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Myanmar junta rejects UN rights criticism as 'unfounded' by AFP Staff Writers Yangon (AFP) June 17, 2022 Myanmar's ruling junta on Friday rejected criticism of its human rights record by the United Nations, accusing the organisation's rights chief of "interference" in the country's internal affairs. UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet on Tuesday said Myanmar's military government had likely committed "crimes against humanity" in its crackdown on dissent since seizing power in February last year. In a statement, the Myanmar junta rejected what it called "one-sided and unfounded statements" at the UN's ongoing Human Rights Council in Geneva. Bachelet called on the military to abandon plans to carry out Myanmar's first executions since 1990, including those of a former lawmaker from Aung San Suu Kyi's party and a prominent democracy activist. "Myanmar wishes to remind the High Commissioner and certain countries that the individuals sentenced to death are those who were found with hundreds of weapons and they are in charge of several dozen terrorist factions," the statement from Myanmar's mission to the UN in Geneva said. The junta's announcement that it would execute the men triggered a storm of criticism from international rights groups, who contended that the secret military tribunals where they were convicted were unfair. Bachelet said at least 1,900 killings by the military had been reported since the coup, with more than 13,500 people arbitrarily arrested. The figures tally with those gathered by the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, a local monitoring group that maintains data on killings and arrests since the coup. But the junta's statement criticised Bachelet for making a "misleading statement with sweeping allegations" and for not criticising violence carried out by anti-junta militias. Myanmar has been in turmoil since the military ousted Aung San Suu Kyi's civilian government in February last year. Widespread resistance to the takeover was met with a bloody military crackdown.
Nicargua's Ortega urges parliament to welcome US, Russian troopsl Managua (AFP) June 12, 2022 Nicaragua's President Daniel Ortega urged parliament to ratify a decree allowing foreign troops, including from Russia and the United States, to carry out joint humanitarian assistance and anti-drug trafficking exercises in the country. The presidential decree was sent to parliament "as a matter of urgency" and is to be discussed on Tuesday, according to the legislative agenda published on Saturday by the official newspaper. The decree authorizes the entry "on a rotating basis" of Russian troo ... read more
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