Tunisia says this happens through cooperation with UN migration agency, neighboring countries Algeria and Libya
Opposition parties demand explanation after Osama Almasri Najim, suspected of murder, rape and torture, released from prison
Libya deported more than 600 men from Niger last month as North African countries — financed by the European Union to tackle migration — have ramped up expulsions of sub-Saharan Africans.
The Arab Spring did not bring democracy to the region, but it remains a beacon of hope for struggling Arabs.
Tunisia announced its ratification of an agreement to establish a mechanism for consultation on shared groundwater in the northern desert, with Libya and Algeria, pursuant to a decision published in the Official Gazette of Tunisia.
According to the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), as many as 613 Nigerian people were forcibly asked to leave Libya following which they arrived in the desert town of Dirkou in Niger in
Italy took the Turkey model and applied it to North Africa, pledging hundreds of millions of euros to Tunisia and Libya, the main departure points. “It came down to money,” said an EU ...
No fewer than 613 Nigerien migrants have been forcibly deported from Libya, enduring what has been described as a "dangerous
Algerian authorities have released a group of young Moroccans attempting to migrate through the Maghnia-Oujda land route, according to the Moroccan Association for the Assistance of Migrants in Difficult Situations.
Two teams from the Philippines will be competing in the 34th Dubai International Basketball Championship 2025 beginning Friday at Al Nasr Club in Dubai, UAE. The Strong Group Athletics and Zamboanga Valientes will be representing the country,
The ruins of Ptolemais are in the modern-day city of Tolmeita, Libya. The country sits along the Mediterranean Sea in North Africa and borders Algeria, Chad, Egypt, Niger, Sudan and Tunisia. Google Translate was used to translate the news release from the University of Warsaw.
Here is a look at Arab Spring, anti-government protests that began in Tunisia in December 2010 and spread throughout the Middle East and Africa in 2011. Algeria January 4, 2011 – Protests begin, sparked by an increase in food prices.