Thursday, December 29, 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.



Russian Foreign Ministry says new sanctions will harm restoration of ties
7:58:07 PM
MOSCOW (Reuters) - New U.S. sanctions on Russia are counterproductive and will harm a restoration of bilateral ties, Interfax news agency reported on Thursday, citing Konstantin Dolgov, Foreign Ministry commissioner for human rights, democracy and the rule of law. (Reporting by Katya Golubkova; Editing by Kevin Liffey)


U.S. House Speaker Ryan says Obama sanctions against Russia overdue
7:48:31 PM

U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan   (R-WI) speaks at U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's USA Thank You Tour event   at the Wisconsin State Fair Exposition Center in West Allis, WisconsinU.S. House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan said on Thursday Russia "has consistently sought to undermine" U.S. interests and sanctions imposed by the Obama administration on Russia were overdue. "While today's action by the administration is overdue, it is an appropriate way to end eight years of failed policy with Russia," Ryan said in a statement.




Obama sanctions Russia for intervening in 2016 election
7:44:08 PM

U.S. President Barack Obama participates in his last   news conference of the year at the White House in WashingtonPresident Barack Obama on Thursday authorized a series of sanctions against Russia for intervening in the 2016 U.S. presidential election and warned of more action to come. "These actions follow repeated private and public warnings that we have issued to the Russian government, and are a necessary and appropriate response to efforts to harm U.S. interests in violation of established international norms of behaviour," Obama said in a statement. "These actions are not the sum total of our response to Russia's aggressive activities.




U.S. expels 35 Russian diplomats, closes two compounds - official
7:28:36 PM
The United States expelled 35 Russian diplomats and closed two Russian compounds in New York and Maryland in response to a campaign of harassment against American diplomats in Moscow, a senior U.S. official said on Thursday. The move against the diplomats from the Russian embassy in Washington and consulate in San Francisco is part of a series of actions announced on Thursday to punish Russia for a campaign of intimidation of American diplomats in Moscow and interference in the U.S. election. The Obama administration was also announcing on Thursday a series of retaliatory measures against Russia for hacking into U.S. political institutions and individuals and leaking information to help President-elect Donald Trump and other Republican candidates, two U.S. officials said.


France's constitutional council rules against 'Google tax'
7:23:08 PM
France's Constitutional Council has ruled against a fiscal measure dubbed the "Google tax", which was aimed at making it tougher for multinational companies to minimise their tax payments in France. The council's ruling on Thursday comes as the government seeks to make France more attractive for foreign businesses after Britain's decision to leave the European Union. The "Google tax" targeting multinationals that use different countries' tax regimes to reduce tax liabilities had initially been included in France's 2017 budget law, but the government has since said it has reservations about the plans.


Judge orders psychiatric exam for South Carolina church shooter
7:21:02 PM

Charleston County Sheriff's Office handout   booking photo of Dylann Roof(Reuters) - A federal judge on Thursday ordered a psychiatric examination for Dylann Roof, days before he is to represent himself as jurors hear evidence about whether he should be executed for the June 2015 massacre at a Charleston, South Carolina, church. U.S. District Judge Richard Gergel said in an order he was requesting the evaluation and would hold a second competency hearing "in an abundance of caution" after Roof's standby lawyers filed a motion about his mental fitness to stand trial. The motion was sealed, but Gergel said defence lawyers stated it was spurred by facts developed since an initial competency hearing was held in November at their request ahead of the guilt phase of Roof's trial.




Gang-ravaged Mexico stuck in weed ban as U.S. opens up
6:42:31 PM

To match Feature MEXICO-DRUGS/TIJUANABy Joanna Zuckerman Bernstein MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Mexican advocates for drug reform are voicing alarm about the country's widening gap with the United States on marijuana legislation, as criminal violence surges again south of the border. Tens of thousands have been killed over the years in Mexico, on the front line of a U.S.-led war on drugs. The country's prohibitionist approach to marijuana is increasingly at odds with the United States, where liberalisation is advancing.




Man purporting to be Boko Haram leader denies Sambisa forest defeat
6:36:57 PM

A man purporting to be Boko Haram's leader   Abubakar Shekau speaks in this still frame taken from social media video courtesy   of SITE Intel GroupBy Ahmed Kingimi MAIDUGURI, Nigeria (Reuters) - A man purporting to be the leader of Nigerian Islamist militant group Boko Haram, Abubakar Shekau, denied the jihadist group has been pushed out of its stronghold in the Sambisa forest, but the army said the base had been captured. President Muhammadu Buhari on Saturday said Boko Haram's last enclave in the forest, a former game reserve in northeastern Nigeria, had been captured in the "final crushing" of the group. How many times have you killed us in your bogus death?" he added in the 25-minute video during which he spoke in the Hausa language and Arabic.




Egypt's government approves deal to hand two Red Sea islands to Saudi Arabia
5:59:54 PM
Egypt's government has approved a deal to hand over two Red Sea islands to Saudi Arabia and sent it to parliament for ratification, despite a legal dispute over the plan, according to state television. The deal, announced in April, caused public uproar and rare protests by Egyptians who said the uninhabited islands of Tiran and Sanafir belonged to their country. The controversy has become a source of tension with Saudi Arabia, which has provided billions of dollars of aid to Egypt but recently halted fuel shipments amid deteriorating relations.


New PM Gentiloni aims to unite "lacerated" Italy
5:51:54 PM

Italy's Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni gestures   as he holds a traditional end-year press conference in RomeBy Giselda Vagnoni ROME (Reuters) - Italy's new prime minister, Paolo Gentiloni, said on Thursday that he aimed to restore unity and cohesion following a divisive referendum, and continue the economic reforms begun by his predecessor, Matteo Renzi. Speaking at the prime minister's traditional year-end news conference, Gentiloni, 62, who took office less than three weeks ago, said he would try "to mend the many lacerations that are threatening our social fabric and our cohesion". The former foreign minister took over when Renzi resigned after almost three years in power after his constitutional reform plan was rejected in a Dec. 4 referendum.




Germany releases Tunisian suspect in Berlin truck attack
5:48:35 PM

Anis Amri, the Tunisian suspect of the Berlin   Christmas market attack, is seen in this undated photo taken from security cameras   at the Milan Central Train Station in downtown MilanBy Joseph Nasr and Isla Binnie BERLIN/ROME (Reuters) - Germany on Thursday released a Tunisian man detained on suspicion of involvement in the truck attack at a Berlin Christmas market last week, and Italian police searched houses in and around Rome where the main suspect may have spent time. Investigators across Europe are trying to determine whether Anis Amri, a failed asylum seeker from Tunisia who was shot dead by police in Milan on Friday after killing 12 people in Berlin in the name of Islamic State, had any accomplices. A spokeswoman for Germany's Federal Prosecutor's Office said the Tunisian man had been detained on Wednesday on suspicion Amri may have sent him a voice message and picture shortly before the attack.




Chilean Navy sailors accused of secretly filming female crewmates
5:46:58 PM

FILE PHOTO: The Chilean Navy ship "Almirante   Lynch" is seen off the coast of Valparaiso, Chile.Chilean authorities said on Thursday they are investigating allegations that female sailors were secretly videotaped in their quarters on a naval vessel and that those images were then shared via social media by other crew members. It said "it roundly rejects these types of actions that insult our personnel and we reiterate our respect for the privacy of those that form part of the institution." Chile's Defense Minister Jose Antonio Gomez said that sanction for these actions would "set an example." After receiving a complaint from a sailor who had seen the recordings of the women shared on a WhatsApp group, Chile's naval prosecutor opened an investigation into at least nine seamen, the Estrella de Valparaiso newspaper reported on Thursday.




Argentina to probe Fernandez over alleged bombing cover-up
5:44:45 PM

Argentina's President de Kirchner addresses a   news conference at the chancellery in BerlinAn Argentine appeals court will order the re-opening of a probe of accusations that former President Christina Fernandez covered up Iran's role in the bombing of a Jewish center in 1994, state news agency Telam said on Thursday. Two years earlier the prosecutor who initially made the accusation, Alberto Nisman, was found shot dead in the bathroom of his Buenos Aires apartment. Nisman's body was discovered hours before he was to brief Congress about accusations that Fernandez tried to whitewash Iran's role in the truck bombing of the AMIA Jewish Center in Buenos Aires, which killed 85 people.




Photographs of homeless "grave dwellers" shock Iranians
5:34:13 PM
Widely distributed images of dozens of homeless Iranians, many of them drug addicts, taking shelter in empty graves outside Tehran in freezing temperatures have prompted a public outcry and criticism from President Hassan Rouhani. "Who can accept ... that fellow human beings who suffer social ills have to take refuge in graves because of homelessness?" Rouhani said in a speech shown live on state TV. Special buses are also provided for addicts to sleep in overnight, when temperatures are often below freezing, the officials said.


Italian police search homes connected to Berlin attack suspect
4:29:07 PM

Anis Amri, the Tunisian suspect of the Berlin   Christmas market attack, is seen in this undated photo taken from security cameras   at the Milan Central Train Station in downtown MilanItalian police have searched three houses in and around Rome, where the man suspected of killing 12 people last week at a Christmas market in Berlin may have spent time, a judicial source said on Thursday. Anis Amri, a Tunisian, first arrived in Europe by boat to the Italian island of Lampedusa in 2011, and was shot dead by police in Milan four days after the Dec. 19 attack in Berlin. Police are investigating whether he was seeking to stay in Italy or trying to reach another country.




Turkish journalist accused of spreading propaganda; leading writer freed
4:19:46 PM
By Humeyra Pamuk ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Prominent Turkish journalist Ahmet Sik was detained on Thursday on suspicion of spreading terrorist propaganda, state media and an opposition lawmaker who spoke to the reporter said. Sik works for the daily Cumhuriyet, one of the few dailies still critical of the government as Turkish authorities have purged tens of thousands, largely from the state apparatus, in the wake of a coup attempt last July. Prosecutors could not be reached for comment but Sik himself tweeted that he was being taken to the prosecutor's office.


Polish president sends freedom of assembly bill to constitutional court
4:16:45 PM

Duda arrives for a working session on Ukraine at the   NATO Summit in Warsaw, PolandPoland's President Andrzej Duda has declined to sign the government's freedom of assembly bill into law in the first such rejection since the Law and Justice party (PiS) took power in November last year. "President Andrzej Duda believes that the freedom of assembly is an necessary element of democracy and a condition for exercising other freedoms and human rights connected with the public sphere," the statement said.




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