Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
India

Indian Prisoner Kirpal Singh's Body Reaches India; Family Alleges Foul Play

IANS, 19 Apr, 2016 10:43 AM
    The body of Indian prisoner Kirpal Singh, who died under suspicious circumstances in a Lahore jail last week, arrived in India on Tuesday. His family members alleged that his body bore injury marks and foul play led to his death, but doctors who conducted an autopsy denied this.
     
    Alleging foul play in his death, Kirpal's family members said the body bore injury and blood marks.
     
    Contrary to the claims, the medical board which conducted the post-mortem examination here after his body was brought back to India on Tuesday, said there were no external or internal injury marks on the body.
     
    Ashok Sharma, head of the three-member medical board, however, told the media after the post-mortem examination that the cause of death has not been established yet.
     
    The doctor said some organs from his body were missing, as an autopsy has already been done (in Pakistan).
     
    "In the post-mortem examination, it was found that there was no external or internal injury on the body. Post-mortem of this body has already been done (in Pakistan) because stitches were present on the body and the head.
     
    "When we opened the body, we found that some of the organs were missing because when post-mortem is done, some organs are taken to test to find out whether there is any disease or not," Sharma said.
     
    "... rest of the organs which were present, we took out portions of those organs and we sent them for testing (to know) about diseases as well as poisoning. I can say with 100 percent accuracy that the wound marks which are inflicted during life, they cannot be removed. The cause of death has not been established yet," the doctor added.
     
    After being handed over to the Border Security Force at the Attari-Wagah joint check post, Kirpal's body was immediately taken for post-mortem examination in Amritsar after which it was taken to Gurdaspur district for cremation in his native village.
     
    His family members alleged that he was murdered either by fellow prisoners or prison officials in Pakistan.
     
    Close relatives and residents from Kirpal Singh's village were present at Attari, 30 km from here, when the body was brought back to India.
     
    The body, in a coffin, was carried by porters on the Indian side even as family members showered flowers on the coffin.
     
    Close family members were allowed to see the body to identify Kirpal Singh's mortal remains.
     
    Pakistani authorities have attributed his death to heart attack, but his family has alleged he was murdered in prison.
     
    "He has been murdered by the Pakistanis under a conspiracy. He was the sole witness to the murder of Sarabjit Singh in the Lahore prison. We want a thorough inquiry and post-mortem to know the truth of his death," Kirpal's nephew told the media outside the hospital mortuary.
     
    Kirpal Singh, the family has maintained, had inadvertently crossed into Pakistan and was arrested and charged with spying by Pakistani authorities.
     
    His family had met union home minister Rajnath Singh and Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal in New Delhi last week to seek immediate repatriation of his body to India.
     
    The Punjab government has offered to extend all help and relief to Kirpal's family on the same lines as given to another Indian prisoner, Sarabjit Singh, who was murdered in the same prison in Lahore in April 2013.
     
    Kirpal Singh, a former serviceman, was lodged in Lahore's Kot Lakhpat prison since 1992. He died on April 11.
     
    Pakistani authorities had labelled him a spy and got him convicted for terror attacks inside Pakistan. He was initially sentenced to death which was later converted to 20 years' imprisonment.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    PM Modi Tweets Condolences Over Terror Attacks In France, Kuwait, Tunisia

    PM Modi Tweets Condolences Over Terror Attacks In France, Kuwait, Tunisia
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday tweeted his condolences over terror attacks in France, Kuwait and Tunisia, that left over 50 people dead, and said the progress of humanity lies in peace and brotherhood and not in terror and mindless violence.

    PM Modi Tweets Condolences Over Terror Attacks In France, Kuwait, Tunisia

    Vasundhara Admits To Helping Lalit Modi But Bjp Backs Her

    Bharatiya Janata Party sources said that Saudan Singh, who is organisational incharge of Rajasthan, and general secretary Arun Singh met Raje in Jaipur on Wednesday following Congress showing the purported document.

    Vasundhara Admits To Helping Lalit Modi But Bjp Backs Her

    Emergency India's Darkest Period, Can't Be Forgotten: Modi

    Emergency India's Darkest Period, Can't Be Forgotten: Modi
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday said India was placed under Emergency 40 years ago "for the sake of power" and the event which "cannot be forgotten" was the "darkest period" in our history.

    Emergency India's Darkest Period, Can't Be Forgotten: Modi

    Modi Hasn't Shown Signs Of Dictatorship: Journalist Coomi Kapoor

    Modi Hasn't Shown Signs Of Dictatorship: Journalist Coomi Kapoor
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi hasn't shown any signs of dictatorship nor is there any chance of an emergency being declared again, says veteran journalist Coomi Kapoor

    Modi Hasn't Shown Signs Of Dictatorship: Journalist Coomi Kapoor

    Murthy Rules Out Returning To Infosys Again

    Infosys co-founder N.R. Narayana Murthy on Monday ruled out returning to the company as he did in June 2013, three years after retiring in August 2011.

    Murthy Rules Out Returning To Infosys Again

    Millions In India, Thousands Abroad Mark International Yoga Day

    Millions In India, Thousands Abroad Mark International Yoga Day
    A record-breaking nearly 36,000 people, led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, took part in the main early morning event at Rajpath in the heart of New Delhi.

    Millions In India, Thousands Abroad Mark International Yoga Day