Human Rights

UNICEF welcomes final release of child soldiers by armed group in South Sudan

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Children surrender their weapons during a ceremony formalizing their release from the SSDA Cobra Faction armed group, in Pibor, South Sudan (February 2015).

Central African Republic: Key Step Toward Justice

Get New Special Criminal Court Up and Running

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Ethnic Peuhl women and children housed in dilapidated government buildings in the town of Yaloké, protected by international peacekeepers and local gendarmes.

EU: Mixed Messages on Boat Migration

Augmented Search and Rescue, but Focus Still on Preventing Departure

The commitment by European Union heads of state to triple the capacity of Frontex operations in the Mediterranean is an important step towards preventing migrant deaths at sea, Human Rights Watch said on 23 April, 2015. But the EU, at its extraordinary summit meeting on April 23, 2015, remained vague about whether Frontex ships will be deployed off the Libyan coast where migrant boats are sinking.

Ethiopia: Free Zone 9 Bloggers, Journalists

A Year After Arrests, Drop Politically Motivated Charges

Ethiopian authorities should immediately release nine bloggers and journalists arrested a year ago who are being prosecuted on politically motivated charges, Human Rights Watch said on 23 April, 2015. The six bloggers, who belong to the Zone 9 blogging collective, and three journalists were arrested on April 25 and 26, 2014, in a coordinated sweep in Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa. They were charged under the criminal code and anti-terrorism law for having links to banned opposition groups and trying to violently overthrow the government.

Bangladesh: 2 Years After Rana Plaza, Workers Denied Rights

Enforce Labor Law and End Mistreatment of Unions

Garment workers in Bangladesh face poor working conditions and anti-union tactics by employers including assaults on union organizers, Human Rights Watch said in a report released on 22 April, 2015. In the two years since more than 1,100 workers died in the catastrophic collapse of the Rana Plaza factory on April 24, 2013, efforts are underway to make Bangladesh factories safer, but the government and Western retailers can and should do more to enforce international labor standards to protect workers’ rights, including their right to form unions and advocate for better conditions.

Central African Republic: Muslims Held Captive, Raped

UN, Government Should Free Ethnic Peuhl Women, Children Held by Anti-Balaka

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A young Peuhl woman, around 18 years of age, held for 14 months as a sex slave by anti-Balaka fighters in Pondo, Central African Republic.

€150,000 for a kidney: the lethal trade in illegal organs

The demand for organs far outstrips what is available, leading to illegal trafficking in organs all over the world. With Europeans travelling to other countries to receive one of these illegally harvested organs, it also forms a challenge for the EU. The EP's public health committee and human rights subcommittee held a workshop on 21 April dedicated to organ harvesting in China to discuss these issues. However, MEPs warned that the problem was not limited to China.

UN takes first steps towards eradicating school-related gender-based violence

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As Forum opens, deputy UN chief says 2015 a ‘critical year’ for world’s indigenous peoples

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Opening of the fourteenth session of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues.

‘Callous’ EU politics on migrants costing lives, UN rights chief warns

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Maltese emergency workers in Senglea collect bodies from the Mediterranean disaster which happened overnight Saturday-Sunday 18-19 April 2015.

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