Bianna Golodryga speaks with the Middle East Bureau Chief of The Los Angeles Times, Nabih Bulos, about the ceasefires in Lebanon and Gaza.
Lebanon’s new government should prioritize protecting and promoting human rights, accountability, transparency, and the rule of law.
United Arab Emirates billionaire Khalaf Ahmad Al Habtoor, who this week scrapped his investments in Lebanon, said the country was still not safe and that he had been threatened with being "slaughtered and killed" last year.
The ceasefire in Lebanon is a throwback to 2006, when the national Lebanese army was supposed to defang Hezbollah and chart a new course for the land
The conflict between Israel and Hezbollah has left behind lots of rubble. Some experts fear that much of it will be dumped into the environment without controls.
Air France will resume service to Beirut this Saturday, initially with five weekly flights, the airline announced. Transavia, the low cost subsidiary of the Air France-KLM group, will resume its flights to the Lebanese capital on February 13,
Secretary-General of the Ministry of Water and Irrigation Hisham Heisa, during a recent meeting in Beirut, chaired a committee tasked with drafting a unified Arab vision and strategy to address regional interventions in the water sector.
Khalaf Ahmad Al Habtoor, the head of Dubai conglomerate Al Habtoor Group, said on X on Tuesday he had cancelled all planned investments in Lebanon due to continuing instability, and would sell all his properties and investments in the country.
Emirates is resuming its flight operations to Beirut and Baghdad from February 1, 2025 after a temporary suspension due to conflict in the area
Some say that love has phases: attraction, infatuation, the honeymoon period and commitment. Attraction is relatively easy. There are many ways in which something can be attractive. And Lebanese food has all of them.
Reporting from Lebanon, The New Arab spoke to Sudanese nationals who, fleeing the war and other hardships, have found refuge at Beirut's Sudanese Club
EXCLUSIVE: MAD World, the film sales arm of Cairo-based MAD Solutions, has acquired global rights to Lebanese director Sarah Francis’ tense couple drama Dead Dog ahead of its premiere in the Rotterdam Film Festival’s Harbor contemporary cinema strand.