Monday, October 3, 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.



Colombia FARC rebels vow to maintain ceasefire
5:43:00 PM

A Nicaraguan supporter of "Si" casts a vote   into a mock ballot box that reads "Urn of Peace" during a simulated vote   held in support of a Colombian peace deal with FARC rebels, in ManaguaBOGOTA (Reuters) - Colombia's Marxist FARC rebels said on Monday they would maintain their ceasefire put in place over a year ago and "remain faithful" to the peace accord signed last week with the government. In a statement, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) called on social and political movements to mobilize peacefully and back the peace agreement that was narrowly rejected on Sunday in a plebiscite. (Reporting by Helen Murphy; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne and Chris Reese)




NY attorney general orders Trump Foundation to stop soliciting in state
5:40:58 PM
The New York attorney general has served the Trump Foundation with a cease and desist order that requires it to stop fundraising in New York, alleging it is not properly registered in the state. "The failure immediately to discontinue solicitation and to file information and reports ... with the Charities Bureau shall be deemed to be a continuing fraud upon the people of the state of New York," according to a letter dated Sept. 30 that the attorney general's office posted online.


Colombia's peace deal in limbo after shock referendum
5:30:34 PM

Supporters of "No" vote celebrate after the   nation voted "NO" in a referendum on a peace deal between the government   and FARC rebels in Bogota, ColombiaBy Helen Murphy and Julia Symmes Cobb BOGOTA (Reuters) - Colombia's government and Marxist FARC guerrillas scrambled on Monday to revive a plan to end their 52-year war after voters rejected the hard-negotiated deal as too lenient on the rebels in a shock referendum result that plunged the nation into uncertainty. Any renegotiated peace accord now seems to depend on whether the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) could accept some tougher sanctions against them. "No" voters, who narrowly won Sunday's vote, want assurances the rebels will hand in cash earned from drug smuggling, spend time in jail, and earn their political future at the ballot box rather than get guaranteed unelected seats in Congress.




U.N. to discuss urging end to all military flights over Syria's Aleppo
5:24:20 PM

Vehicles drive past damaged buildings in al-Rai town,   northern Aleppo countrysideBy Michelle Nichols UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The United Nations Security Council will begin negotiations on Monday on a draft resolution that urges Russia and the United States to ensure an immediate truce in Syria's Aleppo and to "put an end to all military flights over the city." The draft text, seen by Reuters, also asks U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon to propose options for a U.N.-supervised monitoring of a truce and threatens to "take further measures" in the event of non-compliance by "any party to the Syrian domestic conflict." The 15-member council will begin talks on the text - drafted by France and Spain - on Monday afternoon, diplomats said. The draft resolution urges Russia and the United States "to ensure the immediate implementation of the cessation of hostilities, starting with Aleppo, and, to that effect, to put an end to all military flights over the city." Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov said on Monday that the draft text "raises many questions" for Moscow and was a politicized move to exert additional pressure on Russia and Syria, TASS news agency reported.




Ohio to resume executions in January after three-year pause
5:22:42 PM
(Reuters) - The state of Ohio plans to resume the execution of condemned inmates in January, ending a three-year pause in carrying out death sentences, under a new lethal-injection protocol designed to meet U.S. Supreme Court approval, prison officials said on Monday. The Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction said it would proceed in January with the scheduled execution of Ronald Phillips, convicted and sentenced to death for the 1993 rape and murder of a 3-year-old girl. Ohio, one of 31 U.S. states with capital punishment, instituted a death penalty moratorium in 2015 due to difficulty in obtaining the drugs needed to perform lethal injections.


Kim Kardashian back after being held at gunpoint in $10 million Paris robbery
5:17:03 PM

Kim Kardashian West participates in a television   interview as she arrives for the 20th Annual Webby Awards in ManhattanBy Leigh Thomas PARIS/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Reality TV star Kim Kardashian returned to New York "badly shaken" on Monday after being robbed at gunpoint in her Paris residence by masked men who stole some $10 million worth of jewelry from her. Kardashian, wearing sunglasses and with her head bowed, was pictured entering her Manhattan apartment with her rapper husband Kanye West. Kardashian, who her publicist said was "badly shaken but physically unharmed," said nothing to waiting media upon her arrival.




Thousands of Poles protest against planned abortion ban
4:49:06 PM

Women shout slogans as they gather in an abortion   rights campaigners' demonstration to protest against plans for a total ban on   abortion in front of the ruling party Law and Justice (PiS) headquarters in   WarsawThe ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party has put forward the proposal - from a group called Ordo Iuris - for debate in parliament. Critics of the new rules say PiS may back them for fear of angering the church in staunchly Roman Catholic Poland. Poland's already restrictive laws only allow abortion in the case of rape, incest, a threat to a pregnant woman's health, or when the baby is likely to be permanently handicapped.




Shootings at U.S. colleges deadlier and more frequent, report finds
4:48:24 PM

From the Files - Worst Mass Shootings in the U.S.By Joseph Ax NEW YORK (Reuters) - Shootings on college campuses over the last five years have more than doubled since a similar period a decade earlier, according to a report released on Monday by a criminal justice reform organization. The incidents have also grown more deadly, with three times as many people injured or killed during the most recent five-year period, the New York City-based Citizens Crime Commission said. "It is now appropriate to call our nation's gun violence problem an epidemic," said the commission's president, Richard Aborn.




Belgian FA starts inquiry into player bets on own matches
4:36:29 PM
Belgium's soccer federation has started an inquiry into allegations that several players in the country's top league bet on their own matches. The federation said in a statement on Monday that it had begun its investigation on Sept. 29, a day after club Waasland Beveren fired keeper Laurent Henkinet for betting on a match in which he featured. Belgian media have run reports about betting by other players in Belgium's top league.


Stunned Latin America exhorts Colombia to keep seeking peace
4:35:50 PM

A supporter of "Si" vote cries after the   nation voted "NO" in a referendum on a peace deal between the government   and FARC rebels at Bolivar Square in BogotaBy Alexandra Ulmer and Mitra Taj CARACAS/LIMA (Reuters) - Latin America bemoaned Colombian voters' rejection of a peace deal with Marxist insurgents but regional leaders urged Bogota to keep pursing efforts to end the longest-running conflict in the Americas. Havana hosted four years of peace negotiations while Chile, Cuba, and Venezuela acted as guarantor and observer countries. Nations from leftist-run Venezuela to center-right Peru lamented the outcome of Sunday's referendum, the "No" camp won by less than half a percentage point.




Protests hit Ethiopia after stampede deaths
4:33:39 PM

Fresh flowers are pictured on the grave of Tesfu   Tadese Biru, a construction engineer who died during a stampede after police fired   warning shots at an anti-government protest in Bishoftu during Irreecha, in   Denkaka KebeleBy Aaron Maasho ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - Protests broke out in some areas of Ethiopia's Oromiya region on Monday, a day after dozens of people were killed in a stampede at a religious festival sparked by a bid by police to quell demonstrations, witnesses said. On Monday, witnesses said crowds took to the streets in Oromiya's Ambo, Guder, Bule Hora and other towns in response to the deaths. The region's assistant police chief told journalists that "widespread disturbances" had taken place in several parts of the region.




Chechens go on trial for killing Kremlin critic, lawyers cry foul
3:30:40 PM

An opposition supporter pickets at the site of   Russian opposition politician Boris Nemtsov's murder in central MoscowBy Valery Stepchenkov MOSCOW (Reuters) - Five Chechen men went on trial in Moscow on Monday for the murder of Kremlin critic Boris Nemtsov, but lawyers for the dead man's daughter said the investigation had failed to uncover who ordered the shooting. The 55-year-old Nemtsov, an opposition leader and former deputy prime minister, was gunned down near the Kremlin walls late in the evening of Feb. 27, 2015, as he walked home with his girlfriend from a restaurant. A prosecutor said the investigation had identified a group of Chechens who had been after Nemtsov since autumn 2014.




Morocco says arrests 10 suspected female Islamic State militants
2:28:29 PM
Morocco has dismantled a suspected Islamic State militant cell and arrested 10 women believed to be planning attacks in the North African kingdom, the Interior Ministry said on Monday. It was the latest in a series of militant cells Morocco says it has broken up, but it is the first time authorities have arrested a group of female suspects. An Interior Ministry statement said the cell was operating in several regions including the cities of Kenitra and Tangier.


U.S. Sept. 11 law weakens international relations, Saudi cabinet says
2:20:08 PM
Saudi Arabia said on Monday that a U.S. law allowing citizens to sue the kingdom over the Sept. 11 2001 attacks represented a threat to international relations and urged Congress to act to prevent any dangerous consequences from the new legislation. The cabinet, at its weekly meeting in the capital Riyadh, also said that the law, known as JASTA, represented a violation of a leading principle preventing lawsuits against governments that regulated international relations for hundreds of years. "Weakening this sovereign immunity will affect all countries, including the United States," the statement by Saudi Information Minister Adel al-Toraifi, carried by Saudi state news agency SPA, said.


Estonia's parliament elects country's first female president
2:10:47 PM

Newly-elected Estonia's President Kaljulaid   listens during a news conference after the vote in the country's Parliament   in TallinnTALLINN (Reuters) - The Estonian parliament on Monday elected the country's first female head of state. Kersti Kaljulaid, 46, a former EU budget auditor, received 81 votes in the election for the five-year presidential term, well above the two-thirds majority of 68 required. The office is largely symbolic in the Baltic country although it gained weight after outgoing President Toomas Hendrik Ilves carved a role as an outspoken critic of Russia and a campaigner for government digitalisation and cybersecurity. ...




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