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Country Report: Sudan
Conflict between the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) continued for a third year, with all warring parties committing war crimes and other violations of international humanitarian law. The warring parties’ actions made Sudan the worst global humanitarian crisis. The United Nations’ World Food Programme reported that 24.6 million people suffer from acute hunger and 2 million face famine or risk of famine. Over 11.8 million were displaced by the conflict as of September, including 7.4 million internally displaced and 4.2 million in neighboring countries. While the SAF retook the capital, Khartoum, and other cities and villages including in central Sudan, by the end of October El Fasher, North Darfur’s capital, fell to the RSF and immediately there were reports and images of RSF extrajudicial killings and other serious violations against people fleeing. The SAF carried out indiscriminate airstrikes in South Darfur as well other parts of the country. Both parties continue to wilfully obstruct aid despite the population’s desperate needs, and to detain and harass humanitarian workers and local volunteers. In July, the RSF and their allies announced the creation of a parallel government, based in Darfur. The United States rolled out designated sanctions against individuals and entities in relation to the conflict. In July, the European Union (EU) adopted more targeted sanctions for serious human rights violations, including against the Sudan Shield Forces leader Abu Aqla Keikel. In Conclusions adopted by EU foreign ministers, the EU stated its grave concerns over violations across Sudan, called for accountability and committed to advance concrete measures for the protection of civilians. The International Criminal Court (ICC) investigations in Darfur continued. In September, the UN Security Council renewed the Sudan sanctions regime for another year. They did not expand it to cover the whole of Sudan nor designate new individuals under the existing regime. The mandate of the UN Independent International Fact-Finding Mission (FFM) was extended by the UN Human Rights Council in October. Conflict and Abuses in Khartoum In March, as the SAF regained control of Khartoum, they uncovered evidence of serious violations by the RSF, notably in Omdurman. The SAF committed retaliatory attacks against local volunteers accused of collaborating with the RSF. Civilians faced ongoing indiscriminate shelling and air attacks. Local volunteers said in January that the SAF carried out indiscriminate airstrikes in southern Khartoum, including on a market, killing, and injuring dozens of civilians. In February, local medical authorities and activists said the RSF shelling resulted in 54 people being killed and over 100 injured at a market in Omdurman. In March, media reported that around 500 people may have been buried in mass graves in northern Khartoum near an RSF base, where detainees reported torture and starvation. The RSF drone strikes reportedly continued to target installations in Khartoum vital for civilians, even if also used by the military, including on September 9 when media reported RSF attacks hit power stations and an oil refinery. In March, the UN Human Rights Office noted credible reports that the RSF and allied forces looted houses in eastern Khartoum, carrying out summary killings, arbitrary detentions, and looting. They said that SAF-allied fighters were reported to have carried out similar abuses. Conflict and Abuses in Darfur On October 26, the RSF captured El Fasher, the culmination of a siege on the city since May 2024, and relentless attacks by the armed group that triggered famine in displacement camps in and around the city. The RSF carried out mass killings of people fleeing, as well as sexual violence. Prior to the fall of El Fasher, both parties carried out attacks impacting civilians and civilian infrastructure, including the city’s few remaining health facilities. The UN FFM reported that the RSF damaged water facilities and supply lines in February and in mid-April, RSF large- scale attacks on Zamzam killed between 300 and 1,500 and injured over 157, the majority women and children, according to the UN. The SAF shelled and bombed residential areas, including bombing a market north of El Fasher on March 24 and in early February also killed scores of civilians in attacks on residential and commercial neighbourhoods in Nyala, South Darfur. using unguided air- dropped bombs. Conflict and Abuses in Other Locations On January 10, the Sudan Shield Forces, an armed group currently allied with the SAF, and led by Abu Aqla Keikel, targeted civilians in Tayba village, killing at least 26 civilians. The fighters looted property, burned homes, and terrorized residents, forcing many to flee. The attack took place in the context of a SAF offensive to retake Gezira state. In West Kordofan, the SAF bombed a mosque on June 21, killing 41 and wounding dozens. The UN reported that around 300 people were killed in RSF-led attacks in July on a Barra locality in North Kordofan. The SAF also carried out airstrikes in July in West Kordofan that reportedly left at least 23 civilians killed. Wilful Obstruction of Humanitarian Assistance, Attacks on Aid The warring parties continue to wilfully obstruct aid movement, while also attacking humanitarian workers and local volunteers, violating international humanitarian law. The UN FFM concluded that the RSF and their allied forces used starvation as a method of warfare, a war crime. Cuts to international aid by the US and others, combined with attacks by the warring parties, have led to the closure of many emergency food kitchens, a vital source of food. At a conference in London in April, international actors pledged over €500 million in aid. Even to the extent aid remained available, fighting and attacks on humanitarian aid agencies resulted in suspension of services in some parts. In February, WFP temporarily paused food distribution to Zamzam camp in North Darfur. In June, a WFP convoy was attacked in North Darfur killing five staff members. A drone strike also hit another UN convoy in the same region in August. An armed attack in August 2025 forced Doctors without Borders (MSF), a medical charity, to suspend their operations in Zalingei hospital, central Darfur in the midst of a Cholera outbreak. The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported that in May 2025 only 110 visas for the UN and international NGOs were approved out of the 355 pending requests, and the backlog was increasing. Conflict-Related Sexual Violence Sexual violence has been routinely perpetrated primarily against women and girls by combatants on both sides of the conflict. Evidence of rape, gang rape, and sexual slavery indicate that these acts are numerous and often widespread. In May, UN experts said at least 330 cases of conflict-related sexual violence have been documented. But with severe restrictions on access to services, attacks on medical personnel, survivors facing deep stigma, and ongoing restrictions on independent monitoring, the documented cases are likely a small proportion of the actual number. As of June 2025, the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) said recent cuts to aid funding have forced the agency to withdraw from more than half of the 93 health facilities it was supporting. Detention, Torture, and ill-Treatment Both parties have unlawfully detained, tortured, and executed civilians. The UN FFM said RSF fighters beat and shot detainees in April in Omdurman. The mission also said both parties held detainees in inhumane conditions. The SAF unlawfully detained people accused of collaborating with the RSF, often along ethnic lines. In April, activists raised concern over the lack of due process for over 25 women charged by SAF authorities with collaborating with the RSF, who face possible death sentences. A local rights group said in September that the SAF and their allies were detaining over 3,000 people in Gezira state, most of them political activists. Accountability Impunity remains a key factor fuelling the violence and emboldening perpetrators of grave crimes, as often both parties deny allegations or fail to take credible steps to investigate. All parties to the conflict continued their refusal to cooperate with the UN FFM and the AU Joint Fact-Finding Mission, by blocking access to territories under their control, dismissing their findings and concerns, and not responding to any of their communications or requests. On October 6, ICC judges convicted former Janjaweed militia leader, Ali Muhammad Ali Abd-Al-Rahman (Ali Kosheib), of charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur in 2003-04 and 2013, the first trial arising out of the court’s Darfur investigation. However, the ICC’s mandate remains limited to Darfur, leaving no independent judicial mechanisms to investigate and prosecute individuals responsible for grave crimes committed across Sudan. The UN Human Rights Council decided to extend the mandate of the UN FFM, to ensure robust continued investigations into ongoing grave abuses, and to support efforts to hold perpetrators of international crimes to account. Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Same sex sexuality and gender non-conforming expression are criminalized in Sudan under sections 148 and 151 of the penal code. The law penalizes those convicted of “sodomy” and “indecent acts” with one year to life imprisonment. Human Rights Watch, World Report 2026. New York.
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Country Report: Sri Lanka
President Anura Kumara Dissanayake’s government made some efforts to stabilize the economy and address inequality in access to public services, but made little progress in implementing human rights commitments. The United Nations human rights office, in its annual report on Sri Lanka, recorded cases of arbitrary detention, torture, and deaths in custody, noting that “the structural conditions that led to past violations persist.” Victims, their families, and human rights defenders continued to face threats and harassment from security agencies, particularly in the north and east, where state officials also engaged in land rights and religious rights violations. The authorities failed to advance accountability for widespread war crimes committed during the 1983-2009 armed conflict. Despite rhetoric of “national reconciliation,” the Dissanayake government has done little to build trust with the Tamil and Muslim communities. Courts ordered the excavation of mass graves at two sites believed to be associated with enforced disappearances during the conflict. The government stalled on promised legal reforms, including to establish an independent prosecutor’s office, repeal the Prevention of Terrorism Act, and amend the Online Safety Act. Sri Lanka's Penal Code criminalizes same-sex conduct. In October, the UN Human Rights Council by consensus renewed the mandate of the UN Sri Lanka Accountability Project to collect evidence of conflict-related abuses for two years. The United Kingdom joined other countries, including the United States and Canada, that had previously imposed targeted sanctions on military leaders accused of civil war-era crimes. The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Türk, visited Sri Lanka in June and called for reforms. Economic, Social and Cultural Rights The government abided by the terms of a US$3 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout negotiated by its predecessor after the 2022 economic crisis, when Sri Lanka defaulted on its foreign debt. The crisis occurred partly due to low government revenues — a result of tax policies that benefitted those most wealthy. According to World Bank data for 2023, the most recent available at time of writing, over a quarter of the population had income below the bank’s poverty line of US$3.65 a day. Nearly one-third of children were malnourished, according to the World Food Programme. Many families struggled to access goods and services essential for their rights to education and health. Social spending has remained at low levels under the Dissanayake government, harming numerous rights. Policies pursued by the government under the IMF’s framework have placed the burden of fiscal recovery disproportionately on those least able to cope. There was some progress in combatting corruption. Dissanayake’s predecessor, Ranil Wickremesinghe, was arrested for alleged misuse of funds and later released on bail—one of over a dozen political leaders and senior officials to be detained in corruption investigations led by the strengthened Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption. Accountability and Justice Over 100,000 people were killed in the 26-year civil war between the Sri Lankan government and the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), including an estimated 40,000 in the final months alone. Abuses by government forces included torture and extrajudicial killings, rape and other sexual violence, enforced disappearance, and indiscriminate attacks on civilians. The LTTE committed atrocities including suicide bombings and other indiscriminate killings of civilians, summary executions, and the use of child soldiers. In the 1980s there were thousands of enforced disappearances in the south of the island, as the army combatted an insurgency by the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (People’s Liberation Front or JVP), a formerly militant leftist party that is now the largest constituent of the Dissanayake government. Due to the lack of credible domestic justice efforts, as well as ongoing violations against some victim communities, many activists welcomed the UN Human Rights Council’s decision to continue international efforts to advance accountability through the UN Sri Lanka Accountability Project (OSLAP) for two more years. Victims engaged with OSLAP despite the ongoing risk of reprisal by security agencies. A woman in Trincomalee who shared extensive information with OSLAP said counterterrorism police questioned her at her home for three hours in June. “The monitoring is tighter now,” she said. “Sometimes [police] even approach our children to get information about us. That is a type of threat.” The government pledged to address these crimes through a new domestic mechanism, but did not announce any details, while victims and their families expressed little faith in domestic processes. Previous governments have appointed at least 10 different commissions to examine human rights violations and war crimes since the 1990s, but none led to accountability nor revealed the fate of victims of enforced disappearance. Although President Dissanayake has supported claims by whistleblowers and the Catholic church that there was a cover-up of state complicity in the 2019 Easter Sunday bombings, the authorities have yet to credibly investigate the attacks, which killed over 250 people. The persistent impunity has led to continued abuses. The report from the UN human rights office described “routine use of torture and other forms of ill-treatment” and multiple cases of deaths in police custody, as well as “a lack of effective investigation into these cases.” The Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka reviewed at least 736 torture complaints. The government pursued a crackdown on organized crime including drug and weapon seizures, and the extradition of high-profile suspects, but there were concerns over the use of the military in law enforcement and due process in the arrest of people for drug possession. There were more than 120,000 such arrests between January and August. Mass graves Over several years at least 20 mass graves have been discovered throughout Sri Lanka, often by accident during construction work. In a fresh investigation of a mass grave at Chemmani, near Jaffna, the remains of over 200 people, including children, were discovered; they are believed to be victims of extra-judicial killings by the Sri Lankan army in the 1990s. In August a court ordered the excavation of another mass grave at Kurukkalmadam in Batticaloa district. Sri Lankan authorities lack the technical capacity to rigorously investigate mass grave sites, and in the past a lack of political will undermined investigations, meaning almost no victims’ remains have ever been identified or other evidence suitably preserved. Freedoms of Expression and Assembly In the north and east of Sri Lanka, the areas most affected by the 1983-2009 civil war, police and intelligence agencies continue to monitor and intimidate the families of victims who campaign for justice, as well as human rights defenders and other members of civil society. The NGO Secretariat, responsible for regulating civil society organizations, remains part of the Ministry of Public Security, enhancing the risk that human rights defenders would be treated as a threat. In August, counterterrorism police summoned Kanapathipillai Kumanan, a prominent Tamil journalist and rights defender, for questioning. The UN annual human rights report on Sri Lanka found that “the surveillance apparatus, especially in the north and east, has remained largely intact, with minimal oversight or direction from the central government,” leading to continued patterns of “intimidation and harassment.” Counter Terrorism Laws President Dissanayake’s election manifesto included a commitment to the “[a]bolition of all oppressive acts including the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) and ensuring civil rights of people in all parts of the country.” Previous governments have made similar commitments, including repeatedly to the Human Rights Council, and to the European Union as a condition of the beneficial GSP+ trading arrangement. However, the police increased use of the PTA, from 38 cases in all of 2024 to 49 during the first five months of 2025. Minority Tamils and Muslims face threats of baseless terrorism allegations. Human rights defenders in the Northern and Eastern provinces reported that members of the police and intelligence agencies routinely warned that they will be accused of terrorism because of their work. Administrators of nongovernment organizations said they were sometimes unable to receive bank transfers due to the misapplication of rules purportedly intended to counter terrorist financing. Sri Lanka is being evaluated by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), an intergovernmental organization that combats money laundering and terrorist financing. Activists raised concerns that the government violated FATF’s code, which calls for “focused, proportionate and risk-based measures,” and warns against “unduly disrupting or discouraging” legitimate work by nonprofit organizations. In September 2023, the IMF found that “broad application of counter-terrorism rules” restricted civil society scrutiny of official corruption. Freedom of Religion and Belief A campaign to redesignate Hindu temples as Buddhist sites accelerated in 2020, when then-President Gotabaya Rajapaksa established the Presidential Task Force for Archaeological Heritage Management in the Eastern Province. Although the task force is no longer active, some government agencies have continued to pursue such designations. Agencies, including the Department of Archaeology, Department of Forests, Department of Wildlife Conservation, the military, and the police, took part in a concerted strategy to appropriate Hindu temples and adjoining lands, as well as property that contains Muslim cemeteries. These actions infringe on the right to freedom of religion as well as property rights, and made government rhetoric of postwar “reconciliation” appear hollow to members of affected communities. Human Rights Watch, World Report 2026. New York. Country Report: South Sudan
South Sudan's human rights situation significantly deteriorated with escalating political violence and intensified armed clashes between government forces and aligned militias and armed opposition groups, including the Sudan People’s Liberation Army in Opposition (SPLA-IO). Clashes occurred mainly in Western Equatoria, Western Bar El Ghazal, Upper Nile, Unity and Central Equatoria, bringing the implementation of the 2018 peace agreement to a standstill. The government conducted indiscriminate aerial bombardments in populated areas under opposition control, killing and injuring civilians and destroying property. The National Security Service (NSS) severely curtailed civil and political rights, escalating arrests, detentions, harassment, surveillance, and other abuses against civil society and political actors. Authorities initiated criminal proceedings against the SPLA-IO leader and first vice president Riek Machar and other opposition figures with charges including treason. The National Salvation Front (NAS), a non-signatory to the peace deal, continued its insurgency campaign in Greater Equatoria and formed a military alliance with the SPLA-IO in September. The humanitarian crisis worsened with approximately seventy percent of the population needing food assistance amid conflict, food insecurity, the impacts of extreme climate events and USAID aid cuts. According to the UN refugee agency (UNHCR), as of October 2025, 1.9 million people were internally displaced in South Sudan. South Sudan also hosted nearly 600,000 refugees, mostly from Sudan, and over 800,000 South Sudanese returnees who fled the conflict in Sudan since April 2023. Conflict and Attacks against Civilians Many civilians were killed in the context of conflict and intercommunal violence. The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights reported that at least 1, 854 people were killed, 1, 693 injured, 423 abducted and 169 subjected to sexual violence between January and September due to intercommunal violence and fighting between government and armed opposition groups including SPLA-IO and NAS. Intercommunal violence in Warrap, Lakes, Eastern Equatoria, Jonglei, Abyei and Unity states, driven by ethnic tensions, revenge attacks, cattle raiding, political influence, and competition over natural resources, continued to escalate with killings, abductions, sexual violence, and destruction of property. In mid-January, reports of killings of South Sudanese in Sudan, by Sudanese armed forces, triggered anti-Sudanese riots in South Sudan with attacks on Sudanese nationals and their properties. While authorities moved to protect Sudanese people and businesses, the UN reported allegations that the security forces used live ammunition to disperse protesters in Aweil and Juba. Following this, the National Communication Authority ordered Internet service providers to block social media. In early March, hostilities between government forces and the “White Army” armed Nuer youth, historically allied with the SPLA-IO, intensified. This followed a March 4 “White Army” attack on a government military base and Nasir town and a March 7 attack by armed men on a UN helicopter that killed a UN crew member and over two dozen South Sudanese soldiers. Uganda then deployed its troops at South Sudan’s request to provide technical support in military operations against the “White Army” and the SPLA-IO in Upper Nile state. The deployment violated the UN Security Council arms embargo as neither Uganda nor South Sudan sought prior exemption. The government conducted indiscriminate aerial bombardments in populated areas, killing and maiming civilians including older people and people with disabilities. Human Rights Watch found that at least 58 people were killed and 17 others severely burnt after government forces used incendiary weapons in Nasir, Longechuk and Ulang counties of Upper Nile state in early March. In early March, the NSS and military intelligence arrested and detained at least 22 members of the SPLA-IO, holding them incommunicado. On March 26, 2025, the government placed Machar under house arrest. On September 11, the justice minister announced treason, conspiracy, murder, and crimes against humanity charges against Machar and seven others for the “White Army” attacks on a government military base in Nasir. Thirteen others were indicted in absentia. The trial began on September 25. Authorities gave the South Sudan Broadcasting Corporation unrestricted access to the proceedings, while blocking independent journalists and civil society. The UN peacekeeping mission, UNMISS, documented serious violations including killings, abductions, sexual violence, forced recruitment, and looting and destruction of property by government forces, SPLA-IO and NAS in Western Equatoria between January and June 2025. In September, an unidentified armed group attacked UN peacekeepers, looting weapons and ammunitions, during a patrol in Tambura, Western Equatoria. Women and Girls’ Rights Gender‐based violence remained pervasive. Most victims of conflict-related sexual violence were women and girls. The UN peacekeeping mission reported that armed groups used sexual violence as a weapon against communities. Survivors face stigma, inadequate healthcare, and little access to psychosocial support and other essential services. The parliament failed to adopt the Anti-Gender Based Violence and Child Protection Bill, which could strengthen legal protections, criminalize forced and child marriage, and guarantee survivors free medical and psychosocial support. Children’s Rights Children in conflict-affected areas remained especially at risk of recruitment, violence, displacement, and hunger. During the first six months of 2025, UNMISS documented 326 children killed, injured, abducted, or subjected to conflict-related sexual violence. Humanitarian Crisis Humanitarians continued to face frequent attacks from armed actors. According to UNOCHA, 15 humanitarian workers and 11 contractors were killed or injured between January and August. On April 13, an armed group attacked and looted a hospital operated by a medical charity, Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in Ulang, Upper Nile state. On May 3, government forces bombarded an MSF hospital in Fangak and the old Fangak market, in Jonglei state, killing seven and injuring at least 20. Systemic Corruption Impacts A September report by the UN Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan concluded that systemic government corruption and predation, notably of oil and non-oil revenues, by South Sudan’s political elites is resulting in “preventable deaths, widespread malnutrition, and mass exclusion from education,” and “fueling deadly armed conflict over resources.” Restrictions on Civil and Political Rights The NSS detained political actors, activists, and journalists under the 2024 NSS Act, which allows arrests without warrants and grants broad powers with little oversight. In September, the South Sudan Human Rights Defenders Network published a report documenting at least 114 cases of censorship, harassment and arbitrary arrests of civil society actors and journalists between July 2022 and July 2025. Justice and Accountability Justice for conflict-related violations remained elusive. Media reported that kidnapping for ransom of aid workers had increased. One local aid worker abducted in August in Western Equatoria reportedly died in captivity. In March 2025, authorities in Unity state, with UNMISS support, deployed a mobile court to Leer to address a decade-long backlog of criminal cases in southern Unity state. The court tried charges of murder, rape, and other serious crimes, but did not have jurisdiction to prosecute war crimes or crimes against humanity, including from the February-April 2022 violence. In November, South Sudan and the African Union separately started recruiting South Sudanese and non-South Sudanese commissioners for the Commission for Truth, Reconciliation and Healing. There was no progress on the Hybrid Court for South Sudan, as the African Union and South Sudan government failed to take action to establish it. In April, the UN Human Rights Council extended the Commission on Human Rights in South Sudan’s mandate, expressing concern over the lack of progress on the establishment of the Hybrid Court, and noting “persistent impunity for violations and abuses.” In May the UN Security Council extended the arms embargo on South Sudan for another year despite opposition of certain Council members. US Deportations In April the US imposed a visa ban on South Sudan passport holders owing to failure to “accept the return of its citizens in a timely manner.” South Sudan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation confirmed on September 4 that it was holding seven foreign nationals deported from the United States in July, while a South Sudanese national was released to his family. On September 6, the authorities formally announced the repatriation of one Mexican national to Mexico but did not clarify where the remaining six men are held and under what conditions, or the legal basis for holding them. On November 5, the US terminated Temporary Protection Status for South Sudan. Human Rights Watch, World Report 2026. New York. Country Report: South Africa
In 2025, allegations of corruption, criminality, and political interference within South Africa’s criminal justice system prompted the president to set up a Commission of Inquiry. Enduring issues related to xenophobia and migrants’ rights to health and education continued. Vigilante groups prevented migrants from accessing public health services and education. The government failed to adequately protect children from violence, including sexual violence and neglect from parents and others, while human rights defenders and whistleblowers faced repression and killings. Rule of Law February 14 marked the 30th anniversary of South Africa’s Constitutional Court. Born out of the South Africa’s democratic transition in 1994, and through its landmark cases, the court has protected constitutional democracy, rule of law, and human rights. In July, President Cyril Ramaphosa established a “Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Criminality, Political Interference, and Corruption in the Criminal Justice System,” the Madlanga Commission. This followed allegations on July 6 by KwaZulu-Natal provincial police commissioner, Lieutenant General Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi that a criminal syndicate, linked to international drug cartels, had infiltrated the criminal justice system, including the police, prosecutors, the judiciary, intelligence services, and politicians. Mkhwanazi accused high ranking political figures of protecting syndicates, including former Police Minister Senzo Mchunu, who he said improperly disbanded the Political Killings Task Team. This police unit had been tasked with investigating political killings in the KwaZulu- Natal province. Xenophobia and the Rights of Migrants South Africa's constitution guarantees the right to health care and basic education, including for migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers, and prohibits refusal of emergency medical treatment. However anti-immigrant vigilante groups such Operation Dudula and March for March blocked migrants access to health in public health facilities and public education. On 31 July, a one-year-old Malawian boy died after Operation Dudula blocked him from accessing treatment at two local government clinics in Alexandra because the family did not have a South African identity card. Economic Freedom Fighters, a political party, has lodged a murder charge against Operation Dudula for the boy’s death. In July, the South African government issued a statement expressing concern at the violations of migrants’ constitutional rights. They committed to strengthen collaboration between the police and the departments of Health and Home Affairs, and to prosecute individuals who take the law into their hands. However, more incidents of blocking migrants’ access to health services, in particular, and more recently education have continued. The latest GovDem Survey of the Inclusive Society Institute found that South Africans harbor high levels of mistrust towards African foreign nationals and anti-immigration sentiments are rising. Seventy-three percent of respondents reported not trusting immigrants from Africa “at all” or “not very much”. These attitudes drive harmful rhetoric, misinformation, and vigilante campaigns against foreign nationals. The report concludes that, if left unaddressed, societal divisions may deepen. Violence Against Women and Girls Violence against women and girls continues to be a concern as rape, intimate partner violence, and femicide continued. A May 2025 report by the Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation noted that access to justice for survivors of gendered violence remains elusive. It found that systemic inefficiencies in the criminal justice system hinder the speedy and successful procession of cases, and support, including psychosocial, for victims is limited. The report finds that implementation of South Africa’s progressive laws remains a challenge. This is consistent with a report by the Commission for Gender Equality. Children’s Rights As South Africa commemorated Child Protection Week in April, an annual campaign to raise awareness about the safety and wellbeing of children, spates of violent attacks against children were on the rise, including child neglect and abuse. Despite legislation that protects the rights of children, including the constitution, the Children’s Act, and the National Plan of Action for Children, reported cases of violence against children in South Africa continued unabated. Approximately 30 percent of children aged 3 to 5 years are not enrolled in any early learning program. Only a third of such programs receive government funding, and caregivers say that fees are the primary barrier to enrolment. Older People’s Rights Another year of minimal government increases to social security left millions of older people with less than half the national minimum wage. The Older Person’s Grant was not enough to cover one full day of support a month for those requiring full-time care at home. Repression of Whistleblowers and Human Rights Defenders On February 15, Muhsin Hendricks, an openly gay imam, Islamic scholar and lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) rights activist was shot and killed in Gqeberha, in Eastern Cape province, as he was leaving to officiate an interfaith marriage. Hendricks came out publicly as a gay imam in 1996 and established a support network and later a mosque for LGBT and other marginalized Muslims. He dedicated his life to helping LGBT Muslims reconcile their sexual orientation and gender identity with their faith, amid backlash from other members of the Islamic faith. On March 7, Pamela Mabini, a community activist and whistleblower was shot and killed outside her home in Gqeberha. Mabini was known for her activism to restore dignity and reduce crime and violence in her community. She played an instrumental role in the arrest of televangelist Timothy Omotoso and others, who were on trial for rape, racketeering, and human trafficking. Before her murder, she was a regular attendee at the trial, participating in protests and providing support to victims and witnesses. Five years after the murder of environmental activist, Fikile Ntshangase, in October 2020 in Ophondweni, KwaZulu-Natal, there has been no accountability. Ntshangase advocated against the expansion of coal mining operations in her community that harm the environment, including air and water quality. Human Rights Watch, World Report 2026. New York. |
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Preamble
Although our own circumstances may be uneventful, the daily news never fail to remind us that we live in a troubled world; at times fraught with unimaginable pain and suffering. Scripture encourages us to pray always in the Spirit, being watchful to this end with all perseverance and supplication especially for all believers everywhere (Eph 6:18). The Greek word 'agrupneo' is the origin of the phrase "being watchful" and it means to stay awake or be sleepless. It emphasises the need for spiritual vigilance and alertness. Let us be faithful in praying. Only the preceding twelve month's posts will be listed. |