New Delhi: The death of Ram Singh, the alleged prime accused of the December 16, 2012 Delhi gang-rape, would not affect the case, said police on Tuesday.
"The case is on the right track. Ram Singh's death would not affect the case as we have enough evidence and witnesses," said Anil Kumar, the investigation officer of the gang-rape case.
Ram Singh reportedly committed suicide in Tihar Jail on Monday morning. He was one of the six accused in the rape of a 23-year-old woman in a moving bus in 2012. A magisterial inquiry has been ordered into Ram Singh's death. His family says he was murdered.

The five accused were formally charged in the Saket fast-track court after they gang-raped and tortured the woman, that led to her death.
"Ram Singh was one of the prime accused in the case. His death has no relation with the further proceeding in the case," said the investigation officer.
Ram Singh drove the bus in which the gang-rape took place. He was arrested December 17, 2012, a day after the brutal gang-rape that ignited protests all across India.
A day-to-day hearing into the case is going on at a fast-track court.
The other accused who are facing trial are Ram Singh's brother Mukesh, 26, fruit seller Pawan Gupta, 19, gym instructor Vinay Sharma, 20, and bus cleaner Akshay Thakur, 29. All of them are now in Tihar Jail.
The five accused were formally charged in the Saket fast-track court 18 days after they gang-raped and tortured the trainee physiotherapist, causing multiple-organ failure that led to her death in a Singapore hospital December 29, 2013.
The sixth accused in the case is a juvenile and his case is before the Juvenile Justice Board.
(For updates you can share with your friends, follow IBNLive on Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and Pinterest)


Uttarakhand: Rescue operations resume; Army airdrops food, medicines
Watch: ITI campus submerged in water at Shrinagar
Video: Death toll likely to rise as rescue operations hampered
Watch: Bad weather conditions hit rescue operations in Uttarakhand









Ram Singh Namdhari known as Satguru, (February 3, 1816 – 29 November 1885) was a Sikh philosopher and reformer and the first Indian to use non-cooperation and boycotting of British merchandise and services as a political weapon. He was the r ...
Tihar Prisons, also called Tihar Jail and Tihar Ashram (Hindi: तिहाड़ आश्रम), is the largest complex of prisons in South Asia. It is located at Tihar village, approximately 7 km ...

Live: Don't panic, rescue teams are working, says Uttarakhand CM
Live Blog: IND v SL: Sri Lanka eye 200 thanks to Mahela-Mathews stand
Sri Sri Ravi Shankar backs Modi, says time to shed the baggage of 2002
Now pay before you book your appointment for passport




