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SHOPKEEPER
TONY SINGH NOT TO FACE MURDER CHARGE
London, February 27, 2008 (IANS)
Indian
shopkeeper and local hero Tony Singh was Wednesday told that he
will not face a murder charge after a career criminal who tried
to rob him was stabbed to death with his own knife. Singh, 34, feared
he could face a murder charge after career criminal Liam Kilroe
was killed trying to rob the British Indian shopkeeper Feb 17 -
just five days after police had issued a warrant on Kilroe. Singh,
who owns a convenience store in Skemersdale, in Lancashire, was
arrested but later released on bail.
Said
Detective Superintendent Mick Gradwell: "This was a violent
attack on Mr Singh by a convicted armed robber. My recommendation
was that Mr Singh should not be prosecuted and I am pleased that
the Crown Prosecution Service has agreed with that."
Singh
told the local Skemersdale Advertiser newspaper: "It is a big
burden that has been lifted, but on the other hand the memory of
what happened will live with me forever.
"It
will always be there, I will be watching it replay in my mind and
it is something I'll have to live with for the rest of my life."
Singh,
who suffered knife injuries to his head during the attack and needed
hospital treatment, has become a local hero for standing up to an
attacker in a country where violent crime routinely captures newspaper
headlines. Singh gave an account of what happened Feb 17 after being
told Wednesday that he will not face any charges.
"I
tried to get away from the attacker but was left with no option
other than to defend myself. In the course of the attack I was stabbed
to my head causing what could have been a life threatening injury
and also repeated stab wounds to my back," Singh said.
"In
the struggle with my attacker I understand he suffered an injury
but I do not know how that injury was caused. I do not want to be
seen as a hero. I did no more or less than try to save my own life.
I extend my sympathy to the Kilroe family, who after all have lost
a son."
He
said he was "a few millimetres" from being killed in the
fight, which began when Kilroe confronted Singh with a knife, smashed
his car window and demanded to be handed over the day's takings
after he had closed his shop.
Ordinary
Britons have continued to question the police action, saying Kilroe
- a man who was facing trial for armed robbery - should not have
been out on bail in the first place, and that Singh should never
have been arrested.
Newspaper
websites have been inundated with messages of support for Singh.
One, posted in the Daily Telegraph, said the reason police and the
Crown Prosecution Service had decided not to prosecute Singh was
that they knew no jury would find him guilty. Another said there
would have been a "national outcry" if Singh had been
charged and slammed the police for putting him through "10
days of agony".
Singh
escaped the fate of Tony Martin, a Norfolk farmer who served three
years in prison after shooting dead a teenager burglar in his farm
in 1999.
The
opposition Conservative Party has called for a review of the law
covering self-defence. The current law permits people to use "reasonable
force" to defend themselves and others. However, critics claim
it is weighted in favour of the criminal.
Shailesh
Vara, the Conservative Party deputy leader in parliament, recently
criticised the government's failure to amend legislation in favour
of citizens who defend themselves against attack.
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