Harvey Milk has inspired me to keep fighting discrimination
By Siobhán Murphy
By Siobhán Murphy
Journalists who dare to criticize the authorities in Sri Lanka have been arrested, tortured or even killed. © Ishara S.KODIKARA/AFP/Getty Images
A refugee camp near the Turkish border in the town of Harmanli, south-east of the Bulgarian capital Sofia © NIKOLAY DOYCHINOV/AFP/Getty Images
In the blink of an eye, ‘Attiyeh’s worst nightmare came true.
By Cilina Nasser, Syria researcher at Amnesty International, who is currently in Istanbul
The Court skirted around the real issue in this case and missed a key opportunity to state clearly that to criminalize consensual same-sex conduct ultimately amounts to criminalising people for who they are and, therefore, amounts to persecution per se, regardless of how often sentences of imprisonment are enforced.
By John Dalhuisen, Europe Director at Amnesty International
Given the strains that the main hosting countries are under, there is a risk that without sufficient support from the international community they will no longer be willing or able to continue to give adequate protection and assistance to Syrian refugees. Countries with the means to do so, including Europe, must provide sufficient funding to deal with the refugee crisis.
31/10/2013 – Almost one third of Syria’s population have fled their homes. More than 2 million are refugees living outside Syria – mostly in Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Iraq and Egypt – and 4.25 million individuals are displaced internally in Syria. They have fled widespread violence and human rights abuses, including war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Italy’s housing policies are just another example of the discrimination that Roma people suffer across the EU, with their rights to adequate housing, education and sanitation often being shamefully compromised. It is appalling that, even in the area of social housing allocation, Roma are treated like second class citizens