• Srebrenica suspect loses Israeli extradition appeal

    A man accused of partaking in the Srebrenica massacre has lost his appeal against an extradition to Bosnia, the first time a genocide suspect has been liable for eviction in Israel.

  • Israel approves 3,000 settler homes

    The Israeli government has approved the building of 3,000 homes for Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.

    The move comes less than a day after a vote at the UN General Assembly granted Palestine non-member observer status.

  • UK suspends £21 million aid to Rwanda

    The UK has stopped £21m worth of aid to Rwanda, over its alleged support for rebels fighting the army of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

    International Development Secretary Justine Greening said she stopped the payment to Kigali because President Paul Kagame has broken agreements.

  • Guangcheng’s nephew sentenced

    The nephew of Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng has been jailed for three years for assaulting a police officer.

    Chen Kegui was detained by police during a scuffle when police raided homes of Gunagcheng’s relatives.

  • Ban supports AU Mali mission

    The UN’s Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has said that the UN could authorise a 3,300 strong African Union mission to support Mali’s military against rebels in the north of the country.

    He said it could "restore the unity and territorial integrity of Mali and reduce the threats posed by terrorist and affiliated groups and transnational organised crime".

  • Palestine wins non-member observer state status at UN

    The United Nations general Assembly has voted to grant Palestine non-member observer state status.

    The vote has seen Palestine's position at the UN enhanced from "permanent observer" to "non-member observer state" status, with the assembly voting 138-9 in favour, with 41 nations abstaining.

    President of the Palestinian Liberation Organisation,Mahmoud Abbas, who arrived to a standing ovation at the UN said,

    "Palestine has come to the United Nations because it believes in peace and because its people are in desperate need of peace,"

    "The international community is now the last chance to save the two-state solution. We did not come here to complicate the peace process. The moment has arrived for the world to say clearly: enough Israeli aggression, settlements and occupation."

    "Sixty-five years ago on this day, the United Nations General Assembly adopted resolution 181, which partitioned the land of historic Palestine into two states and became the birth certificate for Israel... The General Assembly is called upon today to issue a birth certificate of the reality of the State of Palestine".

    Meanwhile, the Israeli ambassador to the UN, Ron Prosor, said "the only way to reach peace is through agreements" between the two parties, slamming the vote. He commented,

    "No decision by the UN can break the 4,000-year-old bond between the people of Israel and the land of Israel."

  • Burmese riot police attack protestors

    The Burmese riot police dispersed thousands of protestors using phosphorus shells, tear-gas and water cannons, claimed activists and local media sources.

    The villagers were protesting against a vast copper mining project that is currently underway.

    Activists on the ground said that at least 50 people were injured. Local media reported the use of ‘phosphurous bombs’.

    Describing the brutal attack of the riot police, student activist, Myo Thant said,

    “The stuff from these canisters got caught on the clothes and bodies of the victims. When they shook their robes to remove this stuff, fire started.”

  • UK likely to abstain on Palestine UN vote – Hague

    The British Foreign Secretary William Hague has said that the UK will not vote against Palestinian non-member observer status at the UN.

    However, Mr Hague demanded assurances from the Palestinians that they would enter talks without setting conditions and that Palestine will not seek membership of the International Criminal Court.

  • EU support for Palestinian UN bid

    Several EU nations have vowed to support the Palestinian bid for UN recognition of statehood.

    States include: Austria, Denmark, Norway, Finland, France, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Luxembourg, Malta, Portugal, Spain and Switzerland.

    Reports indicate the UK is likely to abstain, whilst Germany has made clear it will not support it.

     

  • Colombia pulls out of recognising ICJ
    The Colombian government has announced its decision to cease recognising the jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice based at The Hague.

    The decision comes after the court redrew maritime borders, reducing an expanse of sea that the country claims in favour of Nicaragua.

    President Juan Manuel Santos commented,
  • Palestinian UN bid supported by France

    The French foreign minister Laurent Fabius has confirmed that france will vote in support of Palestine’s bid to become a non-member state at the United Nations General Assembly.

    "You know that for years and years France's consistent position has been the recognition of the Palestinian state," Fabius said to the lower house of parliament.

  • Students injured as Tibetans protest after self-immolations
    20 Tibetan students were sent to hospital, with at least 5 in critical condition, after Chinese security forces put down a large protest on Monday, according to reports.
  • Papuan rebels kill police

    Unidentified gunmen, thought to be separatist rebels, have attacked a police station in Indonesia’s Papua province.

    Three policemen were killed when dozens of gunmen attacked the station and set it alight.

    Indonesian security forces have been increasing security in anticipation of the independence declaration anniversary coming up on December 1.

  • Spain rejects ETA talks offer

    The Spanish government has said it would not enter talks with Basque separatist group ETA, after the group offered to hold discussions to bring about a “definitive end” to its armed struggle.

    The country’s interior minister Jorge Fernandez Diaz said that there would be no negotiations with a "terrorist organisation".

  • Serbia calls for evidence over freed Croatian generals
    The Serbian government has called for UN prosecutors to hand over evidence related to two Croatian generals who were freed earlier this week, in a move that has flared tensions between the countries.

    The move suggests that Serbia is considering whether to indict the two Croatian generals themselves, after a UN court reversed convictions for both Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markac, over alleged war crimes that occurred during a 1995 Croatian military offensive known as Operation Storm

    U.N. War Crimes prosecutor Serge Brammertz stated that,
    "evidence collected by my office will remain available to judicial authorities in the former Yugoslavia to facilitate national prosecutions for the crimes committed in connection with Operation Storm."
    Meanwhile Croatian President Ivo Josipovic commented,
    "The fact is that it is not Croatia that freed the generals, but that the highest legal authorities in The Hague decided that our generals are not guilty… It's a matter of respect toward the international community and international law."
    However Serbian President Tomislav Nikolić responded by saying,
    "It's not going well with Croatia… He wants us to talk — me as the president of a nation which has committed crimes, and him as the president of a nation which has not been convicted of anything."
    "Croatians know that the crime committed during the Storm is awful, but they still celebrate because no one was convicted… They are a nation on a wrong path."

    “When indictment was issued against Ratko Mladić in the Srebrenica case, we did not even wait for the guilty verdict, the (Serbian) parliament immediately passed a resolution condemning the Srebrenica crime. Our government arrested (Ratko) Mladić and extradited him to the Hague. I know it (Srebrenica) was a crime, and I will never say that it was not."
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