On the occasion of the 73rd anniversary of the adoption of the UN convention on genocide prevention, the Budapest Centre for Mass Atrocities Prevention would like to share the article written by Dr. Gyorgy Tatar, Chair of the Budapest Centre, to commemorate the historical event and to stress the importance and urgency to intensify fight against hate.
The Budapest Centre for Mass Atrocities Prevention is proud to share the interview to Dr. Gyorgy Tatar, the Director of the Centre and Chair of the Board of Trustees, at the 2021 EFUS conference on Security, Democracy and Cities.
We invite you to take a look at the interview here.
The Budapest Centre calls your attention to the newly published EPLO statement on The European Peace Facility: Minimising Significant Risks in Implementation.
At least 15 bodies found in a remote jungle were brutally tortured and executed, villagers say.
The murder of more than a dozen people whose bodies exhibited signs of torture and were left to rot in a forest in Myanmar’s remote Sagaing region this week was carried out by troops loyal to the country’s junta and should be classified as a “war crime,” witnesses and a rights lawyer said Tuesday.
We invite you to read the essay "What is at stake in handling the case of the Uyghurs?"prepared by the Director of the Centre, Dr. Gyorgy Tatar. The Budapest Centre for Mass Atrocities Prevention thereby urges the International Community to take all appropriate measures discussed in the document to tackle the Uyghur Genocide and prevent further escalation.
The authoritative World Health Organization (WHO) World Malaria Report, published on Thursday, shows that resistance to antimalarial drugs now poses[…]