Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 6th July 2026, 2:13 PM
A devastating incident has shaken the community of Kumarkhali Upazila in Kushtia after a passionate football supporter allegedly committed suicide following a defeat suffered by the Brazilian national football team. The deceased, identified as 19-year-old Ratan, reportedly took his own life out of sheer despair. The tragedy occurred on Monday in the Ghoraghat area under Kaya Union, leaving the local neighbourhood in deep mourning. Ratan, who was a young father, leaves behind a two-month-old daughter.
Ratan was the third son of Hossein Mistry, a resident of the Ghoraghat locality. According to family and local sources, the incident came to light when family members noticed that Ratan’s bedroom door had been locked from the inside for an unusually long period. After repeatedly calling out his name and receiving no response, anxious relatives peered through the window. To their horror, they discovered him hanging from the ceiling.
Neighbours quickly gathered at the scene, broke down the door, and rushed him to a local medical professional. Upon examination, the attending doctor pronounced the teenager dead.
Distraught neighbours described Ratan as a polite, well-mannered, and well-liked youth within the village. However, his peers noted that he was an exceptionally zealous follower of the Brazilian football team. Local residents claimed that Ratan had been severely depressed following a recent international match where Brazil suffered an unexpected defeat against Norway. Friends observed that he had been struggling to cope emotionally with the loss, which apparently triggered a severe mental health crisis.
Reacting to the incident, Yunus Ali, the President of the Kaya Union unit of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), termed the event deeply unfortunate and highly undesirable. He urged young sports enthusiasts to maintain perspective and view games purely as a form of entertainment. Meanwhile, Suman, a local Union Parishad (UP) member representing Ward 4, confirmed that he had heard of the youth’s tragic demise. He cautioned, however, that while football fanaticism is being widely discussed as the primary trigger, it remains difficult to confirm if other underlying personal or family issues contributed to the suicide.
Law enforcement authorities arrived at the scene shortly after being notified of the death. Amirul Islam, the Officer-in-Charge (Investigation) of Kumarkhali Police Station, stated that officers had conducted an inquest report on the body. Since the grieving family and local representatives raised no allegations of foul play and submitted a formal written request to bypass an autopsy, the police authorised the release of the body for burial without a post-mortem examination.
Football fanaticism runs deep across Bangladesh, with the nation famously dividing into passionate camps of Brazil and Argentina supporters during major tournaments. While this intense rivalry usually manifests as colourful processions, flags, and playful banter, psychologists have repeatedly warned about the dangers of extreme emotional attachment to sports teams among vulnerable youths. This heartbreaking loss highlights the urgent need for counselling, emotional resilience, and community support to prevent sports-related passions from escalating into irreversible personal tragedies.
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