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Migrants and Refugees
- Amnesty International reported that tens of thousands of refugees have been cut off from humanitarian aid for the last two months in an area between Syria and Jordan. [Al Jazeera]
- The hunger strike of a former Guantanamo detainee currently residing in Uruguay as a refugee prompted a judge this week to order a medical evaluation. [Washington Post]
- The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees announced this week that the number of South Sudanese refugees is now over a million. [UN News Centre]
Civil Society
- A Colombian court ruled this week that Colombia was responsible for the 1999 death of Jaime Garzon, a journalist and satirist, and ordered the State to pay his family damages. [Washington Post]
- Two activists in South Kordofan in Sudan were detained and questioned about a meeting to take place this week to discuss health care, infrastructure, and utilities. [All Africa]
- Khurram Parvez, a human rights defender in India was prevented from travelling to Geneva this week where he planned to attend the United Nations Human Rights Council’s current session. [FIDH]
- The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights criticized Ethiopia this week for the use of lethal force against protestors as well as other human rights abuses. [Reprieve]
- The High Court of Justice in Israel ruled this week that force-feeding Palestinian prisoners who have gone on a hunger strike is constitutional. [Jurist]
International Bodies’ Activities
Conflict and Violence
- A United Nations report released this week found that civilian casualties are on the rise in eastern Ukraine due to ongoing conflict in the area. [OHCHR Press Release]
- Ahead of signing a peace accord, the FARC, an armed forced in Colombia, admitted in a released video this week that they have kidnapped thousands of people during the conflict and promised not to do so again. [Al Jazeera]
Politics
- After an opposition leader submitted a complaint to Gabon’s Constitutional Court claiming that President Ali Bongo was recently re-elected through fraudulent means, the African Union announced that it will send observers to assist the court. [VOA]
- Luxembourg this week called for Hungary to be kicked out of the European Union based on its treatment of refugees and violation of the right to freedom of expression. [Guardian]
- President Edgar Lungu was sworn in this week after being re-elected last month in Zambia. [Al Jazeera]
- In a statement issued this week China reiterated its intent to uphold the right to be presumed innocent. [Jurist]
- This week the United States House of Representatives intelligence committee released a summary of its investigation into Edward Snowden’s removal of documents from the National Security Administration and stated that Snowden is not a whistleblower. [Al Jazeera]
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