Our Focus programme brings you exclusive reports from around the world, followed by comment and analysis from our newsroom in Paris. Monday to Friday, at 7:15 am and 9:15 pm.
After the revolution comes a long awaited election. Yemenis took to the polling booths despite recent outbreaks of violence. The winner didn't come as a surprise, given that the only candidate in the running was the incumbent Vice-president Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi. This election was more about getting rid of the old regime under Ali Abdullah Saleh. The new President will have a lot on his plate but says Yemen has closed an old chapter and is looking ahead to a better future.
As Nicolas Sarkozy enters the presidential election race we take a look at the issues likely to dominate the campaign. The recent cold snap highlighted the acuteness of France's housing shortage. Housing advocates are now fighting to make it a headline election issue. With an estimated 10 million French people affected by a lack of appropriate housing, this issue has the potential to be a vote winner. Catherine Nicholson and Marine Casalis find out who is promising what.
The latest in a series of tit for tat retaliations between Iran and the West has resulted in the halt of oil exports to Britain and France. However, business shouldn't be greatly affected as Iran sells most of its oil to Asia and the EU is winding down its imports from Iran. Tehran does hold a big bargaining chip though and continues to threaten the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a strategic waterway carrying a third of the world's oil shipments.
In a bid to decrease US debt, President Obama is planning to cut military spending. With the Iraq war over, and a pull out date set for all combat troops in Afghanistan, the troop drawdown comes as military expenditure has reached a breaking point. However, some disagree with the proposal. Our Washington correspondents Philip Crowther and Stanislas de Saint Hippolyte report.
A year ago they rose up to take on Muammar Gaddafi's brutal regime. Today, Libya's revolutionary militias patrol the streets, man checkpoints and control access to Tripoli's airport. But Amnesty International has warned of human rights abuses, and says that these groups now pose a threat to the country's stability. Meanwhile, the government appears incapable of bringing the various factions in line.
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