Tunisian Youth Call for Greater Political Participation - Tunisia Live : Tunisia Live - 0 views
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a growing disconnect in the country between youth and older generations
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“Last elections’ youth participation was almost 17 percent of the total voters. So how are we expecting to have a better chance in the coming elections without the youth’s enthusiasm and participation?”
Egypt: 8 months after Dr. Mohamed Morsi assumed the presidency, the rapid deterioration... - 0 views
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the rights situation in Egypt currently appears even direr than it did prior to the revolution and the ouster of the former president. The country has merely traded one form of authoritarianism for another, albeit with some new features
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The principles of the rule of law and the independence of the judiciary were undermined with the issuance of the constitutional declaration of November 2012
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A “state of emergency” was announced unnecessarily and by way of a law which violates international human rights standards
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The Jordanian State Buys Itself Time | Middle East Research and Information Project - 0 views
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the elections have afforded the regime room to breathe
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For the moment, the state seems confident that it commands the loyalty of the silent majority. For years, polls have found that most Jordanians are politically conservative, holding positive impressions of the king and royal family and darker views of political parties -- including the Islamists. Jordan has long been regarded as an oasis of stability compared to its neighbors who have faced invasion, foreign occupation and insurrection. Polls and interviews indicate that Jordanians put a high premium on a sense of security, the maintenance of which is of course a mainstay of regime rhetoric.
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The opposition, on the other hand, draws its strength primarily from concerns about the economy and complaints about corruption in the cabinet and Parliament. Many in the opposition also note the state’s well-documented history of using “political reform” as a sop to critics. [3] In tough times, the regime pledges to open up the political system, but then offers changes that do little to alter the established power structure.
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Egypt blames media for plot to topple Morsi - www.thenational.ae - Readability - 0 views
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the media has become a weapon in the war over Egypt's future, diminishing the possibility of reaching any political accommodation
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Islamist-run newspapers and broadcasters, along with Muslim Brotherhood government officials, allege that secularist media moguls have put in motion a plot to topple the country's first democratically elected president
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After taking office last year, he replaced many executives who served during the Mubarak era and told staff that they should include all perspectives in their coverage. He also removed a rule preventing women who wear a headscarf from appearing as presenters and focused on reducing expenditures to tackle more than 20 billion Egyptian pounds (Dh10.8bn) of debt held by the state media
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Egypt wheat stocks dwindle, sufficient for 89 days - News - Aswat Masriya - 0 views
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Egypt's strategic stocks of wheat have fallen to 2.207 million tonnes, enough to last 89 days, a cabinet report said on Wednesday, as the top global importer struggles to ensure supply through an economic and political crisis.
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the government also upped its projection of the local harvest to more than 9 million tonnes - a number that would exceed the current record of 8.523 million tonnes in 2009/10, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) estimates
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The Egyptian cabinet's forecast for its upcoming harvest is also above the USDA's crop estimate of 8.5 million tonnes, released last week.
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News from The Associated Press - 0 views
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Census data show that 1,135 of the nation's 3,143 counties are now experiencing "natural decrease," where deaths exceed births. That's up from roughly 880 U.S. counties, or 1 in 4, in 2009. Already apparent in Japan and many European nations, natural decrease is now increasingly evident in large swaths of the U.S.
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Despite increasing deaths, the U.S. population as a whole continues to grow, boosted by immigration from abroad and relatively higher births among the mostly younger migrants from Mexico, Latin America and Asia.
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As a nation, the U.S. population grew by just 0.75 percent last year, stuck at historically low levels not seen since 1937.
Tunisian Universities Become Literal and Ideological Battlegrounds - Tunisia Live : Tun... - 0 views
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the leftist student union UGET and its Islamist rival UGTE
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While the UGET remained active during the rule of former president Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali and continued its resistance of the RCD-endorsed student union, the UGTE was suspended after being accused in 1991 of stockpiling weapons. It was reactivated after the revolution.
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The battle now is an ideological one
Cutting Subsidies to Rein in a Budget Deficit: A Necessary Trade-Off? - Tunisia Live : ... - 0 views
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the continuing costs of inflation since the revolution of January 2011
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the current government is only a transitional body and that according to constitutional bylaws, it is not allowed to make any crucial decisions that have direct effects on consumers and the country’s economy. Zarouk went on to explain that the decision will harm consumers; The cost of household consumption has already increased by 5.9% between January 2012 and January 2013. Fuel is also vital to various segments of the economy, averaging 13% of general production costs in areas such as clothes and food. It also accounts for 50% to 60% of total expenses in the production of cement and bricks, which represent an important element of the country’s economy. “So it [the rise in fuels prices] harms such sectors,” he said. “And they are crucial in our economy.”
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savings rates are insignificant in Tunisia – 17% – and decreasing, according to Zarouk. “People can no longer afford to save,”
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Egypt bakeries protest planned reduction of flour subsidies - Economy - Business - Ahra... - 0 views
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Hundreds of Egyptian bakery owners on Saturday blocked Cairo's Qasr Al-Aini Street near the Ministry of Supply and Internal Trade to protest government plans to reduce flour subsidies. On Thursday, the supply ministry announced that it would continue to subsidise bread loaves, but not flour – which would henceforth be sold to bakeries at market prices. The move means that prices paid by bakeries for a 100-kilogram bag of flour would rise from LE16 to LE286.
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The government will then purchase loaves of bread from bakeries for 34 piastres each before selling them on to consumers at 5 piastres each.
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"We have long called for the liberalisation of flour prices and the entire system of bread production," Ghorab added. "But with its latest decision, the government is setting an unrealistic production cost."
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