National courts lead the way in prosecuting Syrian war crimesDomestic prosecutions in Germany and other European countries offer some hope of justice to victims of war crimes.
The prosecutor’s son: ‘The living legacy of Nuremberg’Don Ferencz’s father prosecuted Nazis at Nuremberg and made sure his son understood the depths of their crimes.
The survivor’s silence: Remembering the Nuremberg trialsSeventy-five years after senior Nazis were tried, a survivor’s daughter describes growing up in the Holocaust’s shadow.
‘I knew my father would be hanged’: Remembering NurembergThe son of a senior Nazi sentenced to death at the Nuremberg trials on growing up in the shadow of his father’s crimes.
Tsitsi Dangarembga: Life in an ‘ever-narrowing Zimbabwe’The Booker Prize shortlisted author on being arrested, having more Black characters in fiction and why she writes.
Indian law on foreign funding a ‘tool to silence’ civil societyInternational Commission of Jurists says amendment to FCRA law will ‘obstruct’ the work of NGOs in the country.
‘Like Obama’: What Biden’s presidency could mean for human rightsExperts expect a return to multilateralism and a closer relationship with the International Criminal Court.
Int’l community must protect, preserve mass graves: CallamardUN expert proposes human rights framework to manage the world’s tens of thousands of mass grave sites.
Julian Assange case ‘politicised’, says whistleblower’s lawyerJennifer Robinson speaks to Al Jazeera about the trial and what the future may hold for Assange, who is in poor health.
Syria-Russia alliance targeted civilians in Idlib: HRW reportThe watchdog says the targeting of civilians by the Syria-Russia alliance may amount to crimes against humanity.