- English Newsletter 15 December 2025
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In Gaza, families whose tents have been flooded are among those choosing to live in the fractured ruins of buildings bombed by the Israelis. Salem al Rayyes meets those who know their shelter could collapse at any time.
In Syria, interim president Ahmed al-Sharaa has clearly studied Iraq and Libya, says Kamal Alam. After a period of war, both states experienced immense and ongoing problems. So far, al-Sharaa seems to have learned the lessons.
With American aircraft carriers hovering off the coast of Venezuela, Stefanie Butendieck Hjerra explains how Washington's approach to Latin America is increasingly outdated and playing into its adversaries' hands.
Meanwhile in Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has asked President Isaac Herzog for a pardon. As Mohammed Najib says, the timing is key: a court judgement is due soon, and many now predict conviction.
In Opinion, Abdullah al-Judaya looks at the United States' recent proscription of certain chapters of the Muslim Brotherhood, arguing that those wielding the pen need to take over from those wielding the law.
For two decades, Maher al-Assad was the second most powerful man in Syria after his brother, Bashar. Feared and ruthless, recent rumours of his return have caused panic. Don't worry, says Alia Mansour. It won't happen.
Still in Syria, Haid Haid says a chant from sections of Syria's parading soldiers (about rivers of their enemies' blood) pricked Israeli ears. With Syria-Israel talks over a demilitarised zone ongoing, footage of the chant has not helped.
In Business, Marcelle Nasr considers the problems in Egypt's healthcare sector, notably the medicines needed to treat patients. While most can be made domestically, their efficacy is questionable and their prices are rising.
In some Gulf states, there are efforts to make government data openly available. Hatem Farid says this is helping companies and state agencies tailor products and services to what is needed, saving money and time.
In Culture, the girls and young women of Tunisia make up the clear majority of students in higher education, says Asmahan al-Sha'abouni. In universities, seven in ten students are women. Why?
In Japan, there are several masters of the traditional poetic artform of haiku, one of whom is Banya Natsuishi. He tells Osama Esber that the key is being able to detach from situations and people.
Finally, our Profile this week is of Jensen Huang, the boss of NVIDIA, a US tech company that makes the processors powering the AI revolution. As Marco Mossad explains, he is a hard worker who takes calculated risks.
In Gaza, bombed-out homes become death traps
In rainy season, living in a wobbly structure is a step up from a tent that can flood. But while it offers some relief, it could also collapse over the heads of those seeking refuge behind its walls.
Politics
How Syria's al-Sharaa learned from the failures of Libya and Iraq
To the surprise of many, Syria's interim president has neither removed Assad-era staff nor sought revenge on his key lieutenants. It has helped stop Syria from fragmenting.
Politics
A century of interventions: the US is misreading Latin America
Gone are the days when Washington could wax lyrical about democracy while toppling governments and supporting authoritarians. With Venezuela and others, it needs a new playbook.
Clemency for retirement: the deal shaking Israel
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu seeks presidential clemency in the face of incarceration and political oblivion
Mohammed NajibCulture takes over from the law after Muslim Brotherhood ban
Abdullah Al-JudayaDespite the whispers, Maher al-Assad is not ‘coming back’ to Syria
Alia MansourA parade chant lays bare the fragility of Syria-Israel talks
Haid Haid
Business & Economy
Egypt’s drug price increases help companies but not patients
Quality assurance issues for locally made drugs, shortages in some areas, and the dizzying cost of imported medicines makes it a bad time to get ill in Egypt.
Business & Economy
Commercialising government data: a new investment opportunity
Vast and reliable datasets held by the state are increasingly being made publicly available around the region. Those using this data to design new products and services are driving growth.
Culture & Social Affairs
Why Tunisian women are outpacing men in education
At an earlier age, boys and girls both attend school, but males increasingly drop out in their mid-teens, and now seven out of every ten Tunisian university students are women. Why is this?
Culture & Social Affairs
Banya Natsuishi: a haiku poet detached from all things
This Japanese art form reveals 'a bitter awareness of the frailty of human existence and the impermanence of nature,' one of its most perceptive proponents tells Al Majalla.
Jensen Huang: from washing pots to steering the AI revolution
The founder of NVIDIA has matched vision with hard work for more than three decades. Today, the world's biggest tech firms rely in his company's chips. No wonder he has Donald Trump's ear.