Tunisia | Institute for War and Peace Reporting
Tunisia
Journalists trained by IWPR produce news, analysis, and comment pieces on the issues that affect their countries and communities.Global Voices
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Customs service lacks the manpower, vehicles and helicopters it would need to stem the flow of consumer goods, arms and drugs.
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Attempting to cross to Lampedusa on flimsy vessels carries huge risks.
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Pictures show daily life in all its colours.
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Security sources say recent arrests mark progress in campaign to root out armed Islamists from their mountain retreats.
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Recriminations fly as governing Ennahda party condemns assassination while opponents suggest it had a hand in it.
29 Nov 13
Customs service lacks the manpower, vehicles and helicopters it would need to stem the flow of consumer goods, arms and drugs.
21 Nov 13
Homegrown marijuana on the illicit market alongside narcotics imported by trafficking networks.
11 Oct 13
Officials deny that medical error is common and insist legal methods of redress are working.
10 Oct 13
Fears of violence mean foreigners stay away, and lack of cash slows recovery.
3 Oct 13
Attempting to cross to Lampedusa on flimsy vessels carries huge risks.
25 Sep 13
Pictures show daily life in all its colours.
18 Sep 13
Security sources say recent arrests mark progress in campaign to root out armed Islamists from their mountain retreats.
26 Jul 13
Recriminations fly as governing Ennahda party condemns assassination while opponents suggest it had a hand in it.
22 Feb 13
Ennahda picks one of its own to take over prime minister’s post after dismissing plan for a non-partisan government to see country through crisis.
7 Feb 13
As politicians argue about what to do next, Tunisians take to the streets in scenes reminiscent of spring 2011.
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BBC News
Mosul: Culture and concerts where IS once reigned
For almost three years, while her home city of Mosul was under occupation by so-called Islamic State (IS), Tahani Salih kept a daily diary documenting their crimes.
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IWPR in the News
BBC
IWPR's Asia & Eurasia Director Alan Davis discusses whether Facebook is losing the war against hate speech in Burma.
The Guardian
The west wanted Aung San Suu Kyi to be a saint. It’s no surprise she is not
The adulation heaped on the Nobel laureate recalled the treatment of Mother Teresa. But her failure to act on the Rohingya crisis has destroyed the myth
By Alan Davis, IWPR Asia & Eurasia Director