Nithari victims’s relatives express outrage over Pander’s acquittal

New Delhi, Sep. 11 (ANI): The acquittal of Nithari killings accused Mohinder Singh Pandher in the Rimpa Haldar murder case has left relatives outraged and anguished.

“I will destroy this bungalow (Pandher’s residence) in one minute. I am ready to spend money to get justice,” said Anil Haldar, Rimpa’s father.

His reaction came after the Allahabad High Court acquitted Pandher for the murder of Rimpa, who was among the 19 people killed at the businessman’s home.

Haldar, a married woman, was called by Kohli to work as housemaid at the Pandher, and thereafter went missing.

The father of another victim said he would approach the country’s apex court for justice.

“We will go to Delhi and appeal in the Supreme Court because the government out here is corrupt,” said Jhabbu Lal, the father of Jyoti, a Nithari massacre victim.

Earlier this year, both Pandher and Koli were awarded capital punishment by a special court in Ghaziabad.

The Nithari killings came to light three years ago, leaving people across the country shocked.

The skeletal remains of the children were first discovered in a sewer behind Pandher’s plush D-5 bungalow in Noida’s Sector 31.The human skulls were stuffed in 57 gunny bags along with 700 bone pieces.

Special Judge Rema Jain completed the proceedings after re-cross examination of former Noida police officer Dinesh Yadav on January 27 and the recording of statements of Pandher and Kohli.

A total of 19 cases of killings were registered at the Noida police station in December 2006. All of them were transferred to the CBI for further investigation. (ANI)

Fire fighters rush to rescue hand stuck in toilet pot!

New Delhi, Aug 19 (ANI): Fire fighters in China were a little amused when they rushed in to rescue a woman’s hand, which was jammed in the sewer of a toilet in a hospital.

The woman, surnamed Zhang, was in the hospital visiting her sick husband, reports the China Daily.

She dropped 117 dollars in the pot after using the facility, which is why she put her hand in.

Fire fighters in Xi’an, capital of Shaanxi province, took an hour to free Zhang’s hand from the mess without causing any injury. (ANI)

Rats are loyal to their neighbourhoods

Washington, May 27 (ANI): In what may have important implications for controlling diseases that spread from rats to humans, Johns Hopkins scientists have found that rodents spend the majority of their lives close to their homes.

The researchers have also observed that some rodents may, in the face of danger, travel as far as seven miles to repopulate abandoned areas.

Wild Norway rats-also called wharf rats, sewer rats or brown rats-can weigh nearly 2 pounds and transmit a variety of diseases to humans.

Even though expensive eradication efforts have been made in Baltimore, point out the researchers, the number of rats there has remained unchanged over the past 50 years.

With a view to finding out why such drives have failed to eradicate rats from Baltimore, the researchers trapped about 300 rats from 11 residential areas and conducted genetic studies to see how the rats were related.

They found that East Baltimore rats are separated from their unrelated West-side counterparts by a large waterway known as the Jones Falls. Within these hemispheres, rat families form smaller communities of about 11 city blocks.

Each community is further divided into neighborhoods that span little more than the length of an average alley. And to a city rat, this is home sweet home.

Based on their observations, the researchers have come to the conclusion that while rats rarely migrate, neighborhood eradication efforts may backfire by encouraging the rodents to repopulate other areas and further spread disease.

They believe that the best solution may be to tackle the problem on a much larger scale-perhaps by targeting entire families at once.

A research article on the study has been published in the journal Molecular Ecology. (ANI)

South has shifted ‘out’

Mason Ranjit Singh could not get medical attention for six hours after a dog bit him in the ankle last month. The nearest hospital – the government-run Safdarjung Hospital – lay almost at the other end of town from his home in Tughlakabad Village.

“The only private nursing home is too costly and a dispensary near Asola village never has any stock,” said Singh. Welcome to the post-delimitation South Delhi, no longer the posh vision that the name conjures up.

With a vast rural expanse covering half the city from Bijwasan and Palam in the west to Badarpur on the eastern skirt and the ‘farmhouse-land’ of the Chhattarpur-Mahipalpur-Merhrauli belt in the south, this is one constituency where the Nuclear Deal and economic slowdown are non-issues. Instead, good-old promises of civic amenities still strike a chord.

So, politicians are promising jobs, access to healthcare, higher/technical education, and permanent civic amenities to woo voters. Sangam Vihar is Delhi’s biggest unauthorised resettlement colony near Tughlakabad.

“Politicians come and talk about permanent residence certificates, ration cards and sewer lines for the houses and clean drinking water,” said Kailash Kumar, a trader at the Sangam Vihar main market. In the Gujjar farmer-dominated Chhattarpur, the educated younger generation wants jobs in the ‘city’.

“I need to learn English and get out of here. I cannot work at the farmhouse like my brother or as a labourer like my father,” said Subhash Gujjar, a 22-year-old Arts graduate working as an office help in a farmhouse.

Farmhouses here stand as little islands in the sea of shanties of migrant labourers and landless farmers, most of whom sold their plots before the property boom arrived. Some 20 km to the west, 60-year-old Rajpal Shehrawat in the Jat-belt of Palam village shares the same ambition, albeit for his grandsons.

“Our generation was fooled by promises of development. We are neither in a city nor in a proper village.

Now, for the younger lot, we want colleges and industries here. They need to learn English and work for big companies,” he said between puffs on his hookah.

Amidst the squalor, the posh residential colony of Kalkaji sticks out. A part of the old South Delhi constituency with neatly painted houses, tree-lined parking lots and guarded colony gates, this Punjabi dominated area has very different concerns.

“If all work is directed towards the rural belt, I’m afraid our area might get neglected,” said businessman and resident Haran Anand.

Nithari Case: Pandher, Koli get death sentence

New Delhi, Feb 13, (ANI): The special Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) court on Friday awarded the death sentence to Moninder Singh Pandher and Surinder Koli for their respective roles in the Nithari mass murder case.

Judge Rema Jain pronounced the quantum of sentence, terming the case as falling in the ‘rarest of the rare’ category.

Both Pandher and Koli are accused of killing and disposing off the bodies of 19 children and a young woman between 2005 and 2006.

The Nithari killings that came to light two years ago, left people across the country flabbergasted.

The skeletal remains of the children were first discovered in a sewer behind Pandher”s plush D-5 bungalow in Noida”s Sector 31.

The human skulls were stuffed in 57 gunny bags along with 700 bone pieces.

The investigation of the case was handed over to the CBI on January 11, 2007. The CBI has filed chargesheets in 16 cases. Chargesheets in the remaining three cases are still awaited. (ANI)

Court to pronounce quantum of sentence to Pandher, Koli

Ghaziabad, Feb 13 (ANI): A special court in Uttar Pradesh will pronounce the quantum of sentence to the main accused Mohinder Singh Pandher and his domestic help Surinder Koli in the Nithari killings case.

Judge Rema Jain will pronounce the quantum of sentence.

A special Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) court on Thursday convicted Pandher and Koli who are accused of killing and disposing off the bodies of 19 children and a young woman between 2005 and 2006.

Pandher was found guilty under Indian Penal Code (IPC) sections 302, 376, 201 and 120B, whereas Koli was convicted under sections 302, 376, 364 and 511.

Pandher was charged with causing disappearance of evidence of offence and giving false information (section 201) and hatching criminal conspiracy (section 120B).

Kohli was charged with the kidnapping or abducting in order to murder (Section 364) and for attempting to commit offenses, which are punishable with imprisonment for life (section 511).

The Nithari killings that came to light two years ago left people across the country flabbergasted.

The skeletal remains of the children were first discovered in a sewer behind Pandher’s plush D-5 bungalow in Noida’s Sector 31.

The human skulls were stuffed in 57 gunny bags along with 700 bone pieces.

The investigation of the case was handed over to the CBI on January 11, 2007. The CBI has filed chargesheets in 16 cases. Chargesheets in the remaining three cases are still awaited. (ANI)