Tuesday, November 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.



Fans welcome back Kim Kardashian after social media silence
3:35:04 PM

Kim Kardashian arrives at the 2016 MTV Video Music   Awards in New York(Reuters) - Reality star Kim Kardashian has returned to social media, posting on Facebook for the first time since a robbery in Paris last month forced her to retreat from her busy public life. Kardashian, who grew a multimillion-dollar brand through her prolific Twitter, Instagram and other social media postings that attract tens of millions of followers, put up three Facebook entries late on Monday, but made no reference to the robbery at gunpoint in Paris. Instead she posted a link to old Kardashian Halloween family videos, linked to Halloween costume ideas from her personal assistant, and shared what appeared to be an old photo of herself sitting and looking at her cell phone.




Venezuela frees three jailed activists in post-talks gesture
3:30:08 PM

Riot police officers rise their shields as they   escort people walking out from the National Assembly after a session in CaracasVenezuela has freed three opposition activists jailed for more than a month in a first gesture by President Nicolas Maduro's government after talks began with his foes. The socialist leader met opposition leaders at the weekend in talks convened by the Vatican, but they conditioned further dialogue on the release of political prisoners and a national vote on Maduro's rule. Authorities freed the three activists - Carlos Melo, Andres Moreno and Marco Trejo - on Monday night, but the opposition says another 100 or so Maduro opponents remain in jail.




Hong Kong leader raises prospect of controversial legal request to Beijing
3:24:12 PM

Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying holds a   news conference in Hong KongHong Kong's leader has signalled he might ask Beijing to use a rarely invoked power to interpret the city's Basic Law mini-constitution to end a political crisis over a fledgling independence movement. Any such move will spark fears for Hong Kong's autonomy and vaunted legal system, officials, judges and lawyers say privately. Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying's remarks on Tuesday come ahead of a Hong Kong government-requested legal hearing that could effectively bar two recently elected pro-independence lawmakers from the legislature of the global financial hub.




Ousted Tata chairman denies mishandling DoCoMo dispute
3:15:14 PM

Tata Group Chairman Mistry speaks to shareholders   during TCS annual general meeting in MumbaiBy Aditi Shah and Abhirup Roy MUMBAI (Reuters) - Cyrus Mistry, who was ousted as chairman of Indian conglomerate Tata Sons last week, said "insinuations" that he mishandled a dispute with Japanese telecoms firm NTT DoCoMo Inc were baseless, ratcheting up a war of words with the Tata board. People close to the matter have said one of the reasons for Mistry's dismissal was his handling of a long-running dispute with DoCoMo, Tata Sons' partner in a telecoms joint venture in India. Mistry's office said in a statement that all decisions related to the dispute were taken with the unanimous approval of the Tata Sons board, and that of Tata family patriarch Ratan Tata, and Tata trustee N.A. Soonawalla.




Jailed anti-Putin activist says he is being tortured in prison
3:12:29 PM
By Andrew Osborn MOSCOW (Reuters) - A Russian opposition activist who became the first person to be jailed for repeatedly staging peaceful anti-Kremlin protests under a new law says he is being tortured in prison and fears for his life. A Moscow court sentenced Ildar Dadin to three years in prison in December for holding a series of one-man protests in a case Amnesty International called "a cynical attack on freedom of expression." His jail term was later reduced to two and a half years on appeal. In a letter to his wife from prison in north-west Russia published by online news portal Meduza on Tuesday, Dadin, 34, said he was being subject to group beatings where around 10 prison guards would kick him at the same time.


Exclusive - India's tobacco industry, government face off ahead of WHO conference
3:07:38 PM
By Aditya Kalra NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's $11 billion (9 billion pound) tobacco industry has urged the government to take a softer line on tobacco control efforts when it hosts a WHO conference in New Delhi next month, but officials say the government will not bow to "pressure tactics". Delegates from about 180 countries will attend the Nov. 7-12 World Health Organization (WHO) conference on the sole global anti-tobacco treaty: the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC). In force since 2005, the treaty aims to deter tobacco use that kills around 6 million people a year.


Iranian parliament approves three new Rouhani ministers
2:27:22 PM
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Iranian lawmakers approved three new ministers on Tuesday, signalling support for changes in the cabinet of pragmatist President Hassan Rouhani seven months before a presidential election. State media reported that Reza Salehi Amiri, Saeed Soltanifar and Fakhredin Ahmadi Danesh-Ashtiani won votes of confidence to take over the ministries of Islamic guidance and culture, sport and youth affairs, and education. Their predecessors resigned after Rouhani criticised them for inefficiency and succumbing to pressures from outside the government. ...


Top diplomats to visit Myanmar's troubled northern Rakhine - sources
1:37:59 PM

The ruins of a market which was set on fire are seen   at a Rohingya village outside Maugndaw in Rakhine stateSenior diplomats from the United States, China, Britain and the European Union will this week visit Myanmar's troubled northern Rakhine State, which has been cut off to aid workers and observers for more than three weeks, sources said. The diplomats, and the top United Nations representative in Myanmar, will set off for Maungdaw on Wednesday, six people with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters on Tuesday. Residents and human rights advocates have said government forces have committed abuses including summary executions, rape and setting fire to homes.




Mandela Foundation rebukes Zuma, joins calls for leadership change
12:43:03 PM

South African President Zuma laughs ahead of Finance   Minister Gordhan's medium term budget speech in Cape TownBy James Macharia JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - The foundation set up to guard the legacy of the late Nelson Mandela on Tuesday blamed South Africa's President Jacob Zuma for the "wheels coming off" Africa's most industrialised nation and urged a change in political leadership. Since coming to power in 2009, Zuma has survived a string of corruption scandals almost unscathed. The non-profit Nelson Mandela Foundation, whose board consists of ten prominent South African academics, politicians and journalists, called on the African National Congress (ANC), the liberation movement once headed by Mandela and now led by Zuma, to change its leadership.




Syrian refugee sought after family found dead in freezer in Denmark
12:16:38 PM
By Nikolaj Skydsgaard COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - The bodies of a Syrian woman and her two daughters, aged 7 and 9, have been found in a freezer in a town in Denmark and the woman's husband and father of the children was being sought, Danish police said on Tuesday. The discovery was made on Sunday night in Aabenraa in southern Denmark. The family came to Denmark in summer 2015 and obtained refugee status, police said.


Italian prosecutor in Egypt to discuss probe into student's killing
12:16:05 PM

An Amnesty International activist holds a placard   reading "truth for Giulio Regeni" as she takes part in a performance to   protest against enforced disappearance in RomeItaly's deputy chief prosecutor arrived in Cairo on Tuesday to discuss developments in the investigation into the killing of Italian student Giulio Regeni, sources at Cairo airport said. Regeni, who was doing postgraduate research into Egyptian trade unions, was last seen by his friends on Jan. 25. Deputy chief prosecutor Sergio Colaiocco will meet Egyptian Public Prosecutor Nabil Sadek and other senior judicial and security officials, according to the sources, who participated in welcoming the Italian delegation at the airport.




Turkey to name custodians to replace detained Kurdish mayors
12:01:10 PM
Turkish authorities will appoint unelected administrators to run the mainly Kurdish city of Diyarbakir, officials said on Tuesday, after detaining its two mayors last week in a crackdown on unrest in the southeast of the country. Separately, police detained 30 officials from the opposition Democratic Regions' Party (DBP) in dawn raids in three towns in the restive region, security sources said. Turkey's Western allies are worried about due process and a deteriorating human rights situation in the southeast as a crackdown against Kurdish militants widens to include politicians and journalists.


Turkey rejects Europe's "red line" on press freedom after detentions
12:00:06 PM

Turkey's Prime Minister Binali Yildirim   addresses members of parliament from his ruling AK Party during a meeting at the   Turkish parliament in AnkaraBy Daren Butler and Humeyra Pamuk ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkey's prime minister said he had no regard for Europe's "red line" on press freedom on Tuesday and warned Ankara would not be brought to heel with threats, rejecting criticism of the detention of senior journalists at an opposition newspaper. Police detained the editor and top staff of Cumhuriyet, a pillar of the country's secularist establishment, on Monday, on accusations that the newspaper's coverage had helped precipitate a failed military coup in July. The United States and European Union both voiced concern about the move in Turkey, a NATO ally which aspires to EU membership.




Ex-banker in 1MDB-linked trial worked for Malaysian 'Jho Low' - witness
11:55:19 AM

A man walks past a 1 Malaysia Development Berhad   (1MDB) billboard at the funds flagship Tun Razak Exchange development in Kuala   LumpurBy Fathin Ungku SINGAPORE (Reuters) - A former private banker for BSI quit his job in 2014 to work for Low Taek Jho, the Malaysian financier accused of siphoning billions of dollars from Malaysia's scandal-tainted 1MDB fund, a witness told a Singapore court on Tuesday. The allegation was made by Kevin Swampillai, the supervisor of ex-BSI banker Yeo Jiawei. More than $3.5 billion was allegedly misappropriated from 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), according to civil lawsuits filed by the U.S. Department of Justice, which named several individuals, including Low, better known as "Jho Low".




All sides may be committing war crimes in Aleppo, U.N. says
11:47:19 AM

Smoke rises near a damaged road in Dahiyet al-Assad,   west Aleppo cityAll sides fighting over the Syrian city of Aleppo may be committing war crimes through indiscriminate attacks in civilian areas, U.N. human rights spokeswoman Ravina Shamdasani told a regular U.N. briefing in Geneva on Tuesday. Last week insurgents launched an offensive against government-held western Aleppo, more than a month into an operation by the army to retake the city's rebel-held eastern districts, which it had already put under siege. The U.N. estimates 250,000-275,000 civilians are trapped and 8,000 rebel fighters holed up in the eastern part.




Turkey could draft 'limited measure' on death penalty, PM says
11:26:43 AM

Turkey's Prime Minister Binali Yildirim   addresses members of parliament from his ruling AK Party during a meeting at the   Turkish parliament in AnkaraTurkey could draft a "limited measure" to bring back the death penalty if a political compromise could be reached on the issue, Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said on Tuesday. Following the July failed coup, crowds have repeatedly called for the re-introduction of capital punishment and President Tayyip Erdogan has said he would approve it if parliament voted for it. Turkey formally abandoned the death penalty in 2002 as part of its European Union accession process, although no executions had been carried out since 1984.




Turkey pushed into coup process in planned way - opposition leader
11:25:40 AM

A military aims his weapon on top of a tank during an   attempted coup in AnkaraANKARA (Reuters) - Turkey was pushed into a coup process in a "planned and programmed way" and is now experiencing conditions worse than after a military coup in 1980, the leader of the main opposition CHP, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, said on Tuesday. He was speaking to his party in parliament a day after 13 journalists from a secularist opposition paper were detained on accusations of supporting the July 15 failed coup, in which rogue soldiers tried to seize power, killing more than 240 people. (Reporting by Gulsen Solaker and Ayla Jean Yackley; Writing by Daren Butler; Editing by David Dolan)




Moroccan authorities, facing protests, charge 11 over fishmonger's death
11:16:34 AM

Protests take part in a rally called by the February   20 Movement in Rabat after a fishmonger in the northern town of Al Hoceima was   crushed to death inside a rubbish truck as he tried to retrieve fish confiscated   by policeBy Aziz El Yaakoubi RABAT (Reuters) - Moroccan authorities have charged 11 people over the death of a fishmonger who was crushed in a garbage truck while trying to stop police from destroying his stock, in a case that has ignited public anger. The death of Mouhcine Fikri in the northern city of Al-Hoceima on Friday has prompted thousands to take to the streets in four days of protests, among the biggest in Morocco since pro-reform demonstrations broke out during the 2011 Arab Spring. In an effort to calm tensions, King Mohamed, currently on a tour of Africa, ordered the interior minister to visit the victim's family and present royal condolences.




Russia dismisses British allegations about spy threat
11:15:13 AM
MOSCOW (Reuters) - The Kremlin on Tuesday dismissed as untrue allegations by the head of Britain's MI5 intelligence agency that Russia is mounting cyber-attacks and other aggressive measures which pose a growing threat to Britain. "Those words do not correspond to reality," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told a conference call with reporters when asked about the comments, made by MI5 chief Andrew Parker. "Until someone produces proof, we will consider those statements unfounded and groundless." (Reporting by Denis Pinchuk; Writing by Christian Lowe; Editing by Polina Devitt)


UK spy chief sees growing threat from Russian cyber-attacks, espionage
11:13:28 AM

Britain's intelligence chiefs give their first   ever public testimony at parliament in LondonRussia is pushing its foreign policy in increasingly aggressive ways including cyber-attacks and espionage, posing a growing threat to Britain and the rest of Europe, the head of Britain's internal intelligence agency MI5 has said. MI5 Director General Andrew Parker said Russia had been a covert threat for decades, but what differed now from the Cold War era was that there were more and more methods available for it to pursue its anti-Western agenda. "Russia increasingly seems to define itself by opposition to the West and seems to act accordingly," he told the Guardian newspaper in an interview published on Tuesday.




Iran court issues verdict for suspects in Saudi embassy attack
11:12:54 AM
Iran's judiciary has issued verdicts for 20 people accused of storming Saudi diplomatic missions in January and will announce them in the near future, an official was quoted as saying by the judiciary news agency on Tuesday. Sunni Muslim Saudi Arabia cut diplomatic relations with its Shi'ite Muslim rival Iran after protesters stormed the kingdom's embassy in Tehran and consulate in Mashhad in response to Riyadh's execution of a prominent Saudi Shi'ite cleric. The Iranian government condemned the assault and President Hassan Rouhani, keen to improve Tehran's long-strained relations with its neighbours and the West, asked the judiciary to punish the protesters and prevent further attacks.


Defence in Hong Kong murder trial says British man warned bank of reputation risk
11:02:52 AM

File photo of Jutting, a British banker charged with   two counts of murder, sitting in the back row of a prison bus as he arrives at the   Eastern Law Courts in Hong KongBritish investment banker Rurik Jutting called his boss at the Bank of America in Hong Kong and warned him that its reputation was at risk after he had killed a second woman, a Hong Kong court heard on Tuesday. Tim Owen, a lawyer defending Jutting against charges of murdering two Indonesian women in his Hong Kong apartment, detailed the stress that Jutting felt during his working life that culminated in a cocaine-fuelled torture and killing spree two years ago. Jutting, 31, has pleaded not guilty to murdering Sumarti Ningsih, 23, and Seneng Mujiasih, 26, on grounds of "diminished responsibility", but guilty to the lesser charge of manslaughter.




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