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Dhaka terror attack victim Tarishi cremated in Gurgaon
The cremation was held at the Shiv Murti Cremation ground near IFFCO Chowk in Gurgaon`s Sector 29 on the Delhi-Gurgaon expressway.
Gurgaon: The mortal remains of 19-years-old Tarishi Jain, who was among the 20 hostages killed in a gruesome terror attack in Dhaka, was on Monday brought here by her family for the last rites.
The cremation was held at the Shiv Murti Cremation ground near IFFCO Chowk in Gurgaon's Sector 29 on the Delhi-Gurgaon expressway.
Central and state ministers were among those who paid tributes when the body arrived from Dhaka.
Haryana Education Minister Ram Bilas Sharma, Gurgaon Deputy Commissioner T.L. Satyaprakash and other officials earlier on Monday afternoon received Tarishi`s mortal remains at Delhi`s IGI Airport.
Union Minister of State for Power Minister Piyush Goyal, Union Minister of State Rao Inderjit Singh, other Haryana ministers MLAs along with others, paid tribute to her.
Earlier, people paid her rich tribute at Gurgaon`s DLF-1 community centre amid sombre atmosphere with relatives crying inconsolably for Tarishi.
Tarishi, a student of University of California-Berkeley, was in Dhaka on vacation. She had gone with two other friends to a cafe in the upscale Gulshan area where she was brutally killed by Islamist terrorists.
On Saturday, she was among the first victims of Dhaka`s siege to be identified. Her friends Abinta Kabir and Faraaz Hossain were also killed in the attack.
Nine Italians, seven Japanese, one Indian, one Bangladeshi American and two Bangladeshis were killed in the terror attack at the Holey Artisan Bakery in Gulshan on Friday night.
Tarishi`s father, who runs a garment business in Bangladesh for the last 15-20 years, has a flat in Sector 32 of Gurgaon.
The family members decided to cremate her in Gurgaon as it would be difficult to take the body to her native place in Firozabad in Uttar Pradesh by road.
The Bangladesh government handed over the body of Tarishi to her relatives on Monday morning in Dhaka, following which her moral remains were flown to Delhi.