Human Rights

Lebanon: Police Violence Against Protesters

Investigation Needed; Respect Right to Peaceful Assembly

Police in Lebanon used force to disperse a peaceful protest on August 19, 2015, failing to uphold human rights standards.

Gagging the Critics in China

Over the last five weeks, Chinese authorities have conducting a sweeping roundup of human rights lawyers and activists, interrogating and briefly detaining over 200 people, with 25 still in custody. Most of those 25 are being held in secret locations with no access to family or lawyers. Under Chinese law, police can detain citizens for up to 37 days before the procurator must either approve their arrest or release them. For most of those still in detention, that crucial deadline has passed; their detention is now unlawful, not just under international law but domestic law. And to think that the official justification for rounding-up the lawyers was to “uphold the rule of law!”

Following Tianjin explosion, UN expert calls on China to ensure transparent investigation

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City landscape, Tianjin, China.

Syria: Impose Arms Embargo Following Deadly Airstrikes

Repeated Strikes on Douma Kill At Least 112

The United Nations Security Council should impose an arms embargo on the Syrian government following the government’s repeated air attacks on Douma’s popular markets and residential areas on August 16, 2015. The attacks killed at least 112 people, whom witnesses and first responders described as overwhelmingly civilian.

Yemen: Set UN Inquiry Into Violations by All Sides

Growing Toll From Indiscriminate Attacks, Cluster Weapons

The United Nations Human Rights Council should create a commission of inquiry to investigate alleged serious laws-of-war violations by all parties in Yemen since September 2014, Human Rights Watch and 22 other human rights and humanitarian organizations said on August 19.

Egypt: Counterterrorism Law Erodes Basic Rights

Broad ‘Terrorist Acts’ List May Criminalize Civil Disobedience

Egypt’s new counterterrorism law increases authorities’ power to impose heavy sentences, including the death penalty, for crimes under a definition of terrorism that is so broadly worded it could encompass civil disobedience. President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi enacted the law on August 15, 2015.

Bangladesh’s Machete Attacks On Free Speech

Free speech in Bangladesh is under attack as never before, held hostage between angry, machete-wielding radicals on one hand and a government, quick to take offence, on the other.

Libya: UN human rights office alarmed by reports of ISIL-led violence, reprisal killings

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Rupert Colville, spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR).

South Africa: Education Barriers for Children with Disabilities

Discriminated Against, Excluded from Schools

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Two children sit on chairs in the New Covenant day care center, a center set-up and led by parents in Orange Farm township, Johannesburg, to cater to children with disabilities who are not admitted in the township’s mainstream schools.

Moldova: Activist Faces Extradition to Tajikistan

Forced Return Could Lead to Torture, Ill-Treatment

The government of Moldova should ensure that Tajik opposition activist Sobir Valiev is not extradited or otherwise returned to Tajikistan, where he faces possible torture or ill-treatment, Human Rights Watch said on August 17. Sobir Valiev, deputy head of the Congress of Constructive Forces of Tajikistan, a peaceful opposition group, was detained on August 11, 2015, at the request of the Tajik government by Moldovan migration police in the Chisinau airport before boarding a flight to Istanbul. Tajik authorities are pursuing Valiev’s extradition on extremism charges that appear politically motivated and in retaliation for his peaceful political opposition activity.