Gangsters stop traffic, shoot at rival on busy road, two killed
Police say more than 20 rounds fired in gun battle near Dwarka Mod Metro station as members of one gang rained bullets on one of their rivals, police claim a constable shot dead one of the assailants
NEW DELHI: Two “notorious gangsters” were shot dead during a gangwar that broke out under the Dwarka Mod Metro station on the busy Najafgarh Road in west Delhi on Sunday, police said, adding, one of the men was gunned down by an “alert” policeman.
More than 20 rounds were fired in the gun battle that saw traffic briefly come to a standstill as members of one gang rained bullets on their rival, Praveen Gehlot, seated in a car. Gehlot was shot at least 10 times, police said.
The men killed in Sunday’s gang war include Praveen Gehlot and Vikas Dalal, who were earlier members of a gang led by jailed gangster Manjeet Mahal. “But Gehlot and Dalal turned enemies due to some dispute over a property in Haryana,” police said.
Vikas Dalal carried a reward for his arrest and had nearly three dozen cases against him. He had escaped from Haryana police’s custody in last October. Gehlot, allegedly involved in at least half-a-dozen criminal cases, had come out of jail recently.
The officer said that Dalal was in Goa until recently and had come to Delhi only for killing Gehlot.
Accompanied by an aide in his grey Swift Dzire car and another on a motorcycle, Dalal allegedly chased Gehlot on the Najafgarh Road from Uttam Nagar towards Najafgarh. According to the police, Gehlot was alone in a white Maruti Ritz car.
“Dalal caught up with Gehlot’s car under the Dwarka Mod Metro station a little after 3.45pm, but not before ramming a Hyundai Verna car along the way,” said Madhup Tiwari, joint commissioner of police (western range).
The Verna owner had tried to confront the assailants, but backed off on realising what was about to unfold, Tiwari said, adding that his claims were being verified. The three attackers then used pistols to fire multiple rounds at Gehlot’s the car, an act that was caught on camera. There were at least 11 bullet holes on the Ritz car, but an investigator said more rounds could have been fired of which 10 found mark.
A video captured at the scene showed mini trucks and buses
waiting behind the two cars as the three men, including one in a helmet, got close to the Ritz car and fired at it. Another video showed some people panicking, others watching from behind metro pillars, while a few others recorded videos on their mobile phones.
The shooting unfolded on a stretch of road that had a PCR van stationed on the other side. “The sound of gunshots caught the attention of the PCR staff and a constable, Naresh, decided to take on the criminals,” said Tiwari. “Constable Naresh
jumped across the road divider and challenged the attackers. One of them, who later turned out to be Dalal, responded by firing in his direction. Reacting in self defence, the policeman used his gun to fire three rounds at Dalal,” said Tiwari.
Dalal was hit at least twice and collapsed on the road. He was rushed to two different hospitals, but succumbed. A video accessed by HT couldn’t establish whether Dalal was killed in police firing or in retaliatory shots from inside the Ritz car, but joint commissioner
Tiwari insisted that no weapon was found in the car or in possession of the Gehlot.
An eyewitness in the video clip said he had seen a policeman take on the assailants. “Two of the killers checked on their dying friend before driving away, without being challenged,” said the eyewitness .
Police said that it wasn’t practically possible for the PCR van on the other side of the road to launch a chase and the assailants possibly used one of the many bylanes in the area to get away. PHOENIX : Nordstrom, an American chain of luxury department stores, has apologised to Sikhs for selling a turban, but a representative with the US community’s top civil rights organisation said on Saturday they are still waiting to hear from the Gucci brand that designed it.
“We feel that companies are commodifying and capitalising on something that is dear and sacred to people around the world,” said Simran Jeet Singh, a senior fellow with the New York-based Sikh Coalition, who said the turban has a deep religious significance for Sikh men.
“And there is tension over the fact that the very article of our faith has been the focus of so much hate and violence and bullying,” he said, recalling that Sikhs wearing turbans have been attacked in hate crimes, including a man killed near Phoenix a few days after 9/11.
The current complaint springs from a Gucci head wrap that until Wednesday was advertised on Nordstrom’s website for $790 (around ₹55,000) as the “Indy Full Turban.” The description said the “gorgeously crafted turban is ready to turn heads while keeping you in comfort as well as trademark style.”
“We have decided to stop carrying this product and have removed it from the site. It was never our intent to disrespect this religious and cultural symbol. We sincerely apologize to anyone who may have been offended by this,” the department store said in a tweet.
Gucci’s turban was first talked about last winter, when a white model walked the runway wearing it.
Gucci had not responded to the criticism over the product by Saturday. Emails seeking comment were sent to Gucci through its public relations representatives and a corporate fashion services website.
“When companies appropriate articles of faith, they do not take into consideration the discrimination Sikhs face while adhering to the tenets of their faith. We appreciate @Nordstrom’s recognition of this problem & apology; we hope @Gucci will follow suit,” the Sikh coalition said in a Thursday tweet.
The coalition was formed after Balbir Singh Sodhi, a Sikhamerican wearing a turban, was shot dead on September 15, 2001, in the Phoenix suburb of Mesa when he was mistaken for an Arab Muslim.
In another attack on the community, a white supremacist opened fire on a Wisconsin Sikh temple in 2012, killing six people and wounding five others before killing himself.
Sikhs across the United States and around the globe have taken to social media to lambaste Gucci, including Taran Parmar, a radio journalist for News 1130 in Vancouver, Canada.