LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
April 24/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For today
Indeed, all who want to live a godly life in
Christ Jesus will be persecuted
Second Letter to Timothy 03/10-17: “You have observed my teaching, my conduct,
my aim in life, my faith, my patience, my love, my steadfastness, my
persecutions, and my suffering the things that happened to me in Antioch,
Iconium, and Lystra. What persecutions I endured! Yet the Lord rescued me from
all of them. Indeed, all who want to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be
persecuted. But wicked people and impostors will go from bad to worse, deceiving
others and being deceived. But as for you, continue in what you have learned and
firmly believed, knowing from whom you learned it, and how from childhood you
have known the sacred writings that are able to instruct you for salvation
through faith in Christ Jesus. All scripture is inspired by God and is useful
for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, so
that everyone who belongs to God may be proficient, equipped for every good
work.”.
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese
& Lebanese Related News published on April 23-24/19
Aoun receives joint French US delegation: Countries that feed terrorism do not
believe in democracy
Minister of Finance submits to cabinet secretariat revised version of draft
budget
Lebanon: Hariri Demands Consensus on State Budget
Berri, interlocutors tackle overall situation
Saudi Arabia to Launch Projects to Support Lebanon, Displaced Syrians
Nasrallah: Israeli Home-Front Not Prepared For War
Nasrallah Says No New Israeli War on Lebanon
Salameh: Lebanon Isn’t on Verge of Bankruptcy
Hariri Slams ‘Fabricated’ Claims Published in Hizbullah Daily
Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel Gemayel: We Aspire to Change in Political System's
Structure
Fattouh announces Salameh best Arab Central Bank Governor
Hariri: Banks ready to help government but we should carry out reforms first
Future bloc convenes at Center House to discuss latest developments
Hassan: We will mitigate crisis’ impact on pensions and wages
Jumblatt tackles latest developments with Saudi Ambassador
Defense Minister: Military Institutions Not Responsible for State Deficit
U.S. Puts Up $10 mn Reward for Hizbullah Information
Saudi Royal Advisor Affirms ‘Strong' Lebanon Ties
US Offering $ 10 Million For Info On Hezbollah's Mechanisms
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
April 23-24/19
Iranian Parliament Labels All U.S. Military Forces as Terrorist
IRGC Threatens to Close Hormuz Strait
US Looking To Sign New Agreement With Iran: Brian Hook
Complaint Filed against Netanyahu’s Nomination to Form Govt.
Palestinian To Iranian Media: Israel Is Stronger Future Unpredictabl
Saudi Arabia Welcomes US Decision to Stop Waivers on Iran Oil Imports
France says Iran/Instex mechanism is making positive progress
Bahrain Welcomes US Decision on Iranian Oil Waivers
Saudi, French Land Forces Hold Joint Exercise
Damascus Opens Airspace to Qatar Airways
Assassinations Rock Southern Syria
Russia to Lease Syria’s Tartus Port for 49 Years
Probe shows Sri Lanka attacks ‘retaliation for Christchurch’
UNICEF: At least 45 children killed in Sri Lanka attacks
Sri Lanka detains Syrian for questioning over attacks, say sources'
Sri Lanka arrests 40 suspects after bombings, toll up to 321
ISIS Claims Responsibility for Sri Lanka Easter Sunday Bombings
Gaza Cleric Mahmoud Al-Hasanat Rebukes Arab Leaders Who 'Whine' About Notre-Dame
Cathedral From Which 'A Crusade Against Islam' Was Once Declared
ISIS Supporters Celebrate Easter Sunday Bombings In Sri Lanka
Sri Lankan minister says attacks were ‘retaliation for Christchurch’ massacre
Ukraine Leaps into Unknown after Comic Elected Presiden
Bodies of Three Mountaineers Found in Canada
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on April 23-24/19
Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel Gemayel: We Aspire to Change in Political System's
Structure/Kataeb.org/Wednesday 24th April 2019
US Offering $ 10 Million For Info On Hezbollah's Mechanisms/Jerusalem Post/April
23/19
Iranian Parliament Labels All U.S. Military Forces as Terrorist/The Associated
Press/April 23/19
Palestinian To Iranian Media: Israel Is Stronger Future Unpredictable/Jerusalem
Post/April 23/19
ISIS Supporters Celebrate Easter Sunday Bombings In Sri Lanka/MEMRI/April
23/2019
Sri Lankan minister says attacks were ‘retaliation for Christchurch’
massacre/Reuters/April 23/19
U.S. Withdrawal From Syria Threatens Revival of Kurdish Language, Too/Elizabeth
Tsurkov (Northern Syria) /Haaretz/April 23/20
The Persecution of Palestinians No One Mentions/Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone
Institute/April 23/2019
The Burning of Notre Dame and the Destruction of Christian Europe/Guy Millière/Gatestone
Institute/April 23/2019
Algeria and Sudan can learn from the political transitions of 2011/Oussama
Romdhani/Al Arabiya/April 23/19
Renewing the Iran Sanctions Waivers (Part 1): Nuclear Activities/Patrick
Clawson/The Washington Institute/April 23/2019
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese
Related News published
on April 23-24/19
Aoun receives joint French US delegation: Countries that feed terrorism do not
believe in democracy
Tue 23 Apr 2019/NNA - President of the Republic, General Michel
Aoun, said on Tuesday that the Middle East has witnessed many wars under the
banner of consolidating freedom and establishing democracy. "The fight against
terrorism has begun in 1981 in Afghanistan, yet the region is still suffering;
it knows neither the promised peace nor democracy. There has only been an
expansion of terrorism that has spread throughout the world," Aoun told a
visiting French-US delegation from the French city of Bordeaux and the United
States of America, headed by Father Nabil Mwanes. The delegation is on a
pilgrimage visit to Lebanon marking Easter holiday."The countries that nurture
terrorism do not believe in democracy or human rights. Moreover, the recognition
of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and annexing the Golan to it, in no way
serves the establishment of freedom and democracy, but rather serves the logic
of force," Aoun added. "When a country is declared a national homeland for a
particular religion, it means a return to racist ideologies that reject the
other and do not respect international laws and norms based on respect for the
natural right to difference, freedom of conscience, and expression," the
President maintained. Separately, President Michel Aoun met at Baabda palace
with State Prosecutor Samir Hammoud, with whom he discussed an array of judicial
affairs. On another level, the President signed a decree allowing the release of
LL.700 billion in overdue payments since 2017 to the independent municipal fund.
The decree bore the signatures of Prime Minister Saad Hariri, Finance Minister
Ali Hassan Khalil and Interior Minister Rayya Hassan. President Aoun also
received on Tuesday an invitation from President of the American University of
Beirut, Dr. Fadlo Khuri, to lay the cornerstone of a new medical center at the
AUB. He finally welcomed Lebanon's Ambassador to South Korea, Antoine Azzam,
over the bilateral relations between the two countries.
Minister of Finance submits to cabinet secretariat revised version of draft
budget
Tue 23 Apr 2019/NNA - Minister of Finance, Ali Hassan Khalil, submitted to the
General Secretariat of the Council of Ministers the revised version of the draft
budget and the proposed articles, after a re-evaluation of the basic draft
submitted on August 30, 2018, including the austerity measure
Lebanon: Hariri Demands Consensus on State Budget
Beirut - Mohamed Choucair/Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 April, 2019/Prime Minister Saad Hariri is seeking for consensus in the government to pave
way for the swift approval of the 2019 draft state budget, Lebanese ministerial
sources told Asharq Al-Awsat on Monday.“Hariri is after a swift approval of the budget but he rejects being hasty to
prevent political clashes among cabinet members,” the sources said.
The PM is expected to kick off meetings on Tuesday with concerned parties to
tackle the draft budget before referring it to the cabinet for final approval.
The sources said Hariri had no objections to remarks made by President Michel
Aoun following a meeting he held with Maronite Patriarch Bechara Rahi on Sunday.
Aoun had called on all sides to speed up efforts in ending the economic crisis
the soonest. However, the sources said the president should not have launched
accusations against certain political figures by claiming that he could end the
crisis if “those who do not have skills” are unable to resolve it quickly. The
sources wondered whether Aoun was referring to Finance Minister Ali Hassan
Khalil, who first proposed a draft budget last August, then annexed to it
another draft with amendments. They said Aoun could have also been referring to
Hariri.
Berri, interlocutors tackle overall situation
Tue 23 Apr 2019/NNA - Speaker of the House, Nabih Berri, on Tuesday met at his
Ain Tineh residence with State Minister for Foreign Trade Affairs Hassan Murad,
with talks reportedly touching on the general situation.
This afternoon, Speaker Berri met with a delegation of the Gathering of Muslim
Scholars, with whom he discussed the overall situation in Lebanon and the broad
region. Speaking in the name of the delegation, Judge Sheikh Ahmad Al Zein said
that the delegation stressed in front of the Speaker the need to address the
simmering economic crisis with measures and taxes that do not entail low-income
people and the underprivileged. The delegation also underlined the dire need to
safeguard national unity at this difficult stage, jailing the Speaker's national
role in this regard. Later, Berri met with Environment Minister, Fadi Jreissati,
with talks reportedly touching on the current situation and relevant ministerial
affairs, including trash and quarries' dossier.
Saudi Arabia to Launch Projects to Support Lebanon, Displaced Syrians
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 April, 2019/Saudi Royal Court Advisor,
General Supervisor of King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center (KSRelief),
Abdullah Al-Rabeeah said his country will implement a series of relief and
humanitarian projects that will serve the Lebanese population and displaced
Syrians.
“We look forward to meeting officials and representatives of the organizations
to build strong bridges of cooperation for the benefit of the refugees and the
underprivileged in various areas of Lebanon,” the official said upon arriving in
Beirut on Monday. He added that his visit aims to implement a series of relief
and humanitarian projects, meet with Lebanese officials and build bridges of
cooperation between KSRelief and the Lebanese.Rabeeah met with Prime Minister Saad Hariri, in the presence of Saudi Ambassador
to Lebanon Walid Al-Bukhari and Secretary-General of the Higher Relief Council,
Major General Mohammed Kheir. In remarks following the meeting, he said he was
very pleased to meet with Hariri, conveying to him the greetings of Custodian of
the Two Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdulaziz and Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman bin Abdulaziz.
He noted that the visit “comes as an affirmation of the deeply consolidated
relations between the Kingdom and Lebanon.”“During this visit and under the
guidance of the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, many programs and agreements
will be implemented to support the brotherly Lebanese people and relief and
humanitarian work in several areas hosting Syrian refugees,” he stressed.
Nasrallah: Israeli Home-Front Not Prepared For War
Jerusalem Post/April 23/19/
“I personally eliminate any possibility for a Zionist war on Lebanon.”
Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah has denied reports that the Lebanese Shiite
terror organization is planning for war with Israel this summer, saying that the
IDF would not start a military conflict with the group because the Israeli
home-front is not prepared.
“What was published in the newspapers about a war with Israel was mistaken and
badly timed,” he said, referring to reports by Kuwait’s al-Rai newspaper that he
told Hezbollah commanders to expect to go to war with Israel this summer, a war
in which he expected to be killed.
I personally eliminate any possibility for a Zionist war on Lebanon.”According to Hezbollah’s al-Manar website Nasrallah stressed that the leader of
the Shiite terror group hopes to “participate in liberating occupied Palestine
and pray at Al-Aqsa Mosque” in Jerusalem.
“Although the Resistance always prepares for the worst possibilities, I
personally tend to rule out the possibility of witnessing an Israeli war on
Lebanon because the enemy’s ‘home’ front is not ready for that,” he was said
Monday night during a ceremony marking the anniversary of the founding of
Hezbollah’s youth movement.
The Hezbollah leader said that while Israel boasts about their missile defense
system, it cannot defend the country’s citizens against the threat posed by
Hezbollah's rocket arsenal.
“The events of the recent weeks have proved the unpreparedness of the Israeli
home front. We saw how two missiles were fired by mistake from Gaza and landed
in the Tel Aviv surroundings and then another missile was shot off from Gaza and
landed north of Tel Aviv. All the Israeli measures were not able to do
anything,” he said referring to a recent round of violence between Hamas and
Israel.“Neither the air force nor the ground forces can settle the battle in
favor of the Israeli enemy,” Nasrallah continued, adding that “the Zionists
themselves acknowledge that their infantry troops are unable to wage any war.”
Israel and Hezbollah last fought a war – the Second Lebanon War – in 2006, and
has since then morphed from a guerrilla group to an army with a set hierarchy
and procedures. With the help of Iran, it has rebuilt its arsenal since 2006 and
has hundreds of thousands of short-range rockets and several thousand more
missiles that can reach deeper into Israel.
In addition to their massive arsenal Hezbollah also has the ability to mobilize
close to 30,000 battle-hardened fighters, some of whom are expected to try to
infiltrate into Israeli communities on the border to kill or kidnap civilians
and soldiers.
In his speech Nasrallah also mentioned the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, saying
that the Palestinian people should not despair about US President Donald Trump’s
yet-unveiled peace plan.
“We are in a battle between faith and despair. When the Palestinian people
despair, it is possible to impose the ‘deal of the century’ on them, but as long
as they have hope, no one can impose anything on them,” he said, adding that “if
the Lebanese people would surrender to despair, Trump would give Lebanon to
Israel.”
Nasrallah Says No New Israeli War on Lebanon
Naharnet/April 23/19/Hizbullah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah denied remarks
attributed to him and published in Kuwaiti al-Rai newspaper that Israel plans to
wage war against Lebanon in the summer, and announced that his party is willing
to assist in resolving the current economic crisis in the country. “These
reports are unfounded and wrong in timing and substance. I have never said, not
even to myself, that Israel is planning to wage war on Lebanon, and I did not
say that I might be killed during the process,” said Nasrallah in his Monday
televised speech. Ruling the possibility of an Israeli aggression, he described
al-Rai’s report as “empty and baseless.” He denounced the timing saying it harms
Lebanon which is looking forward to its summer tourism season as it grapples
with an economic crisis. Al-Rai claimed in its report that Nasrallah has warned
Hizbullah officials of an Israeli war on Lebanon, fearing he could be killed. On
the economic crisis, Hizbullah leader urged political parties to cooperate
together in order to find a way out of it. “There is political consensus on the
need for a solution, the problem will affect us all,” he said, pointing out that
resolving the crisis needs “cooperation,” noting “the solution will not be
easy.”He said Hizbullah is “part of the state” and is willing to shoulder
responsibility, “we are part of the state and people, and we are ready to bear
responsibility. Approval of a state budget is only the beginning of financial
and administrative reform. Discussions underway are our chances to stop
corruption.”
Salameh: Lebanon Isn’t on Verge of Bankruptcy
Naharnet/April 23/19/Lebanon’s Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh assured on
Tuesday that Lebanon is not on the verge of bankruptcy, as the government
prepares to impose austerity measures to combat the bulging fiscal deficit, LBCI
TV station reported. “According to available data, it does not indicate that
Lebanon is on the verge of bankruptcy,” Salameh said, “I can confirm that in
terms of the assets of the Banque du Liban and in terms of the assets of the
banking sector," he told the station. Salemeh added saying that “35% of Lebanese
public debt is in the central bank.”Lebanon’s government plans on implementing
strict austerity measures to reduce a ballooning budget deficit and massive
national debt. The austerity measures to be adopted in the new budget could lead
to wage cuts for state employees amid the economic crisis. The budget is still
in the works and is expected to be sent to parliament for approval in the coming
weeks. Discussions by the government of what it called "painful" and "unpopular"
measures to be taken to try to cut the budget deficit and slow the growth of the
national debt, which stands at more than $85 billion, or more than 150% of the
gross domestic product, making it among the highest in the world.
Hariri Slams ‘Fabricated’ Claims Published in Hizbullah Daily
Naharnet/April 23/19/Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s media office slammed
“fabricated” reports published in Hizbullah's al-Akhbar daily on Tuesday
alleging the PM has suggested hikes in taxes and fuel prices as part of
austerity measures planned by the government. The office said in a statement
that “al-Akhbar newspaper is specialized in circulating daily abuses of
everything related to PM Saad Hariri. This newspaper said today that an economic
and financial paper was allegedly prepared by Hariri and includes procedures in
the form of daily fabrications of that newspaper.”In its Tuesday publication,
the daily alleged the PM prepared a “paper” suggesting cuts to salaries of state
employees, hikes in taxes and fuel prices, and many other unpopular financial
measures that affect low-income earners, according to the daily. Hariri’s office
added: “The reform paper required to reduce the state deficit and stop the waste
of funds is a subject of official discussion with all components of the
government. It will be translated into the draft budget to be submitted by the
Minister of Finance to the Cabinet. “Reports published by the daily are falsely
attributed to Prime Minister Hariri, and include fabricated ideas to sabotage
economic advancement and the government program,” said the statement.
Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel Gemayel: We Aspire to Change in
Political System's Structure
Kataeb.org/Wednesday 24th April 2019
Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel on Tuesday stressed that the party has decided to
stand up against illegal arms and the partitioning mentality prevailing over
Lebanon, saying that the country's new electoral law has formed a pro-Hezbollah
majority and altered the State's political identity.
“The country has been handed over to Hezbollah. The corrupt performance and
incompetent management have destroyed Lebanon's economy, “Gemayel said in an
interview on LBCI channel. “Our opposition is against a ruling authority that
has relinquished the country's sovereignty and surrendered to Hezbollah,” he
added.
“Our opposition is against the partitioning mentality that everyone is now
adopting.” "The settlement that led to the election of President Michel Aoun has
caused a drastic change in the political life in Lebanon,” he pointed out.
Gemayel stressed that it is time to pull the country out of the corruption
quagmire it is stuck into, saying that the Kataeb party has decided to offer an
alternative option for the current reality Lebanon is experiencing. “After the
elections, we gave the ruling authority a new chance to prove its good will.
However, all the promises made turned out to be empty,” he said. “We have
returned to our position as an opposition force given that the same partitioning
mentality is still prevailing,” he pointed out. “Remaining loyal to our
ancestors' struggle requires full commitment to their cause.”
The Kataeb leader said that change needs time, saying that the state-building
requires the presence of a public opinion that revolts against reality. “In
order for change to happen, the Lebanese must realize that the only goal behind
sectarianism is to boost the politicians' power,” he said. “The Kataeb's role
has always been to stand up against reality and wrongdoings," Gemayel affirmed.
“Our goal is to expand the opposition force and to cooperate with anyone who
wants to prevent the country's deterioration,” he noted. Gemayel stressed that
the Kataeb has been constantly putting forth solutions to all of the country's
problems, notably that related to electricity, saying that the party is
finalizing a challenge contesting the government's power plan.
“The challenge aims at preventing all illegal aspects related to the tendering
process and protecting the state's treasury from mismanagement,” he said.
Gemayel explained that the state's deficit should be reduced by addressing
random employment and favoritism, as well as ending tax evasion, adding that
Lebanon cannot overcome hardships unless decentralization and neutrality are
enforced. “We aspire to change the political system's structure because it is no
longer viable,” he said, pointing out that decentralization would relieve all
sects in the country. Gemayel stressed that the Constitution must be revised in
a way that would prevent obstruction, saying that the electoral law must be
changed. “Every generation must learn from the mistakes of its predecessors;
history teaches us that anyone who derived his power from foreign powers ended
up vanishing,” he said. “If the people does not hold onto its future and revolt,
the country is doomed to ruination,” he warned. “There are two ways to build the
country and that’s by either dividing or by adopting a new management system
that would preserve the country’s unity." Gemayel deemed the Kataeb party as an
examplary model for every young man who aspires to build a civilized country,
saying that its goal is to break the vicious circle in which the Lebanese people
are living.
Fattouh announces Salameh best Arab Central Bank Governor
Tue 23 Apr 2019/NNA - Governor of the Central Bank of Lebanon Riad Salameh has
been declared by the Secretary General of Arab Banks Union, Wissam Fattouh, best
Arab Central Bank Governor, at the opening ceremony of the "Arab Banking
Conference 2019 - Economic Reform and Governance" under the patronage of Prime
Minister Saad Hariri. "The despair industry in Lebanon has been trying for years
to destroy the monetary stability and the Lebanese economy, but these attempts
have failed, and we are now on the threshold of a new campaign," Salameh said in
a speech. "This new campaign will fail as well," Salameh said, explaining that
"the laws approved by the government and the parliament allowed Lebanon to be in
compliance with the fight against money laundering and combating terrorism."He
stressed that "the level of compliance in Lebanese banks is high, as confirmed
by correspondent banks as well." "Lebanon attaches importance to maintaining its
reputation, and we are a country where transfers play an important role in our
economy," Salameh said. "International institutions have recognized Lebanon's
compliance and this is important," he added.
Hariri: Banks ready to help government but we should carry
out reforms first
Tue 23 Apr 2019/NNA - The President of the Council of Ministers Saad Hariri said
that the government is committed to fight corruption and squander, and is
determined to carry out the necessary reforms for the benefit of the Lebanese
citizen and public finance. He added that the banks and the Central Bank
Governor would be ready to help.Hariri expressed these stances this afternoon
during the opening ceremony of the Arab Banking Conference for 2019 entitled
"Economic Reforms and Governance" that he sponsored at the Phoenicia Hotel, at
the invitation of the Union of Arab Banks, the Central Bank and the Association
of Banks in Lebanon.He said: "We in Lebanon sometimes suffer from campaigns that
aim to make people feel desperate. The successful organizations, just as the
successful people, like Riad Salame or the Middle East Airline or other Lebanese
institutions, are always under attack because they are successful. We want to
carry out the necessary reforms for the benefit of the Lebanese citizen and
public finance and this is what is happening now. In the end, what concerns me
is this reform. I do not have a problem with who takes the credit or says that
the reform happened thanks to him. What is important is that these reforms take
place because Lebanon cannot continue with laws that go back to the 1950s and
1960s, while we are in 2019." He added, addressing Salame: "I reiterate my
congratulations to you and I tell you: God help you and we are with you. The
banks supported Lebanon during delicate stages. The problem is that the state
did not make the reforms it should have made. In the past, for example, the
Paris II Conference was held, and there was a package of reforms that had to be
carried out. The governorate and the banks did their job and gave the state 10
000 billion Lebanese pounds with an interest rate of 0.2, on the basis that
reforms will be made. But these reforms did not take place, the state took these
amounts and spent them but did not make reforms."He concluded: "The state should
not resort to the Lebanese banks or the governorate of the Central Bank before
carrying out its duty, which it was supposed to do 20 years ago, namely reform.
I am confident that the banks and Central Bank Governor will be ready to help
us, just as happened in Paris II. Thus, we pray God to help us in the coming
days to put the budget on the table of the Council of Ministers for discussion
before being referred to Parliament. I am totally confident that the President
and the Speaker are very keen to have austerity measures, stop the squander,
fight corruption and develop our laws, in the necessary manner."
Future bloc convenes at Center House to discuss latest developments
Tue 23 Apr 2019/NNA - Future bloc on Tuesday convened at the Center House under
the chairmanship of MP Bahia Hariri, to tackle the overall situation in the
country and most recent political developments. In a statement issued in the
wake of the periodic meeting and read out by MP Mohammed Al Qera'awi, the bloc
congratulated the Lebanese, in general, and the Christian communities, in
particular, on the holy Easter Eid, hoping that the occasion will be a renewed
opportunity for Lebanon to emerge from the current simmering socio-economic
crises. The bloc stressed that political consensus among the main components of
the government and the Parliament on possible measures to address the economic
dossier, forms the basis for any salvation project to be complementary with the
requirements of reforms. The bloc also regarded the ongoing work to put the
final touches on the national draft budget as moving in the right direction,
hailing positive stances and positions accompanying such a process.On the other
hand, the bloc categorically deplored the atrocious terror attacks that targeted
churches and hotels in Sri Lanka, offering condolences to the people of Sri
Lanka and its government.
Hassan: We will mitigate crisis’ impact on pensions and wages
Tue 23 Apr 2019/NNA - Minister of the Interior and Municipalities Raya al-Hassan
said: "We will work to mitigate the impact on pensions and monthly wages,"
adding that the country is going through an economic crisis and "we need to
strive to control expenses."The minister spoke during her visit to the
Headquarters of the General Security, welcoming the efforts of the leadership
under the chairmanship of General Abbas Ibrahim.
Jumblatt tackles latest developments with Saudi Ambassador
Tue 23 Apr 2019/NNA - Progressive Socialist Party Head, Walid Jumblatt, received
this evening at his Clemenceau residence Saudi Ambassador to Lebanon, Waleed
Bukhari. The meeting took place in the presence of Minister of Industry, Wael
Abou Faour, and former Minister Ghazi Al Aridi.
Talks reportedly touched on most recent developments in Lebanon and the broad
region.
Defense Minister: Military Institutions Not Responsible for
State Deficit
Naharnet/April 23/19/Defense Minister Elias Bou Saab said the Lebanese army is
not responsible for the budget deficit but “successive economic policies and
waste of public funds are.”In a televised press conference, Bou Saad said “the
current economic situation is due to successive economic policies. The military
institutions and the Lebanese army are not responsible for the budget
deficit.”“It’s true that the budget allocated for the defense ministry is the
largest in the government, but it’s not as mistakenly reported responsible for
the deficit,” he added. “Lebanese must know that the military institutions are
tasked with protecting the country and security. They go to the front unaware of
what their fate could be,” added Bou Saab. He said his Ministry should decide on
reducing military expenditures based on the spending needs of the army.
U.S. Puts Up $10 mn Reward for Hizbullah Information
Naharnet/April 23/19/The United States on Monday offered a $10 million reward
for information that would disrupt the finances of Lebanon's Shiite militant
movement Hizbullah. The State Department said it would give the money to anyone
who provides intelligence that allows the United States to disrupt Hizbullah in
key ways. The areas include information on Hizbullah's donors, on financial
institutions that assist its transactions and on businesses controlled by the
movement. President Donald Trump's administration has put a top priority on
reducing the influence of Iran, the primary backer of Hizbullah.
The State Department listed three alleged Hizbullah financiers as examples of
activities it was seeking to stop, with one, Ali Youssef Charara, allegedly
funding the group by investing millions of dollars from Hizbullah in the
telecommunications industry in West Africa. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has
pointed to a recent appeal by Hizbullah for donations as a sign of US success in
curbing Iran. On a visit last month to Beirut, Pompeo urged Lebanon to counter
the "dark ambitions" of Iran and Hizbullah but was rebuffed by Foreign Minister
Gebran Bassil, who said Hizbullah was not a terrorist group and enjoyed a wide
base. The United States has vowed for decades to fight Shiite militants in
Lebanon, with memories still bitter over the 1983 attack on a military barracks
in Beirut that killed 241 Americans. Hizbullah, however, also functions as a
political party, with posts in the current cabinet, and enjoys support among
some Lebanese who recall its guerrilla campaign that led Israel to withdraw from
the country in 2000.
Saudi Royal Advisor Affirms ‘Strong' Lebanon Ties
Naharnet/April 23/19/Prime Minister Saad Hariri received Monday evening at the
Center House Advisor to the Saudi Royal Court Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz al-Rabeeah,
who emphasized Saudi Arabia’s “strong ties with Lebanon,” Hariri’s media office
said. Rabeeah was accompanied by the Saudi Ambassador to Lebanon Walid al-Bukhari
and the accompanying delegation, in the presence of the Secretary General of the
Higher Relief Committee Maj. Gen. Mohamed Kheir. Discussions highlighted
Rabeeah’s mission in Lebanon and the bilateral relations between the two
countries. During the meeting, Rabeeah presented to the PM a shield as a token
of appreciation. After the meeting, Rabeeah said: “I am pleased to meet with
Prime Minister Saad Hariri. I conveyed to him the greetings of the Custodian of
the Two Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdul-Aziz and of Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman bin Abdul-Aziz. The visit comes in implementation of these directives and
to underline the strong relations between the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and
Lebanon. “Through this visit and in application of the directives of the
Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, many programs will be implemented and
agreements signed to support humanitarian aid in several areas, to Syrian
refugees and the brotherly Lebanese people. This work is a continuation of this
strong relationship not only in the humanitarian field, but in all areas,” he
concluded.
US Offering $ 10 Million For Info On Hezbollah's Mechanisms
Jerusalem Post/April 23/19
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/74155/%D8%AD%D8%B2%D8%A8-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%84%D9%87-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A5%D8%B1%D9%87%D8%A7%D8%A8%D9%8A-%D9%88%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%81%D8%A7%D8%B1%D8%B3%D9%8A-%D9%88%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%84%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A8%D9%86%D8%A7/
It is the first time that the department is offering a reward for information
regarding Hezbollah's financial networks.
WASHINGTON - A new program will offer up to $10 million in rewards for
information leading to the disruption of the global financial mechanisms of
Hezbollah, the US Department of State announced Monday. It is the first time
that the department is offering a reward for information regarding Hezbollah's
financial networks.
According to a December 2017 "Forbes Israel" report, Hezbollah is the richest
terror organization in the world, with an estimated annual income of $1.1
billion. The organization's revenue comes from a combination of Iranian support,
business investments, donor networks and money laundering activities. The State
Department designated Hezbollah a Foreign Terrorist Organization in October
1997, and as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist in October 2001.
According to the State Department's announcement, the rewards could be provided
for information that would lead to the identification and disruption of a source
of revenue for Hezbollah or its fundamental financial facilitation mechanisms;
major Hezbollah donors or financial facilitators; financial institutions or
exchange houses facilitating Hezbollah transactions; and businesses or
investments owned or controlled by Hezbollah or its financiers.
"I'm confident that the (reward) that we are offering today, will provide
incentives for people to come forward with information that will help us take
down Hezbollah's financial networks," said Assistant Secretary for State for
Diplomatic Security Michael T. Evanoff in a press briefing at the State
Department: In addition, the State Department has highlighted three individuals
as key Hezbollah financiers or facilitators about whom it seeks information:
Adham Tabaja, Mohammad Ibrahim Bazzi and Ali Youssef Charara.
Tabaja is a Hezbollah member who maintains direct ties to senior Hezbollah
organizational elements, including the group’s operational component, Islamic
Jihad. Bazzi is an important Hezbollah financier who has provided millions of
dollars to Hezbollah generated from his business activities in Europe, the
Middle East and Africa. Charara is also a key Hezbollah financier as chairman
and general manager of Lebanon-based telecommunications company Spectrum
Investment Group Holding SAL. He has extensive business interests in the
telecommunications industry in West Africa.
"We will leave no stone unturned in our pursuit of information that will help us
clamp down further on these individuals and on others they use to access the
international financial system," said Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for
Terrorist Financing Marshall Billingslea. "Either directly or via cash smuggling
networks and other seemingly legitimate businesses and investments.
"We will pay for bank records, customs forms, real estate transactions, and
anything evidencing money laundering or cash smuggling," he continued. "The
United States government is prepared to pay for this information, and we will
award up to $10 million for leads that result in financial disruption. Whether
by US law enforcement sanctions or other enforcement actions."
Latest LCCC English Miscellaneous Reports & News published
on April 23-24/19
Iranian Parliament Labels All U.S. Military Forces as Terrorist
The Associated Press/April 23/19
Move comes a day after Washington ratcheted up pressure on Tehran by announcing
that no country would any longer be exempt from U.S. sanctions if it continues
to buy Iranian oil
Iranian lawmakers on Tuesday overwhelmingly approved a bill that labels all U.S.
military forces as terrorist, state TV reported, a day after Washington
ratcheted up pressure on Tehran by announcing that no country would any longer
be exempt from U.S. sanctions if it continues to buy Iranian oil.
The bill is a step further from the one last week, when lawmakers approved
labelling just U.S. troops in the Middle East as terrorist, in response to the
U.S. terrorism designation for Iran's Revolutionary Guard earlier this month.
The Trump administration reimposed sanctions on Iran, including on its energy
sector, last November, after pulling America out of the landmark 2015 nuclear
deal between Iran and world powers.
The U.S. designation against Iran's Revolutionary Guard — the first-ever for an
entire division of another government — added another layer of sanctions to the
powerful paramilitary force, making it a crime under U.S. jurisdiction to
provide the guard with material support.
On Monday, President Donald Trump decided to do away with waivers as part of the
administration's "maximum pressure" campaign on Iran that aims to eliminate all
of its revenue from oil exports that the U.S. says funds destabilizing activity
throughout the Mideast and beyond.
Hours before Trump's announcement, Iran reiterated its long-running threat to
close the Strait of Hormuz if it's prevented from using the crucial waterway in
the Persian Gulf through which about a third of all oil traded at sea passes.
The U.S. Navy has in the past accused Iranian patrol boats of harassing American
warships in the waterway.
Iran's Foreign Ministry promptly brushed off Trump's move to stop the oil
waivers, saying the Islamic Republic "basically has not seen and does not see
any worth and validity for the waivers."
But on Tuesday, 173 out of 215 lawmakers at the parliament session in Tehran
voted for the new bill. Only four voted against while the rest abstained; the
chamber has 290 seats.
The bill confirms Iran's earlier label of the U.S. Central Command, also known
as CENTCOM, and all its forces as terrorist. Any military and non-military help,
including logistics support, to CENTCOM that can be detrimental to the
Revolutionary Guard will be considered a terrorist action, the semi-official
ISNA news agency said.
The bill also demands the Iranian government take unspecified action against
other governments that formally back the U.S. designation. Saudi Arabia, Bahrain
and Israel have all supported the Trump administration's designation.
The lawmakers also requested Iran's intelligence agency provide a list of all
CENTCOM commanders within three months so that Iran's judiciary can prosecute
them in absentia as terrorists.
The bill requires final approval by Iran's constitutional watchdog to become
law.Other than underscoring Iran's defiance, it's unclear what impact the bill
could actually have, either in the Persian Gulf or beyond. The Revolutionary
Guard has forces and wields influence in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen, and is
in charge of Iranian missiles that have U.S. bases in their range.
IRGC Threatens to Close Hormuz Strait
London - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 April, 2019/The Iranian Revolutionary Guard
Corps (IRGC) has hinted that it would close the Strait of Hormuz if Iran is
prevented from using it, in what appeared to be the first response to the US
plan to end waivers on Iranian oil exports. "If Iran’s benefits in the Strait of
Hormuz, which according to international rules is an international waterway, are
denied, we will close it,” IRGC Navy Commander Rear Admiral Alireza Tangsiri
said after the Trump administration revealed Monday that it will no longer
exempt any countries from US sanctions if they continue to buy Iranian oil. Iran
has previously threatened to close the strait.
“Don't play with fire, or you will regret,” Iranian President Rouhani cautioned
Trump last July. Rouhani said that the Americans should come to realize that
establishing peace with Iran is the mother of all peace and waging war with the
country is the mother of all wars. At the same time, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei agreed that Rouhani’s threats to close the international waterway
expressed the regime’s policy. Khamenei replaced chief commander of IRGC
Mohammad Ali Jafari with Brigadier General Hossein Salami, seven days after the
US designated the group a foreign terrorist organization.
Tangsiri added that replacing the IRGC commander-in-chief had nothing to do with
Washington’s recent decision. However, Iranian Armed Forces spokesman
Brigadier-General Abu al-Fadl Shakarji said Monday that Salami’s appointment is
a blow to the US. The Iranian foreign ministry said Iran was in "constant talks
with its international partners including the Europeans" on Washington’s ending
of the exemptions. It added that an “important decision" will be announced
later, without elaborating.
China, India, North Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Italy, and Greece will face US
sanctions starting May in case they continue to purchase Iranian oil. In
November, Washington reimposed strict economic sanctions against Tehran and all
states that don’t abide by them, after its withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear
deal.
US Looking To Sign New Agreement With Iran: Brian Hook
Jerusalem Post/April 23/19/“You can either work with the United States or you can work with Iran, but you
can’t do both,” Hook told the Saudi-owned television news channel.
The United States is looking to sign a new agreement with Iran that covers its
nuclear and missile programs, the country’s regional aggression and the
arbitrary detention of foreign nationals including Americans, according to US
Special Representative for Iran Brian Hook.
In an interview with Al Arabiya English, Hook said, “That is the kind of deal we
need. We are ready to negotiate something like that.”
Hook was speaking on Monday, the same day that Washington declared it would
start ending waivers to Tehran’s oil customers.
“You can either work with the United States or you can work with Iran, but you
can’t do both,” Hook told the Saudi-owned television news channel.
He noted that the United States has denied the Iranian regime more than $10
billion in revenue and expects that amount to increase dramatically, with the
support of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, countries that Hook said,
“share a lot of the United States’ national security goals when it comes to
Iran."
"Yes, we had very good meetings with both of the Saudis and the Emiratis," he
continued. "So it’s in our interest and it’s in their interest to deny the
Iranian regime the revenue it needs to fund its foreign policy.
“And now Saudi Arabia has been very helpful, increasing its production as it did
many months ago in order to offset the loss of Iranian crude, and they’ll
continue to be helpful,” he said. “So, there’s a convergence of interest -
especially with Arab nations, Israel, the United States [and] many of our
European allies. We want a more peaceful Iran, and that’s up to Iran. They can
either start behaving more peacefully or they can watch their economy crumble.”
The White House officially announced Monday its intention to end sanction
waivers on eight countries that are still trading oil with Iran, increasing its
“maximum pressure” campaign against the Islamic republic. Current exemptions are
set to expire in early May.
Some of the countries that are slated to be affected are allies such as India.
Other countries that will be affected include China and Turkey, which could open
new friction.
The goal of the sanctions is not only to create a more peaceful Iranian regime,
but also to suck the economic life out of the terrorist organization Hezbollah,
which is predominantly funded by Iran, though it also receives money from
business investments, donor networks and money laundering activities.
“What we are doing is making it harder for Hezbollah to meet payroll, because
70% of Hezbollah’s revenue comes from the Iranian regime,” Hook told Al Arabiya.
“Historically, Iran gives Hezbollah $700 million a year - that’s 70% of their
budget.”
The State Department designated Hezbollah a Foreign Terrorist Organization in
October 1997, and as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist in October 2001.
Hook noted that in March, the leader of Hezbollah made a public appeal for
donations; it was the first time in history they’ve had to do that.
On Monday, the State Department announced a new program that will offer up to
$10 million in rewards for information leading to the disruption of Hezbollah's
global financial mechanisms, also a first.
Complaint Filed against Netanyahu’s Nomination to Form Govt.
Tel Aviv - Nazir Magally/ Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 April, 2019/With more than
15,000 signatures from the public, the Movement for Integrity in Israel on
Sunday petitioned the High Court of Justice to overturn a decision by President
Reuven Rivlin’s to nominate Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to form the next
government.
They also asked the court to issue a precautionary order against Netanyahu,
Attorney General Avichai Mendelblit, the Knesset and the Likud party bloc to
explain their position and answer questions about Rivlin’s decision.
“The appointment of Netanyahu is not constitutional and undermines the solid
core of the rule of law in the State of Israel,” said Shahar Ben-Meir, head of
the movement. He continued: “It is not only the president who made a mistake
here, we have a series of mistakes and sins. The legal advisor must explain why
he is silent about the violation of the law. Netanyahu is corrupt and there are
strong suspicions against him; and the same advisor has declared that he and the
prosecution support an indictment against him.”
The petitioners said they were not asking to end Netanyahu’s term as head of an
interim government, but to prevent him from exercising his duties and making him
a “frozen prime minister”, “because it is unreasonable, illogical and immoral,
to hand over the administration of state affairs to a person who is soaked in
corruption.”The court is likely to reject the complaint, which will, however,
bolster the forces that are supporting the corruption cases against Netanyahu.
Ben-Meir said, however, he was optimistic about a positive decision by the High
Court of Justice. Undeterred, Netanyahu continued on Monday efforts to form his
government. He met representatives of the right-wing Union Party, which
announced that they intend to draft a law that would prevent Netanyahu from
being tried as long as he is prime minister. In return, they demanded that the
government reject US President Donald Trump’s yet unveiled Middle East peace
proposal and any plan that includes decisions to evacuate settlements.
Palestinian To Iranian Media: Israel Is Stronger Future Unpredictable
Jerusalem Post/April 23/19
/Soltan-Shahi was described by MEMRI in 2018 as secretary-general of the
Organization for Aiding the Islamic Revolution of the Palestinian People in the
Office of the Iranian Presidency.
Iran’s Tasnim news ran a long and important interview on Tuesday with a
Palestinian named Ali Reza Soltan-Shahi. The interview is interesting because it
gives a window not only into Palestinian thinking, but particularly because of
the views conveyed to the Iranian regime via the interview.
Soltan-Shahi has appeared before at Iranian events. He was described by MEMRI in
2018 as secretary-general of the Organization for Aiding the Islamic Revolution
of the Palestinian People in the Office of the Iranian Presidency. Tasnim
describes him only as a former head of the Palestinian Center for Mental Health.
The interview begins with a discussion of the Israeli political parties that
contested the election. Soltan-Shahi says the 2019 election was the culmination
of a process that begin in 1977 and has seen the entrenchment of Likud and the
Israeli right. He notes that Labor and Meretz have fallen in their number of
seats. He describes Israel as more fundamentalist and religious, an irony
considering that the Iranian regime is a fundamentalist theocracy. He argues
that the right will gain more power in the future in Israel. He argues that
while Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will form a new government successfully,
his “popularity is at the lowest level internationally. Those countries that
interact with the Zionist regime, such as the Europeans, their interaction is at
its lowest.” He says Israel’s main ally is the United States and the Trump
administration.
The interview notes that the privileges Israel enjoys in its relations with the
US have made Israel’s policies more efficient and he points to US recognition of
Jerusalem and the Golan. What does this unprecedented Israel-US coherence in
policy mean going forward? He notes that due to the flexibility the US is
showing in terms of more imaginative peace process concepts, tensions will
increase in the West Bank and Gaza, which he refers to as the “occupied
territories.” Unpredictability will increase and the “resistance may be
strengthened.”
Israel is also seeking to “strengthen its relations with Arab countries, and as
far as possible make these relations more explicit and clearer.” Israel is
helping to cement an anti-Iranian alliance even as Iran’s role in the region
increases. The interview calls this Iran’s “strong presence.” The interview does
not point to direct confrontation between Israel and Iran, but rather Israel
encouraging the US to be more tough on Tehran financially. “The Zionist regime
will certainly use anti-Iran countries in the region, including Saudi Arabia.”
Soltan-Shahi then discusses the differences between Iran’s view and that of
Europe. While European powers supports a two-state solution and Israel
withdrawing to the 1967 borders, “they are by no means like us, who demand the
complete destruction of the Zionist regime.” Iran and Europe can only cooperate
insofar as Iran seeks to highlight Israel’s abuses of international law and
violation of international norms, the interviewee says. He indicates such
examples as using UNESCO against Israel.
What about the rumors of an “Arab NATO” which would oppose Iran? Soltan-Shahi
says that experience shows the Arab NATO has not worked well. Egypt, for
instance, did not agree to be part of it. “It those that the Arab countries that
have the most secret relations with the Zionist regime cannot actually bring
Zionists against the Islamic Republic of Iran.” In short, many Arab countries in
the region are unwilling to make their relations with Israel public because they
know such relations are unpopular at home and will cause protests against their
rulers.
The interview ends with discussions of whether Trump will be re-elected. “The
Jews in the US are financially, politically, economically and media-wise very
influential, but it should be borne in mind that eve as the Jews are powerful in
the US, the political system is rooted in four-year terms for the Presidency.”
Soltan-Shahi says that if Trump is re-elected it would mean the US has changed a
lot in the last four years.
The interview is interesting because this is the kind of information that
Iranian media seeks to highlight and also what some Iranians read in Farsi. The
knowledge of the goals of Israel and the current Israeli government, including
the complexity of coalition politics, are laid bare. In general the interview
seems to suggest that while Israel has cemented its power and relations with
Arab states, as well as gaining from Washington’s policies, it is unable to take
things to the next step. This is because, in the view of the interview, the Arab
states will not ever actually form a real alliance with Israel. It is an
alliance of convenience. With that knowledge a sophisticated regime like Iran’s
can continue to insert itself into politics in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Yemen and
beyond. The interview also points to unpredictable Palestinian responses to any
kind of US “deal of the century.” Defeated militarily, the Palestinian
“resistance” has less options. But, isolated, it may be unpredictable. This is
an important point because the US is pushing a deal that is reportedly in line
with Israel’s interests and it is unclear how the Palestinian Authority and
Hamas in Gaza will react.
The astute Iranian regime reads the prevailing winds in the region carefully. It
correctly understands that while the European powers may be critical of Israel
in some international forums, that only Iran really seeks the destruction of
Israel. Iran seems to understand that this cannot be achieved by direct
confrontation either. Interviews like this point to what information the Iranian
regime is receiving and propagating.
Saudi Arabia Welcomes US Decision to Stop Waivers on Iran Oil Imports
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 April, 2019/Saudi Arabia hailed on Tuesday
Washington’s decision to stop renewing exemptions granted last year to buyers of
Iranian oil, reported the Saudi Press Agency. Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Assaf
stressed that the Kingdom completely backs the measure, saying it was necessary
to force Iran to quit its destabilizing policies in the region and cease its
support of terrorism throughout the world.
The regime in Iran has been using state resources in order to finance these
dangerous policies in total disregard to international law, he continued.
He reiterated Saudi Arabia’s firm stance that the international community must
hold the regime accountable to respecting international laws and stop its
destructive meddling in the affairs of other countries.
Moreover, Assaf underlined Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih’s confirmation that
the Kingdom will maintain its firm policy that seeks to achieve stability in oil
markets. Falih said Monday that Riyadh would work with other oil producers "to
ensure adequate supplies are available to consumers while ensuring the global
oil market does not go out of balance."The US demanded on Monday that buyers of
Iranian oil stop purchases by May 1 or face sanctions, a move to choke off
Tehran’s oil revenues. The US reimposed sanctions in November on exports of
Iranian oil after US President Donald Trump last spring unilaterally pulled out
of a 2015 accord between Iran and six world powers to curb Tehran’s nuclear
program. Eight economies, including China and India, were granted waivers for
six months, and several had expected those exemptions to be renewed.
Iran’s oil exports have dropped to about 1 million barrels per day (bpd) from
more than 2.5 million bpd prior to the re-imposition of sanctions.
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, in a briefing Monday, said “we’re going to
zero across the board,” saying the United States had no plans for a grace period
for compliance beyond May 1. The White House intends to deprive Iran of its
lifeline of $50 billion in annual oil revenues, he added. The White House said
it was working with top oil exporters Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates
to ensure the market was “adequately supplied.”
France says Iran/Instex mechanism is making positive
progress
Tue 23 Apr 2019/NNA - The 'Instex' mechanism set up by France, Britain and
Germany for Iran to skirt U.S. sanctions is making positive progress, said the
French foreign ministry on Tuesday, as it responded to the latest moves by the
U.S. government to put pressure on Iran.
"The work that has been put in place is making positive progress, with a view to
an eventual conclusion. Iran must also, for its part, make progress on its
equivalent counterparty," said the French foreign ministry in an electronic
briefing. France also reiterated its support for a 2015 nuclear deal with Iran.
On Monday, the U.S. demanded that buyers of Iranian oil stop purchases by May 1
or face sanctions, in a move aimed at choking off Tehran's oil revenues. Instex
was conceived as a way to help match Iranian oil and gas exports with purchases
of EU goods, but those ambitions have been toned down. Diplomats say that,
realistically, it will be used only for smaller transactions such as purchases
of humanitarian products or food. -- REUTERS
Bahrain Welcomes US Decision on Iranian Oil Waivers
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 April, 2019/Bahrain welcomed on Monday the decision
of US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo concerning Iran’s oil exports.
"This step is crucial in order to further support and strengthen efforts exerted
in combating terrorism and eradicating Iran’s malign and dangerous activities
that aim to undermine security and stability and support terrorist organizations
and militias in the region," Bahrain’s foreign ministry said. "The Kingdom
commends the pivotal role of the United States in its relentless efforts and
strategic decisions to eliminate violence, extremism and terrorism, and all
those supporting or funding it on the regional and international levels," the
ministry said in a statement. The Kingdom reiterated its unequivocal support to
the US and called for the need to enhance international efforts aimed at
eradicating the Iranian regime’s malign activities and policies that threaten
security and peace, and end its attempts to spread chaos in the region. The US
demanded on Monday that buyers of Iranian oil stop purchases by May 1 or face
sanctions, a move to choke off Tehran’s oil revenues. US Secretary of State Mike
Pompeo said "we're going to zero across the board.” He added that the United
States had no plans for a grace period beyond May 1 for countries to comply.
Saudi, French Land Forces Hold Joint Exercise
Dammam - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 April, 2019/The Royal Saudi Land Forces and
French forces launched on Monday the Asad Al Ganob 3 joint exercise in the
Eastern Province. Abdullah bin Saeed al-Qahtani, the commander of the Eastern
Province, attended the launching of the military drill.
Qahtani delivered a speech to announce the launch of the third edition of Asad
Al Ganob exercise between the Royal Saudi Land Forces and French forces in the
Eastern Province. The drill allows both sides to exchange expertise and skills,
said the commander of the French forces taking part in the exercise.
Damascus Opens Airspace to Qatar Airways
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 23/19/Syria's government has agreed to allow
planes from regional aviation giant Qatar Airways to fly over the country after
eight years of conflict kept its planes at bay. "Transport Minister Ali Hammoud
has agreed to allow Qatar Airways to cross Syrian airspace, based on a request
from the Qatari civil aviation authority," the ministry said late Monday in a
statement. Most airlines stopped flying over Syria after war broke out in 2011,
instead taking longer routes to circumvent the war zone. But the conflict has
largely wound down in recent years, after major regime advances against rebels
and jihadists with Russian military backing since 2015."The agreement came on
the principle of reciprocity, as SyrianAir crosses Qatari airspace and never
stopped flying to Doha throughout the war," it said. The use of Syrian airspace
would see "increased revenues in hard currency for the benefit of the Syrian
state", it added. Qatar, a small Gulf state that has traditionally supported the
Syrian opposition, suspended its ties with Damascus after the war broke out.
Syria was suspended from the Arab League in November 2011, as the death toll was
escalating and several regional powers bet on President Bashar al-Assad's
demise. But his regime today controls almost 60 percent of the country. Fellow
Gulf states the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain have reopened their missions in
Damascus. A high-ranking Iraqi official told AFP last year that Baghdad was
helping to mediate a restoration of ties between Damascus and Doha. But Qatar, a
country in a bitter feud with its Gulf neighbours, in January ruled out the
possibility of re-opening an embassy in the Syrian capital.
Assassinations Rock Southern Syria
Daraa (southern Syria) - Riyad al-Zein/Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 April,
2019/Assassinations have been on the rise in southern Syria, where a
Russian-mediated deal with the opposition has been holding since July.
Observers believe that the increased attacks in the area are a reflection of a
power struggle between Iran and Russia.Most of the victims in eight cases
documented this month were leaders of reconciliation factions, regime officers
or pro-Iran militia figures, according to activists in the south. The latest
assassination attempt took place on Sunday in the city of Dael in Daraa’s
countryside where unknown assailants opened fire from machine guns at two former
opposition leaders Fadi Shahadat and Mazid al-Jamous,.
The incident took place a few hours after the killing of Abu al-Nur al-Bardan, a
former leader in Al-Muataz Billah Army, who joined the fifth brigade’s forces in
Daraa after the regime took back the area from the opposition.
Bardan was shot dead near his residence in the city of Tafas in Daraa’s western
countryside. He was considered a close associate of Abu Morshed al-Bardan, the
former commander of Al-Muataz Billah Army. Local sources in Daraa’s countryside
affirmed that Abu Morshed al-Bardan and his close associates had been exposed to
several assassination attempts by unidentified persons after the
Russian-mediated deal. Bardan is considered among the first opposition leaders
to approve the deal in Daraa’s western countryside after which he became close
to Russia. He has recently attended several important meetings in the southern
region with representatives from the Syrian regime, including the Syrian Defense
Minister and the head of national security.
Syrian regime officials and figures close to Hezbollah and Iran have also been
the target of assassination attacks in Daraa this month. Among them is Abu
Hussein, the leader of an Iranian-backed militia in the city of Busra al-Harir
in northeast Daraa, who was killed in a recent attack.
Russia to Lease Syria’s Tartus Port for 49 Years
Damascus, London- Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 23 April, 2019/Russian Deputy Prime Minister Yuri Borisov met with Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad and discussed Moscow’s efforts to help the Middle Eastern country’s
economic revival, as well as trade and economic cooperation “particularly in the
fields of energy, industry and increasing trade,” according to Russian sources.
Assad and the Russian envoy also discussed mechanisms to overcome obstacles
including those from the sanctions which “countries against the Syrian people
imposed on Syria.”
“We have made considerable progress on that matter and hope that a contract will
be signed within a week and the port of Tartus will be used by Russian
businesses for 49 years," Borisov was quoted by Russia’s TASS news agency.
In December 2017, Russia’s Federation Council ratified an agreement between
Moscow and Assad’s government on Russian forces' access to the naval base in
Tartus. A few days ago, Syrian state media reported a shortage in fuel which
caused the rationing of available quantities, pointing out that this was due to
the difficulties in importing fuel and the halting of credit line from Iran.
Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Mouallem said in a statement on Saturday
carried by state-owned Syrian news agency (SANA) that "Syria is always
coordinating with Iran". On the other hand, news of leasing Tartus port caused
widespread discontent among Syrians, who have been witnessing unprecedented
economic distress for the past two weeks.
Syrian port workers are worried about the future of their work and the
consequences of Russia's control over the port. In 2017, Moscow and Damascus
signed an agreement on the deployment of a Russian navy logistics support center
in Tartus for the term of 49 years.
Russia and Iran are competing for influence in Syria. Moscow’s intention to
lease Tartus port comes after Iran leased from the Syrian regime its commercial
port of Latakia in October 2018. During an unannounced visit to Tehran in
February, Assad signed with his Iranian counterpart, Hasan Rouhani, an agreement
allowing Iran to manage the commercial port of Latakia, which angered the
Russian side. Russia is looking to explore oil fields in Turkey, Iraq, Lebanon,
and Syria, and establish a land bridge to Europe across the Middle East to
strengthen its role as a major supplier of gas to Europe.
Moscow is also interested in Lebanon, especially that, over the past two years,
trade exchange has doubled between the two countries. It is also eyeing the oil
storage facility at Tripoli port, 30 kilometers from the Syrian border and 60
kilometers from the Syrian port of Tartus. Sources in Damascus said that leasing
Tartus port to Russia is a clear indication of the shared influence and control,
especially that there are Iranian-Russian interests in using the Syrian
territory to extend gas pipelines in the region and resume the railway project
linking Iran, Iraq, and Syria.
Various media outlets reported Iranian and Russian forces are clashing in
several areas, which SANA categorically denied saying no such thing occurred.
Soon after the news broke of leasing Tartus port, allies and opposition figures
denounced the move, prompting social media activists affiliated with the regime
to promote that the ports of Tartus and Latakia were operated by the
Philippine’s International Container Terminal Services Inc up until 2011 when
both ports were classified dangerous areas.
The pro-regime critics considered the lease a “tactical move by Syria” in the
face of the economic war declared on it. They argued that this would restore
activity to the quasi-paralyzed port as a result of the economic blockade, and
will allow the import of food and oil to Syria.
Earlier, al-Watan newspaper, which is close to the Syrian government, disclosed
in an article “Unprecedented Disclosure on Oil” that the serious shortage of
fuel in Syria is due of Iran halting a credit line to Syria after US sanctions.
The newspaper pointed out that Syria daily needs 4.5 million liters of gasoline,
6 million liters, 7 thousand tons of fuel, and 12 hundred tons of gas, amounting
to $200 million every month. Meanwhile, Moscow has pushed for a political
process involving talks on a new constitution and elections as a way to end the
conflict, but Assad has played down the possibility that the Turkey-backed
opposition or foreign countries might participate. Russia’s Foreign Ministry
said late on Friday that Assad met Moscow’s Syria envoy Alexander Lavrentiev,
Deputy Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Vershinin, and several Russian Defence
Ministry officials. They discussed the formation of a constitutional committee,
which Syria’s opposition last year agreed to join under UN auspices during Sochi
peace conference. SANA said meetings had focused on the next round of talks in
Kazakhstan involving Syria, its allies Russia and Iran, and the rebels’ backer
Turkey.
Probe shows Sri Lanka attacks ‘retaliation for
Christchurch’
Reuters, AFP, Colombo/Tuesday, 23 April 2019/Sri Lanka’s Easter Sunday bomb
attacks were retaliation for a recent attack on mosques in New Zealand, a Sri
Lankan official said on Tuesday, adding that two domestic Islamist groups were
believed to be responsible. “The initial investigation has revealed that this
was in retaliation for the New Zealand mosque attack,” junior minister for
defence Ruwan Wijewardene told parliament. “It was done by National Thawheed
Jama’ut along with JMI,” he said, referring to another local group, Jammiyathul
Millathu Ibrahim. Fifty people were killed in shooting attacks on two mosques in
the New Zealand city of Christchurch on March 15.
UNICEF: At least 45 children killed in Sri Lanka attacks
AFP, Geneva/uesday, 23 April 2019/At least 45 children were among the more than
320 people killed in suicide bomb attacks in Sri Lanka, the UNICEF said on
Tuesday. “The total now is 45 children who died,” UNICEF spokesman Christophe
Boulierac told reporters in Geneva.
He added that the toll from the Sunday attacks could rise as many other minors
“are wounded and are now fighting for their lives in intensive care units across
the country.” UNICEF has confirmed that 27 children were killed and another 10
injured in the attack at St Sebastian’s Church in Negombo.
In the eastern city of Batticaloa, 13 children were killed, including an
18-month-old baby, UNICEF said. Those 40 children who lost their lives in the
two cities were Sri Lankan nationals, while UNICEF has confirmed that another
five children of foreign nationality were also killed.
Boulierac was not immediately able to provide details on where the non-Sri
Lankan children died. Danish billionaire Anders Holch Povlsen, who was on
vacation in Sri Lanka with his family at the weekend, lost three of his four
children in the attack, a spokesman for his clothing retail group Bestseller has
said. Twenty children have also been admitted to hospital following the attack
in Colombo, including four who were in intensive care. Sri Lanka has named the
local Islamist group, National Thowheeth Jama’ath, as the chief suspect, for the
violence that has sparked local and international outrage.
Sri Lanka detains Syrian for questioning over attacks, say
sources
Reuters, Colombo/Tuesday, 23 April 2019/Sri Lankan police are holding a Syrian
national in custody for questioning over the Easter Sunday attacks on churches
and hotels, three government and military sources told Reuters on Tuesday. “The
terrorist investigation division of the police arrested a Syrian national
following the attacks for interrogation,” a source said. Two other officials
with knowledge of the investigation confirmed the detention. “He was arrested
after interrogation of local suspects,” a second source said. No group has yet
to claim responsibility for Easter Sunday’s suicide bomb attacks on three
churches and four luxury hotels that killed 290 people and wounded about 500
people.
Sri Lanka arrests 40 suspects after bombings, toll up to 321
Agencies, Colombo/Tuesday, 23 April 2019/As a state of emergency took effect on
Tuesday giving the Sri Lankan military war-time powers, police arrested 40
suspects, including the driver of a van allegedly used by the suicide bombers
and the owner of a house where some of them lived. Sri Lanka’s president
Maithripala Sirisena gave the military a wider berth to detain and arrest
suspects - powers that were used during the 26-year civil war but withdrawn when
it ended in 2009. Police spokesman Ruwan Gunasekara said the death toll from
Sunday’s attacks rose to 321, with several people dying of their injuries
overnight, a police spokesman said Tuesday. Around 500 people were wounded in
the blasts, Ruwan Gunasekera said in a statement.He added that 40 people were
now under arrest in connection with the attacks, which Sri Lanka’s government
has blamed on a previously little-known local Islamist group, National Thowheeth
Jama’ath. On Monday, officials disclosed that warnings had been received weeks
ago of the possibility of an attack by the radical group. Nationwide
three-minute silence observed .Early Tuesday, Sri Lankans across the island
nation observed three minutes of silence to pay tribute to nearly 321 people
killed in a string of suicide attacks. National flags were lowered and people
bowed their heads as the silence began at 8:30 am local time (0300 GMT), the
time the first of six attacks occurred on Sunday. The government has declared a
full day of national mourning on Tuesday, with flags at all government
institutions lowered to half mast, liquor shops ordered shut and radio stations
and television channels expected to play somber music.
At St Anthony’s Shrine in Colombo where the first suicide bomb detonated on
Sunday morning, a crowd of several dozen people held up candles and prayed
silently, palms pressed together, eyes squeezed shut. Some of them struggled to
hold back tears, and as the three minutes drew to a close, the crowd began to
recite prayers. Sri Lanka travel advisory issued for Emiratis . In the UAE, the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, (MoFAIC), has issued
a warning cautioning UAE citizens against traveling to Sri Lanka following the
current events taking place in the country, reports WAM. In a statement issued
on Sunday, the ministry also urged Emiratis currently in Sri Lanka to exercise
caution and to return back to the UAE.
ISIS Claims Responsibility for Sri Lanka Easter Sunday Bombings
Reuters, DPA and The Associated Press/April 23/ 2019/Earlier, deputy defense minister says an extreme Islamist group is believed to
be responsible for bombings that killed at least 311 people on Easter Day
The Islamic State has claimed responsibility for coordinated bombings in Sri
Lanka which killed 321 people and injured about 500 others, the group's AMAQ
news agency said on Tuesday, providing no evidence to the claim.
Earlier, the Sri Lankan deputy defense minister said that according to initial
investigations by the government, the bombings were intended as retaliation for
last month's attack against Muslims in Christchurch, without providing evidence
or explaining where the information came from.
On March 15, a white supremacist gunman opened fire on worshippers in two
mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, killing 50 people in what was the
country's worst-ever mass shooting.
"We believe [the massacre] was carried out by an extreme Islamist group as a
reprisal to the Christchurch mosque massacre in New Zealand," State Minister for
Defense Ruwan Wijewardene said in a statement to parliament.
"This group is known to have links to an organization named National Thowheed
Jamath. We should take immediate steps to ban any such organization that have
links to extremist elements," he added.
Authorities in Sri Lanka are further increasing security measures after at least
311 people were killed in eight separate attacks on Sunday. The explosions took
place during busy Easter services at Christian churches in Negombo, Batticaloa
and Colombo and in three five-star hotels in the capital.
As a state of emergency took effect Tuesday giving the Sri Lankan military
war-time powers, police arrested 40 suspects, including the driver of a van
allegedly used by the suicide bombers and the owner of a house where some of
them lived.
Police issued orders Tuesday that anyone parking a car on the street and leaving
unattended must put a note with their phone number on the windscreen.
Postal officials meanwhile said they would no longer accept pre-wrapped parcels
for mailing.
A warning shared with Sri Lankan security agencies on April 11 said a local
group was planning a suicide terror attack against churches in Sri Lanka.
Priyalal Disanayaka, the deputy inspector general of police, signed the letter
addressed to the directors of four Sri Lankan security agencies. He asked the
four security directors to "pay extra attention" to the places and VIPs in their
care.The intelligence report attached to his letter called the group National
Towheed Jamaar, said it was targeting "some important churches" in a suicide
terrorist attack that was planned to take place "shortly." The report named six
individuals likely to be involved in the plot.
On Monday, Sri Lanka's health minister held up a copy of the report while
describing its contents, spurring questions about what Sri Lanka police had done
to protect the public from an attack.
Gaza Cleric Mahmoud Al-Hasanat Rebukes Arab Leaders Who
'Whine' About Notre-Dame Cathedral From Which 'A Crusade Against Islam' Was Once
Declared
MEMRI/April 23/2019/In a Friday sermon delivered in Gaza on April 19, 2019,
Mahmoud Al-Hasanat, an Islamic cleric, referred to the fire in the Notre-Dame
Cathedral in Paris. Al-Hasanat rebuked Arab leaders for shedding tears for the
French cathedral and collecting funds to rebuild it while they remained silent
when mosques in Syria and Gaza were burned down and destroyed. Al-Hasanat said
that thousands of people are being burned in Syria today, but Arab leaders do
not shed tears for them. "Our blood is cheap, but the blood of the French and
Parisians is expensive." Al-Hasanat added that a Crusade against Islam was once
declared from this very cathedral. "The heads of Muslims were chopped off and
people were killed in the streets, after war [against Islam] had been declared
in this cathedral." He concluded by saying: "This is their principle: Killing an
animal in the jungle is an unforgivable crime, but killing an entire Muslim
people is a matter open for debate."
Click here to view this clip on MEMRI TV
https://www.memri.org/tv/gaza-cleric-mahmoud-hassanat-notre-dam-fire
Mahmoud Al-Hasanat: "The people who whine about the burning of a cathedral in
Paris… A centuries-old cathedral was burned down. The Umayyad Mosque… Damascus
was completely burned down, Damascus was completely burned down, and it is much
older than that cathedral. It is 4,000 years old. The Umayyad Mosque was also
burned down. Did they shed tears over it? By Allah, they did not. In New
Zealand, 60 Muslims were martyred in one minute, but not a single Arab ruler
attended their funerals. "Gaza was burned down in three consecutive wars. Did
they shed tears over it? No, by Allah, they did not. To this day, thousands of
people are being burned in Baghuz and in Idlib, in Syria. Did they shed tears
over them? Our blood is cheap, but the blood of the French and Parisians is
expensive. All the Arab rulers rose to the occasion, and collected donations in
order to rebuild that cathedral. That is just great! That is just great! Also,
they all sent messages of grief. Thirty four billion dollars were collected so
far from the Arab countries, from the EU, and from foreign countries, in order
to rebuild that cathedral, but Gaza mosques that were destroyed have still not
been rebuilt."From that very cathedral, they once declared a Crusade against
Islam. The heads of Muslims were chopped off, and people were killed in the
streets, after war [against Islam] had been declared in this cathedral. Indeed,
these are crocodile tears. These are crocodile tears. This is their principle:
Killing an animal in the jungle is an unforgivable crime, but killing an entire
Muslim people is a matter open for debate."
ISIS Supporters Celebrate Easter Sunday Bombings In Sri
Lanka
MEMRI/April 23/2019
The following report is now a complimentary offering from MEMRI's Jihad and
Terrorism Threat Monitor (JTTM). For JTTM subscription information, click here.
The multiple April 21, 2019 bombings in Sri Lanka, which targeted a number of
churches and hotels, as well as other locations, and in which more than 200
people were killed and hundreds were wounded, appear to have been coordinated by
a single organization. While no group has yet claimed responsibility for the
bombings, many of which appear to be suicide attacks, supporters of the Islamic
State (ISIS) have taken to Telegram to celebrate them. A Kashmiri pro-ISIS
channel mentioned a poster that had been released on April 20, one day before
the attacks, by the pro-ISIS Indonesian media outlet Ash-Shaff Foundation. The
poster, showing a hooded man standing in front of the Notre Dame in Paris with a
text threatening "lone wolf attacks" in "Crusader" churches, [1] seems to be a
reaction to the April 15, 2019 Notre Dame fire. The Kashmiri channel, however,
associated it with the Sri Lanka bombings, writing in English: "As-Shaff
foundation (Pro Islamic State Media) had released a poster yesterday threatening
of attacks and bloodshed in churches. And today three churches were attacked in
Sri-Lanka, there is a possibility that Islamic State lonewolves executed this
attack, but there is no claim from the official Islamic State sources." [2]
The pro-ISIS Muntasir Media Foundation released a poster celebrating the Sri
Lanka attacks themselves.
Another pro-ISIS media outlet, the Ash Shaff News Agency (which may or may not
be linked to the Ash-the Shaff Foundation) celebrated the attack with several
sarcastic posts. After providing information on the explosions in English and
Indonesian, it commented: "What a great news and bad news for kuffar[unbelievers].
Ok Mr Kuffar, Welcome and enjoying in Jahannam [Hell]. HAHA..." In a later post,
after quoting media sources that blamed the blasts on the Islamist group
National Thowheed Jama’ath (NTJ), whose members include jihadis returned from
Syria, Ash Shaff commented: "Ok Mr TerroriST what a great job, S A L U T E 4
You!" Following the seventh and eighth explosions, the media outlet posed:
"Looks like the party is getting more exciting, nice weekend yaa Kuffar idiot!
LOL".[4]
ISIS supporter Al-Basha'ir wrote in Arabic on his own Telegram channel: "These
burning churches, I think that terrorists are behind them, but Allah knows best.
Notre Dame and now Sri Lanka." [5] Another pro-ISIS channel, Hamlat Fadh Al-Mukhabarat
(The Campaign to Expose Intelligence Agents), published a gruesome photo of the
carnage in one of the churches, with the Arabic text: "Preliminary photos of the
celebration that was held today in the churches of Sri Lanka. We in turn
congratulate them on this beautiful, festive day and ask Allah to repeat it on
many days and for extended periods." [6]
The pro-ISIS Quraysh Media published a poster with the caption: "Sri Lanka pays
the price. Islamic State."
[1] Telegram.me/ Publisher_Media_Ash_Shaff, April 20, 2019.
[2] Telegram.me/xcptz, April 21, 2019.
[3] Telegram.me/ MUNTASIR, April 21, 2019.
[4] Telegram.me/ ASH SHAFF NEWS, April 21, 2019.
[5] Telegram.me/ Al-Basha'ir, April 21, 2019.
[6] Telegram.me/ Hamlat Fadh Al-Mukhabarat, April 21, 2019.
Sri Lankan minister says attacks were ‘retaliation for
Christchurch’ massacre
Reuters/April 23/19
COLOMBO: An initial probe into the deadly suicide bomb attacks, which killed 321
people and injured about 500 others, shows it was “retaliation for
Christchurch,” the country’s deputy defense minister said earlier Tuesday.
“The preliminary investigations have revealed that what happened in Sri Lanka
(on Sunday) was in retaliation for the attack against Muslims in Christchurch,”
state minister of defence Ruwan Wijewardene told parliament.
Fifty people were killed in shooting attacks on two mosques in the New Zealand
city of Christchurch on March 15.
Wijewardene said investigations showed that a local group called National
Thowheeth Jamaath (NTJ) was behind the attack and was linked to a little-known
radical Islamist group in India.
“This National Thowheeth Jamaath group which carried out the attacks had close
links with JMI it has now been revealed,” Wijewardene told parliament, in an
apparent reference to a group known as Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen India.
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe also told journalists on Tuesday that there
was "specific intelligence" from India on the attacks, and that he believed
there may be "some links" with Daesh. He also disclosed that a fourth hotel was
also a target, but the attack failed.
A state of emergency took effect Tuesday giving the military war-time powers,
police arrested 40 suspects, including the driver of a van allegedly used by
suicide bombers and the owner of a house where some of them lived, officials
said.
Daesh has claimed responsibility for the bombings, the group’s propaganda agency
AMAQ reported, but have not provided any evidence.
Sources said police are holding a Syrian national in custody for questioning
over attacks, Reuters reported.
“The terrorist investigation division of the police arrested a Syrian national
following the attacks for interrogation,” a source said. Two other officials
with knowledge of the investigation confirmed the detention.
“He was arrested after interrogation of local suspects,” a second source said.
Sri Lanka’s president gave the military a wider berth to detain and arrest
suspects — powers that were used during the 26-year civil war but withdrawn when
it ended in 2009.
Two Saudis were among the 31 foreigners killed in the attack, the Sri Lankan
Foreign Ministry said on Monday.
On Tuesday, which President Maithripala Sirisena declared a day of mourning, Sri
Lankan authorities planned to brief foreign diplomats and receive assistance
from the FBI and other foreign intelligence-gathering agencies after officials
disclosed Monday that warnings had been received weeks ago of the possibility of
an attack by the radical Muslim group blamed for the bloodshed.
The country fell silent for three minutes Tuesday on a day of national mourning
to honor those killed.
Flags were lowered to half-mast on government buildings, and people bowed their
heads and reflected silently on the violence that has caused international
outrage.
The silence began at 8:30 am (0300 GMT), the time that the first of six bombs
detonated on Sunday morning, unleashing carnage at high-end hotels and churches
packed with Easter worshippers.
The first memorial services for the victims, among them dozens of foreigners,
were being held Tuesday, hours after the government imposed a state of emergency
and said an Islamist group was behind the violence.
At St Anthony's Shrine in Colombo -- where scores died as they gathered for
Easter Sunday prayers -- a few dozen people held candles and prayed silently,
palms pressed together.
The six near-simultaneous attacks on three churches and three luxury hotels and
three related blasts later Sunday were the South Asian island nation’s deadliest
violence in a decade. The government blocked most social media to curtail false
information. Even after an overnight, nationwide curfew was lifted, the streets
of central Colombo remained mostly deserted and shops closed as armed soldiers
stood guard.
Wickremesinghe said he feared the massacre could unleash instability and he
vowed to “vest all necessary powers with the defense forces” to act against
those responsible.
In an indication of the tensions, three explosions caused panic but apparently
no injuries Monday as police were defusing bombs inside a van parked near one of
the stricken churches. Dozens of detonators were discovered near Colombo’s main
bus depot, but officials declined to say whether they were linked to the
attacks.
At Bandaranaike International Airport outside of Colombo early Tuesday morning,
police walked explosive-sniffing dogs outside as inside cheery video
advertisements of gamblers and snorkelers played. At a roadside checkpoint at
the airport, security officials checked car trunks and questioned drivers.
Nuns walk past military personnel standing guard at the St Sebastian's Church in
Negombo on April 23, 2019 – the military have been given far reaching powers to
arrest people suspected of terrorism. (Ishara S. Kodikara /AFP)
The lack of social media access was contributing to the confusion and doing
little to reassure residents and visitors that the danger had passed.
International intelligence agencies had warned that the little-known group,
National Thowfeek Jamaath, was planning attacks, but word apparently didn’t
reach the prime minister’s office until after the massacre, exposing the
continuing political turmoil in the highest levels of the Sri Lankan government.
Health Minister Rajitha Senaratne said the warnings started April 4, the defense
ministry wrote to the police chief with information that included the group’s
name and police wrote April 11 to the heads of security of the judiciary and
diplomatic security division.
Sirisena, who was out of the country Sunday, had ousted Prime Minister Ranil
Wickremesinghe in October and dissolved the Cabinet. The Supreme Court reversed
his actions, but the prime minister has not been allowed into meetings of the
Security Council since October, leaving him and his government in the dark about
the intelligence.
It was not immediately clear what action, if any, was taken after the threats.
Authorities said they knew where the group trained and had safe houses, but did
not identify any of the suicide bombers, whose bodies were recovered, or the two
dozen other suspects taken into custody.
All the bombers were Sri Lankans, but authorities said they strongly suspected
foreign links, Senaratne said.
Also unclear was a motive. The history of Buddhist-majority Sri Lanka, a country
of 21 million including large Hindu, Muslim and Christian minorities, is rife
with ethnic and sectarian conflict.
In the 26-year civil war, the Tamil Tigers, a powerful rebel army known for
using suicide bombers, was finally crushed by the government in 2009 but had
little history of targeting Christians. Anti-Muslim bigotry fed by Buddhist
nationalists has swept the country recently, but there is no history of Islamic
militancy. Its small Christian community has seen only scattered incidents of
harassment.
Two of the stricken churches are Catholic and one Protestant. The three hotels
and one of the churches, St. Anthony’s Shrine, are frequented by foreigners.
Tourism Minister John Amaratunga said 39 foreigners were killed, although the
foreign ministry gave the figure as 31. The reason for the discrepancy wasn’t
clear, but some victims were dual nationals.
India and Britain have confirmed eight dead each. The US State Department
confirmed that at least four Americans dead and several seriously wounded.
Others were confirmed to be from Bangladesh, China, France, Japan, the
Netherlands, Denmark, Portugal, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Turkey and Australia.
The scale of the violence recalled the worst days of the civil war, when the
Tamil Tigers, from the ethnic Tamil minority, sought independence from the
Sinhalese-dominated, majority Buddhist country. The Tamils are Hindu, Muslim and
Christian.
The six near-simultaneous blasts were set off Sunday morning at St. Anthony’s
and the Cinnamon Grand, Shangri-La and Kingsbury hotels in Colombo, as well as
the two churches outside Colombo. They collapsed ceilings and blew out windows,
killing worshippers and hotel guests, and leaving behind scenes of smoke, soot,
blood, broken glass, screams and wailing alarms.
The military confirmed two other related blasts, one near an overpass and
another at a guesthouse where two people were killed. A ninth blast, which
killed three police officers, was set off by occupants of a safe house trying to
evade arrest, authorities said.
A morgue worker in Negombo, outside Colombo, where St. Sebastian’s Church was
targeted, said many bodies were hard to identify because of the blasts. He spoke
on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.
Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, the archbishop of Colombo, said at least 110 of the
dead were killed at St. Sebastian’s, making it the deadliest of the attacks.
Nilantha Lakmal, a businessman who took his family to St. Sebastian’s for Mass,
said they all escaped unharmed, but he remained haunted by images of bodies
being taken from the sanctuary.
Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, the archbishop of Colombo, said the attacks could have
been thwarted.
“We placed our hands on our heads when we came to know that these deaths could
have been avoided. Why this was not prevented?” he said.
Ukraine Leaps into Unknown after Comic Elected President
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 23/19/Ukraine leapt into the unknown Monday
after comedian Volodymyr Zelensky was elected president on promises of change
but with just a vague blueprint of what he might do as leader. Zelensky, whose
previous political experience was playing the president on a TV show, crushed
incumbent Petro Poroshenko in a stinging rebuke to the establishment fuelled by
voters' anger over war with separatists and social injustice. Ukrainians looked
to the future with hope and anxiety after the performer took 73 percent of the
vote on Sunday, according to nearly complete official results. Zelensky at 41
will become Ukraine's youngest ever president when he is sworn into office by
early June. It remained unclear Monday who would fill top positions in his
governement, including prime minister. The star of "Servant of the People", a
sitcom now in its third season, has vowed to press ahead with the pro-European
course set out by Poroshenko.
But he has also said he wants to improve ties with arch-enemy Russia. On
election night, however, he appeared to taunt the Kremlin when he told people in
fellow post-Soviet countries that "everything is possible."
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Monday it was "too early to talk about
President Putin congratulating Mr Zelensky, or about the possibility of working
together."Ties between Ukraine and Russia were shredded after a bloody uprising
ousted a Kremlin-backed regime in 2014, prompting Moscow to annex Crimea and
support insurgents in eastern Ukraine in a conflict that has claimed around
13,000 lives.
Poroshenko pledges to return
Poroshenko, 53, quickly conceded defeat and said he was ready to coach the
successor. But on Monday evening he told a rally he planned to take back the
country's top job during the next presidential polls set for 2024. Several
thousand supporters, who gathered outside the presidential offices, chanted they
wanted him back "in a year"."With God's help," Poroshenko replied. "We will
unite to secure our common victory in the near future.". Poroshenko's faction
has the most seats in the legislature and new parliamentary polls are due to be
held in October. The Ukrainian president has strong powers over defence,
security and foreign policy but will need parliament backing to push through
reforms. On the streets of Kiev earlier Monday, many praised the elections as a
fair and peaceful transfer of power after popular uprisings of 2004 and 2014.
"People showed that they want change," 28-year-old Karina told AFP.
"We had the most honest polls in the history of Ukraine," she added. Zelensky
shunned traditional campaign rallies, instead performing comedy gigs, and
implied he would use the same unorthodox style to run the country of 45 million
that depends on international aid.
US President Donald Trump and French leader Emmanuel Macron called the political
novice to congratulate him, while German Chancellor Angela Merkel pledged
support. G7 ambassadors said they looked forward to working closely with the new
leader but also recognized the progress the country had made under Poroshenko
since 2014. OSCE observers praised Ukraine's election as "competitive and held
with respect for fundamental freedoms", while regretting that the campaigns were
thin on substance.
'Political honeymoon'
The Kremlin said it respected the choice of the people but questioned the
legitimacy of the polls, noting that "three million" Ukrainian citizens living
in Russia could not vote there. Kiev refused to open polling stations at its
diplomatic missions in Russia. Zelensky has said that among his top priorities
are securing the release of Ukrainians being held prisoner by Russia and
rebooting moribund Western-brokered peace talks. But many doubt the political
neophyte will be able to stand up to Putin and revive the struggling economy.
Questions have also been raised over his close ties to Israel-based tycoon Igor
Kolomoysky. Victoriya, a 74-year-old pensioner, said she liked the new
president-elect but expressed concern that he may not last long. "He has not met
this pack of wolves yet," she said. Analyst Volodymyr Fesenko said that
Zelensky's political "honeymoon" would last two or three months before reality
kicks in. Ukrainians want to see a quick end to the war in the east and pay less
for utility bills, Fesenko told AFP. "It will be extremely difficult to meet
these expectations," he said.
Bodies of Three Mountaineers Found in Canada
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 23/19/The bodies of three world-renowned
professional mountaineers -- two Austrians and an American -- were found Sunday
after they went missing during an avalanche on a western Canadian summit, the
national parks agency said. American Jess Roskelley, 36, and Hansjorg Auer, 35,
and David Lama, 28, of Austria went missing late Tuesday at Banff National Park.
Authorities launched an aerial search the next day. The three men were
attempting to climb the east face of Howse Pass, an isolated and highly
difficult route.
They were part of a team of experienced athletes sponsored by American outdoor
equipment firm The North Face. "Parks Canada extends our sincere condolences to
their families, friends and loved ones," the agency said in a statement. "We
would also like to acknowledge the impact that this has had on the tight-knit,
local and international climbing communities. Our thoughts are with families,
friends and all those who have been affected by this tragic incident." Roskelley
was the son of John Roskelley, who was also considered one of the best
mountaineers of his own generation. Father and son had climbed Mount Everest
together in 2003. At the time, the younger Roskelley was only 20 years old, and
became the youngest mountaineer to climb the planet's highest mountain above sea
level. ran's oil revenues. Instex was conceived as a way to help match Iranian
oil and gas exports with purchases of EU goods, but those ambitions have been
toned down. Diplomats say that, realistically, it will be used only for smaller
transactions such as purchases of humanitarian products or food. -- REUTERS
Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on April 23-24/19
U.S. Withdrawal From Syria Threatens Revival of Kurdish Language, Too
Elizabeth Tsurkov (Northern Syria) /Haaretz/April 23/2019
The civil war lessened the Assad regime’s grip on northeastern Syria, allowing
Kurdish culture to be seen and heard again. Locals worry that recent events will
force it underground once more.
QAMISHLI and AL-MALIKIYAH, Northern Syria — The students at Rojava University
rise to welcome their Kurdish literature professor. The large room is dimly lit
by indirect sunlight because the electricity is cut off most hours of the day,
and the lecturer, whose students address him as “professor,” has not completed
his master’s degree.Yet despite the immense challenges, the students are making history: They are
among the first to ever attend a university in which classes and reading
materials are in Kurmanji — the dialect of Kurdish spoken in Syria and Turkey.
Rojava University, opened only three years ago in the autonomous region
established by Syria’s Kurds in northeastern Syria, is part of the revival of
the long-suppressed Kurdish language. However, this revival is now under threat
as the future of the region hangs in the balance following an announcement on
the drawdown of the U.S. forces whose presence has protected the Kurds from a
regime takeover or Turkish invasion.
Some 10 percent of Syria’s population are Kurds. But under the Ba’ath Party
regimes of Syrian presidents Hafez and Bashar Assad, expressions of Kurdish
identity have been suppressed and penalized. The Kurds suffered discrimination
in public sector employment, while Kurdish-majority areas in Syria’s northeast —
bordering the areas inhabited by Kurds in Iraq and Turkey — received
disproportionately smaller state budgets, contributing to the region’s
impoverishment.
Publications in Kurdish were banned during the reign of Hafez Assad and only
slightly relaxed under his son’s rule, starting in the year 2000.
Speaking to Haaretz in his spacious home in central Qamishli, Zara, a famous
Kurdish novelist and poet, recounts being interrogated in 1978 for publishing an
apolitical Kurdish children’s song in a Kurdish-language newspaper in Turkey.
(Most of the Kurds’ names in this article were changed to protect the identity
of Syrians speaking to an Israeli reporter.)
Prior to the interrogation, Zara was able to avoid the harassment of authorities
for years by publishing using a pen name and traveling to Banyas — a majority-Alawite
town with a decreased secret police presence — to mail his poems and novels.
Zara’s books could not be published in Syria and either had to be printed
outside of Syria and smuggled into the country, or printed in Damascus while
falsely claiming the books were printed in Beirut.
Kurdish language education has been banned under the Arab nationalist regimes
that have ruled Syria since independence. Shiyar, a resident of Qamishli in his
30s, recalls being sent to study Kurdish by his father. “He told me not to speak
about this. I used to carry the notebook under my clothes. I was constantly
afraid. I was a child, but I could feel something was abnormal about this
situation,” he tells Haaretz. Later, as an adult, “I realized that I and the
teacher could have been arrested, tortured and even killed for doing this.”
Barin, a journalist and activist from Qamishli, describes becoming involved in
covert study circles of the Kurdish language in 2009, during her time at Aleppo
University.
“We were five people studying with a teacher. The idea was for each of us to
learn the language and then teach it to five more people,” she explains. Despite
limiting the number of students in an effort to prevent infiltration by the
regime, after Barin began teaching the Kurmanji alphabet to five students,
someone informed on her. The secret police raided her workplace and her
supervisor had to bribe them to leave, following which he fired her. “This was
the moment I realized that I am a Kurd; I am not Syrian. I will never forget
this terrifying moment,” she says, her eyes glistening.
‘Sweetest days’
In 2011, with the outbreak of the civil war, the Assad regime lost its tight
grip over large swaths of Syria. Kurdish towns witnessed anti-regime protests
that featured Kurdish chants and flags. Syrians across the country rushed to
enjoy the newly created space to organize, protest, publish magazines and debate
politics for the first time in their lives.
Across Syria’s northeast, Kurds rushed to study their long-banned language.
Samira Hajj Ali , co-chair of the educational body of Syria’s northeast region,
recalls studying Kurdish for the first time in her life in 2012. “We gathered
money and built a two-room school in Qamishli,” she says, adding that despite
the lack of electricity that winter and it being so cold in the school that “our
pencils would fall out of our hands,” she still remembers that time as “the
sweetest days of my life.”In mid-2012, Syrian opposition factions stormed Aleppo City, forcing the regime
to shift forces there to protect Syria’s largest city. Most regime forces
withdrew from the country’s northeast, ceding the territory to the militarily
most dominant Kurdish party, the Democratic Union Party (PYD), which remains the
region’s ruling party to this day. (It maintains a “third way” policy of not
aligning with the Assad regime but not fighting it either.)
With Kurds in control of their own region for the first time in Syria’s
post-independence history, all prohibitions on studying or using the Kurdish
language were lifted.
Storefronts, street signs and official documents across the region now feature
both Arabic and Kurdish, and at times the Syriac language as well, used by the
region’s Assyrian community. Public events and a plethora of local media outlets
that sprang up in the area celebrate the region’s ethnic and linguistic
diversity. Starting in 2017, the local administration implemented its own
curriculum and Kurdish-language education in schools. In Kurdish-majority areas,
Arabs, Kurds and Assyrians now study in their own languages in grades 1 through
10. Rojava University currently offers classes mostly in Arabic, with only
Kurdish literature being taught in Kurdish. Hajj Ali tells Haaretz that the
intention is to begin teaching additional subjects in Kurdish in the coming
years.
Kurdish ‘indoctrination’
Not all the region’s residents are rushing to embrace the new curriculum,
though. Some oppose it due to educational content that they see as
indoctrination by the Democratic Union Party, which sets the curricula. Others
are concerned about the long-term viability of the region’s educational system,
worried that if the Syrian regime retakes the area, their children will be at a
disadvantage because they’ve studied an unrecognized curriculum and would only
know Arabic as a second language.
In areas recaptured from the opposition by the Syrian regime, children have had
to repeat all classes they’ve studied in opposition-run schools due to the
regime’s refusal to recognize the alternative curriculum.
Such fears have increased following President Donald Trump’s surprise
announcement last December regarding the complete withdrawal of U.S. forces from
Syria. The decision has since been partially reversed with a residual force of
several hundred U.S. personnel set to remain in place. But the autonomy of the
region faces threats both from the emboldened Assad regime and neighboring
Turkey.
The Assad regime refuses to accept any genuine autonomy inside Syria’s borders,
ceding control over certain regions only due to its military weakness. Now that
Syria’s opposition and the Islamic State have been largely defeated due to
Iranian and Russian support, the regime is determined to extend its control over
Syria’s oil-rich northeast.
Another threat is Turkey, which has vehemently opposed the emergence of Kurdish
autonomy in northern Syria — particularly due to the close organizational and
ideological ties between the Democratic Union Party and the Kurdistan Workers
Party (PKK), a militant group that has waged a guerrilla campaign against Turkey
since 1984.
Turkey has made repeated threats and even mobilized forces to invade the region.
Locals in northeastern Syria are painfully aware of the reality in Efrin, a
region in northwestern Syria previously under the control of the Democratic
Union Party, which was captured by Turkey and Turkish-backed Syrian armed
factions in early 2018. Since that takeover, the Kurdish language has again been
erased from the region, celebrations of Newroz (the Kurdish New Year) were
banned, Kurdish statues destroyed and Turkish is taught as a second language in
schools while instruction is done in Arabic.
For Syrian Kurds, schools were a place of oppression and violence where they
were forced to attend classes on history and nationalism that erased their
identity. Shiyar, who studied Kurdish in secret as a child, describes being
beaten by a teacher twice a week in front of his classmates for an entire
semester at age 13 for refusing to join the ruling Ba’ath Party. “He would slap
my head so hard it would hit the wall,” he recalls.
Shiyar did not tell his parents about the abuse, fearing his father would
complain and then be arrested. Today, Shiyar’s children attend Kurdish schools.
“I will never let my children study in regime schools again,” he says defiantly.
“If Assad comes back, we will have to escape.”
*Elizabeth Tsurkov is a Research Fellow specializing in Syria and Iraq at the
Jerusalem-based Forum for Regional Thinking. You can follow her on Twitter @Elizrael.
https://www.haaretz.com/middle-east-news/syria/.premium.MAGAZINE-u-s-withdrawal-from-syria-threatens-revival-of-kurdish-language-too-1.7159846
The Persecution of Palestinians No One Mentions
Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone Institute/April 23/2019
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14098/palestinians-persecution-saudi-arabia
In Lebanon, Palestinians have long been facing discriminatory and "Apartheid
laws" that deny them basic rights, including access to dozens of skilled
professions, health-care and education services. According to some reports,
thousands of Palestinians have been fleeing Lebanon in recent years as a result
of the dire economic conditions and government regulations that deny them basic
rights.
In 2015, a Saudi court sentenced Palestinian artist and poet Ashraf Fayadh to
death by beheading for "apostasy." Later, however, the court overturned the
death sentence and replaced it with an eight-year prison term and 800 lashes.
The "evidence" against Fayadh was based on poems included in his book
Instructions Within, as well as social media posts and conversations he had in a
coffee shop in Saudi Arabia.
Palestinian leaders do not seem to care about the suffering of their people at
the hands of Arabs. Yet, these same leaders are quick to condemn Israel on
almost every occasion and available platform. Palestinian leaders in the West
Bank and Gaza Strip are so busy fighting each other (and Israel) that they seem
to have forgotten about the Palestinians in Arab countries, being killed,
wounded and arrested every day.
In 2015, a Saudi court in Abha sentenced Palestinian artist and poet Ashraf
Fayadh to death by beheading for "apostasy." Later, however, the court
overturned the death sentence and replaced it with an eight-year prison term and
800 lashes. The "evidence" against Fayadh was based on poems included in his
book Instructions Within, as well as social media posts and conversations he had
in a coffee shop in Saudi Arabia. Pictured: Abha, Saudi Arabia. (Image source:
iStock)
Saudi Arabia appears to have joined the list of Arab countries that mistreat
Palestinians.
In Syria, thousands of Palestinians have been wounded, murdered and arrested
since the beginning of the civil war in 2011. The latest statistics show that
nearly 4,000 Palestinians -- 3,920 to be exact -- have been killed in Syria in
the past nine years, while 1,750 others are being held in various Syrian
government prisons. Another 323 Palestinians have gone missing during the same
period.
In Lebanon, Palestinians have long been facing discriminatory and "Apartheid
laws" that deny them basic rights, including access to dozens of skilled
professions, health-care and education services. According to some reports,
thousands of Palestinians have been fleeing Lebanon in recent years as a result
of the dire economic conditions and government regulations that deny them basic
rights.
It now seems that it is Saudi Arabia's turn to harass and intimidate
Palestinians.
A report in the Gulf-based Al-Khaleej Online news site disclosed that the Saudi
authorities have in recent weeks arrested and terrorized Palestinians living in
the kingdom while the Palestinian embassy in Riyadh has chosen not to intervene.
The report said that more than 30 Palestinians, including students, academics
and businessmen, have been secretly rounded up by Saudi security forces. The
Saudis, the report added, have also threatened to ban dozens of Palestinians
from leaving the kingdom, while many others have been dismissed from their jobs
and are facing deportation.
Palestinian sources said that the crackdown on Palestinians in Saudi Arabia
began nine months ago, but has intensified in recent weeks.
Saeed bin Nasser al-Ghamdi, a Saudi academic and opposition figure, revealed
that the Saudi authorities have also frozen the bank accounts and confiscated
property belonging to Palestinians in the kingdom. He claimed that the
Palestinians were accused of "sympathizing with the Palestinian resistance,
supporting Hamas and displaying interest in Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip."
In early March, the Saudi authorities announced , without providing further
details, that they had arrested six Palestinians in connection with
security-related offenses. The Palestinians were among 50 suspects with eight
different nationalities arrested by the Saudis. In addition to Saudi Arabia, the
remaining suspects are from Egypt, Afghanistan, Syria, Jordan, Yemen and the
Philippines.
At this stage, it is not clear whether the security crackdown on Palestinians in
Saudi Arabia is linked to the arrest of the 50 suspects. Palestinians insist
that the crackdown began long before the arrests.
Palestinians families said that their sons who are residing in Saudi Arabia have
been subjected to "humiliating interrogation" by Saudi security officers. "The
Palestinians were threatened and prohibited from leaving the kingdom," the
families were quoted as saying.
As part of the unprecedented crackdown, the Saudi security forces have raided
some Palestinian homes and conducted "violent searches" before taking their
occupants into custody. The Palestinian detainees are being held in undisclosed
locations, their families said.
Nidal Hamideh, a Palestinian living outside Saudi Arabia, said that on April 5,
one of his relatives -- Abu Fadi -- was arrested after being summoned for
interrogation. "Abu Fadi has been working as an employee for a Saudi company for
three years," Hamideh said.
"He and his family members are legal residents of Saudi Arabia and he was never
involved in any illegal activities. Lately, Abu Fadi was harassed several times
by the Saudi security forces, who questioned him about his residence, work and
even political affiliation."
Hamideh said that his family's attempts to find out where Abu Fadi was being
held have thus far been unsuccessful.
The Paris Francophone Institute for Freedoms condemned the "arbitrary" Saudi
measures against Palestinians in the kingdom as a "blatant violation of
international human rights conventions." The institute said it has received
testimonies and statements indicating that in Saudi Arabia, in the past few
months, dozens of Palestinians have been arrested. The Saudis, it added, have
also confiscated properties belonging to the Palestinians.
One of the Palestinians targeted by the Saudis told the Paris Institute that the
Palestinians were being interrogated about their support for Palestinian groups
in the Gaza Strip and for criticizing the Arab government's policies towards the
Palestinian issue. "The prolonged detentions without charge, trial or appearance
before a judge are arbitrary measures that violate Saudi law and international
human rights standards," the institute said.
"The crackdown on freedom of opinion and expression violates human rights
conventions and laws and reflects the tyranny of the regime in Saudi Arabia,
which denies public freedoms to its citizens and those who come to the kingdom."
The Paris institute expressed deep concern that the Palestinian detainees were
being subjected to widespread abuses, including extended periods of
incarceration without charge, trial or legal assistance, and called on the Saudi
authorities immediately to release all Palestinians, end their travel ban and
the confiscation of their properties, and to compensate them for physical and
psychological harm.
In November 2015, a Saudi court sentenced Palestinian artist and poet Ashraf
Fayadh to death by beheading for "apostasy." Later, however, the court
overturned the death sentence and replaced it with an eight-year prison term and
800 lashes. The "evidence" against Fayadh was based on poems included in his
book Instructions Within, as well as social media posts and conversations he had
in a coffee shop in Saudi Arabia.
In the past few years, relations between the Palestinians and Saudi Arabia have
been extremely tense, particularly after reports about a rapprochement between
the Saudis and Israel. Several Palestinians have taken to social media to
badmouth Saudi leaders and denounce them as corrupt, mentally retarded and
traitors.
For now, Palestinian officials are refusing to comment on reports about the
crackdown on Palestinians in Saudi Arabia. Palestinian dignitaries are acutely
careful when it comes to criticizing Arab heads of state or Arab government
policies. They appear to be afraid that any criticism of Arab leaders and
governments will only worsen the conditions of Palestinians in the Arab world.
They also seem afraid of losing Arab political backing for the Palestinian
leadership, especially as the US administration prepares to announce its
long-awaited plan for peace in the Middle East, also known as the "deal of the
century."
Palestinian leaders do not seem to care about the suffering of their people at
the hands of Arabs. Yet, these same leaders are quick to condemn Israel on
almost every occasion and available platform. Palestinian leaders in the West
Bank and Gaza Strip are so busy fighting each other (and Israel) that they seem
to have forgotten about the Palestinians in Arab countries, being killed,
wounded and arrested every day.
*Khaled Abu Toameh, an award-winning journalist based in Jerusalem, is a
Shillman Journalism Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
© 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.
The Burning of Notre Dame and the Destruction of Christian Europe
كي ميليار/معهد جيتستون: حريق كاتدرائية نوتردام الفرنسية
وتدمير أوروبا المسيحيةا
Guy Millière/Gatestone Institute/April 23/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/74151/%D9%83%D9%8A-%D9%85%D9%8A%D9%84%D9%8A%D8%A7%D8%B1-%D9%85%D8%B9%D9%87%D8%AF-%D8%AC%D9%8A%D8%AA%D8%B3%D8%AA%D9%88%D9%86-%D8%AD%D8%B1%D9%8A%D9%82-%D9%83%D9%86%D9%8A%D8%B3%D8%A9-%D9%86%D9%88%D8%AA%D8%B1/
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14107/notre-dame-destruction-christian-europe
Barely an hour after the flames began to rise above Notre Dame -- at a time when
no explanation could be provided by anyone -- the French authorities rushed to
say that the fire was an "accident" and that "arson has been ruled out." The
remarks sounded like all the official statements made by the French government
after attacks in France during the last decade.
The Notre Dame fire also occurred at a time when attacks against churches in
France and Europe have been multiplying. More than 800 churches were attacked in
France during the year 2018 alone.
Churches in France are empty. The number of priests is decreasing and the
priests that are active in France are either very old or come from Africa or
Latin America. The dominant religion in France is now Islam. Every year,
churches are demolished to make way for parking lots or shopping centers.
Mosques are being built all over, and they are full.
The fire that destroyed much of the Notre Dame Cathedral in the heart of Paris
is a tragedy that is irreparable. Even if the cathedral is rebuilt, it will
never be what it was before. Stained glass windows and major architectural
elements have been severely damaged and the oak frame totally destroyed. The
spire that rose from the cathedral was a unique piece of art. It was drawn by
the architect who restored the edifice in the nineteenth century, Eugène
Viollet-le-Duc, who had based his work on 12th century documents.
In addition to the fire, the water needed to extinguish the flames penetrated
the limestone of the walls and façade, and weakened them, making them brittle.
The roof is non-existent: the nave, the transept and the choir now lie in open
air, vulnerable to bad weather. They cannot even be protected until the
structure has been examined thoroughly, a task that will take weeks. Three major
elements of the structure (the north transept pinion, the pinion located between
the two towers and the vault) are also on the verge of collapse.
Notre Dame is more than 800 years old. It survived the turbulence of the Middle
Ages, the Reign of Terror of the French Revolution, two World Wars and the Nazi
occupation of Paris. It did not survive what France is becoming in the 21st
century.
The cause of the fire has so far been attributed to "an accident," "a short
circuit," and most recently "a computer glitch."
If the fire really was an accident, it is almost impossible to explain how it
started. Benjamin Mouton, Notre Dame's former chief architect, explained that
the rules were exceptionally strict and that no electric cable or appliance, and
no source of heat, could be placed in the attic. He added that an extremely
sophisticated alarm system was in place. The company that installed the
scaffolding did not use any welding and specialized in this type of work. The
fire broke out more than an hour after the workers' departure and none of them
was present. It spread so quickly that the firefighters who rushed to the spot
as soon as they could get there were shocked. Remi Fromont, the chief architect
of the French Historical Monuments said: "The fire could not start from any
element present where it started. A real calorific load is necessary to launch
such a disaster".
A long, difficult and complex investigation will be conducted.
The possibility that the fire was the result of arson cannot be dismissed.
Barely an hour after the flames began to rise above Notre Dame -- at a time when
no explanation could be provided by anyone -- the French authorities rushed to
say that the fire was an "accident" and that "arson has been ruled out." The
remarks sounded like all the official statements made by the French government
after attacks in France during the last decade.
In November 2015, on the night of the massacre at the Bataclan Theater in Paris,
in which jihadists murdered 90 people, the French Department of the Interior
said that the government did not know anything, except that a gunfight had
occurred. The truth came out only after ISIS claimed responsibility for the
slaughter.In Nice, after the truck-attack in July 2016, the French government insisted for
several days that the terrorist who crushed 86 people to death was a "man with a
nervous breakdown".
In 2018, Sarah Halimi's murderer, who recited verses from the Quran while
torturing his victim, was declared "mentally disturbed" and held in a
psychiatric institution immediately after his arrest. He will most likely never
face a court. On April 8, Alain Finkielkraut and 38 other intellectuals
published a text saying that her murderer must not escape justice. The text had
no effect.
The fire at Notre Dame took place less than three years after a "commando unit"
of jihadi women, later arrested, tried to destroy the cathedral by detonating
cylinders of natural gas. Three days before last week's fire, on April 12, the
leader of the jihadis, Ines Madani, a young French convert to Islam, was
sentenced to eight years in prison for creating a terrorist group affiliated
with the Islamic State.
The Notre Dame fire also occurred at a time when attacks against churches in
France and Europe have been multiplying. More than 800 churches were attacked in
France during the year 2018 alone. Many suffered serious damage: broken,
beheaded statues, smashed tabernacles, feces thrown on the walls. In several
churches, fires were lit. On March 5, the Basilica of St. Denis, where all but
three of the Kings of France are buried, was vandalized by a Pakistani refugee.
Several stained-glass windows were broken, and the basilica's organ, a national
treasure built between 1834 and 1841, was nearly wrecked. Twelve days later, on
March 17, a fire broke out at Saint Sulpice, the largest church in Paris,
causing serious damage. After days of silence, the police finally admitted that
the cause had been arson.
For months, jihadist organizations have been issuing statements calling for the
destruction of churches and Christian monuments in Europe. Notre Dame was
repeatedly named as a primary target. Despite all that, the Cathedral was not
adequately protected. A couple of young men, who entered the Cathedral at night,
climbed on the roof last November and shot a video that they then put on
YouTube.
Many messages were posted by people with Muslim names on social media --
Twitter, Facebook, the website of Al Jazeera -- expressing a joy to see an
important Christian symbol destroyed. Hafsa Askar, a migrant from Morocco and
the vice president of the National Union of Students of France (UNEF), the main
student organization in France, published a tweet saying, "People are crying on
little pieces of wood... it's a delusion of white trash".
French President Emmanuel Macron, who had never even mentioned the attacks on
Saint Denis or Saint Sulpice, quickly went to Notre Dame and declared, "Notre
Dame is our history, our literature, our imagination". He totally left out
cathedral's religious dimension.
The next evening, he said that Notre Dame would be rebuilt in five years: it was
a bold statement. Many commentators interpreted his words as dictated by his
will desperately to try to regain the confidence of the French people after five
months of demonstrations, riots and destruction stemming from his ineffective
handling of the "Yellow Vests" uprising. (On March 16, much of the
Champs-Élysées was damaged by rioters; repairs have barely begun.) All experts
agree that it will almost certainly take far longer than five years to rebuild
Notre Dame.
Macron strangely added that the cathedral would be "more beautiful" than before
-- as if a badly damaged monument could be more beautiful after restoration.
Macron went on to say that the reconstruction would be a "contemporary
architectural gesture". The remark raised concern, if not panic, among defenders
of historic monuments, who now fear that he may want to add modern
architectural elements to a jewel of Gothic architecture. Again, he totally left
out the cathedral's religious dimension.
Macron's attitude is not surprising. From the moment he became president, he has
kept himself away from any Christian ceremony. Most of the presidents who
preceded him did the same. France is a country where a dogmatic secularism
reigns supreme. A political leader who dares to call himself a Christian is
immediately criticized in the media and can only harm a budding political
career. Nathalie Loiseau -- the former director of France's National School of
Administration and the leading candidate on the electoral list of Macron's
party, "Republic on the Move," for the May 2019 European Parliament elections --
was recently photographed exiting a church after mass, which led to a media
debate on whether her church attendance is a "problem."
The results of French secularism are visible. Christianity has been almost
completely wiped out from public life. Churches are empty. The number of priests
is decreasing and the priests that are active in France are either very old or
come from Africa or Latin America. The dominant religion in France is now Islam.
Every year, churches are demolished to make way for parking lots or shopping
centers. Mosques are being built all over, and they are full. Radical imams
proselytize. The murder, three years ago, of Jacques Hamel, an 85-year-old
priest who was slaughtered by two Islamists while he was saying mass in a church
where only five people (three of them old nuns) were present, is telling.
In 1905, the French parliament passed a law decreeing that all the properties of
the Catholic Church in France were confiscated. Churches and cathedrals became
property of the State. Since then, successive governments have spent little
money to maintain them. Those churches that have not been vandalized are in poor
condition, and most cathedrals are in poor condition, too. Even before the
devastating fire, the Archdiocese of Paris stated that "it can't afford all the
repairs" that Notre Dame needed, "estimated at $185 million." According to CBS
News, in a March 20, 2018 report:
"The French government, which owns the cathedral, has pledged around $50 million
over the next decade, leaving a bill of $135 million. To raise the rest, Picaud
helped launch the Friends of Notre-Dame of Paris Foundation. It works to find
private donors both in France and across the Atlantic.
"'We know Americans are wealthy, so we go where we think we can find money to
help restore the cathedral,' Picaud said."
On the evening of the fire at Notre Dame, hundreds of French people gathered in
front of the burning cathedral to sing Psalms and pray. They seemed suddenly to
understand that they were losing something immensely precious.
Following the fire, the French government decided to start collecting donations
from private individuals, businesses and organizations for reconstruction; more
than one billion euros have poured in. French billionaires promised to pay large
sums: the Pinault family (the main owners of the retail conglomerate Kering)
promised 100 million euros, the Arnault family (owners of LVMH, the world's
largest luxury-goods company), 200 million euros, the Bettencourt family (owners
of L'Oréal), also 200 million. Many on the French "left" immediately said that
wealthy families had too much money, and that these millions would be better
used helping the poor than taking care of old stones.
For the foreseeable future, the heart of Paris will bear the terrible scars of a
fire that devastated far more than a cathedral. The fire destroyed an essential
part of what is left of the almost-lost soul of France and what France could
accomplish when the French believed in something higher than their own
day-to-day existence.
Some hope that the sight of the destroyed cathedral will inspire many French
people to follow the example of those who prayed on the night of the disaster.
Michel Aupetit, Archbishop of Paris, said on April 17, two days after the fire,
that he was sure France would know a "spiritual awakening".
Others, not as optimistic, see in the ashes of the cathedral a symbol of the
destruction of Christianity in France. The art historian Jean Clair said that he
sees in the destruction of Notre Dame an additional sign of an "irreversible
decadence" of France, and of the final collapse of the Judeo-Christian roots of
Europe.
An American columnist, Dennis Prager, wrote:
"The symbolism of the burning of Notre Dame Cathedral, the most renowned
building in Western civilization, the iconic symbol of Western Christendom, is
hard to miss. "It is as if God Himself wanted to warn us in the most
unmistakable way that Western Christianity is burning -- and with it, Western
civilization."
Another American author, Rod Dreher, noted: "This catastrophe in Paris today is
a sign to all of us Christians, and a sign to all people in the West, especially
those who despise the civilization that built this great temple to its God on an
island in the Seine where religious rites have been celebrated since the days of
pagan Rome. It is a sign of what we are losing, and what we will not recover, if
we don't change course now."
For the moment, nothing indicates that France and Western Europe will change
course.
*Dr. Guy Millière, a professor at the University of Paris, is the author of 27
books on France and Europe.
© 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.
Algeria and Sudan can learn from the political transitions
of 2011
Oussama Romdhani/Al Arabiya/April 23/19
As unrest sweeps away long-tenured rulers in Algeria and Sudan, there are
lessons the new political generations there can draw from other transitions in
the region since 2011.
The first lesson is that, despite regional ramifications of upheaval in any Arab
country, the politics of unrest are essentially local. It might be tempting to
see a domino effect in the pattern leading to the fall of the long-time leaders
in Algiers and Khartoum. But Omar al-Bashir and Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s
respective ousters had more to do with the realities of each country than
cross-border trends. Populations in Algeria and Sudan were driven by their own
political, social, and economic factors the same way societies in Tunisia,
Libya, and Egypt rose against long-entrenched authoritarian systems years
before.
There are caveats to that theory. Young crowds may get inspiration and
encouragement from scenes of protesters in other Arab countries challenging the
status quo. Also, it does not need a conspiracy theorist to figure out that some
regional actors seeking wider influence can find in the protests an opportunity
to settle scores with leaders they dislike. Regime change can appeal to global
powers with interventionist agendas.
It remains true, however, that the most fundamental conditions for unrest are
home-bred. Populations can put up with rulers who overstay their welcome, until
a breaking point is reached.
In recent years, that time has come in many parts of the region. Authoritarians
who clung to power for two or three decades, if not more, eventually outlasted
their welcome.
The populations under their rule became unwilling to live with the reigns of old
and ailing leaders any longer. Young people, in particular, came to see the
continued presence of outdated political systems as a daunting obstacle between
them and a better future.
But most importantly, socio-economic factors within their countries’ borders led
them to that determination. That’s the second lesson new rulers should not
forget. In Algeria and Sudan, the economy gave way well before the demonstrators
concluded that the old rulers had to go.
Socio-economic indicators provided the regimes in place with early warnings that
should have prompted them to adjust the course of their policies, but regimes at
risk of extinction have a tendency to stall.
They try to buy time even when time is scarce. Algeria’s bureaucratic statism
combined with clan interests rendered the system unresponsive and let young
masses down. The country’s undiversified economy could not adjust to the fall of
oil prices from $100 a barrel in 2014 to $66 in recent months. Foreign exchange
reserves fell by half and GDP growth slumped to less than one percent. The
government could not bankroll its social programs.
Youth unemployment was at a rate of about 30 percent and half the population was
less than 25 years old, so it was not difficult to predict that young people
would be the first to object to the ruling class’s attempt to extend the reign
of Bouteflika for a fifth term in office.
Sudan may have been more of an economic basket case as it struggled with an
inflation rate of nearly 70 percent, a foreign debt level of about $50 billion,
and hard currency reserves at merely seven weeks of imports.
With half the population under the age of 19 and youth unemployment at more than
27 percent, the ticking bomb was waiting to go off anytime. The discredited
National Congress Party was out of sync with the demands of the young
population. Its Islamist diktat no longer guaranteed the regime’s hold on power.
There are accelerators of the fire, such as the force of social media, the level
of violent repression on demonstrators, and the ability of the rulers to read
the writing on the wall.
The main protagonists, especially those trying today to hold onto the levers of
power, should look at the lessons of the 2011 uprisings. They know that as the
dust settles and as democratic transitions are set in motion, economics is
likely to come back and haunt them, probably sooner than the inexperienced
operators of regime change would have them believe.
The Tunisia case has shown that any transition, even if seemingly successful,
will remain precarious unless accompanied by an economic recovery that creates
jobs and revives growth – and that’s easier said than done. In the climate of
demands and expectations that comes with revolutionary fervour, big-spending
policies are going to be more likely than budget rigor. Such policies are,
however, untenable.
The interim rulers in Algeria and Sudan may have their minds set on more
immediate concerns. In Algeria, there are demands to prosecute corrupt
businessmen and investigate allegations of ill-management in the national oil
company. On the other hand, there are hints from Sudanese rulers that they see
economic difficulties as pressing. Saudi and Emirati expressions of support for
Khartoum have included pledges to expedite economic assistance to the nearly
bankrupt country.
The military and security establishment in Sudan and Algeria will have to keep
in mind the security risks inherent in power vacuums and unsecured borders. They
should not commit the mistakes of the post-2011 Tunisian rulers who complacently
let Islamist radicals wreak havoc on the country. It took major terrorist
incidents for the new political class to realise that national security must be
preserved even in a democracy.
These establishments should be allowed to continue doing their job of meeting
national security challenges and the new generation of politicians should have
its chance to gear the country towards democracy building and economic
reconstruction.
Renewing the Iran Sanctions Waivers (Part 1): Nuclear Activities
تجديد الإعفاءات من العقوبات المفروضة على إيران (الجزء الأول): الأنشطة النووية
پاتريك كلاوسون/معهد واشنطن/23 نيسان/19
Patrick Clawson/The Washington Institute/April 23/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/74164/%D9%BE%D8%A7%D8%AA%D8%B1%D9%8A%D9%83-%D9%83%D9%84%D8%A7%D9%88%D8%B3%D9%88%D9%86-%D9%85%D8%B9%D9%87%D8%AF-%D9%88%D8%A7%D8%B4%D9%86%D8%B7%D9%86-%D8%AA%D8%AC%D8%AF%D9%8A%D8%AF-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A5%D8%B9/
Neither blanket extension nor wholesale cancellation is the best course, but
several of the expiring waivers would serve U.S. interests if properly—and
publicly—revised.
This PolicyWatch is the first in a two-part series on how Washington should
handle the upcoming waiver deadlines. Part 2 looks at energy waivers and the
exemption for Chabahar port.
As the May 2 deadline for waiver extensions approaches, much attention has been
devoted to the temporary waivers for Iranian energy exports—namely, gas and
electricity deliveries to Iraq, and oil deliveries to eight countries. On April
22, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that the latter deliveries would no
longer be permitted. By contrast, the waivers for some Iranian nuclear
activities have received little attention, apart from an April 9 letter from
nine senators to President Donald Trump demanding their end.
THE U.S. WAIVER TOOLKIT
All U.S. laws regarding sanctions on Iran permit national security waivers,
usually temporary; some laws allow permanent exemptions, and of course the
president can modify any executive order. During President Trump’s term, the
State Department appears to have granted waivers for the following sanctions:
The Iran Freedom and Counterproliferation Act of 2012, specifically sections
1244 (covering energy, shipping, shipbuilding, and ports), 1245 (adding
specially designated nationals and any sector of Iran’s economy determined to be
“controlled directly or indirectly by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps”), 1246
(“nuclear, military, or ballistic missile” items and precious metals), and 1247
(insurance for the previously cited activities). These sanctions can be waived
for up to 180 days.
The Iran Threat Reduction and Syria Human Rights Act of 2012, sections 212(a)
(covering insurance for Iranian oil shipments) and 213(a) (government
borrowing), which can be waived for up to 180 days.
The Iran Sanctions Act of 1996, section 5(a) (covering oil and gas investment),
which can be waived for up to 180 days.
The National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 2012, section 1245(d)(1)
(covering foreign banks involved with Iran’s oil trade), which can be waived for
up to 120 days.
Individual waivers reportedly include language about permissible transactions,
but none of the waivers has been made public, so governments, companies, and
observers have no way of telling which transactions are sanctionable unless the
State Department informs them directly. In addition to formal waivers, the U.S.
government has the option of assuring certain parties that no action will be
taken to enforce sanctions under some circumstances—an option the administration
has apparently taken with regard to Iraqi imports of Iranian electricity.
IRAN’S NUCLEAR ACTIVITIES: USEFUL VS. DANGEROUS
U.S. nuclear waivers were last issued on November 5, 2018, and the only publicly
available information about them is the cursory and ambiguous State Department
press release disseminated at the time. It is not clear what exactly the waivers
cover; the statement said they permit “nonproliferation projects at Arak,
Bushehr, and Fordow,” implying that some activities at those sites are not
covered. The only other guidance is that the waivers permit “continuation for a
temporary period of certain ongoing projects that impede Iran’s ability to
reconstitute its weapons program and that lock in the nuclear status quo until
we can secure a stronger deal,” referring to the administration’s 2018
withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA). The release also
stated that “each of the waivers we are granting is conditional on the
cooperation of the various stakeholders,” though no information was provided
about what will be done to monitor compliance with any specific conditions.
Such ambiguity fits with the JCPOA pattern of releasing only minimal
information. For instance, the “Elements of Iran’s R&D Plan” that Tehran
prepared as part of the nuclear deal has never been released, which means
outside observers have no way of knowing if the regime is observing the many
JCPOA provisions that use language such as “consistent with its plan.” The Obama
administration reportedly allowed members of Congress to look at a description
of the plan, but they likely lacked the technical expertise to evaluate such a
document and were not permitted to share it with outside experts.
While it is difficult to evaluate waivers without more information, allowing
some of Iran’s nuclear activities to continue is clearly in America’s national
security interest. An obvious example is the shipment of used fuel from Bushehr
back to Russia, rather than leaving that material—which contains elements that
could be recovered for nuclear weapons—in Iranian cooling ponds. The same goes
for some of the nuclear safety upgrades being discussed with European countries.
Yet the State Department’s November announcement noted that waivers had also
been provided for Fordow and Arak, respectively the site of centrifuges and a
heavy water reactor. To be sure, it is America’s interest that these facilities
be modified to make them less capable of producing fissile material for a
weapon. And there is much to be said for giving Iranian nuclear scientists
something innocent to do rather than having them be unemployed. However, general
unrestricted waivers for Fordow and Arak would be particularly worrisome given
Iran’s long history of deception about those sites—deception that continued this
year.
On January 22, Ali Akbar Salehi, head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran,
told a television interviewer that the regime had concealed extra equipment for
the Arak reactor: “There are tubes where the fuel goes [in the calandria, the
reactor’s central component]. We had bought similar tubes, but I could not
declare this at the time. Only one person in Iran knew this. We told no one but
the top man of the regime [Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei]...We did not tell [the
other JCPOA parties] that we had other tubes. Otherwise, they would have told us
to pour cement into those tubes as well. Now we have the same tubes.” Until this
matter is thoroughly investigated and resolved, any waiver for Arak should be
strictly conditioned, for instance, requiring a separate waiver for each item
shipped.
Salehi went on: “As a matter of fact, I thank God that the JCPOA technical
discussions left so many holes about the ways we can act that the other parties
cannot claim there is a violation of the deal.” Unfortunately, he is correct.
Consider this statement in Annex I of the JCPOA, covering how Iran is permitted
to develop advanced IR-8 centrifuges: “Iran will proceed from single centrifuges
to small cascades to intermediate cascades in a logical sequence.” That highly
generalized sentence does not define any of its terms, meaning the regime could
do pretty much whatever it wants and claim it was observing the JCPOA.
Further, Iran can test its centrifuges “with or without uranium” so long as it
“does not accumulate enriched uranium”—which begs the question of what
constitutes accumulation. Presumably Iran would argue for the technical nuclear
meaning (combining the “tails” after an enrichment run) rather than the common
meaning (having a large stock of enriched material). If so, the restriction is
toothless.
To prevent Iran from exploiting such ambiguities, any new waivers need tight
wording and clear definitions. They should also be made available to the public,
so that outside experts can evaluate them and supplier companies can be properly
briefed on what is and is not allowed.
In addition, waivers should include an explicit verification mechanism—namely,
international inspections to see how shipped items are being used—as well as
stiff penalties for violations. The example to be avoided is the JCPOA
procurement channel, in which the obligation to report relevant shipments to
Iran and verify how they are being used falls entirely on the supplier. The
International Atomic Energy Agency has no role in that process; rather, its
procedures apparently require it to remain silent on any violations because
disclosing them would breach the commercial confidentiality guaranteed by its
Safeguards Agreement with Iran. Even if that were not the case, violating the
JCPOA procurement channel carries no penalties. Far from “trust but verify,”
current U.S. policy on certain nuclear issues seems to be “trust and hope for
the best,” which is definitely a bad idea in Iran’s case.
CONCLUSION
The debate about nuclear waivers would be better informed if all of them were
published. Keeping them from the public is largely ineffective and/or
counterproductive: word about many of them is quickly published, but sometimes
in a distorted fashion that ill serves U.S. interests, while companies often
have no way of knowing which shipments to Iran are sanctionable. Undue
confidentiality also adds to the disturbing pattern of secrecy surrounding the
nuclear program, facilitating Iran’s clandestine activities and evasion of
controls. Sunshine is the best disinfectant.
Going forward, neither automatic extension of general waivers nor complete
rejection of all waivers is the appropriate course. Activities that have a
strong nonproliferation benefit (e.g., returning Bushehr’s spent fuel) should
certainly be encouraged. At the same time, most nuclear waivers should be tied
to strict monitoring and control, ensuring that the material is used only for
civilian non-enrichment purposes at specified locations. This requires ongoing
inspections to verify that the restrictions are being observed, and a
willingness to make all of these findings publicly available. Ideally,
Washington can forge international consensus in the coming months, convincing
its partners to prevent Iran from expanding its enrichment capacity and
investigate past troubling activities.
*Patrick Clawson is the Morningstar Senior Fellow and director of research at
The Washington Institute.