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Conflict Weekly #235&236, 12 July 2024, Vol.5, No.27 & 28
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IPRI # 448, 12 July 2024

Conflict Weekly
Continuing Crisis in Kenya, Doha Talks with the Taliban, and Suicide Bombings in Nigeria

  IPRI Team

Nuha Aamina, Ayan Datta and Anu Maria Joseph


 

Kenya: Crisis continues, as the protests expand despite President's interventions
Anu Maria Joseph
 
In the news
On 11 July,  Kenyan President William Ruto dissolved the cabinet following the protests which have been ongoing since the end of June. Ruto claimed that the move came after "reflection, listening to Kenyans, and after holistic appraisal of my cabinet."

On 2 July, Kenyan police fired tear gas to disperse the protesters in the capital Nairobi. The new round of protests erupted after President William Ruto promised to withdraw the controversial financial bill on 28 June. The protesters are demanding Ruto's resignation. 

On 3 July, the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) reported that at least 270 people were arrested for criminal rampage during the protests. It stated: "The DCI has further deployed scrupulous investigators across the affected regions to pursue suspects captured on CCTV cameras and mobile phone recordings violently robbing, stealing and destroying properties and businesses of innocent citizens."

The same day, the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights (KNCHR) reported that 39 people had been killed during the violent protests across the country.

On 1 July, Ruto said that the country will have to further depend on borrowing USD Seven billion to "be able to run our government." He stated: "I have been working very hard to pull Kenya out of a debt trap. It is very easy for us, as a country to say: 'Let us reject the financial bill.' That is fine and I have graciously said we will drop the financial bill. But it will have huge consequences."

On 29 June, one of the protesters commented: "I am not afraid to die, many have died before us. Many more will die but we have to stand up for our generation who are being taken for fools by the politicians."
 
Issues at large
First, expansion and intensification of protests in Kenya. The protests began in early June against a financial bill to increase taxes to address the debt crisis of USD 80 billion. Although Ruto withdrew the bill, the protests continued. What began as a protest against the tax hike is currently over public grievances, corruption, misgovernance and a demand for Ruto's resignation. What started in the capital (Nairobi) has expanded to 35 of Kenya's 47 counties. They have cut across geographic, social and ethnic landscapes. The protesters have been chanting, "Ruto must go." They are demanding the police be held accountable for their brutality during the previous week's protests, which killed 39 people. Many fear that Ruto could still sign the bill before it expires next week. The anger also amounts to a year-long public discontent against Ruto's series of tax hikes and financial management since he came to power.

Second, new faces of protest. Traditionally, Kenyan protests have been led by elites. They often were on ethnic lines; the minority against the majority over marginalisation. Several protests end up in power-sharing deals between the leadership and a few benefits to the protesters. However, this time, protests are led by the younger generation. Uniquely, they are not supported by any political parties. They were mobilised through social media without any leadership. Hashtags of #OccupyPrliament, #RutoMustGo and #RejectBudgetCorruption were trending on social media. On TikTok, many influencers circulated videos highlighting the harm government policies were causing. 

Third, President Ruto's reponse. Ruto's administration has placed its response between repression and accommodation. Police used tear gas and live ammunition after protesters set fire to the parliament house, causing several deaths. They continue to use tear gas to disperse the protesters. KNCHR reported 32 cases of "enforced or involuntary disappearance" and 627 arrests. Meanwhile, Ruto, on 26 June, promised talks with protesters, stating that "I run a government, but I also lead people, and the people have spoken." 

Fourth, the international response. There were swift international responses at the initial stage. The previous week, the UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres expressed concerns over the deaths of the protestors. The AU called on the stakeholders to hold dialogues on the issues. The US, which lately designated Kenya as its non-NATO ally, condemned the violence and urged to restore order.
 
In perspective
The protests have expanded in terms of geography and intensity. However, they are not organised but fragmented, implying a likely slow death unless proper leadership takes over. Despite this, Ruto's withdrawal of the bill did too little to contain the protests. The protesters demand accountable governance and Ruto's resignation. Ruto's double stance by violently suppressing the protests while maintaining the rhetoric of "the people have spoken" was received with scepticism. The public has perceived Ruto's latest statement about the debt crisis and money requirement to run the government as more of a threat; a threat to force the public to agree to the bill.

International response to the violence seems limited to the initial week. The second phase of the protest received a silent response. 

African countries are known for their extraordinary success of mass mobilisation and protest movements- the Arab Spring in 2011, the Sudanese Revolution in 2019, the #ZumaMustFall protests in South Africa in 2020, and the #EndSARS protests in Nigeria in 2020. They have always been inclusive beyond the class, ethnic, regional and religious divides. They recorded an immediate success. All of them were born and grown through social media. Although the long-term success of African protest movements is debated, the immediate success implies the capacity to mobilise the masses inclusively. It is yet to see how Kenyan protests will unfold. The potential for divisions and differences is high without organised leadership, implying a major challenge.


Afghanistan: The Doha Talks with the Taliban
Nuha Aamina

In the news
On 30 June, a two-day meeting at Doha took place between the UN and the Taliban. DiCarlo (representing the UN), Qatar's special envoy to Afghanistan, twenty-four envoys from other countries, and Zabiullah Mujahid (the Chief Spokesperson of Afghanistan) participated in the discussions. The UN sought to discuss peace within and beyond Afghan borders. The Taliban was interested in discussing the restrictions imposed on the financial and banking systems and alternative livelihoods for farmers after banning the cultivation of opioids. Earlier, on 29 June, the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) wrote a letter to the UN Secretary Council (UNSC), urging the body to reconsider its decision to engage with the Taliban regime in the Doha-III meeting. It outlined that before acknowledging Afghanistan on the international stage, there is a need to address gender apartheid and protect the human rights of women and religious minorities. 

On 1 July, the third meeting of Special Envoys on Afghanistan focused on assisting the private sector and fighting narcotics. According to DiCarlo, there was a “deep international concern- from special envoys” and her “about the ongoing serious restrictions on women and girls.” She said, “Afghanistan cannot return to the international fold, or fully develop economically and socially" if half of its population doesn't contribute to the growth. 

Former commissioner of the Independent Human Rights Commission of Afghanistan, Shabnam Salehi, described this meeting as “inconclusive” due to the non-inclusion of women and the UN’s approach as “misguided”. At a press briefing, the Taliban stated that the discussion around  women's rights was “Afghanistan's issue.”

Issues at large
First, the ground situation in Afghanistan since the Taliban takeover. In the UN’s recent reports, since the takeover, there have been at least "800 human rights violations," "218 extrajudicial deaths," and "14 enforced disappearances of former government officials." In 2023, Afghanistan ranked last in the Women's Peace and Security Index, which aims to assess countries' progress in women's inclusion, justice, and security. It faced one of the most severe humanitarian crises, with about two-thirds of its population needing humanitarian aid. UN's reports stated that by mid-2023, approximately four million civilians were suffering from acute malnourishment, including nearly three million children under the age of five.  

Second, the Doha Talks. Taliban was not invited to the first one in May 2023. The second was held in February 2024.  Earlier dialogues were centred around human rights and influencing the Taliban. They did not succeed and could be the reason for the UN to engage directly with the Taliban. 

In perspective
The third round of Doha talks is significant because it marks the first time the Taliban is engaging with international envoys on Afghanistan since coming to power in 2021. The meeting started with the “obstacles” the Taliban is dealing with, such as developing the private sector and receiving inputs from the special envoys. Throughout the session, the issues of human rights, mostly about women and girls were raised, even with subjects around developing the economy and counter-narcotics.  

Previously, several countries were hesitant to recognize the Taliban, and this sentiment was reiterated during the UN-led meeting, clarifying that the conference was not intended to legitimize Afghanistan's authority but to discuss humanitarian issues. There has been a shift from isolating the state to engaging in diplomatic discussions. These talks could potentially increase the Taliban's bargaining power, compelling countries to engage with them as the de facto authority. 


Suicide Bombings in Nigeria
Ayan Datta  
 
In the news
On 29 June, three female suicide bombers targeted a wedding, a funeral and a market in northwestern Nigeria’s Borno State. The attacks killed around 32 civilians and injured around 48. Although no group claimed the attack, the armed groups Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) were suspected because they used female suicide bombers in past attacks. Nigeria’s President, Bola Tinubu, stated that the acts were “desperate acts of terror” and that the government would “not allow the nation to slither into an era of fear, tears, sorrow, and blood.”

On 28 June, armed groups killed 17 people in Borno State. 
 
Issues at large
First, an overview of insurgent groups operating in Nigeria’s Borno state: Since the early 2000s, the Borno state became the operating base of three armed groups: Boko Haram, the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) and Ansaru. In 2002, a Salafist preacher, Mohammad Yusuf, established Boko Haram in Borno’s capital, Maiduguri. Its objective was to establish a Sunni Islamic State and oppose Western culture and education. In 2012, Ansaru emerged as a faction of Boko Haram and aligned with Al-Qaeda. Ansaru focused on targeting foreigners and Nigerian government officials. In 2015, Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekaku formed an ISIS-aligned splinter group called Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) to establish a caliphate in West Africa. 

Second, the continuing suicide attacks in Nigeria. In 2011, Boko Haram began using suicide attacks in Nigeria. Since then, Boko Haram and ISWAP regularly used this tactic. During 2011-2018, armed groups carried out around 245 suicide bombings. From 2018-2024, the number of attacks was around 35. 

Third, using women and girls for suicide attacks. In 2014, Boko Haram began the practice of using female suicide bombers. The attacks often involved multiple women who detonated in coordination. According to survivors' accounts, the group abducted women and girls, brainwashed them, and forced them to carry out suicide attacks. The women are threatened with violence if they refuse. However, ISWAP reduced the use of female suicide bombers to gain local support and avoid civilian casualties. 

Fourth, a profile of the victims and locations of the armed groups. Boko Haram targeted civilians of all religions in 85 per cent of its suicide bombings and attacked public spaces like markets, weddings and hospitals. However, ISWAP and Ansaru targeted non-Muslim civilians like Christians and the visible sites of government presence, including government officials, police stations, and military camps.
 
In perspective
First, armed groups use female suicide bombers because of tactical reasons. Armed groups like Boko Haram use women to carry out suicide attacks because they are assumed to be beyond suspicion, cannot be body-searched by male soldiers, and can be trained cheaply. For little cost, these bombings create public insecurity, cripple local economies and boost morale and cohesion among members of the armed group.

Second,  the government’s ineffectiveness in suppressing armed groups in the Borno region. Nigeria’s military is severely underfunded, with significant funds lost yearly because of corruption in the Ministry of Defence. Since the military is underfunded, the armed groups often have more advanced equipment than the army overwhelms them in battles. 

Third, reasons for the prevalence of armed groups in the Borno region. All three of Nigeria’s armed groups are based in the Borno State, located on the country’s geographic and political periphery. Owing to low state capacity, government institutions aside from military camps are almost absent in the Borno. The region is prone to raids by bandits and armed groups. Under such conditions, local youths often join one of the groups for economic benefits and protection against other groups.


Issues in Peace and Conflict This Week:
Regional Roundups

Rohini Reenum, Akriti Sharma, Femy Francis, Anu Maria Joseph, Padmashree Anandhan, Dhriti Mukherjee, Vetriselvi Baskaran, Ayan Datta, Ken B Varghese, Mugdha Chaturvedi, Sayeka Ghosh and Neha Tresa George

China, East, Southeast Asia, and the Pacific
China: Fighter jet J-31B ready for service
On 6 July, the Chinese state broadcaster China Central Television (CCTV) reported that the country’s latest stealth fighter jet with carrier-based potential is ready for military service. The FC-31 Gyrfalcon, officially “J-31B,” is expected to complement the J-20, China’s most advanced stealth fighter jet which came into service in 2017. CCTV released a promotional video by the Shenyang Aircraft Corporation, a warplane developer and state-owned subsidiary of one of China’s top defence contractors. The video featured a computer-generated prototype of the new jet with a side weapon bay carrying two missiles.

China: Commerce ministry sets hearing date for EU brandy anti-dumping probe
On 5 July, the Chinese Ministry of Commerce announced a hearing on 18 July related to the anti-dumping investigation into EU brandy imports to ensure fairness and transparency. The probe was initiated in January following a request by the China Alcoholic Drinks Association. It will examine EU-produced brandy in containers holding less than 200 litres imported between October 2022 and September 2023. Minister of Commerce Wang Wentao emphasised that the investigation “neither targets any specific EU member state nor carries predefined findings.” A research fellow at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, Zhou Mi, noted that the process demonstrates China's adherence to WTO rules. The hearing would involve parties including Martell and Hennessy. The probe is expected to conclude by January 2025. 

Japan: Defence agreement with the Philippines
On 8 July, Japan and the Philippines signed a Reciprocal Access Agreement (RAA). The pact, Japan's first with a Southeast Asian country, facilitates joint military exercises and easier access to Philippine bases. Defence expert, John Bradford, noted that the pact reflected the “unprecedented similarity between the nations' threat perspectives” regarding China. Japanese Minister of Defence Minoru Kihara emphasised the strategic importance of the Philippines for realising a "free and open Indo-Pacific."

North Korea: Military delegation visits Russia
On 9 July, North Korea sent a military training delegation to Russia following the signing of a defence treaty in June. South Korean Ministry of spokesperson Lim Soo-suk stateded that any military cooperation strengthening North Korea's capabilities violates UN sanctions. The visit came on the sidelines of escalating tensions in the Korean peninsula. South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol questioned Russia's priorities in the region. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov rejected Yoon's comments by asserting Russia's desire for good relations with both Koreas. 

China: Russian and Chinese companies replicate Iran’s Shahed drone
On 3 July, Bloomberg cited European sources who stated that Chinese and Russian companies were developing an attack drone similar to an Iranian model deployed in Ukraine. Western officials familiar with the matter took this as a sign that Beijing could be moving closer to providing lethal aid, though Chinese drones have not been used in Ukraine yet. The companies from both two countries have been in talks since 2023 regarding collaboration to replicate Iran’s Shahed drone, and the provision of these drones to Russia will deepen China’s support to Russia despite repeated warnings from the US and its allies. 
 
Taiwan: Military plan to convert temples into ammunition storehouses receives public opposition
On 30 June, three temples in Taiwan’s Miaoli used local news sources to make a document detailing the Taiwanese military’s proposal to convert local temples into ammunition depots during wartime public. This sparked public concerns about these sites being targeted in case of a cross-conflict. Temples in Maoli were sent an official document from a local reserve command, asking them to sign an agreement that allows the military to use their open spaces to store the ammunition. The document specified that in case of a potential war, the command plans to transport some ammunition from its depot to the open areas in the temples. It further explained that this would “facilitate the resupply of ammunition for reserve brigade units, ensuring continued combat effectiveness.”  The plan was rejected by Miaoli’s residents, particularly those living around these temples.
 
China: UN envoy calls on Israel to ensure quick entry of humanitarian aid to Gaza
On 2 July, during a UN Security Council (UNSC) briefing on the situation in the Middle East, China’s permanent representative to the UN, Fu Cong, urged Israel to fulfil its obligations under international humanitarian law by ensuring the rapid and unobstructed entry of humanitarian aid to Gaza. Cong detailed that the severe humanitarian crisis in Gaza is being worsened by extreme shortages of essential supplies and poor health conditions in the region. He noted that as a result of the man-made humanitarian disaster, “millions of people are struggling with hunger, disease, pain, and despair.” Cong opined that over two million people in Gaza are living in an “open-air prison” as they have been deprived of water, electricity, food, medication, and fuel. He criticised the closure of Rafah crossing, arguing that the “existing crossing points are far from being able to meet the demand for humanitarian aid.” Cong thus asserted that “hunger cannot be weaponised, humanitarian issues cannot be politicised.”

South Korea: First trilateral military exercise with the US and Japan comes to an end
On 29 June, The Korea Times reported South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) said that the first trilateral multidomain military exercise between the US, Japan, and South Korea, known as “Freedom Edge,” was set to conclude on the same day The drills, which involved various warships and aircraft including the USS Theodore Roosevelt and ROKS Seoae Ryu Seong-ryong destroyer, began on 27 June. In a statement, the JCS stated that Freedom Edge enhanced the “deterrence and response against North Korean nuclear and missile threats.” The statement added: “It was also significant that the three countries conducted cyber training together for the first time.” This was the first trilateral exercise to be held across multiple domains, including air, underwater, and cyber.  

Maritime: RIMPAC drills start in the Asia-Pacific region
On 28 June, the opening ceremony of the Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC), the “world’s largest international maritime exercise” hosted by the US Pacific Fleet, was held in Hawaii. RIMPAC is held every alternate year and brings together the armed forces of 29 countries for five weeks of training to strengthen multilateral relations and promote “a free and open Indo-Pacific.” The drill this year includes militaries from South Korea, Japan, and India and several other countries. Israel will also be joining in its third RIMPAC, which led to protests from pro-Palestinian groups. The exercise centres around combat and contingency training on land, air, and water. The drill will include 150 aircraft, 40 surface ships, three submarines, and more than 25,000 personnel conducting amphibious landing, urban combat training, anti-submarine warfare, ship sinking exercises, and cyber, and space operations. 

South Asia
Pakistan: Terrorist killed in Gilgit-Baltistan
On 4 July, Dawn reported that security forces killed an alleged terrorist in Deral Valley in Diamer. The military operation led to the death of four Gilgit-Baltistan (GB) scouts personnel and two civilians. GB Minister of Interior Shams Lone said that the intelligence-based operation targeted three terrorists for their suspected involvement in an attack in 2023 which killed nine people in Diamer. 

Pakistan: Bomb attack in Mardan 
On 5 July, a bomb attack on the Jalala Bridge at Malakand-Mardan Road killed three people and injured five others, including two children. A police spokesperson, Farman Ali Khan told Dawn that the bomb was triggered when a police van and motorcycle rickshaw were crossing the bridge. Three passengers in the rickshaw were killed. The area has been cordoned off and a search operation has been launched.

India: Manipur police arrests two members of Arambai Tenggol
On 10 July, Manipur police arrested two members of Arambai Tenggol, a radical Meitei outfit in Imphal. The police seized arms and ammunition and registered for “further investigation and legal action.” The group has emerged as one of the prominent armed actors in Manipur. On 9 July, the police and CRPF arrested three people identified as “armed cadres of an underground outfit.” On 10 July, people protested and called for a shutdown following the arrests.

Pakistan: Ambassador asks US for “sophisticated small arms” for counter-terror operation, Azm-i-Istehkam
On 29 June, Dawn reported that Pakistan’s envoy to the US, Masood Khan requested Washington to provide small arms and modern equipment to Islamabad to help ensure the success of Operation Azm-i-Isethkam. Recently, the Pakistani federal government had given a nod to the national counter-terrorism campaign operation. In this regard, Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif had assured that the initiative would not be large-scale in nature. During an address at the Wilson Centre, a think tank in Washington, Khan elaborated that the operation is made of three components- doctrinal, societal, and operational- and work on the first two has begun already. Noting the importance of strong security links between the US and Pakistan, he added that “this is crucial for regional security and opposing the rising tide of terrorism that also threatens the interests of the US and its allies.” Khan said that since both countries “share values” and their “security and economic interests are interwoven,” the bilateral relationship should not be held “hostage” by a few issues. 

Pakistan: Former Senator Hidayatullah Khan killed in an IED blast in Bajaur
On 3 July, five people were killed in an improvised explosive device (IED) blast that happened in Sesai village of Mamund tehsil, Bajaur tribal district. Former independent Senator Hidayatullah Khan was also among those killed. Deputy Superintendent of Police Bakht Munir revealed that “Khan was on his way to attend a planned campaign event for his nephew when his vehicle was targeted by an IED.” Malik Irfanullah, a police officer and the senator’s close relative was also killed in the blast. The bomb disposal squad revealed that around five to seven kilograms of explosives were used in the explosion. The police spokesman termed the incident an act of terrorism, even though no group claimed responsibility for the attack. The attack was widely condemned in Pakistan, including criticism by Pakistan’s President Asif Ali Zardari, Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur, the Awami National Party, the Jamiat Ulema-i Islam, and several others. 

Pakistan: Land-to-Air missile FN-6 successfully test-fired by the Pakistan Navy
On 3 July, the firing of FN-6 missile, a land-to-air missile, was successfully tested by the Pakistan Navy (PN).  A statement by the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR) revealed that the Pakistan Navy’s ground-based air defence system was used to test the firing of FN-6 missiles. PN’s Ground-Based Air Defense System successfully engaged the aerial objectives during the test. Commander Coast Vice Admiral Raja Rab Nawaz, who was the chief guest for the occasion, “expressed full satisfaction over the operational preparedness of Pakistan Navy’s Ground-Based Air Defense System.”

The Middle East and Africa
Israel: IDF releases report on the 7 October attack
On 11 July, the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) published the findings of Hamas’ 7 October attack. The IDF admitted that it failed to protect its citizens, especially those in the Kibbutz Be’eri community. Hamas killed over 100 people in Be’eri and took 32 hostages. The IDF lauded the efforts of the Be-eri’s residents and rapid response team who tried to repel the attackers. 

Israel: US to close Gaza Pier 
On 11 July, the Pentagon Press Secretary Major General Pat Ryder stated that the US-built temporary pier in Gaza “will soon cease operations.” He added: “The pier and support vessels and equipment are returning to Ashdod, where they will remain until further notice.”  

Qatar: Egypt, Israel and US intelligence heads to resume ceasefire talks in Doha 
On 9 July, according to Reuters, ceasefire negotiations between Israel and Hamas would resume on 10 June in the Qatari capital Doha. The Director of Egypt’s General Intelligence Directorate Abbas Kamel, Mossad Director David Barnea, and Central Intelligence Agency Director William Burns will be the attendees. 

Yemen: Houthis strike three ships for violating “the ban on access to Israeli ports”
On 9 July, the Houthi armed group’s spokesperson, Yahya Saree, stated that it attacked three ships in the Arabian Sea and the Gulf of Aden with “a combination of ballistic and winged missiles.” The group targeted the US ship Maersk Sentosa, the Israeli ship MSC Patnareem and the Maltese ship Marathopolis with drones. Saree said that they attacked the ships because they “violated the ban on access to Israeli ports.”

Israel: IDF continues attacks in Gaza, Palestinian Israeli stabs two soldiers
On 1 July, Al Jazeera reported that Israeli raids in Nuseirat and Gaza City killed 28 people. Separately, an Israeli citizen of Palestinian ethnicity stabbed two Israeli soldiers in a shopping mall in northern Israel’s Karmiel city, killing one soldier and injuring another. Additionally, the Palestinian Red Crescent reported that an Israeli attack in Gaza City killed four Palestinians.

Yemen: US Central Command destroys Houthi targets in Yemen and Red Sea
On 3 July, the US Central Command (CENTCOM) stated on X that its forces destroyed two Houthi radar sites in Yemen and two uncrewed surface vessels (USV) in the Red Sea. It added that the radar sites and USV were “imminent threats” to US forces and merchant ships passing the region, and it destroyed them to “protect freedom of navigation” and secure international waters. Earlier on 1 July, CENTCOM said it had destroyed one more Houthi radar site in a Houthi-controlled area of Yemen.  

Lebanon: Israeli airstrike kills senior Hezbollah commander
On 3 July, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) stated that they eliminated Hezbollah’s Commander, Muhammad Neamah Naser. The IDF detailed that he led the armed group’s rocket and missile strikes at Israeli civilians from southwestern Lebanon. Reuters cited two security sources in Lebanon who said that Naser was killed by an Israeli airstrike in southern Lebanon’s Tyre city, making him one of the seniormost Hezbollah commanders to die in the ongoing Israel-Lebanon conflict. Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said that Israeli forces had been hitting Hezbollah “very hard every day,” and while it would take necessary action against the group, the preference would be to reach a negotiated agreement. In response, Hezbollah fired rockets at Israeli military positions in the Golan Heights. 

Iraq: Government arrests three suspects for suspected ties to banned armed group PKK
On 1 July, Iraq said it had arrested three people linked with the political party and armed group Kurdistan People’s Party (PKK), who were suspected of planning attacks across Iraq, including on an oil pipeline. Iraq’s Interior Ministry spokesperson Brigadier General Muqdad Meeri said that as per an investigation, “these PKK members had plans to attack the Ceyhan oil pipeline linking Kirkuk, Erbil and Duhok to Turkey.” He added that all three suspects confessed to setting sabotage fires at commercial markets over the last few months, which had incurred losses of about USD 300 million, as per orders from the PKK to attack the commercial interests of a “neighbouring state.” The PKK is banned as a terrorist organisation in Turkey, the US, and the European Union, and has bases around northern Iraq. In response, the armed group dismissed the accusations, asserting it was not involved in the arson attacks and instead blamed Turkey’s intelligence agency for it.

Africa: Sahara land route twice as deadly as Mediterranean Sea route for migrants, reports UNHCR
On 5 July, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, International Organization for Migration (IOM), and Mixed Migration Centre published a joint report titled “On this Journey, No One Cares If You Live or Die.” According to the report, African migrants taking the Sahara land route to Europe is twice as deadly as the Mediterranean Sea route. UNHCR's special envoy for the Central Mediterranean situation, Vincent Cochetel, stated: “Many people tell us that they are aware of someone who has died on the way, normally more on the land routes than on the sea routes… risk of kidnapping seems to be a new one. It used to be mentioned by 2% of the respondents four years ago. Now it is mentioned by 18% of the respondents. Almost one out of five claim that the journey involved that risk of kidnapping.” 

Niger: US troops withdraw from Air Base 101 by 7 July
On 5 July, Reuters quoted US Air Force Major General Kenneth Ekman that the US would withdraw its troops from Air Base 101 by 7 July. Erkman stated: "We will do a joint ceremony on that occasion that marks the departure of the last U.S. C-17 (aircraft). The government of Niger will assume control of former U.S. areas and facilities.” In March, Niger’s military government ordered the US to withdraw its troops from the country. 

Niger: Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso form the Alliance of Sahel States (AES)
On 6 July, Reuters reported that Mali’s interim President Assimi Goita, Niger’s President General Abdourahamane Tiani, and Burkina’s Faso’s President Captain Ibrahim Traore withdrew from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and formed the Alliance of Sahel States (AES) confederation. Tiani stated: “It is up to us today to make the AES Confederation an alternative to any artificial regional group by building ... a community free from the control of foreign powers." The leaders released a joint communique agreeing to coordinate diplomatically and establish an AES investment bank and mining, energy, and agriculture projects. 

Ethiopia: US Ambassador says 100 people kidnapped in one week
On 8 July, Reuters quoted the US Ambassador to Ethiopia Ervin Massinga that around 100 people had been kidnapped the previous week in the country. Massinga stated: “Recent and frequent kidnappings in Oromia and Amhara regions show how prolonged conflict emboldens criminals and weakens (the) rule of law.” According to the UN, in 2023, 1300 people were killed in kidnappings across the country. 

Democratic Republic of Congo: Uganda and Rwanda backing M23 group, says UN experts
On 10 July, according to BBC, the UN Group of Experts report on the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) stated that Uganda and Rwanda were supporting the M23 armed group in DRC. The report stated that while Uganda sent military intelligence officers to coordinate with M23 leaders and allowed the armed group’s leader to travel to Uganda, Rwanda supplied around 4,000 troops to fight with M23. The report stated that the crisis was rapidly escalating and “carried the risk of triggering a wider regional conflict.” 

Europe and The Americas
Turkey: Border crossing with Syria closed following an exchange of fire between troops and protestors 
On 3 July, according to the BBC, Turkey closed its border crossings into northwest Syria after Syrians angered by violence against their people in Turkey attacked Turkish troops. Following an exchange of fire between the troops and armed protesters in Syria’s Afrin city, four people were killed. Turkish police arrested roughly 500 individuals following these attacks, which saw angry Syrians throwing stones at Turkish military convoys and tearing down Turkish flags. Presently, more than three million Syrian refugees stay in Turkey, and tensions between local communities and these refugees have been increasing. 

Ukraine: Hungarian Prime Minister proposes “swift ceasefire” with Russia
On 2 July, during a surprise visit to Kyiv, Hungarian Prime Minister Victor Orbán suggested a swift ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia during negotiations and told Ukraine that it should not wait for Moscow to withdraw its troops before starting these talks. In a press release, Orbán noted that since the “rules of international diplomacy are slow and complex,” he asked Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to “consider whether it would be possible to reverse the order and to speed up the peace negotiations with a swift ceasefire.” He added that a “ceasefire tied to a time limit” helps to create an “opportunity for speeding up” peace talks. While Zelenskyy did not provide a direct response to this, in the past he has maintained that a “pause on the Ukrainian battlefield will not mean a pause in the war.” He also appreciated “Hungary's readiness to work effectively for the return of real long-term security.” 

Russia: Drone strikes allegedly hit oil depot in Tambov Oblast 
On 28 June, the governor of Tambov Oblast, Maxim Yegorov, announced that a drone attack allegedly hit an oil depot in the Michurinsky municipal district, causing a “small fire” to break out. This was then controlled with the help of 11 fire crews, and no casualties were reported. Earlier, Russian President Vladimir Putin noted that Ukraine’s Security Service had struck more than 30 Russian oil refineries, terminals, and oil depots. 

Mexico: Officials discover bodies of 19 men in abandoned truck 
On 2 July, Mexican officials said they discovered at least 19 bodies in a truck in the southern state of Chiapas, in an incident that may have links to a violent turf war between drug and migrant trafficking gangs. According to the Ministry of Public Security, the male bodies had been found a day earlier in an abandoned truck, and authorities added that the victims, who were shot, included at least six men with Guatemalan identity documents. Earlier on 28 June, a preliminary investigation found that there had been a clash between Mexico’s powerful Sinaloa cartel and the Chiapas and Guatemala cartel, near the border with Guatemala. The ministry in its statement detailed that the clashes were over “criminal control of the border area.” 

Bolivia: Government recalls Argentine ambassador over Argentina’s claims of orchestrated coup
On 1 July, the Bolivian government summoned the Argentine ambassador to address the country’s claim that the attempted coup in Bolivia last week was a hoax. The attempted coup that occurred on 26 June has resulted in Bolivia’s President Luis Arce facing a wave of criticism both nationally and internationally, with people accusing him of engineering the coup to look like a hero. Arce’s political opponents have also issued similar accusations, which he has vehemently denied. Argentina’s President Javier Milei was the first head of state to make this accusation, asserting that Bolivia’s history of socialist governments is a threat to democracy. Referring to the alleged coup attempt, Milei’s office said that the “tale that was told was not very credible.” In response, Bolivia’s interim Foreign Minister, María Nela Prada, said that Milei’s “unfriendly and reckless” statement was “misinformed and biased,” and called on him to stay out of Bolivia’s internal affairs. Additionally, Bolivia’s Deputy Minister of Communication, Gabriela Alcón, stated: “We have always maintained a position of respect and we will demand the same respect.”

Haiti: UN report says violence displaced more than 300,000 children 
On 2 July, UNICEF said that more than 300,000 children in Haiti have been displaced as a result of the violence that has surged since February 2024. UNICEF’s Executive Director, Catherine Russell, stated: “The humanitarian catastrophe unfolding before our eyes is taking a devastating toll on children.” She highlighted that children who are displaced need “a safe and protective environment, and increased support and funding from the international community.” Most of these children are living in makeshift shelters such as schools, many of which are in poor hygienic conditions that increase the risk of disease. UNICEF also pointed out that multiple children in the country are forced to joint violent gangs due to a lack of access to essential goods and services. They additionally face a higher risk of sexual assault, exploitation, and family separation. 

The US: Hurricane Beryl hits Caribbean islands, bringing “catastrophic winds”
On 1 July, Hurricane Beryl made a landfall on the island of Carriacou in Grenada as a Category 4 storm. Later, as per the US’ National Hurricane Centre (NHC), Beryl intensified into a “potentially catastrophic” Category 5 storm, and headed towards Jamaica after damaging houses and causing flooding in other southeastern Caribbean islands. The NHC projected that “fluctuations in strength are likely… but Beryl is expected to still be near major hurricane intensity.” Islands such as Grenada and St Vincent experienced “catastrophic winds and life-threatening storm surge.” Grenada’s Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell reported one death, adding that the government would send people early on 2 July to evaluate the situation. A hurricane warning was issued in Jamaica, along with tropical storm warnings in parts of the Dominican Republic and Haiti.

The US: Roughly 309,000 Haitians to be covered under Temporary Protected Status programme 
On 28 June, the US Department of Homeland Security announced that the administration of US President Joe Biden would expand deportation relief and work permits to roughly 309,000 Haitians who are already in the country. In light of violence and security issues in Haiti that have posed an obstacle to safety and access to food, water, and healthcare, the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) programme will be extended to Haitians through February 2026. So far, around 264,000 Haitians in the US were covered by the programme. As part of this new move, TPS will be available to those Haitians who were in the US on or before 3 June, offering deportation relief and work permits. 


About the authors
Akriti Sharma and Rohini Reenum are PhD Scholars at NIAS. Padmashree Anandhan and Anu Maria Joseph are Research Associates at NIAS. Femy Francis, Dhriti Mukherjee, and Vetriselvi Baskaran are Research Assistants at NIAS. Ayan Datta, Ken B Varghese, Neha Tresa George, Sayeka Ghosh and Mugdha Chaturvedi are Research Interns at NIAS.

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May 2022 | IPRI # 281
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Another school shooting in the US, and EU-UK tussle over Northern Ireland protocol

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NIAS Africa Studies
May 2022 | IPRI # 280
IPRI Comments

Poulomi Mondal

Communal Tensions in Ethiopia: Five drivers

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Conflict Weekly
May 2022 | IPRI # 279
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Another racial attack in the US, Divide within the EU over the Russian oil ban, and violence in Israel

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Conflict Weekly Cover Story
May 2022 | IPRI # 278
IPRI Comments

S Shaji

Sudan, three years after Omar al Bashir

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Conflict Weekly
May 2022 | IPRI # 277
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Intensifying political crisis in Sri Lanka, Communal tensions in Ethiopia, and 75 days of Ukraine war

read more
NIAS Africa Studies
May 2022 | IPRI # 276
IPRI Comments

Mohamad Aseel Ummer

Wagner Group: Russia's Proxies or Ghost Soldiers?

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NIAS Africa Studies
May 2022 | IPRI # 275
IPRI Comments

Anu Maria Joseph

Mali ends defence ties with France: What does this mean

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Conflict Weekly
May 2022 | IPRI # 274
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Mali-France tensions and anti-UK protests in the Virgin Islands

read more
Conflict Weekly
April 2022 | IPRI # 273
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

​​​​​​​UK-Rwanda asylum deal, Mexico's continuing femicides, and Afghanistan's sectarian violence 

read more
Conflict Weekly
April 2022 | IPRI # 272
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

The battle for Donbas, Violence in Jerusalem, Riots in Sweden, Kyrgyzstan- Tajikistan border dialogue, and China’s military drills

read more
Conflict Weekly
April 2022 | IPRI # 271
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Violence in Nigeria, and Russia’s new military strategy in Ukraine

read more
Conflict Weekly
April 2022 | IPRI # 270
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Political Crises in Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Tunisia; Ceasefire in Yemen; and the Battle for Mariupol

read more
NIAS-IPRI Brief
April 2022 | IPRI # 269
IPRI Briefs

Sourina Bej

Ceasefire trails in Naga conflict: Space for peace parleys and violent politics

read more
NIAS-IPRI Brief
April 2022 | IPRI # 268
IPRI Briefs

Mohamad Aseel Ummer

Failing Peace in Darfur: Multiple Actors, No Outcome

read more
NIAS-IPRI Brief
April 2022 | IPRI # 267
IPRI Briefs

Jeshil Samuel J

The 2014 Gaza Ceasefire: A Stopgap to Peace dividend

read more
NIAS-IPRI Brief
April 2022 | IPRI # 266
IPRI Briefs

Dincy Adlakha

The 1999 Lome Peace Agreement: Issues and failed aspirations

read more
NIAS-IPRI Brief
April 2022 | IPRI # 265
IPRI Briefs

Anju C Joseph

Ceasefire in Moro Conflict: No lasting solution in sight

read more
Conflict Weekly
March 2022 | IPRI # 264
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

30 days of War in Ukraine

read more
Conflict Weekly
March 2022 | IPRI # 263
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Sri Lanka’s worsening economic crisis

read more
Conflict Weekly
March 2022 | IPRI # 262
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

The end of Denmark’s Inuit experiment

read more
Conflict Weekly
March 2022 | IPRI # 261
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

International Women’s Day: Gap between policies and realities on gender equality

read more
Conflict Weekly
March 2022 | IPRI # 260
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Russia’s Ukraine Invasion: One Week Later

read more
Conflict Weekly
February 2022 | IPRI # 259
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Russia’s Ukraine salami slicing and Canada’s freedom convoy protests

read more
Conflict Weekly
February 2022 | IPRI # 258
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Unfreezing the Afghan assets, Tunisia’s judicial crisis and Libya’s new political deadlock

read more
Conflict Weekly
February 2022 | IPRI # 257
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Freedom convoy protests in Canada, and a de-escalation over Ukraine

read more
NIAS Africa Monitor
February 2022 | IPRI # 256
IPRI Comments

Apoorva Sudhakar

Coup in Burkina Faso: Five things to know

read more
Conflict Weekly
February 2022 | IPRI # 255
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

One year of the coup in Myanmar, Taliban meetings in Oslo, and the Global hunger report

read more
Conflict Weekly
January 2022 | IPRI # 254
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Coup in Burkina Faso, Continuing violence in Yemen, and an ISIS attack in Syria

read more
Conflict Weekly
January 2022 | IPRI # 253
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Threat of War over Ukraine, a Syrian trial in Germany, and Protests in France

read more
Central Asia
January 2022 | IPRI # 252
IPRI Comments

Abigail Miriam Fernandez

The unrest in Kazakhstan: Look beyond the trigger

read more
Conflict Weekly
January 2022 | IPRI # 251
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Unrest and crackdown in Kazakhstan, Another jail term for Aung San Suu Kyi, Two years after Qasem Soleimani, and Canada's reconciliation with the indigenous people

read more
Conflict Weekly
January 2022 | IPRI # 250
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Conflicts in 2021 : Through Regional Prisms

read more
NIAS-IPRI Workshop
January 2022 | IPRI # 249
IPRI Briefs

Dr Shreya Upadhyay

State of Peace and Conflict in North America in 2021

read more
NIAS-IPRI Workshop
January 2022 | IPRI # 248
IPRI Briefs

Dr Aparaajita Pandey

State of Peace and Conflict in Latin America in 2021

read more
NIAS-IPRI Workshop
January 2022 | IPRI # 247
IPRI Briefs

Dr Shaji S

State of Peace and Conflict in Africa in 2021

read more
NIAS-IPRI Workshop
January 2022 | IPRI # 246
IPRI Briefs

Dr Stanly Johny

State of Peace and conflict in the Middle East in 2021

read more
NIAS-IPRI Workshop
January 2022 | IPRI # 245
IPRI Briefs

Dr Athar Zafar

State of Peace and Conflict in Central Asia in 2021

read more
NIAS-IPRI Workshop
January 2022 | IPRI # 244
IPRI Briefs

Dr Anshuman Behera

State of Peace and Conflict in South Asia in 2021

read more
NIAS-IPRI Workshop
January 2022 | IPRI # 243
IPRI Briefs

Dr Bibhu Prasad Routray

State of Peace and Conflict in Southeast Asia in 2021

read more
NIAS-IPRI Workshop
January 2022 | IPRI # 242
IPRI Briefs

Dr Sandip Kumar Mishra

State of Peace and Conflict in East Asia in 2021

read more
NIAS-IPRI Workshop
January 2022 | IPRI # 241
IPRI Briefs

Dr Anand V

State of Peace and Conflict in China in 2021

read more
Conflict Weekly
December 2021 | IPRI # 240
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Top 15 Conflicts in 2021

read more
Conflict Weekly
December 2021 | IPRI # 239
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

New reports on the Omicron threat, and lifting sanctions on humanitarian aid to Afghanistan

read more
Conflict Weekly
December 2021 | IPRI # 238
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

West warns Russia over Ukrainian aggression and South Korea and North Korean agree on end-of-war declaration in principle

read more
NIAS Africa Monitor
December 2021 | IPRI # 237
IPRI Comments

Harshita Rathore

Famine in Ethiopia: The government's refusal to acknowledge, worsens the crisis

read more
Conflict Weekly
December 2021 | IPRI # 236
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Conflict Weekly: 100th Issue

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Conflict Weekly
December 2021 | IPRI # 235
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Unrest in the Solomon Islands, and the 12 million missing children in China

read more
Conflict Weekly
November 2021 | IPRI # 234
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Anti-lockdown protests in Europe, Farmers' protests in India, and Continuing instability in Sudan

read more
Conflict Weekly
November 2021 | IPRI # 223
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Europe's other migrant crisis, and Protests in Cuba and Thailand

read more
Conflict Weekly
November 2021 | IPRI # 222
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

The migrant threat to Europe from Belarus and Ceasefire with the TTP in Pakistan

read more
Conflict Weekly
November 2021 | IPRI # 221
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

One year of Ethiopian conflict and UK-France fishing row

read more
Conflict Weekly
October 2021 | IPRI # 220
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Coup in Sudan, Pressure on Myanmar's military regime, and the Migrant game by Belarus

read more
October 2021 | IPRI # 219
IPRI Comments

Vandana Mishra

The Texas abortion law: Five reasons why it is draconian

read more
Pakistan Reader Comments
October 2021 | IPRI # 218
IPRI Comments

Apoorva Sudhakar

No honour in honour killing

read more
Conflict Weekly
October 2021 | IPRI # 217
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

One year after Samuel Paty's killing, Kidnapping in Haiti, and Instability in Sudan

read more
Conflict Weekly
October 2021 | IPRI # 216
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

ISIS violence in Afghanistan, and Targeted killings in J&K

read more
Pakistan Reader Comments
October 2021 | IPRI # 215
IPRI Comments

Apoorva Sudhakar

Rising child abuse in Pakistan: Five reasons why

read more
Pakistan Reader Comments
October 2021 | IPRI # 214
IPRI Comments

Abigail Miriam Fernandez

Hazara Persecution in Pakistan: No end in sight

read more
Pakistan Reader Comments
October 2021 | IPRI # 213
IPRI Comments

D. Suba Chandran

Talking to the Pakistani Taliban: What did Imran say? And what does it mean? Is the rest of Pakistan ready for the same?

read more
Pakistan Reader Comments
October 2021 | IPRI # 212
IPRI Comments

D. Suba Chandran

Protests in Gwadar: Who and Why

read more
Conflict Weekly
October 2021 | IPRI # 211
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Anti-Bolsonaro protests in Brazil, UK-France fishing row, Talks with the TTP in Pakistan, and the anti-abortion law protests in the US

read more
Conflict Weekly
September 2021 | IPRI # 210
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

The Chinese White Paper on Xinjiang, and the Haitian migrant crisis in the US

read more
NIAS-IPRI Brief
September 2021 | IPRI # 209
IPRI Briefs

Apoorva Sudhakar

Africa’s Stolen Future:Child abductions, lost innocence, and a glaring reflection of State failure in Nigeria

read more
Afghanistan
September 2021 | IPRI # 208
IPRI Comments

Vineeth Daniel Vinoy

Who is who in the interim Taliban government? And, what would be the government structure?

read more
Conflict Weekly
September 2021 | IPRI # 207
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Pride marches in Europe, Jail term for Hotel Rwanda hero, and continuing Houthi-led violence in Yemen

read more
Conflict Weekly
September 2021 | IPRI # 206
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Protests in Europe and Brazil, and an impending humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan

read more
Latin America
September 2021 | IPRI # 205
IPRI Comments

Lokendra Sharma

Two months of Cuban protests: Is the ‘revolution’ ending?

read more
Conflict Weekly
September 2021 | IPRI # 204
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Texas' abortion ban, Return of the Thai protests, the Taliban government, and the Guinea coup

read more
Conflict Weekly
September 2021 | IPRI # 203
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

The US exit from Afghanistan, the Houthi violence in Yemen, and Hurricane Ida in the US

read more
Conflict Weekly
August 2021 | IPRI # 202
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Chaotic evacuation in Kabul, Crimea Summit on seven years of Russian occupation, anti-lockdown protests in Australia, and continuing kidnappings in Africa

read more
Conflict Weekly
August 2021 | IPRI # 201
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Return of the Taliban and the fall of Afghanistan

read more
Conflict Weekly
August 2021 | IPRI # 200
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Protests return to Thailand, Taliban gains in Afghanistan, Pandemic action triggers protests in Europe, and new Climate Change report warns Code-Red

read more
Conflict Weekly
August 2021 | IPRI # 199
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Taliban offensive, New Zealand's apology over the Pacific communities, Peru's new problem, and an inter-State clash in India's Northeast

read more
Conflict Weekly
July 2021 | IPRI # 198
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

France's anti-extremism bill, Canada's burning churches, and Tunisia's new political crisis

read more
NIAS Africa Monitor
July 2021 | IPRI # 197
IPRI Comments

Abigail Miriam Fernandez

Impending famine in Tigray, should make Ethiopia everyone's problem

read more
NIAS Africa Monitor
July 2021 | IPRI # 196
IPRI Comments

Anu Maria Joseph

Too late and too little is Ethiopia's international problem

read more
NIAS Africa Monitor
July 2021 | IPRI # 195
IPRI Comments

Sankalp Gurjar

Africa's Ethiopia Problem

read more
NIAS Africa Monitor
July 2021 | IPRI # 194
IPRI Comments

Apoorva Sudhakar

Ethiopia's Tigray problem is Tigray's Ethiopia problem

read more
Afghanistan
July 2021 | IPRI # 193
IPRI Comments

Abigail Miriam Fernandez

Five reasons why Afghanistan is closer to a civil war

read more
NIAS Africa Monitor
July 2021 | IPRI # 192
IPRI Comments

Anu Maria Joseph

Beyond the apology to Rwanda: In Africa, is France still a 'silent colonizer'?

read more
NIAS Africa Monitor
July 2021 | IPRI # 191
IPRI Comments

Mohamad Aseel Ummer

Migration in Africa: Origin, Drivers and Destinations

read more
NIAS Africa Monitor
July 2021 | IPRI # 190
IPRI Comments

Apoorva Sudhakar

15 of the 23 global hunger hotspots are in Africa:Three reasons why

read more
NIAS Africa Monitor
July 2021 | IPRI # 189
IPRI Comments

Apoorva Sudhakar

Libya: A new unity government and rekindled hope, a decade after the fall of Gaddafi

read more
Conflict Weekly
July 2021 | IPRI # 188
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Floods in Germany, Wildfires in Siberia and the Pegasus Spyware

read more
Conflict Weekly
July 2021 | IPRI # 184
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Anti-government protests in Cuba, Pro-Zuma protests in South Africa, and remembering the Srebrenica massacre

read more
Conflict Weekly
July 2021 | IPRI # 183
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Taliban offensive in Afghanistan, Protests in Colombia, and the Heat Wave 

read more
Conflict Weekly
June 2021 | IPRI # 182
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Ceasefire in Ethiopia, Berlin Conference on Libya and the World Drug Report

read more
Conflict Weekly
June 2021 | IPRI # 181
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

The US Juneteenth, UN resolution on Myanmar and Global Peace Index

read more
Europe
June 2021 | IPRI # 180
IPRI Comments

Chetna Vinay Bhora

Spain, Morocco and the rise of rightwing politics in Europe over immigration

read more
Southeast Asia
June 2021 | IPRI # 179
IPRI Comments

Anju Joseph

Timor Leste: Instability continues, despite 19 years of independence

read more
Conflict Weekly
June 2021 | IPRI # 178
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Three new reports on Child labour, Ethiopia and Xinjiang, Tensions in Belfast, and the Suu Kyi trial

read more
Conflict Weekly
June 2021 | IPRI # 177
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

The UN report on Taliban-al Qaeda links, Denmark on relocating refugee camps, Burkino Faso massacre, Arctic melt, and Afghan trilateral dialogue

read more
Israel-Palestine Conflict
June 2021 | IPRI # 176
IPRI Comments

Udbhav Krishna P

Revisiting the recent violence: Three takeaways

read more
Gender Peace and Conflict
June 2021 | IPRI # 175
IPRI Comments

Vibha Venugopal

The return of Taliban will be bad news for women

read more
Nepal
June 2021 | IPRI # 174
IPRI Comments

Sourina Bej

Fresh election-call mean unending cycle of instability

read more
Conflict Weekly
June 2021 | IPRI # 173
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Continuing protests in Colombia, another mass abduction in Nigeria, and a controversial election in Syria

read more
Conflict Weekly
May 2021 | IPRI # 172
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Ceasefire in Israel, NLD ban in Myanmar and a new Belarus crisis

read more
Conflict Weekly
May 2021 | IPRI # 171
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Elusive ceasefire in Israel-Palestine conflict, a migration crisis in Spain, three weeks of protests in Colombia, and the rise of Ransomware reign

read more
The Maldives
May 2021 | IPRI # 170
IPRI Comments

N Manoharan

The bomb attack on Mohamed Nasheed. Is it political or jihadist?

read more
Conflict Weekly
May 2021 | IPRI # 169
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Escalating Israel-Palestine violence, an attack and a ceasefire in Afghanistan, and the fallouts of Scotland election for the UK

read more
Australia's indigenous communities
May 2021 | IPRI # 168
IPRI Comments

Avishka Ashok

The systemic oppression continues despite three decades of the Royal Commission report

read more
Africa
May 2021 | IPRI # 167
IPRI Comments

Apoorva Sudhakar

15 of the 23 global hunger hotspots are in Africa. Three reasons why

read more
Afghanistan 
May 2021 | IPRI # 166
IPRI Comments

Abigail Miriam Fernandez

The US decision to withdraw is a call made too early. Three reasons why

read more
Conflict Weekly
May 2021 | IPRI # 165
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Violent protests in Colombia, US troops withdrawal in Afghanistan, and the battle for Marib in Yemen

read more
Conflict Weekly
April 2021 | IPRI # 164
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Israel-Syria missile strikes, Clashes in Somalia and Afghan meetings in Pakistan

read more
Conflict Weekly
April 2021 | IPRI # 163
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

George Floyd murder trial, Fukushima water release controversy, anti-France protests in Pakistan, Report on the Rwandan genocide and another Loya Jirga in Afghanistan

read more
Conflict Weekly
April 2021 | IPRI # 162
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Riots in Northern Ireland, Sabotage on an Iranian nuclear facility, and a massacre in Ethiopia

read more
Conflict Weekly
April 2021 | IPRI # 161
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Global gender gap report, Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam talks failure, Maoist attack in India, Border tensions between Russia and Ukraine, and the Security forces take control of Palma in Mozambique

read more
Conflict Weekly
March 2021 | IPRI # 160
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Bloody Week in Myanmar, a Suicide attack in Indonesia and an Insurgency in Mozambique

read more
Conflict Weekly
March 2021 | IPRI # 159
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Sanctions on China, Saudi Arabia ceasefire in Yemen, the UNHRC resolution on Sri Lanka, and a massacre in Niger

read more
Conflict Weekly #62
March 2021 | IPRI # 158
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Gender Protests in Australia, Expanding Violence in Myanmar and Anti-protests bill in the UK

read more
Conflict Weekly # 61
March 2021 | IPRI # 157
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Women’s Day, Swiss Referendum, Myanmar Violence, George Floyd Trial and Lebanon Protests

read more
Conflict Weekly #60
March 2021 | IPRI # 156
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

From Myanmar and Hong Kong in Asia to Nigeria in Africa: Seven conflicts this week

read more
Conflict Weekly # 59
February 2021 | IPRI # 155
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Continuing Protests in Myanmar, ‘Comfort Women’ issue in South Korea and Abductions in Nigeria

read more
Ethiopia
February 2021 | IPRI # 154
IPRI Comments

Apoorva Sudhakar

Five fallouts of the military offensive in Tigray

read more
Afghanistan
February 2021 | IPRI # 153
IPRI Comments

Abigail Miriam Fernandez

The recent surge in targeted killing vs the troops withdrawal

read more
Abortions, Legislations and Gender Protests
February 2021 | IPRI # 152
IPRI Comments

Avishka Ashok

In Argentina, an extraordinarily progressive law on abortion brings the Conservatives to protest

read more
Abortions, Legislations and Gender Protests
February 2021 | IPRI # 151
IPRI Comments

Harini Madhusudan

In Poland, the protests against the abortion law feed into anti-government sentiments

read more
Abortions, Legislations and Gender Protests
February 2021 | IPRI # 150
IPRI Comments

Abigail Miriam Fernandez

In Honduras, a move towards a permanent ban on abortion laws

read more
Abortions, Legislations and Gender Protests
February 2021 | IPRI # 149
IPRI Comments

Sukanya Bali

In Thailand, the new abortion law poses more questions

read more
Myanmar
February 2021 | IPRI # 148
IPRI Comments

Aparupa Bhattacherjee

Civilian protests vs military: Three factors will decide the outcome in Myanmar

read more
Conflict Weekly # 58
February 2021 | IPRI # 147
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Anti-Separatism bill in France, Protests in Nepal against a gender-specific law, Surge in targetted killings in Afghanistan, and Instability continues in Ethiopia

read more
Conflict Weekly #57
February 2021 | IPRI # 146
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Anti-Coup protests in Myanmar, a new US strategy on Yemen, and the US-Iran differences on nuclear roadmap

read more
India and Sri Lanka
February 2021 | IPRI # 145
IPRI Comments

N Manoharan and Drorima Chatterjee

Five ways India can detangle the fishermen issue with Sri Lanka

read more
Conflict Weekly #56
February 2021 | IPRI # 144
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Coup in Myanmar and Protests in Russia

read more
Conflict Weekly #55
January 2021 | IPRI # 143
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Farmers' protests in India, Vaccine Wars, another India-China border standoff, and Navalny's imprisonment

read more
Conflict Weekly # 54
January 2021 | IPRI # 142
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

New President in the US, new Chinese Village in Arunachal Pradesh, new Israeli settlement in West Bank, and another massacre in Sudan

read more
Conflict Weekly # 53
January 2021 | IPRI # 141
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Trump impeached by the US House, Hazara miners buried in Pakistan, Farm laws stayed in India, and the Crisis escalation in CAR

read more
Conflict Weekly # 52
January 2021 | IPRI # 140
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

GCC lifts Qatar blockade, Iran decides to enrich uranium, Argentina legalizes abortion, French soldiers targeted in Mali, and the AFSPA extended in India's Northeast

read more
Conflicts around the World in 2020
December 2020 | IPRI # 139
IPRI Comments

Lakshmi V Menon

The Middle East: The Abraham Accords may be the deal of the century, but comes with a heavy Palestinian cause  

read more
Conflicts around the World in 2020
December 2020 | IPRI # 138
IPRI Comments

Sourina Bej

France:  Needs to rethink  the state-religion relation in battling extremism

read more
Conflicts around the World in 2020
December 2020 | IPRI # 137
IPRI Comments

Teshu Singh

India and China: A tense border with compromise unlikely

read more
Conflicts around the World in 2020
December 2020 | IPRI # 136
IPRI Comments

Apoorva Sudhakar

Ethiopia: The conflict in Tigray and the regional fallouts

read more
Conflicts around the World in 2020
December 2020 | IPRI # 135
IPRI Comments

Kamna Tiwary

Europe: From anti-government protests in Belarus to ‘United for Abortion’ in Poland 

read more
Conflicts around the World in 2020
December 2020 | IPRI # 134
IPRI Comments

Harini Madhusudan

Brexit: A year of the UK-EU transition talks and finally, a Deal 

read more
Conflicts around the World in 2020
December 2020 | IPRI # 133
IPRI Comments

Mallika Devi

Hong Kong: Slow Strangulation of Protests, Security Law and China's victory

read more
Conflicts around the World in 2020
December 2020 | IPRI # 132
IPRI Comments

Aparupa Bhattacherjee

Thailand: For the pro-democracy protests, it is a long march ahead 

read more
Conflicts around the World in 2020
December 2020 | IPRI # 131
IPRI Comments

Abigail Miriam Fernandez

Nagorno-Karabakh: Rekindled fighting, Causalities and a Ceasefire

read more
Conflict Weekly
December 2020 | IPRI # 130
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Hot on the Conflict Trails: Top Ten Conflicts in 2020

read more
Conflict Weekly
December 2020 | IPRI # 129
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Boko Haram abductions in Nigeria, Violence in Afghanistan and Farmers' protest in India

read more
Gender Peace and Conflict
December 2020 | IPRI # 128
IPRI Comments

Pushpika Sapna Bara

From Poland to India: More attacks on abortion rights coincide with the emergence of right

read more
Conflict Weekly
December 2020 | IPRI # 127
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Farmers protest in India, Radicals target idols in Bangladesh, UK reaches out to the EU and Saudi Arabia to mend ties with Qatar

read more
Conflict Weekly
December 2020 | IPRI # 126
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

An assassination in Iran, Massacre in Nigeria and Suicide bombings in Afghanistan

read more
The Friday Backgrounder
November 2020 | IPRI # 125
IPRI Comments

D Suba Chandran

J&K: Ensure the DDC elections are inclusive, free and fair

read more
Conflict Weekly
November 2020 | IPRI # 124
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Electoral violence in Africa, War crimes in Afghanistan, COVID's third global wave, and Protest escalation in Thailand

read more
Domestic turmoil and South Asia
November 2020 | IPRI # 123
IPRI Comments

Chrishari de Alwis Gunasekare

Sri Lanka’s 20-Amendment is more than what was bargained for

read more
Conflict Weekly
November 2020 | IPRI # 122
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

The US troops withdrawal, Violent protests in Thailand, Refugee crisis in Ethiopia, Anti-France protests in Pakistan and the Indo-Pak tensions along the LoC

read more
The Friday Backgrounder
November 2020 | IPRI # 121
IPRI Comments

D Suba Chandran

J&K: The Gupkar Alliance decides to fight the DDC elections together. The ballot may be thicker than principle

read more
Conflict Weekly
November 2020 | IPRI # 120
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

A peace agreement in Nagorno-Karabakh and a brewing civil war in Ethiopia

read more
Conflict Weekly
November 2020 | IPRI # 119
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

IS terror in Vienna and Kabul, new controversy along Nepal-China border, and a boundary dispute in India’s Northeast

read more
J&K
October 2020 | IPRI # 118
IPRI Comments

D Suba Chandran

The Friday Backgrounder: Union Government amends the land laws, and the Kashmiri Opposition protests. There is politics in both

read more
GENDER AND PEACEBUILDING DURING A PANDEMIC
October 2020 | IPRI # 117
IPRI Comments

Kabi Adhikari

In Nepal, rising gender violence shadows COVID-19 pandemic

read more
GLOBAL PROTESTS MOVEMENT
October 2020 | IPRI # 116
IPRI Comments

Apoorva Sudhakar

Lebanon: One year of protests; it is more setbacks and little reforms

read more
GENDER AND PEACEBUILDING DURING A PANDEMIC
October 2020 | IPRI # 115
IPRI Comments

Chrishari de Alwis Gunasekare

In Sri Lanka, pandemic has eclipsed women’s role in peacebuilding

read more
J&K
October 2020 | IPRI # 114
IPRI Comments

Akriti Sharma

The new demands within the State over the Official Language Act

read more
India's Northeast
October 2020 | IPRI # 113
IPRI Comments

Sourina Bej

The Naga Peace talks: Caught in its own rhetoric, NSCN(IM) will lose its stakes

read more
J&K
October 2020 | IPRI # 112
IPRI Comments

Akriti Sharma

The Gupkar Declaration: Vociferous Valley and an Indifferent Jammu

read more
The Friday Backgrounder
October 2020 | IPRI # 111
IPRI Comments

D. Suba Chandran

J&K: Flag, Constitution, Media Freedom and Local Elections

read more
Conflict Weekly
October 2020 | IPRI # 110
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Solidarity in France, Emergency withdrawn in Thailand, Terror tag removed in Sudan and Hunger in South Asia

read more
Conflict Weekly
October 2020 | IPRI # 109
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Protests against sexual violence in Bangladesh, One year after Xi-Modi summit, Assassination of a Deobandi scholar in Pakistan and continuing violence in Yemen

read more
Conflict Weekly
October 2020 | IPRI # 108
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

An Afghan woman nominated for the Nobel and a Dalit woman assaulted in India. External actors get involved in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict

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GENDER AND PEACEBUILDING DURING A PANDEMIC
October 2020 | IPRI # 107
IPRI Comments

Fatemah Ghafori

In Afghanistan, women peacebuilders need more than a seat at the table

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GENDER AND PEACEBUILDING DURING A PANDEMIC
October 2020 | IPRI # 106
IPRI Comments

Tamanna Khosla

In India, home has been the most violent place for women

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GENDER AND PEACEBUILDING DURING A PANDEMIC
October 2020 | IPRI # 105
IPRI Comments

Pushpika Sapna Bara

In India, pandemic relegates women peacebuilders to the margins

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Conflict Weekly
October 2020 | IPRI # 104
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Six million COVID cases in India, Abdullah Abdullah's visit to Pakistan, China's naval exercises in four seas, and the new tensions in Nagorno Karabakh

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Conflict Weekly
September 2020 | IPRI # 103
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Al Qaeda module in India, Naga Peace talks and the Polio problem in Pakistan

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Conflict Weekly
September 2020 | IPRI # 102
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

The Afghan summit in Doha, India-China Five Points agreement, Women protest in Pakistan, New amendment in Sri Lanka and the Bahrain-Israel rapprochement

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The Middle East
September 2020 | IPRI # 101
IPRI Comments

Samreen Wani

Lebanon: Can Macron's visit prevent the unravelling?

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Africa
September 2020 | IPRI # 100
IPRI Comments

Sankalp Gurjar

In Sudan, the government signs an agreement with the rebels. However, there are serious challenges

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Conflict Weekly
September 2020 | IPRI # 99
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Targeted Violence in Pakistan, Protests in Hong Kong and the Charlie Hebdo Trial in France

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The Friday Backgrounder
September 2020 | IPRI # 98
IPRI Comments

D. Suba Chandran

J&K: The PDP meeting, Muharram clashes and the Kashmiri parties vis-à-vis Pakistan

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Conflict Weekly
September 2020 | IPRI # 97
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Anti Racist Protests in the US and the Floods in Pakistan

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Discussion Report
August 2020 | IPRI # 96
IPRI Comments

Sukanya Bali and Abigail Miriam Fernandez

Sri Lanka: Election Analysis, Expectations from the Government, Challenges Ahead, & a road map for India

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The Friday Backgrounder
August 2020 | IPRI # 95
IPRI Comments

D Suba Chandran

J&K: The Gupkar Resolution is a good beginning. So is the NIA charge sheet on the Pulwama Attack.

read more
Conflict Weekly
August 2020 | IPRI # 94
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Proposed amendment in Sri Lanka, Verdict on the gunman in New Zealand, Peace Conference in Myanmar and the Ceasefire troubles in Libya

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The Friday Backgrounder
August 2020 | IPRI # 93
IPRI Comments

D. Suba Chandran

J&K: Baby steps taken. Now, time to introduce a few big-ticket items

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Conflict Weekly
August 2020 | IPRI # 92
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Further trouble to the Naga Peace Talks, Taliban attack on woman negotiator, Protests in Thailand, Belarus and Bolivia, Israel-UAE Rapprochement, and the Oil Spill in Mauritius

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Friday Backgrounder
August 2020 | IPRI # 91
IPRI Comments

D Suba Chandran

J&K: Integration and Assimilation are not synonymous.

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Conflict Weekly
August 2020 | IPRI # 90
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Release of Taliban prisoners in Afghanistan, Troubles in Naga Peace Talks in India’s Northeast, and a deadly week in Lebanon

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Friday Backgrounder
August 2020 | IPRI # 89
IPRI Comments

D Suba Chandran

J&K: One year later, is it time to change gears?

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Discussion Report
August 2020 | IPRI # 88
IPRI Comments

Chrishari de Alwis Gunasekare

Sri Lanka Elections 2020 - A Curtain Raiser: Issues, Actors, and Challenges

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Conflict Weekly
August 2020 | IPRI # 87
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

J&K a year after 5 August 2019, Militant ambush in Manipur, Environmental protests in Northeast India, and the return of street protests in Iraq

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Friday Backgrounder
July 2020 | IPRI # 86
IPRI Comments

D Suba Chandran

J&K: Omar Abdullah complains, there is no space for mainstream leaders. Should there be one?

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Conflict Weekly 28
July 2020 | IPRI # 85
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Floods in Bihar, Nepal and Bangladesh, Abduction of a journalist in Pakistan, Neutralization of militants in Srinagar and the UNAMA report on Afghanistan

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WOMEN, PEACE AND TWENTY YEARS OF UNSC 1325
July 2020 | IPRI # 84
IPRI Comments

Chrishari de Alwis Gunasekare

In Sri Lanka, 20 years later women still await the return of post war normalcy

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Friday Backgrounder
July 2020 | IPRI # 83
IPRI Comments

D. Suba Chandran

J&K: After the Hurriyat, is the PDP relevant in Kashmir politics today?

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Conflict Weekly 27
July 2020 | IPRI # 82
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Devastating floods in Assam, and a mob Lynching of cattle smugglers along India-Bangladesh border

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WOMEN, PEACE AND TWENTY YEARS OF UNSC 1325
July 2020 | IPRI # 81
IPRI Comments

Mehjabin Ferdous

In Bangladesh, laws need to catch up with reality

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Conflict Weekly 26
July 2020 | IPRI # 80
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Violence in India's Northeast, FGM ban in Sudan, the UN warning on Global Hunger & the Return of Global Protests

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Friday Backgrounder
July 2020 | IPRI # 79
IPRI Comments

D Suba Chandran

J&K: Four years after Burhan Wani

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Conflict Weekly 25
July 2020 | IPRI # 78
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Conflict and COVID in J&K, Dispute over constructing a temple in Islamabad, Return of the Indian fishermen into the Sri Lankan Waters, and the water conflict over River Nile in Africa

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Friday Backgrounder
July 2020 | IPRI # 77
IPRI Comments

D. Suba Chandran

The Rise, Fall and Irrelevance of Geelani. And the Hurriyat

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Conflict Weekly 24
July 2020 | IPRI # 76
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Geelani's Exit and Continuing Violence in J&K, and the BLA attack on Pakistan stock exchange in Karachi

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June 2020 | IPRI # 75
IPRI Comments

Sudip Kumar Kundu

Cyclone Amphan: West Bengal, Odisha limp back to a distorted normalcy

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June 2020 | IPRI # 74
IPRI Comments

Abigail Miriam Fernandez

An olive branch to the PTM in Pakistan: Will the PTI heed to the Pashtun rights movement

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Conflict Weekly 23
June 2020 | IPRI # 73
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Baloch Disappearance issue returns, Nepal tightens Citizenship rules, and Egypt enters the conflict in Libya

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Conflict Weekly 22
June 2020 | IPRI # 72
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Violence escalates along the India-China border, Cartographic tensions over India-Nepal border, Gas explosion in Assam and Deadly attacks by the Boko Haram in Nigeria

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Conflict Weekly 21
June 2020 | IPRI # 71
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Echoes of Black Lives Matter, Violence in Kashmir Valley, Rohingyas in the deep blue sea, One year of Hong Kong protests, Conflict in Libya and the human-wildlife conflict in South Asia

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Conflict Weekly 20
June 2020 | IPRI # 70
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

A week of violence in the US, Afghanistan and Africa, Urban drivers of political violence, and anti-racism protests in Europe

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Conflict Weekly 19
May 2020 | IPRI # 69
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Cyclone Amphan in the Bay of Bengal, Ceasefire in Afghanistan, Indo-Nepal border dispute in Kalapani, Honour Killing in Pakistan, New protests  in Hong Kong & the Anti-lockdown protests in Europe

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Conflict Weekly 18
May 2020 | IPRI # 68
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Kalapani dispute in India-Nepal border, Migrants exodus in India, Continuing violence in Balochistan and KP

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Conflict Weekly 17
May 2020 | IPRI # 67
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

The return of Hong Kong Protests, a new Ceasefire in Myanmar, China-Australia Tensions on COVID & Trade, and the Al Qaeda-Islamic State clashes in Africa

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Conflict Weekly 16
May 2020 | IPRI # 66
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

The Binge-fighting in Kashmir Valley, SIGAR report on Afghanistan, Killing of a PTM leader in Pakistan, the US Religious Freedom watchlist, and Haftar's ceasefire call in Libya

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Conflict Weekly 15
April 2020 | IPRI # 65
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Ceasefire and Self Rule in Yemen, Syrian war trial in Germany, SIPRI annual report on military spending, and Low civilian casualties in Afghanistan 

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One year after the Easter Attacks in Sri Lanka
April 2020 | IPRI # 64
IPRI Comments

D Suba Chandran

Healing needs Forgiveness, Accountability, Responsibility and Justice

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One year after the Easter Attacks in Sri Lanka
April 2020 | IPRI # 63
IPRI Comments

La Toya Waha

Have the Islamists Won? 

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Conflict Weekly 14
April 2020 | IPRI # 62
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

A new wave of arrests in Hong Kong, One year after Easter Sunday attacks in Sri Lanka, ISIS violence in Mozambique, and the coming global Food Crisis

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COVID-19 and the Indian States
April 2020 | IPRI # 61
IPRI Comments

Alok Kumar Gupta

Jharkhand: Proactive Judiciary, Strong Civil Society Role, Rural Vigilantes

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COVID-19 and the Indian States
April 2020 | IPRI # 60
IPRI Comments

Alok Kumar Gupta

Bihar as Late Entrant: No Prompt Action, Punitive Measures, Migrant Crisis 

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COVID-19 and the Indian States
April 2020 | IPRI # 59
IPRI Comments

Anshuman Behera

Odisha’s Three Principles: Prepare for the Worst, Prepare Early, Prevent Loss of Lives

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COVID-19 and the Indian States
April 2020 | IPRI # 58
IPRI Comments

Niharika Sharma

New Delhi as Hotspot: Border Sealing, Curbing Fake News, Proactive leadership

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COVID-19 and the Indian States
April 2020 | IPRI # 57
IPRI Comments

Vaishali Handique

Northeast India: Civil Society in Unison, Media against Racism, Government’s Timely Preparedness 

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COVID-19 and the Indian States
April 2020 | IPRI # 56
IPRI Comments

Shyam Hari P

Kerala: Past Lessons and War-Footing response by the administration

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COVID-19 and the Indian States
April 2020 | IPRI # 55
IPRI Comments

Shilajit Sengupta

West Bengal: Proactive Local Leadership, Early Lockdown and Decentralised Action

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COVID-19 and the Indian States
April 2020 | IPRI # 54
IPRI Comments

P Harini Sha

Tamil Nadu’s Three Pronged Approach: Delay Virus Spread, Community Preparedness, Welfare Schemes 

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COVID-19 and the Indian States
April 2020 | IPRI # 53
IPRI Comments

Hrudaya C Kamasani

Andhra Pradesh: Early course correction, Independent leadership and Targeted Mitigation  

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ONE YEAR AFTER THE EASTER ATTACKS IN SRI LANKA
April 2020 | IPRI # 52
IPRI Comments

Sanduni Atapattu

Preventing hatred and suspicion would be a bigger struggle

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ONE YEAR AFTER THE EASTER ATTACKS IN SRI LANKA
April 2020 | IPRI # 51
IPRI Comments

Chavindi Weerawansha

A majority in the minority community suffers, for the action of a few

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ONE YEAR AFTER THE EASTER ATTACKS IN SRI LANKA
April 2020 | IPRI # 50
IPRI Comments

Chrishari de Alwis Gunasekare

The Cardinal sermons for peace, with a message to forgive

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ONE YEAR AFTER THE EASTER ATTACKS IN SRI LANKA
April 2020 | IPRI # 49
IPRI Comments

Aparupa Bhattacherjee

Who and Why of the Perpetrators

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ONE YEAR AFTER THE EASTER ATTACKS IN SRI LANKA
April 2020 | IPRI # 48
IPRI Comments

Natasha Fernando

In retrospect, where did we go wrong?

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ONE YEAR AFTER THE EASTER ATTACKS IN SRI LANKA
April 2020 | IPRI # 47
IPRI Comments

Ruwanthi Jayasekara

Build the power of Co-existence, Trust, Gender and Awareness

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ONE YEAR AFTER THE EASTER ATTACKS IN SRI LANKA
April 2020 | IPRI # 46
IPRI Comments

N Manoharan

New ethnic faultlines at macro and micro levels

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ONE YEAR AFTER THE EASTER ATTACKS IN SRI LANKA
April 2020 | IPRI # 45
IPRI Comments

Asanga Abeyagoonasekera

A year has gone, but the pain has not vanished

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WOMEN, PEACE AND TWENTY YEARS OF UNSC 1325
April 2020 | IPRI # 44
IPRI Comments

Kabi Adhikari

In Nepal, it is a struggle for the women out of the patriarchal shadows

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WOMEN, PEACE AND TWENTY YEARS OF UNSC 1325
April 2020 | IPRI # 43
IPRI Comments

Jenice Jean Goveas

In India, the glass is half full for the women

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WOMEN, PEACE AND TWENTY YEARS OF UNSC 1325
April 2020 | IPRI # 42
IPRI Comments

Fatemah Ghafori

In Afghanistan, there is no going back for the women

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Conflict Weekly 13
April 2020 | IPRI # 41
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Executing Mujib's killer in Bangladesh, Continuing conflicts in Myanmar, Questioning Government's sincerity in Naga Peace Deal, Releasing Taliban prisoners in Afghanistan, and a report on damming the Mekong river by China

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Conflict Weekly 12
April 2020 | IPRI # 40
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Globally, Coronavirus increases Domestic Violence, deflates Global Protests, threatens Indigenous Communities and imperils the migrants. In South Asia, two reports question the Assam Foreign Tribunal and the Afghan Peace deal

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Afghanistan
April 2020 | IPRI # 39
IPRI Comments

Sukanya Bali

One month after the deal with the Taliban: Problems Four, Progress None

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Conflict Weekly 11
April 2020 | IPRI # 38
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Releasing a former soldier convicted of a war crime in Sri Lanka, Deepening of internal conflicts in Myanmar and the Taliban’s Deal is a smokescreen in Afghanistan

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Report Review
March 2020 | IPRI # 37
IPRI Comments

Lakshmi V Menon

Pakistan: Decline in Terrorism

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Conflict Weekly 10
March 2020 | IPRI # 36
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

More violence in Afghanistan, Naxal ambush in India, Federal-Provincial differences in Pakistan's Corona fight, and a new report on the impact of CoronaVirus on Conflicts

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Conflict Weekly 09
March 2020 | IPRI # 35
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

The CoronaVirus: South Asia copes, China stabilises, Europe bleeds and the US wakes up finally

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Conflict Weekly 08
March 2020 | IPRI # 34
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Triumphant Women's march across Pakistan, Anti-CAA Protests in Dhaka,  Two Presidents in Afghanistan, and Turkey-Russia Ceasefire in Syria

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Conflict Weekly 07
March 2020 | IPRI # 33
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Aurat March in Pakistan, US-Taliban Deal in Doha, Anti-CAA protest in Meghalaya, Sri Lanka’s withdrawal from the UNCHCR Resolution, and the problems of ceasefire in Syria and Libya 

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Conflict Weekly 06
February 2020 | IPRI # 32
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Seven Days of Peace in Afghanistan, Violence in Delhi, Setback to Peace Talks on Libya and the Ceasefire in Gaza

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Conflict Weekly 05
February 2020 | IPRI # 31
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Afghan Election Results, US-Taliban Deal, Hafiz Saeed Conviction, Quetta Suicide Attack, Assam Accord, Mexico Femicide and the Climate Change impact on Bird Species

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Conflict Weekly 04
February 2020 | IPRI # 30
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Sri Lanka drops Tamil anthem, Assam looks for a new census for the indigenous Muslim population, Bangladesh faces a Rohingya boat tragedy and Israel witnesses resurgence of violence post-Trump deal

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Conflict Weekly 03
February 2020 | IPRI # 29
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Continuing Violence in Afghanistan, Bodo Peace Accord in Northeast India, Attack on the anti-CAA protesters in Delhi, and Trump's Middle East Peace Plan

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Conflict Weekly 02
January 2020 | IPRI # 28
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Bangladesh and ICJ's Rohingya Verdict, Taliban and Afghan Peace, Surrenders in India's Northeast, New government in Lebanon and the Berlin summit on Libya

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Conflict Weekly 01
January 2020 | IPRI # 27
IPRI Comments

IPRI Team

Nile River Agreement, Tehran Protests, Syrians meet in Berlin, Honduran Caravans in Mexico, Taliban's ceasefire offer, Quetta Suicide attack, Supreme court verdict on J&K and the Brus Agreement in Tripura

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Myanmar
October 2019 | IPRI # 26
IPRI Comments

Aparupa Bhattacherjee

Will prosecuting Suu Kyi resolve the Rohingya problem?

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Climate Change
October 2019 | IPRI # 25
IPRI Comments

Lakshman Chakravarthy N & Rashmi Ramesh

Four Actors, No Action

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From Okjökull to OK:
September 2019 | IPRI # 24
IPRI Comments

Rashmi Ramesh

Death of a Glacier in Iceland

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The Hong Kong Protests:
August 2019 | IPRI # 23
IPRI Comments

Harini Madhusudan

Re-defining mass mobilization

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The Hong Kong Protest:
August 2019 | IPRI # 22
IPRI Comments

Parikshith Pradeep

Who Wants What?

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Africa
December 2020 | IPRI # 6
IPRI Briefs

Apoorva Sudhakar

Ballots and Bloodshed: Trends of electoral violence in Africa

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Myanmar
March 2019 | IPRI # 5
IPRI Comments

Aparupa Bhattacherjee

The Other Conflict in Rakhine State

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West Asia
February 2019 | IPRI # 4
IPRI Comments

Seetha Lakshmi Dinesh Iyer

Yemen: Will Sa'nna fall?

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China and Islam
February 2019 | IPRI # 3
IPRI Comments

Harini Madhusudhan

Sinicizing the Minorities

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Terrorism
January 2019 | IPRI # 2
IPRI Comments

Sourina Bej

Maghreb: What makes al Shahab Resilient?

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India's Northeast
July 2019 | IPRI # 1
IPRI Briefs

Titsala Sangtam

Counting Citizens: Manipur charts its own NRC

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