Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Happy Valentine's!!!

Well, the theme of the posting will be much similar to the ordinary, but starting by noting the day at least makes the world seem a bit brighter! ;-) The past 2 weeks have been quite full of events and early on, the period was dominated by Internet problems across the Middle East (as reported by BBC).

Culture
I'd like to start today with a Dagens Nyheter-article on the richness of early art in Afghanistan.

On a completely different note, the Swedish children's detective novels on Ture Sventon (featuring a Stockholm in the 50's) are analysed in Svenska Dagbladet.

Turkey
In Turkey, the headscarf controversy has been imminent again. Here Svenska Dagbladet, before the vote in parliament, on popular protests.

Palestine
Dagens Nyheters Nathan Schachar here discusses how people could not see what was brewing in Gaza. This ties in with my own fascination with the region, but of course it is sad that insights and analyses do not empower policies...

Egypt
A New York Times report on what to do in 36 hours in Cairo.

Iraq
A friend recommended this Dagens Nyheter article, on women police officers in Iraqi Kurdistan.

ICG's latest Iraq report here - on the "Sadrist surge".

Saudiarabia
Reform in Saudi-arabia walks in small steps (here from the BBC). Someone said the driving ban for women may be loosened very quietly, does anyone know more?

Valentine's is too much to stomach though, apaprently, here in a Dagens Nyheter report.

Syria
Sey Hersh here from the New Yorker on Israel's attack last year on an alleged nuclear facility in Syria.

Hizbullah leader Mughniyeh died a day ago in a carbomb in Damascus, here reported by BBC.

Iran
Yesterday I could tell you about Parvin Ardalan's receiving the Palme prize. Here Eurasianet asks whether Iran's government fears educated women? Ironically in that case, since (perhaps surprisingly) women's literacy and education has risen quite steeply in Iran in the year's of the present regime. Longterm subversiveness?

Middle East knowledge development
This theme is very poignant here in the Gulf and I have followed it before. BBC here reports on a new World Bank report on Arab education and it's challenges.

Not on education, but on information and freedom of expression is this piece, BBC reporting on Arab broadcasting being curbed...

Other
Light has been shed on how a leading family in Nazi Germany, the Himmlers, dealt with reality through a daughter talking of her experience (here from Svenska Dagbladet).

BBC's Beirut-correspondent thinks about leaving Beirut and what that means for her as a journalist.

Aftonbladet reviews Åsne Seierstads new book (soon to be published in Sweden and Norway, if it hasn't just recently been) on Chechnya, where her journalism-career once started.

Svenska Dagbladet here writes on information warfare.

BBC reports on a Russian film, clandestinely depicting president Putin's love life!

Svenska Dagbladet has some travel tips on Vilnius, where I will make a third visit next month.

This issue is quite a challenging one - a man here writes an op-ed on the need to legislate against enforced marriage. Oh yes, of course! Each one should freely chose one's spouse. But what I have yet to figure out is how such a law be written and enforced so it has a real meaning, outside being either racist or pointless. Advise me, please.

Added on Friday - Dagens Nyheter has photos from the Hariri memorial activities in Beirut yesterday. Svenska Dagbladet reports on the development too, and Hizbullah's reaction to the death of Mughniyeh (featured abve also).

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