
#economist.com. × Lebanon faces its worst crisis since the end of the civil war. Refugees are flooding into central Beirut
#Sep.29.2024 ×

#economist.com. × Hassan Nasrallah’s death will reshape Lebanon and the Middle East. A decapitated Hizbullah faces the most precarious moment in its history
#Sep.28.2024 ×

#economist.com. × Hassan Nasrallah, leader of Hizbullah. Israel has killed the head of the militant group
#Sep.28.2024 ×

#economist.com. × Israel targets the head of Hizbullah in a deadly strike on Beirut. It may provoke the militia into a response that leads to all-out war
#Sep.27.2024 ×

#economist.com. × The flight from southern Lebanon has been swift. Israel’s attacks have left the Lebanese fearful and suspicious
#Sep.26.2024 ×

#economist.com. × Tunisia’s strongman president looks set to win another term in office. It helps to put most of your opponents in jail
#Sep.26.2024 ×

#economist.com. × Building an African multinational. What a solar startup reveals about business in the continent’s toughest places
#Sep.26.2024 ×

#economist.com. × How lower American interest rates will boost Africa. One of the world’s worst-named financial instruments is newly relevant
#Sep.26.2024 ×

#economist.com. × Hizbullah seems to have miscalculated in its fight with Israel. But neither side would gain from a ruinous and pointless war
#Sep.25.2024 ×

#economist.com. × Iran’s damage-limitation efforts may not go to plan. As war with Israel intensifies on two fronts, Iranian presidential hopes for a rapprochement may fade
#Sep.25.2024 ×

#economist.com. × Israel and Hizbullah creep closer to all-out war. But Israel does not yet have the forces in place to invade
#Sep.22.2024 ×

#economist.com. × A theatre in Jenin offers a different kind of Palestinian resistance. It is a target for both Israel and Palestinian militants
#Sep.19.2024 ×

#economist.com. × Israel’s government is again trying to hobble its Supreme Court. While at war, Israel is facing a constitutional crisis
#Sep.19.2024 ×

#economist.com. × Floods in Nigeria’s north-east are aggravating a humanitarian crisis. The region had already been devastated by the Boko Haram insurgency
#Sep.19.2024 ×

#economist.com. × Nairobi’s reputation for crime is outdated. That is only in part thanks to its notorious police
#Sep.19.2024 ×

#economist.com. × The world’s poorest countries have experienced a brutal decade. Why has development ground to a halt?
#Sep.19.2024 ×

#economist.com. × Israel has bloodied Hizbullah but is stuck in a war of attrition. Two attacks on the Shia militia may not change Israel’s strategic dilemma in Lebanon
#Sep.18.2024 ×

#economist.com. × A pager-bomb attack causes disarray for Hizbullah. Thousands of devices explode in an apparent Israeli strike
#Sep.17.2024 ×

#economist.com. × Turkey is trying to deport Syrian refugees back to a war zone. Many Turks fear Syrian refugees will change the character of their country
#Sep.12.2024 ×

#economist.com. × How trading in war-torn Sudan survives—just. Profiteering from conflict is only part of the story
#Sep.12.2024 ×

#economist.com. × Is Syria’s drug-dealing dictator coming in from the cold?. Bashar al-Assad is less of a pariah, but cannot hold the country together
#Sep.11.2024 ×

#economist.com. × A narrow corridor in Gaza has become an obstacle to a ceasefire. Binyamin Netanyahu says the presence of Israeli troops is crucial. His generals disagree
#Sep.09.2024 ×

#economist.com. × If Nigeria cannot end fuel shortages, disaster beckons. A new refinery creates a chance to scrap ruinous petrol subsidies
#Sep.09.2024 ×
Filter: #economist.com. × #Sep.29.2024 ×
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