The incident has sparked strong debate on parenting, social media, and moral responsibility. It exposes how personal choices online can clash with family bonds and accountability.
In the digital world, what you post rarely stays private. Online behaviour shapes family dynamics, affects children, and spreads into society. A parent’s actions on social media can deeply influence their child’s self-esteem and mental health.
The case of Alka Jain highlights this troubling reality. Reports claim she regularly shared vulgar mujra-style reels. Her 15-year-old son objected, asking her to dress modestly. He told her classmates mocked him because of her videos.
Instead of addressing his concerns, Jain allegedly strangled him and staged the crime as suicide. The tragedy underlines the dangers when parents ignore their child’s emotional suffering and fail to protect their dignity.
Equally shocking is the response from some online groups. Sections of self-labelled feminists are said to be celebrating the incident. Such reactions dismiss the seriousness of child abuse and murder, normalising violence in the name of ideology.
Freedom of expression cannot erase responsibility within families. It should never be used to justify neglect or cruelty. Social media empowerment becomes hollow when it strips children of respect and safety.
The Alka Jain case reminds you that personal freedom must coexist with accountability. When self-expression crosses into harm, it loses its value. Protecting a child’s dignity and well-being must always come first.
Meet Alka Jain
> She made vulgar mujra reels
> Her 15 year old son said – Mom, please wear modest clothes
> My friends make fun of me in school
> She strangled him to death
> Staged it as a suicideThousands of Indian feminist girls are celebrating it in the comments. pic.twitter.com/vVAXeDn8Vl
— ︎ ︎venom (@venom1s) September 25, 2025




