LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
April 10/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For today
Those who have never been told of him shall see, and those
who have never heard of him shall understand.
Letter to the Romans 15/14-21: “I myself feel confident about you, my brothers
and sisters, that you yourselves are full of goodness, filled with all
knowledge, and able to instruct one another. Nevertheless, on some points I have
written to you rather boldly by way of reminder, because of the grace given me
by God to be a minister of Christ Jesus to the Gentiles in the priestly service
of the gospel of God, so that the offering of the Gentiles may be acceptable,
sanctified by the Holy Spirit. In Christ Jesus, then, I have reason to boast of
my work for God. For I will not venture to speak of anything except what Christ
has accomplished through me to win obedience from the Gentiles, by word and
deed, by the power of signs and wonders, by the power of the Spirit of God, so
that from Jerusalem and as far around as Illyricum I have fully proclaimed the
good news of Christ. Thus I make it my ambition to proclaim the good news, not
where Christ has already been named, so that I do not build on someone else’s
foundation, but as it is written, ‘Those who have never been told of him shall
see, and those who have never heard of him shall understand.’””
’
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on
April 09-10/19
Aoun Meets Bulgarian Counterpart: Difficult Conditions Could Drive Refugees to
Europe
Mustaqbal Warns against 'Attacks on Security, Judiciary Leading Figures'
Jumblat: Hizbullah Can't Usurp Our Decision Forever, I Don't Agree with Bassil's
Strategic Views
Hariri Holds Talks with Geagea at Center House
Bassil Says FPM Not Covering Any Judge, Electricity Plan an FPM Achievement
Hizbullah Minister Jabaq in Visit to Kuwait
Hariri Discusses Situation in the Region with Abu el-Gheit
Top Military Prosecutor Files Charges against ISF Information Branch
Lebanon on Alert amid Reports US May Impose Sanctions on Speaker Berri
UN Looks Forward to Cooperate With Lebanon On Return Of Displaced
Hariri to Spend Weekend in Tripoli Ahead of By-Elections
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
April 09-10/19
Netanyahu claims 'tremendous victory' as results point to his fifth win as prime
minister
Netanyahu, Gantz Both Claim Victory in Israeli Polls
Israel Closes off West Bank, Isolates Gaza ahead of Elections
Intra-Israeli Differences on Establishing Ties With Neighboring Countries
Protests as Algeria Lawmakers Elect First New President in 20 Years
Algeria Appoints Bensalah as Interim President Prompting More Protests
Egyptian-US Summit to Tackle Mideast as Sisi Meets Trump
Putin, Erdogan Coordinate on Astana Talks, Syria Constitutional Committee
Libyan National Army Raids Tripoli Airport
UN Postpones Libya National Conference amid Raging Clashes
UN Envoy in Sanaa to Persuade Houthis to Accept Hodeidah Deal
Tripartite Meeting in Amman to Discuss Syria's Rukban Camp
Airstrike Kills Seven ISIS Terrorists South of Kirkuk, Iraq
Tunisia Court Issues 6-10 Years Jail Sentences to Terror Accomplices
Sudanese Protesters Maintain Sit-in outside Army HQ
Trump Praises 'Great Job' by Egypt's Controversial Sisi
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published on April 09-10/19
Netanyahu claims 'tremendous victory' as results point to his fifth win as prime
minister/Ynetnews/April 09/19
A New Wave of Arab Revolutions/Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Asharq Al Awsat/April 09/19
Haftar Can Unite Libya, End Chaos/Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Asharq Al Awsat/April
09/19
Just War vs Just Plain-Old Jihad/Raymond Ibrahim/April 09/19
Qatar: 'A Wolf in Sheep's Clothing'/Bankrolling Islamism in Europe/Giulio Meotti/Gatestone
Institute/April 09/2019
Palestinian Authority Targets Students/Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone
Institute/April 09/19
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese
Related News published on April 09-10/19
Aoun Meets Bulgarian Counterpart: Difficult Conditions Could Drive Refugees to
Europe
Naharnet/April 09/19/President Michel Aoun received at Baabda Palace on Tuesday
the Bulgarian President Rumen Radev who arrived in Beirut early today on a
two-day official visit. The two held a joint press conference during which Aoun
highlighted the strained economic conditions in Lebanon as it hosts around 1.5
million Syrian refugees. “We are concerned if the situation gets more difficult,
Palestinian and Syrian refugees could move Europe. Economic conditions are very
difficult in Lebanon,” said Aoun. “Confronting the burdens of the displaced
Syrians is a common international responsibility. We must work swiftly to end
the suffering of the displaced and secure their safe return to their country,”
he added. On Israel’s violations of Lebanon’s land and maritime territories, the
President urged Bulgaria to support Lebanon’s stance against “Israel’s
continuous breaches, and to assert Lebanon’s right to extract its gas and oil
within its territories.”The President reiterated Lebanon’s denunciation of the
US decision recognizing Israel’s sovereignty over the Golan Heights “it is a
flagrant violation of the international community. Not only does it threatens
the sovereignty of a sister state but also threatens the sovereignty of the
Lebanese state.”Radev is set to meet later with Speaker Nabih Berri, PM Saad
Hariri where talks will focus on the Lebanese-Bulgarian relations and the means
to develop them in addition to the situation in the region, said NNA.The plane
of the Bulgarian President, his wife and the accompanying delegation, landed at
the Rafik Hariri International Airport at 9:30 am. He was received by Minister
of the Displaced Ghassan Atallah, the Governor of Mount Lebanon Mohammed Makkawi,
and several other officials.
Mustaqbal Warns against 'Attacks on Security, Judiciary
Leading Figures'
Naharnet/April 09/19/Al-Mustaqbal parliamentary bloc on Tuesday warned against
what it called a “suspicious campaign” against “leading figures” in the security
and judicial institutions, amid controversy over suspected corruption in the
judicial body. “The bloc warns against some parties' continued attacks against
leading figures in the security and judicial institutions who have dedicated
their lives, efforts and work to serve and protect the Lebanese,” it said in a
statement issued after its weekly meeting. It added: “In this regard, the bloc
points to the suspicious campaign that is especially targeting, systematically
and maliciously, State Prosecutor Samir Hammoud and Internal Security Forces
chief Maj. Gen. Imad Othman and behind them the (ISF) Intelligence Branch and
its achievements that are known by all Lebanese.”Noting that the “campaign” is
aimed at “harming the reputation and image of state institutions,” Mustaqbal
slammed statements by “fugitives and outlaws,” in an apparent jab at ex-minister
Wiam Wahhab who has renewed his attacks on Hammoud. In an unprecedented move,
State Commissioner to the Military Court Judge Peter Germanos has filed a
lawsuit against the ISF Intelligence Branch, accusing it of “mutiny” against his
authority, manipulation of investigations and “detaining individuals beyond
legal timeframes.”The clash reflects a silent war between political leaders,
seeing as Germanos is seen as being close to President Michel Aoun's camp
whereas the ISF Intelligence Branch is known of being close to Prime Minister
Saad Hariri's al-Mustaqbal Movement.
Jumblat: Hizbullah Can't Usurp Our Decision Forever, I
Don't Agree with Bassil's Strategic Views
Naharnet/April 09/19/Progressive Socialist Party leader ex-MP Walid Jumblat
announced Tuesday that Hizbullah cannot “usurp the decision” of the Lebanese
people forever, amid a growing rift with the Iran-backed party. “Hizbullah
defended us in 2006 but it can't usurp our decision forever,” Jumblat said in an
interview on LBCI television. “Hizbullah must listen to criticism and we have
the right to speak,” Jumblat added. Acknowledging that the residents of south
Lebanon consider Hizbullah a “guarantee” in the face of Israel's hostility, the
PSP leader hoped this “guarantee” will become part of a national defense
strategy. “Due to Arab disunity, Hizbullah considers itself the owner of the
Palestinian cause, because the Arabs have abandoned it,” Jumblat said. A
decision by Industry Minister Wael Abu Faour to revoke the license of a cement
factory belonging to Pierre Fattoush in the Ain Dara area has strained relations
between Jumblat and Hizbullah, with pro-Hizbullah media outlets reporting that
the party has decided to “sever” its ties with the PSP leader. Asked whether
Israel might wage a war on Lebanon in the near future, Jumblat told LBCI that he
does not believe that the Israelis “want a war to break out.”
Separately, Jumblat criticized a recent visit to Russia by President Michel Aoun
and Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil. “When each sect resorts to a certain nation
for protection, we will only reach an internal war,” Jumblat warned, apparently
referring to remarks by Aoun. “We thank you for your stances that defend the
Christian minorities in the Levant and we hope you will continue this help,”
Aoun told Russian President Vladimir Putin during the Kremlin meeting. Jumblat
added: “We do not agree a lot with Jebran Bassil's strategic views.” Commenting
on regional developments, Jumblat said: “I'm Arab but not in the fashion of
Bashar al-Assad. Arabism without democracy and humanity has no meaning.”“The
Palestinians' right to return will be dropped in Jared Kushner's scheme,” he
warned.
Hariri Holds Talks with Geagea at Center House
Naharnet/April 09/19/Prime Minister Saad Hariri held talks with Lebanese Forces
leader Samir Geagea Tuesday evening at the Center House. A statement issued by
Hariri's office said the discussions tackled “the political and general
situations in the country” and that talks continued over a dinner banquet thrown
by Hariri. The meeting was also attended by ex-minister Melhem Riachi of the LF
and Hariri's adviser Ghattas Khoury.
Bassil Says FPM Not Covering Any Judge, Electricity Plan an
FPM Achievement
Naharnet/April 09/19/Free Patriotic Movement chief MP Jebran Bassil on Tuesday
stressed that the FPM is not providing political “cover” for any judge in the
latest controversy over suspected corruption in the judicial body. “Despite what
is being said in the media, we are not covering anyone and there are no
pro-presidency judges and anti-presidency judges,” Bassil said after the weekly
meeting of the Strong Lebanon bloc. “The anti-corruption drive will continue,”
he stressed. Turning to the long-awaited national electricity plan that was
adopted on Monday, Bassil said the FPM's concerns over alleged attempts to
obstruct the plan were justified. “They prevented us twice from carrying out
tendering processes in the electricity and oil sectors,” he noted. “The issue of
merging the temporary and final solutions was proposed by us and the minister
(Nada Bustani) included it in her plan, so let them respect our intelligence,”
Bassil added, in a jab at rival political parties. As for the failure to form an
electricity regulatory commission, Bassil said “the law has been stalled in
parliament for seven years now.”“We hope it will be passed,” he added.
Hizbullah Minister Jabaq in Visit to Kuwait
Naharnet/April 09/19/Health Minister Jamil Jabaq arrived Tuesday in Kuwait to
take part in the 21st edition of the Arab Healthcare Development Conference,
Lebanon's National News Agency reported. The minister was welcomed at the
airport by a delegation from the Kuwait health ministry and Lebanese consul in
Kuwait Nisrine Bou Karroum. Jabaq is scheduled to meet with Lebanese expats at
the embassy's headquarters in the evening. The minister, who was named by
Hizbullah for the new government, is not a member of the party but is believed
to be close to its chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah and was his personal physician
at one point. In August 2017, Kuwaiti authorities said they arrested 12
convicted members of a "terrorist cell" with alleged “ties to Iran and
Hizbullah.”The supreme court in Sunni-ruled Kuwait, which has a sizable Shiite
minority, had earlier overturned an acquittal by an appeals court and convicted
21 Shiites of forming a "terrorist cell with ties to Iran and Hizbullah.”The
cell had planned to launch attacks across the Gulf state, according to the court
verdict. Kuwait later presented a formal protest letter to Lebanon over
Hizbullah's alleged training of the so-called "Abdali Cell".
Hariri Discusses Situation in the Region with Abu el-Gheit
Prime Minister Saad Hariri received on Tuesday the Secretary-General of the Arab
League Ahmed Abu el-Gheit and talks highlighted the latest developments in the
Arab region, the National News Agency reported. NNA said that Abu el-Gheit was
accompanied by the Arab League assistant secretary general Hussam Zaki,
Ambassador Abdul Rahman al-Solh.The meeting was held in the presence of
ex-Minister Ghattas Khoury.
Top Military Prosecutor Files Charges against ISF
Information Branch
Naharnet/April 09/19/An unprecedented judicial-security “challenge” emerged when
Lebanon's top military prosecutor, Judge Peter Germanos filed charges against
the Information Branch of the Internal Security Forces, accusing it of
"disobeying his orders, distorting investigations, and holding suspects beyond
the legal detention period," Asharq al-Awsat reported on Tuesday. This
confrontation conceals a “silent war between the political authorities. Germanos
is considered an ally of President Michel Aoun’s team, while the ISF Information
Division is allied to al-Mustaqbal Movement led by PM Saad Hariri,” said the
daily. The move of Germanos “shocked the political, judicial and security
circles,” said the daily. He accused the ISF Information Branch of "disobeying
his orders, leaking and altering information and facts, detention of suspects
beyond their legal detention period." He referred the case to Military Judge
Fadi Sawan for investigation. Germanos said his move is part of the ongoing
fight against corruption, he told the daily: “This is a battle of jurisdictions
to prove that we live under the rule of law or the rule of security. All the
security services are under my authority and control, starting from the military
intelligence,the military police, the Information Branch of the ISF, the
Investigation Branch of the General Security, the State Security and the
Customs.”Although the security forces refrained from making any comment on
Germanos’ remarks, a security source who spoke on condition of anonymity told
the daily that “officers and members of the Information Branch should be
rewarded for their achievements instead of prosecuting them and distorting their
role.” These developments are a “natural result of the dispute between some
judges over powers in the files of corruption,” said the daily. A well-informed
source said “the battle that Germanos began against the Information Branch is
part of his battle with some judges.” “Germanos has asked the Branch to close
investigations with suspect (Joe.Aa) and to refer his case to the army
Intelligence. But his request was not met because the suspect was arrested by
order of Mount Lebanon Prosecutor Judge Ghada Aoun," sources said. "J.A was
arrested for issuing checks without credit and falsification of judicial files.
This person has no file before the military judiciary,” they added.As part of an
ISF crackdown from within on bribery and abuse of power, several ISF officers,
policemen and State Security agents have been interrogated and detained in
recent weeks.
Lebanon on Alert amid Reports US May Impose Sanctions on
Speaker Berri
Beirut - Paula Astih/Asharq Al Awsat/April 09/19/The statements of US Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo delivered from the White House Monday gave a new impetus to
reports linked to US sanctions that might affect Speaker Nabih Berri and his
Amal Movement due to their longstanding ties with Hezbollah and Iran. MP Yassin
Jaber, head of the parliament committee on Foreign Affairs told Asharq Al-Awsat
on Monday that Lebanon is currently looking at the new information. “Until this
hour, there is no decision or official position other than Pompeo’s statements,”
he said. On Monday, Pompeo said that during his recent trip to Beirut, he made
clear to the Lebanese leadership, including in conversations with Berri, that
America was not going to tolerate the continued rise of Hezbollah in the
country. “This is about armed forces inside the country of Lebanon. We made very
clear that we were going to continue to evaluate sanctions for all those that
were connected to (Hezbollah),” Pompeo told reporters. Jaber is currently in
Washington as part of a parliamentary delegation attending meetings of the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund. MP Mohammed Nasrallah from Amal said
Monday it has not yet received any official signs that the US was considering
sanctions on Berri or any other official from the Movement. But, Nasrallah said
that in all cases, one should take the current information into consideration.
“Pompeo’s statements kept the door open to all possibilities and it is important
during this phase to wait and see how things will unfold,” the MP said. He
revealed that the deputies’ presence in Washington was not linked to the new
sanctions that might affect Berri. Sources from the Amal Movement also told
Asharq Al-Awsat they were not informed about any official decision linked to the
US sanctions. “But, we expect anything from the US administration after its
recent decisions related to the region, the last of which was a decision to
recognize Israel's territorial claim to the occupied Syrian Golan Heights,” the
sources said. On Monday, Trump formally announced his administration’s plan to
designate Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps, including its Quds Force, as a
Foreign Terrorist Organization.
UN Looks Forward to Cooperate With Lebanon On Return Of
Displaced
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 9 April, 2019/Lebanese President Michel Aoun
told UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed that his country “looks forward
to full coordination with the United Nations to face current challenges,”
especially in the file of the return of Syrian displaced. Emphasizing UN support
for Lebanon's economic and reform plan within the process of economic
development, Aoun said several projects were under review to be implemented
after the adoption of the state budget, hailing the UN’s cooperation in this
regard. He also highlighted the heavy impact of the Syrian displacement on the
socio-economic situation in Lebanon, stressing that the international community
showed no enthusiasm to facilitate their return to their homeland. Mohammed
underlined the UN support for all measures taken by Lebanon to promote stability
and achieve the necessary reforms.
She also noted that the United Nations looks forward to working with Lebanon to
secure the return of the displaced Syrians to their country. The official also
confirmed the UN support of Aoun's proposal at the Arab Economic and Social
Development Summit, held in Beirut, to establish a bank for reconstruction and
development in the Arab countries, especially those that witnessed military
events in the past few years. Also on Monday, the Lebanese president met with UN
Special Coordinator for Lebanon, Jan Kubis, with talks touching on the New York
consultations about the UN report on the implementation of Security Council
Resolution 1701.
Hariri to Spend Weekend in Tripoli Ahead of By-Elections
Beirut- Mohammed Shokair/Asharq Al Awsat/April 09/19/Lebanon’s Prime Minister
Saad Hariri will head to Tripoli on Friday, two days before the by-elections
scheduled for April 14, to hold consultations with his allies and to sponsor
popular meetings aimed at encouraging citizens to participate massively in the
elections. The by-elections are set to fill the vacant Sunni legislative seat
after Lebanon’s Constitutional Council annulled last month the parliamentary
membership of Dima Jamali, of Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s Mustaqbal Movement,
as a result of an appeal by unsuccessful candidate Taha Naji, who ran on MP
Faisal Karami’s National Dignity list in the May 2018 elections. Leading sources
in Al-Mustaqbal told Asharq Al-Awsat that Jamali would likely regain her seat,
facing other opponents, mainly those close to MP Faisal Karami and the
Association of Islamic Charitable Projects (Al-Ahbash) and the Alawites. In this
context, sources in Tripoli stressed that Hariri’s party was deploying
“extraordinary efforts” to guarantee the support of voters to its candidate.
Other candidates include Yehya Mawloud from the Civil Movement, who had run in
the last parliamentary elections in May 2018.
By the expiry of the candidacy period deadline on March 30, eight people were
successfully registered for the by-elections. The number of candidates rose to
nine on Tuesday when the State Shura Council annulled an Interior Ministry
decision to reject the candidacy of Nizar Zakka, a Lebanese citizen detained in
Iran. Zakka had submitted his candidacy for the May 2018 parliamentary elections
to raise awareness for his detention, but his request was then rejected.
Latest LCCC English Miscellaneous Reports & News published
on April 09-10/19
Netanyahu claims 'tremendous victory' as results point to his fifth win as prime
minister
Ynetnews/April 09/19
Gantz also claims to have won national elections after exit polls predict a
tight race, vowed to form government before partial count indicated that former
IDF chief likely to lose out to his rival
A jubilant Benjamin Netanyahu took to the stage at Likud headquarters in Tel
Aviv late Tuesday night, flanked by his wife Sara, as final results pointing to
his victory in the Knesset elections began to trickle in.
"This is an unimaginable achievement," Netanyahu said, at around 2am. "I am very
moved tonight, a night of tremendous victory. I am very excited that the people
of Israel once again trusted me for the fifth time, and with greater
confidence.""I believe that God and history gave the Jewish people another
opportunity to turn their country into a strong nation and that's what I'm
working for," Netanyahu said, pausing for shouts of praise for his wife.
"I wish to thank you, the citizens of Israel, for supporting us," he said. "To
the Likud activists, you went from city to city, neighborhood to neighborhood,
house to house. To the volunteers, the campaign staff, all of you without
exception brought heart and soul to a difficult struggle, and each of you played
an important part in this tremendous achievement."
He added: "I have already started talks with the leaders of our right-wing
parties, and almost all of them have publicly declared that they will recommend
me to form the government, and will do so to our president. There will be a
right-wing government, but I intend to be the prime minister of all the citizens
of Israel, right and left, Jews and non-Jews, I care about everyone, that's how
it was and that's how it will be. "By the early hours of Wednesday morning, the
Likud Party took the lead with 40 seats in the 120-Knesset, with some 42.1
percent of the votes counted. Gantz's Blue and White was in second place with 35
seats, while the ultra-Orthodox Shas and United Torah Judaism parties each won
seven seats. The once mighty Labor party was down to just six seats, the same
number as Yisrael Beiteinu.
Moshe Kahlon's Kulanu party was on course to win five seats, while Hadash-Ta'al,
Meretz and the Union of Right-Wing Parties were set to claim four seats apiece.
The results put the the rightist bloc in the lead with 67 seats, while the
leftist bloc stands at 53 seats.Benny Gantz had also claimed victory hours
earlier, as the exit polls showed his Blue and White party locked in a tight
race with Netanyahu's Likud.
"This is an historic day. Thank you to Netanyahu for his service for the
country. Just as he said - the largest party should be the one to form the
government," said Gantz, in a speech at his party headquarters just two hours
after the release of exit polls that predicted a slight lead for his party over
the Likud, but an advantage to the right-wing bloc led by Netanyahu. One of the
exit polls was later corrected to show a small lead for Likud. "There are
election losers, there are election winners - and we are the winners," Gantz
said. "They said we would not win, we won," Gantz said. "We will win in a way
that is respectful to everyone, respectful of the past, respectful of the
present, and building a joint future that is yet to come."Gantz also vowed to
move quickly to form the next government. "We have a responsibility to form a
government that will serve the State of Israel and not itself," he said. "The
sooner we form a government, the sooner we can lead the State of Israel. We have
a lot of work ahead of us."
Netanyahu, Gantz Both Claim Victory in Israeli Polls
Naharnet/April 09/19/Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April
09/19/Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his main challenger Benny Gantz both
claimed victory after Israel's general elections on Tuesday as exit polls showed
the two were neck and neck. The exit polls from Israel's three main television
stations appeared to show Netanyahu better placed to form a coalition with the
help of smaller right-wing parties, but the final outcome was far from clear. A
combination of Netanyahu's Likud and smaller right-wing parties allied to him
had between 60 and 66 seats in the 120-seat parliament, three polls from
Israel's main television stations showed. Gantz and his Blue and White alliance
along with other smaller parties had between 54 and 60 seats, according to the
exit polls. Exit polls have however proven to be unreliable in previous Israeli
elections. Final official results were not expected until early Wednesday.
Israel Closes off West Bank, Isolates Gaza ahead of
Elections
Ramallah – Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 9 April, 2019/On the eve of Tuesday’s
parliamentary elections, Israel cordoned off the West Bank and Gaza, including
the Karam Abou Salem crossing used for the passage of goods, gas and fuel into
the coastal enclave. The Israeli army spokesman announced the imposition of a
security barrier and the closure of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, except for
humanitarian cases.“There are quite a few extremist activists who want to take
advantage of the situation to carry out hostile attacks,” Israeli security
sources said. “The Israeli army, the General Security Service, the Border Police
and the Israeli Civil Police are preparing for every possible scenario,
including hostile operations carried out by individuals in an attempt to strike
security forces or civilians.”“One unusual field incident could ignite an entire
region,” the sources added. Hours before the elections, Israeli forces arrested
21 Palestinians from Ramallah, Bethlehem, Hebron, Qalqilya and Tulkarem. As part
of the preparations, police announced that they would “reinforce deployment of
forces throughout the country to enable all registered voters to safely reach
thousands of polling stations and exercise their right to vote.”According to the
security plan, 17,000 police and volunteers, as well as thousands of civilian
security guards, will be deployed at various polling stations. There will be
more than 10,000 ballot boxes in more than 4,000 polling stations throughout
Israel. “Public and secret forces will work in polling stations and in the
surrounding areas to prevent any illegal activity that would harm the integrity
of the election and its proper functioning,” according to the Israeli police.
Intra-Israeli Differences on Establishing Ties With
Neighboring Countries
Tel Aviv- Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 9 April, 2019/An internal Israeli report
showed that severe disputes spurred between the National Security Council (NSC)
and the Mossad on their powers in dealing with issues of Arab and Islamic
countries that Israel is seeking to connect with. According to reliable sources,
officials of Mossad directed by Yossi Cohen objected over the NSC activity and
considered it a violation of its powers. Mossad accused NSC of not cooperating
in opening channels with neighboring countries. NSC members are working
independently without having the required tools, especially in the field of
security supervision because they don’t cooperate with Mossad, they added. Also,
there are talks on the activity of National Security Adviser Meir Ben Shabbat
who has the full support of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The sources
referred to possible revelations of corruption scandals in which the Mossad
wouldn't allow the presence of another Yitzhak Molcho-- who was Netanyahu's
diplomatic envoy. In a joint statement to the NSC, security bodies and the
government spokesman said that the bodies work cooperatively to achieve the
goals determined by the prime minister and the political leadership.
Protests as Algeria Lawmakers Elect First New President in
20 Years
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 09/19/Bouteflika Ally Named Algeria's First
New President in 20 Years. Algerian lawmakers appointed a regime stalwart as the
country's first new president in two decades Tuesday, dismaying protesters
seeking sweeping change following the resignation of veteran leader Abdelaziz
Bouteflika. The election of upper house speaker Abdelkader Bensalah as interim
president follows constitutional rules but goes against the demands of
demonstrators, who have pushed for him and other top politicians to stand down.
"I want to work towards fulfilling the interests of the people," Bensalah, a
trusted ally of Bouteflika, told parliament on taking up the 90-day interim
presidency. "It's a great responsibility that the constitution demands of me,"
the 77-year-old added. Opposition parties refused to back the appointment of the
seasoned establishment insider and boycotted the session, as thousands of
students protested against him in Algiers. "Resign Bensalah!" they chanted,
clutching hand-written placards and Algerian flags. For the first time in seven
weeks police in the capital fired tear gas to try to disperse the protest by
students, who were also hit with water cannon. On Friday -- in the first weekly
mass protest since Bouteflika announced his departure after losing the
military's support -- Algerians demanded regime insiders be excluded from the
political transition. Ahead of the parliamentary session, an editorial in
pro-government daily El Moudjahid on Tuesday suggested Bensalah should step
aside from the presidential post. He is "not tolerated by the citizen movement,
which demands his immediate departure," or by the opposition and various
political groups in both houses of parliament, the newspaper said. 'Voice of the
people' Three men in particular have drawn demonstrators' ire: Bensalah, the
head of the constitutional council Tayeb Belaiz and prime minister Noureddine
Bedoui. The protest movement is calling for a new transitional framework that is
committed to deep reforms and organizing free elections. Ahead of Bensalah's
appointment, calls continued for the speaker to step down. "He has to resign,
it's the voice of the people and the people must be right," said 50-year-old
Mourad, an entrepreneur who will protest Friday with his two young daughters.
"They don't know that there's democracy... I want to teach them what freedom
is," he added. Algerians of all ages have rallied since late February against
Bouteflika, who resigned a week ago after efforts to appease demonstrators
proved fruitless. Although the 82-year-old's resignation was celebrated by
protesters, they have remained firm in pushing for a wider overhaul of the
political system. Human Rights Watch said Bouteflika's departure is "at most a
first step in ending autocratic rule." "During any transitional phase,
authorities should fully respect the rights of Algerians to speak, assemble and
associate with one another," the watchdog said in a statement.Demonstrators in
huge numbers have defied a protest ban in Algiers, and HRW on Tuesday called on
authorities to overhaul laws "on association and assembly that stifle rights."
Algeria Appoints Bensalah as Interim President Prompting
More Protests
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 9 April, 2019/The Algerian parliament appointed Tuesday
upper house chairman Abdelkader Bensalah as interim president amid an opposition
boycott. Out of a total of 604 MPS, only 470 lawmakers attended the meeting.
Bensalah will serve as president for the next 90 days following the resignation
of Abdelaziz Bouteflika. Bensalah will run the country until new elections are
held, according to the North African country's constitution. Protesters, who are
demanding sweeping democratic reforms, are opposed to figures like Bensalah, a
close associate of Bouteflika and his inner circle who dominated Algeria for
decades. As per the Algerian constitution, Bensalah will remain interim
president until new elections are held. "We must work to allow the Algerian
people elect their president as soon as possible," Bensalah told parliament.
Protesters soon took to the street to rally against the appointment. “Appointing
Bensalah will fuel anger and it could radicalize the protesters,” said taxi
driver Hassen Rahmine as crowds gathered in central Algiers. On Friday -- in the
first weekly protest since Bouteflika announced his departure after losing the
military's support -- Algerians demanded regime stalwarts be excluded from the
political transition. Three men in particular have drawn ire: Bensalah, head of
the constitutional council Tayeb Belaiz and prime minister Noureddine Bedoui.
Mass protests have led to the disintegration of what has been described as the
ruling elite’s “fortress” - veterans of the war of independence against France,
ruling party figures, businessmen, the army and labor unions. But Algerians have
been pushing for more radical change since Bouteflika’s allies abandoned him in
the weeks leading up to his resignation last week. They are unwilling to
compromise in their demand for a new generation of leaders in the North African
country, which has failed to create jobs and improve living standards despite
vast oil and natural gas resources. “You go means you go,” read banners at the
protest in central Algiers, which ended in the late afternoon. At one point,
police briefly turned water cannon to disperse protesters. The critical question
is how Algeria’s military - long seen as a highly effective backstage player in
politics - will react to Bensalah’s appointment and any opposition that arises.
“I thank the army and all security services for their work,” Bensalah told
parliament after his appointment.
Army Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Gaid Salah carefully managed Bouteflika’s
exit after declaring him unfit to stay in power and expressed support for
protesters, who have put up little resistance to the military. Hours after
parliament made its choice, Salah said the military will do more to ensure peace
for the Algerian people, the state news agency APS reported. “All in all, the
way in which the vacancy of the Presidency of the Republic has been filled does
not bring our country closer to the end of the crisis,” said Ali Benflis, leader
of the opposition Talae El Houriyet party. “By maintaining the old guard like
Bensalah, the system will be responsible for any bad consequences. We will not
give in,” said student protester Djilali Chemime, 27.
Egyptian-US Summit to Tackle Mideast as Sisi Meets Trump
Cairo - Mohammed Abdo Hassanein/Asharq Al Awsat/April 09/19/Egyptian President
Abdul Fattah al-Sisi will hold talks with his American counterpart Donald Trump
at the White House on Tuesday to discuss bilateral relations, counter-terrorism
efforts and a number of regional files, mainly peace in the Middle East and the
situation in each of Syria, Libya and Yemen. Presidency spokesperson Bassam Rady
said Sisi’s visit is part of a series of meetings between the two leaders aimed
at bolstering bilateral relations, achieving strategic interests and resuming
dialogue on regional issues.
A report prepared by Egypt’s State Information Service revealed that Tuesday’s
summit is the sixth since Sisi assumed his position as the president and that it
was his second trip to Washington. Sisi first visited the US in September 2014
when he attended the 69th Session of the UN General Assembly in New York.
According to the White House, the two presidents are expected to discuss
strengthening the strategic partnership between Washington and Cairo and
building on their robust military, economic and counter-terrorism cooperation.
The two leaders will also tackle developments and shared priorities in the
region, and addressing ongoing conflicts, and Egypt’s longstanding role as a
lynchpin of regional stability. The Egyptian-US summit will hold great
importance because it is taking place after the US decision to recognize
Israel's territorial claim to the occupied Syrian Golan Heights, almost a year
after Washington also officially recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.
Egypt categorically opposes both decisions. The visit also comes one day after
the US administration’s plan to designate Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Corps,
including its Quds Force, as a Foreign Terrorist Organization. Egyptian Foreign
Minister Sameh Shoukry said Sisi’s visit and his talks with Trump come as part
of the positive atmosphere between Cairo and Washington, especially after the
two countries overcame the most disputed issues in their relations.
Putin, Erdogan Coordinate on Astana Talks, Syria
Constitutional Committee
Moscow - Raed Jaber/Asharq Al Awsat/April 09/19/Russia and Turkey have sought to
develop a common vision for the future in Syria in terms of settling the
situation in Idlib amid talks about an imminent military operation to implement
the agreement to establish a demilitarized zone around the city. Talks between
Presidents of Russia, Vladimir Putin, and Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, on
Monday focused on this issue and others on Syria, including the situation in the
north, the mechanisms of dealing with US moves and Ankara’s plans to move in the
border area between Syria and Turkey. Putin said the two leaders agreed to
further strengthen cooperation “in the spirit of advanced, multifaceted
partnership.”“I would like to note that Russia and Turkey, as guarantors of the
Astana process,” continue to make vigorous efforts for the long-term
normalization of the situation in Syria, added Putin. “We are coordinating
efforts to revitalize the Syrian political process, including with a view to
forming a constitutional committee as soon as possible.”Prior to his departure
to Moscow, Erdogan announced he intends to discuss the possibility of a new
Turkish military operation in Syria with his Russian counterpart. "Our
preparations at the border are completed. Everything is ready for the operation.
We can start it at any moment. I will discuss this and other issues during the
visit to Moscow,” he indicated. Meanwhile, Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail
Bogdanov said that the efforts to launch the Syrian constitutional committee are
ongoing as Moscow is holding negotiations with officials from Syria, Iran and
Turkey. “There will be a meeting in the coming days,” he revealed. He said that
some agreements on the committee may be reached before the next round of Astana
talks are held, adding that it was about time that the committee was finalized.
An informed source told Russia Novosti state news agency that the guarantors
will send out invitations to attend the talks, set for April 25 and 26, the
first after the name of the Kazakh capital was changed to Nur-Sultan. Prior to
that, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Vershinin said that the next round
of talks was planned at the level of deputy foreign ministers, while Kazakh
Deputy Foreign Minister Mukhtar Telupid announced that the new UN special envoy
to Syria, Geir Pedersen, might participate in the upcoming negotiations.
Libyan National Army Raids Tripoli Airport
Cairo – Khaled Mahmoud and Sawsan Abou Hussein/Asharq Al Awsat/April 09/19/The
Libyan National Army’s (LNA) operation against Tripoli entered its fifth day on
Monday with Khalifa Haftar’s forces raiding the capital’s Mitiga airport. The
development took place only hours after forces loyal to Fayez al-Sarraj’s
Government of National Accord (GNA) claimed to have seized control of the
facility in southern Tripoli. The civil aviation authority decided "to suspend
aerial traffic until further notice" to Mitiga airport, said Mohammed Gniwa, a
spokesman for national carrier Libyan Airlines, reported AFP. An airport source,
who did want to be named, confirmed the closure. No on was injured in the air
strike that targeted a runway. UN special envoy to Libya Ghassan Salame
condemned the attack on Tripoli’s only functioning airport, saying the UN was
“deeply concerned for the welfare of the civilian population in the ongoing
violence.”LNA spokesman Ahmed al-Mismari confirmed later on Monday that his
forces were still controlling the airport, revealing that minor skirmishes had
taken place in areas south, southeast and west of Tripoli, thereby refuting GNA
claims that its forces had made advances on the LNA. Meanwhile, parliament
Speaker Aguila Saleh said that the LNA’s march on Tripoli is in line with the
constitutional declaration and parliament decision to rid the capital of
militias. “We assure you that the LNA will be embraced by the residents of
Tripoli. It will protect them, their properties and freedom,” he said after
meeting with Arab League Secretary General Ahmed Abul Gheit in Cairo. In
Tripoli, Higher Council of State chief Khaled al-Mishri announced his rejection
of the LNA’s operation, calling on the GNA to issue a warrant for Haftar’s
arrest. The UN mission in Libya later confirmed that it was still operating in
Tripoli in spite of the unrest south of the capital. Unofficial reports had
claimed that it had evacuated its staff to Tunisia in wake of the military
escalation. At least 32 people have been killed and around 50 wounded in
fighting, said the GNA. Mismari said that the LNA had lost only two members in
the fighting.
UN Postpones Libya National Conference amid Raging Clashes
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 9 April, 2019/The United Nations announced on Tuesday
the postponement of the Libyan national conference as the Libyan National Army (LNA)
continued its operation against the capital Tripoli against terrorist and
criminal gangs. "We cannot ask people to take part in the conference during
gunfire and air strikes," UN envoy Ghassan Salame said. He expressed hope that
the meeting, which had been scheduled for next week, would take place "as soon
as possible". The move came as the North African country's warring parties faced
mounting international pressure to halt violence that has caused thousands to
flee and left several dozen people dead. Earlier, the UN’s health body said
local facilities had reported 47 people killed and 181 wounded in clashes
between Khalifa Haftar’s LNA and militias countering its advance on the capital.
The UN agency warned that the renewed fighting could deplete medical supplies.
Separately, night flights will resume at the capital’s Mitiga airport following
a brief closure prompted Monday by LNA air strikes, said the national carrier,
Libyan Airlines. LNA spokesman Ahmed al-Mismari said the strike targeted a
MiG-23 military plane and a helicopter. A security source at the airport said
the strike hit a runway without causing casualties. A spokesman for national
carrier said that the first flights from the facility will fly in passengers who
were unable to travel due to Monday’s closure. UN chief Antonio Guterres on
Monday appealed for an immediate halt to fighting in Libya, after the air strike
on Tripoli's only functioning airport. "I make a very strong appeal to Libyan
leaders … to stop all military activities... and to return to the negotiation
table", the EU's foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said after talks with
EU foreign ministers. Later Tuesday, Mismari accused the Tripoli-based
Government of National Accord of Fayez al-Sarraj of allying itself with
terrorist groups. “Sarraj disqualified himself from the political scene by
supporting extremist groups,” he added.
UN Envoy in Sanaa to Persuade Houthis to Accept Hodeidah
Deal
Aden - Ali Rabih/Asharq Al Awsat/April 09/19/United Nations envoy to Yemen
Martin Griffiths arrived in the Yemeni capital Sanaa on Monday on a mission to
persuade the Iran-backed Houthi militias to accept the truce agreement on
Hodeidah that includes the deployment of forces in its three main ports. The
deal was reached in Sweden in December 2018 and it has yet to be completely
implemented, generating pessimism among the legitimate government. Government
member of the Regional Redeployment Committee (RCC) Saghir bin Aziz said: “It is
known that the Houthis have always withdrawn from a region they occupied with
force. Have you ever heard of them quitting an area in peace?” He said that
Griffiths would not have traveled to Sanaa without having had received a pledge
by the Houthis to implement the first phase of the redeployment. “Even if they
do make vows, they will not respect them,” he tweeted. Griffiths had arrived in
Sanaa without making a statement, local sources told Asharq Al-Awsat. He was
received at the airport by Houthi officials from their illegitimate foreign
ministry. Informed sources said the envoy will meet with a number of Houthi
leaders, including their top chief. He is accompanied on his visit by RCC head
Michael Lollesgaard. Prior to departing for Sanaa, Griffiths had held talks with
a Houthi delegation in the Omani capital, Muscat. He then headed for the Saudi
capital, Riyadh, to relay the Houthi stances to legitimate government officials,
including Foreign Minister Khaled al-Yemany. Following the Houthis’ failure to
respect the Sweden deal, Lollesgaard made amendments to the proposed withdrawal
from Hodeidah. The deal would call for the militias to quit the ports of
Hodeidah, al-Salif and Ras Issa and head five kilometers east of the area. Mines
they planted in the area must also be removed. The Houthis have refused to
withdraw from Hodeidah, saying that they are responsible for managing its
security and administrative affairs.
Tripartite Meeting in Amman to Discuss Syria's Rukban Camp
London - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 9 April, 2019/Amman will host next month a
tripartite Russian-Jordanian-US meeting to discuss the Rukban camp for displaced
Syrians, reported Russia Today. Meeting with Jordan’s Foreign Minister Ayman
Safadi in Amman on Sunday, Russian Foreign Sergei Lavrov called for dismantling
of the camp. US officials have been refusing to participate so far in
consultations with Russia on this issue. Safadi said that the displaced refugees
must return to their homes, pointing out that this is a Syrian issue because the
camp is located in Syria and its residents are Syrian. He called Sunday for a
meeting between American, Russian and Jordanian officials to solve the "major
humanitarian issue" of Rukban. "There can be no solution in Syria except through
an American-Russian agreement supported by the international community," he
said. Nearly 50,000 Syrians live at the camp near the Al-Tanf base used by the
US-led coalition fighting the ISIS group. Russian and Syrian military and
politician officials had warned that the camp was on the verge of a humanitarian
crisis. Conditions inside the settlement are dire, with many surviving on just
one simple meal a day, often bread and olive oil or yogurt, according to one
resident.
Airstrike Kills Seven ISIS Terrorists South of Kirkuk, Iraq
Baghdad – Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 9 April, 2019/Iraqi police announced on
Monday that seven ISIS terrorists were killed in an airstrike staged by the
US-led international coalition south of Kirkuk, some 250 km north of Baghdad.
International coalition drones targeted the Al-Shay region in the south Kirkuk
district of Daquq, an assault that resulted in the death of seven ISIS
terrorists, Iraqi police sources told THE German news agency DPA.Sources
clarified that the ISIS elements killed have carried out numerous terror attacks
against civilians and local security officers. They were tracked back to their
hideout and then attacked by a drone, sources added. On par, Iraqi security men
neutralized another two ISIS terrorists west of Anbar province. “A unit from the
7th Anbar Emergency Regiment have killed two suicide attackers before they
managed arriving to their target,” a security spokesman told the press on
Tuesday. The two assailants, according to the spokesman, were targeting a
security checkpoint situated in the valley of Ghaida near the village of Saqra,
some 30 km west of Anbar’s western city of Haditha.
Tunisia Court Issues 6-10 Years Jail Sentences to Terror
Accomplices
Tunisia – Muni Al Saeedani/Asharq Al Awsat/April 09/19/A trial court in the
Tunisian capital, Tunis, gave jail terms that varied between six and ten years
to 15 suspects accused of providing medical and food aid and shelter to members
of a terror cell accused of attacking and killing security and army servicemen.
Security investigations showed that the 15 who assisted the terrorist cell did
not embrace extremist ideology but sought to obtain money by providing
logistical assistance to terrorists holed up in mountainous areas. Apparently,
the 15 were paid between 200 and 400 Tunisian dinars ($ 66- $ 133) for aid per
operation. At the end of last week, another court of the first instance handed
down prison sentences to members of a terror cell known as Al-Kaaf, it is
believed to be behind the 2014 attack against a military bus in the Nabar area
of the Al-Kaaf province in northwestern Tunisia. Members of the cell received
varying sentences. Yassin al-Khazri was sentenced to 30 years in prison, with
five years of post-term parole, while Faisal al-Jabali was given a 20-year
sentence and will remain under parole for 5 years as well after serving his
time. Other jail sentences ranged from 2 to 10 years. The ruling on another case
for another three terror suspects was adjourned based on the shortage of valid
evidence.
Sudanese Protesters Maintain Sit-in outside Army HQ
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 9 April, 2019Chanting "freedom, freedom," crowds of men
and women spent the night camped outside sprawling the Khartoum complex that
also houses the president's residence. It is the largest rally since protests
erupted following a three-fold increase in bread prices in December, before
mushrooming into nationwide demonstrations demanding that Bashir and his
government step down. Early on Tuesday, members of the National Intelligence and
Security Service and riot police fired tear gas at the protesters in an abortive
bid to disperse their sit-in, protest movement organizers said. "There was heavy
firing of tear gas after which army soldiers opened the gates of the compound
for protesters to enter," a witness told AFP. "A few minutes later a group of
soldiers fired gunshots in the air to push back the security forces who were
firing tear gas."A second witness too said soldiers had intervened against the
security force agents. Since the protests erupted in December, the armed forces
have remained on the sidelines even as security agents and riot police have
cracked down. Demonstrators have called on the army to protect them from the
deadly crackdown, during their four days camped outside its headquarters.An AFP
correspondent, some five kilometers (three miles) away, heard shooting for about
four minutes. Later a group of soldiers returned to the complex with a body in
their pick-up truck, witnesses said. "What is the price of martyrs?" shouted the
demonstrators as the vehicle entered. It was not immediately clear whose body it
was. Defense Minister General Awad Ibnouf vowed that the army would prevent any
slide into chaos. "Sudan's armed forces understand the reasons for the
demonstrations and is not against the demands and aspirations of the citizens,
but it will not allow the country to fall into chaos," Ibnouf said on Monday,
according to the official SUNA news agency. In a separate statement, army chief
of staff Kamal Abdelmarouf said the military was "discharging its responsibility
in securing and protecting citizens."
Officials say 38 people have died in protest-related violence since December.
Interior Minister Bushara Juma said seven protesters died and 15 were wounded on
Saturday when forces tried to disperse them.
He said 42 security personnel were injured and 2,496 arrests made.
The umbrella group spearheading the protests appealed to the army on Monday for
talks on forming a transitional government.
"We call on the Sudanese armed forces to talk directly with the Alliance for
Freedom and Change for facilitating the peaceful process of forming a
transitional government," said Omar el-Digeir, a senior member of the group.
Digeir said the protest organizers had formed a council to open talks aimed at
agreeing a "transitional government that represents the wish of the revolution".
Reading from a statement, he also called on the armed forces "to withdraw their
support for a regime that has lost its legitimacy" and to support the "people's
alternative for a transition to a civilian democratic government".
The rally outside the army headquarters has been the largest since protests
began on December 19 in the central town of Atbara, quickly spreading to the
capital and nationwide. The European Union said an "unprecedented" number of
people had come out calling for change since Saturday. "The people of Sudan have
shown remarkable resilience in the face of extraordinary obstacles over many
years," the EU's External Action Service said. "Their trust must be won through
concrete action by the government."
The protesters accuse Bashir's administration of economic mismanagement that has
led to soaring food prices and chronic shortages of fuel and foreign currency.
After a meeting chaired by Bashir on Sunday, Sudan's security council said the
demands of the protesters "have to be heard". Bashir took power in a coup in
1989. He has remained defiant, introducing tough measures that have seen
protesters, opposition leaders, activists and journalists arrested.
Trump Praises 'Great Job' by Egypt's Controversial Sisi
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 09/19/U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday
praised the "great job" he said is being done by Egyptian President Abdel Fattah
al-Sisi, despite widespread criticism over Sisi's human rights record. "I think
he is doing a great job," Trump said as he sat down for talks with Sisi in the
White House. "We have never had a better relationship between Egypt and United
States than we do right now." Egypt is one of the biggest U.S. strategic
partners -- an Arab country that made peace with top U.S. ally Israel 40 years
ago and a major recipient of U.S. aid.
However, Sisi faces accusations of overseeing the repression of political
opponents, women and religious minorities in Egypt. Later this month, Egyptians
are expected to take part in a referendum that could see Sisi extend his rule
beyond the end of his second term in 2022. Constitutional amendments would also
increase the military's political role and bring the judiciary under Sisi's
control. Ahead of Sisi's meeting with Trump, Human Rights Watch urged the U.S.
Congress to pressure Sisi, saying the referendum could "institutionalize
authoritarianism."
Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on April 09-10/19
A New Wave of Arab Revolutions
Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Asharq Al Awsat/April 09/19
If we assume that what is happening simultaneously in Libya, Algeria and Sudan
represents a series of popular uprisings and a collective desire for political
change, then we are witnessing the second chapter of the Arab revolutions that
erupted in 2011.
The difference, however, between the two chapters is the tepid manner in which
Arabs seem to be receiving the second one — with much skepticism and little
enthusiasm. How can we identify people’s feelings amid the absence of surveys at
a time when the streets of Algiers and Khartoum are packed with hundreds of
thousands of protesters?
Indeed, the demand for change aside, there are significant differences between
the revolutions of early 2011 and what we see and hear today. There is
skepticism about the motives of the new uprisings, being openly expressed by
intellectuals. Moreover, there is concern about change despite the popular anger
toward the regimes targeted by the protests.
Who can guarantee that these countries will not end up like Syria, where the
regime stayed and the country was devastated; or like Yemen, where the
revolution was hijacked; or even like the countries that achieved change and
established stability — Tunisia and Egypt — but only after having gone through
phases of difficult transitional disorder? Perhaps change could have been
achieved without having to go through such a difficult labor.
No doubt enthusiasm has faltered regionally because the results of the so-called
Arab Spring have been a terrible nightmare. Even in the positive uprising in
Sudan, which is growing with time and reflects a long state of unrest,
demonstrators have not demanded anything except to change the regime that is
stifling the Sudanese people, but there is no sign yet of a better replacement.
Leading opposition figure Sadiq Al-Mahdi reflects the current disfavored rule
and an old religious and family image with whic
h the Sudanese people are now fed up.
In Libya, change has come from above — from the army, which has decided to
refuse to share power with the militias, taking the risk of confronting local,
regional and international forces. It has been an armed uprising, not a peaceful
one, which has won great support and may, according to opponents, establish a
dictatorial regime.
However, eliminating the legacy of the 2011 revolution is a popular demand
because it has torn Libya apart and put people’s lives in danger every day.
Unlike in Sudan, where people have risen up against the longstanding status quo,
in Libya there is a revolution against the revolution.
As for Yemen, there is a war on the coup led by the Houthi militias. The war
aims to re-establish the legitimacy of the 2011 revolution and get rid of those
who hijacked it, including the Houthis and the insurgents supporting the former
regime.
The situation in Algeria looks like a proactive process for a larger popular
revolution. The streets and squares have welcomed demonstrators under the army’s
protection. This is almost a repetition of the scenario that took place during
the 2011 revolution in Cairo, as army forces and tanks filled the Tahrir Square
and the streets surrounding it to help protect the demonstrators after the
security forces vanished from the streets.
In fact, the military establishment in Algeria has led the ranks of protesters,
announced its demand for change, compelled President Abdelaziz Bouteflika to
step down and pull out of the presidential election, and then got rid of most
pro-regime leaders, either by dismissal or arrest. The popular-military
revolution continues to work on new arrangements for change.
Libya, Algeria, and Sudan represent a new wave of change, but it does not have
the same spirit and climate as the Arab Spring. Even the international powers
that had raced to welcome the earlier revolutions are now silent via-a-vis this
wave, except for a few warnings and calls for peace.
Haftar Can Unite Libya, End Chaos
Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Asharq Al Awsat/April 09/19
It is not surprising that Libyans look forward to the end of the eight-year
nightmare of fighting and chaos and wish for a united country with one central
government and one army. This dream seems closer to reality today, for the first
time, with the rapid advancement of the Libyan National Army (LNA), which has
arrived in Tripoli, the capital and militia stronghold, and liberated a number
of its districts.
It is not only Libyans who want the end of the nightmare of war, the elimination
of militias, and the establishment of one central authority. This is the desire
of the world, and specifically most of the regional and international powers.
Although all governments have called for a peaceful solution and a cessation of
military operations, most of them do not mind a decisive military solution if
there is no alternative, albeit under the leadership of army chief Khalifa
Haftar. The language of the political statements issued by Paris, Washington,
Moscow, and Cairo did not resort to the threat of sanctions, but instead adopted
a language calling for a political solution, which is known to be unattainable
under the previous balance of power, before the arrival of the vanguard of the
LNA in Tripoli. The promised negotiations would have failed as long as the
militias insisted on keeping their weapons, oil, and spheres of influence.
Ghassan Salame, the UN envoy to Libya, who had set the table for dialogue, said
he would not back down despite the new developments and the solution would be
negotiated at a conference next week.
“Having spent a year getting to this stage, I will not cancel it,” he said. In
reality, this point seems to be better for negotiations, even if the LNA does
not take all of Tripoli. The balance of power has changed in favor of the
military leadership against the armed militias, whose neighborhoods are now
within range of the army’s artillery fire.
In recent days, the militias have been keen to use the term “legitimacy” in
their political propaganda, and claim that they are allies of the
“internationally recognized Government of National Accord led by Fayez Al-Sarraj.”
They have borrowed legitimacy from the Government of National Accord on the
pretext that they support it. Legitimacy is a common word here. The army itself,
led by Haftar, is a legitimate institution and enjoys the full support of the
Libyan parliament, which is also a legitimate institution.
Most importantly, what about the Libyan people, who have been living in a
miserable situation since the 2011 revolution? There is no doubt that they would
welcome any central authority that would unite the country, reunite the
shattered state, establish security and stability, eliminate the militias, and
clear this long darkness.
In light of the eight-year chaos, nothing can unite Libya better than the LNA.
Most of the militias are armed to the teeth, and some Al-Qaeda-affiliated
groups, which are supported by governments like Qatar and Turkey, are even more
dangerous. These same governments supported similar groups in the Syrian civil
war. When the Qataris said that Saudi Arabia is supporting the LNA’s campaign to
liberate Tripoli, that claim did not go beyond the bickering. Qatar has been
publicly supporting Libyan extremist groups since the beginning of the war. As
any action that ends the divisions and chaos must be welcome, I wish the
accusations on Saudi Arabia supporting Haftar were true, but they are not. Saudi
Arabia is moving away from regional events except in the Yemen war, where it is
leading the Arab coalition. Most neighboring countries would be happy if the
chaos and armed groups threatening Tunisia, Algeria, Chad, and Egypt were
eliminated. Supporting the military move in Libya is not in favor of Haftar, nor
LNA spokesman Ahmed Al-Mesmari, but rather in the hope of uniting Libyan and
bringing salvation to the era of chaos.
Just War vs Just Plain-Old Jihad
ريموند إبراهيم: الحرب المحقة مقابل الجهاد القديم العادي
Raymond Ibrahim/April 09/19
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/73680/raymond-ibrahim-just-war-vs-just-plain-old-jihad/
Wherever one looks, the historic crusades against Islam are demonized and
distorted in ways designed to exonerate jihadi terror. “Unless we get on our
high horse,” Barak Obama once chided Americans who were overly critical of
Islamic terror, “and think this [beheadings, sex-slavery, crucifixion, roasting
humans] is unique to some other place, remember that during the Crusades and the
Inquisition, people committed terrible deeds in the name of Christ.”
Others, primarily academics and self-professed “experts,” insist that the
crusades are one of the main reasons modern day Muslims are still angry.
According to Georgetown University’s John Esposito, “Five centuries of peaceful
coexistence [between Islam and Christendom] elapsed before political events and
an imperial-papal power play led to [a] centuries-long series of so-called holy
wars that pitted Christendom against Islam and left an enduring legacy of
misunderstanding and distrust.”[1]
Nor is this characterization limited to abstract theorizing; it continues to
have a profound impact on the psyche of Westerners everywhere. Thus in 1999 and
to mark the nine hundredth anniversary of the crusader conquest of Jerusalem,
hundreds of devout Protestants participated in a so-called “reconciliation walk”
that began in Germany and ended in Jerusalem. Along the way they wore T-shirts
bearing the message “I apologize” in Arabic. Their official statement follows:
Nine hundred years ago, our forefathers carried the name of Jesus Christ in
battle across the Middle East. Fueled by fear, greed and hatred… the Crusaders
lifted the banner of the Cross above your people… On the anniversary of the
first Crusade, we … wish to retrace the footsteps of the Crusaders in apology
for their deeds … We deeply regret the atrocities committed in the name of
Christ by our predecessors. We renounce greed, hatred and fear, and condemn all
violence done in the name of Jesus Christ.[2]
The great irony concerning the mainstream condemnation of the historic crusades
is that a closer examination of them—what they meant, what inspired them, how
they were justified, who could participate—in comparison to the requisites of
jihad, not only exonerates the crusades but exonerates the West of any
wrongdoing against Islam, past or present. As outrageous as this may sound,
consider some facts:
Just War Theory
First, the crusades were a product of Just War theory, the fundamental criterion
of which is that wars “must be defensive or for the recovery of rightful
possession,” to quote Crusades historian Christopher Tyerman.[3] “Christian
warriors,” elaborates Reconquista historian Joseph O’Callaghan, “were exhorted
to regain land, once theirs, but now wrongfully occupied by Muslim intruders who
were charged with oppressing Christianity and despoiling churches.” As such,
“the Christians, certain that their cause was just and that God was on their
side, faced the enemy.”[4]
So sure of the justness of their cause, premodern Europeans never failed to
explain it to their Muslim opponents. Before beginning the siege of Lisbon,
Archbishop Joao of Braga invited the Muslims to surrender, since they had
“unjustly held our cities and lands already for 358 years,” and “to return to
the homeland of the Moors whence you came, leaving to us what is ours.”[5] Fifty
years earlier and thousands of miles to the east, Peter the Hermit relied on the
same logic to explain to a Muslim commander why it was just for the
crusaders—and not for the Muslims—to claim the ancient Christian city of Antioch
by force: because it had been Christian for six centuries before Islam invaded.
Indeed, because North Africa and the Middle East were part of Christendom
centuries before Islam conquered them, not a few Medieval European thinkers
harbored hopes of liberating even these. “The oriental church shone in
antiquity, explained Jacques [de Vitry, a Frankish theologian, b. 1160/70],
spreading its rays to the West, but ‘from the time of the perfidious Muhammad
until our own time’ has been in decline” and thus needed liberation.[6] The
“idea of proceeding through Spain to Africa and thence to the Holy Land was put
forward in the fourteenth century in several treatises on the recovery of the
Holy Land.”[7]
As late as the twentieth century, the prolific Anglo-French historian Hilaire
Belloc lamented that if the crusades had not failed, “probably we Europeans
would have recovered North Africa and Egypt—we should certainly have saved
Constantinople—and Mohammedanism would have only survived as an Oriental
religion thrust beyond the ancient boundaries of the Roman Empire.”[8] Even the
entire colonial era was a byproduct of Just War. As Bernard Lewis explains:
[T]he whole complex process of European expansion and empire in the last five
centuries has its roots in the clash of Islam and Christendom. It began with the
long and bitter struggle of the conquered peoples of Europe, in east and west,
to restore their homelands to Christendom and expel the Muslim peoples who had
invaded and subjugated them. It was hardly to be expected that the triumphant
Spaniards and Portuguese would stop at the Straits of Gibraltar, or that the
Russians would allow the Tatars to retire in peace and regroup in their bases on
the upper and lower Volga—the more so since a new and deadly Muslim attack on
Christendom was under way, with the Turkish advance from the Bosporus to the
Danube and beyond threatening the heart of Europe. The victorious liberators,
having reconquered their own territories, pursued their former masters whence
they had come.[9]
Just Plain-Old Jihad
Now compare Just War logic—defending one’s lands and its people and defanging
one’s enemy—with the jihad. The “Western distinction between just and unjust
wars,” writes international relations professor Bassam Tibi, “is unknown in
Islam. Any war against unbelievers, whatever its immediate ground, is morally
justified. Only in this sense can one distinguish just and unjust wars in
Islamic tradition. When Muslims wage war for the dissemination of Islam, it is a
just war…. When non-Muslims attack Muslims [including in self-defense], it is an
unjust war. The usual Western interpretation of jihad as a ‘just war’ in the
Western sense is, therefore, a misreading of this Islamic concept.”[10]
To be sure, a great many Western “experts” on Islam insist that jihad is the
Islamic counterpart of Just War, that it is all always defensive and in no way,
shape, or form supports offensive warfare. (Most recently, Juan Cole makes this
false assertion in his book, Muhammad: Prophet of Peace Amid the Clash of
Empires.)
Or consider the words of Islam scholar Clement Huart (b.1854), writing back at
the height of Western power and Muslim weakness: “The [Western] international
conventions that have limited the exercise of the right to wage war [to purposes
of defense] have no influence over the Muslim soul, to which passivism is and
always will be for foreign. The state of peace has been imposed on it by force;
the Muslim soul tolerates it but does not recognize it, and cannot recognize it
as long as there are unbelievers on earth to convert.”[11]
Sin, Sincerity, and Sex
What constitutes casus bellum is only the first of many differences between
crusade and jihad. Because the former developed within a Judeo-Christian
paradigm, it was surrounded by moral constraints that no other
civilization—especially Islam—imposed on itself.
From the very start, at Clermont in 1095, Pope Urban never offered forgiveness
of sins (but rather remission of the penances for sins to which crusaders had
already confessed).[12] Those who took the cross were required to be sincerely
penitent.
This is a far cry from what Muslims were (and are) taught about fighting and
dying in jihad: every sin they ever committed is instantly forgiven, and the
highest level of paradise is theirs. “Lining up for battle in the path of
Allah,” Muhammad had decreed in a canonical hadith, “is worthier than 60 years
of worship.” Muhammad also said, “I cannot find anything” as meritorious as
jihad, which he further likened to “praying ceaselessly and fasting
continuously.”[13] As for the “martyr”—the shahid—he “is special to Allah,”
announced the prophet. “He is forgiven from the first drop of blood [he sheds].
He sees his throne in paradise. . . . Fixed atop his head will be a crown of
honor, a ruby that is greater than the world and all it contains. And he will
copulate with seventy-two Houris.” (The houris are supernatural, celestial
women—“wide-eyed” and “big-bosomed,” says the Koran—created by Allah for the
express purpose of gratifying his favorites in perpetuity.)
Crusader motives also had to be sincere: “Whoever shall set forth to liberate
the church of God at Jerusalem for the sake of devotion alone and not to obtain
honor or money will be able to substitute that journey for all penance,” Urban
had said. Similarly, Spanish Prince Juan Manuel (d.1348) explained that “all
those who go to war against the Moors in true repentance and with a right
intention … and die are without any doubt holy and rightful martyrs, and they
have no other punishment than the death they suffer.”[14]
In this, Christian war significantly departed from Islamic jihad. Allah and his
prophet never asked for or required sincere hearts from those flocking to the
jihad; as long as they proclaimed the shahada—thereby pledging allegiance to
Islam—and nominally fought for and obeyed the caliph or sultan, men could
invade, plunder, rape and enslave infidels to their hearts content.
The cold, businesslike language of the Koran makes this clear. Whoever wages
jihad makes a “fine loan to Allah,” which the latter guarantees to pay back
“many times over” in booty and bliss either in the here or hereafter (e.g.,
Koran 2:245, 4:95, 9:111). “I guarantee him [the jihadi] either admission to
Paradise,” said Muhammad, “or return to whence he set out with a reward or
booty.
In short, fighting in Islam’s service—with the risk of dying—is all the proof of
piety needed. Indeed, sometimes fighting has precedence over piety: many
dispensations, including not upholding prayers and fasting, are granted those
who participate in jihad. Ottoman sultans were actually forbidden from going on
pilgrimage to Mecca—an otherwise individual obligation for Muslims, especially
those who can afford it, such as the sultan—simply because doing so could
jeopardize the prosecution of the jihad.
Little wonder that, whereas there was never a shortage of Muslims willing to
participate in a jihad, “85-90 percent of the Frankish knights did not respond
to the pope’s call to the Crusade,” explains Tony Stark, and “those [10-15
percent] who went were motivated primarily by pious idealism.”[15]
Little wonder that there are still countless jihadis today but no crusaders.
The crusade’s stringent requirements compared to the jihad’s lax requirements
are especially evident in the context of sex. Crusaders were forbidden from
owning or raping slaves. During the more than eight month long siege of Antioch,
desperate crusaders—whose many deprivations included female
companionship—resorted to roaming bands of local prostitutes. These were
eventually driven out, “lest they [the crusaders], stained by the defilement of
dissipation, displease the Lord.”[16] Contrast this with the Muslim army that
came to face them: it contained numerous beautiful women “brought here not to
fight, but rather reproduce,” observed one eyewitness.[17]
Inevitable Atrocities vs. Intentional Atrocities
Because Just War demanded the restoration of a particularly important piece of
Christian territory, in this case, Jerusalem, the crusaders marched for years
over thousands of miles deep into hostile territory, suffering hunger, thirst,
disease, and a host of other plagues to reach their goal.
This comes out clearly in the writings of participants and contemporaries of the
First Crusade. “So, for the love of God,” explained Fulcher of Chartres, “we
suffered … hunger, cold, and excessive rains. Some wanting food ate even horses,
asses, and camels. Also, we were very often racked by excessive cold and
frequent rainstorms… I saw many, without tents, die from the coldness of the
rainstorms…. Often some were killed by Saracens lying in ambush around the
narrow passages, or were abducted by them when they were seeking victuals… [But]
it is evident that no one can achieve anything great without tremendous effort.
[Thus] it was a great event when we came to Jerusalem.” Pregnant women, adds
Albert of Aix (b. 1060) “their throats dried up, their wombs withered, all the
veins of the body drained by the indescribable heat of the sun and that parched
region, gave birth and abandoned their own [probably stillborn] young in the
middle of the highway in the view of everyone.”
Unsurprisingly, when they finally breached the walls of those who had initiated
the need for them to march (and suffer) in the first place—Muslims—the by then
emaciated and half-maddened Europeans often responded with unbridled fury. “As
they recalled the sufferings they had endured during the siege” of Antioch,
wrote a contemporary, “they thought that the blows that they were giving could
not match the starvations, more bitter than death, that they had endured.”[18]
Likewise, during the siege of Barra, the crusaders were so “harassed by the
madness of excessive hunger”[19] that they devoured the flesh of already dead
Muslims; when they finally took the city, “[t]heir [deranged] appearance …
terrified the Muslims,” who were ruthlessly massacred.[20]
Conversely, Muslims never had a specific goal that required them to march
thousands of miles deep into hostile territory; rather the jihad took place
wherever Muslim territories conveniently abutted against infidels (the ribats or
border fortresses). Thus jihadis rarely suffered hardships or deprivations and
were always a short march away from Muslim territories, whence supplies,
recruits, and refreshments of all sorts were easily attainable. Even so,
according to the popular view (voiced by academics, politicians, and especially
media) the atrocities committed during the crusader sack of Jerusalem—not the
countless Muslim atrocities committed in the centuries before and after it that
were neither justified nor exacerbated by undue hardships but rather fueled by
sadistic hate for “infidels”—is the worst atrocity ever committed in the many
centuries of war between Christians and Muslims, and the only one that should be
talked about.
Religious Freedom vs Religious Coercion
Finally, because Just War is exclusively concerned with matters of justice
(recovering land or repulsing enemies) and, unlike the jihad, is not
ideologically driven, so too did it not institutionalize any mechanisms to
pressure Muslims into converting to Christianity. (With notable exceptions as
when the Spanish crown found conversion to Christianity the only realistic way
for half a million Muslims to abandon their ongoing hostilities and subversions;
even this failed as the overwhelming majority of Muslims feigned conversion
while internalizing the antagonism in keeping with the doctrine of taqiyya, as
documented in Sword and Scimitar, pp. 199-203).
As Constantine the Great had explained three centuries before the coming of
Islam, “Let those [pagans] who delight in error alike with those who believe
[Christians] partake of the advantages of peace and quiet…. Let no one disturb
another, let each man hold fast to that which his soul wishes, let him make full
use of this… What each man has adopted as his persuasion, let him do no harm
with this to another.”[21]
A millennium after Constantine, Spanish prince Juan Manuel (d.1348) agreed:
“There is war between Christians and Moors and there will be until the
Christians have recovered the lands that the Moors have taken from them by
force. There would not be war between them on account of religion or sect,
because Jesus Christ never ordered that anyone should be killed or forced to
accept his religion.”[22]
“In other words,” concludes crusades professor Riley-Smith, “the Crusades, like
all Christian wars, had to be reactive; they could never, for example, be wars
of conversion.”[23] Accordingly, whether during the crusades or the colonial
era, European (re)conquerors did not behave like their Muslim counterparts and
institutionalize discriminatory or humiliating measures designed to pressure the
conquered to convert. A ninth century letter from Constantinople to the
caliphate argues that, “since … the Arab prisoners could pray in a mosque in
Constantinople without anyone obliging them to embrace Christianity, the Caliph
should also cease to persecute Christians.”[24]
That Just War is morally superior to just jihad can even be seen in the
aftermath of both. Whereas successful jihads almost always culminated in
slavery, depopulation, and devastation, Muslims “live in great comfort under the
Franks,” wrote Ibn Jubayr around 1180, while passing through the crusader
kingdoms on pilgrimage to Mecca. Muslims “are masters of their dwellings,” he
added, “and govern themselves as they wish. This is the case in all the
territory occupied by the Franks.”
Distinctions Even a Child Understands
Be that as it may; whatever else can be taken from this excursus on the
differences between crusade and jihad, between just and unjust wars, the most
fundamental point cannot be overstated: because Islam initiated hostilities
against the premodern Christian world—invading and conquering the majority of
its historic territory without provocation and in the name of jihad, not
justice—everything the West did in response was justified. If this assertion
strikes some as outrageous, so too does it accord with the most universally held
notions of justice, apparent from birth. For when two school boys are chastised
for fighting and one indignantly cries out “but he started it!”—what else does
he do but appeal to the innate human conviction that whoever starts, not
responds to, violence is the guilty party?
(Note: See Ibrahim’s new book Sword and Scimitar: Fourteen Centuries of War
between Islam and the West for many examples of just and unjust wars.)
[1] Andrea, 1.
[2] Stark 2009, 5.
[3] Tyerman, 34.
[4] O’Callaghan 2004, 177.
[5] Ibid., 43.
[6] Tolan, 199.
[7] O’Callaghan 2004, 39.
[8] Belloc, 62.
[9] Lewis 1994, 17-18.
[10] Nardin, 128-145.
[11] Bostom, 291.
[12] Rubenstein, 10.
[13] Lindsay 2015, 70, 145.
[14] O’Callaghan 2004, 201.
[15] Stark 2009, 114.
[16] Peters, 54.
[17] Guibert, 93.
[18] Guibert, 84.
[19] Peters, 69.
[20] Gabrieli 1993, 9.
[21] Stark 2012, 179.
[22] O’Callaghan 2004, 211.
[23] Riley-Smith 2008, 15.
[24] Bonner 2004, 230.
https://www.raymondibrahim.com/2019/04/09/just-war-vs-just-plain-old-jihad/
Qatar: 'A Wolf in Sheep's Clothing'/Bankrolling Islamism in Europe
جوليو ميوتي/معهد جيتسون/قطر هي ذئب في ملابس الأغنام وهي التي تمويل الإسلاميين في
أوروبا
Giulio Meotti/Gatestone Institute/April 09/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/73687/%D8%AC%D9%88%D9%84%D9%8A%D9%88-%D9%85%D9%8A%D9%88%D8%AA%D9%8A-%D9%85%D8%B9%D9%87%D8%AF-%D8%AC%D9%8A%D8%AA%D8%B3%D9%88%D9%86-%D9%82%D8%B7%D8%B1-%D9%87%D9%8A-%D8%B0%D8%A6%D8%A8-%D9%81%D9%8A-%D9%85%D9%84/
"We have been reporting Doha's ideological and religious penetration for years.
In the form of investments and financial operations, Qatar extends its
proselytizing network every day, with serious damage to European societies..." —
Souad Sbai, the Moroccan-born president of Italy's Averroes Studies Center.
Qatar has been funding mega-mosques across Europe. Qatar's goal is apparently to
Islamicize the European diaspora.
"[Qatar's] English-language stations produce slick propaganda against Qatar's
enemies, dressed up in Western liberal rhetoric. Al Jazeera's latest venture –
its social media channel, AJ+ – is aimed at young, progressive Americans. Its
documentaries on the evils of Israel, Saudi Arabia, and the Trump administration
are sandwiched between glowing coverage of transgender rights campaigns and
emotional appeals for the plight of asylum seekers on America's southern border
– seemingly incongruous topics for a broadcaster controlled by a Wahhabi
regime... Qatar is now the largest foreign donor to American universities." —
Daniel Pipes, president of the Middle East Forum.
According to Souad Sbai (left), the Moroccan-born president of Italy's Averroes
Studies Center, "Qatar extends its proselytizing network every day, with serious
damage to European societies, including Italy". Daniel Pipes (right) writes that
Qatar "works to influence Western policymakers and the public directly... Its
English-language stations produce slick propaganda against Qatar's enemies,
dressed up in Western liberal rhetoric... Qatar is now the largest foreign donor
to American universities."
In October, Italian Interior Minister Matteo Salvini visited Qatar, the "energy
giant", where he praised the emirate for "not sponsoring extremism anymore".
Unfortunately, the opposite is true. Qatar, "the other Wahhabi state",
apparently is interested not only in its economic relationship with Europe, but
also in exporting its brand of political Islam.
According to a new book, Qatar Papers: How the Emirate Finances Islam in France
and Europe, by two French journalists, Christian Chesnot and Georges Malbrunot,
Qatar has distributed 22 million euros to Islamic projects in Italy alone. This
funding has had virtually a single beneficiary: the Union of Islamic Communities
and Organizations in Italy (UCOII), accused of closeness to Qatar's pet
organization, the Muslim Brotherhood, the mouthpiece of which is Qatar's media
outlet, Al Jazeera, located in the capital city of Doha.
"Qatar is today a leading funder of Islam in Europe," Malbrunot said in an
interview. His book, an important exposé of the Islamist penetration into
Europe, notes that Qatar has funded 140 mosques and Islamic centers in Europe to
the tune of €71 million. The country with the most of the projects (50) was
Italy, where Rome's Al Houda Centre received €4 million.
A grandson of Muslim Brotherhood founder Hasan al-Banna, Tariq Ramadan, whom
several women have accused of rape and sexual abuse, has received €35,000 per
month from the Qatar for being a "consultant". The Muslim Cultural Complex of
Lausanne, Switzerland, received $1.6 million. Qatar, in 2015, donated a new £11
million building at Oxford's St Antony's College, where Ramadan is a professor.
Qatar has also been extremely active in France. The emirate, according to the
book, financed the Islamic Center of Villeneuve-d'Ascq and the Lycée-Collège
Averroès, France's first state-funded Muslim faith school. Lycée-Collège
Averroès became the center of a scandal when one of its teachers resigned after
writing that the school was "a hotbed of anti-Semitism and 'promoting Islamism'
to pupils".
Qatar has also financed other mosques in France. The Great Mosque of Poitiers,
for instance, sits in the vicinity of the site of the Battle of Tours (also
known as the Battle of Poitiers), where Charles Martel, ruler of the Franks,
stopped the advancing Muslim army of Abdul al-Rahman in the year 732. The
Assalam mosque in Nantes and the Grand Mosque of Paris are other examples.
In their previous book, "Nos très chers émirs" ("Our Very Dear Emirs"), Chesnot
and Malbrunot exposed the close relationship that exists between the French
political establishment and the Qatari monarchy. Among Qatar's beneficiaries
were the European Institute of Human Sciences -- an Islamic facility close to
the French branch of the Muslim Brotherhood -- that offers courses in Islamic
theology.
Among the Islamists described in the book is the Doha-based cleric, Yusuf al
Qaradawi, who condoned suicide bombings during the Second Intifada; endorsed a
fatwa for killing Americans in Iraq and encouraged Muslims to travel abroad to
fight in civil wars in Syria and Libya. Qaradawi also called for the "conquest
of Rome" and announced on Egyptian television in 2013 that without death as a
punishment for leaving the religion (apostasy), "Islam wouldn't exist today".
"We have been reporting Doha's ideological and religious penetration for years",
said Souad Sbai, the Moroccan-born president of Italy's Averroes Studies Center.
"In the form of investments and financial operations, Qatar extends its
proselytizing network every day, with serious damage to European societies,
including Italy". The newspaper L'Opinione delle Libertà quotes Sbai calling
Qatar "a wolf in sheep's clothing".
Elzir Izzedin, the imam of Florence and president of UCOII, admitted three years
ago: "25 million euros arrived from Qatar".
Qatar was also behind the founding of an Islamic university for 5,000 students
in the small southern Italian town of Lecce.
Also two years ago, with an investment of over 2.3 million euros, Qatar was
carrying out important Islamic projects in Italy's southern island, Sicily,
where Qatar apparently supports about a quarter of the mosques.
According to the president of the Middle East Forum, Daniel Pipes, "Doha does
not rely only on the Islamist diaspora in the West to advance its agenda; it
also works to influence Western policymakers and the public directly":
"Its English-language stations produce slick propaganda against Qatar's enemies,
dressed up in Western liberal rhetoric. Al Jazeera's latest venture – its social
media channel, AJ+ – is aimed at young, progressive Americans. Its documentaries
on the evils of Israel, Saudi Arabia, and the Trump administration are
sandwiched between glowing coverage of transgender rights campaigns and
emotional appeals for the plight of asylum seekers on America's southern border
– seemingly incongruous topics for a broadcaster controlled by a Wahhabi
regime."
"Doha also seeks to influence Western educational institutions. The
regime-controlled Qatar Foundation hands tens of millions of dollars to schools,
colleges and other educational institutions across Europe and North America.
Indeed, Qatar is now the largest foreign donor to American universities. Its
funds pay for the teaching of Arabic and lessons on Middle Eastern culture and
their ideological bent is at times unashamedly apparent, as in the lesson plan
in American schools titled, 'Express Your Loyalty to Qatar.'"
Italy's largest newspaper, Il Corriere della Sera, described the Qatari activism
in the country: "On May 24th, Sheikh Prince Hamad Bin Nasser Al Thani, a member
of the Qatari royal family, was in Piacenza, where he inaugurated the new
Islamic center alongside the main city authorities; the same day he moved to
Brescia, to cut the ribbon of the enlargement of the local mosque. Two days
later and a smiling prince Al Thani reappeared in Mirandola, in the province of
Modena, for the inauguration of the new Muslim prayer center, damaged by the
2012 earthquake and put up as new, unlike the local parish church. On May 28,
the sheikh was immortalized in Vicenza, again for the opening of an Islamic
center. On June 5, another ribbon-cutting ceremony, this time of a complex for
prayer and a Koranic school in Saronno (Varese), even flanked by the episcopal
vicar".
An analyst at the Spanish Institute of Strategic Studies of the Ministry of
Defense, Colonel Emilio Sánchez de Rojas, charged both Qatar and Saudi Arabia
with "campaigns of influence in the West". Qatar has been funding mega-mosques
across Europe. Qatar's goal is apparently to Islamicize the European diaspora.
As the German MP and Middle East expert, Rolf Mützenich, said in 2016:
"For quite some time we've had indications and evidence that German Salafists
are getting assistance, which is approved by the governments of Saudi Arabia,
Qatar and Kuwait, in the form of money, the sending of imams and the building of
Koran schools and mosques."
The Economist has also focused on Qatar's takeover of Europe's mosques.
In 2014 the US Treasury Department not only singled out Qatar as a source of
funds for al-Qaeda; it seems that Doha has also been, with a few suspensions, a
primary supporter of Hamas, the Palestinian terrorist organization that is
pursuing the destruction of the State of Israel. During the "Arab Spring" in
2011, Qatar, which, through Al Jazeera, has been credited for its role in
"participating in creating the environment for the Arab Spring," supported the
Islamists, presumably to replace secular dictators in Tunisia, Libya and Egypt.
Qatar has also been accused of funding the Islamic State (ISIS). General
Jonathan Shaw, a former Assistant Chief of Defence Staff in Britain, declared
that Qatar and Saudi Arabia are responsible for spread of radical Islam. "This
is a time bomb that, under the guise of education, Wahhabi Salafism is igniting
under the world really. And it is funded by Saudi and Qatari money and that must
stop", said Gen Shaw.
As Qatar's ideological spending spree in the West races ahead, many Europeans,
still seemingly lost behind a willful blindness, pursue their futile accusations
of "hate speech", "racism" and "Islamophobia", while radical Muslims infiltrate
their democracies and continue to encircle them.
*Giulio Meotti, Cultural Editor for Il Foglio, is an Italian journalist and
author.
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14042/qatar-europe-islamism-finance
Palestinian Authority Targets Students
Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone Institute/April 09/19
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14041/palestinians-target-students
The Palestinian students are being targeted because of their political
affiliations and not because of any crime they committed.
While the Palestinian Authority and Hamas are busy beating up each other's
supporters, "pro-Palestinian" activists on US and Canadian university campuses
are busy blaming Israel for Palestinian woes.
For these alleged activists -- who are remarkably passive when it comes to truly
assisting Palestinians -- their protests seem more about hating Israel than
anything else. If they really cared about the Palestinians, they might stop
abusing Israel long enough to notice the abuse that the Palestinian "leaders"
inflict on the people under them.
Last month, the largest university in the West Bank, An-Najah University in
Nablus, issued a directive banning the Islamic Bloc student list from carrying
out any activities on campus, without giving any reason for the ban. In the past
week, Palestinian Authority security forces arrested two An-Najah University
students, apparently as part of an ongoing crackdown to silence and intimidate
political opponents.
"Pro-Palestinian" activists at university campuses in the US and other Western
countries have long been waging various campaigns to denounce Israel and hold it
fully responsible for the continued "suffering" of Palestinians.
These activists, however, seem to care little about violations committed against
the Palestinians by the Palestinian Authority (PA) in the West Bank or Hamas in
the Gaza Strip -- even when fellow students in the West Bank and Gaza are being
targeted.
In recent weeks, the PA has been waging a campaign of arrests and intimidation
against Palestinian students at some of the West Bank universities. The
students, according to the Palestinian Authority, are being targeted because of
their affiliation with opposition groups, including Hamas. The students, in
other words, are being targeted because of their political affiliations and not
because of any crime they committed.
Last month, the largest university in the West Bank, An-Najah University, issued
a directive banning the Islamic Bloc student list from carrying out any
activities on campus. The university administration did not offer any reason for
the ban. The decision was announced shortly after a student list affiliated with
the Palestinian Authority's ruling Fatah faction accused its rivals in the
Islamic Bloc of carrying out "political activities" on campus on behalf of
Hamas. The Fatah-affiliated students later closed the offices belonging to their
rivals on campus.
In response, the Islamic Bloc issued a statement denouncing the university
administration's ban as "unfair and unjustified." The statement said that
Palestinian university students in the West Bank "were continuing to suffer from
harassment, repression, torture and politically motivated arrests."
The university administration defended its decision and said that it also banned
the activities of the Fatah-affiliated list on campus. A spokesman for the
university pointed out that tensions on campus only escalated after Hamas's
recent brutal crackdown on Fatah supporters in the Gaza Strip.
Last month, Hamas security forces used violence to disperse Palestinians
protesting economic hardship and increased taxes imposed on residents of the
Gaza Strip. Fatah says that Hamas security forces broke the arms and legs of
dozens of Fatah protesters, including a senior Fatah official, Atef Abu Seif.
In the past week, the Palestinian Authority security forces arrested two
students from An-Najah University, apparently as part of an ongoing crackdown to
silence and intimidate political opponents.
A video posted on YouTube showed armed Palestinian security officers in
plainclothes beating and arresting student Musa Dweikat at the entrance to An-Najah
University in Nablus. The security officers are seen knocking Dweikat to the
ground and repeatedly kicking him before he is carried to a police van.
The video sparked a wave of protests among Palestinians, including local human
rights activists. The Association of Civil Society Organizations in Nablus
condemned the Palestinian security forces for the force used against Dweikat and
called for holding those responsible to account. The Association also condemned
the "ongoing arrests and violations against the Palestinian Basic Law" against
students because of their political affiliations and opinions. Noting that
politically motivated arrests were also taking place in the Hamas-ruled Gaza
Strip, the organization said that the human rights violations committed by the
Palestinian Authority and Hamas were "harmful to the image and reputation of the
Palestinians."
Dweikat was the second university student to be arrested by the Palestinian
Authority this past week.
The other student, Ibrahim Shalhoub, was arrested by Palestinian security
officers at his home in the village of Deir al-Ghusoun in the northern West
Bank. Shalhoub's family said that the officers conducted a thorough search of
their home and confiscated their son's cellular phone and computer. Shalhoub was
arrested after he threatened to appeal the decision by An-Najah University to
ban the activities of the Islamic Bloc student list.
Another West Bank university, Al-Quds University, announced last week a similar
decision to ban students affiliated with the Islamic Bloc from running in the
student council election.
Earlier this month, Palestinian security officers and Fatah activists tore down
election banners belonging to the Islamic Bloc at Hebron University in the West
Bank. The move came on the eve of elections for the university's student
council. The Palestinian security forces also summoned several students for
interrogation, apparently as part of an attempt to intimidate them and undermine
the chances of the Hamas-affiliated Islamic Bloc from winning the election.
Hamas and other Palestinian groups accused the Palestinian Authority security
forces of acting with a mob mentality against university students in the West
Bank. "Our people and sons in the West Bank are facing a gang in contradiction
of morals, laws and national values," Hamas said in response to the crackdown on
university students. The PLO's Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP)
called on the Palestinian Authority to "stop dealing with a mob mentality toward
with Palestinian students."
It is ironic that Hamas is accusing its rivals in Fatah and the Palestinian
Authority of acting like gangs.
This is the same Hamas that has repeatedly resorted to repressive measures,
including breaking bones and shooting unarmed protesters, to silence its critics
in the Gaza Strip. Hamas and the PA have been at war with each other since 2007,
when Hamas violently seized control of the Gaza Strip. Since then, hundreds of
Palestinians, including political activists, journalists, writers, and
university students, have fallen victim to the power struggle between the two
groups.
The latest crackdown on university students in the West Bank is the latest sign
of the mounting tensions between the two Palestinian parties. While the
Palestinian Authority and Hamas are busy beating up each other's supporters,
"pro-Palestinian" activists on US and Canadian university campuses are busy
blaming Israel for Palestinian woes. For these alleged activists -- who are
remarkably passive when it comes to truly assisting Palestinians -- their
protests seem more about hating Israel than anything else. If they really cared
about the Palestinians, they might stop abusing Israel long enough to notice the
abuse that the Palestinian "leaders" inflict on the people under them.
*Khaled Abu Toameh, an award-winning journalist based in Jerusalem, is a
Shillman Journalism Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
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