City
Epaper

Baba Tarsem Singh Death: Gurudwara Kar Sewa Pramukh Murdered in Uttarakhand

By Lokmat English Desk | Updated: March 28, 2024 11:41 IST

Nanakmatta Gurudwara Kar Sewa chief Baba Tarsem Singh was shot dead by unidentified assailants in Uttarakhand’s Nanakmatta town of ...

Open in App

Nanakmatta Gurudwara Kar Sewa chief Baba Tarsem Singh was shot dead by unidentified assailants in Uttarakhand’s Nanakmatta town of Udham Singh Nagar on Thursday morning, police said.According to police, the two bike-borne assailants fired indiscriminately at Baba Tarsem Singh inside the dera at around 6:30am.

Watch:

Uttarakhand additional director general of police (Law and Order) AP Anshuman said, “Two identified assailants who came on bike opened fire at Nanakmatta Gurdwara Kar Sewa Pramukh Baba Tarsem Singh inside the dera at around 6:30am. We have deployed several police teams, along with the special task force (STF), to nab the killers. We will also constitute a special investigation team (SIT) to investigate the murder.

Tags: Baba Tarsem Singhuttarakhand
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalDelhi Double Murder Case: Accused Arrested from Uttarakhand's Haldwani

NationalUttarakhand Rains: Bridge Washed Away on National Highway to Yamunotri Amid Heavy Rainfall (Watch)

NationalTehri Garhwal Truck Accident: 3 Kanwariyas Dead, 14 Injured After Vehicle Overturns on Rishikesh-Gangotri Highway (Watch Video)

NationalRoorkee Accident: Young Woman Crushed to Death by Car While Walking to Work; Shocking CCTV Footage (VIDEO)

NationalUttarakhand Landslide: Char Dham Yatra Suspended as IMD Issues Red Alert - Here's What Travellers Need to Know

National Realted Stories

NationalTwo-day police conference in Jaipur to check human trafficking

NationalCongress flags five key objections to Special Intensive Revision in Bihar

NationalCare of senior citizens is the community's responsibility: Delhi Speaker Vijender Gupta

NationalNavi Mumbai International Airport must be completed by Sep 30: Maha CM

NationalWBSSC may face technical difficulties in detecting 'tainted' candidates seeking fresh recruitment