Archive for: 08/2010

UN findings on Australia’s record of racially discriminatory policies

30 August 2010, 01:53PM

Amnesty International welcomes international scrutiny of Australia’s poor track record on racial discrimination, calling on the incoming government to table the latest United Nations recommendations in Parliament and begin taking action within its first 100 days.

Zimbabwe: Armed police torch homes of 250 people in Harare

28 August 2010, 10:35AM

Amnesty International is calling on the Zimbabwean government to take immediate action to protect some 250 people who were forcibly evicted before their homes and possessions were set alight during a night raid by armed Zimbabwean police.

France urged to end stigmatisation of Roma and Travellers

27 August 2010, 10:46AM

Amnesty International today expressed deep concern about recent statements and measures taken by the French authorities that appear to target Roma and Travellers.

Mass rape in Democratic Republic of Congo

27 August 2010, 10:25AM

Amnesty International is appalled at the latest reports of the mass rape and other sexual violence committed in the Walikale region of North Kivu between 30 July and 2 August.

Yemen abandons human rights in the name of counter terrorism

26 August 2010, 08:57AM

Yemen must stop sacrificing human rights in the name of security as it confronts threats from al-Qa’ida, Zaidi Shi'a rebels in the north, and address growing demands for secession in the south.

UN must not use flawed data on cause of oil spills

26 August 2010, 08:55AM

Amnesty International has challenged the credibility of data cited by a senior UN official investigating oil-impacted sites in Ogoniland in the Niger Delta, who is reported to have said that 90 per cent of oil spills in Ogoniland were due to sabotage and criminal activity, and just 10 per cent due to equipment failure and negligence by companies such as Shell.

India rejects Vedanta mine

26 August 2010, 08:44AM

Amnesty International has described the Indian government’s decision to reject the bauxite mine project in Orissa’s Niyamgiri Hills as a landmark victory for the human rights of Indigenous communities.

China death penalty reforms to have little impact

24 August 2010, 09:30AM

China may remove the death penalty from 13 out of 68 crimes that currently carry the punishment, such as white collar crimes, and would also remove the death penalty as a punishment for those over 75 years of age. However, in practice this may not result in significantly fewer executions.

PNG must act on UN concerns about violence against women

24 August 2010, 08:48AM

The Papua New Guinea Government must act on the recommendations of a UN Committee and do more to solve the problem of violence against women.

EU court to consider asylum seeker returns

21 August 2010, 07:42AM

The EU Court in Luxembourg will look at whether EU countries can turn back asylum seekers to Greece under EU law, after a case where the UK refused to process the claims of asylum seekers who had first passed through Greece.

Saudi Arabia must not paralyse man as punishment

21 August 2010, 07:11AM

Saudi Arabian authorities have asked hospitals if they could deliberately paralyse a man by cutting his spinal cord, as punishment for similar injury he allegedly caused someone in a fight more than two years ago.

Criminalisation of peaceful political activities in Maluku must end

20 August 2010, 12:12PM

The decision to charge at least 22 political activists in Maluku for “rebellion” once again highlights the failure of the Indonesian government to distinguish between armed groups and peaceful political activists.

Malaysia should halt expansion of security force accused of abuses

20 August 2010, 10:40AM

The Malaysian government should scrap plans to expand a state-sponsored security force of civilian volunteers with a long record of human rights abuses against refugees and migrants.

Tamil Nadu must release five activists

19 August 2010, 09:57AM

Authorities in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu must release five arrested human rights defenders, drop the false charges against them and hold the state police accountable for harassment and intimidation.

No justice for humanitarian workers murdered in Sri Lanka

19 August 2010, 09:44AM

Four years after 17 humanitarian workers with the international humanitarian agency Action Contre La Faim (“Action against Hunger”, or ACF) were gunned down execution style in Sri Lanka, no-one has been arrested, let alone convicted.

Philippine police must be prosecuted for torture

19 August 2010, 09:36AM

The Philippines government should ensure that police officers responsible for torture are brought to justice. A video broadcast on Tuesday in the national media showed a suspect being yanked by a cord attached to his genitals, and whipped with rope, as uniformed police officers looked on.

Kenya: Important death penalty judgment

18 August 2010, 02:17PM

Amnesty International welcomes the judgment delivered by the Court of Appeal of Kenya, declaring mandatory death penalty for murder as inconsistent with the spirit and letter of the Constitution and raising important questions on the application of the death penalty in the country.

Afghan couple stoned to death by Taliban

17 August 2010, 10:27AM

Amnesty International has condemned the first Taliban executions by stoning carried out in Afghanistan since 2001.

Incoming government must act to end violence against women

16 August 2010, 03:54PM

The release of the proposed National Plan to Reduce Violence Against Women and their Children (2010 to 2022) is a positive move, but the most important step has yet to be taken – the plan must be immediately delivered, with the cooperation of State and Territory Governments.

Amnesty International fights global poverty at U2 concerts

14 August 2010, 10:04AM

Amnesty International signs up support at U2 concerts for Demand Dignity campaign in fight against global poverty.

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