INSIGHT: Bolstering Education and Science in the Arab World

A decade ago, the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) shone a spotlight on the sorry state of education in the Arab world with its inaugural Arab Human Development Report in 2002, and its 2003 follow-on report, “Building a Knowledge Society.” The reports’ statistics still shock: in one year, Spain translates the same number of More »

Arab Women Launch Online Uprising

On October 1st, 2012, women organizers launched a Facebook page, “The Uprising of Women in the Arab World,” to highlight the discrimination against them which they don’t feel comfortable – or safe – enough to protest in the streets.  In just ten days, the page has generated nearly 35,000 “likes” and conversation among more More »

The World Reacts to Anti-Muslim Film

Probably not since the notorious Quran burning calls by controversial Florida pastor Terry Jones in 2010/2011 have relations been so tense between the United States and the Muslim world in what seemingly boils down to a conflict between perceived blasphemy and free speech. Still sore wounds were reopened earlier this month by a YouTube More »

WATCH: Touareg Grammy Winners Tinariwen on World Tour

They won this year’s Grammy for Best World Music album.  The Touareg group Tinariwen is currently on a world tour to promote its Tassili CD. VOA’s David Byrd caught up with the group when they visited Washington, D.C., and reports that the current turmoil in the group’s home country of Mali is never far More »

Clinton Calls on Middle East Activists to Assess US Support

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton welcomed Middle East democracy activists to the State Department on Tuesday, asking for their input on how the United States can help advance freedom and human rights in the region. Greeting the activists before the meeting, Clinton called on them to give their “honest assessments” of the best ways More »

Current Affairs Podcast With Carol Castiel: Mustapha El Khalf's First 100 Days

 Interviews with newsmakers and thought leaders about events and issues affecting the broader Middle East and the More »

Without iTunes in Middle East, Music Piracy on the Rise

If you want to buy a CD in the Arab world – legally, that is – you can’t go online and simply download it.  You either have to resort to piracy or hope that the local music shop sells the artist you are looking for.  iTunes, the world’s biggest music store, is available in More »

Current Affairs Podcasts With Carol Castiel

 Interviews with newsmakers and thought leaders about events and issues affecting the broader Middle East and the More »

UPDATED: Touareg Musicians Tinariwen Take Home Grammy

Up against three other nominees, the Touareg group Tinariwen receives a Best World Music Album Grammy for its Tassili Desert Sessions at the 54th Annual Grammy Awards ceremony in Los Angeles February 12. Their beginnings come out of conflict and turmoil.  Now they say they want their music to help build a new tomorrow for More »

Hit Film ‘Zenne Dancer’ Explores Turkish Gay Community

Movie based on true story of homosexual man who police suspect was murdered by his father in honor killing More »

POLL: What Arabs Really Think About Turkey

A newly-released survey finds that majorities across the Middle East have positive views about Turkey and its role in the region.  This according to the Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation (TESEV), which yesterday released its third annual Perception of Turkey in the Middle East survey. Out of more than 2,300 respondents  TESEV surveyed across More »

The Arab Spring One Year On: What Has Changed?

It has been a year since the start of the so-called Arab Spring. Several old regimes in the Middle East and North Africa have been overthrown; others are still clinging to power.  Islamist political parties have taken a new place on the stage and old assumptions about the region are being challenged. But has anything More »

Five Political Arab Spring Music Bands You Need To Watch

Arab Spring was a revolution of the arts as well as the politics of many Middle Eastern countries.  One form of artistic expression that became integral to the demonstrations on Cairo’s Tahrir Square and elsewhere in the region was music.  Witness the rise of Ramy Essam, an architecture student in Mansoura who grabbed his More »

REPORTER’S NOTEBOOK: Morocco Charts Own Arab Spring

King Mohammed VI named a new government almost six weeks after parliamentary elections on November 25, 2011, catapulted the Justice and Development Party (PJD), a moderate Islamist movement, to power. Abdelilah Benkirane, PJD’s secretary general, was appointed Head of Government. Since the PJD did not win an outright majority of the 395 parliamentary seats, Benkirane More »

Arab Spring Brought Major Change, Challenges to Middle East

In this Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2011 file photo, a Yemeni protestor holds a dagger and chants slogans during a demonstration demanding the prosecution of President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sanaa, Yemen. The case is often made that Washington was caught flatfooted by the Arab Spring and now must adapt to diminished influence in the Middle East. But declaring a twilight for America in the Mideast ignores a big caveat: The deep U.S. connections in the Persian Gulf have so far ridden out the upheavals and are increasingly flexing their political clout around the Arab world. (AP Photo/Hani Mohammed)

Long-reigning rulers fell, others teeter on the brink, region is forever changed More »

VOA Middle East Newsmaker: Morocco’s Constitutional Future

Moroccans have overwhelmingly approved the constitutional reforms that King Mohammed VI says will bring democratic reform to his country. Moroccan officials said 98 percent of voters voted to approve the new constitution, with a stunning 72 percent of the 13 million registered voters casting a ballot. King Mohammed announced his proposed reforms last month.Reporter Cecily More »