Sunday, February 8, 2026
ADVT 
Sports

Sardar Singh Claims Sex Accuser Misused His Social Media Accounts, Victim Woman Shows 'Proofs'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 05 Feb, 2016 10:42 AM
    India's hockey captain Sardar Singh on Thursday threatened to sue the woman who has accused him of sexual harassment, saying she used his social media accounts to post her side of the story without his consent.
     
    Saying that they were good friends but there was no "romantic relationship", the 29-year-old denied the allegations of a sexual harassment against him by the British woman hockey player of Indian origin.
     
    "Last time when I was playing in Spain, she had access to my emails as earlier my friends used to use these," a visibly-disturbed Sardar Singh told reporters here.
     
    "Some tweets that were attributed to me were also misused. She had also announced through Twitter that we will get married soon. At that time we were playing in Spain," he said.
     
    "We met before London Olympics (in 2012) through Facebook and then we have not met," Sardar Singh, who is representing Jaypee Punjab Warriors in the Hockey India League (HIL), added.
     
     
    "There was no romantic relationship. I agree that she went to my home. But there was no much talk between my parents and her parents."
     
    Sardar Singh, an official with Haryana Police, said he was not in touch with the woman for two years and the allegation regarding rape and getting her child aborted were false.
     
    "When the (police) report comes, I will see what legal action is required," he added.
     
    Punjab Police on Wednesday constituted a special investigation team to look into allegations of "sexual exploitation" levelled by the 21-year-old British national against Sardar Singh.
     
    The police have not registered any case against Sardar so far.
     
    Clarifying that he played safe in his relationship with the woman, he said: "She took my passwords (of my social media accounts) from my friends. She posted on her own that we are getting married. 
     
    At that time (playing in Spain), I informed my coaches. My entire focus is on hockey. I will take legal action against her."
     
     
    The woman had alleged that Sardar refused to marry her after exploiting her. She hails from Leeds and comes from a business family.
     
    She alleged that she was "mentally, physically and emotionally tortured".
     
    The complainant is the first Sikh to play in Britain's Under-19 women's hockey team.
     
    Sardar's father Gurnam Singh told reporters in Haryana's Sirsa district on Wednesday that his son knew the woman but denied both were engaged.
     
     
    The woman alleged that Sardar got engaged to her in 2014 and she became pregnant last year as a result of their physical relationship. She said he forced her to abort and began avoiding her thereafter.
     
     
    The complainant said she met Sardar in 2012 after becoming friends through a social networking site. She claimed they began living together after their engagement.
     
    In the past, Sardar had posted tweets and his photographs with the British woman.
     
    Sources close to Sardar defended him on Wednesday, saying that he had withdrawn from the relationship with the British hockey player after she started putting pressure on him to marry her and settle down in Britain.
     
     
    They said that Sardar, who remains busy in India due to his commitments with the national team and HIL, did not want to settle in Britain.
     
     
    "She started black-mailing him through SMSes and phone calls to force him to settle in the UK," a close aide of Sardar said on Wednesday.

    MORE Sports ARTICLES

    India's Wimbledon Hat-Trick: Leander Paes, Sania Mirza, Sumit Nagal Create History

    India's Wimbledon Hat-Trick: Leander Paes, Sania Mirza, Sumit Nagal Create History
    Indian tennis ace Leander Paes with his Swiss partner Martina Hingis won the mixed doubles title at Wimbledon here on Sunday.

    India's Wimbledon Hat-Trick: Leander Paes, Sania Mirza, Sumit Nagal Create History

    Canada Wins First Medal Of Pan Am Games, Gold In Women's Kayaking

    Canada Wins First Medal Of Pan Am Games, Gold In Women's Kayaking
    WELLAND, Ont. — Canada has won its first medal of the Pan American Games — a gold in women's kayaking. The Canadian crew finished first in the K-4 500 metres in one minute 36.495 seconds.

    Canada Wins First Medal Of Pan Am Games, Gold In Women's Kayaking

    Donovan Bailey Headlines Starry Pan Am Opening Ceremony With CN Tower Stunt

    Donovan Bailey Headlines Starry Pan Am Opening Ceremony With CN Tower Stunt
    Organizers followed through on a promise to cater the presentation to a younger generation of viewers who might have anticipated a stodgier production.

    Donovan Bailey Headlines Starry Pan Am Opening Ceremony With CN Tower Stunt

    Lions Come Back From 11 Points Down Late To Stun Roughriders 35-32 In Overtime

    Lions Come Back From 11 Points Down Late To Stun Roughriders 35-32 In Overtime
    Travis Lulay threw a four-yard touchdown to Manny Arceneaux in overtime Friday as the Lions picked up their first win of the season with a wild 35-32 comeback victory over the Saskatchewan Roughriders.

    Lions Come Back From 11 Points Down Late To Stun Roughriders 35-32 In Overtime

    Canadian Open-Water Swimmer Looks To Defend Pan American Games Title

    Canadian Open-Water Swimmer Looks To Defend Pan American Games Title
    VANCOUVER — After yet another marathon training session in his home pool, Richard Weinberger slips on an Amon Amarth T-shirt and gets ready to chat.

    Canadian Open-Water Swimmer Looks To Defend Pan American Games Title

    Carli Lloyd's Hat Trick Leads U.S. Over Japan In Women's World Cup Final

    Carli Lloyd's Hat Trick Leads U.S. Over Japan In Women's World Cup Final
    VANCOUVER — Carli Lloyd caught herself daydreaming before the Women's World Cup. In between sprints on an empty practice field, she envisioned scoring four goals in the final.

    Carli Lloyd's Hat Trick Leads U.S. Over Japan In Women's World Cup Final