07 March,2010 06:45 AM IST | | Khalid A-H Ansari
Even as three-year-old Gurshan Singh Channa's family mourn his death, Australian police await forensic test results
An autopsy has yielded no clues as to the cause of death of the child who, according to Ajay Pathania, a housemate, was screaming after his father left home to visit a library nearby. (KHALIDOSCOPE, MiD DAY, March 5). Victoria police are now believed to be of the opinion that Gurshan, who his devastated father Harjit Singh Channa yesterday described as a "sweet child", was not the victim of a random attack.
Harjit and his cooking student wife Harpreet Kaur Channa were yesterday taken to the coroner to view his body. Gurshan Singh vanished from his home at 1.10 pm. on Thursday when Pathania was at the library with the boy's father. "We got a call from his mother and we didn't know where the boy was," he is reported as saying by AAP. The police were here quickly," he said.
Three families had been living in the house, with Gurshan the only child.
Twenty-four-old Sim Kaur, who was at home when Gurshan disappeared, said the boy'su00a0 screaming suddenly stopped and she feared he had left the house and tried to follow his father.
The toddler's body was found among beer bottles in knee-high grass six hours later in a dead-end, semi rural road more than 20 kilometres away fully clothed with no injuries.
Police say further forensic tests are needed after the inconclusive autopsy.
Neighbours have been dropping off flowers and toys in Gurshan's memory since his death. "It's very touching to see," Pathania said. About two dozen different types of flowers have been laid outside the couple's home, next to stuffed teddy bears and toy trucks. "Sorry for your tragic loss from a caring grandmother," says one card attached to a bunch of orange roses. "Little angel Gurshan -- my heart goes out to you," says another.
The Melbourne Police on Saturday | |
Requested the Indian community to not jump to conclusions over the death of Gurshan Singh Channa. Victoria Police spokesman Marty Beveridge said they needed to give the homicide detectives time and space to conduct investigation into the child's death | |
Postscript: Australia has "informally advised" Indian authorities that its visa applicants will not be subject to new counter-terrorism biometric screening tests despite heightened fears of terrorist activity within its region.
(Source: AAP and The Australian)