Sunday, May 29, 2016

Akali leader on his own trip

Akali leader on his own trip

SAD leader Rozy Barkandi (left) and SOI leader Robin Brar travelling in a luxury bus during a trip to Salasar Dham in Rajasthan. Tribune photo
Muktsar: Even as the Punjab Government is holding the Dharmik Darshan Yatra, taking people to various religious places free of cost in trains and buses, the Akali leadership has started a private pilgrimage tour. Recently, SAD’s Muktsar constituency incharge Kanwarjit Singh ‘Rozy Barkandi’ organised a two-day trip to Salasar Dham in Rajasthan, taking along a select group in two super luxury buses modified by Delhi-based Dilip Chhabria. However, this move has upset the people who consider themselves close to Rozy but were not picked. They are asking him to undertake another such tour.

Contributed by Archit Watts
Courtesy: The Tribune

Cashing in on Sangat Darshan

Cashing in on Sangat Darshan
Muktsar: The Chief Minister’s two-day Sangat Darshan programme in his assembly segment (Lambi) proved beneficial for Youth Akali Dal (YAD) activist Ranjodh Singh Lambi, who is contesting the Panjab University Senate elections. While the CM was meeting the public, Ranjodh was interacting with the officers, seeking their votes and distributing his poll campaign material. Some officers were heard telling him, “You are killing two birds with one stone.” Indeed, the YAD activist managed to make his presence felt before the CM, while pursuing his own agenda.

Contributed by Archit Watts
Courtesy: The Tribune

‘Budha Jarnail’ evokes chuckle

‘Budha Jarnail’ evokes chuckle
Muktsar: During a recent Sangat Darshan programme in Lambi assembly segment, a speaker welcomed Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal by calling him ‘Budha Jarnail’ (old general), making everyone laugh. However, when one asks the octogenarian about his age, he says proudly, “Main taa aje jawana naalo vee takda haan! (I am still fitter than the youngsters).” No wonder, the ‘youthful’ CM’s back-to-back programmes are leaving cops and bureaucrats breathless, especially in Muktsar district.

Contributed by Archit Watts
Courtesy: The Tribune

Badal all praise for Modi, says Centre helps state

Badal all praise for Modi, says Centre helps state


Badal all praise for Modi, says Centre helps state
Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal during a Sangat Darshan at a village in Lambi, Muktsar, on Sunday. Tribune photo
Archit Watts
Tribune News Service
Lambi, May 29
Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal here today lavished praise on Prime Minister Narendra Modi, while countering PPCC chief Capt Amarinder Singh’s recent statement that it was the Congress government led by Dr Manmohan Singh which had cared for Punjab.
Badal said the BJP-led NDA government had given several gifts to the state, such as the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS); the Indian Institute of Management (IIM); heritage status to Amritsar; inclusion of Amritsar, Jalandhar and Ludhiana under the Smart Cities project; World Heritage Park status to the Jallianwala Bagh; and the Horticulture Research Institute of Excellence at Amritsar.
Badal further said, “The Centre will never turn down any of our genuine demands for the betterment of the state and its people. We have benefited immensely from the Centre’s decision to give us a bigger pie of the taxes, accelerating development and growth in Punjab.”
On the spurt in farmer suicides, Badal said, “The state government can’t do anything about the bank loans. But it has passed the Punjab Settlement of Agricultural Indebtedness Bill, which provides for expeditious settlement of farmers’ debt disputes. The process for setting up the district-level forums and the state-level tribunal has already been initiated. This will mitigate the woes of the beleaguered farming community.”
Badal preferred to keep mum over the standoff between Sikh preacher Ranjit Singh Dhadrianwale and Damdami Taksal chief Harnam Singh Dhumma. “What can I say about their controversy?” he said.
Retd teacher, sniffer dog land in hospital 
Two persons, including a retired teacher, fainted during the CM’s Sangat Darshan programme in Mahuana and Fatehpur Manian villages on Sunday. The retired teacher was taken to hospital in a private vehicle as the ambulance was stuck in a traffic jam. A sniffer dog of the district police pooped blood at Mahuana village. It was also rushed to a hospital. Asked about the urgency of holding Sangat Darshan programmes in the hot and humid weather, the CM said, “We Punjabis don’t feel the heat. The persons might have fainted due to some other reason.”

Courtesy: The Tribune

Saturday, May 28, 2016

Ours is most peaceful state, says Badal

Ours is most peaceful state, says Badal


Ours is most peaceful state, says Badal
Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal holds a Sangat Darshan in the Lambi Assembly segment of Muktsar district on Saturday. A Tribune photo
Archit Watts
Tribune News Service
Lambi, May 28
Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal today said that the state was the most peaceful and harmonious in the country. “Petty incidents can happen anytime in any part of the world,” he said on the sidelines of his sangat darshan programme in Lambi Assembly segment today.
The Congress was playing dirty politics on sensitive issues and advised its leadership to act responsibly for the betterment of the state, he said.
He dismissed the charges by the opposition on various issues and said he needed no certificate of the nine year rule of the SAD-BJP regime, but from the people of the state.
Earlier, Badal sought the support and cooperation from the farmers to counter the whitefly pest attack on cotton by destroying weeds around their fields that served as its breeding ground.
Help Badal village women, youth get jobs: Sukhbir
SAD chief and Deputy CM Sukhbir Singh Badal today met a number of women from his native village at his residence here. He asked his personal staff to assist the women and youngsters in getting jobs, admission in schools and colleges. Sources said that Sukhbir later told his staff to get the details of all unemployed youth in the village, so that they can be adjusted somewhere.
Job scam: CM denies pressure on VB
Parkash Singh Badal dismissed the reports that there was pressure on the Vigilance Bureau (VB) to spare the guilty in the recruitment scam in the Local Government Department. Asked whether the VB could conduct a free and fair probe when the names of Akali leaders were cropping up in the scam, Badal said on Saturday on the sidelines of a sangat darshan programme in the Lambi assembly segment, “Had we decided to spare the culprits, why would I have marked the probe to the Vigilance? The law will take its own course and whosoever found guilty will be taken to task, whether he is a Congressman or an Akali.”

Courtesy: The Tribune

Friday, May 27, 2016

Gangster’s ‘aide’ cremated amid security in Muktsar

Gangster’s ‘aide’ cremated amid security in Muktsar


Gangster’s ‘aide’ cremated amid security in Muktsar
SAD leader Harpal Singh Bedi (C) consoles Rana Sidhu (L), brother of deceased Jimmy Sidhu, at Thandewala village in Muktsar district on Friday. A Tribune photograph
Archit Watts
Tribune News Service
Thandewala (Muktsar), May 27
Twenty-four-year-old Muktsar resident Ajmer Singh alias Jimmy Sidhu, who was killed in a police encounter near Dabri Khana village on Kotkapura-Bathinda road in Faridkot district on Wednesday, was cremated under tight security at Thandewala village here today.
A large number of youngsters were present at the cremation.
Taking precautionary measures, police personnel, including SP (D) Muktsar Baljit Sidhu, DSP Muktsar Harmeek Deol, two SHOs from Muktsar and a SHO from Faridkot district and some policewomen, had been deployed.
The body was directly brought to the village cremation ground after conducting the post-mortem examination at Faridkot.
Two SAD leaders, Muktsar MC chief Harpal Singh Bedi and councillor Gurmeet Singh ‘Jeeta’, were also present.
Meanwhile, gangster Ranjeet Singh alias Rana Sidhu, elder brother of the deceased who is also an accused in a case registered by the Faridkot police yesterday under Sections 307, 353, 186 and 34 of the IPC, said that he was now managing 13 liquor vends of Sarainaga unit in Muktsar district, in which SAD councillor from Muktsar Gurmeet Singh ‘Jeeta’ was a partner. Notably, Jeeta was sitting next to him.
Rana said, “Though I am presently facing five criminal cases and acquitted in a similar number of cases, my brother Jimmy was not involved in any illegal activity. The police mistook him as gangster Davinder Bambiha and the person accompanying him as Gurbaksh Sewewala. Jimmy was shot dead while the person accompanying him managed to flee.”
Rana said, “Jimmy called me on that ill-fated night saying that a police party was chasing him. I, along with four others, immediately rushed to Jeeda and also spoke to a policeman posted at CIA Bathinda who was chasing my brother. However, by the time I reached there, he had apparently died due to bullet injury. The police party of Bathinda was present there and they even regretted their act. They told us to take him to the hospital first. Thereafter, the police detained us from civil hospital, Bathinda, and released us today after thorough investigation.”
He accused Dhammi, a liquor contractor of Bathinda district, for the killing of his brother.
4 associates released, kin agree to autopsy 
Faridkot: A day after the killing of Ajmer Singh, the Faridkot police on Friday was successful in prevailing upon the family of the deceased to agree to the post-mortem examination and cremation. The family members reportedly came around after the police released all four associates of the deceased. These four youths were rounded up by the Bathinda police on the charge of firing at a police party on the intervening night of May 25-26 at civil hospital, Bathinda. Among the four youths released, two are facing many criminal cases at various police stations in the area. — TNS

Courtesy: The Tribune

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Jimmy boasted about pal’s crimes on FB

Jimmy boasted about pal’s crimes on FB


Jimmy boasted about pal’s crimes on FB
Jimmy Sidhu’s family members at the Civil Hospital in Bathinda on Thursday. Tribune photo: Pawan Sharma
Archit Watts
Tribune News Service
Muktsar, May 26
Jimmy Sidhu, who died in an encounter with the police, and his close friend, Ranjit Singh alias Rana Sidhu, were kabaddi players.
While Jimmy did not have a criminal record in Muktsar district, Rana is facing 10 cases, including two in the district. The Kabarwala police registered a case against Rana for looting a marble-loaded truck last year. He was also booked by the Sadar Malout police for planning to commit a dacoity in 2015.
Going by Rana’s Facebook account, he is linked to gangster Jaipal Ferozepur’s gang. Jaipal is the prime accused in the murder of gangster-politician Jaswinder Rocky.
Rana’s FB friends include Jaipal and Jodha Kothaguru. Rana and Kothaguru had been together in jail.
Jimmy used to boast about Rana’s criminal activities on his own Facebook account. Jimmy had also uploaded on FB some pictures of Rana, in which the latter was seen brandishing weapons or in handcuffs while being produced in court.
Jimmy and Rana have adjoining houses, built on a similar pattern, on the Barkandi road in Muktsar town. 
Meanwhile, the Muktsar police today raided both houses and seized 17 cartons of liquor stocked illegally and Rs 17,500 from Rana’s house. “Nothing incriminating was recovered from Jimmy’s house,” said Gurpreet Singh Gill, Muktsar SSP.

Courtesy: The Tribune

Akali MLA’s son pays fine for stocking liquor illegally

Akali MLA’s son pays fine for stocking liquor illegally

Archit Watts
Tribune News Service
Muktsar, May 26
The Excise and Taxation Department has collected a fine of Rs 1 lakh from the liquor firm of Gaurav Malhotra, son of SAD MLA from Faridkot Deep Malhotra, for stocking country-made liquor illegally here in a godown.
The godown was sealed on Saturday following a complaint about the illegal sale of liquor. Excise sleuths conducted a raid in the godown and found 337 boxes of country-made liquor illegally stocked there. The stock was seized and action initiated against the firm owners.
Inderjit Singh, ETO (Excise), Muktsar, said, “The department had slapped a penalty of Rs 1 lakh on the liquor firm. It has been paid and the permission to open the godown and resume business has been given to them. The stock of 337 boxes of liquor is still in our possession for further investigation.”
Meanwhile, a liquor contractor alleged that rules had been bent for the ruling party politician. “Usually, the excise department imposes a huge penalty for such an offence. For example, a liquor firm in Ludhiana recently had to pay a huge penalty, but in this case, rules have been bent,” he alleged.

Courtesy: The Tribune

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Harsimrat's message lost in translation

Harsimrat's message lost in translation

Harsimrat's message lost in translation
A screenshot of Harsimrat’s FB post.

Muktsar: Union Minister Harsimrat Kaur Badal posted a message on her Facebook wall on Saturday, alerting the public about fraudsters who were misusing her name to dupe people. She wrote, “They are taking money from them (people) to get them enrolled in fake government schemes. This is a conspiracy of the rivals to defame us…” However, her post’s Punjabi translation became a laughing stock, “Je koi tuhanu sarkari schema vich naam darj karvaun de badle paise mangda hai taan osnu paise den ton pehlan osdi jaanch padtaal karo.” A Facebook user quipped, “Matlab paise taa dene hi painge. Veero dhyaan naal padh ke dekho ki likhya (That means we will have to pay to get enrolled in government schemes).”

Contributed by Archit Watts
Courtesy: The Tribune

Taking a leaf out of Badal’s book

Taking a leaf out of Badal’s book


Taking a leaf out of Badal’s book
Gidderbaha MLA Amrinder Singh Raja Warring distributes sports kits among the youth at a village in Muktsar. Tribune photo
Muktsar: It seems that Indian Youth Congress chief and Gidderbaha MLA Amrinder Singh Raja Warring is following in the footsteps of Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal. He is busy distributing sports kits among youngsters in villages under his assembly constituency. The kits have his photograph imprinted on them, Badal style. Interestingly, Badal had also represented Gidderbaha in the Vidhan Sabha.
Courtesy: The TribuneContributed by Archit Watts

Friday, May 20, 2016

Water wasted for a dust-free welcome to Union Minister Harsimrat

Water wasted for a dust-free welcome to Union Minister Harsimrat
  • Malout: Even though the Local Bodies Department has told all civic bodies to save water and penalise those wasting water, officials here on Friday sprinkled a lot of water on roads to give a dust-free welcome to Union Minister Harsimrat Kaur Badal.
  • Harsimrat had come here to flag off the Sriganganagar-Nanded Sahib train. Throwing rules to wind, officials deployed tankers to sprinkle water on the route marked for VVIP’s visit.
  • A social activist said, “The officials must be fined. The Deputy Commissioner should take a suo motu action in this regard.”
  • Executive Officer Jagsir Singh, however, said, “No water was sprinkled on the road. Tankers were deployed as part of drinking water arrangements.” — Archit Watts

Courtesy: The Tribune
Edition: May 21, 2016

Treatment charges keep addicts away from rehabilitation centres

Treatment charges keep addicts away from rehabilitation centres


Archit Watts
Tribune News Service
Muktsar, May 20
Health authorities are witnessing a sharp decline in number of patients coming to the de-addiction and rehabilitation centres and that too when neighbouring state Rajasthan has imposed a ban on the sale of poppy husk from April 1. The reason: The Health Department charges Rs 200 per day per patient.
When the state government was providing treatment free of cost about two years ago, the de-addiction and rehabilitation centres were running successfully. But the day the charges of Rs 200 per day were imposed, the number of patients fell sharply.
The 50-bed rehabilitation centre at Thehri village on average has just one admitted patient. The 10-bed de-addiction centre at the Civil Hospital Badal most of the times remains unoccupied. Further, the 10-bed de-addiction centre in Civil Hospital Malout has an average of only 4-5 patients.
Dr Rashmi Chawla, psychiatrist, who looks after the de-addiction centre at Malout and the rehabilitation centre at Thehri village, said, “Earlier, the patients were coming in large numbers when the treatment was free. But the day the government fixed charges of Rs 200 per day, the number of patients decreased sharply. Now, only motivated patients come to these centres.”
She said that the rehabilitation centre at Thehri village had so far got just 10 patients since its inauguration in January.
Meanwhile, Dr Rahul Jindal, psychiatrist, civil hospital at Badal village, said, “Most of the addicts, usually poor people, who used to consume poppy husk, have now switched to sedative drugs. They often tell us that the drugs are easily available in Haryana and Rajasthan, not far from here. Even these drugs cost lesser than the treatment charges.
“Despite the ban, the addicts who still consume poppy husk are getting their daily dose under Rs 100. Why will they come to us and pay Rs 200 for de-addiction?”
Dr Gurjant Singh Sekhon, a social activist from Malout, said, “We all know that drugs usage has become rampant, especially among youngsters and the state government is making tall claims about successfully running a campaign against drugs.”

Courtesy: The Tribune

Cotton farmers switching to ‘arhar dal’, maize in Muktsar

Cotton farmers switching to ‘arhar dal’, maize in Muktsar


Archit Watts
Tribune News Service
Muktsar, May 19
Due to the closure of Lambi minor, Arniwala minor canals this season for repairs and the whitefly attack on cotton crop last season, farmers in Muktsar district have started abandoning cotton. They are opting for other crops like ‘arhar dal’ and maize.
The trends show that the area under cotton crop will decrease sharply. Even agriculture experts said that they were expecting the total area under cotton crop to remain nearly 50,000 hectares this year, which last year was 78,000 hectares, in Muktsar district.
They said the farmers were moving towards ‘arhar dal’ and had sown it in nearly 3,000 hectares in the district. 
“The shortage of water due to the closure of Lambi minor and Arniwala minor has forced the farmers to opt for other crops. They are switching to ‘arhar dal’ because of its high prices last year and maize as well. This is a new trend in this area. Though after renovation, water was released in Lambi minor yesterday, it developed breaches,” said Beant Singh, Chief Agriculture Officer, Muktsar.
He added, “The sowing of cotton can be delayed till the end of this month at maximum. As of now, nearly 36,000 hectares have been brought under cotton crop in the district. We are appealing to farmers to start maize cultivation from June 1.”
Meanwhile, the Agriculture Department has announced subsidy on maize seeds. “As some farmers could not sow cotton crop due to the closure of Lambi minor and Arniwala minor, we have announced subsidy of Rs 84 per kg on maize seed up to five acres per farmer,” said Satwant Singh, Joint Director, Agriculture, Punjab.
Agriculture officials in Muktsar said the state government had not installed maize dryers in the area and the farmers opting for this crop might have to face difficulties in marketing. Maize was sown in just 300 acres in Muktsar district last year.

Courtesy: The Tribune

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

At receiving end of CM’s wit

At receiving end of CM’s wit
Muktsar: Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal retains his witty side, and at times, puts it to full use. At a recently held Sangat Darshan in Muktsar, he did not spare anyone while drawing out hearty laughter at the same time. He first took a dig at Ferozepur MP Sher Singh Ghubaya, who reached a bit late: “Shukar hai tusi aa ta gaye. Chalo changi gall hai.” Then he granted funds for some elderly people for ‘sath’ (village common land), saying, “Ehna nu taash (cards) khedan vaaste 3 lakh de deyo.” In another village, he told the public, “Development de kamma de paise chahe jehde marzi kamm te laa deyo, par bas theke (liquor shop) ta naa laayo.” In another village, when an aged woman demanded construction of a street, Badal said, “Chhad Bibi...paath karya kar.” Later, he told some people who were standing, “Beh jaao, neeche kehre spring lagge hai.”

Contributed by Archit Watts
Courtesy: The Tribune

Quench thirst Badal’s way

Quench thirst Badal’s way
Muktsar: What keeps 88-year-old Parkash Singh Badal going in this blistering heat? Critics will readily say he is consumed by power, but what the Chief Minister consumes readily is coconut water. On a Sangat Darshan spree, he quenches his thirst with fresh coconut water. Besides, he exercises regularly and is always accompanied by a physiotherapist. And then there’s the familiar argument from Badal himself: “Meeting people infuses fresh energy and that is what keeps me going.”

Contribued by Archit Watts
Courtesy: The Tribune

Cops keep record of AAP vehicles

Cops keep record of AAP vehicles


Archit Watts
Tribune News Service
Muktsar, May 16
The district police today allegedly noted down the registration numbers of vehicles ferrying AAP activists to Chandigarh. Besides, some AAP activists were “detained”. However, the police have denied this charge.
AAP activists came up with a video showing policemen noting down the numbers at Sarainaga village on the Muktsar-Kotkapura highway.
Sarabjeet Singh ‘Happy’, an AAP activist from Muktsar, showed a photograph of policemen taking away AAP activists in their vehicle.
“The police had put up nakas on all major roads in the district, making it tough for AAP activists to reach Chandigarh. The police not only noted down the registration numbers of vehicles ferrying our activists, but also detained some of them. It clearly shows that the state government is concerned about the AAP’s growing popularity and so, is resorting to such methods,” said Happy.

Courtesy: The Tribune

Area under basmati likely to shrink sharply this season

Area under basmati likely to shrink sharply this season


Area under basmati likely to shrink sharply this season
Archit Watts
Tribune News Service
Muktsar, May 15
With the basmati having failed to fetch desired prices last season, the area under the crop is likely to drop significantly in Muktsar district this season. As per an estimate of the Agriculture Department, it may go down by 75 per cent.
Beant Singh, Chief Agriculture Officer, Muktsar, said the number of farmers opting for basmati was expected to decline sharply this year. “Last season, the area under the basmati cultivation was nearly 45,000 hectares, but this year it is expected to remain around 12,000 hectares. The prices of basmati had remained between just Rs 1,600 and Rs 2,000 per quintal last year,” said Beant Singh. He said the total area under the paddy cultivation would however remain around 1.3 lakh to 1.35 lakh hectares this year.
Farmers, too, said there was no MSP fixed for the basmati crop, thus they would not grow basmati. “We will sow normal varieties of paddy, rather than sowing basmati. It had last year fetched very low prices. The government should ensure some support to basmati growers,” said Ranjeet Singh of Lundewala village.

Courtesy: The Tribune

3 armed police battalions sought for Bathinda zone

3 armed police battalions sought for Bathinda zone


Archit Watts
Tribune News Service
Muktsar, May 13
With the elections approaching and having experienced hardships in tackling critical situations such as the Dera-Sikh clash and sacrilege of holy books, the Bathinda zonal police have sought permanent stationing of three armed police battalions near Bathinda, which is dominated by the ruling Badals and represented in Parliament by Union minister Harsimrat Kaur Badal.
The process has started and the police are finding a suitable location that can accommodate a large number of personnel together. The Bathinda police zone comprises seven districts — Bathinda, Muktsar, Mansa, Ferozepur, Fazilka, Moga and Faridkot.
Sources said two places were recently scrutinised for this purpose in Bathinda district, one near Maur and the other near Bhissiana, but neither one could be finalised. Besides, the sanctioning of a post of a DIG-level officer too has been sought for these reserve battalions, added sources.
Notably, this area remains on an edge geographically and whenever any major issue arises, additional police force comes from far-flung areas.
“It takes nearly eight hours for personnel to prepare and reach Bathinda from Jalandhar. It will be better if three armed battalions are permanently posted in this area. As per norms, a battalion needs an area of 20-25 acres. But it is not possible to get a huge chunk of 75-acre for the three battalions. The residential quarters, offices and grounds can be made one above the other and land can be saved,” said an SP-level officer posted in the Malwa region.
RS Khatra, Deputy Inspector General (DIG), Bathinda range, said, “We have sought permission for the permanent stationing of three reserve armed police battalions and a senior officer in this area. However, the non-availability of land is so far proving to be an issue. If some village panchayat agrees to provide us 25-30 acres, we will compensate by giving jobs to village youth.”

Courtesy: The Tribune

Cops urge residents to install CCTV cameras; Footage provider won’t be considered as witness: SSP

Cops urge residents to install CCTV cameras

Footage provider won’t be considered as witness: SSP

Police meet social activists

  • The police have held some meetings with the NGOs, social activists and other organisations
  • They appealed them to make people aware that installation of CCTV cameras is helpful
  • A survey is being conducted to know the total number of cameras installed

Archit Watts
Tribune News Service
Muktsar, May 6
To bring down crime rate, the Muktsar police have appealed to residents to install security gadgets like CCTV cameras at their residences and business establishments.
The police informed the public that those who would provide the CCTV footage to them won’t be treated as witness in the case.
Muktsar SSP Gurpreet Singh Gill said, “We have held some meetings with the NGOs, social activists and other organisations and appealed them to make people aware that installation of CCTV cameras is very helpful. It not only provides a sense of security to residents, but also creates apprehension in the mind of would-be criminal.”
“Besides, a survey is being conducted to know the total number of cameras installed and their locations in the district. It will help us solve the crime in future,” he added.
He said, “It is not possible for the police to install thousands of CCTV cameras, thus public cooperation is necessary. Earlier, some people feared that providing CCTV footage of any criminal activity would make them witness in the case. However, we assure that the video provider would not be considered as a witness in the case.”
Malout DSP Manwinderbir Singh said, “A young girl was recently abducted from outside her workplace in Malout town and the accused was caught on CCTV camera installed in the street. The CCTV footage had helpful the police solve the case.”
The DSP further said he recently visited some places in the town where CCTV cameras were installed to check their location and suggested those who had installed these to change their settings for best usage.
Meanwhile, the SSP, who has assumed charge recently, said it, however, did not mean the policemen would not do patrolling. “We are also increasing patrolling. Besides, the SHOs have already started laying nakas at night in their jurisdiction,” he added.

Courtesy: The Tribune

The gangs of ‘prosperous’ Punjab

The gangs of ‘prosperous’ Punjab

Jupinderjit Singh, Archit Watts & Mohit Khanna in Chandigarh/Muktsar/Ludhiana
Rocky’s killing lays bare the dark underbelly of Punjab. His rivals announced their ‘achievement’ on a social networking site. Others have exhibited their grisly side by dancing around the body of their rival and lining up hundreds of cars when out on bail. The Tribune takes a look at the gangland.
The gangs of ‘prosperous’ Punjab
Autumn of 2003 (Ludhiana): Anil Sharma alias Lalla from  Ludhiana lifts a car of a Deputy Superintendent of Police and calls him: if he dared catch him. The car is found abandoned near the Sutlej despite a chase by cops from four districts. Sharma wasn’t caught. 
  • Feb 9, 2004: Sharma is gunned down (Haibowal/Ludhiana) allegedly by Ramesh Rana, who is absconding. 
  • Winter of 2010, Firozpur: Shera Khubban shoots Happy Deora in his car point-blank. Shera then dances on the bonnet.
  • Jan 22, 2015, Jalandhar: At least a dozen men gun down Sukhbir Singh Kahlwan, alias Sukha Kahlon in the presence of six cops taking him to Nabha jail after a court hearing. The assailants film the act and dance around the body.
  • April 30, 2016, Panchkula-Shimla highway: Jaswinder Singh alias Rocky is shot dead in suspected gang war. Vicky Gounder, lodged in Nabha jail, posts his claim on Facebook of having killed Rocky. Vicky allegedly challenges Bathinda SSP to take action.
A ring of halo appears to surround Punjab’s gangland: Jeona Morh and Jagga Daku are a part of the folklore. Post-terrorism Robin Hoods are fiercely audacious, killing or being killed, is like loaded dice in life’s gamble. For instance, a Pollywood film on Rupinder Gandhi, killed in 2003 after three days of torture, offers an insight into the mushrooming of several gangs who have tried emulating his name. The Gandhi Gang is considered formidable in the underworld and is perceived as among the top five. On police records, though, the one topping the chart is Jaipal Singh & gang post Rocky killing.
‘Land of plenty’
Individuals, described in police records as belonging to various tribes, have been attracted to the ‘land of plenty’ Punjab. These seasonal killers came from eastern and central India. They would strike and vanish. The locals do not go anywhere. They prosper and expand, many times rising in political circles. For instance, Lalla, a gangster from Ludhiana, once played along with the Nirdosh Dhand gang, but later developed a bitter rivalry. He is thought to be close to a BJP politician from Ludhiana. The politician reportedly went to the Senior Superintendent of Police for an arms licence renewal allegedly on behalf of Lalla. The politician was shown the door. The incident was widely reported.
The tribe of the modern-day internet savvy gangsters is swelling. From about less than 20 loosely formed gangs, who were found mainly in industrial cities of Khanna and Ludhiana about a decade back, their count has crossed 50. The police data shows 70 gangs with over 500 members are active in the state. About 300 of them, though, in jail quickly regroup and extend the network by recruiting more, plan more heinous crimes and attacks on rivals, thus maturing as hardened criminals. 
Politics of might
“The historical figures of Jeona Morh and Jagga Daku looted the rich and helped the poor. Today’s gangsters are goons of the high and mighty. Many among them are on the payrolls of the liquor or sand mafia. Some work for illegal moneylenders or as recovery teams for banks and finance companies. They also help in land grabbing. They rob people, kidnap children for ransom and ensure payment of lost bets on cricket matches are made on time,” says a police officer who has been on the trail of some of the prominent gangs.
Post terrorism some contract killings took place in the mid 1990s. “Those were fringe terrorists. It was as if they took a sabbatical and returned to their old ways of looting people,” says a police officer. The real estate and industrial sector boom of the early 2000 saw several criminals surfacing with primary objective of controlling the unions. The flourishing of banking sector, especially finance companies, spurred the demand for bouncers who ensured recovery of bad loans and helped in grabbing disputed properties. 
By 2009-10, the boom in real estate ended. The gangs then tuned to extortion and protection money. Many among them were hired by cricket bookies. In between, kidnapping for ransom also continued.
And unlike movies, a don doesn’t sit on a high chair nor is he surrounded by a bevy of good-looking women. “But yes, some of them would like to wear pure white linen. They are known as overground gangsters. Jaswinder alias Rocky, the latest casualty of gang war, was one such overground gangster, who claimed he had left crime,” says a senior IPS officer.
The pecking order
The police divide up the gangs into four major categories: One has a top don with die-hard followers. “Only 5% of gangs in Punjab have such a structure,” says the IPS officer. Operation: straighten out inter-gang rivalries, recruitment and winning disputes over spoils. “Police intervention has often led to breakup of gangs. Shera Khuban, killed in Ferozepore, led such a gang. Among its members were Rocky and his alleged murderer Jaipal Singh. They had fallen apart.”
The second is one where the members are common but they have different units and sub-units and thus have different leaders. “Almost 60 per cent of the present gangs have this structure. They work with different units in tandem and stay away from the specialized field of the other unit. They are like branches of a tree.”
The third is independent and works alone mostly. They come together for a common assignment and then go their own ways. Most of these are inter-state gangs as well as gangs specializing in arms smuggling, narcotics and kidnapping. 
The fourth one seeks raw domination. They are the ones who encroach on others’ fields and look for expansion and break other gangs. They are the offshoots of cohesive units who want bigger shares of the pie. It is this lot which indulging in killing each other. “These categories are not fixed,” the officer hastens to add. “A gang can be a Category One today and a Category Four the next day.”
The nurseries
Where do they gangsters emerge from? A police officer says the gang members may be addicts or local criminals, but the top guy comes from student politics. “Universities are the prime nurseries. It is here that a prospective gangster tends to assume the centre-stage. Jails are the colleges of crime. Once inside, a criminal gains access to more network, develops better understanding of the loopholes in the law and gets into a bigger gang or expands on his own.” 
That’s the reason the criminals are mostly in their mid-twenties and mid-thirties. “They are neither jilted lovers nor frustrated job seekers. Many of them like the slain Jaswinder Rocky owned 70 acres. They seem to have entered the world of crime by choice,” says the officer.

Memories of a reformed gangster
He wants to keep his identity secret. “Reformed”, he is full of his childhood memories. In early teens, he was euphoric when his school team won the under-14 Inter-school district championship in Ludhiana. The “player of the series” — an off-spinner, as well as a good batsman — thought he was sure of a berth in the Ludhiana district team. He failed. “Many players with sifarish made it to the team.” 
A fatherless child, and eldest of the three children, he tried hard to follow his cricket dream but every time “some non-performer” would take his place. He lived in Nalli Mohalla, a downtown area known for narrow, dark streets where criminals held sway. Area dominance was the key to survive and thrive. “I had responsibilities. I had a younger brother and a sister to take care. My mother was a class four employee with the government. Money was always short.”
“In one street brawl, I was caught by a gangster called Billu. He hit me and taunted me for being a member of another gang. I hit him back and my life changed.”
With more brawls and more jail visits, he became a formidable name. Then one day, Billu was stabbed to death. Police named him the accused. He denied. “The tag of a murderer meant end of life. I had to leave my studies mid-way. Jails were full of criminals. Somehow I managed to remain aloof”.
Out on bail after spending a few years behind bars, he is trying to help others. “I run an organisation that helps the needy in education.” At 33, he is a bachelor. “Who would marry me?”
Can others leave crime? “Yes. There are two crucial moments. One, when you let go of your ego and hurt. The second is when you are on the verge of no return. It is that moment where you can still return.”
— Jupinderjit Singh in Chandigarh

The mobsters of Majha
The Majha region dreads Jagdeep Singh alias Jaggu. He has given the police sleepless nights. The gang is involved in heroin smuggling besides extortions. Recently, the gang is being charged with systematic elimination of a rival group called the Haria gang. Jaggu, who is in police custody, allegedly runs the show from the jail, say police sources. On May 4, Jaggu gang’s member Bobby Malhotra killed Haria near Police Station Division B. Eye-witnesses said Haria was first attacked near a marriage palace. He ran but was chased through a crowded market in filmy style before being shot dead. Jaggu is a regular on Facebook. It is alleged that his associate Waris Randhawa, allegedly in Australia, uses Facebook from that country. 
Key members: Jagdeep Singh alias Jaggu (Amritsar jail); Rajat alias Masti alias Karan (absconding); Waris Randhawa (absconding); Mannu Pandori (Amritsar jail); Manpreet Singh alias Mann (Amritsar jail); Gopi alias Goli (on bail). 

The rogue gallery

  • Prabhjinder Singh Brar alias Dimpy Chandbhan: One of the biggest names almost 10 years after his murder. He was killed outside Lake Club in Chandigarh on July 7, 2006. “He had had access to 3 CMs during his time,” says a police source.
    Logbook: Belonged to a landlord family of Chand Bhan village in Faridkot. In 1985 came to be linked to the murder of a PU student leader. Once out on bail, Dimpy was welcomed by 500 cars on Bathinda-Kotkapura Road.
     
  • Jaswinder Singh Bhullar ‘Rocky’: Once an aide of Dimpy, he was, however, accused of his murder in 2006. Acquitted in 2014, unsuccessfully contested assembly and parliamentary polls as an Independent.

     
  • Jaipal: Son of a former cop is said to be one of the most powerful gangsters active in the state. An undergraduate, he was once a national-level hammer thrower.
  • Logbook: In his mid-thirties, Jaipal is known for a good physique. Lands in jail in 2003 for kidnapping son of a cinema hall owner. Out on bail, Jaipl and Shera plot to bring Raja out from jail in 2009 and succeed.  In the trail of his activities, the latest is Rocky’s murder, which he claimed through his Facebook post.
     
  • Shera Khubban: Alias Gurshahid Singh was a hammer thrower, was killed in a police encounter in Bathinda in 2012. Gurshahid studied in SGGS College, Chandigarh.
    Logbook: Many Facebook pages are active in his name, was fond of branded clothes and eye-wears. “He wore Marc Jacob sunglasses and jeans of Diesel. He was fond of visiting hill stations,” says a student leader.
     
  • Lawrence Bishnoi: Son of a rich farmer, was an average student of DAV College, Chandigarh. In 2010-11, became president of the Students’ Organisation of Panjab University (SOPU) DAV campus unit.
    Logbook: Escaped from police custody in January 2015. In Kapurthala Jail for various cases.
     
  • Vicky Gounder: A native of Sarawan Bodla village in Lambi assembly segment. Accused of killing of gangster Sukha Kahlwan.
    Logbook: In Nabha Jail for murder.
     
  • Gurpreet Sekhon Mudki: Shera Khubban nurtured him a few months before his killing. Belongs to a financially sound family, owns some brick kilns. In 2012 assembly polls, Shera killed someone and Gurpreet was with him.
    Logbook: In Nabha Jail
     
  • Davinder Bambiha: Belongs to Bambiha Bhai village in Moga, known as a sharpshooter. Very active on Facebook where he projected a sarpanch’s murder as his ‘achievement.’
    Logbook: Key accused in a murder case, has at least 10 cases aganst him

Courtesy: The Tribune

Despite ban, stubble burning goes on unabated in Muktsar

Despite ban, stubble burning goes on unabated in Muktsar


Vans hired for awareness drive

  • Fatehgarh Sahib: The administration has hired vans to educate farmers about the decision of the National Green Tribunal regarding burning of wheat and paddy stubble. DC Kamaldeep Singh Sangha said that SDMs have been directed to involve officers of pollution boards, agriculture department, local bodies and NGOs to create awareness about the impacts of burning of stubble burning. The NGT has banned stubble burning as it pollutes the environment and endangers the life of birds and animals. Hesaid those violating the orders would be fined.
Despite ban, stubble burning goes on unabated in Muktsar

Archit Watts
Tribune News Service
Muktsar, May 5
Despite a ban on stubble burning, the illegal practice continues unabated in the district.
The police have so far booked only seven farmers for burning wheat stubble.
SSP Gurpreet Singh Gill said, “I have directed all the SHOs to book farmers burning wheat stubble in their fields. So far, seven cases have been registered.”
However, while travelling on any major or link road in the district, one comes across a large number of fields covered in ash due to stubble burn.
The rampant violation has claimed the life of Sohan Singh (45) and his son Gurpreet Singh (18), who worked as farm labourers when they were charred to death when a farmer of Bhangchari village set the stubble afire in his fields.
Activists of the Khet Mazdoor Union and the deceased’s kin are seeking a compensation of Rs 10 lakh each for the next of kin and a government job for the families.
They are also demanding the registration of a case under Section 304 of the IPC instead of Section 304-A of the IPC against the Iqbal Singh, who along with his sons Kulwinder and Gurdas has been arrested for stubble burning.
The police today added the relevant sections of the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act in the case.
Lachman Singh Sewewala, general secretary of the union, said said, “The administration reneged from its assurance. The ADC had promised Rs 1 lakh each to the next of kin of the deceased, Rs 2 lakh compensation from the Agriculture Department and a government job for the family. Today he refused to give a permanent job, saying that it can be provided only for a year,” he added.

Courtesy: The Tribune

Wheat stacked in bags from Haryana

Wheat stacked in bags from Haryana


Wheat stacked in bags from Haryana
Farmers show a gunny bag of the Haryana government being used for wheat procurement at Wattoo village in Muktsar. Tribune photo
Archit Watts
Tribune News Service
Muktsar, May 4
Apparently facing acute shortage of storage material to lift wheat from grain markets, wheat procurement agency Punjab State Warehousing Corporation is using gunny bags of neighbouring state Haryana.
Farmers from Wattoo village said the practice was going on for the past one week and nobody bothered. “The focal point is allotted to the Punjab State Warehousing Corporation for wheat procurement and 80 per cent of gunny bags here are of the Haryana government. The quality of bags is also poor, but the authorities concerned are not giving any satisfactory reply,” said Sukhwinder Singh, a farmer of Wattoo village.
Congress leader Jagjeet Singh said, “It shows that the state government has failed to make adequate arrangements of gunny bags, thus now using bags from Haryana.”
A senior officer, looking after the wheat procurement process in the district, said, “The issue was even brought to the notice of the Deputy Commissioner by officials of the FCI recently. The gunny bags of Haryana had come when the agencies were facing acute shortage of it.”
Paramjit Singh Dhamija, District Food and Civil Supplies Controller, Muktsar, said, “When the gunny bags came through goods trains, some bogie must have been changed. It will have no affect on the procurement process.”
Pushpinder Singh, District Manager, Punjab State Warehousing Corporation, was not available for comment.

Courtesy: The Tribune

Student outfits named after criminals

Student outfits named after criminals


Archit Watts
Tribune News Service
Fazilka, May 2
Student politics in the state are not without the influence of gangsters as some student outfits bear the name of criminals.
The Gandhi Group Student’s Union (GGSU), Shera Khubban Students Union (SKSU) and Students Organisation of Panjab University (Lawrence Bishnoi group) are named after gangsters.
The GGSU is named after Rupinder Singh Gandhi alias Gandhi, former Sarpanch of Rasulra village near Khanna who operated a gang in Ludhiana area and was murdered by a rival gang in 2003.
The SKSU is named after gangster Gurshahid Singh aka Shera Khubban, who was killed in his mid-20s in a police encounter in Bathinda in 2012. Shera was a native of Khubban village in Fazilka district.
The SOPU, that was not linked to any political outfit in the past, has gradually turned out to be a group of gangster Lawrence Bishnoi, who is behind bars. Lawrence is also known as sharpshooter, belongs to Duttaranwali village in Fazilka district.

Courtesy: The Tribune

Tota Singh’s relative turns ‘rebel’

Tota Singh’s relative turns ‘rebel’
Muktsar: Kulbir Singh Matta, district mandi officer of Muktsar and Fazilka districts, has been posing as a SAD rebel on his Facebook account. Matta, a relative of Cabinet Minister Tota Singh, was recently transferred from his home district Faridkot and sulking since then. He is usually posting the news clippings of his father Rajinder Singh Matta’s statements on his Facebook account, praising AAP and terming it a threat to the SAD in Faridkot. His father has also announced that Kulbir might contest elections from Kotkapura after quitting his job and described the SAD a party of sycophants. Political observers say this is nothing but pressure tactics to negotiate with the party high command.

Contributed by Archit Watts
Courtesy: The Tribune