• Syrian opposition evacuates Darayya

    After four years of intense fighting, Syrian opposition groups have left the town of Darayya, allowing Syrian government forces to take control of the region under a deal.

  • Colombia signs peace deal with Farc

    The Colombian government on Wednesday signed a peace deal with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc), bringing to five decades of violence. 

    “Today I can say - from the bottom of my heart - that I have fulfilled the mandate that you gave me,” the Colombian president Juan Manuel Santos was quoted by Reuters as saying, referring to his 2014 electoral victory on the pledge of a peace deal. 

  • UN human rights chief urges international inquiry in Yemen

    The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein on Thursday called on the international community "to establish an international, independent body to carry out comprehensive investigations in Yemen" after a UN Human Rights Council report highlighting the extent of human rights violations. 

    Over 3500 civiians are believed to have been killed since March 2015 in the conflict. 

  • Turkish backed rebels take Syrian border town

    Syrian fighters backed by the Turkish military and US airstrikes have seized control of a Syrian border town from the Islamic State, according to the latest reports.

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that fighters had retaken the town of Jarablus, after Turkish troops crossed the border into Syria to assist in the fight against Islamic State.
    The military operation takes place as US Vice-President Joe Biden arrived in Turkey and expressed solidarity with Ankara.

  • US warns Nigeria against human rights abuses

    US Secretary of State John Kerry warned the Nigerian military against launching a “crackdown” and committing human rights abuses in the conflict with Boko Haram, at an address in Sokoto, Nigeria today.

    Expressing the United States support for the Nigerian government’s war against Boko Haram, Mr Kerry said trust must be built in government structures in order to counter violent extremism.

  • UK misled parliament over Saudi arms deals - Oxfam

    The international aid agency Oxfam criticised Britain's policy of selling arms to Saudi Arabia, and described ministers as being in "denial and disarray".

    Oxfam accused Britain of going from being an "enthusiastic backer" of the Arms Trade Treaty to "one of the most significant violators" and is expected to raise the issue of sales to Saudi Arabia at the second conference of states party to the treaty in Geneva today.

  • Guilty plea in landmark ICC Timbuktu war crimes trial

    The Islamist extremist accused of destroying the historic site in Timbuktu pleaded guilty as his trial at the International Criminal Court began on Monday. 

    The trial is the first such ICC war crimes trial over the destruction of a site of historic or cultural signifcance. 

    Ahmad Al Faqi al-Mahdi, who was a member of a group close to Al Qaeda, told the trial that he entered a guilty plea "with deep regret and great pain". 

  • Protest in Hong Kong over banning of pro-independence candidates


    Hundreds took to the streets in Hong Kong on Sunday to protest against the ban on pro-independence candidates standing in the upcoming Legislative Council election on September 4. 

  • Curfew continues in Kashmir as Pakistan’s PM writes to UN

    A curfew continues to be enforced in Indian-administered Kashmir for the 43rd day, as clashes between security forces and protestors rumbled on.

  • UN pledges compensation after admitting role in cholera outbreak

    The United Nations said it would provide “material assisstance” to the victims of a cholera outbreak in Haiti, days after admitting its role in the spread of the diseases.

    After almost 6 years of denying it had any role in the epidemic, which has killed thousands so far, the UN this week acknowledged that it bore some responsibility for the spread of the disease.

  • MSF to withdraw from northern Yemen after hospital attack

    Humanitarian organisation Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) announced that it will be withdrawing staff from hospitals in northern Yemen, following yet another Saudi-coalition air strike on one of its buildings.

    19 people were killed in Monday’s airstrike, marking the fourth time MSF buildings have been hit and the deadliest attack to date.

  • Australia agrees to close off-shore asylum camp


    The Australian government on Wednesday agreed to close its off-shore asylum camp in Papua New Guinea after files leaked earlier this month showed over 2000 incidents of sexual abuse and assault, including against children.

    No date has been set however, for the closure. Meanwhile, Australia's immigration minister stressed that no one would be settled in Australia.

  • Kurdish forces push to retake Mosul from ISIS

    Kurdish Peshmerga forces claimed to have captured several villages on the outskirt of Mosul, as they pushed to retake the last major city in Iraq under the Islamic State’s control.

    In a massive offensive backed by US air strikes Kurdish and Iraqi government troops advanced towards the city on Sunday. More than 5,000 Kurdish troops are involved in the operation, said a commander to the BBC.

  • ‘Chemical weapons are the new normal in Syria’ warn Aleppo doctors


    Doctors working in the besieged Syrian town of Aleppo warned that the use of chemical weapons is becoming the new normal in the conflict, after reports of yet another chlorine gas attack killed three people and injured dozens more.

  • US criticises militarisation of South China Sea

    US Secretary of State John Kerry criticised China’s restrictions and militarisation of the South China Sea at a regional meeting in Malaysia.

    Accusing China of constructing facilities for military purposes on man-made islands, Mr Kerry said,

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