• Boko Haram kidnap dozens in Cameroon

    Islamic militant group Boko Haram are suspected to have kidnapped dozens of people from villages in Cameroon in a series of cross-border attacks on Sunday, according to government officials.

    As many as 80 people, mostly women and children, were abducted and a further four villagers reportedly killed in the raids. “They burnt to ashes almost 80 houses,” said Cameroon's Information Minister Issa Tchiroma Bakary, adding that investigations into the attacks were still ongoing.
  • Clashes break out in Yemeni capital
    Heavy fighting between Houthi militants and Yemeni soldiers have taken place near the presidential palace in Sanaa with gunfire and explosions rocking the capital city, according to the latest reports.

    Yemeni Prime Minister Khaled Bahah's convoy was also shot at as he departed from a meeting with President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi, reports the BBC, though no casualties are thought to have occurred.

    Rocket propelled grenades, machine gunfire and mortar rounds were reportedly being fired near the presidential palace and by the home of Yemen's national security chief, in the biggest hostilities seen since Houthi gunmen overran Sanaa last year.

    “This is a step towards a coup and it is targeting the state's legitimacy,” said Nadia Akkaf, the country's information minister.
  • UN peacekeeper killed in Mali

    An attack on a UN camp in Mali has left one Chadian peacekeeper dead and another injured.

    Gunmen and suicide bombers ambushed the camp in the north-eastern town of Kidal on Saturday morning, reported the BBC.

    A UN official confirmed the attack to Reuters news agency, but did not provide further details.

  • Yemeni chief of staff ‘arrested’ by Houthi militants

    Houthi militants say they have “arrested” the chief of staff of Yemeni President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi, claiming the abduction took place in order to prevent the breakdown of an UN-brokered deal.

    Ahmed Awad bin Mubarak was in the centre of Yemen's capital Sanaa with two bodyguards, when his car was intercepted and he was abducted. No information is currently available on his whereabouts. The government say that Mubarak was kidnapped.

    The Houthi militants released a statement warning President Hadi of "a series of special measures" that they would undertake in order to prevent an agreement between the presidency and them "from being broken". The Houthis called the abduction an “arrest” and said that they were acting in the “national interest.”

  • Obama says will veto Congress bill on Iran sanctions
    Barack Obama and David Cameron, warned US congress that new sanctions on Iran could result in the collapse of nuclear negotiations with Iran.

    Outlining his intention to veto any sanctions bills passed by Congress, Mr Obama said that new US sanctions would give Iran an excuse to walk away from negotiations and blame Washington for the failure.
  • Hamas welcomes ICC investigation into Israel-Palestine war crimes
    The Palestinian militant group controlling the Gaza strip, Hamas, welcomed the International Criminal Court decision to launch in an inquiry into war crimes committed in Palestinian territories.

    The spokesperson for Hamas, Fawzi Barhoum, welcoming the decision on Saturday, said,
  • US lawsuit against United Nations over cholera outbreak dismissed

    A United States judge has dismissed a lawsuit against the United Nations (UN), which claimed that the international body bears responsibility for the deadly outbreak of cholera in Haiti.

    US district Judge J. Paul Oetken ruled that the UN charter gives the organisation immunity from legal action, stating that the UN had not waived any immunity.

    "Where such an express waiver is absent, the UN and [its operation in Haiti] are immune from suit," said Oetken in his judgement.

    The lawsuit had alleged that the UN had not screened peacekeepers that arrived in Haiti for cholera and that the peacekeepers were responsible for the poor sanitation and waste disposal practises that led to the outbreak, killing thousands. The claims have been backed by scientific studies, reported Al Jazeera.

    "The court's decision implies that the UN can operate with impunity," said lawyer Beatrice Lindstrom. "We don't think that is the law."

    "It essentially implies that there is nowhere in the world one can turn when the UN doesn’t comply with its legal obligations and when the UN refuses to provide justice,” added Lindstrom.

  • African Union to discuss multi-national force to tackle Boko Haram

    Members of the African Union are set to meet next week, to discuss setting up joint military action against Boko Haram in Nigeria.

    Ghana's President John Mahama called on African Union leaders to initiate a "specific plan of action” to "deal permanently" with the Islamist militant group, days after they were accused of massacring up to 2,000 people in one attack.

    Earlier this week, Amnesty International released satellite imagery showing the scale of the attack on the towns of Baga and Doron Baga, in what it termed the “deadliest massacre” by Boko Haram.

    "This has to end. We have to make this terror end," said Mahama. "We must find a way to act together to share information, to synchronise our strategies, to pool our resources in order to rid the entire African continent of terrorism.”

  • ICC starts war crimes investigation in Palestinian territory
    The International Criminal Court opened an inquiry into possible war crimes in Palestinian territory since June 2013.

    Prosecutors at the ICC said  that crimes committed since June 13 last year would be investigated with “full independence and impartiality,” in a statement made on Friday.

    “It is a legal matter now and we have faith in the court system, “ said the head of the Palestinian delegation in The Hague, Nabil Abuznaid.
  • US judge dismisses genocide lawsuit against Modi

    A United States judge has dismissed a court case filed against India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi, accusing him of carrying out “attempted genocide” during the deadly anti-Muslim Gujarat riots in 2002.

    The case, filed by The American Justice Centre in September was dismissed by US District Judge Analisa Torres, who stated Modi is entitled to immunity from US civil lawsuits as a sitting head of government.

  • US troops to train Syrian rebels

    The Pentagon is planning to send 400 troops and hundreds more supporting personnel to train rebels fighting the Islamic State in Syria.

    The personnel will be deployed in three countries around Syria in March, as part of US efforts to support rebels against IS.

    The announcement comes a few days after senior officials met with Syrian opposition leaders in Istanbul.

  • Kerry: Boko Haram attacks are 'nothing less' than crime against humanity

    The US Secretary of State, John Kerry said the killing of civilians in northeastern Nigeria by Boko Haram over recent days, was "nothing less" than a crime against humanity, reports VoA.

    Speaking a day after satellite images were released by Amnesty International, showing the destruction of buildings in two towns targetted by Boko Haram fighters, Mr Kerry said that the group was "one of the most evil and threatening terrorist entities on the planet today."

  • Hundreds of asylum seekers protest in Manus Island detention centre

    As many as 500 asylum seekers are on hunger strike in Manus Island detention centre and a further 20 of them have reportedly sewn their lips shut in protest at their living conditions, according to the latest reports.

    In another act of protest, an Egyptian Christian man swallowed razor blades and collapsed, reported the Guardian, as up to half of the detention centre’s population were refusing all food and water.

    One of those being detained told the Guardian,

    “Frustrated refugees are tired of being mistreated and not heard after 18 months in inhumane detention [and have] decided to act for the last time.”

  • US eases embargo on Cuba
    The United States announced new rules that ease sanctions on Cuba, opening up the country to expanded US travel, trade and financial activities.
  • Argentine prosecutor accuses president of diverting accountability for civilian bombing
    An Argentine prosecutor accused the president of orchestrating a cover up of Iran's responsibility for a bomb blast in a Jewish community centre that killed 85 people in Buenos Aires.

    The state prosecutor, Alberto Nisman, accused Cristina Fernandez of pushing to drop the criminal investigation into the 1994 bombing, to normalise relations with Iran and secure oil deals.

    Fernandez opened a 'truth commission' with Iran in 2013 to investigate the bombings, which was criticised by the Nisman, as a pact to deactivate arrest warrants and avoid prosecution. 
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