Thursday, November 11, 2010

South Africa Gordan Warns on Capital Flow,Gordan Warns on Capital Flows,Warns on Capital Flow,South Africa Gordan Warns on

South Africa Gordan Warns on Capital Flows


Several independent United Nations experts today condemned the recent public execution of two teenage girls in central Somalia, voicing deep concern that groups such as the Islamic militant Al-Shabaab are taking the Horn of Africa nation "back into the stone age."
The two young women, who had been accused of spying in the central town of Beledweyne by the Islamic militant group known as al-Shabaab, were killed by firing squad two weeks ago in front of hundreds of residents in the town, according to media reports.
"We join the Somali people in condemning, in the strongest terms, these latest brutal summary executions of two young women convicted without any semblance of due process."
The experts called on the parties to the conflict "to immediately refrain from committing acts of extrajudicial executions, torture, stonings, decapitation, amputations and floggings as well as other human rights violations, including with regard to freedom of religion."
They voiced deep concern that groups such as Al-Shabaab are "taking Somalia back into the stone age."
According to the experts, regular indiscriminate attacks in the capital, Mogadishu, in which heavy artillery, mortars, rocket-propelled grenades, heavy machine guns and roadside bombs have been used, as well as targeted assassinations, have caused thousands of deaths and injuries, as well as destruction of property, with whole neighbourhoods razed to the ground.
Shamsul Bari, the Independent Expert on Somalia, noted constant reports of sexual and gender-based violence, including rape and female genital mutilation, as well as forced child marriages and the lack of educational opportunities for young girls and boys.

Several independent United Nations experts today condemned the recent public execution of two teenage girls in central Somalia, voicing deep concern that groups such as the Islamic militant Al-Shabaab are taking the Horn of Africa nation "back into the stone age."
The two young women, who had been accused of spying in the central town of Beledweyne by the Islamic militant group known as al-Shabaab, were killed by firing squad two weeks ago in front of hundreds of residents in the town, according to media reports.
"We join the Somali people in condemning, in the strongest terms, these latest brutal summary executions of two young women convicted without any semblance of due process."
The experts called on the parties to the conflict "to immediately refrain from committing acts of extrajudicial executions, torture, stonings, decapitation, amputations and floggings as well as other human rights violations, including with regard to freedom of religion."
They voiced deep concern that groups such as Al-Shabaab are "taking Somalia back into the stone age."
According to the experts, regular indiscriminate attacks in the capital, Mogadishu, in which heavy artillery, mortars, rocket-propelled grenades, heavy machine guns and roadside bombs have been used, as well as targeted assassinations, have caused thousands of deaths and injuries, as well as destruction of property, with whole neighbourhoods razed to the ground.
Shamsul Bari, the Independent Expert on Somalia, noted constant reports of sexual and gender-based violence, including rape and female genital mutilation, as well as forced child marriages and the lack of educational opportunities for young girls and boys.

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