• Syrian rebel defends eating heart of dead soldier

    A anti-Assad fighter has defended a video of him purportedly cutting out and eating the organs of a dead Syrian soldier.

    The video, which had surfaced earlier this week, was criticized by Human Rights Watch, who said,

  • Commision of Inquiry appointed to investigate DPRK abuses

    The United Nations Human Rights Council, announcedlast week the appointment of a commission of inquiry to investigate alleged  “systematic, widespread and grave violations of human rights” in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK).

  • Britain, US pledge to strengthen Syrian opposition

    The UK and the US have pledged to help strengthen the moderate opposition in Syria and create a transitional body to replace President Bashar al-Assad.

    British Prime Minister David Cameron said in Washington that there was an "urgent window of opportunity before the worst fears are realised".

  • UN rights chief welcomes genocide conviction

    The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, welcomed the conviction of former Guatemalan dictator Efraín Ríos Montt for crimes against humanity and genocide, for which he was sentenced to 80 years in prison earlier this week.

    Speaking on the conviction, Pillay said,

    “Guatemala has made history by becoming the first country in the world to convict a former head of state for genocide in its own national court,”

    I salute the victims, relatives and survivors whose courage and perseverance made this possible against all odds, as well as the lawyers, prosecutors and judges who carried out their duties under exceptionally difficult circumstances in the face of serious threats and intimidation.”

    The High Commissioner added that,

    “Despite all the obstacles, interruptions and numerous legal challenges which slowed down the trial, Guatemala has shown the world, and even more importantly its own people, that it is possible to address past crimes and bring justice,”

    This historic verdict shows that no one is above the law, and that Guatemala’s institutions have the strength and solidity to carry this through – provided there is the will to do so.”

    “Guatemala can now truly begin to heal the wounds of the past, as the suffering of so many people has been formally recognised,”

  • Filipino peacekeepers released

    The four peacekeepers from the Philippines who had been abducted by Syrian rebels in the Golan Heights have been released.

    Filipino army spokesperson Brigadier General Domingo Tutaan told AFP said that the soldiers are in good health.

  • Over 3000 Serbs protest against Kosovo deal

    Over 3000 Serbs protested against on Friday in Belgrade against the deal normalising relations with Kosovo, reports the Sacremental Bee and RT.

    See RT for photographs.

  • Montt supporters protest against genocide verdict

    Supporters of former Guatemalan dictator Efraín Ríos Montt protested outside the prison where he is being held, after he was found guilty of crimes against humanity and genocide earlier this week.

  • New Pakistani prime minister pledges better relations with the U.S

    A record breaking turnout in Pakistan’s elections resulted in the former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, topping the polls, to take power from the military that first ousted him in 1999.

  • Montt convicted of genocide
    Former Guatemalan dictator Efraín Ríos Montt has been found guilty of genocide and crimes against humanity by a Guatemalan court on Friday and sentenced to 80 years imprisonment.

    The sentence marks the first time a former head of state has been convicted of genocide inside his or her country.

    Judge Yasmin Barrios announced the sentence to cheers of “justice, justice!” inside and outside of the courtroom, packed full of survivors and relatives from Montt’s time in office.

    Barrios stated in her sentencing,
    "We are convinced that the acts the Ixil suffered constitute the crime of genocide… He had full knowledge of everything that was happening and did not stop it,"
    "The Ixils were considered public enemies of the state and were also victims of racism, considered an inferior race,"
    "The violent acts against the Ixils were not spontaneous. They were planned beforehand."
    The verdict was praised by human rights groups, including Human Rights Watch, with their Americas director José Miguel Vivanco stating that the conviction,

    sends a powerful message to Guatemala and the world that nobody, not even a former head of state, is above the law when it comes to committing genocide”.
  • Tutu will not vote ANC anymore, criticises foreign policy

    Nobel Peace Prize winner Archbishop Desmond Tutu has announced that he will no longer vote for the African National Congress.

    "The ANC was very good at leading us in the struggle to be free from oppression," Archbishop Tutu wrote in an opinion for South Africa’s Mail & Guardian.

  • UN intervention brigade arrives in Congo
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    The initial phase of the United Nations intervention brigade arrived in eastern Congo today, following an United Nations Security Council resolution in March that called for a peacekeeping force.

  • Pakistan expels NYT reporter on election eve

    A reporter with The New York Times was expelled from Pakistan by the country's Interior Ministry on Friday, said NYT.

  • Bangladeshi Islamist sentenced to death for genocide

    A Bangladeshi Islamist was sentenced to death on Thursday, charged with orchestrating the killing of 120 farmers during the 1971 war of independence.

    The war crimes tribunal found the 61-year-old Kamaruzzman guilty of genocide, torture, abduction, and crimes against humanity.

  • Philippines want Golan Heights pull-out

    The Filipino foreign minister Albert del Rosario said that he wants to pull out its UN peacekeepers from the Israeli occupied Golan Heights, after four members of its forces were kidnapped by Syrian rebels.

    "The people that abducted our peacekeepers were actually under siege and they are using our people to get themselves out of the situation they find themselves in. That thing is not for us,"

  • Former Guatemalan dictator denies genocide

    Efraín Ríos Montt , the former Guatemalan dictator currently on trial facing charges of genocide and crimes against humanity has denied all charges in his closing statement.

    In an hour long rebuttal, Montt stated,

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