Close X
Wednesday, September 25, 2024
ADVT 
International

Indian Woman Jailed For Compatriot's Murder After Drunk Sex Claim In Australia

Darpan News Desk, 21 Sep, 2015 11:27 AM
    A court in Australia on Monday sentenced an Indian-origin woman to 18 years in jail for the murder of her ex-lover's fiance out of jealousy and rage, a media report said.
     
    New South Wales Supreme Court Justice Helen Wilson handed down the sentence to Manisha Patel, 32, after finding that she intended to kill the victim who became the focus of her "pain and resentment", the Herald Sun reported.
     
    Purvi Joshi, who had moved to Sydney from India to get married in November 2013, was found dead by her fiance Niraj Dave in his apartment in Sydney's Kyeemagh on July 30, 2013. A knife was found sticking out of Joshi's abdomen.
     
    In July this year, Patel was found guilty of murdering Joshi.
     
    Patel said she went to the apartment that morning while Dave was working because Joshi had demanded to know about their past relationship. Once there, she said she killed Joshi in self-defence.
     
    However, handing down the sentence on Monday, Justice Wilson said: "At some point, she (Patel) must have known she (Joshi) was fighting for her life."
     
    The court heard that Patel met Dave on the Indian matrimonial website shaadi.com in August 2011.
     
    They became friends, moved in together and began a sexual relationship.
     
    In early 2012, after formally ending his marriage with his wife in India, Dave began talking to Joshi to who he said Patel was "just a friend".
     
    In March 2013, Patel became pregnant following a drunken weekend with Dave and they organised to have a termination.
     
    But just before Joshi arrived in Australia, Dave asked Patel to leave his flat and hand over the keys to a car they had bought together.
     
    This, Justice Wilson said, "must have crystallised the offender's dramatic change in her own circumstances".
     
    Joshi, meanwhile, was completely innocent and had no idea she had walked into a "psychodrama not of her own making", the judge said.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Yoga On Capitol Hill

    Yoga On Capitol Hill
    In a curtain-raiser event for the First International Day of Yoga on June 21, the newly founded Congressional Yogi Association organized the first-ever "Yoga on the Hill" at Capitol Hill, the seat of US parliament.

    Yoga On Capitol Hill

    A Week After, Nepal Quake Toll Hits 7,040

    A Week After, Nepal Quake Toll Hits 7,040
    As search and rescue operations continued for the seventh day, the toll due to the massive earthquake that hit Nepal on April 25 rose to 7,040 on Saturday, officials said.

    A Week After, Nepal Quake Toll Hits 7,040

    A Week After, Nepal Quake Toll Hits 7,040

    A Week After, Nepal Quake Toll Hits 7,040
    As search and rescue operations continued for the seventh day, the toll due to the massive earthquake that hit Nepal on April 25 rose to 7,040 on Saturday, officials said.

    A Week After, Nepal Quake Toll Hits 7,040

    Kate Middleton Makes First Public Appearance With Newborn Baby Daughter Looking Immaculate

    Kate Middleton Makes First Public Appearance With Newborn Baby Daughter Looking Immaculate
     The newborn British princess on Saturday evening made her first public appearance, along with her parents, the Duke and the Duchess of Cambridge, outside St. Mary's Hospital where she was born.

    Kate Middleton Makes First Public Appearance With Newborn Baby Daughter Looking Immaculate

    Sikhs Explain Meaning Of Turban To US Lawmakers

    Sikhs Explain Meaning Of Turban To US Lawmakers
    Sikhs have to explain to American people what the turban means because that is the immediate source of their identification, according to the author of a new report on Sikhs in America presented to US lawmakers.

    Sikhs Explain Meaning Of Turban To US Lawmakers

    Online Voting Can Be A Reality In Britain By 2020 Thanks To This Indian-Origin Man Gurchetan Grewal

    Online Voting Can Be A Reality In Britain By 2020 Thanks To This Indian-Origin Man Gurchetan Grewal
    Even as voters gear up to stand in queue for Britain's upcoming general election this month, researchers, including one of Indian-origin, have developed a technique to allow people to vote online - even if their home computers are suspected of being infected with viruses.

    Online Voting Can Be A Reality In Britain By 2020 Thanks To This Indian-Origin Man Gurchetan Grewal