This story is from August 27, 2018

NRI wife-killer to be deported to Indian jail from UK

Harpreet Aulakh was sentenced to a minimum of 28 years in London in December 2010 for ordering the murder of his wife, Geeta Aulakh, after she asked for a divorce. The 40-year-old will be deported under the India-UK Repatriation of Prisoners Act, the BBC reported on Monday. The man from Punjab, had told the UK authorities that he wanted to serve his remaining term in India, said police.
NRI wife-killer to be deported to Indian jail from UK
Representative image (TOI)
LONDON: A non-resident Indian (NRI) serving a jail term in a UK jail for killing his wife over eight years ago is to be deported to India to serve the remainder of his murder sentence in Punjab.
Harpreet Aulakh was sentenced to a minimum of 28 years in London in December 2010 for ordering the murder of his wife, Geeta Aulakh, after she asked for a divorce. The 40-year-old will be deported under the India-UK Repatriation of Prisoners Act, the BBC reported on Monday.

"All arrangements are in place. According to the plan, the UK authorities will bring him to Delhi from where a team of Punjab police officers will bring him to Amritsar," IPS Sahota, a top prison official in Punjab, was quoted as saying.
Inspector general of prisons Roop Kumar said Harpreet, who is from Punjab, had told the UK authorities that he wanted to serve his remaining term in India.
Geeta, 28, was brutally attacked with a machete during the attack in Greenford, west London, in November 2009. She worked for local Indian community radio station, Sunrise Radio, and her murder had hit the headlines around the world at the time of the attack.
In November 2009, the victim, who was the mother of Harpreet's two sons, was hacked to death with a sword, which her husband of 10 years had chosen from a selection of swords at a store days before the murder.

The attack took place when Geeta went to pick up her sons after leaving work at the radio station where she worked as a receptionist.
She was found with head injuries and her right hand severed, and died a few hours later in hospital.
Harpreet, also known as Sunny, and two others - Sher Singh, 19, and Jaswant Dhillon, 30, - were also found guilty of Geeta's murder in 2010. Singh, who actually wielded the sword, and Dhillon, who acted as the lookout for the group, were sentenced to 22 years behind bars.
During the trial, the court was told that British-born Indian-origin Geeta wanted to divorce her husband over his involvement in violent crimes, leading him to plot her murder.
End of Article
FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA