Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian Woman Acquitted Of Maid Abuse In Singapore

IANS, 02 Mar, 2019 03:08 AM

    An Indian woman in Singapore has been acquitted of maid abuse after the judge felt that the domestic help was "prone to exaggeration" in her complaints against her employer, a media report said Friday.


    District Judge Kenneth Yap, who delivered the judgement after a nine-day trial, said that Rajinder Kaur, 28, had "demonstrated a lack of intention to work in Singapore from the start", The New Paper reported.


    Her former employer Madam Singh Manu, 43, was accused of assaulting Kaur on four occasions in January, 2017 in an apartment in the western part of Singapore.


    The purported acts included hitting the maid twice, hitting her hand with a knife, pulling her hair and twisting her arm.


    Deputy Public Prosecutors Yang Ziliang and Sheryl Yeo had stated that Kaur was a truthful witness who had no reason to fabricate the acts of assault.


    But defence lawyer Amarjit Singh Sidhu said Kaur, who is now in India, had made the allegations as she wanted to return home.


    The lawyer said Kaur was "irresponsible as a domestic helper" who would at times leave the door to the apartment wide open and forget to turn off the gas switch.


    In his brief grounds of decision, Judge Yap noted that in August, 2016, Kaur came here to work and take over her older sister's place as the family's breadwinner.


    He said: "Rajinder did not seem to share this sentiment... Even after she arrived, she cried... It required the combined efforts of her sister and the accused to calm her down and convince her to stay on".


    The judge said he found her accounts of the alleged assaults to lack clarity and "appear to be subject to exaggeration".


    He noted that Kaur had given different accounts on how a knife was purportedly used.


    "Rajinder initially said the sharp end of the knife came into contact with the top of her left hand and her skin had come off as a result," the Singapore tabloid quoted the Judge as saying.


    She later gave another version, stating it was the flat side of the knife instead and the top part "grazed" her hand.


    Judge Yap said a doctor who conducted a medical examination soon after did not record such an injury.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    U.S. Levels 13 Charges Against Huawei For Stealing Secrets, Evading Sanctions

    The U.S. Department of Justice laid out its case Monday against Canada's most famous corporate detainee

    U.S. Levels 13 Charges Against Huawei For Stealing Secrets, Evading Sanctions

    Top Pakistani Court Frees Asia Bibi, Christian Woman Acquitted Of Blasphemy

    Pakistan's top court on Tuesday upheld its acquittal of a Christian woman sentenced to death for blasphemy, paving the way for Aasia Bibi to leave the country in a blow to radical Islamists who had demanded her execution.  

    Top Pakistani Court Frees Asia Bibi, Christian Woman Acquitted Of Blasphemy

    Indian Worker In UAE Arrested For Molesting School Girl

    Indian Worker In UAE Arrested For Molesting School Girl
    An Indian construction worker in the UAE has been arrested and facing trial for allegedly groping a 14-year-old school girl here last year, according to a media report.

    Indian Worker In UAE Arrested For Molesting School Girl

    Pro-Khalistan Sikh Separatists Protest In Front Of Indian Embassy In US, Twitter Suspends Account Of Sikhs For Justice

    A rally by Pro Khalistan group, Sikhs For Justice (SFJ) outside the Indian Embassy in Washington on the occasion of the Republic Day turned out to be a dismal show.

    Pro-Khalistan Sikh Separatists Protest In Front Of Indian Embassy In US, Twitter Suspends Account Of Sikhs For Justice

    India, Pak In Contact On Kartarpur Corridor Issue: Envoy In Islamabad

    Kartarpur Corridor Issue: Ajay Bisaria said India had consented to the basic points about the Kartarpur corridor except for its zero-point.  

    India, Pak In Contact On Kartarpur Corridor Issue: Envoy In Islamabad

    Indian Origin Team Develops Model For Safer Self-Driving Cars

    Indian Origin Team Develops Model For Safer Self-Driving Cars
    A team of Indian American researchers has developed a novel model that uses human inputs to uncover Artificial Intelligence (AI) "blind spots" in self-driving cars, so that the vehicles can avoid dangerous errors in the real world.

    Indian Origin Team Develops Model For Safer Self-Driving Cars