Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
India

Manipuri man beaten to death in Delhi

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 21 Jul, 2014 07:30 AM
    A 29-year-old man from Manipur was beaten to death here by a group of five to six men, police said Monday.
     
    Shaloni, a resident of Munirka in south Delhi, was allegedly beaten up in south Delhi's Kotla Mubarakpur area around 2.30 a.m. after a quarrel with the assaulters.
     
    Police have learnt that the accused had come to a Big Apple shop on Gurudwara road in Kotla Mubarakpur area in a white coloured car and they assaulted Shaloni following an argument.
     
    He was rushed to the All India Institute of Medical Science (AIIMS) trauma centre, where he was declared dead.
     
    Shaloni's body has been preserved for a postmortem examination which will be conducted later in the day after his family members arrive. A medical board is likely to be constituted for the autopsy.
     
    Joint Commissioner of Police Robin Hibu said: "Police received a call regarding a quarrel around 2.30 a.m. The police team on arriving the spot found Shaloni unconscious. He was rushed to AIIMS trauma center in a PCR van but hospital authorities declared him dead on arrival."
     
    "A case has been registered against unknown persons. The case is being probed from all angles as there seems no sudden provocation," he said.
     
    "Call details of the victim's mobile phone are being analyzed and a special team has been formed to crack the case," another police official told IANS.
     
    The police has seized the footage of a CCTV camera installed outside a shop near the spot.
     
    Shaloni, who was apparently employed at a Business Processing Outsourcing (BPO) company, was returning from a his work when he was attacked.
     
    Similar to this case, a 19-year-old student from Arunachal Pradesh, Nido Tania, died after being badly assaulted with iron rods and sticks by a group of men after an altercation with a shopkeeper in a south Delhi market, not far from Kotla Mubarakpur, in January this year.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Modi leaves for BRICS summit in Brazil Sunday

    Modi leaves for BRICS summit in Brazil Sunday
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi will make his first foray into international diplomacy when he leaves Sunday for the sixth summit of BRICS countries July 15-16, with the meeting expected to discuss creation of development bank and reforms of the UN Security Council.

    Modi leaves for BRICS summit in Brazil Sunday

    'Israel not to end Gaza offensive for global pressure'

    'Israel not to end Gaza offensive for global pressure'
    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Friday his country would not bow to international pressure to halt the offensive on Gaza.

    'Israel not to end Gaza offensive for global pressure'

    Modi accepts Obama's invite, seeks result-oriented visit

    Modi accepts Obama's invite, seeks result-oriented visit
    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has accepted President Barack Obama's invitation to visit the US in September and said he looked forward to a "result-oriented visit" with concrete outcomes that impart new momentum to the strategic partnership between the two countries.

    Modi accepts Obama's invite, seeks result-oriented visit

    Akali Dal terms Haryana gurdwara bill unconstitutional, illegal

    Akali Dal terms Haryana gurdwara bill unconstitutional, illegal
    Punjab's ruling Shiromani Akali Dal Friday termed the passing of a bill by the Haryana assembly for a separate Sikh board for gurdwaras in the state as "totally unconstitutional" and "illegal".

    Akali Dal terms Haryana gurdwara bill unconstitutional, illegal

    Haryana assembly passes bill for separate SGPC

    Haryana assembly passes bill for separate SGPC
    Amid stiff opposition from the opposition benches, a bill for creating a separate body for managing Sikh gurdwaras in Haryana was passed by the state assembly Friday.

    Haryana assembly passes bill for separate SGPC

    South Asian bodies troubled by spying of Muslim Americans

    South Asian bodies troubled by spying of Muslim Americans
    A group of South Asian Organizations says it's deeply troubled by reports that US government agencies have engaged in surveillance of Muslim American civic and civil rights leaders, including Indian and Pakistani Americans.

    South Asian bodies troubled by spying of Muslim Americans