WORLD NEWS

World News

Latest news from and about the homeland

Rwandan genocide memorial in Nyamata (Fanny Schertzer) German prosecutors have arrested a German-Rwandan national on suspicion of complicity in genocide and 25 counts of murder during the 1994 genocide against the Tutsis in Rwanda. The suspect, identified only as Innocent S. under German privacy rules, was arrested in the central German state of Hesse on Wednesday. According to Reuters,…

HRW urges Iraq to join ICC to bring ISIS to justice

Human Rights Watch this week urged Iraq to join the International Criminal Court, in order to ensure that Islamic State leaders who committed crimes can be brought to justice.

“Without Iraq joining the ICC, Baghdadi [ISIS leader] cannot be tried there, as he is an Iraqi national,” Balkees Jarrah with Human Rights Watch, was quoted by RUDAW as saying.

“That is needed for the persecutor to be able to examine potential abuses there,” Jarrah added.

UN aid worker suspended for whistleblowing on sexual child abuse

A senior United Nations aid worker has been suspended for disclosing a report outlining sexual abuse by French peacekeeping troops in the Central African Republic.

Anders Kompass, who is based in Geneva, passed the document to French authorities due to the UN failure to take action to stop abuse reports The Guardian.

Mr Kompass was suspended from his post as director of field operations, and accused of leaking confidential UN information and breaching protocols.

The aid worker has been placed under investigation by the UN office for internal oversight service (OIOS), with the knowledge of senior UN officials, including the UN Human Rights Chief, Zeid AL Hussein.

The confidential report, Sexual Abuse on Children by International Armed Forces, documented details of the rape and sodomy of starving homeless young boys by French peacekeeping troops in the CAR.

Paula Donovan, the co-director of Aids Free World, calling for an independent commission of inquiry into the matter, said,

Japan's prime minister apologises for killing US troops during WW2

Japan’s prime minister Shinzo Abe offered “eternal condolences” to US soldiers that died in the conflict with Japanese forces during World War Two.

Speaking to US Congress on Wednesday, Mr Abe, expressed “deep repentance” over Japan’s role in World War Two, reports the BBC.

“My dear friends, on behalf of Japan and the Japanese people, I offer with profound respect my eternal condolences to the souls of all American people that were lost during World War Two.”

US calls on Iran to bring warring factions in Yemen to political settlement negotiations

The US called on Iran to help move warring parties in Yemen to peace-talks for a political settlement a US official confirmed on Wednesday.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Mahammad Javad Zarif, met with his US counterpart on Monday to discuss Iranian help to get Houthi militants in Yemen to the negotiation table, reports Reuters.

A US State Department official, when asked if Secretary of State John Kerry called on Iran to bring Houthi militants to peace talks, the official told reporters, “Yes.”

Israel attacked schools in Gaza - UN

The Israeli army struck seven UN schools, where Palestinians were sheltering from attacks, killing at least 44, a UN inquiry has found.

According to the UN, at least 2,189 Palestinians died during the 50 day conflict, of which at least 1,486 were civilians.

An independent board of inquiry looked into incidents at ten schools run by the UN, finding that one girls' school was hit by 88 rounds of mortar fire with other schools hit by missiles and anti-tank projectiles.

At another girls' school, the inquiry found, "no prior warning had been given by the government of Israel of the firing of 155mm high explosive projectiles on, or in the surrounding area of the school".

Dozens killed in car bombs across Iraq

Dozens of people have been killed in a series of car bombs across Iraq on Sunday and Monday, according to officials.

A car packed with explosives killed 7 soldiers at an army checkpoint near the town of al-Nukhaib, with military officials blaming Islamic State for the attack. An army officer told Reuters, “Deash terrorists used a suicide car bomb attack to distract our soldiers and then they clashed with soldiers, but we managed to repel the attack."

Nigerian army 'rescues hundreds of girls' from Boko Haram

The Nigerian army claimed to have rescued as many as 200 girls and 93 women during an offensive against the Islamist militant group Boko Haram.

“Troops have this afternoon captured & destroyed three camps of terrorists inside the Sambisa forest & rescued 200 girls & 93 women,” said defence spokesman Chris Olukolade, with the Nigerian army also claiming to have destroyed 3 camps in the Boko Haram stronghold.

Al-Bashir re-elected as Sudan’s president

Omar al-Bashir has been re-elected as the president of Sudan, with 94% of the vote going to the suspected war criminal, according to the official election results.

The president, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court and is accused of committing genocide in Darfur, has been in power for 25 years, and can now serve for another 5.

Turnout was at 30-35% and the main opposition parties boycotted the election, according to observers from the African Union.

‘The worst can always happen’ warns French president on visit to WW2 camp

French President Francois Hollande said racism was still present in the world and that atrocities like those committed during World War Two could still occur, as he visited a Nazi concentration camp on Sunday.

"Evil has not disappeared, it has taken on new colours," said the French president on his visit to Natzweiler-Struthof in Alsace, the only Nazi concentration camp built on French soil.

"The worst can always happen, it is in knowing it that we can avoid it," he added. "We must not forget anything."

IFJ condemns killing of Libyan journalists by Islamic State

The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), a group promoting press freedom, condemned the killings of 5 Libyan journalists by Islamic State militants, in a statement made on Monday.

Islamic State militants killed five journalists working for a Libyan TV station in the eastern regions of the country, a Libyan army commander told press.

The army district commander in eastern Libya, Faraj al-Barassi, speaking to Reuters, said that militants loyal to the Islamic State had slit the throats of 5 journalists.