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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Iran News ( A man who killed a security guard was executed today- Also another Drug dealer ) Western Iran

Two prisoners Executed In Iran- 16 Executions in 8 Days

Thursday 24 January 2013
[English] [فارسى]


Iran Human Rights, January 24: Two prisoners were hanged in two different Iranian prisons, reported the Iranian state media today.
One of the prisoners was convicted of murdering a security officer in Khoramdareh (Province of Lorestan, western Iran), reported the daily Kayhan newspaper. The prisoner was identified as V. Sh and hanged in Khoramdareh Prison on the morning of January 23.
The other prisoner was convicted of drug trafficking and was hanged in the Shahroos Prison (northern Iran) early this morning. According to the official website of the Iranian Judiciary in the province of Semnan, the prisoner was identified as Ch. P. and convicted of trafficking 1.94 kilograms of morphine.
Official Iranian sources have reported that, since January 16, 2013, at least 16 people were executed in different Iranian cities. Six of the executions were carried out in public.

Zimbabwe ( Police officer beats up partner for affair with his wife ) Ouch !

Junior policeman (22) thoroughly beats up senior police officer (39) for dating his wife

// News | Crime/Legal | Junior policeman (22) thoroughly beats up senior police officer (39) for dating his wife
 
A police constable Tinashe Munhamo (22) based at Nkayi Police Construction Section is in trouble after he allegedly assaulted his boss accusing him of having a love affair with his wife.Munhamo, who fell ill after his arrest and was taken to Nkayi District Hospital where he is admitted, appeared before Nkayi magistrate Ndumo Masuku on Monday on his hospital bed. He was not asked to plead to assault charges.
Prosecutor Maxwell Hapanyengwi said the accused must be remanded in custody as he was facing a serious allegation. He said Munhamo had allegedly threatened to assault his boss Inspector Newyear Rera (39) again and releasing him from custody would endanger Rera's life. Masuku remanded him in custody to February 4.
Allegations are that Munhamo accused his boss of having an affair with his wife. The court heard that on January 19 at 12 midnight, Rera left his house for the office and Munhamo allegedly waylaid him. He allegedly hit the senior police officer in the neck with an unknown object. Rera fell down and Munhamo again struck him on the left foot with a stone.
He allegedly threatened to stab him with a knife he was holding. Rera, however, managed to grab his hand and sought refuge at the charge office where he made a report.
Munhamo allegedly pursued his boss and threatened to assault him further, but he was restrained by his colleagues who later detained him. Rera sustained several injuries. While in detention, Munhamo fell ill on Sunday and was taken to hospital for treatment.

JAPAN ( Talk of warning shots with F-15 fighter Jets ) Fight over Islands with China

Japan talk of warning shots heats up China dispute

TOKYO —
Japan says it may fire warning shots and take other measures to keep foreign aircraft from violating its airspace in the latest verbal blast between Tokyo and Beijing that raises concerns that a dispute over hotly contested islands could spin out of control.
Japanese officials made the comments after Chinese fighters tailed its warplanes near the islands recently. The incident is believed to be the first scrambling of Chinese fighters since the tensions

began to rise last spring.

According to Chinese media, a pair of J-10 fighters was scrambled after Japanese F-15s began tailing a Chinese surveillance plane near the disputed islands in the East China Sea. China has complained the surveillance flight did not violate Japanese airspace and the F-15s were harassing it.
It was the first time the Chinese media has reported fighters being mobilized to respond to Japanese air force activity in the area and comes amid what Japan says is a rapid intensification of Chinese air force activity around the islands, where Japanese and Chinese coast guard ships have squared off for months.
Though there have been no outright clashes, the increased sea and air operations have fueled worries that the situation could spin out of control.
Such concerns have grown over official comments suggesting Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his cabinet are considering the use of “tracer” fire as a means of responding to airspace incursions. Tracer rounds are designed to burn brightly to get the attention of a pilot who may have missed other warnings due to a radio malfunction, while also indicating that the aircraft firing them is prepared to take further action.
“Every country has procedures for how to deal with a violation of its territory that continues after multiple cautionary measures,” Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera said Wednesday when asked if tracer shots would be fired against intruding aircraft that refuse to change course. “We have response measures ready that are consistent with global standards.”
Onodera said the use of warning shots has long been provided for under Japan’s defense policies and is widely accepted under international rules of engagement. Japan’s air force has not actually resorted to them since 1987 — against a Soviet aircraft — and none were fired last week.
But Chinese and Japanese media have suggested Tokyo is publicly floating the possibility to test China’s reaction.
The escalation of tensions has worried the United States, with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton saying Friday that while the U.S. doesn’t take a position on who has sovereignty over the islands, it opposes “any unilateral actions that would seek to undermine Japanese administration.”
That brought a sharp retort from the Chinese Foreign Ministry on Sunday. The comments “ignore the facts” that the islands are China’s inherent territory, spokesman Qin Gang said in a statement that urged the U.S. to adopt “a responsible attitude.”
In Beijing last week, a Foreign Ministry spokesman said China is on “high alert” and suggested Japan is escalating the tensions over the islands, called the Diaoyu in China and the Senkaku in Japan. Taiwan also claims the small isles, which are uninhabited but may be surrounded by valuable underwater natural resources.
“Chinese planes and ships are exercising normal jurisdiction in the waters and airspace surrounding the Diaoyu Islands,” spokesman Hong Lei said. “We are opposed to the operations of Japan’s planes and ships, which violate our rights around Diaoyu. We are on high alert against this escalation.”
As is often the case, Chinese media quoted military academics with a much more fiery response.
“Japan’s desire to fire tracer warning shots as a way of frightening the Chinese is nothing but a joke that shows the stupidity, cruelty and failure to understand their own limitations,” Maj Gen Peng Guangqian of the Chinese Academy of Military Sciences was quoted as saying by the China News Service and other state media.
“Firing tracer bullets is a type of provocation; it’s firing the first shot,” he said. “Were Japan to dare to fire tracers, which is to say fire the first shot, then China wouldn’t stint on responding and not allow them to fire the second shot.”
Peng said Japan may have put out the report to generate discussion and gauge China’s response.

JAPAN ( 3 arrested for violating Iran sanctions ) TOKYO

Police arrest three for violating Iran sanctions

TOKYO —
Police said Wednesday they have arrested three employees of a Tokyo shipping agency accused of breaching economic sanctions imposed against Iran over its nuclear program.
The trio took part in illegally transferring fees totalling 14 million yen to a firm linked to Iran’s Hafiz Darya Shipping Lines (HDSL) last year and in 2011, authorities said.
The money was payment for transporting unspecified goods, Kyodo news agency reported, adding that it was the first such criminal case in Japan since its sanctions took effect in 2010.
The employees of Tokyo-based Ben Line Agencies (Japan), including a 64-year-old company director, allegedly broke a law that bans cross-border payments to Iranian-linked entities without official approval.
“They made the payments to HDSL without approval from the economy and trade minister,” a Tokyo police spokeswoman said.
The firm is reportedly an affiliate of state-run Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines, which is suspected of transporting materials used in Iran’s nuclear program.
According to media reports, the Japanese group admitted transferring the money but said it was unaware it was breaking the law.
Tehran, which is under several sets of international sanctions, insists that its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes.

Mexico JUAREZ (Missing 3 yr old boy "Lorenzo " since 1954 ) Mother looking for him

 JUAREZ toddler missing since 1954




Click photo to enlarge
Lorenzo "Lenchito" Vasquez has been missing for more than 60 years. (Courtesy photo)
 

 
Lorenzo "Lenchito" Vazquez Lazalde was about 3 years old when his El Paso relatives last saw him in Juárez.
That was in 1954.
His mother, Virginia Lazalde, said her son was at a relative's home playing outdoors when he vanished.
"Over the years, we received rumors that he was killed in an accident in Juárez, and later that he was spirited by different relatives to El Paso and then that he was taken to California, but we were never able to confirm these stories," the mother said.
Others said they saw the boy get on a public transport bus in Juárez after someone called out to him by his nickname, "Lenchito."
"For many years, his father's family refused to talk about him," his mother said. "His father died 20 years ago, and we still don't know what happened to my son. I need to know, if he is alive, that he is all right."
Virginia Lazalde cries and clutches the black-and-white photographs she had of her son as a toddler. She had other children, but has never forgotten her first child.
"I nearly went crazy after Lorenzo disappeared, and searched for him in many places for a long time," she said. "In my latter years, I don't want to die
without knowing what happened to him. I know his disappearance was reported because the police in Juárez came to my home to ask if I was hiding Lorenzo. In my heart, I believe that Lorenzo is out there, somewhere."

Virginia Lazalde said she would like help in obtaining an age-progression picture of her son that will show what he might look like today.
Anyone with information may contact the family at 915-780-9033 or 915-861-0895.

 

 
Reporter: Diana
Washington Valdez
 

Iran ( OMG - Public Amputation of man's fingers ) Man's fingers cut off in public -Sick photo

Iranian Authorities’ Terrorizing People Continues: Public Amputation of A Young Man’s Fingers- IHR Urges International Community To React

Thursday 24 January 2013
 
Iran Human Rights, January 24: Iranian authorities’ campaign of public medieval punishments continues. According to the state run Iranian news agencies amputation verdict of a prisoner was carried out in public in the city of Shiraz (southern Iran).
According to the report, the prisoner was a 29 year old man identified as "A. S. H." and was sentenced to "amputation of four fingers of the right hand" and three years in prison for and 99 lashes for immoral relationship.
The chief prosecutor of Shiraz warned that similar sentences of several other prisoners will be carried out in the near future.
Iranian authorities have increased implementation of public sentences such as lashing, executions and amputations in the recent months. Two young men were hanged publicly on 20th January for mugging in Tehran.
Iran Human Rights condemns today’s barbaric public punishment and urges the international community to react. Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam, the spokesperson of IHR said:”It seems that the Iranian authorities’ campaign of terrorizing the people through public medieval punishments doesn’t know any limits. Unless the international community show strong reactions, we are afraid that Iranian people, and especially children will have to watch more public hangings, lashings and amputations as we get closer to the Presidential elections in June 2013".
Amiry-Moghaddam continued: "We urge the UN, EU and all countries with diplomatic ties with Iran to condemn these barbaric punishments immediately. Iranian leadership among them the Supreme leader Ali Khamenei, and head of the Judiciary Javad Larijani must be kept accountable for these crimes".

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Iran ( Qazvin Prison - west of Tehran- 3 Drug Dealers Flogged and Executed ) Hard Liners



Three prisoners in Iran were hanged today


Wednesday 23 January 2013
[English] [فارسى]

Iran Human Rights, January 23: Three prisoners were hanged in Qazvin Prison (west of Tehran) today.
Fars, a state-run Iranian news agency reported that three prisoners, identified as "K Kh." (28), "A. N." (34) and "A. H." (41), were convicted of possession and trafficking of narcotic drugs. They were sentenced to fines, lashes and death by branch 2 of the Qazvin Revolutionary Court.