Thursday, January 28, 2016

Criminal News Headlines | National News - Yahoo India News

Your RSS feed from RSSFWD.com. Update your RSS subscription
RSSFWD

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.



Islamic State claims attack on Yemen president's residence
2:58:21 PM
Islamic State claimed responsibility on Thursday for a bomb attack outside the residence of Yemeni President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi which killed seven people. In a statement online, the militant group said the attack was carried out by a suicide car bomber it identified as Abu Hanifa al-Hollandi, suggesting the attacker was Dutch.


CONMEBOL says it backs Infantino for FIFA president
2:47:26 PM

UEFA General Secretary Infantino attends a news   conference after an Executive Committee meeting at the UEFA headquarters in NyonThe South American Football Confederation CONMEBOL will back Gianni Infantino's bid for the presidency of soccer's governing body FIFA, it said on Thursday. "The CONMEBOL executive committee has decided to back Gianni Infantino's candidacy and plan of action for the presidency of FIFA," it said in statement. It said the committee had "expressed its unanimous approval to vote as a block for Gianni Infantino".




Israeli campaign against artists draws accusations of 'McCarthyism'
2:34:06 PM

Israeli novelist Amos Oz speaks during a news   conference in OviedoBy Luke Baker JERUSALEM (Reuters) - An ultra-nationalist Israeli group that has campaigned against foreign-funded NGOs broadened its assault to include left-wing artists on Thursday, accusing authors such as Amos Oz and David Grossman of disloyalty to the country. The offensive by Im Tirtzu takes place amid deepening left-right divisions in Israel, with members of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government frequently critical of the arts and advocating a more religious-nationalist agenda. Culture Minister Miri Regev, a member of Netanyahu's Likud party, has proposed cutting government funding for any theatre or arts institution whose programmes "subvert the state".




"Whistleblower" helps Swiss investigation against FIFA's Blatter
2:05:28 PM

FIFA's suspended president Sepp Blatter waves as   he leaves with his daughter Corinne after a news conference in ZurichAn important witness has offered information to help criminal proceedings against long-time president of the world soccer body FIFA, Sepp Blatter, the Swiss attorney general's office said on Thursday. Spokesman Andre Marty said in an interview with TV programme "Morgenmagazin", broadcast on German channel ARD, that it should be clear by the end of 2016 to mid-2017 whether there was evidence to bring a charge against Blatter whose presidency has ended with the worst corruption scandal in FIFA's history. "In the name of the office of the attorney general of Switzerland I can confirm that a witness has given us interesting information that is relevant for the case and should be essential for the investigation," Marty said in an emailed statement.




South African racial tensions thwart opposition challenge to ANC
1:17:48 PM

Members of the opposition Democratic Alliance walk   out of the chamber during President Jacob Zuma's State of the Nation address   in Cape TownBy Stella Mapenzauswa JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - A racist Facebook post by a member of South Africa's main opposition party has caused a national furore and left it scrambling to shake off its image of an organisation that chiefly serves the interests of the minority white community. The episode highlighted how racial tensions simmer in the country more than two decades after Nelson Mandela become its first black president, with wealth and income gaps that are still clearly visible along race lines fuelling perceptions of white privilege. It could set back the Democratic Alliance's efforts to attract black votes and present an effective opposition to the African National Congress (ANC), whose hold on power has been virtually untested since the end of apartheid despite rising discontent over an ailing economy and job losses.




Ivorian ex-president accused at war crimes trial of stoking "unspeakable violence" to keep power
1:14:53 PM

Former Ivory Coast president Laurent Gbagbo arrives   for the start of his trial at the International Criminal Court in The HagueBy Thomas Escritt THE HAGUE (Reuters) - War crimes prosecutors accused ex-Ivorian president Laurent Gbagbo of orchestrating "unspeakable violence", including murder and gang rape by supporters, in order to cling to power after losing an election, pitching his country into civil war. Rising stiffly on the opening day of his trial at the International Criminal Court, Gbagbo, 70, pleaded not guilty to all charges. Four months of conflict ravaged Ivory Coast, the world's largest cocoa grower, in early 2011 after Gbagbo refused to step down.




Most Americans support Obama's contested immigration plan
12:50:12 PM

A young boy holds U.S. flags as immigrants and   community leaders rally in front of the U.S. Supreme Court to mark the one-year   anniversary of President Barack Obama's executive orders on immigration in   WashingtonBy Roberta Rampton WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Most Americans say they back a plan that would allow certain illegal immigrants to stay in the country, but support for the idea slips when President Barack Obama's name is attached to the question, according to a recent Reuters/Ipsos poll. The results underscore the polarized nature of the debate over how to overhaul immigration laws and how to address the estimated 11 million people living illegally in the country. In 2014, Obama bypassed the Republican-controlled Congress to issue an executive order to shield more than 4 million undocumented immigrants from deportation and offer them work permits, but he was blocked by court challenges from Republican-governed states.




Rivalries, squabbles hinder Libya's unity government
12:26:42 PM

Seraj attends an event to offer condolences to the   families of the Libyan police training centre bombing victims, in ZlitenBy Aidan Lewis TUNIS (Reuters) - A month after it was agreed in Morocco, a U.N.-backed plan for a united Libyan government is struggling to take off. Efforts to push the hard-fought compromise through show the enduring regional rivalries and power struggles that have bedevilled Libya since the 2011 overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi. While foreign pressure builds to tackle a threat from Islamic State militants, Libya's internationally recognised parliament, based in the east, has rejected a main article in the U.N. accord as well as a proposed list of ministers.




Israel reluctant to accuse Islamic State over bar shootings despite hallmarks
12:16:23 PM

Israeli special forces policemen patrol the streets   during a search for Arab citizen Nashat Melhem in the northern town of AraraBy Dan Williams JERUSALEM (Reuters) - It appeared to have hallmarks of the first Islamic State attack in Israel: A Muslim citizen opened fire on a Tel Aviv bar days after the militant group threatened the country, and left behind a black ISIS banner. "This really was not a classic ISIS terrorist attack," a security official told Reuters on Thursday after the Shin Bet domestic intelligence agency and Justice Ministry issued their findings on the Jan. 1 shooting rampage by Nashat Melhem that killed three people. An Israeli indictment against three Arab citizens for abetting Melhem's escape said he had "sought to help the enemy, including the ISIS group, fight Israel".




Britain says will take UN Yemen report "extremely seriously"
12:13:49 PM

A house is pictured after it was destroyed by a   Saudi-led air strike in Yemen's capital SanaaBritain said on Thursday it would take "extremely seriously" the findings of a United Nations report which says British military ally Saudi Arabia could have committed crimes against humanity in Yemen. A United Nations report on Wednesday said the Saudi-led coalition has targeted civilians in Yemen, documenting 119 sorties "relating to violations of international humanitarian law". The report has put political pressure on the British government which provides training to the Saudi military and has approved billions of pounds worth of military exports to the country.




Two suicide bombers dead after targeting school in north Cameroon
11:50:35 AM
Two suicide bombers died on Thursday when they targeted a school in northern Cameroon, local officials said, the latest attack in the central African country which is struggling to contain violence blamed on Boko Haram militants in neighbouring Nigeria. There were no other reported deaths in the double suicide bomb attack, though an unknown number of people were injured, one official said. "The double attack occurred in the public school in the town of Kerawa," the official said.


Turkey's Erdogan says stronger presidency not a matter of personal ambition
11:47:32 AM

Turkey's President Tayyip Erdogan addresses the   audience during a meeting in AnkaraTurkish President Tayyip Erdogan laid out his case for a new constitution and a more powerful presidency on Thursday, saying it was not a matter of personal ambition but a necessity in a country whose parliamentary system he said was out of date. Erdogan, who won Turkey's first direct presidential election in August 2014, said a head of state elected by the people should have more than a symbolic role. Previously parliament had picked Turkey's president.




Pakistani cleric says willing to review blasphemy law
11:23:06 AM

Muhammad Khan Sherani, Chairman of Council of Islamic   Ideology that advises the government on the compatibility of laws with Islam,   speaks with a Reuters correspondent in IslamabadBy Tommy Wilkes and Mehreen Zahra-Malik ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - The head of a powerful religious body said on Thursday he is willing to review Pakistan's harsh blasphemy laws that critics say are regularly misused and have led to the deaths of hundreds, to decide if they are Islamic. Pakistan's religious and political elites almost universally keep clear of debating blasphemy laws in a country where criticism of Islam is a highly sensitive subject. "The government of Pakistan should officially, at the government level, refer the law on committing blasphemy to the Council of Islamic Ideology.




EU takes aim at multinationals' multi-billion tax avoidance
11:13:12 AM

New 20 Euro banknotes are presented at the Austrian   national bank in ViennaBy Francesco Guarascio BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Commission proposed on Thursday allowing EU countries to tax corporate profits at home in some circumstances even if the money has been transferred elsewhere to avoid such payments. Weighing in on a row about business responsibility and fairness, the Commission proposed a set of measures to tackle some of the most common tax avoidance schemes used by multinational companies to reduce their tax bills. Big corporations legally avoid taxes of up to 70 billion euros ($76.10 billion) a year in Europe, a study of the European Parliament estimated, with global losses from such schemes ranging between $100 billion and $240 billion.




Insight: Cologne attacks show Germany unprepared for migration challenge
11:06:45 AM

A police vehicle patrols at the main square and in   front of the central railway station in CologneBy Michelle Martin COLOGNE, Germany (Reuters) - The crowds of drunk young men had been gathering for hours outside the main railway station in Cologne on New Year's Eve when city police finally told the office that coordinates forces for the region that they wanted to clear the square. Cologne, a city of more than 1 million people, had added just 142 extra police for the holiday. The incidents have caused profound soul searching in a country that allowed in an unprecedented 1.1 million migrants last year in what its leaders described as an act of historic generosity towards refugees.




Turkey's Kurdish conflict impacting Syria, migrant crises - Demirtas
11:01:34 AM

Leader of Turkey's opposition pro-Kurdish   People's Democratic Party Demirtas speaks during meeting with Russian Foreign   Minister Lavrov in MoscowBy Hanna Knutson BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The leader of Turkey's pro-Kurdish opposition said conflict in the country's largely Kurdish southeast had grown into an international problem, feeding into war in neighbouring Syria, and urged allies to do more to push for a ceasefire. Unrest in the NATO member state, which is negotiating to join the European Union, has turned parts of the southeast into a war zone. It is also complicating efforts to stage Syrian peace talks.




Authorities working to clear remaining protesters in Oregon occupation
10:25:03 AM

An amoured vehicle is seen outside the police   perimeter at Malheur National Wildlife Refuge near Burns, OregonBy Peter Henderson BURNS, Ore. (Reuters) - Law enforcement was working on Thursday to convince remaining protesters in a month-long armed occupation of a federal wildlife refuge in Oregon to leave the site following calls from the group's leader to stand down and the death of a member. The FBI and local law enforcement have set up checkpoints near the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in northeast Oregon and are working "around the clock to empty the refuge of the armed occupiers in the safest way possible", a statement said. Eight more people had left the compound by late on Wednesday, the FBI said, and three were arrested and facing charges of felony conspiracy to impede federal officers.




Mass grave in Iraq's Ramadi holds at least 40 Islamic State victims - officials
9:48:37 AM
Iraqi authorities have uncovered a mass grave in Ramadi containing at least 40 bodies, including women and children, apparently killed by Islamic State insurgents when they seized the city in May, police and provincial officials said. Footage posted on the Facebook page of the provincial police on Wednesday showed what appeared to be bodies in varying states of decay being pulled from a shallow grave in the capital of Anbar province which Iraq's military recaptured last month. Interior Ministry spokesman Brigadier General Saad Maan confirmed the reports.


Rights group seeks probe into police inaction over rape complaints in Chhattisgarh
9:25:01 AM
One of India's poorest regions, Chhattisgarh has seen major security operations to flush out Maoist rebels who say they are fighting for the rights of poor farmers and landless labourers to land and a greater claim on mineral wealth. According to Amnesty's India office, 13 women from the Adivasi group said they were raped and sexually assaulted by police and security forces during anti-Maoist raids in Nendra village between Jan. 11 and 14.


Japan's economy minister resigns over money scandal, denies bribery
9:20:37 AM

Japan's Economics Minister Amari reacts during a   news conference in TokyoBy Stanley White and Leika Kihara TOKYO (Reuters) - Japanese Economy Minister Akira Amari said on Thursday he was resigning to take responsibility for a political funding scandal that has rocked the government, but denied having taken bribes. In a packed news conference televised live, Amari acknowledged taking money from a construction company executive but said he told his aides to correctly record them as a political donation. While asserting his legal innocence, Amari, a key player in Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's policy team, said he was stepping down to prevent the scandal from being a distraction to his administration's drive to pull the country out of deflation.




Kidnapped Al Jazeera journalists freed in Yemen - network
8:56:53 AM

Palestinian journalists are seen through a glass   window at Al-Jazeera offices in RamallahTwo journalists and a driver working for the Qatari-owned Al Jazeera Arabic TV channel were freed in Yemen on Thursday, the network said, ten days after they were abducted by gunmen in the war-torn southwestern city of Taiz. The Doha-based channel said in a news report on its website that correspondent Hamdi Al-Bokari, cameraman Abdulaziz Al-Sabri and driver Moneer Al-Sabai were released by their captors, whose identity remains unclear. Fighters loyal to Yemen's President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi are battling Iran-allied Houthi militia and loyalists of the country's former leader in a war that has raged for nine months and in which some 6,000 people have been killed.




Sudan opens border with South Sudan for first time since 2011 secession
8:49:57 AM

Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir waits to   welcome Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni at Khartoum AirportKHARTOUM/JUBA (Reuters) - Sudan's President Omar Hassan al-Bashir ordered the opening of his country's border with South Sudan for the first time since the south's secession in 2011, paving the way for better economic links between the two nations. The border was closed in 2011 when relations deteriorated after the south seceded following a long civil war, taking with it three quarters of the country's oil, estimated at 5 billion barrels of proven reserves by the U.S. Energy Information Administration. "President Omar al-Bashir issued a decree today ordering the opening of borders with the state of South Sudan and ordered the relevant authorities to take all measures required to implement this decision on the ground," Sudan's state news agency SUNA reported on Wednesday.




RSSFWD - From RSS to Inbox
3600 O'Donnell Street, Suite 200, Baltimore, MD 21224. (410) 230-0061
WhatCounts

No comments:

Post a Comment