21st September 2018
The South African duo who risked EVERYTHING to film the illegal trade in rhino horn in Africa and Asia South African filmmakers Susan Scott and Bonne de Bod sold their homes and moved back in with their parents to undertake a dangerous three-year-long investigation into the murky underground world of the illegal trade in rhino […]
Read more on World Rhino Day – Journey into the Rhino Horn War | Reply (1)
6th September 2018
Seized from the wild when they’re as young as 6 weeks to feed the illegal pet trade, cheetah cubs may look cute but more often than not they don’t survive. ‘Pet’ cheetahs rarely make it past a year. Cheetah populations are plummeting.
Read more on Fighting the heartbreaking trade in exotic pets | Reply (8)
9th August 2018
Berlin, Germany
We in the UK and Germany have come a long way over the past decades in the fight for tolerance, diversity and sexual equality. And we have achieved a great deal. Today it almost easy to forget that homosexual relations were illegal less than 50 years ago in both countries. Since then, many small steps […]
Read more on Flying the flag for diversity, respect and tolerance | Reply
6th August 2018
In Cameroon, endangered pangolins are sold for their meat and smuggled to Asia for their scales. Conservationists and the government of Cameroon are intensifying their efforts to clamp down on this illegal trade.
Read more on Saving pangolins: London Zoo helps train customs agents in Cameroon to fight illegal trade | Reply (2)
24th July 2018
Harare, Zimbabwe
The Akashinga rangers Being an anti-poaching ranger in Zimbabwe used to be a profession reserved for men. But that’s changing, thanks to the success of the Akashinga rangers, an all-female anti-poaching team operating in the northern Hurungwe area.
Read more on The rangers saving elephants in northern Zimbabwe | Reply (2)
26th June 2018
London, UK
For the last decade, the Norwegian Police Service and the Norwegian Centre for Human Rights (NCHR) at the University of Oslo have cooperated on implementing methods of interviewing and investigations in law enforcement, military and intelligence services around the world. The methods originated in the UK and the ongoing projects involve close cooperation with British […]
Read more on UK interviewing and investigation techniques take a detour through Norway and go global | Reply (2)
13th June 2018
London, UK
“If we don’t protect freedom of expression and free press, we will lose democratic values.” I am a free media advocate from Mongolia, working to ensure fellow Mongolians are able to enjoy their right to freedom of expression both on- and offline. I am passionate about the right to enjoy media freedom and for journalists […]
Read more on Media freedom in Mongolia: a Human Rights Defender’s perspective | Reply
30th May 2018
Poaching doesn’t just kill elephants and rhinos. Too often these days there are other victims: vultures. In southern Africa, poachers lace the carcasses of their prime targets with powerful poisons that kill the magnificent birds of carrion.
Read more on Poaching wars: UK-supported poison response kit helps cut vulture mortality rates | Reply (2)
8th May 2018
London, UK
Today (8 May) is World Red Cross and Red Crescent Day, a day to celebrate the incredible work of our staff and volunteers around the world. Every year the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement supports millions of people affected by conflict, natural disasters and other emergencies through its network of 191 national societies,14 million […]
Read more on The Red Cross and Red Crescent: everywhere for everyone | Reply
3rd May 2018
Remember that heart-wrenching picture that flashed round the world last year of the poached rhino with its horn roughly sawn off by the waterhole against South Africa’s grey skies?
Read more on South African wildlife photographer on saving Africa’s rhinos | Reply (8)