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MEAN STREETS MEDIA
Monday, July 29, 2013
LONDON ( A British coroner has asked police to investigate further - In womans Suicide )
Georgianna Thomsson, an 18-year-old aspiring astronaut from Chennai, was found hanging in her room at Melville Grove on the university campus.
"There were various notes left within the accommodation. Some of those notes seemed to indicate intentional self-harm. However, there were other notes which led me to direct there be investigations not just here, but also in Chennai," Liverpool Coroner Andre Rebello said.According to local media report, Thomsson - an aerospace engineering student at the university - had not been seen for several days before her body was found on July 12.
She had reportedly started missing lectures in February.
"She was last seen on July 3 by a domestic supervisor. Her room was checked daily and although she was never seen after this date, all of Georgianna's possessions were still in the room as if she was still living there.
On July 12, the domestic supervisor returned to the room to see if she had left and on entering found Georgianna hanging," the coroner added.
Local Merseyside Police have confirmed that officers are working to respond to the coroner's directions of a further probe to piece together the circumstances surrounding Georgianna's death.
Her father Seshiyan Thomsson, a policeman from Chennai, insists there is more than meets the eye.
'There is no fan, no iron rod in the room where she was found dead. How could she hang herself," he had said following a visit to the room where her body was found.
He has refused to accept his daughter's body until further investigations are carried out.
'There is no fan, no iron rod in the room where she was found dead. How could she hang herself," he had said following a visit to the room where her body was found.
He has refused to accept his daughter's body until further investigations are carried out.
Iran ( Reports said that some 300 satellite dishes were collected and taken away from Citizens )
NCRI - The Iranian regime's repressive State Security Forces (Police) have raided people's houses in a district in the southern city of Shiraz confiscating their satellite dishes.
According to the reports received from Iran during the raid that took place in Pansad-Dastgah district of the city on Wednesday, June 24, many satellite dishes were collected.

Last week also, in a widespread attack to several villages in the province of Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari, the security forces collected people’s satellite dishes. Reports said that some 300 dishes were collected and taken away.
The people however disregarded the measure and a few hours later almost all collected dishes were bought and installed again.
Since early July the Iranian regime's state security forces have intensified raids on homes in a number of provinces in Iran.
A regime official recently admitted that the regime had failed in its bid to ban people from watching satellite TV channels.
Despite a 1994 law making satellite dishes illegal, up to 70 per cent of families have them and their use is increasing, state-run TV network boss Fardin Ali-Khah said.
"Although their use is now forbidden, they can be seen everywhere. Statistics show that the use of satellite dishes has never declined, and currently there is 50 to 70 per cent use of satellite dishes in Iranian families."
Jamming satellite signals and other methods to
According to the reports received from Iran during the raid that took place in Pansad-Dastgah district of the city on Wednesday, June 24, many satellite dishes were collected.
Last week also, in a widespread attack to several villages in the province of Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari, the security forces collected people’s satellite dishes. Reports said that some 300 dishes were collected and taken away.
The people however disregarded the measure and a few hours later almost all collected dishes were bought and installed again.
Since early July the Iranian regime's state security forces have intensified raids on homes in a number of provinces in Iran.
A regime official recently admitted that the regime had failed in its bid to ban people from watching satellite TV channels.
Despite a 1994 law making satellite dishes illegal, up to 70 per cent of families have them and their use is increasing, state-run TV network boss Fardin Ali-Khah said.
"Although their use is now forbidden, they can be seen everywhere. Statistics show that the use of satellite dishes has never declined, and currently there is 50 to 70 per cent use of satellite dishes in Iranian families."
Jamming satellite signals and other methods to
Pakistan ( 21 people have died from drinking clandestinely-made alcohol in Faisalabad )
ISLAMABAD – At least 21 people have died and 24 others are hospitalized after consuming clandestinely-made alcohol in Faisalabad, a city in Pakistan’s eastern Punyab province, police said Sunday.
The majority of the victims drank the alcohol on Thursday at a private party organized by a group of friends to celebrate the birth of a son, a police spokesman told the Express Tribune.

Four suspected distributors of the tainted alcohol have been arrested, the private Geo TV television network reported, citing officials.
The first deaths occurred Thursday night.
Many of the dead and sick are residents of Warispura, a Christian neighborhood in Faisalabad, although the majority of the names on the list of victims provided by the authorities are those of Muslims and only a few appear to be Christians, press reports said.
This type of tragedy occurs occasionally in Pakistan, which is officially an Islamic republic where the law permits only non-Muslims to buy and consume alcohol, and non-Muslims constitute only slightly more than 3 percent of the population.
However, a number of Muslims drink alcoholic beverages in private.
The majority of the victims drank the alcohol on Thursday at a private party organized by a group of friends to celebrate the birth of a son, a police spokesman told the Express Tribune.
Four suspected distributors of the tainted alcohol have been arrested, the private Geo TV television network reported, citing officials.
The first deaths occurred Thursday night.
Many of the dead and sick are residents of Warispura, a Christian neighborhood in Faisalabad, although the majority of the names on the list of victims provided by the authorities are those of Muslims and only a few appear to be Christians, press reports said.
This type of tragedy occurs occasionally in Pakistan, which is officially an Islamic republic where the law permits only non-Muslims to buy and consume alcohol, and non-Muslims constitute only slightly more than 3 percent of the population.
However, a number of Muslims drink alcoholic beverages in private.
Honduras ( Suspect who killed Honduran Judge Arrested - in the city of El Progreso )
Martinez was taken to prison Saturday night by a judge with national jurisdiction on the charge of murdering the magistrate last Wednesday.
The accused was handed over to the courts in San Pedro Sula, 27 kilometers (17 miles) west of El Progreso, a few hours after being captured in the city where the crime was committed.
The judge overseeing the case ordered Martinez to be held in the San Pedro Sula penitentiary, officials added.
Martinez was captured Saturday during a raid in a neighborhood in El Progreso after authorities identified him on a security camera video that recorded the murder of Mendoza, 42.
According to the court report, the security video shows the moment when men on two motorcycles approached the vehicle the judge was driving and one of them, apparently Martinez, opened fire on her.
Mendoza’s vehicle was hit by more than 20 bullets, according to photos published by local media.
Mendoza is the 64th attorney or judge to be murdered in Honduras during the administration of Porfirio Lobo, who took office on Jan. 27, 2010, according to the country’s state-run Human Rights Commission.
Honduras is experiencing a crime wave that results in an average of 20 deaths per day, according to human rights organizations.
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