Riot about women's constable murder in the Odisha meeting, the Minister of Legislation replied

Bhubaneswar, September 24 (IANS). There was a riot about the female traffic constable Shubmitra Sahu murder case in the Odisha meeting. The Minister of Law responded to this incident. On Wednesday, the incident of brutal murder of female traffic constable Shubhitra Sahu shook in the Odisha meeting. The body of the female constable was restored from Ghatgaon in the Kejhar district. The Minister of Legislation presented a detailed description of the case, and responded to the workplace -motion set by Mlas Pramera Malik, Gautam Buddha Das, Thrill Ranjan Biswal, Dhrub Charan Sahu and Sharda Prasanna Jena. According to the statement of the minister, Shubmitra went missing on September 6, 2025, after which her mother Sukanta Sahu filed a missing complaint with the Capital Police Station. During the investigation, Saka went to her husband, Constable Deepak Kumar Raut, who was also posted in the commissioner police. He said the record revealed that Shubhitra and Deepak married the Khordha marriage registrar on July 23, 2024. However, the police investigation revealed the growing dispute between them. Deepak allegedly refused to give 20 lakh calls for the traditional wedding ceremony by Shubhitra. Later, he admitted to strangling himself in his Honda City car in the Bhubaneswar unit-6 area between 2 and 15:00 on September 6. Deepak, along with his family members Vinod Bihari Bhuiyan alias Papu and Shambhunath Mohanty alias Jata, allegedly buried his body in the village of Kusunpur under the border of Ghatgaon police. Police arrested the three accused on September 17 and produced in court the next day. He is now filed in the Jarpada jail. A case is registered in terms of section 103 of the Indian Code of Justice and is being investigated. The Minister of Legislation also offered data on crime against women in Odisha, saying that there were more cases between 2020 and 2024, but most categories of crimes associated with women and a dedicated women’s safety app integrated to EASS-112. -Ians Ash/DKP Share This Story Tags