Latest update: 02/09/2011 

- David Cameron - Libya - Muammar Gaddafi - Nicolas Sarkozy


Libya after Gaddafi: who's in charge in Tripoli? (part 2)

Muammar Gaddafi is still at large and it’s a problem. "We need to close that chapter", admits the National Transitional Council’s Waheed Burshan. "We need to find him, we need to get him."

  • Waheed BURSHAN. National Transitional Council member, President of Gharyan local council;
  • Fathi Ben SHATWAN. Former Libyan Energy Minister;
  • Pierre CONESA. Defence consultant. Professor at Sciences-Po Paris and French National Administrative School;
  • Francis PERRIN. Editorial Manager, "Arab Oil and Gas";
  • Alexis CROW. Research Fellow, International Security Program, Chatham House - from LONDON.

Watch the first part here.
 

Hollande's rebuttal: French president meets the press (part 2)
16/05/2013 - THE DEBATE

Hollande's rebuttal: French president meets the press (part 2)

In the face of recession and dismal poll numbers, the French president promises to go on the offensive, but by staging his grand bi-annual press conference one day after a trip to Brussels, does François Hollande give the impression he’s come with his marching orders?
Hollande's rebuttal: French president meets the press
16/05/2013 - THE DEBATE

Hollande's rebuttal: French president meets the press

In the face of recession and dismal poll numbers, the French president promises to go on the offensive, but by staging his grand bi-annual press conference one day after a trip to Brussels, does François Hollande give the impression he’s come with his marching orders?
I spy, you spy
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I spy, you spy

And you thought the Cold War was over. Beyond cloak-and-dagger tales of blonde wigs and bags of money, the expulsion of an alleged US spy highlights the continued and unabated mistrust between Moscow and Washington.
Riots in Paris: why Paris Saint-Germain title celebrations turned sour (part 2)
14/05/2013 - THE DEBATE

Riots in Paris: why Paris Saint-Germain title celebrations turned sour (part 2)

A case of poorly-anticipated hooliganism, or were Monday's Right Bank riots symptomatic of a deeper-rooted problem in France that goes well beyond football? François Picard's panel looks at how Paris Saint-Germain's past could haunt its new Qatari owners.
Riots in Paris: why Paris Saint-Germain title celebrations turned sour
14/05/2013 - THE DEBATE

Riots in Paris: why Paris Saint-Germain title celebrations turned sour

A case of poorly-anticipated hooliganism, or were Monday's Right Bank riots symptomatic of a deeper-rooted problem in France that goes well beyond football? François Picard's panel looks at how Paris Saint-Germain's past could haunt its new Qatari owners.

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