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Man Accused Of Punching Woman After Asking For $1 At Brooklyn Subway Station

March 4, 2021 by newyork.cbslocal.com Leave a Comment

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) — Police are investigating another attack in the subway system.

This one happened around 5:30 a.m. on Valentine’s Day at the Nostrand Avenue stop in Brooklyn.

READ MORE: Police: Suspect Beats Subway Rider With Cane On Brooklyn A-Train

Police are investigating another attack in the subway system. (Credit: NYPD)

Police said the suspect approached a 41-year-old woman on the A train platform and asked her for a dollar.

READ MORE: NYPD: Brutal Subway Beating Of Asian Man On Lower East Side Considered Hate Crime

He became upset when she said she didn’t have any money and allegedly punched her in the head.

Police said the victim suffered minor cuts to the right side of her head.

MORE NEWS: NYC District Attorneys Say Time Has Come To Make Assaults On Transit Workers A Crime Punishable By Up To 1 Year In Jail

Anyone with information about the suspect is asked to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477), or for Spanish, 1-888-57-PISTA (74782). You can also submit a tip via their website or on Twitter, @NYPDTips . All calls are kept confidential.

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Police: Suspect Beats Subway Rider With Cane On Brooklyn A-Train

March 4, 2021 by newyork.cbslocal.com Leave a Comment

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) — Police are searching for a man they say beat a subway rider with a cane in Brooklyn.

It happened around 2 p.m. on Feb. 24 on board an A train approaching the Euclid Avenue station.

READ MORE: NYPD: Brutal Subway Beating Of Asian Man On Lower East Side Considered Hate Crime

Police said the suspect hit the 30-year-old victim in the head multiple times.

READ MORE: NYC District Attorneys Say Time Has Come To Make Assaults On Transit Workers A Crime Punishable By Up To 1 Year In Jail

(Credit: NYPD)

He took off in an unknown direction at Euclid Avenue.

The victim was taken to the hospital and treated for cuts to his face.

MORE NEWS: Police: Woman Attacked With Sock Full Of Coins With Son On Subway

Anyone with information about the suspect is asked to call the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477), or for Spanish, 1-888-57-PISTA (74782). You can also submit a tip via their website or on Twitter, @NYPDTips . All calls are kept confidential.

Filed Under: Uncategorized subway cane attack, subway attack, subway assault, subway crime, cane, a train, brooklyn, new york, subway...

Rival gangs create chaos, clash over dominance; cross-complaints filed

March 4, 2021 by punemirror.indiatimes.com Leave a Comment

Andekar gang’s leader was apprehended by Khadak police on Tuesday; while FIR lodged against the rivals in Samarth PS

Andekar gang’s leader was arrested by Khadak police on Tuesday after a rival gang filed a complaint against him for clashing with them on February 21. The two gangs filed first information reports (FIRs) in different police stations against each other. The gangs allegedly clashed due to gaining dominance over localities. The Andekar gang in Ganesh Peth allegedly attacked the youth with a scythe and tried to kill him. Khadak police have arrested gangster Suryakant alias Bandu Andekar and two others in connection with the case. The cross-complaints have been lodged in this regard.

Shir Hari Bahirat, senior police inspector of Khadak police station, told Mirror, “Omkar Kudle (age 21) lodged a complaint in this regard in Khadak police station. Accordingly, Suryakant alias Bandu Ranoji Andekar (60) and Rishabh Devdatta Andekar (21) have been arrested. The court has ordered police custody of the duo till March 6. And a case has been registered against Suraj alias Ganesh Ashok Wadd, Swaraj Wadekar, Aditya Ukrande and five to six others.”

Assistant police inspector Vishal Mohite form Samarth police station said, “A 16-year-old boy, a friend of Kudle, who lives in Nana Peth, has lodged a complaint with Samarth police against six persons, including Omkar Kudle . The complainant had stopped with his friend near his house in Nana Peth around 10 pm on February 23. At that time, the accused, who came on a two-wheeler with sharp weapon, insulted him. The accused told the complainant that Suraj gave the information about Thombre to Andekar gang. Thay attacked the complainant. The complaint took his weapon and created a chaos in the area. Samarth police are investigating the matter further.”

The police arrested Omkar Kudle, Rajan Kalbhor and Kanifnath Mahapure. Also, a case has been registered against Kanifnath Mahapure and six others following a complaint lodged by the 16-year-old boy at Samarth police station. The court has ordered police custody of these accused till March 9.

Cases have been filed under sections 307 (attempt to murder), 143 (unlawful assembly), 147 (rioting), 148 (rioting, armed with deadly weapon), 149, 506 (2), 109, 507, and 34 of the Indian Penal Code against the Andekars, while the Maharashtra Police Act and the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act charges have been slapped in both cases.

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Tunisia Needs Another Revolution | Opinion

March 4, 2021 by www.newsweek.com Leave a Comment

In January, following the Tunisian revolution’s tenth anniversary, riots took place across the country. Protesters marched against inequality, corruption and police brutality, despite a COVID-19 curfew.

The rioters were mostly teenagers aged 14-17, according to Khaled Hayouni , interior ministry spokesperson. They clashed with the police, who used tear gas to disperse them. In Tunisia, 15-24-year-olds represent 12.9 percent of the population.

According to human rights groups at least 1,000 people were arrested during six nights of riots. The Tunisian government reported arresting 670 people. The contrast in figures highlights the lack of transparency in the so-called Arab democracy.

The Tunisian League for Human rights (LTDH) stated that those who didn’t participate in the riots were arrested arbitrarily and taken by force from their homes. Activists who showed support for the protests on social media were arrested and risk six years imprisonment.

Such was the case of 23-year-old Ahmed Ghram, a Tunisian activist and a human rights league member. He was arrested for “encouraging civil disobedience,” following a post he wrote on Facebook saying: “When you steal because you’re hungry and poor, they accuse you of being a criminal. When you steal the people’s money for years and deprive the poor of their rights, you become a successful businessman, supported by bootlickers.”

Fortunately, Ghram was released in late January. His case ended in acquittal.

The treatment in detention centers isn’t ideal according to the LTDH’s report on the riot arrests. The organization deplored “the serious abuses carried out against minors, who were undressed and threatened of rape,” as a means to get confessions. Among the 126 arrested minors, 37 were released and others were sentenced to up to four years in prison.

These police practices remind me of former Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali’s era of police terror from when I was a child. Although I was too young to remember it well, I recall how adults around me would suddenly change their demeanor whenever they came close to a police car or station.

I’ll never forget how uncomfortable they felt whenever a police officer would stop them for a random check. January’s violent events brought back the police brutality trauma and made me concerned about my future as a young Tunisian, in a regime that’s becoming increasingly more authoritarian.

February 6 marked the eighth anniversary of Chokri Belaid’s murder, a leftist politician who was popular in his life. Tunisians viewed him as being honest and humble, attributes lacking most politicians. His political assassination made him a symbol of fairness and integrity in the eyes of the people.

While Belaid’s family, along with others, gather every year to demand justice for the late politician on the anniversary of his murder, the protests this year were different.

Aside from commemorating Belaid’s death, civil society and activists took this occasion to protest against police brutality. Tunis’ center, the symbolic place of the 2011 Jasmine Revolution, has always been the favored place for protests.

Expecting a large rally to take place in advance, an aggressive police presence in downtown Tunis was present. Police were ordered in advance by Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi, who is also the minister of interior. He dismissed the previous PM Taoufik Charfeddine in early January.

The security forces blocked roads, shutting down a large part of Tunis’ center. According to Reuters , police deployed cordons, stopped cars and checked people who wanted to access Avenue Habib Bourguiba, a symbolic street of the 2011 revolution.

Activists on social media reported that security forces prohibited young people and those who “look leftist” from going to the city center. Despite the exaggerated police presence which aimed to intimidate and scare off protesters, thousands gathered on the Place des Droits de l’Homme near the Ministry of the Interior and marched until the Avenue Habib Bourguiba.

Backed up by the General Tunisian Union of Work ( UGTT ), one of the most powerful political organizations in Tunisia, the demonstrators demanded the fall of the regime and an end to police brutality. Protesters reported being brutalized by the security forces. Lawyers complained of assault and pictures posted on social media showed the police beating Abdennaceur Aouini, a Tunisian lawyer.

On Twitter , some media outlets stated that police blocked people from taking pictures and covering the event. Reading these statements made me question the ability of Tunisia to provide a conducive environment for my career.

Seeing slogans and people’s demands, it made it seem like the Jasmine Revolution was happening again, however, there were some differences this time.

Along with the equality and regime change slogans, the LGBTQ flag was raised with the support of the queer community. Coming out of the closet is a bold move since Tunisian law punishes homosexuality with three years of imprisonment.

During 2011’s revolution, Generation X mostly took the lead. Ten years later, it’s the Millennials’ turn along with people from my generation, Generation Z, to lead a second revolution.

As someone who was raised during the first decade of the revolution with the internet, people like me viewed human rights progress in Western countries from afar. Tunisians realized that the 2011 revolution wasn’t enough. People still need their basic human rights.

Minorities like the queer community have been marginalized. They couldn’t benefit from the social gains brought by the Jasmine Revolution.

On social media, many Tunisians denigrated young protesters with homophobic insults and accusations of having an agenda and conspiring with foreign lobbies.

Rania Amdouni, a prominent Tunisian feminist and queer activist, raised the LGBTQ flag and was body-shammed on a private Tunisian radio station .

This homophobic bullying outraged many activists who expressed their indignation and full support of Amdouni, who was present during rallies for equality and justice.

She was harassed on social media by police unions. Members of the security forces consider her and those who participated in the February protests to be enemies of the state.

On February 27, Amdouni went to the police station to complain about the online harassment and denigration she suffered and was arrested for offending standards of public decency, which is a classical pretext police use to falsely accuse someone of a crime. Civil society and activists protested this, demanding her release.

Throughout Tunisia’s history, the police have been instrumentalized. Under Tunisia’s first President Habib Bourguiba and then under Ben Ali, security forces served the interests of dictators at the expense of the people.

After the 2011 Jasmine Revolution, tactics changed progressively and now the government uses propaganda to influence the police, pitting them against activists accused of sowing chaos.

Ten years after the revolution, police brutality didn’t disappear but its motives have changed. Now, security agents believe they act out on patriotism and the defense of the nation. This new frame of mind frightens me because it oppresses my freedom of speech as a young journalist and impedes my advocacy work through journalism.

Today is a critical period on all sides for Tunisia. We are witnessing the establishment of a new police regime, arguably one that is more dangerous than what was present during Ben Ali’s rule.

As a young Tunisian woman raised with the principles of the revolution, I’m not willing to give up the gains of the last 10 years.

For me and many young people, we need a second revolution—a more inclusive one that will hopefully provide the equality and justice we’ve been seeking since the last decade.

Tharwa Boulifi is a 19 year old Tunisian freelancer. She writes in four languages (Arabic, French, English and Spanish) about feminism, Arab and African womens’ rights, culture and LGBTQ+ rights. She has written for more than 12 magazines including Teen Vogue , Ms. Magazine , Herizons and The New Arab . You can follow her on Twitter : @TharwaBoulifi

The views expressed in this article are the writer’s own.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Opinion, Tunisia, Tunis, Revolution, Jasmine Revolution, Middle East, Arabs, Africa, Democracy, LGBTQ, Middle..., do i need vaccinations for tunisia

Actor Suniel Shetty files complaint over fake film poster

March 4, 2021 by www.oneindia.com Leave a Comment

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India

India
oi-Madhuri Adnal
By Simran Kashyap

| Published: Thursday, March 4, 2021, 18:06 [IST]

Mumbai, Mar 04 : Bollywood actor Suniel Shetty has filed a police complaint here against a production company for circulating a fake film poster featuring him, an official said on Thursday.

Shetty, who filed the complaint at the Versova police station on Wednesday, accused the production company of using his photo without permission and lying about him playing the lead role in the film, he said.

No FIR has been registered yet.

According to the official, the 59-year-old actor has alleged that producers at the company have shared a fake poster of the movie with which he is not associated.

Mumbai: IT raids continue for second day

The incident came to light after the poster found its way on social media platforms.

Shetty has alleged the company is also contacting people and asking for money in his name, the official said, citing the complaint.

The actor has termed the production house”s act as a “complete fraud”.

Senior inspector at the Versova police station, Siraj Inamdar, said We have received the complaint, but no FIR has been filed yet and no one has been called for recording statement. We are conducting our investigation.

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