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Tunisia fears the changes in Syria will lead to the return of extremist Tunisians citizens who joined armed groups in Syria in large numbers years ago. It must be prepared logistically and ...
Geir O. Pedersen, Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for Syria, and Edem Wosornu, Director of Operations and Advocacy, ...
In Syria the damage is done, and future generations will continue to suffer from the cruel folly of those convinced they know ...
ZARGHOUAN, Tunisia (Reuters) - Aymen Saadi's brief call to jihad began with dreams of fighting for an Islamic state in Syria and ended with a botched suicide bombing attempt in a crowd of foreign ...
In Turkey, the Brotherhood has not only found shelter but purpose. Since the 2013 military overthrow of Egypt’s Mohamed Morsi ...
Tunisia, the first country to experience the Arab Spring in 2011, approved the ostracisation of Syria by the Arab League while Moncef Marzouki, Tunisia's first democratically elected president ...
In Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, and Yemen, Islamists joined the protests belatedly—but subsequently took ownership. Assad’s particular brutality militarized Syria’s initially peaceful uprising, justifying ...
Tunisia was the best case, Sudan the last hope, Syria the bloodiest of all: The countries that not long ago sparked optimism for a democratic wave in the Arab world have descended into ...
While some countries – Egypt and Tunisia – became democracies, albeit briefly, others, like Yemen, Libya and Syria, descended into violence.
Unfortunately, Tunisia’s newfound enthusiasm for democracy is not shared by all. Roughly 6,000 Tunisians have left home to join the ranks of ISIS, the highest per capita rate in the world.
Britain is considering whether it could and should do more to help defeat Islamic State militants in Syria after a deadly attack in Tunisia last week killed up to 30 of its nationals, a ...
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