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This is an archive article published on August 13, 1997

Stunned silence at Super Cassettes’ Delhi factory

MUMBAI, August 12: Work at the sprawling Super Cassette Industries in Noida's Film City near New Delhi came to a grinding halt when news th...

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MUMBAI, August 12: Work at the sprawling Super Cassette Industries in Noida’s Film City near New Delhi came to a grinding halt when news that its owner Gulshan Kumar had been gunned down sank in.

Clad in a spotless white kurta-pyjama, Gulshan Kumar’s father Chandrabhan sat weeping on a bed. “Why my son. He was such a god-fearing man,” he wept. The air in the building was heavy with grief. What Kumar’s father could not understand was why anyone would want to kill his son. “Suddenly my world has collapsed.

And I was expecting him to come home. He likes tinda and only yesterday I bought some for him…I knew he would want to go to the temple so I bought bananas, coconuts and other fruits for him. But now he won’t come,” he said.

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His tears gave way to anger as he asked if anything was known about the identity of his son’s killers. “Tell me who has killed him and I will take care of them…I know who is behind this. It has to be Jaggi – that Jagmohan…I will see him.”

Officials of the Super Cassette Industries were constantly in touch with Kumar’s younger film-actor brother Kishen Kumar and other relatives in Mumbai. “They are asking whether the funeral would be held in Mumbai ,” an official asked Chandrabhan.

“Nothing doing. Never in Mumbai. All the workers are here. The family is here and the funeral would be held here. Arrange for my son’s body to be flown here. It will be a family funeral not a film industry funeral,” he insisted.

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