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  • Alaa Abdelfattah, the jailed Egyptian-British dissident on hunger strike

    Alaa AbdElfattah, an Egyptian-British software developer and blogger from an activist family who rose to prominence in the Arab Spring uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak is now a symbol of suffering during the repression that followed. The 2011 revolution gave hope to a generation of activists in Egypt and beyond,...

  • As Netanyahu returns, concerns grow over far-right ally

    Benjamin Netanyahu faces a new test forming a government with an ultra-nationalist party whose sudden rise has many at home and allies abroad alarmed at the potential implications for Israeli democracy....

  • Arabs view revived Netanyahu with concern but as balance against Iran

    Benjamin Netanyahu’s likely return to power will fuel concern about deepening tensions with Arab neighbours, but Gulf States which forged ties with Israel under his leadership will see him as a regional balance against Iranian power. Arab leaders were largely silent on Wednesday over Netanyahu’s triumph in Israel’s election. Lebanon’s caretaker Prime...

  • What happens now that Lebanon is without a president?

    Lebanon entered an unprecedented government crisis on Tuesday, with no president, a caretaker cabinet with limited powers and a deeply fragmented Parliament. The country is still struggling with a record-making financial meltdown that has impoverished most of the population. What makes electing a president so difficult, what’s at stake and who...

  • Israel ballot: round five in Netanyahu's fight for survival

    On 1 November, Israel holds an unprecedented fifth election in less than four years, with former Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, vying for a comeback, Reuters reports. Caught in an election cycle since 2019, the same year in which Netanyahu was indicted for corruption on charges he denies, voters hope to...

  • What is at stake as Lebanon faces presidential vacuum?

    The Lebanese Presidency is set to fall vacant on 31 October, unless the main powerbrokers can strike a deal on the election of a successor to Michel Aoun, raising the prospect of a vacuum at a time of deep financial crisis, Reuters reports. Reserved for a Maronite Christian in Lebanon’s...

  • Election disruptions loom as social media giants likely to resist Turkiye's new law

    Social media companies are unlikely to fully abide by Turkiye’s new law requiring them to remove “disinformation” content and share user data with authorities, analysts say, raising the spectre of possible platform disruptions before elections next year. Facebook, Twitter, Google and others are required to fully comply with the law...

  • Fans stay away from Qatar World Cup that does not make them dream

    The Qatar World Cup was always going to be unique in several ways, but one aspect FIFA would not have welcomed is that fans the world over are opting not to attend a tournament that one supporter group said “doesn’t make fans dream”. There are many factors involved, which individually might have...

  • Beyond cutting hair and rhetoric, little West can do to change Iran’s trajectory

    Western actors and officials have cut their hair on camera to dramatise their support for Iranian women, whose protests have rocked the Islamic Republic since a 22-year-old woman died in the custody of Iran’s morality police over a month ago. “For Freedom”, French actor, Juliette Binoche, said as she snipped off...

  • Saudi oil power play bruises US ties but will not break them

    Neither side is backing down in a battle of wills over oil, between Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince and US President Joe Biden, putting a severe strain on their countries’ energy-for-security alliance, although a full rupture looks unlikely, Gulf sources and experts said. As de facto leader of the OPEC+ oil...

  • What is NOPEC, the US bill to pressure the OPEC+ oil group?

    US legislation that could open members of oil producing group OPEC+ to antitrust lawsuits has emerged as a possible tool to tackle high fuel prices, after the body said it would slash production despite lobbying by the Biden administration. The No Oil Producing and Exporting Cartels (NOPEC) bill, which passed...

  • In an empty kitchen, Yemeni family struggles with hunger

    In a bare kitchen in her house in the Yemeni capital, Sana’a, Umm Zakaria Al-Sharaabi, prepares for a daily challenge – creating a meal out of virtually nothing to feed the 18 people in her extended family. “Today we have yet to make lunch,” she says, gesturing at an empty...

  • Israel, Lebanon closing in on maritime border deal

    Lebanon and Israel are closer than ever to signing a deal demarcating their maritime border, opening the door to new oil and gas exploration, after years of US-brokered negotiations. While limited in scope, the agreement is set to ease security and economic concerns in both countries, whose shared history is...

  • Kabul blast a setback for Afghan women seeking education against the odds

    Raihana, 19, wanted to be a doctor, studying until midnight in recent weeks for Afghanistan’s university entrance exam, a chance for women to advance their education even as they face growing restrictions from the Taliban government, Reuters reported. Her diligent preparation ended on Friday when a suicide attacker detonated his explosives during...

  • Teachers' strike and soaring fees: Lebanon’s public school pupils miss class

    School teacher, Claude Koteich, her teenage daughter and 10-year-old son should have all been back in class weeks ago – but a crisis in Lebanon’s education sector has left them lounging at home on a Monday afternoon. Lebanon’s three-year financial meltdown has severely devalued the country’s pound and drained State...

  • Sudanese head north to Egypt seeking brighter future

    At downtown Khartoum’s Al-Souq Al-Arabi, travel agencies helping young Sudanese seek a brighter economic future in Egypt are replacing once-packed hardware stores in a corner of the capital’s main commercial hub. The exodus reflects growing despondence over prospects at home, where the economy has been in free fall and the...

  • Saudi Prince's Ukraine mediation signals 'useful' Russia ties

    Saudi Arabia has won a diplomatic victory by securing freedom for foreign fighters captured in Ukraine, signalling the value of the Crown Prince’s alliance with Russia to Western partners seeking to isolate Moscow over the war there, analysts say. Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman, may also find that the initiative...

  • On the run, Lebanon woman who stole own savings says she is not the criminal

    On the run from authorities after forcing a bank to release her family savings at gunpoint to treat her cancer-stricken sister, 28-year-old Lebanese interior designer, Sali Hafiz, insists she is not the criminal. “We are in the country of mafias. If you are not a wolf, the wolves will eat...

  • Lebanon bid for IMF deal hits snags

    Five months after Lebanon’s draft IMF deal raised hopes it could finally pull together an economic reform plan to address its financial meltdown, political and financial elites are obstructing prospects of securing any rescue package. Efforts to enact eight reforms sought by the IMF are going nowhere or falling short,...

  • Healing with humour, Palestinian comedians strike a chord in occupied cities

    Palestinian-American, Amer Zahr, is on a mission to heal through humour. In 2015, he started bringing fellow Arab-American comedians from the United States to perform stand-up across occupied Palestinian cities including Nablus, Bethlehem and Ramallah. Seven years later, Zahr’s now annual Palestine Comedy Festival is still going strong. “Laughter is therapy,” he...

  • Attacks on major Iraqi gas field drive out US contractors

    A series of rocket attacks on a gas field in northern Iraq has sent the US contractors working on its expansion packing, dealing a blow to the Kurdish region’s hopes of boosting its revenues and offering a small alternative to Russian gas. The project to expand the Khor Mor field...

  • From the US to China and Europe, Saudi seizes the diplomatic moment

    Last Wednesday, Uzbek President, Shavkat Mirziyoyev, became the first leader from his country to visit Saudi Arabia in 30 years, the latest recipient of a Saudi diplomatic offensive that has included the United States, France, China and other powers. Four years after the murder of dissident Saudi journalist, Jamal Khashoggi,...

  • Fatal stabbings highlight violence against women in Egypt

    A series of violent crimes against women in Egypt has drawn attention to gaps in legal and social protection that leave female citizens vulnerable to attacks and harassment, victims and activists say. The highest profile case was the murder in late June of 21-year-old student, Naira Ashraf, who was stabbed...

  • Russia Jews head for Israel as Kremlin targets emigration group

    In the hours after Russia invaded Ukraine in February, Ilya Fomintsev, a 43-year-old oncologist and director of a medical charity, took to the streets of Moscow to protest. He was arrested and sentenced to 20 days’ detention. Fearing for his future, like many other opponents of the “special military operation”...