The Croatian government last week announced that it had spent over 3 million euros in the country’s genocide prosecution against Serbia at the International Court of Justice in The Hague, reports BalkanInsight.
World leaders gathered in Normandy, France on Friday to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Normandy landings.
More famously known as D-Day, the landings began the Allied invasion of Nazi-occupied Europe and eventually led to the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War 2.
Both sides of the conflict in the Central African Republic are responsible for war crimes and crimes against humanity, found a United Nations preliminary Commission of Inquiry report.
The report stressed that, "the displacement of Muslims affected by whatever party so far is a matter of protection and the preservation of human life, not a matter of ethnic cleansing.”
In response to a Palestinian unity government being sworn in this week, Israel has announced the construction of almost 1,500 new homes in various settlements, in a move that has received international condemnation.
Ruling Syrian President Bashar al-Assad was announced the winner of the much criticised Syrian elections on Wednesday, taking 88.7% of the vote and securing a third term in office, as fighting continued in many parts of the country.
Opposition controlled areas did not see any voting, yet Syria's constitutional court put the turnout at 73.42%. The two other men on the ticket, who received only 4.3% and 3.2% of the vote, were dismissed by the opposition, claiming they were token candidates who provided no real alternative to the Assad regime.
The elections were also slammed by US Secretary of State John Kerry, who said, “The elections are non-elections. A great big zero”. Speaking in Lebanon, he went on to add, "You can't have an election where millions of your people don't even have an ability to vote... Nothing has changed between the day before the election and after”.
He was joined by the European Union in his criticism who stated it was not "a genuinely democratic vote".
See more minute by minute tweets of the events of June 4th 1989 @prchovanec
Tens of thousands of people gathered in Hong Kong to mark the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre today, whilst Chinese authorities silenced all mention of the pro-democracy protests, that resulted in a military crackdown killing hundreds.
Organisers stated that 180,000 people gathered in Hong Kong, as thousands of candles were lit to mark the massacre, alongside events held in Taiwan and around the globe.
Pro-democracy activists alongside Tamil Solidarity mark the massacre in London. Photograph: Tamil Solidarity
The White House also released a statement saying, the United States “continues to honor the memories of those who gave their lives in and around Tiananmen Square and throughout China, and we call on Chinese authorities to account for those killed, detained, or missing in connection with the events surrounding June 4, 1989.”
In mainland China though, the government cracked down in the weeks leading up to the massacre, where it is still a taboo topic. Lawyers, journalists and activists were reportedly detained while international news reports were censored and internet searches blocked.
Security officials routinely gang rape women in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) prisons as punishment for their political activities, said UK- based charity, Freedom From Torture.
The report documented testimonies from 34 survivors who were tortured and raped by state actors due to involvement in political and rights organisations.
The Colombian government and rebel FARC group, resumed a second round of peace negotiations whilst calling on the public to support the peace process, reports the Agence France Presse (AFP).