martes, 12 de julio de 2016

Turkey: Satellite Imagery in the Neighborhoods of Cudi and Sur


(Istanbul) – The Turkish government is blocking access for independent investigations into alleged mass abuses against civilians across southeast Turkey, Human Rights Watch said today. 

The alleged abuses include unlawful killings of civilians, mass forced civilian displacement, and widespread unlawful destruction of private property. 
The government should promptly grant the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights permission to enter the area and investigate according to its standards.


 “The Turkish government’s effective blockade of areas of the southeast fuels concerns of a major cover-up,” said Emma Sinclair-Webb, senior Turkey researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The Turkish government should give the UN and nongovernmental groups immediate access to the area to document what’s going on there.”
Most of the deaths, destruction, and mass displacement occurred in nine towns, including Cizre. More than 355,000 people have been temporarily displaced within towns or  to other nearby towns and villages, or to other regions of Turkey. At least 338 civilians have been killed in places where security forces and the Civil Protection Units (YPS), the armed group linked to the PKK, have clashed.



 Satellite imagery recorded before and after building demolition in the neighborhoods of Cudi and Sur.














https://www.hrw.org/news/2016/07/11/turkey-state-blocks-probes-southeast-killings

Turkey: Satellite Imagery in the Neighborhoods of Cudi and Sur

domingo, 3 de julio de 2016

Un país que ahora no existe: ¿Cómo era Irak hace 50 años?

Un país que ahora no existe: ¿Cómo era Irak hace 50 años?:



Antes de la época de Saddam Hussein, la intervención militar de EE.UU. y la presencia del Estado Islámico, Irak era muy diferente. 
Los hombres llevaban trajes y corbatas, mientras que las mujeres podían llevar vestidos de manga corta. Un cortometraje muestra estos detalles.