Delhi E-rickshaw driver beaten to death for objecting to public urination was promoting Swachh Bharat: Naidu
Union minister Venkaiah Naidu looked for activity on Monday against the individuals who beat a 32-year-old e-rickshaw driver to death allegedly to object to a few men urinating on the roadside in north Delhi's GTB Nagar on Saturday evening.
Ravinder, an inhabitant of Kishore Market range, was beaten with iron knuckles and stones wrapped in towels close entryway number four of GTB Nagar Metro station when he was stopping his e-rickshaw on the roadside.
"He was promoting Swachh Bharat. I addressed the police official and requesting that he make the strongest action possible against the offenders," tweeted Naidu, minister for housing and urban poverty alleviation.
Naidu, who likewise holds the information and broadcasting portfolio, was alluding to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's pet venture Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, or Clean India Mission, a drive to clean India's urban areas and towns.
The crusade, initiated to match with Gandhi Jayanti, expects to understand its vision of 'Clean India' by October 2, 2019, the 150th birth commemoration of Mahatma Gandhi.
Police said Ravinder saw 2-3 men, who appeared to be students, urinating on the roadside. "Ravinder was nourished up of this and revealed to them that their propensity prompted terrible stench and poor cleanliness in the territory," Milind Dumbere, deputy commissioner of police (north-west), said.
An argument ensued in which the men undermined Ravinder and said they would return with their companions. They returned around 8pm with around 15 other men who purportedly whipped Ravinder.
Ravinder figured out how to call his sibling after they exited the wrongdoing spot and he hurried to him and took him home. Be that as it may, when they achieved, Ravinder's condition had started to compound and he was taken to Bara Hindu Rao Hospital where he was pronounced brought dead.
Hitched on May 9 a year ago, Ravinder lived with his significant other, guardians and 3 siblings in Kishore Market, a short distance from where he was executed.