Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
International

Man jailed for attacking elderly Sikh in Manchester

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Oct, 2022 05:09 PM
  • Man jailed for attacking elderly Sikh in Manchester

A man who had punched a 62-year-old Sikh in Manchester "without any justifiable reason" and left him for dead has been jailed for three years.

Claudio Campos, 28, attacked Avtar Singh in broad daylight as he was walking home from work through the Tib Street area of the City Centre on June 23.

Campos, who was with his partner at the time, proceeded to walk up behind Avtar before violently punching him to the head. Singh fell into the middle of the road where he stayed unconscious until a passer-by called for an ambulance.

Singh had suffered a severe traumatic brain injury, a stroke caused by bleeding on the brain and multiple fractures to his cheek, jaw and eye socket as a result of the attack, the BBC reported.

He remains in hospital requiring 24-hour nursing and medical care.

"This was a horrific attack on a much loved family member and community leader which deeply shocked the public. I hope today's verdict gives Mr. Singh's family some relief that the person who has harmed their husband and father has now faced justice and will be sent to prison," Detective Inspector Mark Astbury, of Greater Manchester Police (GMP), said.

Campos was located with the help of CCTV footage and taken into custody by the GMP in September, where he admitted the assault.

Sentencing Campos, Judge Hilary Manley told him he had attacked Singh "without any justifiable reason".

"As a direct result of your decision to attack him, his life, and the lives of his family, are forever traumatised, changed and diminished. He gave you no reason at all to do what you did," Manley was quoted as saying in the BBC.

The judge rejected the defendant's claim that he was "very sorry".

"When our dad came to this country over 30 years ago, he never imagined that he would be the subject of such a heinous attack which has left him bed bound and in hospital for as long as he has been," Singh's children said in a release issued by the GMP.

"As a family, we are truly heartbroken and still struggle to come to terms with the reality of his future and the truth behind this crime," they said.

MORE International ARTICLES

US Urged To Save Hindu Principal Charged With Blasphemy In Pakistan

As Pakistan's blasphemy laws guarantee the death penalty or life imprisonment, it has become common for radical Islamic groups in that country to slap blasphemy charges on locals who are unwilling to convert

US Urged To Save Hindu Principal Charged With Blasphemy In Pakistan

US Assures India Of 'Partnership', As Congress Members Criticise Kashmir Restrictions

"When we see Indian institutions have failed or respond slowly it is something that we take up but this is not a relationship of dictation, it is a relationship of partnership," Alice Wells, the Acting Assistant Secretary of State

US Assures India Of 'Partnership', As Congress Members Criticise Kashmir Restrictions

Religious Conflict Over JUI's 'Azadi March' In Pakistan

With Barelvi religious leaders opposing the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam Fazl's (JUI-F) proposed 'Azadi march', the religious and political differences between different sects in Pakistan have resurfaced.  

Religious Conflict Over JUI's 'Azadi March' In Pakistan

Lahore To Start Sikh Pilgrimage Tour From October 27

This is for the first time that the Walled City of Lahore Authority has planned to give a tour of religious places, Gurudwaras and other monuments of the Sikh community in Pakistan to the tourists.

Lahore To Start Sikh Pilgrimage Tour From October 27

Kartarpur Corridor: Already Mired In Dispute

Even before its inauguration, the Kartarpur Corridor has got mired in a dispute with Pakistan unrelenting on making the pilgrimage to one of the holiest Sikh shrines free of any charges.

Kartarpur Corridor: Already Mired In Dispute

British Sikhs Ask Pakistan's Maulana Fazal-Ur Rahman To Stop March

British Sikhs Ask Pakistan's Maulana Fazal-Ur Rahman To Stop March
A group of British Sikhs has appealed to Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazal (JUI-F) leader Fazal-ur Rahman to stop his proposed march and October 31 sit in at Islamabad.

British Sikhs Ask Pakistan's Maulana Fazal-Ur Rahman To Stop March