Harry-Meghan looked nervous, says Indian-American cab driver

Harry-Meghan looked nervous, says Indian-American cab driver

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Sukhcharn Singh, an Indian-American cab driver in New York City who drove Prince Harry and Meghan Markle for a short while while they tried to escape the paparazzi, said the Duke and Duchess of Sussex “looked nervous” during the brief ride.

Speaking to the BBC, Singh, who goes by the name Sonny, said that he picked the couple up at a local police precinct in Midtown Manhattan.

“I was on 67th Street and then the security guard hailed me. Next thing you know, Prince Harry and his wife were hopping into my cab,” he said.

“We got blocked by a garbage truck, and all of a sudden paparazzi came and started taking pictures.”

The couple were about to share their destination, when the security guard made the call to return to the police precinct, Singh told the BBC.

“They looked nervous, I think they were being chased the whole day or something,” he said, adding: “They were pretty nervous, but the security guard, he was on it.”

On Tuesday night, the couple had attended an awards ceremony in the city along with Meghan’s mother Doria Ragland.

When they were chased by numerous photographers after leaving, the couple tried to take shelter from the paparazzi by going to a Manhattan police station — which is where Singh picked them up.

For at least the few minutes they were in Singh’s car, he did not believe they were in danger.

“I don’t think that’s true, I think that’s all exaggerated and stuff like that. Don’t read too much into that,” Singh told the BBC.

He later added “that must have happened before” they got in his taxi.

“New York City’s the safest place to be… There’s police stations, cops on every corner, there’s no reason to be afraid in New York.”

The paparazzi were not being aggressive during his drive, he said.

“They were behind us. I mean, they stayed on top of us, that was pretty much it, it was nothing more. They kept their distance.”

In a statement, Harry and Meghan’s spokesperson said they had experienced a “near catastrophic car chase”.

The New York police also said numerous photographers “made their transport challenging”.

Singh also described Harry and Meghan as “nice people”.

“At the end of the trip, they say, ‘Oh nice meeting you’,” and asked his name, Singh recalled.

As his passengers disembarked, the security guard paid and tipped him for the ride.

“It was great. Ten-minute drive, $50… What can you ask for? You can’t beat that,” he told the BBC.

Meghan, Harry “Were Pretty Nervous”: Indian-American Cabbie On Car Chase

Meghan, Harry “Were Pretty Nervous”: Indian-American Cabbie On Car Chase

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Prince Harry and his wife Meghan were “pretty nervous” as they were chased by paparazzi in New York, according to an Indian-American cab driver who drove them for about 10 minutes after picking them up at a police station in Manhattan.

Sukhcharn Singh, the driver who drove the Duke and Duchess of Sussex briefly on Tuesday night as they were trailed in their car by photographers, said he instantly recognised his passengers.

“I was on 67th Street and then the security guard hailed me. Next thing you know, Prince Harry and his wife were hopping into my cab,” he said.

“We got blocked by a garbage truck, and all of a sudden paparazzi came and started taking pictures,” he said.

Singh said Harry, 38, and Meghan, 41, were about to give him their location but told him to go back to the police station.

“They were nice people, they looked nervous. I think they were being chased the whole day or something. They were pretty nervous,” Singh told Sky News.

In a statement, Harry and Meghan’s spokesperson said on Wednesday the couple had experienced a “near catastrophic car chase” on Tuesday.

The New York Police Department (NYPD) later said they assisted the private security team protecting the Duke and Duchess of Sussex.

“There were numerous photographers that made their transport challenging,” it said.

The police, however, said the couple “arrived at their destination and there were no reported collisions, summonses, injuries, or arrests.” Harry and Meghan were in New York attending an awards ceremony – the Ms Foundation Women of Vision Awards – along with Meghan’s mother Doria Ragland.

When they were chased after leaving the event, the spokesperson said, the couple tried to avoid the paparazzi by going to a Manhattan police station – which is where Singh picked them up.

Singh laughed when asked if it was a “near catastrophic car chase”.

“I don’t think that’s true, it’s exaggerated. Don’t read too much into that,” he said.

When asked if he felt he or his passengers were in danger, he said, “No, New York City is the safest place to be”, adding that there are police personnel on every corner.

“So, there is no need to be afraid in New York,” he added. According to a report in The Washington Post newspaper, Singh picked up Harry, Meghan, her mother and a security guard around 11 p.m. on Tuesday outside the New York City Police Department’s 19th precinct.

The report quoted him as saying that he drove them for a brief period, during which they were pursued by other vehicles.

“Singh estimated that the entire journey lasted 10 minutes, and said he got the impression from the group that they had been already pursued by paparazzi before entering his car,” according to the report.

Singh said they were pursued by two vehicles: a black Honda Accord and an older gray Honda CR-V.

“They kept following us and were coming next to the car. They took pictures as we stopped and were filming us,” he said.

Singh said the security guard was concerned about the photographers and asked him to return to the police station.

The guard thought they were too exposed and didn’t want their location shared more widely, he said.

New York City Mayor Eric Adams has described the incident as “reckless and irresponsible”.

Adams, responding to a question on the incident during an announcement on combating retail theft in New York City, said Wednesday that while the press and the paparazzi want to get the right shot and right story, public safety must always be at the forefront.

Adams said two NYPD officers could have been injured in the chase.

“New York City is different from a small town somewhere. You shouldn’t be speeding anywhere, but this is a densely populated city, and I think all of us, I don’t think there’s many of us who don’t recall how his mom died and it would be horrific to lose an innocent bystander during a chase like this and something to have happened to them as well.

“So, I think we have to be extremely responsible. I thought that was a bit reckless and irresponsible,” the mayor said in a statement.

Harry’s mother Princess Diana and her partner Dodi Fayed, an Egyptian film producer and son of billionaire Mohamed Al-Fayed, were being chased relentlessly by paparazzi and died when their car crashed in an underpass in Paris in August 1997.

In response to the assertion of the couple’s spokesperson that the car chase lasted two hours, Adams said he “would find it hard to believe that there was a two-hour high-speed chase” in a city as crowded and dense as New York.

“I find it hard to believe, but we will find out the exact duration of it. But if it’s 10 minutes, a 10-minute chase is extremely dangerous in New York City. We have a lot of traffic, a lot of movement, a lot of people are using our streets,” he said.

He said that any type of high-speed chase that involves something of that nature is inappropriate. “Police do it under limited circumstances when they’re going after violent people, but to do it because you want to get the right shot can turn out to be a place where people can be harmed in a real way,” he said.

The statement by Harry and Meghan’s spokesperson said that while “being a public figure comes with a level of interest from the public, it should never come at the cost of anyone’s safety.” “Dissemination of these images, given the ways in which they were obtained, encourages a highly intrusive practice that is dangerous to all in involved,” it said.

Pictures that have appeared on social media have shown Harry, Meghan and her mother Ragland in a taxi.

Harry and Meghan quit their royal duties in 2020 and moved to the United States partly because of what they described as intense media harassment

The prince has long spoken out about his anger about press intrusion which he blames for the death of his mother Princess Diana, who was killed when her limousine crashed as it sped away from chasing paparazzi in Paris in 1997.

Indian-American woman cop named highest-ranking South Asian in NY

Indian-American woman cop named highest-ranking South Asian in NY

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Indian-American Captain Pratima Bhullar Maldonado has become the highest-ranking South Asian in the New York Police Department (NYPD), a position she was promoted to last month.

Maldonado runs the 102nd Police Precinct in South Richmond Hill — home to one of the largest Sikh communities in the US — and is now the NYPD’s first female South Asian captain, CBS News reported.

The mother of four lived in Punjab until she was nine before moving to Queens.

“It feels like coming home. I spent more than 25 years of my life in this precinct when I was growing up,” Maldonado said, adding that her new role will help with community policing.

The top-ranking cop told CBS News that it wasn’t easy climbing the ranks.

“Getting out there and working, and protecting people that are cursing you out sometimes and not appreciating what you’re doing, but you still got to do what you got to do,” Maldonado said.

“It’s a big responsibility. I want to be a better and positive example, not only for my community, for other females, kids that see us every day. Because that would change their perspective of how they view law enforcement,” she said.

According to the NYPD, of the Department’s 33,787 members, 10.5 per cent are Asian.

“I feel extremely proud. It’s good to show other up and coming Asian, South Asian females that if you work hard enough you too can climb the ladder of success,” Maldonado told CBS News.

Remembering her father, Maldonado said he drove a taxi in the US for many years to support the family.

“He was a hard worker. He passed away in 2006, before I became a cop. He would have been so proud right now,” she said.

Earlier this year, Lt Manmeet Colon, a 37-year-old Indian-origin Sikh woman officer, assumed charge as the assistant police chief in the state of Connecticut, becoming the department’s first-ever second-in-command of Asian descent.

Rahul Gandhi to visit US in first week of June, address NRIs in New York

Rahul Gandhi to visit US in first week of June, address NRIs in New York

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Congress leader Rahul Gandhi will visit the US in the first week of June and address NRIs on June 4 in New York, sources in the Indian Overseas Congress said Tuesday.

Gandhi is also likely to visit Washington DC and Los Angeles during his over-a-week-long stay in the US, they said.

The sources said that during his visit he would address Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) in New York on June 4 but the venue has not been finalized and would be fixed this week.

During his US visit, he may interact with university students as well.

In March this year, Gandhi had visited the UK during which his remarks alleging that the structures of Indian democracy are under attack and there is a “full-scale assault” on the country’s institutions, had created a row back home.

His remarks had triggered a political slugfest, with the BJP accusing him of maligning India on foreign soil and seeking foreign interventions, and the Congress hitting back at the ruling party by citing instances of Prime Minister Narendra Modi raising internal politics abroad.

Flawed: Government rejects US report criticising India on religious freedom

Flawed: Government rejects US report criticising India on religious freedom

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India on Tuesday trashed as “motivated” and “biased” a report by the US State Department on religious freedom that criticised the country for alleged attacks on minorities.

External Affairs Ministry Spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said such reports continue to be based on “misinformation and flawed understanding”.

The annual report listed alleged attacks on religious minorities in India and expressed concerns over such incidents.

“We are aware of the release of the US State Department 2022 Report on International Religious Freedom. Regrettably, such reports continue to be based on misinformation and flawed understanding,” Bagchi said.

“Motivated and biased commentary by some US officials only serves to undermine further the credibility of these reports,” he said.

Bagchi was responding to media queries on the report.

“We value our partnership with the US and will continue to have frank exchanges on issues of concern to us,” he said.

The report that documents the status of religious freedom in countries across the world was released on Monday.

A senior US official said far too many governments, including Russia, India, China and Saudi Arabia, continue to freely target faith community members.

“Far too many governments continue to freely target faith community members within their borders,” Rashad Hussain, Ambassador at Large, Office of International Religious Freedom, told reporters at a news conference in Washington soon after the report was released by Secretary of State Anthony Blinken.

The report provides a fact-based, comprehensive view of the state of religious freedom in nearly 200 countries and territories around the world, Blinken said.