Monday, June 1, 2015

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.



Food inspectors file case against Nestle over noodles
2:58:51 PM

A bird flies past the logo at the headquarters of   world food giant Nestle in VeveyBy Sharat Pradhan LUCKNOW (Reuters) - Food safety inspectors in Uttar Pradesh said they had filed a criminal complaint against Nestle's local arm after saying they had found high levels of lead in some packets of Maggi instant noodles Nestle India, which disputes the findings, has said the batch in question was manufactured in February 2014 so was already past its sell-by date in April this year and would have been automatically collected from retailers by the time the inspectors announced a recall of the products. A spokesman for Nestle India, which has said it has carried out extensive independent and internal tests, said the company has not yet been notified of the complaint. The noodles, which sell at roughly a dozen rupees (.20) per single-serving packet, are a hugely popular snack in India and Maggi has long been market leader.




Foreign governments, non-profits press China to revise draft NGO law
2:40:20 PM

A general view shows that delegates enter the Great   Hall of the People, the venue of the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party   of China, in BeijingUnder the law, the term "foreign NGO" is so loosely defined it could apply to an American professor planning to speak at a Chinese university, foreign trade associations, and overseas dance troupes performing in China.




Stung by FIFA furore, Qatar's soft power at risk
1:52:45 PM

Workers helmets are arranged on street by   Austria's construction trade union marking 'international workers   memorial day' in front of the Qatari embassy in ViennaBy Amena Bakr DOHA (Reuters) - "It will blow over" tends to be Qatar's unofficial response to criticism of its World Cup bid, but with a FIFA corruption scandal exploding onto the world's front pages, the Gulf state has glumly realised it may have a real fight on its hands. Super-rich Qatar would suffer no economic pain if it lost the right to host the world's top soccer event. Years of allegations of corruption in the vote that won it the 2022 cup, and of abuse of migrant workers, mean Qatar has struggled to convince world opinion of the justness of its cause.




Blatter disgraced FIFA, says former VP Warner
1:47:10 PM

Re-elected FIFA President Blatter gestures during a   news conference after an extraordinary Executive Committee meeting in ZurichNo one has brought more shame on FIFA than its president Sepp Blatter and he should step aside for a younger leader, the organisation's former vice president Jack Warner has said. Warner, who has been accused of soliciting bribes as part of a U.S.-led corruption case against senior soccer officials, left jail in Trinidad and Tobago on Thursday after he was granted bail, according to local media. "Why are there no investigations in Asia, or in Europe?" Warner told German magazine Stern in an interview released on Monday.




Vatican defends Australian cardinal against charges of "disregard" of sexual abuse
1:41:03 PM

Cardinal George Pell gestures as he talks during a   news conference for the presentation of new president of Vatican Bank IOR, at the   VaticanBy Philip Pullella and Byron Kaye VATICAN CITY/SYDNEY (Reuters) - The Vatican on Monday strongly defended Australian Cardinal George Pell against accusations by a member of Pope Francis' commission on sexual abuse that the Vatican's finance chief had little regard for victims. Peter Saunders, one of 17 members of the commission advising the pope on how to root out sex abuse in the Church, said on Australian television on Sunday that Pell should be dismissed over allegations he failed to take action to protect children. Pell, now charge of reforming the Vatican's economic departments, issued a statement soon after the programme aired, calling Saunders's comments "false", "misleading" and "outrageous", and said he would consult legal advisers.




Egyptian court adjourns Al Jazeera journalists trial to Thursday
1:38:50 PM

Al Jazeera reporter Peter Greste talks during   interview with Reuters in SydneyA Cairo court on Monday adjourned the trial of three Al Jazeera television journalists for four days after hearing the prosecution's closing argument that their reporting had endangered Egypt's national security. Australian journalist Peter Greste, who was released in February after 400 days in jail and deported, has not returned for the trial and the presiding judge only mentioned him once when reading out the names of the accused. Mohamed Fahmy, a naturalised Canadian who gave up his Egyptian citizenship, and Egyptian Baher Mohamed were present to hear the argument that their meetings with members of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood and use of the word "coup" to describe the army's July 2013 seizure of power had harmed the country.




Corrected - Vatican commissioner accuses Australian cardinal of "disregard" for abused children
12:59:35 PM

Australian Cardinal Pell arrives for a meeting at the   Synod Hall in the Vatican(Corrects to show Saunders is one of 17 commissioners) By Byron Kaye SYDNEY (Reuters) - One of the Catholic Church's commissioners for the protection of children has described the Vatican's finance chief as having an almost sociopathic disregard for abused children, accusations the Australian cardinal rejected as wrong and misleading. Peter Saunders, a member of the 17-strong commission advising Pope Francis on how to root out sex abuse in the Church, said on Australian television the Vatican's prefect for the Secretariat for the Economy, Australian-born Cardinal George Pell, should be dismissed over allegations he failed to take action to protect children from abuse in the church in Australia. "He is making a mockery of the papal commission (into child abuse), of the pope himself, but most of all of the victims and the survivors," Saunders said on Channel Nine's 60 Minutes Australia on Sunday.




Former top Hungarian communist faces new trial over role in 1956 reprisals
11:24:33 AM

Former Communist Party leader Biszku escorted by   police during his trial in BudapestBy Krisztina Than BUDAPEST (Reuters) - A 93-year-old former senior Hungarian Communist Party official convicted of war crimes last year will face a new trial after a higher court on Monday annulled his jail sentence, saying the verdict against him was unsubstantiated. In May 2014, Bela Biszku was convicted of war crimes over shootings of civilian protesters after the 1956 uprising that was crushed by Soviet tanks. A Budapest court of first instance sentenced him to five-and-a-half years' imprisonment.




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