Cigarette lighter helps French police identify murdered Indian man

AFP  |  Lille 

said Monday they had identified the body of an Indian national found in a sack by the side of a road in northern France, thanks to a lighter found in the dead man's pocket.

Police said the clue had proved distinctive enough to help lead to the detention in of another Indian national suspected of murder.

Last October a was clearing out a pit at Bourbourg when he found a sack containing a decomposed body, without any documents or cellphone to help determine the sex, nationality or circumstances of the death.

The DNA and fingerprints also failed to reveal the identity, according to a statement from investigators in who led the inquiry.

But it was a lighter stamped "Kroeg Cafe" that was found in the pocket of the victim's trousers that finally led to a breakthrough, when Belgian federal police saw a picture of the evidence.

Police had been searching for 42-year-old Darshan Singh, an Indian national resident in Belgium, since last June.

The cafe on the lighter, though a common name in and the meaning "the pub," was located near the victim's home in Ravels close to the Dutch border.

Investigators confirmed the victim's DNA from a toothbrush.

The discovery of the missing man's remains relaunched an inquiry by Belgian authorities, who in late March questioned another man of Indian nationality suspected of having killed Singh.

A source close to the case declined to give further details on the motive for the suspected murder. French authorities will hand over the file to

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, June 04 2019. 10:10 IST