Inside the Middle East - Blog
February 23, 2008
Capital Controversy
-- By CNN's Atika Shubert

Monopoly, the world's best-selling board game, is going global. A simple idea, substituting the iconic properties of the original game with hallmark cities of the world.

Hasbro is letting people vote on its Web site for which cities to include in the new game.



In this celebration of capitalism, would-be moguls could buy up properties in cities such as Moscow, Russia; Tokyo, Japan and Jerusalem, Israel.

Wait. Nix that last one -- at least the Israel part.


Given the white-hot controversy over Israel -- the world's most fought-over piece of real estate -- should the board game refer to "Jerusalem, Israel" even though Palestinians say Jerusalem will be the capital of any future Palestinian state? Should it say "Jerusalem, Palestine?"


Instead of rolling the dice, parent company Hasbro is taking the middle ground.
The company is letting people vote on its Web site for which cities to include in the new game -- "Dublin, Ireland" for example. It recently removed "Israel" after "Jerusalem" and then eventually removed all of the country names.

Hasbro told The Associated Press that a mid-level employee decided on her own to take out "Israel" after pro-Palestinian groups and bloggers complained -- sparking even more protests from the other side.


"It was never our intention to print any countries on the final boards and any online tags were merely used as a geographic reference to help with city selection," Hasbro said in a written statement. "We would never want to enter into any political debate. We apologize for any upset this has caused our Monopoly fans."

Taking that stance may be Hasbro's "Get of jail free" card, allowing it to sidestep a sticky political situation that's anything but fun and games.


Sacred to Jews, Christians and Muslims, the Holy City has sparked wars since the crusades and beyond. It's no different today, even in the world of Monopoly.


An Israeli lobbying group, One Jerusalem, is driving an Internet campaign that pushed the city to 5th place in the Monopoly vote -- guaranteeing Jerusalem a spot on the board -- before Hasbro made the leaderboard a secret to add mystery to the final days of voting.


Internet voting on the top 20 cities ends Thursday, February 28. Two wild card cities will be added later on.

One Jerusalem's goal is to solidify Jewish claims on the city shared by three major religions.

"If it appears on the Monopoly board and everyone is buying and selling and renting and trading over Jerusalem," said the group's Yechiel Lieter. "Surely, that will enhance the consciousness of Israel's monopoly over Jerusalem."
February 21, 2008
Emirates Censors Target Facebook
The UAE's telecoms regulator (TRA) will soon ban sections of the networking sites Facebook and Myspace, according to local reports.


(Photo Associated Press)

From Arabianbusiness.com:

"A TRA spokesperson said the regulator wanted to encourage cultural interaction in today’s globalised world, and did not intend to deny access to websites that are social portals.

However, sections of social networking websites including Facebook and Myspace, which encouraged dating would be banned under the new policy."

Read the full article here.
February 20, 2008
The New Longevity Miracle: Live In The Mideast
You often hear people in the region say they will never live long enough to see peace in the Middle East.

(PhotoYasmine Perni)

Well, if you're lucky enough to live as long as Mariam Ammash, there's still hope for you.

CNN's Ben Wedeman caught up with the self-proclaimed oldest human being on earth and sent us this report:


-- I recently turned 48 years old, and was wondering when I would start feeling (and acting) my age. But after meeting Mariam Ammash today in the Arab-Israeli town of Jisr Al-Zarqa, I realise I was wasting my time.

A few weeks ago she showed up at a government office in the town of Hadera to replace a lost identity card. And there they were stunned to discover her birth date.

She claims to be one hundred and twenty years old, born way back in 1888, at a time when this land was under the rule of the Ottoman Empire. She would have seen the Ottoman Turks driven out by the British in World War One, and the creation of Israel in 1948.

Is it for real? Honestly, it seems a bit of a stretch. For one thing, her oldest son, Hilmi, is eighty years old. Which means she would have given birth to him at the age of fourty. In traditional Arab society, a woman giving birth to her first child at that age was almost unheard of. And I met another son, Mohamed, who is fifty four years old. Mariam would have been 66 years old at the time. And frankly that is stretching the credulity a tad.

But whether she's that old or not, she's a woman who is holding up remarkably well. She lives on her own, walks all over her neighbourhood, checking up on her more than four hundred children, grandchildren, great-great-children, and so on. And it seemed as if everyone we spoke to in Jisr Al-Zarqa was related to Mariam in one form or another.

She told me the secret to her longevity was fresh fruit and vegetables, fish straight out of the sea and dairy products and meat from animals she had raised. She also recommends drinking a glass of unprocessed olive oil every morning, along with herb tea and homemade bread. And of course, she said, stay away from alcohol and tobacco.

So whether she's that old or not, it really doesn't matter. I'll try to follow her advice and see if I make it to 120, or maybe half that.

Watch Ben's report on Mariam Ammash here.
February 19, 2008
Saudi Says Don't Go To Lebanon
--From AP:

Saudi Arabia advised its citizens Monday not to travel to Lebanon, citing unstable security conditions in that country, according to a Foreign Ministry statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency.

The advice stemmed from the government's concern for the safety of Saudis who wish to travel abroad, according to SPA.
"The Foreign Ministry advises Saudi citizens against traveling to Lebanon in view of the political and unstable security conditions that Lebanon is going through," the statement said, and urged Saudis already in Lebanon to be cautious.

Although the kingdom has said it is not taking sides in Lebanon's 15-month-long political crisis — the worst since the end of the 1975-90 civil war there — some pro-Syrian Lebanese politicians have accused the Saudi government of obstructing a solution to the Lebanese deadlock and of seeking to rekindle the conflict by supporting the anti-Syrian parliament majority.

Lebanese pro-government groups are locked in a fierce power struggle with the Syria and Iran allied Hezbollah-led opposition. Political tensions have degenerated into street clashes in Beirut recently, in which several people have been injured.
February 17, 2008
Freewheeling Across The Desert
-- By CNN's Alphonso Van Marsh in Cairo

In Egypt, apparently membership has its privileges... and owning a Jeep vehicle is entrée into the "Jeep Club". The group is run by carmaker DaimlerChysler (owner of the Jeep brand) and holds monthly four-wheeling, off-road treks across the country.


The idea is that if you are going to be a desert cowboy safari driver, you might as well have a team of Jeep professionals accompany you to bail you out of the sand if the vehicle gets wheels-deep stuck in the sand.

CNN's Alphonso Van Marsh and his friend Mohammed.

It so happens my good friend Mohammed has a Cherokee. So on a recent stop in Cairo, I joined him for a Jeep Club outing, criss-crossing the desert near the pyramids of Saqqara. Quite a family affair: tents, music and food on offer. Kiddies running around. Young drivers snapping pictures. Plenty of alpha males bragging about their 4x4 driving exploits.



Now the folks at DaimlerChrysler, well, they aren’t fools: they don’t tow bar their clients out of trouble without seeing a marketing/sales opportunity. But the drivers – families in tow – seemed happy enough to listen to a Jeep sales pitch before taking DaimlerChysler’s latest 4X4 model for a spin across the dunes.
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Welcome to the Inside the Middle East blog. Our reporters, producers, cameramen and editors will regularly add to this with colorful behind-the-scene stories. This page is about how we put the show together -- from on-location shoots to the editing room -- as well as for anecdotes and stories that don't always make it into our finished on-air product.
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