Police in southern Hyderabad city advised BBC Hindi they need to know whether Aradhana Samdariya was compelled to quick.
Her folks have demanded she intentionally fasted as endorsed in Jainism, one of the world's most old religions.
The case has started a level headed discussion about the act of religious fasting in India.
Reports said Aradhana lived for 68 days on bubbled water. Two days after she canceled her quick a week ago, she was dead.
Specialists trust it is workable for the human body to make due without nourishment for up to two months.
A police representative said an argument had been enlisted against the guardians after a kid rights association documented a grumbling.
Intentional quick?
"The guardians - Laxmi Chand and Manshi Samdariya - have been reserved under at fault murder [causing demise by negligence] and Juvenile Justice Act [cruelty against minors]," the representative said.
The guardians, rich gem specialists situated in Hyderabad, have denied that they constrained their little girl to quick.
"She approached consent for upvaas [fast that includes revoking food]. We requesting that her stop following 51 days however she would not surrender. Her quick was deliberate. Nobody constrained her," Mr Samdariya said.
Be that as it may, social activists have rejected the family's claim.
"The whole country ought to be embarrassed that such a practice still exists. Her dad's master prompted the family that on the off chance that she fasted for 68 days, his business would be productive," extremist Achyut Rao told BBC Hindi.
"The young lady was made to drink just water from dawn to nightfall. There was no salt or lemon or whatever else."
1 Comments
very very sad one
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