Skip to content

{ Category Archives } Arab World

16 Die in Attack on U.S. Embassy in Yemen

In the morning of Wednesday, September 17, 2008 there was an attack by militants in Yemen on the U.S. Embassy. 16 were left dead including six of the attackers. There were two forms of attack, the first was armed militants firing at the Embassy guards and the second was a car driving into the building [...]

Tagged

Dubai: Trying to Bridge the Gap Between Secularism and Religion in the Arab World

In the seventh installment in their series “Generation Faithful,” the New York Times profiles life in fast paced Dubai, where an atmosphere of moderation and tolerance help Arab young people bridge the sometimes difficult tension between secular and religious ways of life. However, living in Dubai is still challenging for those foreign Arabs who are used [...]

Iran Asserting Itself in the Strait of Hormuz

The six Arab Gulf Cooperation States (GCC) have condemned Iran for setting up offices on three disputed islands near the Strait of Hormuz, through which much of the world’s oil is shipped.  The islands - Abu Musa, Greater Tunb, and Lesser Tunb -  are claimed by both Iran and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The GCC [...]

How Far Libya and the U.S. Have Come!

U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has met with Libya’s ruler Muammar Qaddafi in Libya.  She is the first U.S. Secretary of state to visit Libya since 1953.
Story at BBC
See also:  Helene Cooper, “Isolation Over, Libyan Leader Meets With Rice,” New York Times, Sept. 6, 2008
More on Libya

Libya’s Ruler Muammar Qaddafi Profiled

See the BBC profile of Libyan leader Muammar al-Qaddafi (also spelled Gaddafi)
More on Libya

Drive to Regulate Public Morality Growing in Yemen

Conservative Islamist clerics and tribal chieftains in Yemen, a country where the reach of state power is limited, are pushing for stronger regulation of public morality. 
Story from the BBC

Palestinian Poet Mahmoud Darwish is Dead

The man nicknamed the “national poet” of Palestine has passed away.
Story at BBC

New Troubles for Egyptian Human Rights Activist

Egyptian university professor and political activist Saad Eddin Ibrahim has been sentenced to two years in jail for “tarnishing the reputation of Egypt. ”
Story from the BBC
More on Professor Ibrahim
Translation of an article that helped get Ibrahim in trouble.

Food and Water in the Middle East

The New York Times’ Andrew Martin wrote recently on the impact of rising prices and global food shortages on the Middle East.
Andrew Martin, “Mideast Facing Choice Between Crops and Water,” New York Times, July 21, 2008
More on water shortages in the Middle East

Algerian Militants: From Nationalist Insurgents to Global Jihadists

Militant Islamists in Algeria, who prompted a bloody civil war there in the 1990s, have forged new ties with Al-Qaeda and are attempting to transform what had been a nationalist insurgency into part of the global jihad.
Souad Mekhennet, Michael Moss, Eric Schmitt, Elaine Sciolino and Margot Williams, “A Threat Renewed: A Ragtag Insurgency Gains a [...]