Inside the Middle East - Blog
October 8, 2008
The Economic Crisis In Cairo

In Egypt filming an hour-long special on the Middle East due to air in the nenxt few months, the Inside the Middle East team filed a quick spot on the financial crisis in Egypt for CNN International.

The main Cairo stock index has lost over 20% over the last two sessions. But for ordinary Egyptians, it is the price of basic commodities that is creating uncertainty and concern. There have been protests over the rising cost of food.

The worry for most Egyptians isn't the stock market, but the fruit and vegetable market.
October 5, 2008
Humiliation On The Squash Court


--BY CNN's Alphonso Van Marsh

It is not everyday an 'ordinary Joe' plays sport with an athlete who is top of his or her game. So we at CNN were pretty excited not only to meet AmrShabana - squash's world champion and world ranked #1 since 2006 - but also for a chance for me to join him on the squash court.

I'm athletic. But I haven't swung a squash racket, well, for about as long as Shabana has been the squash's Best Player on Earth. Needless to say,I got spanked.

I think I may have scored one point, but only because Shabana had pity on me. Not that I remember, as I was too busy running around the court chasing after the ball to keep track.

Egyptian squash players are pushing to dominate the squash world rankings. Shabana goes for his fourth world championship title in Manchester, England this month. This week, two other Egyptians join Shabana in the upper echelon of the Professional Squash Association's World Rankings.. .clinching three of the top six spots for the first time.

Find out why Egyptians are so goodatsquash, by watching my story "Egypt's Squash Mania" on CNN.

After crashing into the squash court wall (more than once,) I tossed all shame aside and (breathlessly) suggested to Amr and the film crew that we take a breather for a few digital still photos. We'd post more snaps of Amr and I "in the game" - but the images are out of focus and blurry. Apparently the guy holding the digital camera was laughing too hard to hold the camera still.

Shabana goes for his FOURTH world title at the squash championships in Manchester this month. Is Egypt poised for world dominance in the sport? Tell us what you think...
Would You Like Fries With That?
Fom Middle East News

Paris - The difficulties the French have in pronouncing the letter 'h' landed the country's foreign minister, Bernard Kouchner, in hot water.

Israeli media quoted the minister as saying Israel 'will eat' Iran if the Islamic Republic gained possession of nuclear weapons, prompting Kouchner's office to issue a statement of clarification on Sunday.

Kouchner wanted to say in an interview given in English that Israel would 'hit' Iran if it developed nuclear weapons. But journalists apparently mistook his pronunciation of 'hit' for 'eat,' the statement said.

Kouchner, who is currently visiting the Mideast, profoundly regretted the misunderstanding, the foreign ministry said.
October 3, 2008
A Visit To Iraq's "Ground Zero"

-- By CNN's Jomana Karadsheh

It was my first time at Iraq’s ground zero.

Al- Askari Shrine in Samarra, one of Shiite Islam’s holiest sites, was bombed twice. It was the first bombing on February 22nd 2006 that destroyed the shrine’s golden dome, and the one that would change Iraq forever.

The US Military and the Iraqi Government blamed al-Qaeda in Iraq. Shiites blamed Sunnis for the attack on the shrine that houses the tombs of two of Shiite Islams 12 revered Imams.

Soon, reprisal attacks against Sunnis escalated into a bloody sectarian war that plagued the country and claimed tens of thousands of lives. Chills ran down my spine as I thought of the lives lost since that day.

The U.S. Military organized our media trip to the city after it was recently listed as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.

The security situation in Iraq, including the predominantly Sunni city of Samarra, has changed for the better over the past few months, but little looked like it had changed at the Shrine itself. Rubble from the bombings was still piled high, lining the sides of the road leading to the shrine.

The few workers on site looked unenthused. The shrine is now protected by Shiite guards deployed by Iraq's Prime Minister. The tough looking guards asked our U.S. military escorts to stay outside as they took us into the shrine complex. Citing orders from the PM, they hurried us through parts of the shrine and scrambled what we could film.

But just a few months ago a similar tour might not have been possible. “You couldn’t walk here without taking fire” one soldier said. The security situation in Samarra has drastically improved in recent months and U.S. commanders attribute that to a number of factors including the Sons of Iraq, mainly former Sunni fighters who have turned against al-Qaeda.

Following our visit to the shrine, soldiers from the 101st Airborne drove us back to their base, just a few minutes drive from al-Askari compound. What once was “The Samarra Resort Restaurant” is now U.S. Patrol Base Olsen. We were taken up to a rooftop of one of the buildings for a joint press conference by US and Iraqi commanders. The view from the roof was breathtaking… it was one of the very few times I had the chance to admire the beauty of Iraq. A panoramic view of a Samarra landmark- the 9th century minaret (al-Malwiyya), al-Askari shrine and the lush farmlands on the banks of the Tigris.

The charismatic US commander in Samarra, Lieutenant Colonel J.P. McGee, said just the fact that we were standing on the roof was evidence of the city’s security transformation. But like the rest of the country, these remarkable security gains are fragile and that is why McGee and his men have now shifted their focus to rebuilding the city and are working with local leaders to provide residents with essential services like power and water.

McGee says by getting services to the people of Samarra they will have no reason to fight the government. Up until a few months ago, Samarra was a stronghold of al-Qaeda in Iraq. One local resident said insurgents had terrorized the population with bombings, kidnappings and public executions. Until recently the city was paralyzed.

Also paralyzed up until six months ago was the reconstruction of the shrine. Samarra’s mayor says he expects al-Askari shrine to be rebuilt in two years. Captain Josh Kurtzman, commander of Charlie Company smiled when I asked him how it feels to have such an important shrine as part of his area of responsibility.

“It’s a great responsibility, the most important thing that I think I have been able to do in my life so far and most interesting time of my life has been in this city I would say just because of all the history …both old history and history being made” he said, standing in the shadow of the destroyed shrine.

Kurtzman says rebuilding al-Askari takes time. The young commander said if the Vatican needed to be rebuilt, people would want to take their time too. As our chopper took off, I gazed at the shrine and wondered if the wounds it left in Iraq would ever heal.
October 1, 2008
Sea, Jetskis And Sun In... Iraq?

For most of the last twenty years, Iraq has been synonymous with war, economic sanctions, bloody sectarian conflict and hopelessness.

But there was a time, even amidst the brutality of the Saddam Hussein regime, where there were vacation resorts that attracted not only tourists but substantial investment money.

One of those resorts on lake Habbaniye, in the heart of Iraq's Sunni heartland, is starting to inch its way back to life. The improved security situation means a few ordinary Iraqis are once again taking the time to relax with their families and friends by the water.

Baghdad correspondent Arwa Damon sent me these pictures of a story she shot for Inside the Middle East.

Arwa writes: "The Habbaniye Resort was once allegedly voted “best resort in the Middle East.” Sanction began its initial decline into decay, and after the 2003 US-led invasion, it deteriorated completely. Surprisingly, even though it is located between Ramadi and Falluja in what was Al Qaeda’s heartland, it was never over run by insurgents – the employees defended the place. Today, tour buses run from Baghdad, taking Iraqis on day trips to the lakeside; but it is a shadow of what it was."

The sandy waterfront is littered with trash (picture 2) and the once chic reception area of the resort (picture 3) is still abandoned and damaged.

Arwa says of the couple in the middle picture: "Ahmed and his wife – a young couple from Baghdad, making their first trip with 38 other family members. He married her after her father – his best friend – was gunned down. They do believe that Iraq will be a place where they can raise a family."

Check out Arwa's story on the Habbaniye resort on this month's edition of Inside the Middle east.
September 30, 2008
Muslims And Jews Celebrate




To all of our Muslim and Jewish readers for whom important religious holidays fall today and tomorrow, happy Eid and happy Rosh Hashana!

"Cowards Have No Place To Hide"
In most countries, giant public billboards are used to advertise shopping malls, car dealerships or off-road fast food restaurants.

But in Iraq, many billboards are used for public service announcements against terrorist organizations. Others promote cross-confessional entente.

Check out these two interesting signs on the streets of Baghdad, snapped by CNN producer Jomana Karadsheh.

"You cowards of Al-Qaeda terrorist organization. Al Qaeda in Iraq, you will have no place to hide."

This billboard reads: "Ramadan unites us."
Olmert Bombshell: Give Back 67 Land For Peace

The outgoing Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert may be on his way out, but he seems determined not to leave quietly.

In an interview in daily newspaper Yediot Aharanot, Olmert says Israel should exchange most of the West Bank the Golan Heights in any peace deal with the Arabs.

"The decision we are going to have to make is a decision we have been refusing for 40 years to look at open-eyed," Olmert told Yediot Aharonot. "The time has come to say these things. The time has come to put them on the table."

But here's the big surprise. The Israeli leader says he feels that if his country is to live in true peace with the Palestinians, then it must consider exiting East Jerusalem.

"This decision is difficult, terrible, a decision that contradicts our natural instincts, our innermost desires, our collective memories, the prayers of the Jewish people for 2,000 years."

(Photo AFP/Getty)
September 29, 2008
The Beautiful Game In An Ugly War
Thank you to CNN Baghdad producer Jomana Karadsheh for sending me these pictures of the Iraqi national football team.


The players are training in Baghdad for the first time in four years. I remember being in Baghdad when they wowed the world with their amazing performance at the Asian Cup, uniting the country in a national pride no political initiative seems to achieve.


Jomana writes that the fans who come to the stadium everyday are local children from the nearby Sadr city slum area. They see these players as their heroes.

But the horrors of Iraq's bloody war are always present: right outside the training area, the carcasses of cars destroyed in explosions over the years pepper the perimeter outside stadium.

September 27, 2008
Seventeen Dead In Car Bomb

This is the kind of headline you'd expect in Iraq, not in Syria. But it happened earlier today on a main road between Damascus airport and the Syrian capital.

These sorts of attacks are extremely rare in Syria.

So who is behind it?

Well, the explosion occurred near some Syrian military intelligence offices. Large scale attacks in Syria may be rare, but in recent years, there has been some low-scale religious militant activity by groups opposed to Syria's secular military regime.

The car that killed at least 17, all of them reportedly civilians, was packed with 200 kilos of explosives.

Are extremist Sunni militants shifting to a higher gear in Syria?

Perhaps, but let's keep in mind the blast rocked an area close to a major Shia shrine. Could the attackers have attempted to target pilgrims?

Regardless of who is responsible, this will have hardline regime authorities - an ordinary Syrians - worried.

(Photo AP - a man cleans up debris after an explosion blew out windows and damaged property in a Damascus suburb.)

September 26, 2008
Last Friday Of Ramadan
These pictures were taken at the Qalandia checkpoint between Jerusalem and Ramallah on the last Friday of Ramadan.






-- From Yasmine Perni
September 20, 2008
Diyala Dust Devil





Out on embed yesterday, our team encountered a huge dust devil in Diyala province. As we were waiting for the chopper that would transport us back to Baghdad, we looked outside to check the weather conditions. We couldn’t help but notice the rather large whirlwind of sand coming our way. Most people would’ve opted to stay indoors. Being a news team, we immediately picked up our gear and went outside to film it ... Needless to say, we were enveloped ...

-- From CNN's Mohammed Jamjoom
September 19, 2008
Images from the Old City









I went to the Old City today, 3rd Friday of Ramadan. Damascus Gate was flooded after the prayer. No private cars are allowed to enter from many checkpoints and only buses are allowed by the Old City. Everyone who came had to line up for a bus back home ... Hebron, Ramallah, Beit Sahur ... all under the watchful eye of the Israeli Army.

-- From Yasmine Perni
September 18, 2008
Attack on U.S. embassy in Yemen

A diplomatic source told me it was a sophisticated attack involving two car bombs and three suicide bombers with explosives belts, one of whom blew himself up just meters away from the embassy's main gate.

The entire attack, he said, lasted 15 minutes and left 16 dead -- five Yemeni security forces, one U.S. embassy Yemeni guard who was shot by the assailants when he tried to bar the first vehicle from entering the embassy parking lot, six of the attackers and four civilians, including an 18-year-old Yemeni-American woman from Bufallo, New York.

Yemeni government security guards outside the embassy told me the attack was by "cowards" who kill innocent people. We saw several people who appeared to be U.S. investigators surveying and photographing the damage.

We were allowed into the area by Yemeni security officials who didn't coordinate with the Americans. One of the investigators exclaimed to another (and I overheard) "Who the f***k allowed CNN in here?"

Shortly afterwards a security officer from the embassy told us to leave the area directly in front of the embassy because we were endangering the evidence, although dozens of Yemeni troops were milling around the area.

She told the CNN crew to go to the other side of the barrier in front of the embassy, "up against the wall" on he other side of the street.

The atmosphere in sanaa is calm, streets are quiet and of course it's Ramadan, so it's quiet on top of quiet. That's all for now.

-- From CNN Correspondent Ben Wedeman
September 12, 2008
Saudi Cleric: You Can Kill "Immoral" TV Bosses

We've reporting on some shocking "fatwas" before, but this one ranks right up there.

A Saudi cleric issued a religious decree Tuesday, stating that it is permissible to kill the owners of television stations that broadcast "immoral content."

But here's the thing: many of these satellite channels are operated in Egypt, Lebanon and Jordan but are owned by Saudi princes and businessmen.

According to AP:

"The 79-year-old hard-line Sheik Saleh al-Lihedan said satellite channels cause the 'deviance of thousands of people.'"

Speaking of fatwas, a senior cleric last week issued a religious ruling stating that birthday cakes were "unislamic." This sparked a debate in the country, leading other clerics to disagree with the ruling..

Let them eat cake? Not in Saudi Arabia!
ABOUT THIS BLOG
Welcome to the Inside the Middle East blog. Our reporters, producers, cameramen and editors will regularly add to this with colorful behind-the-scene stories. This page is about how we put the show together -- from on-location shoots to the editing room -- as well as for anecdotes and stories that don't always make it into our finished on-air product.
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Inside the Middle East airs 1st full weekend of every month and the following Thursday.

Saturday (1st Saturday of every month)
0730, 1330, 1830 (all regions)

Sunday (1st Sunday of every month)
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Thursday (1st Thursday of every month)
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