• UK ministers to boycott Euro 2012 football in Ukraine

    The UK Foreign Office has confirmed that ministers are to boycott the Euro 2012 football tournament over the treatment of the imprisoned Ukrainian opposition leader, Yulia Tymoshenko, reports The Guardian.

  • US wants India to be ‘more active’ in Afghanistan
    Meeting with Indian officials, US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta has called on India to play a “more active” role in Afghanistan, according to US officials.

    Officials speaking to reporters told the AFP,
  • China warns US against naval shift towards Asia
    Chinese state media warned the US for its recent decision to move majority of its naval fleet into Asia-Pacific region by the end this decade under Obama administration’s “strategic re-balance” in Asia.

    Washington continues to insist that recent decision to move its naval fleet into Asia-Pacific was not to contain China, but Communist Party run People’s Daily newspaper has repudiated such claim.
  • ICC prosecutor calls for tough action on Sudan
    The outgoing International Criminal Court prosecutor has called on the UN Security Council and member nations to take stronger action against Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir, who is accused of genocide in Darfur.
  • ‘International justice is here to stay’
    Writing in the Guardian, Geoffery Robertson QC, who served as an appeal judge for the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone, has commented on the Charles Taylor verdict, noting that as the former Liberia leader is jailed, more "despots" will follow.

    Excerpts have been reproduced below. See his full piece here.
  • Syrian rebels abandon ceasefire to defend people

    The Syrian rebels anonunced on Monday that they could no longer be committed to Kofi Annan's ceasefire amid on-going attacks by the Syrian military on civilian targets.

    The rebels' spokesperson, Sami al-Kurdi, told Reuters news agency:

  • Assad does not 'necessarily' need remain in power - Russian minister

    The deputy foreign minister of Russia, Gennady Gatilov said on Monday that Syrian president Assad, did not "necessarily" need to remain in power "at the end of the political process".

    See here for article by The Times.

    Gatilov said,

  • Diplomats barred, aid workers let in - Syria

    The Syrian government barred 17 Western diplomats from the country, reports Reuters. 

  • Protests continue over Mubarak sentence

    Thousands of protesters returned to Cairo's Tahrir Square on Sunday, angry at the sentence of Muburak.

    Warning of a renewed revolution, many demanded that Mubarak must face the death penalty for his treatment of the protesters during the January 2011 uprising, and pledged to protest until those who died received justice.

  • No political prisoners in Russia says Putin

    Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, defended the country’s human rights record and claimed that Russia has no political prisoners, the Associated Press reported from St. Petersburg on Monday.

  • Widespread censorship as China curtails Tiananmen remembrance

    Chinese authorities deleted numerous blog posts, closed down individual blog accounts, and blocked a whole cohort of words and phrases, such as "that year", "massacre", "recall", "candle", "suppress", "mourn" "square" and "today", from the Chinese equivalent of Twitter - Sina Weibo, as many commemorated the 23rd anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre of 1989.

  • Serbian president says 'no genocide in Srebrenica'

    The newly elected president of Serbia, Tomislav Nikolic, has sparked controversy after claiming that "there was no genocide in Srebrenica."

    See here and here.

  • Pillay - No amnesty for 'serious crimes' in Syria

    The UN High Commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay, said that amnesty could not be granted for "serious crimes" in Syria.

  • Syrian diaspora activists face intimidation

    As Syrian diplomats are expelled around the world, reports emerge of Syrian diaspora opposition activists being subject to threats and intimidation by Syrian officials.
     
    According to a story by Paul Daley in the Sydney Morning Herald, a Syrian business owner living in Australia, recounted the intimidation he faced.

    See here.

    Speaking anonymously, the diaspora activist described how he had received a call from the Syrian embassy while he was organising an international conference of young peaceful Syrian dissidents in Tunisia, and an embassy representative told him that “he could not guarantee [his] safety in Syria.”

    The activist said, 

    "This was October last year. He said I should not go, and that foreigners should stay out of Syria's internal problems. I told him that I had no plans to go to Syria. He responded … that 'we know you do'. He told me that I would be putting the young Syrians who would attend the conference 'in danger' and that they should be 'very careful'. I do not know how he found out about the conference.”
     
    "I was told that 'people like you represent the problem in Syria'. I was told that the government 'will shut your fraud of a business down'.

    "A week later, the premises of my business [in Syria] was trashed by thugs. Nearing the conference, the calls got more frequent and more aggressive."

    "Gradually these calls came less from the embassy but also from Syrian government officials in Damascus, directly to my mobile. A mix of Arabic and English was used.”
     
    "While a good deal of the Syrian diaspora in Australia supported Assad until very recently, there was a vocal minority of Syrians working with a number of peaceful opposition groups. I know they have been threatened - worse yet, they have had their families back in Syria threatened."

  • Protesters disrupt parliament over reconciliation bill - Thailand

    Over 2500 anti-government protesters disrupted Thailand's parliament on Friday, as they surrounded the building and blocked cars from entering the premises.

    Dressed in yellow, protesters from the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD), forced the speaker to postpone a debate on a reconciliation bill that could allow theformer Prime Minister, Thaksin Shinawatra to return.

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