One summer afternoon in 2018, two men set out on a road trip into the Karbi Anglong region of India's northeastern Assam state. They never came back.
Abhijeet Nath, a 30-year-old businessman, and Nilotpal Das, a 29-year-old musician, were driving from the city of Guwahati. By evening, their journey had taken them to a village, where they were surrounded by a mob that suspected them of being "child kidnappers" and beaten to death.
The case drew national attention - not only for its brutality, but because it reflected a wider pattern of violence emerging at the time. Across parts of India, rumours about child-abduction gangs were spreading rapidly through WhatsApp messages and viral videos, fuelling suspicion of strangers and, in some cases, mob attacks.
Nearly eight years later, the lynching is back in the headlines after a court in Assam convicted 20 people, finding them guilty of murder and participation in an unlawful assembly, while acquitting 25 others for lack of evidence "beyond reasonable doubt". It will announce the quantum of punishment on Friday.
Those convicted have denied the allegations. They have the option to appeal against the verdict in a higher court.






