George Sabra (C), president of the Syrian National Council, talks with other Syrian opposition members during a break at their meeting in Istanbul on May 25, 2013. (AFP)
JEDDAH/ISTANBUL: Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal said yesterday Syrian President Bashar Assad and his regime should have no role in the proposed peace talks aimed at ending that country...
JEDDAH/ISTANBUL: Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal said yesterday Syrian President Bashar Assad and his regime should have no role in the proposed peace talks aimed at ending that countr
SOUTHERN SHUNEH, Jordan: Jordan’s King Abdallah said yesterday extremism has “grown fat” off of the longstanding conflict between Israel and the Palest
BEIRUT: Two rockets hit a Shiite Muslim district of southern Beirut on Sunday and wounded several people, residents said, a day after the leader of Lebanese Shiite militant movement Hezbollah said his
Egemen Bagis, Turkey’s minister for European Union Affairs and chief negotiator, values the strong Saudi-Turkish economic relations and said yesterday that it’s committed strengthening ties with i
TUNIS: Tunisia has received a second yacht belonging to the former dictator’s family, this time from Spain.The $ 5 million, 32-meter yacht arrived at Tunis’ port of La Goulette on Friday.
ANKARA: Turkey is constructing 2.5-km-long twin walls at a border crossing with Syria to increase security at the frontier following three deadly bombings this year.
TRIPOLI: The death toll in Lebanon’s northern city of Tripoli reached 25 yesterday in the seventh straight day of clashes between factions supporting opposing sides in Syria’s two-year civil war,
BEIRUT: Forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad shelled a strategic western town yesterday in their heaviest barrage of a week-long battle to dislodge rebels from
TEHRAN: Iran’s top nuclear negotiator, a candidate in next month’s presidential elections has vowed to pursue a policy of resistance against the West if elec
KHARTOUM: Sudan’s security services temporarily suspended the country’s two biggest newspapers to punish them for writing about army operations against rebel