BBC News Middle East

Top Stories

Latest Updates

  1. Israel evacuates Jews from Ethiopia conflict region

    Kalkidan Yibeltal

    BBC News, Addis Ababa

    Ethiopia Tigray crisis: Members of Amhara region militias ride on their truck as they head to face the Tigray Peoples Liberation Front in Sanja
    Image caption: The US, UK and other countries have expressed concerns over the deteriorating security in Ethiopia

    Israel has announced it's evacuated in a special flight over 200 of its citizens and Ethiopian Jews from two cities in the Amhara region affected by recent violence and moved them to the country’s capital Addis Ababa.

    Amhara is home to thousands of members of the Jewish community.

    In a statement Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he’d directed the evacuees to be moved out of combat areas and that they would leave for Israel.

    Relative calm continues to be reported in the biggest cities in the Amhara region amid recent intense clashes between the army and local militias.

    The army said it regained control in key regions but residents in some smaller towns and rural districts say local militias are still in charge.

    Meanwhile the US and the UK have joined hands with three other countries - Japan, Australia and New Zealand - to express concerns over deteriorating security in Ethiopia.

    A joint statement released on Friday says recent violence in the country’s Amhara and Oromia regions “have resulted in civilian deaths and instability".

    The UN’s Commission of Human Rights Experts on Ethiopia earlier said it was “deeply concerned” by the recent insecurity and called on the government to adhere to “the principles of necessity, proportionality, and non-discrimination” in implementing a state of emergency declared in connection with the violence.

  2. At least 14 migrants die in Tunisia shipwrecks

    The Newsroom

    BBC World Service

    Sub-Saharan African migrants who were expelled from the city of Sfax in Tunisia beg for help as they gather in an area near the Libyan-Tunisia border, in Ras Jedir, 173 km west of Tripoli, Libya, 26 July 2023.
    Image caption: Tunisia is a major gateway for irregular migrants from other parts of Africa

    The Tunisian authorities say at least 14 migrants have died in different shipwrecks in the Mediterranean over the last two days.

    More than 50 are missing after the latest accident, in which a boat sank off the coast.

    All those on board were from sub-Saharan Africa.

    Tunisia is a major gateway for irregular migrants from other parts of Africa attempting perilous voyages to Europe.

    The Tunisian interior minister says the coast guard has recovered more than 900 bodies of drowned migrants so far this year.

  3. New head of top Libyan council elected

    BBC World Service

    A new head of the High Council of State in Libya has been elected in a development that may further complicate efforts to restart its stalled political process.

    Mohammad Takala defeated the incumbent Khaled al-Meshri to take over as president of the Tripoli-based consultative body.

    The body was set up in 2015 as part of the UN-backed roadmap towards a new democratic future for Libya, after the fall of Muammar Gaddafi and the violent unrest that followed.

    The election of Mr Takala may lead to a shift in political alliances in Libya, as he is a close ally of the interim Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah.

  4. Tunisian singer's show cancelled over Palestinian concerts

    Mike Thomson

    BBC World Service News

    Tunisian singer Emel Mathlouthi
    Image caption: Emel Mathlouthi performed in Bethlehem, Ramallah and East Jerusalem to Palestinian audiences last month

    A Tunisian singer who was hailed as the voice of the country's uprising in 2011 has had a forthcoming show cancelled after performing in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

    Last month Emel Mathlouthi performed in Bethlehem, Ramallah and East Jerusalem to Palestinian audiences.

    Following the tour she was accused by pro-Palestinian campaigners of promoting “normalisation” with Israel – and her performance at next week’s Hammamet International Festival in Tunisia has been cancelled.

    Ms Mathlouthi said she had been the victim of a “big misinformation campaign” – and the move was “unjustified” because she didn’t perform in Israel.

  5. Moroccan jailed for criticising king on Facebook

    Cat Wiener

    BBC World Service Newsroom

    A convoy carrying Morocco's King Mohammed VI leaves the Tetouan palace following a ceremony of allegiance to mark the 24th anniversary of his enthronement, on July 31, 2023.
    Image caption: Moroccan law stipulates that foreign affairs are the responsibility of the king

    The lawyer for a Moroccan man accused of criticising the country's king on social media has told journalists his client has been sentenced to five years in prison.

    Said Boukioud was charged with "undermining the monarchy" for comments he posted on Facebook in 2020 criticising Morocco's normalisation of ties with Israel.

    He was living in Qatar at the time.

    The Moroccan constitution stipulates that foreign affairs are the responsibility of King Mohammed VI and any comments that appear to question his authority are severely penalised.

    Mr Boukioud's lawyer, El Hassan Essouni, described the sentence as "harsh and incomprehensible" and said his client would appeal.

  6. Tunisia’s president sacks PM Bouden

    The Newsroom

    BBC World Service

    Tunisia's Prime Minister Najla Bouden
    Image caption: Ms Bouden was the country's first ever female prime minister

    Tunisia's autocratic President Kais Saied has sacked Prime Minister Najla Bouden.

    Ms Bouden - the country's first ever female prime minister - was hand-picked by President Saied to lead the government after he removed her predecessor two years ago and took control of almost all state powers.

    Her late-night dismissal was followed by the immediate swearing-in of another political unknown, Ahmed Hachani, who previously worked at the Tunisian central bank.

    The move comes during a deepening economic and social crisis that has seen a shortage of many key commodities.

    Ms Bouden's government had supported an economic reform programme geared towards securing a $2bn (£1.6bn) IMF bailout