• Anger over Suu Kyi's report

    An inquiry panel headed by Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi has sparked anger after failing to punish police for injuring protesters and suggesting that a controversial copper mine be kept open.

    Thein Than Oo of the Upper Burma Lawyers Network said:

  • Seven foreign hostages likely killed in Nigeria

    Seven hostages taken by Nigerian militants are thought to be dead.

    The group Ansaru claimed responsibility for the killings as a response to reports of British warplanes in the area. The seven included one Briton, a Greek, an Italian and four Lebanese hostages.

    The UK's Foreign Secretary William Hague condemned the 'cold-blooded' murders saying:

  • Syrian govt using militias for mass killings - UN

    The Syrian government is using local militia groups, known an Popular committees to carry out mass killings, said the UN Commission of Inquiry on Monday.

    Presenting its findings to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, the Commission said:

  • Bomb blast in Northern Ireland

    After careful investigation, police have stated that the Bomb attack on officers in Northern Belfast last Saturday, was a “sophisticated device with the intent to kill.”

  • ICC drops charges against Kenyatta's co-accused

    A case against a man accused of crimes against humanity, alongisde Kenya's Kenyatta, at the International Criminal Court collapsed on Monday.

    Kenyatta and former civil servant Francis Mathaura were charged of perpetrating violence that led to the killing of 1200 and the displacement of over 100,000 following the 2007 election.

  • Former Argentine president convicted over arms deals

    Argentina’s ex-president Carlos Menem has been convicted by a court in Buenos Aires for selling arms to Croatia and Ecuador in the 90s.

    He was found guilty of authorising shipments to the countries, although he denied knowing that the arms were destined for those countries.

  • Tibetans mark uprising anniversary with protests

    Tibetans exiled across Asia have marked the 54th anniversary of the failed 1959 uprising against China with protests in India, Taiwan and Nepal.

    The Prime Minister of the India-based Tibetan Government in Exile, Lobsang Sangay, stated that those who dare to speak out inside Tibet

  • Saudi human rights activists sentenced to 10 years imprisonment

    A court in Saudi Arabia sentenced two well-known human rights activists to at least ten years in prison, finding them guilty of offences that included sedition and providing false information to foreign media.

  • Kurds welcome decision to recognise genocide
    The President of the semi-autonomous Kurdish region in Iraq has welcomed a decision made in the British parliament last week to recognise the genocide of Kurds by the Iraqi government under Saddam Hussein.

    President of Iraq's semi-autonomous northern Kurdish region Masoud Barzani’s full statement has been republished below.
    "The British parliament last week formally recognised the genocide in Iraqi Kurdistan. We are pleased that the parliament took this decision and did so after an impassioned debate by several MPs, some of whom are old friends of Kurdistan, and with no opposition to the motion.

    We appreciate that the British parliament also said it will encourage governments, the European Union and the United Nations to do the same. This underlines Britain’s role as a leading player in the international community and we hope that it will follow up on this decision. By doing so it will be sending a clear message to all dictators and oppressors.

    Formal recognition is a step towards justice for all those who suffered in the decades-long campaign of death against the Kurdish people. It is acknowledgement of the suffering of the widows and the children left behind without knowing what happened to their loved ones or even where their remains lie. It took over two decades for some of the perpetrators to be brought to justice by the Iraqi courts.
  • UN hostages freed

    A group of UN observers, who were abducted by a Syrian rebel group, has arrived in Jordan after their earlier release.

    A UN team, sent to collect the 21 hostages from inside Syria, couldn’t reach the area due to government shelling.

    The rebels themselves then transported the hostages to the Jordanian border, and were taken to the capital Amman.

  • South Sudan and Sudan sign security agreement

    South Sudan and Sudan signed a security agreement on Friday, pledging to withdraw their respective military troops from the demilitarised zone in between the two states, later this month.

    The Sudan Defence Minister, Lt. Gen. Abdal-Rahim Mohamed Hussein, said: "We will be ... committed, definitely, to implement (the agreement) word-by-word and step-by-step,"

  • UN sets DRC ‘army rape’ ultimatum

    The United Nations has given the Democratic Republic of Congo until the end of March to act against two units of the Congolese army, accused of committing mass rapes.

    The UN’s peace force has said it will stop working with the units if their demands aren’t met.

  • Thousands attend Chavez funeral

    Thousands of mourners joined leaders from around the world to pay their respects to the late Venezuelan leader, Hugo Chavez, during his state funeral that took place on Friday in Caracas.

  • Kenyatta wins elections

    Kenya’s Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta appears to have won the presidential election by the tightest of margins.

    The counting of votes found that Kenyatta won 50.03% of the vote, just 4,109 votes above the threshold required for an outright victory.

  • Canada threatens to cut Palestinian aid

    Canada’s Foreign Minister, John Baird, told the North American Israel lobby group, that any Palestinian Authority (PA) legal action against Israel at the International Criminal Court would result in his country blocking aid payments to Palestine.

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