Friday, September 2, 2016

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.



Britain committed to European foreign policy, security - Johnson
3:19:19 PM

Britain's Foreign Secretary Johnson and   Austria's Foreign Minister Kurz arrive for a media statement after a meeting   in ViennaBritain is committed to European foreign and security cooperation even though it is preparing to leave the European Union, its foreign secretary, Boris Johnson, said on Friday as he arrived for talks with other EU ministers. Johnson, a former mayor of London and a colourful politician with a long record of gaffes and scandals, was a high-profile "Leave" campaigner in Britain's June referendum which resulted in a vote to quit the EU bloc. As Britain and the other 27 EU states gear up for painful divorce talks, Johnson reiterated that Britain "may be leaving the European Union but we are not leaving Europe." "The British government, under Theresa May, is absolutely committed to participation in European foreign policy cooperation and European defence and security co-operation," he said.




Turkish police use tear gas on protesters near Syrian border - security sources
3:09:11 PM
ANKARA/BEIRUT (Reuters) - Turkish security forces used tear gas and water cannon to disperse a group of protesters along the Syrian border on Friday, Turkish military sources said, but denied suggestions that they opened fire and killed at least one civilian. The protesters were demonstrating against Turkey building a wall on the Syrian border near the Kurdish Syrian town of Kobani, the security sources said. An official from the Kobani town council, Anwar Musallim, told Reuters that Turkish forces used live ammunition as well as tear gas.


Mother Teresa borne to sainthood by complex, mysterious process
2:56:16 PM

A tapestry picturing Mother Teresa hangs from the   central balcony of St. Peter's BasilicaBy Philip Pullella VATICAN CITY (Reuters) - The canonisation of Mother Teresa of Calcutta on Sunday will be the culmination of a process - sometimes called "the saint-making machine" - that is long, complex, expensive, opaque and often contentious. The Catholic Church posthumously confers sainthood on people considered so holy during their lives that they are now believed to be with God and can intercede with him to perform miracles. Mother Teresa died in 1997 and the late Pope John Paul, who met her often, bent Vatican rules to grant a dispensation allowing the procedure to establish her case for sainthood to be launched two years after her death instead of the usual five.




Photos show South Sudan rebel leader in apparent good health
2:44:10 PM
By Denis Dumo JUBA (Reuters) - Supporters of South Sudanese opposition leader Riek Machar have released pictures showing him in apparent good health, more than a month after he fled fierce fighting in the capital, Juba, in which he was reported to have been wounded. Hundreds of people were killed in the battles that broke out in the world's youngest nation in July as troops loyal to Machar and President Salva Kiir, his long-time political foe, fought each other using tanks, artillery and helicopters. After withdrawing from the capital, Machar's whereabouts and condition remained unknown for several weeks until the United Nations said it had picked him up in neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo with a leg injury.


Colombians would approve peace accord in plebiscite - report
2:12:43 PM

A couple from the 51st Front of the Revolutionary   Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) pose for the camera at a camp in Cordillera   OrientalColombians would vote in favor of a peace deal between the government and Marxist FARC rebels even as the nation remains deeply divided over the agreement, local media reported on Friday, citing a poll. After almost four years of complicated talks in Havana, the government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) agreed last week to end a five-decade war that has killed more than 220,000 and displaced millions. A poll by Cifras y Conceptos, the first since the agreement was reached, showed that 62 percent of Colombians who decide to participate in the plebiscite would vote in favor of the deal, local radio station Caracol reported on Friday.




Ex-Stanford swimmer released after three months in jail for sex assault
2:10:13 PM

Brock Turner, the former Stanford swimmer convicted   of sexually assaulting an unconscious woman, leaves the Santa Clara County Jail in   San Jose, CaliforniaBy Jane Lanhee Lee SAN JOSE, Calif. (Reuters) - A former Stanford University swimmer was released from jail on Friday after serving just half of a six-month sentence for sexually assaulting an unconscious woman, a sentence widely criticized as too lenient. Brock Turner, 20, left the Santa Clara County Main Jail in San Jose shortly after 6 a.m. PDT (1300 GMT), just three months after he began serving a sentence for assault with intent to commit rape, penetration of an intoxicated person and penetration of an unconscious person. Sheriff's deputies stood nearby as Turner, carrying a paper bag filled with his belongings, walked silently from the jail to a white sports utility vehicle waiting at the curb.




Ireland to join Apple in fight against EU tax ruling
2:02:51 PM

A 3D printed Apple logo is seen in front of a   displayed European Union flag in this illustrationBy Padraic Halpin and Conor Humphries DUBLIN (Reuters) - Ireland's cabinet agreed on Friday to join Apple in appealing against a multi-billion-euro back tax demand that the European Commission has slapped on the iPhone maker, despite misgivings among independents who back the fragile coalition. The Commission's ruling this week that the U.S. tech giant must pay up to 13 billion euros ($14.5 billion) to Dublin has angered Washington, which accuses the EU of trying to grab tax revenue that should go to the U.S. government. With transatlantic tensions rising, the White House said President Barack Obama would raise the issue of tax avoidance by some multinational corporations at a summit of the G20 leading economies in China this weekend.




Conflict in Jharkhand makes it harder for women to claim land rights
1:07:10 PM

Local women stand atop of an open cast coal field as   other collect coal at Dhanbad district in JharkhandBy Rina Chandran MUMBAI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Women in parts of conflict-hit central and eastern India are more vulnerable to violence and eviction from their land because a decades-long insurgency has made it harder for them to claim equal land rights, according to a new study. In the 10 villages surveyed by land rights advocacy group Landesa in Jharkhand, only 4 percent of housing plots and 3 percent of agricultural plots were owned solely or jointly by women. In contrast, 59 percent of housing plots and two-thirds of agricultural plots were owned by men.




The woman behind Brazil's domestic violence law: 'I can't give up the fight'
12:52:03 PM
By Jo Griffin LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Brazil must do more to ensure its landmark law on domestic violence combats the crime in a country where statistics show a woman is killed every two hours, said Maria da Penha, whose own fight for justice led to a law named after her 10 years ago. Da Penha, a biopharmacist in northeast Ceara state who was left paraplegic in 1983 after her husband tried to kill her, has shared her name for the past decade with the law praised by the United Nations as world leading on gender violence. The Maria da Penha law toughened sentences for offenders and set up specialised courts, police stations and shelters for women in cities of more than 60,000 people.


South Africa's cabinet seeks inquiry on banks' treatment of Zuma friends
12:49:00 PM

South Africa's President Jacob Zuma arrives for   the official announcement of the munincipal election results at the result centre   in PretoriaBy James Macharia JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - The South African cabinet has asked President Jacob Zuma to launch a judicial inquiry into why the country's top banks cut ties with a company owned by the wealthy Gupta family, who have been accused of holding undue political sway over Zuma. The prominent business family is accused by the opposition of being behind Zuma's abrupt sacking of former finance minister Nhlanhla Nene in December, a move that rattled investor confidence and triggered calls for the president's resignation. The Guptas, whose businesses stretch from media to mining, have denied using their friendship with Zuma to influence his decisions, including cabinet appointments, or advance their business interests.




Migrants lured by sex into Egypt's backstreet kidney trade, says report
12:35:35 PM

Israeli soldier stands near border fence between   Israel and Egypt as African would-be immigrants sit on the other side near the   Israeli village of Be'er MilchaBy Tom Esslemont LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Brokers in Egypt's underground trade in human body parts use prostitutes to tempt migrants to sell their kidneys as hospitals turn a blind eye to illicit dealing in donated organs for transplants, a report says. Undocumented African migrants arriving in Cairo, desperate for cash, told the British Journal of Criminology that sex workers were offered as a "sweetener" before or after removal of their organs. "A night with a sex worker was offered as an extra inducement to sell." Organ purchase is banned in Egypt, though the country is a common destination for transplant tourism, along with India, Pakistan and Russia, according to separate research by Erasmus MC University Hospital Rotterdam in the Netherlands.




Sturgeon launches new Scottish independence drive after 'seismic' Brexit vote
12:10:21 PM

Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon speaks   at the public Question and Answer event with EU nationals living in Scotland, at   the Corn Exchange,By Elisabeth O'Leary STIRLING, Scotland (Reuters) - The Scottish National Party is to send out thousands of its faithful to measure the appetite for independence, leader Nicola Sturgeon announced on Friday, raising the political stakes further as Britain decides how it will leave the European Union. The first minister of the devolved Scottish government said Britain's June vote to leave the EU, dragging Scotland with it, had shifted the debate dramatically just two years after Scots voted by 10 percentage points to reject independence. "Do we control our own destiny as a country or will we always be at the mercy of decisions taken elsewhere?" Sturgeon asked her Scottish National Party (SNP) lawmakers in Stirling, the site of a historic Scots battle over the English in 1297.




Judge in French Riviera's Nice deals further blow to burkini foes
12:07:10 PM

A man wears a placard with a message outside the   Conseil d'Etat after France's highest administrative court suspended a   ban on full-body burkini swimsuits in ParisAttempts to ban burkini-clad women from the beaches of France's Riviera coast suffered a further setback when a judge in the city of Nice declared the prohibition of the body-hiding swimwear to be illegal there. The verdict delivered on Thursday was the latest of several rulings against bans imposed by local authorities in dozens of southeastern beach resorts in the peak holiday month of August - bans that sparked intense controversy inside and outside France. Nice, where 86 people died in an Islamic State militant attack in July, was one of some 30 towns in the largely right-wing part of the country to ban the burkini on the grounds that it presented a threat to public order.




Cannabis booths torn down in Danish free town Christiania
12:04:50 PM

A resident demolishes a marijuana vending stall   following a shooting in Freetown ChristianiaBy Annabella PultzNielsen and Nikolaj Skydsgaard COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Residents of the 'free town' of Christiania in Copenhagen began tearing down cannabis-selling booths on its main street on Friday, two days after a shooting incident rocked one of Denmark's favourite tourist attractions. Known to Danes as "the town", Christiania was founded on abandoned military grounds by squatters in 1971 and is known for its rainbow-coloured hippie houses and its cannabis trade, which generates approximately 1 billion Danish crowns ($150 million) a year, according to police. Free town residents decided at a gathering on Thursday night to start demolishing the booths, concerned that Christiania's liberal drugs culture has been taken over by organised crime.




U.N. chief urges Sri Lanka to redress wrongs of war
12:01:21 PM

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon gestures   during his speech at the "Sustaining Peace - Achieving Sustainable   Development Goals" forum during an official visit in ColomboBy Shihar Aneez COLOMBO (Reuters) - U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on Friday urged Sri Lanka to do more to redress wrongs committed during 26 years of war with Tamil rebels, including returning land and restoring the accountability of the judiciary and security services. Ban, on a three-day official visit, praised the efforts of President Maithripala Sirisena's administration since coming to power last year to address some rights abuses committed during the war. "Sri Lanka is still in the early stages of regaining its rightful position in the region and the international community." Dozens of Sri Lankan nationalists, who back ousted president Mahinda Rajapaksa, on Thursday protested against Ban's visit, demanding he leave the island and stop an investigation into alleged abuses at the end of the civil war.




Brazil's Temer says decision for Rousseff to keep political rights a "small" embarrassment
10:32:12 AM

Brazil's new President Michel Temer attends a   ministerial meeting after Brazil's Senate removed President Dilma Rousseff in   BrasiliaBy Adam Jourdan SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Brazil's newly installed president Michel Temer said the Senate's decision to allow former president Dilma Rousseff to maintain her political rights was a "small" embarrassment, and played down its significance to the stability of his government. Temer was speaking on the sidelines of a business summit in Shanghai, after arriving in China on Friday to attend a G20 leaders' meeting in Hangzhou, his first global event after this week's impeachment of his predecessor, Rousseff. "From the beginning I have always said I would wait respectfully for the Senate decision.




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