Yahoo! News: India Top Stories - Reuters
Yahoo! News: India Top Stories - Reuters |
- U.S. agency to cancel $929 million in California high-speed rail funds
- As Vatican meets on sex abuse, Pope must defrock Guam's Apuron, groups say
- Alabama woman who joined Islamic State seeks return to US
- MAGA hat student sues Washington Post for $250m over coverage of confrontation with Native American man
- Saudi Prince Pledges to Help India Fight Terror
- Trevor Noah talks Jussie Smollett: 'Either this guy is telling the truth or he deserves an Emmy'
- Lesbian couple turned away by Indiana tax preparer four years after Mike Pence signed anti-LGBTQ law
- IS teen 'shocked' after UK revokes her citizenship
- Conspiracy theorists are claiming Ruth Bader Ginsburg is dead. She isn’t.
- Aurora warehouse where 5 killed won't reopen until next week
- Man Charged with Pulling Gun on Couple in MAGA Hats
- Vladimir Putin says Russia will target US if it places missiles in Europe
- The stakes are high for Pope Francis, Catholics worldwide in unprecedented sex abuse summit
- China's Silicon Valley Blueprint Has Plenty of Holes
- India says suicide attack mastermind killed
- Farrakhan to Omar: Don’t apologize for Israel comments
- Palestinian president rejects tax money from Israel
- Obama joined by Curry to tell minority boys 'you matter'
- Alec Baldwin, Donald Trump Jr. exchange Twitter jabs over 'Saturday Night Live' skit
- Roger Stone to appear in court over controversial Instagram post that could send him to jail while awaiting trial
- Chilean nuns find 'relief' in Pope's recognition of Church abuse
- Southwest apologizes to travelers for spike in cancellations and delays, blames union
- Cold case solved 46 years after girl's murder
- Pompeo Denies ‘ISIS Bride’ Request to Return to U.S.
- Many Americans Are Shocked By Their Tax Returns in 2019. Here’s What You Should Know
- Alabama editor who called for lynchings by Klan should quit, senators say
- Mariano Rivera calls child support allegations 'unfounded'
- One-time US head of Russia probe to leave office soon: reports
- US weather latest: Powerful coast-to-coast storm to blast Americans with snow, ice and torrential rain
- Neptune's new moon Hippocamp is so tiny that it wasn't detected in 1989 during flyby, scientists report
- French TV cuts Facebook live feed from Jewish cemetery after anti-Semitic abuse
- Shamima Begum: What could happen to the Isil bride?
- Man punches and throws hot coffee on Sikh 7-Eleven clerk because he 'hates Muslims'
- VIDEO: Man attempts kidnapping, sex assault on El Monte street
- Deadly crackdown stokes fear among protesters in Venezuela
- McCabe Says Lawmakers Didn't Object When FBI Opened Trump Probe
- Designer Karl Lagerfeld to be cremated without ceremony
- Airlines begin waiving change fees for new winter storm
- Putin, faced with ratings slump, offers Russians financial sweeteners
- North Carolina election: Republican candidate aide falsified ballots and tried to obstruct investigation, officials say
- Fiat's Unloved 500L Tries Again with the 2019 Urbana Edition
- Trump says he has 'absolute right' to declare emergency
U.S. agency to cancel $929 million in California high-speed rail funds Posted: 19 Feb 2019 05:55 PM PST California Governor Gavin Newsom said last week the state will dramatically scale back a planned $77.3 billion high-speed rail project that has faced cost hikes, delays and management concerns, but will finish a smaller section of the line. The Transportation Department's Federal Railroad Administration said in a letter it wanted to halt funding because the state had "failed to make reasonable progress." It cited Newsom's announcement to scale back the project. |
As Vatican meets on sex abuse, Pope must defrock Guam's Apuron, groups say Posted: 20 Feb 2019 04:10 AM PST |
Alabama woman who joined Islamic State seeks return to US Posted: 19 Feb 2019 03:16 PM PST |
Posted: 20 Feb 2019 01:19 AM PST A student involved in a viral confrontation with a Native American man is suing the Washington Post for $250m (£191m) over its coverage of the incident. The defamation lawsuit, filed by Covington Catholic High School pupil Nick Sandmann, claims the newspaper "wrongfully targeted and bullied" him due to its "biased agenda" against Donald Trump. The 16-year-old was wearing one of the president's signature Make America Great Again hats when he attended an anti-abortion rally in Washington in January along with classmates from his Kentucky school. |
Saudi Prince Pledges to Help India Fight Terror Posted: 20 Feb 2019 01:50 AM PST "Terrorism is a common concern and Saudi Arabia will cooperate with India in fighting it, including in matters like intelligence sharing," Prince Mohammed said in a press statement alongside Modi in New Delhi. The comments were part of the Saudi royal's delicate diplomacy, as he visits both nuclear-armed South Asian neighbors amid heightened geopolitical tensions. |
Posted: 19 Feb 2019 09:14 AM PST |
Lesbian couple turned away by Indiana tax preparer four years after Mike Pence signed anti-LGBTQ law Posted: 19 Feb 2019 01:26 PM PST A married lesbian couple in Indiana were turned away by a tax preparer when they attempted to file their taxes jointly last week, making them one of many victims of the state's anti-LGBTQ laws. Bailey and Samantha Brazzel got married last July and decided to file their taxes jointly for the first time. The couple went to Carter Tax Service in Russiaville to meet with Nancy Fivecoate, a tax preparer Ms Bailey used for the last four years. |
IS teen 'shocked' after UK revokes her citizenship Posted: 20 Feb 2019 07:45 AM PST A British teenager who joined the Islamic State group in Syria said Wednesday she was shocked by a government decision to revoke her citizenship and was considering applying to settle in The Netherlands, the homeland of her husband. Shamima Begum, who travelled to Syria in 2015 and now wants to return to Britain after giving birth in a refugee camp in Syria last week, said the order was "unjust". |
Conspiracy theorists are claiming Ruth Bader Ginsburg is dead. She isn’t. Posted: 19 Feb 2019 11:42 AM PST |
Aurora warehouse where 5 killed won't reopen until next week Posted: 18 Feb 2019 07:23 PM PST |
Man Charged with Pulling Gun on Couple in MAGA Hats Posted: 19 Feb 2019 08:09 AM PST A Tennessee man was arrested Tuesday for pulling a gun on a couple who were wearing the Make America Great Again hats popularized by Donald Trump's presidential campaign.James Phillips, 57, of Cottontown, Tenn., was charged with first-degree wanton endangerment after he reportedly pulled the gun in a Kentucky Sam's Club store amid an argument, according to his arrest citation. Phillips allegedly told the woman, "It's a good day to die, b****," and exchanged obscene hand gestures with the man. He said he did so because of their hats.Phillips, who wore a hat indicating he was a military veteran, has a concealed-carry permit for his gun.The incident comes amid the continuing controversy over Empire actor Jussie Smollett's claim that he was beaten and left with a noose around his neck by two men shouting pro-Trump slogans, which has been increasingly scrutinized as a possible hoax. |
Vladimir Putin says Russia will target US if it places missiles in Europe Posted: 20 Feb 2019 08:42 AM PST Vladimir Putin has said Russia will target the US with new nuclear weapons if it deploys missiles to Europe following the demise of a major arms control treaty. In an annual speech to the federal assembly, the Russian leader on Wednesday accused Washington of planning to deploy intermediate-range missiles to the continent following its withdrawal from a bilateral agreement banning those weapons. This would put the missiles within a 10-minute flight from Moscow, creating a serious threat to Russia and compelling it to consider "symmetrical and asymmetrical actions" in response, he said. "Russia will be forced to create and deploy types of weapons that can be used not only against those territories posing a direct threat to us, but also against those territories where the decision-making centres are," Mr Putin said, referring to the United States. Russia and the United States have had hundreds of nuclear missiles pointed at each other since the Cold War, but Mr Putin's speech also detailed a bevy of new weapons Russia is developing, including hypersonic weapons and a nuclear-powered underwater drone. His comments marked an escalation in rhetoric from earlier this month, when he announced only a "symmetrical" response to Donald Trump's suspension of US participation in the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces treaty signed by Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev in 1987. Besides ceasing to observe the agreement, Russia would create a land-based version of its Kalibr cruise missile, he said at the time. Donald Trump's national security adviser John Bolton, far left, is a longstanding opponent of arms control agreements Credit: Andrew Harnik/AP Washington has long argued that Moscow's 92M79 missile is banned by the INF treaty. But Russia has claimed that US missile defence in Romania and a similar system planned for Poland are in violation of the agreement. Last month, the authorities even showed journalists and foreign military attaches a cruise missile canister and launcher outside Moscow to try to dispute the US accusations. A leaked US intelligence report later claimed that this equipment had nothing to do with the 92M79. In Wednesday's speech, Mr Putin again argued that US missile defence launchers in Romania could pose an offensive threat by firing Tomahawk cruise missiles and claimed that "target missiles" developed for defence shield exercises were intermediate-range missiles in disguise. The United States needs to "do away with the illusion" that it could "achieve absolute military superiority with the help of global missile defence," he said, touting several new weapons first announced in his address to the federal assembly last year. The Avangard system, a hypersonic glider that can carry a nuclear warhead, and Peresvet laser weapon will enter deployment by the end of 2019, he said. Moscow showed a cruise missile canister to journalists and military attaches in an attempt to argue its 9M279 missile did not violate the INF treaty Credit: Pavel Golovkin/AP Meanwhile, Russia is testing a nuclear-powered cruise missile and underwater drone that Mr Putin has claimed will have unlimited range, as well as a heavy intercontinental ballistic missile. The drone has been called a "doomsday weapon" because it could potentially destroy swathes of the US seaboard. But Washington said last year that the "unlimited range" cruise missile had crashed during tests. Seven new submarines and five new long-range warships will be launched, and 16 more such ships will be constructed by 2027, he added. But Mr Putin tried to walk a fine line between boasting of new weapons development and promising to solve economic problems faced by the population, which took up most of the speech. One in five Russians now live in poverty, and polls show trust in Mr Putin has fallen following an unpopular hike in the pension age. While claiming the Zircon missile in development could fly at nine times the speed of sound, he noted that it could be deployed on ships and submarines outfitted for the Kalibr and "won't be expensive for us". Mr Putin said Moscow was open to arms control talks and doesn't want confrontation, but warned that US leaders should "count the range and speed of our perspective weapons systems" before deploying new arms against Russia. Elsewhere in the speech, the Russian president promised state aid for large families to try to reverse population decline, an effort he dubbed "more children, fewer taxes". He also promised to fight poverty and increase access to healthcare and education in far-flung regions. |
The stakes are high for Pope Francis, Catholics worldwide in unprecedented sex abuse summit Posted: 20 Feb 2019 06:03 AM PST |
China's Silicon Valley Blueprint Has Plenty of Holes Posted: 18 Feb 2019 11:13 PM PST Late Monday, the official Xinhua News Agency released details of the State Council's Greater Bay Area plan – a project to knit together Hong Kong and Macau with nine mainland cities into a global innovation hub to rival California's Silicon Valley. Hong Kong residents struggling with high housing prices will have the opportunity to move across the border and work in state-owned companies while people moving the other way will gain access to the city's education and health systems. |
India says suicide attack mastermind killed Posted: 19 Feb 2019 01:04 AM PST India's army said Tuesday it had killed the mastermind of a major suicide bomb attack in Kashmir which it blamed on Pakistan, as calls grew for reprisals over the deaths of more than 40 paramilitaries and soldiers. Indian forces have staged operations since Thursday's attack while anti-Pakistan and anti-Kashmir sentiment has spread across the country, fuelled by social media including widely shared false news reports. Three militants from the Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM) group, which claimed responsibility for the suicide attack, were killed in a gunbattle that lasted much of Monday, Lieutenant General Kanwal Jeet Singh Dhillon told a press conference in Srinagar. |
Farrakhan to Omar: Don’t apologize for Israel comments Posted: 19 Feb 2019 03:31 AM PST |
Palestinian president rejects tax money from Israel Posted: 20 Feb 2019 02:26 AM PST The Palestinian Authority (PA) will no longer accept tax revenues collected on its behalf by Israel following its decision to trim the sum over the PA's financial support of militants' families, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said. The cash-strapped Palestinian Authority, an interim self-government body set up following the 1993 Oslo peace accords, has suffered a series of financial blows in the past year. Under interim peace deals, Israel collects taxes in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and in the Gaza Strip and makes monthly payments to the PA, which says it receives around $222 million each month. |
Obama joined by Curry to tell minority boys 'you matter' Posted: 20 Feb 2019 07:21 AM PST |
Alec Baldwin, Donald Trump Jr. exchange Twitter jabs over 'Saturday Night Live' skit Posted: 20 Feb 2019 04:54 AM PST |
Posted: 19 Feb 2019 09:04 AM PST Roger Stone has been ordered back to court on Thursday to discuss a controversial Instagram post that attacked the judge presiding over his trial. Earlier Monday, Stone posted a photo of US District Judge Amy Berman Jackson with what appeared to be crosshairs near her head. The judge already issued an order limiting comments in the pending case prior to Stone's Instagram post. |
Chilean nuns find 'relief' in Pope's recognition of Church abuse Posted: 19 Feb 2019 12:36 PM PST Three former Chilean nuns who claim to have been sexually abused over two decades ago by priests in their religious order have hailed comments by Pope Francis earlier this month in which he recognized the abuse of nuns in the Catholic Church. The three nuns, who had been members of the Sisters of the Good Samaritan order in the Chilean city of Molina, 130 miles south of Santiago, told Reuters in an interview on Friday that they were embraced and fondled during the 1990s and 2000s by several priests who had since died. The three, Yolanda Tondreaux, Eliana Macias and Marcela Quitral, told Reuters TV they had reported the abuse to their mother superior but were told either that they were lying or had provoked the abuse and were threatened with being forced to leave the convent. |
Southwest apologizes to travelers for spike in cancellations and delays, blames union Posted: 20 Feb 2019 08:12 AM PST |
Cold case solved 46 years after girl's murder Posted: 20 Feb 2019 02:54 AM PST |
Pompeo Denies ‘ISIS Bride’ Request to Return to U.S. Posted: 20 Feb 2019 12:13 PM PST Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Wednesday that an Alabama woman who fled to Syria to join ISIS in 2014 is not a U.S. citizen and, as a result, is not entitled to return to the U.S. with her 18-month-old son, as she had hoped to do."Ms. Hoda Muthana is not a U.S. citizen and will not be admitted into the United States," Pompeo said in a statement. "She does not have any legal basis, no valid U.S. passport, no right to a passport, nor any visa to travel to the United States. We continue to strongly advise all U.S. citizens not to travel to Syria."Muthana, 24, was taken to a refugee camp in northeast Syria by Kurdish forces after escaping ISIS territory.An attorney representing Muthana's parents claims she is a U.S. citizen despite the fact that her father was serving as a Yemeni diplomat when she was born in New Jersey, which, according to the State Department, means she is not entitled to birthright citizenship.Muthana's son was fathered by one of the three ISIS fighters she was married to during her time in the caliphate. In a 2015 tweet, she urged Americans to carry out domestic terror attacks."Americans wake up! Men and women altogether. You have much to do while you live under our greatest enemy, enough of your sleeping!" she wrote, according to The Guardian. "Go on drivebys, and spill all of their blood, or rent a big truck and drive all over them. Veterans, Patriots, Memorial, etc day . . . Kill them."In a recent interview with The Guardian, Muthana pleaded with U.S. officials to allow her return to America, citing her youth and immaturity at the time she fled to Syria."I would tell them please forgive me for being so ignorant, and I was really young and ignorant and I was 19 when I decided to leave," she said. |
Many Americans Are Shocked By Their Tax Returns in 2019. Here’s What You Should Know Posted: 20 Feb 2019 12:35 PM PST |
Alabama editor who called for lynchings by Klan should quit, senators say Posted: 19 Feb 2019 07:23 AM PST |
Mariano Rivera calls child support allegations 'unfounded' Posted: 19 Feb 2019 07:40 PM PST |
One-time US head of Russia probe to leave office soon: reports Posted: 18 Feb 2019 11:26 PM PST The US Justice Department official who once oversaw the Russia probe, Rod Rosenstein, plans to resign in mid-March, US news outlets reported. Rosenstein's departure from his post as deputy attorney general has been expected for some time. CNN late Monday quoted a department official as saying it has nothing to do with recent explosive claims by the former acting director of the FBI, Andrew McCabe. |
Posted: 19 Feb 2019 08:58 AM PST A powerful storm is expected to hit up to 200 million Americans with snow, ice and torrential rain, over the coming week. About 60 per cent of the US will likely to be hit by wintry weather on Tuesday, according to AccuWeather, an American media company that provides commercial weather forecasting services worldwide. It said the storm will develop over the western Gulf of Mexico before moving northwards. |
Posted: 20 Feb 2019 01:52 PM PST |
French TV cuts Facebook live feed from Jewish cemetery after anti-Semitic abuse Posted: 20 Feb 2019 01:40 PM PST "Our country is confronted with a resurgence of anti-Semitism undoubtedly without precedent since the Second World War," President Emmanuel Macron said later on Tuesday in an annual speech to Jewish leaders in France. France 3 television said it went live from the first cemetery in the village of Quatzenheim on Tuesday as President Emmanuel Macron was visiting to pay his respects after more than 90 graves were vandalized with swastikas and anti-Semitic abuse. "We are talking about explicit death threats, comments that were openly anti-Semitic and racist, including "Heil Hitler", "dirty Jew" or "dirty Jews", comments that were addressed at Emmanuel Macron and representatives of the Jewish community," the channel said in a statement explaining its decision. |
Shamima Begum: What could happen to the Isil bride? Posted: 20 Feb 2019 07:29 AM PST The Home Office has stripped jihadi bride Shamima Begum of her British citizenship, but the ongoing saga of what will happen next to her and her days-old son remains up in the air. International law forbids nations from making people stateless by revoking their only citizenship, prompting speculation that Begum held dual citizenship through her Bangladeshi parents. On Wednesday morning, Begum's lawyer Tasnime Akunjee said his client does not have dual nationality, but the Home Office told The Telegraph laws in Bangladesh means the teenager automatically retains dual citizenship until she is 21. Her family say they will consider "all legal avenues to challenge this decision", and Begum herself said that she may think about trying to travel with her terrorist husband to his home country of Holland to claim citizenship there. The case has prompted fresh discussions over how Britain manages those returning or attempting to come back from Syria, once gripped by the tyranny of Islamic State (Isil). Begum was one of three schoolgirls, along with Kadiza Sultana and Amira Abase, from Bethnal Green Academy who left the UK in February 2015. She married an Isil fighter and on Sunday have birth to her third child at a refugee camp in northeastern Syria. Her first two children died. Begum's family has pleaded for the 19-year-old to be shown mercy and to be allowed to return to east London. But what options do authorities have in such instances? Remain in Syria If Begum is not repatriated, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) could hand her over to neighbouring Iraqi forces, Middle East Correspondent Josie Ensor explains. The Telegraph is aware of at least three cases, including European citizens, where male Isil suspects have been transferred from Syria to Iraq to face trial. This would be a controversial option as Baghdad has the option to impose the death penalty, which the UK opposes. Foreign detainees are currently being held by the SDF in an area of Kurdish self-rule in northeastern Syria. The SDF has said that they do not have the money or resources to hold them forever. Islamic State losing its grip on Syria They have warned that if Turkey invades, which it has threatened, it could see the prisoners being set free in the chaos. The Syrian Kurds are also in talks with the Syrian government about ceding some of their territory, which could see some foreign prisoners being handed over to the regime. A third option - Mustafa Bali, the SDF spokesman, has called for an international court to be set up in Syria. This would see them tried by international judges in Syria but return home to serve their sentence. However, sources at the UN say it would be difficult if not impossible to set up such a court in Kurdish-held territory without the authority of the Syrian government. Bangladesh dual citizenship The Telegraph understands that the Home Office made the decision to revoke Begum's British citizenship based on Bangladeshi law. There, until the age of 21, it is understood the Isil bride automatically retains dual nationality due to the fact her parents are both from the country. At the age of 21, a child born to Bangladeshi parents has the right to waive their right to dual nationality, but not before. The complication lies in how she gets to Bangladesh - where it is understood her father is currently living - and how she proves that she is Shamima Begum. The teenager has never visited the country and does not have a Bangladeshi passport. Her old British passport is invalid due to her citizenship being revoked and she has previously said she used her sister's passport to travel to Syria back in 2015. One possible option for her would be to travel to Turkey via the notoriously penetrable border with Syria and present herself to the Bangladeshi embassy. But officials in Dhaka may well appeal the Home Office's decision to make Begum their responsibility, insisting that she has never even been to the country. Attempt to gain Dutch citizenship Begum married Isil fighter Yago Riedjik in Syria having travelled to the Middle East from Bethnal Green in east London in 2015. His whereabouts are still unknown, but when asked what she might do next, the Isil bride told ITV News: "Another option I might try with my family is my husband is from Holland and he has family in Holland. "Maybe I can ask for citizenship in Holland. If he gets sent back to prison in Holland I can just wait for him while he is in prison." This would need a number of elements to align for it to even be a possibility. First, Holland would have to accept to take Riedjik back, having left the country to become a terrorist in the Middle East. Yago Reidjik The country doesn't offer to help its citizens in Syria who are willing to return, and if they report to an embassy, they would be transported to Holland, arrested and prosecuted. A foreigh fighter with dual nationalities deemed a threat to national security - like Britain - can have their Dutch citizenship and passport revoked. If that happens, Begum would have to follow him. But her British passport is - as it stands - invalid. And she previously said she had travelled to Syria on her sister's passport, which has since been taken from her. Dutch legislation dictates that a spouse or partner wishing to live in Holland would need a residence permit, and in order to be eligible for a permit - they must have a valid passport or other travel documents. Somehow, if she manages to make the 2,000-mile journey from Syria to Holland, the Dutch authorities would have to accept that she and Riedjik are married. The pair were wed within the confines of Islamic State a matter of weeks after she arrived. It is highly unlikely there is paperwork to prove they are legally married, and even if there is, the Dutch authorities would have to accept it as binding. Home Office decision is rescinded As the Home Office's letter states, Shamima Begum and her family have the right to appeal the decision. Her lawyer Tasnima Akunjee's rhetoric all along suggests he will help his client fight any move to strip her of her British citizenship. The letter to the Begum family Credit: ITV News If judges side with Begum, deciding Sajid Javid had no right to revoke her British citizenship because it renders her stateless - the Government would be back to square one. The appeal might not necessarily need to happen. If, as Begum's lawyer suggests, the Isil bride is currently stateless - the Home Office would be forced to reverse it stance. In that scenario, all these options are once again back on the table. Sent to Guantánamo Bay As revealed by Ben Riley-Smith, Robert Mendick and Laura Fitzpatrick on The Telegraph's front page on Friday, the United States is planning to send British Isil fighters to Guantánamo Bay amid frustration at the UK's failure to take responsibility for its homegrown terrorists. Senior US officials believe Guantánamo can house more than 50 Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant fighters, including the two surviving British members of the so-called "Beatles" terrorist cell that executed Western hostages. It has emerged that the vast majority of Islamist fighters returning to the UK from Syria have been placed on "secretive" government rehabilitation schemes rather than prosecuted. Despite British concern, Guantánamo Bay is being readied in the run-up to Donald Trump's withdrawal of US troops from Syria as soon as April. There is acute frustration within the Trump administration over how Britain and other western European countries are refusing to take back their foreign fighters for prosecution in their own courts. Returning jihadis: What other countries do Arrest and prosecution Home Secretary Sajid Javid previously said those who make it back "should be ready to be questioned, investigated and potentially prosecuted". But authorities have faced difficulties obtaining evidence to prove someone committed crimes in Syria. Most recently, The Isil Beatles have caused the Government enormous problems. Two of the four suspected terrorists' fate has been left in limbo as the UK and the US play tug-of-war with where they will end up in court. The Home Office previously blocked their return, and they could end up in an American federal court facing the death penalty after the CPS said there was "insufficient evidence" for them to be tried in the UK. uk drops opposing of death pen Figures disclosed in the Commons last year suggested that only around one in 10 returnees has been prosecuted over "direct action" in Syria, although ministers say a significant proportion of those who have come back were assessed as no longer being of national security concern. New legislation which passed last week made it an offence to enter or remain in overseas terror hotspots, officially termed "designated areas". Managed return to UK Powers known as temporary exclusion orders (TEOs) were introduced in 2015. They can last for up to two years and can be imposed on those suspected of involvement in terrorism abroad, making it unlawful for them to return to the UK without engaging with authorities. The powers were unused in 2016, while nine TEOs were issued in 2017. Isil schoolgirls' journey into Syria TPIMs Terrorism Prevention and Investigation Measures (TPIMs) allow the Home Secretary to impose a range of disruptive measures on individuals who are suspected of posing a threat to security but who cannot be prosecuted, or, in the case of foreign nationals, deported. Restrictions can include relocation to another part of the country, electronic monitoring and limits on the use of phones and computers. As of the end of August, six TPIMs were in force. Deradicalisation back in Britain Returnees could be referred to the Government's £40 million a year Prevent programme, which aims to stop people being drawn into terrorism. There were 7,318 individuals referred to Prevent in 2017/18. The schoolgirl who turned to Isil In most cases, referrals are found to require no further action or passed to other services, but when authorities conclude there is a danger the person could be drawn into terrorism, they can be supported through a voluntary scheme known as Channel. Prevent is backed by ministers and police, but has been described as "toxic" by critics, and the Government announced earlier this year that it would be independently reviewed. |
Man punches and throws hot coffee on Sikh 7-Eleven clerk because he 'hates Muslims' Posted: 19 Feb 2019 08:28 AM PST A man has been charged with a hate crime after allegedly attacking a Sikh employee of a California 7-Eleven convenience store. The man can allegedly be seen on surveillance footage punching the employee, and throwing coffee on him after he attempted to leave without paying for coffee. The man, identified by police as John Crain, was arrested by the Marysville Police Department. |
VIDEO: Man attempts kidnapping, sex assault on El Monte street Posted: 18 Feb 2019 07:24 PM PST |
Deadly crackdown stokes fear among protesters in Venezuela Posted: 20 Feb 2019 02:49 PM PST |
McCabe Says Lawmakers Didn't Object When FBI Opened Trump Probe Posted: 19 Feb 2019 09:12 AM PST |
Designer Karl Lagerfeld to be cremated without ceremony Posted: 20 Feb 2019 06:05 AM PST Karl Lagerfeld will be cremated without ceremony and his ashes are likely to be scattered with those of his mother and lover, his label said Wednesday. "His wishes will be respected," a spokeswoman for his Karl Lagerfeld brand told AFP a day after the legendary designer died at the age of 85. Lagerfeld had previously said that his ashes would be mixed with those of his longtime lover, the French dandy Jacques de Bascher, who died of AIDS in 1989. |
Airlines begin waiving change fees for new winter storm Posted: 19 Feb 2019 10:06 AM PST |
Putin, faced with ratings slump, offers Russians financial sweeteners Posted: 20 Feb 2019 08:15 AM PST In his annual speech to the Russian political elite, Putin set out how he planned to raise people's living standards and boost healthcare and education, promising he would find extra money to back the pledges. Putin also laid out deadlines to close huge and sometimes apparently spontaneous landfill sites that have become a political sore for the Kremlin and angered many Russians who have seen them spring up near their homes, polluting the air. Bureaucratic red tape is of little interest to them," Putin told lawmakers and regional leaders. |
Posted: 19 Feb 2019 03:57 AM PST State election officials in North Carolina said on Monday that a political operative for Republican Mark Harris orchestrated a "coordinated, unlawful, and substantially resourced absentee ballot scheme" in the 9th Congressional District last year, hiding evidence of the operation as it unfolded and obstructing the state's investigation after the election. The state board's executive director, Kim Strach, told the five-member board that Leslie McCrae Dowless, a long-time political operative from Bladen County, paid workers to collect absentee ballots from voters, a felony in North Carolina. |
Fiat's Unloved 500L Tries Again with the 2019 Urbana Edition Posted: 20 Feb 2019 08:49 AM PST |
Trump says he has 'absolute right' to declare emergency Posted: 19 Feb 2019 06:24 PM PST |
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