Foreign Policy Blogs

Human Rights

ICTR Defense Investigator Guilty of Leaking Information

A former defense investigator at the Rwanda Tribunal’s trial of Jean de Dieu Kamuhanda, Léonidas Nshogoza, was found guilty of contempt yesterday and sentenced to 10 months imprisonment for repeatedly meeting with and disclosing protected information about two witnesses. Although this was a much different offense than that of another former defense investigator, Joseph Nzabirinda, […]

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The Truth of Justice from a Child

The Truth of Justice from a Child

We often give children little input into matters of foreign affairs, politics or human rights, however children are the most observant and astute and regardless of weather or not we teach them about the world or not, they are watching and learning. Recently I was sitting around with my friends son, who is the ripe […]

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Delayed Again: CIA Interrogation Report

The re-release of a May 2004 internal CIA report on the agency’s secret detention and interrogation program was again delayed this afternoon, CNN reports. The document has been requested by the ACLU as part of its ongoing Freedom of Information Act lawsuit.  It is a report regarding then CIA inspector general John L. Helgerson’s May […]

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The Prism of Human Rights: Irony and Power Compared in the Middle East and Latin America

The Prism of Human Rights: Irony and Power Compared in the Middle East and Latin America

This post can also be found on FPA’s Latin America Blog. It came as no surprise to those who knew about the past rights abuses by Iran’s government when many Iranians, especially young Iranians, took to the streets in the last two weeks and were met with brutal retribution affecting every sector of Iran’s vibrant […]

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Chad's 'African Pinochet' – Time for Trial?

An African Union summit will bring African heads of state together tomorrow in Libya; in anticipation 8 human rights organizations  yesterday called on the AU to ensure that Senegal prosecutes former Chadian dictator Hissène Habré for crimes against humanity and torture. Habré, dubbed the “African Pinochet”, ruled Chad from 1982 until 1990; a Truth Commission […]

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Amazon's Tiananmen

About two weeks ago John Vidal of the Guardian newspaper wrote that conflicts will increase as government backed companies in the scramble for resources push into territories contested by indigenous people.  About a week before his article, something extraordinary had happened. Peru sent in heavily armed police to clear away some 2000 Aguarana and Wampi Indians […]

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Thinking Outside the (Ballot) Box

Mexico’s midterm election for its Chamber of Deputies, six governors and mayors and local legislators in 11 states will be held next Sunday July 5. The governing National Action Party (PAN) has  deployed an agressive campaign that attempts to turn the elections  into a referendum on  President  Felipe Calderón’s war against the drug cartels: either […]

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Help pass the Child Protection Compact Act of 2009 (HR 2737)

Help pass the Child Protection Compact Act of 2009 (HR 2737)

Human trafficking is the worlds fastest growing industry, according to the 2009 State Department Trafficking in Persons Report over 80% of those victimized by transnational trafficking are women and children. According to the International Labor Organization (End of Child Labor Within Reach 2006), each year, some 1.2 million children are trafficked for the purposes of […]

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News…

News…

Tanzania orphan program may set example for continent Supporters believe an innovative program in Tanzania to care for infants of mothers who die in childbirth might hold the key to cutting infant mortality rates and caring for Africa’s 50 million orphans. Infants are cared for during the first two to three years of life at […]

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Putting words into action

Putting words into action

In previous posts such as; The renewed debate over potential U.S. ratification of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child and The United States and The Rights of the Child, I have mentioned the heavy importance for the United States to ratify the Convention on the Rights of the Child.  This past November we saw […]

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Truth and Torture

Throughout the war with Iraq  under the Bush administration, the question of torture seemed to provoke the basest of sensibilities.  On the one hand were the Jack Bauer types who believe in the ticking bomb scenario, on the other, are the Geneva Conventions, the War Crimes Act, and let’s face it – what’s left of […]

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Georgia's iron grip on the press

Georgia's iron grip on the press

The freedom of expression and press has long been a contentious issue in Georgia where journalists, both Georgian and foreign, are facing intimidation, threats, and beatings.  Reporters without Borders ranks Georgia 120 on the press freedom index scale, worse than Sierra Leone and only one up from Algeria. And Saakashvili’s government is fully aware of it.  […]

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U.S. Department of State Releases 2009 Trafficking in Persons Report

U.S. Department of State Releases 2009 Trafficking in Persons Report

On June 16, 2009, the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons within the U.S. Department of State released the Trafficking in Persons Report 2009, which describes foreign governments’ efforts to eliminate human trafficking. You can download the report from the following here. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, alongside leaders in Congress, announced […]

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Western journalist attacked – cont'd

Update – Five men in ski masks entered Norwegian journalist’s Ragnar Skre‘s apartment at around 22:00 last night in Tbilisi.  According to my contact, a police officer who arrived at the scene said it was just a robbery while another police officer said it was because he was a journalist.  After the beating, the five […]

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Western Journalist attacked in Georgia

I received a disturbing email from a human rights activist contact inside Georgia.  He forwarded the following email from freelance Norwegian journalist Ragnar Skre: I was attacked – two hours after I sent this. Masked men with guns. How can I contact you? I called your mobile, talked to probably your son, now there is no […]

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