P4Z-0hy22ZRyqh5IUeLwjcY3L_M
Friday, July 3, 2015
11 Illegal Immigrants Found Hiding among Onion Sacks in Texas
AUSTIN, Texas - U.S. border patrol officers Thursday arrested 11 illegal immigrants, hiding among sacks of onions in the trailer of a truck, traveling through southern Texas, near the Mexican border.
"Upon further inspection, agents found 11 undocumented immigrants concealed between pallets of onions with no means of escape in the event of an emergency," the Border Patrol said in a statement without revealing the nationality of the immigrants.
A patrol dog alerted the officers of possible irregularities in the truck, prompting an inspection.
The driver of the vehicle, a U.S. citizen, was also arrested.
The incident occurred at the Falfurrias checkpoint, one of the points where the U.S. Border Patrol is stationed within the country, to detect illegal activities.
Journalist Gunned Down in Southern Mexico
OAXACA, Mexico – A journalist who hosted a radio program in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca was fatally shot Thursday, authorities said.
Filadelfo Sanchez was killed around 9:30 a.m. as he left the studios of La Favorita radio in the municipality of Miahuatlan de Porfirio Diaz, the state Attorney General’s Office said.
Police began a search for the perpetrators as investigators and forensic technicians went to the crime scene to collect evidence, the AG’s office said in a statement.
Miahuatlan was among the Oaxaca towns that experienced unrest during the days leading up to the June 7 mid-term elections, when striking teachers and their supporters burned ballots and attacked the offices of political parties.
Another radio newscaster in Oaxaca, Armando SaldaƱa Morales, was kidnapped in May and found dead two days later. His body bore signs of torture.
Mexico has become Latin America’s most dangerous country for the practice of journalism.
Thursday, July 2, 2015
Iranian authorities’ arguments in defence of amputation expose outrageous inhumanity: Amnesty International
Amnesty International has condemned the amputation of fingers of two young Iranian prisoners in the city of Mashhad in on Sunday 28 June.\
“These brutal punishments flagrantly violate international law and there is no place for them in the criminal justice system. The punishment of amputation is torture, a crime under international law,” Amnesty International said in a statement on Wednesday, 1 July.
“However, Iran’s Penal Code continues to prescribe corporal punishments, such as amputation, flogging and blinding, which violate the prohibition of torture and other ill-treatment. Under Article 278 of Iran’s Penal Code, the punishment for first-time theft is ‘amputation of the full length of four fingers of the right hand of the thief in such a manner that the thumb and palm of the hand remain.’ Theft for the second time is punishable by ‘amputation of the left foot in such a manner that half of the sole and part of the place of anointing [during religious ablution] remain.’ Third and fourth time offenders are punished with life imprisonment and the death penalty, respectively. “
“Iranian authorities have on numerous occasions defended amputation, including in public, as the best punishment for deterring theft and regretted that they cannot practice it as widely as they would like to because of international condemnation. A month ago, Ayatollah Naeem Abadi, the representative of Iran’s Supreme Leader in southern Hormozgan Province, bemoaned, during a speech in Mashhad, that amputation sentences are not firmly implemented ‘when security can be restored in society by cutting off a few fingers.’ “
“Dismissing the concerns of the UN Human Rights Council about the practice, Mohammad Javad Larijani, the head of Iran’s Human Rights Council, denied, in October 2010, that corporal punishments such as amputation, flogging and stoning amount to torture and claimed that they are “culturally justified”.
“Far from providing any semblance of justice and order, the authorities’ arguments in defence of amputation expose the outrageous inhumanity of a criminal justice system that is bent on enforcing cruelty.”
At Least 15 Die in Peru Bus Crash
LIMA – At least 15 people were killed and 19 others injured Wednesday when a bus tumbled 700 meters (2,295 ft) down the side of a mountain in central Peru’s Ancash region, authorities said.
First responders have recovered 15 bodies, but “there are more, apparently,” regional health director Cesar Fallaque told RPP Noticias radio, adding that the dead “are scattered across the slope.”
All 19 injured passengers were initially taken to a hospital in Huaraz and were set to be transferred to better-equipped facilities in Lima, he said.
Four of the injured are in serious condition, Fallaque said.
The accident took place around 4 a.m. at a remote spot on the Conococha-Antamina highway, a police spokeswoman told EFE from the town of Chiquian.
Police are uncertain how many people were aboard the bus, she said.
The bus was traveling from Lima to Llata, a town in the Huanuco region, according to media accounts.
Eight-Year-Old Girl Dies of Rabies in Bolivia
LA PAZ – An 8-year-old girl died in Bolivia of rabies after being bitten by a puppy three months ago at home, authorities in the eastern Santa Cruz region, where the death occurred, said on Tuesday.
The Santa Cruz Provincial Health Department, or Sedes, said in a communique that the death occurred Monday and that the minor came from the rural municipality of Portachuelo.
According to Sedes, the child’s mother did not report the bite to any medical center until she had her admitted a week ago as the symptoms of the disease intensified.
This is the first case of death from rabies recorded in the eastern Santa Cruz region in two and a half years, Sedes said.
It is the third case of death from rabies reported in Bolivia so far this year, since in March a woman, 28, died, as did a 63-year-old man in May, both infected by dog bites in the central region of Cochabamba.
More than 300,000 stray dogs live on the streets of Bolivia, a country with some 10 million inhabitants, according to Health Ministry officials.
The packs of dogs that wander the streets and feed on whatever they find in the garbage are a typical sight in Bolivian cities like La Paz, though the dogs are not usually aggressive toward people.
In Bolivia it is also a common practice for domestic dogs to spend the day on the street and return home to their owners at night to eat and sleep.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)