Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
International

Indian-origin man admits to attacking cop in Singapore

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Jun, 2023 01:51 PM
  • Indian-origin man admits to attacking cop in Singapore

Singapore, June 2 (IANS) An Indian-origin man in Singapore admitted to attacking a police officer in 2020 and leaving him with a bloody face, a media report said.

Nikhil M. Durgude, 25, pleaded guilty on Thursday to eight charges including one for voluntarily causing hurt to deter a public servant from his duty, The Straits Times reported.

Also charged with possessing cannabis and consuming methamphetamine, Nikhil is expected to be sentenced on June 16.

According to court documents, three officers, including Senior Staff Sergeant Chua Ming Cheng and Inspector Zheng Yiyang, went to a unit at City Suites in Balestier as part of a police operation on November 5, 2020.

They identified themselves as police to Nikhil and his accomplices, Prakash Mathivanan and Malani Naidu Prabhakar.

After a while, Prakash lunged at Staff Sergeant Chua, causing him to fall. He then hit the officer in the face and upper body, the report said.

When Inspector Zheng pointed his revolver at Prakash asking him to stop attacking, the latter grabbed his hands.

Before Chua could get up and assist Inspector Zheng, he was attacked by Nikhil, who punched and kicked him repeatedly. He fell again and Nikhil continued to assault Chua as he lay on the floor, The Straits Times reported.

"The accused did so to prevent Staff Sergeant Chua from assisting Inspector Zheng, and intending, therefore, to deter Chua from discharging his duty as such public servant," the prosecution told the court

Nikhil stopped his attack on Chua when two other officers were led into the unit after some time.

The three men were arrested and taken to the Central Police Division headquarters where the authorities detected methamphetamine in Nikhil's urine after tests.

Staff Sergeant Chua suffered a cut on the forehead and abrasions on his right elbow and left forearm, and was admitted to Singapore General Hospital for treatment.

For voluntarily causing hurt to a public servant, Nikhil could be jailed for up to seven years, caned, or fined.

MORE International ARTICLES

2 Indian CEOs Attend White House Summit For Tech Leaders

Trump has had an uneasy relationship with liberal Silicon Valley

2 Indian CEOs Attend White House Summit For Tech Leaders

Extradite Vijay Mallya To India, Says London Court

Extradite Vijay Mallya To India, Says London Court
"There is insufficient evidence for this court to find that he will not be tried by a competent and fair court," the court said.Mallya To Be Extradited, London Court Rules

Extradite Vijay Mallya To India, Says London Court

Ellen Page Steps Up Attack On Nova Scotia Pulp Mill's Effluent Pipeline

Hollywood actor Ellen Page is doubling down on her criticism of a Nova Scotia pulp mill, rallying her 1.4 million Twitter followers against its plan to build an effluent pipeline into the ocean.

Ellen Page Steps Up Attack On Nova Scotia Pulp Mill's Effluent Pipeline

Boy Who Was ISIL Captive Behind Movement To Bring Bicycles To Refugee Children

Emad Mishko Tamo looks excitedly at his bright-green mountain bike and talks about how he's looking forward to summer cycling adventures with other Yazidi refugee children in his community.  

Boy Who Was ISIL Captive Behind Movement To Bring Bicycles To Refugee Children

Pakistan Will Continue To Lend Full Support To People Of Kashmir: Imran Khan

Pakistan Will Continue To Lend Full Support To People Of Kashmir: Imran Khan
Pakistan would continue to lend full diplomatic, political and moral support to the people of Jammu and Kashmir, Prime Minister Imran Khan said on Monday.

Pakistan Will Continue To Lend Full Support To People Of Kashmir: Imran Khan

Protester Says Canada Doing U.S. 'Dirty Work' Outside Huawei Exec's Bail Hearing

The bail hearing for a senior executive at Chinese tech giant Huawei who is wanted by the United States on allegations of fraud heard about plans for her security today if she is released.

Protester Says Canada Doing U.S. 'Dirty Work' Outside Huawei Exec's Bail Hearing