Human Rights

OSCE Parliamentary Assembly human rights chair calls for release of Crimean Tatar leader Umerov

The forced commitment to a psychiatric clinic of Ilmi Umerov represents a worrying new low in Russia’s stigmatization of the Crimean Tatar community and should be immediately reversed, said the Chair of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly's human rights committee, Ignacio Sanchez Amor (MP, Spain) on 27 August.

UK Prime Minister orders government audit to tackle racial disparities in public service outcomes

Theresa May launches an audit of public services to reveal racial disparities and to help end the injustices that many people experience.

UK Prime Minister Theresa May is on 27 August launching an unprecedented audit of public services to reveal racial disparities and help end the burning injustices many people experience across Britain.

UN envoy urges all sides to quickly agree truce to ease suffering in Aleppo

Stressing that “time is of the essence” amid the increasingly dire situation in Aleppo, the United Nations Special Envoy for Syria on 27 August called for all sides in the conflict to agree by Sunday on allowing aid delivery and repairs for the war-ravaged city's power and water systems to provide some relief for the nearly two million people trapped there.

Colombia: Peace Pact a Key Opportunity to Curb Abuses

Flawed Justice Deal Risks Sustainable Peace

The agreement between the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) guerrillas on August 24, 2016, to end their 52-year conflict is an unprecedented opportunity to curtail abuses in the country, Human Rights Watch said on Aug 25. But it includes a serious defect that risks its unraveling: a flawed victims’ agreement reached in December 2015, that could guarantee impunity for those responsible for human rights abuses and war crimes.

Burma: Ensure Women’s Role in Peace Talks

Government, Ethnic Armed Groups Should Promote Women’s Rights in Political Transition

Burma’s government and ethnic armed groups should ensure that women meaningfully participate in efforts to end the country’s longstanding armed conflicts, Human Rights Watch said in a report released on Aug 24. The government should also make women’s rights a priority as Burma continues its political transition. In late August 2016, the National League for Democracy-led government that was elected in November 2015, and various armed groups will meet at the “Panglong 21st Century Peace Conference” to begin talks.

Thailand: Insurgents Target Civilians in South

Systematic Bombings Possible Crimes Against Humanity

Separatist insurgents in Thailand’s southern border provinces have committed an apparent series of bombings against civilians that may amount to crimes against humanity, Human Rights Watch said on Aug 24.

Bahrain: Authorities Targeting Shia clerics

Prosecutions Fanning Sectarianism

Bahraini authorities are targeting Shia clerics in a systematic campaign of harassment that violates their rights to freedom of assembly and speech, and to religious freedom, Human Rights Watch said on Aug 23.

WHO scales up response to humanitarian crisis in Nigeria

Dire health situation identified in 15 local government areas formerly held by insurgents

A WHO emergency health team arrived 19 August 2016 in Maiduguri city to assess and respond to the health needs of 800 000 people in north eastern Nigeria, formerly held by militant insurgency groups. WHO is scaling up its emergency response activities, together with partners, to assist hundreds of thousands of people in desperate need of health services. More than half of the health facilities in Borno State, the area most severely affected, are not functioning.

Indonesia: Court Reviews Anti-LGBT Law

Criminalizing Same-Sex Relations Raises Privacy, Discrimination Concerns

Indonesia’s Constitutional Court will hold its fifth hearing on August 23, 2016 on proposed revisions to the country’s criminal code that would punish consensual same-sex behavior and increase penalties for sexual activity out of wedlock, Human Rights Watch said on Aug 23.

Jordan: Positive Steps on Education for Syrian Children

Thousands More Eligible to Enroll, but Challenges Remain

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Syrian children attend class in a school in the Zaatari refugee camp in northern Jordan, October 20, 2015. The school taught Syrian girls in the morning and boys in the afternoon, but lacked electricity, heating, and running water.