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25 April 2024

Crazy World: Groom invites friends to rape his new bride

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By Staff/Agencies

INDIA: A newly-married man connived with a few others to get his bride gang raped. Two men have been arrested for gang-raping the 19-year-old woman in Kolkata.

The woman's husband managed to flee and has been absconding since the horrific incident, reports Mid Day.

The couple tied the knot about a week before the incident. One evening, the man's friends visited them. The husband left home and his friends stayed back with the new bride. The friends assaulted the wife that same evening.

 

Drunk man cuts own abdomen

INDIA: In a bizarre act, a man who had consumed too much alcohol, got a knife and cut his own abdomen in Goa.

The incident occurred in the early hours of the morning when the 27-year-old was at his relative's place, reports The Times of India. Fortunately, for the man, someone saw him doing the ghastly deed to himself and shouted out.

But by then the young man's internal oprgans were already hanging out of his open abdomen. He had also managed to jab his intestine in several places.  He was admitted to the hospital and underwent surgery immediately.

Doctors told the daily that such  acute alcohol intoxication led to the person injuring himself and such abnormal behaviour was not common.

 

Man blackmails wife's friend for money, sex

MUMBAI: A woman who was involved in a clandestine affair with a colleague was caught red-handed by a friend's husband.

The man saw an opportunity to earn money and receve sexual favours, and clicked a picture of the woman with her lover, reports Mid Day.

However, the blackmailer's wish was not to be granted.

The man tried to blackmail his wife's friend by asking for Rs20,000 and other sexual favours for keeping his exclusive information and photograph hidden from her family.

The woman initially gave him Rs 5,000 but once the man started pestering her for more money, she called for some official help. The woman, who works in a bank, went to the police and got the man arrested for blackmailing and extortion.

 

Mafia bosses 'killed, ate traitor'

SPAIN: A man who turns traitor in a mafia organisation usually meets an  untimely death. However, in this case, the Serbian mafia bosses, not only killed the traitor but also ate him up, literally, reports news website News.com.au.

The 37-year-old nab was hammered to death for stealing some money by a gang of criminals in Madrid. His body was chopped into pieces and put into a meat grinder and cooked. It was consumed by the group members, confessed a gang member.

The traitor's bones were allegedly thrown into a river flowing by the Spanish capital by the cannibalistic gang.

 

Facebook blasts snooping employers

SAN FRANCISCO:  Facebook on Friday blasted employers that want to peer at what workers have posted on their personal accounts at the world's leading social network.
 
Facebook Chief Privacy Officer Erin Egan urged members of the online community not to share passwords with current or potential employers and warned companies to resist pressing for access.
 
"In recent months we've seen a distressing increase in reports of employers or others seeking to gain inappropriate access to people's Facebook profiles or private information," she said in a blog post.
 
"The most alarming of these practices is the reported incidences of employers asking prospective or actual employees to reveal their passwords."
 
She argued that snooping employers undermine the privacy of workers, and their friends at Facebook, while exposing themselves to legal risks.
 
For example, prospective employers could be accused of discriminating against an applicant based on seeing Facebook account information revealing someone's age or sexual preference.
 
"You shouldn't be forced to share your private information and communications just to get a job," Erin Egan said.
 
"As the friend of a (Facebook) user, you shouldn't have to worry that your private information or communications will be revealed to someone you don't know and didn't intend to share with just because that user is looking for a job."
 
To enforce the point, Facebook made it a violation of its policy to share or solicit an account password.
 
"We don't think employers should be asking prospective employees to provide their passwords because we don't think it's right the thing to do," Erin Egan said.