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Creating new perspectives since 2009

 

Alastair Sloan

Alastair Sloan tweets and writes on international affairs, terrorism and Westminster politics and is author of the upcoming book, “What Does Michael Gove Really Think?” You can also read his work in Al Jazeera English and Newsweek.

 

Items by Alastair Sloan

  • A woman fighter pilot doesn't mean that the UAE respects women

    How typical of the United Arab Emirates to turn the bombing of Iraq and Syria into a reputation-laundering propaganda operation. Pictures of Mariam Hassan Salem Al-Mansouri, the first Emirati woman to hold the rank of fighter pilot in the UAE Air Force, have been circulated widely, along with headlines...

  • Inside the secret world of Gulf 'GONGOS'

    Two British human rights workers have finally made it back to the UK following their unexpected stay with the Qatari security services. They were arrested while investigating abuses against migrant workers in the wealthy Emirate. After the usual protestations from Amnesty, Human Rights Watch and the men’s own Norwegian employers...

  • The media's failure in Palestine

    It is the whistle-blower’s dilemma: follow the official internal complaints’ procedure and risk the truth being buried, or take it straight to the press, and risk improvised prosecution by a bitter government resentful that you did right and exposed its dirty tricks. The forty-three Israeli whistle-blowers of Yehida Shmoneh-Matayim,...

  • Kuwait feeling the heat over terror financing

    Later this month Kuwait is in the dock once more on terror financing. The Financial Action Task Force, a group of super-hero accountants, will be reviewing financial regulations and practices which have seen hundreds of millions let loose from Kuwaiti donors into the coffers of terrorists. Like all super-heroes,...

  • Washington didn't know about Libya air strikes! Come off it

    Did the bomber pilots of the United Arab Emirates and Egypt really act without Washington’s consent when they bombed Libya? It’s extremely unlikely. The Americans have a clear motive to lie, as they have done so brazenly. A joint statement signed by Washington (and Paris and Berlin and Rome and...

  • Egypt's deep-seated culture of sexism

    “Don’t worry, women have smaller brains than men.” “It’s in the Qur’an, its God’s right given to men to command women.” “Women overstate the problem, its nothing, they shouldn’t take it so seriously.” These are just some of the comments that I heard sitting with various groups of young and older...

  • Attacking journalists makes Israel a plastic democracy

    I’ve just had the pleasure of spending eight hours in detention at the border between Egypt and Israel, between Tabaa and Israel’s southern-most city, Eilat. My crime at first appeared to be a single male travelling alone into a Middle Eastern country. But once the immigration police realised I...

  • Collaborating with Israeli occupation should be a serious crime...for everyone

    Recently, while looking for a film to keep myself entertained, I came across quite an extraordinary piece of modern cinema entitled Iron Sky. It’s broadly about the Nazis… in space. Yes – according to this epic piece of 2012 Hollywood trash, space Nazis have fled to the moon following their...

  • Israel is a Frankenstein monster of America's militaristic society

    How does a father explain to his ten year old son, watching the American Super Bowl for the first time, that his country introduces sporting events by a killing machine fly-by? Each year, US Black Hawk helicopters swoop low over the stadium and fighter jets roar through the sky,...

  • It is a lie to say that Iron Dome is protecting Israelis from Hamas

    A sceptical Philip E Coyle III shook his head at the Israel Defence Forces claim that its “Iron Dome” missile defence system intercepts nine out of ten Hamas rockets. “No military system is ninety per cent effective,” he said. Coyle is amongst a worrying number of Israeli and American defence...

  • Don't be fooled: 'media watchdogs' are Israeli propaganda tools

    Consider yourself very lucky if you have never heard of “Comment is Free Watch” (CiF Watch), “BBC Watch”, “HonestReporting” and “Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting in America” (CAMERA). Statistics collected by the Institute for Internet Nonsense suggest that these four blogs account for “ninety per cent of web-based...

  • The whys and wherefores of political persecution in Saudi Arabia

    Is King Abdullah the most progressive, liberal Saudi monarch to date? Quite possibly, though it’s a limited field and a low bar. Still, thanks to him, seventy thousand Saudi students now study in Western Europe, North America and Australia free of charge. New laws on domestic violence and divorce have...

  • The fate of migrant workers in Yemeni 'torture camps'

    A new report from Human Rights Watch revisits the torture camps of Yemen, where the only way out for the tens of thousands of migrant workers interned each year is a ransom payment from back home – and until it arrives, torture, beatings and inhumane conditions. Nearly all of the...

  • A renewed Kuwaiti opposition rises to fight corruption

    “The battle starts tonight,” Musallam Al-Barrak told several thousand Kuwaitis gathered outside their Parliament building last night. Al-Barrak, the popular ex-Member of Parliament and pro-democracy activist, had promised an innovative mix of investigative journalism with al fresco politics – with a big reveal about corruption amongst Kuwait’s political elite promised...

  • China’s complex relations with the Gulf States

    Untangling the complex relations between China, Russia, the Gulf states and “the West”is no easy task. Although Beijing and Moscow have long kept a small hand in Gulf affairs, there is growing activity between the four parties – each with differing interests, overlapping activities and sometimes schizophrenic approaches to...

  • Bahraini activists speak out about 'systematic persecution' by British government

    Human rights groups have claimed Bahraini pro-democracy activists in London are being “systematically persecuted” by the British government, with specific accusations made against Whitehall departments, the Metropolitan Police and a high profile member of the House of Lords. The accusations come as King Hamad of Bahrain, whose family have ruled...

  • Britain's hypocrisy over Gulf links

    “Our foreign policy should always have consistent support for human rights…as its irreducible core,” claimed Foreign Secretary William Hague when he took office in 2010. Despite the rhetoric, which echoed that of his Labour Party predecessor, Britain enjoys cosy relationships with several dictators, suppressive regimes and states where human...

  • Obituary: Bassem Sabry

    In memory of an Egyptian commentator and revolutionary On 29th April 2014, aged just thirty one, the Egyptian analyst and writer Bassem Sabry passed away. As is appropriate for a man who spent much of his time blogging, tweeting and exchanging emails – Twitter has mourned his death as publically...

  • Who are the 'political prisoners' in Saudi and Iran?

    Both Iran and Saudi Arabia maintain fairly poor reputations in the Western world for their approach to human rights. While Iran remains isolated through sanctions and is frequently vilified, the oppression of political dissent by Saudi Arabia is frequently overlooked by both their Western allies and the public. Not only...

  • Post-coup politics raise tensions between Egypt and Sudan

    Relations between Cairo and Khartoum are tense. Although many fleeing the coup have made it to Libya or London, hundreds if not thousands of Muslim Brotherhood members are thought to have fled to Khartoum. The run down to the border is punctuated by military checkpoints, but it is 2000...

  • Saudi regime continues to oppress women

    Back in 2002, more than a dozen Saudi schoolgirls, along with foreign nationals, died in a school fire in Jeddah. The girls were all pupils at a local high school, which was later criticised for overcrowding, poor quality construction and poor fire drills. But the blaze made headlines for another...

  • Is Saudi Arabia losing the battle to combat substance abuse?

    There’s a story in the medical journal Emergency Physicians International, in which a Saudi doctor finds a male patient convulsing on the floor of his ward, unable to talk. Suspecting the young man may be showing early signs of a heart attack, he bundles him into a treatment room....

  • Gulf states among world's largest arms importers

    New data released by the Stockhold International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), an authoritative research body covering the global arms trade, shows how UAE and Saudi Arabia are currently the 4th and 5th largest importers of arms in the world, with further increases in arms importing by their fellow Gulf...

  • GCC divided over Egypt's aborted democracy

    A row has erupted in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) – with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain dramatically withdrawing their envoys from Qatar on Wednesday. The three states accuse Doha of breaching a GCC concord first agreed in November, which guaranteed that member states would not interfere...