• India pledges 'heavy' response to Kashmir attack that killed over 40 soldiers

    A suicide bombing in Kashmir killed almost 40 Indian policemen on Thursday, with India's prime minister pledging those behind the attack will pay a "very heavy price".

  • UN warns food aid in Yemen at risk of rotting

    The UN warned this week grains stored in the Red Sea Mills Silos in western Hodeida is at risk of rotting.

  • Australia to reopen detention centre after Senate passes medical evacuation bill

    Scott Morrison, Australia’s Prime Minister, has said that the Australian government would reopen its Christmas Island detention centre, after suffering a historic defeat in Parliament over a medical evacuations bill.  

  • Cameroon blames separatists for hospital fire
    <p>The Cameroon government accuses separatists of setting a hospital on fire and killing four people.</p> <p>In a press release, the Minister of Communication and government spokesperson Rene Sadi stated, "the fire incident in Kumba District Hospital was committed by close to 20 secessionists rebels”.</p>
  • Amnesty accuses Myanmar of fresh violations

    Amnesty International has found Myanmar’s forces are again shelling villages and blocking civilians from accessing food and humanitarian assistance in its battle against the Arakan Army, who are fighting for more autonomy in the Rakhine state.

  • Protests in Madrid against Catalan independence

    Tens of thousands of Spanish nationalists took to the streets in Madrid on Saturday ahead of a proposed meeting between Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez and Catalan separatists. 

  • Venezuelan crisis continues 
    <p>A hospital in the Venezuelan city of Barcelona has reported that 14 children have died due to an outbreak a form of dysentery this week, as the political crisis in the country continues with two men claiming to be the country’s rightful president.</p> <p>Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro warned against US military intervention last week after US National Security Adviser John Bolton was pictured with a notepad signifying “5,000 thousand troops to Colombia”.</p>
  • Deadline extended for Nepal’s war crimes investigation

    Nepal on Wednesday extended its war crimes investigation for the third time, by passing an amendment on the Transitional Justice Act granting a one-year extension.

  • Calls to end British Home Office's indefinite immigration detention
    <p>A British parliamentary committee has called for an end to indefinite detention in immigration centres and for detention to be authorised independently of the Home Office.</p> <p>According to the Guardian, around 27,000 people a year are detained in connection with immigration and are usually held without being given a date for release or deportation.</p>
  • Outcry after 'menstruation hut' deaths
    <p>There has been international outcry after a number of deaths of women who were banished to “menstruation huts” in Nepal.&nbsp;</p> <p>This month, 21-year-old woman, from Nepal died after being banished to a “menstruation hut” during her period. The head of police in Doti district, Lala Bahadur Dhami, told reporters that she died of suffocation after making a fire to keep herself warm.</p> <p>Parbati Bogati, had initially planned to spend the night on the ground floor of an abandoned house but had found that communal menstruation hut too crowded. This follows a similar incident three weeks ago in which a mother who was following the tradition and her two sons died of smoke inhalation in Bajura.</p>
  • France announces national day marking Armenian genocide

    French president, Emmanuel Macron, yesterday announced a day to remember the Armenian genocide, April 24

  • 50 mass graves unearthed in the Democratic Republic of Congo

    A UN rights group has uncovered more than 50 mass graves in the western province of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mai Ndombe.

  • Kashmir separatists call for regional strike as Modi visits

    Three separatist leaders from the Joint Resistance Leadership in Kashmir have called for a regional strike in protest at the Indian prime minister's visit on Sunday. 

    Narendra Modi's visit is the first since the BJP pulled out of the coalition government in Kashmir. Announcing new infrastructure projects, Modi warned he would "break the back" of terrorism in the area. 

  • Second round of UN sponsored talks on Western Sahara self determination set for March
    <p>A second round of internationally administered official talks between the Polisario Front and Morocco to solve the 43- year old political dispute on Western Sahara’s self-determination are set to&nbsp;take place next month, reports <a href="https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/01/talks-western-sahara-expected-ma…">Al Jazeera.</a></p> <p>The UN Special Envoy for Western Sahara, former German president Horst Koehler, told the United Nations that he planned to hold separate talks preliminary talks with all parties to prepare for a&nbsp;second around of official talks in March.</p> <p>Speaking after a meeting of the United Nations last week,&nbsp;German Ambasador Christoph Hesugen said,&nbsp;“I do see hope. The unity of the Security Council is a very important factor. This is a conflict we can resolve.</p>
  • Saudi Arabia agrees to release 7 Houthi rebels in exchange for POW

    Saudi Arabia has agreed to release seven Houthi rebel prisoners after a Saudi prisoner of war was released safely in Riyadh. 

    The release of  Mousa Awaji, a Saudi soldier, was initiated by the Houthi rebels who stated they they did not have the adequate medical equipment to care for his ailments. The UN welcomed the transfer and hopes that this could lead to a ceasefire in Yemen. 

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