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Showing posts with label officers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label officers. Show all posts

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Officers, the soldier injured in clashes in Port Said Egypt

Cairo (Reuters)-An army officer and two soldiers were injured in clashes between protesters and security forces in Port Said in northern Egypt on Sunday (3/3), said Helmy el-Hefny, Deputy Health Minister in Port Said, told Xinhua.

Although the Government-owned Ahram online daily quoting military sources reported one description of a soldier killed, Abdel Rahman Farag--on duty at the hospital Port Said--confirmed three people injured and one soldier was in critical condition.

According to a statement issued by Egypt's armed forces at the official his Facebook, clashes between protestors and security forces has killed a soldier--who was shot in the neck by an unidentified person.

The statement denied reports earlier that a soldier was killed during a gun battle between the raw-the armed forces and police personnel. He urged residents in Port Said in order not to approach the headquarters of the Governor or the institution guarded by Armed Forces personnel for the sake of the safety of their lives.

More than 310 people injured on Sunday in clashes between security forces and protesters on the handover of the prisoners on the coast of Port Said, Egypt Gubernuran, Xinhua reported. Meanwhile, the unrest has entered the weekend third in the region, said the Ministry of health.

Protesters clash with police, while the Interior Ministry decided to relocate the prisoners waiting for the ruling of 29 regarding the tragic riots at soccer matches so that killed more than 70 people in February last year, in order to avoid a riot, said Egypt's official news agency, MENA.

As many as 200 people from families of prisoners gathered outside the police station in Port Said, after they learned that their families will be moved to the prison of the unknown.

Protestors threw petrol bombs and fireballs into the building the police station and set fire to a police car, while security officers retaliated with tear gas to disperse the mob.

Elsewhere in Egypt, dozens of protesters blocking the path of el-Bahr on the traffic circle in the city of Mahalla Shoon, Gharbiya, with roadblocks and burned tires. Protestors also threw stones in the direction of a passing car.

In another incident the demonstrators in At-Tharir Roundabout in Central Cairo to put the tires burned at the entrance to the circle, so that traffic flow is completely at a standstill. Meanwhile the Interior Ministry ordered all police personnel to traffic leaving the roundabout to avoid further clashes, said MENA.

On Sunday morning, the protest was carried out by a group of football fans who were in Cairo on the streets Of Salem--leading to the international airport, thus blocking the U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry take the train just in time.

Protestors shut down the road really was, after some protesters burned car tires, making passengers leave the car and hurried walk so as not to lag behind their aircraft. (C003)



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News; Finance; Insurance; Health; Cancer; Car Insurance; Health Insurance

Friday, March 1, 2013

The Governor of Pakistan's security officers after the bombing kecam

Hazara Shiite community following the funeral victim bomb blast in Quetta, Pakistan, Monday (14/1). (REUTERS/Naseer Ahmed)

Quetta, Pakistan (Reuters)-officials denouncing the security forces of Pakistan province on Sunday after the bombing of the Shia Hazara community, killing 80 people in the Northwest of the town, Quetta.

"The terrorist attacks on the Shia Hazara community in Quetta is password and security failure," said Nawab Zulfiqar Ali Magsi, Governor of the province of Baluchistan, when organizing the hospital.

"We give freedom to the security to act against the terrorists and the Group hard, but Quetta incident happened," he said.

The number who perished as a result of the bombing on Saturday night rose to 80 people, with most of the victims were in the city's main bazaar, the capital of Baluchistan, near the border with Afghanistan.

Most of the dead were citizens of Hazara, Shia tribal groups. High security officials said that number could rise as 20 people were seriously injured.

The Pakistani Government, which is not favored over various issues, such as poverty and electricity outages, ahead of the election predicted in the coming months, increasingly hard pressed to pursue Sunni pegaris, who consider Shiites not a Muslim.

A spokesman for Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ), Sunni, claimed responsibility for the bomb in Quetta, which is also causing casualties near the school and the computer center.

LeJ also stated was behind bombings in the past month in Quetta, which killed almost 100 people, one of the worst school attack in Pakistan.

Shia political institutions called for a strike in Quetta to denounce the latest massacre. Many shops and bazaars are closed. Relatives who were injured responding to a request by the hospital's blood.

Officials said Pakistan hard group password command bombings and shootings increase LeJ against Shiites to spark violence, which will pave the way for a Sunni theocracy in Pakistan, an ally of United States.

More than 400 people dead in Pakistan's Shiites in the past year, many of them by gunmen or bomb. Some hard-line Shiite group retaliated by killing Sunni clerics.

The split with Sunni Shia evolved after the Prophet Muhammad died in 632, when his followers disagree over his successor.
(B002/AK)



News; Finance; Insurance; Health; Cancer



News; Finance; Insurance; Health; Cancer; Car Insurance; Health Insurance

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Man jailed for stabbing officers

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota
25 October 2011 Last updated at 14:28 GMT John Onyenaychi John Onyenaychi has a history of violence A man has been jailed for a minimum of 25 years for the attempted murder of two police officers in west London.

John Onyenaychi cut PC Paul Madden's throat and slashed at community support officer Piotr Dolata in Ealing.

The Old Bailey heard the attack was the culmination of a five-day crime spree by the 30-year-old last December.

Onyenaychi, of Wise Road, Stratford, east London, was found guilty of two counts of attempted murder and of attacking a third officer.

As well as the attempted murder charges, Onyenaychi - who received a life sentence - was convicted of causing grievous bodily harm with intent, robbery and attempting to cause grievous bodily harm.

The court heard the defendant cut PC Madden's throat as people watched and then lashed out with his knife at other officers who tried to restrain him.

PC Madden's life was saved by retired heart surgeon Samad Tadjkarimi who happened to pass the scene as he was Christmas shopping.

Mr Tadjkarimi, who had retired from Harefield Hospital three weeks earlier, told the court he had seen the officer lying on the ground with "lots of dark blood on the right side of his neck".

"I turned my attention to him immediately and I compressed his neck, holding it," he said.

"It's my duty, I guess. I'm sure anyone in my profession would do the same.

"It's very humbling that my intervention perhaps contributed to the outcome of possibly saving his life - a very brave young officer."

On licence

PC Madden, 23, received emergency surgery for injuries to his neck, throat and face. He was left with permanent scarring.

PCSO Dolata, 27, needed 12 stitches to his head.

The Recorder of London, Judge Peter Beaumont, said Onyenaychi had not shown any remorse.

He added: "He used a knife on the face and neck of a police officer who was doing his job.

"Paul Madden would have died within two to three minutes, such was the loss of his blood, without the help he received from the passing retired doctor."

John Onyenaychi cut PC Paul Madden's throat and slashed at community support officer Piotr Dolata

The jury heard that minutes before the attack, Onyenaychi had become agitated when challenged about his ticket on a bus in New Broadway.

Support officers called to the scene recognised him as a man who was wanted for a previous attack.

PC Madden, who thought Onyenaychi might be armed, was stabbed as he tried to arrest him.

The trial heard the defendant was on licence at the time, having been jailed for two years for causing death by dangerous driving while under the influence of drugs.

While in jail, he attacked a prison officer, using a pencil as a homemade weapon, and committed other violent offences.

He had also stolen a laptop in Fulham, west London, six days before the stabbings in Ealing.

Onyenaychi threatened to murder the computer's owner, telling him "I do this for a living", the court heard.

Det Ch Insp John McFarlane said: "He is one of the most dangerous men in Britain."

He refused to come out of his cell throughout his trial.



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