LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
January 27.2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For today
Very
truly, I tell you, whoever keeps my word will never see death
Holy Gospel of
Jesus Christ according to Saint John 08/51-55/:”Very truly, I tell you, whoever
keeps my word will never see death.’The Jews said to him, ‘Now we know that you
have a demon. Abraham died, and so did the prophets; yet you say, “Whoever keeps
my word will never taste death.” Are you greater than our father Abraham, who
died? The prophets also died. Who do you claim to be?’Jesus answered, ‘If I
glorify myself, my glory is nothing. It is my Father who glorifies me, he of
whom you say, “He is our God”, though you do not know him. But I know him; if I
were to say that I do not know him, I would be a liar like you. But I do know
him and I keep his word.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese
Related News & Editorials published on January 26-27/2020
Maronite Blinded and Escariotic leaders With idol-Derailed Worshipers/Elias
Bejjani/January 24/2020
Lebanese security forces fire water cannons, tear gas at protesters
Qaouq Says New Govt. Formation a 'Slap' to U.S. Administration
Al-Rahi Says Govt. Facing Tough Test, Salutes 'Peaceful Uprising'
Alain Aoun Suggests Early Polls if Government Fails
Mashnouq Slams Mustaqbal Supporters who Attacked al-Jadeed TV
Hariri’s Press office: Rebuttal of NTV report
Kobeissi: We are against this chaos and this policy, and against starving the
Lebanese
Hoballah: It is a oneteam government, not one color
Sami Gemayel declares his Party's reservation towards tomorrow's Parliament
session
Wazni denies sending budget to Parliament
No Confidence” protest march in Nabatiyeh and Kfarreman
Protest march roams the streets of Tyre
Protest march roams the streets of Tripoli
Justice Minister's Office: Imaginary Twitter account attributes false news to
the Minister
Here's how the US can pressure Lebanon's new government tackle corruption/Hanin
Ghaddar & Matthew Levitt/The Hill/January 26/2020
Hassan Diab’s cabinet is unable to meet protesters’ demands or confront
Hezbollah/Makram Rabah/The Arab Weekly/January 26/2020
Hezbollah-dominated government emerges in Lebanon for the first time/Jonathan
Spyer/Jerusalem Post/January 26/2020
The tattoo spectrum in Lebanon/Salma Yassine/Annahar January 26/2020
Why is Lebanon's Gebran Bassil so controversial?/Timour Azhari/Al Jazeera/January
26/2020
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
January 26-27/2020
Pope Francis praises China's efforts to contain coronavirus
Israel gives green light for visits to Saudi Arabia under limited circumstances
Israel strikes in Gaza in response to flammable balloons
Trump rejects lifting Iran sanctions to negotiate
Trump’s Middle East peace plan will be ‘historic’: Netanyahu
Palestinians threaten to quit Oslo accords over Trump peace plan
One killed in truck blast in northern Syria’s Azaz: Reports
Five rockets hit near US embassy in Baghdad’s Green Zone
Iraqi cleric Sadr scraps anti-US demonstrations ‘to avoid internal strife’
Iraqi protesters defy top cleric and return to the streets
Jordanian charged with ‘terror’ over tourist stabbings
Four cargo vessels catch fire in Iranian port city
Syria regime forces on edge of key opposition-held town: Monitor
Syria Regime Forces on Edge of Key Rebel-Held Town
Kurdish authorities move 21 orphans out of Syria al-Hol camp
Turkey quake death toll rises to 31
Trump says ‘no thanks’ to Iran's FM negotiation proposal
Man whose wife was killed when Iran shot down plane flees Iran after threats
UN says ‘blatant’ violations of Libya arms embargo continue
Confession Of ISIS Mufti Shifa Al-Ni'ma: 'I Issued Fatwas Permitting Expulsion
Of Christians From Mosul, Enslavement, Selling of Yazidi Women'
Former Kuwaiti Minister Ali Al-Baghli: Kuwaitis Who Convert To Judaism, Other
Religions Should Not Lose Their Citizenship; Our Laws Do Not Forbid Conversion
Palestinians Threaten to Quit Oslo Accords over Trump Peace Plan
Oman Top Diplomat in Iran for Second Time within Week
China Stiffens Its Defenses against Epidemic as Death Toll Hits 56
NBA Legend Kobe Bryant Killed in Helicopter Crash
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published on January 26-27/2020
Cruelty to Animals Gets More Media Coverage than Beheaded Christians/Giulio
Meotti/Gatestone Institute/January 26/2020
New EU Report on Integration Misses the Point/Judith Bergman//Gatestone
Institute/January 26/2020
New details from Trump's peace plan revealed/Itamar Eichner|/Ynetnews/January
26/2020
The lessons of the Marib massacre/Khairallah Khairallah/The Arab Weekly/January
26/2020
Iranian myths exposed as Ukrainian plane shot down/Claude Salhani/The Arab
Weekly/January 26/2020
Libya, Erdogan and the Mercenaries/Dr. Jebril Elabidi/Asharq Al Awsat/January
26/2020
Medvedev Out: Putin Overhauls Russia's Governance System/Leonid Bershidsky/Bloomberg/January
26/ 2020
Details Of The Latest English LCCC Lebanese
& Lebanese Related News & Editorial published
on January 26-27/2020
Maronite Blinded and Escariotic leaders With idol-Derailed Worshipers
Elias Bejjani/January 24/2020
Leadership wise, we, the Maronites, are currently orphans in both
religious and political domains. Our childish and marginalized present leaders
are totally detached from every thing that is a requirement and gifts for
leadership, Lebanese identity, faith, self respect, planning, vision,
conscience, principles, and self-respect. Sadly they are a bunch of greedy ,
self-centred, narcissistic and iscariot creatures blinded by their earthly
hunger for power and money. No hopes what so ever for our people at any level in
their presence and influence...replacing them is an urgent obligation and a
must.
Lebanese security forces fire water cannons, tear gas at
protesters
Reuters, Beirut/Sunday, 26 January 2020
Lebanese security forces on Saturday fired water cannons and tear gas at
anti-government protesters trying to breach a security barricade outside
government headquarters in central Beirut. Some protesters among the hundreds
who had gathered for a planned march managed to open a metal gate blocking their
way but were pushed back. After Lebanon’s Internal Security Forces used Twitter
to warn peaceful demonstrators to leave for their own safety, riot police fanned
out to disperse dozens of remaining protesters. “We want the demonstrations to
be peaceful so they can prevail,” said Abdo Saadeh, criticizing a government
formed this week as a “masquerade” by a political elite that protesters blame
for driving the country towards collapse. The Iranian-backed group Hezbollah and
its allies formed a cabinet of technocrats nominated by their parties under
Prime Minister Hassan Diab, who was tapped for the job after protests forced
former premier Saad Hariri to resign on October 29. “We came here today because
there is no trust in this government,” Saadeh said. “They brought their cronies,
their consultants.”The new government must tackle a financial emergency that has
sunk the currency, pushed up prices and driven banks to impose capital controls.
Security conditions have deteriorated, with hundreds injured last weekend in
clashes between demonstrators and security forces. “We want a government of
independents, not parties,” said demonstrator Reema Ajouz. “Independents can
save the country. With the politicians we have we are headed to the precipice.”
Qaouq Says New Govt. Formation a 'Slap' to U.S.
Administration
Naharnet/January 26/2020
A senior Hizbullah official announced Sunday that the formation of a new
government in Lebanon delivered a “slap” to the U.S. administration. “The
government’s formation was a slap to (U.S. President Donald) Trump, (Secretary
of State Mike) Pompeo, (State Department Assistant Secretary David) Schenker and
all the men of the U.S. administration, who bet on chaos, the besiegement of the
resistance and the subjugation of the Lebanese,” Hizbullah central council
member Sheikh Nabil Qaouq said. “They were betting that the Lebanese would not
be able to form a government except through U.S. dictations, desires and
conditions, but a government was formed with a 100 percent Lebanese will to
represent a real chance to rescue the country from collapse,” Qaouq added,
noting that “the start has been encouraging and positive domestically and
externally.”Reiterating that the new government is “a government for work and
rescue, not confrontation,” the Hizbullah official said it will seek to “rescue
what’s left of the state institutions, halt the collapse and confront the
corrupts.”“Hizbullah will be at the forefront of its supporters, but at the same
time, it will be at the forefront of those who monitor its performance,” Qaouq
pledged.
Al-Rahi Says Govt. Facing Tough Test, Salutes 'Peaceful
Uprising'
Naharnet/January 26/2020
Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi on Sunday said the new government is facing a
“tough test” as he saluted the “peaceful uprising” of Lebanese youths. “The new
government is facing a tough test, seeing as it has embarked on a difficult
risk, in the name of the people and the youths who lost confidence following
successive disappointments from the politicians and officials,” al-Rahi said in
his Sunday Mass sermon. “Despite that, the government must be assisted and held
accountable for the outcome of its actions… This does not stand for the end of
the uprising-revolution as they think, but rather for taking a stance of
monitoring and demanding,” the patriarch added. Stressing that the government
must “regain the lost confidence,” al-Rahi said he salutes “the peaceful and
civilized uprising of the young men and women in all Lebanese regions.”“We
express our solidarity with them and appreciate their sacrifices and efforts,
because they want to turn a black page of our national life and write a new
history,” the patriarch went on to say.
Alain Aoun Suggests Early Polls if Government Fails
Naharnet/January 26/2020
MP Alain Aoun of the Strong Lebanon bloc has suggested going to early
parliamentary elections should the new government fail to halt the economic and
financial deterioration. “First, the deterioration in Lebanon should be halted
and then recovery measures should begin,” Aoun said in a TV interview, warning
that “the failure of the rescue process would affect entire Lebanon.” “The first
phase requires foreign assistance, but we can’t go to economic conditions that
would blow up the social situation,” the lawmaker added, in reference to any
austerity measures that might be demanded by international financial
organizations. Calling for the privatization of the electricity sector, Aoun
said he has a feeling that the “invisible hand” that is impeding power
generation in Lebanon is “an oil cartel.” Asked whether he might run for the
presidency of the Free Patriotic Movement, the lawmaker said “everything is
possible.”He also underlined that “should the current government fail, the only
solution is to go to early parliamentary elections to produce a new political
situation, on the condition that the people accept it.”Aoun also noted that
Hassan Diab’s government is the “last chance government” prior to “elections
that produce a new political class.”
Mashnouq Slams Mustaqbal Supporters who Attacked al-Jadeed
TV
Naharnet/January 26/2020
Beirut MP Nouhad al-Mashnouq on Sunday blasted Mustaqbal Movement supporters who
had attacked the building of al-Jadeed TV in Beirut on Friday. “I was worried
for the Sunni community… and I grew more worried after I saw thugs attacking al-Jadeed
TV’s building and smashing its entrance, and after thugs whose loyalty is
well-known came out of our ranks to attack a media outlet, after their brilliant
success outside my house,” Mashnouq, who distanced himself from al-Mustaqbal
bloc after the 2018 elections, tweeted. “They were likely trained at the hands
of the protectors of the Council for South,” the ex-interior minister added,
referring to the AMAL Movement supporters who assaulted anti-corruption
protesters in Jnah on Friday. Lashing out at the person who “sent them” and
identifying him by his first name Saleh, Mashnouq thanked God that slain ex-PM
Rafik Hariri is no longer among us “so that he doesn’t see what is being
committed in his name.” Those who attacked the TV network on Friday were
protesting an anti-corruption show that exposed properties owned by prominent
political leaders. Al-Mustaqbal Movement leader and ex-PM Saad Hariri was among
those mentioned. Al-Jadeed said Hariri owns 71 real estate properties in Jezzine,
Sidon, Aley and Beirut as well as six companies.
Hariri’s Press office: Rebuttal of NTV report
NNA/January 26/2020
In an issued statement by former Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s Press Office on
Sunday, it responded to NTV’s report on Hariri’s ownership of 71 properties in
Lebanon, clarifying that "Prime Minister Hariri owns only one property, which is
his residence in Beirut (Center House).”
“As for the rest of the real estate that he inherited from martyr Prime Minister
Rafic Hariri, he ceded it to his siblings, by power of attorney, knowing that
the vast majority of the properties owned by the martyr Prime Minister in
Lebanon had been purchased before he assumed any political responsibilities,”
the statement added.
Kobeissi: We are against this chaos and this policy, and
against starving the Lebanese
NNA/January 26/2020
Member of the "Development and Liberation" Parliamentary Bloc, MP Hani Kobeissi,
voiced Sunday rejection to the state of chaos and to starving the Lebanese
people. Kobeissi considered that "whoever wishes to keep Lebanon immune must
avoid the chaos." He added: "Finally, we were able to form a government, and
whoever wishes to boycott it is free, but no one has the right to obstruct its
work.""The upcoming Parliament session is to approve the budget first, and
secondly to give confidence to the government which has many burdens and huge
responsibilities awaiting it. Therefore, we all have to give it an opportunity
in order to be able to solve the major problems at stake, most prominently the
economic crisis," Kobeissi underscored. His words came during a memorial
ceremony held in the Southern town of Ghassanieh today, where he offered
condolences on behalf of House Speaker Nabih Berri.
Hoballah: It is a oneteam government, not one color
NNA/January 26/2020
Industry and Trade Minister, Imad Hoballah, described the new government as
being "a government of one team, not one color.""This government, which includes
specialized and distinguished figures, is the government of one team, not one
color. This government came to fight corruption and the corrupt," he said.
"Lebanon needs to be rescued, and this is the reason for the presence of a
government of specialists at this stage," Hoballah corroborated. His words came
during a reception hosted by the Southern Municipality of Kfar-Melki, in the
presence of a large crowd of townsmen who gathered to welcome the new Minister.
Addressing the attendees, Hoballah said he was entrusted with a huge
responsibility that requires "support and embrace."At the industrial level,
Hoballah pledged to back industrial production. "We will work to ensure a high
quality industry..and there will be job opportunities by supporting local and
small factories," he asserted.
Sami Gemayel declares his Party's reservation towards
tomorrow's Parliament session
NNA/January 26/2020
Kataeb Party Chief, Sami Gemayel, announced Sunday his Party's "reservation
towards the Parliament Council session scheduled for Monday to approve a budget
that has been set by a fallen government, and will be defended by a government
that has not yet received its votes of confidence, thus breaching the
Constitution."In a press conference held earlier today at the "Kataeb House" in
Saifi, Gemayel considered that "the old approach continues, and the sole
solution is to resort to early parliamentary elections immediately."
Gemayel also disclosed that the MPs received a three-paper document on the state
budget from the Parliament, which was said to have been sent by the new Finance
Minister, explaining that the latter has no right to send anything before the
government takes confidence and adopts the budget.
He added that the Finance Minister's Office later issued a statement denying
that he had sent the document in question. "So, who sent these papers which
adopt, in the name of the new government, the budget of its predecessor? Are
there ghosts in Parliament sending papers to the deputies...and who has the
right to send such documents?" questioned Gemayel sarcastically. "The state of
chaos continues," he added. Gemayel also criticized the new government's
adoption of a budget set by a previous failed government, after all that
happened in the country, the economic collapse, the revolution and the people's
uprising. "What we see today is a confirmation that there is a clear intention
to pursue the same approach that was adopted, and a clear will by the ruling
system to continue in the same way by voting on this budget," he said. "The most
critical aspect is that we are in a state of collapse, while the authority
considers that Lebanon can continue for a year without reforms, until 2021,"
warned Gemayel, considering this "an affirming act of fleeing responsibility."
The MP stressed that in light of the absent intention to hold reforms, and since
the people will not stop demanding their rights, and in an effort to yield a new
Lebanon, "we must return the decision to the people by adopting a law that
shortens the mandate of the parliament and holding new elections.""People are
suffering and we cannot continue in this way. The country cannot afford to delay
reforms for another year," concluded Gemayel.
Wazni denies sending budget to Parliament
NNA/January 26/2020
Finance Minister Ghazi Wazni denied MP Sami Gemayel's accusations during his
press conference early this morning, that "he has sent a new budget to the
Parliament or any other text related to the budget," stressing that it is the
budget of the previous government.
No Confidence” protest march in Nabatiyeh and Kfarreman
NNA/January 26/2020
The Nabatiyeh and Kfarreman popular movements organized a march this afternoon
to protest the new government under the slogan, "No confidence", which set out
from outside the Nabatiyeh Serail, NNA correspondent reported. Participants
carried Lebanese flags and banners denouncing the public money looters, as they
marched towards the Central Bank building where protesters called for the bank’s
authority to be overthrown, revolting against corruption and the corrupt.
Protesters indicated that their move aims at shedding light on three main
headlines, namely the deteriorating economic situation that led to a setback in
the city of Nabatiyeh and its commercial market, the fuel crisis and the dollar
crisis. They stressed that "there is no trust in the government as long as the
crises exist and the solutions are absent," adding that their movements "will
continue until the country gains its freedom from corruption."
Protest march roams the streets of Tyre
NNA/January 26/2020
A demonstration march roamed this afternoon a number of streets in the city of
Tyre, starting from al-Alam Square, in which participants gathered raising the
Lebanese flags, and chanted "no confidence" slogans against the new government,
NNA correspondent in Tyre reported.
Protesters criticized the newly formed cabinet, denouncing the return of quotas,
and condemned those responsible for the collapse of the Lebanese pound against
the US dollar. Security measures by the army and internal security forces
accompanied the demonstration march.
Protest march roams the streets of Tripoli
NNA/January 26/2020
A demonstration roamed the streets of the Northern city of Tripoli this
afternoon, in which participants raised Lebanese flags and banners denouncing
the "corrupt authority" and chanted slogans calling for the resignation of the
government and the formation of an independent specialists' cabinet that can
rescue the country, NNA correspondent in Tripoli reported.
Justice Minister's Office: Imaginary Twitter account attributes false news to
the Minister
NNA/January 26/2020
The Press Office of Justice Minister Marie Claude Najm issued a statement on
Sunday, in which it indicated that fabricated news is being attributed to the
Minister through a false Twitter account. The statement categorically denied
such news, stressing that Minister Najm has no Twitter account in her name till
this moment.
Here's how the US can pressure Lebanon's new government
tackle corruption
Hanin Ghaddar & Matthew Levitt/The Hill/January 26/2020
حنين غدار وماثيو لافيت/موقع الهيل: الضغوضات الأميركية المطلوبة للضغط على الحكومة
اللبنانية الجديدة لمواجهة الفساد
Against the backdrop of three months of political and economic protests,
Lebanese politicians appear to have reached a deal establishing a nominally
technocratic government in Beirut. Still beholden to Hezbollah, the government
has little Sunni or Druze support. Some protesters already call this a
“Halloween government” since it gives thinly disguised cover to longtime
establishment politicians. But the new government is unlikely to be able on its
own to tackle the single biggest challenge it faces: the rampant corruption
responsible for the country’s acute financial crisis.
The formation of a new Lebanese government has been a central demand of the
international community and a necessary precondition for any international aid.
But that is not enough. The government must quickly take action to fight
corruption and enhance transparency. For a country that has run on corruption
and political patronage, this will be a very heavy lift.
Nearly all of Lebanon’s political establishment is entangled in Beirut’s
deep-rooted corruption crisis, which cuts across the sectarian divide. Lebanon
ranks 138th out of 180 nations in the Corruption Perceptions Index released by
the anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International. Meeting in December,
the International Support Group for Lebanon issued a final statement in Paris
urging Lebanese authorities to “take decisive action” to tackle corruption and
tax evasion while improving economic governance and the country’s business
environment.
At the time, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that while Lebanon must
take these steps, the U.S. is ready to “do the things that the world can do to
assist the Lebanese people getting their economy right and getting their
government right.”
Today, the U.S. should take action that would force the new government’s hand
and empower it to take on the corrupt political establishment — something no
Lebanese government could otherwise do on its own: Washington should issue
sanctions targeting some of the most egregious corrupt actors across the
Lebanese political and sectarian spectrum under the Global Magnitsky Act.
Corrupt leaders seek profit and the political power that comes with funding
patronage projects. Global Magnitsky sanctions would not only name and shame
Lebanon’s most corrupt actors, it would block all property and interests they
hold in the United States, which are likely to be substantial.
There are other tools available to designated political corruption — such as
Section 7031(c) of the Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related
Programs Appropriations Act, 2020. The State Department employed this tool
earlier this month targeting Moldovan corruption, but it includes only a ban on
visa to enter the United States for the designee and their family members, and
it lacks the authority to block funds held in the United States. Global
Magnitsky would be a better fit in the case of Lebanon.
The State Department issued anti-corruption designations under the Global
Magnitsky Act targeting entities in Cambodia, Latvia and Serbia in December, and
there are no shortage of strong candidates for such action among the political
elite in Lebanon today. Under the umbrella of such a U.S. action, the Lebanese
government could be empowered to take the kind of action necessary to clear the
way for the international aid package the country desperately needs.
Such action would have broad public support. Since the Lebanese people took to
the streets on Oct. 17, 2019, U.S. officials have supported protesters’ demands
for anti-corruption measures and reforms. In fact, corruption is the main reason
behind the economic collapse that has pushed people to the streets. They clearly
oppose the new government, which provides former foreign minister Gebran Bassil,
a Hezbollah ally and one of the most roundly protested political figures, with
control of a third of the cabinet and, therefore, the power to block legislation
not to his or Hezbollah’s liking. To be sure, demonstrators would cheer
sanctions against corrupt politicians and their business-class enablers.
The most notable aspect of the Lebanese protests was its anti-sectarian rhetoric
and cross-sectarian participation. People from all sects and regions of Lebanon
rallied to demand the end of the sectarian system and accountability for corrupt
politicians. This is not a coincidence. The link between Lebanon’s sectarian
leaders and the country’s acute corruption crisis is very strong, because they
use nepotism and exploit state institutions to strengthen control over their
constituencies.
These sectarian leaders have been implicated in a laundry list of corrupt deals
and transactions used to build their financial empires through the good offices
of politically-allied corrupt businessmen. One need look no further than
Lebanon’s electricity, gas and garbage sectors to see how corruption has
depleted the state of its resources and led to the economic crisis.
Designating corrupt Lebanese businessmen and officials under the Global
Magnitsky Act would offer a tangible response to the persistent demands of
Lebanese protesters because such action would target corrupt individuals from
all sects and complement the anti-sectarian rhetoric of the Lebanese street. Now
that a government has been formed — one that is unlikely on its own to gain the
trust of the street or the international community — this is the perfect moment
to send a message of support to the Lebanese people.
*Hanin Ghaddar is the Friedman visiting fellow at the Washington Institute for
Near East Policy.
*Matthew Levitt is the institute’s Fromer-Wexler fellow and director of its
Reinhard program on counterterrorism and intelligence.
https://thehill.com/opinion/international/479538-heres-how-the-us-can-pressure-lebanons-new-government-tackle?fbclid=IwAR1AdG-a6XusjsjAzs9hkhMjs0VG5Q08pOsv_zSMZfJj-070pyT44x7UvnI
Hassan Diab’s cabinet is unable to meet protesters’ demands
or confront Hezbollah
Makram Rabah/The Arab Weekly/January 26/2020
مكرم رباح: حكومة حسان دياب ليس بمقدورها لا تلبية مطالب
المنتفضين ولا مواجهة حزب الله
Almost a month after he was designated Lebanon’s prime minister, Hassan Diab
announced the formation of his cabinet, which many Lebanese hoped would save the
country from its political and economic meltdown.
For more than 100 days, millions of Lebanese have taken to the streets to demand
an end to the archaic and corrupt system of governance and advocate for a
cabinet of independent technocrats that would lead the country’s transition.
Diab’s cabinet, unfortunately, does not fully respond to citizens’ demands.
While the group does include 20 ostensible technocrats, who are proven and
capable in their respective fields, none are truly independent or capable of
initiating real reforms.
Diab’s attempt to project an image of impartiality did not go over well with the
public. Hundreds of people quickly took to the streets to express disapproval.
The sentiment was shared by the international media, with many saying Diab’s
so-called cabinet of experts was a “Hezbollah-backed government.”
While Diab claimed his cabinet was a product of the revolution, the riots and
destruction caused by rebels in downtown Beirut and their clashes with Lebanese
security forces showed that Diab and his government are perceived no differently
from the rest of Lebanon’s political elite.
Even most pro-revolution Lebanese who do not engage in or support violence are
hesitant to wager on Diab’s success. Few trust his cabinet’s ability and
commitment to confront the ruling elite or Hezbollah’s hegemony over the state.
Diab’s mission is to meet the calls of the Lebanese revolution, which include
serious structural reforms that allow the country’s faltering economy to rebound
and for Lebanese to gain access to the savings that the banks have held hostage.
However rudimentary as these reforms might seem, they will legally end the
political and economic monopoly of the ruling elite. Since Diab owes his newly
acquired fame to this same junta, there is no indication he can take on the role
of reformer.
Diab’s real enemy is time, a luxury neither he nor the Lebanese people have. The
Lebanese economy has entered a very dangerous phase in which banks are no longer
giving the public access to their accounts and have enforced unofficial capital
control, limiting people to a few hundred dollars a week.
Aggravating the situation is the fact that major firms and businesses are either
scaling down operations or shutting down, unleashing an unemployment crisis that
Lebanon is ill-equipped to deal with.
Shortages of gasoline, medicine, medical supplies, wheat and other essential
goods are looming because Lebanon relies almost exclusively on imports, which
are paid for in dollars that are only found on the black market and from money
exchangers, who also cater to Syria’s heavy demand on hard currency.
The Lebanese ruling establishment and its newly appointed government might
assume they can ignore the rage in the streets and wrongfully dismiss protesters
as being bent on vandalism and destruction but adding more cement walls and
barricades to the parliament building and buying more creative and brutal
anti-riot weapons will not make the revolution go away.
To exit Lebanon’s economic and political inferno, the Diab cabinet must heed the
demands of its own people, demands that have been reiterated by the
international community.
Adhering to diplomatic norms, the United States, France and Britain welcomed the
formation of the Diab government and declared their intentions to help Lebanon,
as they have over the years. Still, they were quick to remind the ruling elite
that no grants or loans would come their way without proper reform and, more
important, before Hezbollah and its regional excursions are curbed.
Constitutionally, Diab and his band of technocrats have 30 days before they must
appear before the Lebanese parliament with a plan of action and face a vote of
confidence that would permit them to properly carry out their duties.
It has been 100 days since the Lebanese people first rose up and voiced
rejection of the country’s corrupt leadership. They will not be fooled into
supporting the same people who got them where they are now. Diab might get the
vote of confidence from the 69 MPs who designated him but he has lost the
support of millions of his own people.
*Makram Rabah is a lecturer at the American University of Beirut, department of
history. His forthcoming book, “Conflict on Mount Lebanon: The Druze, the
Maronites and Collective Memory,” (Edinburgh University Press) covers collective
identities and the Lebanese Civil War.
Hezbollah-dominated government emerges in Lebanon for the
first time
Jonathan Spyer/Jerusalem Post/January 26/2020
جونيثون سباير/جيرازولم بوست: حكومة لبنانية يسيطر عليه حزب
الله للمرة الأولى في لبنان
For the first time since the departure of Syrian troops from Lebanon in 1990,
the latter country has a government in which only Hezbollah and its allies are
represented.
For the first time since the departure of Syrian troops from Lebanon in 2005,
the latter country has a government in which only Hezbollah and its allies are
represented. This is likely to have a significant negative effect on Beirut’s
efforts to engage international partners and donors in order to alleviate the
acute financial crisis facing the country. It will also impact on Israeli
strategic planning vis-à-vis Hezbollah.
The new government is the product of escalating popular protests under way since
October 15. The protests are in response to Lebanon’s dire economic state.
Demonstrators were demanding the formation of a government of “technocrats”
qualified to address the urgent issues facing the country and untainted by
contact with Lebanon’s enormously corrupt political parties.
The new government appears to be an attempt to create the superficial appearance
of such an administration. Its 20 ministers were presented by Prime Minister
Hassan Diab as “specialists,” nonpartisan and without loyalties to this or that
political bloc.
Few Lebanese are likely to be convinced by this claim. The “specialists” in
question are individuals whose names were put forward by the political parties.
The composition of the new government emerged in a process of wrangling and
horse trading between these parties.
But, crucially, parties and movements broadly associated with the West and with
Saudi Arabia stayed out of the negotiations. Individuals linked to prominent
pro-Western and anti-Iranian political trends, such as the former prime
minister’s Mustaqbal (Future) Movement and the Christian Lebanese Forces, are
not to be found among the new ministers. The Progressive Socialist Party of
Lebanese Druze leader Walid Jumblatt is also not represented.
The government that has emerged from this process comprises individuals linked
to movements that are part of only one of the existing power structures – the
one associated with Hezbollah and Iran.
The new administration is being described by Lebanese commentators as a
government of “one color,” Lebanon’s first of this kind. The color is that of
Hezbollah and Iran’s banners.
Hezbollah itself controls only two ministries in the new government. But the
Christian Free Patriotic Movement, led by Gebran Bassil, and the Shia Amal
movement, both closely associated with Hezbollah, control much of the rest.
Smaller parties also associated with this bloc make up the remainder.
In this regard, Diab’s emergent government constitutes for the first time an
administration that reflects the long-standing power reality in Lebanon.
Hezbollah has long dominated the key nodes of power in Lebanon – in the military
and intelligence fields. Its influence is also profound in the economic sector.
The overt, formal political administration in the country will now reflect this.
Over the last decade and a half, Hezbollah has gradually removed all obstacles
to its exercise of full-spectrum dominance in Lebanon. In a trial of strength in
May-June 2008, it brushed aside an attempt by West-aligned forces to challenge
its will by force. Hezbollah’s 50,000-strong armed forces obey the edict of no
government in Beirut.
On October 31, 2016, long-standing Hezbollah ally Gen. Michel Aoun assumed the
presidency of Lebanon.
Three of Lebanon’s four intelligence services – the General Directorate of
General Security, the Military Intelligence Directorate and the State Security
Directorate – are headed by individuals appointed by Aoun and approved by
Hezbollah. The fourth, the Internal Security Forces, once constituted a potent
Sunni-led intelligence organization, associated with anti-Syrian and
anti-Hezbollah forces. Today, headed by Imad Othman, it no longer plays this
role.
Following the elections of May 2018, Hezbollah and its allies dominated the
legislature and executive. They controlled 74 seats in the 128-member
parliament, and 19 of 30 cabinet portfolios. But until the resignation of prime
minister Saad Hariri in October 2019, the facade of a coalition government
continued. This situation was amenable to the Hezbollah-controlled deep state.
It enabled normal relations with international institutions, including financial
ones, and ensured the continued flow of US and European aid.
As of this week, however, the ambiguity appears to have cleared. Formal power in
Lebanon now coincides with real power.
SINCE THE war of 2006, a body of opinion has emerged in Israel according to
which, in the event of a future conflict ignited by Hezbollah, Israel should
abandon the paradigm by which the Lebanese state is seen as a helpless but
blameless hostage of the Shia terrorist group.
Representing this view, then-education minister and current Defense Minister
Naftali Bennett said in May 2018, following significant electoral gains by
Hezbollah and its allies, that henceforth “the State of Israel will not
differentiate between the sovereign state of Lebanon and Hezbollah, and will
view Lebanon as responsible for any action from within its territory.”
In 2006, the government of prime minister Fouad Siniora was orientated toward
the West. Israel thus faced the difficult task of chasing Hezbollah in Lebanon,
while avoiding harm to the Lebanese state infrastructure. The results were
mixed. It has since become apparent that senior Iranian Revolutionary Guard
Corps (IRGC) commanders, including the late Gen. Qasem Soleimani, were present
in Lebanon during that war, directing the campaign of their Lebanese franchise.
Given the events of this week in Lebanon, any such attempt at differentiation is
unlikely to be repeated. Rather, in a future contest between Israel and
Hezbollah/Iran, the state of Lebanon under its Hezbollah-dominated government
will constitute the enemy. This, in turn, will enable Israel to exercise the
full range of options available to it from a conventional military point of
view.
It is not clear whether such a war would include a formal declaration of war
between Israel and Lebanon. If it did, such a declaration would be highly
misleading. A conflict of this kind would not in any meaningful sense constitute
a war between two sovereign states. Rather, as recent events in Iraq, Syria and
Lebanon have made clear, the praxis of the IRGC is to use its franchises to
construct states within states. These structures then seek to occupy the formal
body of the state, turning its independence and sovereignty into a fiction. This
process appears this week in Lebanon to have reached its apogee. The formal
state, up to and including the highest bodies of government, is now operated
solely and overtly by Iran via its franchise, with the allies and clients of
that franchise. This produces clarity, with its many attendant benefits.
The tattoo spectrum in Lebanon
Salma Yassine/Annahar January 26/2020
BEIRUT: The tattoo scene in Lebanon entails a spectrum of elements that shape
its multifaceted visage.
Tattoos are a keepsake of the moments, words, numbers, inanimate entities,
people, pets, and a plethora of other features that weave their holders’
personas. They act as a timeline that embodies museums of self-expression,
molded by raw emotions that are archived through them on permanent trajectories.
“I’ve gotten tattoos at different times in my life to either commemorate an
important piece of literature or literary figure that has meant to me or
immortalize a certain intellectual breakthrough. My tattoos are a part of me,
they represent me, who I am, who I’ve been, and the cyclic course of existence,”
Emma Harfouche noted for Annahar.
People also resort to this particular form of body art to cover certain scars.
It is a remedy that allows them to regain or further boost their
self-confidence. Nour El Sabeh, a tattoo artist, stated that “most people who
are getting tattooed are doing so for the sole purpose of beautifying and/or
gaining control over their bodies.” She further added that covering scars of
tummy tuck and self-harm are very common. It documents people’s healing journey
in a beautifully vulnerable way. Tattoos are identity markers, wherein they are
not only eternalized scribbles on people’s flesh but are also visual aesthetic
narrators unveiling their personal stories in a silent manner. “My three tattoos
symbolize important things to me. I felt the need to have them as a constant
reminder of the motives that linger within them,” Rawand Haress narrated her
experience of getting inked.
One of the leading prominent reasons behind yearning to get inked pivots around
the fact that tattoos signal belongingness to a particular ideological
background or the complete rebellion against it. This notion is heavily
portrayed in the religious, political, feminist, queer, and patriotic vestiges
in Lebanon.
“Our eyes caress churches everywhere, we witness the crosses touch the sky and
listen to the mosques pray out loud. Our country’s streets are also bombarded
with religious and political flags and/or figures. Thus, what is vibrantly
exposed in public tends to transcend that medium to become carved on the skin as
a token of pride and belongingness reflecting certain ideologies,” Charbel Eid
told Annahar.
Iconizing religious and political affiliations is a unique aspect that
distinguishes and diversifies this region of the world. Sandy Akoury, a body
artist, accentuated the notion that the elements of religion and politics are
key components that hover upon the lives of most of the Lebanese population. She
stated that cherishing their beliefs through getting inked is a common practice.
Tattoos can be perceived from various angles. They can either be considered as
trendy, cool and great conversation starters or be frowned upon by the masses.
The latter depends on the restriction of the work field, the background of the
beholder, and the oriental mentality that still dominates the angle from which
the topic is approached.
Despite that, the art of getting tattooed has always been entrenched in the
Arabian entourage.
“The urge of marking someone’s skin had been there since the existence of
humanity, and tattooing in the region started and still happens in tribes,” El
Sabeh noted. “We are intellectual beings that appreciate beauty and art. Just
like people like to hang artwork in their houses and offices, people also like
to adorn their bodies with timeless artwork.”These artworks often carry a rich
cultural background that encompasses Arabian and specifically Lebanese features
such as the renowned Fairouz and Um Kulthum songs, names of Arabian cities,
authentic foods that may add an element of humor, and Arabic poetry. These
elements constitute a collective heritage that brings together the entirety of
the nation’s history and folds it within a single tattoo. Moreover, El Sabeh
noted that Arabic calligraphy is very common for native Arabic speakers in
Lebanon in comparison to Latinized lettering.
Tattooed bodies are canvasses portraying aesthetic art that also voices
defiance. Tattoos often blatantly mark statements of activism and rebellion in
their own way, and this notion has been recently widespread to glorify Lebanese
patriotism after the October revolution sprung.
Why is Lebanon's Gebran Bassil so controversial?
Timour Azhari/Al Jazeera/January 26/2020
Bassil, 49, has seen his fortunes shift since mass protests against corruption
and nepotism erupted last year.
Beirut, Lebanon - A colourful mix of insults and allegations of nepotism, racism
and corruption is how an average Lebanese protester would describe the country's
former Minister of Foreign Affairs Gebran Bassil.
He is not alone. Lebanon's entire ruling class has been targeted by protesters
who took to the streets more than 100 days ago to demand an end to corruption
and sectarian politics.
Bassil is one of the newer politicians on the bloc, having come to power after
the country's 15-year civil war. But he quickly rose to be a symbol of the
cynical sectarian politics and mismanagement that have dominated the post-war
era, critics say. Protesters point to his last 10 years in the government where
he moved through the telecommunication, energy and foreign ministries and
assumed leadership of one of the country's biggest parties, the Free Patriotic
Movement (FPM).
Lebanon has some of the highest telecommunications costs in the world, and the
FPM has held the energy portfolio for a decade while the country remains without
uninterrupted electricity supply. Still, Bassil enjoys unwavering support from
his Christian base, who see him as a shrewd hard worker and a protector of their
rights. MP Mario Aoun, a member of Bassil's FPM parliamentary bloc, told Al
Jazeera that Bassil was being "targeted because of his successes".
Insults from the crowd
When the protests against Lebanon's corrupt ruling elite broke out more than
three months ago, crude chants were aimed at Bassil's mother. So severe were the
insults that Bassil, in his first address after more than two weeks of
uncharacteristic silence, apologised to his mother.
"I'm so sorry that you were attacked because of me and it wasn't your fault. You
taught me to love Lebanon," he said, addressing her in front of crowds of
supporters at an organised rally on the outskirts of the capital, Beirut.
Before the protests, Bassil was widely expected to remain a top minister in
government for a long time and was thought to be a serious contender for the
presidency, a post currently held by his 84-year-old father-in-law, Michel Aoun.
However, he was not named as a minister in Prime Minister Hassan Diab's new
government announced earlier this week. He was forced to go back on his initial
demand to retain a cabinet post and instead name people not directly affiliated
with his party. Bassil's most recent trouble came when Lebanese people found out
he had been invited to speak on a panel about the return of Arab unrest at the
World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Before the interview on Thursday,
40,000 Lebanese people signed a petition saying he no longer represents them.
CNBC reporter Hadley Gamble asked Bassil how he arrived at the forum on a
ministerial salary of about $5,000. Bassil responded that it had been offered to
him, rather than paid for by the Lebanese treasury.
Family rule
Bassil's political career began in earnest after he married one of Aoun's three
daughters, Chantelle, in 1999. This is not unusual in a country where many
politicians inherit their posts or marry into power. He first stood for
elections with the FPM in 2005, failing to win a seat in his hometown of Batroun.
He lost again four years later, leading many in Lebanon to joke that he was not
even welcome in his own town. But he finally managed to win a seat in his third
election bid in 2018. Despite the presence of other popular figures in the FPM,
Aoun had handed Bassil the party's reigns in 2015 over fears that leadership
elections could sow division.
"You really feel like he's that spoilt kid, because he's the president's
son-in-law," Nidal Ayoub, an activist who has led chants on the streets
throughout Lebanon's uprising, told Al Jazeera. Family politics also plays a
large role in the party Bassil leads. Three of the FPM bloc's 24 members - Salim,
Mario and Alain - are all relatives of the president, and, by extension, Bassil.
Chamel Roukoz, one of Aoun's in-laws, is also an FPM member of parliament,
though his relationship with Bassil is frayed over what Roukoz has previously
put down to their "different ways of doing things".
Al Jazeera was unable to reach Bassil for comment while Roukoz and a former
brother-in-law of Bassil declined to comment.
Charbel Nahhas, a two-time FPM minister who broke away from the party in 2012,
told Al Jazeera that Bassil had been troubled by the impression among his peers
that he was in his position because of nepotism. This, Nahhas said, translated
into an overbearing approach to politics that led Bassil into chronic conflicts
with other parties.
"He's a hyperactive person. He works on all the files and learns, which is a
rare thing to find among politicians in Lebanon," Nahhas said. "Because he was
so hyperactive, he would easily antagonise even those who are with him." Bassil
has, over the years, led the FPM into public spats with most of the country's
major political parties, who have accused him of engaging in corruption,
monopolising top-level appointments and violating the delicate power-sharing
agreement that ended the civil war in 1990.
As an ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, Bassil also sought to normalise
ties with Damascus despite half the country's political parties opposing the
move.
Rhetoric on refugees
During a portion dedicated to Syrian refugee policy at a party event in 2017,
Bassil told FPM supporters that, "Yes, we are Lebanese racists, but we know how
to be Arab in our belonging, global in our [diaspora] and strong in our
openness". There are just less than a million Syrian refugees registered with
the United Nations in Lebanon, though Lebanese officials including Bassil have
said the number is much higher.
"The Syrians have one place to go: Back to their country," Bassil said during
that same event. It is the rhetoric like this that has led many to accuse Bassil
of incitement against refugees.
As the leader of the country's largest Christian party, Bassil has also
repeatedly held up government work, including vital appointments, citing
Christian representation.
This includes his years-long refusal to sign off on the appointment of forest
rangers because most of them are Shia Muslims.
Is Bassil's career over? In a recent four-hour interview with Lebanese
broadcaster Al Jadeed, Bassil said all the pressure and insults he was facing
would only make his resolve stronger. There were calls to boycott the interview.
The interviewers repeatedly alleged he was involved in corruption, as Bassil was
forced to defend himself throughout.
It was a far cry from past white-glove treatment by local media, such as a
glowing 2018 documentary by another local broadcaster about Bassil titled "The
Man Who Doesn't Sleep", where he was portrayed as a hard-working family man. But
it is unlikely that Bassil's career is over. He still heads the biggest party in
the Parliament and, importantly, enjoys Hezbollah's backing. "I don't think
those leading this campaign against him will be able to win - he's cunning and
clear-headed and on a path, a struggle till the end," Mario Aoun, the MP, said.
Nahhas, however, believes Bassil will be brought down by the impending collapse
of the country. Lebanon is mired in an economic and financial crisis that new
Finance Minister Ghazi Wazni said earlier this week was the worst in its
history. "If the whole system wasn't falling then he [Bassil] could digest it -
lets not forget that the logic of these Zuama (sectarian leaders') is built on
constant fighting and conflict and even if there are 10,000 deaths on both
sides, they can reconcile and become national heroes again," he said.
"But the system is falling apart, and this is what threatens them all."
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News
published on January 26-27/2020
Pope Francis praises China's efforts to
contain coronavirus
Reuters/NNA/January 26/2020
Pope Francis praised China's "great commitment" to contain the coronavirus
outbreak on Sunday and said he was praying for the dead, the sick, and families
of victims. "I would like also to be close to and pray for the people who are
sick because of the virus that has spread through China," Francis told tens of
thousands of people in St. Peter's Square for his weekly message and blessing.
"May the Lord welcome the dead into his peace, comfort families and sustain the
great commitment by the Chinese community that has already been put in place to
combat the epidemic," he said. Relations between the Vatican and Beijing have
improved since September, 2018 when the two sides signed a historic pact on the
naming of bishops. Conservative Catholics have objected to the pact, accusing
the Vatican of having sold out to the communist government. The ability of the
new coronavirus to spread is strengthening and infections could continue to
rise, China's National Health Commission said on Sunday, with nearly 2,000
people in China infected and 56 killed by the disease.
Israel gives green light for visits to Saudi Arabia under limited circumstances
Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 26 January 2020
Israel on Sunday officially gave its citizens the right to travel to Saudi
Arabia for religious and business visits. Israel had never granted official
approval for such travel by both Jewish and Muslim Israelis. Interior Minister
Aryeh Deri “signed for the first time an order enabling an exit permit for
Israelis to Saudi Arabia,” his office said. The move, coordinated with the
security and diplomatic services, approves travel to the Gulf state “for
religious purposes during the Hajj and the Umra (Muslim pilgrimages),” it said
in a statement. It said Israel would also allow its citizens to travel to Saudi
Arabia “to participate in business meetings or seek investments” for trips not
exceeding 90 days. Business travelers must have “arranged their entry to Saudi
Arabia and received an invitation from a governmental source,” the interior
ministry said. There was no indication of a corresponding policy change from the
Saudi side. Earlier Sunday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu praised
Mohammed al-Issa, head of the Muslim World League based in Mecca, Saudi Arabia,
for attending commemorations in Poland this week marking 75 years since the
liberation of the Nazi death camp Auschwitz. (With AFP)
Israel strikes in Gaza in response to flammable balloons
AFP/Sunday, 26 January 2020
Israel carried out air raids on Hamas targets in the Gaza Strip late Saturday,
in response to the launching of incendiary devices attached to balloons sent
over from the Palestinian enclave, the army said. “A short while ago, combat
planes hit a number of targets of the Hamas organization in the southern Gaza
Strip,” the military said in a statement. Among the targets was an arms factory,
the army added, stressing that the air raids were in response to the launching
of the incendiary balloons towards Israeli territory. Hamas has controlled Gaza
since 2008, and Israel holds the Islamist movement responsible for all rocket
fire coming from the territory, although it has targeted other militant groups
there. On Tuesday, Israeli troops shot dead three Palestinians who crossed into
Israel from Gaza and hurled an explosive device at soldiers, according to the
army.
Hamas has fought three wars with Israel, which maintains a crippling blockade on
the impoverished territory.
Trump rejects lifting Iran sanctions to negotiate
The Arab Weekly/January 26/2020
WASHINGTON - The United States will not lift sanctions on Iran in order to
negotiate, US President Donald Trump tweeted late on Saturday, seemingly in
response to a Der Spiegel interview with Iran's foreign minister. "Iranian
Foreign Minister says Iran wants to negotiate with The United States, but wants
sanctions removed. @FoxNews @OANN No Thanks!" Trump tweeted in English on
Saturday and later in Farsi. Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif
responded on Sunday by tweeting an excerpt from the interview with Der Spiegel
published on Friday, where he said Iran is still open to negotiations with
America if sanctions are lifted. "@realdonaldtrump is better advised to base his
foreign policy comments & decisions on facts, rather than @FoxNews headlines or
his Farsi translators," Zarif said in the tweet with the interview excerpt.
Tensions between Iran and the United States have reached the highest levels in
decades after the US killed top Iranian General Qassem Soleimani in a drone
strike in Baghdad on Jan. 3, prompting Iran to fire missiles days later at bases
in Iraq where US troops are stationed. Tensions between the two have been
increasing steadily since Trump pulled the United States out of Iran's nuclear
pact with world powers in 2018 and reimposed sanctions that have driven down
Iran's oil exports and hammered its economy. Iran has routinely vowed to begin
enriching its stockpile of uranium to higher levels closer to weapons grade if
world powers fail to negotiate new terms for the nuclear accord following the US
decision to withdraw from the agreement and restore crippling sanctions.
European countries opposed the US withdrawal and have repeatedly urged Iran to
abide by the deal. Under the agreement, Iran agreed to limit its enrichment of
uranium under the watch of UN inspectors in exchange for the lifting of
sanctions. Trump has maintained that the 2015 nuclear deal needs to be
renegotiated because it didn't address Iran's ballistic missile program or its
involvement in regional conflicts. The other signatories to the nuclear deal —
Germany, France, Britain, China and Russia — have been struggling to keep it
alive. Zarif did suggest Iran was also still prepared for conflict with the US,
though was not specific.
Trump’s Middle East peace plan will be ‘historic’:
Netanyahu
AFP/Sunday, 26 January 2020
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Saturday said he expected US
President Donald Trump’s peace plan for the Middle East to be “historic” ahead
of a trip to Washington. “An opportunity such as this comes once in history and
cannot be missed... I am full of hope that we are on the verge of a historic
moment in the annals of our state,” Netanyahu, who has been invited to meet
Trump at the White House on Tuesday to discuss the plan, said in a statement.
Palestinians threaten to quit Oslo accords over Trump peace plan
AFP, Ramallah/Sunday, 26 January 2020
Palestinian officials threatened Sunday to withdraw from key provisions of the
Oslo Accords, which define relations with Israel, if US President Donald Trump
announces his Middle East peace plan next week. Chief Palestinian negotiation
Saeb Erekat told AFP that the Palestinian Liberation Organization reserved the
right “to withdraw from the interim agreement,” the concrete part of the Oslo
deal, if Trump unveils his plan. The Trump initiative will turn Israel's
“temporary occupation (of Palestinian territory) into a permanent occupation,”
Erekat said. Trump is set to decide the fate of his administration’s Middle East
peace proposal, named the “Deal of the Century”, within the coming days,
according to a White House official. The official said that Trump was the one
who will be making the decision and is considering the timing of the
announcement as a delay will not be in the interest of the plan given the
upcoming US presidential election later this year.
One killed in truck blast in northern Syria’s Azaz: Reports
Reuters/Sunday, 26 January 2020
A truck packed with explosives blew up in the city of Azaz in northern Syria on
Sunday, killing one person and wounding a number of others, civil defense forces
said. There was no immediate claim of responsibility. Turkish-backed Syrian
armed factions opposed to President Bashar al-Assad control Azaz, which falls
near the Turkish border. The civil defense forces said that seven had been
severely wounded and were transferred to Turkey for treatment.
Five rockets hit near US embassy in Baghdad’s Green Zone
Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 26 January 2020
A number of rockets hit near the US embassy in Baghdad’s heavily fortified Green
Zone on Sunday, two security sources said, in the latest unclaimed attack on
American installations in Iraq. The Green Zone houses government buildings and
foreign missions. US sources revealed that rockets fell inside the embassy’s
compound in Baghdad, Al Arabiya correspondent in Washington reported. Baghdad is
in the throes of mass anti-government protests. AFP reporters heard loud thuds
emanating from the western bank of the Tigris, where most foreign embassies are
located. One security source said three Katyusha rockets hit near the
high-security compound while another said as many as five struck the area. Later
Iraq’s security forces said in a statement that five rockets hit the
high-security Green Zone with no casualties. It did not mention the US embassy.
The rocket fire comes two day after thousands massed in Baghdad in response to a
call by populist cleric Moqtada al-Sadr for a rally to demand the ouster of US
troops from Iraq. America’s military presence has been a hot-button issue in
Iraq since a US strike killed Iranian general Qassim Soleimani and a top Iraqi
commander outside Baghdad airport on January 3.
Around 5,200 US troops are in Iraq to lead a global coalition fighting ISIS, but
Iraq said the strike against Soleimani violated that mandate. Sunday’s attack
was the latest in a series of rocket fire this month targeting the Green Zone,
where the Iraqi parliament is also located. The parliament earlier this month
urged the departure of US troops from Iraq, which has been gripped by
anti-government protests since October. (With AFP)
Iraqi cleric Sadr scraps anti-US demonstrations ‘to avoid
internal strife’
Reuters, Baghdad/Sunday, 26 January 2020
Populist Iraqi cleric Moqtaqa al-Sadr on Sunday called off demonstrations
against the US embassy “to avoid internal strife,” his office said. Sadr had
earlier called for the demonstrations to take place in Baghdad and other cities.
Iraqi protesters defy top cleric and return to the streets
The Associated Press, Baghdad/Sunday, 26 January 2020
Hundreds of anti-government protesters flooded the streets of Iraq’s capital and
southern provinces on Sunday, defying a powerful Iraqi religious leader who
recently withdrew his support from the popular movement. Security forces fired
tear gas and live rounds to disperse the crowds from the capital’s Khilani
Square, medical and security officials said. The officials spoke on condition of
anonymity in line with regulations. At least 22 demonstrators were reported
wounded by Iraqi security forces, as the street rallies continued to grow in
size. The mass protests started in October over widespread government corruption
and a lack of public services and jobs. They quickly grew into calls for
sweeping changes to Iraq’s political system that was imposed after the 2003 US
invasion. Iraqi security forces have responded harshly. At least 500 protesters
have been killed since the unrest began. Iraq also has been roiled by US-Iran
tensions that threatened a regional war after an American drone strike this
month killed top Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani near Baghdad. The US attack
pushed the Shia cleric and political leader, Muqtada al-Sadr, to turn his
influence toward demanding an American troop withdrawal. He also dropped his
support for the anti-government movement on Friday.
Hundreds of protesters, mostly students, marched Sunday through key squares in
the capital and southern Iraq to show their continued support for the
anti-government movement, despite al-Sadr’s reversal of position. “The
demonstrations have become stronger now because of what happened,” said Zaidoun,
26, a protest organizer in Baghdad. Many demonstrators chanted slogans against
the populist preacher. The movement opposes Iraq’s sectarian system and both US
and Iranian influence in Iraqi affairs. Some protesters were worried, however,
that the departure of al-Sadr’s supporters and his militia members from
Baghdad’s Tahrir Square, the hub of the protest movement, could spark a renewed
security crackdown. On Saturday, hours after al-Sadr’s supporters left protest
sites in Baghdad and some southern cities, including Basra, security forces
swooped in to clear areas of demonstrators and torch their sit-in tents. At
least four protesters were killed in the crackdown. With al-Sadr out of the
picture, protesters said the only top leader on their side was Grand Ayatollah
Ali al-Sistani, Iraq’s most revered Shia cleric. Many said they were hoping his
weekly Friday sermon would boost morale ahead of a major planned protest for
Jan. 31. In a statement posted online, al-Sadr called on the protesters to
return their movement to its “initial course,” in what many anti-government
activists interpreted as a veiled threat. The statement added that al-Sadr could
boost his support for the “heroic” security forces if protesters didn’t heed his
calls. Al-Sadr had called on his followers to stage a rival protest targeting
the US embassy on Sunday, before rescinding the order shortly after. In a
statement from his office, al-Sadr asked Iraqis “who reject the American
occupation” to gather at key assembly points later that evening. A spokesperson
from his office later said the decision had been reversed.
Jordanian charged with ‘terror’ over tourist stabbings
AFP, Amman/Sunday, 26 January 2020
A Jordanian court on Sunday levelled “terrorism” charges against a man suspected
of wounding eight people in a November knife attack at a popular tourist site.
The suspect, Moustafa Abourouis, 22, faces up to 20 years in prison after the
stabbing of three Mexicans, a Swiss woman, a Jordanian tour guide and a security
officer at the Roman city of Jerash. At a hearing open to the press, prosecutors
accused Abourouis of committing a “terrorist act” and “promoting the ideas of a
terrorist group” – a reference to ISIS. Abourouis, who is of Palestinian origins
and grew up in the refugee camp of Souf, was arrested immediately after the
attack at Jerash, close to the camp and around 50 kilometers (30 miles) north of
Amman. The Jordanian prosecutor accused Abourouis of trying to join ISIS, an
operative of which in Syria had “ordered him to commit attacks against
foreigners”. Two alleged accomplices, also Jordanians of Palestinian origin,
were charged with “terrorism” in the same case. All three pleaded not guilty.
The court is scheduled to hear witnesses next Sunday, with the date for a
verdict to be confirmed. It was not the first time a Jordanian tourist
attraction has been attacked. In December 2016, in Karak, home to one of the
region’s biggest Crusader castles, 10 people – seven police, two Jordanian
civilians and a Canadian tourist – were killed in an attack that also left 30
wounded. That attack was claimed by ISIS and 10 people were later convicted of
carrying out the assault, two of them sentenced to death. Tourism is a key
lifeline for Jordan, a country lacking in natural resources and reliant on
foreign aid. The sector accounted for 14 percent of GDP in 2019. The kingdom,
bordering conflict-torn Syria and Iraq, has been working to revive its tourism
industry and aims to attract seven million holidaymakers a year.
Four cargo vessels catch fire in Iranian port city
Yaghoub Fazeli, Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 26 January 2020
Four cargo vessels and fishing boats have caught fire in Iran’s port city of
Jask in the Arabian Gulf for unknown reasons, Iran’s semi-official YJC news
agency reported. “Two of these boats have completely burned and the firefighters
are extinguishing the other two,” the governor of Jask Mohammad Rahmehr told YJC.
“A number of paramedics and firefighters who were working to extinguish the fire
were injured in the incident,” said Radmehr, adding that “the cause of the fire
and possible casualties are under investigation.”
Syria regime forces on edge of key opposition-held town: Monitor
AFP, Beirut/Sunday, 26 January 2020
Syrian regime forces have reached the outskirts of a key city on the edge of the
country’s last opposition-held stronghold, a monitor and a pro-government
newspaper said Sunday. The mainly deserted city of Maaret al-Numan is a
strategic prize lying on the M5 linking Damascus to Syria’s second city Aleppo,
a main highway coveted by the regime as it seeks to regain control of the entire
country. It is one of the largest urban centers in the beleaguered northwestern
province of Idlib, the last stronghold of anti-regime forces and currently home
to some three million people – half of them displaced by violence in other
areas. The regime and its Russian ally have escalated their bombardment against
the extremist-dominated region since December, carrying out hundreds of air
strikes in southern Idlib and the west of neighboring Aleppo province. Over the
past 24 hours, government ground forces have seized seven villages on the
outskirts of Maaret al-Numan, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war
monitor said Sunday. They have now reached “the edges of the city and are...
within gunfire range of part of the highway”, it said. Pro-regime newspaper Al-Watan
reported that loyalist forces were “just around the corner” from the city, whose
“doors are wide open”. Idlib and nearby areas of Hama, Aleppo and Latakiya
provinces are dominated by the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) extremist group, led
by members of the country’s former al-Qaeda franchise. The regime of President
Bashar al-Assad has repeatedly vowed to reassert control over the whole of
Syria, despite several ceasefire agreements. An AFP correspondent says Maaret
al-Numan has become a ghost town. Assad’s forces, which are also battling HTS
extremists in western Aleppo province, are backed on both fronts by Syrian and
Russian air strikes. The fighting has left dozens of fighters dead on both
sides. Since 1 December, some 358,000 Syrians have been displaced from their
homes, the vast majority of them women and children, according to the United
Nations. A ceasefire announced by Moscow earlier this month was supposed to
protect Idlib from further attacks, but the truce never took hold. Aid agencies
and relief groups have warned that further violence could fuel what may
potentially become the largest wave of displacement seen during Syria’s
nine-year-old civil war. Syrian government forces now control around 70 percent
of the country and Assad has repeatedly vowed to retake Idlib.
Syria Regime Forces on Edge of Key Rebel-Held Town
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/January 26/2020
Syrian regime forces have reached the outskirts of a key city on the edge of the
country's last rebel-held stronghold, a monitor and a pro-government newspaper
said Sunday. The mainly deserted city of Maaret al-Numan is a strategic prize
lying on the M5 linking Damascus to Syria's second city Aleppo, a main highway
coveted by the regime as it seeks to regain control of the entire country. It is
one of the largest urban centers in the beleaguered northwestern province of
Idlib, the last stronghold of anti-regime forces and currently home to some
three million people -- half of them displaced by violence in other areas. The
regime and its Russian ally have escalated their bombardment against the
jihadist-dominated region since December, carrying out hundreds of air strikes
in southern Idlib and the west of neighboring Aleppo province. Over the past 24
hours, government ground forces have seized seven villages on the outskirts of
Maaret al-Numan, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights war monitor said
Sunday. They have now reached "the edges of the city and are... within gunfire
range of part of the highway", it said. Pro-regime newspaper Al-Watan reported
that loyalist forces were "just around the corner" from the city, whose "doors
are wide open." Idlib and nearby areas of Hama, Aleppo and Latakiya provinces
are dominated by the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) jihadist group, led by members
of the country's former al-Qaida franchise. The regime of President Bashar
Al-Assad has repeatedly vowed to reassert control over the whole of Syria,
despite several ceasefire agreements. An AFP correspondent says Maaret al-Numan
has become a ghost town. Assad's forces, which are also battling HTS jihadists
in western Aleppo province, are backed on both fronts by Syrian and Russian air
strikes. The fighting has left dozens of fighters dead on both sides. Since 1
December, some 358,000 Syrians have been displaced from their homes, the vast
majority of them women and children, according to the United Nations. A
ceasefire announced by Moscow earlier this month was supposed to protect Idlib
from further attacks, but the truce never took hold. Aid agencies and relief
groups have warned that further violence could fuel what may potentially become
the largest wave of displacement seen during Syria’s nine-year-old civil war.
Syrian government forces now control around 70 percent of the country and Assad
has repeatedly vowed to retake Idlib.
Kurdish authorities move 21 orphans out of Syria al-Hol
camp
AFP/Sunday, 26 January 2020
Kurdish authorities said they transferred 21 orphans from a squalid displacement
camp in northeast Syria on Saturday, including two French children who are set
to be repatriated. The children, including some from France, Egypt and Dagestan,
were only a fraction of the 224 orphans living in al-Hol camp, home to thousands
of relatives of ISIS fighters. They were transferred to the Kurdish-run
settlement of Roj, also in northeast Syria, said Jaber Mustafa, an official at
al-Hol. He did not say why only 21 orphans were being transferred but argued
that Roj is better equipped to host orphans. “The child care centers in Al-Hol
lack many basic services,” including trained specialists and educators, he said.
Two French orphans are among those being transferred, said another camp official
who asked not to be named because he was not authorized to speak on the issue.
They will be handed to a representative of the French government who will then
repatriate them, the official added, without providing a timeline. The
repatriation, according to the official, is taking place at the request of
Paris. Kurdish authorities say they are holding around 12,000 foreigners from
countries other than Iraq, including 4,000 women and 8,000 children, in three
displacement camps in northeastern Syria. The majority are being held in al-Hol.
Turkey quake death toll rises to 31
AFP, Elazig/Sunday, 26 January 2020
The death toll from a powerful earthquake which struck eastern Turkey rose to
31, officials said Sunday, as rescue efforts continued. The magnitude 6.8 quake
hit on Friday evening, with its epicenter in the small lakeside town of Sivrice
in Elazig province but also affected neighboring cities and countries. The
Turkish government’s disaster and emergency management agency (AFAD) said 31
people died, the majority in Elazig but at least four in nearby Malatya, and
1,607 were injured. Rescuers scrambled all of Saturday and searched Sunday to
rescue people alive from under the rubble. The latest number of individuals
rescued was 45, according to AFAD. Nearly 80 buildings collapsed while 645 were
heavily damaged in Elazig and Malatya, the agency said in a statement. President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan promised Saturday that Turkey’s housing agency TOKI would
“do whatever is necessary and make sure no one is left without a home.” He
attended the funeral of a woman and her son in Elazig Saturday, later visiting
Malatya after cancelling a speech in Istanbul.
Trump says ‘no thanks’ to Iran's FM negotiation proposal
Joanne Serrieh, Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 26 January 2020
US President Donald Trump rejected on Sunday a negotiation proposal by Iran’s
Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif on the condition that sanctions be lifted.
“Iranian Foreign Minister says Iran wants to negotiate with The United States,
but wants sanctions removed,” Trump said in a tweet. “No Thanks!”He retweeted
his tweet with a Farsi translation as well. Zarif on Saturday told Germany’s Der
Spiegel magazine that Iran is still willing to negotiate with the US even after
an American drone strike killed Iranian General Qassem Soleimani. The foreign
minister said he would “never rule out the possibility that people will change
their approach and recognize the realities.” There has been growing tension
between Washington and Tehran since 2018, when President Donald Trump pulled the
United States out of the nuclear deal with Iran. The US has since re-imposed
tough sanctions that have crippled Iran’s economy.
* With AP
Man whose wife was killed when Iran shot down plane flees
Iran after threats
Yaghoub Fazeli, Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 26 January 2020
The husband of a woman killed when Iran shot down a Ukrainian airliner earlier
this month has fled the country after allegedly receiving threats from Iran’s
Ministry of Intelligence to stay quiet. Elnaz Nabiyi, a 31-year-old PhD student
in the Department of Accounting, Operations and Information Systems in the
Alberta School of Business, was killed alongside 175 other people when the
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) shot down flight PS752 on January 8.
Her husband, Javad Soleimani Meimandi, said he was threatened and summoned by
the Ministry of Intelligence for “insulting” local IRGC commanders and
representatives of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei who attended Nabiyi’s
funeral in her hometown Zanjan. Soleimani Meimandi called the regime officials
“shameless” at the funeral and received threatening messages later that day. “On
the day of the funeral, I received a message telling me to shut my mouth, and
that this is my first and last warning,” he wrote in an Instagram post.
Soleimani Meimandi – who is not believed to be related to the slain IRGC
commander Qassem Soleimani – added that he was summoned by the Ministry of
Intelligence the following day for “insulting” officials. “I was then forced to
quickly leave the country so I can be a voice for the victims of this tragedy,”
he said. In his latest post on Instagram on Friday, Soleimani Meimandi said that
Khamenei, as the country’s highest authority, must be held accountable for the
shooting down of the Ukrainian airliner. He also called on the international
community to pressure Iran to hand over the black boxes of the downed Ukrainian
airliner. Soleimani Meimandi questioned why Iran did not halt passenger flights
and shut its airspace at a time it was firing missiles and accused the Islamic
Republic of using passenger planes as shields against potential US retaliation
on that day. Iran carried out missile attacks against US military bases in Iraq
in response to the killing of prominent military commander Qassem Soleimani
hours before downing the Ukrainian airliner.
UN says ‘blatant’ violations of Libya arms embargo continue
The Arab Weekly/January 26/2020
The United Nations decried “continued blatant violations” by several countries
of an arms embargo on war-torn Libya, flying in the face of recent pledges made
last week at an international conference in Berlin.
The UN support mission in Libya didn’t name any specific nations, but said they
included “several who participated in the Berlin Conference.” Saturday’s
statement said these countries were supplying advanced weapons, armoured
vehicles and foreign fighters. Libya sits on Africa’s Mediterranean coast, and
is divided between rival governments, each supported by various armed militias
and foreign backers. It has the ninth largest known oil reserves in the world
and the biggest oil reserves in Africa. The weak but UN-recognized government in
the capital Tripoli is backed by Turkey, and to a lesser degree Qatar and Italy.
Rival forces loyal to military commander Khalifa Haftar receive support from the
United Arab Emirates and Egypt, as well as France and Russia. “Over the last ten
days, numerous cargo and other flights have been observed landing at Libyan
airports in the western and eastern parts of the country providing the parties
with advanced weapons, armored vehicles, advisers and fighters,” the UN
statement said. The UN warned that continuing to funnel arms into the conflict
threatens the “fragile truce” in Tripoli. Haftar’s forces have laid siege to the
capital since last April. A cease-fire was brokered earlier this month by Russia
and Turkey. At the Berlin summit, many world powers with an interest in Libya
pledged to halt foreign interference and honor the UN arms embargo. Among those
who attended the Berlin conference were Russian President Vladimir Putin,
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, French President Emmanuel Macron,
Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi Italian Premier Giuseppe Conte, and US
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. The peace push followed a surge in Haftar’s
offensive against Tripoli, which threatened to plunge Libya into chaos rivaling
the 2011 conflict that ousted and killed longtime dictator Muammar Gadhafi.
Earlier this month, powerful tribal groups loyal to Haftar also seized several
large oil export terminals along the eastern coast as well as southern oil
fields. The closure of Libya’s major oil fields and production facilities has
resulted in losses of more than $255 million in the six-day period ending Jan.
23, the country’s national oil company said Saturday. (AFP)
Confession Of ISIS Mufti Shifa Al-Ni'ma: 'I Issued Fatwas
Permitting Expulsion Of Christians From Mosul, Enslavement, Selling of Yazidi
Women'
MEMRI/January 22, 2020
On January 22, 2020, Iraq's supreme Judicial Council published a report
detailing the confessions of Shifa Al-Ni'ma, a senior Islamic State (ISIS)
cleric whose arrest was announced by security forces on January 16, 2020, in
which he admitted to issuing multiple fatwas, including those permitting the
expulsion of Christians from the city of Mosul as well as the sale and
enslavement of Yazidi women.
According to the report, Al-Ni'ma stated that he graduated from Al-Madina Al-Monawarh
University in Saudi Arabia in 1984, and went worked as a teacher in Al-Rashideen
school in Ajman, UAE, for three months before returning to Iraq. He also
admitted to taking part in fighting the Iraqi army and establishing armed
factions such as Al-Mujahideen Army, The Army of Muhammad, and the Islamic Army.
The report also says that A-Ni'ma issued multiple fatwas, including those
permitting assassination and bombing operations against Iraqi security forces in
Mosul in 2006 and 2007.
Al-Ni'ma also admitted to receiving funds for the mujahideen from a Mosul native
residing in London named Abu Mustapha Al-Najmawi, and from a Saudi national
named Abdallah Al-Ghonaiman. The report quotes Ni'ma saying: "In 2007, I
travelled to Makkah to perform umrah [a lesser pilgrimage to Makkah undertaken
at any time of year] and I met with the terrorist Abu Mustapha Al-Najmawi and he
is a Mosul native who resided in London... we discussed religious topics and I
explained to him the situation in Mosul and the details about the Iraqi forces
and their affiliation with the Americans. We talked about the role of jihadi
factions and he gave me $6,000 and asked that I spend it on armed groups. When I
returned to Mosul, I met with members of armed groups and I distributed the
money between them. In the same year, I went back again to Saudi Arabia to
perform hajj and met with Al-Najmawi again and he introduced me to the so-called
sheikh Abdallah Al-Ghonaiman who was a Saudi national who knew about me and my
ideology and he gave me $4,000."
Al-Ni'ma's confession also includes founding the Abdallah Al-Ni'ma's school,
where dozens of mujahideen studied, including one who would eventually become a
bodyguard of the late ISIS leader Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi. Al-Ni'ma further
confessed to urging young men to join ISIS, which he admitted to pledging fealty
to in front of a senior ISIS cleric and judge, Saudi national named Al-Qahtani,
repeating it in front of Abu Mu'taz Al-Afari.
Recounting his fatwas, Al-Ni'ma is quoted as saying: "I issued the fatwas that
punish the citizens who don't go to mosques, a flogging fatwa for those who
smoke cigarettes, and a fatwa requiring officials in the [Iraqi] security forces
to obtain a repentant card and surrender their weapons. I also issued the fatwa
requiring shop owners to pay zakat and the fatwa to expel Christians from Mosul
and I permitted killing of Shi'ites and issued other fatwas in regard to
allowing ISIS fighters to enslave Yazidi women and sell them and killing the
Yazidi men. I also issued fatwas to confiscate houses of displaced people and
permitted ISIS fighters to blow up mosques in Mosul which had graves of prophets
and righteous people inside them, such as permitting the destruction of Mosque
of Prophet Yunus in August 2014."
The report also mentions that Al-Ni'ma's sons, Abd Al-Bari and Abd Al-Hadi, were
members of ISIS. The former was sentenced to death while the latter is currently
serving a five-year prison sentence in Al-Sulaimaniyah, Iraq.
The report concludes by quoting Al-Ni'ma saying that he was hiding at his
daughter's house in the Al-Muhandiseen neighborhood for two months, and when the
Iraqi forces reached the Al-Muthanna area, he began moving to different areas
until he was arrested in the Al-Mansour neighborhood.
Source: Hjc.iq, January 22, 2020.
Former Kuwaiti Minister Ali Al-Baghli: Kuwaitis Who Convert
To Judaism, Other Religions Should Not Lose Their Citizenship; Our Laws Do Not
Forbid Conversion
MEMRI/January 26, 2020
In a December 28, 2019 interview on ATV (Kuwait), former Kuwaiti
Minister Ali Al-Baghli, who has also been a member of Kuwait's parliament, was
asked regarding whether a certain Kuwaiti man who converted to Judaism should be
stripped of his Kuwaiti citizenship or not. Al-Baghli answered that there should
be no punishment for this person because Kuwait is a country governed by laws
that do not infringe upon people's personal liberty to convert to different
religions. He pointed out that if it had been a Jew that converted to Islam,
everybody would have applauded this man, and that Judaism has been around for
longer than Islam. Al-Baghli added: "If he is wrong, Allah will punish him. Why
should we, as humans, interfere?"
Interviewer: "Today, we heard of a Kuwaiti citizen who converted to Judaism, and
people say that he should be stripped of his [Kuwaiti] citizenship. This
conversion, alongside his statements, are not important... Do you think that
revoking his citizenship is justified in this case?"
Ali Al-Baghli: "No. We are a country governed by laws. It is not a crime and
there should be no punishment unless it is written in the constitution. Article
50 of the constitution specifies that... Does our country's citizenship law –
which has been turned into a game – state that a person should be stripped of
his citizenship if he changes his religion? No, it does not. If it was a Jew who
converted to Islam, we would be applauding him. Enough with that.
"It is a matter of personal liberty. If he is wrong, Allah will punish him. Why
should we, as humans, interfere? After all, this religion existed even before
our religion. It existed in the days of the Prophet Muhammad and the Rightly
Guided Caliphs."
Palestinians Threaten to Quit Oslo Accords over Trump Peace
Plan
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/January 26/2020
Palestinian officials threatened Sunday to withdraw from key provisions of the
Oslo Accords, which define relations with Israel, if U.S. President Donald Trump
announces his Middle East peace plan next week.
Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat told AFP that the Palestine Liberation
Organization reserved the right "to withdraw from the interim agreement" if
Trump unveils his plan. The Trump initiative will turn Israel's "temporary
occupation (of Palestinian territory) into a permanent occupation," Erekat said.
The Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement, signed in Washington in 1995, sought
to put into practice the first Oslo peace deal agreed two years earlier.
Sometimes called Oslo II, the interim agreement set out the scope of Palestinian
autonomy in the West Bank and Gaza.
The interim pact was only supposed to last five years while a permanent
agreement was finalized but it has tacitly been rolled over for more than two
decades. Erekat's comment came as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was
headed to Washington, where Trump was expected to release the plan before
Tuesday. The Palestinian leadership was not invited and has already rejected
Trump's initiative amid tense relations with the U.S. president over his
recognition of Jerusalem as Israel's undivided capital.
The Palestinians see east Jerusalem as the capital of their future state and
believe Trump's plan buries the two-state solution that has been for decades the
cornerstone of international Middle East diplomacy. World powers have long
agreed that Jerusalem's fate should be settled through negotiations between
Israel and the Palestinians. "Trump's plan is the plot of the century to
liquidate the Palestinian cause," the Palestinian foreign ministry said in a
statement sent to AFP on Sunday.
Oman Top Diplomat in Iran for Second Time within Week
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/January 26/2020
Iran's top diplomat Mohammad Javad Zarif hosted his Omani counterpart Yusuf bin
Alawi on Sunday for the second time within a week for talks on security in the
sensitive Gulf. Alawi was making the visit to Tehran on the tail end of his trip
to the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, which Zarif skipped
after scheduling changes to the annual event. Zarif and Alawi discussed
"bilateral cooperation regarding the Strait of Hormuz and emphasized their
governments' will... to guarantee maritime and energy security for all," Iran's
foreign ministry said in a statement.
It was their second meeting in the Iranian capital since Tuesday and at least
their fourth encounter since late July. Zarif's withdrawal from Davos was due to
"unilateral changes in mutually agreed arrangements on part of WEF", Iran's
foreign ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi said in a tweet. The spokesman lamented
that it was a "missed opportunity for dialogue." Tensions have soared in the
region and especially between Tehran and Washington since a U.S. drone strike
killed Iranian general Qasem Soleimani in Baghdad on January 3. Iran retaliated
five days later by launching a wave of missiles at U.S. troops stationed in
Iraq. Tehran had been on high alert hours later when its air defenses mistakenly
shot down a Ukraine International Airlines passenger jet, killing all 176 people
on board. Oman has often acted as a mediator between Iran and its regional foes
and also played a key role in facilitating talks involving the United States
that lead to the 2016 nuclear deal. U.S. President Donald Trump's administration
withdrew from the agreement in 2018 and began reimposing sanctions on the
Islamic republic, which retaliated by scaling back some of its nuclear
commitments.
China Stiffens Its Defenses against Epidemic as Death Toll
Hits 56
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/January 26/2020
China on Sunday expanded drastic travel restrictions to contain a viral epidemic
that has killed 56 people and infected nearly 2,000, as the United States and
France prepared to evacuate their citizens from a quarantined city at the
outbreak's epicenter. China has locked down the hard-hit province of Hubei in
the country's center in an unprecedented operation affecting tens of millions of
people to slow the spread of a respiratory illness that President Xi Jinping
said posed a "grave" threat. Outside the epicenter, four cities -- including
Beijing and Shanghai, and the eastern province of Shandong -- announced bans on
long-distance buses from entering or leaving their borders, a move that will
affect millions of people travelling over the Lunar New Year holiday.
Originating in Hubei's capital of Wuhan, the virus has spread throughout China
and around the world -- with cases confirmed in around a dozen countries as
distant as the United States. The US State Department said Sunday it was
arranging a flight from Wuhan to San Francisco for consulate staff and other
Americans in the city. The flight is on Tuesday, it said in an email to
Americans in China that warned of "extremely limited" capacity for private
citizens. France's government and the French carmaker PSA also said they were
formulating plans to evacuate staff and families, who will be quarantined in a
city in a neighboring province. A Japanese official told AFP its government was
exploring options for getting its nationals out, and South Korea's consulate in
Wuhan said it was conducting an online poll of its citizens there to gauge
demand for a chartered flight out.
Fear in Wuhan
Instead of New Year revelry, Wuhan has been seized by an eerie calm that
deepened on Sunday as new restrictions banned most road traffic in the
metropolis of 11 million. Loudspeakers broke the silence by offering tips
slathered with bravado. "Do not believe in rumors. Do not spread rumors. If you
feel unwell, go to the hospital in time," the message said. "Wuhan is a city
that dares to face difficulties and keeps overcoming them," the female voice
added, mentioning the deadly 2002-03 SARS epidemic and 1998 Yangtze River
flooding. But some foreigners in Wuhan expressed deep concern, saying they
feared going outside even though their food supplies were running low. "The
bustling city looks like a ghost town from my window. The shops are all shut
down," Bangladeshi doctoral candidate Israt Zahan told AFP by phone. "I am
rationing the food at my home. It will last for two days, then I don't know what
I will do." The health emergency has overwhelmed Wuhan's hospitals with
patients, prompting authorities to send hundreds of medical reinforcements,
including military doctors, and start construction on two field hospitals.
Shanghai on Sunday reported its first death -- an 88-year-old man who had
pre-existing health problems. The government says most deaths involved the
elderly or people already suffering from other ailments. The Shanghai fatality
was the first confirmed in a major Chinese city outside Wuhan. The outbreak is
suspected to have originated in a Wuhan market where animals including rats,
snakes and hedgehogs were reportedly sold as exotic food. China said Sunday it
was banning all trade in wildlife until the emergency is over, but
conservationists complain that China has previously failed to deliver on pledges
to get tough.
Virus 'accelerating'
Fearing a repeat of SARS, China has dramatically scaled back celebrations and
travel associated with the New Year holiday, which began Friday, while tourist
sites like Beijing's Forbidden City and a section of the Great Wall have closed
as a precaution. In Hong Kong, Disneyland announced Sunday it had closed as a
precaution after the city declared an emergency to combat the crisis. Shanghai's
Disneyland park had already closed Saturday. Xi said at a Communist Party
leadership meeting on the crisis that China faced "the grave situation of an
accelerating spread" of the virus, calling for stepped-up prevention. Measures
have been ordered nationwide to detect and isolate people carrying the virus on
planes, trains and buses.
NBA Legend Kobe Bryant Killed in Helicopter Crash
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/January 26/2020
NBA legend Kobe Bryant died Sunday in a helicopter crash in suburban Los
Angeles, celebrity website TMZ reported, saying five people are confirmed dead
in the incident. A helicopter crash in the hills near Calabasas was also
confirmed by the Los Angeles Times. The incident came only hours after the
former Los Angeles Lakers star, 41, was passed by current Lakers star LeBron
James for third on the all-time NBA scoring list in a Saturday game at
Philadelphia.
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published on January 26-27/2020
Cruelty to Animals Gets More Media Coverage than Beheaded
Christians
Giulio Meotti/Gatestone Institute/January 26/2020
جوليو ميوتي/معهد جستوني: اعلامياً
فإن معاملة الحيوانات بقساوة تلاقي تغطية أكبر بكثير من فضائع قطع رؤوس المسيحيين
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/82638/%d8%ac%d9%88%d9%84%d9%8a%d9%88-%d9%85%d9%8a%d9%88%d8%aa%d9%8a-%d9%85%d8%b9%d9%87%d8%af-%d9%83%d8%a7%d9%8a%d8%aa%d8%b3%d8%aa%d9%88%d9%86-%d9%85%d8%b9%d8%a7%d9%85%d9%84%d8%a9-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%ad%d9%8a/
The Bishops' Conference of Nigeria described the area as "killing fields", like
the ones the Khmer Rouge created in Cambodia to exterminate the population.
"We are Aramaic people and we don't have this right to have anyone protect us?
Look upon us as frogs, we'll accept that -- just protect us so we can stay in
our land". — Nicodemus Daoud Sharaf, the Syrian Orthodox Archbishop of Mosul the
capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, home to many of the Christians who fled jihadis,
National Catholic Register, April 7, 2017.
In an era of round-the-clock information... the abominations suffered by
Christians have been left without images, while the brutality against the
Chinese pig was streamed all over. Christians are an endangered species; pigs
are not.
One of the last Nigerian Christians was executed by an Islamic State child
soldier. Slaughterhouses' workers go on trial in France for abuses to animals.
But the same France has already repatriated more than 250 ISIS fighters, the
same people who turn Iraqi churches into slaughterhouses.
First there was the beheading of 11 Nigerian Christians during the recent
Christmas celebration. The next day, a Catholic woman, Martha Bulus, was
beheaded in the Nigerian state of Borno with her bridesmaids, five days before
the wedding. Then there was a raid on the village of Gora-Gan in the Nigerian
state of Kaduna, where terrorists shot anyone they met in the square where the
evangelical community had gathered, killing two young Christian women. There was
also a Christian student killed by Islamic extremists who recorded his
execution. Then pastor Lawan Andimi, a local leader of the Christian Association
of Nigeria, was beheaded.
"Every day", says Father Joseph Bature Fidelis, of the Diocese of Maiduguri,
"Our brothers and sisters are slaughtered in the streets. Please help us not be
silent in the face of this immense extermination that is taking place in
silence".
The Bishops' Conference of Nigeria described the area as "killing fields", like
the ones the Khmer Rouge created in Cambodia to exterminate the population. Most
of the 4,300 Christians killed for their faith during the last year came from
Nigeria. Nina Shea, an expert in Religious Freedom, recently wrote:
"An ongoing Islamic extremist project to exterminate Christians in sub-Saharan
Africa is even more brutal and more consequential for the Church than it is in
the Middle East, the place where Christians suffered ISIS 'genocide', as the
U.S. government officially designated."
Unfortunately, the murder of these Christians during the last month has been
largely ignored by the Western media. "A slow-motion war is under way in
Africa's most populous country. It's a massacre of Christians, massive in scale
and horrific in brutality and the world has hardly noticed", wrote the French
philosopher, Bernard Henri Lévy.
While Christians were murdered in Nigeria, the global media ran a story of a pig
being tied up and shoved off a bungee tower at a new theme park in China. The
story went viral on BBC, The Independent, The New York Times, Sky News, Deutsche
Welle and many other mainstream media outlets. The Chinese pig got more media
coverage than any of these murdered Christians in Nigeria. You often have to
search for these martyrs on local African sites. "Pig Bungee Jumping Stunt In
China Prompts Global Outcry", wrote the Huffington Post. Where has been the
global outcry for the serial butchering of Christians just because they are
Christians?
The killing of a gorilla in a Cincinnati zoo, committed to save a child's life,
triggered more emotion and media coverage than the beheading of 21 Christians on
a beach in Libya while they invoked the name of Jesus in Arabic and whispered
prayers. ABC, CBS and NBC devoted six times more coverage to the death of one
gorilla than they did on the mass execution of Christians.
"The world prefers to worry about pandas rather than about us, threatened with
extinction in the land where we were born", said Nicodemus Daoud Sharaf, the
Syrian Orthodox Archbishop of Mosul as well as a refugee in Erbil, the capital
of Iraqi Kurdistan, home to many of the Christians who fled jihadis. When the
Archbishop said that four years ago, it looked as if it were just provocation to
shock Western public opinion. But Archbishop Sharaf was right.
The French-Lebanese writer Amin Maalouf also noted "threats to pandas cause more
emotion" than threats to Christians. Archbishop Sharaf gave another example:
"In Australia they take care of frogs. One of our Syriac citizens, who's a
builder, bought land, took money from a bank and wanted to build houses and sell
them. Then when he wanted to get a certificate to build, in the middle of the
land, he came across a hole with eight frogs in it. The government of Sydney
told him: 'You can't build on this land'. He said: 'But I've taken money from
the bank and I must get to work' and they pushed him to build in another place,
making him pay $1.4 million to build a different place for these eight frogs.
And yet we are the last people who speak Jesus' language. We are Aramaic people
and we don't have this right to have anyone protect us? Look upon us as frogs,
we'll accept that — just protect us so we can stay in our land".
In an era of round-the-clock information on our mobile phones, computers,
televisions and social media, the abominations suffered by Christians have been
left without images, while the brutality against the Chinese pig was streamed
all over. Christians are an endangered species; pigs are not. "The International
Union for the Conservation of Nature has several categories to define the danger
of extinction that various species face today", according to Benedict Kiely, the
founder of Nasarean.org, which helps the Christians of the Middle East.
"Using a percentage of population decline, the categories range from 'vulnerable
species' (a 30-50 per cent decline), to 'critically endangered' (80-90 per cent)
and finally to extinction. The Christian population of Iraq has shrunk by 83 per
cent, putting it in the category of 'critically endangered'".
If you search for a cover dedicated to this extinction you have to go on the
confessional media, such as the British weekly Catholic Herald, which just noted
"The end of Iraqi Christianity?" Or the French Catholic media, La Croix, telling
the story of Syrian Christians:
"Before the start of the civil war in 2012, 20,000 Assyrians populated the banks
of the Khabur, a river that crosses northeastern Syria and flows into the
Euphrates. The occupation of part of the region by Isis in 2015 forced the
majority into exile. The Khabur is today a dead valley".
One of the last Nigerian Christians was executed by an Islamic State child
soldier. Slaughterhouses' workers go on trial in France for abuses to animals.
But the same France has already repatriated more than 250 ISIS fighters, the
same people who turn Iraqi churches into slaughterhouses.
Western media stirred global indignation about Russia's laws against "homosexual
propaganda" prior to the Winter Olympics in Sochi. But the same Western media
never protested the Islamist regimes that punish people with the death for
converting to Christianity or countries where Christians are threatened with
death if they do not convert to Islam.
Mauro Armanino, a priest of the Society for African Missions in Niger, who
describes a situation of open genocide, writes:
"The repeated threats to the Christian communities in the border area with
Burkina Faso have achieved the aim they set: to decapitate the communities and
then fall prey to the fear of professing faith in Sunday prayers in the
chapels....On Tuesday, January 14, in a village not far from Bomoanga, which,
for over a year, has helplessly witnessed the kidnapping of Father Pierluigi
Maccalli, a group of criminals who went to settle the scores with the chief
nurse who works in a dispensary in the area, took the nephew from his home and
was beheaded. In Bomoanga people no longer go to church on Sunday".
These persecuted Christians feel more and more alone in a world that sees them
as intruders. They are as if suspended in a limbo, between an amnesic and weak
West and a rising radical Islam. There seems to be no way to push the Western
world to become aware of this tragedy that no one talks about and which could
have fatal consequences for the future of our civilization.
"Out of fatigue or shame, or both, we close our eyes", writes Franz-Olivier
Giesbert.
"Does the life of Christians from East, Africa or Asia count for a negligible
amount? This is a question that we have the right to ask when we see the place
that our dear media give to the killings and discrimination that Catholics and
Protestants are subjected to on the planet: nothing or almost nothing, with a
few happy exceptions. It is our hypocrisy that feeds the clash of
civilizations".
So, shall we now return to our hypocritical indignation about the cruelty
inflicted on Chinese pigs?
*Giulio Meotti, Cultural Editor for Il Foglio, is an Italian journalist and
author.
© 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.
*-Picture enclosed/"The world prefers to worry about pandas rather than about
us, threatened with extinction in the land where we were born", said Nicodemus
Daoud Sharaf (pictured), the Syrian Orthodox Archbishop of Mosul as well as a
refugee in Erbil, the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, home to many of the Christians
who fled jihadis. (Photo by Safin Hamed/AFP via Getty Images)
New EU Report on Integration Misses the Point
Judith Bergman//Gatestone Institute/January 26/2020
It is worth noticing that the European Commission places the responsibility for
integration of third-country nationals exclusively on the shoulders of EU member
states.
The most conspicuous aspect of the report is how it insists that integration of
people who have come mainly from the Middle East and Africa is merely an issue
of ensuring that the rights that they are entitled to under EU and national laws
be fulfilled and everyone will live happily ever after. It takes a lot of denial
of the facts to reach such a conclusion....
First, the report appears to operate on the premise that EU countries have
unlimited resources at their disposal with which to care for third country
nationals. It completely ignores, for example, that countries such as Sweden, as
a result of the high number of migrants that they have taken in, are now
experiencing financial hardships that make it difficult even properly to take
care of their own nationals.
Second, the report completely disregards how poorly the project of
multiculturalism in Europe, including the integration of people from the Middle
East and Africa, has fared until now.
The Six Country Immigrant Integration Comparative Survey... conducted 9,000
telephone interviews in Germany, France, Netherlands, Austria, Belgium and
Sweden. The respondents were Turkish and Moroccan immigrants. Two thirds of the
Muslims interviewed said that religious rules were more important to them than
the laws of the country in which they lived.
The EU's Agency for Fundamental Rights instead has chosen to ignore reality. The
question is why.
A new report on the integration of refugees, by the European Union Agency for
Fundamental Rights, completely disregards how poorly the project of
multiculturalism in Europe, including the integration of people from the Middle
East and Africa, has fared until now. (Image source: GuentherZ/Wikimedia
Commons)
The European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights recently published a report in
which it warned Europe against creating a "lost generation" of migrants aged
16-24, who had arrived in Europe between 2015 and 2018. The report focuses
particularly on the experiences of those young people who arrived in 2015-16 and
looks specifically at the five EU member states with the most asylum applicants:
Austria, France, Germany, Italy and Sweden. The report also includes Greece, as
it is a first EU member state of arrival.
According to the report, Integration of young refugees in the EU: good practices
and challenges:
"From 2015 to 2018, according to Eurostat, 1.9 million people received
international protection in the EU, either as refugees or as beneficiaries of
subsidiary protection, or received a humanitarian residence permit. More than 80
% were below the age of 34..."
Also, according to the report:
"In its 2016 Action Plan on the integration of third country nationals, the
European Commission pointed out that failure to integrate the newly arrived
people can result in 'a massive waste of resources, both for the individuals
concerned themselves and more generally for our economy and society'. The legal,
economic and social inclusion of recently arrived refugees in the host society
depends on how the different rights they are entitled to under EU and national
law can be realised in practice".
It is worth noticing that the European Commission places the responsibility for
integration of third-country nationals exclusively on the shoulders of EU member
states.
The report states:
"EU law defines in detail the rights and obligations of asylum applicants and
international protection beneficiaries, whereas beneficiaries of humanitarian
protection are generally covered by national law. If these rights are not
respected, protected and fulfilled, people will face problems in successfully
integrating in EU societies once they are allowed to stay and settle.
Identifying challenges and gaps, but also opportunities and promising practices,
provides the evidence that is necessary for the EU and its Member States to
adjust their policies and actions. The young age of many newly arrived persons
and their backgrounds of conflict and persecution require smart investments for
successful integration. This report aims to contribute to reflection on how to
achieve this, thus making sure that a whole generation will not be lost."
The following are areas that the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights urged EU
countries to tackle in its report:
Allocating sufficient financial and human resources to process asylum claims
more quickly.
Quick and affordable family reunification.
Passing housing policies that are able to deal with "large-scale arrivals
properly".
Ensuring that refugees receive all social welfare benefits they are entitled to
under EU law. They should consider providing the same entitlements to subsidiary
protection status holders (persons seeking asylum who do not qualify as
refugees) in need of support. EU member states should remove practical obstacles
that impede access to social welfare benefits – for example, by providing
information in clear, accessible and non‑bureaucratic language and offering
language support, where needed. The report takes Sweden as an example:
"In Västra Götaland, the region's public housing agency (Boplats) has started to
provide information in Arabic, Somali and other common languages since the
arrivals of 2015. The social services have revised their written and spoken
language to make it more accessible and less bureaucratic. They use a programme
called Klarspråk (plain language) to adjust the texts used to explain decisions.
These changes have improved the clients' ability to understand the grounds on
which they have been granted or denied social support such as income support".
Swift and efficient referral to mental health treatment for traumatized
migrants.
Access to education and vocational training for asylum applicants.
Providing access to core services, safe housing, employment, education
opportunities and support from relevant professionals from the outset to avoid
involvement in crime "as either a victim or a perpetrator".
The authors of the report interviewed 163 asylum applicants about their
experiences when they arrived in one of the six mentioned EU member states.
Syria, Afghanistan, Eritrea, Somalia, and Iran were the top countries of origin
and 65% of those interviewed were male. The authors also consulted "426 experts
working with young refugees".
The most conspicuous aspect of the report is how it insists that integration of
people who have come mainly from the Middle East and Africa is merely an issue
of ensuring that the rights that they are entitled to under EU and national laws
be fulfilled and everyone will live happily ever after.
It takes a lot of denial of the facts to reach such a conclusion.
First, the report appears to operate on the premise that EU countries have
unlimited resources at their disposal with which to care for third country
nationals. It completely ignores, for example, that countries such as Sweden, as
a result of the high number of migrants that they have taken in, are now
experiencing financial hardships that make it difficult even properly to take
care of their own nationals. For example, every fourth municipality and every
third region, according to a report by the Swedish Association of Local
Authorities and Regions (SKL), had a budget deficit in 2018. At least 110
municipalities expect to run a deficit this year. Many municipalities therefore
need to make severe budget cuts.
Second, the report completely disregards how poorly the project of
multiculturalism in Europe, including the integration of people from the Middle
East and Africa, has fared until now. It does not mention the existence of
Muslim parallel societies, as documented in European TV documentaries, such as
the British BBC Panorama documentary, "Secrets of Britain's Sharia Councils,"
which aired in 2013 or the Danish three-part television documentary, "The
Mosques Behind the Veil," which aired in 2016.
The report also does not mention the findings of Dutch sociologist and professor
at Berlin's Humboldt University, Ruud Koopmans, who has been researching
migration and integration for over 20 years and is a member of an academic
council that counsels the German immigration authorities. In 2013, as director
of the research project, the Six Country Immigrant Integration Comparative
Survey at the Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung (WZB), he
published a report that conducted 9,000 telephone interviews in Germany, France,
Netherlands, Austria, Belgium and Sweden. The respondents were Turkish and
Moroccan immigrants. Two thirds of the Muslims interviewed said that religious
rules were more important to them than the laws of the country in which they
lived. Three quarters of the respondents held the opinion that there is only one
legitimate interpretation of the Koran.
In March 2019, on the occasion of the publication of his new book, Koopmans told
Danish newspaper Berlingske Tidende in an interview:
"For anyone who takes facts and data seriously, it is undeniable that
integration of Muslims is worse than with other groups of immigrants. There is
no doubt about that. There can also be no doubt that in most other groups of
immigrants we see great progress from one generation to the next. It is not
completely absent from Muslims, but the change is much slower...
"The emergence of Islamic fundamentalism in the countries of origin is also a
factor, partly because migrants take it with them, partly because they are
influenced by the propaganda that comes from the Muslim part of the world...[it]
is not that there is something immutably wrong with Islam in itself, but that
there is a problem with the way many Muslims, and at a global level many Muslim
countries, interpret Islam. Namely, in a way that basically claims that the
Qur'an and Sunna must be taken literally, and that the way the prophet lived in
the 7th century must be the yardstick for how Muslims should live in the 21st
century".
The EU report also does not take into account a 2,200-page French report, "Banlieue
de la République" ("Suburb of the Republic"), from 2011, commissioned by the
influential French think tank Institut Montaigne -- directed by Gilles Kepel, a
well-known political scientist and specialist in the Muslim world -- which
concluded that Muslim immigrants in France were increasingly rejecting French
values and identity, and instead immersing themselves in Islam. The report also
warned that Islamic sharia law was rapidly displacing French civil law in many
parts of suburban Paris.
The French report showed how radical Muslim leaders in France, who were
promoting the social marginalization of Muslim immigrants in order to create a
parallel Muslim society ruled by sharia law, were exacerbating the problem. The
report described a proliferation of mosques and prayer rooms in the suburbs.
Nor does the EU report mention the warnings of former Islamists, such as former
Danish imam Ahmed Akkari. In a recent report for Danish think-tank UNITOS, "The
loyalty conflict in the West – why Muslims are hard to integrate", Akkari warned
that Islamism and traditionalist interpretations of Islam wield a monopoly of
power over Muslims, which prevents them from integrating into Western societies,
because it prevents them from thinking and acting freely concerning Islam.
According to Akkari:
"The problem with the Muslim minority in the West... is that it dare not be
independent, when it comes to religious issues... because the strong religious
and cultural elite governs... and posits itself as self-elected representatives
of Muslims".
The EU's Agency for Fundamental Rights instead has chosen to ignore reality. The
question is why.
*Judith Bergman, a columnist, lawyer and political analyst, is a Distinguished
Senior Fellow at 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.
New details from Trump's peace plan revealed
Itamar Eichner|/Ynetnews/January 26/2020
Analysis: The so-called deal of the century apparently considers the difficulty
in implementation and sets a 4-year transition period; it also suggests the
construction of a tunnel connecting the West Bank and the Gaza Strip
As both Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Blue & White Chairman Benny Gantz
prepare to travel to Washington to discuss U.S. President Donald Trump's peace
proposal, more details emerge that shed light on the so-called deal of the
century.
Apparently, the Trump administration understands the difficulty in implementing
the proposal, which establishes a four-year transition period during which the
Palestinians would have a chance to retract their formal refusal (after
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas vacates his position).
Sources also say that the Americans will not accept partial Israeli compliance
and execution of the plan's provisions. They won't accept a "yes, but" from
Netanyahu. The prime minister intends to accept the plan but would also like to
discuss some reservations that Israel might have about the deal.
The peace plan states that during the four-year transition period, the status of
all territories under the Israeli-ruled Area C will remain unchanged. This means
that Israel will be able to build in areas where settlements already exist but
will not be able to expand beyond its current borders. It will also ban the
approval of new urban development plans for the expansion of industrial areas in
the West Bank, a condition to which settlers strongly oppose. The plan allegedly
allows Israel to annex 30% to 40% of Area C, while the Palestinians will have
control over about 40% of Areas A and B. This leaves the status of the remaining
30% of Area C unclear. Settlers argue the Americans allowed Jordan and the
Palestinians to think that these same leftover 30% will later be added to the
40% that the Palestinians already have, so the Palestinian state will cover some
70% of the West Bank. According to Israeli sources, the Americans want to wait a
few weeks for the Palestinians to decide whether they accept or reject the deal
before Israel starts applying sovereignty on its territories within Area C.
However, Israel wouldn't be able to touch any of the territories designated for
the potential Palestinian state in case the Palestinians would want to resume
negotiation talks in the coming years.
President Trump meets with Mahmoud Abbas
At the end of the transition period, the Palestinians will be able to declare an
independent state, but with limited powers. It will be completely demilitarized,
it will have no control over its aerial space or border crossings and will not
be allowed to form alliances with other countries.
The plan suggests the construction of a tunnel connecting the West Bank and the
Gaza Strip and will serve as a safe passage for Palestinians. This is a very
sensitive issue that has not yet been examined by Israeli security authorities,
which will certainly have their reservations to ensure that the tunnel will not
be used to transfer weapons or individuals wanted for crimes against Israel. The
plan demands the Palestinian Authority will regain full control over the
Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip and demilitarize the militant factions in it. Israeli
officials see this demand as proof that the Americans either don't understand
the existing situation correctly or that they simply don't mean it seriously.
The deal leaves 15 settlements in small, isolated enclaves of Israeli
sovereignty and settlers fear that they will have to evacuate their homes at
some point. Israel will also be required to withdraw out of 60 illegal outposts
that house some 3,000 settlers. This is a section that the settlers will
struggle with and also contradicts Netanyahu's past promises to the settlers to
annex all settlements. Jerusalem will remain entirely under Israeli sovereignty,
including the Temple Mount and other holy places that will be under the joint
supervision of both Israel and the Palestinians.
Everything beyond the separation fence in Jerusalem will be transferred to the
Palestinians, provided they accept the plan's full outline. The Palestinians
wouldn't be able to annex territories unilaterally like Israel in Area C
territories. The Palestinians will be able to set their capital anywhere they
want in Jerusalem, provided it is beyond the separation fence. This means the
Palestinians can continue to set their capital in the Arab neighborhood of
Shuafat in Jerusalem.
The economic part
The program also offers $50 billion in funding for projects in territories
designated for the Palestinian state.
Sources close to the White House claim that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin
Salman and the other princes of the Persian Gulf countries have promised the
Americans to donate the money in an effort to prevent the Palestinians from
sabotaging the plan from behind the scenes.
The Palestinians threaten to stop security coordination if Israel applies
sovereignty over all of its settlements. Jordan's King Abdullah II said last
week in an interview that when examining the so-called Deal of the Century, one
should look at the glass half full.
Some in Israel interpret this as tacit consent from the king to annex the Jordan
Valley by Israel or, at the very least, it is indicative of full coordination
between Jordan and the White House, despite threats made by different factions
in Israel warning that Jordan may walk back on the peace agreement between the
two countries if Israel were to annex the Jordan Valley.
The lessons of the Marib massacre
Khairallah Khairallah/The Arab Weekly/January 26/2020
The massacre in Marib can be looked at from two angles. First, is the Houthis’
ability to carry out painful strikes on the Yemeni “legitimacy” camp. From this
perspective, the attacks demonstrate that the Iran-backed Houthis possess
significant military capabilities.
From the angle of the “legitimacy” camp, the Marib attack January 18 shows that
the group needs to be reshaped and that the internationally recognised
government cannot confront the Houthis, stand up to their project and limit
their ambitions.
The Houthis bombed a mosque in Marib, killing about 120 Yemeni soldiers. They
chose their target carefully. It was a mosque where recruits from Aden and Abyan
were assembled.
Why in Marib? The answer is that Marib governorate has become a stronghold of
the Muslim Brotherhood in Yemen. Recruits from the southern governorates
infiltrated by the Yemeni Congregation for Reform, which serves as a cover for
the Brotherhood, are trained in Marib, one of the northern governorates.
The Houthis have demonstrated that they not only have weapons capable of
inflicting heavy losses but that they possess an intelligence network that
provides accurate information about opponents’ locations, whether it is in
northern or southern Yemen.
It is no secret that there has been no progress towards a political solution in
Yemen. UN Special Envoy for Yemen Martin Griffiths has not achieved a
breakthrough at any level despite his frequent visits to Sana’a and indirect
meetings with Houthi leader Abdelmalik al-Houthi.
The Houthis, who have benefited from Griffiths’ moves, seem comfortable with the
status quo lasting indefinitely since the signing of the Stockholm Agreement in
late 2018. That agreement, which served, to a large extent, the Houthis and
their agenda, allowed the situation to be unchanged on the Hodeidah front at a
time when regional stakeholders were concerned with containing the situation in
Aden after clashes between the “legitimacy” camp and the Southern Transitional
Council.
Those clashes continued until an agreement between the two sides in November.
That deal, which calmed the situation in Aden, was to be a starting point for
how to confront the Houthis. However, it became clear that the Houthis were
nothing but a tool in the hands of Iran.
That’s why the strike against the mosque at Marib was not a coincidence. Iran
wanted to remind everyone that it holds a card called Yemen and that the
assassination by the Americans of Major-General Qassem Soleimani, the commander
of al-Quds Force and the Iranian official in charge of the Yemeni file, would
not affect Iran’s work outside its borders.
It is clear the Islamic Republic can use the Houthis to achieve certain goals,
including raising morale of those who in Yemen rely on Iran.
The lesson of the Marib massacre is that the Houthis cannot be trusted. They
can’t provide guarantees required of them and they can’t reach agreements with
those who wish to stop their evil because they are not masters of their
decisions. The master is Iran.
Who can remember any agreement the Houthis reached with their opponents that
were respected by the Houthis? There are none. All those agreements remained
either dried ink on paper or night chatter immediately swept away by daybreak.
Take the Peace and National Partnership Agreement signed by the Houthis with
Yemeni President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi shortly after they seized Sana’a on
September 21, 2014. One day after signing that agreement, Hadi was placed under
house arrest in Sana’a.
He was not the first victim of the Houthis’ treachery. Former Yemeni President
Ali Abdullah Saleh fought several wars against the Houthis since 2004. They were
not about to forgo revenge, despite understandings they had reached with him.
However, once their understandings with Saleh had served their purpose, the
Houthis executed him in cold blood in December 2017, confirming that they have
no partner in Sana’a. Since their takeover, the city has been living in a
permanent nightmare.
Another lesson from the Marib massacre is that the Houthis must be defeated
militarily. Without that victory, there is no hope of reaching an understanding
with them. However, the “legitimate” government is incapable of defeating them.
It was not the government forces that kicked the Houthis and their cohorts out
of Aden, drove them out of the port of Mocha and threatened their very existence
at Hodeidah before being rescued by Griffiths for reasons that could be linked
to British interests in Hodeidah.
Time has forgotten the poor Yemenis. No one is reminding the world of their
sufferings. It has become almost normal to accept that Yemeni children die by
the thousands. No one raises an eyebrow, not the Arab or international media.
What’s more scandalous is it has become normal for the “legitimacy” camp to
behave as if everything is fine. It is as if it was enough to have Prime
Minister Maeen Abdulmalik Saeed stay in Aden to say that the capital of the
south has regained its usual state and that all state departments are working
normally. It is unfortunate that the world has forgotten Yemen and that it had
taken a mass massacre in Marib caused by a Houthi missile to bring it back to
the forefront. What is even more tragic is that the slow death of an entire
country no longer matters to anyone, knowing that preventing this does not
require more than a bold decision.
Bold decision-making begins with the recognition that there is a tragedy in a
country of great strategic importance for the region, especially for the Arabian
Peninsula, and there is no room to address this tragedy considering the
“legitimacy” camp really has no legitimacy.
Pending this bold decision, other massacres will take place in Yemen whenever
Iran desires it.
Iranian myths exposed as Ukrainian plane shot down
Claude Salhani/The Arab Weekly/January 26/2020
By refusing to release the black boxes of the Ukrainian passenger aircraft shot
down by its missiles, Iran is committing yet another mistake. Worse, it is
committing an outrageous humanitarian offence. In their refusal to hand over the
voice and data recorders from the aircraft to countries possessing technology to
decipher the flight data, Iranian authorities prolong the suffering of the
families of the ill-fated civilian aircraft. There were no survivors among the
176 passengers and crew. Iran initially said it would hand over the boxes
because it does not possess the technology to retrieve data from them. Canadian
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau suggested the boxes be handed to France but Iran
has made no move to follow up. Information on the black boxes could help
families of the victims of the downed aircraft learn more about why the plane
was fired upon.
Many of the passengers were Canadians of Iranian origin, holding both Canadian
and Iranian citizenship. Iran, however, does not recognise dual citizenship.
Tehran, embroiled in a long-running dispute with the United States over its
nuclear programme, has given mixed signals about whether it would hand over the
recorders. An Iranian aviation official had said the black boxes would be sent
to Ukraine only to backtrack a day later, saying they would be analysed in Iran.
Further delay in sending them abroad is likely to increase international
pressure on Iran, whose military said it shot the plane down by mistake while on
high alert in the tense hours after Iran fired missiles at US targets in Iraq.
"If the appropriate supplies and equipment are provided, the information can be
taken out and reconstructed in a short period of time," the Iran Civil Aviation
Organisation said in its second preliminary report on the disaster. Even
discounting human compassion, any person with an ounce of logic would be tempted
to ask why Iran is doing this. Why is it so reluctant to help with closure to
this tragedy? A terrible mistake was made. Why not help clear it up? The answer
is simple. This is a terrible embarrassment for the Iranian leadership. It is
all the more embarrassing coming while Iran is trying to show it is a country
that is advanced militarily.
Shooting down a passenger plane speaks otherwise and opens questions as to how
professional and well-trained Iranian officers with fingers on the trigger of
the powerful weapons possessed by Tehran are.
Today, the mistake was made with a missile. Could the same mistake be made with
a nuclear weapon, if Iran weaponises nuclear energy? This apparent mistake begs
the question as to how stable is the country’s military arsenal if an individual
can decide to shoot down a civilian aircraft.
Did whoever decided to fire the two missiles have the authority to do so or was
the request sent up through the chain of command? Worrisome conclusions spring
to mind either way.
How secure would nuclear-armed missiles be under the current regime? Were those
missiles under the control of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) or
the politically distrusted regular military?
Surely there is a cloud of fear among the Iranian leadership about what the data
from the black boxes might show.
Is it fear that information would reveal the ineptitude of the IRGC, which
cannot distinguish between an airliner of a scheduled flight, a US F-35 jet
fighter, a missile or a bird? Does Tehran fear that myths that had surrounded
the IRGC were exposed the minute the Ukrainian plane and its passengers were
shot down? Despite the billions of dollars training and equipping them, the
guards could not perform better than blind sentries shooting in the dark. It is
not Ayatollah Ali Khameini's inappropriate words of praise on January 17 that
can whitewash the bloodstained hands of the IRGC or restore a modicum of the
artificially constructed illusions around them.
Iranian demonstrators have rendered their verdict. The IRGC and the clerics:
Out! They are part of an obsolete past that must go. The killing of
Major-General Qassem Soleimani awakened the Iranian leadership to a new reality.
They realise how outperformed they are by US drone and satellite technology.
They realise that their claims about technological and military prowess are
bluster. Admitting their technological inferiority on top of their lost ethical
compass is too heart-wrenching for the Tehran regime to endure.
Iranian clerics and the military establishment that back them might have lost
more than a battle. Their compounded ineptitude and ignorance of the ways of the
world indicate they might have lost the whole war.
*Claude Salhani is a regular columnist for The Arab Weekly.
Libya, Erdogan and the Mercenaries
Dr. Jebril Elabidi/Asharq Al Awsat/January 26/2020
Deporting the “mercenaries” was the pressure card that Erdogan chose to threaten
Europe’s security. He had previously threatened Europe with deporting what was
left of ISIS to the continent, as part a repeated attempt to blackmail them, and
he had already transferred hundreds of Syrian fighters to Tripoli in Libya to
save the Brotherhood Government from inevitable collapse.
The Turkish president, unfortunately, seeks to play the role of the
Mediterranean pirate through a ridiculous attempt to mess with geography when he
contrived that his country shares a border with Libya. While the two countries
are separated by islands, countries, and thousands of kilometers, he turned
Libya into the neighboring country through the bogus map drawn by Fayez al-Sarraj-
the Prime Minister of the unconstitutional Accord Government.
Recruiting mercenaries is considered a crime by the UN issued International
Convention against the recruitment, use, financing and training of mercenaries,
which means that Erdogan, as a recruiter, trainer, user and financer of
mercenaries is subject to trial for violating international law.
Mahdi al-Harati, the Irish-Libyan former mayor of Tripoli, oversaw the training
of Erdogan’s mercenaries and their transfer to Libya. His familiarity with the
Syrian fighters, stemming from his fighting experience alongside them and
overseeing their training, allowed him to play a central role in their
recruitment.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitored the transfer of the
mercenaries from Syria to Libyan territory. While the registration process
continues, around 2,400 mercenaries have already arrived in Tripoli after
agreeing to fight there, with each terrorist receiving 2,000 dollars. 1,700
recruits have arrived at the Turkish camps for training as recruitment from al-Mu'tasim
Brigade, Sultan Murad Brigade, Northern Falcons Brigade, Hamzat, Legion of
Levant, Suleiman Shah, and Samarkand Brigade continues in Afrin, the Euphrates
Shield, and North-Eastern Syria.
Ahmad Kermo al-Chehabi, a high ranking official in the so-called Syrian Nation
Army, loyal to Turkey, admitted to recruiting and transporting mercenaries,
bragging “we are ready for Jihad anywhere; we won’t stop. We are willing to
sacrifice our souls and our children for the Ottoman Caliphate”.
The agreement to gulp up the gas and wealth of the Mediterranean, plunder
Libya's wealth and violate its sovereignty, and transfer hundreds of mercenaries
to Libya, is equivalent to throwing firewood and gasoline on a fire to ensure
that it continues to burn. It could also be considered a threat to Europe's
security and its interests in Libya, since the presence of fighters of different
nationalities in Tripoli, which is only 300 miles away from Southern Europe,
inevitably poses a threat, whether or not Europe acknowledges it.
Libya and its war is not their final destination. From them, Libya is nothing
but a transit stop that Erdogan took to help his men and those loyal to him, the
Brotherhood and the Government of Reconciliation after it is about to fall. The
Libyan army’s victory in the battle to liberate Tripoli from the grip of
militias and mercenaries is inevitable.
During the debate over solutions to the Libyan crisis, the Libyan parties
refused to sit at the same table, the crisis moved from a truce and an unwritten
cease-fire in Moscow to the birth of the Military Committee (5 + 5) representing
both sides to dismantle the militias in Berlin.
Meanwhile Ghassan Salameh, the international envoy, says: “I do not see blue
hats in Libya anytime soon,” and concerning the Syrian mercenaries brought in by
the Turkish president obsessed with a second Ottoman Caliphate, Salameh also
said that: “Erdogan was invited because he is threatening to send Syrians to
Libya, and he had pledged not to interfere or send mercenaries. Now, after
signing of the agreement, Erdogan can be held accountable. ”
The Europeans ignoring the presence of mercenaries and Erdogan’s transport of
extremists should wait the arrival of hoards of these mercenaries at their
doorsteps. For most of them, Libya is nothing but a transit stop on their way to
Rome and then to other Western countries.
There are no political groups in Libya, nor is there a political conflict. There
is only a security crisis, with the Libyan people facing the international
Brotherhood organization and its terroristic figures. The organizations brought
in members from all parts of the world to help them attain victory, so they
rushed to it and turned Libya into a cemetery of the multinational invaders.
Erdogan's mercenaries, whose coffins have begun returning to Idlib and Gaziantep
from Tripoli, have no place in Libya, as the soil of Libya sizzles and does not
accept them.
Medvedev Out: Putin Overhauls Russia's Governance System
Leonid Bershidsky/Bloomberg/January 26/ 2020
When Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a radical overhaul of Russia’s
governance system this week, he also ended the Medvedev era. Dmitry Medvedev
was, at least formally, Putin’s closest sidekick, the politician with whom the
strongman was most willing to share formal power. Whether or not it’s time for
Medvedev’s political obit, his stint near the top of Russia’s so-called power
vertical will serve as an example of how the Putin system’s inertia can
suffocate the best modernizing intentions.
Medvedev abruptly resigned as prime minister, without giving advance notice to
members of his government, who also had to tender their resignations. “We as the
government must give our country’s president the opportunity to make all the
necessary decisions,” Medvedev said, though it wasn’t clear how his continued
occupancy of the top cabinet post could get in the way of Putin’s reform.
Putin expressed rather tepid gratitude for the prime minister’s service. “Not
everything has worked out, but then things never work out completely,” he said.
Putin has always avoided firing close, trusted associates, but as prime minister
since 2012, Medvedev presided over Russia’s longest run of declining real
incomes during Putin’s 20-year rule. The government’s $400 billion “national
projects” spending plan, designed to rectify things, hasn’t gotten off to a
great start.
The new job Putin has offered Medvedev didn’t even exist before — deputy
chairman of the Security Council, an advisory body that includes Russia's mighty
security chiefs. It’s formally headed by Putin but run by its secretary, former
secret police chief Nikolai Patrushev. The council has been described, including
by Kremlin propaganda outlets, as the closest Russia has to the Soviet Union's
ruling Politburo. So the newly created post, with Putin as the direct
supervisor, can be enormously influential — but perhaps not when filled by
Medvedev, who has never really commanded the respect of the security bosses in
the way Putin does, with his KGB record and training.
Medvedev’s move means he isn’t likely to be Putin’s successor as president when
the latter's term ends in 2024. Nor will he return to the prime ministerial
post, now handed to a supremely skillful technocrat, former tax chief Mikhail
Mishustin. His career has been launched on a downward trajectory — something he
probably expected. For years, he has appeared bored and morose at official
functions, time and again photographed with his eyes closed and seemingly
asleep. Opposition politician and anti-corruption activist Alexey Navalny posted
one such photo taken as Putin delivered his Wednesday address, tweeting, “Only
one thing in Russia is really stable and unshakable — Dmitry Medvedev, asleep
during the president’s state of the nation speech.”
The visibly bored, defeated Medvedev at the end of his prime ministership was a
far cry from the hopeful, cheerful modernizer who started a four-year presidency
in 2008 and charmed US President Barack Obama and his aides into trying a reset
of US-Russia relations. Though many Putin opponents — myself included — never
believed Medvedev could pursue an independent policy, so-called system liberals,
believers in changing the system from within, vested serious hopes in the
younger, more polished leader. They believed he could shake off Putin's
conservative influence if he ran for a second term in 2012, and that Russia
would then gradually become freer both economically and politically.
Putin’s legendary personal loyalty stretched far enough not to send Medvedev,
who is only 54, into retirement. But then, it was Putin himself who backpedaled
in 2011 instead of letting Medvedev pursue his cautiously reformist course. It
was Putin who created a system that paralyzed any kind of economic
liberalization and who launched Russia on military adventures that limited its
ability to develop trade. Putin, who gave Medvedev the exhilarating hope of
building a more modern Russia, then quickly took it away, leaving his former
successor with little except the luxurious lifestyle enjoyed by the Russian
elite.
It was Putin's country to give and to take back.