Friday, October 2, 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.



Sheriff withholds Oregon gunman's name, refuses to immortalize him
3:26:41 PM
By Eric M. Johnson and Courtney Sherwood ROSEBURG, Ore. (Reuters) - The Oregon sheriff investigating the mass shooting that killed nine people at a U.S. college campus took the unusual step of refusing to publicly identify the suspect, insisting on Friday he would do nothing to glorify the gunman or his cause. A day after the shooting at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, local and federal investigators struggled to determine a motive. The gunman, described as shy and socially awkward by neighbors, also wounded seven people in the rampage and died in an exchange of gunfire with police.


Insight - VW rivals risk bigger blow as emissions scandal hits diesel
3:09:28 PM

A 2.0 litre TDI diesel engine cover in a Skodo Yeti   vehicle is seen at a car dealer in BonnBy Gilles Guillaume, Barbara Lewis and Laurence Frost PARIS/BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Volkswagen's cheating on emissions tests has soured the European car industry's heavy bet on diesel, with Renault, Peugeot and Fiat Chrysler potentially facing bigger long-term setbacks than the company that sparked the crisis. VW's use of a banned "defeat device" has drawn scrutiny of more widely practised test manipulation which, although legal, has allowed real-world nitrogen oxide (NOx) emissions to surge to more than seven times their European limits. A renewed push to close EU test loopholes promises to add billions of euros to diesel engine costs already at the limit of mass-market viability, hitting small-car brands hardest while shifting demand to hybrids, where the Europeans are several years behind Japanese competitors.




After Kunduz rout, Afghan army and police blame each other
1:31:23 PM

Afghan security forces sit on top of a vehicle as   they patrol outside of Kunduz cityBy Hamid Shalizi KUNDUZ, Afghanistan (Reuters) - Hungry and exhausted after being routed by Taliban fighters in the northern city of Kunduz, Afghanistan's army and police force are blaming each other for the shambolic surrender of the provincial capital. The lack of coordination between the key pillars of Afghan security forces contributed to a humiliating loss, which, though largely reversed three days later, leaves the government looking more vulnerable than at any time during the 14-year insurgency. "They were the ones who surrendered to the Taliban, not us," said soldier Aqa Shereen, referring to the city's police force.




British MP calls for FA chairman to explain Platini support
1:30:28 PM

Chelsea v Arsenal - FA Community ShieldBy Mike Collett LONDON (Reuters) - English FA chairman Greg Dyke should explain his support for Michel Platini's FIFA presidential bid following the latest twist in the crisis engulfing world soccer's governing body, British MP Damian Collins said on Friday. "I think many people want to know why the FA have nailed their colours to the mast backing Michel Platini before even the presidential nominations have closed," Collins told Sky Sports. Collins said Dyke needed to explain the FA's support for the UEFA president, whom Swiss authorities said had received two million Swiss francs ($2.05 million) from FIFA president Sepp Blatter in 2011.




Turkey kills over 10 Kurdish militants, 44 people detained in Istanbul
12:32:45 PM
Turkish security forces killed more than 10 suspected Kurdish militants amid intensifying clashes in the country's southeast, while 44 people were arrested in Istanbul on suspicion of links with the rebels, officials and media reports said. The exact death toll from clashes in Silvan, a town in southeastern Turkey's Diyarbakir province, was not immediately clear. A security source said it exceeded 10 people - all members of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).


British boy, 15, gets life sentence for inciting Anzac Day attack in Australia
12:18:47 PM
A 15-year-old boy, thought to be the youngest Briton to be convicted of a terrorism offence, was given a life sentence on Friday for inciting an attack on a World War One commemorative event in Australia from his bedroom in northern England. The boy, who cannot be named due to his age, pleaded guilty in July to sending messages online encouraging an attack on police officers at an event in April to mark Anzac Day - a day of remembrance for military dead in Australia and New Zealand. British police said had the plot not been uncovered, it was likely someone would have been seriously injured or killed.


Difficult to buy a gun in China, but not explosives
11:39:51 AM

File photo of a damaged building seen after   explosions hit LiuchengBy Ben Blanchard BEIJING (Reuters) - A series of deadly bomb blasts in China this week has shown how easy it is to acquire explosives in the country, revealing a major gap in its huge security apparatus as the economy slows and anger grows over issues like graft and poor public services. In a country where firearms are banned for most people, the bombings in the southwestern city of Liuzhou on Wednesday, and others in recent years around the country, demonstrate lax enforcement of rules to control access to bomb-making material. Private gun ownership is almost unheard of in China as controls are so strict, meaning gun crime is rare.




Hungarian church thanks God, government for fending off migrants
11:23:06 AM

Migrants look out from the window of a train as they   wait to depart from the railway station in ZakanyThe church in a southern Hungarian diocese heavily affected by an influx of migrants has thanked the right-wing government for regarding its effort to seal Hungary's borders against further migration as "a task given by God". Hungary, a landlocked country whose government has been criticised by European Union peers for its anti-foreigner stance, has become a main transit route for hundreds of thousands of migrants arriving via the Balkans to the south. More than 280,000 migrants fleeing conflict and poverty in the Middle East, Asia and Africa have passed through Hungary in central Europe this year so far, nearly all seeking sanctuary in the wealthier countries of the western EU.




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