• Sarkozy reaffirms pledge towards genocide bill

    French President Nicolas Sarkozy has stated that he will eventually secure the adoption of a bill recognising the 1915 genocide of Armenians by Turkey, after it was deemed unconstitutional by France’s Constitutional Council.

  • Syria's inconvenient truth'
    "Now we see it. The West, or shall we call it, “the international community”, is paralysed in the face of one of the most barbaric and systematic ethnic cleanings of the 21st Century. We are talking Syria, although it has uncanny similarities with Sri Lanka."
  • Outrage at war grave desecration in Libya

    Foreign Office Minister Alistair Burt has expressed outrage at the recent attack on war graves in two British cemeteries in Benghazi.

    200 graves of British and Commonwealth nationals, most of who died in World War 2, were damaged in attacks by unknown individuals.

  • Russia, China join UN Security Council in unanimous condemnation of Syria

    Expressing "deep disappointment" at the Assad regime's failure to allow Valerie Amos, UN's under secretary-general for humanitarian affairs, into the country, and strongly urged that she be.

    In a unanimously agreed statement, the UN Security Council said,

  • North Korea, US announce nuclear suspension and aid

    North Korea announced Wednesday that it would freeze nuclear tests, long-range missile launches and uranium enrichment at its Yongbyon plant, even as the US promised food aid to the country.

    The North Koreans also agreed to the return of nuclear inspectors, who were kicked out of the country in 2009, though they are limited to the Yongbyon site.

  • ICC seeks arrest of Sudan minister

    The International Criminal Court has issued an arrest warrant for the Defence Minister of Sudan for crimes alleged to have been committed in Darfur.

    The Defence Minister, Abdelrahim Mohamed Hussein, is alleged to be responsible for 20 counts of war crimes and 21 counts of crimes against humanity. At the time, Mr Hussein was Interior Minister and the Sudanese government’s representative in Darfur.

  • ICRC evacuation of Homs begins, as Syria conference condemns impunity

    The International Committee of the Red Cross has begun moving civilians including the wounded and children out of the Syrian city of Homs.

  • UN humanitarian official to visit Syria

    The UN's under secretary-general for humanitarian affairs, Valeria Amos, will be visiting Syria in order to negotiate access for aid workers to areas most affected by the conflict, announced the spokesperson to the UN Secretargy General Ban Ki Moon.

  • UN accuses Syria of crimes against humanity

    The UN has accused Syria of committing ‘crimes against humanity’ against its people, in a report released today after an inquiry by a UN panel.

    The panel was refused entry into Syria and had to gather information from outside sources including regime defectors and human rights activists.

  • Veteran war journalist Marie Colvin killed in Syria
    Accomplished war correspondent Marie Colvin of the Sunday Times has been killed in the Syrian city of Homs. It was reported that the house she was staying in was shelled, killing her alongside French photographer Remi Ochlik.
  • US republican proposed bill to recognise Baluchistan's right to self-determination

    Republican, Dana Rohrabacher, introduced a bill recognising Baluchi nation's right to self-determination last week.

    The bill stated that the Baluchi nation “have the right to self-determination and to their own sovereign country; and  they should be afforded the opportunity to choose their own status.”

  • Sexual violence as a weapon of war destroys 'fabric of society'

    Writing in the Huffington Post, the UN Special Representative of the Secretary-General (SRSG) on Sexual Violence in Conflict, Margot Wallstrom, condemned sexual violence as a weapon of war and pledged to "push for an end to impunity and ensure perpetrators are brought to justice".

  • 18-year-old Tibetan monk dies after self immolation
    The London-based International Campaign for Tibet has stated that a monk has died after setting himself alight in protest, at a monastery in South West China.

    The monk, 18-year-old Nangdrol, has raised the number of Tibetans who have self immolated to at least 21 in the past year alone, as protests against the Chinese government’s control over the Tibetan regions continue to grow.
  • War crimes complaint filed against British Government

    A complaint against the British Government has been filed by legal charity Reprieve in regards to the failure of the government to secure the release of a Pakistani man, held in Bagram airbase in Afghanistan.

    Yunus Rahmatullah was captured by British forces in 20054 and was then handed to the US military who have held him without charges ever since.

  • Iran stops selling oil to UK and France

    The Iranian oil ministry announced on Sunday it has stopped all sales of crude oil to British and French companies.

    A spokesman was quoted on the ministry’s website as saying:

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