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zaterdag 1 december 2018

Saudi Crown Prince Faces Possible War Crimes, Torture Investigation


Human Rights Watch
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THE WEEK IN RIGHTS | NOVEMBER 29, 2018


Photo © 2018 Albin Lohr-Jones/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images
This week, the Argentine judiciary took steps toward a formal investigation of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s possible responsibility for war crimes in Yemen and ill-treatment of Saudi citizens, including the murder and alleged torture of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
Mohammed bin Salman arrived in Buenos Aires for the G20 Summit on November 28
A cloud of suspicion will loom over the crown prince as he tries to rebuild his shattered reputation at the G20, and world leaders would do well to think twice before posing for pictures next to someone who may come under investigation for war crimes and torture.
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In 2010, Ntabo Ntaberi Sheka's militia and two other armed groups raped at least 387 women, men, girls, and boys in 13 villages in eastern Congo’s Walikale territory. His trial is crucial for justice in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
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The already dire conditions in the overcrowded Moria camp for asylum seekers on Lesbos may deteriorate into a full-blown humanitarian disaster as winter approaches unless urgent action is taken.
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Mexico’s incoming president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, will inherit a human rights catastrophe involving extreme violence by organized crime, widespread abuse by the military, police, and prosecutors.
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