The migrants, who presented as Moroccan nationals, are "fit and healthy", the Home Office says.
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Jordanian prince pledges allegiance to king
Prince Hamzah issues a statement hours after mediation saying he is committed to the constitution.
Top Stories

Jordanian prince pledges allegiance to king
Prince Hamzah issues a statement hours after mediation saying he is committed to the constitution.

Video 3 minutes 40 seconds
Alone on an abandoned cargo ship
Mohammed Aisha has been living on a cargo ship for four years, part of that time completely on his own.

Editor 'told to drop negative Netanyahu stories'
The Israeli PM's corruption trial is told he sought improper benefits from media bosses.

Dubai police arrest group over nude balcony shoot
Eleven Ukrainian women were among those detained, the Ukrainian consulate told the BBC.

Video 1 minute 7 seconds
Egypt's ancient rulers return in mummies' parade
The Cairo spectacle sees the remains of 18 kings and four queens taken to a new resting place.

Suez traffic jam caused by stuck ship 'cleared'
The last vessels blocked by the Ever Given have now passed through the Suez Canal, authorities say.

Deadlock could see Lebanon 'sink like Titanic'
The crisis-hit country has been without a government for more than seven months.
Featured Contents

Jordanian prince pledges allegiance to king
Prince Hamzah issues a statement hours after mediation saying he is committed to the constitution.

Video 3 minutes 40 seconds
Alone on an abandoned cargo ship
Mohammed Aisha has been living on a cargo ship for four years, part of that time completely on his own.

Editor 'told to drop negative Netanyahu stories'
The Israeli PM's corruption trial is told he sought improper benefits from media bosses.

Dubai police arrest group over nude balcony shoot
Eleven Ukrainian women were among those detained, the Ukrainian consulate told the BBC.

Video 1 minute 7 seconds
Egypt's ancient rulers return in mummies' parade
The Cairo spectacle sees the remains of 18 kings and four queens taken to a new resting place.

Suez traffic jam caused by stuck ship 'cleared'
The last vessels blocked by the Ever Given have now passed through the Suez Canal, authorities say.

Deadlock could see Lebanon 'sink like Titanic'
The crisis-hit country has been without a government for more than seven months.

Video 3 minutes 40 seconds
Alone on an abandoned cargo ship
Mohammed Aisha has been living on a cargo ship for four years, part of that time completely on his own.

Editor 'told to drop negative Netanyahu stories'
The Israeli PM's corruption trial is told he sought improper benefits from media bosses.

Dubai police arrest group over nude balcony shoot
Eleven Ukrainian women were among those detained, the Ukrainian consulate told the BBC.
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Video caption: The sailor living alone on an abandoned cargo ship Seafarer Mohammed Aisha has been living on an abandoned cargo ship for four years, part of that time completely on his own.
By James Law
BBC Sport
Video content
Video caption: Egypt mummies: Parade transports remains of pharaohs Amid fanfare, 18 kings and four queens were transported on custom-made vehicles designed to minimise vibration.
By Joshua Cheetham
BBC News
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Video caption: Jordan arrests: Former Crown Prince says he is under house arrest It comes after Jordan's military denied Hamzah bin Hussein had been detained.
By Wael Hussein
BBC News, Cairo
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Video caption: Mona Eltahawy on Nawal El Saadawi’s legacy amongst ‘feminist giants’ Mona Eltahawy says that Nawal El Saadawi's legacy continues in Africa's long the tradition of ‘feminist giants’.
Eight suffocate in Algerian prison septic tank
Seven prison guards and an inmate suffocated to death in a septic tank in Algeria's north-eastern province of Bejaia on Wednesday.
It's thought the men died after inhaling the toxic gas hydrogen sulphide, Justice Minister Belkacem Zeghmati said on Wednesday.
Local media report that the men had been cleaning the tank in Oued Ghir prison when they died.
Their bodies have been taken to a nearby hospital for autopsies.
AFP news agency reports that Oued Ghir prison opened in 2010 and authorities at the time said the facility "meets modern standards".
Why Algeria's feminists no longer work in secret

Alma Hassoun
BBC Arabic women affairs' journalist
Copyright: AFPImage caption: Algerian women are now determined to be heard Algerian women, buoyed by the mass street protests that been demanding political change in the North Africa nation, are determined to be seen and heard.
The anti-government movement, known as the Hirak, started two years ago, bringing down a president within months - forcing Abdelaziz Bouteflika to resign in April 2019.
“We have this longing to gather in public places. Feminists used to work secretively out of fear until the Hirak took place,” 34-year-old feminist activist Amal Hajjaj told the BBC.
During the 20 years Mr Bouteflika was in power Ms Hajjaj says that the feminist movement was undocumented and that a media “blackout” was imposed on it.
“Most feminist groups were established in the 1990s. Try to look for anything about them or women’s demands, you’ll find nothing. You’ll find the result of their fight, such as some law changes, attributed either to Bouteflika or the opposition.”
In March 2019, following calls to keep the Hirak focused on political goals, both old and new feminist groups met for the first time and agreed to form Feminist Square, an umbrella organisation.
Copyright: AFPImage caption: Activists say the Hirak movement gave women the chance to break their silence This collective effort was aimed at preventing history from repeating itself - from marginalising women’s demands amid a national movement.
Since its creation, Feminist Square has been taking to the streets regularly to re-claim the public space.
In addition, the group has done a lot during the pandemic in terms of trying to curb violence against women and coming up with a strategy to protect them, says Ms Hajjaj.
Top of the group’s demands remains the creation of a civil family law to replace the one issued in 1984.
That is known as the “family code” - its most controversial articles are the ones that give men more power when it comes to decisions related to women marriage.
Feminist Square wants women to be guaranteed equal rights without any reference to Islamic law - a demand that has always caused a heated debate in the mainly Muslim country.
"The election law, for instance, recognises women as citizens. Women also pay taxes, transports fees and rents - just like men. Only the family law does not see women as citizens," says Ms Hajjaj






























