JALANDHAR/NEW YORK (TIP): Rural Development and Panchayats and NRI Affairs Minister Kuldeep Singh Dhaliwal , on March 30, held a meeting with the Block Development and Panchayat officials and asked them to create a database of the NRIs so that the department could get in touch with them to seek their support for projects in their native villages, according to a Tribune News report. He said they would be asked to adopt village schools, hospitals and dispensaries. “We will ask them to contribute whatever amount they can like Rs 5 lakh or so on. We can even put up a stone in memory of their parents or family members along with the work they have sponsored,” he said. The minister said the state government would establish four special courts in Amritsar, Ludhiana, Patiala and Bathinda for the cases pertaining to the NRIs. Dhaliwal asked the officials to start the exercise to get back the encroached panchayat land.
Tag: NRI Affairs
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Indian-origin youth Vishal Jood pleads guilty for assault on Sikhs in Australia
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA (TIP): A court in Australia sentenced ‘Tiranga Warrior’ Vishal Jood, a youth from Haryana living on an expired visa, to a prison term for attacking Sikhs in a series of violent assaults in Sydney.
Haryana Chief Minister ML Khattar, BJP leader Kapil Mishra, Olympian Yogeshwar Dutt and Delhi BJP spokesperson Tejinder Bagga have sought Jood’s release.
There is also a social media campaign claiming that Jood was actually a ‘Tiranga Warrior’ who was trying to protect the Indian flag from being dishonored by ‘Khalistanis’.
Magistrate K Thompson in a Parramatta Court on Thursday sentenced Jood, in jail since April, said Vivek Asri of NRI Affairs, Australia, who has been tracking the case.
The sentence carries six months of parole. As Jood has already spent 4 months and 17 days in jail, he could become eligible for parole on 15 October. However, his expired visa clouds the prospects of his early release, as it is likely that he will be sent to a detention center awaiting deportation.
In a plea-bargaining process, Jood pleaded guilty to three main charges. These included assault’, ‘occasioning actual bodily harm in company of others’ and ‘armed with intention to commit indictable offence’. The prosecution dropped the other charges.
Jood’s lawyer, Asri, told the court that the Haryana youth comes from a place where Hindus and Sikhs co-exist ‘in peace’ and argued that his action was spontaneous and out of fear. There was no evidence that it was motivated because of the victim’s Sikh faith, he pleaded.
The magistrate noted that it was “one of the burdens of living in the society to not to succumb to provocation”.
He said that the urge to pick up an object and strike someone, especially when they are down on the ground, must be resisted. Such behavior cannot be condoned, Magistrate Thompson added, reported NRI Affairs. Jood was arrested on 16 April and charged with three counts of affray, three counts of armed with intent to commit indictable offence, two counts of destroying or damaging property, and assault occasioning actual bodily harm in the company of others. He had last appeared before the court on August 12 when the court had set new hearing dates in January 2022.
