LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
June 10/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
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Bible Quotations For today
For it is better to suffer for doing good, if suffering should be God’s will,
than to suffer for doing evil
First Letter of Peter 03/13-22:”Now who will harm you if you are eager to do
what is good? But even if you do suffer for doing what is right, you are
blessed. Do not fear what they fear, and do not be intimidated, but in your
hearts sanctify Christ as Lord. Always be ready to make your defence to anyone
who demands from you an account of the hope that is in you; yet do it with
gentleness and reverence. Keep your conscience clear, so that, when you are
maligned, those who abuse you for your good conduct in Christ may be put to
shame. For it is better to suffer for doing good, if suffering should be God’s
will, than to suffer for doing evil. For Christ also suffered for sins once for
all, the righteous for the unrighteous, in order to bring you to God. He was put
to death in the flesh, but made alive in the spirit, in which also he went and
made a proclamation to the spirits in prison, who in former times did not obey,
when God waited patiently in the days of Noah, during the building of the ark,
in which a few, that is, eight people, were saved through water. And baptism,
which this prefigured, now saves you not as a removal of dirt from the body, but
as an appeal to God for a good conscience, through the resurrection of Jesus
Christ,who has gone into heaven and is at the right hand of God, with angels,
authorities, and powers made subject to him.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese
& Lebanese Related News published on June 09-10/2019
Khamenei Pardons 691 on Eid, but Zakka Excluded
Iran considers request for release of Lebanese prisoner Nizar Zakka
Ibrahim Heads to Iran for Zakka Release Arrangements
AlRahi calls for approving draft budget, ending waste expenditure and
corruption, ceasing interference in state administrations and judiciary
Hariri: ISF Offering Martyrs for the Sake of Lebanon, Lebanese
Hariri patronizes Tripoli's Half Marathon featuring more than 20,000
participants
Jumblat Slams Mustaqbal Ministers over Phone Networks Outage
Bassil says it is normal to defend the Lebanese labor force against any other
Abu Faour promises 'zero pollution' in the Litani River by summer's end; Jarrah
says problem lies not in funding, but in file management
Jabak on Pharmacist's Day: Price reduction will include 3,200 medicines, efforts
are pinned on supporting local industry, closing phantom infirmaries,
establishing a central laboratory
Kouyoumjian from Jezzine: To keep developmental projects away from political
differences
Hassan Says ISF ‘Extremist’ against Terror, Othman Defends Remarks, Institution
Tension forces evacuation of Syrian refugee camp in Lebanon
Political horse-trading weakens Lebanon
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on June 09-10/2019
Iran threatens Europe with unspecified 'action' if it does not 'normalise'
economic ties
Pope Francis appeals for peace, dialogue in Sudan
New US ambassador meets with Iraqi FM in Baghdad
Qatar admits having different ‘assessment’ to US on Iran threat
Qatari Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani said Qatar
respected US policy on Iran, but added: “We have our ow
Goalkeeper Turned Iconic Rebel Fighter Dies in Northwest Syria
4 Killed on First Day of Sudan 'Civil Disobedience'
Sudan’s protesters launch general strike after crackdown
India's Modi Makes Unscheduled Stop at Bombed Sri Lanka Church
Israeli navy boards ship from Turkey that was set on fire
German FM in Jordan in bid to ease US-Iran tensions
Litles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on June 09-10/2019
Political horse-trading weakens Lebanon/Makram
Rabah/The Arab Weekly/June 09/2019
The Mystery of God /June 09/2019
"Europe Will Not Be Europe"/Guy Millière/Gatestone Institute/June 09/2019
The US-Iran showdown after Mecca summits/Khattar Abou Diab/The Arab Weekly/June
09/2019
Qatar enters third year of crisis but no lessons learnt/Iman Zayat/The Arab
Weekly/June 09/2019
Iraq should care about Arab Gulf security, not fret about Iran/Tallha Abdulrazaq/The
Arab Weekly/June 09/2019
Russia is playing an increasing role in the Afghan peace process/Rahimullah
Yusufzai/Arab news/June 09/2019
Daesh’s demonic second coming … stronger than ever before?/Baria Alamuddin/Arab
news/June 09/2019
Special relationship in calmer waters after a successful state visit/Zaid M.
Belbagi/Arab news/June 09/2019
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese &
Lebanese Related News published on June 09-10/2019
Khamenei Pardons 691 on Eid, but Zakka Excluded
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/June 09/2019/Iran's supreme leader
pardoned hundreds of prisoners on the occasion of the end of Ramadan, but a
Lebanese national who Lebanon expected to be released was not among them,
authorities said Sunday. In total, the sentences of 691 prisoners were either
commuted or deferred as decided by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as a gesture for the
Eid al-Fitr holidays, said the jucidiary's Mizan Online news website. Last week,
Lebanon said one of its nationals condemned in 2016 to 10 years' jail in Iran
after being found guilty of spying for the United States would be on the pardon
list. The Lebanese foreign ministry, quoted by the country's official NNA news
agency, said Nizar Zakka would be pardoned at the request of Beirut as a gesture
for Eid. But Zakka's name was not on the list, said Iran's judiciary spokesman
Gholamhossein Esmaili. "The individual was sentenced and the president of
Lebanon had -- in letters to judicial officials -- requested a conditional
pardon," he said, quoted by Mizan. "This request has been in the judicial
process and, in case any decision is taken by the judicial apparatus,
information will be provided." A resident of the United States in his 50s, Zakka
was arrested in September 2015 during a visit to Iran, where he was convicted
the following July. At the time of his arrest, state television in Iran charged
Zakka had "deep ties to military and intelligence services of the United
States," Iran's arch-foe. It broadcast photographs of a man in military uniform
it said was of Zakka at an American base. At the end of 2017, Iranian courts
confirmed his 10-year sentence on appeal, as well as that of an American and two
Iranian-Americans accused of "collaboration" with the United States. Iran and
the United States broke diplomatic ties in 1980, and their relations have
deteriorated significantly since U.S. President Donald Trump took office in
January 2017.
Iran considers request for release of Lebanese prisoner
Nizar Zakka
Reuters, LondonSunday, 9 June 2019/Iran has received an amnesty request from
Beirut for a Lebanese citizen who was detained in 2015 for “collaborating
against the state” but has yet to make a decision on the case, an Iranian
judiciary spokesman said on Sunday. Lebanon state news agency NNA last week
quoted the foreign ministry as saying that Iran had agreed amnesty for Nizar
Zakka, an information technology expert who was sentenced to 10 years in prison
in 2016 and fined $4.2 million. NNA also quoted media representatives on behalf
of Zakka’s family as saying the initiative to release him had been successful
and thanking President Michel Aoun and Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil. “We have
received a request filed by the accused and other Lebanese officials to grant
amnesty and release him. We are looking into this request as a special case,”
Gholamhossein Esmaili, a judiciary spokesman, was quoted as saying by Fars news
agency. Iranian state media reported on Sunday that Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei pardoned about 700 prisoners, but Esmaili said Zakka’s name was not on
the list of those pardoned. Zakka, who also has permanent US residency, had been
invited to Iran by a government official in 2015 but then disappeared after
attending a conference in Tehran.State media announced later that year that he
had ties to US military and intelligence services and had been detained by the
Revolutionary Guards.
Ibrahim Heads to Iran for Zakka Release Arrangements
Associated Press/Naharnet/09 June/2019/General Security chief
Maj. Gen. Abbas Ibrahim on Sunday left for Tehran to follow up on ongoing
preparations to release from prison Lebanese citizen and U.S. green card holder
Nizar Zakka, the security agency said. Zakka is serving a 10-year sentence on
espionage charges. Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency on Sunday confirmed
that Tehran is considering Zakka’s release. It quoted Iranian judiciary
spokesman Gholamhossein Esmaili as saying that authorities were conducting a
"special review" of the request by Zakka and "Lebanese political officials,"
without elaborating.
Zakka is a U.S. permanent resident from Lebanon who advocated for internet
freedom and has done work for the U.S. government. He was arrested in September
2015.The request could be part of a Lebanese effort to ease recent tensions
between Washington and Tehran.
AlRahi calls for approving draft budget, ending waste
expenditure and corruption, ceasing interference in state administrations and
judiciary
Sun 09 Jun 2019/NNA - Maronite Patriarch, Cardinal Bechara Boutros Al-Rahi,
urged Sunday the members of Parliament to speed-up the endorsement of the annual
draft budget and to work on ending waste expenditure and corruption in the
country. Additionally, he highlighted the need to stop all interferences in the
state's administrations and judiciary, and to develop a plan for economic
advancement and structural reform. Al-Rahi added that the country's political
leaders ought to find the best ways to secure public goodness by competing in
coming-up with suitable choices, rather than engaging in a vicious verbal battle
that only fuels strife and sectarian spirit, triggers an atmosphere of tension
and undermines mutual trust, cooperation and respect for law and justice.
Patriarch Al-Rahi's words came as he presided over Sunday Mass at the Basilica
of "Our Lady of Lebanon" in Harissa marking the Feast of Pentecost, coinciding
with the 29th anniversary of Tele Lumière and the 18th anniversary of Noursat,
alongside the launching of their satellite channels' group. "Every time Lebanon
reached the brink of political, security and financial abyss, the hidden hand of
the Virgin Mary protected it and prevented its downfall," said the Patriarch,
referring to the Virgin's call on all political leaders of Lebanon in
particular, and citizens in general, to demonstrate solidarity, unity of efforts
and cooperation to protect their homeland. Al-Rahi commended the valuable
contributions of both Christian TV Channels in adhering to the teachings of
Jesus Christ and the Church, respecting other religious beliefs, addressing
various issues of life in light of the Gospel and promoting the building of a
culture of love and peace throughout the world and working together for a free
and dignified human being. He added that both Stations strive to make their
programs an essential means of disseminating Christian, human, ethical,
cultural, artistic and national values and principles. The Patriarch concluded
by renewing the dedication of Lebanon and the countries of the Middle East to
the pure heart of the Virgin Mary, raising prayers to the Lord Almighty to bless
the region and its inhabitants so that they may all enjoy complete salvation on
Earth and in Heaven.
Hariri: ISF Offering Martyrs for the Sake of Lebanon,
Lebanese
Naharnet/09 June/2019/Prime Minister Saad Hariri on Sunday threw his support
behind the Internal Security Forces institution, in the wake of the latest
criticism that has targeted it. “I salute the ISF and its director general,
officers and personnel on the 158th anniversary of its establishment,” Hariri
said. “It is a vigorous institution in the state of law. It is protecting the
security of citizens and the safety of the society, offering sacrifices and
martyrs for the sake of Lebanon and the Lebanese,” Hariri tweeted. An Islamic
State-inspired gunman had killed two ISF members and two army troops in an
attack in Tripoli on Monday.
Hariri patronizes Tripoli's Half Marathon featuring more
than 20,000 participants
Sun 09 Jun 2019/NNA - The city of Tripoli witnessed Sunday morning a major
sports event marked by the "Half Marathon" race that set out in the early hours
of the day, under the auspices of Prime Minister Saad Hariri represented by his
Advisor, Abdul-Ghani Kabbara. More than 20,000 athletes from Lebanon and
numerous Arab and foreign countries took part in the Marathon, with the
participation of Maher Dennawi representing former PM Najib Mikati, Northern
Governor Ramzi Nohra, Tripoli's deputies and prominent figures and various
youth, social and trade unions and associations, student bodies and a crowd of
citizens. The four-hour race took place in a smooth and tranquil atmosphere,
while strict security measures were adopted by the Internal Security Forces and
main roads leading to the race track were closed off to traffic which was
diverted to other roads, so citizens can easily move around the city. In his
delivered word on the occasion, Kabbara conveyed PM Hariri's greetings to all
the participants in the race and to the people of Tripoli, considering that
"this sports festival reflects the true image of the capital of the North."
Kabbara hoped that "efforts would be united to ensure the rise of Tripoli
economically and developmentally," stressing that "the painful and denounced
terrorist incident that hit the city was an individual act that happens in most
Arab, European and American states." He called herein on the Army, the Internal
Security Forces and all other security apparatuses to "strike with an iron fist
against anyone who wishes to tamper with the security of Tripoli or any other
region in Lebanon." Kabbara emphasized on unity and solidarity to save the
country from its current ordeals.
Jumblat Slams Mustaqbal Ministers over Phone
Networks Outage
Naharnet/09 June/2019/Progressive Socialist Party leader ex-MP Walid Jumblat on
Sunday launched a fresh jab at al-Mustaqbal Movement, amid a new row between the
two parties. “Why did mobile networks witness an outage yesterday morning in the
Aley-Chouf region,” Jumblat tweeted. “We hear about these large sums of money
that get earmarked for the so-called fiber optic cables, from the tenure of
(ex-telecom minister Jamal) al-Jarrah to the tenure of (incumbent Telecom
Minister Mohammed) Shqeir, and suddenly we get disconnected from the world,” the
PSP leader added. “Even the landlines were affected,” Jumblat lamented,
wondering if “someone from the security agencies is eavesdropping or jamming the
signals.”The head of the OGERO state-run telecom company, Imad Kreidieh, later
responded to Jumblat’s tweet. “The severing of the fiber optic cable between
Btater and Rishmaya has caused an internet outage and maintenance crews are
working on restoring normalcy,” Kreidieh tweeted. He said the affected towns are
Majdal al-Meoush, Btater and Rishmaya.
Bassil says it is normal to defend the Lebanese labor force against any other
Sun 09 Jun 2019/NNA - Addressing the dinner attendees at the closing of the
sixth round of the Diaspora Energy Conference on Saturday, Foreign Minister
Gebran Bassil stressed that "our belonging is what brings us together," and "one
form of this belonging is the Lebanese nationality, or Lebanity, which we
considered to be the highest affiliation and is the real common denominator
between us."He added: "Lebanon wants to give you, not to take away from you.
This is a basic equation."Bassil indicated that in spite of all that people hear
about Lebanon, the deposits in Lebanese banks reach 200 billion dollars, which
is four times the size of the national production, and 80 percent of these
deposits belong to residents because the Lebanese believe in their homeland and
deposit their money here. "Some people accuse me of being racist and I
understand them because their Lebanese affiliation is not strong enough to feel
what we feel, and because they consider that a second affiliation may be more
important to them," Bassil went on. "It is normal for the state to distinguish
its citizens from others, i.e. from foreigners, and this is not racism," he
explained, pointing to the content of the International Convention against
Racial Discrimination which indicates that the local law prevails."It is normal
to defend the Lebanese labor force against any other labor, whether Syrian,
Palestinian, French, Saudi, Iranian or American," Bassil maintained, stressing
that "the Lebanese come first!""Our economy and our banking system are still
resisting, and are still a role model for many other countries. What harms
Lebanon is the distorted image that some people convey, and this is the biggest
pollution, namely the insistence on not revealing the positives," Bassil
concluded.
Abu Faour promises 'zero pollution' in the Litani River by summer's end; Jarrah
says problem lies not in funding, but in file management
Sun 09 Jun 2019/NNA - Minister of Industry, Wael Abu Faour, confirmed Sunday
"the commitment to reach zero industrial pollution in the Litani River by the
end of this summer."He stated that the final deadline will not be extended and
on June 28, the interval given to industrial establishments of the fourth and
fifth degrees will expire, whereby measures will begin to be implemented. "No
Lebanese can claim, or be certain that he is immune from the current health and
environmental damage caused by the current state of the River," Abu Faour said,
stressing on addressing this issue as a "legitimate need."His words came during
a meeting held at the West Bekaa Country Club in the town of Khirbet Qanafar in
Western Bekaa earlier today, at the invitation of the Ministry of Industry, to
discuss with various industrialists and municipalities ways of treating the
pollution of the Litani River and its tributaries. The meeting was attended by
Minister of Information Jamal Al-Jarrah, and Future Parliamentary Bloc Members,
Deputies Mohammad Al-Qaraawi and Henry Shdid, and former MPs Antoine Saad and
Nasser Nasrallah. "There is a great effort undertaken by Prime Minister Saad
Hariri, with the Committee in charge of addressing this pollution problem, not
only at the industrial level, but at all levels," disclosed Abu Faour.
"The problem at large is at the level of sanitation," he added, referring to the
tragic and urgent situation that requires immediate action and shortening of
deadlines given to industries and speeding up implementation in order to
eliminate the damages. Abu Faour pointed out that "industrial damage according
to statistics is a small quantity, but the most harmful aspect is in terms of
health and environment, because industrial wastes, including heavy metals, are
the most harmful to citizens' health." "The municipalities are responsible like
us," he corroborated, stating that all municipalities of the Litani basin
shoulder the same responsibility of trying to keep the river clean. In turn,
Minister Jarrah considered that "the focus should basically be on industrial
decontamination, and other contaminants such as sanitation, because this water
is used in agriculture while being polluted, and there are large contaminants
that lead to serious diseases."
"This affects agriculture, our economy and exports, and the excessive use of
chemicals and agricultural medicines reaches our underground waters," he added.
"We managed to get $25 million from the Development and Reconstruction Council
to clean the Litani, because the amount of waste in the river is incredible,"
Jarrah said, noting that the problem lies not in securing of funds but rather in
the management of the dossier.
He called on municipalities to "prevent people from throwing waste into the
river, and to create a culture of protection of the Litani River and the
preservation of such important natural resources, which are the basis of our
livelihood, especially agriculture."
Jabak on Pharmacist's Day: Price reduction will include
3,200 medicines, efforts are pinned on supporting local industry, closing
phantom infirmaries, establishing a central laboratory
Sun 09 Jun 2019/NNA - Public Health Minister, Jamil Jabak, outlined Sunday his
Ministry's policy on regulating the pharmaceutical sector in terms of lowering
prices, raising the quality level and activating inspection to ensure proper
health among citizens. This came during his patronage of the Pharmacist's Day
reception organized by the Pharmacists' Syndicate at the Phoenicia Hotel in
Beirut, devoted to tackling the role of pharmacists in the rationalization of
the drug bill. Jabak disclosed that "the reduction of prices will include 3,200
medicines," adding that his Ministry accords "special priority to restructuring
the pharmaceutical sector, thus leading to the provision of great support for
high quality medicine at very reasonable prices that are accessible to
patients.""We have made a commitment and promise to advance the medical,
pharmacological and pharmaceutical status in Lebanon, and we have taken the
initiative to begin doing so," vowed Jabak. He disclosed that efforts will be
focused on supporting the local pharmaceutical industry and closing of all
"phantom infirmaries" while working to establish a central laboratory to examine
medicines, food supplements, water, air and all components related to modern
pharmaceutical tests that are very sophisticated and of high quality, in light
of the country's urgent need at the health and environmental level.
Kouyoumjian from Jezzine: To keep developmental projects away from political
differences
Sun 09 Jun 2019/NNA - Social Affairs Minister, Richard Kouyoumjian, called
Sunday for keeping developmental projects away from political difference in the
country. "Democracy in Lebanon is represented by municipal and mayoral elections
because the voter has direct contact with his constituents. I hope that your
local projects and the development of your areas will be joint projects away
from political differences," he said, addressing citizens and officials in
Jezzine during his visit to the region earlier today. "I am calling from Jezzine
today on my fellow ministers, my brethrens at the Parliament House, the three
Presidents and all officials, to rescue the associations and institutions that
have reached the red line, being on the verge of bankruptcy," he went on. "The
citizen of Jezzine should stay in his land and residents of Beirut must be
invited to visit Jezzine during weekends and occasions...I congratulate you on
living together in this region," he added. Kouyoumjian planted a Cedar tree in a
land belonging to the Lebanese Forces Party in the area of Jezzine during his
tour, following which he headed to the building of the Union of Municipalities
of Jezzine where he had a meeting with Union President, Khalil Harfoush, and
heads of municipalities of the region.
Hassan Says ISF ‘Extremist’ against Terror, Othman Defends Remarks, Institution
Naharnet/09 June/2019/Interior Minister Raya al-Hassan on Sunday said the
Internal Security Forces institution is “extremist” in its efforts against
terrorism, as ISF chief Maj. Gen. Imad Othman clarified his remarks about the
Islamic State-inspired gunman who killed four troops in Tripoli.
“The ugly crime that hit Tripoli was made by the remnants of the terrorism which
Lebanon has succeeded in the fight against it,” Hassan said in a speech marking
the anniversary of the ISF’s creation. “The ISF is extremist in its efforts to
eradicate the black terrorism, and it is a security valve that is cooperating
with the other security institutions to preserve the country’s stability,” she
added. Othman for his part explained what he meant by saying in the wake of the
attack that the militant was “psychologically unstable.” “Anyone who thinks of
carrying out any act of terror is a mentally- and psychologically-ill creature
and we meant that no sane person can murder people,” Othman said. In a possible
jab at Free Patriotic Movement chief MP Jebran Bassil, the ISF chief added: “No
matter how much schemers try to fight your institution, we will remain proud of
what we have accomplished, because we were the first to launch the spark of the
fight against corruption.” “We will remain proud of what we are doing and our
conscience is clear with our reasonable and firm stances that we have taken in
the most difficult circumstances,” Othman went on to say.
Tension forces evacuation of Syrian refugee camp in Lebanon
The Associated Press, Deir al-Ahmar/Sunday, 9 June 2019/Dozens of Syrian
refugees dismantled their tents, filled trucks with belongings and left a camp
they lived in for years in eastern Lebanon on Sunday after local authorities
ordered them to evacuate in the aftermath of a brawl with local firefighters.
Lebanese officials say the decision to evacuate is to prevent revenge attacks
and further tension after residents of the town threatened to storm the camp. A
curfew on the Syrian refugees living in Deir al-Ahmar, estimated at 6,000, was
put in place for two days and police patrolled the area. “This is to ensure
their safety and to stop the bloodshed,” said Jean Fakhry, a Lebanese
municipality official in Deir al-Ahmar told The Associated Press. The evacuation
of more than 90 tents reflects the growing tension in Lebanon over hosting more
than 1 million Syrian refugees since 2011.
A country of nearly 5 million, Lebanon’s infrastructure and economy has been
overwhelmed by the arrival of those fleeing the war next door. Mostly
impoverished and dispossessed, many settled in the country’s east, living in
squalid camps and struggling to work and survive in the area known for its harsh
winters and sizzling summers. As Lebanon deals with an economic crunch, many
Lebanese politicians and groups turned to Syrians, calling for them to go home
saying the violence there is winding down. In the scorching sun of the early
afternoon, Syrian men, women and children pulled down cloth and carpets covering
the wooden structures that served as their temporary homes. They piled
mattresses, pots and pans into trucks headed to a new location miles away. Local
officials say 600 lived in the camps but UN estimates said it was closer to 400
people. It is at least the second time the refugees, most of them from Idlib
province, had to pack their lives into boxes to find new, safer areas. Samar
Awad, a 27-year old Syrian, said the camp’s residents are being sent to a new
site with no electricity or water. She said it may be equally dangerous as their
reputation as troublemakers will precede them. “We have been living here for
seven years,” said Awad. “It has become like home, and more.”Awad hails from
Saraqeb, a town in Idlib, the last area controlled by the opposition to Syria’s
President Bashar al-Assad.
Seasonal farmers from Syria, like Awad, used to come to Lebanon even before the
war. But after the violence, many of them stayed, overwhelming the local
communities. Last week, a fire broke out on the hill overlooking the camp
sparking panic. When firefighters arrived, residents pelted their vehicle with
stones over what they said was the rescuers’ late arrival. A brawl ensued and a
firefighter was injured and tents were damaged. The army arrived on the scene
and arrested more than 30 Syrians. The camp residents fled and later, unknown
assailants set three of the tents ablaze. The tensions led to the evacuation
order and the lockdown on refugees in the area. “There was local anger and
revolt,” Fakhry, the Lebanese official said. “We decided they should not come
back to avoid another problem and bloodshed.”The UN refugee agency was on the
scene on Sunday as the Syrians prepared to leave. In a statement, the agency
said all perpetrators should be prosecuted as an investigation is underway. “A
collective punishment of Syrian refugees in Lebanon will further escalate the
situation,” the UNHCR said. “All refugees in Lebanon should not be punished over
one incident and outside the justice system.”
Political horse-trading weakens Lebanon
Makram Rabah/The Arab Weekly/June 09/2019
The end of Ramadan and the Eid al-Fitr celebration were tragic for the Lebanese
because festivities were interrupted by terrorism in Tripoli, leaving four law
enforcement officers dead and a country in shock.
Yet the dreadful act, which was carried out by a local jihadi lone wolf who
briefly fought with the Islamic State in Syria, fuelled a more violent verbal
dispute, one that has been raging between factions of Lebanese Prime Minister
Saad Hariri and Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, President Michel Aoun’s
son-in-law and president of the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM).
This intense and ferocious debate is not new but resurfaces every time Bassil,
ever aspiring to the Lebanese presidency, openly challenges the position of the
Sunni prime minister, an act that takes a sectarian undertone and convulses an
already polarised nation.
Such political bickering has been the norm the last few years, yet the level to
which politicians have sunk and their willingness to exploit their power are at
a record low.
The abuse of power is palpable in the showdown between Bassil and Hariri’s
faction, the Future Movement, with Bassil vying to depose the Director of the
Internal Security Forces (ISF) Major-General Imad Othman, a Sunni officer whom
Bassil accuses of usurping power and operating without oversight.
Bassil and his faction are very clear that Aoun’s term is one that will see the
reinstatement of the Maronite hegemony over power, a status they lost to the
Sunnis following the end of the Lebanese civil war in 1990 and the adoption of
the Taif Agreement.
The power feud between Bassil and the Future Movement recently moved to the
judiciary with Bassil allegedly instructing military prosecutor Peter Germanos
to exonerate Major Suzan Hajj, who was accused of falsifying evidence leading to
the unlawful detention of actor Ziad Itani.
Hajj, the former head of the Lebanese Anti-Cybercrime and Intellectual Property
Bureau who enjoys Aoun’s patronage, made news when the ISF Intelligence Branch
provided evidence allegedly implicating her in framing Itani.
The Itani affair provided both sides with an arena to exchange blame with each
side accusing the other of trying to subdue the judiciary and law enforcement
agencies to serve their own goals.
However, following the Tripoli incident, the FPM took its assault further,
accusing Othman and the Sunni community of harbouring terrorism and providing
protection for jihadists.
This dangerous sectarian undertone and the reaction of the Hariri faction go
beyond merely instigating strife but dangerously erode the base of the Lebanese
state and transforms the judiciary and the police into sectarian pawns that lack
the confidence and support of the general public, rendering them ineffective.
While true that all aspects of governance have been traditionally controlled by
the ruling elite, the brazen way Bassil, as well as Hariri, are taking liberties
by declaring high-ranking bureaucrats as part of their political fiefdom is
utterly disgraceful.
What is more appalling is that this outrageous tug of war has become recurrent.
Yet both Hariri and Bassil seem to be sticking with their sacred alliance, which
led to the election of Aoun as president two years ago.
Despite these brief falling outs, the Bassil-Hariri political and allegedly
financial arrangement has persisted and used the populist feuds to justify and
perhaps reinforce their alliance vis-a-vis their supporters. Remarkably, every
time Hariri had to make a major concession or a lucrative deal with Bassil this
would be preceded by a mock verbal fight such as the current one while failing
to address the deficiencies.
Time and again, Hariri has been criticised by his Sunni supporters and his
political allies for not properly assuming the reins of the premiership and
instead allowing Aoun and Bassil to infringe on his constitutional prerogatives.
Interestingly, throughout this recent feud, Hariri has not properly responded to
Bassil’s attacks but preferred to stay somewhat silent on the matter and allow
for Bassil’s rampage to run its course.
Wishing to divert attention from the abysmal budget passed by his cabinet,
Hariri’s only way to muster support is to lean on his sectarian Sunni power
base, a tactic Bassil also uses with his Christian power base.
Hariri and Bassil have major obstacles to overcome, including senior
bureaucratic appointments that their opponents and allies will try to sway to
their side. Having this tense atmosphere allows them to play both sides.
As long as Hariri and Bassil have their arrangement, which includes sanctioning
Hezbollah’s continued hegemony over all other Lebanese matters, the Lebanese
state will become increasingly weaker, resulting in a potentially dangerous
political vacuum that threatens stability and makes it easier for terrorists and
lone wolves to operate.
**Makram Rabah is a lecturer at the American University of Beirut, Department of
History. He is the author of A Campus at War: Student Politics at the American
University of Beirut, 1967-1975.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on June 09-10/2019
Iran threatens Europe with unspecified 'action' if it does not 'normalise'
economic ties
Reuters/June 09/2019/Iran said on Sunday Europe was in no position to criticise
Tehran for its military capabilities and it called on European leaders to
normalise trade ties with the Islamic Republic despite US sanctions, or face
consequences. President Donald Trump last year withdrew the United States from
world powers' 2015 nuclear deal with Iran and reimposed sweeping sanctions. The
west European signatories to the deal - France, Britain and Germany - share the
same concerns as the United States over Iran's ballistic missile development and
regional activities. However, they have defended the nuclear accord as the best
way to limit Iran:s enrichment of uranium, a potential pathway to nuclear
weapons, and a basis for future negotiations on a broader palette of security
and other longstanding disputes. "Europeans are not in a position to criticise
Iran for issues outside the JCPOA," Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif was
quoted as saying by the state broadcaster, using the acronym for the nuclear
deal. "The Europeans and other signatories of the JCPOA should normalise
economic ties with Iran...We will halt our commitments or will take action in
accordance with their measures." Last month, Iran scaled back some commitments
under the 2015 deal and warned that in 60 days it would resume enriching uranium
to a higher degree than that permitted by the accord if the Europeans failed to
shield it against the U.S. sanctions, which aim to cripple its oil-dependent
economy. German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas will visit Iran this week to explore
options for preserving the fraying nuclear non-proliferation pact. Iranian
Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani on Sunday criticised French President Emmanuel
Macron for saying last week in a meeting with Trump that they shared the same
objectives on Iran.
Macron said France wanted to make sure Tehran will not get nuclear weapons: "We
had an accord until 2025 and we want to go further and have full certainty in
the long run... (Then) reduce ballistic activity and contain Iran regionally."
Tehran unveiled on Sunday a new "domestically-produced" air defence system with
the capability to trace six targets - including fighetr jets, bombers and drones
at the same time and destroy them with missiles. "Iran will increase its
military capabilities to protect its national security and interests, and it
will not ask permission from anyone on this matter," Defence Minister Amir
Hatami said at an unveiling ceremony for the system.
Pope Francis appeals for peace, dialogue in Sudan
Reuters, Vatican CitySunday, 9 June 2019/Pope Francis on Sunday appealed for
peace in Sudan following a bloody crackdown by security forces on pro-democracy
protesters in Khartoum last week. “The news coming from Sudan is giving rise to
pain and concern. We pray for these people, so that the violence ceases and the
common good is sought in the dialogue,” the pope said in his weekly address to
crowds in St Peter’s Square. Opposition medics say 113 people were killed in
this week’s violence in the Sudanese capital, while the government has put the
death toll at 61, including three members of the security services. Sudan’s main
alliance of opposition groups and protesters have urged workers and employees to
stay home on Sunday, launching what it called a campaign of civil disobedience
to force military rulers to hand over power to civilians.
New US ambassador meets with Iraqi FM in Baghdad
AFP, BaghdadSunday, 9 June 2019/The new US ambassador in Baghdad submitted his
credentials to Iraq’s top diplomat, the foreign ministry announced Sunday,
joining the embassy just weeks after Washington brought “non-essential”
diplomatic staff home. Matthew Tueller has served as US ambassador to both Yemen
and Kuwait, and had been previously posted in Baghdad as a political adviser at
the American embassy. On Sunday, Tueller submitted his diplomatic credentials to
Iraqi Foreign Minister Mohammed Ali al-Hakim, who said Baghdad would “guarantee
all necessary conditions for the success of his mission.”The US Senate confirmed
Tueller’s appointment in Iraq in mid-May, a day after the State Department
announced it was withdrawing all “non-essential” members from its embassy in
Baghdad and consulate in Erbil. The move came amid escalating tensions between
the United States and Iran that have repeatedly seen Iraq - an ally of both
countries - caught in the middle. The US withdrew from the landmark 2015 nuclear
deal with Iran last year, then reinstated tough sanctions on the Islamic
Republic. In April, it designated Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps as a
“terrorist organization,” prompting Iran to slap US troops across the region
with the same designation. And last month, the US deployed a carrier group and
B-52 bombers to the Gulf over unspecified Iranian “threats” and a rocket landed
in Baghdad’s high-security Green Zone, where the US embassy is based. It sparked
fears of a spillover into Iraq, which relies heavily on Iran for energy and
consumer goods and where various Shiite armed groups have close ties to Tehran.
Qatar admits having different ‘assessment’ to US on Iran
threat
Qatari Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin
Abdulrahman Al-Thani said Qatar respected US policy on Iran, but added: “We have
our own
Arab News/09 June/2019/LONDON: Qatar has its "own assessment” different to the
US on policy towards Iran, the country’s foreign minister said Sunday.The
comments are expected to alarm members of the Trump administration, which has
beefed up America’s military presence in the region after an increased Iranian
threat. Qatar hosts the biggest US military base in the Middle East but
has become increasingly close to Iran despite Washington viewing Tehran as the
world’s largest state sponsor of terror. Since withdrawing from the 2015
agreement to curb Iran’s nuclear program, President Donald Trump has ramped up
sanctions and vowed to curb Tehran’s destabilizing activities in the region.
Speaking in London, Qatari Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani
said Qatar respected US policy on Iran, but added: “We have our own
assessment.”“There is a big pressure on Iran’s economy, but Iran lived under
sanctions for 40 years. It’s never been like this but they survived. We don’t
see the repetition of the same way will create a different result,” he said.
“They don’t want to have a continuation of the sanctions at the same level and
enter negotiations. They believe there was an agreement and US was part of the
agreement.” Sheikh Mohammed said Qatar and other countries have been talking to
both Iran and the United States about de-escalation, urging both sides to meet
and find a compromise. “We believe that at one point there should an engagement
– it cannot last forever like this,” he said. “Since they are not willing to
engage in further escalation, they should come up with ideas that open the
doors.”Qatar’s close ties with Iran, along with its support of extremist groups,
was one of the reasons Saudi Arabia, the UAE and other Gulf and Arab countries
cut ties with Doha two years ago.
The comments from Qatar on a differing approach to Iran come after the US last
month deployed an aircraft carrier strike group and B-52 long-range bombers to
the region to tackle escalatory action by Iran. The US has also said Iran was
almost certainly behind an attack on four oil tankers, including two Saudi
ships, off the coast of the UAE. Sheikh Mohammed also spoke about the
Trump administration's impending Middle East peace deal, saying there was a
disconnect between the Palestinians and the US over the blueprint. "It cannot be
a solution like, sort of, imposed on the Palestinians – no country in the Arab
world can accept that," Sheikh Mohammed said, of the deal to end decades of
confict with Israel.*With Reuters
Goalkeeper Turned Iconic Rebel Fighter Dies in Northwest Syria
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/June 09/2019/A Syrian goalkeeper turned rebel
fighter who starred in an award-winning documentary has died of wounds sustained
fighting regime forces in northwestern Syria, his faction said. Abdel-Basset al-Sarout,
27, was among dozens of fighters killed since Thursday in clashes on the edges
of the Idlib region. Some 215 fighters from both sides have been killed in the
fighting, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. That number
includes 65 regime fighters, as well as 48 jihadists and allied rebels on
Saturday alone. The region, dominated by an alliance led by Syria's former
al-Qaida affiliate, is supposed to be protected by a months-old buffer zone
deal. But it has come under deadly regime bombardment in recent weeks, sparking
fears for its roughly three million residents. Before Syria's eight-year civil
war, Sarout, from the central city of Homs, was a goalkeeper for the country's
youth football team. When peaceful demonstrations broke out against President
Bashar al-Assad's regime in 2011, he joined in and soon became a popular singer
of protest songs. Following a brutal government crackdown on the protests, he
took up arms. Sarout starred in the documentary "Return to Homs" by Syrian
director Talal Derki, which tracked his evolution from protest leader to
fighter, and won a top prize at the Sundance Film Festival in 2014. Jameel al-Saleh,
commander of the rebel faction Jaish al-Izza, announced Sarout's death in a
message on Twitter, describing him as a "martyr".Another of the group's
commanders, Mahmoud al-Mahmoud, also confirmed the fighter's death. "He was a
well-mannered young man and one of the fiercest fighters I have known," he told
AFP. He said the fighter had been wounded two days previously in the battle for
Tal Maleh, a village in the north of Hama province.
'Goalkeeper, bard' and fighter
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Sarout was wounded in overnight
battles Thursday to Friday while fighting in the ranks of Jaish al-Izza. "He
died of his wounds on Saturday," said the head of the Britain-based monitor,
Rami Abdel Rahman. Sarout was evacuated from Homs in 2014 under a surrender deal
with the regime to end a two-year siege of its historical centre, according to
the Observatory. His father and four of his brothers were killed during bombing
and clashes in Homs, it said. On Saturday, Syrian activists and opposition
figures took to Twitter to mourn him. "The goalkeeper of freedom, the icon of
Homs, the bard of the squares, the unforgettable sound of the Syrian revolution
has been martyred," wrote researcher and opposition supporter Ahmad Abazeed.
Hadi al-Bahra, a member of the opposition Syrian Negotiations Commission,
posted: "He died hoping to realise the dreams of Syrians." Since 2011, the
conflict has killed 370,000 people and displaced millions. Today, Assad's forces
are in control of almost 60 percent of Syria, after a series of Russian-backed
victories against rebels and jihadists. A large northeastern swathe of the
country remains in Kurdish hands, while the Idlib region is dominated by the
Hayat Tahrir al-Sham alliance.
'Totemic figure'
Syria analyst Shiraz Maher described Sarout as "a totemic figure within the
revolution". "His trajectory reflects the many twists and turns of this
constantly mutating conflict," said the director of the International Centre for
the Study of Radicalisation in London. "The symbolism of his loss is huge. It's
another loss for the stalled and stunted revolutionaries of 2011," he told AFP.
Almost half of the Idlib region's residents have been displaced from other parts
of the war-torn country, including under deals to hand back those areas to
government control. The region, also spanning slivers of neighboring Latakia,
Aleppo and Hama provinces, is nominally protected by a September buffer zone
deal signed by Russia and rebel backer Turkey. But the regime and their allies
have upped their deadly bombardment of the region since late April, killing more
than 330 civilians, according to the Observatory. The violence has also forced
more than 270,000 people to flee their homes and hit 24 health facilities, the
United Nations says. Late Thursday, HTS and rebel allies launched a
counterattack against government forces in the area of Tal Maleh to the
southwest of the Idlib region. Analysts predict the regime will continue to chip
away at the Idlib region, but say it is unlikely to unleash a major assault.
4 Killed on First Day of Sudan 'Civil Disobedience'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/09 June/2019/Four people were killed in Sudan on
Sunday on the first day of a "civil disobedience" campaign by protesters, a
doctors' committee linked to demonstrators said. Two people were shot dead in
the capital Khartoum and its twin city of Omdurman just across the Nile river,
the Central Committee for Sudanese Doctors said, adding two others died in a
hospital in Omdurman after being stabbed. The committee blamed the ruling
military council and paramilitary forces for the four deaths.It said a total of
118 people have been killed since a crackdown was launched on June 3 to disperse
a sit-in protest outside the military headquarters in the Sudanese capital.
Sudan’s protesters launch general strike after crackdown
The Associated Press, Khartoum/Sunday, 9 June 2019/Shops are closed and streets
are empty across Sudan’s capital on the first day of a general strike called for
by protest leaders demanding the resignation of the ruling military council. The
Sudanese Professionals Association (SPA) had called on people to stay home
Sunday in protest at the military’s deadly crackdown last week, when security
forces violently dispersed the group’s main sit-in outside the military
headquarters in Khartoum. The SPA spearheaded months of mass protests that led
to the military overthrow of President Omar al-Bashir in April, and had called
on people to remain in the streets until a full handover of power to
civilians.The group posted photos it said were of an empty Khartoum
International Airport. It says airport workers and pilots are taking part in the
civil disobedience.
US envoy’s annexation comments show ‘extremist’ approach: Palestinian leaders
AFP, RamallahSunday, 9 June 2019/Palestinian leaders say a US envoy’s comments
on Israel having the right to annex at least parts of the occupied West Bank
show “extremists” are involved in White House policy on the issue. In a
statement late Saturday in response to US ambassador to Israel David Friedman’s
comments in a New York Times interview, a Palestinian government spokesman said
some leading US policy on the issue were “extremists” lacking in “political
maturity.” The Palestinian foreign ministry said it was looking into filing a
complaint with the International Criminal Court on the issue. Palestine
Liberation Organization secretary general Saeb Erekat on Twitter called Friedman
an “extreme ambassador of the settlers.” “Their vision is about annexation of
occupied territory, a war crime under international law,” he said. Erekat also
renewed a Palestinian call for countries to boycott a June 25-26 conference in
Bahrain to discuss economic aspects of a peace deal the White House has been
working on. In the interview published Saturday, Friedman said some degree of
annexation of the West Bank would be legitimate. “Under certain circumstances, I
think Israel has the right to retain some, but unlikely all, of the West Bank,”
he said. Israel occupied the West Bank in the 1967 Six-Day War and its
construction of settlements there is viewed as a major stumbling block to peace
as they are built on land the Palestinians see as part of their future state.
Friedman has in the past been a supporter of Israeli settlements, as has the
family of Jared Kushner, US President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and adviser
leading efforts to put together the peace deal. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu pledged ahead of April elections to begin annexing West Bank
settlements. Bringing settlements under Israeli sovereignty on a large-scale
could end any remaining hopes for a two-state solution to Israel’s conflict with
the Palestinians. More than 600,000 Jewish settlers now live in the West Bank
and annexed east Jerusalem among some three million Palestinians. On the
long-delayed peace plan, Friedman said it was aimed at improving the quality of
life for Palestinians but would fall well short of a “permanent resolution to
the conflict.”Publication of the plan looks set to be further delayed after the
Israeli parliament called a snap general election for September, the second this
year. The plan is regarded as too sensitive to release during the campaign. The
Palestinian leadership has already rejected the plan, saying Trump’s moves so
far show him to be blatantly biased in favor of Israel. Those moves include
recognizing the disputed city of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and cutting
hundreds of thousands of dollars in aid to the Palestinians.
India's Modi Makes Unscheduled Stop at Bombed Sri Lanka
Church
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/09 June/2019/India's Prime Minister
Narendra Modi Sunday made an unscheduled stop at a Catholic church bombed during
the Easter suicide attacks ahead of his official welcome to Sri Lanka. Modi's
entourage made a detour to St Anthony's shrine on their way to President
Maithripala Sirisena's office, where a red carpet military parade awaited. "I am
confident Sri Lanka will rise again," Modi said on Twitter while posting photos
of himself at the church. "Cowardly acts of terror cannot defeat the spirit of
Sri Lanka. India stands in solidarity with the people of Sri Lanka." Modi is
stopping in Colombo on his return home after an official visit to neighbouring
Maldives, where he inaugurated a coastal radar system and military training
centre. His brief but politically significant visit to the two neighbours comes
as New Delhi seeks to fend off Chinese influence on the strategic nations. The
Maldives, a low-lying archipelago of more than a thousand tiny coral islands
south of the Indian subcontinent, straddles the world's busiest east-west
maritime route. Sri Lanka is located at a halfway point on the same sea route.
India, the traditional ally of both Sri Lanka and the Maldives, had watched with
unease as former governments of strongman leader Abdulla Yameen of the Maldives
and Sri Lanka's Mahinda Rajapakse leaned towards Beijing for political and
financial support. Yameen's election loss last September, however, has seen the
new administration under President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih swing back towards New
Delhi. Colombo too has moved back to New Delhi after the defeat of Rajapakse in
January 2015.Last month, Colombo announced entering into partnership with India
and Japan to develop a deep-sea container terminal next to a controversial
$500-million Chinese-run facility in the capital.
A memorandum of cooperation (MOC) had been signed between the three countries to
develop what is known as the East Terminal of Colombo port. China owns 85
percent of the adjoining Colombo International Container Terminal, which was
commissioned in 2013. The state-owned Sri Lanka Ports Authority owns the
remaining 15 percent.More than two thirds of transhipment containers handled by
Colombo originated from or was destined for India. Sri Lanka, unable to repay a
huge Chinese loan, handed over another deep-sea port in the south of the island
to a Beijing company in December 2017 in a deal that raised concerns at home and
abroad.
Israeli navy boards ship from Turkey that was set on fire
The Associated Press, Jerusalem/Sunday, 9 June 2019/The Israeli military says
naval forces boarded a cargo ship off the coast that had been set on fire.The
military says it was alerted early Sunday to an anchored ship off northern
Israel whose hull was ablaze. At the request of the ship’s captain, Israeli
forces boarded and searched the ship. Hours later, the military said it
apprehended a hidden passenger and transferred him to police for questioning.
Local media say the ship was making its way from Turkey to an Israeli port and
that a stowaway tried to set the vessel ablaze, causing damage. The ship was
said to have sailed under a Panamanian flag. The military says the incident is
over and would provide no further details
German FM in Jordan in bid to ease US-Iran tensions
The Associated Press, Amman/Sunday, 9 June 2019/German Foreign Minister Heiko
Maas met on Sunday with Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Al-Safadi in the
Jordanian capital Amman. Mass and Al-Safadi discussed regional security,
countering ISIS extremist group, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the Syria
crisis, funding for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine
Refugees (UNRWA) and bilateral relations. The talks also focused on the economic
challenges facing the kingdom. Maas said Germany will support Jordan with an
unconditional loan of 100 million US dollars. Al-Safadi said both countries were
in agreement that the two-state solution is the only solution to ending the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Maas’ visit to Jordan is part of a wider trip to
the Middle East seeking to de-escalate tensions between Iran and the United
States.
The German foreign minister visited Iraq on Saturday and expected in Iran on
Monday.
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources
published
on June 09-10/2019
The Mystery of God /June 09/2019
In the Name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit; immediately, the
faithful starts with sign of the Cross. Many would question that, how they are
related the sign of humiliation and the sign of victory and the faithful raise
his head to summarize his faith by the sign of the Cross. The speech of Paul to
the people of Corinth is very simple. it was similar to a mother would like to
teach her baby many things by using a simple language that would convince his
mind and approach his heart to understand his mother who approaches her child
with love. The Apostle of the Nations was very faithful to the inspiration of
the Spirit of God to carry out the personal experience to receive the Good News
that plant the seed of faith in the hearts of the People of God. The simplicity
of the mystery of God has been hidden from the wise of the World to be revealed
to humble people. This is the plan of salvation that has been established by the
Heavenly Father before the Creation of the world. His plan is that, to
communicate the life of God to all human being. “as he chose us in him, before
the foundation of the world, to be holy and without blemish before him In love,
he destined us for adoption to himself through Jesus Christ, in accord with the
favor of his will, for the praise of the glory of his grace that he granted us
in the beloved. The Mystery of Salvation of God has been established in the
Church who is the Pillar and the Foundation of the Truth. The Mystery of God and
his act of Salvation are hidden from the wise and the power of the world. In the
end of the ages, God has revealed them to a special people like his disciples
and those who believe in Jesus Christ. John expressed highly this revelation the
Jesus Christ who became a victim to come eagerly according to his free will to
save the World.
“Through divine revelation, God chose to show forth and communicate himself and
the eternal decisions of his will regarding the salvation of men.” (DV 6) 5.
"The obedience of faith" (Rom. 13:26; see 1:5; 2 Cor 10:5-6) "is to be given to
God who reveals, an obedience by which man commits his whole self freely to God,
offering the full submission of intellect and will to God who reveals," (4) and
freely assenting to the truth revealed by Him. To make this act of faith, the
grace of God and the interior help of the Holy Spirit must precede and assist,
moving the heart and turning it to God, opening the eyes of the mind and giving
"joy and ease to everyone in assenting to the truth and believing it." (5) To
bring about an ever deeper understanding of revelation the same Holy Spirit
constantly brings faith to completion by His gifts.
When Jesus, comforted his disciples , he promised that he would not live them
orphans ; he will continue to stay with them not similar to what they had
promise the Spirit of God will establish a strong relationship to have more
confidence the Father and the Son with the holy Spirit are living in the hearts
of the faithful.
Many people would ask if what Jesus says is real.
Much time we would look around to see everything is gloomy and dark, the world
is deteriorating to become vacant of love and mercy. This is a sign of the
absence of the Spirit of God. We are bubbling words from stories or quotations
from the scriptures without understand the meaning of that. Most of the time we
are hopeless because of different reasons one of them, we prefer the world that
is consuming our love and our energy to compete the others.
I would like to change starting with myself, my prayers. How to pray do I ask
the presence of the kingdom of God in my life as the Scriptures promise to day:
“Whoever loves me will keep my word, and my Father will love him, and will come
to him and make our dwelling with him.”
The revolution is not accusing the others but seeking the kingdom of God inside
of me have my heart a special place for God and the whole body is the temple of
the Holy Spirit.
Many would say how we start?
Saint Paul says: “The Word is near you, in your mouth and in your heart.” Many
times we repeated it and we memorize it because of proclamation in catechism,
radio, TV and preaching in the Church. This word is sterilized for many reasons.
it needs the presence of the Holy Spirit to be ready to sprout and become
effective in the hearts like those who were present listening to the
proclamation of St. Peter as the book of the acts says: “Now when they heard
this, they were cut to the heart, and they asked Peter and the other apostles,
“What are we to do, my brothers?”
Peter [said] to them, “Repent and be baptized,* every one of you, in the name of
Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you will receive the gift of
the Holy Spirit.
For the promise is made to you and to your children and to all those far off,
whomever the Lord our God will call.”
many of our saints whom we honor head one thing in their lives is to live the
promises of God that seeking his kingdom and they became the temple of the
Spirit. Many would be amazed to see the tomb of a Saint to be a source of graces
and inspirations, such as St Sharbel Padre Pio St Therese and others.
The humble body has been transformed to be a chosen vessel of graces.
This marvelous grace that came upon the apostles through Christ and the out
pouring of the Holy Spirit would overflowing over the faithful through the
proclamation of the Good News and the receiving the power through their
communion.
"Europe Will Not Be Europe"
Guy Millière/Gatestone Institute/June 09/2019
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14353/europe-will-not-be-europe
In the United Kingdom, the Brexit Party victory at 31.6% of the vote was a
remarkable achievement that showed the persistent willingness of millions of
Britons to leave the European Union. The "populist" positions -- the defense of
national sovereignty and European civilization, refusal of uncontrolled
immigration and diktats of Brussels technocrats -- have gained ground.
The parties that have ruled Europe for decades obtained weak results, but, with
rare exceptions, did not collapse -- and will continue to dominate the European
Union.
The Greens may gain more influence – along with its consequences. To anyone who
read the Greens' programs, it is evident that they are essentially leftists with
an environmental green mask. They support unrestricted immigration and
multiculturalism. They are...resolutely hostile to any defense of Western
civilization, to free enterprise and free markets. They are often in favor of
zero growth. Most of them support an apocalyptic vision of climate change and
say that the survival of humanity will be at stake around the corner if Europe
does not take drastic measures to "save the planet". All of them are in favor of
authoritarian decisions imposed from Brussels to all of Europe.
A European parliament placed under the influence of the Greens will almost
certainly accelerate the slide towards more power given to the unelected members
of the European Commission, and a phasing out of nuclear energy and fossil
fuels. Policies favorable to still more immigration already are in preparation.
On the evening of May 26, Italian Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of the
Interior Matteo Salvini commented on the results of the European elections, "A
new Europe is born." The party he leads, the League, had just won with 34.3% of
the vote. Other parties defined in Europe as "populist" also won: in Hungary,
the Fidesz-KDNP alliance (Hungarian Civic Alliance and the Christian Democratic
People's Party) received 52.3% of the vote. In Poland, the PiS (Law and Justice)
party won 45.4% of the vote. Sebastian Kurz's Austrian People's Party (ÖVP) won
34.6% of the vote and the Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ), his ally, was awarded
17.2%, despite a recent scandal that led to the resignation of Heinz-Christian
Strache, chairma of the FPO, from his post as Vice-Chancellor of Austria (the
Kurtz government fell on May 27). In the United Kingdom, the Brexit Party
victory -- at 31.6% of the vote -- was a remarkable achievement that signaled
the persistent willingness of millions of Britons to leave the European Union.
There, the "populist" positions -- the defense of national sovereignty and
European civilization, refusal of uncontrolled immigration and diktats of
Brussels technocrats -- gained ground.
In many European countries, however, the results of the "populists" were mixed.
In France, Marine Le Pen's National Rally finished first, but with 23.3% of the
vote: only 0.9% more than The Republic on the Move, created three years ago by
Emmanuel Macron. The extreme unpopularity of the French President apparently did
not cost him much. In Sweden, the Sweden Democrats received only 15.4%, or two
percent less than in the 2018 Swedish general elections. The Alternative for
Germany (AfD) received 11%. In Belgium, the Vlams Belang received 11.2% of the
vote. In Spain, Vox, with 6.2%, had to deal with even more disappointing
results. In the Netherlands, the Forum for Democracy got 10.9% and Geert
Wilders's Party for Freedom, which fell to 3.5%, no longer has a seat.
The "populist wave" often mentioned in recent weeks did not overwhelm Europe.
"Populist" parties will have only a little more than twenty percent of the seats
in the European Parliament: enough to be heard, but not enough to exert
influence.
The parties that have ruled Europe for decades obtained weak results, but, with
rare exceptions, did not collapse -- and will continue to dominate the European
Union. The crushing defeat of the British Conservative Party (8.9%, the lowest
in its history) seems to have been the result of Theresa May's inability to
deliver Brexit. In France, the sharp downfall of The Republicans (8.5%) and the
Socialist Party (6.2%) can be explained by most of their leaders (Republicans
and socialists) having joined Macron's The Republic on the Move party two years
ago. In Germany, the CDU-CSU alliance obtained only 28.9% of the vote, but it
was enough to win nevertheless. The socialist SPD received an honorable score,
15.8%.
In several Western European countries, socialist parties prevailed, indicating
that apparently socialism is not losing ground. The Spanish Socialist Party
triumphed (32.8%), as well as the Portuguese Socialist Party (33.4%). In the
Netherlands, the Labor Party (18.9%) finished first. In Italy, socialists
obtained 22%; in Denmark, 21.5%, and in Sweden, 23.6%.
The center-right European People's Party (EPP) and the Party of European
Socialists (PES), however, lost ground. Their alliance will have only 43% of the
seats. For the first time since 1979, when the first European Parliament
elections were held, they will not be able to form a majority, although they
nevertheless remain dominant. All the same, they will need allies and will
likely find them in ALDE (Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe), a
group composed of center-left parties that support still more abandonment of
sovereignty as well as an even more centrally-controlled European Union.
The EPP-PES alliance will also likely find allies in the real winners of the
elections: the green parties. The German Greens (20.5% of the vote) finished
second. In France, the EELV (Europe Ecology, The Greens), with 13.5% of the
votes, finished third. The Greens also showed strength in the Netherlands
(10.9%), Sweden (11.4%), Denmark (13.2%), Austria (14.1%) and Belgium (15.2%).
As the EPP-PES alliance will rely on those parties to counter and isolate the
populist parties, the Greens may gain still more influence -- along with its
consequences.
To anyone who has read the Greens' programs, it is evident that they are
essentially leftists with an environmental green mask. They support unrestricted
immigration and multiculturalism. They are seemingly blind to the dangers
arising from the Islamization of Europe and resolutely hostile to any defense of
Western civilization, to free enterprise and free markets. They are often in
favor of zero growth. Most of them support an apocalyptic vision of climate
change and say that the survival of humanity will soon be at stake if Europe
does not take drastic measures to "save the planet". All of them are in favor of
authoritarian decisions imposed from Brussels on all of Europe.
A European parliament placed under the influence of the Greens will almost
certainly accelerate the slide towards more power given to the unelected members
of the European Commission, and a phasing out of nuclear energy and fossil
fuels. Policies favorable to still more immigration already are in preparation.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán continues to emphasize the dangers of
Islamic mass immigration into Europe and has defined Hungary as "the last
bastion against Islamization of Europe." Italy's Salvini has said that "Europe
is threatened by Islamization" and could become an "Islamic caliphate". Most
other "populist" leaders, however, did not take risks and chose not to address
that issue. France's Marine Le Pen spoke about "extremist Islamism", but
immediately added that most European Muslims integrate. In Britain, Brexit Party
leader Nigel Farage did not say a word on the subject. Tommy Robinson, who made
Islamic danger the main theme of his campaign, was subjected to constant
harassment and barely received 2% of the vote. In the Netherlands, the leader of
the Forum for Democracy party, Thierry Baudet, defended the same positions as
Wilders, but avoided talking about Islam, and Wilders's party was basically
defeated.
Europe's severe demographic problems were barely mentioned during the campaign.
The idea that a change in population could occur was treated as if it were just
a "rightist" fantasy. Facts, however, are hard to ignore. Fertility rates in
almost all European countries are well below the replacement level of 2.1
children per woman. The figure for Italy is 1.45. In Germany it is 1.48; in
Spain 1.5; in Hungary 1.4, and in Poland 1.38. The only country in continental
Europe where a higher figure exists is France (1.97) -- but France also has the
largest Muslim population in Europe, and all available data show that birth
rates are far higher in Muslim families. The population of most European
countries is decreasing. Italy is losing 250,000 inhabitants a year, equivalent
to almost the population of Venice. Germany decided to welcome millions of
immigrants to stop its population decline; today, 12% of German citizens are
foreign-born. The massive influx of hundreds of thousands of Muslim immigrants
in 2015 was a societal disaster. Integration did not occur. Most of the
newcomers are still jobless and rely on welfare to survive. In addition, sexual
assault cases increased.
Anti-Semitic attacks have also increased. The situation has now grown so toxic
that Felix Klein, the Commissioner for Jewish Life in Germany and the Fight
against Anti-Semitism, recently urged Jews not to wear skullcaps in public.
Chancellor Merkel said that, "there is to this day not a single synagogue, not a
single day care centre for Jewish children, not a single school for Jewish
children that does not need to be guarded by German policemen." Although
investigations so far show that most anti-Semitic attacks come from Muslim
immigrants, she preferred to speak of the "specters of the past."
The situation in France is not much different. Sammy Ghozlan, director of the
National Bureau of Vigilance Against Anti-Semitism (BNVCA), alleges that all the
anti-Semitic attacks in the country have one thing in common: "the culprit is
Muslim". The French government claims that it fights anti-Semitism, but it
points only to "rightist and leftist anti-Semitism." It never speaks of Muslim
anti-Semitism.
Commenting on the results of the European elections -- and noting that:
"populist" movements will have no weight in the European Parliament; that the
Greens are gaining ground; that Islamization will not stop, and that
anti-Semitism will probably continue to rise -- the journalist Éric Zemmour said
on television that Europe is probably on the road to an irreversible decline.
The author Renaud Camus also noted in his diary that the European people seem to
be choosing euthanasia.
In the first paragraph of The Strange Death of Europe, Douglas Murray stated:
"By the end of the lifespan of most people currently alive, Europe will not be
Europe".
Despite the enthusiasm of some commentators on the results of "populist"
movements, signs seem to show that European elections have not stopped Europe's
barreling towards decline. If nothing changes, in a few decades Europe truly
could no longer be Europe.
*Dr. Guy Millière, a professor at the University of Paris, is the author of 27
books on France and Europe.
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or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
The US-Iran showdown after Mecca summits
Khattar Abou Diab/The Arab Weekly/June 09/2019
The Gulf, Arab and Islamic summits in Mecca were a last-chance call to protect
peace and security in the Gulf and the Middle East.
Amid the escalation between Washington and Tehran, the Gulf and Arab leaders
rejected Iran's interference and its threats to stability in the region.
Indeed, the entire region is affected by the muscle flexing illustrated by US
President Donald Trump's strategy of "extreme pressure" on Iran and by Iran’s
reactions wavering between military posturing and ambiguous, vague and
non-constructive diplomatic proposals.
With mounting tensions, the summer promises to be hot. It is unlikely the
escalation will reach the level of military confrontation but the growing
likelihood of a dead end on the diplomatic level could lead to a limited
military conflict because it is difficult for Trump, despite his sometimes
conciliatory tweets and statements, to back down after two years of harsh
measures against Iran.
The case of the Iranian regime is more complex. Its problem has become chronic
because, for four decades, Iran has not been behaving as a nation-state. It has
been driven by ideological revolution instead.
Therefore, the conflict cannot be considered a traditional struggle between two
states because the ideological dimension also exists in Washington's
calculations. The intensification of the US pressure campaign is pushing Iran
into a tight corner and could lead to a conflict that carries great risks in a
region that is vital for the production and transit of the world’s energy
resources.
It seems that the United States believes that its harsh sanctions and the noisy
political and military campaigns will either convince or force Iran to return to
the negotiating table.
The escalation of US sanctions resulted in tangible results in their first
month. Iran's oil exports fell to 400,000 barrels per day in May. Before the
sanctions exports of Iranian oil totalled 2.5 million barrels per day. The
situation stands to worsen for Iran when China switches to Russian oil by the
end of its exemption period.
Contrary to Iran's desire to rely on the European troika -- Germany, France, the
United Kingdom -- to complete the financial mechanism to circumvent US
sanctions, the private sector in Europe is reluctant to go along and European
decision makers hesitate, not only because of the US threat of sanctions against
specific individuals and entities but also because Tehran has not shown
flexibility concerning its ballistic missile programme and its role in regional
crises.
Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's announcement of a tripartite
security meeting between the United States, Russia and Israel in June hints at
Russia distancing itself from Iran and working to develop regional
understandings with Washington, all with Israeli encouragement.
This American effort in economic and political pressure and military
intimidation does not necessarily mean that Trump's success is imminent because
Iran reads the situation differently.
Tehran does not trust the US administration enough to return to negotiations.
Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, the country’s top decision maker, openly
refused to negotiate under the pressure of sanctions.
Khamenei’s position does not make the mission of Iranian President Hassan Rohani
and Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif easier. On the contrary, their
manoeuvres of openness and suggestions of a non-aggression treaty with Gulf
countries -- a suggestion that came too late -- is a reminder of negative
precedents in the region and the world and have lost their credibility.
So, the threats by the leaders of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps can
be considered a reflection of Tehran’s real position, especially when they are
linked with sabotage operations in Saudi Arabia and off the coast of the United
Arab Emirates and with rattling the Iranian sabres in Iraq. At the beginning of
the escalation between the two sides, observers agreed that war was not
inevitable because Trump understands that wars are bad for business and seldom
go as planned.
Iran's rulers may prefer to wait for the end of Trump's first term and the
prospect of a more lenient Democrat president in his stead. This may be wishful
thinking but Iran knows the heavy price of war and that resorting to war by
proxy may provoke a US military retaliation, exactly the outcome it wants to
achieve.
However, it seems these indicators were gone after the attack on international
shipping off the UAE coast. After May 12, the reading of the situation changed
and the degree of danger went up.
Therefore, it won’t be possible to curb the escalation without an Iranian
concession. Perhaps the inner circles of velayat-e faqih in Tehran can remind
Khamenei of the truce strategy of Imam al-Hasan Ibn Ali with his rival Caliph
Muawiya Ibn Abi Sufyan to find a precedent justifying flexibility and return to
the negotiation table for a new deal with the Trump administration.
However, the rhetoric from Tehran about the defeat awaiting the United States
from now until 2050 shows that calculations based on wishful thinking can lead
to adopting the worst choice and that resorting to pointless manoeuvring, hollow
language, double discourse, twisted tactics, subversive messages and threats,
will intensify Iran's conflict with Washington and neighbouring countries.
*Khattar Abou Diab is a professor of geopolitical sciences at the Paris Centre
for Geopolitics.
Qatar enters third year of crisis but no lessons learnt
Iman Zayat/The Arab Weekly/June 09/2019
The way Qatar is dealing with a regional dispute that has left it weakened and
isolated from its Arab neighbours is beyond strange. As Doha loses regional
influence and sees its relationships with Arab countries dwindle, it continues
to insist that all is well that ends well.
Of course, this is largely because Doha has weathered the crisis by becoming
economically self-sufficient, particularly through its dairy and fresh poultry
products. Does an abundance of cows, chickens and hydroponic tomatoes really
mean that the tiny Gulf emirate has emerged from a 2-year boycott victorious? Of
course not, unless it is believed that a country needs only food to thrive and
meet the needs of its people.
The reality is that Qatar’s economy has taken a turn for the worse, with its
real estate and retail sectors reeling from the effects of the boycott. Reports
from inside Doha say shopping malls and hotels have been nearly abandoned in the
absence of wealthy tourists from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
Qatar’s housing market also remains depressed because of a supply glut ahead of
the 2022 FIFA World Cup that is to be hosted there. To stimulate the gas-rich
country’s economy last October, Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani
issued a new law allowing foreigners to own property in the country.
Doha’s economic woes do not stop there. Qatar Airways, once touted as one of the
fastest growing carriers in aviation history, reported its second consecutive
annual loss in March. The company’s troubles began when it was barred from
entering the boycotting countries’ airspace, forcing it to reroute many flights
at a high cost.
Still, Doha insists that it has emerged stronger than ever from its crisis.
Isn’t that curious?
Qatar’s misinformation strategy has not been particularly effective but it seems
determined to stick to the famous propaganda law often attributed to Nazi
Minister of Propaganda Joseph Goebbels: “Repeat a lie often enough and it
becomes the truth.”
In psychology, this phenomenon is known as the illusory truth effect: People
tend to believe statements to be true if they are told them repeatedly. To
believe or not to believe is not the question. What is at stake is the future of
a whole country and population that has been suffering from two plagues: First,
the Qatari state’s policies, which are informed by desperate leaders who refuse
to learn from mistakes and, second, a systematic campaign to deepen division
between families, tribes and peoples with common roots in culture and history.
Sure, Doha may continue its costly public relations campaign in the United
States, Europe and elsewhere to combat the accusations of its rivals but this
will in no way help resolve its dispute with Arab neighbours or help it
strengthen its standing after losing influence in Syria, Libya, Sudan and Egypt,
where it mistakenly backed failed or failing Islamist groups.
Indeed, Qatar can continue tossing money out the window. It does have plenty of
that to spare — although not thanks to the wisdom or good governance of its
leaders but to the country’s huge gas reserves. None of that money will buy Doha
friends or allies in the Arab region, especially following its rapprochement
with Tehran and its obstinate efforts to resuscitate Islamist groups in the
region.
Unlike Doha, other Arab countries cannot afford to see their governments fail or
to conceal domestic problems, whether political, economic or social, through
quasi-religious camouflage. Qatar should have learnt this lesson long ago, when
people in Tunisia, Syria, Libya and Egypt resisted its sponsored drive to
install political Islam in their countries. These people yearned for justice,
freedom, democracy and dignity, not Doha’s Islamist vision.
Somehow, Qatar has not learnt this lesson. Even today, Doha feverishly tries to
revive political Islam in places such as Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Sudan.
Qatar’s insistence on meddling in the affairs of other countries, including
those striving for freedom and democracy, puts it on the wrong side of history —
the side of autocracy, oppression, censorship, bribery and enslavement, all of
which are defining elements of Qatar’s regime.
Just as foolish as thinking it can pull the Arab world back into religious
fundamentalism is Qatar’s belief that rapprochement with Iran is an effective
strategy for the future. The closer Qatar edges towards Tehran, the further it
moves away from the Arab world and the more isolated it becomes.
Arab countries that are boycotting Qatar would consider Doha’s rapprochement
with their arch-rival to be further confirmation that Doha is acting with
hostility and in bad faith. This was again made clear during the recent Mecca
summits, when Qatar expressed reservations with the meetings’ unified stance
against Tehran. Two years into the crisis, Doha’s house of cards is crumbling.
Its few regional allies — Turkey and Iran — are facing their own problems, while
old Islamist allies such as the Muslim Brotherhood have effectively been knocked
on their back.
As such, it won’t be long before the winds of change blow the last card from
Doha’s hands. When this happens, no one will go to the rescue of a regime that
played one party against another, antagonised its neighbours and maintained its
rule by fanning the flames of regional division and fear.
Iraq should care about Arab Gulf security, not fret about
Iran
Tallha Abdulrazaq/The Arab Weekly/June 09/2019
When Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud called the Mecca summits involving
members of the Organisation for Islamic Cooperation, the Arab League and the
Gulf Cooperation Council, the idea was to forge Arab and Islamic unity and
understanding.
Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and the wider Arab and Islamic world have
suffered because of Iran’s unceasing expansionist agenda but none have suffered
more as a result of Iranian sectarianism than the people of Syria and Iraq.
It must surely come as quite an insult, then, when Iraq and Qatar opposed the
Mecca summit’s final statement that emphasised Iran’s responsibility to cease
its hostile and destabilising actions and that the countries of the Arabian Gulf
deserved to have their peace, security and stability respected. These two
countries prioritised their own narrow, short-term and selfish interests over
the obviously great need to push Iran back into its box and to compel it to
respect its neighbours and their security needs.
Qatar balked at adopting the final statement on grounds that it was apparently
not consulted on its wording and that it contradicted Qatari foreign policy
imperatives. As to the first point, Qatar was fully represented at the summit by
a senior delegation. It is not as though the final declaration could have come
as a surprise to Doha.
Further, it would seem obvious that Qatar’s decision to support Iran stems
directly from the fact that it has moved ever closer to the Islamic Republic,
despite Tehran launching a veritable sectarian campaign of slaughter against
Doha’s fellow Sunni Arabs.
Iraq’s stance is slightly more nuanced in that Iraqi President Barham Salih’s
rejection of the final declaration reflected the fact that Iraq is almost
entirely an Iranian colony.
Salih was a long-time Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) member and the PUK has
been an Iranian client for decades. Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi
similarly has strong and lasting ties to hard-line Shia Islamist factions that
were incubated and supported by Iran. Iraqi security services are riddled with
infiltrators who are loyal to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
and not to Iraq. Other IRGC Shia jihadist proxies run amok across Iraq with
impunity.
What is striking about Salih’s reasoning in rejecting the final declaration of
the Mecca summit is that he stresses how Iran’s security and stability are of
critical importance to the security and stability of other Muslim and Arab
states. Salih said: “Honestly, the security and stability of a neighbouring
Islamic country [Iran] is in the interest of Muslim and Arab states.”This is
astonishing. Is Salih saying that Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and
other countries threatened by Iranian meddling and its sectarian genocidal
tendencies are not neighbouring Islamic countries?
Salih is essentially arguing that Iran’s security and stability trumps the need
for any other country’s stability. Why? Are Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates unworthy of peace, stability, security and the right to not be attacked
by Iranian proxies or have their internal affairs meddled in by Tehran’s agents?
The Iraqi president claimed he fears an uncontrollable war breaking out in the
region. He is right — no one wants war to happen. However, his reasoning for
wanting to avoid this war has less to do with the sanctity of human life and the
avoidance of mass destruction of civilian infrastructure and livelihoods than
because he is afraid that a war on Iran would topple Iraq’s inherently unstable
and corrupt system due to its reliance on Tehran’s goodwill. Rather than fret
about Iran’s security, perhaps these countries should think about peace and
stability across the entire region.
Russia is playing an increasing role in the Afghan peace process
Rahimullah Yusufzai/Arab news/June 09/2019
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and former Afghan President Hamid Karzai
posing with the participants of a conference last month marking a century of
diplomatic relations between Afghanistan and Russia. (Russian Ministry of
Foreign Affairs / AFP)
Russia hosted the second intra-Afghan meeting in less than four months as it
continues to seek a role as a credible mediator for ending the Afghan conflict.
The first meeting, which brought together Taliban leaders and Afghan opposition
politicians, was held in Moscow in February. It was a landmark event because the
commencement of intra-Afghan dialogue is considered essential for national
reconciliation.
The second intra-Afghan dialogue organized on May 28-29 was a repeat of the
previous one, but with a crucial difference. It was the first time Mullah Abdul
Ghani Baradar, the Taliban deputy leader and head of the movement’s political
commission in Qatar, came face to face with prominent Afghan politicians,
including Hamid Karzai, Hanif Atmar, Ata Mohammad Noor, Younas Qanooni and
Mohammad Mohaqiq, following his release last October after spending eight years
in Pakistani custody. It was also his first visit to Russia, which has used its
growing contacts within the Taliban to step up its own diplomatic initiative for
ending the Afghan war.
Moscow timed the intra-Afghan conference with the 100th anniversary celebrations
of diplomatic relations between Afghanistan and Russia. This is a remarkable
turnaround in the relations between the two countries as the invasion of
Afghanistan by the erstwhile USSR in December 1979 to prop up a struggling
Afghan communist regime had fueled a fierce war of resistance until 1989.
The Taliban took home happy memories from the first intra-Afghan conference in
Moscow as the joint declaration issued on the occasion endorsed major Taliban
demands. It called for the complete withdrawal of US-led foreign forces from
Afghanistan, the release of Taliban prisoners and the removal of Taliban
leaders’ names from the UN Security Council blacklist. Moscow timed the
intra-Afghan conference with the 100th anniversary celebrations of diplomatic
relations between Afghanistan and Russia
The second intra-Afghan meeting in Moscow, however, didn’t reach any agreement,
and caused disappointment as Afghan politicians unsuccessfully pushed the
Taliban to agree to a cease-fire. As some delegates reported, the two sides
worked on a 12-article joint statement, but disagreement about the cease-fire
caused them to merely issue a short press release.
The statement said both sides discussed important issues linked with the destiny
of the Afghan people including the continuation of intra-Afghan talks,
cease-fire, release of prisoners and women’s rights, among others. Without
elaborating, it noted that some progress had been made on a number of issues,
but no agreement was made “because reaching agreements needed more discussions.”
So the discussions will continue in the next round of intra-Afghan talks likely
to be held in Qatar. An earlier plan to convene a broader intra-Afghan
conference in Qatar involving representatives of the Afghan government didn’t
materialize as the Taliban objected to the large size of the delegation coming
from Kabul. The Taliban also did not want the Afghan government to play the lead
role in finalizing a list of 250 delegates to attend the Doha meeting. Besides,
they had imposed the condition that all participants, including Afghan
government officials, would participate in their personal capacity.
Though Russia has twice managed to hold an intra-Afghan dialogue in Moscow, the
process was incomplete due to the absence of the internationally recognized
Afghan government.
Despite facing isolation at home due to growing internal opposition and abroad
on account of his government’s non-representation in the Taliban-US talks in
Doha and intra-Afghan meetings in Moscow, President Ashraf Ghani made the point
that only his elected government had the mandate to make decisions about the
peace process and Afghanistan’s future.
It cannot be kept out forever, even though the twice delayed presidential
election, now due on Sept. 28, has created uncertainty about who will eventually
represent the government in the peace process.
Russia has an abiding interest in Afghanistan due to its regional proximity. As
former Afghan president Karzai noted, relations between the two countries are
among the oldest and most important.
Though the Taliban are officially a terrorist organization in Russia, that
didn’t stop Moscow from engaging with the group and inviting its leaders to
meetings in a bid to make itself relevant to the Afghan peace process.
The US also made an effort in April to engage its rivals, Russia and China, to
reach a consensus on efforts to end the Afghan conflict. But global politics and
regional rivalries could pose problems as the US, Russia and China, as well as
Pakistan, Iran and India, vie for influence in determining Afghanistan’s future.
Rahimullah Yusufzai is a senior political and security analyst in Pakistan. He
was the first to interview Taliban founder Mullah Mohammad Omar and twice
interviewed Osama bin Laden in 1998. Twitter: @rahimyusufzai1
Daesh’s demonic second coming … stronger than ever before?
Baria Alamuddin/Arab news/June 09/2019
Allow me to make a bold prediction: Within a few years, not only will Daesh
return to prominence, but it will become exponentially more vigorous and
difficult to defeat.
Daesh continues to be the wealthiest terrorist organization in history, with
hundreds of thousands of dollars stashed away in readiness for its re-emergence.
Tens of thousands of Daesh personnel may still be at large, or deployed as
sleeper cells across Iraq and Syria. Meanwhile, about 100,000 detainees with
various levels of Daesh affiliation languish in mass camps. Their status is
problematic, because of their multinational character: Should their home
countries reluctantly accept them back, or leave them to rot or hang? Let us not
forget that Daesh perpetrated the worst crimes known to humanity: Burnings,
stonings, beheadings, rape, genocide and other systematic atrocities. Yet its
ideology remains potent, with wide-reaching propaganda capabilities: A few
symbolic victories (the recapture of a town, a spectacular terrorist attack…)
could inspire thousands of confused and sick individuals to flock back into its
ranks.
It is tempting to assert that because Daesh’s actions were self-evidently evil,
all those who lived under it must be evil too. Our failure to recognize why many
ordinary Iraqis and Syrians tolerated Daesh (other than simply out of fear) will
be a major factor in allowing this menace to return.
Daesh’s rule varied markedly across its so-called caliphate. While foreign
jihadists brutally imposed alien theocratic models upon major cities, in small
rural towns Daesh leaders were predominantly locals. The result was an organic
hybrid between local traditions and Daesh’s rigid asceticism. When Daesh was
purged, local jihadists simply melted into the mountains, using their exhaustive
knowledge of the landscape to embark on a war of attrition against security
forces.
By 2011 Al-Qaeda in Iraq was a defeated force. Yet Nouri Al-Maliki’s sectarian
policies, his purge of Sunni politicians, and his reliance on brutal
paramilitaries to entrench his power alienated Sunnis and other communities. By
2013, Iraq was awash with a furious ferment of protest movements and anti-state
forces — Islamists, tribes and Baathists. Daesh swept to power out of this
complex milieu. Daesh will aspire to be more geographically dispersed to avoid
presenting an easy target, it will consolidate its strength in the shadows to
avoid provoking a decisive response, and it will avoid unnecessarily alienating
local people. The fight-back against Daesh was partly franchised out to
Iran-aligned paramilitaries who have today been put back in control of
localities reduced to ashes by coalition bombing campaigns. Iraqis are squeezed
between two evils: “Hashd” militants and Daesh are equally guilty of sectarian
atrocities. Before the 2018 elections, Sunnis in areas liberated from Daesh were
widely prevented from accessing documentation allowing them to vote, access
benefits and travel around the country. Paramilitaries terrorized returnees into
fleeing back into exile. Thus, a high proportion of the population have
effectively become non-persons, with the stigma of Daesh association branded
upon entire communities. Aside from discredited allies of the Hashd, few
respected Sunnis are allowed to hold political posts. It is dangerous for Iraq’s
national unity that Sunnis are left feeling more alienated and angry than ever.
Deprived of core territories in Syria and Iraq, Daesh has become more dangerous.
Thousands of foreign fighters who avoided capture have dispersed, either quietly
heading home or migrating to new battlefields, pledging to wreak mayhem and
attract new recruits wherever they end up. There have been recent deadly Daesh
assaults in northern Lebanon and the Sinai, along with horrific attacks against
Sri Lankan churches a couple of months ago that killed over 250 worshippers. We
can guarantee more such attacks, whether against Egyptian Copts, Asian tourist
resorts, overcrowded African malls, or Western stadiums and other public places.
Already, in a dozen states across northern and sub-Saharan Africa, a resurgent
Daesh is carving out something resembling a new trans-continental “caliphate.”
Last week it claimed attacks in Mozambique and the Democratic Republic of Congo,
two states not known as hotbeds of Islamist extremism. The group also reported
pledges of loyalty from other Sahel factions, further indications of an
ambitious pan-Africa strategy. Daesh Mark II has learned a lot from defeat. It
will aspire to be more geographically dispersed to avoid presenting an easy
target, it will consolidate its strength in the shadows to avoid provoking a
decisive response, and it will avoid unnecessarily alienating local people.
Daesh is also seeking to overcome past enmities with rivals such as Al-Qaeda,
which had weakened the jihadist movement. The knee-jerk racism and Islamophobia
of an emergent European far-right will leave disaffected young Western Muslims
increasingly vulnerable to the blandishments of extremists. Without radical
efforts to address sectarianism, militancy, injustice and social exclusion in
Iraq and other priority states, most experts concur that the necessary
prerequisites are in place for Daesh to again achieve breakout capacity.
However, Daesh in 2019 it is a greatly more experienced, globe-straddling and
organically integrated force than it ever was in 2014. Affiliated factions in
Libya, Western Africa, Egypt, Yemen, Afghanistan, Indonesia and elsewhere will
act in concert to make Daesh’s second coming a truly globalized phenomenon.
Where is the globalized response to an entity that is consolidating its strength
across dozens of states?
In 2014 the world feigned astonishment when a hitherto unknown terrorist horde
swarmed across much of Iraq and Syria. Yet Daesh’s expansion had already been
obvious for over a year to those who cared to pay attention. If history is
condemned to bloodily repeat itself, it will be through criminal lack of
foresight and leadership in failing to eradicate a menace that should never have
been allowed to reconstitute itself as an existential global threat. When
grievances are addressed, citizens’ voices are represented and a culture of
tolerance is cultivated, society becomes effectively immunized against the
nihilistic, hateful propaganda of both right-wing and Islamist extremists.
Prevention is a thousand times better than cure. We know this, yet instead we
choose once again to leave the hen-house door wide open for the wolves.
*Baria Alamuddin is an award-winning journalist and broadcaster in the Middle
East and the UK. She is editor of the Media Services Syndicate and has
interviewed numerous heads of state.
Special relationship in calmer waters after a successful state visit
Zaid M. Belbagi/Arab news/June 09/2019
As concrete blocks were dragged across Regent’s Park to fortify the US President
Donald Trump’s temporary headquarters, many expressed concern as to the status
of the alliance between the UK and the US. Mr. Trump’s off-the-cuff style, the
spectre of a Conservative Party leadership contest and differences over Huawei
and Iran were set to test the resolve of the so-called “special relationship”.
Despite the visit being fraught with the possibility of diplomatic peril, as the
president departed aboard Airforce One his trip was applauded as a great success
from the perspective of all those involved.
Prime Minister Theresa May invited the controversial US leader as she fought for
the future of her premiership. Dogged by troublesome negotiations with the EU,
cabinet mutiny and parliamentary division, the invitation of the world’s
greatest superpower seemed an excellent idea to bolster her fortunes. However,
following the announcement of her resignation a week beforehand, the visit was
suddenly extraordinarily badly timed. Had the palace been browbeaten into
inviting only the third US president (of the 12 in office during the Queen’s
reign) for a state visit, the diplomatic awkwardness of the trip’s timing was
not lost on Foreign Office insiders.
First coined by Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1946, the special
relationship was born out of the US and UK having overcome the global turmoil,
terror and loss of life of World War II together. A shared language, continued
military cooperation and strong commercial ties have characterised the
relationship. Concern has steadily grown as at first the Obama administration
did not see eye to eye with No. 10, and then the Trump White House began
rewriting post-1945 geopolitical realities. The president’s combative approach
to traditional Western allies since his first G20 and NATO engagements has
represented a significant shift in US foreign policy. Separately, the UK visit
came during a growing number of trade disputes with countries across the world
that demonstrate the severe economic consequences of the US president’s “America
First” approach to bilateral partnerships.
With Xi Jinping gearing to announce his agenda for global governance at the St.
Petersburg International Economic Forum, it was reassuring to see the special
relationship back on track, critical to a Western alliance system that underpins
international peace and security.
It was therefore significant that President Trump left the UK with the Prime
Minister heralding “positive discussions” about an ambitious trade agreement.
Trump added that the deal would be “phenomenal,” leading to trade that would be
“two and even three times of what we’re doing right now.” This was welcome news
for British business as the prospect of Brexit is the most significant
geopolitical move for the UK since World War II, making London more reliant on
the US as ties loosen with the other 27 members of the EU. Though thousands of
people protested in central London on Tuesday against Mr.Trump’s glitzy state
visit, numbers were far down from the tens of thousands who gathered to oppose
his working visit last year. There is little doubt that to many, this visit had
to succeed and that differences that Trump has had with European allies,
provided an opportune moment for the UK to focus on similarities with its
American cousins.
Building strong commercial ties was not even beyond the Queen as she charmed a
clearly dazzled President, lauding how the two countries were the largest
investors in each other’s economies. The role of palace in the visit provided a
masterclass in how experienced political figures have an institutional memory
which inspires awe and confidence. The President nodded politely as the Queen
reminded him of his Scottish roots and of how the Special Relationship once
saved the world from tyranny. The centerpiece of the visit was a very poignant
open-air ceremony in celebration of the 75th anniversary of the D-Day landings.
By drawing the US president into an event of this nature, both the Foreign
Office and the palace very publically reminded him of the two country’s special
partnership and indeed the wider family of western alliances. There was never a
more important moment to remind American decision makers of historical
realities, as the post-war global order looks ripe for strategic
reconfiguration. It was appropriate, therefore, that while much of the Western
media scrutinized the relationship between the United States and the United
Kingdom, another close — and growing — geopolitical and economic bond was also
being built upon. As China’s President Xi Jinping makes a state visit to Russia
to meet his counterpart Vladimir Putin, the two countries are increasingly at
odds with the United States. As they feel the long arm of US trade and foreign
policy hurting their interests, they have actively sought to undermine the
international community, exploiting tensions between the US and its allies. With
Xi Jinping gearing to announce his agenda for global governance at the St.
Petersburg International Economic Forum, it was reassuring to see the special
relationship back on track, critical to a Western alliance system that underpins
international peace and security.
• Zaid M. Belbagi is a political commentator, and an adviser to private clients
between London and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). Twitter: @Moulay_Zaid