Inside the Middle East - Blog
April 5, 2008
This Month's Show: Behind The Scenes
We hope you enjoyed this month's program from Turkey. The whole show will be online Monday (www.cnn.com/ime), including our profile of Turkish billionaire Husnu Ozyegin and our report into the headscarf ban controversy in Turkey.



In the meantime, check out our behind-the-scenes pictures of the shoot here.

For the May edition of Inside the Middle East, we are headed to Dubai and other emirates in the Gulf.
April 3, 2008
Autism Through The Arab Lens
-- By CNN's Octavia Nasr

In the Middle East too, Autism Awareness Day is making news.

On the Dubai-based channel, Al-Arabiya, a focus on early diagnosis and awareness marked the occasion.

Anchor Rima Maktabi gives viewers statistics for their region: "1 in 160 children are diagnosed with Autism in Saudi Arabia alone."

Maktabi offers a comparison with the United States (1 in 150) and United Kingdom (1 in 86).

Al-Arabiya's coverage featured reports on autism institutes such as the Jordan Autism Center and young lives affected by the disorder.

"Young Rashed and his family know the challenges all too well," says the reporter who later expresses regret that so many children miss the chance at a better life because they get the wrong diagnosis which leads them to what the reporter calls "isolation and a condemned life as misfits."

A guest from the Dubai autism center joined the conversation and described the signs to look for in autistic children.

On its site the center asks for donations while displaying a moving video explaining that children with autism are different and yet very much a part of society and in need of help.

Online, specialized websites and blogs were busy throughout the Arab world.

In Lebanon, offering books and advice with a special focus on early intervention and how to communicate with the autistic population.

From Kuwait, an announcement about an upcoming therapist training program.
From Saudi Arabia, an explanation of autism in pictures and poetry and a thank you note that says: "It is my world awareness day. Thank you for those who remembered me and joined me in celebration!"

The emirate of Qatar boasts a major center for disabilities and autism.. The first lady of Qatar was instrumental in establishing world autism awareness day. Yet, on this day.. the State's flagship network, Al-Jazeera, stayed away from the subject.

Back on Al-Arabiya, young Ghalia stole the spotlight.

Her family explains hiring a teacher to help her at home was easier than knocking on doors where there was no guarantee she'd be accepted.

Ghalia's mother thinks the efforts are well worth it. Ghalia’s mother: "It is very hard for us now, but I have no doubt that because of her, we will earn paradise."

But in the here and now, long before paradise, this post card asks for compassion, love and opportunities for people with autism.

The card reads : "I need you to understand me and accept me. I am Autistic and I am human."
April 2, 2008
Mideast Snapshot - Covering The Iraq War
CNN correspondent Michael Ware and cameraman Joe Duran, embedded with U.S. troops in central Iraq. March 11th, 2008. (Photo CNN's Thomas Evans)
April 1, 2008
Middle East Rift: Hezbollah Jumps In
After Saudi Arabia criticized Syria for getting in the way of a political solution in Lebanon, the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah is verbally attacking Saudi Arabia.

The rift between Middle East countries crystallized last week, when U.S. allies Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan sent low-level delegations to the summit in Damascus and Lebanon boycotted the Arab League gathering altogether.

(Photo AP)


Now Hezbollah, the group that operates with Iranian and Syrian support and is politically opposed to the Western-backed government of Fouad Siniora in Lebanon, is accusing Riyadh of siding with America.

In an Associated Press article today, Hezbollah is quoted as saying in a statement:

"This (Saudi) accusation against the opposition harms the kingdom's role and raises big question marks about its position and role in the Lebanese political crisis."

The article goes on: In rare criticism of Sunni Muslim Saudi Arabia, the Shiite Hezbollah said Prince Saud's comments had put the kingdom in "a biased position incapable of playing a positive role in a solution" to Lebanon's deepening political crisis.

One more (fault) line in the sand.
March 31, 2008
Saudi Blogger's Daughter Sends YouTube Message
Every few weeks, I like to revisit the story of Fouad Al-Farhan, a Saudi blogger detained by authorities last December 10th on charges that remain unclear.

Well, 112 days later, he's still in jail and many human rights groups continue to accuse the government of detaining Al-Farhan because he used his blog to openly criticize some aspects of the Saudi regime.

File photo of Fouad Al-Farhan. Courtesy Saudijeans.org.


Here's a development impossible to fathom only a few years ago: I recently came across an "Arab News" article on a video plea made by Al-farhan's nine-year old daughter that was posted - where else - on YouTube.

In it, she says: “Daddy I miss you. When are you coming back home?” File video of 32-year-old Al-Farhan also appears in the clip along with family pictures and videos.

Back in February, Nic Robertson traveled to Saudi Arabia. Check out his in-the-field entry on Fouad Al-Farhan here.
Mideast Snapshot - In The Rubble Of Baiji
Baiji, Iraq, March 11th, 2008. Photo CNN's Joe Duran

March 30, 2008
Mideast Snapshot - Nic Robertson Live From Baghdad
My colleague, Senior International Correspondent Nic Robertson, is in Baghdad covering one of the most crucial stories of the year so far in Iraq: the Iraqi government forces' battle with Shiite militias on the streets of the country's largest cities.


Nic getting ready for his live report. CNN Baghdad bureau, March 30th, 2008.

Baghdad producer Mohammed Tawfeeq snapped these pictures of Nic at work, during a live appearance today on Wolf Blitzer's Late Edition.

CNN Senior Cameraman Joe Duran

CNN Producer Sarah Sultoon, coordinating Nic's live report in Baghdad.

The big question today: will Muqtada Al-Sadr's call to his fighters, asking them to lay down their arms in their battle against Iraqi Security Forces, quell the violence?

ABOUT THIS BLOG
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.
SHOWTIMES
Inside the Middle East airs 1st full weekend of every month and the following Thursday.

Saturday (1st Saturday of every month)
0730, 1330, 1830 (all regions)

Sunday (1st Sunday of every month)
1130, 1730 (all regions)

Thursday (1st Thursday of every month)
1330, 1730 (all regions)

(All times GMT)
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