Tuesday, November 3, 2015

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.



Austria drafts law to deter most Afghan migrants
10:08:52 AM

A group of migrants waits to cross the border from   the village of Sentilj into Spielfeld in AustriaAustria's cabinet proposed a bill on Tuesday to deter Afghan migrants from coming to the country located along a major migration route across Europe and facing record numbers of asylum requests this year. The move follows the German interior minister's call for Afghans, who make up a large proportion of the hundreds of thousands of migrants seeking refuge in Europe, to stay in their home country. Austria's new law would force most Afghans to wait for three years, rather than one year under current rules, to bring their families to Austria as well as to prove they have an independent source of income, health insurance and a flat.




Police raid German soccer HQ over 2006 World Cup payment
10:06:56 AM
By Andreas Kröner FRANKFURT (Reuters) - German police raided the Frankfurt headquarters of Germany's football association (DFB) on Tuesday and searched the private homes of officials on suspicion of tax evasion linked to the awarding of the 2006 World Cup, prosecutors said. The raid is focused on a 6.7 million euro ($7.4 million) payment the DFB made in 2005 to world soccer's governing body FIFA, which prosecutors said they suspected the association of failing to register in tax returns. According to a report in magazine Der Spiegel, the money was used to buy votes in favour of Germany's successful bid for the 2006 tournament.


Indonesia to deport Chhota Rajan to India
9:34:46 AM

Indonesian plainclothes policemen escort Indian   gangster Rajendra Nikalje, widely known as Chhota Rajan, as they walk at Denpasar   police officeIndonesia will deport one of India's most wanted men on Tuesday to face charges in more than two dozen murder cases at home. Rajendra Nikalje, widely known as Chhota Rajan, was arrested by police on Indonesia's resort island of Bali last week, ending a two-decade-long international manhunt. Rajan has been on Interpol's wanted list since 1995 suspected of running a crime syndicate that engaged in extortion, arms struggling and contract killing.




UK govt denies dropping plans for vote on Syria air strikes
9:14:34 AM

Britain's Prime Minister Cameron waits to meet   Luxembourg's Prime Minister Bettel outside of 10 Downing Street in LondonBy Kylie MacLellan LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister David Cameron has not dropped plans to seek parliamentary support to bomb Islamist militants in Syria, a source in his office said after reports that he had done so. Cameron has said he wants to do more to tackle IS. Keen to avoid a repeat of his 2013 defeat over air strikes against Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, he has been trying to build cross-party support for extending strikes to Syria from Iraq.




China's ruling Communist Party says to accelerate military reform
9:01:23 AM

A paramilitary policeman stands guard on   Beijing's Tiananmen SquareChina's ruling Communist Party will seek to build the capability to win an "informationized war" by 2020 as part of accelerated reform of the armed forces, state media reported on Tuesday. China will make significant progress toward realising "mechanization and informatization" by 2020, and build a system capable of "winning an informationized war and effectively fulfilling the mandated mission of building modern military strength with Chinese characteristics", the Xinhua news agency reported. The reform pledge was contained in a communique issued nearly a week after the Party's Central Committee held a high-level policy meeting to set a 13th Five-Year Plan.




South Africa prosecutors start arguments in appeal court to convict Pistorius of murder
8:07:20 AM

South African Olympic and Paralympic sprinter   Pistorius is escorted to a police van after his sentencing at the North Gauteng   High Court in PretoriaBLOEMFONTEIN (Reuters) - South African state prosecutors began their appeal to have paralympian Oscar Pistorius' conviction scaled up to murder from culpable homicide for killing his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp on Valentine's Day 2013. Pistorius was released from prison into house arrest last month after serving a fifth of his five-year prison term. During the trial, the state failed to convince judge Thokozile Masipa of Pistorius' intent to kill when he fired, leading to his conviction for negligent killing or culpable homicide. (Reporting by Stella Mapenzauswa; Editing by James Macharia)




Turkey detains 35 people in raids on supporters of Erdogan foe - media
6:50:00 AM

Islamic preacher Fethullah Gulen is pictured at his   residence in Saylorsburg, PennsylvaniaTurkish police detained 35 people including senior bureaucrats and police officers in the western province of Izmir on Tuesday in an operation targeting supporters of President Tayyip Erdogan's foe, Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, media reported. The raids came two days after the AK Party, which Erdogan founded, secured a return to single-party rule, in an election result he cast as a vote for stability but which opponents fear heralds growing authoritarianism. The Dogan news agency said Tuesday's dawn raids were carried out at various addresses across Izmir in an operation against the "parallel structure", a term used to refer to U.S.-based cleric Gulen's supporters in the state apparatus.




S.Korea to publish history textbooks in bid "to correct bias"
5:08:32 AM
South Korea's government on Tuesday said it would publish history textbooks for use in schools from 2017, taking a step necessary to strip current teaching of its "ideological bias". The move to stop use of textbooks written by private-sector scholars and issued by private publishers capped weeks of debate about whether it was democratic for the government to dictate how the country's turbulent modern history is taught. Park, who took power in a military coup in 1961 and ruled until his assassination in 1979, is credited with building modern and industrial South Korea, but at the expense of democracy.


A lone Muslim campaigns in Myanmar's stronghold of radical Buddhism
4:52:16 AM

Muslim candidate Khin Maung Thein pauses during an   interview with Reuters in MandalayBy Hnin Yadana Zaw and Andrew R.C. Marshall MANDALAY, Myanmar (Reuters) - The city of Mandalay in northern Myanmar is a Buddhist religious centre so crowded with temples, monasteries and monks that they can sometimes seem innumerable. Much easier to count is the number of Mandalay Muslims standing in Myanmar's historic general election on Nov. 8. Khin Maung Thein hails from an obscure little party and runs his campaign from a cluttered, two-story home that doubles as the family printing business.




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