The Daily Populous

Tuesday November 1st, 2022 day edition

image for Iranian teen girl beaten to death by police for tearing Khomeini's photo

An Iranian girl in middle school was beaten to death after police officers found a torn-up photo of former Iranian Supreme Leader Ruhollah Khomeini in one of her schoolbooks, local news outlet in the Sistan and Baluchestan Province Haalvsh reported on Sunday night.

According to Haalvsh, security forces severely beat Hamnava in front of the other students and she later died of her wounds in the hospital.

Dozens of protesters have reportedly been killed by Iranian forces in recent weeks in Zahedan.

A number of teenagers have been killed amid the protests, with multiple cases of teenage protesters beaten severely or even to death by security forces reported throughout Iran.

On Sunday, at Al-Zahra University in Tehran, female students chanted "I will kill, I will kill, whoever killed my sister.".

At Khazai's grave, protesters chanted "death to the dictator," according to footage shared by the 1500tasvir account.

Salami blamed the US and Israel for the riots and claimed that protesting students were being influenced by them. »

Feds concerned about armed people at Arizona ballot boxes

Authored by apnews.com

WASHINGTON (AP) — Reports of people watching ballot boxes in Arizona, sometimes armed or wearing ballistic vests, raise serious concerns about voter intimidation, the Justice Department said Monday as it stepped into a lawsuit over the monitoring.

While lawful poll watching can support transparency, “ballot security forces” present a significant risk of voter intimidation, the court documents state.

The group sued a group calling itself Clean Elections USA after reports that people were watching 24-hour ballot boxes in Maricopa County, including some who were masked and armed. »

Microsoft will keep Call of Duty on Sony platforms "as long as there's a PlayStation out there to ship to"

Authored by eurogamer.net

Speaking to the Same Brain Youtube channel, Spencer pledged to keep releasing Call of Duty games on Sony's consoles "as long as there's a PlayStation out there to ship to".

Still, regulators have questioned how long this will actually last, if and when Activision Blizzard is owned by Microsoft.

"Giving Microsoft control of Activision games like Call of Duty" had "major negative implications", Sony said at the time. »

4 men plead guilty to conspiring to rape drugged wives after exchanging wife-sharing fantasies

Authored by channelnewsasia.com

The court heard that the men met their respective accomplices online as early as 2010, on the forum Sammyboy and other platforms for wife-sharing fantasies.

The court heard that the men discussed various wife-sharing fantasies, exchanged details of their sex lives and would share explicit images and footage.

They agreed to use a sedative to sedate their wives, so that other men could rape them. »