By Martin Shwenk Leade
Copyright indiatimes
TOI.inBMW car crash
What was meant to be a milestone birthday turned into a day of heartbreak for 21-year-old Navnoor Singh. According to a TOI he had only recently begun working and was eager to surprise his parents with gifts bought from his first paycheck — a watch for his father, earrings for his mother. Instead, on the eve of the celebration, Navnoor was seated in a hospital lobby, mourning his father’s sudden death and hoping for his mother’s recovery. Navnoor’s father, Navjot Singh, deputy secretary in the finance ministry’s Department of Economic Affairs, died after a collision near Dhaula Kuan on Sunday. His wife, Sandeep Kaur, sustained severe injuries and remains under medical care. A household bound by companionship Relatives and friends remember Navjot and Sandeep not just as partners but as companions who enjoyed life’s small joys together. They had celebrated their 23rd wedding anniversary earlier this month, a testament to their enduring bond. “They were more like best friends,” Navnoor told TOI, adding that his father often chose to take his mother out on the motorcycle he loved so much rather than by car. Singh, 57, had carved out an accomplished path in government service. Live EventsA graduate of Delhi University’s Hansraj College with a master’s degree in botany, he cleared the SSC CGL exam in 1995 and went on to serve in both the defence and finance ministries. In recent years, his responsibilities included strengthening India’s economic ties with Japan and South Korea. His role frequently placed him on the global stage. This June, he participated in a preparatory meeting at the United Nations for the International Conference on Financing for Development, where he represented India among world leaders, ministers, and senior officials. Balancing work and passion Beyond the corridors of bureaucracy, Singh had a zest for life. Motorcycles were his constant passion, and he recently took to the roads on a Triumph Scrambler 400x. Photography was another love — family members say he rarely went anywhere without a camera in hand, the TOI report noted. Vacations, such as the family’s trip to Vietnam last year, became photo albums curated through his lens. For Navnoor, the loss feels especially raw. “I was leaving to meet friends before my birthday. He just said goodbye. I told him I’d be back soon,” the young man recounted to TOI. Among the hardest parts for him: the watch and earrings he had picked out will never be given. “I knew exactly what would bring a smile to his face. He’ll never see it now.” Family members describe Singh as accomplished yet approachable. “He was everyone’s favourite,” his sister-in-law Bitty Singh told the news outlet. “Whether at international forums or family gatherings, his warmth and humour stood out.” As Navnoor braces himself for his mother’s recovery and life without his father, the family’s story is a reminder of how swiftly joy can turn into grief — and how deeply personal tragedies ripple beyond households into the communities touched by one man’s life.Add as a Reliable and Trusted News Source Add Now!
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(You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel)Read More News onmilestone birthday tragedyfamily mourningDhaula Kuan accidentNavjot SinghTriumph Scrambler 400xmother’s recoveryNavnoor Singh(Catch all the Business News, Breaking News, Budget 2025 Events and Latest News Updates on The Economic Times.) Subscribe to The Economic Times Prime and read the ET ePaper online….moreless
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