
Nails pulled out, given electric shocks: Two workers tortured by employer on suspicion of theft in Chhattisgarh
The Hindu
Ice-cream factory workers tortured in Chhattisgarh, police investigating; victims escape and file complaint in Rajasthan.
“Two ice-cream factory workers in Korba district, in Chhattisgarh, were allegedly tortured by their employer and his aide who pulled out their nails and administered them electric shocks on suspicion of theft,” police said on Saturday (April 19, 2025.)
“The victims, Abhishek Bhambi and Vinod Bhambi, originally from Bhilwara district in Rajasthan, were hired through a contractor to work at the ice-cream factory owned by Chhotu Gurjar in Khaprabhatti area under the Civil Lines police station limits,” a police official said.
“On April 14, Gurjar and his associate Mukesh Sharma accused the two workers of theft. The duo was stripped, given electric shocks, and their nails were pulled out,” he said, adding that the video of the torture has gone viral.
“The video clip shows a semi-nude man being administered electric shocks and thrashed,” he said. The two victims managed to escape and reach their native place in Bhilwara. They lodged a complaint at Gulabpura police station.
“The Rajasthan Police registered a “zero” FIR and forwarded the case to Korba police for further action,” he said. Under a zero FIR, victims can file complaints at any police station regardless of the crime’s location.
Subsequently, a case was registered at Civil Lines police station in Korba on Friday (April 18, 2025) against Gurjar and Sharma.
One of the victims, Abhishek Bhambhi, stated that he had demanded ₹20,000 advance from his employer to pay for the instalment of his vehicle. When the owner refused, “Abhishek expressed his desire to quit the job, which angered the accused who assaulted both workers,” he said.

Four persons were killed and three others sustained injuries in a fire that broke out in a five-storey building housing several manufacturing units in Rohini Sector 5, the police said on Wednesday. Sixteen fire tenders were rushed to the spot after the Delhi Fire Services (DFS) received a call about the blaze at 7.30 p.m. on Tuesday. However, due to the combustible material stored in the building, including plastic and clothes, and the narrow lanes leading up to it, which prevented fire engines that ran out of water from giving way to other rescue vehicles, it took the DFS over 12 hours to douse the flames.