Private detectives a pre-nuptial priority in India

The wedding, to be celebrated in sumptuous Indian style, was due for June but the groom suddenly lost interest.

The wedding, to be celebrated in sumptuous Indian style, was due for June and everything was progressing smoothly until the groom suddenly lost interest.

Suspicious of an affair, the bride did what increasing numbers of anxious lovers and nervous families are doing in India, she rang a private detective to find out why.

In a country where nine out of 10 marriages are still arranged and modern social pressures are putting the institution under pressure, the industry of snooping on lovers has expanded fast over the last five years, say insiders.

In this case an investigation by the agency AMX – “marriage is a gamble,” says its website – revealed that the groom had recently discovered he was HIV positive. The discovery was made by an attractive female undercover agent sent by the agency, who befriended the groom and found his medicine.

The wedding was eventually called off, like 20 per cent of cases after a probe, AMX boss Baldev Kumar Puri told AFP.

“A pre-matrimonial investigation is your duty,” Puri said. “A post matrimonial investigation is much more costly.”

Puri and others, like Kunwar Vikram Singh, director of the New Delhi-based Lancers agency, are in a growth industry being driven by social changes and the way in which weddings are arranged.


In cities, families are relying increasingly on small advertisements in newspapers and websites or specialist dating agencies to find the perfect match for their children. The problem is that everyone exaggerates, or even lies, about their qualities.

“Unlike the old days when a close-knit society meant that marriages were usually held between known families, these days marriages are increasingly being arranged through unknown, unfamiliar sources,” said Singh. Information given by potential partners can be verified, such as their financial position, educational achievements, health and even sexual orientation.

For Puri, there’s nothing unethical about running background checks on a potential life partner. “People are coming because they want to be 100 per cent sure. It’s like a medical check-up, you do it once a year just to be sure that everything is ok,” he said.

In recent years, attitudes towards dating have changed dramatically in India among the middle classes, who generally enjoy far more freedom than their parents.

Singh said he had a female client from the Indian army who wanted him to look into a divorced businessman she was planning on marrying.

“The businessman took her out. He behaved like a perfect gentleman,” he explained. “The marriage was fixed and the wedding cards were sent. But then he was always postponing their meetings.” And the outcome of his investigation?

“He was married to a beautiful woman in Kolkata. No case of divorce was pending in the court,” he said.

Published in The Express Tribune, July 6th, 2010.
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