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Tuesday 18 May, 2010
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MEI vol 2 Issue 13

MEI vol 2 Issue 13




MEI Magazine

€5.95

Product ID: RP-9-0013
Status: Available

Format: 270 x 200 mm
Page: 32
Language: English
Publisher: MEI Publications Ltd, Nicosia  
Year: 2010
ISSN: 0047-7249
Issues: 25 Issues/12 Months

                

              Cyprus: back-pedalling from reunification?
Viewpoint


Water: ducking the issues

From Mark Zeitoun

Centuries of conflict over the Nile River almost ended in mid-April. The refusal by Egypt and Sudan to sign the Framework Agreement that would have coordinated development and possible re-distribution of Nile flows came, however, as no surprise...


News Analysis


Cyprus


Mutually incompatible visions

From Michael Jansen in Nicosia

On 23 April, hard-line Turkish Cypriot nationalist Derviș Eroğlu assumed the presidency of the breakaway region in northern Cyprus occupied by Turkey since 1974. He had defeated the incumbent president, Mehmet Ali Talat, in an election on 18...


A step closer to partition
From George Tsalakos in Nicosia

The election of Derviș Eroğlu as the new Turkish-Cypriot leader, succeeding Mehmet Ali Talat, complicates efforts to find a solution to the Cyprus problem. Eroğlu’s political animateur has been the ex-leader of the Turkish-Cypriot community...

Positive statements, low expecations

From Nicole Pope in Istanbul

Derviş Eroğlu’s electoral victory was expected, but it nonetheless marked a setback for Turkey’s ‘zero problem’ regional foreign policy, given his opposition to the notion of a single sovereignty for Cyprus. What will happen next is...


International law


Occupation and criminal responsibility

From Michael Jansen in Nicosia

During a lecture delivered in Nicosia on 16 April, South African judge and legal expert John Dugard suggested innovative remedies to combat the phenomenon of “new colonialism” as it has developed in Cyprus, Palestine and Western Sahara. Dugard,...


Palestine


Taxing times in Gaza
From Nicolas Pelham in Gaza

Gaza’s economic doldrums deepened in April as the Hamas authorities substantially hiked local taxation on the already beleaguered population. Taxes climbed highest on goods smuggled by tunnel from Egypt: cigarettes rose from seven to 10 shekels a...


Expecting nothing

From Diana Buttu in Ramallah

When David Hale, deputy to US Special Envoy George Mitchell, flew to meet Mahmoud Abbas in Amman on a surprise visit on 21 April, many believed that a breakthrough was afoot in the repeatedly stalled ‘proximity talks’ between the PLO and...

Israel


One holy row....

From Peretz Kidron in West Jerusalem

In the improbable event of Israeli towns and cities mounting a contest for the ugliest building within their domains, Jerusalem apparently has the best chance of winning. The architectural monstrosity concerned is a complex of five towers, adjoined...


....and the cynicism grows

From Haim Baram in West Jerusalem

The atmosphere of pervasive sleaze is almost suffocating. It is further exacerbated by the extensive TV coverage, which shows snatched images of famous public figures, their unkempt hair and swollen eyes betraying deep anxiety. The suspects normally...

Syria

Much ado about Scuds

From Omayma Abdel-Latif in Beirut


On 11 April, the Kuwaiti daily al-Ra’i al-Aam published a report by its Washington correspondent referring to a “silent crisis” between Damascus and Washington over accusations of recent Scud missile transfers to Hizbullah. The paper’s...

Lebanon


A drizzle of light rain
From Nicholas Blanford in Beirut

The Lebanese government has been publicly dismissive of the latest flurry of reports suggesting that Syria has transferred Scud missiles to Hizbullah that can strike any target in Israel, even from the Lebanese group’s camouflaged strongholds in...

Jordan

Mysterious missiles
From Sana Abdallah in Amman

Mystery continues to surround two, or possibly three, short-range rockets that were supposedly aimed at Israel in the early hours of 22 April. One of the missiles struck a deserted warehouse on the outskirts of Jordan’s Red Sea port city of Aqaba,...

Iran

Flexing muscles

From Paul Sampson in London

After a brief lull, tensions have been rising in Iran on both the regional and domestic fronts. In the Gulf, the Revolutionary Guard (Sepah) spooked Arab neighbours by carrying out a five-day military drill that involved firing missiles in the...

United States

The ties that bind
From Graham Usher in New York

Fifteen months after he became president, a distinctly Barack Obama foreign policy is starting to emerge. Unlike the imperial overreaches in Iraq and Afghanistan that characterised the watch of George W Bush, Obama’s marks a return to a...

Unrepresentative chequebooks
From Ian Williams in New York

Recently, Ronald S Lauder, the lipstick magnate, and Elie Wiesel, one of many dubiously entitled Nobel Peace Prize winners, took out full-page advertisements in the major American newspapers attacking their own government’s foreign policy over...


Turkey

Whirlwind diplomacy

From Nicole Pope in Istanbul

Turkey’s Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu has embarked on a dizzying round of diplomatic talks in the past couple of weeks, travelling from Washington to Brazilia, from Tehran to Brussels as well as to Baku. His most pressing foreign policy...

Iraq

Perilously in the balance
From Jim Muir in Baghdad

Iraq is living through some of its most crucial moments in the fateful struggle over its future. With the Americans preparing to stage major troop withdrawals, a rash of bombs giving Baghdad its bloodiest day so far this year, and political tension...

Iraqi media: under pressure, under fire

From Peter Feuilherade

Iraq retains its dark reputation as one of the world’s most dangerous places for journalists. The country has the worst record for unsolved murders of journalists and media workers, the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)...

Sudan

‘Instruments of power’ prevail
From Julie Flint in London

Twenty-one years after seizing power in a military coup, and 14 months after being charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur, President Omar al-Bashir has been elected to lead Sudan for the next five years in the country’s...

Egypt

Water worries
From Issandr el Amrani in Cairo

“Call Egypt’s bluff,” said an editorial in Kenya’s Daily Nation last week. The bluff in question was over Egypt’s refusal to sign a new Cooperation Framework Agreement after the latest meeting of the Nile Basin Initiative (NBI), in Sharm...


Yemen

The signs bode ill
From Philip McCrum in Bath, UK

The failed attack by a suicide bomber on the British ambassador in Sana’a on 26 April has ensured that the terrorist threat from Yemen remains headline news. In preceding weeks, al-Qa’ida’s activities in the country had dominated international...


Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia: tiptoeing towards legal reform

From Neil Partrick

The Higher Council of Ulema (HCU), the most senior clerical body in Saudi Arabia, has reportedly decided to approve the codification of shari’a law, a move that could alter radically the country’s legal system and, in the process, challenge...

Features


Yemen's 'silent emergency'

From Hugh Macleod

With the outside world looking the other way and the government in denial, a humanitarian crisis has been creeping up on the country. Hugh Macleod reports from Sana’a Hunger in Yemen begins in the womb and continues to blight the lives of...


China's Gulf calculations
From Philip McCrum

Philip McCrum considers the policy implications of China’s growing reliance on Middle East energy, markets and trade routes In the last week of March, two Chinese warships docked in Abu Dhabi’s Zayed Port, marking the first time the...


Reviews

Stereotype-bursting history

From Ian Williams

Crossing Mandelbaum Gate: Coming of Age – Between the Arabs and Israelis 1956-1978 Kai Bird Scribner (New York), 2010, $30 ISBN: 9781416544401 Kai Bird is a distinguished biographer of American statesmen and their effect on public policy....

Part of the explanation
From Ghada Khouri

Islam and the Middle East: An Insight into Theory and Praxis Farid Mirbagheri, Editor University of Nicosia Press/Deadalos Institute of Geopolitics, 2009, €15 ISBN: 9789963634712 As a collection of papers from two separate conferences, Islam...

Letter From


Letter from Hebron
From Catrina Stewart

Speaking flawless Arabic, an Israeli soldier falls into conversation with a group of Palestinians. He smiles and jokes, and accepts a cup of coffee. Just metres away, his colleagues stand listlessly in the sun-soaked street, controlling access to...


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Middle East International magazine was established in 1971 and remains a respected source for independent news, analysis and commentary on the region. To subscribe to MEI, please visit www.meionline.com

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