Latest update: 03/04/2012 

- al Qaeda - Amadou Toumani Touré - ECOWAS - Mali - Sahara - Tuareg


Mali: After the fall of Timbuktu

As northern rebels rout the army, it's clear that the justification for Mali's coup has backfired miserably. François Picard's panel looks at the double-whammy of a country cut in two and the prospect of crippling sanctions.

  • Gregory Mann, Professor of History, Columbia University;
  • Adam Thiam, Columnist at newspaper Le Républicain (from Bamako, Mali);
  • Melissa Bell, France24 Senior Correspondent (from Bamako, Mali);
  • Gilles Yabi, Director of West Africa Program, International Crisis Group (from Dakar, Senegal).

Watch part two

Produced by Christopher Davis, Elom Marcel Toblé, Mary Colombel, Sara Bertilsson

Cancun climate talks - curbing expectations?
30/11/2010 - THE DEBATE

Cancun climate talks - curbing expectations?

We're told it's the biggest threat to humanity today and that hundreds of millions of people are at risk from its effects. So why have so few world leaders turned up to talks on climate change in Cancun this Tuesday? NGOs and environmentalists are pleading with those that did attend not to miss this opportunity for a global deal, but the will to compromise has been severely hit by the economic crisis and expectations for a breakthrough at this round of talks are low.
Cancun climate talks - curbing expectations? (part 2)
30/11/2010 - THE DEBATE

Cancun climate talks - curbing expectations? (part 2)

We're told it's the biggest threat to humanity today and that hundreds of millions of people are at risk from its effects. So why have so few world leaders turned up to talks on climate change in Cancun this Tuesday? NGOs and environmentalists are pleading with those that did attend not to miss this opportunity for a global deal, but the will to compromise has been severely hit by the economic crisis and expectations for a breakthrough at this round of talks are low.
Wikileaks: diplomacy, a changed game? (part 2)
30/11/2010 - THE DEBATE

Wikileaks: diplomacy, a changed game? (part 2)

WikiLeaks has done it again! Over a quarter of a million classified and private documents have fallen into the hands of those dreaded journalists. Telegrams sent between the United States' State Department and some 270 embassies and consulates around the world are now in the hands of the public. So how damaging are these leaks to international diplomacy?
Wikileaks: diplomacy, a changed game?
30/11/2010 - THE DEBATE

Wikileaks: diplomacy, a changed game?

WikiLeaks has done it again! Over a quarter of a million classified and private documents have fallen into the hands of those dreaded journalists. Telegrams sent between the United States' State Department and some 270 embassies and consulates around the world are now in the hands of the public. So how damaging are these leaks to international diplomacy?
Is Haiti fit to vote? (second part)
26/11/2010 - THE DEBATE

Is Haiti fit to vote? (second part)

Cities in ruins and a raging cholera epidemic. Some might say Haiti is not in the best position to hold an election. Still, this weekend the country's traumatised population goes to the polls to choose a new president. Is democracy important to Haitians at this time of unprecedented crisis? Or is it enough of a challenge just surviving day to day? Before we kick off tonight’s debate, let’s remind ourselves of the daily struggle for survival in Haiti.

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