Indagini sui crimini di guerra utilizzando tecniche open source
Sab 20 aprile 2024
14:00 - 14:50
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News organisations have struggled to report accurately on the Israel-Gaza war due to a host of challenges. International reporters are not allowed to report from the ground. Local journalists are being killed in record numbers by Israel’s military campaign. Misinformation is constantly posted on social media by public officials and partisan sources, and filtering through public discourse. But open-source reporting techniques have aided reporting of violations in active conflict zones.
This panel is an exploration of war crimes investigations and grave human rights abuses that have been exposed remotely using open source intelligence, and the permissibility of this information in prosecutions at the International Criminal Court and other bodies. We will discuss real-life examples of investigations we’ve conducted in the Israel-Gaza war, the Syrian civil war, the invasion of Ukraine and China’s vast network of incarceration of Uyghur Muslims – the evidence for all of which was gathered using a combination of open source techniques and used to corroborate ground realities – in a bid to push for international accountability and justice.
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Pagine coinvolte
Palazzo Murena (Perugia)
Il Palazzo Murena è un edificio storico di Perugia, in Umbria. Sito in piazza dell'Università, è sede dell'Università degli Studi di Perugia.
Sam Dubberley
Sam Dubberley is the managing director of the Digital Investigations Lab in the Technology and Human Rights Division of Human Rights Watch (HRW). Prior to joining HRW, Dubberley was the head of the Evidence Lab at Amnesty International where he conducted and led on a wide range of open-source research for Amnesty International. He has been a fellow of the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Colombia University.
Manisha Ganguly
Manisha Ganguly is the visual investigations lead and an investigations correspondent at The Guardian. She has been pioneering open-source investigations (OSI) to expose war crimes. She is a judge for the International Emmy®Awards, a member of BAFTA, a Forbes Under 30 media honouree, and a two-time Amnesty Award winner. Manisha holds a PhD in OSINT, AI and automation and the future of investigative journalism funded by the University of Westminster. Her investigative documentaries for the BBC World Service, exposing war crimes and human rights abuses across the Middle East, North Africa, Russia and China, have been broadcast to over 300 million.
Megha Rajagopalan
Megha Rajagopalan is an international investigative correspondent for The New York Times. She worked previously for BuzzFeed News.
Nick Waters
Nick Waters is an open-source analyst at Bellingcat, Previously, he was a British army officer.