Watching Vladimir Putin speak on Friday about his sham annexations of #Ukrainian territory as Russia’s “great liberation mission,” my colleague, @yuliagorbunova_, recalled a woman from occupied Kherson, whom she interviewed some weeks ago…
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Russia’s security agents had detained her entire family and interrogated her for hours with a plastic bag over her head.
All the while, she could hear her husband being beaten in the next room.
“They kept asking me, ‘Are you a fascist?’ I told them that I was Ukrainian.”
“They said: ‘There is no such people. We are one people.’”
“So, I asked them, ‘if we are one people, why am I sitting here with a bag over my head, while you are beating my husband to death?’”
Putin’s #shammexations of Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions last week – complete with a hasty referendum held at gunpoint – have no legal value.
Just as with Crimea in 2014, Russia remains an occupying power in these regions, bound by the Fourth Geneva Convention, which continues to guarantee protections to civilians in those areas.
And by all accounts, the occupiers have flouted those obligations.
My colleague, Yulia, has interviewed dozens of civilians from Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions who shared horrific accounts like the one above.
They describe beatings, electric shocks, and incommunicado detention at the hands of Russian forces.
Many were locked up for days or weeks, blindfolded, with hands tied.
In areas now liberated from Russian occupation, @hrw has documented extensive evidence of torture, as well as summary executions and enforced disappearances.
New reporting from Human Rights Watch on how Iranian authorities have ruthlessly cracked down on widespread anti-government protests with excessive & lethal force throughout #Iran.
Based on videos of protests, and interviews with witnesses and a security force member, we documented numerous incidents of security forces unlawfully using excessive or lethal force against protesters in 13 cities across #Iran.
Verified videos showed security forces using shotguns, assault rifles, and handguns against protesters in largely peaceful and often crowded settings, altogether killing and injuring hundreds.
In some cases, they shot at people who were running away.
“I would love to have a front page of The Telegraph with a plane taking off to Rwanda, that’s my dream, it’s my obsession,” Suella Braverman told an interviewer yesterday.
Braverman was referring to the plan of her predecessor, Priti Patel, to send asylum seekers in the UK to Rwanda, a country with a terrible rights record.
The on-again-off-again celebrity relationship of the year is back in the news...
Billionaire @elonmusk once more seems set to buy Twitter.
The romance may have been rocky, but our concerns about the possible deal haven't wavered.
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First of all, some of Musk’s past statements give us pause, in particular how he describes himself as a “free speech absolutist.” 🤔
It’s a term that initially may sound appealing to rights defenders, but it doesn’t hold up to closer inspection.
👉 Freedom of expression is not an absolute right.
Media companies, social media companies included, have to walk a fine line between protecting free speech and addressing online content and behavior that threaten people’s rights.
But for Beijing, any public discussion of the recent report from the UN high commissioner for human rights on abuses in #Xinjiang is anathema, let alone a possible debate at the UN Human Rights Council.
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Chinese diplomats have made every effort to suppress the high commissioner’s report and prevent discussion of its contents.
Council member states now have to decide whether to vote to hold a debate or crumble under pressure from Beijing to keep quiet about a report that talks of possible “crimes against humanity” requiring “urgent attention by the UN intergovernmental bodies and human rights system.”
Musk describes himself as a "free speech absolutist."
However, freedom of expression is not an absolute right, which is why Twitter needs to invest in efforts to keep its most vulnerable users safe on the platform. reuters.com/markets/europe…
We've already been critical of how Twitter and other social media platforms aren’t doing enough to respect the rights of their users.
Read more from our expert @F_Kaltheuner about what this purchase could mean for people on Twitter: bit.ly/3SPz5Gc
I'll write more about this in my newsletter today. Stay tuned...
In a very welcome move and an example to other countries, the Nigerian government has finally confirmed it will end military detention of children.
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It’s a critical step to end a terrible abuse.
We’ve reported, for example, on how children in northeast Nigeria were detained in horrific conditions in a military prison for alleged association with the armed group Boko Haram.