Every governance event classified by the Civica Pulse Beta pipeline. Updated daily.
The Civica Pulse Beta is a real-time governance shock monitor under active validation. Events queued for human review (severe and catastrophic severity tiers, plus events where the classifier didn't reach consensus) do not drive published Pulse scores until a reviewer confirms them. See the Pulse methodology for the full pipeline.
(lavozdegalicia.es)
- CONGRESO | El Gobierno salva los vetos de PP y Vox al blindaje del aborto en la Constitución con muchas críticas de sus socios (elperiodico.com)
- La reforma constitucional del aborto del Gobierno supera las enmiendas a la totalidad de PP y Vox (abc.es)
- CONGRESO | El Gobierno salva los vetos de PP y Vox al blindaje del aborto en la Constitución con muchas críticas de sus socios (diariodemallorca.es)
- CONGRESO | El Gobierno salva los vetos de PP y Vox al blindaje del aborto en la Constitución con muchas críticas de sus socios (elperiodicoextremadura.com)
Spain's constitutional reform to enshrine abortion rights has cleared legislative vetoes from PP and Vox, representing a positive de jure expansion of reproductive rights for women, best classified as a minority/group rights change in a positive direction.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Minority group rights change (de jure)
Rights & FreedomsModerate + · +3
Spain's constitutional reform to enshrine abortion rights has advanced past vetoes from PP and Vox, representing a positive de jure expansion of reproductive rights for women.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Minority group rights change (de jure)
Rights & FreedomsModerate + · +3
Spain's constitutional reform to enshrine abortion rights has survived veto attempts by PP and Vox in Congress, representing a de jure expansion of reproductive rights for women.
AustriaApr 30, 2026Myanmar : Friedensnobelpreisträgerin Suu Kyi im HausarrestRule of LawSevere − · -52/3 agreeQueued for review
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawSevere − · -5
Aung San Suu Kyi, Nobel Peace Prize laureate and opposition leader, being held under house arrest in Myanmar constitutes politically motivated detention of a prominent opposition figure by the military junta.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawSevere − · -5
Aung San Suu Kyi, Nobel Peace Prize laureate and opposition leader, being held under house arrest in Myanmar constitutes a politically motivated detention of a prominent opposition figure by the military junta.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -4
Aung San Suu Kyi, a prominent opposition figure and former head of state, being held under house arrest in Myanmar constitutes politically motivated detention/prosecution of a leading opposition figure by the military junta.
GermanyApr 30, 2026В Кыргызстане предъявили обвинения экс - главе спецслужбыRule of LawModerate − · -33/3 agree
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -3
The charging of a former intelligence chief in Kyrgyzstan may reflect politically motivated prosecution of a former official, though without additional context it could also represent legitimate accountability; classified as opposition_prosecution at moderate severity given the pattern of such cases in Kyrgyzstan.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -3
The former head of Kyrgyzstan's security service has been charged, which could reflect either legitimate accountability or politically motivated prosecution of a former official, warranting moderate negative classification pending further context.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -3
The charges against a former intelligence chief in Kyrgyzstan suggest a politically motivated prosecution, though without more context it is unclear whether this is genuine anti-corruption enforcement or targeted political repression.
FranceApr 30, 2026Brésil : réduction de peine en vue pour Bolsonaro , nouvelle défaite pour LulaRule of LawModerate − · -33/3 agree
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -3
A potential sentence reduction for Bolsonaro (a convicted opposition figure) signals a shift in the politically charged prosecution/legal proceedings against him, fitting the opposition prosecution dimension, though the framing as a 'defeat for Lula' suggests political interference in judicial outcomes.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -3
A potential sentence reduction for Bolsonaro (convicted opposition figure) represents a development in a politically charged prosecution, though the framing as a 'defeat for Lula' suggests judicial independence from executive pressure, making classification uncertain; the closest fit is opposition_prosecution given the political salience of the case.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -3
A potential sentence reduction for Bolsonaro in his ongoing legal proceedings touches on politically motivated prosecution dynamics, though the event is ambiguous and may reflect legitimate judicial review rather than clear governance abuse.
NigeriaApr 30, 2026Court Fast - Tracks Treason Trial Against Six Suspects , as Witness Gives Fresh Details on Alleged Coup Plot – THISDAYLIVERule of LawModerate − · -33/3 agree
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -3
A court fast-tracking a treason trial against six suspects in an alleged coup plot suggests politically motivated prosecution proceedings, though the limited context makes it difficult to fully assess whether this is a legitimate rule-of-law action or targeted political persecution.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -3
A court fast-tracking a treason trial against six suspects in an alleged coup plot suggests politically motivated prosecution of opposition or dissenting figures, fitting the opposition_prosecution category at a moderate negative level given the serious charges but limited contextual detail.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -3
A court fast-tracking a treason trial against six suspects in an alleged coup plot suggests politically motivated prosecution proceedings, though the legitimacy of the charges remains ambiguous from the available context.
IsraelApr 30, 2026Israel’s brazen interception of Global Sumud Flotilla bound for Gaza sparks fears for 175 arbitrarily detainedRights & FreedomsSevere − · -62/3 agreeQueued for review
(Responding to reports that Israeli forces intercepted 22 vessels and detained around 175 crew members of the Global Sumud Flotilla, which was attempting to break Israel’s illegal blockade and deliver essential humanitarian aid to the occupied Gaza Strip, amidst Israel’s ongoing genocide, Amnesty International’s Senior Director for Research, Advocacy, Policy and Campaigns, Erika Guevara Rosas, […]
The post Israel’s brazen interception of Global Sumud Flotilla bound for Gaza sparks fears for 175 arbitrarily detained appeared first on Amnesty International.)
Israeli forces detained approximately 175 flotilla crew members following the interception of humanitarian vessels, constituting a mass political detention of civilians engaged in a non-military humanitarian mission.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Mass political detention
Rights & FreedomsSevere − · -6
Israeli forces detained approximately 175 crew members from intercepted flotilla vessels in what Amnesty International characterizes as arbitrary detention, constituting a large-scale mass political detention event.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Mass political detention
Rights & FreedomsSevere − · -6
Israeli forces detained approximately 175 crew members from intercepted humanitarian flotilla vessels, constituting a large-scale arbitrary detention of civilians described by Amnesty International as part of an ongoing pattern of repression in the context of the Gaza blockade.
PakistanApr 30, 2026Myanmar coup - leader turned president orders Suu Kyi to house arrestRule of LawSevere − · -63/3 agreeQueued for review
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawSevere − · -6
The military-installed president ordering the detention/house arrest of Aung San Suu Kyi, the legitimate democratic leader, constitutes a politically motivated prosecution/detention of the primary opposition figure in the post-coup context.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawSevere − · -6
The military-installed leader ordering the detention of Aung San Suu Kyi constitutes a politically motivated prosecution/detention of the leading opposition figure, a hallmark action of the 2021 coup's ongoing repression.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawSevere − · -6
The detention of Aung San Suu Kyi under house arrest by the coup-installed military leadership constitutes a politically motivated prosecution/detention of the primary opposition figure, continuing the post-coup suppression of democratic leadership in Myanmar.
(Nepali authorities have stopped processing applications for transgender people to change their legal gender on identity documents.The authorities’ actions are regressing on years of progress and undermining the fundamental right of recognition before the law.The Nepal government should immediately process pending applications and create a clear policy for legal gender recognition aligned with international human rights law.
(Berlin) – Nepali authorities have stopped processing applications for transgender people to change their legal gender on identity documents, regressing on years of progress and undermining the fundamental right of recognition before the law, Human Rights Watch said today. Policymakers in Nepal should reject attempts to undermine the fundamental rights of sexual and gender minorities.
The Nepali authorities’ recognition of trans people’s rights based on self-identification following a court ruling in 2007 garnered widespread praise and made the country an important global touchpoint for rights related to gender identity and expression. Despite this jurisprudence, a
Nepali authorities have halted processing of legal gender recognition applications for transgender people, representing a de facto rollback of previously recognized LGBT rights and undermining the right to legal recognition.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
LGBT rights change
Rights & FreedomsModerate − · -3
Nepali authorities have halted processing of legal gender recognition applications for transgender people, representing a de facto rollback of established LGBT rights and undermining self-identification protections built since 2007.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
LGBT rights change
Rights & FreedomsModerate − · -3
Nepali authorities halting processing of legal gender recognition applications for transgender people constitutes a de facto rollback of LGBT rights, reversing years of progress on gender identity recognition.
Government collapse via no-confidence / coalition breakdown
StabilityLow − · -2
The dissolution of Kosovo's parliament suggests a government collapse or early election trigger, a moderate but not severe democratic disruption in a fragile parliamentary system, though limited context prevents higher confidence.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Government collapse via no-confidence / coalition breakdown
StabilityLow − · -2
The dissolution of Kosovo's parliament suggests a government collapse or early election trigger, which fits the government_collapse category, though minimal context makes confident classification difficult.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Government collapse via no-confidence / coalition breakdown
StabilityLow − · -2
The dissolution of Kosovo's parliament suggests a government collapse or early election trigger, likely due to coalition breakdown or no-confidence dynamics, though limited context makes precise classification uncertain.
SwitzerlandApr 30, 2026Myanmar : Aung San Suu Kyi kommt in den HausarrestRule of LawSevere − · -53/3 agreeQueued for review
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawSevere − · -5
The transfer of Aung San Suu Kyi to house arrest represents a politically motivated restriction on a prominent opposition figure under Myanmar's military junta, consistent with ongoing opposition prosecution in the post-coup context.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawSevere − · -6
The transfer of Aung San Suu Kyi to house arrest represents a politically motivated restriction on a prominent opposition figure under Myanmar's military junta, consistent with ongoing opposition prosecution in a post-coup context.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawSevere − · -5
Aung San Suu Kyi, the leading opposition figure in Myanmar, being placed under house arrest constitutes a politically motivated detention of a prominent opposition leader by the ruling junta.
BrazilApr 30, 2026Organizaes sociais criticam derrubada de veto ao PL da DosimetriaRule of LawModerate − · -33/3 agree
(rondoniadinamica.com)
- Organizaes sociais criticam derrubada de veto ao PL da Dosimetria (correiodopovo.com.br)
- Congresso derruba veto de Lula a projeto de lei da dosimetria e beneficia Bolsonaro (tnonline.uol.com.br)
- Congresso derruba veto ao PL da Dosimetria e beneficia condenados pelo 8 de janeiro (acritica.com)
- Congresso derruba veto de Lula e mantém PL da Dosimetria (folhavitoria.com.br)
- Congresso começa a debater veto de Lula ao PL da Dosimetria ; assista ao vivo (cbn.globo.com)
- Organizaes sociais criticam derrubada de veto ao PL da Dosimetria (agenciabrasil.ebc.com.br)
- Organizaes sociais criticam derrubada de veto ao PL da Dosimetria (jc.uol.com.br)
- Congresso derruba veto de Lula e mantém PL da Dosimetria (gazetadigital.com.br)
- Congresso derruba veto de Lula e mantém PL da Dosimetria (agenciabrasil.ebc.com.br)
- Congresso analisa veto de PL da Dosimetria nesta quinta - feira ( 30 ) (correio24horas.com.br)
- Congresso derruba veto de Lula sobre PL da dosimetria e alivia penas de golpistas (brasildefato.com.br)
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -3
Brazil's Congress overrode President Lula's veto of the 'Dosimetria' sentencing bill, which civil society organizations criticize as benefiting those convicted for the January 8 insurrection (Bolsonaro supporters), effectively reducing sentences for politically charged convictions and undermining rule-of-law accountability.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -3
The Brazilian Congress overrode President Lula's veto on the 'Dosimetria' sentencing bill, effectively reducing penalties for those convicted in connection with the January 8 insurrection (Bolsonaro supporters), which civil society organizations criticize as politically motivated leniency toward convicted coup participants — this most closely fits a rule-of-law concern around politically motivated legal changes affecting prosecutorial outcomes, though no single category fits perfectly.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -3
Brazil's Congress overrode President Lula's veto of the 'Dosimetria' sentencing bill, which critics say benefits those convicted over the January 8 riots (Bolsonaro supporters), effectively softening criminal penalties for politically motivated offenses — this touches rule-of-law and prosecution integrity, though 'none' or 'anticorruption_law' could also apply; the closest fit is a rule-of-law change affecting prosecutorial/sentencing norms for opposition-linked defendants.
NigeriaApr 30, 2026Nigeria: Authorities must investigate deaths of at least 150 Fulani people in military campRule of LawSevere − · -73/3 agreeQueued for review
(The Nigerian authorities must conduct a prompt, thorough, independent, impartial, transparent and effective investigation into the reported deaths of least 150 members of the Fulani community, most of them children, who have been arbitrarily detained by the Nigerian military in the north-central state of Kwara, Amnesty International said today. An investigation by the human rights […]
The post Nigeria: Authorities must investigate deaths of at least 150 Fulani people in military camp appeared first on Amnesty International.)
The event centers on the deaths of at least 150 arbitrarily detained Fulani people (mostly children) in a military detention facility, making detention conditions — including lethal conditions — the defining feature rather than the act of mass detention itself.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Detention conditions change
Rule of LawSevere − · -7
The event centers on the deaths of at least 150 arbitrarily detained Fulani people, mostly children, in a Nigerian military camp, making detention conditions (including lethal outcomes) the defining feature rather than the act of mass detention or ethnic minority rights change alone.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Detention conditions change
Rule of LawSevere − · -7
The event describes the deaths of at least 150 arbitrarily detained Fulani people, mostly children, in a Nigerian military detention facility, making detention conditions (including lethal outcomes) the defining feature rather than the act of mass detention itself.
QatarApr 30, 2026Myanmar coup - leader turned president orders Suu Kyi to house arrestRule of LawSevere − · -63/3 agreeQueued for review
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawSevere − · -6
The military-installed leader ordering the detention of Aung San Suu Kyi under house arrest is a politically motivated deprivation of liberty targeting the leading opposition figure, fitting opposition_prosecution at severe level given the post-coup authoritarian context.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawSevere − · -6
The military-installed leader ordering the detention of Aung San Suu Kyi constitutes a politically motivated deprivation of liberty targeting the leading opposition figure, occurring in the context of the ongoing post-coup authoritarian consolidation in Myanmar.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawSevere − · -5
The military-installed leader ordering the detention of Aung San Suu Kyi, the democratically elected opposition leader, constitutes a politically motivated prosecution/detention of a prominent opposition figure in the context of Myanmar's ongoing post-coup repression.
CroatiaApr 30, 2026Bojkot SDP - a i Možemo ! blokirao izbor , raspisuje se novi poziv ? Democratic QualityModerate − · -32/3 agree
The headline indicates that a boycott by SDP and Možemo! blocked an election/vote, with a new call potentially being issued, suggesting an election or selection process was disrupted or cancelled due to political boycott.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Election cancellation or postponement
Democratic QualityModerate − · -3
The SDP and Možemo! boycott blocked an election/vote, potentially requiring a new call, which constitutes an election cancellation or postponement dynamic at a local/institutional level.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Disputed election outcome
Democratic QualityLow − · -2
The SDP and Možemo! boycott blocking an election/vote (likely a parliamentary or local body election/selection) represents a disputed or obstructed electoral process, fitting the disputed_election category at low severity given it appears to be a procedural blockage rather than a full cancellation.
Saudi ArabiaApr 29, 2026Saudi Arabia: Halt Imminent Executions of Ethiopian MigrantsRule of LawSevere − · -63/3 agree
At least 65 Ethiopian migrants face imminent execution in Saudi Arabia on drug-related charges, with three others executed on April 21, 2026, according to Human Rights Watch. The organization documented cases of three men held in Khamis Mushait detention facility who claimed to be refugees fleeing the 2020-2022 Tigray conflict in Ethiopia and stated they were denied basic due process protections during their trials. The cases raise concerns about Saudi Arabia's application of capital punishment to foreign nationals for non-violent offenses and adherence to fair trial standards.
(Beirut) – At least 65 Ethiopian migrants are at imminent risk of execution in Saudi Arabia for drug-related offenses, Human Rights Watch said today. Saudi authorities executed three others on April 21, 2026.
“Saudi Arabia’s willingness to execute foreign migrants for nonviolent offences following trials that denied them basic due process reflects a profound disregard for their rights and lives,” said Nadia Hardman, senior refugee and migrant rights researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Saudi Arabia’s partners should urgently intervene before it is too late.”
Human Rights Watch interviewed three informed sources about the cases of three men held in the Khamis Mushait detention facility in the Asir region of Saudi Arabia. The sources said that all three explained they were refugees, having fled the 2020-2022 armed conflict in Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region, where the humanitarian situation remains dire.
The sources said that the three men used the dangerous migration route across the Gulf of Aden, through Yemen, and into Saudi Arabia to seek
The event describes imminent executions of Ethiopian migrants following trials that denied basic due process, pointing to severe detention and judicial conditions rather than a single named institutional category, though mass_detention or systematic_crackdown could also apply given the scale and pattern of abuse against a migrant/refugee population.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Detention conditions change
Rule of LawSevere − · -6
The event describes imminent executions of Ethiopian migrants following trials that denied basic due process, pointing to severe detention and judicial conditions rather than a named institutional rollback, mass political detention, or systematic crackdown on a specific group.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Detention conditions change
Rule of LawSevere − · -6
The event describes imminent executions of Ethiopian migrants following trials lacking due process, with migrants held in detention facilities under conditions that deny basic rights — while this could also fit systematic_crackdown or mass_detention, the focus on detention facility conditions, denial of due process during proceedings, and imminent execution of detainees most closely maps to detention_conditions at severe level.
IsraelApr 29, 2026Israel Bankrolls War Crimes in Occupied Syrian GolanStabilitySevere − · -63/3 agree
On April 17, 2026, Israel's cabinet approved a $334 million plan to expand Israeli civilian settlements in the occupied Syrian Golan Heights, according to Human Rights Watch. The organization characterized the population transfer as violating international law and called on the EU, UK, and other countries to suspend trade agreements and arms transfers to Israel in response. The decision represents a continuation of Israeli settlement expansion in occupied territories alongside similar activities in the West Bank.
AI summary · Claude Haiku
Source description (1 paragraph)
(Beirut) – The Israeli government has approved a $334 million plan to transfer thousands more Israeli civilians into the occupied Syrian Golan Heights, Human Rights Watch said today. The decision, adopted by the cabinet on April 17, 2026, is a clear statement of intent to commit war crimes.
“Israel's cabinet has put public money behind a war crime in Syria at the same time as it is turbocharging settlement expansion in the West Bank alongside continued impunity for violence against Palestinians there,” said Hiba Zayadin, senior Syria researcher at Human Rights Watch. “A permanent population transfer into Syrian territory violates international norms with grave implications for long-displaced Syrians.”
The European Union and its member states, the United Kingdom, and other countries with leverage should respond by suspending their trade deals with Israel and adopting a ban on trade and business with illegal Israeli settlements, applying to the occupied Golan Heights as well as the West Bank. Countries should also suspend arms transfers to Israel. Where national laws allow, prosecutors in third co
Israel's cabinet-approved $334 million plan to transfer thousands of Israeli civilians into the occupied Syrian Golan Heights constitutes a deliberate state-sponsored population transfer into foreign-occupied territory, which HRW characterizes as a war crime under international law, fitting the foreign occupation category.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Foreign occupation or imposition
StabilitySevere − · -6
Israel's cabinet-approved $334 million plan to transfer thousands of civilians into the occupied Syrian Golan Heights constitutes a deliberate deepening of foreign occupation and population transfer, which HRW characterizes as a war crime under international law.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Foreign occupation or imposition
StabilitySevere − · -6
Israel's $334M cabinet-approved plan to transfer thousands of civilians into the occupied Syrian Golan Heights constitutes a deliberate, state-funded expansion of foreign occupation and population transfer, which HRW characterizes as a war crime under international law.
YemenApr 28, 2026Yemen: One year on, impunity for detention centre strike exposes US failures on accountability and civilian harm preventionRule of LawSevere − · -53/3 agree
On April 28, 2025, a US air strike struck a Houthi-run migrant detention centre in Sa'ada, northwestern Yemen, killing and injuring dozens of African migrants. One year later, no investigation or accountability measures have been implemented, and survivors continue to experience physical and psychological trauma. Amnesty International has called for the strike to be investigated as a potential war crime and has documented the absence of progress toward justice or reparations for affected civilians.
AI summary · Claude Haiku
Source description (1 paragraph)
(One year on from the deadly US air strike on a Huthi-run migrant detention centre in Sa’ada, north-western Yemen, there has been no discernible progress towards justice and reparation, and survivors are still struggling with severe physical and psychological trauma, Amnesty International said today. The organization had called for the 28 April 2025 strike by US forces, which killed and injured dozens of African migrants to be investigated as a war crime, and this month spoke once again to six […]
The post Yemen: One year on, impunity for detention centre strike exposes US failures on accountability and civilian harm prevention appeared first on Amnesty International.)
The event centers on a deadly airstrike on a migrant detention centre, impunity for civilian harm, and ongoing trauma of survivors — most closely fitting detention conditions in a severe negative context, though the armed conflict and accountability failure dimensions make this a difficult classification.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Detention conditions change
Rule of LawSevere − · -5
The event centers on a deadly airstrike on a migrant detention centre, ongoing impunity, and survivors' trauma — most closely fitting detention conditions (conditions and treatment of detainees, including lethal harm) in the severe_neg tier given the scale of casualties and lack of accountability, though armed_conflict or protest_crackdown could also apply given the military strike context.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Detention conditions change
Rule of LawSevere − · -5
The event centers on a deadly airstrike on a detention centre holding migrants with no accountability or reparations one year on, touching on both armed conflict/civilian harm and detention conditions; detention_conditions is selected as the most specific fit given the focus on the facility and survivors' ongoing trauma, though armed_conflict is also plausible.
BoliviaApr 28, 2026Criminal charges target community opposition to extractive projects in Bolivia; Nationwide protests erupt over economic reformsRights & FreedomsSevere − · -63/3 agree
Criminal charges have been filed against community members opposing extractive projects in Bolivia, while nationwide protests have simultaneously erupted over government economic reforms. This development raises concerns about the balance between resource development policies and citizens' rights to petition and protest. The charges and protests reflect underlying tensions between the government's economic agenda and communities' environmental and social concerns.
Criminal charges used against community activists opposing extractive projects constitute a pattern of abuse targeting civil society, compounded by nationwide protests indicating broad suppression of dissent.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Systematic crackdown (pattern of abuse)
Rights & FreedomsSevere − · -6
Criminal charges used against community activists opposing extractive projects constitute a pattern of state repression targeting civil society, compounded by nationwide protests indicating broad societal resistance to government policies.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Systematic crackdown (pattern of abuse)
Rights & FreedomsSevere − · -6
Criminal charges targeting community activists opposing extractive projects, combined with nationwide protests, indicate a systematic pattern of suppressing civil society and political dissent in Bolivia.
On April 24, 2024, Burkina Faso's Council of Ministers adopted a draft law to establish a 100,000-strong military reserve by the end of 2026, with Defense Minister Célestin Simporé describing it as a mechanism for rapid citizen mobilization against security threats. The proposal expands an existing model that relies on civilian auxiliaries called Volunteers for the Defense of the Homeland, which human rights organizations have documented committing grave abuses including summary executions and forced displacement. The initiative raises institutional concerns about potential human rights violations given the scale, compressed timeline, and documented pattern of abuses by similar auxiliary forces.
AI summary · Claude Haiku
Source description (1 paragraph)
Burkina Faso’s Council of Ministers adopted a draft law on April 24 to create a 100,000-strong military reserve by the end of 2026. Defense Minister Célestin Simporé framed the move as a way to rapidly mobilize citizens to respond to security threats and “embed Patriotic Defense within a logic of citizen participation.”
On face value, adding tens of thousands of soldiers would appear to bolster national security, but in Burkina Faso it also risks accelerating an already serious human rights crisis.
Burkina Faso’s military already relies on tens of thousands of civilian auxiliaries known as the Volunteers for the Defense of the Homeland (Volontaires pour la défense de la patrie, VDPs). In several reports, Human Rights Watch has documented how VDPs have committed numerous grave abuses, including summary executions, looting, and forced displacement of minority communities.
Expanding this model risks replicating and multiplying these harms.
The proposed reserve would include both experienced military personnel and newly trained civilians. Yet the massive scale and short timeline raise concerns about the nature an
The HRW report documents a pattern of grave abuses (summary executions, looting, forced displacement) by state-backed civilian auxiliaries in Burkina Faso, with a new law risking systematic expansion of these abuses, fitting a pattern of systematic rights violations rather than a discrete single event.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Systematic crackdown (pattern of abuse)
Rights & FreedomsSevere − · -5
The HRW report documents a pattern of grave abuses (summary executions, looting, forced displacement) by state-backed civilian auxiliaries in Burkina Faso, with a new law risking systematic expansion of these abuses, fitting a pattern of systematic crackdown on civilian populations.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Systematic crackdown (pattern of abuse)
Rights & FreedomsSevere − · -5
The HRW report documents a pattern of grave abuses (summary executions, looting, forced displacement) by state-backed civilian auxiliaries in Burkina Faso, with a new law risking systematic expansion of these abuses, fitting a pattern of systematic rights violations rather than a discrete event.
KazakhstanApr 27, 2026Homophobia Taints Criminal Prosecutions in KazakhstanRule of LawModerate − · -43/3 agree
On April 22, 2025, courts in Kazakhstan convicted two LGBT rights advocates in separate cases: Zhanar Sekerbaeva, cofounder of the feminist group Feminita, was found guilty of battery and fined 173,000 Tenge following a November 2024 incident where she was assaulted at a café by individuals shouting anti-LGBT slurs, while authorities did not prosecute her attackers; and Amir Shaikezhanov, an openly gay activist and bar owner, was convicted of rape and sentenced to five years in prison, though he disputed the charges despite acknowledging the sexual encounter. The cases raise concerns about potential homophobic bias and selective prosecution, as authorities appear to have pursued charges against the LGBT advocates while declining to prosecute those who targeted them with anti-LGBT harassment and violence.
On April 22, courts in Kazakhstan delivered guilty verdicts in two unrelated criminal cases. Though the cases are distinct, they share commonalities: both defendants are outspoken advocates for the rights of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) people in Kazakhstan and how the authorities handled each case raises concerns that homophobia and retaliation were factors in the defendants’ treatment and prosecution.
Zhanar Sekerbaeva, cofounder of the feminist group Feminita, was found guilty of “battery” and fined 173,000 Tenge (approximately USD$380). In November 2025, a group of people aggressively disrupted a gathering Sekerbaeva was attending with colleagues and friends at a café. In the aftermath, authorities detained and criminally prosecuted Sekerbaeva but did not pursue those who accosted the group, including by shouting anti-LGBT slurs and filming them without their consent.
Meanwhile, another court convicted Amir Shaikezhanov, an openly gay activist and the owner of a popular gay bar in Almaty, of rape and sentenced him to five years in prison. Shaikezhanov acknowledged the sexual encounter at issue, which occurred in March 2025, but denied the rape charges. The la
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -4
Two LGBT rights advocates face criminal convictions in Kazakhstan where the handling of their cases raises credible concerns of politically/ideologically motivated prosecution, fitting the pattern of opposition_prosecution over the more general lgbt_rights_change category.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -4
Two LGBT rights advocates were convicted in proceedings where authorities appear to have selectively prosecuted them while ignoring aggressors, suggesting politically/ideologically motivated prosecution rather than impartial justice.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Politically motivated prosecution of opposition figure
Rule of LawModerate − · -4
Two LGBT activists in Kazakhstan received criminal convictions in proceedings HRW characterizes as politically/homophobically motivated, fitting the pattern of politically motivated prosecution of opposition/activist figures rather than a broader de jure LGBT rights change.
RussiaApr 27, 2026Russia: Russian LGBT Network is labelled “extremist” in escalating crackdown on LGBTI rightsRights & FreedomsSevere − · -63/3 agree
A St. Petersburg court designated the Russian LGBT Network as an "extremist organization" and imposed a nationwide ban on its activities following closed hearings. The designation restricts the organization's ability to operate and advocate for LGBTI rights in Russia, marking an escalation in legal constraints on civil society organizations focused on sexual orientation and gender identity issues.
AI summary · Claude Haiku
Source description (1 paragraph)
(A decision by a court in Russia’s second biggest city to designate the Russian LGBT Network an “extremist organization” and impose a nationwide ban on its activities will only increase the marginalization of LGBTI people and their human rights, Amnesty International said today. The verdict by the St Petersburg City Court followed closed hearings as […]
The post Russia: Russian LGBT Network is labelled “extremist” in escalating crackdown on LGBTI rights appeared first on Amnesty International.)
Labelling the Russian LGBT Network as 'extremist' and banning its activities nationwide represents a systematic, state-sanctioned crackdown on LGBTI rights and civil society, escalating a documented pattern of abuse against a marginalized group.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Systematic crackdown (pattern of abuse)
Rights & FreedomsSevere − · -6
Labelling the Russian LGBT Network as 'extremist' and banning its activities nationwide represents a systematic, state-sanctioned crackdown on LGBTI rights and civil society, escalating an ongoing pattern of abuse against a marginalized group.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Systematic crackdown (pattern of abuse)
Rights & FreedomsSevere − · -6
Labelling the Russian LGBT Network 'extremist' and banning its activities nationwide represents a systematic, state-sanctioned crackdown on LGBTI rights and civil society, consistent with a documented pattern of abuse against a marginalized group.
In 2022, the Taliban's Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice issued directives requiring Afghan women to appear fully veiled with covered faces when speaking on media, a restriction that extended to Afghan women living outside Afghanistan. A Human Rights Watch researcher documenting Taliban policies was asked by an Afghan media outlet to be replaced by a male colleague to comply with these requirements, illustrating how Taliban restrictions on women's public representation operate beyond Afghanistan's borders. The directive effectively restricts Afghan women's ability to present themselves as experts and public figures in media, regardless of their location or professional role.
While corresponding with a local journalist in Afghanistan around a recent report I had authored, I received a shocking request: “Can we please have a video clip on your new report—not from you, but from a man from Human Rights Watch?”
I reread the message in anger. Although I was the report’s author as Human Rights Watch’s Afghanistan researcher, the outlet wanted a male colleague to speak in my place. Sadly, the reason behind the request is something many Afghan women around the world experience on a daily basis.
I eventually learned the media outlet had been instructed by the Taliban’s Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (PVPV) that any Afghan woman, no matter where she lives, must appear in a full hijab with her face covered when speaking on air.
Rather than being treated as an expert on the country, I had been, like all women in Afghanistan, reduced to that identity alone and therefore could only speak in the media under conditions set by the Taliban. The implication was clear: being a woman from Afghanistan was enough to justify silencing me, even outside the country.
Nearly five years
The event describes Taliban gender-based restrictions on Afghan women's public expression extending extraterritorially, representing a severe curtailment of women's rights as a minority group under de facto Taliban governance, though the extraterritorial enforcement mechanism makes it a borderline case between minority_rights_change and systematic_crackdown.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Minority group rights change (de jure)
Rights & FreedomsSevere − · -5
The Taliban's extraterritorial enforcement of gender-based restrictions on Afghan women—requiring face coverings even for diaspora women appearing in media—represents a severe curtailment of women's rights as a minority group, extending beyond media shutdown to a broader pattern of gender-based suppression.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Minority group rights change (de jure)
Rights & FreedomsSevere − · -5
The Taliban's extraterritorial enforcement of gender-based restrictions on Afghan women's media participation constitutes a severe de facto curtailment of women's rights as a minority group, extending beyond Afghanistan's borders through coercive pressure on media outlets.
VietnamApr 24, 2026Vietnam: New Retaliatory Decree Targets LawyersRule of LawModerate − · -42/3 agree
Vietnam's government issued Decree 109/2026, effective May 18, 2026, which grants police and local officials authority to revoke lawyers' licenses and impose fines for vaguely defined offenses such as "insulting" officials or "obstructing" state agencies. Human Rights Watch characterized the decree as a threat to lawyer independence and the ability to hold officials accountable, noting it intensifies an already restrictive environment for the legal profession in Vietnam. The decree applies across civil and criminal proceedings, including land disputes.
(Berlin) – A new governmental decree undermines the independence of lawyers in Vietnam and will impede efforts to hold officials accountable, Human Rights Watch said today. The authorities should repeal the decree.
Decree 109/2026, which takes effect May 18, 2026, empowers the police and government officials at the local (commune) level to revoke lawyers’ licenses and impose severe fines for vaguely worded offenses such as “insulting” officials or “obstructing” the functioning of state agencies. The regulation poses new threats in an already hostile environment for the legal profession in Vietnam.
“Decree 109 represents a serious new threat to Vietnam’s already politicized legal system,” said Patricia Gossman, senior associate Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “The authorities should immediately repeal the decree and ensure that lawyers can carry out their professional duties without fear of government retaliation.”
Decree 109 applies to civil and criminal proceedings, including land disputes, and includes sanct
Vietnam's Decree 109/2026 curtails lawyers' professional independence by empowering police and local officials to revoke licenses and impose fines for vague offenses, constituting a de jure rollback of legal/judicial independence.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Judicial independence rollback (curtailment)
Rule of LawModerate − · -4
Vietnam's Decree 109/2026 empowers police and local officials to revoke lawyers' licenses for vaguely defined offenses, directly curtailing the independence of legal professionals and undermining the rule of law in an already repressive legal environment.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Judicial independence rollback (curtailment)
Rule of LawSevere − · -5
The decree empowers police and local officials to revoke lawyers' licenses for vague offenses, directly curtailing the independence of legal professionals and undermining the rule of law in Vietnam's already politicized justice system.
TurkeyApr 24, 2026Environmental Activist’s Detention Undermines Türkiye’s Role as COP31 Co-HostRights & FreedomsModerate − · -33/3 agree
On March 30, Turkish environmental activist Esra Işık, 26, was arrested and placed in pretrial detention pending trial scheduled for April 27 on charges related to peaceful protests against coal mining development in olive groves near her home in Muğla. The court justified her detention by citing concerns she would protest during expert site visits, a rationale that raises questions about compliance with Turkish and international legal standards protecting freedom of assembly and expression, particularly as Turkey prepares to co-host the UN climate summit COP31 in November.
AI summary · Claude Haiku
Source description (3 paragraphs)
(The first hearing in the trial of a Turkish environmental activist, who faces charges stemming from a peaceful protest against new coal mining near her home, will begin on April 27. Meanwhile, the court is holding her in detention to prevent her from protesting.
The detained activist, 26-year-old Esra Işık, has been campaigning against a controversial 2019 government decision to cut down olive groves near her family’s home in Muğla, Western Türkiye, to make way for coal mining. Her detention, and that of two others who condemned her arrest, raises concerns about whether Türkiye will fulfill its responsibilities as co-host of the United Nations climate summit, known as COP31, scheduled for November.
After her March 30 arrest, a court ordered Işık be held in pretrial detention, citing a risk that she would protest visits by the court-appointed experts to the contested land—which is subject to an urgent expropriation process—and unduly exert pressure on them. Such a preemptive jailing for a potential intent to protest is not lawful under Turkish or international law.
Başaran Aksu, a trade un
An environmental activist is held in pretrial detention to prevent her from protesting, representing politically motivated detention of a civil society figure, though the small number of individuals and the framing around a specific activist makes mass_detention a marginal fit over protest_crackdown or opposition_prosecution.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
Mass political detention
Rights & FreedomsModerate − · -3
An environmental activist was placed in pretrial detention to prevent her from peacefully protesting, with two others also detained for condemning her arrest, constituting politically motivated detention of civil society actors rather than a named opposition political figure warranting opposition_prosecution.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
Mass political detention
Rights & FreedomsModerate − · -3
An environmental activist has been placed in pretrial detention to prevent her from protesting, constituting politically motivated preventive detention of a civil society figure, though the small number of individuals involved and the ostensibly judicial framing keep this at the moderate level.
On April 15, 2026, Uganda's Internal Affairs State Minister David Muhoozi introduced the Protection of Sovereignty Bill before parliament, which would criminalize vaguely defined activities promoting "interests of a foreigner against the interests of Uganda." The bill threatens fundamental rights to free expression and peaceful assembly by potentially allowing the government to restrict civil society organizations and political activity under the guise of protecting national sovereignty. The legislation is part of a broader pattern of government actions targeting political opponents, critics, and civil society actors.
AI summary · Claude Haiku
Source description (2 paragraphs)
Ugandan lawmakers arrive at the parliament, in Kampala, Uganda September 21, 2017.
(Nairobi) – A bill before Uganda’s parliament that proposes sweeping controls over “foreign funding” and political activity threatens fundamental rights and could be used to shut down civil society, Human Rights Watch said today. The bill emulates laws adopted in recent years by other rights-abusing governments, which have been deemed to violate international law.
On April 15, 2026, Internal Affairs State Minister David Muhoozi introduced the Protection of Sovereignty Bill of 2026 before parliament for its first reading. The bill proposes criminalizing vaguely defined activities that promote the “interests of a foreigner against the interests of Uganda.” The bill is part of a broader campaign by the Ugandan government to clamp down on free expression and peaceful assembly, that has included arresting and bringing criminal charges against political opponents and their supporters, as well as other critics of government officials.
“The Protection of Sovereignty Bill is the latest example of the government’s efforts to stifle dissent and inhibit political or social organizing and participation,” said Oryem Nyeko, senior Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The proposed bi
The Ugandan Sovereignty Bill proposes sweeping legal restrictions on foreign-funded civil society and political activity, constituting a de jure restriction on NGOs and civil society organizations, though it is still at the bill/first-reading stage rather than enacted law.
Run 2 · temp 0.4
NGO / civil society restriction (de jure)
Rights & FreedomsModerate − · -4
The Ugandan Protection of Sovereignty Bill proposes sweeping controls over foreign funding and political activity that HRW assesses would shut down civil society and restrict free expression and assembly, fitting the de jure NGO/civil society restriction category.
Run 3 · temp 0.8
NGO / civil society restriction (de jure)
Rights & FreedomsModerate − · -4
The Ugandan Protection of Sovereignty Bill proposes sweeping restrictions on foreign funding and political activity that would effectively shut down civil society organizations and restrict assembly rights, fitting the de jure NGO/civil society restriction category.