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Author: Zineb Bettayeb

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Sablettes beach in Algiers. The pace of illegal migration has intensified, despite prison terms of six months for those arrested by the coastguard (photo: Zineb Bettayeb)

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 reportsMore

Coronavirus fallout: Tunisia post-lockdown – should we stay or should we go?The Middle East's "Axis of Failure": Arab autocrats – ruining their own statesMigration policy: Europe's migrants are part of the solution
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  1. Women's voices

    Iranian literature in times of uprising

  2. Women’s Rights in Afghanistan

    The Taliban cannot defeat women

  3. Eye-witness on Iran protests

    Exiled artist Forouhar: 'A country in turmoil'

  4. Forced marriage in Turkey

    Turkish state fails child bride in sect marriage

  5. Women's rights in Egypt

    We need to talk about abortion

  6. Climate change impacts Somalia

    What future without rain – or aid?

  1. Forced marriage in Turkey

    Turkish state fails child bride in sect marriage

  2. Sex life in Saudi Arabia

    Lifting the veil

  3. Economic crisis on the Nile

    Is Egypt the 'new Lebanon'?

  4. Female scholars in Islam

    Unsung guardians of the 'true' tradition

  5. Women's voices

    Iranian literature in times of uprising

  6. Eye-witness on Iran protests

    Exiled artist Forouhar: 'A country in turmoil'

In brief

  • Israel hits Gaza as conflict flares after West Bank clashes

  • IMF announces visit to crisis-hit Pakistan

  • Hijabi 'indie mothers' embraced by young Indonesian music fans

  • All eyes on turnout as Tunisia votes again after boycott

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Most Recent Photo Essay

Goodbye forever? A woman in a burka leaving a university in Kandahar province. She will not be allowed to return. In a government statement in mid-December 2022, the Islamist Taliban instructed all universities – private as well as public – in Afghanistan to ban women from attending. All female students were barred from universities with immediate effect

The Taliban's war on women

Since seizing power in mid-2021, the Taliban have continued to restrict the rights of Afghan women and girls. At the end of 2022, they banned women from attending higher education. By Nele Jensch

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