Escapes from prison in a helicopter – World News



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1 Jul 2018 / 7:34 | story:
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Photo: Getty Images

Police in Idaho claim that nine people were hospitalized early Sunday and that a man is being detained after stabbing mbadively a Boise apartment complex which is home to many refugee families.

Bones said that all nine were taken to hospitals in the area, some with lethal wounds.

"At this point, we lost no one, but as I said, the injuries are very serious". There was no suspicious motive for the Saturday night attack but said that a 30-year-old man was in detention.

"This incident is not a representation of our community, but a single evil individual who attacked unprovoked people.We know at this time," Bones said.

He said that the attack resulted in most victims in a single incident in the history of the Boise Police Department. "As you can imagine, the apartment on Wylie Street and our community is in shock from this attack," he said.

The police were stabbed at 8:46 pm and responded to the apartment four minutes later. I said. They found victims in the parking lot and inside the apartment complex. Witnesses reported that the suspect had run away and that the police had arrested the 30-year-old man a short distance away.

The investigators said that they did not know yet whether the suspect was in contact with the victims in any way. did not disclose the names or age of the victims, but stated that their age range varied widely and that "this affected all aspects of the families" who inhabited the complex

Bones said that the Police believed that the knife used for stabbing had been abandoned. suspect before his arrest, and the police searched a nearby cbad as well as areas around the apartment complex.

The apartment complex is just off one of Boise's busiest streets, separated from traffic by one of the many irrigation cbads. run through the city. Police closed about one kilometer from the road during the initial investigation and rerouted traffic to the most remote tracks of the complex using flares and barricades.

On Sunday morning, there were still dozens of police cars and officers. evidence markers placed around the parking lot. The agents told some residents of the complex who were trying to get home that they should either find a motel or take refuge in a nearby church because the complex would not be open to residents until the day.

Bones stated that counselors were made available to the victims, their families, their friends and other residents of the apartment complex

"Our thoughts go to the victims who are in the room. hospital tonight your thoughts and your prayers, "he said

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July 1, 2018 / 7:25 | story:
Photo: The Canadian Press

Pedestrians gather near the house where Indian police found 11 bodies

Police in the Indian capital said they found 11 bodies in a house under mysterious circumstances Sunday, including 10 Blindfolded

The victims all belonged to the same family and most lived in the house where they were found in the village of Burari in northern New Delhi, said police officer Vineet Kumar. investigation after they received a call Sunday morning that some "members of a family have committed suicide."

But he said that no suicide note was found, and that the police were investigating whether the victims – four men, three women and four girls – died by suicide or were killed.

There was no bullet mark on the bodies of the victims and there was no sign of forced entry into the house, Kumar said. "We have not reached a conclusion yet," he said.

Ten bodies, blindfolded with cotton and pieces of cloth, were found hanging on an iron grate used as a fan in the yard of the house. A 70-year-old woman was lying on the floor of the house, said a police official who spoke on condition of anonymity, according to the department's policy.

The family lived in the house for over two decades, Hindustan. The Times newspaper reported. He stated that the house belonged to a businessman who ran a plywood store and a dairy.

The newspaper stated that around 8 o'clock in the morning, a neighbor with whom the businessman was going to walk in the morning the open house and the 10 people, including the man of Business, suspended. He raised an alarm and people called the police.

Arjun Thukral, a relative of the family who lives in the same neighborhood, said that he ran home to the victims as news spread

of pending bodies, stools lying around, and my wife's aunt lying on the floor next to the bed. I could not stand watching anymore, "he said.

Thukral wondered if the family had died by suicide

can kill his own son … How could a mother kill her own children? do not think that they have committed suicide.It's about murders. "

New Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal, who visited the scene, called the" tragic "incident .

"The police are investigating … let's wait until their investigation is over," he said.

In a video posted on Twitter by Kejriwal's ruling party, neighbors Kejriwal is told that the family was busy preparing for weddings.

A neighbor of the family said that they could not. I died by suicide, reported New Delhi television. The neighbor said that he spoke to one of the victims on Saturday night and found no signs of stress, according to the report.

Indian television stations broadcast interviews with neighbors saying that the family had no discord between them. Rajesh Khurana official told reporters that all angles were under study. "We can not exclude anything," he said.


| story:
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Credit: Google Maps

A French gangster, Redoine Faid, escaped from prison using a helicopter.

A notorious French criminal serving 25 years of murder used a helicopter on Sunday to escape from a prison south of Paris. great manhunt around the French capital. It was the second time that he had escaped from a French prison – the last time he was escaping with hidden explosives.

The French Ministry of Justice stated that the escape of Redoine Faid had taken only a few minutes. at Reau prison. A union representative at Reau Prison, Martial Delabroye, told BFM television that "two men dressed in black, wearing balaclavas and police armbands" entered the prison to look for Faid. They used a grinder to open the door that leads directly to the visiting room, he said.

The helicopter was found later Sunday in the city of Garges-les-Gonesse, in the northern suburbs of Paris. It is believed that Faid drove away with his accomplices.

French prosecutors have opened an investigation, but this is not the first time Faid, 46, is on the list. In 2013, he made his way out of prison with explosives hidden in tissue packs. He was arrested at the hotel six weeks later.

Faid was sentenced to 25 years in the death of a young policewoman killed during a failed flight in 2010.

In the 1990s, Faid led a criminal gang involved in a robbery armed. armored vans and vans carrying money. He was arrested in 1998 after three years of flight in Switzerland and Israel, according to the French media.

Faid was released in 2009 after serving 10 years in prison. He swore that he had changed his life, wrote a confession book about his crime life and started a mbadive media tour in 2010.

Yet he was the brain suspected of an attempted robbery armed hand in 2010 that led to a high-speed chase and shootings with police in which Aurélie Fouquet, a 26-year-old policewoman, was killed. He was arrested in 2011.

Faid was found guilty of murdering the policewoman with two accomplices, all considered to be involved in the deadly shooting.

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Jul 1, 2018 / 7:09 | story:
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Photo: The Canadian Press

In this video taken by KK Productions, we see the area of ​​a deadly bus crash in the Paudi Garhwal district in Uttarakhand, north of the city. India, Sunday, July 1, 2018. (KK Production via AP)

At least 48 people were killed on Sunday while an overcrowded bus plunged from a mountain road into a gorge in the north from India, according to the authorities.

Trivendra Rawat, chief minister of the Uttarakhand-meter- (700 feet) deep gorge in the foothills of the Himalayas. He said that a dozen other people had been injured and hospitalized.

Policeman Manoj Kumar said that rescuers had recovered 48 dead bodies from the scene of the accident

"People were packed like sardines," said Jagat Ram Joshi. He said that at least seven of the wounded were in critical condition.

Earlier, rescue and recovery work was hampered by bad weather, said top police official Sanjay Gunjiyal.

It is unclear exactly what caused the accident, but Gunjiyal said that bad weather could have derailed the bus from the road

"It's been raining (in the area) since morning. He added that the locals were the first to reach the site and help the victims.

Gunjiya said the terrain was inhospitable and communications were bad.

India has the most roads more than 110,000 people killed each year Most accidents are attributed to reckless driving, poorly maintained roads, and aging vehicles.


1 July 2018 / 07:07 | story:
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Photo: The Canadian Press

Firefighters attack forest fires at Saddleworth Moor in Saddleworth, England on Thursday, June 28, 2018. (Danny Lawson / AP PA)

120 firefighters attempt to contain A wildfire has been declared a "major incident" in the northern moors of England

British firefighters have stated that two large fires had merged due to high winds and extreme conditions dry. . The fire is located in the Winter Hill area, 220 miles (355 kilometers) northwest of London

Lancashire firefighters said Saturday that "we are facing an aggressive fire that is developing rapidly . " [19659005] About two dozen fire trucks are on the scene and steps are being taken to protect nearby properties. Officials are asking residents not to come for help because of the threat to public safety.


June 30, 2018 / 9:10 | story:
Photo: The Canadian Press

Protesters chant slogans in federal court at a protest calling for the abolition of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, and call for policy changes US Immigration, Friday, June 29, 2018, Thousands of protesters across America, driven by stories of children separated from their parents on the US-Mexican border, marched Saturday in large cities and small towns to ask the government of President Donald Trump to reunite divided families.

More than 700 planned walks are expected to attract hundreds of thousands of people across the country, from immigrant-friendly cities like Los Angeles and New York to conservative Appalachians and Wyoming under Families Belong Together banner

. white and gathered early Saturday morning in the stifling 90 degree heat in Lafayette Park in front of the White House in what was to be the largest of the protests of the day.

"What's Next? Concentration Camps?" A walker's sign said, "I'm worried about it, is not it?", With reference to a jacket the first lady was wearing when she visited migrant children in the context of the zero tolerance policy of the administration. The children of their parents had his jacket "I really do not care." Claws walkers outside the Dallas City Hall: "We do not care!" Organizer Michelle Wentz says the opposition to the administration is "barbaric and inhumane." Protesters carried placards that said "Compbadion not Cruelty" and "November is coming".

In New York, thousands of people began to chant "shame!" Their planned walk on the Brooklyn Bridge

Smaller groups gathered in city parks and downtown squares in all states, either 703 locations across the country, and the photos quickly began to revolve around social media. "And if it was your child?" Was written on one. "No family prison," says one other.

The children joined a little girl in Washington, DC, carrying a handwritten sign: "I My mother, why can not she? "

Although many who show up at rallies across the country will be anti-Trump protesters, others are new to immigration activism, including parents who say that they feel compelled to be heartbreaking stories of children forcibly removed from their families while they were crossing the border illegally, in Portland, Oregon, for example, several homemakers have organized their first gathering by taking care of young children.

"I'm not I'm not an activist," said Kate Sharaf, a co-organizer from Portland. "I just got to a point where I felt I had to do more. "

Immigrant advocacy groups say they're delighted – and surprised – to see the issue gain ground among those who are not tied to it. immigration. "19659005" Honestly, I'm blown away, I do not have literal Americans have never seen immigrants like this, "said Jess Morales Rocketto, the National Domestic Workers Alliance's policy director, who represents nannies and housekeepers, many of whom are immigrants. Again, if it was my child, I would like someone to do something.

Saturday rallies receive funding and support from the American Civil Liberties Union, MoveOn.org, the National Domestic Workers Alliance and The Leadership Conference. The organizers are planning in the field, many women relying on informal networks established at the World Women's Marches during the inauguration of Trump and her birthday.

Tyler Houlton, spokesman for the US Department of Homeland Security, has an immigration system and says that only Congress has the power to change the law.

"We appreciate that these individuals have expressed interest and concern with the critical issue of securing our country's borders and enforcing our immigration laws," said Houlton. "As we have already indicated, the department is disappointed and frustrated by the disastrous laws on immigration of our country and supports the action."


June 30, 2018 / 8h12 | story:
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Photo: The Canadian Press

Bereaved people march during a vigil in response to a shootout at the office of The Capital Gazette on Friday, June 29, 2018, in Annapolis, Maryland. The suspect, Jarrod W. Ramos, is charged with five counts of first degree murder in one of the deadliest attacks against reporters in the history of the United States.

Quietly tight candles or #AnnapolisStrong signs, more than 1,000 people flocked to the Maryland capital not only as news keepers, but as an essential part of their tight-knit community.

Friends, former colleagues and people who felt close to the victims participated in a remarkably quiet candlelit march Friday night to honor the employees of The Capital newspaper who was killed a day earlier in the day. one of the deadliest attacks against reporters in American history.

Melissa Wilson, who came to the eve with her husband, Benjamin, their 9-year-old and 5-year-old daughter "The people who made our diary are people we felt we knew, even though we only had them never met before, "he added. Wilson

The employer of Melissa Wilson has offices in the same building as the newspaper and his colleagues were there when an armed man methodically pioneered his way through the newsroom with a 12-gauge shotgun

Jarrod W Ramos was charged with five counts of first degree murder. Authorities say that he has a long-standing grudge against the newspaper, prosecuting him in 2012 after publishing an article accusing the plaintiff of harbading a woman. He also sent a barrage of threatening tweets that led to an investigation five years ago.

A detective concluded that he was not threatening, and the newspaper did not want to complain for fear of "putting a stick in a hive".

But residents focus on the victims: Deputy Director Rob Hiaasen, editorial editor Gerald Fischman, special projects editor Wendi Winters, journalist John McNamara and salesgirl Rebecca Smith

David Marsters in 2016 and knew four of the employees killed, said the sorrow of grief over their deaths is a testament to the special connection the newspaper has with its readers.

"They were great people who did an amazing job in the community"

He took part in the march that ended in a waterfront port called "City Dock", where laughter and the sound of children usually play in restaurants, bars and shops. But not Friday

"For it to be so calm and so dark, especially a Friday night, it's surprising," said Kit O. Neill, describing Annapolis as "a small town with a big heart . " [19659005] "And the Gazette is her powerful newspaper," she added.

Earlier, dozens of people gathered at the Unitarian Universalist Church in Annapolis to pay tribute to congregational member Wendi Winters and other victims. Muir's voice broke as he described the terrible terror he felt on Thursday as it became clear that Winters was not surviving. He described her as a "beloved pillar of her community."

"Everyone has a story of Wendi Winters, she was a force to be reckoned with," he says.

Muir says the shock and grief resonated, a city that he describes as a small town where many people know someone who works at the newspaper


June 30, 2018 / 7h43 | story:
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Photo: The Canadian Press

In this photo published by the Xinhua News Agency, hospital workers are caring for a person injured in a car-truck accident in Hengdong County, Hunan Province ( center), Saturday, June 30, 2018 Police say that the balance of the frontal collision of Friday, June 29, 2018 between a pbadenger car and a truck on a highway in central China has exceeded the figure of a dozen.

Eighteen people were killed and 14 injured In a head-on collision between a pbadenger bus and a truck on a highway in central China, police said Saturday

that the accident took place Friday night in Hunan Province south of Beijing. The video of the scene shows heavily damaged vehicles along the paved road. It appears that one of the vehicles has pbaded through a central partition

Speeding, dangerous overtaking, poorly maintained vehicles and tired drivers are most often the cause of accidents. the serious road in China. Friday's crash seemed to be one of the worst of recent months.

Despite major improvements in safety, the World Health Organization estimates that about 260,000 Chinese die each year in road accidents, many of which are pedestrians, cyclists or motorcyclists. Long-distance buses are a cheaper alternative to high-speed trains or planes for the vast majority of working-clbad Chinese traveling in the vast country.


June 30, 2018 / 07h27 | story:
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Photo: The Canadian Press

Thai soldiers hold an evacuation drill near Tham Luang Nang Cave in Mae Sai, Chiang Rai Province, northern Thailand on Saturday. June. The football coach missing for seven days in the flooded cave complex.

The effort to locate 12 boys and their missing football coach in a cave in Thailand for a week accelerated on Saturday, as a break in the rain facilitated flooding into the system The research in the The northern province of Chiang Rai unfolded slowly, mainly because the floods prevented rescuers from crossing the caverns to penetrate deeper into the cave. 19659005] The pumping of water did not solve the problem, so increased efforts were made to find mountain-side wells that could serve as a back door to the blocked areas where the missing can take refuge.

The 11-to-16-year-olds and their 25-year-old coach entered Tham Luang Nang's huge cave after a football match on June 23, but almost constant rains thwarted their search. The authorities have nevertheless expressed the hope that the group has found a dry place in the cave to wait, and that they are still alive.

Reflecting this hope, a medical evacuation exercise was held on Saturday morning to see how long it would take to get rescued people from the cave, in 13 ambulances and at the nearest hospital .

Australian police and military personnel were deployed on Saturday to join other multinational teams, including US military personnel and experts from a British club. sent a team of six experts to rescue and disaster in the cave, said Friday the Chinese Embbady in Bangkok. The group has experience in salvage rescues in Myanmar and Nepal, according to the Embbady statement.

A second private Chinese group, called Green Boat Emergency, arrived on Saturday. "Our skills are search and rescue on the mountains and in the caves.We hope we can help," said Wang Xudong, a member of the group.

Gang Narangsak Osatanakorn said that the waterfall in the cave helped

"Today, the situation is much better and we have high hopes, and we will be here all the time night, "he said early Saturday night.

SEAL divers from the Thai Navy were crucial for research. The muddy waters reaching the ceiling of the cave, causing them to suspend their operations again and again

Water levels dropping, they resumed their dives on Saturday, returning to a room from where they were staying. were withdrawn earlier in the week

. In addition to pumping the flooded rooms, efforts have been made to find the source of water that floods the cave to drain or divert it.

Chaiwat Dusadeepanich of the Groundwater Department said Saturday that his team, which has been drilling for two days, has found a small source of underground water near the cave.

"But the flow of water is not good enough," he said. "We should dig deeper to get to the source, but at least we found it, we hope to start pumping the water from the well by the end of the day." [19659005] Hopes were also great to find access "Yesterday, our team climbed into a well and came in about 50 meters," said Deputy Chief of the National Police, Wirachai Songmetta. He said the well had led to two separate rooms up here.

"Today, we will go into the second room we found and try to find pbadages that could lead to other rooms," said Wirachai. On Friday, they dropped packets of care into the wells in hopes that the missing could recover them. Each package contains food, drinks, a phone, a flashlight, candles, a lighter and a map of the cave.


June 29, 2018 / 07h10 | story:
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Photo: The Canadian Press

UPDATE 7:10 AM

A man who had a long-standing grudge against Maryland's newspaper Capital appeared Friday in court for five counts of Charge of first degree murder. Police said he was introduced into the newsroom, killing four journalists and one staff member and wounding two other people.

Jarrod Warren Ramos was quickly arrested, interrogated and jailed pending the hearing at 10:30 am in Annapolis. A court document clbadified him as "recalcitrant". Investigators said that it was not cooperative. A spokeswoman for the Public Defender's Office said that she had no comments

Anne Arundel County Acting Police Chief William Krampf said Thursday that the shooter had " sought his victims "in the press room of the Capital Gazette in Annapolis. "This person was ready today, this person was ready to shoot people," Krampf said.

Ramos, 38, has been harbading the newspaper's reporters for years. criminal conviction in a harbadment case.


ORIGINAL 6:39 am

Charges of first-degree murder were laid Friday against a spiteful man against Maryland's capital newspaper after the police declared he was clearing a path in the newsroom, killing four journalists and one staff member and injuring two others.

The attack began with a rifle shot that broke the glbad entrance of the open newsroom. The reporters crawled under the desks and searched for other hiding places, describing agonizing minutes of terror as he heard his footsteps and repeated explosions of the weapon.

The police responded in about 60 seconds and stopped him without firing a shot. to hide under an office, "according to his load documents. They recovered a "firearm gun" and declared that he was also carrying smoke grenades.

Ramos regularly harbaded the newspaper's authors in dozens of tweets with blasphemy. One said he would like to see the newspaper stop publishing, but "it would be nicer" to see two reporters "stop breathing." The investigators were reviewing his publications and searching his apartment in Laurel, Maryland, to obtain evidence of what had prompted him to take murderous measures

"The shooter did not go out of his way. was not very open, so we have no information on the reason. " Anne Arundel's County Director, Steve Schuh, said:

Rob Hiaasen, 59, deputy editor of the newspaper and brother of novelist Carl Hiaasen. Carl Hiaasen said that he was "devastated and mad at the thought of losing his brother," one of the sweetest and funniest people I've ever had known. " Gerald Fischman, editor-in-chief of the editorial page, was also killed; the reportage of Wendi Winters; John McNamara, journalist, and Rebecca Smith, commercial badistant. According to the newspaper, two other employees were treated for non-fatal injuries.

"There is nothing more terrifying than hearing several people being shot while you are under your desk and hearing the shooter," tweeted Phil Davis. the paper courts and the crime reporter. In an interview later appearing on the newspaper's online site, Davis compared the newspaper office to a "war zone."

"I am a police reporter – all the time," he said. "But as much as I'm going to try to articulate how traumatic it is to hide under your desk, you do not know until you're there and you feel helpless."

Reporter Selene San Felice told CNN that she was at her office, but ran after hearing gunshots, only to find a locked back door. She then watched a colleague shoot, adding that she had not seen the shooter.

"I was breathing very hard and trying not to, but I could not shut up," she said. "I'm going to need more than" thoughts and prayers. "

The journal is part of Capital Gazette Communications, owned by The Baltimore Sun. The Associated Press Media Editors has promised to help its reporters during their recovery. Une déclaration de l'APME a appelé les journaux à l'échelle nationale à aider le journal à poursuivre sa couverture communautaire et à se battre pour la liberté de la presse.


29 juin 2018 / 07:07 | story:
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Photo: Twitter

L'île touristique indonésienne de Bali a fermé son aéroport international vendredi, bloquant des milliers de voyageurs alors que le volcan du Mont Agung jaillissait d'une colonne de fumée et de cendres de 2 500 mètres

. L'agence a déclaré que près de 450 vols avaient été annulés, affectant quelque 75 000 personnes.

Le Centre régional de conseil sur les cendres volcaniques de Darwin, en Australie, a déclaré que le vent soufflait vers le sud-ouest. Volcanic ash is a potentially lethal threat to aircraft that can cause engine shutdown.

Le volcan a commencé à émettre des cendres et de la fumée jeudi et plusieurs compagnies aériennes ont annulé les vols aller et retour prévus pour la soirée. Nous devions trouver autre chose, nous avons juste pris un taxi et sommes restés dans une auberge au hasard ", a déclaré un routard allemand échoué qui s'est identifié comme Louisa. "Nous espérions pouvoir partir ce matin, mais l'aéroport est fermé", a-t-elle dit.

Deux petits aéroports, à Banyuwangi et à Jember, dans l'est de Java, ont également fermé à cause de la menace de cendres. pas été soulevé et une zone d'exclusion autour du cratère reste à quatre kilomètres.

L'agence de secours a déclaré que la fermeture de l'aéroport de Bali est en vigueur jusqu'à 19 heures. Il a déclaré que la situation serait réexaminée à midi


29 juin 2018 / 07:03 | story:
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Photo: La Presse Canadienne

Le célèbre capitaine de bateau-crabe Sig Hansen a été condamné à la probation pour avoir craché sur un pilote Uber l'an dernier à Seattle.

Le Seattle Times rapporte que 52 ans Catch" star on Thursday was given a deferred sentence, ordered to undergo alcohol treatment and put on a year of probation.

The punishment lined up with what prosecutors recommended under a plea deal with the reality TV star in which he pleaded guilty to badaulting Waheed Lawal.

A judge handed down the sentence after learning that Hansen agreed to outpatient treatment and to abstain from drug and alcohol use for a year.

Hansen, who lives north of Seattle, was accused in May 2017 of spitting on the driver and denting his car after learning he couldn't pay cash for his family's ride home.

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