Aus dem Netz

Die Hizbollah in ihren eigenen Worten:

A Hezbollah field commander, indicating a map showing the line of neighboring countries Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon, said the territory now forms a “Shia crescent,” a reference to the branch of Islam that dominates the rule in those countries and echoing Israeli concerns of a corridor from Tehran to Beirut.

Inzwischen ist es ganz offiziell: In Syrien bekämpfen die USA nur noch den IS und zwar koordiniert mit der syrischen Armee und damit auch mit den Verbündeten, Hizbollah und Iran, nur eben an getrennten Fronten:

Diese Entscheidung kommt einer kleinen Revolution gleich:

Tunisia has overturned a law that banned women from marrying non-Muslims.

A spokeswoman for President Beji Caid Essebsi made the announcement and congratulated women on gaining "the freedom to choose one's spouse".

Until now, a non-Muslim man who wished to marry a Tunisian Muslim woman had to convert to Islam and submit a certificate of his conversion as proof.

Mit einiger Verspätung spricht sich auch in hiesigen Medien herum, was auf Mena Watch bereits vor Wochen zu lesen war – wie nämlich die „Sperrung der Mittelmeerroute“ in der Praxis aussieht:

Thomas Erdbrink berichtet für die New York Times über ein Problem, das es eigentlich gar nicht geben dürfte:

In recent years, Iran, where alcohol has been illegal since the 1979 revolution and is taboo for devout Muslims, has taken the first step and admitted that, like most other nations, it has an alcohol problem.

Protests following the killing of two Kurdish kolbars, cross-border porters, have continued in Iran and spread to other cities while police authorities issued a statement on the deaths. (...)

Kolbars are frequently harassed by the Iranian authorities and many have been killed. The kolbars are semi-legal porters who carry goods on their backs, across the mountains from the Kurdistan Region to Iran’s Kurdish provinces, which are some of the poorest regions of Iran. 

Aus einem Artikel des Guardian:

Alexandria’s historic synagogue has very few visitors. In a city once home to almost 25,000 Jews, Alexandria’s Jewish community is now said to number fewer than eight people, most of whom are elderly.

Über einhundert IS-Kämpfer, die eigentlich laut eines Abkommens zwischen Hizbollah und IS nach Deir ez Zor hätten transportiert werden soll, haben sich nun der syrischen Armee angeschlossen.

For three months, the federal government has been secretly spiriting gay Chechen men from Russia to Canada, under a clandestine program unique in the world.

The evacuations, spearheaded by Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, fall outside the conventions of international law and could further impair already tense relations between Russia and Canada. But the Liberal government decided to act regardless.

Last week, Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu warned Russian President Vladimir Putin against allowing Iran's military presence in Syria and, according to Asharq Al-Awsat, he had legitimate reasons for concern: The newspaper reported that at a meeting between US and Russian delegations in Jordan, the Americans agreed to situate Iranian militias 5 miles from the Israeli border.

The deportation of a young Afghan man refused asylum by the Government has been dramatically stayed after the pilot of the plane he was supposed to be removed on refused to take off. (....)

Ms Chapman, who is chair of the Kent Anti-Racism Network, said campaigners “genuinely thought they had failed” when the flight eventually took off 45 minutes late.

Tunesien scheint in Sachen Frauenrechte noch einmal nachlegen zu wollen: Erst Ende Juli verabschiedete das Parlament ein Gesetz, das Vergewaltigung in der Ehe unter Strafe stellt, doch diesmal bewegt sich der tunesische Präsident Béji Caïd Essebsi auf besonders gewagtem Terrain. Mitte August verkündete er eine Reform des islamischen Erbrechts und löste damit eine erhitzte Grundsatzdebatte in der Region aus.

In der Zeit ein Artikel, der an den Krieg im Jemen erinnert:

Four years ago, thousands of people in the besieged rebel district of Damascus were rushed to hospital – after an air raid in the early hours – with symptoms such as convulsions, suffocation, coughing up blood and foaming at the mouth.