NIAS Europe Monitor

NIAS Europe Monitor
France: Paris Terror Trial

Sourina Bej
30 September 2021
Photo Source:

As much as the trial will make the perpetrators accountable for their horrid acts of violence, will it ensure a more inclusive society? 

Newspaper headlines on 9 September 2021 called it: "a historic trial" as it began in Paris. A special criminal court in France is now in session for nine months prosecuting 20 accused and listening to 1800 plaintiffs. More than 330 lawyers are involved in the trial of those accused in the terror attacks of 13 November 2015, and the session will be in a criminal court that was built to hold 550 people at the cost of 8 million euros. 

The logistics detailed above only signifies how France's legal, security, political and social institutions have come together. The trial would aim at finding how terror attacks unfolded in 2015, and the rationale behind the religious extremism will be tried and understood. 

The trial also poses other questions: will the trial heal the victims or create more social divisions? Is the trial another response to State's pre-emptive measures to combat domestic terrorism? Will the trial be an example of how religious terrorism, most importantly Islamist terrorism, be nibbed in the Western democratic countries?  

Paris terror attacks: The perpetrators and the victims

As the court sits to weigh on the testimonies of the accused and the 300 witnesses, a stark reality comes to the fore while decoding the social background of the accused and the victims. While those accused have an immigrant background and are digitally radicalized, those impacted are French nationals from a mixed ethnic background who work in the busiest economic quarters in Bataclan, Paris. The attacks in 2015 were planned in Syria and carried out by the French nationals who had joined ISIS. They were able to travel back and forth undetected with the flow of migrants. The attackers were primarily French and Belgian citizens, born in Europe to immigrants from North Africa. 

Salah Abdeslam is considered the mastermind behind the attack. He was arrested in Belgium in 2016; he is French-Moroccan facing life imprisonment.[1] Thirteen others, ten of whom are also in jail, will be in the courtroom, accused of crimes ranging from helping the attackers with weapons or cars. Six more, primarily Islamic State members, will be judged in abstentia for providing other logistical help to the attackers. 

The multiple attacks in Paris on 13 September 2015 was unexpected. It was the beginning of a rollercoaster Friday night when three coordinated mass bombings exploded in the heart of Paris. The Eagles Death metal rock concert was underway at the Bataclan theatre, a friendly football match between France and Germany was cheered by none other than President Hollande, and the streets of Paris was drowned from the crowded cafes and restaurants until the shooting claimed more than 130 individuals. Those who witnessed the shooting are amongst the 300 plaintiffs ranging from some who lost their family members to small and large enterprise business owners. For the victims, the trial is the moment where facts could be re-examined, the ferocity of the act could be acknowledged. For them, it is also about justice prevails and not only compensation for the loss. 

A similar trial is underway for those accused in the Charlie Hebdo terror attack in France. It is an important step towards the beginning of the memorialization of the event at the individual and societal levels. In this the role of the Judiciary as an institution to identify and open pathways for healings is significant. Plaintiffs not attending the hearings could follow via streaming radio: the first time such a tool is used for a criminal trial. The secure link will be audio-only and subject to a 30-minute delay.[2]

Paris terror attacks: Four issues

The 2015 attack has wounded France's national psyche and also affected its body politic. A country with deep institutional roots for individualism, civic liberalism and secular values, the terror attacks have tested the people's ability to comprehend multiculturalism and multi ethnicism in France truly. The attack also eroded the tolerance towards political Islam, and the trial highlights four issues beyond the immediate aim of justice and reconciliation. 

1. Group attacks as an exception amid lone wolf attacks

The 2015 attack for the first time highlighted the expanse of local networks radicalized by international Islamic terrorist ideology. Not only did the ideology have a cross border influence, but the individuals had also crossed the border to plan the attack. It was the largest attack the ISIS had carried out in the West, and the modus operandi of the attack differed from other such Islamic State claimed operations. 

The attack was an exception as the patterns had moved beyond the lone-wolf attackers. The attacks were well planned and executed under the direct orders of the ISIS operatives in Syria. It also indicated logistical support that was based on an operational infrastructure in France with a backup in Belgium. 

Since 2015, France has witnessed terror attacks led by lone operatives professing radical violent beliefs. The Nice truck attack in 2016 was lethal, with 86 dead. The attack on the Charlie Hebdo office (2015) and the beheading of Samuel Paty (2020), a school teacher who showed his class a satire comic of Prophet Mohammad, underlines the new threat to France from terrorism.  

2. The long hands of law strengthened by State's security policies

Pre-emptive measures have been the core of France's counter-terrorism laws. France declared a state of emergency on 13 November 2015; it remained in place till 2017. During this period, the government pushed fresh anti-terror laws, granting police and intelligence agencies extensive search and arrest as terror attacks continued. 

With each attack, President Emmanuel Macron imposed tougher anti-terror laws. France had a long history of anti-terror legislation, since the 19th century when the State adopted special provisions under wartime regulations. A wave of Iran-sponsored terrorist attacks in 1986 in Paris led the French government to lay the groundwork for its anti-terror legislation, which has provided the foundation of the country's anti-terror legal architecture. The trial is a product of this sizeable legal infrastructure that has systemized accountability and intolerance for any form of religious extremism. 

The legal and security-centric intolerance had also led political actors to debate on the need for social policing. A debate had long raged in early 2016, when former President Hollande had proposed to strip dual-nationality terrorists of their French citizenship and deport them. The proposal never reached its legal end, but it has fueled a social debate on what constituted in identifying one as a French over one's multiple group identities. During 2020-21, the new anti-separatism law has eroded the multi-ethnic contours of the demography in France, especially its Muslim communities. The legislation includes several provisions against online hate speech, the protection of civil servants, and tightened oversight of NGOs and religious associations deemed suspect by the State. It also strengthens the State's arsenal against forced marriages, polygamy, and the delivery of virginity certificates. Individual choices to wear hijab and consume halal food in public has been restricted as the State went on to ban the practices quoting it as anti-secular. The Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin hailed the new separatism bill as "excellent news for the Republic." In several cases, adopting new anti-terror laws is a way for the government to appear tough in its response to Islamist attacks. Also, it is often a political communication exercise.[3]. Thus, French nationalism steeped in civic liberalism supported by legalistic constitutionalism had made its minorities invisible in the society. 

3. Widening social divisions

Even though politicization of the terrorist events has pushed for anti-terror laws, the immediate fallouts have been a social divide where one community's practices stand to be scrutinized and treated exclusively against the whole. For several decades, France has struggled to deal with the fissures within its multi-ethnic and multi-religious demography. The issue of a bourgeoning Muslim citizenry has now become a part of the political discourse on account of the terrorist attacks. The French colonial legacy in North Africa has pushed the labour migration of several Muslim families from the region into Paris. Their segregated housing has long prevented their social integration, let alone the groups' social mobility. In times of economic and political crises, this social exclusion has resulted in communal disharmony and riots. The social rubric was further divided when the French conception of more assertive secularism has now generated a sense of insecurity among the religiously devout sections of the ethnic Algerian community. [4] A growing sense of socio-economic marginalization is seen to have probably worsened the divide. The trial and the probable persecution of the terrorist could also go ahead and instil a likely social alienation.  

The 1986 law had instituted a centralized counter-terrorism system that involves specialized prosecutors and investigating judges working in close cooperation with the intelligence services. However, civil rights defenders have often criticized these laws as one that compromises liberties and procedural guarantees that is necessary to ensure fair trials.[5]. Similarly, Macron's anti-terror law promulgated on 30 October 2017 is highly restrictive. The law allows police to establish "security perimeters", where individuals and vehicles can be searched. Other measures include the closure of religious establishments promoting radical ideas and the use of passenger name records to monitor suspicious travellers. 

Amid these stringent security laws, the ongoing trial and widening mistrust between different groups, the cohesion stands to be fractured. But with the above issues, the trial does peg one to question what outcome the trial would bring? As much as the trial will make the perpetrators accountable for their horrid acts of violence, will it ensure a more inclusive society? 

4. Questions to the collective consciousness

While defining collective consciousness, French sociologist Emile Durkheim famously wrote, "the totality of beliefs and sentiments common to the average members of a society forms a determinate system with a life of its own." The social norms form the basis of collective consciousness. However, when does the anomie break? The terror attacks are a vivid example of one such social rupture, but then could the trial bring in wholistic social norms, or will it build on social anxiety? As the nation awaits justice, a path towards collective memorialization has formed the core of the national consciousness. One could collectively agree on what needs to be condemned and also uphold the values that form social cohesion with equal support from the socio-political institutions. 

When the French society and the different groups within are searching for a common ground for integration, where does the trial leave one? The intra and inter-group cohesion in French society have never been simplistic. Will the trial facilitate a social dialogue in combating religious extremism? On the other side of the spectrum, where lensing and seeing the act of one Muslim man as the burden of a whole ethnoreligious community is also painfully problematic. This marks the beginning of a social perception bordering on social exclusion. 

Indeed, this remains a trial to watch. 

[1] "Paris attacks of 2015: The logistics behind a historic trial," France24, 07 September 2021

[2] "ibid

[3] "How the November 2015 attacks marked a turning point in French terror laws," France24, 05 September 2021

[4] "Trial of the 2015 Attacks: France's Pre-emptive Counter Terrorism," IDSA Comment, 22 September 2021

[5] "How the November 2015 attacks marked a turning point in French terror laws," France24, 05 September 2021


About the author
Sourina Bej is a doctoral candidate and KAS-EIZ scholarship holder at the University of Bonn. Her research interest extends from studying migration, group identity, conflicts, politics of integration to discourses on social exclusion in developing countries. 


PREVIOUS COMMENTS

June 2026 | CWA # 2157

Global Politics Team

The G7 Summit 2026
President Xi Jinping’s North Korea visit I Myanmar President’s China visit
June 2026 | CWA # 2154

Madhura Meenakshi Tanikella

The G7 Summit 2026
Four Takeaways on Economic security, Critical minerals, and Consensus on Ukraine and Iran
June 2026 | CWA # 2153

Global Politics Team

The US-Iran MoU
The War in Ukraine I Anti-immigrant violence in South Africa I Ultra Orthodox Jews' protests in Israel
June 2026 | CWA # 2150

Madhura Meenakshi Tanikella

The War in Ukraine:
Massive drone attacks, Europe's support for Ukraine, and a Distant ceasefire
June 2026 | CWA # 2149

Brighty Ann Sarah

The US-Iran MoU:
Asymmetric Gains and Implementation Challenges
June 2026 | CWA # 2145

Glynnis Winona B

Myanmar and Press Freedom: 
Four Takeaways on Legal repression, Institutional collapse, Violence, and Digital control 
June 2026 | CWA # 2144

Nithin V

Bangladesh and Press Freedom: 
Four Takeaways on Digital security laws, Political polarisation, Journalist safety, and Media vulnerability 
June 2026 | CWA # 2143

Aishal Hab Yousuf 

Sri Lanka and Press Freedom: 
Five Takeaways on Political influence, Legal mechanisms to control, Ethnic sensitivities and History of State intimidation
June 2026 | CWA # 2142

Glynnis Winona B

Bhutan and Press Freedom:
Four takeaways on Regulatory control, Economic fragility, and Social constraints
June 2026 | CWA # 2141

Aishal Hab Yousuf

Maldives and Press Freedom:
Four takeaways on the influence of democracy, legislation, and state funding
June 2026 | CWA # 2140

Nithin V

Pakistan and Press Freedom:
Four takeaways Military influence, cyber laws, political instability, and youth-driven digital journalism
June 2026 | CWA # 2139

Siddhi Halyur

Afghanistan and Press Freedom:
Four takeaways on political control, religious restrictions and economic vulnerabilities 
June 2026 | CWA # 2138

Siddhi Halyur

Nepal and Press Freedom:
Three takeaways on Political constraints, Missing legal protection and Funding issues
June 2026 | CWA # 2136

Acsah H

The Blue Origin Rocket Explosion:
Does this leave Jeff Bezos grounded, Elon Musk unchallenged, and NASA’s lunar timeline in jeopardy?
June 2026 | CWA # 2131

Rohini Reenum

Israel-Lebanon Tensions:
New Deal amidst Israeli incursion and Hezbollah’s retaliation
June 2026 | CWA # 2130

Akshath Kaimal

The UK-Rwanda Asylum Deal: 
Why did the Permanent Court of Arbitration reject Rwanda’s claims? What was Rwanda’s complaint? Why did the UK cancel the deal?
June 2026 | CWA # 2129

Anu Maria Joseph

Conflicts in Africa This Week:
The Ebola fear in DR Congo and the Elections in Ethiopia amidst conflicts
May 2026 | CWA # 2126

Aparna A Nair

The Shenzhou-23 Mission:
China’s Space Missions, Technology, and Infrastructure
May 2026 | CWA # 2124

Glynnis Winona B

The Crisis in Cuba:
The US Sanctions, Energy Crisis, and Economic Instability
May 2026 | CWA # 2123

Akshath Kaimal

The Ebola and the DR Congo:
Multiple Outbreaks, Fragile Healthcare System, and Ineffective Global Responses
May 2026 | CWA # 2122

Radhika M Agarwal

The War in Ukraine:
Ballistic missiles, Nuclear drills with Belarus, and the Czech ammunition initiative
May 2026 | CWA # 2120

Brighty Ann Sarah

Conflicts in the Middle East
The US-Iran War Week Thirteen: Escalating Hostilities, Tenuous Ceasefire and Tense Negotiations
May 2026 | CWA # 2119

Anu Maria Joseph

Conflicts in Africa
The Ebola spread in DR Congo, The Faye-Sonko split in Senegal, and the Deepening US military involvement in Nigeria
May 2026 | CWA # 2115

Aparna A Nair

The Putin-Xi Summit
Trade, Technology, Security, and Pipeline
May 2026 | CWA # 2114

Glynnis Winona B

What makes the UAE a global player?
Explaining the Governance, Economy, People, and Strategic Influence of a Small Middle Eastern State
May 2026 | CWA # 2113

Aishal Hab Yousuf

Sri Lanka and the US-Iran War 
Rising oil imports, Austerity measures and State capacity
May 2026 | CWA # 2111

NIAS Global Politics Team

The Trump-Xi Summit
The Africa Forward Summit 2026 I North Korea's Constitutional Amendment 2026
May 2026 | CWA # 2110

Aishal Hab Yousuf

The Trump-Xi Summit:
Managing Strategic Competition through Trade, Technology, and Diplomacy
May 2026 | CWA # 2092

NIAS Global Politics Team

The US-Iran War, Week Ten
CW Column on Middle East: Escalating Israeli Aggression in Lebanon I UAE's Covert Manoeuvres
May 2026 | CWA # 2091

Brighty Ann Sarah

Conflicts in the Middle East:
Escalating Israeli Aggression in Lebanon I UAEs Covert Manoeuvres
May 2026 | CWA # 2090

Brighty Ann Sarah

The US-Iran War, Week Ten:
Fraying Ceasefire, Renewed Negotiations and the Risk of a Stalemate
May 2026 | CWA # 2088

Nithin V

King Charles's US Visit:
Emphasis on strong bilateral relations, democratic values and security cooperation
May 2026 | CWA # 2086

Aishal Hab Yousuf

UAEs Exit from OPEC:
Implications for the Middle East and the Energy Market
May 2026 | CWA # 2083

Brighty Ann Sarah

The US-Iran War, Week Nine:
Deadlocked Negotiations, Competing Agendas and Domestic Pressure
May 2026 | CWA # 2082

Akshath Kaimal

Escalating Violence in Mali:
Between Ethnic Insurgencies, Jihadist Attacks, and Military Coups
April 2026 | CWA # 2079

Aishal Hab Yousuf

Japans New Defence Posture:
From Post-War Pacifism to Strategic Recalibration and Autonomy
April 2026 | CWA # 2074

Brighty Ann Sarah

Israel-Lebanon Ceasefire:
Asymmetric Terms, Fragile Truce and Israeli Occupation
April 2026 | CWA # 2073

Akshath Kaimal

The US-Iran War, Week Eight:
A Fragile Ceasefire, Attempts to Control Hormuz and the Stalled Talks in Islamabad
April 2026 | CWA # 2072

Anu Maria Joseph

Three Years of War in Sudan
Prolonged Stalemate, Humanitarian Cost, External Interventions and Regional Fallouts
April 2026 | CWA # 2069

Padmashree Anandhan

The War in Ukraine
Expanding Drone Warfare, Russia's Strategic Patience and Ukraine's Diplomatic Outreach
April 2026 | CWA # 2068

Femy Francis

China-Japan Tensions
Escalating Defence Posturing and Economic Decoupling
April 2026 | CWA # 2067

Anu Maria Joseph

Conflicts in Africa
Continuing Conflicts in Sudan, South Sudan and DR Congo, Security issues in Nigeria, and Political Instability in Madagascar
April 2026 | CWA # 2066

Akshath Kaimal

The Pakistan-Afghanistan Conflict
Recurrent Clashes, Defiant Taliban, Contesting Narratives and Emerging Chinas Role
April 2026 | CWA # 2065

Lakshmi Venugopal Menon

The Middle East (JanMar 2026):
The US-Iran War, Israel-Hamas Conflict and their interconnected fallouts
April 2026 | CWA # 2064

Anwesha Ghosh

Afghanistan (JanMar 2026):
Gender Repression, Leadership Rifts, Regional Realignments and Clashes with Pakistan
April 2026 | CWA # 2063

Ramya B

Russia (Jan-Mar 2026)
Assertive Military Posture, Attempts for an Economic Turnaround and Search for Partners
April 2026 | CWA # 2062

Himani Pant

Europe (Jan-Mar 2026)
Trade diversification & FTAs, Increased defence spending, Tightening irregular migration and Economic slowdown
April 2026 | CWA # 2061

S Shaji

Africa (Jan-Mar 2026)
Elections, Civil Wars, Militancy and Peace Initiatives
April 2026 | CWA # 2059

Adarsh Vijay

India and the World(Jan-Mar 2026)
Maintaining Strategic Autonomy, Balancing the US relations and Resetting the China ties
April 2026 | CWA # 2058

Nishchal N Pandey & Mahesh Raj Bhatta

Nepal (Jan-Mar 2026)
Political Upheaval, Generational Change and Economic Uncertainty
April 2026 | CWA # 2057

Bibhu Prasad Routray

Myanmar (Jan-Mar 2026)
An Illegitimate Regimes Consolidation Game
April 2026 | CWA # 2056

Ashik J Bonofer

Southeast Asia (Jan-Mar 2026)
Deteriorating situation in Myanmar, Philippines as the ASEAN Chair, New government in Thailand, and Economic & Environmental challenges
April 2026 | CWA # 2055

Haans J Freddy

East Asia (Jan-Mar 2026)
Chinas military operations near Taiwan, Japan-China tensions and South Koreas security challenges
April 2026 | CWA # 2054

Amrita Jash

Chinas External Landscape (Jan-Mar 2026):
Regional assertion, Pragmatic recalibration with the West and Avoiding military entanglement in the Middle East
April 2026 | CWA # 2052

Shreya Upadhyay

The United States(Jan-Mar2026)
Tariffs, Ukraine, Iran and Operationalization of Trumps World Order
March 2026 | CWA # 2039

Femy Francis

Trump-Xi Meeting
Why did Trump reschedule it? What does that mean?
March 2026 | CWA # 2035

Akshath Kaimal

Pakistan-Afghanistan Conflict
Broken ceasefire, Expanding military strikes and Worsening humanitarian situation
March 2026 | CWA # 2033

Mahesh Bhatta

Nepal after elections:
Five major challenges for the new government
March 2026 | CWA # 2024

Lekshmi MK

The UN and the Iran-US War
UNSC Resolution 2817 between Clear and Unified Message and Manifest Injustice
March 2026 | CWA # 2023

Femy Francis

Chinas Two Sessions 2026
New Five-Year Plan, Ethnic Unity Law, and an Enhanced Defence Budget
March 2026 | CWA # 2019

Akshath Kaimal

Rising Violence in Nigeria
Limited State Capacity, Multiple Actors, and a Complex Security Environment
March 2026 | CWA # 2012

Padmashree Anandhan

The War in Ukraine
Long-range strikes, Defence adaptation and the EUs energy dependence
March 2026 | CWA # 2010

Mahesh Bhatta

Nepal Elections 2026
The Rise of the New and the Fall of the Old
March 2026 | CWA # 2009

Sreemaya Nair

Nepal Elections 2026
Rise of a new leadership and Reset in political landscape
March 2026 | CWA # 2004

Akshath Kaimal

The Forgotten South Sudan Conflict
Instability returns, with a fragile peace agreement, uptick in violence and limited international engagement
March 2026 | CWA # 2003

Yesasvi Koganti

PM Modis Visit to Israel
From bilateral ties to a special strategic partnership
February 2026 | CWA # 1998

Anu Maria Joseph

Instability in Sudan
Response to the genocide call and the threats of a regional spillover
February 2026 | CWA # 1985

Abhimanyu Solanki

Basant in Pakistan
The return of Basant, and what it signifies
February 2026 | CWA # 1977

Anu Maria Joseph

Violence in Nigeria
US military deployment amidst worsening insurgency
February 2026 | CWA # 1976

Lekshmi MK

The War in Ukraine
The Geneva Talks and Growing Negotiation Asymmetry
December 2025 | CWA # 1971

Vani Vyshnavi Jupudi

Pakistan Budget 2025-26
Legislating stabilisation under IMF discipline and coalition constraints
December 2025 | CWA # 1970

Aparna A Nair

Pakistan & China
Ten Years of China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC)
November 2025 | CWA # 1968

Vani Vyshnavi Jupudi

Pakistan and the US
A New opening, or another cycle?
February 2026 | CWA # 1959

Yesasvi Koganti

UK and China
PM Keir Starmers visit and the Recalibration of Economic, Strategic, and Domestic ties
January 2026 | CWA # 1946

R Preetha

The Davos Summit 2026
Five Major Takeaways from The World Economic Forum
December 2025 | CWA # 1931

Padmashree Anandhan

NATO Summit 2025
December 2025 | CWA # 1924

Padmashree Anandhan

NATO Summit 2025
August 2025 | CWA # 1801

R Preetha

28 August 1963
Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech and the Civil Rights Movement in the US
August 2025 | CWA # 1790

GP Team

The World This Week#323-324
The Trump-Putin meeting & the US-China tariff extension
August 2025 | CWA # 1780

Abhiruchi Chowdhury

Trump tariffs:
Weaponization of access to the US economy
August 2025 | CWA # 1779

GP Team

The World This Week#322
US tariffs on India, Brazil and Canada & the EU-US trade deal
August 2025 | CWA # 1778

Lekshmi MK

28 July 1914
Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia, starting the First World War
July 2025 | CWA # 1770

Abhiruchi Chowdhury

Pakistan-Afghanistan relations:
Why the focus on terrorism, refugees, and Uzbekistan as the third partner?
July 2025 | CWA # 1769

GP Team

The World This Week#321
Indian PM Modi's visit to the Maldives I Elections to the Upper House in Japan
July 2025 | CWA # 1762

Lekshmi MK

Ocean Darkening: 
What is the phenomenon? What are its effects? And who are more vulnerable?
July 2025 | CWA # 1749

R Preetha

Africa as the Hunger Epicenter
Of the 13 Global Hunger Hotspots, 8 are in Africa: Five reasons why
July 2025 | CWA # 1748

GP Team

The World This Week #318
PM Modi’s Visit to Trinidad and Tobago & Ghana, One big beautiful bill, and Quad Foreign Ministers Meeting
July 2025 | CWA # 1744

Chittrothu Vaihali

EU-Canada Summit 2025
What is security and defence partnership all about?
July 2025 | CWA # 1742

IPRI Team

Conflict Weekly # 287-88
The 12 Day War and the Congo-Rwanda Peace Deal
July 2025 | CWA # 1738

Fleur Elizabeth Philip

Thailand and Cambodia
What was the phone call between PM Shinawatra and President of Senate Hun Sen? What is the border dispute between the two? Why has this become an issue?
June 2025 | CWA # 1735

Padmashree Anandhan

NATO Summit 2025:
Trump making Europe great again
June 2025 | CWA # 1734

GP Team

The World This Week #317
NATO Summit 2025 and Russia-Mali bilateral agreements
June 2025 | CWA # 1733

Ananya Dinesh

China and the Pacific Islands 
What was the recent China-PIC joint statement about? What it says, and what it means?
June 2025 | CWA # 1728

M Kejia

G7 Summit 2025:
The Focus on the Middle East and Trade negotiations
June 2025 | CWA # 1726

GP Team

The World This Week #316
China-Central Asia Summit in Kazakhstan, and the G7 Summit in Canada
June 2025 | CWA # 1725

Brighty Ann Sarah, R Preetha, Santhiya M, Aparna A Nair & M Kejia

Operation Midnight Hammer: US bombs three nuclear sites in Iran
What were the three Iranian nuclear sites that were targeted? What are the B2 Bombers and Bunker Buster Bombs? What do these attacks mean? What Next?
June 2025 | CWA # 1724

IPRI Team

Conflict Weekly #286
The Spiralling Israel-Iran Crisis, and the Dangerous Hunger Hotspots
June 2025 | CWA # 1721

Rizwana Banu S and Santhiya M

Who are the Afrikaners?
Why is Trump interested in the Afrikaner question in South Africa?
June 2025 | CWA # 1720

Lekshmi MK

New WMO Report on Arctic Warming
What are the social, economic and environmental implications of Arctic warming
June 2025 | CWA # 1719

J Yamini  

China’s EV Surge
What contributes to the rise of BYD
June 2025 | CWA # 1717

J Yamini

Gender Violence in Pakistan:
What are the larger issues in the Noor Mukadam case?
June 2025 | CWA # 1715

Femy Francis

The US-China:
On Tariffs, Rare Earths and Visas
June 2025 | CWA # 1713

GP Team

The World This Week #315
The UN Ocean Conference in France and the US-China Meeting in London
June 2025 | CWA # 1709

IPRI Team

Conflict Weekly #284-285
Cambodia-Thailand Border Tensions, Protests in the US, and the Indigenous Māori question in New Zealand
June 2025 | CWA # 1705

GP Team

The World This Week #314
Elections in South Korea and Poland I China and the Pacific Island Countries I Bangladesh Election Announcement 2026
June 2025 | CWA # 1700

R Preetha

Ethiopia bans the TPLF
What does the TPLF ban mean for the Pretoria agreement? What next for Ethiopia?
June 2025 | CWA # 1694

Aashish Ganeshan

The US:
Harvard vs Trump Administration
June 2025 | CWA # 1691

GP Team

The World This Week #313
China-ASEAN-GCC Summit I President Macron's visit to South East Asia I Trump Vs Harvard
May 2025 | CWA # 1690

GP Team

The World This Week #312
Elections in Romania, Portugal & Poland I UK-EU Summit
May 2025 | CWA # 1689

Padmashree Anandhan

Ukraine
Continuing Russia’s Aerial Attacks, despite exchange of prisoners
May 2025 | CWA # 1688

Ayan Datta

Gaza
The Humanitarian Crisis and Israel’s Renewed Offensive
May 2025 | CWA # 1685

Aparna A Nair

UK-EU Summit:
First step towards a reset
May 2025 | CWA # 1683

Aashish Ganeshan

Elections in Portugal:
The Rise of Chega Party and the Search for Political Stability
May 2025 | CWA # 1679

Aashish Ganeshan

US in the Middle Easr
Trump’s visit to Saudi Arabia, Qatar and UAE
May 2025 | CWA # 1678

Gauri Gupta

China in Latin America
China-CELAC forum: Strengthening ties with Latin America and Caribbean
May 2025 | CWA # 1677

GP Team

The World This Week #310-311
China in Latin America and the Carribbean I Trump's Middle East Visit I Denmark as the new Arctic Chair
May 2025 | CWA # 1675

Lekshmi MK

Turkey:
PKK disbands after 40 years of armed insurgency
May 2025 | CWA # 1673

Padmashree Anandhan

Ukraine:
The Discussion in Turkiye and the Elusive Ceasefire
May 2025 | CWA # 1672

D Suba Chandran

India and Pakistan:
De-escalation and the “New Normal”
May 2025 | CWA # 1671

Abhiruchi Chowdhury

US, Ukraine and Russia:
Air attacks amidst a Minerals deal and Ceasefire Proposals
May 2025 | CWA # 1670

Fleur Elizabeth Philip

Singapore Elections in 2025:
People’s Action Party (PAP) Wins, Again
May 2025 | CWA # 1667

R Preetha and Brighty Ann Sarah

East Asia:
Tough Tariff Negotiations with the US
May 2025 | CWA # 1666

Padmashree Anandhan

The US-Ukraine
The mineral deal with the US
May 2025 | CWA # 1665
Conflict Weekly # 280-81
India-Pakistan De-escalation I Ukraine Discussion in Istanbul I The Battle over Port Sudan I Disbanding of PKK in Turkiye I France-Algeria Diplomatic Tensions
May 2025 | CWA # 1663

R Preetha

Canada Elections 2025:
What do the results convey? What next for Mark Carney?
March 2024 | CWA # 1251

NIAS Africa Team

Africa This Week
February 2024 | CWA # 1226

NIAS Africa Team

Africa This Week
October 2023 | CWA # 1091

Annem Naga Bindhu Madhuri

Issues for Europe
July 2023 | CWA # 1012

Bibhu Prasad Routray

Myanmar continues to burn
December 2022 | CWA # 879

Padmashree Anandhan

The Ukraine War
November 2022 | CWA # 838

Rishma Banerjee

Tracing Europe's droughts
March 2022 | CWA # 705

NIAS Africa Team

In Focus: Libya
December 2021 | CWA # 630

GP Team

Europe in 2021
October 2021 | CWA # 588

Abigail Miriam Fernandez

TLP is back again
August 2021 | CWA # 528

STIR Team

Space Tourism
September 2019 | CWA # 162

Lakshman Chakravarthy N

5G: A Primer
December 2018 | CWA # 71

Mahesh Bhatta

Nepal
December 2018 | CWA # 70

Nasima Khatoon

The Maldives
December 2018 | CWA # 69

Harini Madhusudan

India
December 2018 | CWA # 68

Sourina Bej

Bangladesh
December 2018 | CWA # 67

Seetha Lakshmi Dinesh Iyer

Afghanistan