WORLD NEWS

World News

Latest news from and about the homeland

Al-Shabab fighters are claiming to have seized control of Adan Yabaal, a town in central Somalia, on Wednesday.  Adan Yabaal is situated about 220 kilometres north of Mogadishu and serves as the logistical hub for government forces. Raids were launched by al-Shabab fighters before dawn on Wednesday, forcing the army to retreat after fierce battles, according to a security officer quoted…

French parliament committee passes bill criminalising Armenian Genocide denial

The committee on constitutional law of the French National Assembly has passed a bill which will make denial of the killings of over 1.5 million Armenians in 1915 by Turkey as genocide a crime.

The bill, which will now be sent to the National Assembly, will make genocide denial a criminal offence and carries  a fine of 45,000 euros and a one year prison sentence for those found guilty.

Nobel Peace Prize winner calls for Arab spring support

The first Arab woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize has called on the international community to support the pro-democracy protests that have swept across the Arab world this year.

Speaking at the ceremony, Yemeni journalist Tawakkul Karman, who shares the prize with Liberian president Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf and rights activist Leymah Gbowee, called on the international community to intensify support for the wave of protests in the Middle East.

Taliban in peace talks with Pakistan

The Taliban’s deputy leader, Maulvi Faqir Mohammad has announced they are in talks with the government of Pakistan.

The announcement is likely to exacerbate tensions between the US and Pakistan, already at a critical point after the recent deaths of Pakistani troops in a NATO attack.

British Police allowed into Libya to investigate Lockerbie

The Libyan government has given British police the go-ahead to conduct inquiries into the Lockerbie bombing and the killing of PC Yvonne Fletcher.

Scottish detectives will travel to Libya to interview Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, who was convicted for involvement in th Lockerbie bombing in 1988.

Al-Megrahi was released in 2009 on compassionate grounds due to his ill-health. At the time he was only expected to live another 2 months.

Lord Advocate Frank Mulholland QC said:

EU decision on Serbia’s membership may be postponed

A draft conclusion of the EU heads of government summit currently being held, may delay a decision on Serbia’s accession into the EU until March 2012, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Stipulating conditions that Serbia had to fulfil, it concluded,
"With a view to granting Serbia the status of candidate country by March 2012, the European Council tasks the Council to examine and confirm that Serbia has continued to show credible commitment and achieved further progress"

Despite flaws, UNHRC can bring progress' - Kofi Annan

Writing in The Christian Science Monitor, former UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, reflected on the work of the UN Human Rights Council and urges further action.

Extracts reproduced below, see here for full article.

"More consequential to the Council’s effectiveness than its composition has been the fact that many Council members – from all regions of the world – have begun to break free from the regional straightjackets of the past and worked together to advance human rights."

"The regional bloc voting practices of the past are giving way to more considered discussion and collective action. This engagement on the part of countries has helped to make the Council more effective and progressive than other human rights institutions."

"Council action in response to the human rights situations in Iran, Libya, and Syria has, in each case, been possible due to the support of countries from Africa and Latin America, and even from within the Middle East."

"It is true that conducting effective diplomacy and changing political dynamics is hard, but working to find agreement with countries that have disparate worldviews has always been a difficult endeavor. Nevertheless, it is important and worthwhile."

Russia draws on another Sri Lanka model

United Russia, the nationalist party backing Prime Minister Vladimir Putin saw its representation slashed from 315 to 238 seats out of 450 in Sunday’s polls.

But even this reduced showing seemed to have been gained through interference by authorities at polling stations, the Financial Times reports.

Assad: 'They are not my forces'

In a rare interview, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has tried to downplay the command responsibility he has had over the Syrian army, who have been accused of gross violations of human rights.

Speaking with American broadcaster ABC, Assad claimed that the troops belonged to the “government” saying,

Indonesia considers international observer for Papua

A new development program in the restive Indonesian province of Papua may be allowed to be scrutinised by international observers.

Indonesian Vice-President Boediono told journalists that the Papuan conflict can be managed by the government.

The new programme has been established to improve welfare, security and justice.

Boediono said Indonesia may consider allowing independent observers to oversee the development.

Remaining fugitives will face justice - Rwandan UN tribunal

The prosecutor for the UN tribunal on the 1994 Rwandan genocide, Hassan Jallow, asserted that remaining fugitives will face justice.

Addressing the UN Security Council on Wednesday, Jallow asserted that arresting the remaining nine fugitives would serve the "interests of international justice and regional peace and security".

Jallow urged member states to hand over any of the wanted men who may be sheltering in their country.

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