(MENAFN - NewsBytes) Gangster Lakha Singh Sidhana, wanted by the Delhi Police for allegedly instigating violence during the farmers infamous tractor rally this Republic Day, has called a rally in support of the ongoing farmers protest in Punjab s Bathinda.
Releasing a video on social media, he hit out at the government as well as farmer leader Rakesh Tikait.
Here are more details on this. In this article Sidhana calls rally in Mehraj on February 23 Sidhana is on the run since January 26 Delhi Police has been searching for Sidhana Up to Delhi Police to arrest him, says Bathinda IGP What happened in Delhi on January 26? Who is Lakha Sidhana?
Maxwell: The man behind a town s name
16 Feb, 2021 04:00 PM
6 minutes to read
The district named after George Maxwell is on course to be renamed Pakaraka. Photo / File
Whanganui Chronicle
By: Dave Scoullar
In Whanganui District Council discussions George Maxwell has been described as probably not the nicest guy. Whether he was or not it s indisputable that he played a prominent part in an infamous event. Just over 150 years later the district named after him is on course to revert to its earlier name of Pakaraka.
So who was Maxwell and how did it come to this? He was born in Alloa, Scotland, and arrived as a young boy in Wellington in March 1852 on the Agra with his parents John and Catherine Maxwell.
The bogan whip: Kieran McAnulty on pies, religion and his infamous ute
12 minutes to read
By: Michele Hewitson
Pie-loving Kieran McAnulty is tasked with keeping Labour s bigger, more diverse caucus in line. Let s hope he manages this better than his messy red ute. By Michele Hewitson. At the Carterton Rotary Christmas parade, Kieran McAnulty, the Labour MP who turned the Wairarapa from blue to red in the October election, was dressed from the waist up as an elf. Down below he was wearing shorts and jandals. He was also wearing his sunnies. He looked utterly ridiculous. He said he thought that was rather the point and did I mean he looked generally ridiculous or just ridiculous today?
Red Fox Tavern cold case: We told her what had happened as gently as we could
11 Feb, 2021 03:30 AM
4 minutes to read
Police recreation of Red Fox Tavern in 1987. Video / Supplied
The immediate aftermath of the sudden violent Red Fox Tavern hold-up, which became one of New Zealand s most infamous cold cases, has been revisited in court.
Mark Joseph Hoggart, 60, and a man with name suppression are on trial for the aggravated robbery and murder of Maramarua publican Christopher Bush in 1987.
Both of the accused men deny they were the ones that committed the crimes.
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One was armed with a sawn off double-barrelled shotgun and the other with a baseball bat.