Documents on United Kingdom
Press release
Sep 17, 2009
The UK government should not rely on unreliable "diplomatic assurances" against torture to deport national security suspects to Ethiopia.
Letter
Sep 17, 2009
Human Rights Watch writes to Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Rt Hon David Miliband, on the consequences of the UK and Ethiopian governments signing the Memorandum of Understanding which would do little to curb acts of torture in Ethiopia.
Commentary
Sep 1, 2009
Scotland's release of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, the only person convicted in connection with the Lockerbie bombing of 1988, was supposed to be Gaddafi's ultimate international relations coup in a year when, at times, Libya held the chairmanship of the African Union and the presidency of both the UN Security Council and of the General Assembly. But Megrahi's homecoming did not go as smoothly as planned.
Letter
Aug 12, 2009
The upcoming inquiry into the Iraq war, announced by Prime Minister Gordon Brown on June 15, provides a crucial forum to investigate the actions of the United Kingdom in Iraq over the last eight years.
Press release
Aug 12, 2009
The British Government's Inquiry into its Iraq War policies should include human rights abuses as part of its investigation, Human Rights Watch said today.
Press release
Jul 9, 2009
The UK government should order an independent judicial inquiry into mounting evidence that its security services and law enforcement agencies were complicit in the torture of terrorism suspects in Pakistan.
Press release
Jun 24, 2009
“Protection of human rights can only be achieved if the victims of human rights violations have access to an effective remedy.” Yet this fundamental human right, enshrined in so many instruments, including the European Convention on Human Rights, is being breached on a continuous basis in many member states. This fact underscores a serious enforcement gap that urgently needs to be addressed.
Amicus briefing
Jun 19, 2009
Press release
May 15, 2009
Legislation to allow the government to hold secret investigations into suspicious deaths involving state agents would undermine accountability and breach human rights law.