drones to conduct surveillance of Thai troops at a military base near the Khmer Hindu temple, Prasat Ta Muen Thom. It has also alleged that Thursday's first clashes happened close to this region. The temple is located 400 km northeast of Bangkok, along the border of Thailand's Surin province and Cambodia's Oddar Meanchey province. However, the Cambodian side has disputed this narrative, with its Defence Ministry saying, 'Cambodian forces acted strictly within the bounds of self-defence, responding to an unprovoked incursion by Thai troops that violated our territorial integrity.' The ministry also claimed that the Thai side had deployed drones first and initiated an armed attack on the Cambodian troops at the temple. Both countries have long staked claims on the temple's ownership. Relations have been fraught since May, when a soldier was killed in a skirmish at the border between Cambodian and Thai troops. The incident spurred tit-for-tat actions, amid rising nationalist rhetoric on both sides. Thailand's Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra was suspended from her post earlier this month after her phone call with former Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen was leaked. On the call, she had allegedly spoken disparagingly of her own military's actions in the dispute. The leaked phone call had spurred widespread protests and saw the ruling coalition lose support from a major ally. In recent weeks, border crossings were stopped for all visitors except students and medical patients. Cambodia, in turn, has banned Thai films, cut Thai internet links, and suspended imports of fruits and vegetables, as well as fuel and gas from Thailand. The two nations share over 800 kilometres of border, and have longstanding border disputes based on a 1907 map drawn during French colonial rule in Cambodia. The country has long held the map as a reference to claim territory, while Thailand disagrees, claiming it is vague. One such dispute centres around the mountainous area surrounding the 11th-century Hindu temple of Preah Vihear, located between Cambodia's Preah Vihear province and Thailand's Sisaket province. Both countries have claimed the temple dedicated to Lord Shiva as their own. It was declared a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2008, much to Thailand's consternation. Legal arbitration to resolve this territory claim resulted in an International Court of Justice ruling awarding sovereignty of the region to Cambodia in 1962, spurring further diplomatic tensions. This decision was upheld by the court in 2013, following two years of deadly clashes. The court then created a demilitarised zone around the temple following deadly clashes that left 20 dead and displaced thousands of people, but this was not implemented, the Associated Press reported. Thailand has since rejected the court's jurisdiction.