Thursday, February 25, 2016

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.



BBC culture allowed star to commit sex crimes, but top staff unaware - report
6:06:39 PM

A BBC umbrella protects broadcast equipment outside   the BBC's New Broadcasting House in LondonBy Michael Holden LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's globally respected broadcaster, the BBC, was told on Thursday it was guilty of serious failings in its handling of Jimmy Savile, a celebrated TV and radio showman revealed after death to have been one of Britain's most prolific sex offenders. Warnings about Savile's conduct went unheeded for decades, a damning report by a former judge said on Thursday. The report said there had been - and still was - a prevailing, macho culture at the publicly-funded broadcaster in which staff were fearful of making complaints, especially about its top stars known internally as "The Talent".




Apple CEO: Unlocking San Bernardino iPhone would be 'bad for America'
6:04:23 PM

Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook speaks during   a event for students to learn to write computer code at the Apple store in the   Manhattan borough of New YorkBy Dustin Volz WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Apple chief Tim Cook on Wednesday said that complying with a court order to help the FBI break into an iPhone belonging to one of the San Bernardino shooters would be "bad for America," and set a legal precedent that would offend many Americans. "Some things are hard, and some things are right, and some things are both - this is one of those things," Cook told ABC News in his first interview since the court order came down last week.




French teacher to stand trial over charges of making up Islamic State attack
6:02:48 PM
A teacher at a Jewish school in the southern French city of Marseille will stand trial in April after investigators concluded that he falsely reported being stabbed by Islamic State supporters, the prosecutors said on Thursday. Five days after the Nov. 13 attacks in which Islamic State militants killed 130 people in Paris, Marseille teacher Sylvain Saadoun had said he had been stabbed by three people, one of them wearing an Islamic State T-shirt. In December, another teacher in a district near Paris said he had been assaulted by an Islamic State supporter, causing classes to be cancelled and an anti-terrorism investigation.


Italian Senate approves diluted civil union bill
5:56:09 PM
The Italian Senate approved on Thursday a watered-down bill allowing civil unions for same-sex and heterosexual couples, with the government using a confidence motion to ram the contested legislation through the upper house. To overcome opposition from within his own centre-left coalition, Prime Minister Matteo Renzi had to strip out the most controversial part of the text, which would have granted unmarried couples some adoption rights. If he had lost the vote, Renzi would have had to resign.


On eve of FIFA election, key African vote is hard to call
5:52:06 PM

The FIFA logo is seen outside the FIFA headquarters   in ZurichBy Brian Homewood ZURICH (Reuters) - Africa could hold the key to FIFA's presidential election, but sharply conflicting versions emerged on Thursday of who would get the continent's 54 votes in the contest for the new head of world soccer. The Confederation of African Football (CAF) last month backed Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa of Bahrain as its candidate in Friday's election to replace disgraced FIFA president Sepp Blatter in the wake of a major corruption scandal. On the eve of the vote, CAF vice-president Suketu Patel said he expected virtually all the African football associations to follow the recommendation.




Political future of heavyweight Rafsanjani may rest on Iran poll
5:50:59 PM

Former President Rafsanjani casts his ballot in a   parliamentary election in TehranElections on Friday for the body that selects Iran's supreme leader could be the last hurrah for Iran's best known political grandee, former president Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, who has loomed large in the history of the Islamic Republic. If Rafsanjani is unable to muster the votes to secure his seat on the Assembly of Experts, it could signal the beginning of his exit from political life in Iran. Few have wielded such influence in modern Iran as the 81-year-old, but since 2009 he and his family have faced criticism from hardliners over their support for the opposition movement which lost that year's disputed election to former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.




Sports tribunal CAS rejects Champagne's FIFA voting booth request
5:11:23 PM

FIFA presidential candidate Jerome Champagne of   France arrives before his visit to the CONCACAF meeting in ZurichSport's highest tribunal has rejected FIFA presidential candidate Jerome Champagne's urgent request for transparent voting booths and independent scrutineers at Friday's election for the head of the global soccer body. The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) said it rejected on Thursday the request which Champagne filed on Wednesday. Rival FIFA presidential candidate Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein of Jordan's request for Friday's election to be postponed because of an issue with the voting booths had also been rejected by CAS.




Indonesia orders re-arrest of international school teachers charged with sex abuse
5:08:00 PM

Canadian teacher Neil Bantleman waves beside   Indonesian teaching assistant Ferdinand Tjiong to students as they wait inside a   holding cell before their trial at a South Jakarta courtBy Kanupriya Kapoor and Randy Fabi JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia's Supreme Court on Thursday overturned the acquittal of two teachers from Canada and Indonesia on charges of sexually abusing kindergarten children at an international school in Jakarta, extended their jail sentences and ordered their re-arrest. The Canadian embassy in Jakarta called the Supreme Court's decision "unjust" and said the case had not been handled transparently. "The outcome of this case has serious implications for Indonesia's reputation as a safe place for Canadians to work, travel and invest as well as for Canada's long history of cooperation with Indonesia," it said in an online statement.




Senator John McCain wants hearing on possible F-16 sale to Pakistan
3:27:09 PM

U.S. Senator John McCain attends a panel discussion   at the Munich Security Conference in MunichU.S. Senator John McCain on Thursday urged the Senate Foreign Relations Committee to hold a hearing on the possible sale of Lockheed Martin Corp F-16 fighter jets to Pakistan. McCain, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, told reporters he was concerned about the timing of the Obama administration's decision to approve the sale of the fighter jets to Pakistan, and potential consequences for U.S. relations with India. "I would rather have seen it kicked over into the next administration," McCain said.




Rivals make final pitches for leadership of 'broken' FIFA
3:18:56 PM

Acting FIFA president Hayatou and acting secretary   general Kattner arrive to visit the CONCACAFmeeting in ZurichBy Simon Evans and Mike Collett ZURICH (Reuters) - The five men vying for the leadership of world soccer made their final eve-of-vote pitches on Thursday, outlining competing visions for the future of governing body FIFA as it tries to recover from the worst corruption scandal in its history. Delegates from more than 200 countries will elect a new president on Friday to succeed Sepp Blatter of Switzerland, two days after Blatter and European soccer chief Michel Platini lost their appeals against bans for ethics violations. Whoever takes over from Blatter, who ran FIFA for 17 years like a globe-trotting head of state, will inherit a very different job with a focus on crisis management.




FIFA election to go ahead but Blatter told to stay away
3:18:56 PM

Combination file photo of FIFA President Blatter and   UEFA President Michel Platini in ZurichBy Brian Homewood and Simon Evans ZURICH (Reuters) - World soccer's governing body FIFA will proceed with an election to pick a new president on Friday to replace the disgraced Sepp Blatter and vote on a set of reforms aimed at restoring its credibility after the worst graft scandal in its history. One candidate had sought to have the vote on a new president delayed but sport's highest tribunal threw out his request, clearing the way for FIFA to hold its planned Extraordinary Congress in Zurich. FIFA urged members to approve its reforms at the congress, including term limits for top officials and disclosure of their earnings, to rebuild trust after several dozen officials were indicted in the United States and a criminal investigation was begun in Switzerland.




FIFA's Rogues' Gallery - banned, fined or suspended
3:18:56 PM
Following is a list of high-ranking officials to have been implicated or punished in the bribery and corruption crisis that has engulfed FIFA. President of FIFA for more than 17 years, banned for eight years by the Ethics Committee he created to help clean up FIFA's image when it found him guilty of a conflict of interest by paying European soccer boss Michel Platini 1.3 million pounds ($1.86 million) for work done a decade earlier. At one stage seemed destined to succeed Blatter as FIFA president, but the payment he received from FIFA also landed him with an eight-year ban, reduced to six on appeal.


Malaysia blocks access to news portal for violating media law
2:24:22 PM
Malaysia blocked access to a widely read news portal on Thursday, the latest in a series of clampdowns on media organisations that have published reports critical of the government and Prime Minister Najib Razak. The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) said in a statement that the Malaysian Insider had breached laws under the Communications and Multimedia Act 1998. The Malaysian Insider has published several reports on the scandal around 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) and investigations into $681 million deposited into Prime Minister Najib's personal accounts.


U.N. to announce new round of Syria talks - envoy
1:45:42 PM

U.N. mediator for Syria Staffan de Mistura talks to   the media upon his departure from Damascus, SyriaBy Tom Miles GENEVA (Reuters) - The United Nations will name a date on Friday for Syria's warring parties to return to the negotiating table for a second round of talks, U.N. Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura said on Thursday. De Mistura abruptly aborted a first round of talks on Feb. 3 and urged countries in the International Syria Support Group (ISSG), led by the United States and Russia, to do more preparatory work.




FIFA reforms would leave new president powerless - Bility
1:44:00 PM

FIFA presidential candidate Tokyo Sexwale talks to   journalists before his visit to the CONCACAF meeting in ZurichBy Brian Homewood ZURICH (Reuters) - The African leader prevented from going for FIFA's top job, after failing an integrity check, says delegates must reject proposed reforms at soccer's scandal-hit global body as they would leave the president powerless. Liberian FA chief Musa Bility, one of the most outspoken leaders in African football, also predicted half of the continent's votes in Friday's FIFA presidential election would go to Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein of Jordan rather than Sheikh Salman Bin Ibrahim Al-Khalifa of Bahrain. FIFA's 209 member national associations (FAs) each hold one vote in the poll that will choose a replacement for Sepp Blatter who has been banned for six years due to ethics violations.




Pakistan's largest opposition party wants army chief to stay when term ends
1:27:43 PM

Pakistan's newly appointed army chief General   Sharif attends the change of command ceremony in RawalpindiBy Mubasher Bukhari and Syed Raza Hassan LAHORE/KARACHI (Reuters) - Pakistan's largest opposition party has asked Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif's government to extend the term of the powerful army chief when he retires in November, party officials said on Thursday. Last month, army chief Gen. Raheel Sharif, widely popular for launching operations against militants in several parts of the country, broke a precedent of generals seeking to extend their terms and said he would step down when his three-year one ends. "Move on Pakistan," a new political party formed by influential businessmen in the country's rich Punjab province, has campaigned for his service to be extended.




Pakistan province passes landmark law protecting women against violence
1:10:35 PM

Women sell bangles at a stall outside the Sufi shrine   of Baba Gharib Shah, in Rahim Yar KhanBy Asad Hashim ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Lawmakers in Pakistan's largest province on Wednesday gave unprecedented protection to female victims of violence, in a bid to stem a rising tide of gender-related abuse in a country ranked as the world's third most dangerous place for women. The new law criminalises all forms of violence against women, whether domestic, psychological or sexual, and calls for the creation of a toll-free abuse reporting hot line and the establishment of shelters. Muslim-majority Pakistan, home to roughly 190 million people, sees thousands of cases of violence against women every year, from rape and acid attacks to sexual assault, kidnappings and so-called "honour killings".




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