Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 3 days 23 hours 9 minutes
Hezbollah is banned in many countries as a terrorist group but is a powerful political force in Lebanon and was a kingmaker of the new government. Is the group hindering or helping the reforms the country so desperately needs?
Sweden’s coronavirus strategy has led to a death rate much higher than that of its neighbors. Did the country badly miscalculate? DW’s Conflict Zone meets the country’s foreign minister.
Will China’s new national security law be the end of Hong Kong’s autonomy? Regina Ip, a pro-Beijing party leader, says not to jump to conclusions. “The motherland has nothing but good intentions” for Hong Kong, she says.
By pushing for a presidential election during the coronavirus pandemic, did Poland's government put politics ahead of people's lives? DW's Conflict Zone confronts MEP Dominik Tarczynski.
Tim Sebastian interviews Balazs Hidveghi, Hungarian MEP (FIDESZ)
In an exclusive interview with DW’s Conflict Zone, Kang Kyung-wha discussed her country’s much-lauded handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. But has its technology-led response come at the expense of privacy?
Political infighting is nothing new in Brussels, but facing the Covid-19 pandemic European leaders have been far from united. Conflict Zone's Tim Sebastian asks European Commissioner Ylva Johansson if the EU has suffered a major blow over its disunity.
Tim Sebastian interviews Elizabeth Harrington, Republican Party National Spokesperson
With no end in sight to years of war, political chaos, or the desperate humanitarian crisis, what have thousands of civilian deaths and suffering been for in Yemen? DW’s Conflict Zone meets the country’s foreign minister.
Roderich Kiesewetter, a German Christian Democrat, acknowledged on DW's Conflict Zone that his party made mistakes leading to the political scandal that has rocked the country.