Foreign Policy Blogs

Regions

Danger of default averted

ISLAMABAD, Nov 26: The federal cabinet on Wednesday discussed the economic recovery plan against the background of a bailout package approved by the International Monetary Fund and expressed satisfaction that the danger of default had been averted. A meeting of the cabinet presided over by Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani was informed that most of […]

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Resources, Not Ethnicity in the DRC

Few things in life are certain. The sun will rise, the sun will set, and journalists will look at an African crisis and almost inevitably chalk it up primarily to tribal rivalries — and usually they depict those rivalries as “ancient” (and thus somehow immutable). This lazy shorthand almost always obscures more than it elucidates and helps to […]

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Hijab Controversary in Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan

Hijab Controversary in Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan

The legal and cultural battle of whether or not Muslims should be able to wear a headscarf, hijab, in educational or other government facilities has been a well-publicized, contentious debate in such places as Turkey and France, both either straddling or inside the West, but this issue is also starting to boil in parts of […]

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on those incarcerated as terrorists

The LA Times has an interesting Q and A up today with Farhad Khosrokohavar on his work interviewing inmates in a French prison who were detained for terrorism.

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The Guinea-Bissau Coup Attempt

There was an apparent coup attempt in Guinea-Bissau over the weekend.  This IRIN report shows how the coup attempt “has underscored the country's chronic political volatility.”

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Zim Talks Resuming?

Amidst the constant thrum of tumult in Zimbabwe — the criticism from foreign dignitaries locked out of the country, the outbreak of cholera throughout much of the country, a surge in anthrax that has killed both people and livestock, and the general humanitarian crisis caused by mismanagement, malfeasance, and avarice on the party of the […]

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Afghan Justice

Afghan Justice

Good news that hopefully just keeps getting better. The Afghan government, not US/NATO troops, has arrested 10 suspects in the Nov. 12 female student and teacher acid attack. It looks like it was a combination of local Kandahar and federal police and law officials who performed the investigation, arrests, and has reportedly garnered confessions from […]

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If a Russian Journalist Falls in a Forest, Can the West Hear It?

If a Russian Journalist Falls in a Forest, Can the West Hear It?

A Russian journalist assaulted and left for dead for exposing an abuse of power by the authorities. The whole world knows the story of Anna Politkovskaya: a Putin opponent gunned down in the lobby of her Moscow apartment after publishing a series of articles on Russian atrocities in Chechnya. Except this journalist is called Mikhail […]

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Internet resistance

Columbia University, in partnership with the Department of State and some other organizations, including Google and AT&T, is convening a conference from 12/3-12/5 called “the Alliance of Youth Movement” to discuss the ways that Facebook and other social networking websites can provide a launching pad of sorts for nonviolent political resistance. DoS invited 17 organizations […]

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Superbugs at the Mexican Government

In August 2008, an article in the New Yorker described a number of outbreaks of highly resistant infections caused by "superbugs‚ those bacteria that have developed immunity to a wide number of antibiotics." Although the author of the article, Jerome Groopman, was referring to the harmful inhabitants of the human body, he could have been […]

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Egypt's Exporting of Gas to Israel Not Likely to Change

The Egyptian government has appealed a recent court ruling annulling a 2005 Egyptian-Israeli agreement for the export of natural gas to Israel. The court's ruling called for the freezing of the shipments on the basis that the deal was never approved by the Egyptian parliament. Furthermore, opposition to the deal objects to Egypt selling gas […]

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South African Questions (And Answers)

With all of the verbiage flowing and the spin doctors in full effect in South African politics today, it is hard to separate what is true from what is self serving, what is accurate from what is accusation. To wit, consider the following questions (with answers that I humbly submit for your consideration): Is South […]

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Evidence the Chinese Government would like to see Mummified

Evidence the Chinese Government would like to see Mummified

The New York Times, which has done a more than decent job covering the people, culture, and political situation of the Uighurs in China's Xinjiang Province, has a well-researched piece examining the impact of several mummified Xinjiang ancestors’ genetic background. A museum in the province's capital of Urumqi holds several well-preserved mummified humans found in […]

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Blocking Elders and Pointing Fingers

Zimbabwe denied entry into the country this weekend to a group of respected international figures, including former United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan, former United States President Jimmy Carter, and human rights advocate (and wife of Nelson Mandela) Graca Machel. Called “The Elders,” the group did meet with Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) leader Morgan […]

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U.S.-Egypt at the Middle East Institute Conference

The panel on U.S.-Egypt relations proved the highlight of the annual Middle East Institute conference in DC this past Friday.  Graeme Bannerman moderated the panel.  He holds a Ph.D. in Middle Eastern studies, taught at AUB, served as a longtime staffer for Sen Dick Lugar, and most relevantly, for the past decade or longer he […]

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