• 90-year-old Nazi suspect escapes extradition from Australia

    A 90-year-old man accused of war crimes has won a legal battle against attempts to extradite him to Hungary, to face charges of war crimes.

    Charles Zentai, who has lived in Australia for almost 60 years, won the battle after the High Court up held a decision stating he could not be extradited because the offence of “war crimes” did not exist in Hungarian law at the time of the alleged offence.

    The US based Simon Wiesenthal Center lists Zentai amongst the top 10 most wanted for having "participated in manhunts, persecution, and murder of Jews in Budapest in 1944."

  • Aleppo hospital attack is 'no accident' - HRW

    Human Rights Watch (HRW) confirmed that the Syrian government's fighter planes had fired rockets on the main emergency hospital in Aleppo on Tuesday. The hospital had also been attacked two days prior by government aircraft, as well as a nearby school. Four civilians were killed and three wounded.

    HRW visited the hospital after the attack, where hospital staff told them that no opposition fighters were at the hospital, only armed guards providing security.

  • Iran performs U-turn accepts offers of aid

    The Iranian government has said it will accept foreign aid from certain countries after an earthquake devastated cities and killed over 300 in the north-west of the country on Saturday.

    For two days Iran insisted it was not in need of foreign assistance.

    However, after scathing criticism at home over the slow response, the Iranian government has now said it will accept offers of aid.

  • UN report on Syria: war crimes on both sides

    A UN report on the Syrian conflict published on Wednesday, concluded that President Assad’s forces and pro-government Shabiha fighters are were responsible for perpetrating most of the war crimes and crimes against humanity on Syrian civilians.

    The report held the government and its allied militia were responsible for the killing of more than a 100 civilians in May and indicated that murders, unlawful killings, torture, sexual violence and indiscriminate attacks indicated “the involvement at the highest levels of the armed security forces and the government."

    The panel also acknowledged that anti-government armed groups had committed war crimes including murder, extrajudicial killings and torture, but noted that these crimes were of a lesser frequency and scale.

  • Assad aide visits China

    A senior aide to Syrian president Bashar al-Assad has flown to China to discuss the crisis.

    Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang said that Bouthaina Shaaban would meet foreign minister Yang Jiechi later today.

    In a statement he said that China had always "actively balanced its work between the Syrian government and the opposition".

  • Defence opens for Bemba war crimes trial
    The defence for accused war criminal Jean-Pierre Bemba have opened their case before the International Criminal Court earlier on Tuesday, where he faces charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

    Bemba, the former Vice President of the DR Congo, faces three counts of war crimes and two of crimes against humanity, for alleged atrocities committed by troops of the Movement for the Liberation of Congo (MLC), after he deployed them into the Central African Republic in 2002 and 2003.
  • UN drops food aid to Sudanese refugees in South Sudan

    The UN has started to deliver airdrops of food aid to refugee camps in the South Sudan border region, where refugees from Sudan have sought safety.

    Over 170,000 people are believed to have fled Sudan according to the UN World Food Program (WFP).

  • Israeli soldier jailed for 45 days over Palestinian deaths

    A former Israeli soldier has been sentenced to 45 days in prison for the killing of a Palestinian mother and her daughter, after avoiding manslaughter charges.

  • US ‘expected’ Egypt army reshuffle

    US officials have informed reporters that they expected changes in the military after the election of President Mursi.

    "We had expected President Mursi at some point to co-ordinate changes in the military leadership, to name a new team," Pentagon spokesman George Little told reporters.

  • Global Islamic body suspends Syria – Reuters

    The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) has agreed to suspend Syria from the body, according to an OIC source.

    The source told Reuters that foreign ministers agreed to the suspension at a meeting in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, on Monday.

    "The session just ended. The ministers adopted the resolutions, including the suspension of Syria," the source told Reuters.

    Iran opposed the suspension from the 57-member body.

  • Secretary General wants ‘flexible’ UN presence in Syria

    The UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has urged for a continued ‘flexible UN presence in Syria’ after the end of the current observer mission.

    "A continued UN presence in Syria that goes beyond our important humanitarian work would allow systematic and meaningful engagement with the Syrian stakeholders, inside the country," the UN chief said in a letter on Friday to the 15 members of the UN Security Council.

  • Putin pledges hundreds of new military planes for Russia
    Russia’s President Vladmir Putin has stated that the country’s military will be boosted with the acquisition of 1,600 new warplanes and helicopters by 2020, as part of efforts to modernize the military.
  • Mursi dismisses Egyptian generals

    The newly elected president of Egypt, Mohamed Mursi, dismissed two generals on Sunday, and quashed a military order that had curtailed the new government's powers.

    Mursi's spokesperson described it as "sovereign" decision designed to pump "new blood" into the army.

  • US and Turkey discuss possibility of Syrian no-fly zone
    The United States and Turkey have been considering the imposition of a no-fly zone over Syria as US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met with  the Turkish foreign minister, Ahmet Davutoglu this week.

    Announcing that a working group to help provide “very intensive operational planning" was being set up, Clinton said,
  • Federal investigation into Assam violence

    India’s Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) will investigate recent violence in the north-eastern state of Assam.

    77 people died after violence erupted between indigenous Bodo tribes and Bengali Muslim settlers.

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