Never before has the Arab world, North Africa, and the wider region sent so many flags to football's biggest stage As the twenty-third FIFA World Cup prepares to kick off across the United States, Mexico and Canada from June 11 to July 19, one storyline towers above the rest for fans from Rabat to Tehran: the greater region stretching from Morocco and Egypt across the Levant to Türkiye, Saudi Arabia and Iran has never been so powerfully represented. A record ten national teams from this vast cultural and geographic belt have booked their places at the first 48-team finals, a tally without precedent in the tournament's 96-year history. The expansion to 48 teams has opened the door, but it is the depth of talent and decades of institutional investment that have walked through it. From North Africa's perennial heavyweights to first-time debutants, here are the ten teams carrying the hopes of millions. North Africa's Established Powers Morocco arrive as the region's sta...
Ancient Phoenician port and UNESCO World Heritage Site faces fresh bombardment as ceasefire frays Israel's military issued an evacuation order on Tuesday for the southern Lebanese city of Tyre, warning residents to flee north of the Zahrani River ahead of possible strikes. For the first time, the order extended to the city's Christian Quarter, which earlier warnings had spared. Military spokesperson Avichay Adraee claimed Hezbollah was operating in the quarter and cautioned that any building used by the group could be targeted. The order arrives as a U.S.-brokered ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon, renewed only last week, frays badly. A strike on Tyre on Monday killed five people and wounded eight, four of the dead Red Cross paramedics, according to Lebanon's Health Ministry. The bombardment has also battered the city's celebrated antiquities: Ali Badawi, the culture ministry's regional director for archaeological sites in south Lebanon, said recent shelling had ...