MAYA GEBEILY

Reporter

Skip to content
  • Home
  • Newsletter
  • Personal Writings
  • Archives
  • About
Search

minorities

Iraq’s Weathervanes | Intuitive Reactions

December 3, 2020December 18, 2020 / Maya Gebeily / Leave a comment

I joined friend and ecumenical lawyer Harry Hagopian for a discussion on Iraq’s weathervanes — the under-represented communities whose subjugation to injustice can tell us more about society as a whole than we think.

Give it a listen, and apologies in advance for Iraq’s unreliable internet as we were recording:

On the backfoot, IS uses old tactics to gain new strength | AFP

August 7, 2018August 7, 2018 / Maya Gebeily / Leave a comment

[Published here August 7, 2018]

The Islamic State group is looking to recapture lost power by reverting to the grisly tactics that first propelled it to global notoriety, analysts say, including executions and kidnapping minorities.

Continue reading →

War, displacement reshuffle Syria’s demographic map | AFP

May 25, 2018May 25, 2018 / Maya Gebeily / Leave a comment

[Published here May 25, 2018]

Seven years of war and massive displacement have redrawn Syria’s demographic map, erecting borders between the country’s ethnic, religious, and political communities that will be hard to erase.

Continue reading →

Instagram

"This is the fight of our lives."
Less than a week ahead of Lebanon’s parliamentary elections, the main roads and roundabouts in the country’s north are splattered with slogans and self-confident smiles - but few seem to have won over voters in Sunni-majority districts. That’s cause for concern for anti-Hezbollah candidates, who fear that widespread disillusionment and the splintering of the traditional Sunni political leadership could pave the way for Hezbollah-aligned candidates to score. What does that mean for the makeup of Lebanon’s next parliament, and the major decisions the body will take in the months ahead? Full @reuters story in the link in my bio.
This is retired judge Nadim Abdelmalak, the head of Lebanon’s election supervisory committee, a body with the seemingly impossible task of ensuring integrity in candidates’ campaigns. Despite a sub-par law, few enforcement mechanisms and myriad opportunities for bribes given Lebanon’s economic crisis, Abdelmalak is determined to do his job.
My Tweets

Categories

  • AFP
  • Appearance
  • Archives
  • Articles
  • climate
  • Culture
  • Iraq
  • ISIS
  • Kurdistan
  • Lebanon
  • Middle East
  • NOW News
  • Personal Writings
  • Syria
  • technology
  • TRF
  • Turkey
  • Women

Tags

Baghdad children conflict diplomacy displaced Geneva government health Iran Iraq IS ISIS Islamic State Islamic State group kurdistan Lebanon oil politics protests Raqqa rebels refugees rights security Syria Syrian Democratic Forces talks US war women

Recent Posts

  • Internet woes shatter young Yemenis’ dreams of startups and studies
  • Facebook’s ‘double standard’ on hate speech against Russians
  • Ukraine war ripples to Yemen where no funds mean no food
  • Yemeni city looks to ancient past to survive climate change
  • Arab women entrepreneurs defy odds with leap into sportswear
Blog at WordPress.com.
  • Follow Following
    • MAYA GEBEILY
    • Join 60 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • MAYA GEBEILY
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar