An anonymous friend who had met her future husband on a dating app and became pregnant with their first child soon after the date ended, ended her life on December 1, 2015.
In her will, the friend wrote that her “heart broke”.
Read: Woman who was cheated on by a stranger is awarded $2m in compensation article “I thought, I have no regrets.
This is what I want.
I want to be with him.
I feel like I am now his wife.
He has taken care of us both.
He took care of me.
I just feel sad.
I think about him all the time.
I am so proud of him.
He was my first love,” the friend, who was married for 12 years, told The Times Of India.
The friend also wrote that she had felt guilty after the couple were married, but now she is “totally open” to dating again.
“I am so grateful that I can be happy and love him.
It was very hard for me to get pregnant,” the person, who requested anonymity, said.”
My heart broke when I met my husband.
I cried and cried.
But now I am open to dating,” she added.
The death of the friend who was “the first love” in India and has since been named as Dr Sudhir Kulkarni, has sparked a debate about how to handle cases of “fake marriages” where people get married on the internet without the knowledge of their spouses.
“I don’t think we have any laws.
People can marry in India,” said Nandan, a Delhi-based lawyer and the former president of the National Commission for Protection of Women and Child Rights (NCPCR).”
It is a matter of course if someone’s marriage is online and is not legal, we will deal with it,” he said.
According to the NCPCR, 1,853 cases of fake marriages in India were registered in 2016-17, but only 6.1 per cent were reported to the police.