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  • Russia-Ukraine fallout starts felling fragile 'frontier' economies

    The fallout of the Russia and Ukraine war has just helped tip two of world’s poorest countries into full-blown crises, and the list of those at risk – and the queue at the International Monetary Fund’s door – will only get longer from here. They may be far from the...

  • You still need us, UAE tells US as it flexes Gulf oil muscles

    By single-handedly knocking 13 per cent off rocketing oil prices on one day this week, the United Arab Emirates demonstrated the power Gulf producers wield in the market and sent a wake-up call to Washington to pay closer attention to its long time allies. OPEC heavyweights, Saudi Arabia and the...

  • Arab refugees see double standards in Europe's embrace of Ukrainians

    Syrian refugee, Ahmad Al-Hariri, who fled the war in his country for neighbouring Lebanon 10 years ago, spent the last decade hoping in vain to escape to a new life in Europe, Reuters reports. Watching European nations open their arms to hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians in less than a...

  • College dreams dashed as young Afghan women fight to keep poverty at bay

    As students return to universities across Afghanistan this month, law major, Waheeda Bayat, will not be among them. The 24-year-old was looking forward to resuming her course at the private Gawharshad University in Kabul, but amid an economic collapse that has dragged millions of Afghans into poverty, she cannot afford to go...

  • IMF's tough terms deepen doubts over quick Lebanon bailout

    The IMF has asked Lebanon to fulfil a string of pre-conditions before negotiating a bailout, four sources briefed on recent talks said, pressing for steps Beirut has long failed to deliver and compounding doubts over whether a rescue plan can be agreed, Reuters reports. An IMF deal is seen as...

  • Demand for Hebrew lessons jumps in Gaza as Israel eases work restrictions

    In a brightly lit classroom in Gaza, a teacher spells out Hebrew words on a whiteboard, followed attentively by Maher Al-Farra and dozens of other Palestinians hoping to take advantage of an opening up of employment opportunities in Israel. Increased demand for the classes at the Nafha Languages Centre follows...

  • How a Saudi woman's iPhone revealed hacking around the world

    A single activist helped turn the tide against NSO Group, one of the world’s most sophisticated spyware companies now facing a cascade of legal action and scrutiny in Washington over damaging new allegations that its software was used to hack government officials and dissidents around the world. It all started...

  • Libya's Dbeibah: the ambitious politician 

    A move by Libya’s parliament to oust Interim Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah, who had promised not to use his stand-in position for political advancement, is testament to his success in doing just that. A reported assassination attempt on Dbeibah overnight came a day after he vowed not to cede power to any...

  • Egypt's tuk-tuk drivers wary of plans for green streets

    Ahmed Samir zips expertly through the Cairo traffic in his tuk-tuk, making a meagre living by ferrying Egyptians around the chaotic mega-city in his three-wheeled people carrier, Thomson Reuters Foundation reports. But Samir’s daily routine of beeping, swerving and cursing Cairo’s congestion could all come to a crashing halt under...

  • War, siege leave Yemenis unable to buy their own honey 

    Idrees Al-Haddad used to buy seven kilogramme tubs of Yemen’s world-famous honey when he went shopping. Today he can only afford one kilogramme. Like many Yemenis suffering the extreme inflation and salary losses of a seven-year war, Al-Haddad’s reduced consumption has left the industry with a production surplus. “Merchants used to...

  • COVID and war push Yemen's businesswomen to smash taboos

    Short of masks and short of protective gowns, Yemen’s over-stretched medical workers started dying from COVID-19. Nadia Dhrah – herself a doctor – was dismayed, so she resolved to do what she could to help. Dhrah, who had set up a tiny business making surgical masks and clothing in 2019,...

  • Lebanon slips further into Iran's orbit as Hariri bows out

    A decision by Sunni Muslim leader, Saad Al-Hariri, to step away from Lebanese politics opens the way for Shia Hezbollah to extend its already deep sway over the country, rendering it ever more a bastion of Iranian influence on the Mediterranean. Three times Prime Minister, Hariri declared on Monday he...

  • Why Yemen is at war – Explainer

    Yemen’s Iran-aligned Houthis have launched two missile attacks at the United Arab Emirates in the last week, raising the stakes in a ruinous and complex conflict. Monday’s assault, which the Houthis said was aimed at a base hosting the US military, was thwarted by American-built Patriot interceptors, following a strike...

  • Only 50 homes destroyed in Israel's 2021 attack on Gaza rebuilt, others remain in ruins

    Palestinian Zeyad Abu Odah watched with a smile as his four-storey house, destroyed in an Israeli air strike in last May’s fierce Israeli attack on Gaza, was slowly being rebuilt in the Shaati refugee camp. He is one of the lucky few. Only 50 of 1,650 homes wrecked in an...

  • Sudan security forces increasing attacks on medical services treating protesters

    On the afternoon of 30 December, security forces banged on the windows of Khartoum Teaching Hospital then fired tear gas into an emergency room packed with protesters injured in a nearby demonstration. “We were around the corner trying to hide, it came right past our heads,” said a nurse who...

  • Kuwait: domestic politics to test crown prince in push for fiscal reform

    The biggest task facing Kuwait’s octogenarian crown prince after unexpectedly stepping in for the emir this month will be to tackle the perennial political feuding which has long blocked badly needed fiscal reform in the wealthy oil producing country. Previously a low-profile figure who avoided public politics, little was known...

  • Abu Dhabi Crown Prince to visit Turkey after years of tension – officials

    Abu Dhabi Crown Prince, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan, the UAE’s de facto ruler, will visit Turkey for the first time in years, as the regional rivals work to repair frayed relations, two Turkish officials said on Monday. The visit, which will include talks with Turkish President, Tayyip Erdogan, is...

  • Kuwait's ruler hands some duties to Crown Prince – decree

    Kuwait’s Crown Prince has been asked to carry out some of Emir Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmed Al-Sabah’s constitutional duties on a temporary basis, state news agency, KUNA. said on Monday, citing an Emiri decree. Crown Prince, Sheikh Meshal Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, also in his 80s, is half brother of the Emir and...

  • Coalition forces say they have withdrawn from around Yemen's Hodeidah port

    Yemeni forces under a Saudi-led coalition said on Friday they have withdrawn from around the main port of Hodeidah held by their foes, the Houthis, as the Red Sea city’s governor announced the reopening of a main road linking it to the capital, Sana’a, Reuters reported. The Giants Brigade southern...

  • US lawmaker looks to block first major Saudi arms deal under Biden

    Democratic US Representative, Ilhan Omar, filed legislation on Friday seeking to block the sale of $650 million air-to-air missiles to Saudi Arabia, the first major arms sale to the kingdom during President Joe Biden’s administration, Reuters reported. Omar said she filed the measure, known as a joint resolution of disapproval,...

  • Qatar to act as US diplomatic representative in Afghanistan

    The United States and Qatar have agreed that Qatar will represent the diplomatic interests of the United States in Afghanistan, a senior US official told Reuters, an important signal of potential direct engagement between Washington and Kabul in the future after two decades of war. Qatar will sign an arrangement...

  • Wielding fresh leverage, Iran to play hardball at nuclear talks

    Iran will adopt an uncompromising stance when it resumes nuclear talks with major powers, betting it has the leverage to win wide sanctions relief in return for curbs on its increasingly advanced atomic technology, officials and analysts say. The stakes are high, since failure in the negotiations resuming in...

  • Climate change threatens jobs of Tunisia's wetland farmers 

    Dotted among wetlands on Tunisia’s coast, a patchwork of tiny man-made islands stretches out towards the Mediterranean. Ploughed in neat furrows and shored up by sandbanks inside a lagoon, they are home to a centuries-old system of agriculture that climate change threatens to wipe out. Ali Garsi has farmed a 0.8...