Quick search
Advanced search
Reset all

Latest from IPHR

Kyrgyzstan: Amid Persisting Repression, Power Rift Prompts Guarded Hopes for a Thaw

Kyrgyzstan: Amid Persisting Repression, Power Rift Prompts Guarded Hopes for a Thaw

Policy Brief: Countering Foreign Influence Operations in Armenia
Reports & Briefing Papers

Policy Brief: Countering Foreign Influence Operations in Armenia

SAVE THE DATE – Holding Enablers Accountable: The Islamic Republic of Iran’s Role in Russia’s Drone War

SAVE THE DATE – Holding Enablers Accountable: The Islamic Republic of Iran’s Role in Russia’s Drone War

Kazakhstan: Verdict Looming in Trial of Activists Protesting Repression in Xinjiang – Ensure Justice and Release Them

Kazakhstan: Verdict Looming in Trial of Activists Protesting Repression in Xinjiang – Ensure Justice and Release Them

Curtailment of Civic Space in Central Asia: Briefing for the EU and International Partners
Briefings & Submissions

Curtailment of Civic Space in Central Asia: Briefing for the EU and International Partners

InternationalPartnershipfor Human Rights

International Partnership for Human Rights (IPHR) is an independent, non-governmental organisation founded in Brussels in 2008. For over a decade, IPHR has cooperated with civil society groups in Central Asia, Eastern Europe and the South Caucasus to promote accountability for human rights violations. Aligned with our mission, we empower partner groups to conduct their work locally, even in highly challenging conditions, and assist them in raising human rights concerns on the international stage.

Civil Society Support, Capacity-Building & Cooperation

Civil Society Support, Capacity-Building & Cooperation

At the heart of our mission, we establish partnerships with local civil society actors and support their endeavours to advance justice, human rights, and the rule of law in their respective countries. This support takes the form of collaborative activities and initiatives aimed at fostering positive change.

We develop and implement joint projects with local civil society partners, carry out joint activities with them on agreed priority issues, and provide tailored assistance and capacity building depending on their needs. We work with both well-established civil society organisations and emerging and grassroots initiatives, and our capacity-building encompasses both expert-led training sessions and hands-on cooperation.  

We also support networking and coalition-building among civil society groups from different countries and facilitate cross-country cooperation on countering human rights violations. 

Monitoring & Reporting

Monitoring & Reporting

We collaborate with local partners to research and document human rights violations in targeted countries. Our findings are disseminated through various publications like statements, reports, and submissions to international bodies.

We use our publications to inform key stakeholders and broader audiences about the evolving human rights situation in the countries where we work. Our publications serve as essential tools in our advocacy and communications efforts, aiming to garner support for pressing human rights causes.

Fact-finding missions are an important part of our research and documentation activities and we prioritise efforts to investigate and document human rights violations committed in conflict and crisis situations.

Advocacy & Communications

Advocacy & Communications

Together with partners, we carry out focused, targeted and impact-oriented advocacy with international institutions and governments to inform and influence their policies on human rights issues in our target countries.

Our engagement encompasses the EU, Council of Europe, Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe, the United Nations, and other institutions and governments.

We continue diversifying our communication channels and strengthening our outreach approach to effectively disseminate information about human rights issues in our target countries, communicate our positions on current developments in these countries and mobilise support for our calls among broader target audiences. 

Crisis Response

Crisis Response

Being aware that crises can emerge suddenly and without warning, IPHR maintains an organisational posture characterised by flexibility and adaptability, allowing us to mobilise quickly to address evolving situations in our region.

We’ve activated this crisis response capacity repeatedly in recent years, not only in the face of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, but also following the the suppression of mass protests in Central Asia in 2022 (the ‘Bloody January’ in Kazakhstan and the events in the Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Region in Tajikistan and in the Republic of Karakalpakstan in Uzbekistan), Lukashenka’s 2020-2021 crackdown on protest in Belarus, the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh and subsequent clashes between Armenia and Azerbaijan and other crises in the region where we work.  

Our crisis response initiatives typically consist of three parts: (i) emergency support to partners at risk, such as operational support, resilience-building, or emergency relocation; (ii) multidisciplinary investigation of suspected human rights violations; and (iii) strategic follow-ups, including advocacy, accountability-seeking and provision of tailored support to survivors and witnesses.

Holistic Accountability

Holistic Accountability

IPHR supports strategic litigation on key human rights issues in our target countries and uses international, regional, and domestic accountability mechanisms to help end impunity for serious human rights violations in Eastern Europe, South Caucasus and Central Asia.

Our holistic approach to accountability encompasses a set of mutually reinforcing strategies, including field documentation of IHL and ICL violations, OSINT analysis, in-house legal research, followed by strategic litigation and advocacy.

IPHR also conducts capacity building of local actors on international accountability mechanisms.

Promoting the Rights of Vulnerable Groups and Individuals

Promoting the Rights of Vulnerable Groups and Individuals

We work with our partners – both well-established organisations and grassroots initiatives – to improve respect for the rights of groups and individuals who are among those most vulnerable to human rights violations. We campaign in support of human rights defenders, lawyers, journalists and bloggers facing persecution; individuals subjected to torture, unfair trials and punitive imprisonment; ethnic, sexual, religious and other minorities; and people affected by inequality, discrimination and violence, including gender-based violence and conflict-related sexual violence. We also assist and defend the rights of those exposed to gross human rights violations during conflicts and crises, as well as individuals and communities suffering environmental harm.

Supporting Victims of Transnational Repression (TNR)

Supporting Victims of Transnational Repression (TNR)

IPHR addresses the growing challenges of transnational repression (TNR) through a dedicated program supporting individuals targeted by Russian government agents or their proxies abroad. This initiative provides critical legal, emergency, and security assistance to human rights defenders, independent journalists, anti-war activists, and members of the independent political opposition. Key services include legal aid for extradition and deportation cases, physical protection, emergency relocation, mental health support, capacity-building, and comprehensive risk mitigation strategies. The program emphasises swift and tailored interventions, ensuring anonymity and safety for those facing heightened risks due to their professional or civic activities.

Publications

More news
Kyrgyzstan: Amid Persisting Repression, Power Rift Prompts Guarded Hopes for a Thaw

Kyrgyzstan: Amid Persisting Repression, Power Rift Prompts Guarded Hopes for a Thaw

Curtailment of Civic Space in Central Asia: Briefing for the EU and International Partners

Curtailment of Civic Space in Central Asia: Briefing for the EU and International Partners

New White Paper Highlights Key Insights from the Conference “Intent to Destroy: Confronting Russia’s Campaign to Erase Ukraine and Its People”

New White Paper Highlights Key Insights from the Conference “Intent to Destroy: Confronting Russia’s Campaign to Erase Ukraine and Its People”

Latest on Ukraine

More from Ukraine
SAVE THE DATE – Holding Enablers Accountable: The Islamic Republic of Iran’s Role in Russia’s Drone War

SAVE THE DATE – Holding Enablers Accountable: The Islamic Republic of Iran’s Role in Russia’s Drone War

Joint Statement : Four Years On: Russia’s Full-scale Invasion of Ukraine is Genocidal in Its Intent and Action

Joint Statement : Four Years On: Russia’s Full-scale Invasion of Ukraine is Genocidal in Its Intent and Action

New White Paper Highlights Key Insights from the Conference “Intent to Destroy: Confronting Russia’s Campaign to Erase Ukraine and Its People”

New White Paper Highlights Key Insights from the Conference “Intent to Destroy: Confronting Russia’s Campaign to Erase Ukraine and Its People”

Joint Statement : Four Years On: Russia’s Full-scale Invasion of Ukraine is Genocidal in Its Intent and Action
Statements & Appeals

Joint Statement : Four Years On: Russia’s Full-scale Invasion of Ukraine is Genocidal in Its Intent and Action

Conference White Paper offers recommendations for concrete action to address Russia’s escalating atrocities 27 February 2026, Brussels/Boston/Washington DC – Four years into Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, mounting evidence of forcible child transfers, unlawful killings, torture, conflict-related sexual violence, systematic attacks on energy infrastructure indispensable to civilian survival, cultural erasure, and eliminationist rhetoric demonstrates that […]

New White Paper Highlights Key Insights from the Conference “Intent to Destroy: Confronting Russia’s Campaign to Erase Ukraine and Its People”
Country & Thematic Reports

New White Paper Highlights Key Insights from the Conference “Intent to Destroy: Confronting Russia’s Campaign to Erase Ukraine and Its People”

IPHR, the International Human Rights Clinic at Harvard Law School, the New Lines Institute for Strategy and Policy, the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security (GIWPS), and the Atlantic Council’s Strategic Litigation Project today released a White Paper with recommendations for concrete action, alongside a comprehensive summary of experts’ interventions during the conference “Intent […]

Intent to Destroy: Confronting Russia’s Campaign to Erase Ukraine and Its People
Events

Intent to Destroy: Confronting Russia’s Campaign to Erase Ukraine and Its People

On 19 November 2025, leading international lawyers, historians, diplomats, and security experts convened at Georgetown University for the conference Intent to Destroy: Confronting Russia’s Campaign to Erase Ukraine and Its People— a joint initiative of IPHR, the International Human Rights Clinic at Harvard Law School, New Lines Institute, the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and […]

Intent to Destroy: Why the World Must Name and Confront Russia’s Genocidal War in Ukraine
News Alerts

Intent to Destroy: Why the World Must Name and Confront Russia’s Genocidal War in Ukraine

By Susan H. Farbstein, Anastasiya Donets, Tamar Ruseishvili Three and a half years have passed since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, and the prospects for peace and security feel slimmer than ever. From the outset, Russia has never sincerely sought peace—only Ukraine’s total submission. Even when offered frameworks that would have allowed Vladimir […]

Joint Statement – No Platform for Authoritarianism in Cultural Spaces
Statements & Appeals

Joint Statement – No Platform for Authoritarianism in Cultural Spaces

We, the undersigned civil society organizations committed to human rights, democracy, and the rule of law, welcome the decision made by the management of the Royal Palace of Caserta to cancel [1] the scheduled participation of Valery Gergiev at the “Un’Estate da Re” festival, set to take place at the Royal Palace of Caserta, Italy, […]

For more information on IPHR’s war crimes investigations work, visit our social media sites:

IPHR in the media

More mentions in media
Just Security
31 March 2026

Iranian Officials’ Legal Liability in Russia’s Drone War on Ukraine

The Islamic Republic of Iran has materially enabled and industrialized Russia’s drone campaign against Ukrainian civilians since mid-2022 through the supply, modification, and joint production of Shahed-style drones. This was not an isolated arms transfer, but a sustained contribution to Russia’s capacity to commit war crimes and crimes against humanity at scale. Indeed, the assistance culminated in Iranian officials and entities providing drone designs, training, and technology to Russia — handing over the information Russia needed to begin domestic production and ramping up its air terror campaign against Ukraine.

By late 2025, the Iranian government’s assistance to Russia’s drone war underpinned the most severe escalation of Russia’s aerial attacks, resulting in record civilian casualties, incursions by Russian drones into NATO airspace, and the gravest energy crisis Ukraine has faced since the full-scale invasion began in February 2022.

While Ukrainians continue facing relentless drone attacks, the Russian-Iranian Shahed industry poses a much broader threat. In apparent retaliation for the U.S. and Israeli war on Iran in recent weeks, Iranian drones, reportedly including Russian-produced variants, have targeted its neighboring countries in the Middle East, damaging civilian structures such as residential buildings, hotels, and airports. Previously, the Iranian government reportedly provided attack drones to repressive regimes and armed groups across Africa and the Middle East, including forces backing the then-government of Bashar al-Assad in Syriathe Sudanese Armed Forces, armed groups such as the Houthis in Yemen, and others.

forthcoming report based on months of analysis by the Atlantic Council Strategic Litigation Project (where one of us, Celeste, works), the International Partnership for Human Rights (IPHR, where Anastasiya works), and the research organization C4ADS argues that Russian Shahed attacks meet the legal tests for the war crimes of attacking civilians, civilian objects, and specially protected objects, and the crimes against humanity of murder and other inhumane acts (pp. 49-61). Secondary liability, furthermore, extends in certain instances to Iranian officials involved in industrial, financial, and logistical support for atrocities.

The continued impunity of Iranian officials reveals a structural failure of international criminal and sanctions enforcement to holistically constrain major international threat actors. The international community must use and strengthen all tools of law and diplomacy at its disposal — including international criminal law — to comprehensively thwart enablers of atrocities and hold them accountable.

Azattyq Asia
13 March 2026

Международные правозащитники призвали снять обвинения с активистов «Атажұрта» перед возможным приговором

Международная правозащитная организация International Partnership for Human Rights (IPHR) и Казахстанское международное бюро по правам человека и соблюдению законности (КМБПЧ) призвали власти Казахстана снять обвинения с 19 активистов движения «Атажұрт» и освободить их. Соответствующее заявление опубликовано на фоне приближающегося завершения судебного процесса.

«Уголовное преследование 19 активистов “Атажұрт” вписывается в более широкий контекст подавления инакомыслия и демонстрирует злоупотребление расплывчатой статьёй о “разжигании розни”. Сейчас правильным шагом было бы снять обвинения и освободить активистов», — заявила директор IPHR Брижит Дюфур.

Radio Azatlyk
03 March 2026

Türkiýede ýiten iki türkmen aktiwistiniň işi gaýtadan Edirne prokuraturasyna berildi

Türkiýede ýiten iki türkmen aktiwistiniň işi gaýtadan seretmek üçin Edirne şäheriniň prokuraturasyna gaýtaryldy diýip, adam hukuklaryny goraýan “Türkmen Helsinki Fondy” (THF) 3-nji martda habar berdi.

Maglumata görä, Alişer Sahatowyň we Abdylla Orusowyň aklawçysy Daşary ýurt raýatlary üçin wagtlaýyn tussaglyk merkezinde we onuň töwereginde ýerleşýän wideogözegçilik kameralarynyň ýazgylaryny, şeýle-de, bu wakanyň bolan ýerindäki kameralaryň ýazgylaryny almak üçin Edirne şäher prokuraturasyna ýene-de bir gezek arza beripdir.

(…)

Dekabryň başynda adam hukuklaryny goraýjy birnäçe halkara guramasy türkmen häkimiýetlerini delillendirilmedik aýyplamalar esasynda, öz esasy hukuklaryny we azatlyklaryny parahatçylykly ulanandyklary üçin azatlykdan mahrum edilen raýatlary azat etmäge çagyrdy. Adam hukuklary boýunça halkara hyzmatdaşlyk (IPHR), Adam hukuklary boýunça Türkmen inisiatiwasy (TIHR), “Turkmen.News” neşiri we Norwegiýanyň Helsinki komiteti (NHC) bilelkde eden çagyryşynda Mansur Mingelow, Myrat Düşemow, Alişer Sahatow, Abdylla Orusow, Farhat Meýmankuliýew, Mälikberdi Allamyradow, Saddam Gulamow ýaly aktiwitleriň atlaryny agzady.

Subscribe to our updates

Please select the topic(s) on which you wish to receive news/updates from us
Type of information you wish to receive
Copied!
IPHR
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.