Minors Plot to Kidnap & Gang-Rape Tribal Star Nivedita Mandavi in Sick Instagram Group — The Vile Chats That Expose India’s Rotten Underbelly
It’s one thing to data-face criticism online. It’s another to discover that people aren’t just talking about you, they’re planning something far more disturbing. That’s the reality Nivedita Mandavi found herself in, and it exposes a problem that goes well beyond one individual.
Nivedita, a creator from chhattisgarh known for showcasing Bastar’s tribal culture, has built her voice around identity, tradition, and representation. But what she encountered recently had nothing to do with disagreement or criticism. It crossed into something far more serious and deeply unsettling.
She was reportedly added to an instagram group under the banner of “Nasha Mukti.” What she found inside wasn’t awareness or discussion. It was a space where minors were openly sharing crude, explicit language and discussing violent intentions toward her. This wasn’t random trolling. It had the structure of coordination, conversations that suggested planning, not just venting.
What makes this more alarming is the lack of hesitation. The tone, the language, and the confidence all point to a growing normalization of dehumanizing behavior online. When individuals begin to see others only through a lens of entitlement or objectification, the line between words and actions becomes dangerously thin.
This is not about one platform or one group. It reflects a wider issue: how unchecked online spaces, algorithm-driven content, and echo chambers can shape attitudes, especially among young users. Exposure without guidance can turn influence into distortion.
And that brings us to the larger question. Where does responsibility lie? Platforms, policymakers, educators, and communities all have a role to play. Because ignoring patterns like this doesn’t make them disappear. It allows them to grow quietly until they are impossible to ignore.
This is not just an online issue anymore. It’s a societal one.