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MEAN STREETS MEDIA

Thursday, May 29, 2014

India ( Girl talking on "cell phone" lost her foot ) Train accident

Indore: A 27-year-old girl from Bhopal lost her right foot after she was stuck between the platform and the train as she tried to board the train while she was talking on the phone.

 

This tragic incident happened on platform no 5 at Indore station on Friday evening at around 5:40 pm. Nishi Niranjan Kumar was stuck for about 20 minutes before the GRP jawans pulled her out. She was in Indore for a job interview. While her brother Mukesh Kumar boarded the train, Nishi was talking on the phone and tried to board the train when it started moving. It was then when she lost her grip of the handle of the gate and fell in the gap between the platform and the train.

The passengers in the train pulled the chain and tried to help the girl. The GRP jawans then pulled her out and rushed to the hospital from where she was later referred to a private hospital.

Mexico ( Two police officers were beaten to death and a civilian was fatally shot )

MEXICO CITY – Two police officers were beaten to death and a civilian was fatally shot when an operation targeting illegal logging went badly wrong, Mexican authorities said.

The incident unfolded Tuesday in Tlalamac, a community in the mountains of the central state of Mexico.

State police were accompanying personnel from the Probosque forest service to investigate reports of illegal logging, the Mexico state Attorney General’s Office said in a statement.

Under circumstances that remain unclear, an area man was wounded by gunfire and his neighbors reacted by attacking the Probosque employees and police, the state AG’s office said.

Within minutes, the police found themselves surrounded by dozens of residents armed with sticks, stones and firearms. The mob seized five of the cops and dragged them to a nearby residence, where the officers were severely beaten.

More than 150 state police rushed to the scene and demanded the release of their comrades.

When the residents refused, the police mounted a rescue operation, the official statement said.

Besides the two officers killed, eight others suffered significant injuries, while the civilian whose shooting ignited the clash died on the way to the hospital.

The state AG’s office vowed that those responsible for the violence would be subjected to “the full weight” of the law.

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Iran ( Inmate becomes " punching bag " for whole world to see ) ???

Saeed Abedini beaten in hospital and returned to prison

Posted on: 25th May, 2014
                
Saeed Abedini
HRANA News Agency- Saeed Abedini, Reverend prisoner who had been transferred to the Dey Hospital was beaten by transfer officers and was returned to prison.
According to the report of Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA), Reverend Saeed Abedini who was admitted to the Dey hospital for the last two months, after being beaten in the hospital, was returned to Rajai Shahr prison, Karaj city.
The reverend’s wife says: “The transfer officers warned him that they are going to keep him there until Iran’s regime problem with 5+1 gets solved.”
The officers attacked him with electrical shocks that caused bruises on his body and he also got internal bleeding because of being beaten by them.
 
His wife said to HRANA: “The internal bleeding occurred because of hits.”
Saeed Abedini, Iranian-American citizen was detained at his parental home in mid-September 2012 when he came back to Iran.
Reverend Abedini was convicted to 8 years imprisonment on charge of forming and establishing house churches to disrupt national security on the mid-February 2013 by the Revolutionary court, branch 26. In result of appeal against the court verdict, the case was referred to Tehran County’s Appeals Court, branch 36, and this branch verified the previous court’s verdict.

Iran ( Woman gets 20 years in prison for " Facebook comment " ) OMG ?

An Iranian court has sentenced eight people to a combined 123 years in prison for various charges including insulting the country's supreme leader on Facebook. The sentencing is the latest in a recent crackdown on Internet freedom in the country.
Facebook shares have pushed its value over $100billion market value ...
The eight, who were reportedly all Facebook users, were arrested last year by the Cyber Unit of the Revolutionary Guard. The Revolutionary Court in Tehran doled out prison sentences ranging from seven to 20 years for charges of blasphemy, propaganda against the Iranian state, spreading lies, and insulting Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The arrests were first reported by the opposition news agency Kaleme.
For Iranian human rights experts, the sentences are unusually harsh and could signal an intention to warn other Iranian netizens.
"The ruling [...] is clearly intended to spread fear among Internet users in Iran, and dissuade Iranians from stepping outside strict state controls on cyberspace," wrote the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran in a statement.
One of the eight, a British woman named Roya Saberinejad Nobakht, received a sentence of 20 years in prison. Her husband said in April that she had been detained in Iran over comments she had made to friends on Facebook and in online chat, calling Iran's government too controlling and "too Islamic," as reported at the time by the Manchester Evening News.

Brazil ( Indians " protest " take on riot police )

Mexico ( Drive by "shooting " and Execution ) Cartel wars

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Pakistan ( Honor " killing" family stoned to death pregnant daughter )

LAHORE, Pakistan (AP) — A pregnant woman was stoned to death Tuesday by her own family outside a courthouse in the Pakistani city of Lahore for marrying the man she loved.
The woman was killed while on her way to court to contest an abduction case her family had filed against her husband. Her father was promptly arrested on murder charges, police investigator Rana Mujahid said, adding that police were working to apprehend all those who participated in this "heinous crime."
Arranged marriages are the norm among conservative Pakistanis, and hundreds of women are murdered every year in so-called honor killings carried out by husbands or relatives as a punishment for alleged adultery or other illicit sexual behavior.
Stonings in public settings, however, are extremely rare. Tuesday's attack took place in front of a crowd of onlookers in broad daylight. The courthouse is located on a main downtown thoroughfare.
A police officer, Naseem Butt, identified the slain woman as Farzana Parveen, 25, and said she had married Mohammad Iqbal, 45, against her family's wishes after being engaged to him for years.
Her father, Mohammad Azeem, had filed an abduction case against Iqbal, which the couple was contesting, said her lawyer, Mustafa Kharal. He said she was three months pregnant.
Nearly 20 members of Parveen's extended family, including her father and brothers, had waited outside the building that houses the high court of Lahore. As the couple walked up to the main gate, the relatives fired shots in the air and tried to snatch her from Iqbal, her lawyer said.
When she resisted, her father, brothers and other relatives started beating her, eventually pelting her with bricks from a nearby construction site, according to Mujahid and Iqbal, the slain woman's husband.
Iqbal said he started seeing Parveen after the death of his first wife, with whom he had five children.
"We were in love," he told The Associated Press. He alleged that the woman's family wanted to fleece money from him before marrying her off.
"I simply took her to court and registered a marriage," infuriating the family, he said.
Parveen's father surrendered after the attack and called his daughter's murder an "honor killing," Butt said.
"I killed my daughter as she had insulted all of our family by marrying a man without our consent, and I have no regret over it," Mujahid, the police investigator, quoted the father as saying.
Mujahid said the woman's body was handed over to her husband for burial.
The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan, a private group, said in a report last month that some 869 women were murdered in honor killings in 2013.
But even Pakistanis who have tracked violence against women expressed shock at the brutal and public nature of Tuesday's slaying.
"I have not heard of any such case in which a woman was stoned to death, and the most shameful and worrying thing is that this woman was killed outside a courthouse," said Zia Awan, a prominent lawyer and human rights activist.
He said Pakistanis who commit violence against women are often acquitted or handed light sentences because of poor police work and faulty prosecutions.
"Either the family does not pursue such cases or police don't properly investigate. As a result, the courts either award light sentences to the attackers, or they are acquitted," he said.
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Associated Press Writer Munir Ahmed in Islamabad contributed to this report.