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From Dalia Ziada at Bikya Masr:
On the morning of the first day of Eid el-Adha, while watching the sheep from my house and other houses in my street herded, without resistance, to a spot at the end of the street to be slaughtered, they reminded me of the submissive majority of my country, who… Read more
My book, What's Really Wrong with the Middle East, is reviewed in the Guardian today by Avi Shlaim. He describes it as "lively, highly readable and illuminating".
For other recent reviews, see Patrick Seale (al-Hayat), Sholto Byrnes (New Statesman), … Read more
Egypt is holding hundreds of people in indefinite detention because they are suspected of trying to emigrate to Europe illegally, according to a local human rights organisation.
The Cairo-based Land Centre for Human Rights appears to have uncovered a previously-unreported category of… Read more
One of the more impressive features of the hajj, I have always thought, is its egalitarianism. Pilgrims perform their rituals in a state that is as close as possible to what nature intended. Wrapped only in a single piece of unstitched cloth and with the simplest of footwear, they do… Read more
A BBC radio programme broadcast on Monday (re-playable here) has shed some new and intriguing light on Britain's role in the Omani coup of 1970 when Sultan Qaboos deposed his father.
Basically, it was decided that Qaboos would serve British interests better than his father and plans were… Read more
At least four people – and possibly as many as seven – died yesterday in clashes between southern separatists and security forces in southern Yemen. Two of the dead were said to be soldiers.
Shooting broke out at a rally in Ataq (Shabwa province) which was reportedly attended by about 1,000 people… Read more
The Center for a New American Security – a thinktank with links to the Obama administration – has published a paper on US policy towards Yemen. It is concerned, of course, with American interests rather than the interests of Yemenis and it says: “The consequences of instability in Yemen… Read more
Human Rights Watch has written to King Abdullah complainingabout the growing number of “sorcery” cases in Saudi Arabia.
"Saudi courts are sanctioning a literal witch hunt by the religious police," the organisation says. "The crime of ‘witchcraft' is being used against all sorts of behaviour,… Read more
There are signs that Kuwaiti MPs may finally get an opportunity to question their prime minister. If it happens, this would be a milestone for parliamentary government and it could bring an end to a long succession of political crises.
The questioning of ministers, which can lead to a vote of no… Read more
The National newspaper reports from Oman on a rarely-discussed phenomenon: prejudice against widows.
"Many Omani widows struggle to lead happy lives after losing their husbands in a society that treats them as a burden and bad luck," the paper says. "According to a local superstition,… Read more
