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  • 4
    days
    ago

    'Sheer savagery': Syrian rebel rips out soldier's heart, Human Rights Watch says

    By Alastair Jamieson, Staff writer, NBC News

    A Syrian rebel commander has been caught on video cutting out the heart of a soldier and biting into it, Human Rights Watch said late Monday.

    Amateur video posted online shows a man cutting into the dead soldier's torso and removing his liver and heart.

    The New York-based rights group identified the man as Abu Sakkar, a founder of the rebel Omar al-Farouq Brigade. 

    In the video, which prompted outrage on all sides of the country’s deadly civil war, the man says: "I swear to God we will eat your hearts and your livers, you soldiers of Bashar the dog,”according to HRW.

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

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    A look back at the conflict that has overtaken the country.

    Launch slideshow

    Sakkar also uses sectarian language to insult Alawites, HRW said. More than 80,000 are thought to have been killed in the increasingly sectarian conflict, in which majority Sunni Muslims have sought to overthrow Assad, whose family is chiefly supported by Alawites, who are an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

    Access to country is difficult because of government restrictions and security concerns, making it hard for observers and news organizations to independently verify the source and authenticity of Internet videos. 

    HRW said it compared frames in the clip to similar videos of the same man and spoke to sources in Homs, including other rebels, who identified Sakkar.

    “It is not known whether the Independent Omar al-Farouq Brigade operates within the command structure of the Free Syrian Army,” HRW said Monday. “But the opposition Syrian National Coalition and the Free Syrian Army leadership should take all possible steps to hold those responsible for war crimes accountable and prevent such abuses by anyone under their command.”

    It repeated its call for the United Nations Security Council to refer Syria’s conflict to the International Criminal Court (ICC) to ensure accountability for all war crimes and crimes against humanity.

    “Even by the standards of Syria's ever-worsening stream of atrocity and massacre videos, the latest footage from the country cannot fail to shock for its sheer savagery,” HRW emergencies director Peter Bouckaert wrote on the Foreign Policy news site.

    Slideshow: The lives of Syrian rebels

    NBC News

    People resisting the army of President Bashar al-Assad in northern Syria cope with loss and prepare for fighting.

    Launch slideshow

    “Abu Sakkar is just one man, and there are many other armed fighters in Syria who reject such sectarian actions and would be horrified by the mutilation and desecration of a corpse -- let alone an act of cannibalism. But he is a commander in a decisive battle in Syria -- hardly a marginal figure.”

    Fahad Almasri, a spokesman for the Free Syrian Army condemned the actions portrayed in the video.

    "First, who did this behavior has not the FSA, does not represent us and does not represent the Syrian Revolution. We in the joint command of FSA categorically reject any actions or behaviors do not respect the values and ethics of Syrian Revolution and FSA, and we condemn in the strongest words of condemnation of such acts of individual that does not accept them never," Almasri said.

    The United States and Russia this week proposed an international conference aimed at ending the war. A Syria government minister on Tuesday said it wanted more details before deciding whether it would agree to attend, Reuters reported.

    Syrian Information Minister Omran Zoabi was quoted by state news agency SANA as saying that Syria welcomed the proposal but stressed it "will not be a party at all to any ... meeting which harms, directly or indirectly, national sovereignty." 

    Related:

    • Syria denies blame for Turkish border bomb blast that killed at least 46
    • Turkey PM: Red line has been crossed 
    • Full Syria coverage from NBC News

    148 comments

    Is this the kind of freedom fighters we are about to support?

    Show more
    Explore related topics: un, syria, rebel, commander, video, heart, human-rights-watch, war-crime, featured, liver, cannibal, hrw
  • 11
    Apr
    2013
    12:02pm, EDT

    Human Rights Watch: Syrian planes have killed 4,300 civilians since July

    Human Rights Watch alleges that Syrian leader Bashar Assad's warplanes are carrying out indiscriminate airstrikes, with one medical facility being hit eight times. ITV's Richard Pallot reports.

    By Barbara Surk, The Associated Press

    The Syrian regime has carried out indiscriminate and sometimes deliberate airstrikes against civilians that have killed at least 4,300 people since last summer and that amount to war crimes, an international human rights group said Thursday.

    Human Rights Watch said Syrian fighter jets have deliberately targeted bakeries, bread lines and hospitals in the country's northern region.

    Parts of northern Syria — especially areas along the border with Turkey — have in the past months fallen under the control of rebels fighting to topple President Bashar Assad, including several neighborhoods of the northern city of Aleppo, the country's largest urban center.

    "The aim of the airstrikes appears to be to terrorize civilians from the air, particularly in the opposition-controlled areas where they would otherwise be fairly safe from any effects of fighting," Ole Solvang of the New York-based group told The Associated Press.

    These attacks are "serious violations of international humanitarian law," and people who commit such breaches are "responsible for war crimes," the group said.

    Aleppo Media Center AMC via AP

    A citizen's image authenticated by The Associated Press shows homes destroyed in what was said to be a government airstrike and shelling in Aleppo, Syria, on Thursday. A rights group has accused Syria of indiscriminate and even deliberate airstrikes against civilians.

    Solvang led the HRW team that inspected 52 sites in northern Syria and documented 59 unlawful attacks by the Syrian Air Force. At least 152 people were killed in these attacks, according to an HRW report released Thursday.

    In most of the strikes, the regime planes appear to have had no military target in sight, such as armed opposition supporters or rebel headquarters, when they dropped their weapons on civilian areas, the group said.

    The 80-page HRW report said that across Syria, more than 4,300 civilians have been killed in attacks by Assad's jets since last July.

    The report is the most comprehensive study of Syrian air force operations since last summer, when Assad's forces started to rely heavily on fighter jets to repel rebel advances and reverse their territorial gains.

    Officials in Damascus could not immediately be reached for comment on the report.

    The opposition now controls large swaths of northern Syria, and last month captured their first provincial capital, the city of Raqqa. Opposition fighters also control whole districts of Aleppo and some key infrastructure in the east, including oil fields and dams on the Euphrates River.

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

    /

    A look back at the conflict that has overtaken the country.

    Launch slideshow

    While the rebels have made major gains, they often cannot hold on to the territory because of the regime's superior air power. The continued threat from the air has also stalled efforts to effectively govern rebel-held areas, allowing opposition leaders from the Western-backed alliance only brief excursions into areas under rebel control.

    For its part, the Syrian National Coalition has been marred by severe divisions in its ranks since its formation late last year in Qatar, and its leaders are mostly seen as disconnected from the myriad rebel forces fighting inside Syria.

    U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry met with opposition leaders in London on Wednesday to discuss ways to step up aid to rebels fighting to topple the regime in Damascus.

    The United Nations says that more than 70,000 people have been killed in Syria's 2-year-old conflict. It started with peaceful protests against Assad's rule, inspired by other Arab Spring uprisings, but following a harsh regime crackdown descended into full-blown civil war.

    Related:

    Iraqi al Qaeda and Syria militants announce alliance

    Syrian rebels ask US to shoot down Assad's warplanes

    Rebels claim Assad forces fired chemical weapon

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    32 comments

    I cannot begin to say how utterly grieved I am, not only for the losses of the Syrian people, but for the very large power vacuum which the U.S., NATO, and the Arab League left for al-Qaida to fill. In the end, that will probably turn out to be the supreme tragedy of this costly civil war. - RC

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    Explore related topics: report, syria, airstrikes, human-rights-watch, assad, featured, civilians-killed
  • 21
    Feb
    2013
    8:49am, EST

    Mexico security forces accused of abducting, murdering civilians

    Yuri Cortez / AFP - Getty Images file

    Relatives and human rights activists show a banner with pictures of missing people while marching during a protest marking the "International Week of the Detained-Disappeared" in May in Mexico City.

    By Gabriel Stargardter, Reuters

    IGUALA, Mexico - Dozens of people were abducted and murdered by Mexican security forces over the past six years during a gruesome war with drug cartels, Human Rights Watch said on Wednesday, urging President Enrique Pena Nieto to overhaul the military justice system. 

    The rights group said that since 2007 it has documented 149 cases of people who were never seen again after falling into the hands of security forces, and that the government failed to properly investigate the "disappearances." 

    "The result was the most severe crisis of enforced disappearances in Latin America in decades," the U.S.-based group said. (Link: Human Rights Watch's full report).

    The report was a grim reminder of the dark side of the war on drug cartels that killed an estimated 70,000 people during former President Felipe Calderon's six-year presidency. 

    Human Rights Watch recommended reforming Mexico's military justice system and creating a national database to link the missing with the thousands of unidentified bodies that piled up during the military-led crackdown on drug cartels. 

    The report also illustrates the obstacles that President Pena Nieto, who took office in December, faces in trying to stem the violence, restore order over areas of the country controlled by the drug cartels and end abuses by security forces. 

    For nearly three years, 56-year-old shopkeeper Maria Orozco has sought to discover the fate of her son. She says he was abducted along with five colleagues by soldiers from the nightclub where they worked in Iguala, a parched town south of the Mexican capital. 

    She says a grainy security video, submitted anonymously, shows the moment in 2010 when local soldiers rounded up the men. 

    "We used to see the military like Superman or Batman or Robin. Super heroes," said Orozco. "Now the spirit of the whole country has turned against them." 

    Hers was one of the cases illustrated in the Human Rights Watch report. 

    27,000 disappeared?
    Pena Nieto has vowed to take a different tack to his predecessor Calderon and focus on reducing violent crime and extortion rather than on going head to head with drug cartels. 

    The government last month introduced a long-delayed law to trace victims of the drug war and compensate the families. It says it is moving ahead with plans to roll out a genetic database to track victims and help families locate the disappeared. 

    "There exists, in theory, a database with more than 27,000 people on it," said Lia Limon, deputy secretary of human rights at Mexico's interior ministry. "It's a job that's beginning." 

    Daniel Becerril / Reuters

    Mexican soldiers take part in an operation to locate members of the music group Kombo Kolombia near Mina township in the state of Nuevo Leon on Jan. 27. Sixteen members of the band and other staff members was reported missing by their relatives, according to local media.

    Still, impunity remains rife. The armed forces opened nearly 5,000 investigations into criminal wrongdoing between 2007 and 2012, but only 38 ended in sentencing, according to Human Rights Watch. 

    In its report it describes the impact of the disappearances on victims' families, a daily reality for Ixchel Mireles, a 50-year-old librarian from the northern city of Torreon, whose husband Hector Tapia was abducted by men in federal police uniforms. 

    Neither Mireles nor her daughter has heard from Tapia since that night in June 2010. 

    "I want him to be alive, but the reality just destroys me," said Mireles. "I just want them to give him back, even if he is dead." 

    'Bulletproof'
    Since her husband's disappearance, Mireles has struggled financially, having lost his 40,000 pesos ($3,143) a month salary. She has moved her daughter to a cheaper university and can barely keep up payments on her house. 

    "I now travel by foot," she said, noting that Mexico's social security system does not recognize the disappeared. 

    Some family members of the disappeared have asked for soldiers guilty of rights abuses to be judged like civilians, a move Mexico's Supreme Court has approved. 

    "To us it just seems that the military is untouchable," said Laura Orozco, 36, who says she witnessed her brother's military-led abduction. "They're bulletproof."

    Related:

    Church bricks up windows amid Mexico violence

    Mexicans form vigilante patrols against drug gangs

    From May 2012: Mexico's drug war -- No sign of 'light at the end of the tunnel'

     

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    55 comments

    Mexico is nothing but a stinking cesspool of corruption, and it's right on our door step. Coming to a city near you soon,,,,, oh wait,, it is here already in some places.

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    Explore related topics: mexico, violence, human-rights-watch, security-forces, featured, cartels, enrique-pena-nieto
  • 6
    Feb
    2013
    11:53am, EST

    'Exploitative, abusive': Activists slam conditions for workers at Olympic site

    Mikhail Mordasov / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Construction workers, many of them migrants, go for lunch in April 2011 at the ski resort that is part of the Sochi Olympic venue. Some workers are now complaining of having no, or few, breaks and of going unpaid.

    By Ian Johnston, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Published at 11:10 a.m. ET: Months without pay, 12-hour shifts, few days off, fined for being sick, cramped accommodations filled with the “overwhelming smell of sweat” -- and deported for complaining.

    A report by Human Rights Watch published Wednesday paints a grim picture of life for some foreign workers building the Olympic venues for the Sochi 2014 Games in Russia -- set to be the most expensive Olympics in history at a cost of $51 billion.

    Based on interviews with 66 workers over three years at what has been described as the world’s biggest construction site, the report catalogs a litany of complaints about conditions.

    “Athletes, journalists, and Olympic ticket holders in Sochi will watch the 2014 Winter Games in iconic modern sports venues, broadcast centers, and hotels,” the author of the report, Jane Buchanan, said in a statement.

    Dmitry Lovetsky / AP

    A hotel is shown under construction Monday at the mountain Olympic cluster east of Sochi. Much of the heavy work is being conducted by thousands of migrant workers, and conditions have caught the eye of Human Rights Watch.

    “But many migrant workers have toiled in exploitative, abusive conditions to build these shimmering façades and luxurious interiors,” she added.

    The report said most of the workers were carpenters, welders, steel fitters or people doing odd-jobs, typically earning $1.80 to $2.60 an hour. They came from countries such as Armenia, Kyrgyzstan, Serbia, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan.

    “Some workers worked for up to six months without pay, hoping to be paid and reluctant to leave, thereby forfeiting several months’ salary,” the report said. “Workers in these most egregious situations ultimately did leave these abusive employers, concluding that they might never be paid.”

    Cigarette money
    Omurbek, 30, from Uzbekistan, told the researchers that he “worked for almost three months, others worked for five months, for nothing.”

    “Nothing but promises, promises from them,” he added. Occasionally, however, he would be given small amounts of money for cigarette and phone calls.

    And Radmilo Petrovic, 52, from Serbia, lost more than just unpaid wages, according to the report.

    As Russia prepares to welcome guests from around the world for the Winter Olympics next year, NBC's Ben Fogle takes an insider's look at the progress of Sochi's Olympic Park and gets the scoop on a few athletes to look out for next year.

    After eight months of work for "a little bit [of money] here or there," he returned home penniless. His wife accused him of squandering or hiding the money and promptly left him.

    Ruziboi Aliev, 48, a father of four from Tajikistan, worked on the Main Media Center site. He told Human Rights Watch that he worked 12-hour shifts and had five days off over a four-month period. A 23-year-old worker from Uzbekistan said he had one day off in six months.

    “The work is really very difficult. There isn’t any rest. It’s really hard. The pay is miserly, but what can you do? ... They don’t even give you a minute to have a cigarette, or rest for a minute,” Salimjon, 22, from Uzbekistan said.

    Isamiddin, 43, from Kyrgyzstan, said he was fined $32 a day for two days when he didn’t show up for work. “I was sick both times,” he said, complaining the fine was unfair as he earned $19 to $22 a day.

    Workers described 150 to 200 people living in houses designed for one family.

    One, from Uzbekistan, said he slept on a bunk bed in a room containing 8 to 12 people. “In the summer, it’s hot and stuffy, totally unbearable. In the winter, it’s not as bad; it’s tolerable, though you get really tired of the overwhelming smell of sweat,” he said.

    The report said workers were sometimes not given a contract, meaning their employment status and therefore their right to live in Russia was “irregular.”

    Slideshow: Sochi 2014

    Mikhail Mordasov / AFP - Getty Images

    The Winter Olympics arrive in Sochi on Feb. 7, 2014. A look at how the Russian city is shaping up for its moment in the spotlight.

    Launch slideshow

    Human Rights Watch said that in October 2010, 50 workers staged a public demonstration about non-payment of wages. Their company then contacted state migration officials to check their documents “after which dozens of workers who had complained or demonstrated were deported.”

    The claims, many of which were made anonymously for fear of retaliation, come after similar concerns were raised about foreign workers who helped build the venues and infrastructure for the 2008 Beijing Games.

    In an e-mailed statement, state corporation Olympstroy, which oversees the construction work by a number of firms, said protection of workers’ rights was being strictly enforced. “Any worker, who has concerns about violations of his rights, is being encouraged … to report the problem,” it said.

    Olympstroy added that it had received only five complaints from workers about “violations of their rights” during the past two years. “All violations have been properly addressed and dealt with as per the Russian law,” it added.

    'It is never easy'
    The International Olympic Committee issued a statement Wednesday saying “it is never easy dealing with anonymous allegations.”

    “We would continue to urge HRW to furnish us with the details of cases that allow us to deal with them on a case-by-case basis and to push for action when necessary,” the IOC added.

    Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Kozak, who was with President Vladimir Putin in Sochi, Wednesday, dismissed the suggestion that there was a significant problem.

    “There have not been enough complaints to deserve an international report,” he told reporters, according to Reuters.

    Join NBC News' Dmitry Solovyov and Alexei Gordienko as they make the 1,000-mile journey from Moscow to 2014 Olympic host Sochi.

    Asked about Kozak’s response, Buchanan said it was “inappropriate to diminish this.”

    “What the Russian government should be doing is investigating these types of allegation and making sure they don’t take place,” she said.

    Buchanan said workers from different companies and different Olympic sites had “consistently” reported similar complaints and stressed they were given no incentive to speak to Human Rights Watch.

    She said the contractors involved had generally given responses -- detailed in the report -- that were “vague” generalizations, denying there was a problem.

    Asked about what athletes and others thinking of going to Sochi should do in light of the report, Buchanan said that Human Rights Watch was “not against the Olympics.”

    “The Olympics is a tremendous opportunity for Russia to present itself to the world,” she said. “We just want people to know that this is going on and to have higher expectations for future games -- that these types of abuses shouldn’t take place.”

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    Related:

    How do you say 'volunteer' in Russian? Sochi 2014 Olympics introduces a new concept

    More Sochi coverage from NBC Olympics

    Full Russia coverage from NBC News

    48 comments

    Corporations can't wait to create these same "global" working conditions right here in the US. Profits are cool, employees suck. Quote from Beavis and Butthead.

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    Explore related topics: olympics, russia, workers, human-rights-watch, sochi, featured
  • 14
    Oct
    2012
    7:09am, EDT

    'Extremely dangerous': Assad forces use cluster bombs as rebels gain, rights group says

    Ugarit News / Human Rights Watch via AP

    This citizen journalism image which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows what Human Rights Watch says are cluster bombs dropped in Tamanea, Syria on Oct. 9, 2012.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 10:38 p.m. ET: Syrian government forces have dropped Soviet-made cluster bombs over civilian areas in the past week as they battle to push back rebel gains, Human Rights Watch said on Sunday.

    The bombs were dropped from planes and helicopters, with many of the strikes taking place near the main north-south highway running through the northwestern town of Maarat al-Numan, HRW said in a report.


    "If we needed any further proof of the Syrian government's complete disregard for the lives of its own citizens, its own children, well, here it is.  Because we know now that the government is using cluster munitions in populated areas," Philippe Bolopion of Human Rights Watch said in a video statement.  "And of course these weapons are extremely dangerous for the civilian population and the children."

    The munitions, which first detonate in midair and release bomblets over a wide area, can remain active for years, the rights group said. Children, who often pickup the munitions, are especially vulnerable to cluster bombs. 

    NATO leaders discuss the volatile situation along the Turkish-Syrian border following last week's shelling of a village by forces loyal to Syria's government. NBC's Jim Maceda reports.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Opposition: Syria rebels capture air base as clashes break out across country

    Residents from Taftanaz and Tamanea -- both near Maarat al-Numan -- told HRW interviewers that helicopters dropped cluster munitions on or near their towns last Tuesday. One that hit Tamanea released smaller bomblets in an area between two schools, a resident was quoted as saying in the HRW report.

    "The bomblets that exploded were the ones that hit the ground on the tip, we collected the ones that didn't explode, their tip didn't touch the ground," the resident said.

    Photos: Who are the Syrian rebels?

    HRW previously reported Syrian use of cluster bombs, which have been banned by most countries but not Syria, in July and August but the renewed strikes indicate the government's determination to regain strategic control in the northwest.

    Researchers identified the the munitions as Soviet-made RBK-250, which would be particularly dangerous because old weapons are less likely to detonate on impact, Bolopion said. New York-based HRW did not know how or when Syria acquired the munitions.

    Turkey: Syria plane carried Russian-made munitions

    Rebels seized Maarat al-Numan from President Bashar Assad's troops last week, cutting the route from the capital Damascus to Aleppo, Syria's biggest city. Government forces have been trying to retake the area since then.

    Andrea Mitchell talks to Ambassador Dennis Ross about the escalating tensions between Syria and Turkey, and what both presidential candidates are saying they'll do about the situation.

    Towns targeted included Maarat, Tamanea, Taftanaz and al-Tah. Cluster bombs were also used in other areas in Homs, Aleppo and Lattakia provinces as well as near Damascus, the rights group said.

    Initial information about the use of the explosives came from videos posted online by opposition activists although HRW investigators said it had confirmed the incidents in interviews with resident in two towns.

    Turkey forces Syrian plane suspected of carrying weapons to land

    People were taking away unexploded bomblets as souvenirs, a highly dangerous action as they can still explode at the slightest touch or movement. Video showed some civilians carrying the bomblets around and throwing them on the ground.

    "The cluster munition strikes and unexploded ordnance they leave behind pose a huge danger to civilian populations, who often seem unaware how easily these submunitions could still explode," Goose said.

    Herve Bar / AFP - Getty Images

    A man who lost a member of his family cries as he sits outside his destroyed home following a government air strike in the town of Maaret al-Numan in Idlib province on Saturday.

    Who are the Syrian rebels?

    Syrian government officials were not immediately available to comment on the HRW report.

    Meanwhile, Turkey banned all Syrian aircraft from its air space on Sunday, days after intercepting a Syrian airliner carrying what it said were Russian-made munitions for the Syrian army.

    Asked if Syrian aircraft were now banned from Turkish air space, a Foreign Ministry official said: "Yes, civilian aircraft. Military aircraft were de facto banned way before."

    Syria said on Saturday that it was banning Turkish civilian flights over its territory.

    Reuters and NBC News staff contributed to this report. 

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

    SANA via Reuters

    A look back at the violence that has overtaken the country

    Launch slideshow

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Video: Pyramid reopens despite turmoil in Egypt
    • Clinton reaffirms support for Libya, emerging democracies
    • Madonna dedicates striptease to child activist shot by Taliban
    • Western intelligence sees 'small signs of wavering' on Iran nuclear policy
    • Mo Yan's Nobel win celebrated -- and panned -- in China
    • Hidden Planet: The Underwater Eden

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    180 comments

    Give it another month and the muslims will be blaming the jews for the whole problem.

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  • 3
    Sep
    2012
    10:35am, EDT

    Rights group blasts 'repressive' crackdown in Tunisia, birthplace of Arab Spring

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    An international rights group called Monday for Tunisian prosecutors to drop charges against two sculptors for artworks deemed harmful to public order and good morals, a legal action seen as part of a clampdown on free speech in the country where the Arab Spring began.

    Human Rights Watch said that the prosecution of artists Nadia Jelassi and Mohamed Ben Salem in Tunisia, the country whose protests against its longtime dictator helped set off similar uprisings across the Arab world, violated the right to freedom of expression because the works did not incite or discriminate.


    "Time and again, prosecutors are using criminal legislation to stifle critical or artistic expression," Eric Goldstein, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement.

    "Bloggers, journalists and now artists are being prosecuted for exercising their right to free speech," he added.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Protests
    The works by Jelassi and Ben Salem were exhibited in a show in La Marsa in June, according to Human Rights Watch. The two, whose mixed-media work provoked protests during the exhibition, face up to five years in prison if convicted, the rights group said.

    La Marsa is a coastal town north of the capital Tunis.

    Jelassi's contribution was a work titled "Celui qui n'a pas …" ("He who hasn't …"). It includes sculptures of veiled women amid a pile of stones. Ben Salem’s work showed ants coming out of a child's schoolbag to spell the word "Allah," or God, according to Human Rights Watch.

    Mother of Tunisian fruit vendor who sparked Arab Spring is arrested

    In addition to protests outside the center, several works of art in the exhibition reportedly were damaged.

    The two artists were informed by the investigative judge of the First Degree Court of Tunis in August that they face charges, Human Rights Watch said.

    Veiled female news anchor marks wane of secular Egypt

    The article of the penal code under which the two artists were charged make it an offense to "distribute, offer for sale, publicly display, or possess, with the intent to distribute, sell, display for the purpose of propaganda, tracts, bulletins, and fliers, whether of foreign origin or not, that are liable to cause harm to the public order or public morals," according to Human Rights Watch.

    NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin recaps Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's two-week overseas tour.

    "Many Tunisians expected that repressive laws ... would not long outlast the dictator who adopted [them]," Goldstein of Human Rights Watch said.

    Voice of Tunisian spring calls for justice, equality

    "We now see that as long as the transitional government does not make it a priority to get rid of these laws, the temptation to use them to silence those who dissent or think differently is irresistible," he added.

    More coverage of the Middle East and North Africa on NBCNews.com

    Clampdown on freedom of expression
    Amnesty International has also contended that freedom of expression has increasingly been under threat in Tunisia in recent months. A number of journalists, cinemas and TV stations have been fined, shut down or arrested, according to Amnesty.

    Slideshow: State of emergency in Tunisia

    Zohra Bensemra / Reuters

    Click for more photos from the 2011 demonstrations against the Tunisian government.

    Launch slideshow

    The Arab Spring is widely considered to have begun in the central Tunisian town of Sidi Bouzid, where a fruit seller's self-immolation triggered the popular uprisings against autocratic rule there and other countries in the region.

    Complete World News coverage on NBCNews.com

    The Tunisian uprising forced out dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in January 2011. Elections that followed brought to power Ennahda, a moderate Islamist party that had been banned under Ben Ali’s rule.

    NBC News' staff and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Sun Myung Moon, founder of Unification Church, dies at 92
    • Girl accused of blasphemy in Pakistan may have been framed by Muslim cleric
    • 'Big enough for all of us': Clinton says US can work with China in Pacific
    • Assad stays cool amid reports of bread-line slaughter
    • Ex-Marine on her journey from homelessness to the Paralympics

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    118 comments

    Is this a foreshadowing of events to come in Libya, Egypt and ultimately Syria? You bet your a$$ it is.

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    Explore related topics: tunisia, amnesty-international, human-rights-watch, featured, freedom-of-expression, arab-spring
  • 3
    Jul
    2012
    3:33am, EDT

    Rights group: Syria's 20 ways to torture prove its crimes against humanity

    Human Rights Watch

    Human Rights Watch commissioned a Syrian artist to produce sketches based on statements received from former detainees and security force defectors. They depict some of the most commonly used torture methods in detention centers across Syria. They are not representations of any specific individuals.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Syrian intelligence agencies are running torture centers where detainees are beaten with batons and cables, burned with acid, sexually assaulted and their fingernails torn out, Human Rights Watch said in a report released on Tuesday.

    The New York-based rights group identified 27 detention centers across the country that it says intelligence agencies have been using since President Bashar Assad's government began a crackdown on pro-democracy protesters in March 2011.

     


    Human Rights Watch documented more than 20 torture methods that "clearly point to a state policy of torture and ill-treatment and therefore constitute a crime against humanity."It conducted more than 200 interviews with people who said they were tortured, including a 31-year-old man who was detained in the Idlib area in June and made to undress.

     

     

     

     


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    "Then they started squeezing my fingers with pliers. They put staples in my fingers, chest and ears. I was only allowed to take them out if I spoke. The staples in the ears were the most painful," the man told Human Rights Watch.

    Human Rights Watch

    Detainees described being beaten on the soles of their feet with sticks and whips to the point that their skin was raw, their feet swollen and bleeding, making it impossible to walk.

    "They used two wires hooked up to a car battery to give me electric shocks. They used electric stun-guns on my genitals twice. I thought I would never see my family again. They tortured me like this three times over three days," he said.

    Another man, named “Elias” in the report, described how he was tortured by Syrian intelligence officers in Damascus.

    “The guards hung me by my wrists from the ceiling for eight days. After a few days of hanging, being denied sleep, it felt like my brain stopped working. I was imagining things,” he said.

    “My feet got swollen on the third day. I felt pain that I have never felt in my entire life. It was excruciating. I screamed that I needed to go to a hospital, but the guards just laughed at me,” he added.

    Women, children, elderly people
    The report found that tens of thousands of people had been detained by the Department of Military Intelligence, the Political Security Directorate, the General Intelligence Directorate, and the Air Force Intelligence Directorate.

    So many people have been arrested that the authorities had used sports stadiums, schools and hospitals as detention centers, the report said.

    From the front line in what looks ever more like a fight for Syria's capital Damascus, members of the Free Syrian Army appear to be closing in on President Assad's stronghold, at a terrible cost to both sides. NBC's Bill Neely reports.

    The report said while most of the torture victims who spoke to the group were men aged 18 to 35, they also spoke to a number of women, children and elderly people who had been tortured.

    “Interrogators, guards, and officers used a broad range of torture methods, including prolonged beatings, often with objects such as batons and wires, holding the detainees in painful stress positions for prolonged periods of time, often with the use of specially devised equipment, the use of electricity, burning with car battery acid, sexual assault and humiliation, the pulling of fingernails, and mock execution,” the report said.

    It added that several former detainees told Human Rights Watch that they witnessed people dying as a result of torture.

    'Mildest form of torture'
    A former Syrian intelligence officer told the campaign group that the “mildest form of torture is hitting people with batons” on their arms and legs and “not giving them anything to eat or drink.”

    “They used … and electroshock machine … it is a small machine with two wires with clips that they attack to nipples and a knob that regulates the currents,” he said. “In addition, they put people in coffins and threatened to kill them and close the coffin.”

    At a meeting of Syrian opposition groups in Cairo on Tuesday, participants were unsurprised by the reports of torture.

    "I, myself, and my son were victims. I spent eight years in prison,” George Sabra, spokesman for one of the best known opposition groups, the Syrian National Council, told NBC News in Cairo. “They used electricity (to torture me) and beat my legs.” Sabra said his son was also imprisoned twice and tortured more severely because he was a young man. They left Syria five months ago and are now living in Paris.

    Khalaf Dahowd, president of the National Coordination Body's Congress in Exile, believes torture in Syria is overshadowed by worse crimes against humanity.

    "The regime has committed massacres! Torture is an abuse of human rights. But massacres have happened," said Dahowd.  

    Aret Gabeau, of the Kurdish Center for Legal Studies and Consultancy, hoped the report would make others aware of the scope of suffering under President Bashar al- Assad's rule. 

    "I was very reassured to see that reports like this are being published so that those outside of Syria can truly be aware of the level of suffering being imposed on the people by Assad’s regime,” said Gabeau. “This is why the regime is so terrified of the press; they have so much power to undermine Assad further." 

    Syrian helicopters strike Damascus suburb

    Human Rights Watch has called for the U.N. Security Council to refer the issue of Syria to the International Criminal Court (ICC) and to adopt targeted sanctions against officials carrying out abuse.

    "The reach and inhumanity of this network of torture centers are truly horrific," Ole Solvang, emergencies researcher at Human Rights Watch said. "Russia should not be holding its protective hand over the people who are responsible for this."

    PhotoBlog: On the road with Syria's rebel motorcycle army

    Russia -- an ally of Syria -- and China have already vetoed two council resolutions that condemned Damascus and threatened it with sanctions and French U.N. Ambassador Gerard Araud told reporters on Monday that reaching a Security Council consensus to refer Syria to the ICC would be difficult.

    "As France is concerned it's very clear we are very much in favor of referring Syria to the ICC," Araud said.

    "The problem is it will have to be part ... of a global understanding of the council and I do think that for the moment we have not yet reached this point," he said.

    U.N. human rights chief Navi Pillay on Monday reiterated her position that the issue of Syria's conflict should be referred to the ICC in The Hague because crimes against humanity and other war crimes may have been committed.

    She said both sides appear to have committed war crimes.

    The United Nations has said more than 10,000 people have been killed during the 16-month Syria conflict. 

    NBC News' Charlene Gubash and Joanna de Boer in Cairo contributed to this report. Reuters also contributed to this report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Sneak peek inside Olympic Village: 'Not a five-star resort'
    • Former Gitmo prisoner: How I see America
    • Afghans are 'no different from any American'
    • On the road with Syria's rebel motorcycle army
    • Libya frees four ICC officials accused of spying

    Follow World News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook


    341 comments

    Sunni Saudi, oil companies and their lobbyists' agents like UN and its agencies, human rights groups and their agents are highly partisan and they don't have much credibility. They tried these tricks during Iraqi wars. Sunni Saudis, al-Qaida, MB, Salaffi, Wahhabi inspired Sunni Islamic militants hav …

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  • 13
    Jun
    2012
    10:58pm, EDT

    Transgender pageant winner murdered in South Africa

    By Isolde Raftery, msnbc.com

    A South African who had won a Miss Gay pageant was found in his rented room with his throat slit, news24 reported. 


    Follow @msnbc_world

    Thapelo Makutle, 23, had argued late Friday night with two men about his sexuality, his friend, Shaine Griqua told mambaonline.com. Those two men followed him home, broke down his door and killed him, Griqua said.

    Makutle, known as Queen Bling, was active in the LGBT community in the Kuruman region, a rural area in the north, Griqua told mambaonline.com. He said his friend identified as gay and recently started calling himself transgender.


    "It's so sad. I can't describe the pain that we are feeling right now," Griqua told mambaonline. "We have lost a young, talented, gay man who was open about who he was. The last few days have been like a dark cloud."

    Griqua, the director of Legbo Northern Cape, a nonprofit that provides sexual health education, released a statement saying that witnesses had seen Thapelo’s body, and that his genitalia had been “severed and inserted into his mouth.”

    There was no sign of burglary, Griqua said, according to globalpost.com.

    Police have not arrested anyone in the case, according to media reports.

    South Africa has long been lauded for its liberal positions on gay rights. The country was the first to ban discrimination based on sexual orientation in its constitution, and same-sex marriage became legal in 2006.

    But a Human Rights Watch report from 2011 found that black lesbians and transgender men in rural areas of South Africa face “extensive discrimination and violence in their daily lives, both from private individuals and government officials.”

    Nearly all 120 people interviewed by Human Rights Watch said they lived in fear of sexual assault and that they were reluctant to approach police for protection.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Report: US expands secret 'shadow war' in Africa
    • UK PM grilled over links to Rupert Murdoch's empire
    • NBC's Richard Engel answers your questions on Syria
    • 'Maple Spring' student protests: Crackdown roils Quebec
    • 'Forest boy' mystery: Stumped cops release photo

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    601 comments

    Horrible. This is indeed sad. What kind of person kills someone because of who they love? Insane. These two murderers will vividly remember the horror they performed. Savage and hateful. Long live love in all it's forms.

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    Explore related topics: crime, gay-rights, human-rights-watch, hate-crime, lgbt
  • 28
    Mar
    2012
    3:46am, EDT

    400 women held in Afghanistan for 'moral crimes' such as fleeing domestic abuse

    Paula Bronstein / Getty Images

    Female prisoners gather in the courtyard of a women's prison in Mazar-e-Sharif, Afghanistan, on Oct. 22, 2010.

    By Reuters

    Updated at 6:18 a.m. ET: KABUL, Afghanistan -- For Afghan women, the act of fleeing domestic abuse or forced prostitution may land them in jail while their abusers walk free, Human Rights Watch said in a report published Wednesday.

    Running away is considered a "moral crime" for women in Afghanistan while some rape victims are also imprisoned, because sex outside marriage -- even when the woman is forced -- is considered adultery, another "moral crime."


    "From the first time I came to this world my destiny was destroyed," 17-year-old Amina, who has spent months in jail after being forced into prostitution, told researchers from Human Rights Watch.

    Despite progress in women's rights and freedom since the fall of the Taliban a decade ago, women throughout the country are at risk of abduction, rape, forced marriage and being traded as commodities.

    PhotoBlog: Afghan graffiti artists depict violence and injustice of women's lives

    It can be hard for women to escape violence at home because of huge social pressure and legal risks to stay in marriages.

    "The treatment of women and girls accused of 'moral crimes' is a black eye on the face of the post-Taliban Afghan government and its international backers, all of whom promised that respect for women's rights would distinguish the new government from the Taliban," the New York-based group said.

    "This situation has been further undermined by President (Hamid) Karzai's frequently changing position on women's rights. Unwilling or unable to take a consistent line against conservative forces within the country, he has often made compromises that have negatively impacted women's rights."

    Teen boxer Sadaf Rahimi, who aims to compete at this summer's London Olympics, hopes her achievements will be an example to others in her war-ravaged country. NBC News' Kiko Itasaka reports.

    The rights organization said that there were about 400 women and girls being held in Afghanistan for "moral crimes", and they rarely found support from authorities in a "dysfunctional criminal justice system".  

    'He will kill me'
    The plight of a woman called Nilofar illustrates the problem. She was stabbed repeatedly with a screwdriver in the head, chest, and arms by her husband who accused her of adultery for inviting a man into the house, the rights group said.

    But afterwards, she was arrested, he was not.

    Afghan woman, imprisoned over rape, is free

    "The way he beat her wasn't bad enough to keep him in jail. She wasn't near death, so he didn't need to be in prison," the prosecutor of the case told Human Rights Watch.

    The dire treatment of women was the main reason Western countries gave for refusing to recognize the Taliban government as legitimate when it was in power.

    As Afghan and Western leaders seek a negotiated end to more than 10 years of war, the future for women is uncertain.

    The United States and NATO -- who are fighting an unpopular war as they prepare to pull out most combat troops by the end of 2014 -- have stressed that any settlement must ensure the constitution, which says the two sexes are equal, is upheld.

    Slideshow: Afghanistan: Nation at a crossroads

    Jangir / AFP - Getty Images

    More than ten years after the beginning of the war, Afghanistan faces external pressure to reform as well as ongoing internal conflicts.

    Launch slideshow

    A law, passed in August 2009, supports equality for women, including criminalizing child and forced marriage, selling and buying women for marriage or for settling disputes, as well as forced self-immolation, among other acts.

    PhotoBlog: Life inside a women's prison in Afghanistan

    But women, especially in rural areas, lack shelters to flee abuse while only one percent of police are female, according to the report based on interviews from October to November with 58 women and girls as well as prosecutors, judges, government officials and civil society.

    Social stigma 
    The ordeal for women does not stop with jail though.

    Once leaving prison, women and girls face strong social stigma in the conservative country and may be killed in so-called "honor killings".

    "I just want a divorce. I can't go back to my father because he will kill me. All my family has left me behind," 20-year-old Aisha, who was sentenced to three years for fleeing an abusive husband she was forced to marry, told researchers.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Teen rescued after 28 days adrift at sea
    • Grumble, grumble: Brits revel in gloom ahead of Olympics
    • Afghan abuse victims jailed over 'moral crimes'
    • Man cuts off foot, throws it in furnace to avoid job assignment
    • Turmoil builds in China's Tibetan regions
    • French rail company to pay out after delays cost commuter job
    • World's cities to expand by twice the size of Texas by 2030

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    183 comments

    So we have replaced an unstable country that produces intolerant terrorists and treats women like @!$%# with an unstable country that treats women like @!$%#. Aww the legacy of Bush, never seems to end.

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  • 13
    Mar
    2012
    10:48am, EDT

    Syria laying mines on routes used by civilians fleeing violence, group says

    Another deadly day in Syria as up to 50 civilians, including women and children, have been killed in what activists claim was a massacre in the city of Homs. ITN's John Ray reports.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Syrian forces have laid mines near the borders of Lebanon and Turkey along routes used by those trying to escape the conflict in Syria, advocacy group Human Rights Watch said on Tuesday.

    Opposition activists who have waged a year-long revolt against President Bashar Assad's rule use Lebanon and Turkey to bring food, medicine and weapons into Syria. Thousands of Syrians have also fled the violence into Turkey and Lebanon.


    "Any use of anti-personnel landmines is unconscionable,'' Steve Goose, Arms Division director at HRW, said in a report. "There is absolutely no justification for the use of these indiscriminate weapons by any country, anywhere, for any purpose.''

    The report came after Nassir Abdulaziz Al-Nasser, president of the U.N. General Assembly, said that the death toll in the Syrian uprising has passed 8,000, including many women and children.

    The Syrian government says more than 2,000 police and regular army soldiers have been killed by "armed terrorist groups," blaming foreign interference for the unrest. It has not given any figures for civilian deaths.

    Syrian President Bashar Assad indicated to UN Arab League envoy Kofi Annan that there could be no cease-fire deal against opponents he called "terrorist" gangs. NBC's John Ray reports.

    An official at the Syrian Embassy in London told msnbc.com that no-one was immediately available to comment on the report. Syria's ambassador to London announced on March 6 that he was set to leave his post after his term ended in Britain.

    Dozens killed in Idlib?
    Also on Tuesday, opposition activists told Reuters that Syrian forces had killed dozens of people near a mosque in the city of Idlib, and that rebels killed at least 10 troops in an ambush in the same area, the focus of the latest government crackdown.

    Video footage showed the bloodied bodies of several unidentified men strewn on the floor of the mosque. An unseen voice said it was impossible to move them due to heavy shelling.

    Army defectors ambushed a checkpoint in Idlib region in the northwest, killing the 10 soldiers and possibly more, while rebels also killed 12 members of forces loyal to Assad in the southern town of Deraa, according to the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

    A Syrian-American woman, who is also a teacher in San Jose, is trying to contact her family in Homs, often her only source of information is images posted on social media.

    Fighting was reported, too, in the eastern city of Deir al-Zor and in Syria's third largest city Homs.

    Speaking after meeting opponents of Assad in Turkey, U.N.-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan said he was expecting to hear later on Tuesday the response from Syria to "concrete proposals" he had made to end the escalating violence.

    Annan met Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu late on Monday to discuss the crisis threatening to tip Turkey's southern neighbor into civil war.

    Syria launches fierce attack as UN envoy tries talks

    The Syrian parliament said Assad, who has promised reforms short of his resignation, had ordered a legislative election for May 7. It would be held under a new constitution, approved by a referendum last month which the opposition and their Western and Arab backers dismissed as a sham.

    Despite mounting international pressure on him in the form of sanctions, Assad has significant allies, notably in Iran. And world powers remained at odds over how to tackle the crisis, with Russia and China continuing to back the Syrian leader.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Friend of UK PM arrested in phone-hacking investigation
    • Soldier accused in Afghan massacre could get death penalty
    • Taliban vows 'revenge' after US soldier kills 16 Afghan civilians
    • Chavez to undergo radiation therapy
    • Mexico police nearly nab drug lord El Chapo
    • A royal rebranding, spurred by the Queen's grandchildren

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    Msnbc.com staff and Reuters contributed to this report.

    52 comments

    While Obama does nothing but talk. Like he said while running for office lets sit with them and have tea. Yeah right that'll do it.

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  • 9
    Mar
    2012
    6:25am, EST

    Report: Saudi woman dies after campus protest

    By msnbc.com staff

    A Saudi Arabian woman died and dozens more were injured after a protest at a university was stormed by stick-wielding police, London's Times newspaper reported on Friday.

    Human Rights Watch's Christoph Wilcke told msnbc.com from Germany that he had read in Arabic-language news reports that hundreds of female students from the Arabic literature and education departments of King Khaled University in the southwest of the country were angry at "harsh" treatment by their supervisors and the fact that trash in their departments was not picked up for three days.


    Some reports put the number of protesters at 5,000, said Wilcke, a senior researcher at the organization's Middle East and North Africa division for Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Yemen.

    One protester died in the hospital of an epileptic seizure and another miscarried her unborn child after the demonstration was broken up, the newspaper reported. (The Times operates behind a pay wall).

    Malaysia deports Saudi accused of prophet insult

    Videos that Wilcke had seen showed "women shouting, being agitated ... (but) entirely peaceful," he said.

    Wilcke estimated that between 50 and 100 members of the religious police were called to the university along with regular police, based on the reports he had seen. Protesters threw shoes as police arrived, the Times reported.

    The university promised to investigate the incident, the Times reported.

    'Caught up with the world'
    While seen by some as a champion of women's rights in the deeply conservative country, Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah "has not made good on any big hopes concretely" since he came to power in 2005," Wilcke said.

    Nevertheless, the demonstration and the fact that it was being reported highlighted the "general evolution of Arab society," Wilcke said. A recent protest at a women's prison went virtually unreported, he said.

    Amnesty calls Saudi beheading for sorcery 'shocking'

    "Here something happened and we heard about it," he said. Wilcke added that it was also significant because of the size and the fact that the women demonstrated openly.

    "They stood in the blazing sun and decided to chant for a while," he said. "It means that the Saudis have caught up with the world, they are more aware of their rights … (but it) doesn't mean that the government has shifted gear."

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:
    • Mansions, jets: Libya battles to seize $20 billion in Gadhafi assets
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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world
     

    62 comments

    Wow Mike. You and your fellow ilk seem to eat, sleep and @!$%# obama 24/7. You guys seem to have been brainwashed into believing that the worlds problems began 3 1/2 years ago. Seen a psychiatrist yet?

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  • 17
    Jan
    2012
    4:10am, EST

    Rights group: Ethiopia forcing tens of thousands off land to make room for investors

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    The Ethiopian government is forcing tens of thousands of people off their land so it can be leased to foreign investors,  Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in a report released Tuesday.

    The Horn of Africa state has already leased 3 million hectares (7.4 million acres)  to foreign farm businesses and the U.S.-based rights group said that the government had plans to lease another 2.1 million hectares (5.2 million acres), Reuters reported.

    Courtesy Human Rights Watch

    The new village of Bildak in Ethiopia's Gambella region, which the semi-nomadic
    Nuer who were forcibly transferred there quickly abandoned in May 2011 because
    there was no water source for their cattle, according to Human Rights Watch.



    HRW said that 1.5 million Ethiopians would eventually be forced from their land and highlighted what it said was the latest case of forced relocation in its report "Ethiopia: Forced Relocations Bring Hunger, Hardship."

    "My father was beaten for refusing to go along [to the new village] with some other elders," HRW quoted a former villager as saying.  "He said, 'I was born here -- my children were born here -- I am too old to move so I will stay.'  He was beaten by the army with sticks and the butt of a gun. He had to be taken to hospital. He died because of the beating -- he just became weaker and weaker."

    The United Nations has increasingly voiced concern that countries such as China and Gulf Arab states are buying swathes of land in Africa and Asia to secure their own food supplies, often at the expense of local people.

    • Ethiopia jails two Swedish journalists for aiding rebels

    "The Ethiopian government under its "villagization" program is forcibly relocating approximately 70,000 indigenous people from the western Gambella region to new villages that lack adequate food, farmland, health care, and educational facilities," HRW said, adding it had interviewed more than 100 people for the report.

    "The first round of forced relocations occurred at the worst possible time of year -- the beginning of the harvest. Government failure to provide food assistance for relocated people has caused endemic hunger and cases of starvation," it said.

    Government denial
    Government officials deny the charge and say the affected plots of land are largely uninhabited and under-used, while it has also launched a program to settle tens of thousands from the remote province in more fertile areas of the country.

    "Human Rights Watch has wrongly alleged the villagization program to be unpopular and problematic," government spokesman Bereket Simon told Reuters.

    "There is no evidence to back the claim. This program is taking place with the full preparation and participation of regional authorities, the government and residents," he said.

    Ethiopia says its prime intention in leasing large chunks of land is technology transfer and to boost production in a country that has been ravaged by droughts over the past few decades.

    Reuters and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

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    47 comments

    What is the biggest joke? The UN is voicing its concerns to the Ethiopian government. What the hell is that supposed to meam? The same way the UN voiced its concerns in R'wanda? The same way it voiced its concerns in North Korea? This is a joke.

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    Explore related topics: china, ethiopia, arab, farmer, human-rights-watch, investor, featured, starvation

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