• Guatemala military committed genocide and crimes against humanity, domestic tribunal rules

    Guatemala’s military committed genocide and crimes against humanity during the country’s 36-year war, a court has ruled, while acquitting the former intelligence chief of all charges.

    Guatemalan judges on the tribunal ruled unanimously that the military forces had committed genocide, however the intelligence chief Jose Mauricio Rodriguez was acquitted in a 2-1 decision, Al Jazeera reports.

  • Hundreds protest in New Delhi against deaths of sewage cleaners

    Hundreds have gathered in India's capital to protest against the continued practice of manual scavenging, after the deaths of sewage cleaners, who are from a 'low-caste' background and forced to enter the sewers to unclog drains and remove human waste with their bare hands. 

    The Indian government's statistics indicate that “at least one Indian worker has died while cleaning sewers or septic tanks every five days since the beginning of 2017”. 

  • Human Rights Watch slams banning of Hong Kong pro-independence party

    The Hong Kong government’s decision to ban the pro-independence Hong Kong National Party is a grim sign for human rights in the territory, Human Rights Watch (HRW) has said.

    Hong Kong’s secretary for security told the party’s convenor that the party’s promotion of Hong Kong independence was a “blatant violation” of Hong Kong’s functional constitution.

    The party’s alliance with pro-Tibet and pro-Taiwan independence groups also came under fire.

  • Canadian parliament declares Myanmar’s killing of Rohingya genocide

    Canada’s House of Commons has unanimously voted to recognise the crimes committed by Myanmar against Rohingya Muslims as genocide this week.

    In a motion, Canadian legislators said they "recognise that these crimes against the Rohingya constitute genocide" and called on the UN Security Council to refer the case to the International Criminal Court.

  • Israel plans to demolish West Bank village

    Israel has ordered villagers in a Bedouin village, Khan al-Ahmar in the West Bank to leave their homes as it plans to demolish their village within the next eight days.

    The decision has been deeply criticised by EU countries, namely France, Poland, Sweden, the UK, the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany and Italy.

  • Ugandan police arrest opposition MP

    Opposition politician and music star Robert Kyagulanyi (aka Bobi Wine) was arrested by Ugandan police upon his arrival at the international airport in Kampala on Thursday.

    Kyagulanyi had returned to Uganda from the United States, where he sought treatment after reportedly being tortured by the Ugandan security forces.

    Authorities have however denied allegations of torture, whilst the police has stated that he was not arrested, but “peacefully escorted” home.

  • World Bank grants Bangladesh $50 million for Rohingya refugee health services

    Bangladesh has signed a $50 million grant financing agreement with the World Bank to strengthen its health services in order to respond to the needs of its population of almost a million Rohingya refugees.

  • Protests erupt in Ethiopia following ethnic violence

    Thousands took to the streets in Addis Ababa to protest against ethnic violence targeting minorities and perpetrated by the country’s majority Oromo ethnic group.

  • Azerbaijan loses appeal on defamation case against French journalists

    The Azerbaijan state has lost an appeal to bring a defamation case against two French journalists, AP reports.

    Azerbaijan attempted to file the case against journalist Elise Lucet and the then-news director of France-2 TV over a 2015 investigative report which called the country a “ferocious” “dictatorship”.

  • ICC opens investigation into Myanmar’s atrocities against Rohingya

    The International Criminal Court (ICC) announced that it has opened a “full-fledged preliminary examination” into crimes committed against Rohingya Muslims by Myanmar’s military this week.

    Thousands of Rohingya have been killed and over 700,000 displaced, with a United Nations report calling for senior Burmese military figures to be investigated for genocide.

  • Burundi threatens to withdraw from UNHRC over allegations of crimes against humanity

    Burundi has threatened to withdraw from the UN human rights council after a commission of inquiry on the country presented its findings, which include allegations of possible crimes against humanity committed by the government.

    The state has refused to cooperate with the commission and last week declared the three commissioners to be personae non-gratae.

  • ICC needed when state is unwilling to deliver justice - UN human rights chief

    UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet said the International Criminal Court was needed when a state is “unwilling or unable to deliver justice” as she spoke on the punishment and prevention of genocide in Geneva this week.

    Addressing a high level panel at the 39th Session of the UN Human Rights Council, Bachelet said that “ending impunity is central to ending genocide”.

  • Four killed in Saudi-led air strike on Yemeni radio station

    Four people were killed in a Saudi-led air strike on a radio station in the Houthi-held port city of Hodeidah in Yemen.

    Four employees of the Almaraweah radio station were killed, reports Reuters, three of them guards.

    The attack exerts further pressure on the international community as UN officials scramble to arrange a resumption of peace talks for the four-year-old conflict.

  • China denies mistreating Uighur Muslims

    Chinese officials have rejected claims of mistreatment of Uighur Muslims in Xinjiang, after growing international outcry and instead claimed they are offering 'education' to counter religious extremism.

  • New UN human rights chief urges Myanmar international inquiry

    The new UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet on Monday urged an international mechanism to collect evidence of crimes committed by the Myanmar army against the Rohingya population in order to pursue prosecutions. 

    “This mechanism would also complement and support the preliminary examination of the ICC (International Criminal Court) prosecutor," she said."

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