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24-year-old Indian student raped, killed in Australia

Victim's body was found in a canal stuffed inside a suitcase
Last Updated 03 May 2018, 06:20 IST

 A 24-year-old Indian student was raped and murdered and her body stuffed into a suitcase in Australia’s Sydney city. Indian External Affairs Minister S M Krishna on Monday described the incident as ''unfortunate.''

 Tosha Thakkar, a student of Sydney College of Business and IT, was raped and murdered in Sydney last week.In New Delhi, Krishna said: “This is a very, very unfortunate incident. We are getting a report from our ambassador. We are closely following and monitoring the investigation.”

There has been a string of attacks on Indians in Australia during the past two years, sparking an outrage in India. One of the attacks proved fatal when Nitin Garg was killed in Melbourne in January last year.

Daniel Stani-Reginald, 19, an Australian of Sri Lankan descent, has been arrested and charged with the murder and aggravated sexual assault on Thakkar.

“The Age” quoted the police as saying the “predator” had waited until her housemate was away to sexually assault and kill her.

Thakkar’s body was found on Friday morning in a canal behind the Meadowbank Park in northwestern Sydney. It had been stuffed into a large, black, cloth suitcase.
The case was mentioned briefly in the Burwood Local Court on Monday. Stani-Reginald is alleged to have murdered Thakkar last Wednesday. He was arrested on Friday night and charged with Thakkar’s murder, the media report said.

About 20 friends and the members of the family of Thakkar, who had been living in Australia to study accounting, turned up at the court on Monday.

“We are very upset, of course. We are just waiting to get justice ASAP. She was very nice, the type that got along with everybody and she didn’t deserve this, such a painful death,”  the newspaper quoted a friend as saying outside the court.

Pamela Young, a police official, said Thakkar’s parents had not yet made plans to come to Australia and police hoped to return her body to India for a funeral service.
“I understand her father is very ill,” she said.

Niralee, a cousin of Thakkar, said the victim was “a lovely human being” who was too young to die.

In January this year, Australian High Commissioner to India Peter N Varghese had said the safety of Indian students in Australia is an issue that is “behind us.” Varghese said the Australian government had taken a series of measures which had led to things being a lot calmer than they were 12 months ago.

“Look, I think that the issue of safety of Indian students is behind us really. We have taken a series of measures at federal government level, state government level and in relation to our police forces,” Varghese added.

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(Published 14 March 2011, 04:12 IST)

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