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  • Two football players close up, one attempts to dribble round the other.
    Arab footballers in Germany

    Is Marmoush following in Salah's footsteps?

    The young Egyptian player Omar Marmoush has made headlines in the German Bundesliga and across Europe, drawing comparisons to his compatriot, the Liverpool legend Mohamed Salah.

  • An handout picture provided by the Israeli Goverment Press Office on 4 May 2008 shows Arabs fleeing with just the possessions they are able to carry as they make their way toward Lebanon from villages in the Galilee during Israel's 1948 War of Independence
    Middle East conflict

    Two peoples' experience of displacement

    The Israel-Palestine conflict is multilayered and very complex. The greatest problem is that both sides have reason to believe the other wants to destroy them

  • U.S. and UK planes joined the Israeli air force in shooting down Iranian missiles and drones, with help from some Arab countries
    Iran drone attacks

    Why did some Arab countries help Israel?

    Some analysts saw the fact that Arab nations helped Israel and the U.S. repel a major Iranian attack as cause for celebration. Countries like Jordan have, however, more complicated motivations for coming to Israel's aid

  • Muslims break their daily fast during Ramadan at a mosque complex in Baghdad
    Islam's holy month

    Why more non-Muslims are taking part in Ramadan

    Ramadan's observance is widespread in the Middle East, often involving non-Muslims in the region's celebrations. In Christian-majority countries, participation has been less common, but this trend is starting to shift

  • Dancing dervishes from the Mevlana Order
    750th anniversary of Rumi's death – Part 6

    Academic research and spiritual exploration

    No Islamic mystic in the past two centuries has touched literary figures and academics in both East and West as much as Rumi. A look at the history of research into this hugely influential spiritual teacher

  • Judge Joan Donohue reads out the court ruling on a TV screen as journalists listen in a media centre
    Israel and the ICJ

    UN court ruling on Gaza 'hard to ignore'

    All eyes were on The Hague as the UN's International Court of Justice ordered Israel to prevent genocidal acts in Gaza but failed to demand a ceasefire. The decision puts Israel's allies in a difficult spot

  • Palestinians mourn their relatives killed in the Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip, outside a morgue in Rafah
    Genocide case against Israel

    Where does the rest of the world stand on the momentous allegations?

    South Africa says more than 50 countries have expressed support for its case at the United Nations' top court accusing Israel of genocide against Palestinians in the war in Gaza

  • A carte blanche for Netanyahu harbours risks. This applies especially to the military operation in Gaza. Western governments really ought to know this already.
    Israeli military offensive in Gaza

    Forces unleashed in the Middle East

    A carte blanche for Netanyahu harbours risks. This applies especially to the military operation in Gaza. Western governments really ought to know this already. An interjection by Stefan Buchen

  • Turkey's brain drain

    Turkish artists and intellectuals in exile

    Turkey's academics, doctors, engineers and journalists are not the only ones who are leaving the country. A growing number of artists, writers and intellectuals now live in exile. Many of them face prison sentences in Turkey if they return home. Ceyda Nurtsch report

  • Saudi Arabia and the Khashoggi murder

    Still no justice

    Far from a pariah state after the assassination of the Saudi dissident Jamal Khashoggi, Saudi Arabia features ever more prominently on the world stage. How do Saudi activists keep fighting when the world is looking away? By Cathrin Schaer

  • Migrants in the UK

    The world of London's others

    In "Auf dem Null Meridian", Shady Lewis tells the story of an immigrant in London who works in social services and whose life is turned upside down. With a light touch and black humour, he describes the tragic consequences of racism and Eurocentric thinking. Lisa Neal read the book for Qantara.de

  • Covering themes of rape, prostitution, poverty, homosexuality, religious fanaticism and much more, Fyzal Boulifa's latest film treats its subject matter in a delicate if disturbing way.
    "The Damned Don't Cry"

    Moroccan melodrama without the tears

    Covering a wide range of themes from rape and prostitution to poverty, homosexuality, and religious fanaticism, Fyzal Boulifa's latest film treats its subject matter in a delicate – if disturbing – way. By Shady Lewis Botros

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