• Former Maldives President arrested

    The former Maldives president, Mohamed Nasheed was arrested on Tuesday by police, ten days after he left the Indian High Commission where he had fled to avoid arrest.

    Police made the arrest following a court order issued after Nasheed missed a court appearance on 10th February. He has been accused of illegally detaining a judge during the final days of his presidency.

  • US pushes for tough North Korea sanctions

    The US has tabled a resolution at the UN Security Council, calling for sanctions on North Korean officials and financial transactions.

  • Venezuelan President, Hugo Chavez, dies

    Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez died on Tuesday evening, losing a two-year battle to cancer.

    Born in 1954 and described as the vanguard of "21st Century Socialism", Chavez took office in 1999 and was re-elected for a six-year term in October 2012.

    Chavez named his Vice-Preisdent Nicolas Maduro as his preferred successor in December 2012.

  • Israel launches Palestinian only bus routes say campaigners

    Israel launched two Palestinian only bus routes in the West Bank on Monday, a move which has been criticised as racist. (See here)

  • £3 and an apology - Torture victim's demands from British govt
     A Libyan torture victim has demanded an unreserved apology and a token payment of £3 from the British government, for their alleged role in his kidnap to Libya where he claims he was tortured under the Gaddafi regime.

    Abdel Hakim Belhaj, a Libyan revolutionary commander turned politician, made his offering challenging British government claims that a new secret courts had to be introduced to prevent large payouts, after a £2.2 million was paid to another dissident.

    Belhaj is demanding a pound each from the British government, former Foreign Secretary Jack Straw and Sir Mark Allen, former head of counter-terrorism at MI6.

    In a letter published in the Independent, Belhaj says,

    "Various media reports I have seen suggest that our motive for bringing this case is to enrich ourselves. I wish to lay this misconception to rest."

    "But we have come to court in Britain because we believe your courts can deliver justice. We are primarily bringing this claim to secure a public judgment, recognising the wrongs we have suffered.

    "I have seen press reports of ministers seeking to justify secret trials on the basis that the government has to pay large settlements to protect national security. You can now settle this case at little cost to the UK taxpayer. There will be no harm to the security of the British people for the government and Messrs Straw and Allen to accept their responsibility, and apologise to me and my wife."

  • Nuclear watchdog demands Iran access

    The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency has called for access to Iran’s Parchin military complex “without further delay”.

    Director general Yukiya Amano said to the IAEA’s governing board:

  • Syrian troops killed in Iraq ambush

    42 Syrian soldiers seeking refuge in Iraq were killed in an ambush, attributed to the al-Qaeda, on Monday.

    The ambush occured when the soldiers were being escorted back to Syria.

    Seven Iraqi police officers were also killed.

  • UN considers temporary lift of Somalia arms embargo
    The United Nations Security Council is considering lifting a longstanding arms embargo on the Somali government to allow it to combat Islamist fighters, a draft resolution has suggested.
    The Somalia government has asked for the arms embargo to be lifted with the backing of the United States, who has been pushing for the embargo to be lifted.
  • Britain may give arms to Syrian rebels – Hague

    British Foreign Secretary William Hague has said that arming Syrian rebels cannot be ruled out.

    Hague’s comment came after Syrian president Bashar al-Assad attacked Britain in an interview with the Sunday Times.

  • US pledges $450m to Egypt

    The US has pledged $450 million to Egypt in ordering to help improve the fragile Egyptian economy.

    The US Secretary of State, John Kerry, who is currently visiting Egypt, announced the assistance whilst stressing the need for "more hard work".

  • Cambodia tribunal ruling on sexual violence welcomed

    A United Nations official has welcomed a ruling in Cambodia's genocide tribunal that will allow crimes of sexual violence committed during the Khmer Rouge regime to be tried.

  • Alleged rape victim freed in Somalia, journalist jailed

    A Somalian court has dropped charges against a woman sentenced for alleging she was raped by security forces.

    The woman was originally given a one-year jail sentence, alongside Abdiaziz Abdinur, the journalist who had interviewed her about her ordeal, for 'falsely accusing a government body of committing a crime that damages state security.'

  • Kerry in Egypt: political consensus needed for IMF deal

    The US Secretary of State John Kerry will urge the the need for political consensus in order to reach an IMF loan, reports Reuters citing a senior US official.

  • British Parliament recognises Kurdish genocide
    The British Parliament unanimously chose to officially recognise the campaign of killing of Kurds in Iraq as a genocide this week, a decision hailed by Kurdistan Regional Government Prime Minister Nechervan Barzani.

    The decision was taken by the British House of Commons after a year long campaign by activists, which involved gathering 28,000 signatures for a petition.
  • Nato apologises for boys’ deaths

    The International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), led by Nato, has apologised for killing two Afghan boys, who were mistaken for insurgents.

    A helicopter opened fire on the boys, who were herding cattle in Uruzgan province in central Afghanistan.

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