Sunday, February 15, 2026
ADVT 
International

$1 mn reward to nab Indian suspect in Australia murder case

Darpan News Desk IANS, 03 Nov, 2022 11:05 AM
  • $1 mn reward to nab Indian suspect in Australia murder case

Melbourne, Nov 3 (IANS) A $1 million reward has been announced to help nab an Indian man, who according to police may have murdered an Australian woman on a beach before fleeing to India.

Pharmacy worker and animal shelter volunteer Toyah Cordingley, 24, was killed while walking her dog on Wangetti Beach in October 2018. Her body was found the following morning by her father, the Guardian reported.

Three Queensland police detectives have travelled to India and are working with authorities to find Rajwinder Singh, 38, who worked as a nurse in Innisfail, but fled the country two days after the murder, leaving behind his job, wife and three children in Australia, news.com.au reported.

An investigation centre has also been established in Cairns and police officers from across the state who can speak both Hindi and Punjabi have been flown in, according to the police.

Police have also released images of Singh at the Cairns Airport on October 23, 2018, from where he flew to Sydney before travelling to India.

In March 2021, Australian authorities made a request to extradite Singh, who is originally from Buttar Kalan, Punjab.

His brother-in-law Harpreet Singh previously told The Courier Mail that the timing of his return to his hometown of Amritsar in Punjab was a coincidence.

"Raj is not capable of murder... He is too quiet, too afraid. He was under a lot of tension from his work," Harpreet Singh had said.

Photo courtesy of IANS. 

MORE International ARTICLES

White House makes clear U.S. not sharing vaccines

White House makes clear U.S. not sharing vaccines
Press secretary Jen Psaki has been indicating for weeks that the Biden administration would not allow the export of doses manufactured in the U.S. any time soon.

White House makes clear U.S. not sharing vaccines

WHO: 'Premature,' 'unrealistic' COVID-19 will end soon

WHO: 'Premature,' 'unrealistic' COVID-19 will end soon
The world’s singular focus right now should be to keep transmission of COVID-19 as low as possible, said Dr. Michael Ryan, director of WHO's emergencies program.

WHO: 'Premature,' 'unrealistic' COVID-19 will end soon

New coronavirus variant in New York spurs caution, concern

New coronavirus variant in New York spurs caution, concern
One of the spike protein mutations is seen in the variants discovered early on in Brazil and South Africa, and, now, the new variant in New York.

New coronavirus variant in New York spurs caution, concern

White House on U.S. vaccine supply: America first

White House on U.S. vaccine supply: America first
That's despite the challenges faced by other countries, including Canada, in procuring vaccine doses from outside the United States.

White House on U.S. vaccine supply: America first

Attacks on older Asians stoke fear as Lunar New Year begins

Attacks on older Asians stoke fear as Lunar New Year begins
City officials also have visited Chinatowns in San Francisco and Oakland this week to address residents' safety concerns and condemn the violence.

Attacks on older Asians stoke fear as Lunar New Year begins

UN: 'Concerning news' vaccines may not work against variants

UN: 'Concerning news' vaccines may not work against variants
Tedros added that WHO expected to make a decision “in the next few days” on whether it would recommend an emergency use listing for the AstraZeneca vaccine.

UN: 'Concerning news' vaccines may not work against variants