The fog of war, the port of Benghazi. ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
Month: June 2011
MOD11008090.jpg
Near Brega, planning tactics for the next battle. ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
MOD11008074.jpg
Damage near the Mosque at the east gate of Adjabiya. ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
MOD11008078.jpg
A rebel unit from Benghazi. $©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
MOD11008080.jpg
Rebels on the road between Ras lanuf and Sirt. ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
Essay: our writer spent years combating what Pippa Middleton, seen by millions at the Royal Wedding, has made fashionable: a shapely bum. Inspired by the bridesmaid’s becoming backside, Wiesinger may finally be ready to let her ample bottom be.
MOD11008120.jpg
The western town of Sullum, Egypt is the entry point for those few, mostly aid workers and journalists, looking to get into Libya. ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
MOD11008112.jpg
Inside the security prison in Bengazi, where the uprising began. ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
MOD11008102.jpg
The scorched earth left near the prison in Benghazi where the uprising began. ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
MOD11008089.jpg
On the way from Tobruk to Bengazi. ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
MOD11008087.jpg
Northern Libya is dotted by Roman-era ruins ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
MOD11008069.jpg
People return to their houses in Adjabiya after the rebels regain control of the city. Ibrahim Absullam’s house was bombed Gaddafi forces. ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
MOD11008047.jpg
The ultimate price of war. ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
MOD11008057.jpg
After rebels take the city of Adjabiya. ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
MOD11008015.jpg
An injured man thought to be a mercenary soldier for Libyan government forces. ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
MOD11008024.jpg
On the front line for the battle of Ajdabia. ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
MOD11008025.jpg
The shifting front line for rebel troops moving in on the city of Ajdabia. ©DavideMonteleone/Contrasto
Half-brother of Yemen’s wounded president, General Ali Mohsen Al-Ahmar has sided with the protesters, calling for regime change. But he insists that he will find the power to do it peacefully.
Analysis: Voters in Sunday’s national election in Turkey rewarded the governing AKP party, in power for the past eight years, for a job well done. But the success of the leading Kurdish party shows the country’s “seminal question&quo
Le Monde reveals new medical report that recommends a strengthened guardianship for billionaire Bettencourt, 88, who has been battling with her daugther over the family fortune.
Strongest among the under-30s, the trend of Germans renouncing car ownership has touched all age groups. Autos are increasingly a practical choice rather than status symbol.
A R A B I C A ارابيكا MOROCCAN FUTURE*Egypy’s Al Ahram newspaper reported on the largest protests Morocco has witnessed to date, with thousands of people demonstrating in at least 10 cities around the country, including Fez, Marrakech and Casablanca. The demands of protesters are similar to those in Egypt, Yemen, Jordan and other […]
Building China With A Wrecking Ball
People’s rights and the rule of law are being sacrificed on the altar of economic development. By now, the scenes are turning into a collective psychosis: forced from their homes to make way for new development, Chinese increasingly are turning to violenc
A Deadly Year For Union Leaders Worldwide
According to the International Trade Union Confederation, some 100 union members were killed in 2010. A bleak picture that shows no sign of improvement.
The German nuclear phase out is going to cost European states billions in energy costs. Experts say it may also set off an environmental boomerang.
Attacked by dogs, victims of drought, devastated by a disease that is sexually transmitted in humans, Australia’s iconic koala bears are struggling to survive. But government authorities still have not granted the species official “endangered” status.
Opinion: More and more, poor African countries are throwing their lot in with emerging economic powers like China, India and Brazil. In many cases, these new trade relationships are less one-sided than observers might expect.
Asian millionaires want the best Bordeaux wines. This permanent demand on a limited number of bottles has sent prices skyrocketing for the most prestigious Chateaux at Hong Kong auctions. It risks skewing the market as a whole.
The cult of Lenin lives on in modern-day Russia among hardline nostalgics. But new proof revealing Lenin had Jewish roots may not sit well with those who long for a Soviet past that included state-backed anti-Semitism.
A R A B I C A ارابيكا FRIDAY IN SYRIA*Syrian activists told news organizations that at least 20 people were shot dead around the country during another bloody Friday of protests. Here is video reportedly of a Damascus protest on Friday in which many of the participants cover their faces and heads so as […]
According to a recent study, China’s richest dream of one thing: packing up and heading for other countries, especially the West. This Chinese “investment emigration” is in full swing, and can have corrosive economic and social consequences.
An American manufacturer has come up with a device that allows people to “track what’s important.” For some that could mean pets or property. But what happens when the tracker’s target is of the two-legged variety?
According to just released interviews, the famed existentialist and leftist activist was also a foul-mouthed taker of hard drugs who underestimated Hitler, insulted his French colleagues (and lovers) and praised international terrorism.
Milan city officials have given the green light to the largest ever Israeli celebration outside of Israel, to take place next week in the Italian city’s central Duomo piazza. Pro-Palestinian groups have vowed to protest the event.
German naval forces are using multi-million-dollar reconnaissance planes to track pirates, part of an international effort to protect shipping in the Gulf of Aden. Will Germany’s government continue to support the operation?
Big ideas sometimes come in small packages. In both Europe and the United States, home designers are downsizing, offering mini-residences that are mobile, modular and moderately priced.
A R A B I C A ارابيكا SYRIA, STATE OF SIEGE*Al Jazeera broadcast footage from an empty Jisr al-Shughour. The camera rolls through deserted streets of the northern Syrian town, and then shows aerial footage of hundreds of people literally heading for the hills to escape a military encirclement. The network does not have […]
A French journalist defies a ban on foreign reporters in Syria, and reaches Deraa, where the popular uprising began in March. With the city since shut off from the outside world, this exclusive account shows Deraa’s residents living under siege,
danzcolor4898B.jpg
Danziger
As the secret annual meeting of the elite Bilderberg group arrives in Switzerland, theories of world domination abound.