Thursday, 31 October 2013

Egyptian Islamists call for daily protests before Mursi trial

CAIRO (Reuters) - Supporters of Egypt's ousted Islamist President Mohamed Mursi called on Thursday for daily protests in the four days before his trial on November 4, raising the danger of more violence in a crisis that has already cost hundreds of lives.

Mursi, who was ousted by the army on July 3 after mass demonstrations against his rule, is due to appear in court on Monday along with 14 other senior Muslim Brotherhood figures on charges of inciting violence.

The trial could further inflame tensions between the Brotherhood and the army-backed interim government as it struggles to restore stability in the most populous Arab state.

"The Alliance calls on all proud, free Egyptians to gather in the squares in protest against these trials... starting on Friday," the Brotherhood and its allies said in a statement.

It urged crowds to move on Monday to a police institute near Cairo's Tora prison, where the trial is expected to take place.

The charges relate to the deaths of about a dozen people in clashes outside the presidential palace in December after Mursi enraged his opponents with a decree expanding his powers.

Mursi has been held in a secret location in the four months since his overthrow. In that time Islamist militants have staged almost daily attacks in the Sinai Peninsula. Supporters and opponents of the Brotherhood have often clashed in the streets.

Backers of Mursi, Egypt's first freely elected president, say his removal was a coup, reversing the gains of the popular uprising which toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak in 2011.

The army says it was responding to the will of the people.

Security officials accuse Brotherhood leaders of inciting violence and terrorism. Hundreds of the Brotherhood's members have been killed and many of its leaders have been jailed in one of the toughest security crackdowns in the movement's history.

A court order has banned the Brotherhood, Egypt's oldest and best organised Islamist movement, and seized its funds.

The Brotherhood denies any links with violent activity.

(Reporting by Asma Alsharif; Editing by Yara Bayoumy and Alistair Lyon)


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Boyfriend arrested for Rohtak Ph.D student's murder

Rohtak (Haryana), Oct 31 (IANS) The Haryana Police Thursday arrested a post-graduate student of the Maharishi Dayanand University here for allegedly murdering his girlfriend who was pursuing her doctorate in the same university.

Police officials said Piyush Malik, an MA second year student, was arrested for murdering Sushma, 25, who was doing Ph.D in Sanskrit. The police recovered the young woman's body from his room Wednesday.

Police officials said the body bore injuries around the neck. Piyush, missing since Wednesday, was tracked by police teams.

Piyush told police he and Sushma were having an affair since 2008 and planned to get married. However, he came to know she had married someone else in May this year but did not tell him. He said when he confronted her on this issue, she did not admit the same.

Police said an angry Piyush allegedly called Sushma to his room Wednesday and attacked her with a sharp-edged weapon. He later strangulated her to death.

He claimed he tried to commit suicide after the murder but failed. He left her body in his room and went away.


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Tension in communal clash hit Muzaffarnagar, four killed

Lucknow: The situation in Muzaffarnagar, where four people were killed in a communal clash late Wednesday, continued to be tense Thursday, police said.

Officials admitted that the killings had once again endangered the fragile peace in the region.

Another incident - stabbing and then shooting of a couple at Phugana in Shamli district late Wednesday night - fuelled the tension.

Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav has sent state police chief Deo Raj Nagar to the violence hit region.

Nagar along with Inspector General of Police (Law and Order) R.K. Vishwkarma, who were in New Delhi to participate in a meeting called by the Election Commission of India, are now camping in Muzaffarnagar.

Confirming that the second case involving a couple, where the woman was first stabbed and then shot dead while her husband was critically injured, appeared to be communal in nature, Vishwakarma told IANS that investigations were on to identify the assailants and ascertain the motive behind the attack.

The incident took place on the Hasanpur-Lisadh road when the couple was returning from a doctor. They were intercepted by a group of armed assailants who first stabbed them and then shot at them, injured Rajendra told the police.

He also said that his wife Reena was killed on the spot.

Irate villagers kept the woman's body on the road and blocked traffic, demanding the arrest of the assailants.

Police worry that the agitation by villagers, also supported by the Khap Panchayats, could turn violent in the coming days.

Peace in Muzaffarnagar was shattered Wednesday evening as communal clashes between two groups left three people dead.

The incident took place in Bhaurankalan police station area when people from two communities fought a pitched battle in which three youngsters were shot dead.

The youngsters belonged to Hussainpur Kalan village.

Police reinforcements have been rushed to the area and officials said that all the three dead were Muslims.

District officials also added that retired army man Rajendra Singh told the police that he was working in his field when a group of Muslim youth attacked him. He subsequently raised an alarm and villagers rushed to his rescue.

They later opened fire and in the gun battle that ensued, three youth were killed, the official said.

He added that Rajendra Singh's claims were being ascertained.

The retired army man is a resident of Mohammadpur Raisingh village.

Two people, Arvind and Sharnu of Rajendra Singh's family, have been detained.

Communal riots in Muzaffarnagar and neighbouring areas of Shamli and Meerut had left 63 people dead between Sep 6 and 10. More than 43,000 people were rendered homeless and many of them have refused to go back home, citing the possibility of revenge attacks.

The state government has released Rs.90 crore for the 1,800 families, mostly Muslim, who had refused to go back to their homes.


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Khmer Rouge duo deny 'Killing Fields' role as case nears end

By Prak Chan Thul

PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - It might be the last time Cambodians hear the words of the elderly men prosecutors say were most responsible for the deaths and suffering of millions under the Khmer Rouge's 1970s "Killing Fields" rule.

There were no last-ditch pleas for forgiveness from the two defendants, the right-hand men of the late Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot, who protested their innocence in their final arguments before a U.N.-backed court hoping to deliver justice before the accused die, or donors' funding dries up.

"Brother Number Two" Nuon Chea, 87, and former president Khieu Samphan showed no emotion on Thursday when delivering statements to the people they are accused of betraying when they ruled from 1975 to 1979, when Cambodia was turned into a virtual slave labour camp in which as many as 2.2 million died of disease, starvation, torture and execution.

Khieu Samphan, 81, insisted he was a leader without power, who took no decisions that resulted in atrocities. He said he was paying the price for being close to Pol Pot.

"For the presumption that I am a monster ... you seem to believe that I am guilty. All of you believe that I should have foreseen what would happen," he said, his eyes fixed on a sheet of paper in front of him.

"To date, everyone wants only one thing from me - my admission of guilt on the charges of crimes that I never ever committed, at all.

"Whatever I did was to protect the weak, uphold the respect for fundamental rights and to build a Cambodia that was strong, independent and peaceful," he said.

Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan are the only two defendants left in the complex case 002, which initially had four, charged with crimes against humanity and genocide, among other offences.

Former foreign minister Ieng Sary, who was educated in France, like Pol Pot, Khieu Samphan and other Cambodian communist leaders, died this year and his wife, former social affairs minister Ieng Thirith, was diagnosed with Alzheimer's and declared unfit for trial.

The two face a maximum sentence of life in prison.

RACE FOR JUSTICE

To secure a conviction speedily, the prosecution has been split into smaller cases and no time frame has been set for other charges. The court is trying the pair for their role in the forced evacuation of Phnom Penh in 1975 and the execution of government troops.

A verdict is due in the first half of 2014.

Nuon Chea is in poor health and has often been unable to attend proceedings. He expressed remorse for the victims of the Khmer Rouge and said he had no real power in the regime.

Sitting in a wheelchair, he accepted "moral responsibility", but pled innocence before a court he said had insufficient evidence to convict him.

"The proceeding that have been conducted in this chamber are just for the sake of completing the procedure or making it look good in the eye of the public," he told the tribunal and a packed public gallery of Cambodians behind a glass partition.

"I taught people to love and serve the country ... I never educated or instructed anyone to mistreat or kill people."

The hybrid U.N.-Cambodian tribunal spent $173 million from 2006-2012 and is struggling to secure funds for further trials. Investigations are underway into other Khmer Rouge members, but there have been no new indictments.

It has reached a verdict in just one case, case 001, a life sentence in 2010 for Kaing Guek Eav, alias "Duch", chief of the S-21 torture centre where 14,000 people were interrogated before being killed.

International prosecutor Nicholas Koumjian said fast-tracking case 002 was crucial to ensure Duch was not the only conviction.

"It's not good that we're having justice 38 years after the event," he told reporters. "The choice now is to have it now or never. We have the opportunity now, which is fast disappearing and we have to take advantage of it."

Three foreign judges have resigned from the tribunal, two citing political interference. Prime Minister Hun Sen, himself a junior Khmer Rouge officer who defected to Vietnam during their rule, opposed a broader trial of more old leaders.

The Khmer Rouge, for years backed by China and recognised by the West during the Cold War, was finally defeated in 1998, months after Pol Pot died after being purged by his comrades.

Hun Sen has warned that going after more Khmer Rouge leaders could rekindle war.

(Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Robert Birsel)


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China demands U.S. explain spying allegations linked to Australian missions

BEIJING (Reuters) - China is demanding an explanation from the United States after a report in an Australian newspaper said Australian embassies, including the one in Beijing, were being used as part of a U.S.-led spying operation.

The Sydney Morning Herald said on Thursday that the intelligence collection takes place in Australian embassies across Asia, as well as other diplomatic missions, without most Australian diplomats knowing about it.

"China is extremely concerned about this report and demands that the United States offers a clarification and explanation," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a daily news briefing.

"We also demand that foreign embassies in China and their staff respect the Vienna Convention ... and other international treaties and not get involved in any activities which do not accord with their status or post and harm China's security and interests," she added.

China and Australia had a consensus to increase cooperation, and both viewed the other as a development opportunity, Hua said.

"We hope and expect that Australia can work hard with China in this regard."

Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade declined to comment, saying: "It is the long-standing practice of Australian governments not to comment on intelligence matters".

China's own security services are widely believed to run a sophisticated communications tapping and surveillance operation, at least domestically, though the government denies accusations it tries to hack into overseas computer networks.

China, a major trading partner in the midst of negotiations on a free-trade agreement with Australia, expressed concern this week after Australia's newly elected government said it was upholding a ban on China's Huawei Technologies Co Ltd from bidding for work on the country's $38 billion National Broadband Network.

The political uproar over alleged U.S. eavesdropping on close European allies produced an unusual defence from the National Security Agency this week - NSA Director General Keith Alexander said it was the Europeans themselves who did the spying, and then handed the data to the Americans.

Alexander's disclosure at a public congressional hearing marked yet another milestone in the NSA's emergence from the shadows to defend its electronic surveillance mission in the wake of damaging revelations by former agency contractor Edward Snowden. (Reporting by Ben Blanchard; Additional reporting by Jane Wardell in SYDNEY; Editing by Nick Macfie)


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Patna blasts suspect escapes from NIA custody

PATNA: Mehre Alam, one of the suspects in Patna serial blasts case, escaped from the National Investigation Agency custody on Thursday, according to reports.

A CNN IBN report suggests that Alam escaped during questioning at a safe house near Muzaffarpur station. Alam was being questioned in the NIA custody for the last ten hours.

The report adds that Alam requested the interrogators to allow him to use the wash room. However no official accompanied him to the wash room and the suspect used the opportunity to flee the custody.
Alam was detained as investigators had earlier raided several places in Bihar to search for the blasts suspects. He was detained by the NIA from Darbhanga.
Six people were killed and 83 others injured as seven bombs exploded in Patna Sunday last.
The first of the blasts ripped through a toilet around 10 a.m. at the railway station in the heart of the city, killing one person and wounding another.
After an hour, by which time Modi had reached Patna but was not yet at Gandhi Maidan, the venue of the rally, four explosions occurred inside the maidan. Two bombs exploded in the vicinity of the maidan, spreading panic. (With inputs from agencies)


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Patna serial blasts suspect 're-arrested' in Kanpur

Lucknow, Oct 31 (IANS) Terror suspect Meher Alam, accused of involvement in Sunday's Patna serial blasts and who escaped from the custody of the National Investigation Agency (NIA), was arrested in Uttar Pradesh's Kanpur city late Thursday.

While police officials refused to comment on the high profile arrest, sources said he was picked up from the Sapt Kranti Express headed for Delhi.

Alam, 25, was not only a terror suspect in the string of bombings that took place in Patna Sunday before Bharatiya Janata Party's prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi was to address a rally, he is also suspected for the Bodhgaya blasts in July this year.

Officials said following his re-arrest, the terror accused was taken to New Delhi by NIA sleuths. "I am not aware of the operation but the state police must have only provided logistical support at best," a senior official told IANS.

He escaped late Wednesday from a toilet in Bihar's Muzaffarpur while being brought here from Darbhanga district.

Officials, however, were unwilling to confirm whether the terror suspect made good his escape Wednesday night or early Thursday.

While some police officials said the escape took place late Wednesday, there were also those who said it happened Thursday morning.

Six of the seven blasts took place at Patna's Gandhi Maidan. The seventh explosion was at the railway station.

Patna Senior Superintendent of Police Manu Maharaj said Imtiaz along with Arshad came to Patna between Oct 8 and 10 to carry out recce of various sites that could be targeted.

Arshad Alam, 24, a resident of East Champaran district's Alauli village, was arrested by a team of NIA and Bihar Police Tuesday.

"Arshad was arrested on the basis of information provided by Mohammad Imtiaz Ansari, one of the two suspected Indian Mujahideen operatives arrested from Patna junction soon after the first bomb exploded," a police official said.

A second terror suspect who was injured in the blasts is battling for life at a government hospital here.

Imtiaz, a resident of Ranchi, is suspected to be the brain behind the blasts. He was arrested from the Patna railway junction after a bomb exploded in a toilet on platform No.10 Sunday morning.

Ainul alias Tarique, the second suspect, was apprehended while he was crying in pain at the Patna railway junction toilet soon after a bomb which he was trying to fit with a timer exploded.

-- Indo-Asian News Service

md/rr


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China security chief blames Uighur separatists for Tiananmen attack

By Megha Rajagopalan

BEIJING (Reuters) - China's domestic security chief believes a fatal vehicle crash in Beijing's Tiananmen Square in which five died was planned by a Uighur separatist group, designated as a terrorist organisation by the United States and United Nations.

Meng Jianzhu, a member of the 25-member Politburo responsible for domestic security, said the East Turkestan Islamic Movement was behind the attack. This is the first time Beijing has accused the group of carrying out the attack.

On Monday, an SUV ploughed through bystanders on the edge of the capital's iconic Tiananmen Square and burst into flames, killing the three people in the car and two bystanders, in what the government called a terrorist attack.

Beijing police have arrested five people it says were radical Islamists who were planning a holy war. Security has been strengthened in both Beijing and in Xinjiang, the restive far western region the Muslim Uighurs call home.

"This violent terrorist incident that's happened in Beijing was organised and premeditated," said Meng told Hong Kong's Phoenix TV, in comments carried by the official Xinhua news agency on Friday.

"The group that stood behind the scenes inciting it was the East Turkestan Islamic Movement," Meng said.

Many Uighurs call Xinjiang East Turkestan, and the government often blames the frequent outbreaks of violence there on extremists agitating for an independent state.

Some experts have expressed scepticism about China's characterisation of the Tiananmen Square incident as a premeditated and coordinated attack.

"If it's a deliberate act, it's unsophisticated," said Joanne Smith Finley, a lecturer in Chinese studies at Newcastle University who studies Xinjiang. "It doesn't carry any of the hallmarks that we would expect to see if it was something that was plotted and carefully deliberated with overseas extremists."

The United Nations and U.S. placed ETIM on lists of terrorist organisations after the September 11, 2001 attacks.

The group entered the public eye ahead of the 2008 Beijing Olympics, when it claimed to have caused a series of fatal explosions across the country.

Police said the driver of the SUV as a man called Usmen Hasan, whose name suggests he is a Uighur, and said his mother and wife were in the car with him, along with devices filled with gasoline and a flag with "extreme religious content" on it.

At least 42 people were injured.

Exiled Uighur leader Rebiya Kadeer told Reuters this week that caution should be exercised over the government's account, adding she did not believe any kind of organised extremist Islamic movement was operating in Xinjiang.

Xinjiang, a sprawling, desert-like region that borders Central Asian nations that were part of the former Soviet Union as well as Afghanistan and Pakistan, has been beset by violence, blamed by China on Uighur separatists and extremists.

In 2009, nearly 200 people were killed in the Xinjiang capital Urumqi in rioting between Uighurs and the majority Han Chinese.

The East Turkestan Islamic Movement has been accused by the United States and China of having ties to al Qaeda, but there is disagreement among security experts as to the nature of the enigmatic group and whether ties with al Qaeda and other terrorist organisations really exist.

Rights organisations have said there is little concrete evidence that the group has carried out most of the attacks it has been blamed for, and that Beijing uses the group as an excuse to push repressive policies on Uighurs. (Editing by Ben Blanchard and Michael Perry, additional reporting by Adam Rose)


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CISF seizes 19.50 kg contraband drug from IGI

New Delhi, Oct 31 (IANS) Personnel of the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) recovered 19.50 kg pseudoephedrine drug from the baggage of three travellers at the Indira Gandhi International (IGI) airport here and arrested the three people, said a CISF official Thursday.

Van Lal Chhana, 21, Lal Zuiliana, 42, and C. Rochunga, 29 - all residents of Mizoram - were arrested Wednesday evening after the drug was detected during screening of their baggage when they were about to board a Kolkata-bound flight at IGI airport.

"Three packets containing the narcotic substance were recovered. The Narcotics Control Bureau was informed and they confirmed that the item was pseudoephedrine drug valued at Rs.19 lakh in the Indian market and more than Rs.1 crore in the international market," the official said.


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Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Aarushi case: Talwars term weapon theory hypothesis-based

Ghaziabad, Oct 30 (IANS) In the Aarushi-Hemraj double murder case, the defence lawyer for dentist couple Rajesh and Nupur Talwar Wednesday termed the Central Bureau of Investigation's (CBI) weapon theory as one being based on hypothesis.

In his argument, lawyer Satyaketu Singh said all that the agency has indicated is that since two sticks were extra clean, the murders were committed with those. It is absurd to put before the court such arguments which were contradicted by scientists themselves, he oberved.

While scientist M.S. Dahiya submitted that he based his opinion on the basis of documents furnished by the CBI, R.K. Sharma put on record that only depressed fracture could be generated by the use of a blunt weapon like golf stick while deceased Aarushi sustained line fracture which is the evidence of contradiction of opinion among scientists.

Second, the CBI did not follow the rules by stocking the seized articles in the treasury of articles and no evidence of the treasury keeper was put on record before the court of law. Such type of act is itself an evidence that the CBI violated rules and tampered with the seals.

Third, Dahiya's opinion, on the basis of which CBI stressed that the murder was committed by a golf stick was based on the documents furnished by the probe agency. Dahiya himself never visited and inspected the site which he stated before the court.

Fourth, the closure report already mentioned there was no corroboration in the sequence, hence the closure report is being submitted. So the CBI theory of usage of golf stick in the crime is purely based on hypothesis and full of illegalities and lapses.

After three hours' defence arguments from 2 p.m., the CBI judge adjourned the court for Oct 31 to record further arguments of the defence.

Aarushi, 14, was found murdered at her parents' Noida residence May 16, 2008. Next day, Hemraj's body was found on the house terrace.


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CRPF recovers 3 kg explosives in West Bengal

Kolkata, Oct 8 (IANS) The Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) recovered 3 kg explosives, including tiffin-box bombs, here in a joint operation with the state police, a CRPF official said Tuesday.

The CRPF troopers of 50th Battalion along with police have recovered 3 kg explosives - including two detonators fixed in two tiffin boxes and an improvised explosive device from two separate forests in west Midnapore's West Bengal.

"The explosives were recovered during a search operation following a tip-off," said the official.


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China police seek eight in connection with Tiananmen car crash

By Megha Rajagopalan

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese police were scouring hotels in Beijing on Wednesday for eight people wanted in connection with the crash of an SUV at Beijing's Tiananmen Square, which authorities suspect may have been a suicide attack by people from the Xinjiang region.

A security guard at a guesthouse in Beijing that is owned by the local government of Karamay city in Xinjiang said the hotel had received a list of eight suspects to watch for.

Xinjiang, in the far west, is home to China's Uighur Muslim minority and borders the Central Asian states of the former Soviet Union as well as Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Another employee at the guesthouse said police sent a notice to them on Tuesday, saying staff should be "cautious about Uighurs who check in at our hotel."

In Monday's crash, three people from Xinjiang are suspected to have driven the sport utility vehicle into a crowd of bystanders at Tiananmen Square, the iconic heart of the Chinese state, and set it on fire, two senior sources have told Reuters.

The three occupants and two tourists were killed and at least 38 people were injured, in what could be the first major suicide attack in China.

China has not said officially whether the incident was an attack or an accident.

Two hotels contacted by Reuters said authorities were also searching for five vehicles in connection with the suspects. They are also searching for a red motorcycle.

Beijing police did not reply to a faxed request for comment.

China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs urged people not to jump to conclusions when asked if the government believed that the Tiananmen crash was an attack carried out by Xinjiang extremists.

"Relevant departments are carrying out an investigation," said Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying. ""We ought to wait for the results of the probe to come out."

A Chinese state newspaper reported in July that the government suspected Syrian opposition forces were training extremists from Xinjiang to carry out attacks in China.

Uighur activists have long criticised the Chinese government for repressing their language and culture, and say that they have been cut off from much of the economic investment in the oil and gas industry in their resource-rich home region.

"There has been an acceleration of Uighur unrest, and most of it stems from Chinese policy," said Michael Clarke, a professor at Griffith University in Australia who has studied the history and politics of Xinjiang. "The extension of economic modernisation to Xinjiang has gone hand in hand with marginalisation of the Uighurs."

"There really needs to be a reassessment of China's approach to Xinjiang," he added.

Uighur activists have said they fear the government will take advantage of the incident to inflict even more repressive policies on Uighurs all over the country.

"They have not stopped to investigate and find out the real truth of what happened," said Ilham Tohti, a Beijing-based Uighur economist and longtime critic of Chinese policy in Xinjiang. "Why is it that it has already been decided, in the media and by the public, that this is an act of terrorism by Uighurs?" (Additional reporting by Adam Rose and Beijing Newsroom; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)


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Volvo to help in Andhra bus disaster probe

Bangalore, Oct 30 (IANS) Swedish transport vehicle major AB Volvo has offered to help state agencies investigating the fiery mishap involving a luxury bus of its make in Andhra Pradesh Wednesday in which 45 passengers were burnt to death.

"A team from our company will visit the accident spot to gather facts. We will offer full cooperation to the authorities and agencies investigating the mishap," Volvo's Indian subsidiary said in a statement here.

The luxury coach, built by the city-based subsidiary, was being operated by leading private transport carrier Jabbar Travels from Bangalore to Hyderabad, about 600 km away, through National Highway 7.

The accident took place involving a Volvo intercity coach at Kothakota in Mahabubnagar district, about 130 km from Hyderabad.

"At this juncture, we are not in a position to represent the sequence or cause of the incident as investigation is being carried by the authorities concerned," the statement added.

Volvo's air-conditioned buses are one of the popular modes of inter-city and intra-city transport services across the country.

Meanwhile, Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah expressed shock over the ghastly disaster and mourned the victims, offering his condolences to the bereaved families.

"I have directed the Raichur deputy commissioner to help the victims' relatives to transport their bodies to Bangalore and offered to provide relief to them," Siddaramaiah said in a statement.

Raichur, about 500 km from Bangalore, is the border district across Mahabubnagar in the northern region of the state.

Heart-rending scenes were witnessed at the homes of some of the victims here as nearly 30 of the passengers boarded the bus late Tuesday from the transport firm's office in the city centre.

One of the victims, Venkatesh Yadav, was president of the Chiranjeevi Fans' Association in Bangalore, formed by ardent admirers of former Telugu mega star and union tourism minister.

Yadav was travelling to Hyderabad with his sister Anita, who too perished in the bus fire.


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Italy Senate to hold open vote on expelling Berlusconi

By Massimiliano Di Giorgio

ROME (Reuters) - Italy's Senate will hold an open vote next month on whether to expel Silvio Berlusconi from parliament because of a tax fraud conviction, after an upper house committee narrowly rejected his bid to make the ballot secret.

The decision has been the subject of intense wrangling, with the billionaire media magnate's political enemies fearing a secret vote might allow him to escape expulsion through backroom dealings.

A special Senate panel voted by 7 to 6 in favour of an open vote, overruling objections from Berlusconi's People of Freedom (PDL) party, which argued that votes on individual senators are traditionally held in secret.

"The panel has voted but it's given birth to a constitutional monster," PDL Senator Anna Maria Bernini told reporters. "This was a decision aimed against one person."

No date has yet been set for the vote, but the Senate agenda is full until November 22, requiring a change to the timetable if the ballot is to be held before then.

Berlusconi is expected to lose his seat in the upper house following his conviction in August for a giant tax fraud at his Mediaset television empire.

But the expulsion procedure is proving long and divisive, with the PDL repeatedly trying to delay the vote, which would strip its leader of parliamentary immunity and leave him open to arrest in any of a string of other cases.

Wednesday's decision prompted a flood of anger from Berlusconi's supporters, stoking tensions in Prime Minister Enrico Letta's unwieldy coalition between the PDL and the centre-left Democratic Party (PD).

"Democracy was murdered in the Senate today," said Daniela Santanche, one of the 77-year-old leader's most hardline loyalists. "How can anyone still maintain on the basis of some false idea of stability that this government serves the country?"

CRIMINALS

The full Senate, where there is a majority in favour of expelling Berlusconi, must vote before the former prime minister can be stripped of his seat under a law passed last year banning convicted criminals from parliament.

However the showdown has been delayed by heated disagreement between Berlusconi's PDL and Letta's PD.

"The decision of the Senate panel should be respected," PD secretary Guglielmo Epifani said in a statement. "People should lower their tone and remember that the law is supposed to be the same for everyone."

Berlusconi, sentenced to four years in prison - commuted to a year under house arrest or in community service - protests his innocence, saying he is the victim of leftwing magistrates.

He also disputes the validity of the law under which he faces expulsion and has threatened to withdraw support for Letta if the Senate votes to throw him out.

As well as the prison sentence, the courts have also barred him from holding public office for two years, which means he will almost certainly be expelled, whatever the result of this Senate vote.

The tensions over the vote have greatly complicated the task facing Letta's government, which must still pass the 2014 budget law before tackling more ambitious reforms to revive Italy's stagnant economy and cut its enormous public debt.

(Writing by James Mackenzie; editing by Barry Moody)


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Campaign launched to protect Delhi's cyclists

New Delhi, Oct 30 (IANS) Delhi Police Wednesday launched a drive for pasting reflective stickers on bicycles to improve their visibility at night in order to avert road mishaps.

The campaign is basically focused on curbing the rising number of road accidents that bicycle riders face at night.

"Delhi has one of the largest number of road accident deaths and a majority of them are cyclists. Most of the accidents happen as a result of the cycles not being visible, especially at night. Hence, having reflective stickers on the rear of the bicycles will be a solution for their safety," said Additional Commissioner of Police Anil Shukla.

"In the next two month, Delhi traffic police constables will distribute reflective stickers to the bicyclers in the capital to ensure their safety," Shukla said.

He said that so far this year, 89 cyclists have lost their life because of their lack of visibility at night.


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Man arrested for murdering constable

New Delhi, Oct 30 (IANS) A criminal belonging to the notorious Mewati gang, named after the district in Haryana to which many of them belong, has been arrested in connection with the murder of a Delhi Police constable, an officer said Wednesday.

Baddan was arrested Oct 26 from West Bengal, where he had fled along with his family to evade the law.

He carried a reward of Rs.10,000 on his head, police said.

Baddan was arrested for killing constable Naresh, who was posted at Bharat Nagar police station in south Delhi on the intervening night of May 17-18, 2012.

He admitted that he was involved in several thefts of cattle, as well as other crimes in Delhi and National Capital Region (NCR), police said.

"On the fateful night, Baddan, along with his associates, was returning in their mini truck with stolen cattle. They were intercepted by the constable, who was on patrol duty with another constable. In a bid to escape, Baddan rammed his truck into the constable's vehicle, leading to his death," the official said.

Baddan's associates have already been arrested.


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Bail to placement agent in maid assault case

New Delhi, Oct 30 (IANS) A Delhi court Wednesday granted bail to a placement agent who was arrested in connection with the alleged confinement and assault of a domestic help by her employer in Vasant Kunj in south Delhi.

Additional Sessions Judge Dharmesh Kumar Sharma granted bail to Dorothy, the placement agent, on a bail bond of Rs.25,000 with a surety of like amount.

Dorothy had arranged for the employment of the maid with 50-year-old Vandana Dhir, who was arrested for allegedly torturing and illegally confining her teenage domestic help in her house here.

Allowing the bail application of Dorothy, the court restrained her from leaving Delhi without first intimating the court. She would also need to be present before the Investigating Officer (IO) in the case whenever directed to do so.

The court had, Oct 26, denied her bail saying the allegation against her is serious. The police also slapped Section 370 (buying or disposing of any person as a slave) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) on her, a serious charge.

During the hearing Wednesday the police opposed granting bail to Dorothy, saying the probe in the case would be hampered as it was still at an initial stage.

Her counsel told the court that the investigation was complete and the police had nothing more to recover from her or at her instance.

Dhir and Dorothy were arrested in connection with a case lodged under various sections of the IPC, the Bonded Labour Act, the Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes Act and under the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act.

Dhir, who was working with a multinational firm in Noida, has been accused of assaulting her domestic help, beating her and branding her with a hot girdle.

The victim, who hails from Jharkhand, said she was forced to drink urine and was kept by Dhir in her Vasant Kunj house in a semi-naked condition.

She was rescued by a joint team of NGO Shakti Vahini and Delhi Police from Dhir's residence on the evening of Sep 30.

Neighbours had heard her shrieking and had informed the police.


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AgustaWestland violated contract, government to follow law: Antony

New Delhi, Oct 30 (IANS) Defence Minister A.K. Antony Wednesday said AgustaWestland "violated the contract" for supplying 12 VVIP choppers to the Indian Air Force (IAF) and the government has to move as per the law.

"We have to move as per law. They have violated the contract ... we have to take steps to protect our interests ... we have given them 21 days to reply to it," said Antony on the sidelines of an event at the Institute of Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA) here.

On Oct 21, the defence ministry had issued a final showcause notice to AgustaWestland, seeking to cancel the deal to buy 12 helicopters and given the company 21 days to reply.

The company was asked to explain why action should not be taken against it for violating the terms of the pre-contract integrity pact.

In February, the government froze payments on the $771.32-million contract following allegations that Rs.360 crore was paid in bribes.

AgustaWestland has denied the allegations.


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CRPF seizes arms in Jharkhand

Ranchi, Oct 30 (IANS) The Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) has seized an arms cache in Jharkhand in a joint operation with the state police, the CRPF said Wednesday.

The weapons recoveed in Giridih Tuesday evening included three single bore rifles, two pistols, a revolver and 16 live cartridges.


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Deaf, mute minor gangraped in Bengal

Kolkata, Oct 30 (IANS) A deaf and mute minor girl was allegedly gangraped in West Bengal's North 24 Parganas district, police said Wednesday.

The incident happened late Tuesday in Baduria in the district when the victim, 16, while attending a marriage ceremony, was forcibly picked up by a group of men who took turns to rape her.

"We have arrested four people in this regard," a police officer said.

Earlier, another 16 year-old-girl was allegedly gangraped in Madhyamgram in the district Friday. Two people have been arrested.

The West Bengal Human Rights Commission has ordered a probe by a senior police officer in the Friday's case.

Incidentally, both cases have happened not far from Kamduni, which made headlines for the gruesome gang rape and murder of a college student June 7.

Reacting to the rising crimes against women in the state, leader of opposition Surjya Kanta Mishra of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) accused the Mamata Banerjee government of being unable to maintain law and order.

"Not a single day passes when there isn't a case of rape. Even today we heard that a deaf and mute girl has been gangraped. I want to ask this government when the women of the state will be able to live in peace and security," Mishra told media persons here.

Mishra also accused the ruling Trinamool Congress of harbouring and encouraging criminals and quoted National Crime Records Bureau to claim that crime against women in the state has multiplied rapidly under the new regime.


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Rajasthan ex-minister sent to 14 days judicial custody

Jaipur, Oct 29 (IANS) A court here Tuesday sent former Rajasthan minister of state for dairy and rural industries Babulal Nagar - arrested for raping a married woman - to 14 days judicial custody, a lawyer said.

The former minister was produced in the special court for Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) cases, said Nagar's advocate Amar Singh.

Nagar was earlier sent to three days of CBI custody.

"After completion of his police custody, he was again produced in the court today (Tuesday). The court sent him to 14 days judicial custody," said Singh.

Nagar was escorted to Jaipur Central Jail from the court amid heavy security.

CBI interrogated the 53-year-old politician in its custody, sources said.

Nagar resigned from the state cabinet two days after the FIR was registered against him by the 35-year-old woman Sep 17.

He was called to a government circuit house for questioning by CBI Oct 25. He was interrogated for seven hours and arrested after he could not give satisfactory answers to some questions, said a source close to the investigation agency.

In her police complaint, the woman alleged that Nagar called her to his official residence Sep 11 on the pretext of giving her a government job and raped her.

Nagar, who represents Dudu constituency in Jaipur district, is not the sole party legislator to face such charges.

Two other legislators of the ruling Congress, Malkhan Singh and Mahipal Maderna, were suspended in December 2011 following allegations of their involvement in sexual exploitation and murder of government nurse Bhanwari Devi.


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8 stolen vehicles recovered in Ghaziabad, four arrested

Ghaziabad, Oct 29 (IANS) Four vehicle thieves have been arrested here and eight luxury cars recovered from then, police said Tuesday.

Superintendent of Police (Rural) Jagdish Sharma said police received a tip-off Monday night that some criminals were hatching a plan to steal cars at an area near the Masuri flyoverover the Ganga canal. A police team reached the spot and apprehended four people.

During sustained interrogation, the four confessed they stole luxury cars from the area. Based on information obtained from them, police recovered eight cars including two Boleros, a Safari SUV, a Honda City, a Scorpio jeep, an Indigo Car, a Mahendra Quantico and a WagonR from the different places.

They four were identified as Sukendra, Ajit Pal, and Sunil - all from Bulandshahr, and Surendra from Aligarh, said Sharma.


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Model code violation: 15 new FIRs against BJP

New Delhi, Oct 29 (IANS) Fifteen new first information reports (FIRs) have been filed against the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) for violating the model code of conduct, in force in Delhi since Oct 5, Delhi Election Commission sources said Tuesday.

Of the 15 cases, 13 have been filed under the prevention of defacement of property act while two are under the excise act.

With these new cases, the FIRs filed against political parties for violating the model code has touched 328.

The Aam Aadmi Party, with 90 cases against it, tops the list while the BJP is second with 75 cases.


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Can Merkel really be surprised the NSA spied on her?

By Erik Kirschbaum

BERLIN (Reuters) - When Angela Merkel was growing up in communist East Germany, she recalls her parents getting nervous whenever she talked for too long on the phone. "Hang up! The Stasi is listening and it's all being recorded," warned her mother, according to one biography.

But somewhere along the line between her childhood behind the Iron Curtain and becoming chancellor of a united Germany, Merkel apparently lost her fear of eavesdropping.

She called Barack Obama last week to demand clarification of reports that the U.S. National Security Agency had monitored her mobile phone. But the protests ring hollow to those who have warned about omniscient U.S. eavesdropping.

Critics say Merkel is either naive or feigning surprise for her domestic audience.

"Frau Merkel has been listened to since she was a teenager," said Frederick Forsyth, the thriller writer and former Reuters correspondent in East Berlin. "The only thing that amazes me about the furore is that it amazes people.

"Anyone who's been aware of what's been going on the last 30 years would presume all electronic communications are being listened to by someone," he told Reuters.

Before the Berlin Wall came down in 1989, East Germany's pervasive Stasi secret police had 2,000 spies and collaborators in West Berlin and West Germany - including a close aide to then chancellor Willy Brandt. It also ran a massive phone-tapping operation to spy on East Germans.

As a young woman in East Germany during the 1970s, Merkel, now 59, was herself approached by a Stasi agent, who tried to recruit her when she was applying for a university job. She turned him down, saying it was not something for her, she later told German television.

The skills of the Stasi's vast network of agents have not gone to waste in Merkel's Germany. Former Stasi cryptographers are now working with the German government, Der Spiegel magazine reported last month.

"SPYING AMONG FRIENDS"

After the eavesdropping scandal broke, Germany summoned the American ambassador for the first time in living memory, in the most serious breach between the two allies in a decade. "Spying among friends is not at all acceptable," said Merkel.

The public outcry has united Germans behind Merkel even though her position may be more of a domestic show than genuine outrage, in particular as she announced her call to Obama just as Spiegel was about to break the story.

In August, during the election campaign, Merkel and her ministers had first played down what they knew of the NSA's PRISM programme after reports suggested U.S. spies tapped half a billion phone calls, emails and text messages in Germany in a typical month, and also bugged German offices and officials.

"Merkel is pretending to be surprised," said Christian Lammert, a political scientist at Berlin's Free University. "Privacy is a huge issue in Germany and she's got to do this otherwise she'd have a credibility problem."

Michael Desch, a University of Notre Dame expert on international security, suggested that Merkel, who often uses an unsecured cell phone that security experts warned could be tapped even by hobby hackers, was being disingenuous.

"Revelations that the United States spies not only on its enemies but also close allies such as ... Germany demonstrate the old truism that great powers have no permanent allies, just permanent interests," said Desch.

Some senior German officials take it for granted their calls and emails are monitored. "When you're a member of government, you have to assume it's happening - from all sides," outgoing Vice Chancellor Philipp Roesler told Cicero magazine.

"AMERICANS CAUGHT"

For columnist Hajo Schumacher in the Berliner Morgenpost, "the only problem is that the Americans got caught".

Forsyth, whose best-selling novels include "The Day of the Jackal" and "The Odessa File", said the German intelligence agency, the BND, invests heavily in eavesdropping.

"What the hell does she think all those costs are for?" said Forsyth, who covered the Cold War from East Berlin in 1963-64. "Have they no idea what's going on in this world?"

Some Germans view the U.S. eavesdropping of Merkel as a betrayal by the country that did most to defend democratic West Germany from Soviet-backed communist during the Cold War. The issue has dominated German media for the last week.

German authorities have sent helicopters on low-altitude flights to inspect the roofs of the U.S. embassy in Berlin - about 800 meters from Merkel's office - and a U.S. consulate in Frankfurt, German media reported.

Yet the shock and outrage are remarkable considering the history of Berlin, which was split by the Wall until 1989 and was a hotbed of espionage by East and West, where spy exchanges took place on Glienicke Bridge. The United States used West Berlin as a listening post for Eastern Europe.

In August, Merkel said the government had asked internet providers if they had any indications Germans were being spied on. "They all denied it," the chancellor said, adding that she was certain that she herself was not being monitored.

German officials say U.S. intelligence has helped foil half a dozen terrorist plots here in the last decade while Forsyth said Washington might think it has cause to monitor a country where the September 11, 2001 attacks were planned.

"If you're going to use an unsecured cell phone, you're going to be listened to," said Forsyth, who does not use a computer or a cell phone. "The idea that listening to one's ally is something new is complete nonsense." (Writing by Erik Kirschbaum; Additional reporting by Alexandra Hudson; Editing by Stephen Brown and Giles Elgood)


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Court to hear Abu Salem's bail plea Nov 7

New Delhi, Oct 29 (IANS) A court here Tuesday posted for Nov 7 hearing on the bail plea moved by gangster Abu Salem, facing trial for allegedly demanding Rs.5 crore as protection money from a capital-based businessman in 2002.

Additional Sessions Judge Dharmesh Sharma did not hear the arguments on the plea as Abu Salem was not presented in the court.

The judge recorded the statements of the prosecution witnesses in the case and the police sought more time to file reply on his bail plea.

Abu Salem, extradited from Portugal in 2005, along with five others, had allegedly made extortion calls to businessman Ashok Gupta, demanding Rs.5 crore as protection money.

The gangster has been facing trial in eight cases in the country, including the 1993 Mumbai blasts case, and is currently lodged in a Mumbai jail.

In his bail application, Abu Salem had said he has already been granted bail in two cases pending against him in separate courts in Delhi and due to his long incarceration, he is entitled to get relief.

The bail application said: "It is pertinent to mention here that applicant-accused (Salem) in view of his long incarceration is entitled to be released on bail under the provisions contained in section 436 A of CrPC (Criminal Procedure Code) and he has been granted bail in other two cases pending against him in Delhi courts."

It further added that there was no chance of Abu Salem's absconding or tampering with the evidence.


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Helpline opened for Andhra bus fire

Hyderabad, Oct 30 (IANS) Mahabubnagar district police in Andhra Pradesh have opened a helpline to provide information about the mishap in which 40 passengers of a private bus coming to Hyderabad from Bangalore were killed after the bus caught fire early Wednesday.

Following are the helpline numbers: 9494600100, 08542-245927, 245930, 245932.


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CORRECTED - Indian Mujahideen behind attack on Modi rally: police

(Corrects spelling of Jharkhand in para 6, number of dead in Mumbai attacks, final para)

By Jatindra Dash and Frank Jack Daniel

REUTERS - An Islamist militant group is believed to be behind an attack on a rally by Narendra Modi that killed six people and wounded more than 80, police said on Tuesday.

Modi, who has a good chance of becoming India's next prime minister, is seen as a target of militants who hold him responsible for riots a decade ago during his first term as chief minister of Gujarat. At least 1,000 people, most of them Muslims, were killed in the rioting.

Seven crude bombs went off on Sunday in Bihar as Modi's supporters gathered for his rally. He was not near any of the blasts and delivered his speech despite the attack.

Senior police official S.N. Pradhan said one of two suspects arrested after the blasts had identified a suspected senior member of the Indian Mujahideen militant group, Tehseen Akhtar, as the organiser of the attack.

The National Investigation Agency, India's top counter terrorism body, is seeking the arrest of the 24-year-old Akhtar in connection with attacks in recent years in the cities of Mumbai and Varanasi and is investigating his role in blasts in Hyderabad in February.

"Because of the Tehseen connection, the entire chain is established," said Pradhan, a senior police official in Jharkhand, where the detained suspect is from.

"There is no doubt that it is the work of the Indian Mujahideen."

Police said the bombers were trying to spark a stampede in the crowd. Heavy loss of life could have inflamed tension, recently simmering again, between majority Hindus and minority Muslims.

The Indian Mujahideen has been accused of dozens of similar bomb attacks over recent years.

The ease with which the bombs were planted around the rally ground, where tens of thousands of people gathered to hear Modi, has raised concern about Modi's safety.

Leaders of his Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) have called the attack a big security failure and have demanded better protection for him.

There has been no claim of responsibility.

LEADER ARRESTED

Opinion polls suggest the BJP, which is seeking to unseat a ruling coalition led by the Congress party, could win the most seats in a general election due by May.

Critics say Modi did not do enough to stop rampaging Hindu mobs in the 2002 riots in Gujarat. Modi denies any role in the violence and a Supreme Court appointed panel cleared him of wrongdoing.

Modi rejects any suggestion of bias against Muslims although his party rose to prominence after leading a campaign that led to the destruction of the Babri Masjid mosque in 1992, which triggered rioting that killed some 2,000 people.

The party said the mosque was built on a Hindu holy site.

The Indian Mujahideen claimed responsibility for a series of bomb attacks in Gujarat in 2011 that killed at least 45 people, saying they were revenge for the 2002 riots.

India arrested the organisation's suspected leader, Yasin Bhaktal, near the border with Nepal in August but Sunday's explosions would appear to indicate the group can still launch high-profile attacks.

Police also suspect the Indian Mujahideen's involvement in a series of blasts in July at the Buddhist holy site of Bodh Gaya in Bihar.

A National Intelligence Agency official told Reuters an analysis of the bombs used in the Sunday attack showed they were similar to devices used in Bodh Gaya. In both attacks, ammonium nitrate was detected, and the timers and circuits were similar, the official said.

In 2011, the United States designated the Indian Mujahideen a terrorist organization with close links to Pakistan-based groups like the Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT).

The State Department said the group played a "facilitative role" in the 2008 Mumbai attack carried out by LeT that killed 166 people, including six Americans.

For a map locating blasts click link.reuters.com/saw24v

(Writing by Frank Jack Daniel; Editng by Robert Birsel)


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Friends of accused Boston bomber challenge keeping evidence secret

By Daniel Lovering

BOSTON (Reuters) - A lawyer for one of three college friends who allegedly helped to cover the tracks of accused Boston Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev argued on Tuesday that a judge's order keeping most evidence in the case out of public view was unfair to his client.

An attorney for Azamat Tazhayakov, who is charged with obstruction of justice and conspiracy, said prosecutors had failed to give a specific reason for sealing evidence, other than concerns about pretrial publicity and protecting the litigants.

"The defendants have basically been muzzled," said defense attorney Nicholas Woolridge, while the government has been allowed to "cherry pick" details about evidence discovered in the case.

Tazhayakov and another student, Dias Kadyrbayev, both Kazakh nationals, are accused of removing a backpack containing fireworks casings and a laptop from Tsarnaev's dormitory room at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth while the FBI was searching for the suspects.

The bag was dropped in a dumpster outside the New Bedford, Massachusetts, apartment where the two lived and investigators later recovered it from a landfill.

The defendants could face 25 years in prison, or deportation, if convicted on charges of obstruction of justice and conspiracy. They have pleaded not guilty.

Woolridge said the case was not like the recent trial of gangster James "Whitey" Bulger, which involved confidential informants and raised concerns about witness intimidation.

But Assistant U.S. Attorney John Capin said lifting the order would be inappropriate as it only limited dissemination of details about the evidence beyond attorneys and litigants in the case.

Robert Stahl, an attorney for Kadyrbayev, said earlier that his client cooperated with investigators from the moment they approached him, turning over Tsarnaev's computer and telling the FBI where it could find the backpack.

A third friend, Robel Phillipos of Cambridge, Massachusetts, has pleaded not guilty to charges of making false statements in a terrorism investigation. He could face 16 years in prison if convicted.

Tsarnaev, 20, is accused of setting off a pair of homemade pressure-cooker bombs at the race's crowded finish line on April 15, killing three people and injuring 264 in one of the worst attacks on U.S. soil since September 11, 2001.

He is also charged in the death of a university police officer from whom he and his older brother, Tamerlan, tried unsuccessfully to steal a gun, according to authorities.

Tamerlan was killed in a late-night gunfight with police in the suburb of Watertown on April 18. Police found Dzhokhar hiding in a boat parked in the backyard of a home after a day-long manhunt. (Editing by Scott Malone)


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40 die as bus catches fire in Andhra

Hyderabad, Oct 30 (IANS) As many as 40 passengers were burnt alive early Wednesday when a bus caught fire in Andhra Pradesh's Mahabubnagar district, police said.

A private bus coming to Hyderabad from Bangalore caught fire after hitting a culvert around 5.20 a.m. near Palem in Kottakota mandal of Mahabubnagar district, about 150 km from here.

Seven passengers, including the driver and a cleaner, managed to escape. They were shifted to a hospital.

Flames engulfed the bus within no time as the diesel tanker burst after hitting the culvert, a police official said quoting eye witnesses.

There was no clarity yet on the exact number of passengers onboard the ill-fated bus. The police said 40 people were killed and seven were injured, but according to driver, the Volvo air-conditioned bus, belonging to Jabbar Travels, was carrying 49 passengers.

Superintendent of Police Nagendra Kumar, who visited the spot, said a list of only 29 passengers was received from the private bus operator. Other passengers are believed have boarded the bus at Hindupur and Anantapur.

The passengers were asleep when the accident took place, leaving no time for them to escape. The victims were charred beyond recognition.

People from nearby village said the bus was reduced to ashes within few minutes.

Policemen with the help of forensic experts were seen retrieving charred remains of the passengers and keeping them under a tent erected near the scene on Bangalore-Hyderabad national highway. The experts will conduct DNA test to identity the bodies.

Mahabubnagar District Collector M.Girija Shankar said five passengers were shifted to DRDO Hospital in Hyderabad.

The bus left Bangalore at 10 p.m. Tuesday and was scheduled to reach Hyderabad at 6.30 a.m.

Anxious relatives of some of the passengers rushed to Jabbar Travels office here for information. However, the private operator did not have the list of passengers and other details.

Mahabubnagar district police have opened a helpline to provide information. Following are the helpline numbers: 9494600100, 08542-245927, 245930, 245932.

Chief Minister N.Kiran Kumar Reddy Wednesday ordered probe. He directed the district collector and superintendent of police to conduct a thorough investigation and submit a report.

Kiran Reddy expressed his shock and anguish and told officials to provide all the help to the injured and the families of the victims.

Transport Minister Botsa Satyanarayana said compensation would be paid to the families of the victims.

Telugu Desam Party (TDP) president N.Chandrababu Naidu and leaders of other political parties have also expressed shock over the accident and conveyed their sympathies to the kin of the victims.


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Leaders of S. African "Boer Army" plot receive long jail terms

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - Five leaders of a "Boer Army" white supremacist plot in South Africa to assassinate Nelson Mandela and drive blacks out of the country were sentenced to 35 years in prison on Tuesday after a trial lasting more than 10 years.

A Pretoria High Court handed down sentences ranging from 20 to five years to others of the 21 defendants of the "Boeremag", a rag-tag militia of apartheid loyalists accused of a botched 2002 coup attempt in Africa's biggest economy. This had including charges of causing explosions.

Some of the sentences were suspended. Nine of the accused walked free after being held for 11 years behind bars during the trial, National Prosecuting Authority spokesman Medupi Simasiku told Reuters.

In the course of the prolonged case, witnesses testified that the Boeremag planned to assassinate anti-apartheid hero Mandela, who was South Africa's first black president, by planting a bomb along a route he was due to travel.

Their plans however were thwarted when the world-famous statesman, now retired, aged 95 and convalescing at home in Johannesburg, travelled to his engagement by helicopter.

Several of the Boeremag members were charged with causing nine explosions at various sites in Gauteng, South Africa's richest province in October 2002, with most blasts taking place in the sprawling township of Soweto, south of Johannesburg, where one woman was killed.

Racial tensions persist almost 20 years since the first democratic elections ended apartheid rule in South Africa. But groups like the Boeremag and the Afrikaner Resistance Movement of murdered far-right leader Eugene Terre'blanche have little backing from the country's almost 5 million whites.

The alleged mastermind of the Boeremag, former university lecturer Mike du Toit, was the first to be convicted last year for high treason, and was among those given a 35-year sentence.

According to prosecution testimony, the Boeremag's plot, concocted around barbeques and at fast food outlets, had suggested driving South Africa's black majority of about 40 million out of the country and into Zimbabwe by lining a major national road between the two countries with food parcels.

It had also proposed sending the 1.2 million Indians in the country back to the subcontinent by boat. (Reporting by Peroshni Govender; Editing by Pascal Fletcher)


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Six people shot to death in apparent murder-suicide in South Carolina

By Harriet McLeod

CHARLESTON, South Carolina (Reuters) - Six people, including two children, were shot to death in a South Carolina home on Tuesday in what police believe is a murder-suicide involving members of a family, authorities said.

Investigators still do not know which of the slain was the shooter, said Sergeant John Long, a spokesman for the sheriff's department in Greenwood County, where the shootings took place and about 180 miles (290 km) northwest of Charleston.

Officers rushed to the scene after a male caller phoned 911 emergency services shortly before 6 p.m. EDT (2200 GMT) and said he was thinking of hurting himself, Long said.

When officers arrived, the SWAT team tried to encourage the caller to come out, but when he did not, they went inside the home.

"They tried to talk him out and they couldn't get anybody out and that's when the SWAT team went in" about an hour after deputies arrived, Long said.

Authorities did not release the names of the dead or the ages of the children. (Reporting by Harriet McLeod; Writing by Sharon Bernstein; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)


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China suspects Tiananmen crash a suicide attack, sources say

By Benjamin Kang Lim and Ben Blanchard

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese authorities investigating what could be Beijing's first major suicide attack searched on Tuesday for two men from Muslim-dominated Xinjiang after three people suspected to be from the restive region drove an SUV into a crowd at Tiananmen Square and set it on fire.

They killed themselves and two tourists on Monday in the square, the heart of China's power structure and the focal point of the mass 1989 pro-democracy demonstrations brutally crushed the military.

Police have spread a dragnet across the capital, checking hotels and vehicles, seeking two people suspected to be ethnic Uighurs, a Muslim minority from Xinjiang in China's far west, on the borders of former Soviet Central Asia.

Two senior sources said on Tuesday the crash, which also injured 38 bystanders at perhaps the most closely guarded location in China, was suspected of being a suicide attack carried out by people from Xinjiang. It was initially believed to be an accident.

The sources did not specifically say the occupants were Uighurs, many of whom chafe at Chinese controls on their culture and religion.

"It looks like a pre-meditated suicide attack," said a source with direct knowledge of the matter, speaking on condition of anonymity to avoid repercussions for talking to the foreign media.

There have been suicide bombings before in China, and in Beijing, mostly by people with personal grievances, but none have targeted the very heart of China's government like this appears to have.

China has blamed Uighur separatists and religious extremists for a series of attacks in Xinjiang, saying they want to establish an independent state called East Turkestan. Rights groups and exiles say China massively overstates the threat.

In 2009, nearly 200 people were killed in clashes between Uighurs and ethnic Chinese in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang. But the unrest has never before spilled over into China's capital despite speculation in 1997 that Uighurs were to blame for a Beijing bus bomb that killed at least two people.

Uighurs are also not known to have previously carried out suicide attacks.

Exiled Uighur leader Rebiya Kadeer, who is based in Washington, said in a statement that she was worried that Monday's crash would bring a fierce crackdown on her people.

Kadeer, who left China in 2005, heads an international Uighur exile organization called the World Uighur Congress, based in Germany. Her group urged calm and voiced concern that Chinese censorship would stop facts from coming out.

"The Chinese government will not hesitate to concoct a version of the incident in Beijing so as to further impose repressive measures on the Uighur people," she said.

Kadeer said China has used the international fight against terrorism launched after the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States as a pretext for a crackdown on the Uighurs in Xinjiang.

"There is no sign we will see anything different this time, even though evidence of what really happened yesterday is thin on the ground," she said in the statement from Washington.

'NO ACCIDENT'

China's government has given no official word on whether the incident was an accident or an attack. State media has mostly kept to reporting brief statements from the police and official Xinhua news agency giving a bare bones account of what happened, as is common for such sensitive events.

Police are still investigating and have yet to determine the identities of the three people in the sport utility vehicle but suspect they are from Xinjiang, according to the sources. The other dead were a Chinese man and a woman from the Philippines, both tourists.

However, Beijing police said late on Monday they were looking for two suspects from Xinjiang in connection with a "major incident" - though it was unclear if these were the people in the vehicle or accomplices still at large.

The sources said that the occupants were suspected of lighting a flammable substance in the vehicle.

"It was no accident. The jeep knocked down barricades and rammed into pedestrians. The three men had no plans to flee from the scene," said a source who has ties to the leadership.

A Reuters reporter at the scene at the time said he did not hear any gunshots.

On Monday night, hours after the fire, Beijing police issued a notice asking local hotels about suspicious guests who had checked in since October 1 and named two suspects it said were from Xinjiang. Four hotels told Reuters they had received the notice.

Judging by their names, the suspects appeared to be ethnic Uighurs.

"To prevent the suspected persons and vehicles from committing further crimes ... please notify law enforcement of any discovery of clues regarding these suspects and the vehicles," said the notice, which was widely circulated on Chinese microblogs.

Beijing police, contacted by telephone, declined to comment. On Monday, the police said on their official microblog only that they were investigating the accident, and did not say if they thought it was an attack.

Calls to the Xinjiang government went unanswered.

Barry Sautman, a political scientist at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology who has studied Xinjiang, said if it were confirmed as a suicide attack by Uighurs, it would be a first.

"Certainly there have been a lot of bombings carried out by Uighur groups, but none of them as far as I know have involved suicide," he said.

Ilham Tohti, a China-based ethnic Uighur economist and longtime critic of Chinese policy in Xinjiang, said Uighurs had been driven to take extreme measures by China's repression.

"The use of violent means happens because all other outlets for expression are gone. Uighurs do not have any representation, they have no means of self-expression," he told Reuters.

China denies mistreating any of its minority groups, saying they are guaranteed wide-ranging religious and cultural freedoms. Many rights groups say China has overplayed the threat posed to justify its tough controls in energy-rich Xinjiang, which lies strategically on the borders of Central Asia, India and Pakistan.

IN FRONT OF MAO'S PORTRAIT

Police said on Monday the sport utility vehicle veered off the road at the north of the square, crossed the barriers and caught fire almost directly in front of the main entrance of the Forbidden City, in front of a huge portrait of the founder of Communist China, Mao Zedong.

Pictures seen by Reuters showed that the vehicle appeared to have driven several hundred metres (yards) along the pedestrian pavement in front of the Forbidden City entrance before bursting into flames, knocking down people as it went.

One eyewitness, who asked not to be identified due to the incident's sensitive nature, said she saw the vehicle knock down three or four people, and that it had a white banner with black lettering on it streaming from the back.

"People started to panic, and all ran to hide in the toilet," she said. "Three or four minutes later I came out and could see black smoke, and the police had begun to clear people out."

While censors moved quickly to remove pictures of the incident from the popular Twitter-like service Sina Weibo, as often happens in stability-obsessed China, many images and accounts are still viewable a day after the event.

Beijing police stepped up checks on cars around the city in response to the incident, one police officer at a checkpoint on the border between Beijing and Hebei province told Reuters.

A state newspaper reported in July that the government suspected Syrian opposition forces were training extremists from Xinjiang to carry out attacks in China.

"They have been known to carry out attacks outside of Xinjiang," said Yang Shu, a terrorism expert at China's Lanzhou University.

"There have also been reports that East Turkestan elements have received training in Syria, so I would say the possibility does exist of a Xinjiang connection," he added.

(Additional reporting by Beijing newsroom, Adam Rose, Megha Rajagopalan and Michael Martina; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)


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Psychic scammers find fertile haunting ground in Internet age

By Jeffrey B. Roth

GETTYSBURG, Pennsylvania (Reuters) - As pre-Halloween witches and ghouls sprout up on U.S. lawns, experts are warning people to be wary of modern occult scammers who have moved online to hawk virtual voodoo dolls, revenge spells and otherwise "haunted" items.

While the idea of spending money for a magic spell - to help with an endeavor or to inflict pain on an enemy - has been around for centuries, experts say the anonymity of online transactions can encourage people who would otherwise never think of visiting a storefront psychic to fall for a con.

"It's a new twist on an old idea," said Nicholas Little, legal director of the Center for Inquiry, a Washington-based nonprofit that promotes secular and rational thinking. "It's easy to hide your identity on the Internet, so people are willing to try scams online that they would never be willing to try in person."

While most scammers offer items in the small-dollar range - selling allegedly haunted items on auction sites for under $10 - some go for large sums of money. A Manhattan woman running a fortune-telling business earlier this month was found guilty of conning two women out of $138,000, claiming that the funds would be used to solve problems related to their past lives.

Alexandra Holzer Gargiulo, daughter of paranormal researcher and author, Hans Holzer, is publishing a 50th anniversary edition of her father's book "Ghost Hunter." She said paranormal scams prey on people who are "desperate for answers."

Television shows that depict investigators using gadgets such as electro-magnetic field detectors to document evidence of paranormal activity have driven up demand for those items, Gargiulo said. She added that the shows have also sparked growth in the number of self-proclaimed paranormal investigators, who charge homeowners as much as $1,500 to rid their homes of spirits.

The law relating to such activities is not always definitive, Little said, noting that fortune-tellers and others who offer occult services often use a "for entertainment purposes only" disclaimer to prevent legal problems.

Even as people who sell occult services move online, some continue to run storefronts, offering psychic readings for a small fee and trying to talk customers into paying more to resolve problems.

One New York woman who recently fell victim to such a scam was Maya Battle.

"It was a bad time for me and I was unhappy about a lot of things," said Battle. "Before, I had visited a psychic for a $5 reading for fun, but had never invested a lot of money for a reading."

But one day, while waiting for a friend outside a bar, Battle was approached by a doorway psychic, who told her she was the target of an evil curse.

She persuaded Battle to pay $100 to remove the curse. The psychic used an egg in the ritual, touching it against her forehead, shoulders and heart.

At the end of the ceremony, the psychic instructed Battle to break the egg, which appeared to be half-cooked and filled with black seeds, she said.

"That flipped me out," said Battle.

She said the psychic told her the seeds were the physical embodiment of the curse, and persuaded her to spend another $500 to have the egg properly disposed of.

Battle said she paid the money, but later regretted her decision. She did some research on the Internet and discovered she had fallen prey to a commonly used scam. (Editing by Scott Malone and Gunna Dickson)


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Over 40 dead as bus catches fire in Andhra

Hyderabad, Oct 30 (IANS) Over 40 passengers were feared burnt alive when a bus caught fire in Mahabubnagar district in Andhra Pradesh early Wednesday.

A private bus coming to Hyderabad from Bangalore caught fire after hitting a culvert near Palem in Mahabubnagar district around 5 a.m., witnesses said.

Five passengers, including the driver and a cleaner, managed to escape. They were shifted to a hospital.

The Volvo, belonging to Jabbar Travels, was carrying 48 passengers. The remaining 43 passengers were feared killed in the mishap.

The passengers were asleep when the bus hit the culvert and its diesel tank burst. People from nearby village said within few minutes the bus was reduced to ashes. The victims were charred beyond recognition.


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Egypt arrests al Qaeda militant previously jailed for Sadat murder

CAIRO (Reuters) - Egyptian authorities have arrested an Islamist militant jailed over the assassination of Anwar Sadat, for plotting bomb attacks on behalf of al Qaeda since his release from prison in 2012, security sources said on Tuesday.

Nabil al-Maghraby, a former naval intelligence officer who the sources said was a key al Qaeda operative, was arrested on Sunday. He has been linked to an ex-army major who tried to assassinate the interior minister in September, the sources said.

Maghraby had been released from jail after serving 31 years for taking part in the 1981 assassination of Sadat. The Egyptian leader was killed by Islamist members of the military opposed to his 1979 peace treaty with Israel.

Since then, Egypt has been highly sensitive about Islamists infiltrating its armed forces, the biggest in the Arab world.

Maghraby was arrested in the northern Delta town of Qalubiya, 35 km (20 miles) from Cairo.

"He has been arrested for being a part of a terror organization and for planning bomb attacks in the country," one of the sources said.

Authorities believe he was a close associate of former army major Waleed Badr, who blew himself up on September 5 in a failed attempt to kill the interior minister in Cairo.

A Sinai-based Islamist militant group called Ansar Bayt al-Maqdis released a farewell video of Badr urging Muslims to kill government officials in Egypt, a strategic U.S. ally.

Al Qaeda-linked Islamist militants based in the Sinai have stepped up attacks on soldiers and police since the army toppled Islamist President Mohamed Mursi in July.

The majority of the attacks have been carried out in the largely lawless Sinai Peninsula, but some attacks like the one on the interior minister have raised fears that an Islamist insurgency is taking hold elsewhere.

Maghraby was released from jail in 2012 after Mursi pardoned about 100 political prisoners, mostly Islamists.

(Reporting and writing By Hadeel Al-Shalchi; Editing by Michael Georgy and Barry Moody)


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Police failing to keep up standards: K.P.S Gill

New Delhi, Oct 29 (IANS) Senior police officers are failing in establish and effectively implement standards for the force's functioning, former Punjab police chief K.P.S. Gill said Tuesday.

Speaking on the second day of a workshop 'Improving Women's Security in India", Gill noted it was their duty to ensure safety as well as proper registration and investigation of cases.

"There was no law under which any extraneous pressure could provide an alibi for their failures," he added.

He said that it was regrettable that most senior officers no longer travelled in their jurisdictions, and were quick to dismiss areas as "remote".

At the first day of the conference, Gill said that guidelines relating to investigation of violence against women in India are outdated


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SC seeks details of crimes against women in Delhi

New Delhi, Oct 29 (IANS) The Supreme Court Tuesday asked the Delhi government to submit every month details of the number of offences committed against women in the national capital.

A bench of Justice G.S.Singhvi, Justice Shiva Kirti Singh and Justice C. Nagappan asked for the information in the course of the hearing of a petition seeking an independent probe into alleged unprovoked baton charge by police on Aam Admi Party workers protesting outside Gokulpuri police station in east Delhi.

The Aam Admi Party workers were protesting against the non-registration of a FIR on a complaint by a woman alleging rape inside the police station in June this year.

The court asked police to produce the video of the entire incident that culminated in police baton charge on the Aam Admi party workers, as it found that the photographs produced by police in its defence did not addressing all the queries of the court.

The court was moved by 19 people that included five minors who were arrested by police after the incident.

Appearing for the petitioners, senior counsel Shanti Bhushan sought a SIT probe into the incident as he apprehended cover-up by police. He told the court while police personnel received scratches, the activists of AAP suffered serious injuries.

However, Additional Solicitor General Siddharth Luthra disputed submissions by Bhushan.

He told the court that after the incident, a directive has been issued that all the complaints about such alleged incidents had to be mandatorily registered notwithstanding whether the case is one-day-old or one-year-old.

The court will hold further hearing Wednesday after viewing the video recording of the incident.


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Pistorius to face additional gun charges in murder trial

By Peroshni Govender

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South African Olympic and Paralympic track star Oscar Pistorius will face two additional gun-related charges at his trial for the murder of his girlfriend due to start in March next year, prosecutors said on Tuesday.

Pistorius, who is on bail, says he acted in self defence mistaking his model girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp for an intruder when he shot and killed her on Valentine's Day at his upmarket home in February. She was shot in the head, arm and hip.

The additional charges related to incidents prior to the February shooting in which Pistorius was alleged to have fired a gun in a public space. This will form part of the prosecution's overall murder case against Pistorius.

Prosecutors have portrayed Pistorius as a cold-blooded killer and said they were confident that their case, which will have to rely heavily on forensics and witnesses who said they heard shouting before the shots, would stand up to scrutiny.

"The new charges relate to the contravention of the Firearm Control Act, but I cannot go into the details," Nathi Mncube, spokesman for South Africa's National Prosecuting Authority told Reuters. He could not say if the additional charges might delay the existing March 3 start date for the trial.

Pistorius' lawyer Brian Webber confirmed his client would face additional charges but declined to comment further.

The 26-year-old double-amputee known as "Blade Runner" for the prostheses he wears in competition appeared in court in August when his trial date was set for next year. A lesser charge of having 38 rounds of unlicensed ammunition at his home was also presented on that occasion.

South African media have reported one previous incident in which Pistorius allegedly fired a gun at a restaurant and another alleged incident in which he fired shots through a car sunroof while in the company of a former girfriend.

Pistorius was born without fibulas and had both his legs amputated below the knees before he turned one year old.

He was one of the most celebrated athletes of the 2012 Olympics and Paralympics in London, progressing to the Olympic 400-metre semi-final and winning Paralympic gold over the same distance.

His arrest and upcoming trial have riveted South Africa and made headlines around the world and, if convicted, he could face life in prison. (Reporting by Peroshni Govender; Editing by Pascal Fletcher)


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Drug racket involving chemical laboratory busted

Chandigarh, Oct 29 (IANS) The Punjab Police Tuesday claimed to have busted a major racket involving staff of the state's only chemical examination laboratory and drug smugglers operating in the state.

The police said six people, including three officials and an employee of the Kharar-based laboratory, have been booked.

Border range inspector general Ishwar Chander Sharma said the staff of the laboratory at Kharar, 25 km from here, had allegedly connived with drug smugglers to give them favourable reports for drug consignments seized by the Punjab Police and other security agencies.

The police also booked station house officer of the Pathankot Sadar police station, Lalit Kumar Tuesday for his alleged involvement with the laboratory officials and drug smugglers. Raids were being conducted to arrest him. He has been placed under suspension.

The police investigation has found the laboratory staff allegedly manipulated at least 11 reports to favour drug smugglers.

"It has come to light that certain members of the staff of the laboratory at Kharar had a nexus with the drug smugglers and were conniving with them to give chemical reports indicating a sample failed or getting low percentage drug report for financial considerations," a police spokesperson said.

Those booked include laboratory assistant chemical examiner Rajwinder Pal Singh, superintendent R.K. Mishra and senior laboratory technician Lekh Raj. Three others booked, Manjit Singh of district Tarn Taran, Harbhal Singh of Bhikhiwind and Darshan Singh of Nabha town, have been arrested.

The spokesperson said the modus operandi adopted by the gang was that Manjit and Harbhal were in touch with drug smugglers interested in obtaining favourable chemical report from the chemical examiner office for money and would strike a deal.

"Their nexus with the chemical examiner officials was established through Darshan, working as a Class-IV employee at the laboratory. Darshan had a nexus with the laboratory officials," he said.

Deputy inspector general, border range, Lok Nath Angra said raids were being conducted in Mohali, Patiala and Ludhiana to nab laboratory officials who were on the run.

The Punjab Police have recovered nearly 350 kg of heroin and hundreds of kg of puppy husk and other drugs worth several crores of rupees this year.


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Five survive Andhra bus accident

Hyderabad, Oct 30 (IANS) Five people survived the horrific bus accident that left over 40 passengers dead in Andhra Pradesh Wednesday.

The five injured passengers of Bangalore-Hyderabad bus, which caught fire in Mahabubnagar district in Andhra Pradesh early Wednesday, are Sreekar (Hyderabad), Rajesh (Hyderabad), Jai Singh (Uttar Pradesh), Mazhar Basha (Bangalore) and Jogesh (Bangalore).

According to police, they are undergoing treatment at a hospital at Vanaparti in the same district. The driver and cleaner also survived the accident.

Over 40 passengers were burnt alive when the bus caught fire after hitting a culvert.


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Delhi High Court overturns man's conviction for raping daughter

New Delhi, Oct 29 (IANS) The Delhi High Court Tuesday acquitted a man, sentenced to life imprisonment by the trial court for allegedly raping his 11-year-old daughter, observing that his first wife used the daughter "as a tool" to seek revenge.

Justice Kailash Gambhir and Justice Indermeet Kaur said: "The evidence produced by the prosecution and even the medical evidence does not lead us to believe that the appellant had committed a rape of his daughter."

The bench set aside the trial court's order that sentenced the man to life imprisonment on the charge of rape of his minor daughter in 2006.

"It is unfortunate, that to seek revenge from her own husband, she went to the extent of using her minor daughter as a tool to implicate him of an offence such as rape," the court said.

"The facts and circumstance of the case make it amply clear that the grudge nursed by the mother of not being adequately compensated during the divorce coupled with the fact that she was made to agree to hand over the legal custody of children in favour of her husband and above all the remarriage of the husband capitulated her into plotting this devious act."

The bench also rejected the claim of prosecution that man raped his daughter, saying: "The common belief that no women will fabricate an offence such as rape owing to its social and mental ramification is undoubtedly flawed as is exemplified by the present case..."

"The trauma of a man being falsely accused of raping his own flesh and blood is unspeakable and unfathomable.

"The court is appalled as how the mother for her personal vendetta compromise the well-being of her daughter to let her live for a lifetime with such a stigma and scar of being raped by her own father. The question is best left unanswered in the interest of humanity...," the court said.


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Indian Oil employee jumps to death in Delhi

New Delhi, Oct 29 (IANS) An Indian Oil officer committed suicide by jumping off the sixth floor of his office building in south Delhi, police said Tuesday.

Tikam Shivan, 52, working as section officer in the marketing division of the Indian Oil, jumped from the building located in the Yusuf Serai area Tuesday evening, police said.

Shivan died on the spot.

Police said a suicide note was recovered in which he has named an accounts officer of his company for compelling him to take the extreme step.


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Locked for two days, Delhi minor maid escapes

New Delhi, Oct 29 (IANS) A minor maid escaped after being locked by an Air India woman employee in her Delhi home for two days, police said Tuesday.

The victim, hailing from Manipur, escaped Monday. She had come to Delhi two years ago and was employed at Air India crew member Kirathoibi's house in the Sarojini Nagar area of south Delhi.

"Monday evening, Kirathoibi's help informed a neighbour that she was locked inside the house for two days. She somehow managed to escape when her employer left for work," said a police officer.

A neighbour called the police, said the officer.

The victim told police that Kirathoibi used to beat and lock her inside the house whenever she went for work. She did the same thing Sunday and left for duty. She is now abroad.

Police have registered a case against her employer and started a probe. They said the victim has been sent to a child welfare home.

Early this month, a senior employee of a French multinational company and a resident of Vasant Kunj was arrested for physically abusing her domestic help.


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40 dead as bus catches fire in Andhra

Hyderabad, Oct 30 (IANS) Forty passengers burnt alive when a bus caught fire in Mahabubnagar district in Andhra Pradesh early Wednesday, police said.

A private bus coming to Hyderabad from Bangalore caught fire after hitting a culvert near Palem in Mahabubnagar district around 5.20 a.m.

Seven passengers, including the driver and a cleaner, managed to escape. They were shifted to a hospital.

The Volvo, belonging to Jabbar Travels, was carrying 49 passengers. The passengers were asleep when the bus hit the culvert and its diesel tank burst. People from nearby village said the bus was reduced to ashes within few minutes. The victims were charred beyond recognition.

Mahabubnagar District Collector M.Girija Shankar said five passengers were undergoing treatment at a hospital at Vanaparti.

He along with Superintendent of Police Nagendra Kumar visited the scene. They said a list of only 29 passengers was received from the private bus travels. Other passengers boarded the bus enroute.

The bus left Bangalore at 10 p.m. Tuesday and was scheduled to reach Hyderabad at 6.30 a.m.


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Ecclestone accused of "corrupt bargain" in $100 mln London lawsuit

By Estelle Shirbon

LONDON (Reuters) - Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone was accused of making a "corrupt bargain" that cost a German media firm millions in a London court on Tuesday, one of multiple legal challenges that threaten his control of the motor sport.

Constantin Medien is seeking more than $100 million in damages from Ecclestone, arguing that he and three other defendants deliberately undervalued Formula One when private equity fund CVC Capital Partners bought into the business in 2005.

A sports-focused media group, Constantin Medien had an interest in the sale of German bank BayernLB's stake in the motor sport to CVC, and Constantin says it lost out as a result of the undervaluation.

The legal fallout from the sale has already seen former BayernLB banker Gerhard Gribkowsky jailed for 8-1/2 years for corruption, and a German court is due to decide next year whether Ecclestone himself should stand trial on bribery charges.

In addition, the Prosecutor's Office in Geneva said on Tuesday it had received a denunciation from Constantin Medien concerning the disputed transaction and had in response launched a criminal investigation.

Ecclestone denies any wrongdoing, but if the various legal battles were to go against him, his control of a sport that he has helped turn into a global money-spinner could be in jeopardy.

The 83-year-old is scheduled to appear as a witness in the London High Court next week.

After months of pre-trial arguments, the civil trial began on Tuesday morning with Philip Marshall, lead counsel for Constantin Medien, outlining his client's case.

Referring to the German indictment against Ecclestone, Marshall said it revealed that "a corrupt bargain was made between Mr Gribkowsky ... and Mr Ecclestone".

The purpose of the bargain, Marshall said, was "to facilitate a sale of the Formula One Group to a purchaser chosen by Mr Ecclestone in return for remuneration (for Gribkowsky) and a position in Formula One going forward (for Ecclestone)".

$1 BILLION BENEFIT

Judge Guy Newey told Marshall he would not allow him to rely on the German indictment as evidence and Constantin Medien would have to prove its case for damages on the evidence before the London court.

The other three defendants are Ecclestone's former lawyer Stephen Mullins, the Ecclestone family's Bambino Holdings and Gribkowsky, who is mounting no formal legal defence in the case.

Marshall said that Ecclestone arranged with Gribkowsky for BayernLB to sell its 47 percent stake in Formula One to CVC at a knock-down price of $830 million because he stood to gain both financially and by keeping his position at the helm of the sport.

"These arrangements effectively dealt with a serious threat from BayernLB to Mr Ecclestone's control of the Formula One Group," he said.

Ecclestone does not deny making payments of $44 million to Gribkowsky but says he was the victim of extortion after the German banker threatened to make false claims over his tax affairs.

Marshall said that the combined benefit to Ecclestone and Bambino Holdings of the sale was over $1 billion.

He said that based on what the Ecclestone family got out of the transaction, the total valuation of Formula One should have stood at between $3.09 and $3.34 billion, in stark contrast to a valuation just in excess of $2 billion used by CVC at the time.

"We see the transaction as being significantly weighted for the benefit of Mr Ecclestone and Bambino, and significantly to the detriment of BayernLB and those who had an interest (in the sale of its stake)," he told the court.

After Marshall completes his opening submissions on Wednesday, lawyers for Ecclestone and the other defendants will give their responses. The trial is scheduled to last six weeks. (Editing by Patrick Graham)


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