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  1. Algeria seeks to make Russia's Covid vaccine

    Ahmed Rouaba

    BBC News

    A woman receives an injection with Sputnik V vaccine in Algiers, Algeria
    Image caption: Algeria started a vaccination campaign on Saturday

    Algeria has begun discussions to have Russia's Sputnik V Covid-19 vaccine made in the country, the prime minister's office has said.

    "The two parties agreed to start contacts between the relevant bodies with a view to build cooperation in the field of making the Spoutnik V vaccine in Algeria," said a statement from Prime Minister Abdelaziz Djerad after he met Russian ambassador to Algiers Igor Baliaev.

    The government did not give a manufacturing timeline, nor did it specify the quantities of doses to be produced.

    Algeria received its first 500,000 doses of Sputnik V on Friday last week and started a vaccination campaign on Saturday in the province of Blida.

    The authorities are expecting a second shipment of China’s Sinopharm vaccine "in the coming days", according to the Communication Minister Ammar Belhimer.

    An AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine shipment that was ordered by the government would be delivered next month, according to the minister.

    The Algerian government had announced a budget of €122m ($147m;£107m) to secure vaccines and to immunise the population of 40 million.

    Meanwhile, President Abdelamdjid Tebboune is being treated in Germany for a Covid-19 complication.

  2. Video content

    Video caption: ‘Saudi dissidents in exile are on alert all the time’

    It is premature to rule out democratic change in Saudi Arabia, says Prof Madawi Al-Rasheed.

  3. Libya delegates meet to pick interim premier

    BBC World Service

    Delegates from Libya at UN-sponsored talks in Geneva are beginning the process of choosing a temporary administration that would run the country until elections in December.

    They will have until Friday to select a prime minister and a three-member council. Forty-five candidates have put themselves forward.

    They're drawn from the two rival administrations that have been vying for power in the divided country - one in the capital Tripoli, and the other based in the east.

  4. Video content

    Video caption: Lebanon ambulance driver: 'Hospitals can't take our Covid patients'

    Hospitals in Lebanon are having to turn away patients as the country buckles under Covid and economic collapse.

  5. Cannabis-smoking Tunisians 'sentenced to 30 years'

    BBC World Service

    A Tunisian smoking a cannabis joint
    Image caption: It is illegal to smoke cannabis in Tunisia

    Three young Tunisian men are reported to have been sentenced to 30 years in prison for smoking cannabis at a football stadium.

    A spokesperson at the regional court that delivered the sentence said that it was based on three separate laws - which include 10 years for drug consumers and traffickers and 20 years for taking drugs in a public place.

    An MP has called for a presidential pardon to be issued for the three men.

  6. Covid-19: WHO team member in Wuhan says it's not clear they'll find origin of pandemic

    Video content

    Video caption: WHO team investigating the origins of Covid-19 begins fieldwork in Wuhan
  7. Video content

    Video caption: Lebanon: Crowds torch government building amidst lockdown unrest

    Protests have been taking place over strict lockdown measures, including a total curfew.

  8. Moroccan King goes first in vaccine drive

    Video content

    Video caption: It's one of the biggest countries yet in Africa to start a vaccination campaign.

    The large-scale national vaccination campaign seeks to give free jabs to all citizens.