Husband, 35, who stabbed his 23-year-old wife 20 times while she slept after she asked for a divorce is jailed - and will be deported to India
- Rajkumar Janagani, 35, stabbed his wife 20 times as she slept at Brisbane home
- The 23-year-old woman survived but still suffers from her horrific injuries
- Janagani was jailed for 11 years and will be deported to India when he is freed
An Indian man has been jailed for stabbing his wife more than 20 times during a frenzied attack at their Brisbane home after she asked for a divorce.
The woman, then 23, suffered injuries to her head, neck, chest, back and arms during the premeditated attempt to murder her as she slept in August 2015.
Rajkumar Janagani, 35, then turned the knife on himself, saying 'my wife wants to leave me I do not want to live without her'.

An Indian man has been jailed for stabbing his wife more than 20 times during a frenzied attack at their Brisbane home after she asked for a divorce (file picture)
The woman, who cannot be named for legal reasons, grabbed the knife, stopping Janagani as he stabbed himself in the chest and throat.
He sustained superficial wounds. The woman needed surgery and spent two weeks in hospital. She continues to suffer from her injuries.
Janagani pleaded guilty in the Brisbane Supreme Court on Tuesday to attempted murder after he admitted to police that he had tried to kill his wife.
He will spend at least eight years and eight months in jail and is likely to be deported once released.
His early morning attack came a day before she was due to fly home to India.
The court heard his dominating behaviour had escalated and she had told him she wanted a divorce.
'He became very controlling and would isolate me. He would tell me what I would and could not say to people,' the woman said in her victim impact statement.
Janagani also choked the woman, hit her, spat in her food, and monitored her emails.
The woman, who was studying software engineering at the time, said the attack had robbed her of her self-confidence and left her feeling ashamed.
Her family in India have also been impacted after Janagani's family and friends targeted them.
'I was a high achiever and was in the top one per cent,' she said.
'(Now) I feel worthless. I feel like my life has collapsed. I cannot trust people and I feel there is no hope for my future.'
In sentencing, Justice Peter Applegarth said Janagani's assault on a vulnerable woman was cowardly.
'It was not a single horrible stab wound. It was a sustained attack as the number of stab wounds demonstrates,' he said.
He also told the woman she should not feel ashamed for what happened to her.
'I hope when this legal process ends that you will see yourself as more than a victim,' she said.
'You should see yourself as a survivor.'
Justice Applegarth sentenced Janagani to 11 years' imprisonment with parole eligibility after eight years and eight months.
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