Sunday, June 21, 2026
ADVT 
India

Beant Singh's Grandson Harkirat Singh Shoots Himself

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 May, 2016 12:14 PM
    Harkirat Singh, grandson of Punjab's late chief minister Beant Singh, died of a gun-shot wound here on Sunday afternoon, police officials said, adding investigations were on to ascertain if it was suicide.
     
    Harkirat, who was found injured in his house here, was rushed to the Post-Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER) here where doctors pronounced him dead, said Neeraj Sarna, the officer in charge of Sector 3 police station.
     
    Police officials said that it was a suspected case of suicide.
     
    "We are investigating the reason behind the incident. We are not ruling out anything," Sarna said.
     
    Harkirat, 40, was staying in the official bungalow, which has high security around it, allotted to Beant Singh's family in Sector 5 here. The family continues to enjoy high-level security provided by Punjab Police and paramilitary forces.
     
     
    Younger son of former Punjab minister and Congress leader Tej Prakash Singh (Beant Singh's son), Harkirat was facing health issues following an accident last year.
     
    He was the sarpanch (headman) of his family's native village, Kotli, in Ludhiana district.
     
    Harkirat's elder brother Gurkirat Singh Kotli is a sitting Congress legislator and his cousin Ravneet Singh Bittu is a Congress MP from the Ludhiana Lok Sabha seat.
     
    Beant Singh, who was credited with restoring normalcy in Punjab in early 1990s after many years of terrorism, was assassinated on August 31, 1995, by a suicide bomber at the Punjab Secretariat Complex here.
     
     
    Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal on Sunday expressed profound grief and sorrow on the untimely demise of Harkirat Singh.
     
    His death was condoled by Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Singh Badal and Punjab Congress president Amarinder Singh.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Reality Check: Modi government's media policy - keep them away?

    Reality Check: Modi government's media policy - keep them away?
    It has been almost two months since Narendra Modi took charge as India's prime minister, but the new government is yet to spell out its media and...

    Reality Check: Modi government's media policy - keep them away?

    US wants ties with 'Modi's India': Pakistani daily

    US wants ties with 'Modi's India': Pakistani daily
    After denying him a visa for years, the US now wants to engage with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a Pakistani daily said Sunday, adding Washington...

    US wants ties with 'Modi's India': Pakistani daily

    Congress-NC alliance snaps ahead of Kashmir polls

    Congress-NC alliance snaps ahead of Kashmir polls
    The ruling National Conference and its ally the Congress will fight the coming elections in Jammu and Kashmir on their own, ending a long alliance, it was announced Sunday....

    Congress-NC alliance snaps ahead of Kashmir polls

    After women, Delhi is the most unsafe for children

    After women, Delhi is the most unsafe for children
    Delhi has earned the dubious distinction being a city unsafe for women. Now comes another shocker. Among India's 53 mega-cities, the national capital is the...

    After women, Delhi is the most unsafe for children

    Ethiopia's India connect grows: A Dreamliner named Taj Mahal

    Ethiopia's India connect grows: A Dreamliner named Taj Mahal
    In what is being seen as a recognition of the heavy traffic generated on its routes to the Indian subcontinent, the flagship carrier of the East African...

    Ethiopia's India connect grows: A Dreamliner named Taj Mahal

    Are Hindutva hawks flying again?

    Are Hindutva hawks flying again?
    The latest reported observations of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) supremo, Ashok Singhal, echo what the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) ideologue...

    Are Hindutva hawks flying again?