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Wednesday, 7 August 2013

News Round-Up Wednesday 7 August 2013


  • In Northern Ireland, one of the former internees kept at a (up to now) secret detention facility at Ballykelly in early 1970s has given an interview describing his torture.

Tuesday, 6 August 2013

News Round-Up Tuesday 6 August 2013







  • ICC prosecutor Fatou Bensouda reportedly found reason to believe that Boko Haram in Nigeria have committed crimes against humanity.
  • US Army officer convicted of ordering the fatal shootings of 2 Afghans, who the defense argued were presumed Taliban because they were on a motorcycle.  
  • In Cote D'Ivoire, authorities have provisionally released 14 supporters of former President Laurent Gbagbo detained following the 2011 post-election violence that killed 3,000, in a move that is expected to ease tensions.




Monday, 31 December 2012

News Round-Up - 31 December 2012


  • Syria's special envoy Lakhdar Brahimi has said that if there is no political solution to Syria it will be "transformed into hell," likening the potential situation to Somalia.
  • After meeting with AU chairman Thomas Boni Yayi over the weekend, CAR's President Francois Bozize has said he is ready to form a national unity government with the Seleka rebels that have taken much of the country in recent days.The Seleka alliance has accused Bozize of failing to honour the 2007 peace agreement.
  • The Pakistani Taliban have executed 21 of the 23 policemen kidnapped last week in Waziristan in a dawn raid.  The policemen were government-allied paramilitaries recruited from local tribes.  For more on the reprisals carried out in Waziristan in response to drone attacks by the US in the region, see Declan Walsh's piece in the New York Times.
  • Israel has allowed building materials for private sector into Gaza for the first time in five years.  Up until now many private contractors had been relying on smuggled materials from Egypt.
  • In the blogosphere, an interesting debate has started on comparisons between the Newtown bombings and drone strikes.  See here for Kevin Jon Heller's piece at Opiniojuris, and here for Benjamin Wittes's piece over at Lawfare.

Friday, 28 December 2012

Crisis Group Louise Arbour's Top 10 Conflicts for 2013

In an article over at Foreignpolicy.com Louise Arbour of International Crisis Group sets out 10 conflicts which Crisis Group believes are the biggest coming threats for 2013. The list does not claim to be exhaustive or even prioritised. 

Many that could credibly have made their way onto the list - like the "drug-related violence in Mexico and the "ongoing trauma in Somalia" - have been left off.  Rather the list seeks to highlight "a mix of the obvious risks and those we believe are bubbling beneath the surface."  

Those are:  Sudan, Turkey/PKK, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Syria & Lebanon, the Sahel, Central Asia, DRC, and Kenya.  

The full article can be found here.


News Round-Up - 28 December 2012



  • The NY Times carries a piece on life under Islamist rule in Northern Mali, where at least 14 people have had their feet cut off since the takeover last Spring.  Last week the UNSC passed a resolution authorising military intervention in Mali.  
  • The Washington post has published an interesting report on the CIA's little-known Global Response Staff, which employs contractors to provide an "unobtrusive layer of security for CIA officers in high-risk outposts."
  • It is reported that UN Secretary General and the UN Security Council have issued statements condemning armed attacks in several towns in the Central African Republic by the Sedeka coalition rebels
  • Hamas has banned Palestinian journalists in Gaza from working with or giving interviews to the Israeli media.  Israeli journalists have been banned by their own government from entering Gaza since 2006, purportedly for security reasons. In the West Bank, President Abbas has said he will disband the Palestinian Authority and hand over authority to Netanyahu if there is no move to renewing peace talks after the forthcoming Israeli elections in January.


Thursday, 27 December 2012

News Round-Up - 27 December 2012


  • At the ECCC, Florence Ndepele Mwachande Mumba of Zambia has been appointed as the sitting judge of the Supreme Court Chamber. She formerly served as a trial chamber judge at the ICTY and as an appeals chamber judge in the joint ICTY-ICTR appeals chamber. Phillip Rapoza of the USA, who served as a judge on the Special Panels for Serious Crimes in Timor-Leste, has been appointed as the Supreme Court Chamber's reserve judge. 
  • In Syria, the Assad regime's military police chief has defected. Maj. Gen. Abdul Aziz Jassem al-Shallal was reported as saying that he decided to leave when the regime deviated from its mission to protect the country and turned into “a gang for killing and destruction.”
  • Three people have been killed and six more injured in a suicide bomb attack outside a US Base in Khost in eastern Afghanistan. The base is known to host CIA operatives tracking terror suspects in Pakistan. The Taliban have claimed credit for the attack.
  • In Pakistan, there have been attacks on police stations in the town of Darra Adam Khel in the north-western part of Pakistan, in which two policemen have been killed and a further 22 are missing. The Pakistani Taliban, who are believed to be responsible, also announced today their conditions for a ceasefire with the Pakistani government.
  • It is reported that the European training mission to Mali, mandated by Security Council Resolution 2085, is to be headed up by General François Lecointre who has previously served served in Djibouti, the Central African Republic, Rwanda, Gabon and Bosnia.

Color of War - Richard Mosse

In this series of striking photographs, the extraordinarily talented Richard Mosse uses infrared film to capture the "Hobbesian state of war in Congo." For him, Congo is "the most beautiful place I have been in my life - and I've traveled a lot."

The bitter contrast between war and the breathtaking natural beauty that often forms its backdrop is one that those of us involved in international criminal law are probably all too familiar with.  Mosse manages to convey this juxtaposition - beauty and war - without a word.  

For more on Mosse's work in Congo, see here.