Monday, February 1, 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.



U.N. rights boss urges Turkey to probe shooting by security forces
1:20:18 PM

U.N. Human Rights High Commissioner Zeid Ra'ad   Al Hussein addresses a media briefing in Geneva, SwitzerlandBy Stephanie Nebehay GENEVA (Reuters) - The United Nations' top human rights official urged Turkey on Monday to investigate the shooting of unarmed people 10 days ago in its largely Kurdish southeast and said any members of the security forces committing rights abuses should be prosecuted. Southeastern Turkey has seen its worst violence in two decades since a 2-1/2-year ceasefire with militants of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) collapsed last July, reviving a conflict in which 40,000 people have been killed since 1984. U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein was referring to an incident on Jan. 20, in which 10 people were wounded in the town of Cizre when their group, including two opposition politicians, came under fire while rescuing people hurt in earlier clashes.




British woman who took toddler to join IS in Syria jailed for six years
12:37:33 PM
A British mother who took her 14-month-old son to Syria to join Islamic State fighters and allowed him to be photographed wearing a balaclava next to an assault rifle, was jailed for six years on Monday. Tareena Shakil, 26, left Britain in October 2014 and journeyed to the militant group's stronghold of Raqqa with the toddler, despite describing the Syrian city as the most dangerous place on earth, Birmingham Crown Court was told. Sentencing her to six years in prison, Judge Melbourne Inman said she had told lie after lie about her actions.


Greek theatre lowers curtain on political violence play as censorship row builds
12:24:09 PM
By Renee Maltezou ATHENS (Reuters) - The cancellation of a Greek National Theatre play critics had attacked as glorifying convicted killers has ignited a debate on political violence and art censorship in the country that began staging theatre around 2,600 years ago. It made headlines when it was called off in late January after two weeks of performance on the National Theatre's experimental stage. "Today's performance is a victory which belongs to all of us," one of the actors said through a loudspeaker, before free tickets for the play were handed out to dozens of people waiting outside the theatre.


Insight: Battle to honour slain Putin critic Nemtsov unfolds beneath Kremlin towers
12:21:48 PM

A man lights a candle at the site where Russian   politician Nemtsov was killed in MoscowBy Andrew Osborn MOSCOW (Reuters) - As the Kremlin clock inched towards midnight and the ice-bound river beneath their feet melted, a group of Russians silently stood on the bridge where Boris Nemtsov, the Putin critic and opposition leader, was killed nearly a year ago. "This is about remembering," Boris Kazadayev, 73, part of the small crowd, told Reuters. "Nemtsov Bridge" - activists' nickname for the spot where the Putin opponent was shot dead on Feb. 27 last year - has become the scene of a cat-and-mouse struggle between the authorities and the liberal opposition who want to honour a man some Russians say the Kremlin would rather forget.




Singapore says seized bank accounts as part of 1MDB probe
12:18:04 PM

Traffic passes a 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB)   billboard at the Tun Razak Exchange development in Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaSingapore said on Monday it has seized a large number of bank accounts in connection with possible money-laundering offences related to investigations into alleged financial mismanagement at Malaysian state investor 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB). Singapore is cooperating with authorities in Malaysia, Switzerland and the United States on the investigations into 1MDB, the Monetary Authority of Singapore and the Commercial Affairs Department, the city-state's white collar police, said in a statement.




Suicide bomber strikes outside police office in Afghan capital
11:48:50 AM

A boy looks on at the site of a suicide attack in   Kabul, AfghanistanBy Mirwais Harooni KABUL (Reuters) - A suicide bomber blew himself up in the Afghan capital, Kabul, on Monday, killing 10 people and wounding 20 after joining a queue to enter an office of the civil order police, a senior official said. Kabul was hit last month by a series of suicide attacks as the Taliban have stepped up their campaign against the Western-backed government. Deputy Interior Minister Ayub Salangi announced Monday's casualty figures in a post on social media website Twitter, and said most were civilians.




China unveils first oil spill response plan
11:31:23 AM

Leaked oil is seen on the sea after an explosion at a   Sinopec Corp oil pipeline in HuangdaoChina's cabinet has approved the country's first oil spill emergency response scheme to be ready by 2020, to tackle increasing risks from offshore leakages, the government said on Monday. The new regulation - which sets oil clean-up capacity at 1,000 tonnes (7,300 barrels) within 50 nautical miles from shore - came amid a tightening of the country's environmental rules after several oil spills in recent years. China will be capable of cleaning up 10,000 tonnes of oil discharged in those waters that are prone to high risks and less than 50 nautical miles from the coast, according to a statement on the Chinese government's main web portal.




Syrian opposition to meet U.N. envoy after "positive response"
11:28:23 AM

U.N. mediator for Syria Staffan de Mistura delivers a   statement after the opening of the Syrian peace talks at the UN European   headquarters in Geneva, SwitzerlandSyria's main opposition group said it would meet with the U.N.'s special envoy Staffan de Mistura later on Monday after he gave them a "positive response" and they received assurances from international backers on humanitarian issues. "We have come to Geneva to seek relief for our people by insisting U.N. Security Council resolution 2254 is implemented, which means humanitarian relief, the lifting of sieges, and the end of attacks on civilians," said Spokesman Salim al-Muslat. "We are intensifying our efforts to ensure that action is taken to end the suffering in Syria." The opposition was considering a proposal from De Mistura that could pave the way to the delegation pressing ahead with talks after holding their first meeting with him on Sunday, a Western diplomatic source said.




Chinese man jailed for 23 years freed after verdict overturned
10:12:17 AM
A Chinese man walked free on Monday having spent the last 23 years in jail after a court overturned a murder and arson conviction, state media said, the latest wrongful verdict to be overturned in the country. The government has tried to improve the way courts handle cases of miscarriages of justice under efforts by President Xi Jinping to bolster the rule of law and increase public confidence in the legal system. Wrongful executions have stirred particular outrage, though the death penalty itself remains widely popular.


War crimes should not be part of any Syria amnesty - UN rights boss
10:10:09 AM

U.N. Human Rights High Commissioner Zeid Ra'ad   Al Hussein addresses a media briefing in Geneva, SwitzerlandStarvation of Syrian civilians is a potential war crime and crime against humanity that should be prosecuted and not covered by any amnesty linked to ending the conflict, the top United Nations human rights official said on Monday. Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein, speaking to a news briefing in Geneva as Syria peace talks were being held said: "In the case of Syria, we are there to remind everyone that where there are allegations that reach the threshold of war crimes or crimes against humanity that amnesties are not permissible." Pointing to the what he said was the starvation of people in the town of Madaya, and the siege of 15 other towns and cities in Syria, he said this was "not just a war crime but a crime against humanity if proven in court." "We estimate that tens of thousands are held in arbitrary detention and clearly they need to be released," Zeid added.




China sentences two men to death in killing of Tibetan religious leader
10:02:41 AM
China has sentenced two men to death for the 2013 killing of a prominent Tibetan religious leader, state media said, in what had been one of Tibet's most closely watched murder cases. Choje Akong Tulku Rinpoche, who lived in exile in Scotland and became a British citizen, was among the first spiritual leaders to teach Tibetan Buddhism to followers in the West. One of those sentenced was Thubten Kunsal, who had been an artist at Akong Rinpoche's monastery in Britain between 2002 and 2011, the Chengdu intermediate court said in a statement carried by the official Xinhua news agency on Sunday.


Thai PM Prayuth assures general election in 2017
8:35:24 AM

Thailand's Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha   address the nation in BangkokThailand's Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha said on Monday that a general election will take place in 2017, amid criticism that a draft constitution unveiled last week would delay the poll. A draft constitution released on Friday has been pilloried by all major political parties, raising fears it will be rejected in a July referendum, delaying a return to democracy. Last week, Prayuth said Thailand will hold an election in 2017 even if the draft constitution does not pass the referendum.




Suu Kyi allies form Myanmar ruling party after decades of struggle
7:46:29 AM

Myanmar's National League for Democracy leader   Aung San Suu Kyi arrives to the opening of the new parliament in NaypyitawBy Timothy Mclaughlin and Hnin Yadana Zaw NAYPYITAW (Reuters) - Hundreds of lawmakers from Aung San Suu Kyi's National League of Democracy were sworn into Myanmar's parliament on Monday, with enough seats to choose the country's first democratically elected government since the military took power in 1962. The NLD won some 80 percent of elected seats in November's historic vote, catapulting it to power as Myanmar's ruling party after decades of struggle that saw many of its members imprisoned. The first sitting of the NLD-dominated parliament is another step in Myanmar's drawn-out transition, which started with the election and will go on until the NLD government officially begins its term in April after parliament has picked a president.




Law enforcement bikers fought outlaw gang in deadly Denver melee
7:31:58 AM

Men hug after a shooting at a motorcycle expo in   Denver, ColoradoBy Keith Coffman DENVER (Reuters) - A gun and knife fight at a Denver motorcycle show that left one person dead and seven wounded was between an outlaw biker gang and a club with many law enforcement members, lawyers for both groups said on Sunday. Lawyers for the Iron Order Motorcycle Club, whose members include large numbers of law enforcement and the military, and the Mongols Motorcycle Club, which federal authorities deem an "outlaw motorcycle gang", each blamed the other side for starting Saturday's brawl. John C. Whitfield, an attorney for the Iron Order, said a handful of members of that group acted in self-defense after they were surrounded by at least 30 Mongols.




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