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Murdered Brit-Indian bride was not officially married | Anni Diwani, the Brit-Indian bride who was murdered during her honeymoon in Cape Town, was reportedly not officially married to Shrien, according to authorities in Britain and Sweden. According to the Daily Mail, Anni was still Miss Hindocha
when she died. “The marriage registration was not going to happen until March
next year, when Anni had her birthday in Britain and they switched rings, which
is our custom,” the authorities said. The British High Commission in Delhi has
also confirmed that the marriage was never registered in India , and therefore
would not have been recognised in either Britain or Sweden . According to the
paper, the case has further been made complicated by a letter, which was not signed
but ‘the devoted friends and acquaintances of our beloved Anni’, said that she
knew Nigeria and Kenya well, contradicting Shrien’s suggestion that she had never
been to Africa before. The letter also suggested that the Mumbai ‘wedding’ ceremony,
was apparently planned so carefully by Shrien that it is not even recognised as
a formal marriage in law, the paper said. “It is beyond comprehension that Anni
suggested seeing “the real Africa ” in such a dangerous area at such a late hour.
She was an intelligent and smart girl. We believe the South African investigation
may be a whitewash, and Anni’s demise is highly mysterious,” the letter reads.
Meanwhile, South Africa ’s media had recently reported that Shrien ‘will be arrested
and charged’ in connection with Anni’s murder if he returns to the country.
Twenty-eight-year-old
Anni was shot dead when she and her new husband Shrien were hijacked by robbers
as their taxi drove through a notorious township in Cape Town . Shrien was released
unharmed. Earlier Anni’s father, Vinod Hindocha, had claimed that his daughter
was crying and had refused to sit next to her husband on their honeymoon flight.
He also alleged that his son-in-law and South African police had kept him in dark
about the investigation process, and added that Dewani should go back to Cape
Town to identify the culprits.
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