Case against Andhra minister for ”assaulting” realtor

Hyderabad, Jun 6 (PTI) An Andhra Pradesh minister has been booked for allegedly assaulting a realtor following a dispute over laying a drainage pipeline, police said today. On a complaint by real-estate businessman S Ram Reddy, Banjara Hills police last night registered a case against Health Minister Danam Nagender, a local Congress corporator and her husband under sections 448 (trespass) and 506 (criminal intimidation) of IPC, they said.

According to police, Reddy was constructing a building on Road No 12, where a drainage pipeline was being laid. However, Banjara Hills corporator B Bharati and her husband Baba Naik arrived at the construction site yesterday and reportedly told the workers to stop the work saying it was illegal.

Reddy further complained that following a phone call from the corporator and her husband, the minister arrived at the site along with his supporters and indulged in an heated argument asking him to stop the work and allegedly assaulted him, a senior police officer said. Meanwhile, following a counter complaint lodged by the corporator, the police have also registered a case against the realtor under section 509 (word, gesture or act intended to insult the modesty of a woman) of IPC. Further investigations were on in both the cases, the police officer added.

Police arrest man for allegedly spying on girls, leaving blood trail

Northern Territory police have arrested a teenager after receiving two reports a man was spying on young girls in their homes in the Palmerston suburb of Driver.

Police say a woman was asleep on her lounge at her McGuinness Circuit home about 9:15pm, when she heard her daughter’s bedroom window being smashed.

Duty Superintendent Bob Harrison said the woman ran in to her daughter’s bedroom and found a 17-year-old male sitting on the edge of her daughter’s bed.

He escaped out the window leaving a trail of blood.

Police said officers flooded the area speaking with local residents, and patrolling the neighbourhood.

A short time later, another family in the same street told police their 9-year-old daughter saw a man on their upstairs verandah, watching her through the window while she was having a shower.

A man in similar clothes with blood on him was caught by police about an hour later, after he stole several bottles of alcohol from a bar.

Police said the youth is expected to be charged with aggravated unlawful entry, trespass, stealing and criminal damage.

Pair charged over power plant protest

Two protesters at a coal and energy conference at Traralgon have been charged with trespass.

Police say a Melbourne man and woman were arrested after they tried to disrupt the conference this morning.

More than a dozen protesters called on the State Government to shut down the Hazelwood power station by 2012.

Protester Kristy Henderson says Hazelwood is the dirtiest coal-fired power station in the western world.

“Hazelwood is an old dinosaur. It should have been shut down in 2005. In fact, that was an ALP promise and it was expanded and extended until 2031,” she said.

The Energy Minister, Peter Batchelor, says Hazelwood can not be shut down in the short term, because it would cause widespread power outages.

Police warn against railway trespass

Broken Hill police are reminding locals that it is an offence to be on railway owned land, and if caught an on-the-spot fine of $400 could be issued.

Last weekend, police officers chased a couple of men under the Crystal Street overpass, after three cars, including a police vehicle, were hit by rocks that were thrown from the rail line onto the road.

The maximum penalty for someone caught throwing objects at traffic is five years in jail. After the incident, the railway authority has resolved to step up security patrols in the area.

The authority has also raised concern for cars driving over tracks in front of oncoming trains.

Police say a driver can be fined $400 if they are caught driving through the red warning lights at a railway crossing.

Vandals ‘frighten’ Gunns chairman

The Magistrates Court in Launceston has heard the chairman of Tasmanian timber company, Gunns Ltd, is becoming frightened by vandalism attacks on his home.

A 21 year old man has pleaded guilty to trespass and destroying property belonging to John Gay.

The Magistrates Court heard last October, Matthew Phillip Standaloft was walking through East Launceston with a friend when he decided to attack John Gay’s house.

Standaloft was very drunk when he jumped the property’s fence and lit a sparkler bomb on the front doorstep.

The device created a loud bang while his co-accused allegedly painted graffiti the front fence.

The court was told Mr Gay heard obscenities being yelled about his company’s proposed pulp mill and asked police to investigate.

Mr Gay said he is becoming frightened and sick of harassment happening at his house.

Standaloft said he was sorry, and disappointed with his drunken actions.

The Magistrate fined him $800 and accepted that Standaloft did not act with political or activist motivations.

Tibetans-in-exile at Leh react strongly to Chinese incursion

Leh, Sep 15 (ANI): Members of the exiled Tibetan community at Leh reacted strongly to the recent Chinese trespass into India’s border areas in Ladakh region.

Such concern was expressed by functionaries of Tibetan fora based at Leh on Monday.

Warning India of Chinese designs, Kunzang Dechen, President of Regional Tibetan Youth Congress, Leh, termed China as the biggest threat to India.

“China these days is a great threat to India. I have seen through channels…that the Chinese are entering to the border but when Tibet is an independent nation, when Tibet is in between them, China has nothing to bother even. From Indian point of view, this must be settled through Tibet and not through China,” Deche added.

Sonam Gyatso, President of Tibetan Market Welfare Association, Leh, said that if the recent developments in Ladakh are ignored by the government of India, then Ladakh would also meet the same fate as Tibet.

“The one and half kilometres incursion by the Chinese troops in Ladakh…. written at the border area in Chinese ‘Republic of China’, all these will have a bad impact on Ladakh. In Pangong Lake, first they said 45 kilometres is under China and 45 kilometres is under India, which they (Chinese) have extended to 50 kilometres and if Ladakhi government and the authorities ignore this issue then whatever happened in Tibet, the same would happen in Ladakh also since Ladakh is a very isolated region,” Gyatso added.

Officials sources have said that Chinese troops entered nearly 1.5 kilometres into the Indian territory near Mount Gya, which is recognised as the international border by India and China, and painted the word ‘China’ in Cantonese on the boulders and rocks there with red spray paint. The incursions were reported from the area generally referred in the Chumar sector in east of Leh.

The 22,420 ft Mount Gya, also known as “fair princess of snow” by the Army is located at the tri-junction of Ladakh in Jammu and Kashmir, Spiti in Himachal Pradesh, and Tibet. Its boundary was marked during the British era and is regarded as International border by the two countries.

The border patrol discovered the red paint markings on various rocks and boulders along the Zulung La (pass) on July 31 and the Chinese had entered into the area and written “China” all over the place, the sources said.

Indian soldiers later erased the text, writing ‘India’ instead.

This is not the first such reported intrusion. On June 21 Chinese helicopters had violated the Indian air space along the Line of Actual Control in Chumar region. The Chinese troops also reportedly dropped expired tinned food packets in the area. (ANI)

It’s not uncommon, but under-reported

CHENNAI: Friday’s brutal murder of his wife by Subhash, a 30-year-old man, who later had sex with the body sent shock waves among the police and
the public but psychiatrists say necrophilia sexual attraction to a corpse is not uncommon.

“It’s a mental illness rather under-diagnosed and under-reported,” says Dr S Nambi, senior psychiatrist, Institute of Mental Health. “There are times when a suspect is caught for a brutal murder. During interrogation we find it’s due to sexual attraction towards the corpse. In some cases they even eat the genitals, a form called necrolagnia. Remember the Raman Raghav case in Mumbai in the 60s?” he says.

No such cases have been seen at the IMH in the last 20 years, he says. “Not because it did not exist. But because, unlike this case, it is not recognised,” he said.

Doctors say necrophilia, or thanatophilia, comes from the ancient Greek word nekros meaning corpse and philia meaning friendship.

“This kind of horror fascination hardly even comes to the notice of the psychiatrist. It is a deviant abnormal behaviour but it is under-reported,” says Dr Thara Srinivasan of SCARF.

Unfortunately, most doctors think Subash’s act is not the first sign of his disease. “When people live in poverty their survival is at stake. A deviation in normal behaviour during his day-to-day life gets unnoticed,” says psychiatrist Dr Vijay Nagaswami.

Social scientists say it is probably under-reported also because it’s not explicitly stated in the Indian Penal Code. The provision available is Section 297, trespassing on burial places, etc. It states that whosoever with the intention of wounding the feelings of any person, or of insulting religion of any person, or with the knowledge that the feelings of any person are likely to be wounded, or that the religion of any person is likely to be insulted thereby, commits any trespass in any place of worship or on any place of sculpture, or any place set apart for the performance of funeral rites or as a depository for the remains of the dead, or offers any indignity to any human corpse, or causes disturbance to any persons assembled for the performance of funeral ceremonies, shall be punished with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to one year, or with fine, or with both.

Indian Australians family sues accused murderer for trespass

Brisbane (Australia), Mar.27 (ANI): Indian Australians Vijay and Shirley Singh have decided to sue the man accused of brutally killing their three children almost six years ago – for trespass.

According to the Courier Mail, the Singhs have filed a 140,000 dollar damages claim against Massimo “Max” Sica in the Queensland District Court for “negligent trespass” and, or alternately “private nuisance”, at their Bridgeman Downs home around the time their children were killed.

The claim details cleaning, repair and security costs incurred after the crime and police investigation.

Sica is in jail awaiting trial after he was charged on December 30 with the murders of his former girlfriend Neelma, 24, her younger brother Kunal, 18, and sister Sidhi, 12, on April 21, 2003.

He was refused Supreme Court bail in January.

Sica, the self-proclaimed “prime suspect” in one of the most complex investigations in Queensland police history, discovered the bodies and notified police.

The Crown has alleged Sica killed the Singh children in their separate bedrooms and dragged them to a steaming spa bath upstairs.

Neelma died from manual strangulation, Kunal drowned and Sidhi died from head injuries. (ANI)

Sri Ram Sene Chief Pramod Muthalik banned from Mangalore

New Delhi, Mar 16 (ANI): A Mangalore court on Monday banned Sri Ram Sene Chief Pramod Muthalik from entering ‘Dakshin Kannada District’ for one year.

Mangalore is the headquarter of Dakshin Kannada District.

Muthalik’s Ram Sene was involved in an attack in a Mangalore pub in January this year.

The enraged activists of Sri Rama Sene had barged into the lounge bar “Amnesia”, abused the owner and customers and beat up women, even as they tried to run to safety. uthalik, who was arrested, but was later released on bail.

The police have charged the arrested persons of Sri Ram Sene for acts of criminal assault, intimidation, outrage of modesty of women and criminal trespass. (ANI)