• Police fired teargas at protestors in Kuwait

    Security forces in Kuwait have fired tear gas, stun grenades and smoke bombs at protestors who were demonstrating against new electoral laws due to be enforced in December.
  • Gbagbo declared fit to stand war crimes trial

    The former president of the Ivory Coast, Laurent Gbagbo, has been declared healthy enough to stand trial at the International Criminal Court, where he faces charges of crimes against humanity, stated judges on Friday.

  • Cyrenaica Libyans call for autonomy

    Thousands of Libiyans flooded central Benghazi today to rally for autonomy of the eastern region of Libya, Cyrenica.

    Staging a pro-federalism rally, the activists called for the creation of a semi-autonomous region of Cyrenaica, which contains almost three quarters of Libya’s accessible oil reserves.

  • EU offers development aid to Burma

    The European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso has offered Burma over £62 million in development aid.

    The chief met President Thein Sein to discuss plans to boost trade after ending of decades of sanctions.

    The European Commission President’s visit is one of many visits to Burma by Western officials since the beginning of the reforms.

  • China must address 'deep-rooted frustrations' in Tibet says Pillay

    The Chinsese authorities must address the "deep-rooted frustrations with human rights" in Tibetan areas, said the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay, which have led to "desperate forms of protest, including self-immolations".

    Speaking on Friday, Pillay said:

    “I have had several exchanges with the Chinese Government on these issues. But more needs to be done to protect human rights and prevent violations,”

    “I call on the Government to respect the rights to peaceful assembly and expression, and to release all individuals detained for merely exercising these universal rights.”

    I recognise Tibetans’ intense sense of frustration and despair which has led them to resort to such extreme means, but there are other ways to make those feelings clear. The Government also needs to recognise this, and permit Tibetans to express their feelings without fear of retribution.”

    Social stability in Tibet will never be achieved through heavy security measures and suppression of human rights,”

  • Syrian rebels accused of war crimes

    The UN has said that Syrian opposition fighters may have committed war crimes.

    A video, which appears to show the execution of Syrian soldiers, surfaced after rebels seized army checkpoints all over Syria.

    The video shows rebels assaulting captured soldiers, before shooting at the cowering group.

  • Uganda threatens peacekeeping pull out

    Uganda has outlined its intentions of withdrawing its peacekeeping forces from conflict hotspots, following UN allegations that suggested it was supporting the Congolese rebels.

    The security minister, Wilson Mukasa, described the decision as “irreversible” and said another cabinet minister was travelling to New York to explain Uganda’s position.

  • US will speak up about Cambodian rights issues

    An US diplomat for East Asia, Kurt Cambell, stressed that the US would not shy away from raising concerns over the human rights situation in Cambodia at the upcoming summit East Asian Leaders.

  • Kosovo's borders not debatable says Clinton

    Serbia must acknowledge Kosovo’s borders will not change and are not debatable, said the US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Wednesday, as the United States and European Union urge the two countries to cooperate on trade and security.

  • Swiss engagement with civic society praised at UPR

    The Swiss government has agreed to implement 50 of the 86 recommendations made by other member states at the UN Human Rights Council, during the country's Universal Periodic Review (UPR) this week.

    The Swiss government indicated that a response to the remaining 30 recommendations would be provided at the next session of the council, due to take place in March next year. Four recommendations were rejected.

  • Abuses under the anti-terrorism banner in Turkey

    UN human rights experts have said that Turkey is using a vague counterterrorism law to prosecute activists, lawyers and journalists.

    The UN Human Rights Committee reviewing Turkey’s human rights record said that some provisions within its Anti-Terrorism Law are incompatible with international law and that there have been severe restraints on the right to due process since the law’s passing in 1991.

  • Nigerian Islamist group ready for peace talks

    An alleged spokesperson for the Nigerian radical Islamist group Boko Haram has said that the group is willing to enter into peace talks, on the premise that they are held in Saudi Arabia and headed by Muhamed Buhari, a Muslim colonel who ruled Nigeria for 20 months after seizing power in 1984.

    The spokesperson, Abu Mohammed Ibn Abdulaziz, claiming to be representing Boko Haram’s leader said:

  • Modi free to apply for US visa

    Gujurat's chief minister Narendra Modi, who was previously shunned by the West following the 2002 Godhra riots, is now free to apply for a US visa.

    The US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia, Robert Blake, said that Modi the US has "very good" relations with the state of Gujurat, and that it was a "very, very important" market for American companies.

  • US urge Syrian rebels to reject extremism

    Secretary of State Hilary Clinton has warned the Syrian opposition of attempts by radical groups to “hijack” the Syrian revolution.

    The opposition Syrian National Council is based in Turkey and has no control over the escalating violence.

  • Protests against royal welcome for Indonesian president

    Dozens of British protesters condemned alleged torture in Indonesia as the Indonesian President, Susilo Banbang Youdhoyono, received a royal welcome upon his first visit to Britain in over 30 years. The president will address parliament and open a new ‘Indonesia-UK Business forum’ during his 3 day visit.

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