B.C. symposium puts spotlight on dangers associated with strangulation
Charuka Maheswaran was 29 when she met the man she would later marry, have three children with, and who she said eventually beat and strangled her.
“He pushed me up against the counter and I could feel the counter in my back and the cold steel of the fridge on my right arm, and he just had his hands around my neck and he was just squeezing,” she said.
She said she was 34, and six months pregnant with her daughter. She said she remembered trying to push him away with her left hand, while her right immediately went to her belly.
“He just kept squeezing and I just went woozy and was blacking out, and my last thought was, ‘Well, I’m dead, (she’s) dead,'” Maheswaran said of her unborn child.

