iHaveNet.com
The Last Colony in Africa | Africa - African Current Events
Online Breaking News Headlines Single Source to Headlines Breaking News Current Events Top Stories. Find out what is happening in News & the World. Check out iHaveNet.com for the latest news & current events articles plus Movie Reviews, Wolfgang Puck Recipes, NFL Previews Analysis and Politics. Your Single Source to News Articles, Current Events & Reviews.
  • HOME
  • WORLD
    • Africa
    • Asia Pacific
    • Balkans
    • Caucasas
    • Central Asia
    • Eastern Europe
    • Europe
    • Indian Subcontinent
    • Latin America
    • Middle East
    • North Africa
    • Scandinavia
    • Southeast Asia
    • United Kingdom
    • United States
    • Argentina
    • Australia
    • Austria
    • Benelux
    • Brazil
    • Canada
    • China
    • France
    • Germany
    • Greece
    • Hungary
    • India
    • Indonesia
    • Ireland
    • Israel
    • Italy
    • Japan
    • Korea
    • Mexico
    • New Zealand
    • Pakistan
    • Philippines
    • Poland
    • Russia
    • South Africa
    • Spain
    • Taiwan
    • Turkey
    • United States
  • USA
    • ECONOMICS
    • EDUCATION
    • ENVIRONMENT
    • FOREIGN POLICY
    • POLITICS
    • OPINION
    • TRADE
    • Atlanta
    • Baltimore
    • Bay Area
    • Boston
    • Chicago
    • Cleveland
    • DC Area
    • Dallas
    • Denver
    • Detroit
    • Houston
    • Los Angeles
    • Miami
    • New York
    • Philadelphia
    • Phoenix
    • Pittsburgh
    • Portland
    • San Diego
    • Seattle
    • Silicon Valley
    • Saint Louis
    • Tampa
    • Twin Cities
  • BUSINESS
    • FEATURES
    • eBUSINESS
    • HUMAN RESOURCES
    • MANAGEMENT
    • MARKETING
    • ENTREPRENEUR
    • SMALL BUSINESS
    • STOCK MARKETS
    • Agriculture
    • Airline
    • Auto
    • Beverage
    • Biotech
    • Book
    • Broadcast
    • Cable
    • Chemical
    • Clothing
    • Construction
    • Defense
    • Durable
    • Engineering
    • Electronics
    • Firearms
    • Food
    • Gaming
    • Healthcare
    • Hospitality
    • Leisure
    • Logistics
    • Metals
    • Mining
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Newspaper
    • Nondurable
    • Oil & Gas
    • Packaging
    • Pharmaceutic
    • Plastics
    • Real Estate
    • Retail
    • Shipping
    • Sports
    • Steelmaking
    • Textiles
    • Tobacco
    • Transportation
    • Travel
    • Utilities
  • WEALTH
    • CAREERS
    • INVESTING
    • PERSONAL FINANCE
    • REAL ESTATE
    • MARKETS
    • BUSINESS
  • STOCKS
    • ECONOMY
    • EMERGING MARKETS
    • STOCKS
    • FED WATCH
    • TECH STOCKS
    • BIOTECHS
    • COMMODITIES
    • MUTUAL FUNDS / ETFs
    • MERGERS / ACQUISITIONS
    • IPOs
    • 3M (MMM)
    • AT&T (T)
    • AIG (AIG)
    • Alcoa (AA)
    • Altria (MO)
    • American Express (AXP)
    • Apple (AAPL)
    • Bank of America (BAC)
    • Boeing (BA)
    • Caterpillar (CAT)
    • Chevron (CVX)
    • Cisco (CSCO)
    • Citigroup (C)
    • Coca Cola (KO)
    • Dell (DELL)
    • DuPont (DD)
    • Eastman Kodak (EK)
    • ExxonMobil (XOM)
    • FedEx (FDX)
    • General Electric (GE)
    • General Motors (GM)
    • Google (GOOG)
    • Hewlett-Packard (HPQ)
    • Home Depot (HD)
    • Honeywell (HON)
    • IBM (IBM)
    • Intel (INTC)
    • Int'l Paper (IP)
    • JP Morgan Chase (JPM)
    • J & J (JNJ)
    • McDonalds (MCD)
    • Merck (MRK)
    • Microsoft (MSFT)
    • P & G (PG)
    • United Tech (UTX)
    • Wal-Mart (WMT)
    • Walt Disney (DIS)
  • TECH
    • ADVANCED
    • FEATURES
    • INTERNET
    • INTERNET FEATURES
    • CYBERCULTURE
    • eCOMMERCE
    • mp3
    • SECURITY
    • GAMES
    • HANDHELD
    • SOFTWARE
    • PERSONAL
    • WIRELESS
  • HEALTH
    • AGING
    • ALTERNATIVE
    • AILMENTS
    • DRUGS
    • FITNESS
    • GENETICS
    • CHILDREN'S
    • MEN'S
    • WOMEN'S
  • LIFESTYLE
    • AUTOS
    • HOBBIES
    • EDUCATION
    • FAMILY
    • FASHION
    • FOOD
    • HOME DECOR
    • RELATIONSHIPS
    • PARENTING
    • PETS
    • TRAVEL
    • WOMEN
  • ENTERTAINMENT
    • BOOKS
    • TELEVISION
    • MUSIC
    • THE ARTS
    • MOVIES
    • CULTURE
  • SPORTS
    • BASEBALL
    • BASKETBALL
    • COLLEGES
    • FOOTBALL
    • GOLF
    • HOCKEY
    • OLYMPICS
    • SOCCER
    • TENNIS
  • Subscribe to RSS Feeds EMAIL ALERT Subscriptions from iHaveNet.com RSS
    • RSS | Politics
    • RSS | Recipes
    • RSS | NFL Football
    • RSS | Movie Reviews
The Last Colony in Africa
Konstantina Isidoros

HOME > WORLD

 

 

The Sahrawi desert nomads of the Western Sahara have been waiting since 1975 for their fundamental human right to a simple vote -- that of self-determination. As Spain chaotically began withdrawing its colonial presence from Western Sahara, Morocco abruptly claimed the country as its own and threatened to invade. 

The United Nations (UN) asked the International Court of Justice (ICJ) to investigate. This highest court of law in the world delivered its legal opinion - Morocco had no valid claim to territorial sovereignty over Western Sahara, and the Sahrawi indigenous population were the rightful sovereign heirs of the territory. Morocco defied international law and invaded. As the Sahrawi nomads’ liberation movement, the Polisario Front, became locked in fierce war with Morocco, the UN issued a number of alarmed messages reiterating to Morocco that its actions were intolerable.

The Western Sahara is the last country in Africa that has not been correctly decolonised - instead, the right of the Sahrawi people to post-colonial independence has been frozen in time. If we are to take the rule of international law as our guiding foundation, then Morocco has blatantly defied international law twice, by its illegal invasion of someone else’s sovereign territory and by its illegal occupation that still continues today. The Sahrawi people have spent the last 36 years fighting off Morocco’s illegitimate presence on Sahrawi soil and contesting against Morocco’s refusal to cooperate in a UN-led self-determination process. Morocco knows that if it allows the self-determination vote to occur, the Sahrawi will most likely choose independence rather than remain under an illegal colonial military occupation.

The Sahrawi struggle for independence strikes at the heart of our core principles of law and human rights. Are they to be applied uniformly across the globe to safeguard human rights, or is it tolerable that some societies cannot have human rights? 

Given the media silence on the geo-political importance of the Western Sahara conflict and the lack of consciousness of the plight of the Sahrawi people, this special issue of Pambazuka News has been developed to raise greater international awareness about the deception by certain Western governments and the European Union (as powerful members of the UN Security Council), and the failure of the United Nations itself it enforce its mandate. I hope that readers will be inspired to further explore the Sahrawi story and to join the international campaign groups and NGOs, and that students in disciplines such as international law, political science and anthropology may study the Western Sahara case and join a respected world-wide group of academics and scientists who are vociferously objecting to Morocco’s theft of sovereign territory, denial of human rights and exploitation of natural resources in a land it brutally occupies. 

This special issue of Pambazuka News on Western Sahara spotlights the indigenous Sahrawi voices from both sides of the Berm (Morocco’s ‘Wall of Shame’: heavily militarised and landmined sand-walls), and their cultural heartbreak of being forcibly divided. From the Moroccan Occupied Territory, Sahrawi human rights activists - some of whom are currently prisoners of conscience from inside Moroccan prisons - have written articles and short stories in prison to tell us about the brutality of Morocco’s militarised oppression. Other Sahrawi writers have sent us descriptions of the many ways in which daily life is disrupted through the denial of freedoms of speech, movement and livelihoods on their own soil. 

Shining through all these texts are the hopes and dreams of a people and their children - the Sahrawi youth and university students have become a phenomenon of youth activism on YouTube and Facebook - longing for freedom, independence, and an end to the ‘disappearances’, prolonged arrests, unfair court hearings, and torture by Moroccan security forces and secret service. Watch the BBC’s‘Tropic of Cancer - Western Sahara’ and follow upBBC story of an informant in the documentary being beaten up by Moroccans after the BBC film crew left.

Living on the other side of the Berm are the Sahrawi residing in refugee camps on the Algerian border. From these texts we hear of Sahrawi memories of homeland and longings for return. Here there is no need for uprisings against the invader, for this half of the Sahrawi population have the proximity of the Algerian border, which prevents Morocco from daring to invade further inland. Instead the Sahrawi refugees are free to be freedom fighters and their camps provide the symbolic structure of the nation-state in exile. Life is hard in the camps, it is not easy for a dignified and self-sufficient peoples to be dependent on humanitarian aid, to be trapped in refugeehood. The BBC documentary ‘We are Saharawis’ provides an insight into this life. 

Woven among the personal stories from both sides of the Berm are powerful visual photographs and online documentary films to bring the reader close to the incredible world and desert geography of the Sahrawi. I hope this special issue will bring to life the story of the Sahrawi people and let their dream of freedom touch your hearts.I also invited non-Sahrawi voices in selected analytical pieces that focus on the international legal and political science disciplines because the Western Sahara story is clear-cut in the context of international law. Every African nation-state had this right, and it is a symbol of Sahrawi perseverance to the rule of international law that they have been a full and founding member of the African Union since 1984, and some 80 countries recognise the Sahrawi nation-state, the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR, also referred to as RASD). 

I especially asked Anthony Pazzanita to write an update to his 1994 article on Morocco’s sophisticated propaganda tactics. Jacob Mundy also provided a new article from his PhD research showing how Morocco’s brutal repression has ironically fuelled the phenomenon of the Sahrawi’s resilient human rights resistance. I was flooded by offers from the international network of analysts and observers offering to add their voices to this special issue. Sadly, space is limited but it is a testament to the Sahrawi story that so many around the world responded with speed to the opportunity to stand alongside the Sahrawi. I raise these three points because I hope readers will begin to distinguish the two very different sides of the conflict’s story. No matter what Morocco says, the fundamental benchmark is that of international law. It neither supports Morocco’s contemporary political thesis nor its historical claims to sovereignty over the Western Sahara. I point readers to the newest book on the conflict to be published, by Stephen Zunes and Jacob Mundy, ‘Western Sahara: War Nationalism & Conflict Irresolution’, Syracuse University Press (2011). 

Finally, Morocco consistently uses its sophisticated resources to paint a poor picture of the Sahrawi, especially of the Polisario Front (the political representative of the Sahrawi people, recognised by the UN itself). Readers might like to know that the Polisario Front was first formed in the late 1960s, originally as a liberation movement as Spain began moving towards decolonisation, but that it then had to shift its goal to fight off the invading Moroccan ‘Green March’. The Polisario Front’s constitution states that it will dissolve when it has achieved its original liberation goal and the vote of self-determination. I would like to give readers a chance to hear from four senior representatives of the Polisario Front based in various areas around the world - and gauge for yourselves. 

Lamine Baali was recently interviewed by Think Africa Press (August 2011). One of the discussions is that the huge financial drain on Morocco, with its recent purchase of 24 F16 fighter jets from the United States in order to continue its illegal military occupation of Western Sahara, could otherwise be used for economic development and social developments on the Moroccan people themselves. Dr Sidi Omar delivered his analytical paper ‘The legal claim of the Saharawi people to the right to self-determination and decolonisation’ at UNISA’s conference on international law and Western Sahara in Pretoria in 2008 and Emhamad Khadad delivered his paper ‘Sovereignty & Self-Determination in Western Sahara’ at Durham University. Kamal Fadel was interviewed by the Australian Worker’s Union who subsequently visited the refugee camps themselves.

 

- Originally published by Foreign Policy in Focus

 

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

 

Twitter: @ihavenet

 

  • Opinions Strong About Gaddafi's End and Libya's New Beginning
  • Libyans Celebrate Gaddafi's Death
  • Wall Street (Unlike)
  • Animal Spirits: Shaping Patterns of Economic Growth
  • Assessing the Damage of the European Banking Crisis
  • Better Ways Forward for the European Union
  • Solving A Deadly Eurozone Sovereign Debt Crisis
  • Steve Jobs May Have Failed Abroad
  • Behind Europe's Debt Crisis Lurks Another Wall Street Bailout
  • Sluggish America Can Still Be a World Leader
  • US Economic Woes Put China in the Political Crosshairs
  • Newspaper Nostalgia
  • Veterans: The Human Rubble of Our Wars
  • A Devalued Renminbi Makes Wealthier Americans
  • US Fears Misplaced When it Comes to China
  • United States - South Korea Trade Deal Win-Win for Jobs and Economy
  • Predator in Chief
  • United States Accusations Turn Up Heat in Simmering Gulf
  • Congress, Administration Discuss Next Steps on Iran
  • Iran and The Diminishing Returns of Reasonableness
  • What if Arbabsiar Was All About the Drugs, Not Terror?
  • Terror Plot's Mystery Link to Iran
  • What War Between Iran and Saudi Arabia Might Look Like
  • Yemen's Turbulent Spring
  • Dealing with the Haqqanis
  • The Conservative Case Against a Border Fence
  • GOP Uses Border Fence as Immigration Distraction for 2012
  • Learning From Mexico's Coalition Debate
  • Mexican Constitution Now Recognizes Right to Food
  • Islamic Plot to Bomb U.S. Embassy Reported in Mexico
  • The Suppression of Democracy in Haiti
  • Colombia: Human Rights Issues Unanswered
  • Chinese Investment Flows Continue to Aid Brazil's Ascendency
  • Free Trade Is Not So Free: The Panamanian Case
  • Arab Spring, Israeli Isolation
  • Israeli - Palestinian Conflict: The Prisoner Swap
  • Iran Alleged Assassination Plot: Emboldened by Nuke Program?
  • The Real Nuclear Threat From Iran May Not Be Nuclear Weapons
  • From the Mediterranean to the Hindu Kush: Rethinking the Region
  • Price of the Libya Intervention: Surface to Air Missiles for All
  • Exporters Armed Arab Spring Crackdown
  • Fighting Escalates in Yemen
  • Hamas Gains From Prisoner Swap Likely to Fade
  • Mossad Gets Dragged Into Latest British Political Scandal
  • Black Magic Widespread in Saudi Arabia
  • Syria: Alawites Go On Arms Shopping Spree
  • Children Man Barricades in Northern Kosovo
  • Macedonia's EU Bid Still Mired in Name Issue
  • Turkey Needs Further Reforms
  • 'Ottomania' on the Rise in Turkey
  • Turkey: Cartoonist Faces Trial for Asserting that 'Religion Is a Lie'
  • Turkey - Russia Relations and Missile Defense
  • The Black Sea: A Forgotten Geo-strategic Realm
  • Central Asia: Russia Grapples with a Security Dilemma
  • Russia: Is Moscow Heading Toward the Time of Troubles?
  • China and the South China Sea Dispute
  • South China Sea Disputes: Why conflict is Not Inevitable
  • Burma's Junta: Can a Tiger Change Its Stripes?
  • Japan: Ozawa Ichiro on Trial
  • India-China Economic Dialogue: A View from Beijing
  • India-Afghanistan Partnership Through the Eyes of the Pakistani Media
  • India Falters in Countering Terrorism
  • The Last Colony in Africa
  • Beyond Good Versus Evil: Fighting Somalia's Perpetual War
  • Heavy Casualties as Somali Forces Attack Rebel Stronghold
  • Somali Forces Seize District in Lower Jubba from Insurgents
  • Hard Times Lead Young Somalis to Delay Marriage
  • Kenya's Risky Intervention into Somalia
  • Children Tempted With a Phone to Carry a Gun
  • African Drought Response: Lessons Still to Learn
  • Rumpus Over Genetically Modified Food Aid in Africa
  • Great Game in the Horn of Africa
  • Crowds and Constitutions: Insights from Iceland
  • Beyond the Nation-State
  • The Human Rights Council: 5 Years On
  • United States Prepares Sanctions Against Iran for Bomb Plot
  • Iran Denies Alleged Plot to Kill Saudi Envoy
  • Cyber Security as a Wicked Problem
  • An Alternative Eulogy for Steve Jobs
  • Americas to Become Mecca of World's Energy
  • Time for United States to Think Big on Latin America
  • Latin Universities Index Doesn't Tell Full Story
  • Blind Eye to Colombia's Questionable Human Rights Record
  • United States - Cuba Policy Staggers from Inept to Pedestrian
  • Rick Perry Proposal of American Troops in Mexico Stirs Criticism
  • GOP Candidates Look at Narco-Terrorism Risks
  • Dexia Bank's Collapse and the European Financial Crisis
  • European Crisis: Precise Solutions in an Imprecise Reality
  • Slovakia Thumbs Down on Euro Bailout Fund Hike
  • Greek Anger and Greece's Survival
  • A Win-Win Strategy for Investors in Greece
  • Amid Strikes, Greek Workers are Hurting
  • Without Textbooks Greek School Year Starts in Confusion
  • Putin's Comeback: Fast Forward to the Past
  • NATO and Russia: Missile Defense Sticking Point?
  • Russia's Arctic Embrace: Cold War Reloaded
  • Putin Calls For Eurasian Union In Former Soviet Space
  • United Kingdom Riots: State of Denial
  • UK Unemployment Rises to 17-year High
  • Study Estimates 3 Million British Children in Poverty by 2013
  • Bank of England Pours More Money Into Quantitative Easing
  • Britain Shuts Down Family Access Immigration Route
  • EC Recommends Serbia Gain EU Candidate Status
  • Spanish Court Won't Let Cameraman Couso Killing Die
  • Poland's Tusk Wins Historic Second Term
  • Turkey: Making Room for Religious Minorities
  • Cyprus: Waters Roil in Eastern Mediterranean
  • A Nuclear Retaliation Alternative for India
  • Strategic Partnership with Afghanistan: India Showcases Soft Power
  • The India - Bangladesh Border: A New Beginning
  • Pakistan's Sponsorship of Terrorism Is Undeniable
  • Energy Crises and Riots in Pakistan
  • Dante in Karachi: Circles of Crime in a Megacity
  • Children in 2005 Pakistan Earthquake Zone Still Lack Schools
  • Afghanistan: The Regional Complex
  • Afghanistan's Energy War
  • Afghanistan War Marks 10th Year Quietly
  • Bono's African Philanthropy Could Use a Remix
  • The Dadaab Camps: The Daemon in the Detail
  • Dadaab Camps: A Day in the Life of a Refugee
  • Senegal: Demining Machine Clears Path For Better Future
  • Somalia: African Union Forces Attack Al Shabaab's Strongholds
  • Worst Forms of Child Labor Still Widespread in Africa
  • South Africa: Deportations of Zimbabwean Migrants Set to Resume
  • Uganda: New facility to Concentrate on Cancer
  • Africa: Why Involving Men is Crucial
  • Zimbabwe: Poverty Alleviation Program Targets Kids
  • The Economics of the Arab Spring
  • Many Arabs Stay Hopeful Even as Economies Sag
  • Arab World Poised for Economic Growth Spurt
  • Fear of an Islamic Planet
  • Riots in Cairo
  • Egyptian Army Turns Guns on Its Citizens
  • Timeline of Egyptian Sectarian Violence
  • A New Phase in Post-Mubarak Egypt
  • Boycott Looms as Egyptian Elections Near
  • Anxious Campaign Season Opens in Tunisia
  • Saudi Security Force Ramps Up
  • Sectarian Rifts Erupt Again in Saudi Arabia
  • Libya: Winning the Peace Collectively
  • Concerns Over 'Rampant Torture' Rise in Syria
  • Syria: Redrawing the Political Foundations
  • Lieberman Calls for No-Fly Zone Over Syria
  • Syrian Crackdown Reaches London and Paris
  • Anwar Al Awlaki Death Doesn't Solve Yemen's Problems
  • Yemen: Fallout from the al-Awlaki Airstrike
  • Why America Should Pay Attention to Egyptian Elections
  • Boxed in on the Middle East
  • Even Non-Violent Palestinian Intifada Seems Unlikely Now
  • Art Comes to Jerusalem Open Market
  • Israel: Bittersweet Reunion of Righteous Gentiles
  • Jewish Extremists Burn Mosque in Israel
  • Israeli 'Price Tag' Vandals Mark Up Violence
  • Rise of the Renminbi as International Currency
  • China: Significance and Implications of Tiangong 1
  • China Orders Closure of 13 Wal-Marts for Selling Mislabeled Pork
  • China Launches Own Iron Ore Price Index
  • South Korea's Naval Base on Ulleung Island
  • Why 2012 Will Shake Up Asia and the World
  • Rights Groups Moves High Court on Beheading of 8 Bangladeshi
  • Bangladesh World's 5th Most Vulnerable Country for Climate Change
  • Bangladesh's Grameenphone and Teletalk Partner on Cell Phone Early Disaster Warning System
  • How Space Technology Aids Flood Response
  • Philippine Supreme Court Reverses Ruling Favoring Fired PAL Cabin Crews
  • Malaysia Refugee Swap Deal Gets Support from UNHCR
  • Australian Alps Could Be Bare of Snow by 2050
  • Qantas Orders 110 Jets from Airbus
  • Coal Exports Boost Australian Trade Balance
  • Hard Facts: The World Is Getting Better
  • United Nations Can't Save the Oppressed, But It Can Give Them a Voice
  • Obama's International Outsourcing
  • Radical Islamist Cleric Anwar al-Awlaki Killed in Yemen
  • Anwar Al-Awlaki's Death Major Victory For Counter-Terrorism
  • United States Gaze Turns to Uzbeks
  • Fiscal Union for the Euro: Some Lessons from History
  • German Parliament Approves Hike in EU Loan Guarantees
  • Preparing for Greece's Failure
  • Despite Austerity Measures Greece Will Still Miss EU Budget Cut Targets
  • Greece Working to Convince EU it Can Meet Austerity Demands
  • Greek Parliament Approves New Property Tax
  • Greeks to Face Further Tough Measures
  • Albania's Unsettled Past
  • Balkans Summit Extols Regional Co-Operation
  • Erdogan Pushes for Common Future with Balkan States
  • Turkey's Sinking Lira Defies Soaring Economy
  • Kukan: Dialogue Not Barricades
  • Arab Spring Turkish Harvest
  • Iran at a Crossroads
  • Iran's Support of Syria Is Backfiring
  • The Mottled Relationship: Iran and Latin America
  • Is It a Mistake to Draw Solace From Iran's Long Bomb Gestation Period?
  • Arab Spring Added Pressures to Middle East Peace Process
  • Israel Accepts Quartet Proposal to Resume Peace Talks
  • Blocking Palestinian Statehood
  • The Occupation That Time Forgot
  • Israeli Parliamentarians Call for Annexation of West Bank
  • U.S. Congress: Standard Bearer for Israeli Expansion
  • Michele Bachmann 'Blames' Obama for Arab Spring
  • Saudis Tussle Over Textbook
  • Saudi Arabia Grants Women Limited Right to Vote
  • Egypt Eyes New Arms Suppliers
  • Saleh Return Deepens Crisis In Yemen
  • Other Leaders Should Copy Brazil's Anti-graft Measures
  • Obama's U.N. Omission: The War Next Door
  • The Drug War Spreads the Bloodbath South
  • Mexican Cartels and Pan American Games: A Threat Assessment
  • Mexico: Death by Social Media
  • Big Agriculture's Latin American Exploits
  • Is Free Trade Good for Colombia
  • China in Search of Energy Security
  • Cuba's Domestic Reforms Surge Past Immobilized United States
  • Fears Over Environmental Affects Prompt Court To Halt Mega-Dam Project
  • Bolivian Workers Strike to Protest Controversial Highway
  • Afghanistan is Obama's Gordian Knot
  • Why Are Pakistan's Militant Groups Splintering?
  • Questions Raised About Haqqani Network Ties with Pakistan
  • Russia Strives to Clarify Vision for Central Asian Alliance
  • Azerbaijan Faces Difficult Choice Between Turkey and Israel
  • Azerbaijan Wrestles with Iranian Predicament
  • In Post-Soviet Central Asia Russian Takes Back Seat
  • Stabilizing Congo
  • The Balkanization of Somalia
  • Refugees Still Vulnerable in Southern Kordofan
  • Al Shabaab Attacks Kill 16 at Key Somali Border Town
  • Is Africa New Breeding Place for Terrorism?
  • Somali Media Press on with Work Despite Deadly Challenges
  • China-Indian Trade: Smoothening the Rough Edges
  • The Survival of North Korea
  • The 'Orchid Revolution' in Singapore
  • Counterinsurgency and 'Op Sadhbhavana' in Jammu and Kashmir
  • Indian Foreign Policy in Search of a Balance
  • Philippines Struggles After Two Typhoons
  • Typhoon Nesat Death Toll Rises to 20
  • Obama's Dilemma: Foreign Policy and Electoral Realities
  • Why Al-Qaeda Won
  • Israel's Truths and Omissions on Vote for Palestine State
  • How to Save Israel and the United States from Themselves
  • Obama's Middle East Dilemma
  • Palestinian Leader: Obama Wrong to Take Israel's Side
  • Israeli Settlers: Never Shy About Taking Law Into Own Hands
  • Israel: The Cost of Arrogance
  • For Israeli Tycoons: New Strings Attached
  • Israeli Innovation on Display
  • Saudis to United States: You're Sleeping on the Couch Tonight
  • Over 5,000 Killings In Syria Since March
  • Iran Arrests Six for Supplying Information to BBC
  • Iran: Naval-Gazing More Political Than Military
  • Oman Assisting United States to Release Hikers in Iran
  • Al-Jazeera: You're Not Alone
  • Controversial Comeback For Egypt's Emergency Laws
  • Turkish PM Erdogan Encounters Two Egypts on Historic Visit
  • Turkey: Violence Casts Pall Over Constitutional Reform Efforts
  • Turkey: How Much of a Safe Haven for Political Dissidents?
  • Turkey's Neo-Ottoman Foreign Policy
  • Libya to Have a New Government within 7-10 Days
  • Libya Could Break Up Like Somalia
  • Libya and the Bully Problem
  • The Difficult Bit: The Arab Spring After Libya
  • Middle East and North Africa Face Shortfall of Affordable Homes
  • Lean Season Awaits Migrants Escaping Libya

 

Available at Amazon.com:

Aftermath: Following the Bloodshed of America's Wars in the Muslim World

Displacement and Dispossession in the Modern Middle East (The Contemporary Middle East)

Enemies of Intelligence

The End of History and the Last Man

The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order

The Tragedy of Great Power Politics

 

Copyright 2011, iHaveNet.com - All Rights Reserved

 

Share / Recommend

Search Powered By Google

Google Search   

ADVERTISEMENT

Advertisement

Advertisement

ADVERTISEMENT

Job & Career Search

career & job search                    job title, keywords, company, location
  • HOME
  • WORLD
  • USA
  • BUSINESS
  • WEALTH
  • STOCKS
  • TECH
  • HEALTH
  • LIFESTYLE
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • SPORTS

The Last Colony in Africa | Global Viewpoint

  • Services:
  • RSS Feeds
  • Shopping
  • Email Alerts
  • Site Map
  • Privacy