Australian police allege part-time taxi driver of manslaughter
08-03-2010
AUSTRALIAN police on Sunday (7) charged a man with manslaughter over the
death of an Indian toddler whose body was found dumped by the
road-side.
Gurshan Singh's (pictured) body was found in the grass beside an isolated road in
Melbourne on Thursday night. An initial autopsy was inconclusive.
Police allege that a part-time taxi driver who had been sharing a
house with the boy and his family was responsible for his death.
Gurshewak Dhillon, 23, has been refused bail. Detective Senior
Sergeant Ron Iddles accused him of placing the boy unconscious but
alive in the boot of his car.
"He drove up to three hours, stopping at Oaklands Junction, where he
placed the child into the grass and did not check to see if the child
was alive," Iddles alleged.
Iddles did not mention how the boy came to be unconscious.
The toddler disappeared from the house on Thursday afternoon while his
mother was taking a shower and his father was at a nearby library. His
body was found by a council worker about six hours later around 30
kilometres (20 miles) away.
The parents are from the Punjab in northern Indian and are students in
Australia.
There had been fears the case could further damage relations between
Australia and India which have plunged in recent months following a
series of attacks on Indian students, including the murder of a
21-year-old Punjab man.
Foreign Minister Stephen Smith last week made a goodwill visit to
India to bolster trade ties and quell fears about the safety of Indian
students in Australia.
Smith admitted that "We do have a job to repair some damage to our
reputation as a result of the way in which the students issue has been
perceived."