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Algeria opens book fair without winner of top French language literary prize

Algeria opens book fair without winner of top French language literary prize
This year’s Prix Goncourt winner and his French publisher Gallimard — a regular participant — are among those who won’t be welcomed at the Algiers International Book Fair. (AFP)
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Updated 06 November 2024

Algeria opens book fair without winner of top French language literary prize

Algeria opens book fair without winner of top French language literary prize
  • This year’s Prix Goncourt winner and his French publisher Gallimard — a regular participant — are among those who won’t be welcomed at the Algiers International Book Fair

ALGIERS: As one of the Arab world’s largest book fairs opens in Algeria on Wednesday, there is one conspicuous absence. French-Algerian author Kamel Daoud, who won France’s most prestigious literary award earlier this week, was not invited to this year’s event.
This year’s Prix Goncourt winner and his French publisher Gallimard — a regular participant — are among those who won’t be welcomed at the Algiers International Book Fair. The exclusion of several prominent authors and publishers from this year’s event reflects the ongoing limitations on freedom of expression in Algeria.
Daoud’s novels and their subject matter often polarize opinions in both France, where he lives, and Algeria, where he was born. His Goncourt-winning third novel Houris (Virgins, in English) centers on the memories of victims of Algeria’s “Black Decade.” After Islamists won the first round of legislative elections in 1990, Algeria descended into civil war after the second round was canceled by the military-backed government.
Though memories of that history loom large, Houris will not be among the more than 300,000 titles available at the book fair, which is being marketed under the slogan “Read to Triumph” and billed for having a special focus on history.
Ali Bey, the owner of Algiers’ Librarie du Tiers Monde, said he was “delighted” to see Daoud’s international recognition but lamented that Algerian readers would not be able to purchase his novels.
The censorship extends beyond Daoud and Gallimard. Koukou Publishing, an independent Algerian house led by former political activist Arezki Ait Larbi, has also been excluded from this year’s festival. Koukou — known for publishing works by essayists, novelists and journalists whose writings often challenge official narratives — wasn’t invited either, Ait Larbi wrote in a Facebook post.
“Our house is under threat of a complete ban from publishing,” Ait Larbi said, accusing the Ministry of Culture’s censors of targeting his books.


Israel issues fresh evacuation order ahead of strike on Gaza City tower

Israel issues fresh evacuation order ahead of strike on Gaza City tower
Updated 45 sec ago

Israel issues fresh evacuation order ahead of strike on Gaza City tower

Israel issues fresh evacuation order ahead of strike on Gaza City tower
GAZA CITY: The Israeli army issued a fresh evacuation order for a residential tower in Gaza City on Sunday ahead of a planned bombing of the high-rise building, a day after it issued a similar warning.
“The (army) will strike the building soon due to the presence of Hamas terrorist infrastructure inside or nearby,” army spokesman Avichay Adraee said in a statement.
On Saturday, the military had issued a similar warning for the same building, the Al-Roya Tower, after the air force had demolished two other residential high-rises this week.
The Al-Roya Tower was not struck on Saturday.
“For your safety, you must evacuate the building immediately and move south toward the humanitarian zone in Al-Mawasi” area of Khan Yunis in southern Gaza, the army spokesman added.
The warning came as the Israeli army pushed inside Gaza City in a bid to step up pressure on the Palestinian militant group Hamas.
“We are deepening the maneuver on the outskirts of Gaza City and within Gaza City itself,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyuahu told ministers at the start of a cabinet meeting on Sunday.
Israel has not publicly announced the start of a major offensive to seize Gaza City, which Netanyahu’s cabinet approved last month, but troops have intensified bombings and operations in the area for weeks.
The Israeli military has claimed that the two high-rises flattened in recent strikes were used by Hamas to “monitor” Israeli troops — an accusation denied by the Palestinian group.

Jordanian Armed Forces bring down drug-laden balloons on eastern border

Jordanian Armed Forces bring down drug-laden balloons on eastern border
Updated 44 min 30 sec ago

Jordanian Armed Forces bring down drug-laden balloons on eastern border

Jordanian Armed Forces bring down drug-laden balloons on eastern border
  • Border Guard forces detect, seize items
  • Jordan is known as transit point for drug smuggling in Middle East, criminals using drones alongside conventional methods to smuggle narcotics

LONDON: Security forces in Jordan’s Eastern Military Zone foiled a drug smuggling attempt early on Sunday along the country’s eastern border, as part of efforts to protect national security.

Authorities reported that smugglers used balloons guided by rudimentary devices to transport narcotics into Jordan.

Border Guard forces, in coordination with security agencies, detected and brought down the balloons and seized them. The materials have been turned over to the authorities for legal action, the Jordan News Agency reported.

Jordan is known as a transit point for drug smuggling in the Middle East, with criminals using drones alongside conventional methods to smuggle narcotics into the country from neighboring Syria and Iraq.

The Jordanian Armed Forces intercepted on average 51 drones each month from January to July, nearly two per day, all carrying narcotics destined for Jordanian territory, according to an investigative report by Petra.


Saudi energy delegation visits major oil refineries in Syria

Saudi energy delegation visits major oil refineries in Syria
Updated 07 September 2025

Saudi energy delegation visits major oil refineries in Syria

Saudi energy delegation visits major oil refineries in Syria
  • Syrian officials briefed their Saudi counterparts about capabilities at the Baniyas and Homs refineries
  • In June, Syria resumed exports from the country's largest refinery

LONDON: A Saudi energy delegation visited the oil refineries in Baniyas and Homs, two cities in the northwest of the Syrian Arab Republic, as part of cooperation between the two countries in the oil sector.

Syrian officials briefed their Saudi counterparts from the Ministry of Energy about the technical and technological capabilities at the Baniyas refinery on the Mediterranean coast and in Homs. They discussed cooperation in the oil industry, the Syrian News Agency reported.

The delegation held a video conference with the Syrian Oil Transport Company in Baniyas to review the company’s operations and plans for improving the transport system and production, the SANA added.

In June, Syria resumed exports from the Baniyas refinery, sending an initial shipment of 30,000 tonnes of non-crude petroleum products to international markets.

Baniyas, 35 km north of Tartus, is Syria’s largest refinery with a specialized oil port. Since the fall of the Assad regime in December, the new administration in Damascus has been in talks with neighboring countries to support its energy sector.

The cooperation between Syria and ֱ has progressed rapidly since then, especially in the energy and investment sectors, the SANA added.


Baghdad clashes kill six, including four police: ministry

Baghdad clashes kill six, including four police: ministry
Updated 07 September 2025

Baghdad clashes kill six, including four police: ministry

Baghdad clashes kill six, including four police: ministry
  • Clashes between members of two local tribes in Iraq’s capital Baghdad have killed at least six people, including four policemen who intervened in the violence, the interior ministry said on Sunday
  • Iraqi security officials said that the clashes late Saturday erupted over increased fees for a private power generator

BAGHDAD: Clashes between members of two local tribes in Iraq’s capital Baghdad have killed at least six people, including four policemen who intervened in the violence, the interior ministry said on Sunday.
Iraqi security officials, speaking to AFP on condition of anonymity, said that the clashes late Saturday erupted over increased fees for a private power generator.
The vast majority of Iraqis rely on private generators to compensate for daily long power cuts to public electricity.
The violence Saturday in Baghdad’s Saada area resulted in the deaths of four police officers, two of them commanders, after they had intervened to disperse a “tribal dispute,” the interior ministry said, revising an earlier toll.
A security official, requesting anonymity because he was not authorized to brief the media, said the toll was updated after two policemen succumbed to their injuries.
Another nine officers were wounded, the ministry said.
It said the force was attacked by “those who started the clashes,” and returned fire that killed two people.
Five of those involved in the clashes were wounded and several arrested, the ministry said.
Tribal feuds are common in Iraq, a war-scarred country awash with weapons, where the pettiest row can turn into deadly tribal clashes.
Tribes wield significant influence and often operate under their own moral and judicial codes, and they possess huge caches of arms.
Iraq has only recently begun to regain a sense of stability after decades of violence that followed the 2003 US-led invasion that ousted long-time ruler Saddam Hussein.


Drone attack from Yemen injures man at Israeli airport: army, medics

Israel’s Airports Authority said on Sunday that a drone launched from Yemen struck the arrivals hall at Ramon Airport.
Israel’s Airports Authority said on Sunday that a drone launched from Yemen struck the arrivals hall at Ramon Airport.
Updated 07 September 2025

Drone attack from Yemen injures man at Israeli airport: army, medics

Israel’s Airports Authority said on Sunday that a drone launched from Yemen struck the arrivals hall at Ramon Airport.
  • “Paramedics are providing medical treatment... to a 63-year-old male in mild condition, fully conscious, with shrapnel injuries to his limbs,” statement said

JERUSALEM: A drone launched from Yemen injured a man when it fell on Ramon airport in southern Israel on Sunday, Israel’s Magen David Adom emergency service said.
“Paramedics are providing medical treatment... to a 63-year-old male in mild condition, fully conscious, with shrapnel injuries to his limbs,” the service said in a statement.
A spokesperson for Israel’s airports authority said the drone “hit the arrivals hall” and that operations at Ramon airport had been halted.
The Israeli military said the drone was the fourth launched from Yemen within minutes of each other on Sunday.
In an earlier statement, it reported intercepting three unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) en route from Yemen, two of them before they crossed into Israeli airspace. It did not specify what happened to the third.
It later confirmed that an additional UAV “fell in the Ramon airport area,” adding that no sirens were sounded and the incident was under review.
The attack came after the Iran-backed Houthis vowed to avenge the killing of their prime minister in an Israeli air strike last month.
Following the launches, Hizam Assad, a member of the Houthi political bureau, posted on X, “The real revenge hasn’t even started yet... What awaits you will be much worse.”
Israel assassinated the head of the Iran-backed Houthi government together with 11 other senior officials in air strikes two weeks ago.
Sunday’s attack was the first strike by Houthis on an Israeli strategic target since a ballistic missile from Yemen hit Tel Aviv Ben Gurion airport in May.
Since the Gaza war erupted in October 2023, the Houthis have declared their support for the Palestinians and have launched regular drone and missile attacks against Israel in solidarity.
In response, Israel has carried out several rounds of retaliatory strikes in Yemen, targeting ports, power stations and the international airport in Sanaa, the Houthi-held capital.
Last week, amid the ongoing escalation, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz vowed to inflict the biblical 10 plagues of Egypt on the Houthis