Raigarh Molestation Case: Accused Brijesh Mahant Enters Woman's Bathroom, Beats Mother and Daughter — Arrested Under BNS
Digital Desk
Raigarh police arrest Brijesh Mahant for molesting a woman in her own home bathroom and assaulting her mother. Case filed under BNS Sections 74, 75, 77 and 115
A deeply disturbing incident from Raigarh district has once again put women's safety in Chhattisgarh's towns and villages under the spotlight. On March 4, 2026, a young woman was molested inside her own home while bathing, and when she resisted, the accused beat both her and her mother. The accused — identified as Brijesh Mahant, approximately 26 years old, a resident of the same village — was subsequently arrested by Raigarh Women Police Station and sent to judicial remand. The Free Press Journal
This was not a crime committed in darkness or in an isolated location. It happened inside the victim's home, in broad daylight, by a man from her own village. That detail alone makes it a case that demands more than a routine arrest.
What Happened — A Home Violated in Daylight
According to the victim's complaint filed at Raigarh Women Police Station, the incident took place in the afternoon. Brijesh Mahant entered the bathing area — the nahani ghar — of her house while she was bathing. He allegedly watched her and then proceeded to molest her. The Free Press Journal
When the victim resisted and raised an alarm, the accused turned violent — slapping her, hitting her with his hands, and threatening and intimidating her. When her mother arrived at the scene to intervene, the accused assaulted her as well — pushing and hitting her. When the victim's father also arrived on hearing the commotion, the accused panicked, pushed him too, and fled the scene. The Free Press Journal
The calculated escalation — from molestation to assault to threatening an entire family — reveals not a momentary lapse but a deliberate act of aggression by a man who believed he could terrorise a family into silence. He was wrong.
The FIR and the Legal Charge Sheet
Following the victim's complaint, Raigarh Women Police Station registered Crime Number 14/2026 under multiple sections of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita — BNS Sections 74, 75(2), 77, and 115(2). The Free Press Journal
These sections cover a serious range of offences. BNS Section 74 addresses assault or criminal force on a woman with intent to outrage her modesty. Section 75(2) covers sexual harassment. Section 77 deals with voyeurism. Section 115(2) covers voluntarily causing hurt. Together they reflect the full picture of what the accused did — entered, watched, molested, and then violently attacked when challenged.
The use of the new Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita rather than the old IPC sections signals that this case is being processed under the modernised legal framework that came into force in 2024 — a framework designed to be both more comprehensive and faster in prosecution.
Swift Police Action — The Right Response
Raigarh Women Police Station officer Kusum Kaivart took prompt action on the complaint. The accused was traced, arrested, and produced before a court, which sent him to judicial remand. SSP Shashi Mohan Singh stated that the police action sends a strong message to those who commit crimes against women in the district. The Free Press Journal
The speed of arrest matters enormously in cases of this nature. When a victim lives in the same village as her attacker, every hour he remains free is an hour of fear and potential intimidation for her and her family. Raigarh police acted correctly and quickly — and that deserves to be acknowledged.
The Bigger Pattern — Home Is No Longer Safe
This case is part of a disturbing pattern that criminologists and women's rights activists have repeatedly flagged in Chhattisgarh. The majority of crimes against women do not happen in dark alleys or at the hands of strangers. They happen inside homes, in neighbourhoods, committed by men known to the victim — relatives, neighbours, fellow villagers.
Raigarh has seen multiple high-profile women's safety incidents in recent months — including a viral video of a woman constable being attacked and stripped during an anti-mining protest in December 2025, which triggered national outrage and led to arrests. Wikipedia The district's women's safety record is under genuine scrutiny — and rightly so.
The pattern demands systemic response, not just case-by-case arrests. Fast-track courts for BNS molestation cases, mandatory victim support through district legal services authorities, and community-level awareness programmes in villages — not just in towns — are the minimum required infrastructure.
Why Victims Must Keep Coming Forward
One of the most important aspects of this case is that the victim filed a complaint immediately. She did not wait. She did not allow herself to be silenced by the threat of social stigma or the intimidation the accused attempted. She walked to the Women Police Station and put her account on record.
That act of courage is what made the arrest possible. And it must be protected and encouraged. In cases involving village-level accused, post-complaint harassment and social pressure on the victim's family to withdraw are common. As Raigarh Police Station Incharge Deepika Nirmalkar stated in January 2026, "Be it a woman officer or a common woman, they are all women — those who wrong them should definitely be punished." Business Standard That principle must now be backed by active witness protection for this victim and her family throughout the trial.
Opinion: Judicial Remand Is the Beginning, Not the End
Brijesh Mahant is in judicial custody. The FIR is registered under the right sections. The Women Police Station responded with commendable speed. But this is the beginning of the process, not its conclusion.
Chhattisgarh's courts must now ensure fast-track prosecution. Cases under BNS molestation sections should not drag for years while the accused gets bail after bail and the victim lives in fear. The state government's stated commitment to women's safety must translate into dedicated fast-track court capacity for these cases — particularly in districts like Raigarh where the caseload is heavy and the incidents are frequent.
A strong arrest means nothing if the trial takes five years and ends in acquittal due to procedural lapses. Justice for the Raigarh victim means a conviction — and it means every other Brijesh Mahant in every other village in Chhattisgarh knowing that entering a woman's home uninvited ends in prison, not just a night in a police lockup.
