LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
March 09/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the
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Bible Quotations For today
All those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those
who humble themselves will be exalted
Luke 18:9-14/To some who were confident of their own righteousness and looked
down on everyone else, Jesus told this parable: “Two men went up to the temple
to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. The Pharisee stood by
himself and prayed: ‘God, I thank you that I am not like other people—robbers,
evildoers, adulterers—or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week and
give a tenth of all I get.’ “But the tax collector stood at a distance. He would
not even look up to heaven, but beat his breast and said, ‘God, have mercy on
me, a sinner.’ “I tell you that this man, rather than the other, went home
justified before God. For all those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and
those who humble themselves will be exalted.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese
& Lebanese Related News published on March 08-09/2019
Pompeo to Persuade Lebanon to Joint Regional Strategic
Alliance
UK: Blacklisting Hezbollah Will Not Affect Ties with Lebanon
Aoun Signs Decree Setting Tripoli by-Elections
Aoun Urges UNHCR Assistance to Return Refugees
Hariri Says Tax Evasion Must Be Addressed to Reduce Budget Deficit
Government Defers Military Council Appointments
UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon Marks International Women’s Day
Nasrallah: Corruption Battle Sacred Like Resistance and We're Not Seeking
Revenge
Lebanese Officials Mark International Women’s Day
Saniora: Hizbullah, Aounists Trying to Deviate Attention from Their Hegemony
Former President Amine Gemayel: Good Governance Is Key to Lebanon's Rescue
Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel Warns of Police State Rise in Lebanon
Hankache: Kataeb Party to Submit Amendment Proposal on Parliament's
Accountability Vote Threshold
U.N. Humanitarian Coordinator for Lebanon Marks International Women's Day
UK Minister for Middle East Ends Two-Day Visit to Lebanon
Richard Highlights Economic Developmental Projects for Northern Lebanon
Litles For The Latest
English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on March 08-09/2019
Assad in Tehran: Soleimani’s goons snatched him to swear allegiance to Khamenei.
Putin retaliates
US Urges UN to Impose ‘Real’ Sanctions on Iran
London Grants Jailed UK-Iranian Aid Worker Diplomatic Protection
Netanyahu Warns Israeli Navy Could Take Action against Iran Oil Smuggling
Khamenei Appoints Raisi as Iran’s Judiciary Chief
ISIS Ambush Kills 6 PMF Members in Northern Iraq
Egyptian Delegation Heads to Gaza to Revive Truce with Israel
US State Department Hails Chemical Attack Report on Douma
Temporary Solution Reached in Golden Gate Spat in Jerusalem
Turkey Will Deploy S-400 System despite US Warning
Algeria Lawyers Protest against Bouteflika, Demand Transition Govt.
Trump Brands Democrats 'Anti-Israel,' 'Anti-Jewish'
Democrats Including Ocasio-Cortez Condemn U.S. Strategy on Venezuela
Titles For The Latest
LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on March 08-09/2019
Richard Highlights Economic Developmental Projects for Northern Lebanon/Naharnet/March
08/19/
Assad in Tehran: Soleimani’s goons snatched him to swear allegiance to Khamenei.
Putin retaliates/DEBKAfile/March 08/19
Iran: Child Executions, Amputations, Floggings/Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone
Institute/March 08/19
Mullahs Pushed Off the Gravy Train/Amir Taheri/Asharq Al Awsat/March, 08/19
Is This the End of the Anglosphere/John Micklethwait/Bloomberg View/March, 08/19
Deficit Hubris Looks Like the Next Economics Mistake/Noah Smith/Bloomberg
View/March, 08/19
Saving the date palm from the Red Weevil/José Graziano da Silva/March 08/19
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese
Related News published on March 08-09/2019
Pompeo to Persuade Lebanon to Joint Regional Strategic
Alliance
Beirut - Khalil Fleihan/ Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 8 March, 2019/US Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo’s announcement that he will pay a visit to Beirut did not come
as a surprise to Lebanese officials, most notably since the top diplomat had
declared such plans during a trip to Riyadh some two months ago.
A diplomatic source linked on Thursday Pompeo’s visit and its timing to the
growing influence in Lebanon of not only Iran, but also Russia through its
investments in the energy sector. Rosneft, Russia’s state-owned oil company,
closed a 20-year deal in late January to rent, operate and expand storage near
the northern city of Tripoli. Speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat, the source said
Pompeo would use his trip to Lebanon to persuade Beirut to join the “strategic
alliance in the Middle East against threats facing the region.”The official is
aware, however, that Lebanon cannot take part in such an alliance given that
several local political forces reject “anything American”. Moreover, the
government is bound to a dissociation policy aimed at keeping Lebanon away from
regional conflicts. The agenda of Pompeo’s trip remains unclear, officials
informed about his trip said. One of the officials predicted that “talks between
Pompeo and Lebanese officials are expected to be difficult.”The sources
explained: “Usually, Beirut does not respond to Washington’s demands. Several
examples could be listed in this regard, including a decision by Foreign
Minister Jebran Bassil to not attend a Middle East conference co-hosted by the
US in the Polish capital last February.” Other demands that Lebanon has failed
to comply with include the disarmament of the Hezbollah party and limiting
Iran’s powers in the country. However, the diplomatic source expected that
Lebanon will coordinate with US over the armament of the Lebanese army and
training of its personnel.
UK: Blacklisting Hezbollah Will Not Affect Ties with
Lebanon
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 8 March, 2019/British Minister for Middle East
and International Development Alistair Burt said that his country’s decision to
designate Hezbollah as a terrorist organization would not affect relations with
Lebanon and its army. Burt met separately on Thursday with President Michel Aoun
and Defense Minister Elias Bou Saab, after holding talks on Wednesday with Prime
Minister Saad Hariri and Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil. “Lebanon has the will
to move positively to overcome the current situation,” Aoun told the visiting UK
minister. “We are working hard to implement the recommendations of CEDRE
conference, especially with regard to reforms and projects, based on cooperation
between the public and private sectors,” he added. Aoun lauded the ongoing
cooperation between Lebanon and Britain in various fields, especially the act of
providing the Lebanese Armed Forces with much-needed equipment and building
observation towers that have enabled the Lebanese army to defeat terrorists in
the Bekaa border area. The president expressed hope that bilateral relations
would be strengthened, pointing out that Lebanon “has taken note of the British
position towards Hezbollah.” He stressed that Hezbollah’s regional expansion
“does not mean that its influence on Lebanese politics goes beyond its capacity
as part of the Lebanese people and its representation in the government and
parliament.”Burt, for his part, conveyed to Aoun his country’s desire to
strengthen Lebanese-British relations in all fields. “The recent economic
conference in London is part of the British support plan for the Lebanese
economy. UK’s relations with Lebanon will not be affected by any position taken
by Britain against Hezbollah,” Burt added.
Aoun Signs Decree Setting Tripoli
by-Elections
Naharnet/March 08/19/President Michel Aoun on Friday signed a decree setting
April 14 as the date to hold by-election in the district of Tripoli to fill the
fifth Sunni parliamentary vacant seat, the Presidency said in a tweet. The MP
seat was left vacant after the election annulment of al-Mustaqbal Movement MP
Dima Jamali. In February, the Constitutional Council invalidated the 2018
election of Jamali in Tripoli’s parliamentary elections based on an appeal by
failed candidate Taha Naji of the National Dignity List led by MP Faisal Karami.
Aoun Urges UNHCR Assistance to Return Refugees
Naharnet/March 08/19/President Michel Aoun has called upon the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees to keep pace with Lebanon in “facilitating and
expediting” the return of Syrian refugees.During a meeting with the UN
Commissioner General Filippo Grandi in the presence of the Minister of State for
Presidential Affairs, Salim Jreissati, Aoun stressed the importance of providing
assistance to displaced Syrians “after returning to their homeland.”The
President highlighted the cooperation between the competent Syrian and Lebanese
authorities arranging the return of refugees, mainly Lebanon General Security
agency. For his part, Grandi described as “reassuring” the situation of the
displaced in Syria after visiting a number of areas there. He said he met with
several Syrian officials in Syria for the purpose of coordinating efforts to
return of refugees.
Hariri Says Tax Evasion Must Be Addressed to Reduce Budget
Deficit
Kataeb.org/ Friday 08th March 2019/Prime Minister Saad Hariri said that Lebanon
would be able reduce its budget deficit by improving tax collection which makes
up between 23 and 25 percent of the country's GDP. However, the current rate is
less than 20% due to tax evasion; a problem that Hariri's government will have
to address in order to lower its deficit-to-GDP ratio by at least 1 percentage
this year, as pledged in its policy statement. “We will have to save some money
by stopping some projects that are unnecessary, and at the same time, we need to
make sure that we collect more from taxes,” Hariri told The Daily Star
newspaper. The premier stressed the need to make “hard decisions” in order to
reach the deficit reduction target, assuring that no projects will be passed if
they burden the state's finances.
Government Defers Military Council Appointments
Kataeb.org/ Friday 08th March 2019/The government deferred discussions on key
military appointments during its weekly session on Thursday, after it had been
expected to fill four vacant posts in the six-member Military Council headed by
Army commander Joseph Aoun. According to media reports, it was Prime Minister
Saad Hariri who asked that this issue would be postponed till next week in order
to allow further talks. The appointments include the posts of the Army's chief
of staff, secretary-general of the Higher Defense Council, general inspector and
a full-time council member. The government, however, appointed Judge Mahmoud
Makieh as its secretary-general, thus replacing Fouad Fleifel who reached
retirement age. The Cabinet also appointed Brigadier General Elias Al-Baissari
as acting director of General Security for a period of one year during which he
who would fill in for Abbas Ibrahim in case of absence.
UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon Marks International
Women’s Day
Naharnet/March 08/19/UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon Jan Kubis issued a
statement on Friday marking International Women’s Day. Kubis paid tribute to the
efforts, sacrifices and achievements made by women in different fields in
Lebanon and encouraged more inclusion of women in decision-making positions.
Noting this year’s international theme: Think Equal, Build Smart, Innovate for
Change, the Special Coordinator said, “Women are already making commendable
contributions in different fields in Lebanon whether as political leaders,
journalists, lawyers, judges, engineers, pilots, bankers, teachers, academics,
military servicewomen and in many other professions,” the Special Coordinator
said. “But,” he added, “more needs to be done to ensure women reach leadership
positions and are included in decision-making roles.”Kubis met this morning with
Minister of Interior Raya al-Hassan and congratulated her on her appointment as
the first woman Minister of Interior in Lebanon and the Arab world. “This shows
that barriers can be broken ultimately for the benefit of Lebanon and its
people,” Kubis said. The Special Coordinator welcomed the increased
representation of women in the new Cabinet and hoped this will pave the way for
increased female participation in Lebanon’s political sphere. There are
currently four women out of 30 Cabinet ministers and only five women are serving
in Lebanon’s Parliament of currently 127 members. “At the United Nations,
Secretary-General António Guterres has set gender parity as one of his
priorities and this has already been achieved in the Organization’s senior
management team,” the Special Coordinator added.
The objective is to now achieve gender parity throughout UN ranks. Similarly,
Lebanon and other countries are encouraged to take pro-active measures to
involve more women in leadership positions and across the board. Women’s
empowerment and gender equality have been recognized as essential for achieving
long-term peace, security and development as highlighted by the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development and its Sustainable Development Goals that was adopted
by all UN member States in 2015 as well as by a series of UN conventions and
resolutions. Despite that, many legal, cultural and social barriers continue to
restrict women’s potential and rights. The Special Coordinator hoped that in
addition to the adoption of necessary laws and their implementation, efforts are
exerted in all sectors in Lebanon to ensure inclusion and participation of women
and that their rights are upheld. Kubis said the United Nations, through its
different agencies, funds and programmes stands ready to support Lebanon in
achieving the objective of gender equality and women empowerment in line with
the broader efforts to promote Lebanon’s sustainable development, stability and
security. The United Nations has observed International Women’s Day on 8 March
since 1975.
Nasrallah: Corruption Battle Sacred Like Resistance and
We're Not Seeking Revenge
Naharnet/March 08/19/Hizbullah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah announced Friday
that the anti-corruption fight is “as sacred as” his group's military resistance
against Israel's occupation of southern Lebanon. “Today more than ever, there is
national consensus on fighting corruption,” Nasrallah said in a televised speech
marking the anniversary of the establishment of the Hizbullah-affiliated Islamic
Resistance Support Association. “The remarks voiced by the Finance Ministry's
director general should be looked into by the judiciary,” Nasrallah pointed out,
referring to Alain Bifani's press conference about the issue of the state's
financial accounts between the years 1993 and 2017. “Hizbullah would be a
hypocrite party if it ignores the financial accounts file and anyone who seeks
to sideline this file would be a hypocrite,” Nasrallah said.
Noting that tackling this file is the “correct beginning” seeing as it is “the
most important” in the anti-corruption battle, Hizbullah's leader said a
“suspicious financial situation persisted between the years 1993 and 2017.”“You
can expect everything from Hizbullah in this battle because it is necessary and
is related to the survival of the state and the country,” he pledged. “Do not
bet that we will be scared and do not try to intimidate us with threats of a
sectarian strife,” he added. “Anyone who has evidence against us can resort to
the judiciary,” Nasrallah went on to say in response to accusations that
Hizbullah is involved in corruption. He added: “Do not bet that we will despair.
We know that the battle is difficult and we do not expect results within months.
We do not care about insults and accusations and we're used to them.”“This is
one of our central battles. We tell everyone not to bet on our exhaustion. We
have never grown tired,” Nasrallah boasted. Apparently referring to the
controversy involving ex-PM Fouad Saniora and MP Hassan Fadlallah's remarks
about the financial corruption file, Nasrallah denied claims that his party is
“seeking political vengeance against certain politicians and parties.”
“This is untrue,” he underscored. “The corrupts and the thieves will be punished
and the counter-attack is normal,” Nasrallah noted, adding that “the corrupts in
Lebanon and the thieves will stand in the face of this battle and will try to
defend themselves.”
He stressed: “We don't want to be alone in this battle but we are not afraid to
stay alone.”“Anyone who has evidence and documents related to financial
corruption will be supported by us. We support anyone who makes a move in this
battle,” Nasrallah added, noting that Hizbullah is not “competing against anyone
in this battle.”
He clarified: “We are only keen on the ultimate goal and we are not seeking
political gains. We want to recover the state's funds.”“We are in a necessary,
important and national battle against corruption that is not less sacred than
the resistance's battle against occupation,” Nasrallah added.
Clarifying the timing of his party's endeavor against corruption, Nasrallah
said: “Lebanon is precious to us and we are among the Lebanese who have offered
hefty sacrifices and blood for the sake of the country, so we cannot stand idly
by in order not to irritate some parties.”Warning that any financial collapse in
Lebanon represents an “existential threat” to everyone, Hizbullah's leader
emphasized that claims that his party “wants to take the state's money” are
baseless. As for the issue of the U.S. sanctions on Hizbullah and the latest
British measure against the party's political wing, Nasrallah said: “The
resistance axis has triumphed in all countries and they are imposing sanctions
on us because we have defeated their scheme.”“More countries will put Hizbullah
on their terror lists and we are aggrieved but strong,” he underlined. “The
resistance axis is standing in the face of (U.S. President Donald) Trump and his
son-in-law (Jared) Kushner's 'deal of the century' plans,” Nasrallah added,
referring to a reported U.S. plan to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
“The resistance axis is triumphing across the region,” Nasrallah boasted.
Lebanese Officials Mark International Women’s Day
Lebanese officials on Friday marked International Women’s Day noting the social,
economic, cultural and political achievements of women. Using this year’s theme
#balanceforbetter, Prime Minister Saad Hariri said in a tweet: “We commit
ourselves to continue to work for equality of rights as well as duties among
citizens and empowering women to lead all sectors in order to achieve
development, economic advancement and balance in our society because the failure
to benefit from this energy is a national loss,” he said. Interior Minister Raya
al-Hassan tweeted: “On Women’s Day, we must pay a double tribute to the Lebanese
woman whom I am proud of and invite to make more successes and achievements.
“The second is for Lebanese men who increasingly believe in the need for equal
opportunities and equal rights between men and women,” Hassan said. First Lady
Nadia al-Shami Aoun urged women to be strong, “confront and speak up and the
National Commission for Women's Affairs will always stand by your side.”“I don't
call for equality between men and women because I believe it’s a natural and
obvious right. I demand more laws that guarantee these absolute rights in
Lebanon and the Arab world,” Social Affairs Minister Richard Kouymjian said in a
tweet. MP Rola Tabsh called for approval of a law allowing women married to
non-Lebanese to pass the Lebanese nationality to their children.“The biggest
victory for the Lebanese woman is when she becomes able to pass her nationality
to her children. Hopefully we will achieve that,” she tweeted.
Saniora: Hizbullah, Aounists Trying to Deviate Attention
from Their Hegemony
Naharnet/March 08/19/Ex-PM Fouad Saniora on Thursday accused Hizbullah and its
ally the Free Patriotic Movement of seeking to “deviate attention” from “their
hegemony over the state,” the upcoming Special Tribunal for Lebanon rulings and
the U.S. sanctions on Hizbullah. Saniora was referring to the latest
corruption-related controversy sparked by the remarks of Hizbullah MP Hassan
Fadlallah. “They think that by silencing me they would be silencing others,”
Saniora said in an interview on Al-Arabiya television. “During my tenure, I was
the biggest obstacle in Hizbullah's way,” Saniora added. Saniora has recently
described the issue of the “missing” $11 billion as a “farce,” as he announced
that those “setting up mini-states inside the state” are the real corrupts, in
an apparent jab at Hizbullah. At a press conference he held to comment on
perceived accusations against him, Saniora said the 11 billion dollars in
question were spent on interest hikes, treasury loans for Electricite Du Liban,
and wage hikes and recruitment expenses for the armed forces.
Former President Amine Gemayel: Good
Governance Is Key to Lebanon's Rescue
Kataeb.org/ Friday 08th March 2019/Former President Amine Gemayel on Friday
stressed that good governance is key to the development and rescue of Lebanon,
deeming it as the only way out of the tunnel that the country has been trapped
inside for years. “After all those long years of conflicts, wars, occupations
and political vacuum that have marred Lebanon's modern history for more than
half a century, it is not surprising that the Lebanese society is affected by
many flaws and illusions,” Gemayel said in a conference held at House of the
Future. "There is an interactive correlation between politics and society: if
one weakens, the other does too."Gemayel noted that a nation is based on
inter-related factors, adding that when politics gets shaky, the economy is
affected; and when the economy is affected, the society breaks down.
Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel Warns of Police State Rise in
Lebanon
Kataeb.org/ Friday 08th March 2019/Kataeb leader Samy Gemayel on Thursday
condemned the growing oppression of journalists in Lebanon, warning of the rise
of a police state. "It is unacceptable to keep on summoning citizens and
journalists, and arresting them by security and legal authorities because of
opinions and posts they shared on social media platforms, while the pillars of
the political settlement and their supporters are violating the laws without
being subject to accountability," Gemayel wrote on Twitter. The Kataeb chief's
comment was made after the Military Court had sentenced in absentia Al-Jadeed TV
reporter, Adam Chamseddine, to three months in prison over a Facebook post in
which he criticized the State Security agency. "The police state, which we
warned of its rise three years ago, has become a reality that we must not remain
silent about it," Gemayel stressed.
Hankache: Kataeb Party to Submit Amendment Proposal on
Parliament's Accountability Vote Threshold
Kataeb.org/ Friday 08th March 2019/Following his election as member of the
Higher Council, tasked with trying presidents and ministers, MP Elias Hankache
said that the Kataeb party is planning to submit a draft law proposing an
amendment of the voting mechanism adopted by said body. Hankache told Al-Markazia
news agency that the proposal will suggest modifying the clause which requires a
two-thirds majority at the Parliament, i.e. 86 votes, in order to validate any
accusation against a minister. "The Parliament will remain constrained as long
as a two-thirds majority of the total members of the Chamber of Deputies is
required in order to be able to hold ministers and presidents accountable for
their wrongdoings," he said, adding that the Kataeb party will propose lowering
the vote threshold. The Kataeb lawmaker called for giving the Higher Council a
wider margin to work within, saying that, otherwise, it will continue to be
ineffective. “The Higher Council does not convene unless a President or a
minister are referred to it for trial, and that should be changed. It is
unacceptable for it to meet only to discuss these matters; it should have given
a larger framework," Hankache stressed.
“When put to the vote at the Parliament, this draft law will serve as a test for
the Parliament to prove how serious it really is about fighting against
corruption,” Hankache noted. According to Article 80 of the Constitution,
members of the Higher Council are re-elected with each new Parliament. It
consists of seven MPs and eight of Lebanon's top judges. Three MPs and three
judges are elected as reserves. Any verdict issued by the council must be
validated by at least ten of its members.
U.N. Humanitarian Coordinator for Lebanon Marks
International Women's Day
Naharnet/March 08/19/U.N. Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Lebanon
Philippe Lazzarini has marked the occasion of International Women's Day, which
the world celebrates on March 8, with an op-ed. Below is the op-ed titled “Women
in Lebanon - Unreached Potential for Growth”:“International Women’s Day is a
time to commemorate women’s rights, a time to celebrate women’s achievements and
a time to take stock of the progress made towards gender equality. But more
importantly, it is a time to reflect on our shortcomings, and recommit to
working towards a more gender-balanced, equal and empowered world. Gender
equality is not only a fundamental human right, but a necessary foundation for a
peaceful, prosperous and sustainable society. Together with 192 other nations,
Lebanon committed in 2015 to the Agenda 2030 for Sustainable Development – and
as part of this agenda, to achieving gender equality and empowering all women
and girls. Yet we are still far from achieving this goal. Legislative frameworks
in Lebanon have so far significantly hindered women's access to equal economic
rights. Ownership of property is mainly registered on behalf of men. Women have
limited opportunities to receive their shares of inherited lands, which hinders
their ability to have access to loans and therefore investment opportunities.
Personal status laws often do not recognize the concept of marital property, nor
do they recognize the value of unpaid domestic work. The Lebanese labour law
prevents women from working in certain fields considered too hazardous or
difficult, such as mining, welding, alcohol production or in slaughterhouses. As
a result of gender discrimination, women often secure lower-paying jobs and many
end up in unsafe working environments. According to the World Bank, only 25% of
women participated in the labour force in 2017. Women remain significantly
underrepresented in the areas of science, technology, and engineering. Sadly,
steps ahead in education do not translate to economic empowerment and political
empowerment.
No wonder Lebanon is ranked 140th on the 2018 Global Gender Gap Index. The
journey to equality is long and unless bold measures are taken, it will take
generations. And that time is no longer available if we are to achieve the
ambitious 2030 Agenda and its 17 sustainable development goals leaving no one
behind. “Think equal, build smart, innovate for change” is the theme of
International Women’s Day this year. This could not come at a more timely moment
for Lebanon.
In spring 2018, a record 86 women ran for parliamentary elections. Only a few
weeks ago we saw the formation of a new Cabinet comprising four women, the
highest number so far in the history of Lebanon, even though this still
represents only 13% of its members. In its ministerial statement, the government
committed to eliminating all forms of gender discrimination and enhancing
women’s participation in political and public life. Also, at the recent Mashreq
Conference on Women's Economic Empowerment, the Prime Minister announced
Lebanon's commitment to a national action programme to economically empower
Lebanese women and increase their participation in the labour market by at least
5 percent in the next five years. It is now time to walk the talk and make the
empowerment of women and girls in the Lebanese society a reality. Time and time
again, we’ve seen that investing in women’s economic empowerment contributes to
economic growth and the eradication of poverty. The Interim President of the
World Bank Group, Ms. Kristalina Georgieva, recently pointed out that the global
economy is losing $160 trillion in wealth because of gender inequality, due to
access to credit, property rights and differences in lifetime earnings between
women and men. As she rightly points out, the fact that women are blocked from
realizing their full potential is not just morally wrong but is also costing the
earth. The time to act is now. The implementation of the Lebanese Government’s
“Vision for stabilization, growth and employment” and accompanying reform plan
could create a myriad of opportunities for women and their economic empowerment.
This needs to be accompanied by bold legal reforms to remove obstacles impeding
gender equality and equal opportunities for women and men in the country.
International Women’s Day is a day to reiterate our pledge to invest in women,
not only to protect their rights but also to put an end to a devastating human,
social and economic waste. Let us join together as partners – women and girls,
men and boys – to address one of the biggest unfinished businesses of our time
and make gender equality Lebanon’s reality.”
UK Minister for Middle East Ends Two-Day Visit to Lebanon
Naharnet/March 08/19/British Minister of State for the Middle East and
International Development Alistair Burt has visited Lebanon for two-days, where
he “reaffirmed the UK’s commitment to supporting a strong and prosperous
Lebanon, while explaining the UK government’s decision to proscribe Hizbullah in
its entirety,” the British embassy said on Thursday. Burt held a series of
meetings with President Michel Aoun, Prime Minister Saad Hariri, Foreign
Minister Jebran Bassil, Defense Minister Elias Bou Saab, Minister of Education
Akram Shhehayyeb, Minister of Social Affairs Richard Kouyoumjian, and Director
of General Security Major General Abbas Ibrahim. The minister visited a local
school part of the joint DFID-British Council Connecting Classrooms program,
accompanied by Shehayyeb. “With education remaining one of the UK’s key pillars,
and in working towards the goal of reaching every child in Lebanon with
education, the UK had committed up to £160 million to education in Lebanon from
2016-2021,” the embassy said. Minister Burt also met the UK – Lebanon Tech Hub
team and heard from the team how the hub is providing support to Lebanese
start-ups in both Lebanon and the UK.
Promoting a Balance for Better gender based world, Burt also attended an
International Women’s Day reception. Speaking about his visit, the British
minister said: “I am pleased to be back in Lebanon again. I am here to
congratulate the new Lebanese government on its formation, and to reiterate the
UK’s support for a strong, stable and prosperous Lebanon.” “I came to Lebanon at
an important time. Last week, the UK government proscribed Hizbullah in its
entirety. My government took this decision for the sole and simple reason that
we can no longer judge there is any meaningful distinction between Hizbullah’s
military and political wings,” he added. “To be clear, the decision is not about
our commitment to Lebanon or the Lebanese, and I want our $200m per year of
support to Lebanon to continue. But there should be no illusion about our deep
concerns about Hizbullah’s destabilizing actions,” Burt went on to say.
He added: “The economic relationship between the UK and Lebanon is growing
stronger, and I look forward to more British companies investing and operating
in Lebanon – a country that is very much open to business for the UK. In order
to provide certainty and confidence to UK and Lebanese businesses, I hope we can
agree immediately a UK-Lebanon bilateral trade agreement.”“We look forward to
rapid progress following from the commitments made at CEDRE in Paris now that a
government has been formed. At the Lebanon-UK Business and Investment Forum in
London last December, I announced an additional £30 million program to support
the Lebanese Government’s reform plans. Speedy implementation of this reform
program will be important to build momentum and unlock further international
funding,” Burt went on to say.
He said that many of his conversations during the trip focused on the large
number of Syrian refugees Lebanon “generously hosts.”“Our policy is clear: we
want Syrians to return, and we have no position on this other than ensuring they
are safe, voluntary, and dignified, as verified by UNHCR. I welcome any
initiative that helps achieve this,” he added. He, however, pointed out that
while “the great majority of Syrians want to return, the conditions in Syria,
particularly on security, must improve.”“Whether it is the U.N.’s access inside
Syria, conscription into the Syrian army, or the other important issues that
affect refugees’ desire to return, ultimately establishing the right conditions
for returns is only in the gift of the Regime in Damascus. In the meantime, we
will continue our support for the Lebanese state, for vulnerable Lebanese and
for the refugees themselves,” Burt went on to say.
Richard Highlights Economic Developmental Projects for
Northern Lebanon
Naharnet/March 08/19/
United States Ambassador to Lebanon Elizabeth Richard traveled to Tripoli to
visit American funded projects focused on economic development and education in
Northern Lebanon, the U.S. embassy said on Thursday.
“As part of the $825 million in assistance the United States provided to Lebanon
in 2018, we are funding projects in northern Lebanon to provide youth with the
education, tools, and skills to succeed in the marketplace. Today, we
commemorated two projects: 'Lebanon Youth SEEK Jobs' which has already helped
dozens of young people find jobs, and a new project 'Tripoli Youth Economic
Engagement,' also designed to assist young people in northern Lebanon by
offering them vocational training in fields with high demands for skilled labor,”
the embassy said in a statement.
Ambassador Richard reiterated in her speech that the United States is “committed
to helping support the Lebanese people.”
“Our support, which amounts to over $5 billion in total assistance since 2005,
demonstrates the United States’ long-term commitment. The projects celebrated
today demonstrate our focus on empowering the next generation in northern
Lebanon,” the embassy added in its statement.
Following are Ambassador Richard’s remarks:
“Good morning everyone. It is great to be back in Tripoli. I am really delighted
to be back here, especially with my old friends: Mr. Minister, my dear friends
and religious leaders of Tripoli, Mr. Mayor and other leaders, here in the
Tripoli area and the North.
I am very happy to be here because this is a very special project to us. U.S.
investment in Tripoli is not something new. We have been doing this for a long
time and we have a long relationship with Tripoli. In fact they tell me there is
even a neighborhood here called the neighborhood of the Americans - Hay al-Amercan,
which I must go visit. We are here today to celebrate two of the latest U.S.
Embassy projects in Tripoli, one that is ending called “Lebanon Youth SEEK Jobs”
and one that is beginning “Tripoli Youth Econ-Engagement.” Both projects help
Lebanese youth develop the tools and skills they are going to need to enter the
Lebanese job market. We are supporting these programs because we believe that
education has to be accessible to everyone, especially to the citizens of the
North. This region is vital to the Lebanese economy and has been neglected by
the central government for too many years.
You know, we invest over $50 million every year in education in Lebanon – from
reading programs for primary students all the way through sending talented
Lebanese to the United States for graduate degrees through our Fulbright
program. Along the way, we send high school students to the U.S. to study
English. We do social entrepreneurship programs including right here in Tripoli.
We fund full scholarships for smart young people who would otherwise not have
the means to go to university and we support vocational training, like the great
programs we are here today to highlight. In the U.S., I would like to mention,
vocational training and the jobs that they create, support a large number of our
citizens and their families, including members of my own family. So, we are
proud to be partners with Safadi Foundation’s vocational school. And I’m very
happy to report that graduates of this school are even now being hired to work
on our billion dollar new U.S. Embassy project in Lebanon. Let me say a word
about a couple of other U.S. programs that benefit Tripoli and the North. Right
here in Tripoli, we have started a program called “Hope.” The U.S. government
pays all expenses for 100 students from Tripoli to attend the Lebanese
University here in town. As part of the scholarship, we also provide English
language instruction, leadership training, and career planning workshops.
More broadly, we invest about $12 million each year in our University
Scholarship Program. Each year we offer 100 talented Lebanese high school
graduates comprehensive four-year scholarships to LAU and AUB. And I’d like to
point out that nearly 250 very bright talented people from Tripoli and the North
have already won these scholarships and graduated from these two great Lebanese
Universities.
The enduring partnership we have forged with the Lebanese people through the
education programs fits into a much larger effort by the United States here in
Lebanon. I’d like to give you one more number, if I may. In 2018 alone, the
United States provided $825 million dollars in assistance to Lebanon. That
includes: $168 million in to development programs that finance businesses,
particularly in agriculture, access to clean water, and measures to improve
governance, including here in Tripoli. $362 million in humanitarian assistance,
including to Lebanese communities who are hosting, very generously, such large
numbers of refugees. For example, we recently refurbished over 2,000 residences
across Tripoli - from Jabal Mohsen to the old city. And we provided over $180
million in assistance to the LAF, just this year, including support for the
Border regiments which are located not very far from here. They are for the
first time in many decades putting Lebanese soldiers on your border to protect
you from Da’esh and other threats coming from outside the country. But
assistance is only a tool that helps Lebanon in the short term. The real
solution to the economic problems here is investment and economic growth. We are
trying very hard to bring more U.S. companies to invest in Lebanon. U.S. firms
are committed to clear and transparent business practices. When you see a U.S.
firm, you can be sure that it is abiding by U.S. laws, including laws that
prohibit U.S. companies all around the world from paying bribes to win
contracts. They pay fair wages and ensure fair working conditions. And when they
invest outside the U.S., they are always investing for the long term. The energy
sector is a great example of where U.S. technologies and investments can make a
big impact on the Lebanese economy. Today, American companies are bidding on
projects to transition Lebanon’s power production from dirty diesel and heavy
fuel oil to cleaner, cheaper natural gas. These projects are going to establish
natural gas terminals at Deir Ammar, Selaata, and Zahrani.
I very much hope that the new government moves quickly on the badly needed
reforms and investment that would bring reliable and affordable energy to all
Lebanese.
In closing, from talking to countless Lebanese from North to South and East to
West in this country, I hear that the Lebanese want more from their government.
They want action from their government. There is a new government now and the
United States is absolutely committed to helping support this government,
helping support the Lebanese people, and helping build this economy, and the
state institutions for the long term. We have been here a long time – at least
since the founding of AUB and IC in the mid-1800’s. And we are going to be here
for a long time in the future, very committed to be with you as you build a
future for Lebanon, so thank you very much. Mr. Minister thank you very much for
everything Safadi Foundation is doing and thanks all for being with us today.”
Latest LCCC English
Miscellaneous Reports & News published
on March 08-09/2019
Assad in Tehran: Soleimani’s goons snatched
him to swear allegiance to Khamenei. Putin retaliates
DEBKAfile/March 08/19
Al Qods Brigades, the Iranian Rev Guards’ external wing, “brought” Syrian ruler
Bashar Assad to Tehran on Feb. 27, for an audience with supreme leader Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei. This was revealed on Wednesday, March 6, by Al Qods deputy chief
Brig.-Gen Esmaeil Qaani in an interview with Iranian media. Assad arrived alone
without aides – a sign that he did not come voluntarily. And, indeed, Qaani also
admitted that “his men accompanied Assad” all the way to Tehran, another sign
that he was virtually snatched for the trip. DEBKAfile’s intelligence sources,
who followed this revelation, discovered that Assad was bundled onto an Iranian
plane and flown directly to a Revolutionary Guards air base in western Tehran.
The only official on hand to receive the Syrian president was Al Qods chief Gen.
Qassem Soleimani, who never left his side throughout the visit.
The only Iranian advised of his arrival was supreme leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei. Assad later met President Hassan Rouhani, who was surprised to find
the Syrian ruler in Tehran. All the photos and videos of the visit showed Assad
on his own without the usual Syrian aides.
Our sources report that the entire purpose of this virtual abduction was to
force the Syrian ruler to bend the knee and kiss the hand of Ayatollah Khamenei,
a gesture tantamount to an oath of allegiance to Iran’s supreme leader. Assad
became the only Arab ruler to swear allegiance to the Shiite revolutionary ruler
of Iran. He was not given much choice.Having discovered how Tehran forced Bashar
Assad to its will, Russian President Vladimir Putin, who two days later, on Feb.
27, sat down in Moscow with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and IDF Military
chief Maj. Gen. Tamir Hayman, granted Israel a free hand to attack Iranian
targets in Syria. Putin also invited Israel to accept its first role in the
military and political processes ongoing in Syria. According to our sources,
Iran is not taking the Russian concessions to Israel lying down. Assad is being
subjected to brutal pressure from Tehran to declare Israel’s attacks on Iranian
sites in his country tantamount to attacks on Syrian targets, and to issue a
strong warning that Damascus and Tehran will initiate payback.
US Urges UN to Impose ‘Real’ Sanctions on Iran
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 8 March, 2019/The United States accused Iran on Thursday
of defying a UN resolution with one ballistic missile test and two satellite
launches since December and urged the Security Council to impose new sanctions
on Tehran.
In a letter to the 15-member Council, acting US Ambassador to the United Nations
Jonathan Cohen said Iran tested a medium-range ballistic missile on Dec. 1,
2018, and attempted to place satellites in orbit on Jan. 15 and Feb. 5. "Iran
has carried out these three launches in defiance of the expressed will of the UN
Security Council, and such provocations continue to destabilize the entire
Middle East region," Cohen wrote. Security Council Resolution 2231 -- adopted
just after the 2015 nuclear deal - "called upon" Iran to refrain for up to eight
years from work on ballistic missiles designed to deliver nuclear weapons
following an agreement with six world powers. Some states argue that the
language does not make it obligatory. Cohen's letter called upon the Council to
"join us in imposing real consequences on Iran for its flagrant defiance of the
Council's demands and bring back tougher international restrictions to deter
Iran's missile program."Asked for a response to the US letter, spokesman Alireza
Miryousefi for the Iranian mission to the US said Tehran does not have any
ballistic missiles designed to carry nuclear weapons "therefore none of the
ballistic missile launches of Iran are covered by that resolution." There was no
immediate request from the United States for a Council meeting to discuss Iran
and no further steps were announced in the letter. At a Security Council meeting
in December, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo urged the body to toughen that
measure to reflect language in a 2010 resolution that left no room for
interpretation by banning Iran from "activity related to ballistic missiles
capable of delivering nuclear weapons, including launches using ballistic
missile technology."
London Grants Jailed UK-Iranian Aid Worker Diplomatic
Protection
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 8 March, 2019/The UK will hand diplomatic protection to
British-Iranian mother Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe to underline the government's
belief that Iran has behaved unjustly in its treatment of her, Foreign Minister
Jeremy Hunt said on Thursday. Hunt said while the move, a little-used way for
governments to seek protection on behalf of their nationals, was unlikely to be
a "magic wand," it may help the aid worker's case. Zaghari-Ratcliffe, a project
manager with the Thomson Reuters Foundation, was arrested in April 2016 at a
Tehran airport as she headed back to Britain with her daughter after a family
visit. She was sentenced to five years in jail after being convicted of plotting
to overthrow Iran's clerical establishment, a charge denied by her family and
the Foundation, a charity organization that operates independently of Thomson
Reuters and Reuters News. "I have today decided that the UK will take a step
that is extremely unusual and exercise diplomatic protection," Hunt said in a
statement, adding that the move signaled to Tehran that "its behavior is totally
wrong". "It is unlikely to be a magic wand that leads to an overnight result.
But it demonstrates to the whole world that Nazanin is innocent and the UK will
not stand by when one of its citizens is treated so unjustly," he said. Iran's
ambassador to London, Hamid Baeidinejad, said on Twitter that Britain's move
"contravenes international law". "As (the) UK Govt is acutely aware, Iran does
not recognize dual nationality. Irrespective of UK residency, Ms. Zaghari thus
remains Iranian," Baeidinejad added. Diplomatic protection is a mechanism under
international law through which a state may seek reparation for injury to one of
its nationals on the basis that the second state has committed an
internationally wrongful act against that person. Earlier this year,
Zaghari-Ratcliffe went on hunger strike in protest at her treatment in jail. She
has suffered from health issues, including undergoing tests for breast cancer
and a series of panic attacks, while her emotional state has worsened during her
confinement.
Netanyahu Warns Israeli Navy Could Take Action against Iran
Oil Smuggling
Tel Aviv - Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 8 March, 2019/Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu has threatened Iran that the navy could launch operations against its
oil smuggling operations, calling on the international community to stop
Tehran’s attempts to circumvent US sanctions. "Iran is trying to circumvent the
sanctions through covert oil smuggling over maritime routes, and to the extent
that these attempts widen, the navy will have a more important role in blocking
these Iranian actions," Reuters quoted the PM as saying at a navy cadets’
graduation ceremony in Haifa on Wednesday.
"I call on the entire international community to stop Iran's attempts to
circumvent the sanctions by sea, and of course, by any (other) means." US
President Donald Trump last year quit the 2015 nuclear deal with Tehran and
reimposed some sanctions, aiming to cut Iran’s oil exports to zero. It was not
clear how Israel would stop Iran's shipping activities or whether it would risk
direct confrontation at sea with Iranian vessels. The Israeli navy, whose
largest vessels are missile corvettes and a small submarine fleet, is most
active in the Mediterranean and Red seas, according to Reuters.
According to maritime experts, Iranian oil smuggling methods have included
changing the names of ships or flag registries, switching off location
transponders on ships and conducting ship-to-ship transfers offshore and away
from large trade hubs.
"In a few days, the leaders of Cyprus and Greece will come here, together
with... (US Secretary of State Mike) Pompeo, to advance a gas pipeline from
Israel to Europe via these countries," Netanyahu said, hailing the role of the
navy. He and US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman later visited the American
Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system deployment site in Israel.
Netanyahu said: “This is a testimony to the strong alliance between Israel and
the United States. The coalition for joint defense, which is expressed not only
in words but also on the field, is exceptional.”"We are very pleased with the
cooperation and the US commitment to Israel's security, which President (Donald)
Trump often expresses," he added.
Khamenei Appoints Raisi as Iran’s Judiciary Chief
London - Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 8 March, 2019/Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei
appointed on Thursday former presidential candidate Ebrahim Raisi as head of the
Iranian judiciary, taking over from Sadegh Amoli Larijani, who became the
chairman of the powerful Expediency Council last December. Raisi had lost to
President Hassan Rouhani in the 2017 presidential election. "I am appointing you
as the head of the judiciary, as a person who is familiar with the judiciary
after years of serving inside the system," Khamenei said in a statement carried
by IRNA news agency. Hardline cleric Raisi is a protégé of Khamenei. His
appointment is for five years, and could be renewed for a second term. The new
head of the judiciary is said to be one of the contestants for the post of
Supreme Leader in post-Khamenei Iran. He is known for his role in overseeing the
execution of political prisoners in the late 1980s. An audio file release in
2016 proved he was part of a four-person committee that ordered the execution of
several thousand political prisoners in 1988. Human Rights Watch said the
appointment of a former judge responsible for mass executions to be head of
Iran’s judiciary reflects the deteriorating human rights situation in the
country. “It’s disturbing and frankly frightening that Ebrahim Raisi will be
overseeing justice and accountability in Iran,” said Sarah Leah Whiteson, Middle
East and North Africa director at HRW. Khamanei said he appointed Raisi to bring
about a transformation in the judiciary, in line with its needs, advancements
and challenges on the 40th anniversary of the Revolution.
ISIS Ambush Kills 6 PMF Members in Northern Iraq
Baghdad – Hamza Mustafa/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 8 March, 2019/Six members of the
Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) were killed in an ambush by the ISIS terrorist
group in northern Iraq, officials said Thursday. Thirty-one others were wounded
when ISIS ambushed a bus carrying the members in an area south of Mosul city.
Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi opened an investigation into the attack, which
took place late Wednesday near the town of Makhmour. An official from the PMF
said the bus was en route from Mosul to the oil-rich city of Kirkuk. He blamed
the attack on ISIS, which was vanquished in Iraq in late 2017 but has recently
stepped up activities. The wounded were transported to the nearest health-care
facility in the nearby town of Qayyarah, in Nineveh Province. Member of the
parliamentary security and defense committee former interior minister Mohammed
Salem al-Ghabban told Asharq Al-Awsat that such attacks demonstrate that ISIS
has breached security measures. He demanded that the breaches be properly
addressed, highlighting the need for bolstering intelligence efforts, which
would “greatly limit such attacks, but not eliminate them.”“Some of these
violations, including this one, are politically-motivated on the local and
regional levels,” he added without elaborating. Former Nineveh governor Atheel
al-Nujaifi underlined to Asharq Al-Awsat the need to resolve pending political
issues in the Makhmour area and its surroundings in order to prevent ISIS from
exploiting them to carry out more attacks in the future.
Egyptian Delegation Heads to Gaza to Revive Truce with Israel
Ramallah – Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 8 March, 2019/An Egyptian security delegation
headed to the Gaza Strip on Thursday on a mission to defuse tensions between the
Hamas movement and Israel following days of escalation between the two sides.
The Health Ministry in the coastal enclave said a 15-year-old Palestinian died
from Israeli gunfire during overnight border skirmishes. The Israeli military on
Thursday demolished the family home of a Palestinian accused in the deaths of
two soldiers and an Israeli newborn. The Egyptian delegation’s visit was the
second in three days. It visited the Rafah crossing on the Palestinian-Egyptian
border before later meeting with Hamas leaders. The movement had informed the
delegation that it had no intention to escalate tensions with Israel, demanding
that Tel Aviv commit to truce agreements reached months ago. These
understandings include allowing funds to flow into Gaza, expanding fishing zones
and resolving frequent power cuts. Once this part of the truce is finalized,
then discussions could turn to greater issues, such as working on large projects
in Gaza. Israel has been demanding that all attacks from Gaza cease, including
the launching of incendiary balloons towards its territories. On Monday, Hamas
leader Ismail Haniyeh accused Israel of "opting out of short and long term
understandings" aimed at alleviating the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. He said
that last year Israel and Hamas reached understandings for Israel to extend
Gaza's fishing zone, increase the territory's electricity supply and allow cash
into Gaza for Hamas public servants. But he said a botched Israeli undercover
raid in Gaza last fall undermined understandings on broader issues "as if they
never existed."
US State Department Hails Chemical Attack Report on Douma
Washington - Elie Youssef/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 8 March, 2019/The US State
Department has hailed a report issued earlier this month by the global chemical
weapons agency on the use of chemical weapons in an attack last year in the
Syrian town of Douma. “The report concluded that there were reasonable grounds
that chlorine was used as a chemical weapon in the attack. The FFM (an impartial
outside investigator) found that the weaponized chlorine was not manufactured at
the sites, as alleged by the regime, and that it is possible that the chlorine
was released by cylinders that had been dropped from the air, as indicated by
their condition and surroundings,” State Department spokesman Robert Palladino
said in a statement. "The conclusions in the FFM report support what the United
States determined in our assessment of the attack last April – that the regime
is responsible for this heinous chemical weapons attack that killed and injured
civilians," it added. he Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW)
said last week that the mission visited Douma, analyzed samples taken from the
scene and from people affected, interviewed witnesses and studied toxicological
and ballistics analyses. The data, it said, provided "reasonable grounds that
the use of a toxic chemical as a weapon" took place on April 7, 2018. "This
toxic chemical contained reactive chlorine. The toxic chemical was likely
molecular chlorine." The State Department said that “the Assad regime’s use of
chlorine as a chemical weapon is a violation of its obligations under the
Chemical Weapons Convention, to which it is a party, as well as UNSCR
2118.”“Further, the United States rejects the efforts of the Assad regime and
its supporters – Russia chief among them – to sow disinformation about alleged
chemical weapons attacks,” the statement read. The US expressed deep concern
about such disinformation. "As noted in our own assessment in April 2018, after
the CW attack in Douma, the regime falsely accused opposition groups of
perpetrating the chemical weapons attack in Douma; and regime and Russia forces
delayed inspectors from entering Douma in an expedited manner with appropriate
access consistent with their mandate.”“Unfortunately, this is just the latest
case where chemical weapons use in Syria has been confirmed by the FFM,” the
statement added. The US called upon “the Assad regime to fully cooperate with
the OPCW, verifiably destroy its remaining chemical weapons program and
completely disclose its activities related to chemical weapons.” “These are all
obligations Syria accepted when it became a party to the Chemical Weapons
Convention in 2013, but has failed to honor,” it said.
Temporary Solution Reached in Golden Gate Spat in Jerusalem
Ramallah - Kifah Zboun/Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 8 March, 2019/A temporary
solution appears on the horizon in the dispute over the Golden Gate, or Bab al-Rahma,
prayer yard in Jerusalem’s al-Aqsa mosque compound. There have recently been
scuffles between worshippers and Israeli police there over the use the Bab al-Rahma
closed by Israel since 2003. The latest dispute erupted over the renovation of
the Bab al-Rahma. Israel had ordered the closure of the area to carry out
renovations, sparking an objection from Jordan, which oversees holy sites in
Jerusalem. It instead said that it should be entitled with renovating Bab al-Rahma
with the supervision of the Religious Endowments Authority, or Awqaf, which will
in turn bar entry to the site for the duration of the renovation. Jordanian and
Israeli officials held a meeting Wednesday to address the dispute that ended
with disagreement with Amman insisting on its right to carry out the
renovations. Senior officials soon intervened to avert an escalation. Talks
ended with the agreement for Jordan to hold the renovations and the Awqaf to
close the site until they are complete. A senior Jordanian official, who spoke
on condition of anonymity, said that Israel will allow the Awqaf to bring in the
necessary building material for the renovations. The date for the renovation has
not been set yet, but it is said to be soon. He added that Jordan and Israel are
in agreement over the need to renovate Bab al-Rahma, saying that worshippers
will not be allowed to enter the area when the process begins. Access to Bab al-Rahma
was closed by an Israeli court order in 2003 during the second Palestinian
intifada over alleged militant activity there, police say. The compound is the
third-holiest site in Islam and a focus of Palestinian aspirations for
statehood. It is in the walled Old City in east Jerusalem, occupied by Israel in
the 1967 Six-Day War and later annexed in a move never recognized by the
international community.
Turkey Will Deploy S-400 System despite US Warning
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 8 March, 2019/Defense Minister Hulusi Akar said on
Friday US officials have told Turkey it would be impossible for Congress to
approve the sale of F-35 jets if Ankara buys the Russian S-400 air defense
system, but that Turkey is working to overcome those problems. Turkey says it
has already paid Moscow some of the bill, and analysts say President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, who is campaigning for March 31 local elections, would find it
hard to back away from the Russian deal now. The US had agreed to sell 100 of
its latest, fifth-generation F-35 fighters to Turkey, and has so far delivered
two of the aircraft. But Congress last year ordered a delay in future
deliveries. Erdogan said that his country will go ahead with the purchase of
S-400 system, despite a US warning that such a move would force it to cancel a
sale of the F-35 jets to Ankara. In an interview with Kanal 24 television late
Wednesday, he said: "The S-400 is a done deal, there can be no turning back. We
have reached an agreement with the Russians." "We will move toward a joint
production. Perhaps after the S-400, we will go for the S-500." Erdogan added
that first delivery of the S-400 would be made in July. This week, the top US
military commander for Europe, Gen. Curtis Scaparrotti, told the US Congress
that NATO member Turkey should reconsider its plan to buy the S-400 from Russia
or forfeit other future American military aircraft and systems. He said Turkey's
use of the Russian surface-to-air missile defense system would be a threat to
the F-35. It was the latest in a series of warnings the US has made to Turkey
over its plans to buy the S-400. The US and other NATO allies have repeatedly
complained about the purchase, saying it is not compatible with other allied
systems and would represent a security threat.
The issue has aggravated already souring relations with Ankara, including
tensions over the war in Syria. In December, the State Department approved the
sale of a $3.5 billion US Patriot missile defense system to Turkey. Erdogan said
Turkey could still purchase the Patriot system "if the conditions are suitable,
the prices are suitable (and) if we can conduct a joint production." The last
diplomatic crisis between the two countries contributed to driving the lira to a
record low in August. This week, despite the Central Bank maintaining interest
rates well above inflation, Turkey’s currency has fallen 1.5 percent - largely
due to renewed concerns over relations with Washington, traders say.
Algeria Lawyers Protest against Bouteflika, Demand Transition Govt.
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 8 March, 2019/Hundreds of Algerian lawyers took to the
streets of the capital Algiers on Thursday to rally against President Abdelaziz
Bouteflika’s run for a fifth term in office. “The people want to overthrow the
regime”, shouted lawyers, who protested in front of the constitutional council
building. “Republic, not a kingdom,” others chanted. Security forces were
deployed to monitor the demonstration but as with previous protests, they did
not intervene. Tens of thousands of Algerians, tired of the dominance of elderly
veterans of the 1954-1962 war of independence against France, have taken to the
streets to urge the ailing president not to stand in an election scheduled for
April 18. He has submitted his candidacy papers. He has not spoken in public
since suffering a stroke in 2013 and remains in a hospital in Geneva. One lawyer
said that Bouteflika was no longer able to carry out his duties, starting with
his inability to submit his candidacy paper himself. “Isn’t his presence in a
Geneva hospital for 12 days enough evidence to reject his nomination?” he asked.
Bouteflika’s campaign director, however, offered an upbeat assessment, saying
there was "nothing to worry about." "The recent information saying President
Bouteflika's heath has deteriorated is without foundation and the health tests
will soon be finished," said Abdelghani Zaalane. The national association of
lawyers has demanded that the authorities postpone the election and set up a
transitional government. On Wednesday, the influential Algerian war veterans
association expressed support for the so far peaceful protests. Two branches of
powerful Algerian labor union UGTA, representing tens of thousands of workers,
also opposed the re-election plan. Some officials from Bouteflika’s ruling FLN
party have turned up at demonstrations. Several public figures have announced
their resignations in a country where personnel changes normally take place
behind closed doors. Later on Thursday, Bouteflika issued his first warning to
protesters, saying the unrest could destabilize the country. In a letter
reported by the state news agency APS, he said: “Breaking this peaceful
expression by any treacherous internal or foreign group may lead to sedition and
chaos and resulting crises and woes.”He did not say who any of these groups
might be. “We need to preserve the continuity to allow the authorities and
people to maintain the battle of construction in order to achieve more
progress,” said the president.
Trump Brands Democrats 'Anti-Israel,'
'Anti-Jewish'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 08/19/President Donald Trump said Friday
that a recent U.S. House of Representatives vote condemning bigotry shows the
opposition Democrats have become an "anti-Israel" and "anti-Jewish" party. "I
thought yesterday's vote by the House was disgraceful," Trump told reporters at
the White House. "The Democrats have become an anti-Israel party and anti-Jewish
party." The Republican president spoke a day after the vote on a resolution
originally intended to condemn anti-Semitism following controversial comments by
Democratic Congresswoman Ilhan Omar that instead became a broader anti-hate
measure.
Democrats Including Ocasio-Cortez Condemn
U.S. Strategy on Venezuela
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 08/19/Sixteen Democratic lawmakers, among
them rising star Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, on Thursday sent a joint letter to
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo criticizing what they described as
"counterproductive" US strategy on crisis-hit Venezuela. "We write to express
our deep concern regarding the Trump Administration's handling of relations with
Venezuela, particularly its suggestions of military intervention, imposition of
broad unilateral sanctions, and recent recognition of an opposition leader as
interim president," the legislators wrote. They warned recent sanctions could
"exacerbate the country's grave economic crisis, causing immense suffering for
the most vulnerable in society who bear no responsibility for the situation."
Venezuela is in the midst of a power struggle between President Nicolas Maduro
and national assembly leader Juan Guaido, who declared himself interim president
in January and is backed by more than 50 countries, chief among them the United
States. Guaido accuses Maduro of rigging last May's election which saw the
socialist successor to Hugo Chavez win a second term despite a freefalling
economy and hyperinflation that has left millions without basic necessities and
triggered a mass exodus. The lawmakers also strongly condemned Maduro for his
repression of the country's civil society, economic failure, killing of unarmed
protesters, holding illegitimate elections and blocking humanitarian aid. Since
2015, Washington has sanctioned dozens of current and former Venezuelan
officials -- among them Maduro himself -- accusing them of human rights
violations, corruption and drug trafficking. On Wednesday, US President Donald
Trump's administration continued to tighten the screws on its campaign of
sanctions to force Maduro from power, revoking the visas of 77 people linked to
the regime. "The U.S. stands alone in its decision to impose economic sanctions
against the Venezuelan government, that as currently implemented, are hurting
the civilian population," the lawmakers wrote, branding the policies as
"counterproductive" as they "play into the Venezuelan government's narrative"
that the opposition is a puppet of Washington. Along with Ocasio-Cortez,
lawmakers who signed included representatives Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib, Ayanna
Pressley and presidential hopeful Tulsi Gabbard.
Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on March 08-09/2019
Iran: Child Executions, Amputations, Floggings
د. ماجد ربيزاده /معهد جستون: إعدام الأطفال وبتر الأطراف والجلد في إيران
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone Institute/March 08/19
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/72819/dr-majid-rafizadeh-iran-child-executions-amputations-floggings%d8%af-%d9%85%d8%a7%d8%ac%d8%af-%d8%b1%d8%a8%d9%8a%d8%b2%d8%a7%d8%af%d9%87-%d9%85%d8%b9%d9%87%d8%af-%d8%ac%d9%8a%d8%b3%d8%aa%d9%88/
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13841/iran-executions-amputations-floggings
Europe ravenously throw sanctions on a country that has been home to Jews for
more than three thousand years, yet tries to find ways to keep on doing business
with a country such as Iran that is not only trying to establish its hegemony
throughout the Middle East, but is also the serial violator of just about every
human right imaginable. The only conclusion one can come to is that Europe would
evidently still like to kill the Jews and is happy to support those wishing to
kill them.
"In February [2018], Canadian Iranian academic and environmental activist Kavous
Seyyed Emami died in Evin prison following his arbitrary arrest two weeks
earlier. Authorities claimed he committed suicide and refused to release his
body unless his family agreed to an immediate burial without an independent
autopsy." — Amnesty International.
The list of unspeakable human rights violations committed by Iran's regime is
lengthy; however, by far the most disturbing seems the cruelty enacted against
children.
Now is the time for the EU to halt its appeasement policy with a regime that
does not hesitate to flog people -- publicly, as a message to others -- torture
any citizen they choose to target, enact cruel punishments such as amputation
without a fair trial, and execute children just starting their lives. These are
acts that should be condemned -- not condoned through the pursuit of appeasement
policies, moral depravity and raw greed.
According to a report published by Amnesty International on February 26, the
human rights situation in Iran has "severely deteriorated". Why then does the
European Union continue to pursue appeasement policies with a regime that has an
excruciating human rights record? Sadly, Europe -- in spite its endless moral
preening and self-righteousness -- seems to have become the world most immoral
player -- if it was not already. The European Union, for instance, unjustly
singles out for bullying the only liberal, democratic, human-rights-abiding
country in the Middle East: Israel. Not Turkey for occupying Northern Cyprus,
China for obliterating Tibet, or Pakistan for occupying Kashmir. Europe and the
corrupt United Nations do not lay a glove on the real perpetrators of crimes
against humanity such as China, Cuba, Russia, Turkey, North Korea, Nigeria or
Sudan, to name just a few.
The stench of Europe's duplicity cannot be overstated. Europe ravenously throws
sanctions on a country that has been home to Jews for more than three thousand
years, yet tries to find ways to keep on doing business with a country such as
Iran that is not only trying to establish its hegemony throughout the Middle
East -- through proxies in Iraq, Yemen, Syria and Lebanon -- but is also the
serial violator of just about every human right imaginable (here, here, here,
and here). The only conclusion one can come to is that Europe would evidently
still like to kill the Jews and is happy to support those wishing to kill them.
How much more immoral can one get?
The list of unspeakable human rights violations committed by Iran's regime is
lengthy; however, by far the most disturbing seems the cruelty enacted against
children.
According to the Norway-based organization Iran Human Rights (IHR), which
closely monitors executions in Iran:
"Despite ratifying the United Nations' Convention on the Rights of the Child
which bans the death penalty for offenses committed at under 18 years of age,
Iran stays the world's top executioner of juvenile offenders. According to
reports by IHR, Iranian authorities have executed at least 40 juvenile offenders
since 2013. "
These children are held in custody and executed before they have the chance to
reach adulthood. At least 6 minors, including two child brides were executed in
2018. Amnesty International comments on Iran's use of capital punishment on
children:
"Girls as young as nine can be sentenced to execution; for boys it's 15. At
least 73 young offenders were executed between 2005 and 2015. And the
authorities show no sign of stopping this horrific practice.
"We have the details of 49 people on Iran's death row who were under 18 at the
time of the crime they are alleged to have committed. The UN says there are at
least 160 such people facing execution in the country. In fact, there are likely
to be many more young offenders on Iranian death rows, as use of capital
punishment in Iran is often shrouded in secrecy."
Consider Zeinab Sekaanvand Lokran. In October 2018 the former child bride, who
came from a poor minority family, was executed the day after giving birth to a
stillborn baby. Under Iran's Islamic Penal Code, executions can be conducted in
four different ways: hanging, stoning, firing squad, or crucifixion.
Vague charges can be brought up by the Islamic Republic's judiciary system or
the Revolutionary Court, such as "waging war against God", spreading moharebeh
("corruption on earth") such as protesting, or endangering the country's
national security. These charges can be stretched to allow for simple acts such
as criticizing the Supreme Leader to become crimes, simply to allow an order of
execution to be carried out.
Iran's Islamic Penal Code allows girls as young as nine to be executed. This is
all allowed to occur while the deeply cynical EU continues to label the Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani as a "moderate".
The theocratic establishment is also known for forcing confessions and
televising torture, in order to strike fear in the public. As Iran Human Rights
recently stated:
"In 2018, the Iranian authorities once again displayed their systematic
violations of due process and the rule of law. Televised confessions, unfair
trials, and reports of torture are reminders of the fact that sustainable
improvements in the status of human rights and serious steps towards abolition
of the death penalty are not possible without fundamental changes in Iran's
judicial system."
In 2018, at least 273 people were executed in Iran, according to Iran Human
Rights. The Iranian government ranks second (China ranks first) when it comes to
the absolute number of people that it executes, and ranks first for the
execution of people per capita. Because of lack of transparency in the Iranian
regime, the unofficial number of those executed is believed to be even higher.
The use of cruel and inhumane punishments is also on the rise in Iran. According
to Amnesty International's report, the use of various forms of torture such as
amputation and flogging has been increasing at an alarming rate.
One example included tying a man to a tree in plain sight of the public, in the
Razavi Khorasan province, and flogging him 80 times. His crime? Drinking alcohol
a decade before, when he was 14 or 15 years old.
In the case of an accused thief, he allegedly stole some livestock. His
punishment? His hand was cut off. Not only are these punishments barbaric, but
one can assume that neither of these men, nor any of the multitudes of others
treated in a similar way, was given a fair trial or anything close to a legal
defense.
Iranian leaders have also been increasing their crackdown on the whole
population. Detainees have been dying suspiciously in prison, such as a
63-year-old Iranian-Canadian professor. According to Amnesty International:
"In February [2018], Canadian Iranian academic and environmental activist Kavous
Seyyed Emami died in Evin prison following his arbitrary arrest two weeks
earlier. Authorities claimed he committed suicide and refused to release his
body unless his family agreed to an immediate burial without an independent
autopsy."
Due to the recent protests in the country, the theocratic establishment has also
ratcheted up its censorship of media, jamming of foreign satellite television
channels, and detention of human rights defenders. Human rights defenders and
prominent lawyers, including Nasrin Sotoudeh and her husband Reza Khandan, who
defended or supported social movements such as the opposition of compulsory
hijab, have been unfairly prosecuted and sentenced to long prison sentences.
These increasingly wanton human rights violations should raise alarms among the
European governments, who are always lecturing the rest of the world about how
caring they are -- for instance not sending criminals back to countries where
they might be tortured. It should horrify them to know that they are in some way
enabling and emboldening this regime and empowering it to continue to commit
these vicious acts.
Now is the time for the EU to halt its appeasement policy with a regime that
does not hesitate to flog people -- publicly, as a message to others -- torture
any citizen they choose to target, enact cruel punishments such as amputation
without a fair trial, and execute children just starting their lives. These are
acts that should be condemned -- not condoned through the pursuit of appeasement
policies, moral depravity and raw greed.
*Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a business strategist and advisor, Harvard-educated
scholar, political scientist, board member of Harvard International Review, and
president of the International American Council on the Middle East. He has
authored several books on Islam and US Foreign Policy. He can be reached at
Dr.Rafizadeh@Post.Harvard.Edu
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/13841/iran-executions-amputations-floggings
Mullahs Pushed Off the Gravy Train
Amir Taheri/Asharq Al Awsat/March, 08/19
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/72822/amir-taheri-mullahs-pushed-off-the-gravy-train-%d8%a3%d9%85%d9%8a%d8%b1-%d8%b7%d8%a7%d9%87%d8%b1%d9%8a-%d8%a3%d8%a6%d9%85%d8%a9-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%ac%d9%85%d8%b9%d8%a9-%d9%81%d9%8a-%d8%a5%d9%8a%d8%b1/
If you are one of the 3,400 mullahs who work as Friday Prayer Leader (Imam
Jum’ah) in the Islamic Republic of Iran, you better start getting worried, very
worried. The reason is that you may soon find yourself disembarked from the
gravy train and your cushy seat given to a spring chicken novice.
Last week eight “Imams” were disembarked, among them heavy weights from Tabriz,
Shiraz, Rasht and Ahvaz. And, if Tehran rumor mills are right, 25 more are
already scheduled for disembarkation. Judging by the “Supreme Guide” Ali
Khamenei’s latest message to the nation, an ambitious “change of generations”
scheme is to be implemented in the months ahead.
Being a Friday Prayer Imam in the Khomeinist republic is like owning a gold
mine. To start with you receive a mouth-watering tax-free monthly stipend plus
“resources” to cover expenses. In most cases, you are also given a suitable
“residence” plus a bullet-proof limousine and specially trained bodyguards to
protect you against any black sheep in your flock. Other perks include free
medical care, annual all-paid pilgrimages to “holy” cities in Iraq and, at least
one grand Hajj trip to Mecca. Thanks to the position you will also have priority
access to luxuries and services and tax-free imported goods. Moreover, if you or
family members wish to travel, your visa application is fast-tracked through the
Foreign Ministry.
But what does one have to do in exchange for such a cushy position?
Strictly speaking: nothing. Well not quite. You have to grow a substantial
beard, wear a turban and a mullah’s gear, fondle a rosary in public and attend
public events with a sober and straight face.
The highlight of your activity is the sermon you deliver at Friday mass at the
mosque assigned to you. The good thing about that, however, is that you don’t
have to compose the sermon; the text is faxed, or nowadays emailed, to you from
the Central Office of Friday Prayers in Tehran. But even if the text from Tehran
is delayed or doesn’t arrive, you need not worry. All you need is dwell on three
themes: blaming the American “Great Satan” for every problem under the sun,
including the Islamic Republic’s multiple failures, praising the late Ayatollah
Khomeini as the man who “revived Islam”, and praying for eternal life for the
current” Supreme Guide” so that he can unite mankind under the banner of
“Islamic Revolution.”
The scheme, originally launched by Khomeini when the mullahs seized power in
1979, worked reasonably well for the new political masters in Tehran. It turned
mullahdom, if one is allowed such a neologism, into a popular career choice,
attracting energetic and ambitious men.
Before the revolution Iran counted around 80,000 full-time mullahs for a
population of 40 million. Four decades later, and with its population doubled,
it boasts almost half a million.
However, the real picture isn’t that simple.
To start with the vast majority of clerics have gradually distanced themselves
from the regime, preferring to preserve the old traditional clerical universe in
which mullahs devoted themselves to theology, philosophy and religious history.
Slowly but surely, the clergy has been divided between turban-wearing
politicians and genuine clerics who, in the words of Grand Ayatollah Alawi
Borujerdi, have to deal with enough theological problems not to have time for
politics.
Next, something that is worrying for ruling mullahs, happened. The
Khomeinist system’s failures provoked a backlash against the religious
narrative. And, as always in Iran’s history in the past five centuries, setback
for religious narrative leads to a rise of nationalistic discourse. The
nationalist narrative is especially popular with the millennials born after the
mullahs seized power, who account for half of the country’s population.
In the meantime, government mullahs grew old. Today, the average age of the
5,000 government mullahs, from the “Supreme Guide” down and including Friday
Imams, is around 70. The age disconnect is only one reason for the dramatic fall
in turnouts at Friday prayers. According to the latest report by the central
office in charge of the Imam networks, Friday prayers in Tehran no longer
attract more than 20,000 people from a population of over 12 million. In some
cities, Tabriz and Isfahan for example, the numbers have fallen below 1,000.
However, age isn’t the only worrying factor.
People, especially the younger generation, are not interested in the shopworn
anti-American discourse seasoned with empty pseudo-Islamic slogans. The
anti-American discourse sounds even more hallow when the Islamic Majlis
publishes claims that some 15,000 children of senior Islamic Republic officials,
including many mullahs, are in the United States for further studies and that
hundreds of top Khomeinist officials are either US citizens or hold American
“Green Cards” (permanent residence documents.) Reports of top officials and
mullahs or their families traveling to the West for holidays, medical services
and shopping further contribute to the falseness of official Friday sermons.
Would Khamenei’s new plan correct the disconnect between the regime and the
Iranian society? No one could know for sure. Replacing older, tired, and less
enthusiastic mullahs with younger, leaner and more ambitious ones may attenuate
the current mood of doom and gloom among the regime-owned clergy. But, I
suspect, age therapy alone may not do the trick. The second plank of Khamenei’s
plan is to use as much of the Iranian nationalist discourse, as peddlers of
down-market Pan-Islamism could appropriate without losing face.
In the past few weeks, sermon texts coming from Tehran have been peppered with
patriotic themes about the Iranian “nation” rather than the “ummah” and Tehran’s
attempts at dominating several Arab countries justified, in the words of Quds
(Jerusalem) Corps chief Gen. Qassem Soleimani, as “moves necessary to protect
our national territory.”In the final analysis, however, a change of personnel
and official discourse may not be enough to save a tired system in deep crisis.
The core question in the debate about Iran’s future remains: change within the
regime or regime change?
Is This the End of the Anglosphere?
John Micklethwait/Bloomberg View/March, 08/19
Look around the Western world. Which country’s politics seem the most shambolic?
In the past, your eyes might have headed instinctively toward southern Europe.
The politicians in Athens, Madrid and Rome are certainly trying hard, but if you
want dysfunctionality, there are only two places to go: Washington and London.
America’s government was shut for a long stretch of this year — and now
President Donald Trump is stuck in a row with Congress over whether there is a
national emergency on the southern border of the United States. Britain’s
government is meandering toward Brexit with all the discipline of a drunk on an
icy road. If nothing changes, the United Kingdom will topple out of the European
Union in five weeks.
Is this the end of “the Anglosphere”? For nearly four decades, America and
Britain have touted the benefits of open markets, globalization and personal
freedom. Now that voice has either shrunk to a murmur, or is singing a very
different tune. It is not silent yet, but the faltering partnership that has set
the mood music for much of the world is something that matters far beyond the
English-speaking world. You may not like pontificating Anglos, but everybody who
cares about liberty and the rule of law should pray for them to be heard.
By “Anglosphere,” this pontificating Anglo means something narrower than the
fifth of the world that speaks English; this is about the US and Britain. And
yet it’s a definition that is also meant to encompass something much more
powerful and evangelical than the tweedy “special relationship.”
A half-century ago, Britain was certainly America’s closest ally, with strong
historical, military and personal ties and a shared aversion to communism and
the Soviet Union. Still, it was hardly evangelical. In the 1970s, Britain was
both farther left and far less successful than America; not that the United
States, limping through Vietnam and Watergate, looked especially inspirational
either.
All this changed in the 1980s with Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher. The
Anglosphere broadcast a message that handbagged the world: Words like
“privatization” and “deregulation” became commonplace, first in the West and
then in the emerging and ex-communist realms. As Victor Hugo once pointed out,
“Nothing can stop an idea whose time has come,” and globalization jumped
forward, driven by technology as well as ideology. Tony Blair and Bill Clinton;
Blair and George W. Bush; David Cameron and Barack Obama — a succession of
youngish prophets walked the world, telling people what to do, with various
degrees of smugness.
Again the United States was the bigger and more influential partner; Britain’s
economy is smaller than California’s and its total defense budget is less than
half the size of the US Navy’s. But the fact that America had a partner that
spoke the same language (on many different levels) made the alliance greater
than the sum of its parts. Britain gave the Anglosphere a voice in the European
Union. Britain also brought a lot of soft power. It came to the table with an
unusually global media, Oxbridge, and, of course, London, a commercial entrepôt
rivaling New York in finance and cosmopolitanism.
Gradually, the Anglosphere became a presumption. Some countries hated its
message; many more wanted to adapt it to their needs, or delay it. Nevertheless,
the presumption, even in places as hostile to it as Brussels and Beijing, was a
grudging acceptance that most countries, if they wanted to do well, would have
to become more Anglo.
Looking back, this presumption was more vulnerable than anyone realized.
Although the Sept. 11 attacks initially united the world behind the Anglosphere,
the idea that Britain and America were on the right side of history was brutally
questioned by the bloody quagmire in Iraq, the illiberal horrors of Guantanamo,
and then the credit crunch. What’s more, as China continued to rise, a rival
trumpet began to sound that was especially attractive to governments across the
emerging world: The “Beijing consensus” promoted the idea that authoritarianism
was a better spur for prosperity than “chaotic” laissez faire.
The hope is that the Anglosphere will recover. If a recovery is to happen, it
has to happen soon. History does not wait for dysfunctional countries to sort
themselves out. An idea whose time has come can soon become one whose time has
passed. The Anglosphere changed the world for lots of reasons, but one was
because it had sustained momentum. Let’s hope it recovers it soon.
Deficit Hubris Looks Like the Next Economics Mistake
Noah Smith/Bloomberg View/March, 08/19
The 2008 financial crisis and the deep recession that followed taught the world
to be more skeptical of macroeconomic theories. In the years leading up to that
crisis, many leading macroeconomists displayed a startling amount of
complacency, bordering on hubris. The defining quote came in a 2003 essay, when
Nobel-winning macroeconomist Robert Lucas made a startling declaration:
Macroeconomics in [its] original sense has succeeded: Its central problem of
depression prevention has been solved…and has in fact been solved for many
decades.
Lucas believed, like so many others did, that the Federal Reserve and other
central banks had learned how to use monetary policy to fine-tune the economy
and smooth out recessions. And part of the reason for his belief was an
overreliance on the modern macroeconomic theories that he himself had helped
create. Indeed, those theories completely failed to see the Great Recession
coming.
Why did the theories fail in 2008? One reason was that most of them omitted a
critical piece of the economy -- the financial industry. Macroeconomic models
are, by necessity, highly simplified pictures of the economy; they have to
choose which sectors, agents and institutions to include and which to gloss
over, and in this case they chose wrong. Another reason is that the models were
designed to cope with normal conditions and modest economic fluctuations -- a
very large recession was outside the scope of the theories, and so they stopped
working just when they were needed most.
A third reason macro models failed in 2008 was that even the parts of the
economy they did try to describe were probably modeled incorrectly. These models
are chock full of unrealistic assumptions about how consumers, workers and
companies behave. Since even a small departure from realism can potentially make
a macroeconomic model’s results go completely haywire, this is probably a vain
hope most of the time.
Thus, macroeconomic models have little hope of matching the quantitative
accuracy of theories in the natural sciences, or even in microeconomics. They
can’t forecast the economy, and whether they can be used to offer any sort of
precise, quantitative policy guidance is doubtful. Instead, policy makers tend
to use them as heuristics -- useful stories about the economy that can inform
how they think about the forces at work, but not to spit out hard numbers.
But using theories like stories introduces another problem -- how to tell which
story to use. Policy makers have a vast number of different models sitting on
their bookshelves, with very little in the way of a road map for which to pay
attention to and which to ignore. It all comes down to judgment. If that
judgment is wrong, there can be serious unintended consequences. For example,
many central banks have kept interest rates at very low levels ever since the
financial crisis, on the assumption that inflation was the only possible danger.
But a few economists have suggested that low rates distort the economy in other
ways, such as encouraging monopolies or reducing productivity.
For this reason, many have called on macroeconomists to show more humility.
Brash, confident declarations like Lucas’s should be avoided, in favor of an
eclectic, circumspect approach that acknowledges how little really can be known.
Policy makers should generally avoid making huge changes to the way the economy
is managed, except in an emergency like the 1930s or after 2008.
The people who run the Fed definitely seem to have recognized the need for
humility and caution. Academic macroeconomists have been chastened somewhat,
too. But outside of the mainstream, there are thinkers and activists advancing
new kinds of macroeconomic theories with unchecked confidence, and calling for
dramatic changes to US macroeconomic policy.
Chief among these theories is so-called modern monetary theory, or MMT. This
theory, promulgated by a handful of heterodox thinkers and recently embraced by
some activists on the left, purports to overturn the standard understanding of
how money, government spending and taxation work. The theory lies at the center
of the Green New Deal, an ambitious proposal put forth by Representative
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to address climate change and economic inequality.
Because MMT holds that government spending isn't funded by taxes, the Green New
Deal doesn't include any measures to finance the very large, open-ended fiscal
commitments it would undertake. According to MMT economists, the only possible
danger from the resultant government debt would be inflation, which can usually
be controlled with tools other than raising taxes. In other words, deficits
almost never matter. So confident are they of their theory’s universal
applicability that MMT proponents often respond to their critics with scorn.
This incredible confidence can make even Lucas’s precrisis pronouncements seem
humble by comparison. The MMT economists and their activist believers would have
the US dramatically change its whole approach to macroeconomic policy, on the
strength of a theory that has undergone much less empirical examination and
logical interrogation than the theories that failed so spectacularly in 2008.
Even after watching the Great Recession take the economy into uncharted
territory that mainstream theories had no hope of describing, MMT fans assume
that their own doctrine will continue to hold absolutely true no matter what
huge policy changes they make.
This is hubris. Economies are so complex that there is no such thing as a
perfect macroeconomic theory. They all make simplifications, and they all have
limits beyond which the theories stop applying. For MMT, there’s now very little
general understanding of what those simplifications and limits might be. Until
the picture clears up, a lot more humility from MMT theorists -- and a lot more
caution from those who would embark on bold new policy adventures -- is in
order.
Saving the date palm from the Red Weevil
José Graziano da Silva/March 08/19
Deeply rooted in the economies and cultures of the people of the Near East and
North Africa, the date palm is under severe threat and with it the livelihoods
of an estimated 50 million farmers in the region.
The cause of this is the Red Palm Weevil, the most dangerous and destructive
pest of palm trees worldwide, capable of feeding on the trees’ growing tissue
from the inside. This insect originated in South East Asia and has spread
rapidly through the Near East and North Africa where an estimated 90 percent of
the world’s date palms are grown. Part of the problem is that early detection is
difficult because there are few externally visible symptoms that indicate the
presence of the pest in a host tree. Field teams must look for small insect
entry holes in the base or crown of each tree. Lapses in quarantine procedures
are also to blame: The invasive pest moves from one country to another mainly
through infested planting material.
It is clear that combating this pest effectively requires enhanced solidarity
and cooperation between countries and regions, in particular to ensure pest
freedom of traded host plants of the Red Palm Weevil and to harmonize monitoring
and control strategies.
The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) is at the
forefront of efforts to tackle the Red Palm Weevil, working together with many
partners, such as the Khalifa International Award for Date Palm and Agricultural
Innovation, the International Centre for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas,
the Arab Organization for Agricultural Development, the Near East Plant
Protection Organization and the Mediterranean Agronomic Institute of Bari.
In 2017, FAO hosted a Scientific Consultation and High-level Meeting that
included member countries, other UN agencies, non-governmental organizations,
regulatory authorities, international scientists, farmer organizations and the
private sector. The meeting agreed on a framework strategy for the eradication
of Red Palm Weevil and support for the establishment of a Trust Fund to
implement it. Containing, controlling and ultimately eradicating the Red Palm
Weevil is possible. In Mauritania for example, an integrated pest-management
approach based on the active participation and strong commitment of farmers and
their cooperatives, has led to considerable success in curbing the spread of the
previously Red Palm Weevil-infested Tidjikja region.
Part of the solution lies in geographic information systems that collect data
from infested trees to better manage pest control operations. In addition,
research is underway to develop natural pest-control measures. Other innovative
solutions include dogs that can sniff out infestations, detection through
thermal imaging and highly-sensitive microphones that can hear larvae feeding
inside a palm tree.
FAO is developing simple yet powerful tools to assist farmers in better
monitoring and managing the Red Palm Weevil. A mobile app, SusaHamra, is used to
collect standard data when inspecting and treating palms and checking pheromone
traps for Red Palm Weevil.
A global platform is being established for mapping field data and analytics for
better decision making. Remote sensing is being combined with artificial
intelligence to map palm trees for improved monitoring of Red Palm Weevil
spread. Stopping the spread of the Red Palm Weevil also requires countries’
commitment to enforce international phytosanitary measures on movement of
infested material across borders.
FAO has developed a five-year regional programme for the Near East and North
Africa to support efforts in more than 15 countries in order to contain the
spread and finally eradicate the pest. This program focuses on three
interrelated elements: research, capacity development, as well as transfer of
knowledge and technology. Success hinges on the support of governments and
partners. With this purpose, on the 9th and 10th of March in Abu Dhabi, FAO is
co-organizing a donor meeting to replenish the trust fund that was established
in 2017.
FAO counts on the generosity of all countries, especially those from the Near
East and North Africa region, to to tackle the Red Palm Weevil. We must build on
the momentum to stop this serious threat to palm trees.
*José Graziano da Silva is the Director-General of the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations. He tweets @grazianodasilva.