Newsletter October Newsletter

Update on the Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy and Reconciliation) Bill

This Bill has had its third reading in the House of Commons and is now at its second reading in the House of Lords. The Northern Ireland Troubles was a conflict that occurred c. 1968 to 1998 and claimed the lives of over 3,600 people and injured 40,000. In most cases, no one has been…
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Newsletter October Newsletter

Amnesty’s Webinar on the Bill of Rights

This webinar on 20 September had initially been planned to devise strategies to campaign against the proposed Bill. It was led by Laura Treveleyan, campaign manager – human rights team, and Ian Southerden, programme director – law and human rights, who began with some background. Reviewing the Human Rights Act has been in the Conservative…
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Newsletter October Newsletter

Amnesty’s ‘To do’ List for the Prime Minister

On the day Liz Truss was announced as the leader of the Conservative Party and the next Prime Minister, Amnesty provided her with a to do list, including: keeping the Human Rights Act, abandoning the Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy and Reconciliation) Bill, starting to respect the rights of refugees and migrants, stopping the curbs on…
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Newsletter October Newsletter

Calling All Photographers: ‘What Home Means?’

Until 12 December the North London Freedom from Torture Group is running a competition for photographers of all skills, ages and nationalities to tell in a picture ‘what home means to you’. A selection of photos will be included in Freedom from Torture’s digital gallery and the three winning entries in each age group will…
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Newsletter October Newsletter

Exhibition on Public Executions in London

From 14 October to 16 April 2023 the Museum of London in Docklands has an exhibition featuring stories about the executed and those who witnessed executions, as well as objects and paintings. Amnesty’s Anti-Death Penalty Project contributed an interview about the legacy of London’s public executions and the current global position with respect to state…
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Newsletter October Newsletter

The Legacies of Enslavement at Cambridge University

In early 2019, the University created an Advisory Group to advise on its historical links with the transatlantic slave trade, on the legacies of those links and on future action in light of the findings. In September the Group recommended creating a Cambridge Legacies of Enslavement Fund to be put towards research, community engagement and…
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Newsletter September Newsletter

European and World News Updates – September 2022

Bad News Europe According to Missing Migrants, a documentation project by the UN-run International Organisation for Migration, 19,705 people have gone missing in the central Mediterranean since 2014. The Red Cross and Red Crescent Separated Families and Missing Persons Centre registered 16,500 people who were looking for 25,600 missing migrants across Europe in 2021 alone. …
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Newsletter September Newsletter

Good & Bad News in Britain – September 2022 Update

Good News Britain The Bike Project, set up in 2013, refurbishes second-hand bikes and provides them to refugees and asylum seekers in London and Birmingham. Twenty Ukrainian medical students whose training was thrown into turmoil by the Russian invasion are starting clinical placements around Cambridge. Ahead of the court hearing this month scheduled to decide…
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Newsletter September Newsletter

Protecting Indigenous Groups in Papua

Indonesia’s easternmost island of Papua is home to more than 250 different Indigenous linguistic groups. Wabu Block, in the Intan Jaya regency, belongs mostly to the Moni tribe who have inhabited the land for thousands of years. Indigenous peoples there have suffered endless oppression and human rights abuses at the hands of Indonesian authorities despite the fact…
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