Latest update: 11/01/2013 

- Assassinations - France - François Hollande - Iran - Iraq - Kurdistan - Kurds - Recep Tayyip Erdogan - Turkey


Kurdish activists assassinated in Paris (part 2)

Will the assassination of three Kurdish activists kill the peace process? The three murders, including that of a key go-between to imprisoned PPK leader Abdullah Öcalan, come just as Ankara announced talks to end a conflict that’s lasted nearly three decades.

By Anelise Borges
  • Ali KAZANCIGIL. Political analyst. Co-director of the journal Anatoli, CNRS Editions. Former Director, Int. Development of Social and Human Sciences, UNESCO;
  • Dorothée SCHMID. Director, Contemporary Turkey Program at the IFRI;
  • Kendal NEZAN. President, Kurdish Institute of Paris. Board member, Washington Kurdish Institute;
  • Shwan ZULAL. Kurdish Blogger. Political and risk analyst (from London).

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

Watch the first part here.

Iran's new President: Change you can believe in?
17/06/2013 - THE DEBATE

Iran's new President: Change you can believe in?

The election of Hassan Rohani catches most – but not all – of François Picard’s panel by surprise. Now with sanctions biting and the economy in a tailspin, will the ruling clerics dig in their heels or let the president-elect really reform?
Iran: What hope for the reformists? (part 2)
13/06/2013 - THE DEBATE

Iran: What hope for the reformists? (part 2)

On the face of it, a boycott seems the most sensible option for those who supported the green revolution back in 2009 when Mahmoud Ahmedinedjad won his controversial second term. Yet there are suggestions that something unexpected may be happening in Iran. Melissa Bell and her panel discuss whether there is hope for the reformists on the eve of the presidential elections.
Iran: What hope for the reformists?
13/06/2013 - THE DEBATE

Iran: What hope for the reformists?

On the face of it, a boycott seems the most sensible option for those who supported the green revolution back in 2009 when Mahmoud Ahmedinedjad won his controversial second term. Yet there are suggestions that something unexpected may be happening in Iran. Melissa Bell and her panel discuss whether there is hope for the reformists on the eve of the presidential elections.
Lebanon on edge: Hezbollah and the Syrian spillover (part 2)
12/06/2013 - THE DEBATE

Lebanon on edge: Hezbollah and the Syrian spillover (part 2)

One hour’s drive is all it takes to reach the border with Syria from the seaside in the capital Beirut. But, if the capital seems oblivious to it all, hundreds have been killed and scores more wounded in Lebanon’s second city of Tripoli, where the sectarian divide has long been bitter. François Picard and his panel discuss, from Beirut, whether the spillover from Syria's civil war could push neighbouring Lebanon over the edge.
Lebanon on edge: Hezbollah and the Syrian spillover
12/06/2013 - THE DEBATE

Lebanon on edge: Hezbollah and the Syrian spillover

One hour’s drive is all it takes to reach the border with Syria from the seaside in the capital Beirut. But, if the capital seems oblivious to it all, hundreds have been killed and scores more wounded in Lebanon’s second city of Tripoli, where the sectarian divide has long been bitter. François Picard and his panel discuss, from Beirut, whether the spillover from Syria's civil war could push neighbouring Lebanon over the edge.

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