• African National Congress plans to withdraw South Africa from ICC

    South Africa’s ruling African National Congress (ANC) announced it has decided to withdraw membership from the International Criminal Court (ICC).

    The ANC’s party's National General Council (NGC) made the decision after meeting this weekend, said Obed Bapela, head of the ANC's International Relations Commission on Sunday.

    "The NGC has just resolved that South Africa should withdraw from the International Criminal Court,” he said. “However, only after we have followed certain processes."
    Mr Bapela said the ANC was still committed to the principles that led to the founding of the court but said "the CC has lost its direction unfortunately and it's no longer pursuing that principle."

    The decision has been criticised by AfriFroum, a South African civil-rights organisation.

    “Withdrawal from ICC is a step backwards into the swamp of human rights violation and unaccountability,” said the organisation. Alana Bailey, AfriForum Deputy CEO  said the ANC looks to “avoid national and international accountability and move away from a culture of the protection of human rights”.
  • US to pay reparations to families of Kunduz airstrike victims

    The US Department of Defense will look to make “condolence payments” to families of victims of a US airstrike that hit a Medecins Sans Frontieres hospital in Kunduz, Afghanistan reports Reuters.

    In a statement released on Saturday, the spokesperson for the Pentagon Peter Cook, said,

  • Tunisia’s National Dialogue Quartet awarded Nobel Peace Prize

    A coalition of human rights activists, lawyers, business persons and trade unionists has been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for its “role in building of a pluralistic democracy in Tunisia in the wake of the Jasmine Revolution of 2011”, with calls for the country to continue its path towards reform.

    The award for Tunisia’s National Dialogue Quartet, comes almost five years after the self-immolation of a street vendor sparked the Arab Spring protests across the Middle East. The coalition was formed in 2013, after further protests against the Islamist-led transitional government threatened to destabilise the country. The quarter helped to negotiate the ratification of a new constitution and set up its electoral commission, leading to a coalition government headed by a secular president.

    Pointing to the other regions in the Middle East where “the struggle for democracy and human rights has come to a standstill or suffered setbacks,” Kaci Kullmann Five, the chairwoman of the Nobel committee said, “Tunisia, however, has seen a democratic transition based on a vibrant civil society, with demands for respect for basic human rights”.

    Announcing the award the Nobel Prize committee said the prize would help to “safeguard” democracy in Tunisia. “More than anything, the prize is intended as an encouragement to the Tunisian people, who despite major challenges have laid the groundwork for a national fraternity,” the committee added.

    The president of the Tunisian Human Rights League, Mokhtar Trifi said the award was “a clear encouragement for the wider process in Tunisia, and for all the work and dialogue that went into the move to elections and democracy”. “Crucially, it shows that the world is watching us,” he added. “We have much more to accomplish and are facing new challenges.”

  • China warns US about encroaching South China Sea territory

    China will not stand for violations of tis territorial waters in the name of freedom of navigation, said a Chinese spokesperson commenting on the South China Sea on Friday.

  • Spain dismisses war crimes charges against 40 Rwandan officials

    The Spanish Supreme Court has dismissed war crimes cases against 40 Rwandan officials who were accused over their role in revenge killings following the 1994 genocide, reports BBC.

    The officials, many of whom held leadership positions in the Rwanda Defence Forces, were accused of war crimes.

  • Amnesty calls for halt on arms transfers and accountability for coalition strikes in Yemen

    Amnesty International called for the suspension of all weapons transfers to the Saudi Arabia-led coalition in Yemen, after it reported to have “damning evidence of war crimes”.

    In a new report examining air strikes by the coalition, the NGO said the “unlawful air strikes” may amount to war crimes. The report, entitled ‘Bombs fall from the sky day and night’: Civilians under fire in northern Yemen’ demonstrates “in harrowing detail how crucial it is to stop arms being used to commit serious violations of this kind” said Donatella Rovera, Amnesty International’s Senior Crisis Response Adviser.

    Ms Rovera, who headed Amnesty’s fact-finding mission to Yemen, said “the USA and other states exporting weapons to any of the parties to the Yemen conflict have a responsibility to ensure that the arms transfers they authorize are not facilitating serious violations of international humanitarian law”. “Lack of accountability has contributed to the worsening crisis and unless perpetrators believe they will be brought to justice for their crimes, civilians will continue to suffer the consequences,” she added.

    The report examined 13 different airstrikes by the coalition, including the use of cluster bombs, which killed approximately 100 civilians, including 59 children.

  • Obama apologises for US bombing of Afghan hospital
    US President Barack Obama apologised to the head of aid agency Medecins San Frontieres (MSF)and promised accountability for the attack, which left nearly two dozen patients and staff dead.

    White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said the president had called Dr Joanne Liu, international president of Doctors Without Borders, for a personal apology over the incident, and promised a “full accounting” of who was to blame for the attack.
  • US condemns violence in West Bank and Jerusalem
    The White House expressed deep concern on Wednesday about the escalating violence in the West Bank and Jerusalem reports Reuters.

    The White House spokesman Josh Earnest in a news briefing said,
  • Escalation of sexual violence in South Sudan says ICRC

    Women in South Sudan face an unprecedented level of sexual violence which includes abduction, rape, forced marriage and murder in a merciless ethnic warfare, said the head of the Red Cross mission in the country.

  • Pentagon takes responsibility for Afghan hospital strike, seeks accountability

    The US military, pledging to seek accountability, took responsibility for deadly airstrikes that killed Medicines Sans Frontiers (MSF) doctors working in an Afghan hospital.

  • Militant to be tried for cultural destruction at The Hague

    An alleged militant accused of destroying ancient monuments in Timbuktu became the first person to appear at the International Criminal Court (ICC) charged with damaging cultural heritage.

  • Burkinabe coup leader charged

    The leader of last month's coup in Burkina Faso, General Gilbert Diendere has been charged with 11 crimes, including threatening state security, murder, collusion with foreign forces, voluntary assault and wilful destruction of property.

    The general, who led the presidential guard in the short-lived take-over, is expected to face trial at a military tribunal.

  • Former UN General Assembly President charged with corruption

    Former UN General Assembly President, John Ashe, was charged by U.S. authorities on Tuesday, for allegedly taking more than $1.3 million in bribes from real estate billionaire, Ng Lap Seng, in an expansive corruption scheme. John Ashe was General Assembly President from 2013-2014 and the U.N. ambassador from Antigua and Barbuda.

    In return for the bribes, prosecutors say that Mr. Ashe used his positions to introduce a UN document supporting a multibillion-dollar UN-sponsored conference centre that Mr. Ng hoped to build. The complaint sets out that between 2012 and 2014, more than $3 million was deposited into bank accounts controlled by Mr. Ashe from foreign governments and individuals. However, the complaint is limited to charging Mr. Ashe with tax offenses, which are apparently not covered by his diplomatic immunity.

    Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara who announced the arrests today said, “If proven, today’s charges will confirm that the cancer of corruption that plagues too many local and state governments infects the United Nations as well.”

  • Lawsuit filed in US accusing Myanmar president of genocide
    Activists in the United States have filed a lawsuit against Myanmar’s president Thein Sein, accusing him of committing genocide against the Rohingya population.

    The lawsuit filed in Manhattan federal court last week accuses the president and other senior Myanmar officials of planning and instigating "hate crimes and discrimination amounting to genocide".
  • Germany sentences Rwandan FDLR leaders for war crimes

    A court in Germany has sentenced two men from the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR) for war crimes, in a landmark trial last week.

    The trial was the first under Germany’s Code of Crimes Against International Law, which allows the investigation and prosecution of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide, irrespective of where they are committed.

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