2013, സെപ്റ്റംബർ 11, ബുധനാഴ്‌ച

+ 20 including Karayi Rajan acquitted in TP murder case


KOZHIKODE: The special court in Eranhipalam Wednesday acquitted 20 accused including CPM Kannur district secretariat member Karayi Rajan in the RMP leader T P Chandrasekharan murder case.
They were acquitted following lack of evidence. The defendant demanded to acquit 24 persons citing lack of evidence.  

The court considered trial of 56 accused in the case. Karayi Rajan is the 26th accused in the TP murder case. The crime against him was that he helped Sijith, involved in the murder gang, to get treatment at the Koothuparambu Cooperative Hospital. But the court found that it was not enough as evidence.

Apart from Karayi Rajan, SFI Kannur district secretary Sarin Shashi is also among the acquitted. The offence against him was that he helped Kunhanandan to go underground.


+ 20 including Karayi Rajan acquitted in TP murder case


KOZHIKODE: The special court in Eranhipalam Wednesday acquitted 20 accused including CPM Kannur district secretariat member Karayi Rajan in the RMP leader T P Chandrasekharan murder case.
They were acquitted following lack of evidence. The defendant demanded to acquit 24 persons citing lack of evidence.  

The court considered trial of 56 accused in the case. Karayi Rajan is the 26th accused in the TP murder case. The crime against him was that he helped Sijith, involved in the murder gang, to get treatment at the Koothuparambu Cooperative Hospital. But the court found that it was not enough as evidence.

Apart from Karayi Rajan, SFI Kannur district secretary Sarin Shashi is also among the acquitted. The offence against him was that he helped Kunhanandan to go underground.


Man beaten to death

NEYYATINKARA: The body of a man was dumped on the railway track after beating him to death.
The dead identified as Chandrasekharan Nair (58) of Neyyatinkara, was a security employee of the Rajdhani Group. Two persons who came home last night called him and took him away. His family members went in search of him as he failed to return.

His sons working abroad were on vacation and in the search conducted by them found him lying on the railway track in an unconscious stage. Though he was taken to the medical college hospital with serious head injuries, his life could not be saved.  

Nair was involved in some cases earlier. He was in the habit of consuming liquor.  The police have so far not found who took him away. He is survived by his wife Nalini and sons Arun C Kumar and Kiran C Kum

Man beaten to death

NEYYATINKARA: The body of a man was dumped on the railway track after beating him to death.
The dead identified as Chandrasekharan Nair (58) of Neyyatinkara, was a security employee of the Rajdhani Group. Two persons who came home last night called him and took him away. His family members went in search of him as he failed to return.

His sons working abroad were on vacation and in the search conducted by them found him lying on the railway track in an unconscious stage. Though he was taken to the medical college hospital with serious head injuries, his life could not be saved.  

Nair was involved in some cases earlier. He was in the habit of consuming liquor.  The police have so far not found who took him away. He is survived by his wife Nalini and sons Arun C Kumar and Kiran C Kum

Sonia returns home after medical check-up

NEW DELHI: Congress president Sonia Gandhi, who had gone abroad for a routine medical check-up, returned home Wednesday morning. Sources said she reached Delhi early morning. Accompanied by daughter Priyanka, Gandhi had on September 2 left for the US for medical check-up. The 66-year-old Gandhi, who had undergone a surgery in the US for an undisclosed ailment on August 5, 2011, had flown there for a check-up in February and again on September 2 last year. She was admitted to AIIMS in August after she complained of chest pain and exhaustion in the Lok Sabha during a discussion on Food Security Bill when it was in the last stages of adoption.She was discharged from the hospital after she spent five hours undergoing various tests.

Sonia returns home after medical check-up

NEW DELHI: Congress president Sonia Gandhi, who had gone abroad for a routine medical check-up, returned home Wednesday morning. Sources said she reached Delhi early morning. Accompanied by daughter Priyanka, Gandhi had on September 2 left for the US for medical check-up. The 66-year-old Gandhi, who had undergone a surgery in the US for an undisclosed ailment on August 5, 2011, had flown there for a check-up in February and again on September 2 last year. She was admitted to AIIMS in August after she complained of chest pain and exhaustion in the Lok Sabha during a discussion on Food Security Bill when it was in the last stages of adoption.She was discharged from the hospital after she spent five hours undergoing various tests.

2013, സെപ്റ്റംബർ 10, ചൊവ്വാഴ്ച

One in ten men in parts of Asia have raped, says study

London: About 1 in 10 men in some parts of Asia admitted raping a woman who was not their partner, according to the first large studies of rape and sexual violence. When their wife or girlfriend was included, that figure rose to about a quarter. International researchers said their startling findings should change perceptions about how common violence against women is and prompt major campaigns to prevent it. Still, the results were based on a survey of only six Asian countries and the authors said it was uncertain what rates were like elsewhere in the region and beyond. They said engrained sexist attitudes contributed, but that other factors like poverty or being emotionally and physically abused as children were major risk factors for men's violent behavior.

A previous report from the World Health Organization found one third of women worldwide say they have been victims of domestic or sexual violence. 'It's clear violence against women is far more widespread in the general population than we thought,' said Rachel Jewkes of South Africa's Medical Research Council, who led the two studies. The research was paid for by several United Nations agencies and Australia, Britain, Norway and Sweden. The papers were published online Tuesday in the journal, Lancet Global Health.

In the new research, male interviewers surveyed more than 10,000 men in Bangladesh, China, Cambodia, Indonesia, Sri Lanka and Papa New Guinea. The word 'rape' was not used in the questions, but the men were asked if they had ever forced a woman to have sex when she wasn't willing or if they had ever forced sex on someone who was too drunk or drugged to consent.

In most places, scientists concluded between 6 to 8 percent of men raped a woman who wasn't their partner.  When they included wives and girlfriends, the figures were mostly between 30 to 57 percent. The lowest rates were in Bangladesh and Indonesia and the highest were in Papa New Guinea. Previous studies of rape have been done in South Africa, where nearly 40 percent of men are believed to have raped a woman.

Of those who acknowledged forcing a woman to have sex, more than 70 percent of men said it was because of 'sexual entitlement.' Nearly 60 percent said they were bored or wanted to have fun while about 40 percent said it was because they were angry or wanted to punish the woman. Only about half of the men said they felt guilty and 23 percent had been imprisoned for a rape.

'The problem is shocking but anyplace we have looked, we see partner violence, victimization and sexual violence,' said Michele Decker, an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, who co-wrote an accompanying commentary. 'Rape doesn't just involve someone with a gun to a woman's head,' she said. 'People tend to think of rape as something someone else would do.'

'It's not enough to focus on services for women,' said Charlotte Watts, head of the Gender, Violence and Health Centre at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, who was not part of the study. She said some programs in Africa based on challenging traditional ideas of masculinity are proving successful.
'It may be that the culture where they grew up condones violence, but it's not impossible to change that,' she said.


One in ten men in parts of Asia have raped, says study

London: About 1 in 10 men in some parts of Asia admitted raping a woman who was not their partner, according to the first large studies of rape and sexual violence. When their wife or girlfriend was included, that figure rose to about a quarter. International researchers said their startling findings should change perceptions about how common violence against women is and prompt major campaigns to prevent it. Still, the results were based on a survey of only six Asian countries and the authors said it was uncertain what rates were like elsewhere in the region and beyond. They said engrained sexist attitudes contributed, but that other factors like poverty or being emotionally and physically abused as children were major risk factors for men's violent behavior.

A previous report from the World Health Organization found one third of women worldwide say they have been victims of domestic or sexual violence. 'It's clear violence against women is far more widespread in the general population than we thought,' said Rachel Jewkes of South Africa's Medical Research Council, who led the two studies. The research was paid for by several United Nations agencies and Australia, Britain, Norway and Sweden. The papers were published online Tuesday in the journal, Lancet Global Health.

In the new research, male interviewers surveyed more than 10,000 men in Bangladesh, China, Cambodia, Indonesia, Sri Lanka and Papa New Guinea. The word 'rape' was not used in the questions, but the men were asked if they had ever forced a woman to have sex when she wasn't willing or if they had ever forced sex on someone who was too drunk or drugged to consent.

In most places, scientists concluded between 6 to 8 percent of men raped a woman who wasn't their partner.  When they included wives and girlfriends, the figures were mostly between 30 to 57 percent. The lowest rates were in Bangladesh and Indonesia and the highest were in Papa New Guinea. Previous studies of rape have been done in South Africa, where nearly 40 percent of men are believed to have raped a woman.

Of those who acknowledged forcing a woman to have sex, more than 70 percent of men said it was because of 'sexual entitlement.' Nearly 60 percent said they were bored or wanted to have fun while about 40 percent said it was because they were angry or wanted to punish the woman. Only about half of the men said they felt guilty and 23 percent had been imprisoned for a rape.

'The problem is shocking but anyplace we have looked, we see partner violence, victimization and sexual violence,' said Michele Decker, an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, who co-wrote an accompanying commentary. 'Rape doesn't just involve someone with a gun to a woman's head,' she said. 'People tend to think of rape as something someone else would do.'

'It's not enough to focus on services for women,' said Charlotte Watts, head of the Gender, Violence and Health Centre at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, who was not part of the study. She said some programs in Africa based on challenging traditional ideas of masculinity are proving successful.
'It may be that the culture where they grew up condones violence, but it's not impossible to change that,' she said.


Man held four years after murdering physically challenged wife

Kottayam: A 43-year-old man, who allegedly murdered his physically challenged wife by throwing her into a ravine and married twice after that, has landed in police custody four years after committing the crime. Police at Changanassery near here arrested Pradeep Kumar yesterday claiming that evidence had been gathered to charge him with murdering his wife Anjali, who became disabled following a motorcycle accident. According to police, Kumar allegedly administered sleeping pills to his wife and took her in a car to the hill resort Wagamon and pushed her into a ravine in October 2009. The day after the murder, he lodged a complaint saying his wife was missing. As police could not come across any evidence to disbelieve Kumar, they virtually closed the case six months after the crime. The case, however, was reopened after police received
an anonymous letter raising question as to how a person who had become physically challenged could go missing on her own.

Following this, police questioned Kumar and gathered details of the crime he allegedly committed. A police team had begun search to gather forensic evidence at the ravine where the woman was dumped by her h usband, police said.Anjali had suffered serious head injury in a motorcycle accident while riding on a two-wheeler with her husband and two-year-old daughter in February 2009, following w hich she became bedridden, police said. After the murder, Kumar had married twice, proof of
which had been gathered from the local sub-registrar's office. The second wife deserted him allegedly after being harassed
and tortured by Kumar, police said. PTI


Man held four years after murdering physically challenged wife

Kottayam: A 43-year-old man, who allegedly murdered his physically challenged wife by throwing her into a ravine and married twice after that, has landed in police custody four years after committing the crime. Police at Changanassery near here arrested Pradeep Kumar yesterday claiming that evidence had been gathered to charge him with murdering his wife Anjali, who became disabled following a motorcycle accident. According to police, Kumar allegedly administered sleeping pills to his wife and took her in a car to the hill resort Wagamon and pushed her into a ravine in October 2009. The day after the murder, he lodged a complaint saying his wife was missing. As police could not come across any evidence to disbelieve Kumar, they virtually closed the case six months after the crime. The case, however, was reopened after police received
an anonymous letter raising question as to how a person who had become physically challenged could go missing on her own.

Following this, police questioned Kumar and gathered details of the crime he allegedly committed. A police team had begun search to gather forensic evidence at the ravine where the woman was dumped by her h usband, police said.Anjali had suffered serious head injury in a motorcycle accident while riding on a two-wheeler with her husband and two-year-old daughter in February 2009, following w hich she became bedridden, police said. After the murder, Kumar had married twice, proof of
which had been gathered from the local sub-registrar's office. The second wife deserted him allegedly after being harassed
and tortured by Kumar, police said. PTI


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