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…

Israel indicts soldiers for crimes committed in Gaza

Three soldiers with the Israeli Defense Force have been indicted for looting, allegedly committed the violence in Gaza last year, the Los Angeles Times reported.

According to a statement from the Military Advocate General, two soldiers were charged with looting around $600 from a Palestinian house in the Gaza neighborhood of Shajaiyeh and a third soldier was charged with aiding and abetting the theft.

The soldiers were reported to military police by the soldiers' commander last summer.

The IDF is reviewing over 120 cases of alleged violations of humanitarian law in Gaza, of which so far 19 are currently being investigated further. Several of the cases concern incidents in which Israeli military operations caused multiple civilian fatalities, the LA Times said.

FARC militants blame Colombian government for delayed peace-talks

FARC militants in Colombia, rejected the Colombian government’s request to accelerate peace talks on Friday.

The Colombian president, Juan Manuel Santos, repeatedly urged a swift end to peace talks, which have taken place in Havana over the last two and a half years.

However in an open letter to Mr Santos on Friday, the FARC leadership blamed the Colombian government for the unnecessary delays in the process, reports Reuters.

FARC militants killed 11 Colombian soldiers in an attack, which they called a form of self-defence.

Pakistan prime minister condemns activist killing, orders immediate investigation

 The prime minister of Pakistan, Nawaz Sharif, condemned the killing of the leading human rights activist Sabeen Mehmud.

Mr Sharif, in a statement made on Saturday, expressing his condolences, ordered an immediate investigation into the killing, reports the BBC.

Though no group has claimed responsibility for the killing, Ms Mehmud had been subject to death threats before she spoke at an event on the alleged torture of Balochi political activists by the Pakistani military.

Pakistani human rights activist gunned down in Karachi

A leading Pakistani human rights activist has been shot dead in Karachi, shortly after hosting an event detailing torture in Balochistan.

Sabeen Mehmud, director of the charity The Second Floor (T2F), was killed as gunmen opened fire on her vehicle leaving a seminar she hosted on torture in Balochistan. Her mother, who was also in the car, was injured in the attack.

India puts Ford Foundation on security watch list

The Indian government placed the philanthropic organisation, the Ford Foundation, on a national securty watch list, due to its past/ funding of an NGO which recently pushed for the prosecution of Prime Minister Narendra Modi over his role in the massacre of Muslims in Gujarat on 2002.

The home affairs ministry on Thursday sent a letter to the Reserve Bank of India, asking the central bank to place the Ford Foundation on a watch list to ensure that the funds it distributes are used "for bona fide welfare activities without compromising on concerns for national interest and security".

The move means the organisation can now only disburse funds after clearance from the home affairs ministry.

Vaccine against malaria could be available in months

The final stages of clinical trials of a vaccine against malaria are ongoing, which, if successful, could help immunise millions of children from the disease which can be deadly.

However tests conducted on 16,000 children in Burkina Faso, Gabon, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique and Tanzania, showed that booster doses were not as effective as the initial dose, and immunisation waned over time.

Prof Brian Greenwood, study author and professor of clinical tropical medicine at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said to the BBC he was "a little disappointed" by the results.

"I hoped the vaccine would be more effective, but we were never going to end up with the success seen in measles vaccines with 97% efficacy."

Situation in Iraq and Syria ‘utterly unsustainable’ says UN High Commissioner for Refugees

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees said the situation in Iraq and Syria was “utterly unsustainable” and that unless urgent action was taken “things risk getting even worse".

In an address to the UN Security Council In New York, High Commissioner António Guterres called the situation in the Middle East “a cancer that risks spreading and metastasizing”. “If things continue this way, we could see future developments spin out of control, independently of our will and with increasingly dangerous global consequences," he warned.

"We have to recognize the increasingly protracted nature of this refugee crisis,” added Mr Guterres, as he called for increased humanitarian aid, as well as “stopping the horrific loss of life in the Mediterranean”.

However, Mr Guterres warned that the situation could deteriorate further, saying, “after Iraq became so dramatically engulfed in the Syrian conflict with the attacks on Mosul and Tikrit last year, I do not know where the next disrupting shock will take place.” “I only know that it will come, and that things risk getting even worse," he added.

He was joined by UNHCR Special Envoy Angelina Jolie Pitt, who said “it is time for the Security Council to work as one to end the conflict, and reach a settlement that also brings justice and accountability for the Syrian people."

Germany recognises Armenian genocide by attending 100 year memorial service

Turkey’s biggest trade partner, Germany, recognised the Armenian genocide for the first time by attending the 100 year memorial ceremony amidst several other foreign leaders, on Friday.

French and Russian presidents, Francois Hollande and Vladimir Putin were also present at the memorial service, which involved placing flowers at a hilltop memorial near the Armenian capital of Yerevan, reports Reuters.

Germany’s parliament this week approved a resolution that acknowledged the Armenian genocide.

Kadyrov warns Russia

Chechen president Ramzan Kadyrov has ordered his troops to fire at Russian security forces, if they do not have permission to be there, after the killing of a man in Grozny by troops from Russia's Stavropol region.

Mr Kadyrov, who took charge of the republic in southern Russia with the support of Moscow in 2007, maintains his own security forces in Chechnya.

"I would like to officially state: Open fire if someone from Moscow or Stavropol, it doesn't matter, appears on your turf without your knowledge,'' Mr Kadyrov told Chechen security officials. "We have to be reckoned with."

UN court for Rwandan genocide has final hearing

The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) held its final hearing on Wednesday, concluding more than 20 years of work indicting those responsible for the 1994 genocide, which saw the deaths of more than 800,000 people.

Based in Tanzania, the ICTR has indicted 93 people throughout its history, becoming the first international tribunal to deliver verdicts in relation to genocide and the first to recognise rape as a means to carrying out genocide, reports the BBC.

As the final hearing concludes, 61 defendants have been convicted and 14 acquitted by the court. Other suspects have been tried by different courts, remain at large or have since died.

The final hearing was an appeal from former women's minister Pauline Nyiramasuhuko, who was the first woman to be found guilty of genocide by an international tribunal, when she was convicted in 2011.