• Dutch journalist arrested in Turkey

    A Dutch journalist who was covering clashes between Kurds and Turkish police was was arrested in the country's southeast.

    Frederike Geerdink was previously arrested in January on charges of aiding Kurdish militants, but was acquitted and released.

    In an interview after her release, the journalist explained why she had decided to remain in Turkey.

  • Genocide accusations filed against Chad’s president
    A Senegalese tribunal overseeing the case against the former president of Chad confirmed that it has filed accusations of genocide against Chad's current president Idriss Deby.

    The Extraordinary African Chambers confirmed last week that a case had been filed against Mr Deby but would not comment any further.

    Lawyer Mbaye Jacques Ndiaye said that Mr Deby, who overthrew Hissene Habre in 1990, has been accused of "genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and torture, at the initiative of some victims".

    "President Deby personally committed wrongdoing -- acts of torture. He personally killed individuals. These are people who were tortured, who were executed, burned alive and thrown to wild animals," he added.
  • Cuba allows return of doctors who fled

    The Cuban government says it will welcome back doctors who deserted while working on government programmes in other countries.

    The ministry of health says the doctors will be guaranteed a job and not receive punishment.

    Over 25,000 doctors are currently working on government-backed projects in other countries.

  • US readies new sanctions to push South Sudan peace process

     The United States is preparing a new UN sanctions list for South Sudan after a ceasefire failed to take hold under a new peace accord aimed at ending the 20-month war.

  • US readies new sanctions to push Soth Sudan peace process

     The United States is preparing a new UN sanctions list for South Sudan after a ceasefire failed to take hold under a new peace accord aimed at ending the 20-month war.

  • ‘Advocating genocide’ to be criminalised in Australia

    The Australian government announced that “advocacy of genocide” would now be criminalised, under a series of new anti-terrorism legislation to be passed later this year.

    Announcing the legislation, Australia’s attorney general George Brandis said:

  • Swedish citizen charged over Rwandan genocide

    Swedish prosecutors have charged a man over his alleged role in the 1994 Rwandan genocide.

    The 60 year old suspect has not yet been named, but reportedly held a low level leadership role during the killings. If he is convicted, he would be the second person in Sweden to be found guilty of genocide, after another man was sentenced to life in prison in 2013 for his role in the Rwandan genocide.

  • India cancels Greenpeace donation licence

    The Indian government has cancelled a licence which allows Greenpeace India to receive donations from abroad, according to the organisation which campaigns for the environment.

    "It is yet another attempt to silence campaigns for a more sustainable future and transparency in public processes," Greenpeace India said in a statement released late on Thursday.

  • I am not a killer' - Congo rebel leader

    Notorious Congolese rebel leader General Bosco Ntaganda, known as 'The Terminator', has told the International Criminal Court that he never attacked civilians, during his trial at The Hague.

    "I have been described as 'The Terminator', as an infamous killer, but that is not me,'' Gen Ntaganda said on the second day of his trial, the Associated Press news agency reports. 

    "I have never attacked civilians,'' he claimed during a nine-minute speech to the court. "I have always protected them.''

    Sarah Pellet, a lawyer representing 297 former child soldiers, said young girls were gang-raped and forced to become the 'wives' of senior commanders.

  • Turkey: Two journalists released, one remains in custody

    Two British journalists with Vice News were released from Turkish custody on Thursday, however Iraqi journalist Mohammed Ismael Rasool remains in custody.

    Jake Hanrahan and cameraman Philip Pendlebury were arrested in the Kurdish region near Diyarbakir last week and charged with "working on behalf of a terrorist organisation".

  • Turkey’s minister to EU says Armenian killings were genocide

    Turkey’s envoy to the European Union stated that the killing of over a million Armenians more than a century ago by the Ottoman Empire was a genocide.

    Ali Haydar Konca, a parliamentarian with the Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) said:

  • ICC trial: ‘Terminator’ pleads not guilty

    The former Congolese rebel leader Bosco ‘The Terminator’ Ntaganda has pleaded not guilty on the first day of his trial at the International Criminal Court in The Hague.

  • Red Cross workers shot dead in Yemen
    The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said that two of its workers were shot dead in the Amran region of northern Yemen on Wednesday.

    The staff had been travelling in a convoy when they were attacked, the aid agency said.

    "The ICRC condemns in the strongest possible terms what appears to have been the deliberate targeting of our staff," said the head of the ICRC delegation in Yemen, Antoine Grand.

    "Our thoughts and sympathy are with the families and loved ones of our colleagues."

  • Former ICC chief prosecutor calls for recognition of Yazidi genocide
    The former chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Court (ICC) pushed for the recognition of the persecution of the Yazidi community as an “ongoing genocide”.
  • Wall Street and oil prices drop as data reveals contraction in China manufacturing market
    Wall Street opened with a sharp downturn on Tuesday after newly released official data revealed that China’s manufacturing sector had shrank at its fastest pace in three years, reports Reuters.
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