Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Indo-Canadian Woman Pawandeep Kaur Booked For Arranging Hit On Estranged Husband In India

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 May, 2016 12:40 PM
    TORONTO — Police in India are on the hunt for a Toronto woman accused of paying four men — including two lovers — to kill her estranged husband.
     
    Pawandeep Kaur is wanted in the slaying of her husband Jaskaran Singh, who was fatally stabbed in March in the village of Sawara, in Kharar, in the Punjab region of India.
     
    Gursharan Singh Grewal, the superintendent of investigations for SAS Nagar police, says one of the other suspects pointed the finger at Kaur during his interrogation.
     
    He says the couple had a "strained relation" partly because Singh had spent the last few years in India rather than with his wife in Canada.
     
    Grewal says Kaur was romantically involved with two of the suspects and police believe she wanted to seize control of her husband's property.
     
    He says they have made a request for her extradition. A spokesman for Canada's Department of Justice said officials could neither confirm nor deny that such a request had been made.
     
    Singh's relatives in Canada are keeping in close contact with investigators in India, Grewal told The Canadian Press.
     
     
    Kaur was in the region for close to 20 days after her husband's death but then returned to Canada, he said.
     
    "She said her kids are studying over there and their studies are suffering over there so that's why she wanted to go back," he said.
     
    At the time, police had no reason to link her to the killing, he said.
     
    Media outlets in India describe Kaur as a mother of two living in Toronto in a house she owned jointly with her husband.
     
    They identify the four suspects already in custody as Lakhvir Singh, 32, Davinder Singh, 25, Bhawanpreet Bhangu, 25, and Gurpreet Singh, 25.
     
    The Times of India says the couple married in 2001 and have a daughter and a son.
     
    Jaskaran Singh's father, Dharam Singh, told the paper he intends to seek custody of his grandchildren and "deliver justice" to his son.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Moving To Make Anti-overdose Medication Naloxone Easily Available

    Ontario Moving To Make Anti-overdose Medication Naloxone Easily Available
    Eric Hoskins says his ministry is working with the Ontario College of Pharmacists and others to make naloxone available free of charge, over-the-counter and without prescription at pharmacies.

    Ontario Moving To Make Anti-overdose Medication Naloxone Easily Available

    Committee To Look At Ways To Boost Saskatchewan's Low Organ Donation Rate

    Committee To Look At Ways To Boost Saskatchewan's Low Organ Donation Rate
    REGINA — A legislative committee will look at ways to boost what Premier Brad Wall has called Saskatchewan's "dubious record" on organ donations.

    Committee To Look At Ways To Boost Saskatchewan's Low Organ Donation Rate

    Competition Bureau scratches Staples-Office Depot battle off to-do-list

    Both Canada's Competition Bureau and the U.S. Federal Trade Commission had challenged the proposal, arguing it would harm competition in the office products business.

    Competition Bureau scratches Staples-Office Depot battle off to-do-list

    Several Expectant Mothers In Ontario Claim They Got Same Ultrasound Image

    Several Expectant Mothers In Ontario Claim They Got Same Ultrasound Image
    At least a dozen expectant mothers claim an Ontario ultrasound clinic gave them the wrong images of their unborn children.

    Several Expectant Mothers In Ontario Claim They Got Same Ultrasound Image

    Montreal Latest Canadian City To Test Body Cameras For Police Officers

    Montreal has become the latest Canadian city to equip its police officers with body cameras.

    Montreal Latest Canadian City To Test Body Cameras For Police Officers

    Conditions That Must Be Met Before Fort McMurray Wildfire Evacuees Can Go Home

    lberta government says wildfire evacuees could start returning to Fort McMurray as early as June 1. But Premier Rachel Notley says that date is contingent on certain conditions being met within the city. Here are those conditions: 

    Conditions That Must Be Met Before Fort McMurray Wildfire Evacuees Can Go Home