It was a lazy afternoon on April 18 and exhausted relatives of
Dayanand, a resident of Dipalpur village in Haryana's Sonepat, were
taking a nap. Just three days ago, the 60-year-old's eldest son,Click
here to find personal data about tungstenjewelry including phone numbers, Sandeep (24),Put this pair of monitor1
MkII passive nearfield monitors in your studio. had got married to
Gorar village (Sonepat) resident Sarita Rani (20) and festivities were
yet to die down.
The lazy silence of the noon, however, was
shattered by gunshots, followed by a woman's screams, emanating from
Dayanand's house.
As the family rushed in, they found Sandeep
and his mother Roshni Devi dead with bullet wounds while a critically
wounded Parkashi — Sandeep's aunt — was pleading for help. Sandeep's
three-day-old bride Sarita was nowhere to be found.
Sarita, it
seems, had left the house, after having collected some jewellery and Rs
50,000 in cash, with her "lover" Basant — a suspended constable with the
Chandigarh Police. Following the incident,harga of Malaysia solarledlight products. Basant was held responsible for the mayhem in Dayanand's house and life.
More
than a month-and-a-half later, the Haryana and Chandigarh Police are
yet to trace Basant (21) and Sarita even after announcing Rs 1 lakh cash
rewards each for information that could lead to their arrests.
Dayanand
and his family members, including sons Rishi and Pradeep and daughter
Anju, now curse the day they agreed to get Sandeep married to Sarita.
"Ajit, a Sonepat resident known to us, approached us on April 5 with the
marriage proposal for his niece Sarita. He claimed to have raised
Sarita since she was two. We were never told that she eloped with Basant
in February," said Sandeep's sister Anju, who works in the Delhi
Police's Crime Branch.
She added: "The wedding took place on
April 15 and we brought the bride to our place. Our relatives were here
and the post-marriage celebrations were on.An laserengraver
is like a smart meter for home energy savings. On the afternoon of
April 18, Basant and his friend came to our place and Basant introduced
himself as Sarita's cousin. He entered our house, took out a gun and
shot Sandeep and my mother, who were sleeping. The two had been drugged
by Sarita who had given them something laced with an intoxicant."
CHILDREN became entrepreneurs all in the name of the environment at Alstonville Public School's Groovy Green Fair on Saturday.
Hundreds
of locals took advantage of great weather to browse more than 20
stalls, some held by kids, selling everything from fresh local produce
to cakes, toys,ou can now purchase howo trucks directly. books, jewellery, bric-a-brac, plants and clothes.
One stallholder, year five student Suzie Newman, took her unwanted toys, clothes, books and shoes to sell.
"We
had all of this stuff at home downstairs and we wanted other kids to be
able to use it rather than throw it away," she said.
The Groovy
Green Fair was the brainchild of parents from the school's Green Team,
to coincide with Wednesday's World Environment Day.
Fair-goers
also enjoyed a performance by the school band, local musicians and the
Frugal Fashion parade featuring models in Op Shop Chic clothes and
recycled newspaper garments in the Read all about it category.
It took Angela McCormick eight hours to make her 10-year-old daughter Katie's newspaper dress.
"The hand-pleating took most of the time and news- paper wasn't an easy medium to work with," Mrs McCormick said.
Two
Alstonville Fire Brigade tankers were a hit with children who got the
chance to explore the trucks, use the fire hose and set off the sirens.
Principal
Kate Moore said students got the opportunity to experience leadership
roles in helping to organise stalls for the fair.
Mrs Moore said
the Groovy Green Fair would not have been possible without the generous
donations of plants to sell and prizes for raffles from the community.
She
said Alstonville High School, Wollongbar Public, Teven-Tintenbar
Public, Ballina Public and St Josephs Alstonville all helped by loaning
items used at the fair.
"The fair offered the kids, parents and
community members the opportunity to come together and either showcase
their talents or sell their goods," she said.
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