Sunday, August 17, 2014

Criminal News Headlines | National News - Yahoo India News

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Criminal News Headlines | National News - Yahoo India News

Latest crime news headlines from Yahoo India News. Find top stories, videos, pictures & in-depth coverage on crime news from national news section.



Some clashes in Ferguson, Missouri, despite night curfew
5:14:20 PM

A protester reaches down to throw back a smoke   canister as police clear a street after the passing of a midnight curfew in   FergusonBy Ellen Wulfhorst FERGUSON Mo. (Reuters) - Protesters and police clashed early on Sunday despite a night curfew imposed on Ferguson, Missouri to try to quell days of violence that erupted after an unarmed black teenager was shot dead by a white police officer a week ago. Civil rights activist Al Sharpton called for an end to violence and looting. "One person was shot last night, and we don't know if was related to the protest or not, or who shot them, but we do not need more people hurt to stop the hurt," Sharpton said on his syndicated radio show "Hour of Power." The latest confrontation occurred when demonstrators remained in the streets of the St. Louis suburb after a curfew imposed by Missouri Governor Jay Nixon took effect at midnight (0500 GMT). Nixon imposed the curfew on Saturday after a week of racially charged protests and looting over the shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown by Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson.




UK police say migrants found in shipping container are Afghan Sikhs
5:11:37 PM
Police said on Sunday that 35 people discovered in a shipping container at a British port were Afghan Sikhs and that survivors would be questioned about how they came to be there. "We now understand that they are from Afghanistan and are of the Sikh faith." Sikhs make up a tiny minority in Afghanistan's population of around 31 million people.


Sultan of Brunei bids for Sahara' New York and London luxury hotels - WSJ.com
4:52:50 PM

A journalist walks across the dance floor in the   "Grand Ballroom" of "The Plaza" hotel as it re-opens in New   YorkThe Sultan of Brunei has made a bid for New York's Plaza Hotel, Dream Hotel and London's Grosvenor House hotel, the Wall Street Journal's website edition reported on Saturday, citing people familiar with the situation. An investment firm affiliated with Brunei has offered to pay $2 billion for the three hotels, which are currently owned by the Sahara conglomerate, WSJ.com said. Sahara's chairman Subrata Roy has been negotiating a sale of the company's luxury hotels from a makeshift office in prison, having been held for more than five months after failing to appear at a contempt hearing in a long-running dispute over his group's failure to repay billions of dollars to investors who were sold outlawed bonds. The Sultan, along with his luxury hotel operator, the Dorchester Collection, has been criticised for harsh new laws in Brunei.




Saudi Arabia, Kuwait to abide by UN blacklisting of citizens
2:47:31 PM
Saudi Arabia and Kuwait agreed to comply with a United Nations resolution aimed at stopping financing for Islamist militant groups in Syria and Iraq after four of their nationals were named among a group blacklisted by the international body. The UN Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution on Friday intended to weaken the Islamic State - an al Qaeda splinter group that has seized swaths of territory in Iraq and Syria and declared a caliphate - and al Qaeda's Syrian wing, Nusra Front.


Lashes for Saudi woman who called morality police liars - newspaper
2:47:09 PM
A Saudi Arabian judge has upheld a sentence of a month in prison and 50 lashes for a businesswoman convicted of insulting members of the morality police during an argument, the local al-Medina newspaper reported on Sunday. Incidents of heavy-handed behaviour by the morality police have come under growing criticism on social media from inside the kingdom in recent years, straining relations between Saudi citizens and the official body. The appeals court in Mecca upheld the sentence, passed by a district court in Jeddah, after the woman was found guilty of "cursing the morality police" and calling them "liars", the Arabic-language daily reported. The morality police, formally called the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, was set up in 1926 to monitor public behaviour in Saudi Arabia, which follows the strict Wahhabi school of Sunni Islam.


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