Tag: Indianorigin

  • Indian-origin teen girl missing in US fearing family’s deportation amid layoffs

    Indian-origin teen girl missing in US fearing family’s deportation amid layoffs

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    New York: An Indian-American teenager Tanvi Marupally has gone missing in the US and according to the local police, she ran away from home due to fear of her family being deported amid mass layoffs in the tech industry.

    The incident happened in the US state of Arkansas and the community and Conway Police Department “continue to search for a missing 14-year-old girl and now there’s a reward for whoever can find her,” reports kark.com.

    Marupally was last seen on January 17 near Conway Junior High School heading north on Davis Street.

    According to the report, she was wearing a purple coat, pink pullover, blue shirt and blue jeans.

    “Police said they believe one of the possible reasons why Tanvi ran away was a fear of her family being deported,” the report mentioned.

    Tanvi’s father informed the Conway police department that acehe is no longer at risk of losing his job and that leaving the country is not a concern at this time”.

    Charlie Crossman who owns Crossman Printing said he has made over one thousand fliers in the hopes of helping spread the word about Marupally.

    “I hope just to get the word out there’s people I talk to about Tanvi and they don’t know about her. They live on Conway,” Crossman was quoted as saying.

    Crossman spoke with Marupally’s parents when they came to his printing shop for assistance.

    “They came in and I guess they had heard we were giving away flyers for people that wanted to hand them out and we helped them also go to a mailer,” Crossman added.

    Marupally’s family is offering a $5,000 reward in hopes of bringing her home.

    The news comes as thousands of Indian-origin tech employees on H1-B visa have lost jobs and have 60 days to find a new one, else leave the country.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Indian-origin father of 3 dies after being hit by car in US

    Indian-origin father of 3 dies after being hit by car in US

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    New York: A 39-year-old Indian-origin father of three, who had gone to pick up insulin and Pokemon cards for his children from a convenience store in the US, died after being hit by a car.

    Pritesh Patel, a resident of Dauphin County in Pennsylvania, was crossing a road after leaving a convenience store at Mushroom Hill Road when an eastbound vehicle hit him around January 27, Penn Live reported.

    Patel was flown to Hershey Medical Center, where he was kept alive by machines for a couple of days, before he died on January 30, police said.

    According to police, Patel was not in a crosswalk, and surveillance footage showed eastbound traffic had a green light at the time.

    Police were unable to say how fast the vehicle that hit Patel was going, Penn Live reported.

    They said that the driver stayed at the scene afterward and is cooperating with the ongoing investigation.

    Elizabeth Pilukaitis, Patel’s relative, told Penn Live that on the night of the accident, he was riding an e-bike to get some items for his sons.

    Pilukaitis said he wanted to pick up insulin for his youngest son who has Type 1 diabetes, and Pokemon cards.

    The Patel family has decided to donate Patel’s kidneys following his death.Patel was supposed to start a new job at Dauphin County where he had recently moved in along with his family after spending more than a decade in Lancaster.

    Since Patel was the sole earning member of the family, a GoFundMe page has been set up to help his family meet the funeral expenses.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Indian-origin man in UK convicted of killing father with champagne bottle in 2021

    Indian-origin man in UK convicted of killing father with champagne bottle in 2021

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    London: An Indian-origin man was found guilty of killing his 86-year-old father with a bottle of champagne in an inebriated state in north London in 2021.

    Deekan Paul Singh Vig, 54, was convicted following a trial at the Old Bailey court in the city last week and will be sentenced on February 10.

    The Metropolitan Police said his father, Arjan Singh Vig, also lived in the same house in Southgate, north London, when police were called to a disturbance in October 2021.

    “Despite the efforts of emergency services Arjan was pronounced dead at the scene,” the Met Police said.

    “A post-mortem examination gave the cause of death as blunt force trauma to the head,” the police said.

    The trial heard how officers found the victim’s body on the floor of his son’s bedroom with his “head caved in”.

    According to the Evening Standard’, his son was naked and surrounded by about 100 bottles of Champagne, including blood-stained bottles of Veuve Clicquot and Bollinger.

    “I killed my dad. I hit him over the head with a f***ing bloody bottle of Bollinger champagne,” he reportedly said.

    Jurors heard how Deekan had lived with his accountant father and zoologist mother Damanjit Vig, 85, in their four-bedroom home for about 40 years.

    The family had moved from Uganda to the UK when Deekan was five-year-old, at the time Idi Amin expelled members of the South Asian community from the east African country.

    The court was told that Deekan had developed a taste for alcohol during the COVID-19 lockdown and admitted to drinking 500ml of whisky earlier on the evening of the incident.

    At the crime scene, police uncovered 100 bottles of champagne, 10 Amazon delivery boxes of whisky bottles, and an empty bottle of Talisker Scotch on the bed.

    Deekan had denied murder but admitted manslaughter on the second day of his trial on the basis that he did not intend to cause his father really serious harm.

    However, according to the court report, the jury deliberated for less than a day to find him guilty of murder last Friday.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Indian-origin professor to lead ‘best and brightest’ scientists and researchers in Texas

    Indian-origin professor to lead ‘best and brightest’ scientists and researchers in Texas

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    Houston: Ganesh Thakur, an Indian-origin professor in the US, has been appointed as the vice president of the Texas Academy of Medicine, Engineering, Science and Technology (TAMEST), an organisation that brings the state’s top scientists and researchers to advance research, innovation and business in Texas.

    The TAMEST board of directors on Tuesday appointed Thakur, a distinguished Professor of Petroleum Engineering at the University of Houston (UH), vice president alongside Brendan Lee, who will serve as the president.

    Originally from Jharkhand, Thakur is the first UH faculty member to lead TAMEST.

    During his two-year term as vice president, he will help coordinate and guide the board of directors with strategic planning, programmes and communication.

    He will eventually be named the president of the organisation in 2025.

    “Texas is home to some of the most brilliant minds in the world, and I’m honoured and excited by this opportunity to strengthen collaboration and advance innovation across the state in fields critical to our continued growth and development,” said Thakur, who has been a member of the organisation since 2016, most recently serving as treasurer.

    “TAMEST is a scientific and biomedical intellectual engine for the state, and I am passionate about its mission to benefit public good and business,” he added.

    A member of the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Inventors, Thakur is a globally recognised pioneer in Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS). His patent on forecasting the performance of water injection and enhanced oil recovery (EOR) using a hybrid analytical-empirical methodology provided a much faster approach that served as an alternative to more time-consuming reservoir simulation.

    In a USD 5 million partnership with Oil India Limited, Thakur’s team helped capture carbon dioxide from petrochemical plants to boost oil recovery in several fields in Assam. The project is targeted to help reduce India’s carbon footprint and increase its ability to fulfil its energy needs.

    “Dr Thakur’s leadership, passion and cutting-edge research have been instrumental in positioning the University as a strategic partner to the energy industry,” said Ramanan Krishnamoorti, UH vice president of energy and innovation.

    “His extensive knowledge and expertise will be of great benefit to TAMEST and the state of Texas. I sincerely congratulate him on this well-deserved appointment,” he added.

    “We fully support Dr Thakur’s involvement in this key leadership position which is critical to advancing innovation across our state. He has an incredible passion for teaching and collaboration which will be a great asset to the TAMEST,” said Joseph W. Tedesco, Elizabeth D. Rockwell Dean of the Cullen College of Engineering.

    Thakur joined UH in 2016 with a grant from the Texas Governor’s University Research Initiative (GURI). He joined as director of UH Energy Industry Partnerships after almost four decades working in the industry at Chevron, where he served in several leadership roles, including vice president of reservoir management.

    He earned his doctorate in petroleum and natural gas engineering (PNGE) from Pennsylvania State University in 1973, after earning his master’s degrees in mathematics and PNGE there. He also has an MBA from Houston Baptist University and received his bachelor’s degree in petroleum engineering from IIT (ISM) Dhanbad in India.

    TAMEST membership includes all Texas-based members of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, the state’s nine Nobel laureates and 18 member institutions, including the University of Houston. It brings together the state’s “best and brightest” scientists and researchers to foster collaboration and advance research, innovation and business in Texas, according to the TAMEST website.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )