Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
International

Indian accused of abusing domestic help acquitted in Singapore

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Jan, 2023 11:56 AM
  • Indian accused of abusing domestic help acquitted in Singapore

Singapore, Jan 20 (IANS) An Indian woman accused of abusing her Indonesian domestic help and committing forgery has been given a discharge, amounting to an acquittal on all of her charges in Singapore.

This means that Ketaki Rai, 36, an Indian national and Singapore permanent resident, cannot be charged again with the same offences, The Straits Times reported.

District Judge Ronald Gwee gave the decision on Thursday after the domestic help, Susi Rimasari, left Singapore before the start of the trial.

Noting that Susi was an unwilling witness, Judge Gwee said the situation had put the accused people at a disadvantage.

The accused, Gwee said, should be entitled to have the accuser come forward in court to be open to cross-examination.

Defence lawyer Amarjit Singh Sidhu told the court that Ketaki employed Susi on January 19, 2011, to take care of her two sons and perform household chores.

Ketaki, who was accused of slapping Susi once in 2015 and another time in 2016, had earlier faced two counts each of assault and forgery.

According to The Straits Times, Ketaki had submitted a forged three-page document to Ministry of Manpower in 2016, comprising monthly salary acknowledgements for June 2015 to May 2016, purportedly signed off by Susi.

She was also accused of working together with two other Indians -- Varsha Ray and Ahjay Rai Lalhar -- by allegedly making a false one-page apology letter, purportedly signed by Susi between January 1 and September 12, 2017.

Ray and Lalhar, who were accused of forgery, were also given a discharge by the court.

As per the court documents, Ketaki is married to Lalhar's brother, while Ray is Lalhar's wife.

"Save for scolding Susi whenever she did not do a good job in caring for her sons or household chores, Ketaki denies causing any physical harm to Susi," defence lawyer Sidhu told the court.

He said that Susi left Ketaki's place at around 5 am on June 13, 2016 and sought help at a shelter, where she alleged that she had been physically abused and has not been paid her dues. "(Susi's) non-appearance in court has caused irremediable prejudice to the accused," Sidhu said in his submissions, adding that it would be unsafe to convict Ketaki, Lalhar, and Ray.

"(Susi's) evidence cannot be tested under the scrutiny of cross-examination," he added.

Ketaki could have been jailed for up to three years and fined up to $7,500 for each charge had she been convicted

MORE International ARTICLES

Indian-origin Uber driver reported killed by 15-year-old in New York

Indian-origin Uber driver reported killed by 15-year-old in New York
He had been injured in a shootout between a passenger in his car and the teenager who was also injured in the exchange of fire and remained hospitalised, the station said.

Indian-origin Uber driver reported killed by 15-year-old in New York

America transformed: Sept. 11, two decades later

America transformed: Sept. 11, two decades later
The searing parallels that bookend the two decades — shaken commanders-in-chief promising retribution for a devastating suicide attack; triumphant Taliban militants in Afghanistan and a military transport fleeing Kabul — might suggest little has changed. Of course, since Sept. 11, virtually everything has.    

America transformed: Sept. 11, two decades later

WHO to monitor new Covid variant Mu for vax resistance

WHO to monitor new Covid variant Mu for vax resistance
Mu, also known as B.1.621, was first identified from Colombia in January this year. Infections from Mu have since been recorded in South America and Europe. Based on the latest round of assessments, B.1.621 was classified as a VOI on 30 August 2021 and given the WHO label "Mu".

WHO to monitor new Covid variant Mu for vax resistance

Taliban have more Black Hawk choppers than 85% countries

Taliban have more Black Hawk choppers than 85% countries
The militant group's metamorphosis from rag-tag guerrilla force to highly professional, impressively equipped army has been at the expense of Western taxpayers, the report said.

Taliban have more Black Hawk choppers than 85% countries

'Taliban will be a threat to Central Asia and the world'

'Taliban will be a threat to Central Asia and the world'
"Russia should be concerned about the rise of the Taliban. The country will become a terrorist hub that will endanger Central Asia and Russia itself," Fahim Dashty told The Moscow Times by phone from the Panjshir Valley, where his resistance group has gathered as the country's last holdout against the Taliban.

'Taliban will be a threat to Central Asia and the world'

Kabul airport gates closed after deadly bombings, crowds cleared

Kabul airport gates closed after deadly bombings, crowds cleared
On Thursday evening, a suicide bombing rocked a gate of the airport where a crashing crowd was waiting for evacuation flights, and later another explosion hit the nearby Baron Camp, a former coalition base.

Kabul airport gates closed after deadly bombings, crowds cleared