English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese,
Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For December 17/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.december17.20.htm
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Bible Quotations For today
The kingdom of heaven may be compared to someone who sowed
good seed in his field
Matthew 13/24-30: “Jesus put before them another parable:
‘The kingdom of heaven may be compared to someone who sowed good seed in his
field; but while everybody was asleep, an enemy came and sowed weeds among the
wheat, and then went away. So when the plants came up and bore grain, then the
weeds appeared as well. And the slaves of the householder came and said to him,
“Master, did you not sow good seed in your field? Where, then, did these weeds
come from?” He answered, “An enemy has done this.” The slaves said to him, “Then
do you want us to go and gather them?”But he replied, “No; for in gathering the
weeds you would uproot the wheat along with them. Let both of them grow together
until the harvest; and at harvest time I will tell the reapers, Collect the
weeds first and bind them in bundles to be burned, but gather the wheat into my
barn.” ’
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on December 16-17/2020
Aoun Slams 'Rumors' about Interference in Judiciary
Hariri Meets al-Rahi, Says Goal is to Form Reformist Govt.
Parliament Asks Sawwan for File Containing 'Serious Suspicions' in Port Probe
Sawwan Reschedules ex-Ministers Questioning, Charges Port Officials
Fenianos: According to My Own Timing I Will Appear Before Judge
Two Lebanese ex-ministers snub judge after being charged over Beirut explosion
Army: Israeli Gunboat Violates Lebanese Waters
U.S. Ambassador Cancels Visit to Sidon Municipality over Protests
Hezbollah uses Lebanon’s health budget to disproportionally fund its
institutions
Lebanese parliament speaker dismisses hope for cabinet deal
All eyes on Macron visit to help break Cabinet impasse
Tunisia, Lebanon to get Pfizer vaccines despite acute hardships
Biden must support Macron’s plan for Lebanon/Michael Young/The National/December
16/2020
Titles For The
Latest
English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on
December 16-17/2020
US blacklists four companies for helping export of Iranian
petrochemical products
US designates Iran-backed Bahrain group as terrorist
Ghanim re-elected Kuwaiti parliament speaker after tough battle
UN body approves new UN envoys for Libya, Mideast
UN calls for all mercenaries to leave Libya
Biden Joins Battle for Senate as Top Republican Accepts Win
Nikki Haley: Resumption of Iran deal would be ‘devastating’
Turkey’s Erdogan says US sanctions are an ‘attack on sovereignty’
UK lawmakers urge government to designate Iran’s IRGC, replace nuclear deal
Iran’s Khamenei says US hostility toward Iran will continue after Trump
Iran’s Rouhani says he is happy that ‘lawless’ Trump is leaving office
Iranian sentenced to six months in prison for organizing mixed-gender concerts
New lawsuit filed in New York accuses top Qatar banks of funding terror in
Israel
UAE’s Mohamed bin Zayed meets Egyptian President al-Sisi in Cairo
Titles For The Latest
The Latest LCCC English analysis &
editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on December 16-17/2020
Europe Confronts Second Wave of Coronavirus/Soeren Kern/Gatestone
Institute/December 16/2020
Biden rejoining the Iran nuclear deal will allow Tehran to fund militias through
oil/Hussain Abdul-Hussain/Al Arabia/Wednesday 16 December 2020
Why does the Gulf lack female leaders? Data has the answers/Omar Al-Ubaydli/Al
Arabiya/Wednesday 16 December 2020
US designation of Muslim Brotherhood would make the world safer/Dalia Al-Aqidi/Arab
News/December 16/2020
Erdogan’s balancing act faces new challenges in Biden era/Talmiz Ahmad/Arab
News/December 16/2020
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on December 16-17/2020
Aoun Slams 'Rumors' about Interference in Judiciary
Naharnet/Wednesday 16 December 2020
President Michel Aoun on Wednesday warned of “the danger of the rumors that are
being circulated through media outlets.”Noting that some of the rumors are aimed
at “stirring problems between leaders and politicians,” Aoun said the media
reports about his meeting with the Higher Judicial Council are the “best
example.”“It is important to verify information before distributing accusations,
and this is part of shouldering national responsibility, especially that these
rumors have caused great damage, particularly as to building confidence between
the Lebanese and the judiciary,” the president added. He also reiterated his
“ultimate support” for the judiciary, stressing that he will always stand by it
“in the face of pressures.”
Hariri Meets al-Rahi, Says Goal is to Form Reformist
Govt.
Naharnet/Wednesday 16 December 2020
Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri held talks Wednesday in Bkirki with
Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi. “I put the patriarch in the picture of the
line-up that I presented to the president, which is based on nonpartisan,
upright and competent specialists who are capable of carrying out the reforms
that have been agreed on,” said Hariri after the meeting. “I told His Eminence
that the goal is not to form just any government nor that I be its premier but
rather to stop the collapse and rebuild Beirut. This goal can only be achieved
through carrying out the reforms that have been agreed on in order to reactivate
the flow of funding towards Lebanon,” Hariri added. He also noted that he
stressed to al-Rahi his insistence on unveiling the truth in the Beirut port
explosion case. “We stress the right of all Lebanese, topped by the victims and
their families, to know the entire truth and responsibilities. In this regard,
there is no cover for anyone but rather full respect for the constitution and
laws,” Hariri added. Al-Jadeed TV meanwhile reported that Hariri explained the
obstacles delaying the formation of the new government, especially after al-Rahi
addressed Hariri by name during his latest visit to Baabda. Hariri told the
patriarch that “the problem is not a Christian-Muslim one as it is being
depicted,” al-Jadeed added.
Parliament Asks Sawwan for File Containing 'Serious
Suspicions' in Port Probe
Naharnet/Wednesday 16 December 2020
Parliament has asked Judicial Investigator Judge Fadi Sawwan to submit a file
detailing any “serious suspicions” he has regarding officials he has charged or
intends to charge in the ongoing probe into the devastating August 4 explosion
at Beirut’s port. “We have received a letter from Judge Sawwan and it has been
decided not to publish it in the media out of respect for the Lebanese judiciary
and keenness from us on it performing its work to the fullest,” Deputy Speaker
Elie Ferzli announced after a meeting for Parliament Bureau chaired by Speaker
Nabih Berri. “We hope facts will be reached regarding the port’s crime and its
reasons,” Ferzli added. In response, parliament sent Sawwan a letter and it is
“awaiting an answer including a file carrying serious suspicions in order to act
accordingly,” Ferzli revealed. “The letter we sent to Judge Sawwan includes an
essential point, which is that we regret that parliament has been addressed as
if it has neglected the practice of its constitutional jurisdiction, seeing as
how can parliament make accusations without clear evidence?” the Deputy Speaker
went on to say. “We have not found any serious or non-serious suspicions against
all those who were named,” Ferzli added. He also said that parliament will hold
a plenary session on Monday. Caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab and
ex-ministers Ghazi Zoaiter and Ali Hassan Khalil, who are both incumbent MPs,
have declined to be interrogated by Sawwan, casting doubts on the future of the
probe.
Diab, the two ministers and ex-minister Youssef Fenianos were charged last week
by Sawwan with negligence over the massive Aug. 4 blast that killed over 200
people, injured thousands and caused widespread destruction in the capital. The
explosion was caused by the ignition of a large stockpile of explosive material
that had been stored at the port for six years with the knowledge of top
security officials and politicians who did nothing about it. The four are the
most senior officials to be charged in the investigation and were set to be
questioned as defendants this week by Sawwan, starting with Diab on Monday.
According to judicial officials, Diab is now scheduled to be questioned on
Friday. It was not clear what the judge's next steps will be if the politicians
again decline to be questioned. Among his options are issuing arrest warrants.
Or if he is totally ignored he may decide to step down. That would deal a major
blow to the investigation into Lebanon's most destructive single incident in its
history.
Sawwan Reschedules ex-Ministers Questioning, Charges
Port Officials
Naharnet/Wednesday 16 December 2020
Judicial investigator into the port blast Judge Fadi Sawwan on Wednesday
rescheduled the interrogation of ex-ministers Ali Hassan Khalil and Ghazi
Zoaiter to January 4, the National News Agency said. Sawwan’s move comes after
Khalil and Zoaiter failed to show up at a session scheduled for today, Wednesday
and after he did not receive official responses as to whether they have received
notification memos from parliament, NNA added. Also on Wednesday, Sawwan heard
the testimony of former army chief of staff Maj. Gen. Walid Salman, who appeared
before him as a witness. He also filed charges against the president and two
directors of the port’s administration and investment authority, accusing them
of negligence and causing the death of innocents. Sawwan will also question
Beirut Port Director General Hassan Qureitem, who has been in custody since
August, at a session that will be scheduled later.
Fenianos: According to My Own Timing I Will Appear
Before Judge
Naharnet/Wednesday 16 December 2020
Former minister Youssef Fenianos said he is going to appear before the
investigating judge over the Beirut port blast probe but according to his own
scheduling, al-Joumhouria daily reported on Wednesday. "I decided to appear
before the judge but at my own timing. My conscience is clear and will therefore
meet the judge to tell him he violated article 40, 70 and 71 of the
constitution," said Fenianos. On Tuesday, Fenianos went to the Judicial Palace
to attend a questioning by Judge Fadi Sawwan, the lead investigator into the
port blast, but that the session was postponed to a later date which he was not
duly notified of. Sawwan probing last summer’s port explosion in Beirut filed
charges last week against caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab, former Finance
Minister Ali Hassan Khalil, as well as Ghazi Zoaiter and Fenianos, both former
ministers of public works. Khalil and Zoaiter as well as caretaker PM Hassan
Diab had refused to appear before Sawwan on Monday.
Two Lebanese ex-ministers snub judge after being charged
over Beirut explosion
Reuters, Beirut/Wednesday 16 December 2020
Two former Lebanese ministers charged with negligence over a huge explosion at
Beirut port in August that killed 200 people indicated on Wednesday they would
not appear for questioning before the judge handling the case. Judge Fadi Sawan
charged three former ministers and the caretaker prime minister last week,
sparking a fierce debate about whether the judge had the authority to charge the
politicians in a nation still seeking answers about the blast. The explosion
added further strains to a country struggling with its worst crisis since the
1975-1990 civil war. Some leading parties rebuked the judge for his action,
including Iran-backed Lebanese Hezbollah and the Sunni group led by former Prime
Minister Saad al-Hariri. Ali Hassan Khalil, a former finance minister, and Ghazi
Zeaiter, a former public works minister, who were both charged, said they had
not been officially informed of Wednesday's session, which protocol demanded.
Both are lawmakers from Amal, the Shia party led by powerful Parliament Speaker
Nabih Berri who is allied to Hezbollah. Sawan could not immediately be reached
for comment. Hassan Diab, the caretaker prime minister whose cabinet resigned
after the explosion, declined to be questioned on Monday. An official source
said the judge set a new appointment for Friday but had yet to receive a
response. Diab says his conscience is clear over the matter. Families of blast
victims are increasingly frustrated that details have not emerged from an
investigation since the Aug. 4 explosion caused by a huge stockpile of ammonium
nitrate, which was stored in unsafe conditions. The blast, one of the biggest
non-nuclear explosions in history, injured thousands of people and devastated
several districts in the centre of the capital.
Army: Israeli Gunboat Violates Lebanese Waters
Naharnet/Wednesday 16 December 2020
An Israeli military boat violated Lebanese territorial waters off Ras el-Naqoura
region, sailing for four minutes inside Lebanese waters, the Army
Command-Orientation Directorate said in a statement Wednesday. The military said
the boats infiltrated the waters at 16:16 on December 14. The army and UNIFIL
forces are following up on the issue, it added.
U.S. Ambassador Cancels Visit to Sidon Municipality
over Protests
Naharnet/Wednesday 16 December 2020
The US ambassador to Lebanon Dorothy Shea cancelled a visit to the municipality
of Sidon on Wednesday after some protesters chanted slogans rejecting her visit,
the National News Agency reported. A group of protesters staged a sit-in in the
main city’s Nejmeh square, opposite the municipality building and chanted
slogans against the US policies. NNA said the protesters were groups from the
Nasserite Popular Organization, the Democratic Party, the Communist Party, the
Arab National Youth, in addition to leftist groups, and a number of the Sidon
movement groups. The Ambassador later headed to Majdalyoun where she met MP
Bahiaa Hariri. She also visited the Chamber of Commerce, Industry and
Agriculture in Sidon and the South.
Hezbollah uses Lebanon’s health budget to disproportionally
fund its institutions
Al Arabiya English/Wednesday 16 December 2020
Hezbollah has used Lebanon’s health budget to disproportionately fund its own
medical institutions, according to a government document issued by the Health
Ministry currently run by pro-Hezbollah minister Hamad Hasan.
The official document showed the health budget allocations for both public and
private hospitals, which the caretaker Lebanese government signed before its
resignation last August only four days following the Beirut port explosion. It
showed that the ministry raised the budgets of Hezbollah-sponsored medical
institutions. In recent governments, Hezbollah began demanding more ministerial
portfolios that have access to state services and funding such as the Ministry
of Health and Ministry of Industry. This disproportionate budget allocation by
the Ministry of Health has raised the concerns of Lebanese citizens on
Hezbollah’s use of ministries to fund and support its own parallel economy.
Earlier this year, the Ministry of Health was also criticized for trying to
replace medicines produced in Europe with alternatives produced in Iran. The
document seen by Al Arabiya English showed that al-Rassoul al-Azam Hospital,
which was not affected by the Beirut port explosion and is affiliated with
Hezbollah, received 14.7 billion Lebanese pounds ($9.7 million at the country’s
official pegged rate), an increase of 5.5 billion Lebanese pounds ($3.6 million)
compared to the prior year. The same budget allocations were not increased for
prominent hospitals such as the American University, Roum, and Hotel Dieu
despite their recent challenges following the impact of the Beirut blast in
August and being the major hospitals to receive and treat the number of dead and
injured.
The total allocation for all three prominent hospitals did not exceed 16.4
billion pounds ($10.8 million), compared to 14.7 billion Lebanese pounds ($9.7
million) for one hospital sponsored by Hezbollah, the document showed. A source
from the health ministry said, "the scandal of distributing financial ceilings
is not limited to al-Rassoul al-Azam Hospital, which is classified as a first
category.” “Rather, it includes raising the budget allocations of Hezbollah
hospitals, institutions, and clinics run by its health authority, including
newly established institutions, with an overall increase of 14 billion Lebanese
pounds ($9.2 million),” the source added, wishing not to be named. Al Arabiya
English reached out to Dr. Hadi Mourad, who said that the budget's massive
addition only targeted Hezbollah medical institutions across the country.
"Moreover, the ministry added 15 new medical institutions that were not
previously funded by the ministry for the first time. Those additions did not
target Shia predominantly areas, for example, Baalbek public hospital received
minimal aid, despite its importance in the region. Similarly, other institutions
sponsored by the Amal movement did not receive any bonuses from the ministry.
These bonuses clearly targeted only Hezbollah sponsored institutions," Mourad
said. "Karantina hospital, which was destroyed completely by the Beirut Port
explosion, received only 75 million Lebanese Liras," he added. Mourad said that
the prior health minister, Ghassan Hasbani, established a precise formula for
those bonuses based on the number of beds in each hospital and its significance
in the country's medical sector. The government at the time rejected Hasbani’s
formula “because they wanted to keep going with the corrupt sectarian quota
divisions to which the political class is used to,” according to Mourad.
Lebanese parliament speaker dismisses hope for cabinet deal
The Arab Weekly/December 16/2020
BEIRUT – The path to a new Lebanese government is completely blocked, Parliament
Speaker Nabih Berri said in comments published on Tuesday, but he held out hope
that French President Emmanuel Macron might be able to help in a forthcoming
visit. Fractious politicians have been unable to agree on a new government since
the last one quit in the aftermath of the August 4 Beirut port explosion,
leaving Lebanon rudderless as it sinks deeper into economic and financial
crisis. “The situation is not comforting at all (in Lebanon). We have entered a
tunnel and I do not know how we are going to get out of it,” Berri told al-Joumhuria
newspaper. “We are in a pitiful situation. The government situation is
completely blocked.”Prime Minister-designate Saad al-Hariri and President Michel
Aoun aired their differences over the government in statements on Monday, each
blaming the other for the delay. “Why this blockage? The answer certainly lies
with the president and prime minister-designate,” said Berri, an ally of the
armed Iran-backed Hezbollah group. “God willing, the French President Emmanuel
Macron will be able to do something in his coming visit. We can only
wait.”Macron is due to visit Lebanon later this month, his third visit since the
devastating port explosion which worsened an economic crisis. Caused by decades
of corruption and bad governance, the financial meltdown is the worst crisis to
hit Lebanon since its 1975-90 civil war. Following the blast, Macron led efforts
to get Lebanese politicians to agree on a new government which could enact
reforms and in turn unlock international support. But Lebanese leaders have
delivered no reforms.French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said Lebanon’s
political and economic collapse was like the sinking of the Titanic, only
without the music which it is believed the orchestra played as the ship went
down.
All eyes on Macron visit to help break Cabinet impasse
Hussein Dakroub/The Daily Star/December 16/2020
BEIRUT: With the Cabinet formation process hitting a dead-end after the eruption
of a “war of words” between President Michel Aoun and Prime Minister-designate
Saad Hariri, reflecting wide differences over the makeup of a new government,
attention is focused on a new visit to Lebanon by French President Emmanuel
Macron next week to help break the weekslong standoff.
Macron is scheduled to visit Beirut on Dec. 22-23, marking his third trip to the
crises-stricken country since the massive Aug. 4 explosion that devastated
Beirut Port, left half of the capital in ruins, killed nearly 200 people and
injured thousands.
“The government formation process is at a complete standstill. There are
internal mediators working to bridge the gap between President Aoun and Prime
Minister Hariri over the Cabinet formation. But the chances of this mediation
bid to break the deadlock are weak,” an official source told The Daily Star
Tuesday.
“With no chance to resolve the Cabinet crisis internally, Lebanese popular and
political attention is focused on President Macron’s visit to Beirut next week
in the hope it will help achieve a breakthrough in the government formation
gridlock,” the source said.
The source noted that a week after Hariri had presented to Aoun his first draft
Cabinet lineup since he was designated to form a new government on Oct. 22, no
meeting has so far been planned between the two leaders to try to resolve
differences over the names of potential ministers and the shape of a proposed
18-member Cabinet of nonpartisan specialists desperately awaited by the Lebanese
and the international community to enact reforms and salvage Lebanon’s
collapsing economy.
After presenting his Cabinet lineup to Aoun last Wednesday, Hariri sounded
upbeat about forming a new government soon to deliver reforms and halt Lebanon’s
economic collapse. But Hariri’s optimism has since faded by a counter-Cabinet
proposal presented by Aoun. The president’s unprecedented move was viewed as a
rejection of the premier-designate’s proposed Cabinet lineup.
Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri also held out hope that Macron might be able to
help in resolving the Cabinet crisis during his forthcoming visit. He said the
path to a new Lebanese government was completely blocked.
"The situation is not comfortable at all. We have entered a tunnel and I don't
know how we will get out of it," Berri said in remarks published by Al-Joumhouria
newspaper Tuesday. "We are in a pitiful situation. The government situation is
completely blocked."
"Why this blockage? The answer certainly lies with the president and the prime
minister-designate," Berri said. "God willing, French President Emmanuel Macron
will be able to do something in his coming visit. We can only wait." Berri
stressed that the deteriorating economic conditions in the country required a
quick formation of a new government.
Lebanon has been without a fully functioning government since Aug. 10 when
then-Prime Minister Hassan Diab’s government resigned in the aftermath of the
port explosion, although it stayed on in a caretaker capacity.
In a development further complicating the Cabinet formation efforts, Aoun and
Hariri Monday aired their differences over the formation , engaging in a “war of
words” with each blaming the other for the delay.
In a statement issued by his media office, Hariri disclosed that Aoun and the
Free Patriotic Movement headed by MP Gebran Bassil demanded a veto power in the
next government. Hariri, who staunchly rejects granting any party a veto power
in the next government, implicitly blamed, Bassil, Aoun’s son-in-law, for the
obstruction of the Cabinet formation.
Hariri also disclosed that Aoun wanted a government in which all political
parties are represented, which runs contrary to the premier-designate’s decision
to exclude representatives of those parties.
Responding to Hariri’statement, the presidency’s media office accused Hariri of
unilaterally naming ministers, especially Christian ministers, without an
agreement with the president. It also accused Hariri of not adopting unified
criteria in the distribution of portfolios.
The stalled Cabinet formation process was further compounded by a widening
negative political backlash with a sectarian tinge to charges filed last week by
lead investigator in the port blast Judge Fadi Sawwan against Diab and three
former ministers for negligence in the port disaster. The country’s top Sunni
political and religious leaders, including Hariri, rallied behind Diab, accusing
Sawwan of targeting the premiership’s position for political purposes.
Ahead of Macron’s visit, French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian painted a
gloomy outlook of the situation in Lebanon, saying the country’s political and
economic collapse was like the sinking of the Titanic, only without the music.
"Lebanon is the Titanic without the orchestra," Le Drian told the daily Le
Figaro in an interview published on Sunday. "The Lebanese are in complete denial
as they sink, and there isn't even the music."
The FPM’s parliamentary Strong Lebanon bloc called Tuesday for the formation of
“a reformist and productive government as soon as possible in order for Lebanon
to benefit from French President Emmanuel Macron’s visit to discuss ways of the
required [financial] support to emerge from the abyss of collapse.”
In what appeared to be a response to Hariri’s tough remarks, the bloc, in a
statement issued after its weekly electronic meeting chaired by Bassil, called
on the premier-designate to “stop participating, or fomenting problems,
escalating positions and fabricating risks that threaten the premiership’s
position on which the bloc is as much keen as it is on all constitutional
positions.”
Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Joumblatt, who supported the French
initiative to rescue Lebanon from multiple crises, warned that Lebanon stood on
the verge of the abyss.
“Rather, we are heading to the abyss. An opportunity came with the French
initiative or what remained of it from President Emmanuel Macron who told us to
carry out reforms in electricity and banks and then I will open to you the
prospects of negotiations for aid from the World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund. But so far, the majority of [Lebanese] parties are avoiding this
matter because they have different calculations,” Joumbaltt said in an interview
with the US-backed satellite channel Al-Hurra.
“The one who is preventing reforms today are those controlling power. The Free
Patriotic Movement is [controlling] power. So far, we have not seen signs of a
desire for reforms,” he added.
Macron was the first foreign leader to visit Beirut two days after the port
blast. Following the blast, Macron led efforts to get Lebanese politicians to
agree on a new government to enact reforms. But Lebanese leaders have failed to
deliver reforms.
In addition to inspecting French troops serving with the UN peacekeeping force
in south Lebanon, UNIFIL, Macron was expected to meet again with Lebanon’s rival
political leaders to press them to agree on the swift formation of a “mission”
government to enact reforms.
Implementation of long-overdue reforms is deemed essential to releasing billions
of dollars in promised international aid to the cash-strapped country, which is
facing an economic meltdown and a collapsing currency that has lost more than 80
percent of its value since last year, putting half of the 6 million population
under the poverty line.
Tunisia, Lebanon to get Pfizer vaccines despite acute
hardships
The Arab Weekly/December 16/2020
TUNIS/BEIRUT – Lebanon and Tunisia are set to get Pfizer-BioNTech’s COVID-19
vaccine, as the two Arab countries struggle to contain the spread of the
coronavirus pandemic that has exacerbated health and financial crises. Lebanon’s
caretaker Health Minister Hamad Hassan said on Monday that his country is
expected to sign a deal this week for supplies of Pfizer-BioNTech’s vaccine and
is set to receive the first batch eight weeks after that. Meanwhile in Tunisia,
local media reported that the health ministry had signed an agreement to obtain
vaccines at $7 per dose. A surge in infections is straining Lebanon’s healthcare
system, which has been struggling amid a financial crisis and after a huge port
explosion on August 4 smashed hospitals in Beirut. Adding to the pressures, the
economic meltdown has prompted many doctors to emigrate and raised concerns that
subsidies on medicines will be removed.
Lebanon, with an estimated population of 6 million, has reported 1,210 deaths as
a result of coronavirus pandemic. Despite the nation’s dire shortage of foreign
exchange, the government expects to sign the $18 million deal for supplies of
the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine this week, Hassan said. Officials previously said
Lebanon was in talks to secure 1.5 million shots of the vaccine. The first
payment of $4 million “was secured” in a meeting with the central bank and
outgoing prime minister. “We removed this obstacle,” the minister said, adding
that the first batch of vaccines was expected to arrive eight weeks after the
signing. Lebanon has also signed up to join COVAX, a global scheme backed by the
World Health Organization to provide vaccines to poorer countries. Lebanon’s
latest two-week lockdown to curb a surge in infections ended this month. The
authorities have struggled to enforce coronavirus restrictions in a country
where half the nation has slipped into poverty. As hospitals have filled up,
Hassan said Lebanon aimed to add 200 more intensive care unit (ICU) beds in the
next two months, raising the total to 700. He urged UN agencies and
non-governmental organisations to help secure more vaccines for Lebanon, where
refugees make up at least a quarter of the population. “Protecting all the
communities living in Lebanon … should be part of the same plan,” he said. The
situation is no better in Tunisia, which on Tuesday reported 1,483 new cases,
raising its total number of infections to 113,241. The death toll from the virus
rose by 41 to 3,956 in the North African country, the health ministry said in a
statement. Tunisia, like Lebanon, is struggling with economic stagnation that
has left the public as angry as it was a decade ago. Over the past ten years,
Tunisia’s economy has been crippled by high debt and deteriorating public
services, made worse by the pandemic and a year of political turmoil. Despite
the dire situation, the Tunisian health ministry signed an agreement to obtain
the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. Director General of the Pasteur Institute of Tunis
Hechmi Louzir said Tuesday that his country has already reserved 2 million doses
of COVID-19 vaccines from the American pharmaceutical company Pfizer. He added
in an interview with the state news agency Tunis Afrique Presse that the
COVID-19 vaccines will be free for all Tunisian citizens. The first doses of the
vaccine will be allocated to those suffering from chronic diseases, the elderly
and health workers, according to Louzir, who noted that vaccination will not be
mandatory. The vaccine, developed by Pfizer Inc and German partner BioNTech SE,
won emergency-use authorisation last week.Worldwide, more than 73.4 million
infections and over 1.6 million deaths have been recorded so far. But with
wealthy nations reserving more than half of next year’s potential doses, there
are fears the poorer parts of the world will be left behind. Even if the drug
makers all produce effective, safe vaccines and meet their maximum global
manufacturing targets, a study published by researchers from Johns Hopkins
University warned that “at least a fifth of the world’s population would not
have access” until 2022. The World Health Organisation has said it is in talks
with Pfizer about including its vaccines at affordable prices for poor
countries.
Biden must support Macron’s plan for Lebanon
Michael Young/The National/December 16/2020
مايكل يانغ/ذي ناشيونال: مطلوب من بايدين أن يساند خطة
ماكرون للبنان
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/93726/michael-young-the-national-biden-must-support-macrons-plan-for-lebanon-%d9%85%d8%a7%d9%8a%d9%83%d9%84-%d9%8a%d8%a7%d9%86%d8%ba-%d8%b0%d9%8a-%d9%86%d8%a7%d8%b4%d9%8a%d9%88%d9%86%d8%a7%d9%84-%d9%85/
On December 22, French President Emmanuel Macron will travel to Lebanon for the
third time in five months. While his plan is to visit with French UN
peacekeepers, Mr Macron will also be keen to see where Lebanon’s politicians are
in forming a new government. Such a government is necessary to carry out
economic reforms, in return for which the French president promised in September
to mobilise international financial assistance for Lebanon.
Mr Macron was criticised for wasting his credibility in pushing the hopelessly
corrupt Lebanese politicians to enact reforms. There were those who said the
French president was bound to fail for wagering on these officials, while others
condemned Mr Macron’s dialogue with Hezbollah. The French President took a more
sanguine view, saying that as the party was an essential component of Lebanese
political life, trying to circumvent it made little sense.
Some time ago, however, the French recalibrated in Lebanon by saying that it was
up to Lebanese officials to save their own country. In that way they played down
Mr Macron’s stalled initiative to encourage Lebanon to set up a government of
apolitical specialists and implement a reform plan that could unlock aid from
the International Monetary Fund and other international institutions.
But Mr Macron is still keen to help Lebanon once the politicians can get over
their deep divisions and form a government. The reason is that if nothing is
done soon, Lebanon risks reaching a stage of complete collapse, without enough
foreign currency reserves to finance the importation of vital necessities such
as food, medicine and fuel. Within a matter of weeks, the government is expected
to remove subsidies on a wide range of products, which will accelerate
hyperinflation.
In this context, social unrest is likely. France continues to want to provide a
safety net if that happens, as instability in Lebanon could have a negative
affect on Europe. More realistically, the French maybe assume that once
everything breaks down, the latitude of Lebanese politicians to resist reform
will diminish, so that French intervention will be needed to help the country
out of its mess.
The Trump administration has taken a more hardline position on Lebanon and on
the Macron initiative. Last September, in private a US official visiting Beirut
did not hide his mistrust of France’s contacts with Hezbollah. While the
official stated that Washington did not want to undermine the French plan, he
noted that the administration would soon introduce sanctions against people not
tied to Hezbollah, representing an escalation from sanctions past.
A week later that is exactly what happened when Washington sanctioned Ali Hassan
Khalil and Youssef Fenianos – Lebanon’s former finance minister and its former
transport minister. Mr Khalil is a close collaborator of parliament speaker
Nabih Berri, while Mr Fenianos is an ally of the pro-Syrian Christian politician
Suleiman Franjieh. The sanctions were supposedly not aimed at derailing the
French initiative but that is precisely what they did.
Yes, it may mean engaging indirectly with Hezbollah but no realistic change can
happen if the party is left out
Negotiations over a government came to a standstill, as Mr Berri, the indirect
target of the sanctions, apparently concluded that he had nothing to gain by
being flexible on the government then being formed and nothing to lose by
playing tough. The timing of the US move was questionable. And while other
factors helped to block the process, sanctions were the icing on the cake.
Much the same happened when Saad Hariri began forming his government in October.
There were inherent obstacles to the cabinet-formation process, not least the
mistrust between Mr Hariri and Gebran Bassil, the head of the Free Patriotic
Movement and son-in-law of President Michel Aoun. However, when Mr Bassil was
also sanctioned by the US in November, it again made progress all but
impossible, as Mr Bassil, feeling threatened, saw no reason to facilitate
things.
The US has long used sanctions as if they were a silver bullet that could
resolve intractable problems. But the reality is they rarely do. In Lebanon’s
case they had the effect of hindering the only serious proposal available to
help spur the country’s economic revival. Washington’s hard line may satisfy
some people – and few regretted seeing Mr Bassil targeted. But when the country
urgently needs a government, the sanctions only made matters worse.
Lebanon’s politicians form a corrupt cartel, so it is easy to take pleasure in
their distress. But the delay in forming a government, on which international
pressure could be put to introduce reform measures, is mainly causing suffering
among Lebanon’s population, with roughly 50 per cent estimated to be below the
poverty line. While the US can take satisfaction in refusing to talk to
Hezbollah and obstructing the Macron plan, it offers nothing tangible to help
Lebanon.
That is why it is imperative that the international community and the new Biden
administration put their full weight behind the French initiative and use it to
break the resistance to reform from Lebanon’s reprehensible politicians. Yes, it
may mean engaging indirectly with Hezbollah but no realistic change can happen
if the party is left out. Lebanon is nearing a point of no return. The
consequence may be a social explosion and even famine. Avoiding this must be a
priority.
*Michael Young is a Lebanon columnist for The National
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on December 16-17/2020
US blacklists four companies for helping export of Iranian
petrochemical products
Agencies/Wednesday 16 December 2020
The United States on Wednesday imposed sanctions on companies, accusing them of
supporting the sale of Iranian petrochemicals as Washington increases pressure
on Tehran even as President Donald Trump's term nears a close. The US Treasury
Department in a statement said it blacklisted the four entities for facilitating
the export of Iranian petrochemical products by Triliance Petrochemical Co.
Ltd., which was hit with sanctions by Washington earlier this year.
US designates Iran-backed Bahrain group as terrorist
The Arab Weekly/December 16/2020
WASHINGTON – The United States on Tuesday designated the Bahrain-based Saraya
al-Mukhtar group as a terrorist organisation, accusing it of being backed by
Iran and of having plotted attacks against US personnel in the Arab Gulf state.
Washington’s move, which comes amid a slew of sanctions announced by Washington
as US President Donald Trump’s term nears a close, designates Saraya al-Mukhtar,
a marginal group operating underground, as a “Specially Designated Global
Terrorist.”Most of the group’s members are in jail or in Iran.
Links with Iran
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Saraya al-Mukhtar, or Mukhtar Brigades,
was designated for “posing a significant risk of committing acts of terrorism
that threaten the national security and foreign policy of the United
States.”“The group has plotted attacks against US personnel in Bahrain and has
offered cash rewards for the assassination of Bahraini officials,” Pompeo said
in a statement. “Saraya al-Mukhtar’s self-described goal is to depose the
Bahraini government with the intention of paving the way for Iran to exert
greater influence in Bahrain,” he added. Tuesday’s action freezes any assets the
Saraya al-Mukhtar group has within US jurisdictions and bars Americans from
doing any business with it or its members. Pompeo also accused the group of
having received financial and logistical support from Iran’s Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which controls a business empire as well as
elite armed and intelligence forces in Iran.
Bahrain welcomes Washington’s move
The foreign ministry in Bahrain, which hosts the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet as a
regional security bulwark against Iran, issued a statement welcoming the move as
an important step “in combating malign acts and intentions of this terrorist
group.” In 2011, members of Bahrain’s Shia Muslim majority staged major protests
against its Sunni Muslim royal family inspired by the so-called Arab Spring of
that year. The unrest was later crushed with the help of Saudi Arabia and the
United Arab Emirates. Since then, militants have carried out sporadic bombing
and shooting attacks against security forces that Bahrain blames on Tehran’s
Shia theocracy. Iran denies any involvement in Bahrain’s unrest. A September
report by the non-partisan Congressional Research Service included the Mukhtar
Brigades among small underground Bahraini Shia groups that the Sunni-dominated
government says have been armed and advised by the IRGC as part of an effort to
destabilise the country. But, the report noted that attacks by the groups, which
have mainly been aimed at security forces, “have been sporadic and appear to
have waned since 2018.”The US State Department’s international terrorism report
for 2019, “the latest available,” stated that there were no militant attacks in
Bahrain that year.
Ghanim re-elected Kuwaiti parliament speaker after tough
battle
The Arab Weekly/December 16/2020
The opposition’s reactions after the voting session carried a veiled threat to
the government that it would pay the price for its vote for Marzouq al-Ghanim,
who recedived 33 votes in his favour, against 28 votes for his rival Badr al-Humaidi.
KUWAIT – The features of the tough election battle at the new Kuwaiti National
Assembly on Tuesday reflected the new leadership’s insistence on a policy of
transparency in decision-making. Marzouq al-Ghanim won a second mandate as
parliament speaker by receiving 33 votes in his favour, against 28 votes for his
rival Badr al-Humaidi. Three ballots were discarded. Despite attempts by certain
MPs to sabotage the session before it started, it was noticeable that a number
of MPs who had publicly pledged with the opposition bloc to remove Ghanim ended
up either voting for him or wrote the names of both candidates, which nullified
their ballots in the final count. All members of the opposition bloc had pledged
to photograph their ballots to prove they had fulfilled their commitment to vote
against Ghanim, despite the unconstitutionality of the move. But it seems that
at least three of them wrote Humaidi’s name on their ballot, photographed it and
then added Marzouq’s name, nullifying their ballots. The opposition’s reactions
after the voting session carried a veiled threat to the government that it would
pay the price for its vote for Ghanim, but the government, whose president,
Sheikh Sabah al-Khaled al-Hamad al-Sabah, delivered a distinguished statement in
which he spoke of the real challenges facing Kuwait internally and externally
and the need to confront them, seems to have received the green light from the
country’s political leadership to forge ahead in earnest without paying any
attention to parliamentary threats.
Kuwait’s political leadership viewed with apprehension the opposition’s rhetoric
and their agenda based on the promise to kill the projects of loans, pass a
general amnesty for members of the opposition and other politicians who were
sentenced by Kuwaiti courts and who fled to Turkey and to amend the law on
cybercrime and electoral districts.
A Kuwaiti political source asked, “What does it mean to block the loans in a
country that needs to garner every financial resource to overcome its economic
crisis, and do these populist calls contribute to finding economic solutions or
are they mere acts of sterile bidding?”
In a statement to The Arab Weekly, the Kuwaiti political source described
Ghanim’s re-election as speaker and the valuable speech by Kuwaiti Emir Sheikh
Nawaf al-Ahmad al-Jaber al-Sabah as indications that the features of the coming
stage in Kuwait are going to be “dreams and determination.”
The same source quoted the Emir’s speech at the opening of parliament: “There is
no doubt that you are aware of what the world and the region in particular are
witnessing in terms of new developments, and you have enormous challenges ahead
of you, and there is no longer room for wasting more effort, time and potentials
on meaningless conflicts, settling scores and fabricating crises.”Sheikh Nawaf
had warned against practices and behaviours by some inside the parliament that
have become the subject of discontent and frustration of citizens, and an
obstacle to any achievement. Observers say that after the National Assembly
elections on Tuesday, Kuwait is at a crossroads. Either all MPs, especially the
figures of escalation, read the emir’s speech carefully and start working in
earnest on the country’s problems or turn the hall of parliament into an arena
for auctions and conflicts, in which case the country’s leadership will have no
choice but to resort to tough solutions. In his speech to the new parliament,
Sheikh Nawaf said that there is a need to develop a comprehensive reform
programme to help the country get out of its worst economic crises in decades,
and that there was no time “for fabricating crises.”
“Our dear country’s march is suffering from serious problems and faces great
challenges, which necessitate that we immediately implement a comprehensive
reform program,” the emir added. Sheikh Nawaf’s speech shows the extent of the
ambiguity surrounding the political crisis that Kuwait is experiencing and its
future impact on the country, as the same people involved in this crisis are
back on the scene again. The current emir was crown prince, and the prime
minister has not changed, nor has the parliament speaker. In addition, we are
again seeing the emergence of the same political problems and quarrels that are
taking precedence over solving the economic crisis. Previous escalations of
disagreement and stalemate between the government and parliament led to several
government changes and the dissolution of parliament, which impeded investment
and economic and financial reform.
The Kuwaitis are betting that the emir can succesfully converge views between
the government and parliament, and prevent a repeat of the scenarios of the past
years. Kuwait’s economy, which stands at nearly $ 140 billion, faces a deficit
of $46 billion this year. One of the government’s priorities is to pass a bill
that will allow Kuwait to borrow from global loan markets. Observers believe
that the continuation of the battle for dominance between the government and
parliament during the coming period may lead to the dissolution of parliament
and the holding of new elections in a fruitless vicious cycle.
While the government is looking for urgent reforms that respond to domestic and
international economic changes, and may be forced into a harsh policy of
austerity, the parliament continues to oppose any reforms that might affect the
welfare system through which Kuwaitis get many benefits.
Government circles warn that continuing without reforms may impede the
government’s ability to pay salaries.
UN body approves new UN envoys for Libya, Mideast
The Arab Weekly/December 16/2020
NEW YORK/ UNITED NATIONS – The UN Security Council on Tuesday approved a
proposal by Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to appoint Bulgarian Nickolay
Mladenov as the UN Libya special envoy and Norwegian Tor Wennesland as the UN
Middle East envoy, diplomats said. Mladenov will replace Ghassan Salame, who
stepped down as the UN Libya envoy in March due to stress, and Wennesland
succeeds Mladenov, who has spent the past five years as the UN mediator between
Israel and the Palestinians. The appointments end months of bickering among
council members sparked by a US push to split the Libya role, with one person
running the UN political mission and another focused on conflict mediation. The
Security Council agreed to that proposal in September, but Russia and China
abstained. Libya descended into chaos after the NATO-backed overthrow of leader
Muammar Gadhafi in 2011. In October, the two major sides in the country’s war –
the internationally recognised Government of National Accord (GNA) and Khalifa
Haftar’s eastern-based Libyan National Army (LNA) – agreed on a ceasefire. “The
members of the Security Council underlined the importance of a credible and
effective Libyan-led Ceasefire Monitoring Mechanism and looked forward to a
comprehensive report by the Secretary-General on the proposals for effective
ceasefire monitoring under the auspices of the United Nations,” the 15-member
body said in a statement on Tuesday. The council also reiterated a call for the
withdrawal of all foreign fighters and mercenaries from Libya. Wennesland is
currently Norway’s special envoy on the Middle East peace process. The
Palestinians want to establish a state in the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the
Gaza Strip, territories Israel captured in the 1967 Middle East war
— Ongoing talks —
The UN envoy to Libya said Tuesday rivals failed to agree on a mechanism to
choose a transitional government that would lead the conflict-stricken country
to elections in December next year. Stephanie Williams told an online meeting
for the Libyan Political Dialogue Forum that she would form an advisory
committee to help bridge the gaps among the participants and “make concrete
progress.” The 75-member forum reached an agreement to hold presidential and
parliamentary elections on Dec. 24, 2021. However, it failed to break the
deadlock on the selection mechanism for the executive authority despite six
online meetings since their face-to-face talks in Tunisia in November, Williams
said. Williams said she would announce the legal committee to work on
constitutional arrangements for the elections. The committee is expected to
convene Monday, before its face-to-face meeting next month, she said.
“I am fully committed, the train has left the station on this process, there is
no going back … Let’s not litigate the past. There has been a lot of litigation
of the past, but we need to look forward,” she said. No progress was announced
on the issue of foreign forces and mercenaries since they inked the cease-fire
deal almost two months ago.
UN calls for all mercenaries to leave Libya
The Arab Weekly/December 16/2020
NEW YORK/ UNITED NATIONS – The UN Security Council on Tuesday called for all
mercenaries and foreign fighters to leave Libya, in a unanimous statement that
included Russia, which is accused of enabling a Russian contractor to send
paramilitaries. Libya has been wracked by violence and chaos since the toppling
and killing of longtime ruler Muammar Gadhafi in 2011. Moscow has been accused
of supporting mercenaries fighting against the UN-backed Tripoli Government of
National Accord (GNA). All 15 Security Council members called for the
“withdrawal of all foreign fighters and mercenaries from Libya in line with the
ceasefire agreement reached by the Libyan parties on 23 October, the commitments
of the participants of the Berlin Conference and the relevant United Nations
Security Council resolutions.” The statement was released following a
closed-door videoconference. The Security Council also underlined “the
importance of a credible and effective Libyan-led Ceasefire Monitoring
Mechanism.”At the end of December, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is due
to submit options to the Council for the creation of the mechanism, which would
operate under the aegis of the United Nations. The UN only has a small political
mission in Libya of around 230 people.
Thousands in Libya
In early December, the acting UN envoy to Libya, American Stephanie Williams,
said about 20,000 foreign and mercenary forces were still in Libya. “That is a
shocking violation of Libyan sovereignty,” Williams told a virtual meeting of a
political dialogue forum. “They are now occupying your house. This is a blatant
violation of the arms embargo… They are pouring weapons into your country, a
country which does not need more weapons,” she added. The UN envoy’s remarks
reflected at the time her exasperation over the lack of progress on the
departure of foreign fighters and mercenaries from Libya, which was part of a
ceasefire deal inked in October. Two authorities are vying for power in the
country: the GNA in Tripoli, recognised by the UN and supported by Turkish
military forces, and the Libyan National Army (LNA), led by Field Marshal
Khalifa Haftar. Wagner, a Russian military contractor, has long been accused of
sending fighters to serve the Kremlin’s interests in Syria, Libya and countries
in sub-Saharan Africa.
Turkish involvement
Earlier in December, LNA spokesman Ahmed al-Mismari accused Turkey of continuing
to supply arms and fighters to the GNA. Last July, Turkey was reported to have
dispatched to Libya thousands of Islamic extremists, including 2,500 Tunisian
ISIS members. The ISIS extremists were sent to back other militants and
mercenaries dispatched by Ankara to fight on the side of the GNA. According to
the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), “Turkish intelligence have
transferred Jihadist groups and Islamic State (ISIS) members of different
foreign nationalities, from Syria to Libya in the past few months.” These,
according to SOHR, included “over 2,500 Tunisian ISIS members” out of thousands
of other ISIS-affiliated Tunisians operating in Syria. According to the watch
group, “the number of recruits who arrived in Libya rose to 16,100 Syrian
mercenaries, including 340 children under the age of 18.”Another report
published in July by the Pentagon said Turkey has sent between 3,500 and 3,800
Syrian mercenaries to back the GNA over the first three months of the year. The
report, published by the US Defense Department’s inspector general, does not
detail the nature of mercenary contingents dispatched by Turkey after the end of
March even though Ankara has intensified its intervention in Libya since then.
According to experts, Turkey is seeking economic returns, with military bases in
Libya providing military backup for oil and gas drilling operations that Ankara
intends to undertake in Libyan territorial waters and in the Eastern
Mediterranean by virtue of the maritime border demarcation deal struck with the
GNA last November. “The Libyan bases will help Ankara “penetrate deep into the
African continent and its wealth of raw materials,” Tunisian international
relations and security expert Alaya Allani said.
Biden Joins Battle for Senate as Top Republican Accepts Win
Agence France Presse/December 16/2020
President-elect Joe Biden threw his weight behind the Democratic battle for
control of the US Senate on Tuesday, as his White House win was finally
acknowledged by top Republicans and holdout foreign leaders. Biden flew into
Georgia -- a southern state he won in an upset against President Donald Trump --
to host a rally for two Democratic candidates in runoff races that will
determine the Senate's balance of power. "Honk for your next United States
senators Jon Ossoff and Rev. Raphael Warnock," Biden told the crowd at the
drive-in event in Atlanta as he urged voters to turn out in force on January 5.
"Send me these two men, and we will control the Senate!" One day after the
Electoral College affirmed Biden's victory, attention shifted to the looming
Senate battle -- and to the shape of the incoming administration, as Biden also
announced he had nominated Pete Buttigieg, a former mayor and presidential
rival, as secretary of transportation. Buttigieg would be the first openly gay
person confirmed by the Senate to a presidential cabinet post -- in line with
Biden's pledge to usher in the most diverse cabinet ever when he takes office on
January 20. And while Trump still refuses to concede -- continuing to tweet
baseless allegations of mass fraud that have been rejected in dozens of lawsuits
-- top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell finally broke his silence with a
message to the president: it's over. "The Electoral College has spoken. So today
I want to congratulate President-elect Joe Biden," McConnell said on the Senate
floor, adding Americans can also "take pride" that they will have their first
female vice president in Kamala Harris. Biden told reporters before flying to
Georgia that he had a "good" phone conversation with McConnell, a longtime
Senate colleague. "I told him that while we disagree on a lot of things, there
are things we can work together on," Biden said. The Electoral College
confirmation triggered an acknowledgement of Biden's win from Russian President
Vladimir Putin, who said he was "ready for collaboration" with the Democrat.
Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro and Mexico's Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador --
who had both waited until now to recognize the president-elect -- also sent
their congratulations.
'Turn the page'
Trump, in unprecedented fashion, has yet to acknowledge his defeat in the
chaotic election that will see him exit the White House after a single four-year
term. In the wake of McConnell's message to the president-elect Tuesday, Trump
suggested he would continue to fight the results and aired unproven claims that
November's poll was "rigged". "Too soon to give up," he said in a second tweet.
"Republican Party must finally learn to fight. People are angry!"But Biden urged
the divided country to "turn the page" as he welcomed the Electoral College vote
on Monday, saying US democracy proved "resilient" against Trump's "abuse of
power." He praised voters for casting ballots in record numbers despite fears of
Covid-19 and "enormous political pressure, verbal abuse and even threats of
physical violence." The White House transition is occurring with the coronavirus
pandemic surging, pushing US Covid-19 deaths above 300,000. While critical
winter months lie ahead, a bright spot has emerged with health care workers
receiving the first doses of the coronavirus vaccine distributed in the nation.
And with top infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci recommending Biden and
Harris quickly take the vaccine, the president-elect said they would receive the
shot in public view.
Minds on Georgia
Although the door has all but shut on his efforts to overturn the vote results,
Trump has remained defiant. In a threatening move against Republican leaders in
Georgia, where he has made baseless claims of massive voter fraud, he retweeted
a pro-Trump lawyer who posted a picture of Georgia's governor and secretary of
state, saying "they will soon be going to jail." Democrats, who control the
House of Representatives, must flip both Georgia Senate seats in order to seize
control of the upper chamber, while Republicans must hold just one to maintain
their majority. Republicans have framed Georgia as must-win races, with the
state forming the last line of defense against what they describe as radical
"socialism." If Republicans do win, McConnell will remain majority leader, and
his relationship with Biden will quickly become the most closely watched in
Washington. The pair were known for striking deals during crunch periods when
Biden was Barack Obama's vice president. But McConnell gave Obama no quarter,
repeatedly stymying him on judicial nominations and forcing the president to
curtail his legislative agenda.
Nikki Haley: Resumption of Iran deal would be ‘devastating’
Jerusalem Post/December 16/2020
Former United States Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley, speaking at
the first DiploTech Global Summit, said that “it would be devastating and a
massive step backward” if the United States were to resume the Iranian nuclear
deal as it was originally formulated.
In an exclusive conversation with Ambassador Danny Danon, Israel’s 17th UN
Ambassador and recently elected Chairman of the World Likud, Haley said that “to
go back and start over would be devastating.” Haley said that US sanctions
against Iran have brought the Iranians to their knees. She suggested that the
United States should let the Iranians come back to the negotiating table and
“make them prove what they are going to do before we do anything else.” Haley
said that though the Iranian people may want peace, the country’s leaders have
no intention of bringing peace to the Middle East. Ambassador Danon, who worked
together with Ambassador Haley during their UN years, commented, “On the issue
of a nuclear Iran, Israel cannot make any mistakes.”
Spearheading this initiative, Ambassador Danon stated that “Israel is proving
that it continues to be the start-up nation when it comes to technology. The
world is recognizing that Israel has a lot to offer in the way of innovation and
partnerships from Agritech and Watertech to Healthtech and cybersecurity. We
welcome global partners to discuss post-COVID solutions to help change our lives
for a better today, and to help build the world of tomorrow.”
Ambassador Haley urged the Trump Administration, which stopped funding UNRWA in
2018, to declassify information about the actual number of refugees in the UNRWA
program before the Biden Administration takes office. “This is about truth, and
about the fact that the entire world assumes that there are millions of people
that are considered refugees according to UNRWA, yet they will never talk about
the facts. It is hugely important towards peace and towards truth, and it is
important that everyone deserves to know what that true refugee number is.”
The DiploTech Global Summit, which was held virtually due to COVID, brought
together world leaders, heads of state, policymakers, diplomats, investors, and
trailblazers from various fields, including technological innovation in
medicine, hi-tech, agriculture, communications, and more.
Jerusalem Post News Editor Maayan Hoffman moderated two panels with leaders in
the hi-tech field regarding challenges and solutions for a sustainable
collective future and the preparation of a proactive and orderly outline for a
post-COVID world, where innovation and technology will play an even greater and
more meaningful role.
Ambassadors Danny Danon and Nikki Haley to speak at DiploTech 2020 (Credit:
REUTERS)Ambassadors Danny Danon and Nikki Haley to speak at DiploTech 2020
(Credit: REUTERS)
The first panel, entitled ‘Israeli technology and future sustainable solutions’
featured Meggie Abecasis, vice president Commercial Landscaping for Vertical
Field, which develops technological solutions for vertical agriculture, and
green walls in urban areas; Zack Fenster, vice president of Business Development
for Watergen, whose company produces water from the air; and Ofir Ardon, CEO of
Agritask, which provides solutions to farmers to improve productivity.
Fenster said that the shortage of drinking water, which affects both developing
countries and the most advanced nations, requires new approaches to provide
immediate solutions. Abecasis pointed out that the corona pandemic exposed the
weaknesses of poor city planning, extensive urban density, and inefficient
infrastructure, all of which need to be addressed in the future. Ardon stated
that due to the COVID crisis, more and more companies will support remote work,
and that his company is working on solutions to support such activities.
The second panel, entitled ‘The Post-COVID World,’ focused on technological
solutions that have been developed during the COVID crisis and will continue to
be implemented and further developed in the post-COVID world. Participants
included Dr. Kira Radinsky, Chairwoman and CTO, Diagnostic Robotics, Asher
Dagan, CEO of Britannica Knowledge Systems, Rafi Kaminer, CEO of Pangea Group,
and Masood Al-Awar, CEO of Medallion Associates in the United Arab Emirates.
Radinsky said that her company set up a clinical triage system at the outset of
the COVID pandemic that identified the loss of taste and smell as a symptom of
the disease, just three days after the outbreak of the virus. Her company’s
algorithms enabled analysis of the severity of patient symptoms, which were able
to predict which patients would require hospitalization and which could remain
at home. This allowed hospitals to reduce the patient loads initially before a
testing system for COVID was in place. She added that as a result of the
advancement of medical data analysis in the COVID pandemic, many medical
processes will be able to become automated in the future and will thus improve
the quality and efficiency of medical care.
Kaminer, whose company develops access control systems, has created touchless
and frictionless systems that provide authorized access to areas such as
airports and office buildings without a need for visitors to receive physical
authorization from others nearby, thus minimizing the risk of infection. They
are currently working with the World Health Organization to create mobile
vaccination cards and biometric vaccination cards to help open the world economy
once the virus abates.
Dagan, head of Britannica Knowledge Systems, develops training systems for large
companies such as Boeing and NASA, and pointed out that the corona crisis forced
companies to move from classroom training to online schooling, which was
challenging for these highly regulated organizations.
Masood Al-Awar discussed the effects of the pandemic in the UAE and how his
country managed to maintain sufficient supplies of food and medicine during this
challenging period. He said that the advanced development of the UAE’s
infrastructure was accelerated and improved during this time and that future
collaboration with Israel on this front will continue, stating that “technology
has no boundaries.”
The virtual conference was moderated by Fox News business anchor Liz Claman and
also featured appearances by foreign leaders from the Marshall Islands,
Guatemala, and Antigua and Barbuda, all of whom spoke of the importance of
technological innovation in the post-COVID world, and the vital role that Israel
is playing, and will continue to perform in the post-COVID world.
The DiploTech Global Summit aims to continue to build on the success of the
first virtual Summit and continue to forge connections through technology in the
years ahead.
Turkey’s Erdogan says US sanctions are an ‘attack on sovereignty’
AgenciesWednesday 16 December 2020
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday called US sanctions against
Ankara over its purchase of Russian missile defenses an “open attack” on its
sovereignty. “What kind of an alliance is this? This decision is an open attack
on our sovereignty,” Erdogan said during a televised speech in Ankara.
Erdogan said US sanctions imposed on Turkey over its acquisition of Russian
defense systems will fail in what he said was their aim of deterring Ankara’s
defense industry efforts.The Turkish president said the sanctions showed a
hostile stance by the United States against its NATO ally, but that problems
created by them would be overcome.
UK lawmakers urge government to designate Iran’s IRGC,
replace nuclear deal
Yaghoub Fazeli/Al Arabiya English/Wednesday 16 December 2020
UK lawmakers urged Britain on Wednesday to designate Iran’s Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a terrorist organization, declare Tehran’s
detention of foreign nationals as “state hostage taking,” and work towards
brokering a comprehensive deal to replace the current nuclear deal.
The UK Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Select Committee released a report on
Wednesday urging Britain to take a tougher approach with Iran.
Proscribing the IRGC
The UK should designate Iran’s primary military force the IRGC a terrorist
organization, a move taken by the US in 2019, the committee’s report said. “The
actions of the IRGC meet the criteria for proscription in the Terrorism Act
2000, due to its clear and enduring support for terrorists and non-state actors
working to undermine stability in the region,” the report said.
Replacing the JCPOA
Parliament members also urged the UK to work to broker a more comprehensive
agreement to replace the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, known as the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), which they described as a “shell of an
agreement.” “Despite good intentions, the JCPOA was an agreement built on weak
foundations. The slow death of the nuclear deal seems to have been inevitable
and, following the actions in the [Iranian parliament], it now appears beyond
repair,” Chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee Tom Tugendhat said. “The UK
government should work to broker a replacement to the JCPOA, which also
addresses regional security,” Tugendhat said. Earlier this month, Germany’s
Foreign Minister Heiko Maas also said that a new broader Iran nuclear accord
must be reached and that the 2015 deal was no longer enough. Tehran has rejected
calls to renegotiate the JCPOA.
‘State hostage taking’
Iran’s detention of foreign and dual nationals amounts to “state hostage
taking,” the report said. “The UK Government must call the arbitrary detention
of foreign nationals what it is: hostage taking,” Tugendhat said. “The charges,
trials and convictions of British citizens on Iranian soil are a parody of a
justice system … Using young mothers and retirees as bargaining chips and
leverage is an unacceptable form of diplomacy,” he added. The UK’s current
approach to seeking the release of detainees is “clearly not working,” the
report said, adding that a “more decisive, coordinated approach is
needed.”Several dual and foreign nationals are also currently under arrest in
Iran, including Iranian-Swedish scientist Ahmadreza Djalali, British aid worker
Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, and German-Iranian architect Nahid Taghavi. The
Iranian regime is accused of pursuing a “hostage-taking” policy by arresting
foreign nationals on trumped-up charges and using them as hostages to try to win
concessions from other countries. “The UK should also prioritize using Magnitsky
sanctions to target specific Iranian human rights abusers,” the report said.
Iranians are biggest victims of regime
The Iranian people are the regime’s “greatest victims,” the report said, urging
the UK to support those “suffering under the violence of the regime.” “The
greatest victims of the Iranian regime are the Iranian people themselves … for
too long innocent Iranians have suffered violence and human rights violations at
the hands of their own government,” Tugendhat said.
Iran’s Khamenei says US hostility toward Iran will continue
after Trump
Reuters/Wednesday 16 December 2020
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei said on Wednesday that Washington’s hostility
toward the Islamic Republic would not end when US President Donald Trump leaves
office. “The hostility (against Iran) is not just from Trump’s America, which
will not end when he leaves, as (President Barack) Obama’s America also did bad
things to ...the Iranian nation,” Khamenei was quoted as saying by his official
website. Khamenei is due to hold his first public function on Wednesday since
rumors surfaced of his deteriorating health, Iranian media reported. The media
reports said Khamenei would meet organizers of events to mark the first
anniversary of the killing of Iran’s top commander Qassem Soleimani in a US
drone attack in Iraq.
Iran’s Rouhani says he is happy that ‘lawless’ Trump is
leaving office
Reuters/Wednesday 16 December 2020
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said on Wednesday he was happy that Donald
Trump was leaving office, calling him “the most lawless US president” and a “terrorist.”“We
are not overjoyed about Mr. Biden’s arrival, but we are happy about Trump
leaving,” Rouhani said in a televised speech to the cabinet.
Iranian sentenced to six months in prison for organizing
mixed-gender concerts
Marco Ferrari/Al Arabiya English/Tuesday 15 December 2020
Kamyar Sheykh’s dream was to start an independent record label to support
musicians in his native Iran. The dream began to take shape in 2014, starting
off in a humble cafe serving coffee from an espresso machine Kamyar took from
his home, blossoming in time into a thriving hub of musicians and music-lovers
in a city not often thought of for its performing arts scene. His label, Tehran
Sessions, became the focal point of a burgeoning movement in Iran, but the dream
was not to last. The authorities caught wind of the revelry, which involved
women mixing with men, not wearing hijabs, and patrons sneaking in bottles of
alcohol and illicit drugs. In early 2019, police descended on Kamyar’s Tech Café
after female singers were seen performing, and the promoter was arrested for the
charge of ‘creating an atmosphere of prostitution. He spent six nights in jail,
alongside a murderer, and had to post 3,500,000,000 rials ($83,000) bail. He was
then sentenced to six months in prison, eventually acquitted after a long legal
battle. The ordeal left Kamyar depressed, financially destitute, and unable and
unwilling to work in the music business in Iran again.
Here he tells Al Arabiya English his story.
Local music scene
“I thought if I said to men: ‘you can sing,’ and to women ‘you can’t sing,’ it
would not be fair,” he said. “There is nothing like that in the Quran, even –
there is nothing saying that women singing is bad. And when I saw the talents
that were arising there and the communication and the communities that were
being made, I was really happy about it. “I paid the cost for it. But I am happy
that there are so many singers that were allowed to perform on stage.”Female
performers and mixed-gender crowds are rare in Iran, Kamyar says, as licensing
is usually restricted to big-name acts who perform in theaters. Many of the
musicians who played at Tech Café had never taken to the stage before, and since
the cafe shut down, they have been reduced to performing only for their
followers on social media.
Grassroots
The idea to create a live music venue first came when Kamyar was a university
student in Vienna, Austria. He returned home to Iran one summer holiday and
invited local bands to play at a house in Tehran over two nights, advertising
the shows on social media. To his surprise, more than 400 people showed up.
“It clicked in that time, that I could do this here, I could do this in Iran –
and we have to do this.”In 2014, returning home after finishing his studies, he
opened a cafe with his business partner in Sayé Gallery, in Tehran’s northern
Niavaran neighborhood. At the weekends, he would invite local bands to play,
take the artwork off the gallery walls to replace paintings with acoustic
paneling for live shows, and serve coffee to audience members as the musicians
played. The success of Sayé Gallery allowed Tehran Sessions to move to Tech Café
in the city centre's Yusuf Abad district. The new venue hosted a medley of
events: techno nights, acoustic sessions, karaoke, lip sync battles, pantomimes,
and movie screenings. Kamyar and his wife built the business from the ground up,
acting as managers, sound engineers and chefs. “It was a good community for
musicians, because musicians were getting paid for what they were doing, and we
made so many good connections,” he said. Performers would play mostly Western
songs. Kamyar is adamant that one of the more popular female singers sounded
just like Whitney Houston.He said that he had all the legal permits required to
run the café except one, which would have given the green light for female
singers to perform.
“Depressed, financially destitute”
The Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance contacted Kamyar and warned him to
stop organizing the events, but he continued. After the warnings went unheeded,
in early 2019, police descended on Tech Café and arrested the then 25-year-old
promoter for the charge of “creating an atmosphere of prostitution,” after women
were seen mixing with men without wearing the hijab. After he posted bail and
was released, he found that Tech Café had been boarded up with signs proclaiming
that the venue was a hotbed of prostitution. He had to sell the business to
recover the bail money.
Now, nearly two years on, Kamyar is unwilling to try his hand again at the music
business in his home country out of fear of having everything taken away for a
second time. He is looking overseas, hoping to use his events management skills
to forge his way through the entertainment industry in a country that is more
accommodating of live music. “The things that everyone in the world is doing –
we can do it here. We have the potential to do it here, and I wanted to do that,
but they didn’t let me and I don’t have the energy to get in trouble again.”
New lawsuit filed in New York accuses top Qatar banks of
funding terror in Israel
Ismaeel Naar, Al Arabiya EnglishWednesday 16 December 2020
A new lawsuit has been filed in New York against Qatari financial institutions
and charity accusing them of funneling money to fund Palestinian extremist
groups responsible for the killing of Americans in Israel, according to an
initial court complaint filed to the court. The initial complaint was filed on
Tuesday in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York
in Brooklyn by the family of Pinches Przewozman, an American who was killed in
rocket attacks on Israel from the Gaza Strip on May 5, 2019. Tuesday’s suit
directly alleges that Qatar had funneled money to groups in Palestine under the
guise of charitable donations that were then used to fund Hamas and the
Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ). “To accomplish its goal of spreading acts of
terrorism and violence in Israel while evading international sanctions, Qatar
coopted several institutions that it dominates and controls to funnel coveted
U.S. dollars (the primary currency of Middle East terrorist networks) to Hamas
and PIJ under the false guise of charitable donations,” read the 71-page legal
complaint document obtained by Al Arabiya English. Przewozman’s family are
directly accusing Qatar Charity, Masraf Al Rayan Bank and Qatar National Bank in
their case against Qatar. The lawsuit said accused Qatar Charity of soliciting
donations in Qatar and around the world and then transferring those funds to its
account at Masraf Al Rayan in Doha, Qatar. “Masraf Al Rayan then utilized its
“correspondent” bank account located in New York to conduct transactions
involving U.S. dollars (“USD”) and to transfer funds from Doha, through New
York, to Qatar Charity’s accounts in the Palestinian Territories at either the
Bank of Palestine or the Islamic Bank in Ramallah,” according to the complaint.
The new lawsuit filed on Tuesday follows an earlier complaint filed separately
in June by US attorney Steven Perles, who has prosecuted notable cases involving
terrorism and terror-financing on behalf of families and victims seeking
compensation of past terror attacks. That lawsuit also accuses Qatar of secretly
funding Hamas and the PIJ groups with millions of dollars who carried out terror
attacks that killed US citizens. Perles specifically alleges that the money used
by Hamas and PIJ were used to carry out at least six attacks between 2014 and
2016. The June lawsuit said that between March and September 2015, Qatar Charity
gave $28 million to groups in the Palestinian territories that may have been
then transferred to Hamas and PIJ.
UAE’s Mohamed bin Zayed meets Egyptian President al-Sisi in Cairo
Emily Judd, Al Arabiya English/Wednesday 16 December 2020
Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan met Egyptian President
Abdel Fattah al-Sisi in Cairo on Wednesday and discussed peace and stability in
the Middle East. The Crown Prince, who is also the Deputy Supreme Commander of
the UAE Armed Forces, said the two leaders discussed ways to strengthen
bilateral ties between the UAE and Egypt and the development of areas of
cooperation. “We also considered issues of peace and stability in the region,”
the Crown Prince said in a tweet. The Crown Prince recently spearheaded the
UAE’s normalization of relations with Egypt’s neighbor Israel, which was made
official in September in a ceremony at the White House. The UAE became the third
Arab country to make peace with Israel, following Egypt and Jordan. The visit on
Wednesday marked the second high-level meeting this month for both al-Sisi, who
met with French President Emmanuel Macron in France on December 7, and the Crown
Prince, who met with Prince Charles in England on December 10.
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on December 16-17/2020
Europe Confronts Second Wave of Coronavirus
Soeren Kern/Gatestone Institute/December 16/2020
On December 11, Germany recorded 29,875 new coronavirus cases, a one-day record,
according to the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) for infectious diseases.
Economists are warning that the second coronavirus lockdown has increased the
risk of another recession in Europe's largest economy.
"After the coronavirus crisis, Germany will look different: Now many companies,
such as car factories, suppliers, steelworks and mechanical engineering
companies will be closed forever. Even if the country is unlocked again,
companies that are gone cannot start up again. Consumers and entrepreneurs are
unsettled. This is poison for the economy and jobs." — Tichys Einblick, German
blog, December 1, 2020
In Sweden, which has stood out for its "no lockdown" approach to the coronavirus
pandemic, Prime Minister Stefan Löfven imposed the toughest restrictions yet
after a spike in the number of infected people filling intensive care units. He
said that the "unprecedented" response was needed if Sweden is to "curb
transmission."
The German government has reimposed strict lockdown measures in an effort to
reverse a spike in Covid-19 infections. Beginning on December 16, all
non-essential shops and businesses, as well as all schools and daycare centers,
will be closed until at least January 10.
The new restrictions, which were agreed upon after talks between German
Chancellor Angela Merkel and the leaders of Germany's 16 federal states, come
after less intrusive lockdown measures that began on November 2 failed to
significantly bring down the number of infections.
On December 11, Germany recorded 29,875 new coronavirus cases, a one-day record,
according to the Robert Koch Institute (RKI) for infectious diseases. Germany's
intensive care unit capacity — the most important measure of a health system's
ability to deal with the pandemic — is at a critical level, with only 5% to 10%
of intensive care beds available in some parts of the country, according to the
Association of Critical Care and Emergency Medicine (DIVI).
Economists are warning that the second coronavirus lockdown has increased the
risk of another recession in Europe's largest economy. Germany suffered its
worst economic contraction since World War II after the first wave of
coronavirus infections pushed down gross domestic product by 1.7% in the first
quarter and by an unprecedented 9.8% in the second quarter. The economy
rebounded by a stronger-than-expected 8.5% in the third quarter due to higher
consumer spending and booming exports.
Economy Minister Peter Altmaier said the new lockdown measures were necessary to
bring the pandemic under control and to prevent a recession next year. "It is
possible, if we act wisely, to protect the economy," he told public broadcaster
Deutschlandfunk.
The chief economist of Commerzbank, Joerg Kraemer, said that Altmaier's optimism
was misplaced and that the tighter lockdown will almost surely plunge Germany
into a second — or double dip — recession. "Germany should brace for a second
recession," he told the Reuters news agency.
The new coronavirus restrictions have led to a deterioration of the business
climate index in Germany, according to a survey published by the Ifo economic
institute on November 24. The drop is due to pessimistic expectations for the
next six months and fears that the German economy will shrink in the fourth
quarter. "Business uncertainty has risen," Ifo President Clemens Fuest said.
"The second wave of the coronavirus has interrupted Germany's economic
recovery."
Meanwhile, the coronavirus crisis is threatening the continued existence of 15%
of German companies, according to a separate survey published by Ifo on December
1. The threat level is extreme in certain sectors: 86% of travel agencies and
tour operators; 76% of hotels; and 62% of restaurants. Nearly 30% of advertising
firms see themselves at risk; 18% of retail and 10% of wholesale companies are
facing closure; 11% of industrial companies are under threat.
The German blog Tichys Einblick recently warned that the worst is yet to come:
"Actually, life and the economy should have returned to normal by December. But
now our country is more locked than unlocked. The Christmas spirit is nowhere to
be seen: Christmas markets are forbidden in many places, restaurants are closed,
and there is emptiness in the shopping streets. And that's just the beginning:
As of January, the Value Added Tax will rise again, energy and electricity will
become more expensive, new taxes are looming and promised financial aid will be
discontinued. So far Germany has been able to cheat its way through the crisis.
Will it be difficult for many self-employed, traders, retirees and employees in
winter?
"After the coronavirus crisis, Germany will look different: Now many companies,
such as car factories, suppliers, steelworks and mechanical engineering
companies will be closed forever. Even if the country is unlocked again,
companies that are gone cannot start up again. Consumers and entrepreneurs are
unsettled. This is poison for the economy and jobs. The national debt has
exploded and continues to rise in the red sky. The desperation of many
freelancers, restaurateurs and traders too. The German economy is staggering
into crisis. A storm threatens after Christmas."
In France, the second-largest economy in the eurozone, a lockdown that took
effect on October 30 was lifted on December 15, amid growing public anger over
the restrictions to personal freedom. The lockdown will be replaced with a more
lenient curfew between 8 p.m. and 6 a.m.
The transition from lockdown to curfew in France comes amid a spike in the
number of people hospitalized for Covid-19: from 35 on December 11 to 2,906 on
December 14, according to the Reuters news agency. France has the highest number
of Covid-19 cases in Europe — nearly 2.5 million, according to a tally
maintained by Johns Hopkins University.
On December 14, the Bank of France estimated that the latest lockdown resulted
in an 11% drop in GDP in November. The central bank cut its growth forecasts for
this year and next. Bank of France governor François Villeroy de Galhau told
France Inter radio that any positive economic effects from Covid-19 vaccines
would not be felt until the end of 2021.
An analyst for the Dutch investment bank ING, Charlotte de Montpellier, warned
that France, like Germany, is facing a double-dip recession due to the
coronavirus restrictions:
"The deterioration in the business climate...in France is mainly due to the very
negative economic impact of the flaring up of the pandemic and the new
restrictive measures taken gradually over the last few weeks to curb the spread
of the coronavirus....
"In particular, the curfew introduced...in a large part of the country (covering
70% of the French population), has a strong impact on the service sector. In
particular, due to the curfew, the restaurant and catering sectors, as well as
the arts and entertainment sectors, are obliged to close at the time of day when
they generate the largest share of their turnover. The complete closure of bars
and sports halls in the same cities does not help either.
"Apart from the direct impact on supply, the restrictive measures will also have
a negative impact on demand, with households and businesses being more cautious
in their consumption and investment behavior due to uncertainty about the
future....
"Consequently, the probability of another quarter of negative growth in France
is very high and the scenario of a W-shaped recovery becomes more likely."
In Italy, the eurozone's third-largest economy, Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte
has tightened travel restrictions during the holidays of Christmas, New Year's
and Epiphany. Starting on December 21, and running through January 6, people in
Italy will be prohibited from travelling between regions except for work or
urgent reasons.
In recent days, Italy has overtaken the United Kingdom as the European country
with the highest number of Covid-19 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins
University.
On November 30, the Italian government approved a fourth stimulus package to
support businesses hit by Covid-related restrictions. The package, worth eight
billion euros ($9.7 billion), delayed tax deadlines for companies and expanded
cash handouts for workers in some sectors.
Italy, which has one of the world's heaviest debt burdens, has relied on
exceptional economic support from the European Central Bank. In November, the
Italian Parliament backed the government's request to swell the nation's budget
deficit by 8 billion euros to fund the additional relief measures. Conte
approved 100 billion euros in stimulus to provide support during the first wave
of the pandemic. Any extra spending is set to send debt above 160% of GDP by the
end of the year, according to Chiara Albanese of Bloomberg.
The Italian economy is forecast to contract by 10.6% in 2020, the largest
decline of any advanced economy except for Spain, according to the International
Monetary Fund (IMF).
In Spain, the eurozone's fourth-largest economy, a Covid-related national state
of emergency entered into effect on October 25. Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez
announced a curfew from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. that is expected to last for six
months — until well after Easter.
Spain's gross domestic product (GDP) is forecast to shrink by almost 13% in
2020, the biggest contraction of any advanced economy, according to the IMF. The
country is also facing a record-high deficit and soaring unemployment. The
unemployment rate in Spain in 2020 and 2021 is expected to hover around 17%,
second only to Greece among advanced and emerging economies. Long lines are
building at food banks across Spain.
On December 11, the Bank of Spain warned that new Covid-related restrictions
have halted recovery from its worst-ever economic contraction earlier in the
year. "The fourth quarter is worse than we expected in September," Oscar Arce,
the central bank's chief economist, said. "The intensity of the second
Covid-wave surprised us."
The coronavirus pandemic has hit Spain especially hard with over 1.7 million
infections and 48,000 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University.
Like Italy, Spain is depending on financial aid from the European Union to
survive the pandemic. Madrid may be eligible to tap up to 140 billion euros
($170 billion) in European funds — half in grants and half in loans, according
to Economy Minister Nadia Calviño.
In the Netherlands, the eurozone's fifth-largest economy, a second lockdown took
effect on December 15. All schools and shops will be closed until at least
January 18. "The Netherlands is closing down," Prime Minister Mark Rutte said in
a live television address. "We realize the gravity of our decisions, right
before Christmas." The measures include limiting gatherings, even at home, to no
more than two people. An exception will be made for three days around Christmas,
when three adult visitors will be permitted.
In Britain, the government is under pressure to tighten Covid-related lockdown
measures ahead of the Christmas holidays. In Europe, Britain ranks second, just
behind Italy, as having the most coronavirus deaths, according to Johns Hopkins
University. Britain also ranks second, just behind France, as having the most
cases of Covid-19, according to Johns Hopkins.
Elsewhere in Europe, in Belgium, the government is scheduled to meet on December
18 to consider lockdown options amid an increase in new daily coronavirus
infections. In Luxembourg, a coronavirus-related curfew has been extended until
January 15.
In Switzerland, the government ordered restaurants, bars and shops to close from
7 p.m. across much of the country as of December 12. "The number of cases is
rising quickly and strongly," said Swiss President Simonetta Sommaruga.
In Poland, Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said that it was too early to ease
coronavirus restrictions: "It is true that in the last few weeks the situation
is better, but we can't pretend that we have defeated the virus, that the
situation is so good that we can think about changing direction." In Hungary, a
curfew will continue until at least January 11. Meanwhile, the Czech Republic
will implement a partial coronavirus lockdown beginning on December 18.
In Denmark, the government announced further lockdown measures in parts of the
country to curb a spike in coronavirus infections. Restaurants, museums, movie
theaters and other cultural institutions closed on December 9 in 38 of 98
municipalities, including Copenhagen, and students in middle schools, high
schools and universities were sent home. "We are entering a new phase of the
epidemic, it is a phase where we are seeing exponential increases in the
infection curves," said Health Minister Magnus Heunicke.
In Norway, Health Minister Bent Høie extended coronavirus restrictions into the
second half of January. He said that even though infection rates in Norway have
leveled off, the threat of infection from neighboring countries remains. In
Finland, the government extended restrictions until January 10.
In Sweden, which has stood out for its "no lockdown" approach to the coronavirus
pandemic, Prime Minister Stefan Löfven imposed the toughest restrictions yet
after a spike in the number of infected people filling intensive care units. He
said that the "unprecedented" response was needed if Sweden is to "curb
transmission." Löfven added: "This is a very clear and strong signal to everyone
in this country and to the entire society about what the rules are going
forward."
*Soeren Kern is a Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute.
© 2020 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.
Biden rejoining the Iran nuclear deal will allow Tehran to
fund militias through oil
Hussain Abdul-Hussain/Al Arabia/Wednesday 16 December 2020
If President-elect Joe Biden rejoins the Iran nuclear deal, he will likely
suspend some sanctions on Tehran while keeping in place sanctions on non-nuclear
activity. Biden should beware: Tehran has no problem with this arrangement,
which will allow it to fund its militia proxies through oil revenue.
Like former President Barack Obama, President-elect Joe Biden seems to perceive
of the nuclear deal with Iran as the beginning of a relationship. Tehran,
however, sees the deal as the end.
The architects of the deal under both Obama and Biden are the same, including
Biden’s picks for National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan and Secretary of State
Anthony Blinken. The two men seem to believe that there is always an opportunity
for a breakthrough “grand bargain” that will transform Iran from foe to friend.
For such a bargain to work, America has to be patient, and give the process
time.
Democrats see the ongoing process of improving relations with Tehran as being
interrupted by President Donald Trump and his hawks. Therefore, come January 20,
Biden will resume the process from where it broke off: America will rollback its
sanctions on Iran, which will simultaneously dial back its level and stock of
enriched uranium to where they were on May 2018, before Trump withdrew from the
deal.
Obama, however, never suspended all US sanctions on Iran. On the day he paused
sanctions on Iran’s financial, energy and shipping sectors, his Secretary of
Treasury Jacob Lew said this: “We will continue to target sanctionable
activities, including those related to Iran’s support for terrorism, regional
destabilization, human rights abuses, and ballistic missile development.”
Neither did Obama suspend sanctions on Iran by legislation. Instead, he issued
waivers by executive order. Congress demanded that it be in the loop, and hence
Obama — and after him Trump — informed Congress of their waiver renewals, every
six months, until Trump declared that May 2018 would be the last time he renewed
such waivers. In November 2018, suspension of US sanctions on Iran expired, and
the Iranian economy started its free fall.
The Iranian regime wanted to save face, but without breaking the deal, so when
it increased level and stock of enriched uranium, it did so without violating
the levels allowed. Iran’s strategy was to wait out Trump until Sullivan and
other Democrats came back to the White House and restored the agreement that
favored Tehran so much.
To rejoin the deal, Biden and his transitional team exaggerated the nuclear
danger from Iran to justify urgently bringing Tehran back into the deal. Biden
also presented himself as tough, stating that restoring the nuclear deal did not
mean that Washington approved of Tehran’s sponsorship of terrorism or
development of missiles. But even Obama never approved of Iranian militias or
missiles, and never removed US sanctions connected to them.
According to team Biden, once US nuclear sanctions are suspended and Iran’s
program is back under control, America will negotiate with Iran over terrorism
and missiles. But says who Tehran wants to talk missiles or militias? In
response to Biden’s pledge to negotiating with Iran over non-nuclear issues,
Iranian president Hassan Rouhani said: “The Americans were trying for months to
add the missile issue [to the nuclear talks] and this was rejected … and Mr
Biden knows this well.”
In fact, Iran was thrilled with Obama’s deal, which allowed it to legally make
billions from its oil exports to fund its missiles and militia programs. The
other, non-nuclear, sanctions never bothered Tehran. As long as Iran is
concerned, America can keep its non-nuclear sanctions while Tehran continues
developing missiles and supporting militias that undermine the governments of
Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen and other Arab countries.
In effect, Iran is using its nuclear program to buy itself immunity against
American sanctions that can cripple its oil sector and the revenue that Tehran
desperately needs to fund its economy, as well as its missiles and regional
militias.
Even better, under the deal, Iran’s freeze of its nuclear program ends in 2031,
after which it can further develop its nuclear bomb program with impunity. At
that point, the US and the world might demand extending the nuclear deal, but by
then, Iran would probably be close to producing a nuclear bomb that would make
the regime immune to external threats and uninterested in extending the nuclear
deal.
If the Democrats cannot see that this trade takes away US leverage to combat
Iran’s troublemaking behavior, both nuclear and non-nuclear, then they either
know little about global affairs or are simply biased in favor of Iranian
mullahs.
America’s allies will have to think of other ways to counter Iran’s nuclear
program, missiles and terrorism. Israel is already doing so, and winning
regional friends who have an interest in stopping an increasingly bullish Iran.
America under Biden will take a back seat and watch.
*Hussain Abdul-Hussain is an Iraqi-Lebanese columnist and writer. He is the
Washington bureau chief of Kuwaiti daily al-Rai and a former visiting fellow at
Chatham House in London.
Why does the Gulf lack female leaders? Data has the answers
Omar Al-Ubaydli/Al Arabiya/Wednesday 16 December 2020
In the Middle East, women are heavily underrepresented in leadership positions.
Women account for less than 10 percent of parliamentary seats in several Gulf
states, and Kuwait’s 2020 elections resulted in all 50 seats going to men. The
private sector paints an even grimmer picture: only three of the 83 Gulf firms
listed in the Forbes Top 100 Arab Family Businesses had a female chairperson.
Underlying this imbalance is a chronic lack of scientific data on its causes. If
the Gulf countries are serious about supporting female leadership, they must
remedy this deficiency.
The easiest way of trying to correct gender imbalance is to simply affirm that
there is rampant discrimination, and to demand greater representation for women.
A more difficult – but potentially more productive – approach is to use
scientific methods to infer the reasons for the underrepresentation of women.
This is because policies that seek to empower women vary in cost and
effectiveness, and selecting the best mix requires a refined understanding of
the underlying causes of female underrepresentation.
For example, women might be underrepresented as senior executives because they
are discriminated against at the selection phase despite having the same years
of managerial experience as men; or it could be because they are less likely
than men to have the requisite years of managerial experience. In the former
case, government-mandated affirmative action is likely to be effective in
reversing discrimination.
In contrast, in the latter case, affirmative action could be counterproductive
as it might lead to companies being forced to appoint underqualified women,
reinforcing prevailing stereotypes. Under these circumstances, the more
effective policy would address why women are less likely to have the requisite
managerial experience – for example they might be discriminated against at lower
levels, in educational institutions, or by the legal system. Rectifying that
might lead to women organically securing equal representation at the senior
executive level without the need for affirmative action.
In Western countries, there is a large body of scientific work on why women are
underrepresented in leadership positions. Economists have contributed by
demonstrating that, in addition to being discriminated against, women are more
likely than men to be risk averse, to be reluctant to start negotiations, to
avoid competitive environments, to seek jobs with flexible working hours, and to
spend time on low promotability tasks.
However, our understanding is far from complete, as illustrated in a new
research paper by Alleghany College economist Professor Priyanka Chakraborty and
Texas A&M University economist Professor Danila Serra. They used a series of
experiments to study interactions between managers and subordinates when
managers had to decide which employees to promote.
Professors Chakraborty and Serra found that women were less likely to seek
managerial positions than men in situations where subordinates could express
their anger at being overlooked for a promotion by the manger. Moreover, they
found that female managers were more likely than their male counterparts to
receive angry messages from subordinates, and that these subordinates were more
likely to question the decisions of female managers than those of male managers.
Within the confines of the experiment, however, they detected no overall gender
difference in managerial performance, though male and female managers chose to
communicate promotion decisions to their subordinates using different language,
with women systematically preferring more cordial expressions.
Since this is cutting-edge research that isn’t being applied to a narrow
problem, it is too early to determine the paper’s implications for broader
issues of gender imbalances in leadership positions. However, it opens the door
for important follow-up research into why women are treated less fairly by
subordinates who are overlooked for promotion, and what role this might play in
making it harder for women to climb corporate ladders.
In the Gulf countries, unfortunately, the volume of research on these issues is
very limited, despite the arguably more pressing need for it be conducted. Gross
expenditure on research is considerably lower, and funding for research on
women’s issues available from civil society organizations is modest because
these entities themselves are limited in size. In contrast, in countries like
the US, private non-profit organizations that have sizeable endowments offer
grants for the study of a wide range of women’s issues.
While Gulf-based policymakers can certainly make use of the research conducted
by Western-based researchers such as Professors Chakraborty and Serra, there are
many legal and cultural differences between Western and Gulf countries, meaning
that there is no substitute for research conducted by Gulf-based scholars on
populations in the Gulf. For example, in the context of the above study,
organizations tend to be much more hierarchical in the Gulf, meaning that there
are fewer opportunities for subordinates to express their dissatisfaction with a
manager’s decision, and so this may affect the attractiveness of managerial
positions to women.
Fortunately, encouraging more local research on gender differences is
straightforward: provide grants and other forms of support for those who wish to
study the topic. It would also help to raise the profile of those researchers
who make successful intellectual contributions by giving them media coverage and
prestigious prizes.
Equally important is institutionalizing dialogue with underrepresented groups.
Resources should be allocated to interviewing Gulf women who do make it to the
top, and to those who miss out, to understand the difficulties that they face
and the potential solutions. Or, as the Greek philosopher Epictetus quipped: “We
have two ears and one mouth so that we can listen twice as much as we speak.”
*Omar Al-Ubaydli (@omareconomics) is a researcher at Derasat, Bahrain
US designation of Muslim Brotherhood would make the world safer
Dalia Al-Aqidi/Arab News/December 16/2020
داليا عقيدي/ارب نيوز: تصنيف الإخوان المسلمين على قوائم الإرهاب الأميركية سيجعل
العالم أكثر أمانًا
Now and then, calls rise in Washington to designate the Muslim Brotherhood as a
terrorist group due do its activities on a global level. Although several
conservative politicians, intelligence think tanks, and anti-Islamist activists
continue to highlight the danger of this radical movement and its proxy
organizations, no official decision has been taken by the government of the US.
Early this month, Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, who is known for his relentless
attempts against this radical group, reintroduced the Muslim Brotherhood
Terrorist Designation Act, which, if it becomes law, would allow the US
government to impose a broad spectrum of sanctions on any countries, companies
or individuals that support, finance or interact with the group and its members.
“I am proud that under the Trump administration we continue to call out and
combat radical terrorism and I am glad to join my colleagues today in
reintroducing this legislation,” Cruz said in a statement, emphasizing the
importance of holding foreign terrorist organizations accountable for their
actions.
Even though the Muslim Brotherhood was founded in Egypt by Hassan Al-Banna more
than 90 years ago, its threat has grown and its base has widened with the
support of two US allies: Qatar and Turkey. However, several Arab countries
close to Washington have taken firm measures against the group, considering it
the No. 1 threat in the region and beyond.
Al-Banna’s ambitions exceeded the borders of his own country, as he believed the
Brotherhood’s agenda — of recreating the Islam of the caliphate as a
transcontinental ideology — should be implemented globally. The group’s ultimate
goal is to form a bond based on a political ideology to restore the “authentic”
Muslim power and prestige and to have an impact on major international decisions
to serve its own political and economic interests.
Between 1949, when Al-Banna was assassinated, and 2020, the Muslim Brotherhood
learned to infiltrate the West and master the political game. But how? Political
persecution and the oppression of freedoms in parts of the Middle East, in
addition to the desire to pursue a better life, caused waves of immigration.
Millions of Muslims fled to different countries in the West, especially Europe
and the US. Slowly, Muslim communities started to build their own institutions
and organizations. Unfortunately, the people who were most interested in
building these institutions were associated with the Muslim Brotherhood or
inspired by it. Well-funded and backed by powerful governments, it has
manipulated millions of Muslims around the world
Well-funded and backed by powerful governments, the Muslim Brotherhood has used
a large percentage of its assets to manipulate millions of Muslims around the
world by creating hundreds of organizations to keep them isolated in their own
communities. Meanwhile, away from Islamic slogans, the international
organization has used its resources to influence international intellectual
institutions, charitable organizations, public relations firms, and numerous
media outlets in the US and several European countries to indirectly promote the
group and advance its ideology.
Qatar has provided the radical group with the largest media platform in the
Middle East. Al Jazeera Arabic has played a vital role in radicalizing
Arabic-speaking Muslims around the world, inciting hatred and anti-Semitism by
playing on the emotions of its viewers, who originally came from a politically
unstable and war-torn region. On the other hand, the English-language version of
the Al Jazeera network whitewashes the face of certain political Islamist
movements and terrorist groups to play the victim’s role and gain the sympathy
of the Western world.
In the US, thanks to the propaganda coming from the left-leaning mainstream
media, Islamists needed no extra effort or help in emphasizing the narrative
that America is an unjust, evil country that has been targeting different
minorities throughout its modern history.
Meanwhile, widespread confusion between the terms “Islamist” and “Muslim” was
sown by the Brotherhood itself. The strategy of putting all Muslims into one
category has served its agenda and strengthened its argument that every attack
on the group was an attack on Islam. The truth is that Islamist movements have
made it very hard for secular Muslims who do not want to play the game of
identity politics to blend in; forcing them to endlessly distance themselves
from the group’s extremist ideology.
But why should the world bow down to these religious fascists? In order to
succeed in fighting the radical views that have been flourishing in the West in
general, and in the US in particular, America needs to learn from Egypt, the UAE
and Saudi Arabia and take drastic measures against the Muslim Brotherhood and
its attempts to infiltrate its society.
Washington should not treat the Muslim Brotherhood any differently to the
Lebanese Hezbollah or the Palestinian Hamas. It should send a clear warning of
serious consequences to the countries that support, finance, harbor or provide a
platform for the group. Will that be easy? Of course not — at least not in the
next four years.
Most Democrats, including members of the upcoming administration, strongly
believe that designating the Muslim Brotherhood would have a negative impact on
Washington’s relations with several Arab and Muslim countries. But these people
need to take a closer look at the struggles of the people in the Middle East due
to the lack of security and political and economic stability caused by radical
groups such as the Muslim Brotherhood.
A bold and brave decision like this would certainly make the world a better and
safer place.
*Dalia Al-Aqidi is a Senior Fellow at the Center for Security Policy. She is a
former Republican congressional candidate. Twitter: @DaliaAlAqidi
Erdogan’s balancing act faces new challenges in Biden era
Talmiz Ahmad/Arab News/December 16/2020
The US on Monday announced sanctions on Turkey under the Countering America’s
Adversaries Through Sanctions Act due to Ankara’s purchase of the Russian S-400
missile defense system. These sanctions will deny Turkey access to US defense
products and technology, besides imposing asset freezes and visa restrictions on
four senior officials from the Presidency of Defense Industries. The official US
statement noted that the acquisition of the Russian missile system “would
endanger the security of US technology and personnel.” The incoming Biden
administration is expected to uphold the sanctions, as it has also opposed the
S-400 purchase and the disunity within NATO that the Turkish acquisition has
caused.
The EU had also announced sanctions on an unspecified number of Turkish
officials and entities a few days earlier. These sanctions related to the
eastern Mediterranean gas exploration dispute that Turkey has been engaged in
with Greece and Cyprus. Athens blamed the “Berlin-Rome-Madrid bloc” for the soft
response to Turkish aggressiveness. It had called for an arms embargo on Turkey,
but both Italy and Germany are major arms suppliers to its hostile neighbor.
The US and EU sanctions, though mild, could discourage investments in Turkey —
harmful for an economy already under strain. The national currency has
depreciated 24 percent this year, while the inflation rate is 12 percent. The
third quarter saw gross domestic product grow 6.7 percent due to the opening up
of the economy and a government stimulus in the shape of low interest rates,
fiscal spending, and increased credit. However, the recent surge in coronavirus
disease infections, coupled with higher interest rates, will reduce growth in
the fourth quarter, so that overall growth this year will be zero, before rising
to 4 percent next year.
Joe Biden’s US presidential election victory poses fresh problems: Recep Tayyip
Erdogan was personally close to Donald Trump, who backed Turkey at crucial
times, particularly in Syria. There is now the need for a review of Turkey’s
domestic and regional policies. Thus, sensitive to Biden’s concerns, Erdogan has
already announced he is preparing a new human rights action plan.
The Turkish president is also attempting to repair ties with Israel. Erdogan
this week appointed a Hebrew-speaking party loyalist, who is not a career
diplomat, as Ankara’s ambassador to Israel. Diplomatic ties between the two
countries were downgraded in May 2018 following Israeli violence in Gaza and
Trump’s decision to shift the US embassy to Jerusalem. Since November, however,
there have been substantial talks between Turkish and Israeli intelligence
chiefs on upgrading diplomatic relations and their regional interests.
Turkey’s president will be reluctant to choose between the US and Russia, but
will instead seek to veer between them
Besides pleasing Biden, Turkey is also anxious to reconcile with Israel due to
their shared energy interests in the Mediterranean. Ankara wants to revive the
idea of an Israeli gas pipeline project that goes to Europe through Turkey. It
also wants to coordinate their approach to the Caucasus, after both Turkey and
Israel supported Azerbaijan in its recent conflict with Armenia over
Nagorno-Karabakh. They could also be tempted to shape a trilateral partnership
with Ukraine, where Turkey is already a defense supplier.
However, this wish-list may not go through as Israel has serious reservations
about Turkey’s ties with Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood. Meanwhile, Turkey’s
Western allies are also reaching the limits of their patience. Outgoing US
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo this month criticized Turkey for “undermining
NATO’s security.” And, in a press conference in Paris last month, the French
foreign minister described Turkey’s actions in the Mediterranean as
“unacceptable,” while his German counterpart called them “inadmissible.”
Against this background, what will be the future shape of Turkey’s ties with
Russia? Russian President Vladimir Putin has invested heavily in trying to
detach Turkey from the Western embrace by developing substantial bilateral
economic and military ties, accommodating Turkey’s interests in Syria and
engaging with Ankara on matters relating to Libya, even though they back
opposite sides. Russia also brokered the cease-fire in Nagorno-Karabakh, where
again they had supported opposing parties.
Given his past record, Erdogan will be reluctant to choose between the US and
Russia, but will instead seek to veer between them via the repeated acts of
brinkmanship that have marked his diplomacy over the last few years. His trump
card is his country’s geopolitical value — straddling Europe and Asia, its role
in east-west energy transit, its dominant place along the Mediterranean
coastline, and its oceanic outreach to Libya. There is also the large size of
Turkey’s domestic market, both commercial and military, and its civilizational
stature as the heir of the Ottoman Empire. These factors give Erdogan the
confidence that both the US and Russia will remain sensitive to Turkey’s
interests and positions.
But, with Trump on his way out and the Biden presidency much less tolerant of
Erdogan’s unreliability as a NATO ally, the Turkish president may also find
Putin not as accommodating as before. In Syria, the Russian president is likely
to insist that Turkey give a free hand to the Assad government and Russian
forces to fight the extremists in Idlib and affirm the country’s national unity.
In Libya and Nagorno-Karabakh, Turkey will need to work closely with Moscow as
the two countries seek to accommodate each other’s competing positions. For
Putin, Ukraine will be a no-go area; Turkey will have to desist from any
activity that threatens Russia’s interests.
Erdogan will soon discover that his traditional brinkmanship has strict limits.
• Talmiz Ahmad is an author and former Indian ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Oman
and the UAE. He holds the Ram Sathe Chair for International Studies, Symbiosis
International University, Pune, India.