WORLD NEWS

World News

Latest news from and about the homeland

Photograph: Screenshot/ BLA video A fresh wave of extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances has been documented across Balochistan this month, as Baloch rights groups recorded the recovery of several bodies of men who had earlier been forcibly taken, and appealed once more to international institutions that have largely ignored the province. The Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC)…

‘Sixties scoop’ survivors demand compensation from Canada

Members of Canada’s indigenous population who suffered during the infamous ‘Sixties Scoop’ in Canada have demanded compensation from the federal government, as a growing number of lawsuits are filed.

Cluster bombs and barrel bombs hit Aleppo hospital

The largest hospital in opposition-held Aleppo has been forced to shut after it was stuck by cluster and barrel bombs yesterday, as fighting in the Syrian city continues.

“Two barrel bombs hit the M10 hospital and there were reports of a cluster bomb as well,” Adham Sahloul of the Syrian American Medical Society (Sams).

At least 400 civilians, including children have been killed in this week’s fighting according to the United Nations, as a ceasefire between warring sides broke down rapidly.

Colombians vote on peace agreement

Colombians on Sunday vote on whether to accept or reject the peace agreement signed last month between the government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). 

Opinion polls carried out in preceding days indicate that the peace deal will be accepted by the people. 

The deal was struck after 50 years of armed conflict and signed by the FARC leader, Rodrigo Londono (alias Timochenko) last Monday. 

It guarantees FARC 10 seats in the congress without election until 2026 as well as allowing FARC members to run for the 2018 presidential and legislative elections. 

UN genocide advisor alarmed by Philippine president’s Holocaust remarks

The United Nations Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide slammed the president of the Philippines for calling for a campaign to kill millions of drug addicts in a manner similar to the Holocaust in Nazi Germany, where over 6 million Jews were systematically killed by the government.

Special Adviser Adama Dieng said recently elected Rodrigo Duterte’s comments were “deeply disrespectful of the right to life of all human beings,” in a statement issued on Friday.

UN Human Rights Council votes for UN inquiry in Burundi

The UN Human Rights Council on Friday voted in favour of establishing a UN commission of inquiry into alleged human rights violations that took place in Burundi over the past year and a half. 

Burundi, which is facing calls to be removed from the Council, voted against the inquiry unsurprisingly. Nineteen members voted in favour, with 7 against and 21 abstentions. 

Welcoming the inquiry the United States assistance secretary for democracy and human rights, Tom Malinowski tweeted

Sudanese government using chemical weapons in Darfur warns Amnesty

Amnesty International on Thursday published evidence of Sudanese government forces appearing to use chemical weapons on civilians in Darfur. 

An investigation using satellite images and interviews with over 200 survivors has revealed that at least 30 chemical attacks are likely to have occurred since January 2016. 

“This suspected use of chemical weapons represents not only a new low in the catalogue of crimes under international law by the Sudanese military against civilians in Darfur, but also a new level of hubris by the government towards the international community,” Amnesty's director of crisis research, Tirana Hassan said. 

India launches air strikes in Pakistani-controlled Kashmir

At least two Pakistani soldiers are reported to have been killed in air strikes carried out by the Indian military in Pakistani-controlled Kashmir shortly after midnight.

The Indian military said it had conducted “surgical strikes” against “terrorists… waiting to infiltrate the nation”. India’s director-general of military operations Lt Gen Ranbir Singh said the attack had caused “significant casualties … to terrorists and those trying to shield them”.

He went on to state that India had captured militants during last night’s operation and they had “confessed to their training in Pakistan or in Pakistan-controlled region”.

ICC sentences militant over destruction of Timbuktu shrines

The International Criminal Court has sentenced a militant from Mali over the destruction of shrines in Timbuktu, in a landmark case that has seen the destruction of cultural sites successfully prosecuted as a war crime by the court.

Ahmad Al Faqi Al Mahdi was found guilty of organising the smashing of the shrines in 2012 after militants captured areas of northern Mali. As the head of the Ansar Dine morality brigade, Mr Al Mahdi called for and directly participated in the destruction of the ancient structures said judge Raul Cano Pangalangan.

Former Serbian paramilitary commander begins trial in Croatia

A former Serbian paramilitary commander who had fled to Australia, has begun a war crimes trial in Croatia, after being extradited last year.

Dragan Vasiljkovic pleaded not guilty to charges related to the torture and execution of Croatian soldiers during the Balkan conflict, stating that his actions were only part of protecting his homeland.

"He knew that Croatian civilians and prisoners were systematically beaten on a daily basis," said prosecutor Zivana Beros.

Britain accused of blocking war crimes inquiry in Yemen

The United Kingdom has reportedly blocked efforts to establish an independent international investigation into alleged war crimes in Yemen, by refusing to support European Union efforts at the UN Human Rights Council.

A proposal by the Netherlands for an international inquiry had to be replaced instead with calls for  the UN high commissioner for human rights (OHCHR) dispatch a mission “with assistance from relevant experts, to monitor and report on the situation ... in Yemen, ”without British support for the initial proposal, reports the Guardian.