WORLD NEWS

World News

Latest news from and about the homeland

  Three United Nations (UN) experts called for a full and independent investigation into the killing of three Lebanese journalists by Israel last week, which they described as ‘another attack on press freedom by Israeli forces.’ On March 28, Israeli forces killed Al Mayadeen reporter Fatima Ftouni, her brother and cameraman Mohamed Ftouni, and Al Manar TV reporter Ali Shoeib as they were…

Obama visits Argentine 'Dirty War' memorial

US President Barack Obama visited a memorial commemorating victims of Argentina's military dictatorship, during his visit to the country.

The US is widely believed to have been involved in the coup which led to the dictatorship, under which an estimated 30,000 people were killed by the state.

Promising that the US would release more secret files to reveal its role in the 1976 coup, Mr Obama said the US was "too slow to stand up for human rights" in Argentina.

Ukraine extends sanctions on Russia

 Ukraine extended its sanctions lust against Russia to include people and institutions involved in the detention of Ukrainian citizens.

The Ukrainian Security and Defence Council announcement came after Russia sentenced Ukrainian pilot Nadezhda Savchenko to 22 years in prison on Friday.

Syrian opposition ready for peace talks

The Syrian opposition on Thursday said an adequate basis had been set for ‘substantive’ peace talks when the parties meet at the UN later next month.

The opposition delegate Basma Kodmani, speaking after meeting the UN Special Envoy Staffan de Misturea, said,

“Out of these two weeks we come out with feeling that we have perhaps laid the basis for substantive talks in the next round.”

The UN special envoy said on Thursday that the target start date for the talks would be April 9.

South Sudan to face UN commission on rights abuses

An inquiry to investigate human rights abuses in South Sudan has been set up by the UN Human Rights Council during its 31st sitting in Geneva this month.

The three-member commission, the proposal of which was initiated by the US and Albania, will have a renewable one-year mandate.

South Sudan said it would cooperate with the commission, which will look at gang rapes and attacks on civilians, which may constitute war crimes.

ICC convicts Congolese politician of war crimes

The International Criminal Court has convicted Congolese politician Jean-Pierre Bemba of war crimes and crimes against humanity this week. The court held him responsible for a devastating campaign of rape, murder and torture in the Central African Republic in 2002 and 2003. 

The three-judge panel convicted Mr Bemba of murder and pillaging, and defined the large-scale rape by his soldiers as a crime against humanity and as a war crime.

‘The United Nations is failing’

The United Nations assistant secretary general for field support, who quit his job earlier this month, said that the organisation “is failing” and “needs a leader genuinely committed to reform”.

Anthony Banbury detailed “colossal mismanagement” in the world body, including bureaucracy that he described as “blur of Orwellian admonitions and Carrollian logic that govern the place”.

“If you locked a team of evil geniuses in a laboratory, they could not design a bureaucracy so maddeningly complex, requiring so much effort but in the end incapable of delivering the intended result,” he said. “The system is a black hole into which disappear countless tax dollars and human aspirations, never to be seen again.”

The result of this was “minimal accountability,” he continued. Citing the example of a “manifestly incompetent” chief-of-staff of a large peacekeeping mission, Mr Banbury said “many have tried to get rid of him, but short of a serious crime, it is virtually impossible to fire someone in the United Nations”.

Former Bosnian Serb leader convicted for genocide by UN court

The former Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic has been sentenced to 40 years in prison after being convicted for genocide and war crimes in the 1992-95 Bosnian war.

United Nations judges in The Hague found Mr Karadzic to be guilty of 10 of 11 charges including genocide.

Mr Karadzic continued to deny charges, alleging that any atrocities committed were the actions of rogue individuals and not that of forces under his command. The former leader’s lawyer Peter Robinson, said he would appeal the decision.

The former leader was the only person with the power to intervene and protect those being killed during the massacres.

Kurdish federal proposal is ‘an idea worth building on’ – NYT

The declaration of a federal region in northern Syria by Kurdish groups “could offer a model for decentralized governance in a federated Syria,” said the New York Times this week.

In an editorial entitled ‘The Kurds’ Push for Self-Rule in Syria’, it said “the Kurds are an ethnic group of perhaps 35 million in Syria, Iraq, Iran and Turkey, and they have long argued that they are the world’s largest ethnic group without a state”.

“They have suffered persecution and had their aspirations for self-governance crushed,” continued the New York Times, noting that “the American invasion of Iraq created an opportunity for Kurds living there to establish a semiautonomous region in northern Iraq, which has been reasonably successful”.

The editorial went on to conclude:

“The Syrian Kurds say they are not seeking total independence, only a democratic region in which they, Arabs and other ethnic groups can live together. This may be an idea worth building on as part of a political solution to end the war and the slaughter of civilians.”

Deadly explosions hit Brussels airport and metro

Explosions have gone off at Zaventem airport in Brussels this morning and at the city’s metro station at Maelbeek, with several people feared dead.

At least one person has been reported dead, though Belgian broadcaster VRT has put the number killed at 13 so far with a further 35 people injured.

Though the source of the blasts remains unclear, Belgium has raised its terror threat to the highest level. The attack comes just days after the arrest of Salah Abdeslam, the main suspect in the Paris attacks who had been on the run since November.

President Obama begins historic Cuba visit

US President Barack Obama has begun his visit to Cuba, becoming the first American president to do so in 88 years.

After meeting with the government and holding bilateral discussions, the President will meet with Cuban civil society, including human rights activists.

On human rights, the White House had previously written: