Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

PARENTS DIE SAVING BOY FROM GETTING ELECTROCUT­ED

- HT Correspond­ent

MANSA: Kulwinder Singh, a daily wage labourer, and his wife, Jaspal Kaur, died saving their 10-year-old son from being electrocut­ed on the rooftop of their neighbour’s house here on Monday morning.

“The child was trying to catch pigeons while playing on the neighbour’s roof. Suddenly, he came in contact with the 11,000volt high tension wire passing overhead. There was huge spark. His parents on the adjoining building rushed to his rescue. By the time they reached, the boy lost contact with the wire due to severe shock but his parents got electrocut­ed,” said Baldev Khalsa on whose rooftop the incident occurred.

The couple was charred to death and the bodies were brought down after power department staff arrived. The child suffered burns in a leg and was out of danger after being hospitalis­ed.

The family had come here from Barnala six months ago and stayed on rent near the Sai Mandir in Mansa.

Residents of the area said incidents of electrocut­ion had occurred due to the high tension wire hanging over their houses.

“Two people died last year after coming in contact with the wire. Despite repeated pleas, power officials failed to act. This tragedy should spark action,” said another neighbour, Jagdeep Singh Lali.

The residents demanded action against the electricit­y department for negligence.

“The wire was installed for tubewell connection­s in nearby villages. The power trips automatica­lly if anything comes in contact with it. We rushed to the spot as soon as we learnt of the mishap,” said Jagjiwan Singh, a junior engineer of the electricit­y department in Mansa. CHANDIGARH: First, he was booked for amassing properties worth hundreds of crores, and now he finds himself on the wrong side of the law over his age.

A former chief engineer of the Punjab Mandi Board and Greater Mohali Area Developmen­t Authority (GMADA), Surinderpa­l Singh, has been booked by the Punjab vigilance bureau (VB) for getting the government job by submitting a forged birth certificat­e, a VB spokesman said here on Monday.

“The VB had already registered a case against him for abusing his official position and amassing huge wealth with illgotten money by illegally favouring some constructi­on companies besides transactin­g in the accounts of his family and their bogus firms to adjust this ill-gotten money,” the spokesman said.

Now, fresh investigat­ions had revealed that Singh got the government job using a forged birth certificat­e, he said. “Accused Surinderpa­l Singh was recruited as a junior engineer in Punjab Mandi Board on January 28, 1993.

During investigat­ion, it has been found that in the service book, his date of birth had been recorded as December 11, 1971, whereas, his actual date of birth is December 11, 1967,” the spokesman pointed out, citing his academic degrees. “Investigat­ion reveals that Surinderpa­l Singh, in connivance with officials of the PSEB (Punjab School Education Board) and Punjab Mandi Board, got his date of birth altered,” he added.

In this matter, the bureau has registered a case against Surinderpa­l and officials of the PSEB and the Punjab Mandi Board under sections 420, 467, 468, 471 and 120B of IPC and under the Prevention of Corruption Act at the VB police station (flying squad-I), SAS Nagar, the spokesman said.

The VB had last month unearthed at least 92 properties worth crores allegedly amassed by Surinderpa­l; these were allegedly purchased by five firms floated by him in the name of his family members and associates. In addition, ₹57 crore was deposited in three companies owned by his family. The properties were purchased between 2001 and 2016.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India