Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Four Punjab-origin men who hacked British Sikh to death jailed in UK

- Letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

ON JULY 30, 2016, GURINDER WAS ATTACKED IN SOUTHALL. THE MEN CHASED AND STABBED HIM A NUMBER OF TIMES

LONDON: Four Punjab-origin gang members found guilty of hacking a British Sikh man to death as revenge for sleeping with one of their wives have been sentenced to over 90 years in prison at the Old Bailey court here.

Amandeep Sandhu, 31, and Ravinder Singh-Shergil, 32, had been convicted of the brutal murder of 33-year-old Sukhjinder Singh, aka Gurinder Singh, earlier this month.

Vishal Soba, 32, was cleared of murder, but found guilty of manslaught­er and assisting an offender. Kuldeep Dhillon, 26, was also cleared of murder by the jury but convicted of manslaught­er and intimidati­on.

“The nature of weapons used and ferocity of the attack, it is obvious you intended to kill,” said judge Christophe­r Moss, after a trial heard how the masked gang members chopped off the victim’s fingers with knives and swords and went on to attack him with a wooden club and a hammer in Southall, west London, in July 2016.

Sandhu was sentenced to 26-and-a-half years’ of imprisonme­nt for murder and also sentenced to five years for assisting an offender, to run concurrent­ly, and Singh-Shergil was sentenced to 26 years and nine months of imprisonme­nt for murder at a hearing on Friday.

Soba was sentenced to 16 years’ imprisonme­nt after being found guilty of manslaught­er and was also sentenced to five years for assisting an offender.

Dhillon was also sentenced to 16 years’ imprisonme­nt for manslaught­er and was also sentenced to three years for witness intimidati­on, to run concurrent­ly.

A fifth man, 36-year-old Palwinder Multani, was sentenced to five years and nine months after he had pleaded guilty to manslaught­er and becoming the key witness for the prosecutio­n in the case.

“I hope these sentences bring some comfort to Gurinder’s family and friends, following his untimely death. These men used an appalling level of violence to execute their revenge on Gurinder, following a bitter feud.

“The attack was meticulous­ly planned; right down to the time, location and the disposal of the weapons,” said Detective Inspector James Stevenson, of Scotland Yard’s Homicide and Major Crime Command.

“While we now have five men behind bars, there are still more individual­s we would like to speak to in regards to this killing, and I would like to reiterate my appeal for anyone with informatio­n to come forward,” he added.

Earlier, the court heard how the four gang members used multitude of weapons that included knives, swords and baseball bats to attack the victim.

It emerged during the trial that as far back as August 2013, there was a rivalry that existed between the victim and a group of men within the local Southallba­sed British Sikh community.

The rivalry escalated in July 2016 when it surfaced that Gurinder had been boasting about an assault he had committed on Dhillon at a religious festival in Birmingham. Dhillon also wanted revenge as it also emerged that Gurinder had been sleeping with his wife.

On July 30, 2016, Gurinder was ambushed and violently attacked on Spikes Bridge Road in Southall by a group of men with various weapons.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India