• Corporate Accountability for Human Rights Abuses: A Guide for Victims and NGOs on Recourse Mechanisms

    Corporate Accountability for Human Rights Abuses: A Guide for Victims and NGOs on Recourse Mechanisms

    The International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) is pleased to announce the publication of a guide for victims and NGOs on recourse mechanisms in cases of corporate-related human rights violations. The guide was launched today in Amsterdam on the occasion of a public debate on corporate justice held in collaboration with the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre and OECD Watch and with the participation of experts such as Olivier De Schutter, UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food, author of the guide’s foreword and former FIDH Secretary General and Katherine Gallagher, Attorney of the Centre for Constitutional Rights and FIDH Vice-President.

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  • Corporate Accountability for Human Rights Abuses: A Guide for Victims and NGOs on Recourse Mechanisms

    Corporate Accountability for Human Rights Abuses: A Guide for Victims and NGOs on Recourse Mechanisms

    The International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) is pleased to announce the publication of a guide for victims and NGOs on recourse mechanisms in cases of corporate-related human rights violations. The guide was launched today in Amsterdam on the occasion of a public debate on corporate justice held in collaboration with the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre and OECD Watch and with the participation of experts such as Olivier De Schutter, UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food, author of the guide’s foreword and former FIDH Secretary General and Katherine Gallagher, Attorney of the Centre for Constitutional Rights and FIDH Vice-President.

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  • Corporate Accountability for Human Rights Abuses: A Guide for Victims and NGOs on Recourse Mechanisms

    Corporate Accountability for Human Rights Abuses: A Guide for Victims and NGOs on Recourse Mechanisms

    The International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) is pleased to announce the publication of a guide for victims and NGOs on recourse mechanisms in cases of corporate-related human rights violations. The guide was launched today in Amsterdam on the occasion of a public debate on corporate justice held in collaboration with the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre and OECD Watch and with the participation of experts such as Olivier De Schutter, UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food, author of the guide’s foreword and former FIDH Secretary General and Katherine Gallagher, Attorney of the Centre for Constitutional Rights and FIDH Vice-President.

    Read More
  • Corporate Accountability for Human Rights Abuses: A Guide for Victims and NGOs on Recourse Mechanisms

    Corporate Accountability for Human Rights Abuses: A Guide for Victims and NGOs on Recourse Mechanisms

    The International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) is pleased to announce the publication of a guide for victims and NGOs on recourse mechanisms in cases of corporate-related human rights violations. The guide was launched today in Amsterdam on the occasion of a public debate on corporate justice held in collaboration with the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre and OECD Watch and with the participation of experts such as Olivier De Schutter, UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food, author of the guide’s foreword and former FIDH Secretary General and Katherine Gallagher, Attorney of the Centre for Constitutional Rights and FIDH Vice-President.

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  • Cambodias Exploding Prison Population and Correctional Center 4

    Cambodias Exploding Prison Population and Correctional Center 4

    Thus far, the government’s sole response to the overcrowding crisis has been to construct additional prisons and expand existing ones2. The GDP’s latest attempt to ease overcrowding is the construction of Correctional Center 4 (CC4). This new prison in Pursat Province, opened in January 2010, is designed to eventually house 2,500 inmates.

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  • Political Interference at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia

    Political Interference at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia

    This Open Society Justice Initiative report focuses on the judicial independence of the Khmer Rouge Tribunal, and how political interference appears to be threatening the court’s work.​ Now, as the court completes its first case, prepares to try its second, and contemplates additional cases, it is essential to understand the extent to which the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) has succeeded in maintaining its independence. This report (available for download below) begins with a brief exploration of the history of judicial independence in Cambodia and examines how the ECCC has struggled with its commitment to international fair trial standard in practice. It presents recommendations both to better safeguard independence at the ECCC and to inform the structure and performance of future international courts. The Khmer Rouge Tribunal is charged with prosecuting senior leaders and those most responsible for mass crimes committed in Cambodia during the 1970s. Its unique structure as a court formally embedded in the Cambodian domestic system but with international participation at all levels is an experiment in the development of legal accountability for mass atrocities.

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  • Global Witness Welcomes New Openness in Cambodia’s Oil Sector but Remains Concerned over Lack of Transparency

    Global Witness Welcomes New Openness in Cambodia’s Oil Sector but Remains Concerned over Lack of Transparency

    Global Witness today welcomed the decision of Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister Sok An to provide a list of companies operating in the oil and gas sector and some information about the management of payments made by them. The information was released in response to questions from the opposition Sam Rainsy Party. However, the pressure group said that it remained concerned that the government had not yet publicly audited the extractive revenue accounts or provided details of deals struck with oil and mining companies. It also remains unclear how payments from oil companies are being administered and used by the government.

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  • Global Witness Welcomes New Openness in Cambodia’s Oil Sector but Remains Concerned over Lack of Transparency

    Global Witness Welcomes New Openness in Cambodia’s Oil Sector but Remains Concerned over Lack of Transparency

    Global Witness today welcomed the decision of Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister Sok An to provide a list of companies operating in the oil and gas sector and some information about the management of payments made by them. The information was released in response to questions from the opposition Sam Rainsy Party. However, the pressure group said that it remained concerned that the government had not yet publicly audited the extractive revenue accounts or provided details of deals struck with oil and mining companies. It also remains unclear how payments from oil companies are being administered and used by the government.

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  • Global Witness Welcomes New Openness in Cambodia’s Oil Sector but Remains Concerned over Lack of Transparency

    Global Witness Welcomes New Openness in Cambodia’s Oil Sector but Remains Concerned over Lack of Transparency

    Global Witness today welcomed the decision of Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister Sok An to provide a list of companies operating in the oil and gas sector and some information about the management of payments made by them. The information was released in response to questions from the opposition Sam Rainsy Party. However, the pressure group said that it remained concerned that the government had not yet publicly audited the extractive revenue accounts or provided details of deals struck with oil and mining companies. It also remains unclear how payments from oil companies are being administered and used by the government.

    Read More
  • Global Witness Welcomes New Openness in Cambodia’s Oil Sector but Remains Concerned over Lack of Transparency

    Global Witness Welcomes New Openness in Cambodia’s Oil Sector but Remains Concerned over Lack of Transparency

    Global Witness today welcomed the decision of Cambodian Deputy Prime Minister Sok An to provide a list of companies operating in the oil and gas sector and some information about the management of payments made by them. The information was released in response to questions from the opposition Sam Rainsy Party. However, the pressure group said that it remained concerned that the government had not yet publicly audited the extractive revenue accounts or provided details of deals struck with oil and mining companies. It also remains unclear how payments from oil companies are being administered and used by the government.

    Read More
  •  Cambodia Needs to Take Effective Action to Eliminate Torture and Improve Policing

    Cambodia Needs to Take Effective Action to Eliminate Torture and Improve Policing

    As the International Day in Support of Victims of Torture is commemorated globally, the people of Cambodia continue to face serious problems relating to guaranteed rights against torture.

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  •  Cambodia Needs to Take Effective Action to Eliminate Torture and Improve Policing

    Cambodia Needs to Take Effective Action to Eliminate Torture and Improve Policing

    As the International Day in Support of Victims of Torture is commemorated globally, the people of Cambodia continue to face serious problems relating to guaranteed rights against torture.

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