The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR)  ruled on Thursday that Ukraine violated the European Convention on Human Rights by failing to prevent and investigate violence during the Odesa’s pro-European Maidan protests in 2014. In late April 2014, Ukrainian authorities obtained intelligence showing signs of possible incitement to violence and mass riots at the “For [...]

READ MORE
Hutima, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

The Federal Court of Canada dismissed a challenge to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s prorogation of Parliament on Thursday, concluding that the applicants failed to demonstrate that the prime minister exceeded the limits established by the written Constitution, unwritten Constitutional principles, or any other legal limits. In coming to his conclusion, Chief Justice Paul Crampton ruled [...]

READ MORE
Kim Shiflett, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Canadian Privacy Commissioner Phillipe Dufresne on Thursday opened an investigation into social media platform X (formerly Twitter). The inquiry will examine whether the platform is complying with Canadian privacy law “with respect to its collection, use and disclosure of Canadians’ personal information to train artificial intelligence models.” Soon after Elon Musk acquired Twitter and renamed [...]

READ MORE
Wolfmann, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

The UN Human Rights Committee found on Thursday that Albania violated the rights of three Roma children by failing to register their births, leaving them without legal recognition and at risk of statelessness. The three children, born in Greece to Albanian parents, could not be properly registered because the parents lacked residency status. At the [...]

READ MORE
matcuz / Pixabay

Rights groups Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch on Friday decried the UK government’s order directing Apple to give it access to cloud data, asserting the move “severely harms the privacy rights of users in the UK and worldwide.” The Washington Post reported last week that the UK Home Office issued a secret order in [...]

READ MORE

UN experts on Friday expressed deep concern over the US government’s decision to reinstate Cuba as a State Sponsor of Terrorism (SSOT), stating that the decision will have a devastating impact on the human rights of vulnerable groups in Cuba. The independent UN experts referred back to their previous communications in which they raised concerns about [...]

READ MORE

The Supreme Court of Canada ruled on Friday that the province of British Columbia (BC) may bring a class action on behalf of multiple governments in Canada for harm caused by opioids. Faced with a public health crisis caused by the opioid epidemic, BC enacted the Opioid Damages and Health Care Costs Recovery Act in [...]

READ MORE
995645 / Pixabay

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) on Friday reported that more aid workers, healthcare staffers, delivery personnel and other humanitarians have been killed in 2024 than in any other year, with a recorded death toll of 281 aid workers globally. Many of the workers were killed while providing humanitarian assistance on [...]

READ MORE
DEZALB / Pixabay

UN Special Rapporteur on Torture Alice Edwards on Thursday called on Ecuador to investigate and prosecute the alleged torture of its former vice president Jorge Glas. The Special Rapporteur raised alarm over the conditions of Glas, who has shown signs of physical and psychological torture. According to medical reports provided, Glas has suffered “dislocated thumbs, [...]

READ MORE
CDC/ Debora Cartagena, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Three tobacco companies proposed on Thursday to pay $32.5 billion to settle legal claims in Canada, stemming from decades of disputes. The proposal remains subject to further negotiation and court approval. A mediator, appointed by the Ontario Superior Court of Justice to coordinate the tobacco-related claims and facilitate the negotiations, filed the proposed settlement arrangement. [...]

READ MORE