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: Assad responsible for chemical weapons attack

A report published by Human Rights Watch today, outlined that evidence from the massacre site suggested that Assad’s regime was responsible for the chemical weapons attack.

Basing its conclusions on testimony from witnesses and medical staff as well as analysis of the armaments used, the report concluded,

Almost a quarter of Asian men admit rape - UN survey

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Kenyan Deputy President arrives at The Hague

Kenya’s Deputy President Wiliam Ruto arrived at The Hague today, to stand trial at the International Criminal Court (ICC), on Tuesday.

Ruto and the  Kenyan Presidant Uhuru Kenyatta have been charged with charges against humanity, which they continue to deny.

PKK halts withdrawal

The Kurdish rebel PKK has halted the withdrawal of its armed cadres from Turkey according to a website linked to the militants.

The PKK blamed Turkey for not moving towards “democratisation and the resolution of the Kurdish problem”.

Earlier this year the Turkish government and the PKK agreed a deal which would see the PKK pull back its troops to Kurdistan in Iraq and the government to improve Kurdish rights.

US may put Syria attack on hold

The President of the United States Barack Obama has said that US plans for military strikes on Syria could be put on hold if Bashar al-Assad’s government agrees to a Russian proposal to place its chemical weapons under international control.

"I want to make sure that norm against use of chemical weapons is maintained," Mr Obama told ABC News.

"That's in our national security interest. If we can do that without a military strike, that is overwhelmingly my preference."

Tens of thousands protest against government in Tunisia

Tens of thousands of Tunisians have marched in the capital Tunis and called on the government to resign.

The protests come 40 days after the killing of opposition MP Mohammed Brahmi and opposition politicians have accused the government of failing to crack down on radical Islamists.

Read more here.

Kenya radio DJ faces ICC trial

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Assad “probably didn’t order chemical attack” – paper

Syrian president Bashar al-Assad was probably not behind the order to deploy chemical weapons that killed over a thousand people last month.

German tabloid Bild am Sonntag cited unnamed sources from the German intelligence service.

ECJ overrules asset freeze on Iranian firms

The European Court of Justice has ruled that the European Union should unfreeze assets held by several Iranian banks and other businesses as there was insufficient evidence that the firms were involved in nuclear proliferation.

EU urges strong reaction but patience for Syria

The European Union (EU) while believing the Syrian government responsible for chemical attacks in Damascus has urged that any planned international responses are taken through the UN process and held off until the UN report is published.

See here for the EU’s full statement. Extract reproduced below:

"On 21 August, a large-scale chemical attack was perpetrated in the outskirts of Damascus, killing hundreds of people, including many women and children. That attack constituted a blatant violation of international law, a war crime, and a crime against humanity. We were unanimous in condemning in the strongest terms this horrific attack.

Information from a wide variety of sources confirms the existence of such an attack . It seems to indicate strong evidence that the Syrian regime is responsible for these attacks as it is the only one that possesses chemical weapons agents and means of their delivery in a sufficient quantity.

In the face of this cynical use of chemical weapons, the international community cannot remain idle. A clear and strong response is crucial to make clear that such crimes are unacceptable and that there can be no impunity. We must prevent creating a dreadful precedent for the use of chemical weapons in Syria again, or elsewhere.