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,…

No justice for killed Afghan civilians – Amnesty International

Amnesty International has released a report slamming the United States military justice system, for failing to provide adequate justice for the thousands of Afghans it says have been killed or injured by US forces.

The report, which focuses on air strikes and night raids carried out by US forces, detailed 10 incidents taking place between 2009 and 2013, which killed at least 140 civilians. The NGO said it was aware of only six cases since 2009 in which US military personnel have faced trials.

Richard Bennett, Amnesty International’s Asia Pacific Director, said,
“Thousands of Afghans have been killed or injured by US forces since the invasion, but the victims and their families have little chance of redress. The US military justice system almost always fails to hold its soldiers accountable for unlawful killings and other abuses.”

“None of the cases that we looked into – involving more than 140 civilian deaths – were prosecuted by the US military. Evidence of possible war crimes and unlawful killings has seemingly been ignored.”

Experts appointed to UN inquiry on Gaza

Appointments to the UN investigation examining allegations of war crimes in Gaza, were announced on Monday, AP reported.

The three member panel included: a human rights lawyer from Senegal who has previously worked on concerns in Ivory Coast, Doudou Diene and a Canadian international law professor at the University of Middlesex, William Schabas, as well as a British Lebanese human rights lawyer Amal Alamuddin, who later declined the appointment however.

Renewed 72-hour ceasefire in Gaza

A new 3-day ceasefire has begun in Gaza after Israeli and Palestinian officials agreed to a proposal by Egypt on Sunday.

"Israel has accepted Egypt's proposal," a senior Israeli government official told Reuters, adding that if the truce held, negotiators would return to Cairo to resume indirect talks with the Palestinians.

Izzat al-Reshiq, a Hamas negotiator in Cairo, told the news agency: "In light of Israel's acceptance of the truce and their return without pre-conditions, we will inform the Egyptian brothers of our positive response."

Egypt's Foreign Ministry urged "both sides to exploit this truce to resume indirect negotiations immediately and work towards a comprehensive and lasting ceasefire agreement".

A previous truce expired on Friday, which saw an immediate resumption of hostilities. 19 Palestinians died in Israeli air strikes since Friday, with Hamas firing rockets and mortars into southern Israel, leaving two civilians injured.

Hamas urges PA to join ICC

The Middle East Eye reported on Sunday that Hamas is demanding that President Mahmoud Abbas signs the Rome Statute which will allow Palestine to join the International Criminal Court.

Hamas’s deputy chairman and chief negotiator in Cairo, Moussa Abu Marzouk has been instructed to sign the document supporting the State of Palestine as a member of the ICC.

Kurds reclaim towns from IS after US air strikes

Peshmerga forces are reclaiming territory previously lost to Islamic State militants, after US fighter jets pounded their positions south of the Kurdish capital Erbil.

The towns of Makhmur and Gwer were retaken by the Kurdish troops, as the US launched its fourth wave of strikes against IS targets.

Kurdish President Massoud Barzani on Sunday requested international military aid to help defeat the militants.

"We are not fighting a terrorist organisation, we are fighting a terrorist state," said Mr Barzani, who was speaking alongside French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, in Iraq for talks on the crisis.

Kosovo pledges to cooperate with war crimes inquiry

Kosovo promised to cooperate with an EU led inquiry into allegations of war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) against minority Serb and Roma communities in the late 1990s.

The inquiry is led by the EU's Special Investigative Task Force (SITF), set up in 2011 to investigate allegations made by the Special Rapporteur of the Council of Europe including mass atrocities and that of organ harvesting from dead prisoners.

"Kosovo will fully co-operate with the SITF and the country's institutions will make the necessary legal and constitutional changes to establish the new special court," Kosovo President Atifete Jahjaga was quoted by SE Times as saying.

"The government of Kosovo praises the conclusion of the work of Ambassador Williamson, which is an important step in the eventual definition of individual responsibility, and will provide an end to the pretentions of other un-proven allegations," Pristina said in a statement.

UK endorses US air strikes against IS fighters

The UK expressed support over the US decision to launch targetted air strikes in Iraq, to stop the advance of Islamic State (IS) fighters towards the city of Erbil in Kurdistan.

Whilst officials said British airstrikes were currently not on the cards, British spy planes will aid US troops in determining the whereabouts of IS fighters, and a RAF aircraft, able to refuel US Fighter jets in mid-air will be deployed, reports The Times.

Ukraine rebels call for ceasefire, as government forces advance

Pro-Russian fighters in Ukraine’s east have called for an immediate ceasefire to avert a humanitarian disaster, after reports that the Ukrainian army had recaptured a key city from the rebels, reported Reuters.

Aleksandr Zakharchenko, the prime minister of the self-proclaimed Donetsk people's republic, made the call in a statement published on the rebel website.

"We are ready for a ceasefire to prevent the proliferation of a humanitarian disaster in Donbass," he said.

Russia renewed its offer to send a humanitarian mission, after the US warned Moscow on Friday not to use such mission as a pretext to send troops to support the rebels.

Colombian oil field attacked by rebels

Colombian rebels have attacked an oil field near the Venezuelan border.

The state-owned Ecopetrol said that no-one was injured in the attack on the Tibu field.

The left-wing Farc and the ELN are both active in the area, however the Colombian military did not specify which of the groups carried out the attack, which came after weeks of rebels targeting power stations, oil fields, pipelines and roads.

The latest attack comes a day after President Jose Manuel Santos was inaugurated for a second term.

Afghan rivals reach agreement on unity government

The dispute over the Afghan presidency has ended after a political agreement was reached by Ashraf Ghani and Abdullah Abdullah, who both claimed to have won the election earlier this year.

"We are putting the past behind us. We are looking into the future," said Ghani.

The announcement came soon after a surprise visit by US Secretary of State John Kerry, who landed in Kabul on Thursday, to assist the negotiations around the presidency.

Death toll continues to rise in Gaza and West Bank

Israeli air strikes on Gaza have killed 5 Palestinians, with now over 1,900 deaths in the Gaza strip, according to the UN.

Hostilities resumed after a 72-hour truce expired with talks in Cairo between Israel and the Palestinians failing to reach an agreement.