Latest update: 30/01/2013 

- Iran - Mahmoud Ahmadinejad - refugees - Turkey


Political refugees await another presidential election in Iran

In June 2009, hundreds of thousands of Iranians protested against the presidential vote which saw Mahmoud Ahmadinejad re-elected. The movement was swiftly crushed by the authorities and set off a wave of activists fleeing the country. Three years on, the number of Iranian political refugees continues to rise. The majority pass through Turkey while awaiting a visa for Europe or the US. A few months before the next presidential election in Iran, they told us about their struggle.

AFRICA

The rush for oil

Oil exploration has become huge in many sub-Saharan African countries, with foreign companies coming in to take their fill. But even major discoveries, such as in Uganda, rarely result in the oil wealth trickling down to the local inhabitants.
03/09/2009 - IRAN

Is Iran ready to negociate its nuclear programme?

Faced with new sanctions from the West this month, Tehran has prepared an updated nuclear proposal, the details of which remain undisclosed, and says it is ready to negotiate its programme. Could it be Iran's first major engagement with the West?
LEBANON

The business of Ramadan

With exclusive parties on private beaches, special TV series with plenty of commercial breaks, and massive inflation during the holy month, the debate about the meaning of Ramadan is growing louder in Lebanon and also elsewhere.
01/09/2009 - HISTORY

Is the history of World War Two being rewritten?

On Tuesday, ceremonies marking the 70th anniversary of the outbreak of the Second World War in Poland were marred by spats between Russia and Eastern European states over their respective roles in the conflict. Is history being rewritten?
CHINA

Burmese refugees begin to return home

According to Chinese officials, 37,000 refugees streamed into the country from Burma following fighting in Kokang, a mainly ethnic Chinese region of Burma's Shan state. Some have now begun to return home, but fear more unrest.

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