Close X
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
ADVT 
International

Charity To Be Launched In Name Of Murdered Hotelier NRI Ranjit Singh Power

Darpan News Desk IANS, 06 Sep, 2015 01:51 PM
    A charity to support vulnerable children and elderly people will be launched in the name of a British-Indian businessman who was murdered during a trip to India earlier this year, according to a media report.
     
    The Ranjit Singh Power Foundation Trust will be launched on Monday in a ceremony at the Ramada Park Hall in Britain's Wolverhampton city to commemorate Power's 55th birthday, the Birmingham Mail reported.
     
    The trust will be kick-started with a 25,000 pound donation from Power's partner Angela Bir, who said the children with cancer in Britain as well as orphanages and poor families in India would be beneficiaries from the trust.
     
    The NRI hotelier was on a business trip to India in May this year when he disappeared. He was last seen in Amritsar on May 8.
     
     
    His family in Britain feared that he was kidnapped and offered 25,000 pounds for information about his whereabouts.
     
    However 10 days after Power's disappearance, police said the NRI was murdered by his friend and business partner, Baldev Singh Deol, and his partner's driver Sukhdev Singh at Anandpur Sahib in Punjab's Ropar district.
     
    Sukhdev confessed to have participated in Power's murder but Deol returned to Britain after allegedly committing the crime, according to police. The process for extradition of Deol from Britain was initiated.
     
    The body was thrown in the Bhakra canal in Ropar, some 80 km from Chandigarh, and could not be recovered.
     
     
    Both Sukhdev Singh and Deol were booked under the Indian Penal Code. A property dispute was believed to be the cause of the crime.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Rescued False Killer Whale To Stay At Vancouver Aquarium With Dolphin Roommate

    Rescued False Killer Whale To Stay At Vancouver Aquarium With Dolphin Roommate
    The whale, named Chester by Vancouver Aquarium staff, was in poor condition and had cuts on his body when he was rescued in July 2014.

    Rescued False Killer Whale To Stay At Vancouver Aquarium With Dolphin Roommate

    Undercover Cops Provided Money For Accused B.C. Duo Damaged By Addiction: Lawyer

    VANCOUVER — A defence lawyer has begun closing arguments in the case of two alleged B.C. terrorists accused of scheming to blow up the provincial legislature on Canada Day in 2013.

    Undercover Cops Provided Money For Accused B.C. Duo Damaged By Addiction: Lawyer

    'Perseverance Behind Indian Americans' Dominance Of National Spelling Bee'

    'Perseverance Behind Indian Americans' Dominance Of National Spelling Bee'
    The impressive performance of Indian Americans at the Scripps National Spelling Bee could be due to their perseverance, hard work, well-educated parents and a milestone documentary that made them realise "we could do this"

    'Perseverance Behind Indian Americans' Dominance Of National Spelling Bee'

    Indebted Indian migrant commits suicide in Bahrain

    Indebted Indian migrant commits suicide in Bahrain
    Pramu Sudheer, 41, was found hanging from a ceiling fan in his Muharraq City labour accommodation along with a suicide note on Saturday morning, the Gulf Daily News reported.

    Indebted Indian migrant commits suicide in Bahrain

    Russia To Showcase 4.7 Kg Gold Nugget

    Russia To Showcase 4.7 Kg Gold Nugget
    A 4.788 kg gold nugget named Irendyk Bear will be exhibited under 24-hour police guard in the National Museum of Bashkortostan, 

    Russia To Showcase 4.7 Kg Gold Nugget

    Indus Valley Script Numerical, Not Language: Historian

    Indus Valley Script Numerical, Not Language: Historian
    Contrary to the age-old assumption that the Indus script is a language, a veteran science historian has claimed that it is numerical, as evident from numbers and symbols in the seals and artifacts of the Indus Valley Civilisation

    Indus Valley Script Numerical, Not Language: Historian