FROM GAMES TO GUNS
PLAYING FOUL Why have so many talented sportsmen from Punjab and Haryana given up their quest for fame in sports and chosen weapons to walk the path of crime, only to die young or destroy lives in prisons? The recent arrest of Sampat Nehra, a former natio
Why have so many sportsmen from Punjab and Haryana given up their quest for fame and medals in sports and chosen to walk the path of crime, only to die young or destroy their lives in prisons? The recent arrest of Sampat Nehra, a former national-level decathlon athlete, shows this trend has gathered pace
CHANDIGARH: In 2004, a national-level discus thrower at the inter-state school games, Harjinder Singh from Sarawan Bodla village of Muktsar district, was admitted to the Government Sports College in Jalandhar.
Unfortunately, the institute where this teenager could have fulfilled his father’s dream of winning accolades internationally, turned out to be the launch pad for Harjinder’s career in crime. By 2010, he had come to be known as Vicky Gounder, a dreaded criminal who masterminded the Nabha jailbreak in 2016, helping two militants and four gangsters escape.
He was killed in an encounter by Punjab Police on January 26 this year.
Gounder is not an exception. He, in fact, exemplifies the trend of professional sportspersons taking to crime. The latest entrants to the hall of infamy are two sportspersons-turned-gangsters – Sampat Nehra, a former national level decathlon athlete, and Rakesh Mokhriya, a former national gold medallist wrestler – who fell into the police net recently.
MOST WANTED
Many men from the testosterone-fuelled field of sports in Punjab and Haryana have given up their passion for sports to step into the murky world of crime. Prema Lahoria, Shera Khuban and Jaswinder Rocky are some of the prominent names, as notorious as Rakesh Malik, alias Mokhariya and Shani Dev, alias Kuki.
One of North India’s shrewdest criminals, Jaipal Singh Bhullar from Ferozepur is also a national-level hammer thrower. On top of Punjab Police’s most wanted list, he remains on the run after killing Rocky at Parwanoo in Solan district in 2015.
Bhullar’s gangster mentor, Gurshahid Singh, alias Shera Khuban, killed in a police encounter in 2012, was also a hammer thrower. Their association began after they met at a sports tournament in Ferozepur.
Tirath Dhilwan, who now runs the Shera Khuban gang, was known in Malwa as a kabaddi player.
Gounder’s life changed after he met Navpreet Singh, alias Lovely Baba, also a trainee at the college. Baba introduced him to Jalandhar-based sportsperson Prema Lahoriya, a silver medallist at an inter-state college championship in 2006, and the trio became friends.
Lahoria, killed with Gounder on January 26, was also a friend of Sukha Kahlwan, who belonged to a wealthy NRI family of Jalandhar district.
In 2010, Kahlwan killed Baba, once his friend, because of internal rivalry and a clash of egos.
A furious Gounder then swore he would kill Kahlwan to avenge his friend’s death. Lahoriya supported him and both joined the Shera Khuban gang and in 2014 killed Kahlwan near Phagwara, dancing around his body in a bizarre show of might.
Tirath Dhilwan’s criminal career began when his “drug addict” brotherin-law died after he beat him up in a domestic dispute. He met Khuban in Faridkot Central Jail.
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Haryana’s Rakesh Malik, alias Mokhriya, 37, also had a promising career in wrestling, winning a gold medal for Haryana in an inter-state wrestling tournament and a bronze at a national-level wrestling dangal (contest) at Delhi’s Talkatora Stadium in 2003.
Arrested last week by the Rohtak police for murdering a liquor contractor in 2017 at Assan village in the district, Mokhriya had to give up his first love, wrestling, because of a kidney infection.
Soon, while looking for help to recover money from loan defaulters he came in contact with some gangsters and took to crime.
Inspector Manoj Verma, head of the police team that arrested Mokhriya, said he was first arrested in 2005 for the murder of Jhajjar resident Jai Kunwar, allegedly chopping his body to pieces for saying he wanted to have a relationship with Mokhriya’s paramour.
Awarded a 20-year prison term by a local court, he was freed after six years and joined the Rohtash Asaniya gang to deal in liquor contracts, Verma said.
“In 2017, Mokhriya was among the three shooters sent by Asaniya to eliminate Balbir Singh of Assan village who refused to buckle under their pressure over jurisdiction issues to sell liquor,” he added.
Shani Dev, alias Kuki, who represented the Haryana kabaddi team as captain twice in national tournaments, was also arrested for murders.
According to his family, Kuki’s sports career ended after he was falsely implicated in a murder case that ended his sports career. DSP Veer Singh said Kuki fell into bad company and joined a gang, getting arrested in 2010 on charges of attempt to murder.
Once out on bail in 2012, he took to crime fulltime and was named in the murder of gangster Devender Kala, whose gang members, in an act of vengeance, shot dead Kuki’s younger brother Sukhwinder Singh, another national kabaddi player, in March 2016.
To avenge his brother’s murder, Kuki went on a killing spree and shot dead many members of Kala’s gang before being arrested in July 2016.
FINDING THE LINK
A retired joint director from the Punjab Police Training Academy in Phillaur and a psychologist, Dr DJ Singh, said there was no established research to show why sportspersons are prone to committing crimes.
“Sportspersons are taught aggressive skills and encouraged to sharpen their killing instinct to excel in their games. If they fail or if their attention gets diverted, they get frustrated and to compensate for the kick they used to get from sports they opt for careers where they can flaunt their body and power,” he added.
Olympian and former Indian Hockey captain Pargat Singh says failure to perform can harm a sportsperson’s psyche. “I have seen a few sportsmen not excelling in their game for some reason and then finding ways to earn easy money to survive.” “Some sportspersons first get hooked to drugs to enhance their performance and later become suppliers, smugglers and criminals,” he says.
Gangster-turned-social activist Lakha Sidhana, a kabaddi player before he took to crime, blames politicians. “To show their muscle power, politicians trap well built sportsmen into settling their political scores with their opponents. The youth then earn enemies and get involved in police cases.”
Arjuna awardee boxer Akhil Kumar, now a DSP in Haryana, says lack of education also does not help players. “Earlier, people used to play for fitness and learning. Now their attitude has shifted to competitiveness. This evokes unnecessary anger that is channelised in the wrong direction,” he says.
Ruling out any such trend, IG Rohtak range Navdeep Singh Virk says, “I have seen such cases for the past 20 years in Haryana. The likely reason is that Haryana has more sportsmen than any other state. Aggression among players could also be a cause.”
Sportspersons are encouraged to sharpen their killer instinct to excel. If they fail, they get frustrated and to compensate for the kick they used to get from sports, they opt for careers where they can flaunt their body and power. DR DJ SINGH, ex-joint director of Punjab Police Training Academy, Phillaur