A rare glimpse of a fractured conflict where the young are stalked by war and hunger.
Read moreBy Orla Guerin
BBC News, Yemen

Police use water cannon to break up mass demonstrations as a controversial law is passed.

Police use water cannon to break up mass demonstrations as a controversial law is passed.

An Iranian-German businessman on death row may have made his last phone call, his daughter fears.

Unanswered questions about one of the world's worst financial crises hang over Riad Salameh.

Crowds in Iraq and Yemen protest against the acts of a far-right group in Copenhagen.

Former detainees tell the BBC of degrading strip searches which are filmed despite prison rules.

It comes a day after Patrick Zaki was convicted of spreading false news and jailed for three years.

Police use water cannon to break up mass demonstrations as a controversial law is passed.

An Iranian-German businessman on death row may have made his last phone call, his daughter fears.

Unanswered questions about one of the world's worst financial crises hang over Riad Salameh.

Crowds in Iraq and Yemen protest against the acts of a far-right group in Copenhagen.

Former detainees tell the BBC of degrading strip searches which are filmed despite prison rules.

It comes a day after Patrick Zaki was convicted of spreading false news and jailed for three years.

An Iranian-German businessman on death row may have made his last phone call, his daughter fears.

Unanswered questions about one of the world's worst financial crises hang over Riad Salameh.
By Orla Guerin
BBC News, Yemen
By Paul Adams, Raffi Berg & Laurence Peter
BBC News, Jerusalem and London
By Laurence Peter
BBC News
By Emily McGarvey
BBC News
By Raffi Berg
BBC News Online Middle East editor
Mike Thomson
BBC World Service News

Algeria says 15 people have been killed in wildfires during a continuing severe heatwave.
The deaths happened in the mountainous Bejaia and Bouria regions, where more than 7,000 firefighters are battling blazes.
Meanwhile, 1,500 people have been evacuated. Algeria’s Meteorological Office has warned that temperatures of more than 48C (118F) are likely to continue until the end of the month in the north of the country.
The news follows weeks of high temperatures across North Africa - reaching 50C in some areas.
Since the heatwave began, electricity consumption in Algeria is reported to have reached the highest level in the country’s history.
Read more here
Thousands of protesters opposed to plans to overhaul Israel's judiciary have gathered ahead of a key vote.
By Tom Bateman & Malu Cursino
BBC News, Jerusalem and London

James Copnall
BBC Newsday, Camini, southern Italy

It’s easy to get caught up in the heat of the political debate over migration across the Mediterranean, a topic that has propelled right-wing parties into power in Italy and elsewhere.
It’s easy, too, to get lost in the sandstorm of statistics: the tens of thousands of arrivals on Italy’s shores, or the estimated 2,000 people who have died crossing the Mediterranean already this year.
In a week of reporting from southern Italy on migration, though, it is the personal stories, the fear and the hope, the tragedies and the triumphs, that stand far above anything else.
Take, for instance, Tessy, a young Nigerian woman who made it to Italy 15 years ago. She almost broke down as she told me about her journey to Europe.
She spent 10 days stuck in the Sahara desert, almost out of food and water. It was 50:50 whether she lived or died, she said.
Now, she is married, and happy, helping newly arrived migrants and refugees to settle into life in Italy. But, Tessy said, she would never advise her 21-year-old self to make that sort of journey.
Or what about Anicet, an Ivorian woman I met outside a reception centre for migrants in Crotone? She said she had been sold into slavery in Tunisia, and described beatings and rapes as commonplace for women making their way to Europe.
Men told me they had been imprisoned in Libya, and beaten, until they paid ransoms.
The physical and psychological scars will take a long time to heal.
In time, though, all those who make what is one of the world’s most dangerous journeys hope that they – like Tessy – will be able to settle in to a better life.
By Damien McGuinness
BBC News, Berlin
By Nadine Yousif
BBC News
By Parham Ghobadi
BBC World Service
Hundreds of people have stormed Sweden’s embassy in Iraq to protest a planned burning of the Quran in Stockholm.
By Robbie Meredith
BBC News NI education correspondent
By Mike Thomson
BBC News, Sfax
By David Gritten
BBC News