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| Delhi policeman killed in road accident | | | New Delhi, April 22 (IANS) A 44-year-old Delhi Police constable was killed when his motorcycle was hit by a speeding car here, police said Tuesday. Prahlad Sahay Meena was hit by a car around 1 a.m. Tuesday near Nawada Chowk in west Delhi. "At the time of the accident, Meena was heading towards his home in Dwarka Sector 16 in west Delhi. He was rushed to a hospital where doctors declared him dead," said a police officer. |
| Saradha scandal returns to limelight in Bengal poll season | | | Kolkata, April 22 (IANS) The Saradha chit fund scam - West Bengal's biggest financial scandal - is yet again grabbing the spotlight in the midst of the Lok Sabha polls, as the ruling Trinamool Congress faces the heat over the issue from its political opponents. While the Congress and the CPI-M led Left front have been clamouring for a CBI probe into the multicrore rupee scam for months, the Enforcement Directorate's recent arrests of the wife and son of scam kingpin Sudipto Sen, has provided the much needed trigger to the opposition who have come out against the Mamata Banerjee government with all guns blazing. With the Lok Sabha poll jamboree peaking in the state, prominent leaders like Congress president Sonia Gandhi and vice president Rahul Gandhi, as also BJP's prime ministerial nominee Narendra Modi, have all raked up the issue to corner the state's ruling party, one of whose MPs is behind bars for his alleged complicity in the scandal. If Rahul Gandhi during his campaign in the state accused the Banerjee government of "shielding the scamsters", Sonia Gandhi went a step ahead to say the government was hand-in-glove with the looters. |
| Fresh Thai election no closer despite multi-party meeting | | By Amy Sawitta Lefevre BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thailand's political impasse looked no closer to a solution on Tuesday despite a rare meeting of political parties and the Election Commission to discuss how and when a new vote should be held after a general election in February was declared void. About 58 parties including the ruling Puea Thai Party met in Bangkok to discuss a rerun, after months of anti-government protests that have crippled Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra's caretaker government and the economy. However, the main opposition Democrat Party did not attend, citing unspecified security concerns, and the parties did not settle on a date for a new election. The failure of the talks highlights the political division between the mostly poor, rural supporters of Yingluck and her brother, ousted former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, and the largely middle- and upper-class backers of the royalist establishment.
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| In Bellary, nexus between politics and crime plays out | | Stooping to feed grain to a black cow as a religious offering at his unfinished mansion, politician and rags-to-riches millionaire B. Sreeramulu may need help from the gods if he is to win a hard-fought race for the parliamentary seat of Bellary. He faces criminal charges, including attempted murder in a case dating back to 2007, and has close links with a jailed mining tycoon from the southern Indian town where the scandal has put thousands of miners out of work. The anti-graft Aam Aadmi Party came to power in local elections in New Delhi last year in a stunning debut, and the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), likely to lead the next government, has made tackling corruption a priority. Yet it is the BJP who chose Sreeramulu as its candidate in a sign that, for all the rhetoric about cleaning up politics, parties are willing to back figures facing criminal charges.
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| Andhra HC strikes down all sentences in Dalit massacre case | | | Hyderabad, April 22 (IANS) In a dramatic judgment, the Andhra Pradesh High Court Tuesday set aside an order of a special court that sentenced 21 people to life imprisonment and 35 others to one year's jail for the 1991 massacre of Dalits in Guntur district. The high court struck down the sentence for lack of evidence in the sensational case, which had attracted national attention. The high court pronounced its judgment on a petition by the convicts who challenged the special court's order in what is known as Tsundur massacre case. The court directed Guntur district superintendent of police to make adequate security measures and ensure that no procession or celebration is organised after the convicts are released. |
| First sign of S.Korea ferry disaster was call from a frightened boy | | He called the emergency 119 number which put him through to the fire service, which in turn forwarded him to the coastguard two minutes later. That was followed by about 20 other calls from children on board the ship to the emergency number, a fire service officer told Reuters.
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| Islamists kill second Somali lawmaker, threaten more attacks | | | By Abdi Sheikh and Feisal Omar MOGADISHU (Reuters) - Islamist rebels shot dead a Somali lawmaker on Tuesday, a day after blowing up one of his colleagues, and vowed to keep killing politicians and wreck efforts to secure the country. Al Qaeda-linked group al Shabaab told Reuters they wanted to send a message to Western-backed President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, who on Tuesday was due to wrap up a three-day conference on improving security in the capital. "This proves that they cannot and will never do anything about security ... More serious killings are on the way," said al Shabaab's military spokesman, Sheikh Abdiasis Abu Musab. Somalia's two decades of civil war and lawlessness, triggered by the overthrow of President Siad Barre in 1991, has already spread to destablise the region. |
| Government intended to punish Sikhs, reveals Cobrapost | | | New Delhi, April 22 (IANS) The police force in Delhi succumbed to the anti-Sikh sentiments in 1984, thus abetting rioting and arson, a sting operation by news portal Cobrapost revealed Tuesday. "The government's intention appeared to be that the Sikhs should get some punishment," said Shoorveer Singh Tyagi, then police station house officer (SHO) at Kalyanpuri, whom Cobrapost interviewed. "Messages were broadcast directing police to not take action against rioters who were shouting slogans of 'Indira Gandhi zindabad"," Rohtas Singh, SHO at Delhi Cantonment, told Cobrapost in an interview. Throwing light on the complicity of the state in the 1984 anti-Sikh riots, the report added that police logbooks were conveniently changed to eliminate evidence of inaction by senior police officials. |
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