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Invisible and Silenced Women: The Stories of Women Tortured During Saddam Hussein’s Regime
01 January 2006
Invisible and Silenced Women: The Stories of Women Tortured During Saddam Hussein’s Regime
Excerpts from a report being compiled by the Global Justice Center and a team of Harvard Law students assisting Iraqi women. GJC has documented reports of over 4,000 incidents of rape and gender-based violence in Iraq during Saddam Hussein’s regime.
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Q&As
14 February 2025
Update: The Universal Jurisdiction Case Against Myanmar Officials
On 13 February 2025, an Argentine judge, Hon. Marìa Romilda Servini de Cubria, issued arrest warrants for 25 Myanmar military and civilian officials, including Commander-in-Chief Min Aung Hlaing and Deputy Commander- in-Chief Soe Win, for allegedly committing genocide and crimes including aggravated murder, sexual abuse, and torture against the Rohingy. This is the first time that public warrants have been issued in a universal jurisdiction case adjudicating crimes against the Rohingya, representing a significant step towards justice. The case stems from a November 2019 complaint filed in Argentina by Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK (BROUK) alleging genocide and crimes against humanity committed against the Rohingya since 2012, including murder, enforced disappearance, torture, sexual violence, and imprisonment (an earlier Q&A about the case is here). This effort to provide Rohingya survivors and communities with justice and accountability is notable for having been driven and led entirely by the Rohingya community itself.
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Briefs and White Papers
30 September 2024
Documenting Reproductive Violence: Unveiling Opportunities, Challenges, and Legal Pathways for UN Investigative Mechanisms
Reproductive violence is a distinct form of sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) targeting reproductive autonomy, a right protected under international law. The impacts of reproductive violence can be as profound, damaging, and long-lasting as those accompanying other forms of violence and can compound the pain of other forms of SGBV. Yet recognition of reproductive violence as a distinct harm has been overlooked historically, including in international investigations of atrocities, conflict, humanitarian crises, or other instability.
International investigations often play a key role in guiding international responses to crises, and the omission of reproductive violence can thus have significant ripple effects.
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Letters
06 June 2024
Letter to the UN, Security Council and Member States on Women’s Rights in Afghanistan
Letters
22 May 2024
Joint NGO Letter to President Biden on the International Criminal Court
UN/Government Submissions
24 April 2024
Submission to Special Rapporteur on Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment — Report on Sexual Torture
Letters
26 March 2024
Joint Statement in Support of Progress toward a Crimes Against Humanity Treaty
UN/Government Submissions
05 January 2024
Submission to UN Special Rapporteur on Myanmar — Gendered Impacts of the Coup
Gender-discriminatory laws and policies, and impunity for sexual and gender-based crimes, have long been the norm in Myanmar. Since independence in 1948, successive military regimes have perpetuated systemic discrimination based on gender, sexual orientation, and gender identity. The 2021 military coup greatly exacerbated gender-based discrimination and violence against women and people with diverse gender identities, and put an immediate end to any attempts to reform or eliminate these structural barriers to equality.
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27 November 2023