Weekly Quiz! Test your human rights knowledge

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Human Rights Watch Weekly Quiz
 
Afghan women hold placards demanding their right to education, in Mazar-i-Sharif xxon June 26, 2023.
 
 
How well do you remember this week's human rights news?
Let's find out with this 5-question quiz.
download (2).png
 
 
 
 
 
 
Human Rights Watch Weekly Quiz
 
Afghan women hold placards demanding their right to education, in Mazar-i-Sharif xxon June 26, 2023.
 
 
How well do you remember this week's human rights news?
Let's find out with this 5-question quiz.
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Since protests broke out on December 28, Iranian authorities have significantly intensified their lethal crackdown on protesters by: 
Carrying out large-scale killings across the country
Imposing a countrywide Internet blackout
Arbitrarily detaining civilians
All of the above
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New reporting that US forces used an aircraft painted to appear civilian for a lethal strike on a boat in the Caribbean Sea on September 2, 2025—killing 11 people—raises new questions about the erosion of internal safeguards on US military operations. Why would this action be in violation of international humanitarian law? 

 
 
The United States government did not officially declare war before the strike
The feigning of civilian or other protected status to lull an adversary into lowering their guard and then attacking them is prohibited
Civilians were intentionally targeted, violating humanitarian jurisdiction
This action was permissible under international humanitarian law
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This month marks a year since Lebanon’s unlawful extradition of the Egyptian-Turkish poet Abdulrahman Youssef al-Qaradawi to which country? 
United Arab Emirates
Egypt
Türkiye
Syria
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Diplomats from around the world will meet at the United Nations in New York next week to draft an international treaty under which countries agree to prosecute or extradite those responsible for:  

Crimes against humanity
War crimes
Genocide
Colonial expansion
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United Kingdom lawmakers vote this week on a proposed amendment that would classify “life sciences” facilities as “key national infrastructure.” How would this affect human rights in the UK? 
Non-life scientists would face steep pay cuts and resource losses
Other core human rights protections would be deprioritized within the national infrastructure
The change, which is drafted in vague and broad language, would expose people who organize or participate in protests near a wide range of sites to criminal penalties of up to 12 months in prison.
The drafted amendment would improve human rights by prioritizing scientific advancement
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