Human Wrongs Watch

Demonstration in front of Sydney Town Hall in support of Julian Assange, December 2010 | Author: Elekhh | Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
'Unseen' News and Views

Demonstration in front of Sydney Town Hall in support of Julian Assange, December 2010 | Author: Elekhh | Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
Following a Government-led assault on Syria’s opposition-held areas, an estimated 140,000 people in the country’s south-west remain homeless and in need of help, the United Nation Refugee Agency (UNCHR) on 20 July 2018 said, calling for sustained access to displaced communities.

20 July 2018 — United Nations migration agency staff in Yemen say the key port city of Hudaydah remains “a difficult environment” for the delivery of aid to thousands of people displaced by heavy fighting this week.

“The situation is very bad and we’re doing our best to provide them with temporary shelter and support for the time being,” said Stefano Pes, IOM Yemen’s Officer in Charge, noting that agency staff and partners are working in a difficult environment to deliver food, and non-food items, shelter kits and good quality tents.
20 July 2018
ONE CAN look at events in Gaza through the left or through the right eye. One can condemn them as inhuman, cruel and mistaken, or justify them as necessary and unavoidable.

Uri Avnery
But there is one adjective that is beyond question: They are stupid.
If the late Barbara Tuchman were still alive, she might be tempted to add another chapter to her groundbreaking opus “The March of Folly”: a chapter titled “Eyeless in Gaza”.
THE LATEST episode in this epic started a few months ago, when independent activists in the Gaza Strip called for a march to the Israeli border, which Hamas supported.
It was called “The Great March of Return”, a symbolic gesture for the more than a million Arab residents who fled or were evicted from their homes in the land that became the State of Israel.
ROME, 20 July, 2018 (FAO)* — Millions of small-scale farmers and foresters will be able to better protect their lands from the impacts of climate change, and improve their livelihoods thanks to renewed global efforts announced today on the sidelines of World Forest Week (COFO24).

Farmers share results of new climate-smart agriculture practices in Nepal. | Photo from FAO.

The queen bee (center) in a hive. | Author: Waugsberg | CC BY-SA 3.0
20 July, 2018 (FAO)* — What does William Shakespeare have in common with Mexican beekeeper Francisco Lenin Bartolo Reyes? Both men understand the importance of the honey bee, a small but invaluable ally of the human race.

19 July 2018 – After close to three years of siege, 6,900 women, children and men were finally able to leave the Syrian towns of Foah and Kafraya over the past few days, following a local agreement between parties to the conflict.

17 July 2018 — While today’s headlines about Myanmar focus on crimes against humanity and the ethnic cleansing of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims, a story just as consequential and longer in the making has gone largely unreported. A new Human Rights Watch* report describes the impact on small-scale farmers throughout the country whose land has been confiscated over the past 30 years by Myanmar’s government and military.

Despite the improved economic growth, risks to the economic outlook are rising, the United Nations economic and social affairs chief on 19 July 2018 said, warning against “increasingly unilateral trade measures” that are challenging the multilateral trading system.
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