Thursday, May 15, 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.



China foreign minister condemns Vietnam over violent riots in urgent phone call
Friday, May 16, 2014 1:03 AM

Members from pro-Taiwan group protest outside   Vietnamese Consulate in Hong KongChina's foreign minister condemned Vietnam in an urgent phone call with the Southeast Asian country's deputy prime minister over anti-Chinese protests that have killed up to 21 people, the official Xinhua news agency reported on Friday. Foreign Minister Wang Yi told Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Pham Binh Minh in the call on Thursday night that \"Vietnam bears unshirkable responsibility for the violent attacks against Chinese companies and nationals\", the report said. China also sent a working group, led by Assistant Foreign Minister Liu Jianchao, to Vietnam on Thursday to deal with the aftermath of the riots, Xinhua said.




China blames Vietnam, says will not cede inch of disputed territory
Friday, May 16, 2014 12:15 AM

Members from pro-Taiwan group protest outside   Vietnamese Consulate in Hong KongBy Phil Stewart and David Alexander WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A top Chinese general on Thursday defended the deployment of an oil rig that has inflamed tensions in the disputed South China Sea and triggered deadly protests in Vietnam, blaming Hanoi and saying China cannot afford to "lose an inch" of territory. General Fang Fenghui also pointed blame at U.S. President Barack Obama's strategic "pivot" to Asia as Vietnam and China grapple with one of the worst breakdowns in relations since the neighbors fought a brief border war in 1979. Anti-China riots in Vietnam erupted after China's towing of an oil rig into waters claimed by both countries. Fang said some Asian nations had seized on Obama's vows to rebalance military and diplomatic assets to Asia as an opportunity to create trouble in the South and East China Seas.




Cyber experts tread carefully around the Internet
11:19:00 PM

Army Cyber Command Brigadier General Paul Nakasone   talks during a Reuters CyberSecurity Summit in WashingtonBy Alina Selyukh WASHINGTON (Reuters) - They know the risks of the Internet better than anyone, but most cyber experts still shop and bank online - with care. \"We operate in the 21st century ... I've got to shop online, I've got to pay my bills online,\" Brigadier General Paul Nakasone, deputy commander of U.S. Army Cyber Command, said at the Reuters Cybersecurity Summit this week. \"You can't really function without it,\" agreed Nart Villeneuve, researcher at the cybersecurity firm FireEye. Some actions can leave you wide open for data abuse, like checking into a hotel and handing over a credit card, he said.




Erdogan's abrasive style unchecked by Turkish mine tragedy
10:40:36 PM

Turkey's Prime Minister Erdogan walks during his   visit to Soma, a district in Turkey's western province of Manisa, after a   coal mine explosionBy Can Sezer and Dasha Afanasieva ISTANBUL (Reuters) - For a man with ambitions to become Turkey's first popularly-elected president in a few months' time, Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan appears to have done little to unite the country at a moment of national tragedy. Erdogan expressed regret for the tragedy but told a news conference in the town that it was the sort of incident that happened all over the world, donning his glasses to read a list of mining accidents dating back a century and a half in response to suggestions that Turkish regulation may have been at fault. In the narrow streets of Istanbul's Kasimpasa district, where Erdogan grew up and commands fervent support, his handling of the tragedy did little to dent loyalty to a man seen as a champion of the religiously conservative working classes.




Nigerian president to visit town where girls were seized
10:38:08 PM

Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan speaks to the   media on the situation in Chibok and the success of the World Economic Forum in   AbujaABUJA (Reuters) - Nigeria's President Goodluck Jonathan will on Friday visit the northeastern village where more than 200 schoolgirls were seized a month ago by Islamist rebel group Boko Haram, senior government officials said. It will be Jonathan's first visit since the kidnappings to Chibok, epicentre of a growing international effort to rescue the girls. Officials said he would travel on to a regional security summit in Paris at which Boko Haram will be discussed. ...




Dinesh D'Souza fails to win dismissal of U.S. charges over straw donors
10:32:51 PM

D'Souza exits the Manhattan Federal Courthouse   in New YorkBy Nate Raymond and Jonathan Stempel NEW YORK (Reuters) - Dinesh D'Souza, the conservative author and filmmaker, on Thursday failed to win the dismissal of U.S. criminal charges that he used straw donors to make excessive contributions to a 2012 Senate candidate. Ruling from the bench, U.S. District Judge Richard Berman in Manhattan rejected D'Souza's contention that last month's U.S. Supreme Court decision striking some limits on political donations also rendered a straw donor prohibition as unconstitutionally vague. The judge also denied a request by D'Souza, a prominent critic of President Barack Obama, to seek the production of evidence that would support his claim the prosecution was in retaliation for his political activities. Benjamin Brafman, D'Souza's lawyer, afterwards said he was disappointed but was prepared for trial, which is expected Tuesday.




Five MSF staff freed after being held months by kidnappers in Syria
10:22:37 PM
Five staff members of the medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) have been freed after being kidnapped in northwestern Syria in early January by an armed group, the aid group said in a statement on Thursday. MSF, known for sending doctors to conflict zones, said that for security reasons it had closed a hospital and two medical centres in The Jabal Akkrad area in Syria's northwestern Latakia province. \"The reduction of humanitarian aid is a direct consequence of the kidnapping of aid workers,\" MSF said in the statement, adding that approximately 150,000 people in the wartorn area had been deprived of its help. Syria's civil war has left more than 150,000 dead.


Up to 21 dead, doctor says, as anti-China riots spread in Vietnam
10:20:18 PM

Workers wave Vietnamese national flags during an   anti-China protest at a Chinese invested shoe factory in Vietnam's northern   Thai Binh provinceUp to 21 people were killed in Vietnam, a doctor said on Thursday, and a huge foreign steel project was set ablaze as anti-China riots spread in response to China deploying an oil rig in seas claimed by both countries. The doctor at a hospital in central Ha Tinh province said five Vietnamese workers and 16 other people described as Chinese were killed on Wednesday night in rioting, one of the worst breakdowns in Sino-Vietnamese relations since the neighbours fought a brief border war in 1979. More are being sent to the hospital this morning,\" the doctor at Ha Tinh General Hospital told Reuters by phone. China's state news agency Xinhua reported that at least two Chinese nationals had died and more than 100 were hospitalised.




Russian police arrest dozens after killing provokes ethnic unrest
10:17:20 PM
Russian police detained nearly 60 people on Thursday after a demonstration venting anger against immigrants and demanding the arrest of an Uzbek man suspected of killing a local turned violent, Russian media reported. Some of the hundreds of protesters in the town of Pushkino, 30 km (20 miles) northeast of Moscow, chanted anti-immigrant slogans, toppled kiosks at a street market and attacked a bus, beating its driver, Ekho Moskvy radio reported. The riot raised fears of a new outbreak of racial violence such as happened on the streets of Moscow last October and in 2010 after killings of Slavic men that were blamed on people from the Caucasus. The protesters in Pushkino were angry that Zhakhongir Akhmedov, whom investigators suspect fatally beat a local man, Leonid Safyannikov, after an argument in a parking lot on Tuesday, had escaped arrest.


Amid protests, U.S. FCC proposes new 'net neutrality' rules
9:58:39 PM

FCC Chairman Wheeler speaks during a Town Hall   meeting in OaklandBy Alina Selyukh WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. regulators on Thursday advanced a \"net neutrality\" proposal that would ban Internet providers from blocking or slowing down access to websites but may let them charge content companies for faster and more reliable delivery of their traffic to users. For four months now, the public can weigh in on the rules proposed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in what promises to be an intense tug-of-war between some tech companies and consumer advocates on one side and Republicans and broadband providers on the other, over the extent to which the agency can regulate Internet traffic. Dozens protested the vote at the FCC on Thursday as many consumer advocates have rejected FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler's proposal that may allow some \"commercially reasonable\" deals in which content companies could pay broadband providers to prioritize traffic on their networks.




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