Tuesday, January 17, 2017

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.



Corrected - Samsung chief faces long day as S.Korean court weighs arrest warrant
11:35:46 AM

Jay Y. Lee, vice chairman of Samsung Electronics,   arrives to be questioned in Seoul(Clarifies charges for which Choi is on trial in paragraph 20) By Ju-min Park SEOUL (Reuters) - The head of South Korea's giant Samsung Group faces a long day in court on Wednesday as a judge decides whether he should be arrested for bribery in a corruption scandal that has engulfed President Park Geun-hye's administration. Investigators questioned Jay Y. Lee for 22 hours last week as a suspect in the scandal which led to parliament impeaching Park in December and throwing the country into crisis. Park, 64, remains in office but has been stripped of her powers while the Constitutional Court decides whether to make her the country's first democratically elected leader to be forced from office.




UK top court says ex-Libyan rebel commander can sue former minister
11:30:44 AM

Abdul Hakim Belhadj of Libya's Homeland party   speaks during a demonstration at the Ennahda party "Youth Festival"   organized by the Renaissance Movement at the Conference Palace in TunisBy Michael Holden LONDON (Reuters) - A former Libyan Islamist commander, who says he suffered years of torture by Muammar Gaddafi's henchmen after British and U.S. spies handed him over to Libya, was given permission on Tuesday to sue the British government and its former foreign secretary. Abdel Hakim Belhadj, a rebel leader who helped topple Gaddafi in 2011 and is now a politician, says he and his pregnant wife Fatima were abducted by U.S. CIA agents in Thailand in 2004 and then illegally transferred to Tripoli with the help of British spies. Britain's Supreme Court on Tuesday dismissed an appeal by the government to stop him taking legal action, paving the way for Belhadj and his wife to seek damages against former Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, the domestic and foreign spy agencies MI5 and MI6, a senior former intelligence chief and relevant government departments.




In U.N. lawsuit, Ukraine demands Russia end support for separatists
11:23:50 AM

A screen, showing Russian President Vladimir   Putin's annual end-of-year news conference, is on display in SimferopolUkraine filed a lawsuit at the United Nations' highest court demanding that Russia immediately halt its support for pro-Moscow separatists fighting in eastern Ukraine. The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry accused Russia of "acts of terrorism and discrimination in the course of its unlawful aggression" in the filing to the International Court of Justice, according to a ministry statement issued on Monday evening. Russia has repeatedly denied sending troops or military equipment to eastern Ukraine.




Top German court refuses to outlaw far-right NPD party
11:21:16 AM

Nationaldemokratische Partei Deutschlands (NPD) party   members react after the verdict at the Constitutional Court in KarlsruheBy Madeline Chambers and Ursula Knapp BERLIN/KARLSRUHE (Reuters) - Germany's Constitutional Court on Tuesday said the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD) resembled Adolf Hitler's Nazi party, but ruled against banning it because it presented no threat to democracy. Germany's intelligence agency described the NPD as racist and anti-Semitic and the attempt by the country's 16 federal states to outlaw the party came amid rising support for right-wing groups stoked by popular resentment over the influx of migrants.




Macron momentum threatens French election frontrunners
11:11:57 AM

FILE PHOTO Emmanuel Macron, head of the political   movement En Marche !, or Forward !, and candidate for the 2017 French presidential   election, attends a political rally in ParisBy Michel Rose PARIS (Reuters) - In May last year, then French Economy Minister Emmanuel Macron sat down with Socialist lawmaker Christophe Sirugue in the steel town of Le Creusot and asked him to join his new political movement. A political outsider who has never run for office and hopes to transcend the classic Left-Right divide, Macron suddenly seems to have a fighting chance of winning the keys to the Elysee Palace and becoming president before he turns 40. The latest polls show him breathing down the necks of conservative frontrunner Francois Fillon and the far right's Marine Le Pen and he is drawing larger crowds than both at rallies across France.




European anti-corruption body tells Georgia well done, but do more
11:08:47 AM

General view of Georgia's new parliament   building for country's newly elected parliament in KutaisiThe Council of Europe on Tuesday called on Georgia to do more to reduce corruption while at the same time acknowledging it had made considerable progress. The Council's anti-corruption body, the Group of States against Corruption (GRECO), welcomed positive developments in the South Caucasus country of 3.7 million such as the introduction of a monitoring mechanism for submitting asset declarations by public officials including parliamentarians, judges and high-level prosecutors. GRECO said that continuation of the reform of the judiciary was of prime importance and welcomed the recently launched reform of the prosecution service with the view of de-politicising it.




Rolls-Royce jumps on profit upgrade and bribery settlement
10:59:06 AM

FILE PHOTO - The setting sun reflects on a building   at Rolls-Royce in DerbyBy Sarah Young LONDON (Reuters) - Shares in Rolls-Royce jumped 6 percent on Tuesday after the British maker of engines for planes and ships settled a long-running bribery probe and said 2016 profit would beat expectations. Rolls has undergone 18 months of cost-cutting and restructuring under CEO Warren East, who was brought in to stabilise the company in mid-2015 after a series of profit warnings. Rolls's settlement of bribery investigations with British, U.S. and Brazilian authorities also helped to remove a cloud which has hung over the company since 2013, even though the penalty was bigger than analysts had expected.




Uganda minister says Congo's former M23 rebels not welcome in Uganda
10:54:00 AM

Congolese M23 rebels stand behind a gate where they   are being kept after surrendering to Uganda's government at Rugwerero village   in Kisoro districtFormer Congolese rebels who have lived in disarmament camps in Uganda for years are not welcome and are not Uganda's problem, a state minister told Reuters on Tuesday.     Okello Oryem, state minister for international affairs, said he didn't know and didn't care if rebels were missing from the camps following reports that some fighters may have crossed the border into neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) this weekend.    "We never wanted them here, we never invited them here, they are not even desirable in Uganda," he said.




Turkey says New Year's nightclub attacker captured in Istanbul
10:18:36 AM

FILE PHOTO - Turkish police stand guard outisde the   Reina nightclub by the Bosphorus, which was attacked by a gunman, in IstanbulBy Daren Butler ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkish police have captured the gunman who killed 39 people in an Istanbul nightclub on New Year's Day at a hideout in an outlying suburb of the city after a two-week manhunt, officials said on Tuesday. Istanbul Governor Vasip Sahin named the man as Abdulgadir Masharipov and said he was born in 1983 in Uzbekistan and received training in Afghanistan. Masharipov, who was captured with four others overnight, had admitted his guilt and his fingerprints matched those at the scene, Sahin said.




Amnesty International: "draconian" EU anti-terror laws target Muslims
10:17:48 AM
A raft of new counterterrorism laws across Europe discriminate against Muslims and refugees, spreading fear and alienation, Amnesty International said in a report on Tuesday. The human rights group sounded the alarm over security measures adopted over the past two years in 14 EU nations, including expanded surveillance powers. During that period, militant attacks have killed some 280 people in France, Belgium and Germany.


Lavrov says allegations of Russian cyber attacks are fabricated
10:10:59 AM

Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov gives a news   conference in MoscowMOSCOW (Reuters) - Allegations of Russian cyber attacks are fabricated, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Tuesday. Lavrov said at a news conference that U.S. intelligence agencies who had tried to prove that U.S. President-elect Donald Trump had links to Russia have drawn a blank and should be fired. The Russian minister also described as a charlatan the former British spy who wrote a dossier on Trump's alleged links to Russia. (Reporting by Andrew Osborn and Vladimir Soldatkin; Writing by Alexander Winning and Katya Golubkova; Editing by Christian Lowe)




EU parliament votes on speaker, pro-EU bloc forms
9:31:07 AM

European Parliament's presidential candidate   Tajani attends the announcement of the candidates for the election to the office   of the President at the European Parliament in StrasbourgBy Francesco Guarascio STRASBOURG (Reuters) - The European liberal party ALDE withdrew its candidate from Tuesday's ballot to elect a new speaker of the European Parliament and backed the centre-right favourite, seeking a new pro-EU coalition. The surprise withdrawal of centrist Guy Verhofstadt, a former Belgian prime minister, before voting began, appeared to strengthen the hand of Italian conservative Antonio Tajani and underlined how mainstream, pro-EU parties are trying to keep a grip on the legislature against a vocal eurosceptic minority. Verhofstadt, a leading European federalist who is also the parliament's point man on the Brexit negotiations, highlighted the challenges the Union faces, including hostility from Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President-elect Donald Trump.




Germany's top court rejects ban for far-right NPD party
9:25:25 AM
Germany's Constitutional Court on Tuesday rejected an attempt by the country's 16 federal states to ban the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD), described by the intelligence agency as racist and anti-Semitic, saying it was too weak to pose a threat. In the closely-watched ruling, which comes amid concern over rising support for right-wing groups due to resentment about an influx of migrants, court President Andreas Vosskuhle said, however, that the party was anti-constitutional in nature. The federal states started exploring a legal ban after the chance discovery of the National Socialist Underground (NSU) in 2011, blamed for killing nine immigrants and a police woman between 2000 and 2007.


Liberals back centre-right for EU parliament president
8:41:10 AM

European Parliament's presidential candidate   Tajani attends the announcement of the candidates for the election to the office   of the President at the European Parliament in StrasbourgThe European liberal party ALDE withdrew its candidate from Tuesday's ballot to elect a new speaker of the European Parliament and said it would back the centre-right, seeking a new pro-EU coalition. Outgoing President Martin Schulz told the chamber that ALDE leader Guy Verhofstadt had withdrawn. Antonio Tajani of the centre-right EPP is seen having an edge in the now six-person race over Gianni Pittella of the centre-left S&D. Verhofstadt, a former Belgian prime minister, said in an online video: "This morning the liberal and democratic group concluded an important agreement with the European People's Party.




Istanbul nightclub attacker from Uzbekistan, admits guilt - governor
8:05:54 AM

FILE PHOTO - A man places flowers at the entrance of   Reina nightclub, which was attacked by a gunman, in IstanbulISTANBUL (Reuters) - The suspected gunman who killed 39 people in an Istanbul nightclub on New Year's Day was born in Uzbekistan and received training in Afghanistan, Istanbul Governor Vasip Sahin said on Tuesday after police caught him in a city suburb. Sahin told reporters that the alleged attacker, whom he named as Abdulgadir Masharipov, born in 1983, had admitted his guilt and his fingerprints matched those at the scene. ...




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