The chilling policy to cut Greenland’s high birth rate – podcast
The Guardian | Human rights
by Presented by Helen Pidd, with Celine Klint and Bula Larson; produced by Courtney Yusuf and Solomon King; executive producer Homa Khaleeli
18h ago
In the 1960s the birthrate in Greenland was one of the highest in the world. Then it plunged. Decades later, women have finally begun speaking out about what happened Bula Larson was 14 when one day she and her friends were told to go to the hospital. Bula lived in Greenland and was Inuit like most of the population of the island, which is an autonomous territory of Denmark. At the hospital she and her friends lined up, and one-by-one were told to enter a room. Bula recalls how she was asked to sit on a bed with ‘cold metal stirrups’ where, to her shock, she was fitted with an IUD, a contracep ..read more
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US and UK complicit in detentions at Syrian camps where torture rife, says Amnesty
The Guardian | Human rights
by Haroon Siddique Legal affairs correspondent
2d ago
Report says thousands of people held in little-reported facilities where authorities are violating human rights on a large scale The US and UK are complicit in the detention of thousands of people, including British nationals, in camps and facilities in north-east Syria where disease, torture and death are rife, according to Amnesty International. In a report, the charity says the western-backed region’s autonomous authorities are responsible for large-scale human rights violations against people held since the end of the ground war against Islamic State (IS) more than five years ago ..read more
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Braverman tells Tories they should not commit to leaving the ECHR in a ‘losing manifesto’ – UK politics live
The Guardian | Human rights
by Andrew Sparrow
3d ago
Former home secretary says including ECHR withdrawal in general election manifesto will ‘set cause back a generation’ At 12.30pm a transport minister will respond to an urgent question in the Commons tabled by Labour on job losses in the rail industry. That means the debate on the smoking ban will will not start until about 1.15pm. Suella Braverman, the former home secretary, is one of the Britons speaking at the National Conservatism conference in Brussels starting today. The conference, which features hardline rightwingers from around the world committed to the NatCons’ ‘faith, flag and fami ..read more
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‘Correct a black mark in US history’: former prisoners of Abu Ghraib get day in court
The Guardian | Human rights
by Alice Speri
3d ago
Jury trial against military contractor CACI over ‘sadistic, blatant and wanton abuses’ comes 20 years after scandal broke The first trial to contend with the post-9/11 abuse of detainees in US custody begins on Monday, in a case brought by three men who were held in the US-run Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. The jury trial, in a federal court in Virginia, comes nearly 20 years to the day that the photographs depicting torture and abuse in the prison were first revealed to the public, prompting an international scandal that came to symbolize the treatment of detainees in the US “war on terror ..read more
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China continues to persecute family of dissidents unlawfully, finds report
The Guardian | Human rights
by Helen Davidson in Taipei
4d ago
Authorities continuing ‘intimidation’ including separating children from their parents, despite pledge to end collective punishment China continues to unlawfully target the families of activists and dissidents, despite a pledge to end the practice of collective punishment, a Chinese human rights group has said in a report. The persecution, which includes intimidation and harassment, forced evictions, travel bans, criminal proceedings against family members and preventing children from attending school, has affected people across China and the diaspora community for decades, the report by the C ..read more
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UK Foreign Office holding secret talks with Sudan’s RSF paramilitary group
The Guardian | Human rights
by Mark Townsend
4d ago
Exclusive: Rights groups denounce negotiations with Rapid Support Forces, accused of ethnic cleansing and war crimes Inside South Sudan’s worsening refugee crisis – in pictures Foreign Office officials are holding secret talks with the paramilitary group that has been waging a campaign of ethnic cleansing in Sudan for the past year. News that the British government and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) are engaged in clandestine negotiations has prompted warnings that such talks risk legitimising the notorious militia – which continues to commit multiple war crimes – while undermining Britain’s ..read more
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Senior Tories fear Johnson and Truss will sabotage Sunak’s election campaign
The Guardian | Human rights
by Michael Savage Policy Editor
5d ago
Concerns that vicious circle of party ill-discipline is undermining the PM’s ability to restore order Senior Tories fear Rishi Sunak is facing a vicious circle of party ill-discipline, amid concerns that attacks from Boris Johnson, Liz Truss and Suella Braverman will signal his inability to restore authority in the months before the general election. A rebellion this week over his plans to ban smoking is set to be the latest flashpoint, with libertarian MPs, including Truss, preparing to criticise the proposal as a nanny-state measure that is unconservative ..read more
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Strasbourg court’s Swiss climate ruling could have global impact, say experts
The Guardian | Human rights
by Isabella Kaminski
6d ago
Decision by European court of human rights around vulnerability of older women to heatwaves marks significant shift A landmark legal ruling at the European court of human rights could open the floodgates for a slew of new court cases around the world, experts have said. The Strasbourg-based court said earlier this week that Switzerland’s failure to do enough to cut its national greenhouse gas emissions was a clear violation of the human rights of a group of more than 2,000 older Swiss women. The women argued successfully that their rights to privacy and family life were being breached because ..read more
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Keith Carmichael obituary
The Guardian | Human rights
by Owen Bowcott
1w ago
Human rights campaigner who founded the charity Redress following his unlawful imprisonment and torture in Saudi Arabia Questions were asked in the House of Commons after Keith Carmichael disappeared into a Saudi Arabian jail in November 1981. His case was repeatedly raised by MPs and peers as news of his brutal mistreatment filtered out. It was not until he was released without charge two and half years later, however, that the extent of the torture he had endured became public knowledge. Carmichael, who has died aged 90, was held in solitary confinement for three months, deprived of food and ..read more
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‘Right to freedom from torture’: UN experts urge the Gambia not to decriminalise FGM
The Guardian | Human rights
by Eromo Egbejule in Abidjan
1w ago
Repealing ban would mean return of ‘one of the most pernicious forms of violence committed against women and children’ A team of UN experts has urged Gambian lawmakers not to repeal a ban on female genital mutilation, saying such a move would set a dangerous global precedent. In a letter dated 8 April and made public on Thursday, the experts, led by Reem Alsalem, the UN special rapporteur on violence against women and girls, said allowing the unchecked return of “one of the most pernicious forms of violence committed against women and children” would violate their right to freedom from torture ..read more
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