American nightmare: Beneath glossy stories of Indian diaspora lies darker reality

HYDERABAD: Six months after the alleged murder of Hyderabad student Nikita Godishala — a case that sparked global outrage and online campaigns demanding justice — there has been little progress. The prime accused, Arjun Sharma, remains absconding, while Nikita’s family in Tarnaka continues to wait for answers.Though the family lodged a complaint at Lalaguda police station in Hyderabad, police officials said they have not yet received any communication from authorities in the United States to begin tracing Sharma.

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Nikita’s case is part of a far larger and deeply troubling pattern. Data from the Ministry of External Affairs shows that 141 Indian students died in the United States between 2021 and 2025 due to suicides, accidents and violent attacks. The toll peaked at 44 deaths in 2024, nearly one every eight days. Even in 2025, despite a dip in the number of Indian students travelling to the US, 30 deaths were recorded.Behind these numbers are investigations that remain unresolved, with families still searching for closure, and questions that continue to go unanswered.Ransom call that left more questions than answersMohammed Abdul Arfath (25) left Nacharam for the US in May 2023 to pursue a Master’s degree in IT at Cleveland State University.Like thousands of Indian students who travel abroad every year, he hoped education would open the door to a better future. Instead, his disappearance and death became one of the most perplexing cases involving an Indian student in the US.Arfath, who lived in downtown Cleveland, was last seen on March 5, 2024, after leaving his apartment on East 13th Street. When he stopped responding to calls, his roommates alerted the Cleveland Police, which issued a missing-person alert on March 14. His father, Mohd Saleem, said the family last spoke to him on March 7. Days later, the family received a chilling ransom call. An unidentified caller claimed Arfath had been kidnapped by a drug gang, demanded $1,200 for his release and threatened to sell his kidneys if the money was not paid. When the family asked to speak to Arfath, the caller refused. Police never publicly explained whether the call was linked to his disappearance.On April 8, police recovered Arfath’s body from Lake Erie. The cause and maner of his death were never publicly disclosed.No arrests have been made, the ransom call remains unexplained, and the investigation continues without a publicly identified motive, leaving his family with more questions than answers.



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