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Iran’s Water Shortage Crisis Worsens
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Iran’s Water Shortage Crisis Worsens

    The Ministry of Energy, which is in charge of water resources in Iran, has again admitted that the country is facing a

    December 27, 2016

    Iran Has 75,000 Mosques but No Leadership
  • Analysis
  • Iran Has 75,000 Mosques but No Leadership

    Ali Jannati, a former minister of culture under President Hassan Rouhani, has strongly attacked the state of the Iranian society and a lack of political leadership in the country. He said that there were “75,000 mosques and 800 Friday prayer leaders” in Iran today, but ordinary people still had “no one to turn to for leadership.”

    December 23, 2016

    Saudi Female Conservationist Fights to Preserve Islamic Heritage
  • Analysis
  • Saudi Female Conservationist Fights to Preserve Islamic Heritage

    The Middle East’s descent into chaos has been accompanied by a growing threat to the region’s historic sites. The breakdown of states and growth in extremism have exposed these ancient sites to looting and destruction. The drivers, however, are varied. Extremist groups like ISIS profit from the smuggling of antiquities, but there are also religious motivations. Extremist movements such as ISIS and al-Qaeda, which adhere to a strictly puritanical view of Islam, perceive heritage sites, including Islamic, as a sinful distraction from faith.

    December 22, 2016

    Zarif under Attack for Being Soft on US
    Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Zarif under Attack for Being Soft on US

    The Iranian foreign minister, Javad Zarif, is under pressure in Tehran to admit that his nuclear negotiations with the Americans have been a failure.

    December 22, 2016

    Iran-Run Forces in Full Control of Aleppo
  • Analysis
  • Iran-Run Forces in Full Control of Aleppo

    The Iranian media reports that the evacuation of Syrian rebels and civilians from eastern Aleppo has come to an end, and that the entire city is now under the control of the Syrian army.

    December 22, 2016

    The Revival of Lebanese Cinema
  • Analysis
  • The Revival of Lebanese Cinema

    The long, turbulent history of Lebanese cinema is one fraught with financial precariousness, thwarted potentials, and colonialist impediments. Fighting for decades to break away from the hegemony of Egyptian cinema, Lebanon finally came of age in the 1960s and 1970s, reaching a peak with a series of hugely popular mainstream flicks that included the popular Rahbani/Fairuz folk musicals. The rise of what was once deemed as the most exciting Arab cinema at the time proved to be short lived, coming to a premature halt with the outbreak of the Lebanese Civil War.

    December 21, 2016

    The Displaced as Actors in Syrian Politics
  • Analysis
  • The Displaced as Actors in Syrian Politics

    For the Assad regime in Damascus, displacement has become an essential tactic in shaping the terms of its encounter with dissent, alongside violence and detention. At the same time, the process of displacement has not unfolded in a coherent or predictable manner. Rather, displacement in the Syrian conflict is a product of choices, chief among them the regime’s choice to erase, rather than accommodate, political Opposition in Syria. It is also the result of how the Opposition responds to these challenges. This essay explores how Opposition networks have adapted pragmatically to displacement and exile. Far from accepting the terms of the conflict passively, Syria’s diverse opposition continues to mobilize in the face of ongoing state oppression.

    December 21, 2016

    Iran Shows No Concern for Safety of Civilians in Aleppo
  • Analysis
  • Iran Shows No Concern for Safety of Civilians in Aleppo

    A senior Iranian security official has slammed a United Nations Security Council resolution that calls for international observers to monitor the evacuation of civilians trapped in the besieged Syrian city of Aleppo.

     

    December 21, 2016