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Sudan: Peace agreement – a realistic chance for human rights?
Enormous hopes rested on the Government of Republic of the Sudan (GoS) and the rebels Republic of the Sudan People’s Liberation Army/Movement (SPLA/M) when they signed a comprehensive peace agreement (CPA) in Naivasha, Republic of Kenya, on Sunday, 9 January. If sustained, it will mark the end of a more than two decades of war and allowing Sudan’s people to return to a civilian lifestyle with the accompanying rights and freedoms. (4-FEB-05)
Zimbabwe: MDC to participate in March elections “under protest”
The opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) has announced that it will participate in the forthcoming parliamentary elections under protest. According to the party’s spokesman, Paul Themba Nyathi, MDC has abandoned plans to boycott the vote to protest political violence and unfair voting conditions in Zimbabwe. (4-FEB-05)
Sudan: UN splits hairs over genocide
A U.N. special commission, which refused to declare the widespread killings in the Republic of the Sudan as genocide,’ has been criticised for restraining its condemnation of the massacre of some 400,000 Sudanese. Reacting to the report released by the commission Monday, Claudio Cordone of Amnesty International said “the war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in the Darfur region are no less serious than genocide.” (3-FEB-05)
Zimbabwe/South Africa: Cosatu delegation refused entry
The Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) has met its Zimbabwean counterparts today after the union federation was turned away at Harare airport yesterday. Cosatu spokesperson Paul Notyhawa said the two federations would meet in Musina in South Africa’s Limpopo province instead. “The meeting will cover all the topics which would have been discussed in Harare,” he said. (3-FEB-05)
No Gotovina, no negotiations
If the Croatian authorities fail to turn in general Gotovina until the beginning of March 17 to the Hague Tribunal, the European Commission will postpone the negotiations for joining the EU – warned Oli Rehn, commissioner to the European Commission for Enlargement. (2-FEB-05)
Art exhibition and seminar on refugees’ rights
In cooperation with Bergen Kunsthall, the Egil Rafto Human Rights House arranges seminars, lectures and film screening. The topic of these events is in different ways tied to one of this spring’s main exhibitions at Kunsthall, “Time Suspended”. The exhibition, “Time Suspended”, explores the time perspective of refugees’ lives, focusing especially on long-lasting conflicts. (02-FEB-2005)
U.S. To Press for Release of Rafto Laureate Rebiya Kadeer
Washington, Jan 27 – The United States will press Beijing to free jailed Uyghur businesswoman Rebiya Kadeer, a U.S. senior official said Jan. 26 at a ceremony at Capitol Hill in which Kadeer was honored in absentia with Norway’s Rafto Prize for Human Rights. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia Randall Schriver said that Washington’s concerns over Kadeer, 58 and a prominent member of China?s Uighur ethnic group in the largely Muslim Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, would be raised with the Chinese government. (02-FEB-2005)
Burma remains one of the world’s most repressive regimes, says HRW
-According to Human Rights Watch´s recently released annual report for 2004, Burma is still one of the world?´s most repressive regimes, says Aase Sand of the Norwegian Burma Committee, one of the member organisations of the Human Rights House in Oslo. -Burma still has the highest number of child soldiers in the world and continues to hold approximately 1300 political prisoners, says Sand. (2-FEB-05)
HRH to attend advanced journalism course in Sudan
Niels Jacob Harbitz, HRH’s Project Manager for East Africa, has been selected to take part in an advanced course in conflict and war, humanitarian crisis and relief operation journalism, co-ordinated and funded by the United Nations Development Programme. Commencing in Copenhagen, the course will move on to Khartoum and, unless the scurity situation prohibits, take its participants straight to Darfur. (2-FEB-05)
Azerbaijan: Solutions of and missions to occupied territories
-Only a democratic development in the Republic of Azerbaijan and Republic of Armenia will guarantee a peaceful solution to the conflict, the chairman of the Republic of Azerbaijan Popular Front party, Ali Kerimli, said in a meeting with the Norwegian Helsinki Committee at the Human Rights House in Oslo yesterday. The decision to set up the OSCE factfinding mission was made after Republic of Azerbaijan put the issue of Armenians´ settlement in the occupied lands on the agenda of the UN General Assembly session. (2-FEB-2005)
Azerbaijan: OSCE Mission looks into occupied territories
The decision to set up the OSCE fact-finding mission was made after Republic of Azerbaijan put the issue of Armenians? settlement in the occupied lands on the agenda of the UN General Assembly session. -Only a democratic development in the Republic of Azerbaijan and Republic of Armenia will garanty a peaceful solution of the conflict, the chairman of the Republic of Azerbaijan Popular Front party, Ali Kerimli, said in a meeting with the Norwegian Helsinki Committe, Human Rights House Foundation and Amnesty International when he visited Oslo yesterday (2-FEB-2005)
HRH to attend conference on the human rights situation in North Korea
Executive Director Maria Dahle and Project Manager Niels Jacob Harbitz will attend the sixth international conference on the human rights and refugees’ situation in North Korea, to take place in Seoul, South Korea, 14 – 16 February. -Our presence at the conference is to be seen as part of our preparations to co-host next years’ conference with the Egil Rafto Human Rights House in Bergen, says Dahle. (1-FEB-05)