| Latest crime news headlines from Yahoo India News. Find top stories, videos, pictures & in-depth coverage on crime news from national news section.
| Former Russian press minister died in U.S. of blunt force injuries | | Friday, March 11, 2016 1:06 AM | |
| | By Ian Simpson WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former Russian Press Minister Mikhail Lesin, who was found dead in a Washington hotel room last year, died of blunt force injuries to the head, U.S. authorities said on Thursday. Lesin who once headed the state-controlled Gazprom-Media, also had blunt force injuries to the neck, torso, arms and legs, the U.S. capital's Office of the Chief Medical Examiner and the Metropolitan Police Department said in a brief statement. According to a police incident report, Lesin, who was President Vladimir Putin's press minister from 1999 to 2004, was found unconscious on Nov. 5 on the floor of his room in the Doyle Washington Hotel. |
| Trump gets boost with plans by Carson to endorse him | | Friday, March 11, 2016 1:04 AM | |
| | By James Oliphant MIAMI (Reuters) - U.S. Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump got a fresh injection of campaign momentum on Thursday with news that former rival Ben Carson, who is popular with conservatives, planned to endorse him. A source familiar with Carson's decision told Reuters that Carson, a retired neurosurgeon who dropped out of the race March 4 after failing to gain traction in early voting states, would endorse Trump. The endorsement could help Trump settle the nerves of those conservative voters who have doubts about whether he truly is one of them. |
| Militias, hunters reprieved from post-Paris EU gun control | | Friday, March 11, 2016 12:22 AM | |
| | By Alastair Macdonald BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Finnish volunteer militias on the Russian frontier, boar and elk hunters and the Swiss army's pensioner reserve won reprieve on Thursday from tighter European gun control following last year's Islamist attacks on Paris. At a meeting of EU interior ministers in Brussels, officials accepted an array of objections and agreed to review draft plans that could have barred minors from owning firearms, restricted online weapons sales and, notably, banned private use of most semi-automatic rifles, like the Kalashnikovs used by Islamic State militants in the French capital in November. EU and French officials, who have pushed to block loopholes, stressed that after the return to the drafting table the new regulations were still on schedule to be agreed by governments in June before sending to EU lawmakers. |
| U.S. judge allows release of Venezuelan ex-football official on bond | | Friday, March 11, 2016 12:16 AM | |
| A former South American football boss who was arrested last year as part of a U.S. investigation into corruption in football's world governing body FIFA won the right to be released from jail on Thursday on a $7 million bond. Rafael Esquivel, a former president of the Venezuelan Football Federation and vice president of the South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL) is accused by the U.S. Department of Justice of receiving bribes worth millions of dollars in connection with the sale of marketing rights to regional football tournaments. Esquivel, wearing prison issue khaki coveralls at a court hearing in front of Brooklyn federal judge Raymond Dearie, was to be released to his son and daughter after securing the bond with $2 million in cash and 12 properties.
|
| Modi's BJP vows to strip Muslim immigrants of vote in Assam | | By Krishna N. Das JALESWAR, India (Reuters) - Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has vowed to disenfranchise millions of Muslim immigrants in Assam, waging a polarising election campaign in a bid to form its first government there. In campaign rallies in Assam, officials of the BJP have also promised to identify and deport younger illegal migrants, in response to rising discontent among the state's Hindus. When Assam elects a state legislature in April, an estimated 10 percent of its 20 million voters will be Muslims who have migrated since the 1950s from the former East Pakistan, later Bangladesh, and gained Indian citizenship.
|
| Bid to block Pakistan F-16 sale fails in U.S. Senate | | The U.S. Senate on Thursday blocked an effort to prevent the $700 million sale of Lockheed Martin Corp F-16 fighter jets to Pakistan, although a key lawmaker said he would not allow the use of U.S. funds to finance it. Lawmakers voted 71 to 24 against an attempt introduced by Republican Senator Rand Paul to prevent the sale under legislation known as the Arms Control Act. President Barack Obama's administration announced on Feb. 12 that it had approved the sale to Pakistan of the aircraft, as well as radars and other equipment.
|
| Trump calls for tariff hike, Cruz gets first Senate endorsement | | By Andy Sullivan and Megan Cassella WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump called for raising tariffs on foreign-made goods on Thursday, in a further break from his party's long-standing free-trade philosophy ahead of nominating contests in big industrial states hit hard by globalization. The billionaire businessman has harnessed working-class anxieties about immigrants and trade to supercharge his bid to become the Republican Party's candidate in the November election. Trump, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and John Kasich will share the stage at a CNN-hosted debate at the University of Miami, which begins at 8:30 p.m. (0130 GMT on Friday).
|
| Brazil prosecutors seek Lula's arrest for money laundering | | By Brad Haynes and Eduardo Simões SAO PAULO (Reuters) - State prosecutors in Brazil are seeking the arrest of former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva on charges of money laundering and identity fraud for concealing ownership of a beachfront apartment, local media reported on Thursday. Sao Paulo state prosecutors declined to comment on possible arrests in a news conference regarding the charges earlier in the day, and court officials declined to comment on the news. Newspapers O Globo and O Estado de S. Paulo reported the filing for Lula's arrest citing court papers.
|
| Aboriginal Canadian town in crisis amid rash of suicides | | | A Canadian aboriginal community appealed for federal aid on Thursday after six suicides in two months and 140 suicide attempts in the last two weeks alone, the latest in a string of crises in Canada's often isolated indigenous communities. The Cross Lake Cree community of 8,300, located 500 kilometres (311 miles) north of Winnipeg, Manitoba, declared a state of emergency this week as the suicide crisis spread, Pimicikamak Acting Chief Shirley Robinson told Reuters. Robinson said she hopes the state of emergency will prompt the federal government to send more qualified short-term health workers to address the suicides and attempts at self harm. |
| U.S. forces ill-equipped to stop illegal drugs, migrants - admiral | | | U.S. forces responsible for disrupting the flow of illegal drugs and migrants to the United States lack the airplanes and ships needed to perform their mission at the level set by the Pentagon, a top U.S. admiral said on Thursday. Admiral Kurt Tidd, head of U.S. forces operating in Central and South America, told lawmakers the goal was for U.S. forces to interdict 40 percent of the illegal traffic moving from the region toward the United States. Tidd said on any given day, the United States had five to six ships operating in the region, most of them Coast Guard cutters under the Department of Homeland Security. |
| Brazil corruption scandal threatens split in Rousseff coalition | | By Anthony Boadle BRASILIA (Reuters) - A widening corruption probe has turned key lawmakers from Brazil's largest party against leftist President Dilma Rousseff, threatening to split her coalition and increasing chances of her impeachment in Congress this year. The Brazilian Democratic Movement Party, known as the PMDB, is the main ally of the ruling Workers' Party. Its leader, Michel Temer, is Rousseff's vice president.
|
| Liberia shutters Red Cross amid inquest into Ebola spending | | | By James Harding Giahyue MONROVIA (Reuters) - Police shuttered the offices of the Liberian branch of the Red Cross on Thursday, days after the president dismissed its board of directors amid an investigation into the use of funds destined for the fight against recently ended Ebola outbreak. Some 11,300 people died during the two-year epidemic, the worst on record, in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea. Over 4,800 of them died in Liberia, which was declared free of active transmission of the virus in January but only after a massive influx of foreign assistance including the deployment of U.S. soldiers to the West African nation. |
| Blame me for Trump? No way, says Obama | | By Jeff Mason WASHINGTON (Reuters) - He has been attacked over countless issues in partisan Washington, but U.S. President Barack Obama drew the line at this one: the idea that he is responsible for the rise of Donald Trump and the attendant Republican Party disarray. "I have been blamed by Republicans for a lot of things, but being blamed for their primaries and who they're selecting for their party (nominee) is novel," Obama told a news conference on Thursday. Obama had been asked how he viewed being identified as the cause of Trump's ascent to front-runner in the Republican race to pick a presidential candidate for the Nov. 8 election.
|
| Insight: How a hacker's typo helped stop a billion dollar bank heist | | By Serajul Quadir DHAKA (Reuters) - A spelling mistake in an online bank transfer instruction helped prevent a nearly $1 billion heist last month involving the Bangladesh central bank and the New York Federal Reserve, banking officials said. The hackers breached Bangladesh Bank's systems and stole its credentials for payment transfers, two senior officials at the bank said. Four requests to transfer a total of about $81 million to the Philippines went through, but a fifth, for $20 million, to a Sri Lankan non-profit organisation was held up because the hackers misspelled the name of the NGO, Shalika Foundation.
|
| U.S. strikes Islamic State chemical weapons capabilities - Pentagon | | | The United States has carried out air strikes that it believes have degraded the chemical weapons capabilities of Islamic State in Iraq after using information obtained from a captured militant, the Pentagon said on Thursday. U.S.-led coalition forces detained Sulayman Dawud al Bakkar, Islamic State's head of chemical and traditional weapons manufacturing, during an operation in Iraq in February, Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said in a statement. |
|
No comments:
Post a Comment