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Report Summary: UNEQUAL JUSTICE: Accountability for Torture against LGBTIQ+ Persons in Africa

Report Summary: UNEQUAL JUSTICE: Accountability for Torture against LGBTIQ+ Persons in Africa

This report summary highlights the key findings and recommendations of our report Unequal Justice: Accountability for Torture against LGBTIQ+ Persons in Africa. The report sheds light on the violence and torture suffered by LGBTIQ+ people in Africa and the challenges that victims face to secure accountability for these crimes. It examines the situation in 11… Read More

UNEQUAL JUSTICE: Accountability for Torture against LGBTIQ+ Persons in Africa

UNEQUAL JUSTICE: Accountability for Torture against LGBTIQ+ Persons in Africa

This report sheds light on the violence and torture suffered by LGBTIQ+ people in Africa and the challenges that victims face to secure accountability for these crimes. It examines the situation in 11 countries in Africa – Algeria, Angola, Botswana, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ghana,… Read More

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Anti-Torture Standards in Common Law Africa: Quick Facts

Anti-Torture Standards in Common Law Africa: Quick Facts

The Convention against Torture Initiative (CTI) and REDRESS published a three-part series of factsheets which summarises the key thematic areas reviewed in the recent report titled ‘Anti-Torture Standards in Common Law Africa: Good Practices and Way Forward’.  The factsheets review… Read More

Implementing Anti-torture Standards in Common Law Africa

Implementing Anti-torture Standards in Common Law Africa

Today REDRESS and the Convention against Torture Initiative (CTI) launch their joint report entitled Anti-Torture Standards in common law Africa: Good Practices and Way Forward.  The report reviews the anti-torture legal and regulatory framework in The Gambia, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, Sudan, Uganda and Zimbabwe and provides an analysis of standards in place to prevent, prohibit and respond to torture and other ill-treatment in these States.  

Anti-Torture Standards in Common Law Africa: Good Practices and Way Forward

Anti-Torture Standards in Common Law Africa: Good Practices and Way Forward

The effective incorporation of anti-torture standards within States’ domestic legal frameworks and their effective implementation in practice is crucial to prevent torture and other ill-treatment, ensure that perpetrators are held accountable, and to provide redress for victims. States in the African region widely reject the practice of torture and other… Read More

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