News headlines for “Human Rights Issues”, page 478

  1. The Taliban Win: The Aftermath in Afghanistan and in the World

    - Inter Press Service

    A story from Inter Press Service, an international news agency

    SINGAPORE, Aug 30 (IPS) - Some years ago, on a piece on the Afghan crisis I had written that Mullah Omar’s face bore no resemblance to that of the impossibly beautiful, albeit mythical, Helen of Troy. Yet it too had caused the launch of a thousand ships (airships to be more precise), just as Helen’s had done in Homer’s epic tale, the Iliad.

  2. Ensuring the right to a nationality, more pressing than ever: UNHCR

    - UN News

    Ensuring the right to a nationality and eradicating statelessness is more pressing than ever, the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) said on Monday, as it marked the 60th anniversary of the adoption of the 1961 UN Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness.

  3. COVID jabs needed for educators and kids to keep schools open: WHO, UNICEF

    - UN News

    As the school year begins for millions of children in Europe and Central Asia, UN health and child experts on Monday issued a series of COVID-19 risk reduction measures to ensure that in-person lessons can go ahead, despite rising infection rates.

  4. On International Day, UN chief calls for action to end enforced disappearances

    - UN News

    UN Secretary-General António Guterres has urged countries to fulfil their obligations to prevent and prosecute cases of enforced disappearance, a “cowardly practice” which the COVID-19 pandemic has made even more difficult to combat.

  5. Tokyo Paralympics: leaping towards a more inclusive society

    - UN News

    A story from UN News

    Innovators are joining Paralympians to discuss how sport can help to build a more inclusive society in a series of online discussions organized by the UN to coincide with the Tokyo 2020 Paralympics, which continues until 5 September.

  6. Advancing the Rights of Women Manual Scavengers in India

    - Inter Press Service

    Aug 27 (IPS) - Manual scavenging is a caste-based profession that leads to discrimination and atrocities against those engaged in it. Generations of families from marginalised communities in India have been forced to continue in this profession because of social ostracism and a lack of alternatives.

  7. Pacific Community Warns of Threat to Education Retention in the Wake of COVID-19

    - Inter Press Service

    CANBERRA, Australia, Aug 27 (IPS) - Before the pandemic, many Pacific Island countries grappled with low numbers of students completing secondary education. Now experts in the region are concerned that the closure of schools to contain the spread of COVID-19, and the economic downturn, will lead to even more students dropping out of education early.

  8. More children than ever before live as migrants or refugees, outside their birth countries – UNICEF

    - UN News

    More girls and boys than ever are on the move, with 35.5 million having lived outside their country of birth in 2020 and an additional 23.3 million displaced internally, according to a new report by the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) published on Friday.

  9. Pioneering report continues to help children survive conflict

    - UN News

    The UN has verified 266,000 cases of grave violations against children in more than 30 conflict situations across Africa, Asia, the Middle East and Latin America over the past 16 years, two top UN officials said on Thursday – marking 25 years since the Organization released a groundbreaking report on the issue.

  10. Trials of former Spanish judge lack independence, impartiality: landmark case

    - UN News

    The UN Human Rights Committee concluded on Thursday that the trials of a former Spanish in two major political cases were arbitrary and did not comply with the principles of judicial independence and impartiality.

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