outrage against humanity - traducción al árabe
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outrage against humanity - traducción al árabe

STATE-SPONSORED ACT CONSTITUTING A SERIOUS VIOLATION OF THE LAWS OF WAR
Crimes against humanity.; Crime against humanity; Crimes Against Humanity; Crime against Humanity; Crime Against Humanity
  • Hitler's]] death.
  • victims of military junta]], 24 March 2019
  • The defendants at the Tokyo International Tribunal.  General [[Hideki Tojo]] was one of the main defendants, and is in the centre of the middle row.
  • Headquarters of the ICC in The Hague
  • Leopold II]], King of the Belgians and ''de facto'' owner of the [[Congo Free State]], whose agents were accused of crimes against humanity

outrage against humanity      
جريمة ضد الإنسانية
جريمة ضد الإنسانية         
outrage against humanity
OUTRAGE         
  • Iraqi]] gays
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Outrage!; Outrage (disambiguation); Outrage (film); The Outrage (film)

ألاسم

بَغْي ; تَخَطٍّ ; تَعَدٍّ ; جَوْر ; خَرْق ; سُوء ; شَنَاعَة ; ضَيْم ; طُغْيان ; ظُلْم ; عادِيَة ; عُدْوان ; عَسْف ; قَبَاحَة

الفعل

جَارِح

Definición

outrage
(outraged)
1.
If you are outraged by something, it makes you extremely shocked and angry.
Many people have been outraged by some of the things that have been said...
Reports of torture and mass executions in Serbia's detention camps have outraged the world's religious leaders.
VERB: be V-ed, V n
outraged
He is truly outraged about what's happened to him...
ADJ: oft ADJ at/about n
2.
Outrage is an intense feeling of anger and shock.
The decision provoked outrage from women and human rights groups...
N-UNCOUNT: usu with supp
3.
You can refer to an act or event which you find very shocking as an outrage.
The latest outrage was to have been a co-ordinated gun and bomb attack on the station...
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Crimes against humanity

Crimes against humanity are widespread or systemic criminal acts which are committed by or on behalf of a de facto authority, usually by or on behalf of a state, that grossly violate human rights. Unlike war crimes, crimes against humanity do not have to take place within the context of wars, and they apply to widespread practices rather than acts which are committed by individuals. Although crimes against humanity apply to acts which are committed by or on behalf of authorities, they do not need to be part of an official policy, and they only need to be tolerated by authorities. The first prosecution for crimes against humanity took place during the Nuremberg trials. Initially considered for legal use, widely in international law, following the Holocaust, a global standard of human rights was articulated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948). Political groups or states that violate or incite violations of human rights norms, as they are listed in the Declaration, are expressions of the political pathologies which are associated with crimes against humanity.

Since the Nuremberg trials, crimes against humanity have been prosecuted by other international courts (such as the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, the Special Court for Sierra Leone, the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, and the International Criminal Court) as well as by domestic courts. The law of crimes against humanity has primarily been developed as a result of the evolution of customary international law. Crimes against humanity are not codified in an international convention, so an international effort to establish such a treaty, led by the Crimes Against Humanity Initiative, is currently underway.

Unlike war crimes, crimes against humanity can be committed during peace and war. They are not isolated or sporadic events because they are part of a government policy (although the perpetrators do not need to identify themselves with this policy) or they are part of a widespread practice of atrocities which is tolerated or condoned by a government or a de facto authority. War of aggression, war crimes, murder, massacres, dehumanization, genocide, ethnic cleansing, deportations, unethical human experimentation, extrajudicial punishments including summary executions, the use of weapons of mass destruction, state terrorism or state sponsorship of terrorism, death squads, kidnappings and forced disappearances, the use of child soldiers, unjust imprisonment, enslavement, torture, rape, political repression, racial discrimination, religious persecution and other human rights abuses may reach the threshold of crimes against humanity if they are part of a widespread or systematic practice.