
#economist.com. × A coup attempt in Tigray raises tensions in the Horn. Ethiopia and Eritrea are engaged in a dangerous game of brinkmanship
#Mar.20.2025

#economist.com. × Nigerian politics is a nasty place for women. A sexual-harassment scandal in parliament shows why
#Mar.20.2025

#economist.com. × The success of Ivory Coast is Africa’s best-kept secret. How has it managed to outshine its peers?
#Mar.20.2025

#economist.com. × America’s Democrats should embrace “abundance liberalism”. Two new books contain much to commend them
#Mar.18.2025

#economist.com. × Israel’s strikes may be only the start of a new offensive in Gaza. Politics mean Binyamin Netanyahu needs to keep open the possibility of a return to full-scale war
#Mar.18.2025

#economist.com. × Will Trump’s tariffs turbocharge foreign investment in America?. Companies from Asahi to TSMC are expanding production in the country—for now
#Mar.17.2025

#economist.com. × Binyamin Netanyahu is leading Israel into (another) crisis. His decision to sack the security chief will not end well
#Mar.17.2025

#economist.com. × Netanyahu’s decision to sack his security chief will not end well. Another crisis in Israel looms
#Mar.17.2025

#economist.com. × Another civil war looms in South Sudan. It could merge with the one in neighbouring Sudan, to catastrophic effect
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × Binyamin Netanyahu likens himself to Donald Trump. Israel’s prime minister is again under pressure from lawyers and security men
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × After the bloodshed, can Syria’s president unite his country?. A deal with the Kurds may yet shore up Ahmed al-Sharaa’s rule
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × Abiy Ahmed’s agricultural revolution is too good to be true. The prime minister claims to have made Ethiopia Africa’s breadbasket. The numbers disagree
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × The race to elect the next head of the Olympics is heating up. The winner will be faced with growing competition and a changing media landscape
#Mar.13.2025

#economist.com. × Trump’s metals tariffs will cost American industry dearly. Not least because the president is ratcheting up duties on Canada
#Mar.11.2025

#economist.com. × The budget that will determine South Africa’s future. It could make or break its governing coalition
#Mar.11.2025

#economist.com. × South Africa’s government is looking fragile. A spat over the budget exposes deepening rifts
#Mar.11.2025

#economist.com. × A horrific killing spree shakes Syria. Fresh atrocities suggest a country spiralling out of control
#Mar.10.2025

#economist.com. × Donald Trump’s tariffs are a throwback to the 1930s. “Economic nationalism”, our predecessors wrote, “is almost an American invention”
#Mar.06.2025

#economist.com. × Lebanon’s new government must do three big things immediately. It needs money to reform, but donors want to see reforms before they write cheques
#Mar.06.2025

#economist.com. × Why some Africans see opportunity in foreign-aid cuts. They want to be more self-reliant. But that will not be easy
#Mar.06.2025

#economist.com. × How Trump’s tariffs could crush American carmakers. They must hope the levies do not endure
#Mar.04.2025

#economist.com. × Trump’s new tariffs are set to be his most extreme ever. America targets its three biggest trading partners: Canada, Mexico and China
#Mar.03.2025

#economist.com. × Trump’s new tariffs are his most extreme ever. America targets its three biggest trading partners: Canada, Mexico and China
#Mar.03.2025

#economist.com. × Israel’s army adopts a high-stakes new strategy: more terrain. It remains present inside Syria, Lebanon, Gaza and the West Bank
#Mar.03.2025
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