Sunday, April 6, 2014

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.



Jeb Bush says illegal immigration often 'an act of love'
6:07:27 AM

Jeb Bush walks on the 13th hole during the first   round of the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am golf tournament on the Monterey   Peninsula Country Club course in Pebble Beach, in California, February 6, 2014.   REUTERS/Michael Fiala/FilesBy Peter Cooney WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Jeb Bush, a potential Republican presidential candidate in 2016, said on Sunday that illegal immigrants who come to the United States to provide for their families are not committing a felony but an "act of love." In comments at odds with the views of many in his party, Bush, the son of the 41st president and brother of the 43rd, said of the divisive immigration issue: "I think we need to kind of get beyond the harsh political rhetoric to a better place. "I'm going to say this and it will be on tape and so be it," Bush said in an interview with Fox News host Shannon Bream in an event at the Texas presidential library of his father, George H.W. Bush.




Taiwan anti-China protest exposes island's nationalist divide
5:10:17 AM

Student leaders Lin Fei-fan (R) and Chen Wei-ting   chant slogans inside Taiwan's legislative Yuan, Taiwan's parliament,   after a visit from Legislative Speaker Wang Jin-pyng and lawmakers from both the   Nationalist Party (KMT) and opposition Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) in   Taipei April 6, 2014. REUTERS/Pichi ChuangBy Michael Gold TAIPEI (Reuters) - A chaotic sit-in to protest against a trade deal with China has shut down Taiwan's parliament and exposed deep divisions over the island's identity after seven decades of living apart from its vast, undemocratic rival across the strait. The mainly student protesters, who proffer sunflowers as a symbol of hope, denounce the pact as an arrangement suiting Taiwan's wealthy. They say it will lead to mass encroachment by China, and its one-party mindset, on the island's cherished democratic values and institutions. Its advocates, including Taiwan's president and his government, say it is a vital step to normalising relations with Beijing and will provide jobs and improve living standards.




Group of Libyan lawmakers plan to sack parliamentary president
4:49:32 AM
By Ahmed Elumami and Feras Bosalum TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Some 30 Libyan lawmakers plan to remove parliamentary president Nouri Abu Sahmain, the country's top official, over a leaked video in which he was grilled by an unknown questioner over a visit by two women to his house, one of them said on Sunday. A week ago, Libya's Attorney General said it had launched an investigation into the video, which has been widely circulated on the country's news websites. The lawmakers' action has the potential to damage Abu Sahmain, who is the top army commander and has quasi-presidential powers, or force him even to resign at a time of growing turmoil in the oil-producing North African country. Lawmaker Abu Bakr Madur told a televised news conference while surrounded by colleagues that Abu Sahmain had lost the trust of the Libyan people and lied about the visit.


Costa Rica leftist easily wins presidential run-off
3:38:17 AM

Luis Guillermo Solis, presidential candidate of the   Citizens' Action Party (PAC), gestures to supporters after casting his ballot   at a voting station during Costa Rica's presidential election run-off in San   Jose April 6, 2014. REUTERS/Juan Carlos UlateBy Alexandra Alper SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (Reuters) - A center-left academic who has never held elected office easily won Costa Rica's presidential election on Sunday, ousting the graft-stained ruling party from power after its candidate quit campaigning a month ago. Former diplomat Luis Guillermo Solis, of the Citizen Action Party (PAC), won more than three-quarters of votes by tapping in to public anger at rising inequality and government corruption scandals. In a bizarre twist, his rival Johnny Araya of the ruling National Liberation Party (PLN) announced last month he was halting his campaign as polls showed him with little or no chance of catching Solis. Solis had 77.88 percent of the vote with returns in from 94 percent of polling booths, Costa Rica's election tribunal said.




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