Private detectives: A pre-nuptial priority for some in India
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 NEW DELHI — 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 Web  site — 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 percent 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. Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100707com3.html | 
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