Latest update: 09/10/2012 

- France - François Hollande - French politics - Islamism - police - terrorism


French homegrown jihadists (part 2)

After a deadly sting operation, the French wonder if an allegedly homegrown jihadist cell might be the new shape of radical Islam. Authorities describe them as a recently radicalized bunch, whose conversion took place in prison and is fuelled by messages of hate on the internet.

  • Patrick VIGNAL. Senior Correspondent, Reuters;
  • Karim AMELLAL. Lecturer, Paris Institute of Political Studies - Sciences Po;
  • Brooke ROGERS. Senior Lecturer in 'Risk and Terror' in the Department of War Studies, King's College London (from London).

Produced by François Picard, Anelise Borges, Mary Colombel, Christopher Davis.

Watch the first part here.

Collision Course in Ivory Coast (part 2)
04/03/2011 - THE DEBATE

Collision Course in Ivory Coast (part 2)

How do you break the deadlock while avoiding what some already claim is the start of a return to civil war?
Collision Course in Ivory Coast
04/03/2011 - THE DEBATE

Collision Course in Ivory Coast

How do you break the deadlock while avoiding what some already claim is the start of a return to civil war?
Tunisia: Now Comes the Hard Part (part 2)
03/03/2011 - THE DEBATE

Tunisia: Now Comes the Hard Part (part 2)

The strongman’s gone, his former ministers are now gone too. Still the rowing continues over what next. François Picard’s all-Tunisian panel downplays the risk of a coup if it all drags on too long but does admit that speed is of the essence in establishing a roadmap for democracy.
Tunisia: Now Comes the Hard Part
03/03/2011 - THE DEBATE

Tunisia: Now Comes the Hard Part

The strongman’s gone, his former ministers are now gone too. Still the rowing continues over what next. François Picard’s all-Tunisian panel downplays the risk of a coup if it all drags on too long but does admit that speed is of the essence in establishing a roadmap for democracy.
Is Saudi Arabia in trouble? (part 2)
02/03/2011 - THE DEBATE

Is Saudi Arabia in trouble? (part 2)

Should we be worried about Saudi Arabia? With dissent at the doorstep of the world’s largest oil producer, the Kingdom may be rich but it still has the same problems as its neighbours – high inflation and high youth unemployment coupled with demands for more freedom. Will it be reform or revolution inside the home to Islam’s holiest sites? Uncertainty is already weighing worldwide on prices at the pump.

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