Thursday, September 1, 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.



Hispanic backers sour on Trump after immigration speech
10:11:40 PM

Men watch from across the street as protesters rally   against U.S. Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump, who is in town to   speak on immigration, in Phoenix, ArizonaBy Emily Stephenson and Amanda Becker WILMINGTON, Ohio/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Some of Donald Trump's Hispanic backers distanced themselves from the Republican nominee on Thursday for standing by a hardline approach to illegal immigration in a key speech after indicating for weeks that he may soften his approach. Trump tried to clarify confusion about immigration, his signature policy issue, in a speech on Wednesday. While polls show a large majority of Hispanic voters oppose Trump, the withdrawal of support from among his small group of Latino backers underscores how difficult it is for Trump to broaden his support with minorities and moderate voters.




Turkey's judiciary body dismisses 543 judges, prosecutors - TV report
10:01:17 PM
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - The top Turkish judicial board has dismissed 543 more judges and prosecutors, Turkey's NTV television reported, the latest purge of officials suspected of sympathising with those behind a July 15 failed coup. The members of the High Council of Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK) has now dismissed about 3,300 judiciary officials since the July 15 putsch. Overall, the Turkish authorities have removed about 80,000 people from public duties, many of those have also been arrested. (Reporting by Asli Kandemir; Writing by Edmund Blair; Editing by Nick Tattersall)


Pakistani man sentenced in U.S. for trying to export military equipment
9:40:56 PM
A Pakistani man was sentenced on Thursday to 33 months in a U.S. prison for attempting to export military equipment for the Pakistani military without a license, the U.S. Justice Department said. Syed Vaqar Ashraf had previously pleaded guilty to trying to procure gyroscopes and illegally ship them to Pakistan so they could be used by the Pakistani military, the Justice Department said in a news release.


U.S. Muslims relieved Eid holiday to fall day after September 11 anniversary
9:31:55 PM
By Joseph Ax NEW YORK (Reuters) - For weeks, some U.S. Islamic leaders worried that the Eid al-Adha holiday would fall on Sept. 11, raising the possibility that some non-Muslims would misinterpret celebrations occurring on the solemn anniversary of the al Qaeda attacks of 2001. "At least it doesn't give an excuse for the Islam haters to falsely claim that Muslims were celebrating on 9/11," said Ibrahim Hooper, a spokesman for the Council on Islamic Relations. "That was the concern." Eid al-Adha commemorates the willingness of Ibrahim, or Abraham, to sacrifice the life of his son for God.


China quelling evidence weakening its spy case against U.S. woman, husband says
9:12:22 PM
By Jon Herskovitz AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - China has set a Sept. 19 trial date for a U.S. businesswoman it has held since March 2015 for suspected spying, and is suppressing evidence that weakens its case, the woman's husband in Texas said in a statement on Thursday. Vietnam-born Sandy Phan-Gillis, from Houston, a U.S. citizen of Chinese ancestry, was arrested by Chinese authorities in March last year when she visited China as part of a trade delegation from Houston. This brought new attention to her case just ahead of a visit to China by U.S. President Barack Obama, who will arrive on Saturday for a G20 summit in the city of Hangzhou.


Morocco says to keep clearing road at Western Sahara border, despite tensions
8:01:06 PM
Moroccan government said on Thursday it will maintain its "clearing operations" against smuggling and crime at a Western Sahara border area despite warnings from the Polisario Front that it was a violation of their 1991 ceasefire deal. Polisario, which declared an independent republic in the disputed desert land in the 1970s and fought a guerrilla war with Morocco, accuses Rabat of breaking the terms of the ceasefire by building a road in the U.N. buffer zone. U.N. peace-keeping observers (Minurso) deployed this week to monitor a standoff between Moroccan forces and Western Sahara Polisario troops in the buffer zone in the Guerguerat region, near the Mauritanian border.


Venezuelan opposition floods Caracas in vast anti-Maduro protest
7:54:23 PM

Opposition supporters take part in a rally to demand   a referendum to remove Venezuela's President Nicolas Maduro in CaracasBy Diego Oré and Brian Ellsworth CARACAS (Reuters) - Opponents of President Nicolas Maduro flooded Venezuela's capital on Thursday in one of the biggest mass protests against socialist rule for more than a decade. Dressed in white and chanting "this government will fall," hundreds of thousands rallied across Caracas to demand a recall referendum against Maduro and decry a deep economic crisis in the South American OPEC nation. The opposition Democratic Unity coalition estimated at least 1 million people took part after protesters streamed into Caracas from the Amazon jungle to the western Andes.




South Africa's Gordhan says complied with police as row widens
7:10:33 PM

South African Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan reacts   during a media briefing in Sandton near JohannesburgBy James Macharia JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South Africa's finance minister said on Thursday that he had complied with a police investigation, in a widening dispute which has also pitted government agencies against each other and rattled financial markets. Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan declined last week to obey a police summons linked to the inquiry into whether he had used a tax service unit to spy on politicians including President Jacob Zuma. Gordhan said he had done nothing wrong.




Congo opposition supporters clash before election talks
6:57:01 PM
By Benoit Nyemba KINSHASA (Reuters) - Violence broke out on Thursday between supporters of rival Congolese opposition parties, exposing deep divisions among President Joseph Kabila's adversaries over whether to engage in talks about a delayed presidential election. Kabila's opponents accuse him of stalling the vote to hang onto power, a charge he denies. Most of the main opposition parties are boycotting the talks but some prominent figures have agreed to participate, saying they will use the forum to insist on his departure this year.


N.Y. court tosses Lindsay Lohan's Grand Theft Auto V lawsuit
6:25:37 PM

Actress Lindsay Lohan rehearses a scene from   "Speed-the-Plow" by David Mamet at the Playhouse Theatre in LondonBy Karen Freifeld NEW YORK (Reuters) - A New York state appeals court on Thursday dismissed a lawsuit in which the actress Lindsay Lohan accused the maker of the popular "Grand Theft Auto" video games of basing a character on her without her permission. Take-Two Interactive Software Inc did not use Lohan's "name, portrait or picture" in "Grand Theft Auto V" and therefore did not violate her right to privacy, the five-judge Appellate Division panel in Manhattan said. The court also dismissed similar claims against Take-Two by Karen Gravano, star of the "Mob Wives" reality television series.




Over 1,000 arrested as post-election riots rage in Gabon
6:12:24 PM

Soldiers patrol a street near opposition campaign   headquarters in LibrevilleBy Gerauds Wilfried Obangome LIBREVILLE (Reuters) - Three people were killed and up to 1,100 were arrested in Gabon on Thursday, the government said, in a second day of rioting over the announcement of President Ali Bongo's re-election and his main rival's accusation that the vote was rigged. Opposition challenger Jean Ping accused the elections commission of inflating Bongo's score to hand him a slim victory and extend his family's nearly half-century rule in the oil-producing Central African country for another seven years. Violent protests raged in at least nine neighbourhoods of the capital Libreville, two witnesses and a police source said on Thursday, a day after demonstrators set fire to the parliament building following the results announcement.




Romanian hacker 'Guccifer' sentenced to 52 months in U.S. prison
5:58:04 PM

Lehel, alleged hacker "Guccifer", is   escorted by masked policemen in Bucharest, after being arrested in AradBy Dustin Volz WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A Romanian hacker nicknamed "Guccifer" who helped expose the existence of a private email domain Hillary Clinton used when she was U.S. secretary of state was sentenced on Thursday to 52 months in prison by a federal court in Alexandria, Virginia. Marcel Lazar, 44, who used the alias online, had pleaded guilty in May to charges including unauthorized access to a protected computer and aggravated identity theft after being extradited from Romania. Lazar's public defender, Shannon Quill, was not immediately available for comment.




Obama visits Midway Atoll, a symbol of his climate, Asia legacy
5:53:42 PM

Obama arrives aboard Air Force One at Joint Base   Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii, U.S.By Roberta Rampton HONOLULU (Reuters) - President Barack Obama on Thursday was set to visit Midway Atoll, the remote coral reef that serves as a reminder of both modern global climate challenges and the dominance the United States has held in the Pacific since its World War Two victory there. The journey, timed as Obama leaves for his last visit to Asia to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping and other world leaders, will also serve as a reminder of the American victory against Japanese forces on the island during World War Two. "It's a signal, it's a message saying the United States is committed to staying in the Pacific, and not sort of backing away," said naval historian Tom Hone, who has studied the Battle of Midway.




N.Y. man pleads not guilty to killings of imam, associate
5:50:50 PM

Oscar Morel, accused of fatally shooting a Muslim   cleric and his assistant, appears in Queens Criminal Court in Queens, New YorkA New York man pleaded not guilty on Thursday to charges that he shot dead a Muslim cleric and his associate last month on the street after they left a mosque in Queens, prosecutors said. Oscar Morel, 36, is facing murder and weapons charges. Imam Maulana Akonjee, 55, and Thara Uddin, 64, were gunned down in the Ozone Park neighborhood of Queens on Aug. 13 in an attack that shook the area's predominantly Bangladeshi community.




Zimbabwe bans demonstrations in capital for two weeks
5:46:13 PM

Police detain opposition party supporters holding   placards during a court appearance of those arrested following Friday's   protest march, in HarareZimbabwe has banned all demonstrations in the capital Harare for the next two weeks because they are likely to cause public disorder, according to a government notice issued on Thursday. President Robert Mugabe's opponents have become emboldened by rising public anger over an economic meltdown, cash shortages and high unemployment. Violence erupted last Friday when police fired teargas at opposition leaders and hundreds of demonstrators.




India reports 25 percent rise in human trafficking cases in 2015
5:38:11 PM

A 16-year-old girl stands inside a protection home on   the outskirts of New DelhiBy Nita Bhalla NEW DELHI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Reports of human trafficking in India increased by 25 percent in 2015 compared to the previous year, with more than 40 percent of cases involving children being bought, sold and exploited as modern day slaves, government crime data showed. The National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) said there were 6,877 cases related to human trafficking last year against 5,466 in 2014, with the highest number of cases reported in the northeast state of Assam, followed by West Bengal.




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