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Modernity and patriarchy collide as murder shakes up Millennium City
Hindustan Times Bengaluru
|July 12, 2025
On the outside, the building looks like any other house in this posh corner of Gurugram. A towering arched window pane dominates the three-storey facade, faded but serene images of Hindu deities peeking out. A green tarpaulin sheet dangles casually from the top floor, perhaps to shield against the punishing summer sun or monsoon drizzles. A white Thar stands in a narrow driveway, flanked by a pair of motorbikes.
But it is inside this house, in Gurugram's upmarket Sector 57, that 51-year-old builder Deepak Yadav allegedly pumped four bullets into his daughter, tennis player Radhika Yadav, while she was cooking breakfast around 10.30am on Thursday.
Deepak has confessed to the crime, and initial police investigation has hinted at a toxic cocktail of social pressure, patriarchal insecurities, and wounded ego as one of the motives behind the shocking crime. But the crime has also shaken one of India's most prosperous pockets, where skyrocketing salaries and real-estate heft often hides an ugly underbelly of caustic social attitudes that are steeped in an aversion to modern life, especially women's freedoms.
told the police, according to officials.
The murder coincided with Radhika's mother Manju Yadav's birthday.
Ambition and grit
The Yadavs were prosperous, with interests in the construction and sale of builders' floors, leasing out properties on rent, and land deals. They had moved out of Wazirabad village to the city nearly a decade ago. The reason, relatives said, was simple: To give the children, especially Radhika and her elder brother Dheeraj, a better shot at education and life.
"Deepak was obsessed with players such as Saina Nehwal who is also from Haryana. He would often say, 'Radhika will go further.' He spent lakhs on her training," said Kuldeep Singh, a local resident of Wazirabad. "He shifted homes more than once just to be near her coaching academy."
Radhika matched those expectations with grit. After completing her studies from the Scottish International High School in 2018, she began running a sports academy for children, earning well on her own. She reached a career-high ITF doubles ranking of 113 in November 2024, and was ranked fifth in Haryana in women's doubles. She also won private events and Haryana district championships.
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