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  1. Tunisia's president interferes with electoral body

    BBC World Service

    Tunisia's President Kaïs Saïed in 2019.
    Image caption: It comes after he took executive powers and dissolved parliament last year

    Tunisia's President Kaïs Saïed has issued a decree that replaces members of the Independent Electoral Commission with his own appointees.

    The commission has been seen as one of the last official bodies to remain independent in Tunisia since Mr Saïed took executive powers and dissolved parliament last year.

    This latest move seems likely to fuel further opposition to his rule by those who believe that he has taken too much power.

    It also seems all but certain to stir further controversy over parliamentary elections that the Tunisian president has said will be held by the end of this year.

    More about Tunisia:

  2. Libya's rival cabinet meets in challenge to Tripoli

    The rival government in Libya has held its first meeting in the latest challenge to the UN-backed administration based in the capital, Tripoli.

    Since February, Libya has again been spilt between two opposing cabinets after parliament in the east elected Fathi Bashaga as the new prime minister, while the incumbent Abdulhamid Dbeibah refused to step down.

    At the first session of his cabinet in the southern town of Sebha, Mr Bashagha declared that a new era was beginning in Libya after chaos and tyranny.

    But there is widespread concern that the country could face new unrest after the UN-sponsored political roadmap was cast into doubt by the failure to hold planned elections in December.

    A view of the city of Sirte, which is under control of Libyan warlord Khalifa Haftar's forces, in Libya on December 06, 2021.
    Image caption: Libya has been hit by conflict since the killing of long-serving ruler Muammar Gaddafi in 2011
  3. Video content

    Video caption: Syrian refugee wants to be role model for others

    A Syrian woman who arrived in UK as a refugee two years hopes to get back into teaching in Wales.

  4. Egypt authorities rule over mysterious death of economist

    BBC World Service

    Ayman Hadhoud
    Image caption: Ayman Hadhoud was a member of Egypt's liberal Reform and Development Party

    Egypt's Public Prosecution office has ruled that the death of a prominent government critic was not the result of any crime.

    Supporters of Ayman Hadhoud say that he was subject to ill- treatment by the police after what they describe as his "forced disappearance".

    Mr Hadhoud died in a government-run psychiatric hospital in March but his body was not handed over to relatives until earlier this month.

    The Egyptian prosecution office said a post-mortem revealed that Mr Hadhoud had died from a chronic heart condition - and there were no signs of violence or resistance.

    Read more: Ayman Hadhoud: Questions over Egyptian economist's mysterious death

  5. Libya oil production hit amid worsening protests

    BBC World Service

    Smoke rises form the headquarters of Libyan state oil firm National Oil Corporation (NOC) after three masked persons attacked it in Tripoli
    Image caption: Production has stopped at oil fields and energy facilities across the country

    Libya’s National Oil Corporation says that a wave of protests affecting the energy sector are likely to get worse.

    At least four separate groups have stopped production at oil fields and energy facilities across the country.

    The protesters want Libya's Tripoli-based Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah to hand power to a rival government led by Fathi Bashagha which was formed last month.

    The two governments have been competing for power since Libya's parliament elected Mr Bashagha prime minister.

    But Mr Dbeibah says he still has a mandate to govern until national elections scheduled for June.

  6. Video content

    Video caption: Jordan's army faces deadly fight against Syria drug smugglers

    Troops on the kingdom's north-eastern border have made huge hauls of the amphetamine Captagon.