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72 Hours and Still No Trace: The Disappearance of Sneha Debnath Demands Urgent Action

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19-year-old DU student Sneha Debnath has been missing since July 7 near Signature Bridge. With no leads, non-functional CCTVs, and minimal media attention, her disappearance has raised questions about public safety, surveillance, and institutional accountability in Delhi.

Sneha Debnath, a 19-year-old BSc Mathematics student at Atma Ram Sanatan Dharma College, University of Delhi, has been missing since the early hours of July 7. According to her family, Sneha left from Sarai Rohilla and was last known to have taken a cab, reportedly being dropped off near Signature Bridge at approximately 8:30 am. Her final communication was around 8:45 am, after which her phone has remained switched off. As of now, there has been no trace of her.

An FIR has been filed, and police claim that an investigation is underway, but over 72 hours later, no leads have surfaced. What is particularly alarming, family members say, is the alleged failure of basic surveillance infrastructure in the area. CCTV cameras around Signature Bridge, identified in previous reports as a location vulnerable to suicides and disappearances, were reportedly non-functional at the time. The lack of visual evidence has severely impeded the investigation, raising pressing concerns about public safety and the accountability of civic authorities.

Sneha’s family, friends, and college peers are now grappling with a mounting sense of helplessness. Her mother, in a widely circulated video, is seen breaking down, pleading for her daughter’s return. Repeated appeals for urgent intervention have, so far, failed to generate any significant response from either law enforcement or political leadership. Signature Bridge, the site of Sneha’s last known location, has been the subject of public concern before. Despite multiple incidents in the past, calls for improved surveillance, functional CCTV cameras, and regular patrolling have reportedly gone unheeded. The current case, many believe, is a direct consequence of this neglect. In a city that routinely promises technological advancement and public safety, the failure of the most basic protective measures is a sobering indictment.

What has further intensified the distress is the near-complete absence of media coverage. A student from one of India’s most reputed public universities disappearing in broad daylight, without triggering national or even city-wide concern, speaks to a larger issue of whose stories are amplified and whose are quietly erased.

The case of Sneha Debnath cannot be seen in isolation. It is part of a wider, troubling landscape in which women’s safety continues to be precarious, and institutional responses remain reactive rather than preventative. For students, parents, and citizens at large, it is a stark reminder that vulnerability persists despite promises of protection. Sneha’s friends and family continue to urge anyone with information to come forward. But beyond individual appeals, this moment demands structural accountability. For Sneha’s sake, and for the many others who never make headlines, it is time the silence is broken, not just in words, but in action.

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Image Credits: Sneha Debnath Family Statement

Ritobrita Mukherjee

[email protected]

Journalism has been called the “first rough draft of history”. D.U.B may be termed as the first rough draft of DU history. Freedom to Express.

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