You are here

Region

Region section

Iran enforcing 'intensified' hijab crackdown — Amnesty

By - Jul 26,2023 - Last updated at Jul 26,2023

PARIS — Iranian authorities have in the last months launched an intensified crackdown against women deemed to have violated the Islamic republic's strict dress rules, Amnesty International said on Wednesday.

Iran was convulsed for months by unprecedented protests sparked by the September 2022 custody death of Mahsa Amini, 22, who had been arrested by the morality police for purportedly breaking the rules.

Some politicians inside Iran had argued in the wake of the protests that the rules should be loosened and there were even indications — never confirmed — that the morality police could be abolished.

But with the intensity of protests diminishing over the last months, Amnesty said Iranian authorities had launched a new crackdown on women's dress since April.

"The Iranian authorities are doubling down their oppressive methods of policing and punishing women and girls to quell widespread defiance of degrading and discriminatory compulsory veiling laws," Amnesty said.

It has been obligatory for women to cover their heads and necks since shortly after the Islamic revolution of 1979 that ousted the secular shah.

 

Police patrols 

 

Viral images posted online during the protest movement showed women removing their headscarves as well as carrying out daily tasks such as shopping bareheaded.

Some images showing women without headscarves at cafe tables in relatively secular northern Tehran had suggested a more permissive attitude in some areas.

But Amnesty said there is in fact "an intensified nationwide crackdown", and noted that police this month announced the return of car and foot patrols enforcing compulsory veiling across the country.

According to Amnesty, more than a million women have received SMS warnings threatening that their vehicles will be confiscated if they are found travelling in a car while unveiled.

"Morality policing in Iran is back," said Agnes Callamard, Amnesty International secretary general.

She added the stepped-up enforcement was "intensified by mass surveillance technologies capable of identifying unveiled women in their cars and pedestrian spaces".

Hundreds of businesses such as hotels, restaurants, pharmacies and shopping centres have been forcibly closed for refusing to enforce compulsory veiling laws while women have been denied access to education, banking services and public transport, Amnesty said.

Earlier this month a "disturbing video" went viral on social media showing a female police officer "harassing and assaulting" an unveiled woman in Tehran, pushing her against a wall and attempting to violently arrest her and take her into a van, the watchdog said.

"The international community must not stand idly by as the Iranian authorities intensify their oppression of women and girls," Callamard added.

Iran's conservatives, who dominate the parliament and leadership, have passionately defended the dress code. But with many Iranians demanding change, in May the judiciary and the government proposed a bill which sparked heated debate.

It would increase fines for "any person removing their veil in public places or on the Internet" but withdraws the threat of a prison sentence.

Eight civilians, seven soldiers killed in separate Yemen blasts

By - Jul 26,2023 - Last updated at Jul 26,2023

 

DUBAI — Eight people, most from one family, were killed when an unexploded projectile from Yemen's years-long war detonated inside a house, while seven soldiers were killed in two separate attacks with IEDs, government officials said on Wednesday.

A government security official told AFP on condition of anonymity that "an arms dealer was killed along with his wife and five of his children (...) and another eighth person inside the family's home while dismantling a projectile left over from the war".

Another security official confirmed the death toll of the incident, which took place on Tuesday in Marib, northern Yemen.

The conflict in Yemen has rumbled on since 2014, when Iran-backed Houthi rebels seized the capital Sanaa.

A Saudi-led military coalition intervened the following year on the side of the country's internationally recognised government.

Hundreds of thousands of people have died in the fighting or from indirect causes such as lack of food in what the United Nations has called one of the world's worst humanitarian crises.

A six-month truce brokered by the United Nations expired in October last year, but fighting has largely remained on hold.

In a separate incident, an official in the government forces reported that four Yemeni soldiers were killed Tuesday evening when two IEDs “planted by the Houthis on the main road” exploded and hit a number of military vehicles on their way back from one of the fronts near Taiz.

The government military official said “the Houthis infiltrated the road and planted four explosive devices” and were able to detonate two of them as the military vehicles passed by.

And in Abyan, southern Yemen, two officers and a soldier in the government forces were killed Tuesday evening by an IED planted by unknown gunmen, believed to be from Al Qaeda, according to a military official.

According to the official, Abyan has been witnessing “security operations and confrontations between Al Qaeda members and security forces” for weeks.

Erdogan meets Palestinian president, Hamas leader in Ankara

By - Jul 26,2023 - Last updated at Jul 26,2023

This handout photo provided by the Palestinian Authority's press office on Wednesday shows Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas posing for a photo with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan at the Presidential Complex in Ankara (AFP photo)

ISTANBUL — Turkey's leader Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday spoke in Ankara with the Palestinian president and the head of Hamas in the run-up to a crucial meeting of Palestinian factions set for the weekend.

Erdogan, who has good ties with Mahmoud Abbas of the Fateh Party and Hamas' political bureau chief Ismail Haniyeh, has said his government will do its best to push for intra-Palestinian reconciliation.

He told Wednesday's meeting, which was held behind closed doors, that a lack of unity among the Palestinians benefited those "who wanted to undermine peace" according to the Turkish leader's office.

An official in the Palestinian presidency told AFP that Abbas "invited all Palestinian factions, including Hamas and Islamic Jihad, to attend the meeting of the heads of the factions in Cairo" on Sunday.

The meeting will "discuss how to confront aggression against the Palestinian people, especially from the extremist Israeli government, and to strengthen Palestinian unity", said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Sources close to the Fateh Party and Hamas said that the Ankara meeting organised by Erdogan focused on Palestinian unity and how to end divisions.

The meeting is "very important especially in light of the continuation of the Israeli aggression in Jerusalem and the West Bank and the continuation of settlement activity", the sources said.

Israel has occupied the West Bank since the June War of 1967.

Since early last year, the territory has seen a string of attacks by Palestinians on Israeli targets, as well as violence by Israeli settlers against Palestinian communities.

Earlier this month, Israeli forces conducted a two-day raid on the Jenin refugee camp razing swathes of the area, and killing 12 Palestinians, including militants and children

One Israeli soldier was also killed.

The raid on Jenin was one of the biggest operations carried out by the Israeli forces in the West Bank in years.

Turkey is home to prominent Hamas officials even though the Palestinian group, which controls the Gaza strip, is considered a terror organisation by much of the West.

 

Haniyeh and the group’s former chief Khaled Meshal visits Turkey often.

Erdogan is a fervent supporter of the Palestinian cause and a fierce critic of Israel — but he altered regional strategy by initiating an outreach to Israel after several years of tensions.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was due to visit Turkey this week, but his visit was later postponed, after he had surgery last weekend and as Israel is roiled by protests over contentious judicial reform.

Erdogan on Tuesday promised to continue supporting the Palestinian cause and voiced concerns over the flare up of violence in the West Bank, after meeting with Abbas separately.

“We will continue to support the Palestinian cause in the strongest way possible,” Erdogan said, alongside the Palestinian leader.

“We are deeply worried about the increasing loss of life, destruction, the expansion of illegal settlements and settlers violence,” the Turkish leader said.

“The only way to a just and lasting peace in the region is to defend the vision of a two-state solution.”

Israeli forces killed a Palestinian in the occupied West Bank on Wednesday, the Palestinian health ministry said, as the army confirmed it was conducting “counterterrorism activity” in a Nablus refugee camp.

 

Glitzy Dubai hungry for culinary fame

By - Jul 26,2023 - Last updated at Jul 26,2023

Chefs prepare dish ingredients at Moonrise Middle Eastern-Japanese fusion restaurant in Dubai on July 3 (AFP photo)

DUBAI — French chef Renaud Dutel never thought his career would take him to the United Arab Emirates’ glam hub of Dubai, but has found there a culinary capital in the making.

Five years since he was offered a spot at a fancy restaurant in the Gulf financial and tourism hub — better known for its skyscrapers than its food scene — Dutel is delighted to have “taken the risk”.

“I believe Dubai is at the beginning,” he told AFP as lobster cuts were sizzling on a skillet beside him at STAY, a Michelin-starred restaurant specialised in French cuisine on the city’s signature Palm Jumeirah man-made island.

“But [Dubai] is on the way to becoming one of the best destinations in the world to come to dine.”

Boasting about 13,000 restaurants and cafes, some of the city’s eateries are already making global waves.

Last year, 11 Dubai restaurants were awarded the Middle East’s first Michelin stars, with more joining the prestigious club this year.

Some like STAY by Yannick Alleno clinched two stars, but none made it to three — Michelin’s highest honour.

“Dubai’s gastronomy scene has transformed the city into one of the most diverse and dynamic food hubs in the world,” said Issam Kazim of the local government’s tourism and economy department.

 

‘100 per cent Dubai’ 

 

The UAE, a five-decade federation of seven emirates along the eastern coast of the Arabian Peninsula, lacks the rich culinary heritage of other Arab states.

The meat-heavy Emirati cuisine is strongly influenced by historic trade ties with present-day Iran and India.

But it did not see the “gastronomisation” that culinary traditions in much of the West did, according to Loic Bienassis of the European Institute for the History and Culture of Food.

Still, it “can be done”, he told AFP. “And political will can play a role.”

Instead, with expats largely outnumbering the local Emirati population, the city’s rich cultural mix has yielded a unique culinary identity.

Moonrise, a rooftop restaurant which offers a Middle Eastern-Japanese fusion and only seats 12 people at a time, is a prime example.

Solemann Haddad, Moonrise’s head chef and co-owner, described the food as one-third European, one-third Japanese and one-third Arabic, “but it’s 100 percent Dubai”.

Haddad, born in the city to French and Syrian parents, won a coveted Michelin star last year at the ripe age of 27.

His dishes reflect the cosmopolitan spirit of Dubai, he told AFP, combining elements such as date syrup with a chutney of saffron and pineapple.

Having established itself as a business and luxury hot spot, Dubai is now also attracting some of the world’s leading culinary names including Alleno and fellow Frenchman Pierre Gagnaire.

Desert-sourced 

 

Britain’s Gordon Ramsay, Japan’s Nobu Matsuhisa and Italy’s Massimo Bottura have also joined the roster of celebrity chefs with a presence in the city.

But beyond importing top talent, Dubai is also fostering local stars, said Habib Al Mulla, an Emirati lawyer and culinary blogger who has reviewed more than 700 establishments worldwide.

“A new, young generation of homegrown chefs are coming up,” he told AFP.

“Many of them are winning... worldwide recognition.”

Dubai’s rising culinary stars include not only chefs but also restauranteurs such as Omar Shihab, born and raised in the UAE to a Jordanian family.

The restaurant he founded, BOCA, was awarded the Michelin Green Star for sustainability this year.

Shihab sources a bulk of his produce from the UAE — a feat in a country that imports more than 80 per cent of its food needs.

“Let’s face it, we live in the desert,” he told AFP.

“But through our sourcing policy, we prioritise local ingredients.”

Some 30-40 per cent of fruit and vegetables served at BOCA come from hydroponic Emirati farms, and up to 80 per cent of the fish sourced from the UAE or nearby shores, said Shihab.

“We do not have any local or regional suppliers” for meat and chicken, he said.

“But we make sure that the farms we rely on, we know their names, we know a little bit about their practises, no matter where they are in the world.”

 

Three Palestinians killed by Israeli forces in West Bank

Hamas says the 3 were members of its Ezzedine Al Qassam Brigades armed wing

By - Jul 25,2023 - Last updated at Jul 25,2023

Residents inspect the damage following an Israeli raid to search for wanted Palestinians at the Nur Shams refugee camp, east of Tulkarim, in the occupied West Bank, on Monday (AFP photo)

NABLUS, Palestinian Territories — Israeli forces killed three Palestinians in the occupied West Bank on Tuesday, the Palestinian health ministry said, the latest deaths in a surge of violence in the territory since early last year.

"Three Palestinians have been killed by Israeli bullets in Nablus," the ministry said. Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, said the three were members of its armed wing.

The Israeli forces said three "armed terrorists" had opened fire on its soldiers from a vehicle in a Nablus neighbourhood and the Israeli forces fired back "to neutralise" them.

The soldiers recovered three M-16 rifles, a gun, cartridges and other military equipment, the army said in a statement.

The Palestinian health ministry identified the dead as Nour Al Deen Al Ardah, 32, Montaser Salameh, 33, and Saad Al Kharaz, 43.

Hamas said the three were members of its Ezzedine Al Qassam Brigades armed wing.

"We mourn our heroic Qassam martyrs who died this morning in an armed clash with the occupation forces in Nablus," Hamas said in a statement.

The Palestinian president's spokesman, Nabil Abu Rudeineh, said the killing of the three men amounted to a "war crime".

"Israeli crimes will not bring our people to their knees, and will not bring security and stability to anyone," he said in a statement.

Israel has occupied the West Bank since the June War of 1967.

Since early last year, the territory has seen a string of attacks by Palestinians on Israeli targets, as well as violence by Israeli settlers against Palestinian communities.

Violence linked to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict this year has killed at least 201 Palestinians, 27 Israelis, one Ukrainian and one Italian, according to an AFP tally compiled from official sources on both sides.

They include, on the Palestinian side, combatants as well civilians and, on the Israeli side, three members of the Arab minority.

Excluding Israeli-occupied East Jerusalem, the West Bank is home to nearly three million Palestinians, as well as around 490,000 Israelis who live in settlements considered illegal under international law.

16 killed as homes hit in Khartoum air, artillery strikes

By - Jul 25,2023 - Last updated at Jul 25,2023

WADI MADANI, Sudan — Air strikes and artillery barrages from Sudan's warring generals killed at least 16 people in a Khartoum neighbourhood on Tuesday, a neighbourhood group reported.

After more than 100 days of war, the latest bombardments added to a toll of at least 3,900 killed nationwide.

"Sixteen citizens died today in this senseless war" when shells hit civilian homes in the Ombada area of Khartoum's northwest, the neighbourhood group said.

It is one of many pro-democracy "resistance committees" that have cobbled together supplies over the patchy Internet, land lines, or by risking their own lives to venture out since the war began.

The total number of casualties from the latest strikes was still unclear, the committee added in statements provided to AFP.

Mohamed Mansour, a local resident, told AFP he "helped pull eight bodies" from the rubble of homes destroyed by the blasts.

"Four people were killed in the house next door, including two children," said another resident, Hagar Youssef.

The war that began on April 15 between army chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan and his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Daglo, commander of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), has uprooted more than 3.3 million other people from their homes.

Much of the fighting has taken place in densely populated neighbourhoods of the capital Khartoum, where residents on Tuesday reported a renewed RSF attack on the army's ammunition corps in the city's south.

Pro-democracy lawyers said late Monday that civilians in the city’s south and centre were again being “forcibly evacuated from their homes, to be used by fighters” as bases.

Mediators from the United States and Saudi Arabia have previously accused the RSF of “occupation of civilian homes, private businesses, and public buildings”.

 

‘Catastrophic humanitarian crisis’ 

 

For more than three months, millions have been rationing water and electricity in the stifling heat, shielding their families from blasts and unable to reach the few health care facilities still functioning.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) warned Tuesday of the “catastrophic humanitarian crisis” facing Sudan, “with more than 67 percent of the country’s hospitals out of service”.

Healthcare and aid facilities have themselves frequently come under attack or been looted by both forces.

Fighters have also been accused of rampant sexual violence, reports which the WHO said it was “appalled by”.

Alleged sexual and gender based crimes are a focus of a new investigation announced earlier this month by the International Criminal Court into alleged war crimes in Sudan.

The WHO reiterated demands for an urgent response to help prevent outbreaks of disease during the rainy season, which began in June and brought increased reports of malaria, cholera and other water-borne diseases — particularly in remote areas.

“Outbreaks are likely to claim more lives unless urgent action is taken to halt their spread,” said Ahmed Al Mandhari and Matshidiso Moeti, WHO regional directors for the Eastern Mediterranean and Africa, respectively.

On Monday, the UN children’s agency said it had documented “2,500 severe violations of children’s rights — an average of at least one an hour” since the fighting began, with at least 435 children killed and 2,025 injured.

More than half of Sudan’s 48 million people are in need of aid and protection, the UN says, but only a fraction of those have received assistance because of the security challenges, bureaucratic hurdles and other obstacles cited by aid groups.

The UN’s World Food Programme said it has reached more than 1.4 million people with emergency food aid as needs intensify.

 

Civilian talks 

 

Although there is no sign an end to the war is near, peace attempts have taken place.

The Forces for Freedom and Change, Sudan’s main civilian bloc, attended a two-day civilian meeting, which began on Monday in Cairo and sought to “restore the path of peace and stop the war in Sudan”, according to FFC spokesman Jaafar Hassan.

The FFC was ousted from power in a 2021 coup orchestrated by Burhan and Daglo, and which derailed the country’s transition to democracy.

The two generals later fell out in a feud that exploded into war.

US- and Saudi-brokered ceasefires were systematically violated, before Washington and Riyadh adjourned talks.

A quartet from East African regional bloc IGAD has also sought to mediate, but with little success.

 

Algeria battles raging wildfires that have killed 34

By - Jul 25,2023 - Last updated at Jul 25,2023

Firefighters attempt to extinguish a raging forest fire near the town of Melloula in north-western Tunisia close to the border with Algeria on Monday (AFP photo)

ALGIERS — Algerian firefighters were on Tuesday battling blazes that have killed 34 people across the tinder-dry north, destroyed homes and coastal resorts and turned vast forest areas into blackened wastelands.

Witnesses described fleeing walls of flames that raged "like a blowtorch" as TV footage showed charred cars, burnt-out shops and smouldering fields and scrubland.

Severe fires have raged through the mountain forests of the Kabylia region on the Mediterranean coast, fanned by winds amid blistering summer heat that peaked at 48 degrees Celsius on Monday.

President Abdelmadjid Tebboune sent his condolences to the families of those killed — among them 10 soldiers trapped by flames at Beni Ksila, in Bejaia province, according to the defence ministry.

“I have nowhere to go now — my house and that of my son have been completely destroyed by flames,” said a tearful elderly woman who lost her daughter-in-law and granddaughter, speaking on TV from Ait Oussalah.

Authorities reported progress in fighting back the almost 100 fires reported in recent days, having mobilised more than 8,000 civil defence personnel, over 500 fire trucks and multiple chartered aircraft.

Out of 97 fires, most had been brought under control but 13 were ongoing by Tuesday afternoon, the interior ministry said as temperatures dropped somewhat and winds eased.

The public prosecutor of Bejaia ordered an investigation into the causes of the fires and possible perpetrators.

An unknown number of people suffered injuries from burns to smoke inhalation, and more then 1,500 were evacuated as the fires hit 15 provinces, especially Bejaia, Bouira and Jijel.

 

Climate change 

and drought 

 

Much of the water-scarce northern African region has been hit by serious drought, severe summer heat and regular wildfires, a trend expected to worsen as climate change intensifies.

Serious fires have also raged in recent days in neighbouring Tunisia, especially the northwestern Tabarka region.

An AFP team there witnessed significant damage and saw helicopters and Canadair water bombers in action.

More than 300 people were evacuated from the coastal village of Melloula by boat and overland.

Firefighters were still battling flames Tuesday in three areas in the northwest, Bizerte, Siliana and Beja.

Northern and eastern Algeria battle forest fires every summer.

In August last year, 37 people were killed by fires in the northeastern El Tarf region, a year after 90 died, mostly in Kabylia.

To prepare for this year’s fire season, Algerian authorities deployed observation drones and created multiple helicopter landing sites.

The government in May announced the purchase of a large water bomber aircraft and the rental of six others from South America.

Algeria also placed an order with Russia for four water bombers, but reported that their delivery was delayed by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Local media reflected anger about the latest deadly fires, with the TSA news site asking, “in view of all these measures, why couldn’t we avoid the disaster?”

Iran arrests Bahais for Israel links — media

By - Jul 25,2023 - Last updated at Jul 25,2023

TEHRAN — Iranian authorities have arrested several followers of the Bahai faith accused of spying for Tehran's arch-foe Israel, local media in the Islamic republic reported on Tuesday.

The Bahais, Iran's largest non-Muslim religious minority, are not recognised by the state and often targeted over alleged ties to Israel — home to their most important shrines and world headquarters.

"A number of members at the core of the Bahai spy party have been arrested in Gilan province" in Iran's north, said Fars news agency, citing an intelligence services statement.

Fars reported the group was alleged to have links "with the Zionist centre known as Bayt Al Adl located in the occupied Palestinian territories", referring to the Bahais' Universal House of Justice in the coastal Israeli city of Haifa.

The report did not specify how many had been arrested.

The intelligence services also accused the group of "promoting Bahai teachings" particularly among children, according to Fars.

Iran, where Shiite Islam is the state religion, recognises some minority faiths including Christianity, Judaism and Zoroastrianism.

Bahais, however, are branded “heretics” by the Islamic republic.

In August authorities arrested a group of Bahais and 12 more followers the following month, all on similar charges relating to alleged links to Israel.

Bahais consider Bahaullah, born in 1817 in modern-day Iran, to be the latest prophet sent by God and founder of their monotheistic faith.

The group has complained of discrimination in Iran since the emergence of their faith in the second half of the 19th century, well before the 1979 Islamic revolution.

The Bahai community claims to have more than 7 million followers worldwide, including some 300,000 in Iran.

US says Russia damaged American drone over Syria

By - Jul 25,2023 - Last updated at Jul 25,2023

This image released by the US Department of Defence, shows a Russian fighter plane flying close to a US MQ-9 Reaper drone before deploying flares from a position directly over the drone, on Sunday (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON — Russian fighter aircraft dropped flares above a US drone as it took part in a mission against the Daesh group in Syria, damaging its propeller, a US commander said on Tuesday.

The United States has accused Russian pilots of putting both aircraft and crewmembers at risk with a series of unsafe and unprofessional maneuvers this month over Syria, where Moscow’s forces are deployed to support President Bashar Assad.

On Sunday, “Russian fighter aircraft flew dangerously close to a US MQ-9 drone on a defeat-ISIS mission, harassing the MQ-9 and deploying flares from a position directly overhead,” US Air Force Lt. Gen. Alexus Grynkewich said in a statement, using an acronym for the Daesh group.

“One of the Russian flares struck the US MQ-9, severely damaging its propeller,” but it was able to return to its base, Grynkewich said, calling on “Russian forces in Syria to put an immediate end to this reckless, unprovoked, and unprofessional behaviour”.

While most of the recent incidents have involved harassment of drones, Grynkewich said a Russian jet “closely approached” a manned reconnaissance plane on July 16, forcing it to fly through the warplane’s wake turbulence and reducing the “crew’s ability to safely operate the aircraft”.

Earlier in the month, the United States said Russian aircraft harassed American MQ-9 drones over Syria on two occasions within 24 hours, including by dropping flares in front of them.

And in March, Washington said a Russian jet clipped the propeller of an MQ-9 drone operating over the Black Sea, causing it to crash.

French envoy in Lebanon to seek way out of political deadlock

By - Jul 25,2023 - Last updated at Jul 25,2023

Lebanon’s Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri (right) receives French special envoy Jean-Yves Le Drian in Beirut, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Lebanon’s powerful parliament speaker Nabih Berri met on Tuesday with French special envoy Jean-Yves Le Drian, in Beirut to help resolve divisions that have left the presidency vacant for nearly nine months.

A statement from Berri’s office said the meeting was “good” and that “an opening has pierced through” Lebanon’s power vacuum, without elaborating.

Mired in a gruelling economic crisis since 2019, Lebanon has been governed by a caretaker cabinet for more than a year and without a president since late October.

Le Drian, on his second mission to Lebanon, gave no public statement after the meeting with Berri.

The French envoy is set to hold discussions with other political leaders during his three-day visit.

Le Drian “is coming to present the results of the Doha meeting and his talks in Saudi Arabia”, a French diplomatic source told AFP, referring to recent moves meant to encourage Lebanon to name a new president.

“He will try to reconcile points of view and create favourable conditions for a consensual solution to emerge,” the source added.

Lebanese lawmakers failed 12 times to elect a successor to former president Michel Aoun amid bitter disputes between the powerful Iran-backed Shiite movement Hizbollah and its opponents.

On July 17, representatives of Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United States, France and Qatar gathered in Doha to discuss Lebanon, urging parliament to choose a president and politicians to “take immediate steps to break the impasse”.

“We discussed concrete options with respect to implementing measures against those who are blocking progress on this front,” the statement said.

Le Drian came to Lebanon last month for the first time as France’s envoy, meeting key figures on a “consultative” mission to push for a solution to the protracted political deadlock.

Multiple attempts spearheaded by Lebanon’s former colonial ruler France to extricate the country from its woes have ended in failure.

 

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF