BBC News Middle East

Top Stories

Latest Updates

  1. Brother of Algeria ex-president jailed for graft

    BBC World Service

    Said Bouteflika
    Image caption: Saïd Bouteflika was also an advisor to his brother

    An Algerian court has sentenced the brother of the former president Abdelaziz Bouteflika to 12 years in jail for corruption.

    Saïd Bouteflika, who was his brother's advisor, was also fined nearly $60,000 (£50,000).

    Several top Algerian businessmen were convicted with him and also given long prison terms.

    Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who was accused of fostering corruption over his 20 year rule, was forced to resign as president in 2019 following a wave of pro-democracy protests.

    He died two years later.

  2. Video content

    Video caption: Six remarkable rescues amid earthquake chaos

    More than 20,000 people are known to have died in Turkey and Syria, with the number expected to rise.

  3. Algeria recalls envoy to France in spat over wanted activist

    French President Emmanuel Macron in Algeria
    Image caption: French President Emmanuel Macron visited Algeria in August to mend ties

    Algeria has recalled its ambassador to France for consultations, the presidency said on Wednesday in a new spat over the evacuation of Algerian activist Amira Bouraoui who is wanted by Algiers.

    President Abdelmadjid Tebboune ordered ambassador Said Moussi to be recalled "with immediate effect", a statement said.

    Ms Bouraoui, 46, was arrested in Tunisia on Friday and risked being deported to Algeria, but she was finally able to board a flight to France on Monday evening, the AFP news agency reports.

    The French-Algerian was sentenced in Algeria in May 2021 to two years in jail for "offending Islam" and for insulting the president. She has not been placed under arrest since then pending an appeal.

    French President Emmanuel Macron visited Algeria in August 2022 to repair fractured relations after a long period of tension over conflicting memories of Algeria's bloody war of independence.

  4. Video content

    Video caption: How rescue videos give only glimpse into Syria quake horror

    A look at how the BBC is able to cover the story with such limited access on the ground.

  5. African nations send aid to earthquake zone

    Shingai Nyoka

    BBC News

    Tunisian emergency responders load aid to Syria and Turkey into military planes at L'Aouina military airport on 7 February 2023
    Image caption: Emergency responders in Tunisia load supplies on to military planes

    Algeria, Egypt and Tunisia are among African Union countries that have sent aid and technical assistance to the Turkish-Syrian border.

    Kenya has committed to sending aid and called on trained medical workers to volunteer their services.

    Africa’s largest non-governmental humanitarian organisation, Gift of the Givers, has also dispatched teams of rescue workers and equipment to help the huge international rescue effort.

    More than 11,000 people in southern Turkey and northern Syria have been killed in the 7.8 magnitude quake, with officials quoting 8,574 deaths in Turkey and 2,660 people confirmed dead in Syria.

  6. Death sentence in Egypt for Islamic State links

    Mike Thomson

    BBC World Service News

    An Egyptian court has sentenced one man to death and 11 others to life imprisonment after convicting them of links to the Islamic State group.

    Six more were jailed for between 10 to 15 years.

    All were said to have either led or joined a terrorist group between 2015 and 2019.

    In recent years jihadists - some inspired by IS - have carried out a wave of attacks in the Sinai Peninsula and others areas of Egypt.

    Mass trials of this kind there are not uncommon there.

    In a single case last year, 215 defendants received sentences ranging from 10 years to the death penalty.