Tuesday, January 31, 2017

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.



Austrian court sentences Afghan teenagers to prison over gang rape
12:51:18 PM
An Austrian court sentenced three Afghan asylum seekers to prison on Tuesday over the gang-rape of a woman at a train station last year, a case that fuelled debate over immigrants and security during the country's presidential election. The rape of a 21-year-old in a station toilet in Vienna last April was one of the first serious crimes committed by asylum seekers after Austria was swept up in Europe's migration crisis in 2015, and was covered at length by the tabloid press.


Trump state visit to Britain "months away" - UK PM May spokeswoman
12:47:48 PM

British Prime Minister Theresa May and U.S. President   Donald Trump hold a joint news conference at the White House in WashingtonA planned state visit to Britain by U.S. President Donald Trump is months away and any programme has yet to be worked out, a spokeswoman for British Prime Minister Theresa May said on Tuesday. More than 1.6 million people have signed an online petition calling for Trump's visit to be cancelled to avoid embarrassing Queen Elizabeth, in protest at his immigration policies.




U.N. court orders Turkey to release imprisoned judge
12:38:54 PM
A United Nations court ordered Turkey to release Aydin Sefa Akay, a Turkish judge and diplomat caught up in the post-coup crackdown, so he could resume his place on the court's bench hearing a case against a Rwandan genocide suspect. The U.N. Mechanism for the International Criminal Tribunals said in a ruling on Tuesday that as a U.N. judge, Akay enjoyed diplomatic immunity and his imprisonment violated judicial independence. The court, legal successor to the tribunals that tried crimes committed during the Yugoslav wars and the Rwandan genocide, had been due to hear pleadings by Augustin Ngirabatware, a Rwandan politician serving 30 years for inciting genocide.


Poland's Walesa collaborated with communist secret police - institute
12:23:08 PM

Former Polish President Lech Walesa gestures during a   conference organised by Poland's government-affiliated Institute of National   Remembrance, in WarsawBy Anna Koper WARSAW (Reuters) - Poland's government-affiliated history institute said on Tuesday it had new evidence that Lech Walesa, who led protests and strikes that shook communist rule in the 1980s, had been a secret police informant in the 1970s. A lawyer for Walesa, whose actions leading the Solidarity trade union contributed to the fall of communism throughout eastern Europe, said the evidence could be faulty and asked to question the assessors. The Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) said a handwriting study showed recently-publicised documents suggesting Walesa, who was awarded the Nobel Peace prize and later became president, had indeed collaborated were genuine.




Turkey dismissed more than 90,000 public servants in post-coup purge - minister
12:21:31 PM

People take cover near policemen as gunfire are heard   during an attempted coup in Istanbul's Taksim SquareTurkish authorities have dismissed more than 90,000 public servants for alleged connections to a coup attempt in July as part of a purge critics say has broadened to target any political opposition to President Tayyip Erdogan. Speaking to reporters at a roundtable interview broadcast on television, Labour Minister Mehmet Muezzinoglu said 125,485 people from the public service had been put through legal proceedings after the coup attempt, and that 94,867 of those had been dismissed so far. Turkey has been rooting out followers of the U.S.-based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom it accuses of having infiltrated state institutions and plotted to overthrow the government.




Philippines' Duterte asks China to patrol piracy-plagued waters
12:09:36 PM

Philippine President Duterte gestures while speaking   during the oathtaking ceremony for newly appointed generals of the Armed Forces of   the Philippines at the presidential palace in ManilaPhilippine President Rodrigo Duterte on Tuesday said he had asked China to help in the fight against Islamic State-linked militants by sending ships to patrol southern waters plagued by raids on commercial vessels. Speaking to newly promoted army generals, Duterte said he had sought China's help in dangerous waters in the south to check the activities of Abu Sayyaf, a Muslim rebel group sustained by piracy and kidnap-for-ransom activities. A surge in piracy off parts of the Philippines is forcing ship-owners to divert vessels through other waters, pushing up costs and shipping times.




Philippines narcotics agency takes over drugs war, possible military role
11:27:41 AM

Police officers take their oath at the Philippine   National Police headquarters in QuezonBy Manuel Mogato and Martin Petty MANILA (Reuters) - Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte suggested on Tuesday he may seek military support after withdrawing the national police from his war on drugs and handing the job to a much smaller anti-narcotics agency. More than 7,600 people, mostly users and small-time dealers, have been killed since Duterte took office at the end of June, vowing to crack down on methamphetamine use. About 2,550 of the deaths were in police operations while the others were vigilante killings or were unsolved murders.




French parliament searched as part of probe into Fillon's wife's "fake job" - source
11:22:06 AM

Francois Fillon, member of Les Republicains political   party and 2017 presidential candidate of the French centre-right, and his wife   Penelope attend a political rally in ParisInvestigators are searching the French lower house of parliament as part of a probe into allegations that the wife of presidential candidate Francois Fillon had a "fake job", a parliamentary source said on Tuesday. The raid is not taking place in Fillon's office, a Reuters reporter witnessed, while the source said it was likely taking place in the parliament's administrative offices. France's financial prosecutor's office opened an investigation last week after the satirical weekly Le Canard Enchaine reported that Penelope Fillon had been paid 500,000 euros ($535,050) from state funds as a parliamentary assistant to her husband and his successor, but that it could find no evidence that she had actually done any work.




Malaysian police arrest three suspected Islamic State sympathisers
10:49:13 AM
Malaysian authorities have arrested three men for suspected links with the Islamic State militant group, police said on Tuesday. Muslim-majority Malaysia has been on high alert since an attack last January by Islamic State-linked militants in Jakarta, the capital of neighbouring Indonesia. Inspector-general of police Khalid Abu Bakar said the suspects were detained in three separate raids from Jan. 27 to Jan. 29.


Interview - UK lawyer plots legal bid to make Brexit reversible
10:41:04 AM

A Union flag flies next to the flag of the European   Union in LondonBy Michael Holden LONDON (Reuters) - As British lawmakers gather to debate whether to trigger the formal exit from the European Union, London lawyer Jolyon Maugham is building a case which he hopes will ensure that British voters can still reverse it. The 45-year-old tax specialist, an opponent of leaving the EU, said it was right for Prime Minister Theresa May to start the exit process, but voters should also have a right to change their minds if parliament rejects the terms she negotiates. Maugham told Reuters at his offices in central London he believed last year's referendum meant parliament should vote to give May the authority to invoke Article 50 of the EU's Lisbon treaty, which would pull Britain out of the bloc in two years.




Kenya extradites four men to U.S. on suspicion of heroin smuggling
9:08:50 AM
By David Lewis and Katharine Houreld NAIROBI (Reuters) - Four men charged with directing a major heroin trafficking ring have been extradited to the United States from Kenya, a law enforcement official and an investigator told Reuters on Tuesday, in what officials say is a major blow to East Africa's cartels. Baktash Akasha and his brother Ibrahim were arrested two years ago in Kenya along with two other men, Gulam Hussein and Vijaygiri Goswami, in a U.S.-led sting operation.


South African 'Bull Dog' prosecutor made famous by Pistorius trial resigns
8:29:58 AM

State prosecutor Gerrie Nel arrives for an appeal   hearing brought by prosecutors against the six-year jail term handed to Oscar   Pistorius for the murder of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp in JohannesburgSouth African prosecutor Gerrie Nel, who oversaw the conviction of Paralympian Oscar Pistorius, has resigned from the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA), its spokesman said on Tuesday. During the Pistorius trial, Nel painstakingly crafted a picture of Pistorius as a cold-blooded killer who fired through a door at his cowering girlfriend. For his no-nonsense attitude, Nel earned the nickname 'The Bull Dog' as a prosecutor.




Cocaine found in nose cone of American Airlines jet - police
7:38:57 AM
(Reuters) - An airline maintenance worker in Oklahoma found 31 pounds (14 kg) of cocaine in the nose cone of an American Airlines jet after it arrived from Colombia, police said on Monday. Seven bricks of the drug, with a street value of at least $200,000, were discovered on Sunday night at the carrier's maintenance base in Tulsa, the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office said in a Facebook post. It was sent on to Tulsa for maintenance checks because the base in Miami was too busy, the sheriff said.


Indonesia police vow to block "political" rally led by Islamists
7:22:05 AM
By Tom Allard and Agustinus Beo Da Costa JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesian police will block a rally in Jakarta next month led by the hardline Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) if the group intends to make it political just days before an election for city governor that has raised religious tension. The FPI has led two rallies over the past year targeting the ethnic Chinese, Christian Jakarta governor, Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, which drew hundreds of thousands of Muslims calling for his jailing over allegations he insulted the Koran. The FPI leader, Habib Rizieq, was on Monday declared a suspect over allegations he insulted Indonesia's state ideology, Pancasila, which enshrines religious diversity in an officially secular system.


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