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  • In Turkey, concerts and festivals by artists at odds with the government line are being cancelled with increasing frequency. Islamist and nationalist groups are often responsible.
    Music festivals in Turkey

    Only "halal" festivals acceptable?

    In Turkey, concerts and festivals by artists at odds with the government line are being cancelled with increasing frequency. Islamist and nationalist groups are often responsible. Elmas Topcu and Aynur Tekin report

  • In the presidential and parliamentary elections coming up on 14 May, one in five eligible voters will be under the age of 30. What does Generation Z want, and will it end up deciding the elections?
    Turkish elections

    Can Turkey's Gen Z tip the scales?

    In Turkey's presidential and parliamentary elections on 14 May, one in five eligible voters will be under the age of 30. What does Generation Z want, and will it end up deciding the elections? By Ceyda Nurtsch

  • From the south to the north of their country, more and more Egyptians – crushed under the weight of 33.9 percent annual inflation, as of March – are having to abandon once-cherished rituals of celebration and mourning.
    Economic crisis in Egypt

    Rising costs spell doom for Egyptian village traditions

    Multi-day weddings, feeding the bereaved and homemade bread are all becoming things of the past in rural Egypt, as centuries-old traditions are steadily squeezed by a punishing economic crisis

  • Food prices doubled, salaries halved, banks restricting withdrawals: Egyptians now have the same problems as the Lebanese. But if things get worse here, the fallout will be far more damaging.
    Economic crisis on the Nile

    Is Egypt the 'new Lebanon'?

    Food prices doubled, salaries halved, banks restricting withdrawals: Egyptians now have the same problems as the Lebanese. But if things get worse here, the fallout will be far more damaging. By Cathrin Schaer

  • British-Egyptian Alaa Abdel Fattah, one of the leading youth leaders during the 2011 Arab Spring, started a hunger strike in prison on 2 April 2022. As COP27 began in Sharm El-Sheikh, Fattah announced he would stop drinking water. His aim: to highlight the plight of thousands of people – including human rights defenders, journalists, students, opposition politicians and peaceful protesters – currently languishing in Egypt’s jails.
    COVID-19, COP27 and World Cup 2022

    Crisis management in the Arab world

    November 2022 sees the Arab world firmly in the spotlight with the COP27 in Egypt and the FIFA World Cup in Qatar. Public trust in MENA governments is weak, thanks to their miserable record in protecting citizens’ rights, which leaves nations ill-equipped to handle complex crises like climate change or COVID-19. By Jan Voelkel

  • Sablettes beach in Algiers. The pace of illegal migration has intensified, despite prison terms of six months for those arrested.
    Human rights and migration

    Why older Algerians risk the small boats to Spain

    Nouara may be 65, but she is ready to join thousands of others who burn their ID and pay traffickers for the chance of a new life in Europe. Zineb Bettayeb reports

  • Egypt is again mired in a severe economic, monetary and balance of payments crisis. Yet the construction and real estate boom continues unabated – despite socioeconomic distress and empty state coffers – supported to a considerable extent by loans from abroad worth billions and the sell-out of state property.
    Egypt's real estate frenzy

    An "iron curtain" between rich and poor

    Egypt’s military regime is tirelessly modernising roads, public transport and industry across the country and erecting a luxurious administrative capital for the upper class. But the construction boom is primarily financed on credit – Cairo is racing headlong into a debt crisis. By Sofian Philip Naceur

  • The ongoing legal dispute between Qatar Airways and European aircraft manufacturer Airbus may threaten preparations for the FIFA World Cup in Qatar.
    FIFA, France and Qatar

    Qatar Airways' own goal

    While the ongoing legal dispute between Qatar Airways and European aircraft manufacturer Airbus has sent shockwaves across the entire global aviation sector, it may also threaten preparations for the FIFA World Cup in Qatar. By Stasa Salacanin

  • The Pikala Bikes initiative in Morocco

    More mobility, more confidence, more freedom

    In Morocco, the bicycle is considered a poor man's means of transport. What's more, cycling tends to be a male-only affair. The Pikala bike initiative in Marrakesh seeks to change all this. By Marian Brehmer

  • After two years of pandemic-induced closures, popular holiday destinations in North Africa have slowly been coming back to life. Tourism makes up a vital part of national income in countries like Tunisia, Egypt, Morocco and Jordan and as such, also helps maintain political stability.
    Tourism in North Africa

    Tentative recovery, or too little, too late?

    Tourists have been returning to Tunisia, Egypt and Morocco. But, given the global uncertainty caused by the Ukraine war, will the comeback be enough to save a struggling sector, revive lost jobs and avoid unrest? Cathrin Schaer and Mohammed Magdy report

  • Sri Lanka is now almost without gasoline and faces an acute shortage of other fuels. Authorities have announced nationwide power cuts of up to four hours a day and asked state employees not to work on Fridays, except for those needed for essential services.
    Which country will be next?

    Lebanon and Sri Lanka share economic collapse

    Lebanon and Sri Lanka may be a world apart, but they share a history of political turmoil and violence that has led to the collapse of once-prosperous economies bedevilled by corruption, patronage, nepotism and incompetence. By Zeina Karam and David Rising

  • Musica Sequenza Chamber Music Ensemble

    Spanning times and cultures

    Berlin-based international chamber music ensemble Musica Sequenza is known for its modern interpretation of baroque music. With his latest project, the opera "Kassia", composer and ensemble director Burak Ozdemir transcends temporal, cultural and geographical boundaries. By Ceyda Nurtsch

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