LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
March 13/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
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Bible Quotations For today
For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly
of a huge fish, so the Son of Man will be three days and three nights in the
heart of the earth
Matthew12/38-45: Then some of the Pharisees and teachers of the law said to him,
“Teacher, we want to see a sign from you.” He answered, “A wicked and adulterous
generation asks for a sign! But none will be given it except the sign of the
prophet Jonah. For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of a
huge fish, so the Son of Man will be three days and three nights in the heart of
the earth. The men of Nineveh will stand up at the judgment with this generation
and condemn it; for they repented at the preaching of Jonah, and now something
greater than Jonah is here. The Queen of the South will rise at the judgment
with this generation and condemn it; for she came from the ends of the earth to
listen to Solomon’s wisdom, and now something greater than Solomon is here.
“When an impure spirit comes out of a person, it goes through arid places
seeking rest and does not find it. Then it says, ‘I will return to the house I
left.’ When it arrives, it finds the house unoccupied, swept clean and put in
order. Then it goes and takes with it seven other spirits more wicked than
itself, and they go in and live there. And the final condition of that person is
worse than the first. That is how it will be with this wicked generation.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese
& Lebanese Related News published on March 12-13/2019
Lebanon: 3 Candidates May Run in Tripoli Parliamentary
By-Elections
Lebanon’s STL Reiterates Commitment to Bring Rafik Hariri’s Assassins to Justice
Lebanon president asks France for help in refugee issue
Hariri Slams Gharib's Statement, Says 'Press Conferences' Can't Fight Corruption
Rifi Backs Jamali after Meeting Hariri at Saniora's House
Kanaan Denounces 'Campaigns' Against CIB
Affirmation on Continued Cooperation with New Govt. during Aoun Meeting with
Lacroix, Del Cole
Strong Lebanon Says Govt. Must be '1 Team' on Refugee File
Zakka Announces Nomination for Vacant Tripoli Seat
Gunmen Abduct Lebanese Worker in NW Nigeria
Khalil Promises Speedy Budget, Says Seeking to Lower Deficit
Report: Lebanon Reeling Under ‘Endless’ Refugee Burden
Pompeo set for talks this week in Beirut on oil, aid, Hezbollah
The women who shaped Lebanon
Iran wants to turn Iraq into another Lebanon
Litles For The Latest
English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on March 12-13/2019
British MPs Reject Brexit Deal for Second Time
Several Nations Ground Their Boeing 737 MAX Planes
Algerians Take to Streets Despite Bouteflika Concessions
Netanyahu: Allowing Fund Transfer to Gaza Prevents Establishment of Palestinian
State
US-backed SDF says 38 ISIS fighters killed in Syria enclave
Syrian Opposition Coalition Backs Renewed Anti-Regime Daraa Protests
As ISIS Fight Nears End, Violence Flares on Other Syrian Front
SDF Says Assault on ISIS Pocket Almost Over
Shtayyeh Begins Consultations to Form Fatah-dominated Government
After Assuming Office, Raisi Pledges to Fight Corruption in Iran
Experts to Asharq Al-Awsat: Iran Will Not Drag Iraq in its Battle against US
Iran: UK diplomatic protection of jailed mother will not ‘make things easier’
Iran: Human Rights Lawyer Sentenced to 38 Years in Prison, 148 Lashes
Former US Navy Veteran Tried in Iran on Security Charges
OCHA: Thousands Trapped in Yemen's Northern Flashpoint
Titles For The Latest
LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on March 12-13/2019
Pompeo set for talks this week in Beirut on oil, aid, Hezbollah
Hussein Dakroub/The Daily Star/March 12/19
NAYA| The women who shaped Lebanon/Maysaa Ajjan and Hala Mezher/Annahar/March
12/19
Iran wants to turn Iraq into another Lebanon/Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Arab
News/March 12/2019
US Is a Rich Country With Symptoms of a Developing Nation/Noah
Smith/Bloomberg/March 12/2019
Ethiopian Crash Throws the Spotlight Back on Boeing/Chris Bryant/Bloomberg/March
12/19
The World Really Is Getting Richer as Poor Countries Catch Up/Noah
Smith/Bloomberg/March 12/19
Rouhani is in Baghdad to harness Iraq’s banks for beating US anti-Iran oil
sanctions'/DEBKAfile/March 12/19
Armed Opposition Groups in Iran/Dr. Jonathan Spyer/JISS/March 12/19
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese
Related News published
on March 12-13/2019
Lebanon: 3 Candidates May Run in Tripoli
Parliamentary By-Elections
Beirut - Mohammed Shuqair/Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 March,
2019/ Three candidates are expected to run in next month’s parliamentary
by-elections in the Lebanese northern city of Tripoli, sources told Asharq Al-Awsat.
The elections are set to fill the vacant Sunni legislative seat after Lebanon’s
Constitutional Council annulled last month the parliamentary membership of Dima
Jamali, of Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s Mustaqbal Movement. “The electoral
battle will take place between Jamali, former minister Ashraf Rifi and Samer
Qabbara, the nephew of MP Mohammed Qabbara,” the sources said. A fourth
candidate, Taha Naji, could join the race if the Association of Islamic
Charitable Projects (AICP), known as al-Ahbash, decides to back his candidacy.
Naji told Asharq Al-Awsat on Monday that the al-Ahbash is expected to take a
decision in this regard in the coming two days. Barring an unexpected
development, Rifi will make an official announcement over his candidacy on
Thursday, revealed sources from Tripoli. Qabbara is expected to announce his
candidacy on Wednesday. They said that the Mustaqbal Movement insists on
renewing its support for Jamali. Rifi had suggested that he would withdraw from
the race if the Mustaqbal Movement finds a substitute for Jamali. However, the
sources said that the Movement does not want to “break the word” of Hariri, who
renewed his support for her last month shortly after the Constitutional
Council’s ruling. The sources said former PM Najib Mikati, MP Qabbara and former
minister Mohammed Safadi decided to back Jamali’s candidacy. These official
doubt however, that they could convince their supporters to head to polling
stations on the day of the elections. Head of Lebanon’s Constitutional Council
Judge Issam Sleiman said last month that by-elections in Tripoli must be
conducted within two months, as per article 41 of the Constitution.
Lebanon’s STL Reiterates Commitment to Bring Rafik Hariri’s Assassins to Justice
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 March, 2019/The Special Tribunal for
Lebanon that is looking into the 2005 assassination of former Lebanese Prime
Minister Rafik Hariri stressed on Monday that it is committed to bringing the
perpetrators to justice. In its tenth annual report, it said that “the closing
arguments affirmed the important and incomparable role the Tribunal plays in
ensuring the perpetrators of the February 14, 2005 attack are not shielded by
impunity.”The STL submitted the report to United Nations Secretary-General
Antonio Guterres and the Lebanese government. Hariri was killed in a massive
bombing in Beirut in February 2005. The UN Security Council classified his
murder as a "terrorist" crime, appointed an international commission of inquiry,
and then established the STL for the prosecution of the accused. Four Hezbollah
members have been indicted in the crime. Salim Jamil Ayyash, Hassan Habib Merhi,
Hussein Hassan Oneissi and Assad Hassan Sabra currently facing trial in
absentia. They are charged with conspiracy to commit a terrorist act, along with
a number of other related charges. The annual report details the activities of
the Tribunal from March 1, 2018 to February 28, 2019, its objectives for the
coming year and highlights the achievements of the four organs: Chambers, Office
of the Prosecutor (OTP), Defense Office and Registry, said the STL in a press
release. Chambers report that the trial proceedings in the Ayyash et al. case
constituted their main public judicial activities. The Trial Chamber is now
reviewing the evidence before it and deliberating as to whether the Prosecution
had proven its case against the four Accused beyond reasonable doubt. It also
mentions that the precise timing of the judgment will depend upon the complexity
of the legal and factual issues subject to the Trial Chamber’s confidential
deliberations. Following the conclusion of the evidence, the Prosecution filed a
Final Trial Brief and presented its closing arguments in the Ayyash et al. case
against the individuals accused of criminal responsibility for the attack
against Hariri. The Office of the Prosecutor is prepared to move forward quickly
when the updated confidential indictment is refiled. STL President Judge Ivana
Hrdličková concluded that the STL's focus for the next year is on the judicial
deliberations and the preparation of the judgment awaited by the victims of the
February 2005 attack, the Lebanese public and the wider international community.
Lebanon president asks France for help in refugee issue
BEIRUT, March 12 (Xinhua) -- Lebanese President Michel Aoun asked on Tuesday
France to help Lebanon in its efforts of facilitating Syrian refugees back to
their homeland, the National News Agency reported.
"We wish France and other European countries to help refugees Lebanon return to
the secure areas in their country," Aoun was quoted as saying during his meeting
with a French parliamentary delegation. Aoun said that around 167,000 Syrian
refugees had returned to Syria from Lebanon by now, while quoting the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees Chief Filippo Grandi as saying that the returning
refugees are "safe and secure." Aoun also emphasized the importance of
maintaining balance in the Lebanese community. The French delegation assured
Aoun that France is keen on supporting Lebanon's efforts in issuing new
legislations in addition to the president's aims of achieving further
development and growth in thuntry.
Hariri Slams Gharib's Statement, Says
'Press Conferences' Can't Fight Corruption
Naharnet /March 12/19/Prime Minister Saad Hariri on Tuesday blasted a statement
issued by State Minister for Refugee Affairs Saleh al-Gharib over the Brussels
conference, as he noted that those “protecting corruption” are the ones holding
“press conferences.”“We are encouraging Saudis to return to Lebanon,” Hariri
said after meeting President Michel Aoun following a visit to Saudi Arabia. “As
for Brussels, we're heading there because we have a refugee crisis. We want the
refugees to return as soon as possible... and there will be an essential chance
to talk to the relevant parties,” Hariri added. As for the controversy over
excluding Gharib from the delegation that will represent Lebanon in Brussels,
Hariri said: “The prime minister will represent Lebanon and speak in Lebanon's
name.”“Some controversy has happened but this doesn't mean that I want or don't
want the minister to go,” the premier added. He however noted that he “does not
accept the statement that has been issued” by Gharib.“It is prohibited to have
political disputes over this issue,” Hariri added referring to the refugee file.
Gharib had on Sunday issued a stern statement, lamenting that “some political
parties are acting against the desired patriotic approach and there is
insistence on returning to the policies of the previous government on the
refugee file.”“All norms have been breached in the issue of the Brussels
conference invitations,” the minister said. “Overlooking the role of the State
Ministry for Refugee Affairs regarding the Brussels conference is not disregard
for me as a person but rather for the alternative way of thinking and serious
approach that we have adopted in addressing this file in order to secure the
return” of the refugees to their country, Gharib added. “We will not tolerate
this at all,” the minister warned. As for the corruption file, Hariri said
Tuesday that he shares “the same stance” with Aoun and Speaker Nabih Berri
regarding “the fight against corruption.”“No one will be covered whoever they
may be, even if some individuals may be close to some parties,” Hariri said. He
added: “There is no politicization and we don't want anyone to politicize this
file. Those who accept bribes do not belong to a certain sect.”Asked about the
OGERO employment file, Hariri said Parliament “will look into the alleged
wrongdoing.”As for the controversy over the issue of the “missing” $11 billion,
the premier said “the final accounts have been accomplished and those talking
have realized that the previous claims were politicized.”“It is no longer a
political challenge between the parties. All political parties are seeking to
resolve these issues without politicization,” Hariri reassured. “The press
conferences are behind us and today there is calm... Hizbullah and al-Mustaqbal
Movement will not confront each other but rather want to put an end to
corruption,” he said. “Any press conference discussing corruption would be
protecting corruption,” he noted, pointing out that “those who want to fight
corruption should work silently.”
Rifi Backs Jamali after Meeting Hariri at Saniora's House
Naharnet /March 12/19/Prime Minister Saad Hariri, ex-minister Ashraf Rifi and
ex-PM Fouad Saniora held a meeting Tuesday evening at the latter's residence in
Beirut's Bliss area. Saniora announced after the meeting that Rifi has decided
to pull out of the race for Tripoli's vacant Sunni seat and to support the
nomination of al-Mustaqbal Movement's candidate Dima Jamali, whose membership of
parliament was recently revoked by the Constitutional Council. The meeting was
held in the presence of ex-minister Rashid Derbas. “Today a new chapter has been
opened and we should close ranks,” said Hariri after the meeting. “God willing,
the page has been turned on the past and all the consensus and unanimity we are
witnessing today is in Tripoli's interest,” the PM added. “Tripoli needs all its
sons and we must work to pull it out of the poverty it is living in,” Hariri
went on to say. Rifi for his part said: “We are rising above trivial things
because the country is in danger and the priority is for confronting the
challenges.”Voice of Lebanon radio (93.3) had reported that the meeting began
with “a frank exchange and a reconciliation” between Hariri and Rifi. The radio
network said Saniora, Derbas and several figures who have ties to Hariri and
Rifi had exerted efforts to see the meeting happen. The meeting comes in the
wake of a confrontation over corruption allegations between Saniora and
Hizbullah.
Kanaan Denounces 'Campaigns' Against CIB
Naharnet/March 12/19/Head of the Finance and Budget Parliamentary Committee MP
Ibrahim Kanaan on Tuesday denounced campaigns targeting the Central Inspection
Bureau noting the efforts exerted by the Bureau in order to achieve reforms. In
a press conference he held after the Committee meeting, Kanaan said: “Instead of
valuing the efforts it is exerting, the CIB is being subject to campaigns,” he
said, noting that the Bureau is carrying out “great effort and delicate
work.”“Why target the inspection apparatuses? How can we impose reform while
attacking these agencies,” denounced Kanaan. On the other hand, the MP called
for increasing the budget allocated for the Central Inspection Bureau. “To
promote the budget for the CIB and the inspection apparatuses instead of random
political employment,” he concluded. The Central Inspection is a Public
Administration Connected to the council of Ministers, and handles numerous tasks
according to its rules and law of construction.
Affirmation on Continued Cooperation with New Govt. during
Aoun Meeting with Lacroix, Del Cole
Naharnet/March 12/19/President Michel Aoun held a meeting at Baabda Palace on
Tuesday with Under-Secretary-General for Peace Operations Jean-Pierre Lacroix,
UNIFIL Commander Stefano Del Cole and an accompanying delegation, the State-run
National News Agency reported. Lacroix affirmed continued support for the new
Lebanese government and said: “I came with my UN colleagues to visit President
Aoun, who reiterated Lebanon's support for FINUL's work. “Cooperation between
the Lebanese authorities and the international force is essential.For decades,
we have been in southern Lebanon, and this has helped calm the situation there,”
said Lacroix. Lacroix added: “We have assured President Aoun of our willingness
to continue cooperation with the new government, an opportunity to re-launch
several important projects for Lebanon and to work together to strengthen the
Lebanese military forces in southern Lebanon and to gradually strengthen their
maritime capabilities so that there is a gradual shift in work between the
presence of the international naval force and the Lebanese army.”
Strong Lebanon Says Govt. Must be '1 Team' on Refugee File
Naharnet/March 12/19/The Free Patriotic Movement-led Strong Lebanon bloc on
Tuesday said the government should act as “one team” on the thorny issue of
Syrian refugees. “There should not be conflicting goals for those working on the
refugee file and the objective is the safe return of Syrian refugees to their
country,” MP Ibrahim Kanaan said after the bloc's weekly meeting. “The efforts
must converge and the government should be one team in this regard,” Kanaan
added. “All disputes are irrelevant in the face of this national goal that is
strategic at the political, economic, demographic and security levels. This
should be our top priority,” the lawmaker went on to say. He also urged all
parties and components of the government and parliament to rise the level of the
“major challenge that we are all facing as Lebanese.”The country has witnessed
controversy in recent days over the issue of the exclusion of State Minister for
Refugee Affairs Saleh al-Gharib from a delegation that will represent Lebanon at
the Brussels conference on refugees. Prime Minister Saad Hariri on Tuesday
blasted a statement issued by Gharib, adding that “it is prohibited to have
political disputes over this issue.” Gharib had on Sunday issued a stern
statement, lamenting that “some political parties are acting against the desired
patriotic approach and there is insistence on returning to the policies of the
previous government on the refugee file.”“All norms have been breached in the
issue of the Brussels conference invitations,” the minister said. “Overlooking
the role of the State Ministry for Refugee Affairs regarding the Brussels
conference is not disregard for me as a person but rather for the alternative
way of thinking and serious approach that we have adopted in addressing this
file in order to secure the return” of the refugees to their country, Gharib
added. “We will not tolerate this at all,” the minister warned.
Zakka Announces Nomination for Vacant Tripoli Seat
Naharnet/March 12/19/Nizar Zakka, who has been jailed in Iran since 2015, on
Tuesday announced his nomination for the vacant Sunni parliamentary seat in
Tripoli under the slogan “The Freedom Solution for Lebanon”. “I'm Nizar Zakka,
the ordinary Lebanese citizen who has been kidnapped in Iran since September
2015. I ask my people in each of Tripoli -- my mother's city -- and Qalamoun --
my hometown -- to grant me their confidence to be their roaring voice in
parliament -- the voice of every ordinary citizen whose voice is absent or
deliberately stifled,” Zakka said in a letter from his prison in the Tehran area
of Evin. “I'm an ordinary Lebanese who is looking forward to representing every
ordinary citizen whose right has been lost in the state of no justice, whose
voice has been usurped in the state of oppression, whose dignity has been lost
in the state of clientilism and whose bread has been stolen in the state of the
rich,” Zakka, who also holds a U.S. green card, added. “My state has abandoned
me and conspired against me as I lie kidnapped in one of the world's ugliest
detention centers where I've been living since four years, in an underground
grave surrounded by sewers and rats. My weak state is the same one that has
abandoned you, my people in the Tripoli district... It has left you to
deprivation, poverty, tyranny and agony,” Zakka went on to say.And noting that
his political views are largely in line with those of al-Mustaqbal Movement,
Zakka said that “those who truly want to stand in the face of any hegemony will
know very well whom to vote for.”Zakka has been detained in Iran since 2015 over
spying allegations. He was sentenced in 2016 to 10 years in prison and a $4.2
million fine. Zakka, who lived in Washington and held resident status in the
U.S., was the leader of the Arab ICT Organization, or IJMA3, an industry
consortium from 13 countries that advocates for information technology in the
region. Zakka disappeared Sept. 18, 2015, during his fifth trip to Iran. He had
been invited to attend a conference at which President Hassan Rouhani spoke of
providing more economic opportunities for women and sustainable development.
On Nov. 3, Iranian state television aired a report saying he was in custody and
calling him a spy with "deep links" with U.S. intelligence services. It also
showed what it described as a damning photo of Zakka and three other men in
army-style uniforms, two with flags and two with rifles on their shoulders. But
that turned out to be from a homecoming event at Zakka's prep school, the
Riverside Military Academy in Georgia, according to the school's president.
Gunmen Abduct Lebanese Worker in NW Nigeria
Naharnet/March 12/19/Unidentified gunmen abducted a Lebanese construction
engineer in the northern Nigerian city of Kano on Tuesday, in an attack that
left one dead, police and witnesses said. Four gunmen stormed a road
construction site in the city at about 7:40 am (0640 GMT), seizing the engineer
who was supervising work on the site. "There was a kidnapping incident at Dangi
Roundabout this morning and the victim is a Lebanese engineer," Kano state
police spokesman Abdullahi Haruna told AFP. "One person was killed and another
injured in the attack," said Haruna. The victim was at the site without any
assigned security, he added. Police have opened an investigation to identify the
gunmen and rescue the victim. Witnesses said a Nigerian construction worker was
killed and another injured, after they tried to prevent the gunmen from entering
the site. Kidnapping for ransom is widespread in the oil-rich southern delta
region, where criminal gangs seize expatriate oil workers and wealthy Nigerians
in exchange for hefty payments. The trend has also been on the rise in the north
in recent years, flourishing as the economy has struggled, particularly in rural
areas with inadequate security provision. In April last year gunmen kidnapped a
German construction engineer in Kano after killing his police escort in an
attack the police blamed on a gang of armed robbers. In Birnin Gwari, an area in
Kaduna state, also in the northwest, entire villages have been deserted for fear
of raids and kidnapping by criminal gangs. The gangs often roam on motorcycles
and are known to operate in northern Kaduna and neighboring Zamfara states.
Abductees are often released within days if the ransom is paid but residents say
they can be killed if no money is forthcoming. The attacks in the northwest have
been a challenge to recently re-elected President Muhammadu Buhari, who enjoys
mass support in the region. He has pledged to tackle insecurity from kidnappers
and criminal gangs but with few details.
Khalil Promises Speedy Budget, Says Seeking to Lower Deficit
Naharnet/March 12/19/Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil on Tuesday pledged that
the draft state budget will be finalized “as soon as possible,” as he declared
that the ministry is seeking to slash the budget deficit. “We are committed to
finalizing the state budget as soon as possible and we are committed that it
reflects the Lebanese keenness on what we pledged in the Cabinet's Policy
Statement,” Khalil tweeted. In another tweet, he added: “We are working on
lowering the budget deficit through a reform plan and drastic and structural
decisions and we're before a real test in this regard.”
Report: Lebanon Reeling Under ‘Endless’ Refugee Burden
Naharnet/March 12/19/On the eve of the donor Brussels conference on Syria,
Speaker Nabih Berri reiterated that the Syrian refugees must return to their
homeland noting a need for coordination with the Syrian government to achieve
that end, al-Joumhouria daily reported on Tuesday. Moreover, a political source
said the file is taking a negative turn, “the outside world has its own
perception regarding the file and apparently does not care about the return, but
only cares that this burden is kept away from them,” he told the daily on
condition of anonymity. In Lebanon, political parties are sharply divided over
the return issue and the means to be adopted. In light of the aggravating
burden, “the Lebanese side must prove seriousness in addressing the file rather
than complying with regional or international considerations that impede this
return,” the source told the daily. The international community has its own
considerations in addressing the return file, but Lebanon is bearing the
greatest burden of more than two million displaced people which requires a quick
and effective measure. The sources said that the Vatican has already issued a
warning message to Lebanon that the international community has no desire to
return the displaced to Syria. Foreign delegates who visited Lebanon and the
reports from major countries all confirm that the file won’t be addressed
anytime soon, said the source. The above raises concern of attempted
resettlement of displaced Syrians in their places of refuge, something that was
considered by some officials of major powers. “Shall this turns out to be
serious, it means bringing Lebanon into a very dangerous zone that threatens its
future and its entity,” concluded the source. Lebanon hosts an estimated 1.5
million Syrian refugees that impact its already ailing economy and
infrastructure. The Brussels Conference on Supporting the Future of Syria and
the Region is set on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday aimed to raise financial
aid for the 11.7 million Syrians in need of humanitarian assistance. Lebanon
will present a plan, it presented two years ago, to reduce its burden of around
1.5 million Syrian refugees.
Pompeo set for talks this week in Beirut on oil, aid,
Hezbollah
Hussein Dakroub, The Daily Star/March 12/19
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is set to visit Beirut this week for talks
with Lebanese leaders expected to focus on bilateral relations
BEIRUT: U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo is set to visit Beirut this week for
talks with Lebanese leaders expected to focus on bilateral relations, U.S.
military aid to the Lebanese Army, and Hezbollah’s “growing role” in internal
Lebanese politics, political sources said Sunday. Pompeo’s visit to Beirut, to
take place either on March 14 or 15, would be part of a regional tour that would
also take him to Israel and Kuwait. During his quick visit, the top U.S.
diplomat will meet separately with President Michel Aoun, Speaker Nabih Berri,
Prime Minister Saad Hariri and Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, an official
source said. The source said the marine border dispute between Lebanon and
Israel would also figure high in Pompeo’s talks with Lebanese officials.
MTV said in its news bulletin Sunday night Pompeo was carrying with him “a list
of conditions” that Lebanon must meet in order to curb Hezbollah’s influence in
Lebanon.
Acting U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs David
Satterfield, who visited Beirut last week to prepare for Pompeo’s trip, last
year unsuccessfully attempted to negotiate a deal on the disputed maritime
border between Lebanon and Israel, in light of Lebanon’s discovery of potential
offshore oil and gas reserves and fears that Israel would drill in these waters.
As a result of tough sanctions imposed by the U.S. on Hezbollah as well as on
its main backer Iran, in an attempt to dry up the group’s financial sources,
party leader Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah called last Friday for donations after
acknowledging the party was facing financial difficulties due to Western
sanctions. The U.S. and Gulf states brand Hezbollah a “terrorist organization.”
During his visit to Beirut last week, Satterfield warned in meetings with senior
Lebanese officials Lebanon against toeing pro-Iran policies by urging the new
government to make “national choices,” not choices imposed by “external
parties,” in a clear reference to Tehran’s influence in the country through
Hezbollah. Contrary to custom, Satterfield did not meet with Aoun, fueling
speculation that Washington might have wanted to express its disapproval of the
president’s political stances, viewed by many as favoring Hezbollah, and
especially his support for normalizing ties with the Syrian regime. Satterfield
also did not meet with Berri, who was reported over the weekend to have said he
would have rejected a meeting with the U.S. official had he requested it. Berri
recalled a stormy meeting with Satterfield last year focusing on the marine
border dispute between Lebanon and Israel. In Berri’s view, Satterfield did not
play the role of a mediator in the dispute but adopted Israel’s position and
sought to exert pressure on Lebanon to accept an American proposal for a
solution to the border crisis that would eventually serve the Jewish state’s
interest.
Pompeo’s visit also comes a few weeks after U.S. Ambassador Elizabeth Richard
warned Lebanon of Hezbollah’s “growing role” in the new Cabinet, saying this
threatened the country’s stability.
Despite growing U.S. concerns over Hezbollah’s role in Lebanese politics, the
U.S. continues to support the Lebanese Army.
Since 2005, the U.S. has given the Army over $2 billion. This year, the country
is expected the give the Army more than $350 million in military aid.
Pompeo’s visit to Beirut comes less than two weeks before Aoun’s planned two-day
trip to Russia. While in Moscow on March 25-26, his first since his election as
president in 2016, Aoun will hold talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin on
bilateral relations, the Syrian refugee crisis and the stalled Russian
initiative aiming to secure the return of displaced Syrians in Lebanon to their
country, the official source said. The source added that the offshore oil and
gas issue would be discussed during the meeting. Russian company Novatek is part
of a consortium that includes France’s Total and Italy’s Eni and is expected to
begin exploring Lebanon’s potential offshore oil and gas reserves later this
year.
Meanwhile, the issue of fighting corruption continued to reverberate across the
country, dominating the political scene over the weekend. Grand Mufti Sheikh
Abdel-Latif Derian, the head of Lebanon’s highest Sunni religious authority,
threw his weight behind former Prime Minister Fouad Siniora for the second time
in less than a week, rejecting corruption accusations again him. “The indirect
accusations against [former] Premier Fouad Siniora are fabrications, a premature
verdict and an act of injustice,” a statement issued Saturday after a meeting of
the Higher Islamic Council chaired by Derian at Dar al-Fatwa, the seat of the
Sunni mufti, said. The statement called for a “relevant and honest judiciary” to
do its job in investigating corruption charges made by politicians and lawmakers
over the past few weeks. The statement called for fighting corruption within a
legal framework and for holding corrupt people accountable on the basis of
official documents that do not stem from “political spitefulness.”
Derian had said Siniora, whose government had been accused of illegally spending
$11 billion in extrabudgetary expenditures during his tenure from 2005 to 2009,
was a “red line.”Hezbollah has launched a self-proclaimed campaign against
corruption rampant in public administrations and ministries. Nasrallah said the
campaign would continue to the end. Siniora has denied the $11 billion in
extrabudgetary spending during his tenure was illegal, lashing out at Hezbollah
for reviving the controversy.
Copyright © 2019, The Daily Star. All rights reserved. Provided by SyndiGate
Media Inc. (Syndigate.info).
NAYA| The women who shaped Lebanon
Maysaa Ajjan and Hala Mezher/Annahar/March 12/19
The women’s liberation movements in Lebanon date back to the 1920s, when the
Women’s Union was established in Lebanon and Syria. The union focused on
cultural and social issues, was registered with the French system in 1927, and
held conferences in Beirut in 1927, 1928, and 1930.
After Lebanon gained its independence in 1943, four feminism scenes emerged. All
those differed in their demands, political discourses, and temporality.
While the core values that united advocates of women’s rights were almost the
same, each advocate had a voice of her own that distinguished her from the rest.
Whether it was using politics to their advantage or protesting through the pen,
these women were certainly the unsung heroes of Lebanese history.
NAYA| Looking back on 2018: Lebanon's headlines for the "Year of the Women"
After digging into the history and evolvement of women’s rights in Lebanon, NAYA
came up with a list of heroes that she believes did not get the credit they
deserved.
May Ziade (1886– 1941)
May Ziade was a Lebanese-Palestinian poet, essayist and translator.
Known as a prolific writer, she wrote for Arabic newspapers and periodicals and
she wrote a number of poems and books. She was a key figure in the early
20th-century Arab literary scene and is known for being a pioneer of oriental
feminism. Her personal life, however, was marred by tragedy.
After suffering a series of personal losses, beginning with the death of her
parents and a number of her friends, Ziadeh was placed in a psychiatric hospital
by her relatives to gain control over her estate.
Ziade was profoundly humiliated and incensed by this incident; she eventually
recovered and left after a medical report proved that she was of sound mental
health. She returned to Cairo where she died on October 17, 1941.
Rose Al Yusuf (1897 - 1958)
The Lebanese-born Rose Al Yusuf played an instrumental role in shaping Egyptian
theater. She acted with prominent groups and directors such as Iskandar Farah
and Mohammad Abdul Kodoos.
She later left theater and founded “Rose Al Yusuf,” the first art magazine to be
published by a woman in Egypt, if not in the whole region. The magazine ran for
10 years but was severely opposed and boycotted by political opposition, which
led to its eventual bankruptcy. Nevertheless, it marked Al Yusuf’s name in the
Arab literary world.
Emily Nasrallah (1931 – 2018)
Novelist, journalist, freelance writer, teacher, lecturer, and women's rights
activist are only some of the titles bestowed on the award-winning writer Emily
Nasrallah.
She started her journalistic and writing career while she was still in college.
Her first novel “Birds of September” was published in 1962. This novel was
followed by six novels, eight children's books, thirteen short story
collections, and eleven non-fiction books that explore themes such as family
roots, Lebanese village life, the war in Lebanon, and the struggle of women for
independence and self-expression.
She is one of many Lebanese women authors who stayed in Beirut, wrote about the
conflict, and shared their experiences of the war.
Nazirah Jumblatt (1890–1951)
Nazira Jumblatt was one of the earliest Druze leaders and the mother of Lebanese
politician Kamal Jumblatt.
Upon the assassination of her husband Fouad Jumblatt in 1921, Nazira took on the
political role and leadership of the Jumblatt family, becoming the first Druze
woman to do so in an era that completely prohibited women from taking an active
role in politics. She learned the English and French languages during her rule
of three decades under the French mandate.
Anbara Salam Khalidi (1897 - 1986)
Khalidi was born into a prominent political family under Ottoman rule and was
able to acquire an education. She later on became a writer and translator. As a
teenager, Khalidi participated in establishing an Arabic Women’s society, which
was aimed at financing girls’ education and became one of the founders of the
Society of Women’s Renaissance.
Through her articles, she encouraged Arab women to take on more active political
roles and was the first Lebanese woman to publicly discard the veil. She
published her story “Memoirs of an Early Arab Feminist: The Life and Activism of
Anbara Salam Khalidi” in 1978, which was translated in 2013.
“What sin have I, the Arab girl, committed in God's sight, to deserve as
punishment a life filled with repression and denial?'' Expressed Khalidi to
Prince Faisal in a conversation. Khalidi is believed to have been instrumental
to the women’s liberation movement in Lebanon.
Anissa Rawda Najjar (1913 - 2016)
Najjar made it her life’s mission to improve the status of women in rural areas.
To that end, she advocated for accessible healthcare and education for people
living in remote areas and co-founded the first ‘Village Welfare Society’ in
1953 in order to empower women economically and promote literacy.
Najjar represented Lebanese women in several international conferences and
became Editor-in-Chief of the magazine “Al-Urwa Al Wuthqa.” She also acted as
secretary of both the Lebanese Council for Women and the Druze Orphanage. She
was awarded on several occasions for her unmatched contributions.
Nazik Al-Abid (1898 - 1959)
Known for being a vocal opponent of Ottoman and French Control, Abid was given
the title “Joan of Arc of the Arabs.” Abid grew up in a wealthy Damascus family,
but was exiled from the country four times for her controversial views. Abid was
outspoken about her aspirations for secularism and women’s liberation.
She is the founder of the Red Star Society and had a prominent role in the
famous Battle of Maysalun, for which she was honoured by Prince Faisal. Abid
also founded a magazine, a school for girls and the ‘The Working Women’s
Society’.
She eventually fled to Lebanon in 1921 after a clash with the French
authorities, where she met and married Muhammad Jamil Bayhum and continued to
relentlessly fight all forms of injustice.
Laure Moghaizel (1929 - 1997)
The legal authority and advocate of human rights was known for her unprecedented
work in pursuit of gender equality. Moghaizel was motivated by the belief that
women’s rights were an irreducible part of human rights.
Moghaizel launched several campaigns that aimed to educate Lebanese citizens on
their rights and the laws and participated in organizing peaceful demonstrations
to protest the excessive violence of war. She co-founded the Non-Violence
Movement, the Human Rights Association, and the Lebanese Democratic Party in
1970.
In 1996, Moghaizel became the first Arab woman in the United Nations Committee
for Human Rights and led the effort of pushing the Lebanese Government to ratify
the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW).-
Iran wants to turn Iraq into another
Lebanon
Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Arab News/March 12/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/72916/%d8%b9%d8%a8%d8%af-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%b1%d8%ad%d9%85%d9%86-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%b1%d8%a7%d8%b4%d8%af-%d8%a5%d9%8a%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%86-%d8%aa%d8%b1%d9%8a%d8%af-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%b9%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%82-%d9%84%d8%a8/
The visit of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani to Baghdad this week — his first
since he took office six years ago — comes amid heavy pressure on the Iraqis
exerted by the Tehran regime, which wants to use Iraq as an escape route away
from American sanctions. Given these pressures and threats, do we have to worry
that Iraq will become an Iranian satellite?
Tehran succeeded in entering the Iraqi arena following the fall of Saddam
Hussein’s regime. Since then, it has participated in marginalizing the US
presence through its support of Sunni and Shiite armed groups.
Iran now intends to turn Iraq into another “banana republic,” just like Lebanon;
subsequently exploiting it with the recruitment of militants who would fight on
its behalf around the world, as they are currently doing in Syria under Gen.
Qassem Soleimani’s command. It also wants Iraq to become its financial agent,
funding Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Bashar Assad’s Syrian government with billions
of dollars.
Iran does not wish Iraq to have a strong authority, but rather be a weak state
like Lebanon, governed by militias like Asa’ib Ahl Al-Haq. However, Iraq is a
big country that has its own interests and aspirations, which are incompatible
with the interests and ideas of the extremist religious regime in Tehran.
Furthermore, Iran is a country under siege, while Iraq is open to the world.
Today, Iraq enjoys its best relations and circumstances since 1990, and is in a
transitional phase of development that will drive it to become one of the
wealthiest countries in the region. It can play an independent, sovereign and
free role without being subservient or subordinate to any other country.
Prime Minister Adil Abdul-Mahdi is well aware of Iraq’s status, and he knows
well the available options. Abdul-Mahdi knows that Rouhani wants him to give up
his country’s interests after he said in Tehran on Monday: “We have supported
the Iraqi people in their difficult days.” However, Iran would have escaped the
US siege had it agreed to abandon its nuclear project, and stopped exporting
chaos and rebellions, as well as its foreign military interventions. So why
should the Iraqis pay for Tehran’s extremist policies?
Tehran is now more besieged than ever: Its oil tankers are abandoned in the
middle of oceans, it cannot use the US dollar when selling its carpets,
pistachios and vegetables, and it has been deserted even by China and Russia,
the two countries on whose support it was counting in its preparations for the
confrontation with the US. Indeed, Iran was not forced to fight these battles:
Rather, its regime is the one that chose to play the role of the villain in the
region, which is why it is facing this situation and a siege like the one Saddam
faced in the past.
Iraqis must now realize that what is going on is an international battle, and
they will lose all that they have achieved since stability and state authority
returned to Baghdad.
Rouhani, Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif, Soleimani and all Iran’s senior
officials who have visited Baghdad want Iraq to become a subordinate satellite
state. Lebanon is a clear example, as it has been fighting and suffering on
behalf of Iran since the 1980s. Iraq will not be luckier than the current,
divided Lebanon if it falls under Iranian control.
*Abdulrahman Al-Rashed is a veteran columnist. He is the former general manager
of Al Arabiya news channel, and former editor-in-chief of Asharq Al-Awsat.
Twitter: @aalrashed
Latest LCCC English
Miscellaneous Reports & News published
on March 12-13/2019
British MPs Reject Brexit Deal for Second Time
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 12/19/British MPs
overwhelmingly rejected Prime Minister Theresa May's Brexit deal for a second
time on Tuesday, pitching Britain into the unknown just 17 days before it is due
to split from the European Union. The House of Commons voted by 391 to 242 to
reject the divorce deal, even after May secured further guarantees from Brussels
over its most controversial elements. The move risks unleashing economic chaos,
as Britain is scheduled to end ties with its biggest trade partner after 46
years on March 29, no matter what. Appealing to MPs in a voice half-breaking due
to a cold, May had urged them to avoid the "economic shock" of leaving without
an agreement. But she also warned euroskeptics, many of whom have campaigned to
leave the EU for their whole careers, that if her deal failed, so might Brexit.
May has promised to allow MPs to vote on a "no deal" option on Wednesday and if
that is rejected, to decide on Thursday whether to ask the EU to delay Brexit.
"If this vote is not passed tonight, if this deal is not passed, then Brexit
could be lost," she said before the vote. However, euroskeptics believe the deal
is so bad it is worth the risk of leaving with no plan. "We must take what now
seems to be the more difficult route but in the end the one that preserves our
self-respect," said former foreign minister Boris Johnson, a favorite to succeed
May if she steps down. "It is to leave on March 29 as required by law and to
become once again an independent country able to make our own choices."
Not a single change
After MPs first rejected the 585-page Brexit deal in January, May promised
changes to the hated backstop plan which is intended to keep open the border
with Ireland. Weeks of talks failed to make a breakthrough, but May made a
last-minute trip to Strasbourg to meet EU leaders on the eve of the vote. She
announced she had secured the promised "legally binding changes" to the
backstop, which would keep Britain in the EU's customs union if and until a new
way was found to avoid frontier checks. But hours later, however, Attorney
General Geoffrey Cox said the additions would not completely allay MPs fears of
being trapped in the arrangement forever.It did not take long for Brexit-supporting
MPs in May's Conservative party, and her allies, Northern Ireland's Democratic
Unionist Party (DUP), to declare their opposition. Opposition Labor leader
Jeremy Corbyn also urged parliament to vote down May's plan. "After three months
of running down the clock, the prime minister has, despite very extensive
delays, achieved not a single change to the withdrawal agreement," he said. Some
euroskeptics changed their mind, however, urging their colleagues not to risk
everything. Former minister Edward Leigh said: "You may not like the deal, it's
not perfect, but it delivers Brexit and let's go for it." The pound, which has
been highly volatile since the 2016 referendum which saw Britons narrowly vote
to leave the EU, made gains against the euro after May's deal on Monday but fell
sharply on Tuesday as it became increasingly clear the deal would be defeated.
'No third chance'
The backstop is designed to protect the peace process in Northern Ireland, which
involved the removal of border checks with EU member Ireland. Brexit supporters
wanted a unilateral way out of it, or a time limit to the arrangement, but the
EU said this would make it worthless. But leaders across Europe also united
behind a message that this was the best and final offer Britain could expect.
"There will be no third chance," European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker
said after his talks on Monday with May. If MPs vote against a "no deal" exit on
Wednesday, and want to postpone Brexit, the other 27 EU nations would need to
agree. Their leaders will meet in Brussels for a summit on March 21-22. But any
postponement may have to be short-lived. Juncker on Monday said Brexit "should
be complete before the European elections" at the end of May.
Several Nations Ground Their Boeing 737 MAX Planes
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 12/19/ Wave of Countries Ban Boeing 737 MAX
Jets after Ethiopia Crash. Britain, France and Germany joined a growing list of
countries to ban Boeing 737 MAX planes from their airspace on Tuesday as
airlines around the world grounded the jets following a second deadly accident
in just five months. On Sunday a new Ethiopian Airlines 737 MAX 8 went down
minutes into a flight to Nairobi, killing all 157 people on board, from 35
countries. In October, a Lion Air jet of the same model crashed in Indonesia,
killing 189 -- but no evidence has emerged to link the two incidents. The
widening airspace closures puts pressure on Boeing, the world's biggest
planemaker, to prove 737 MAX planes are safe as increasing numbers of fleets
have been grounded. Turkish Airlines was among the latest to announce it was
suspending its 12 Boeing 737 MAX aircraft from flying from Wednesday, until
"uncertainty" was clarified. Low-cost airline Norwegian Air Shuttle, South
Korea's Eastar Jet and South Africa's Comair also said they would halt flights,
but the full extent of the impact on international travel routes was unclear. On
Twitter, U.S. President Donald Trump weighed in on the probe investigating the
Ethiopian Airlines crash, writing: "Airplanes are becoming far too complex to
fly.""Pilot are no longer needed, but rather computer scientists from MIT," he
wrote, referring to the prestigious university in Massachusetts.
U.S. carriers have so far appeared to maintain confidence in Boeing, which has
said it is certain the planes are safe to fly. U.S. federal aviation
authorities, the FAA, have not grounded Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft but have
ordered the manufacturer to make design changes. The move was not enough to
reassure the UK Civil Aviation Authority, which said in a statement headlined
"Boeing 737 MAX Aircraft" that it was banning the planes from UK airspace "as a
precautionary measure."Global air travel hub Singapore, as well as Australia,
Malaysia and Oman were among the other countries to ban all 737 MAX planes from
their airspace. China, a hugely important market for Boeing, had already ordered
domestic airlines to suspend operations of the plane on Monday, as did
Indonesia. Elsewhere Argentina's flag carrier also grounded five MAX 8 aircraft
on Tuesday, as did airlines in countries including Brazil and Mexico. But
several airlines said they were not canceling MAX 8 flights. "The Boeing 737 MAX
is a highly sophisticated aircraft," said India's SpiceJet, which has 13 of the
MAX 8 variants in its 75-strong fleet. "It has flown hundreds of thousands of
hours globally and some of the world's largest airlines are flying this
aircraft," it said in a statement.
'Significant industry impact'
Boeing has described the MAX series as its fastest-selling family of planes,
with more than 5,000 orders placed to date from about 100 customers. But not
since the 1970s -- when the McDonnell Douglas DC-10 suffered successive fatal
incidents -- has a new model been involved in two deadly accidents in such a
short period. The weekend crash sent Boeing shares nosediving as much as 12
percent on Monday, wiping billions of dollars off the market value of the
company. "I think the impact for the industry is significant," said Gerry
Soejatman, a Jakarta-based aviation analyst. "We have a new type of aircraft --
that type of aircraft has only been in service for two years -- and... we have
two accidents with seemingly similar circumstances." The plane involved in
Sunday's crash was less than four months old, with Ethiopian Airlines saying it
was delivered on November 15. It went down near the village of Tulu Fara, some
40 miles (60 kilometers) east of Addis Ababa. Inhabitants of the remote area
looked on from behind a security cordon as inspectors searched the crash site
and excavated it with a mechanical digger. Ethiopian Airlines said the pilot was
given clearance to turn around after indicating problems shortly before the
plane disappeared from radar. The airline's chief executive Tewolde GebreMariam
said the plane had flown in from Johannesburg early Sunday, spent three hours in
Addis and was "dispatched with no remark," meaning no problems were flagged.
Investigators have recovered the black box flight recorders, which could
potentially provide information about what happened, depending on their
condition.
The crash cast a pall over a gathering of the U.N. Environment Program as it
opened in Nairobi -- at least 22 staff from several U.N. agencies were on board
the doomed flight. Delegates hugged and comforted one another as they arrived at
the meeting with the U.N. flag flying at half-mast. Other passengers included
tourists and business travelers. Kenya had the highest death toll among the
nationalities on the flight with 32, according to Ethiopian Airlines. Canada was
next with 18 victims. There were also passengers from Ethiopia, Italy, the
United States, Britain and France.
Algerians Take to Streets Despite Bouteflika Concessions
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 March, 2019/Algerians took to the streets of the
capital Algiers Tuesday to protest against President Abdelaziz Bouteflika's
decision to delay presidential elections indefinitely. His announcement Monday
to withdraw his candidacy for a fifth term cheered his opponents. But on
Tuesday, there was more skepticism over his decision to delay an April 18
election without setting a new date, which opponents say could leave him in
power indefinitely. Many protesters are now demanding that Bouteflika step down
April 18 instead of waiting for a new vote. More student protests are planned in
other cities and nationwide protests are expected Friday. Bouteflika, 82,
abandoned his bid for a fifth term, bowing to weeks of rallies against his
20-year rule by people demanding a new era of politics in a country dominated by
an old guard. Protesters question Bouteflika's fitness for office after a 2013
stroke that has left him largely hidden from public view. Veteran Algerian
diplomat, Lakhdar Brahimi, and protest groups will join a conference planning
the country’s future after Bouteflika’s announcement, a government source said
on Tuesday. Brahimi, a former foreign minister and UN special envoy, is expected
to chair the conference, the source told Reuters. It will oversee the
transition, draft a new constitution and set the date for elections. After
meeting the president on Monday, Brahimi praised protesters for acting
responsibly, saying on state television that it was necessary to “turn this
crisis into a constructive process”. French President Emmanuel Macron said
Bouteflika’s decision opened a new chapter and called for a “reasonable
duration” to the transition period. Algeria’s powerful military is expected to
play a behind-the-scenes role during the transition and is currently considering
several civilians as candidates for the presidency and other top positions,
political sources said.
Netanyahu: Allowing Fund Transfer to Gaza Prevents
Establishment of Palestinian State
Ramallah- Kifah Zboun/Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 March, 2019/Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday that allowing Qatari funds to be
transferred into Gaza was part of a broader strategy to keep Hamas and the
Palestinian Authority divided, preventing the establishment of a Palestinian
state. Netanyahu explained that, in the past, the PA transferred the millions of
dollars to Hamas in Gaza, a source in Monday’s Likud faction told the Jerusalem
Post. He argued that it was better for Israel to serve as the pipeline to ensure
the funds don’t end up in the hands of terrorists. “Now that we are supervising,
we know it’s going to humanitarian causes,” the source said quoting Netanyahu.
“Whoever is against a Palestinian state should be with” transferring the funds
to Gaza because maintaining a separation between the PA in the West Bank and
Hamas in Gaza helps prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state, Netanyahu
further noted. Netanyahu’s comments followed Qatar’s announcement on Monday of
sending the fourth batch of its funds to poor families in Gaza. A total of
55,000 families in the Strip receive $100 payment each. The aid is part of a
$150 million Qatari grant, some of which was used in the past to pay salaries to
Hamas employees before the dispute.Head of Qatar's National Committee for the
Reconstruction of Gaza Strip Mohammad al-Amadi arrived in the strip on Sunday to
oversee the distribution of $5.5 million to Gaza's poorest families. He arrived
one day before UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process Nickolay
Mladenov. They both oversee specific aspects of stabilizing calm in the Gaza
Strip. While Egypt has been working on establishing a ceasefire in Gaza for
weeks now. An Egyptian security delegation visited Gaza and Israel several times
last week in order to establish a new agreement between the two sides. Hamas
demanded Qatari funds be transferred as salaries as well as expanding the
fishing area and allowing entry of certain prohibited items to Gaza.
US-backed SDF says 38 ISIS fighters killed in Syria enclave
Reuters, Beirut/Tuesday, 12 March 2019/The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) said
on Tuesday 38 ISIS fighters were killed in a US-backed offensive against the
extremists’ only remaining enclave in eastern Syria, after the area was pounded
in a bombardment overnight. Calm returned to Baghouz with no sign of fighting on
Tuesday morning after Reuters TV footage showed the fierce bombardment, during
which the enclave was targeted with rockets and fires raged inside. The enclave
is the last shred of territory held by the extremists who have been driven from
territory in Iraq and Syria over the past four years by an array of enemies,
including a US-led international coalition. The SDF has been laying siege to
Baghouz for weeks, but repeatedly postponed its final assault to allow the
evacuation of thousands of civilians, many of them wives and children of ISIS
militants. It finally resumed the attack on Sunday, backed by coalition air
strikes. Mustafa Bali, head of the SDF media office, said the SDF command had
confirmed 38 ISIS fighters had been killed. Three SDF fighters were killed and
10 wounded, he wrote on Twitter. The extremists had fired two rockets, he added,
an indication of continued ISIS resistance.
US-led coalition jets mounted 20 air raids that had destroyed ISIS military
vehicles, defensive fortifications, two ammunition stores and a command post.
Washington does not believe any senior ISIS leaders are in Baghouz, assessing
they have gone elsewhere as part of the group’s shift towards an insurgency, a
US defense official has said. The group still operates in remote territory
elsewhere and it is widely assessed that it will continue to represent a potent
security threat. The bulk of the people evacuated from the diminishing ISIS
territory have been transported to a camp for internally displaced people in al-Hol,
in northeastern Syria, where the United Nations says conditions are “extremely
dire”. The camp, designed to accommodate 20,000 people, is now sheltering more
than 66,000, the UN said. Obdurate support voiced by many evacuees for ISIS,
particularly among foreigners, has posed a complex security, legal and moral
challenge. Those issues were underscored on Friday with the death of the newborn
son of Shamima Begum, a British woman who left to join ISIS when she was a
schoolgirl.
Syrian Opposition Coalition Backs Renewed Anti-Regime Daraa
Protests
Amman, London – Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 March, 2019/The National Coalition
for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces hailed the “brave” anti-regime
popular protests in the southern Daraa province following the erection of a
statue of late President Hafez Assad in the area. Protesters took to the streets
of Daraa city on Sunday to call for the overthrow of the regime. Daraa was where
peaceful protests against 40 years of autocratic Assad family rule began in
2011, and were met by deadly force, before spreading across the country. The
coalition praised the renewed protests, saying Daraa was once again expressing
its commitment to the demands of the revolt and the sacrifices of the Syrian
people. “The illegitimate regime will not be able to impose itself on the
consciences of the free Syrian people,” it stressed in a statement. The Syrian
people’s struggle against oppression and injustice is a national duty, it added.
The Syrians will continue this struggle through all possible means until they
witness the rise of a democratic civil state. “This state refuses to be a symbol
of oppression and criminality. It refuses to be a center for the export of
terrorism,” said the coalition. Residents of the city of al-Bab in the Aleppo
province voiced their solidarity with Daraa, with dozens of locals taking to the
streets to protest against the regime. They also took to social media to back
the rallies. Social media users throughout Syria also stressed that the “Daraa
flame will never be put out,” expressing their commitment to the revolt until
the regime is overthrown. The Syrian regime, aided by Russian airpower and
Iranian militias, retook control of Daraa from opposition forces in July. But
since then, residents of Daraa say disaffection has been growing as Assad’s
secret police once more tighten their control and a campaign of arrests has
sowed widespread fear. The regime had given schools and regime employees a day
off on Sunday to attend a pro-regime rally to inaugurate the new bronze statue
of late president, erected on the site of the previous statue felled by
protesters. That rally broke up after gunfire from near the square caused panic
among attendees, a witness said. A group of youths protesting in Daraa’s old
quarter carried a placard reading: “It will fall. Your statue is from the past,
it’s not welcome here.” Lawyer and activist Adnan Masalma said: “People have
gathered without organization and to peacefully demonstrate over just
demands.”“The country has been destroyed and, instead of reconstruction, we
place memorials,” read another protest placard.
As ISIS Fight Nears End, Violence Flares on Other Syrian
Front
Beirut- Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 March, 2019/While the final battle to retake
the ISIS group's last pocket of territory rages in eastern Syria, violence is
escalating in the country's northwest, pitting al-Qaida-linked militants against
Syrian regime forces.
The alarming violence in the Idlib region threatens to unravel a truce reached
between Turkey and Russia last year that averted a bloody assault by regime
forces to retake the province, the last major rebel stronghold in war-torn
Syria. The escalation raises fears once more of a major assault by the forces of
President Bashar Assad. Idlib has been in the hands of opposition forces for
years, even as Assad's military has succeeded in retaking other rebel enclaves
one after the other. The province is now home to some 3 million people, many of
them displaced from other former opposition territory. Earlier this year,
al-Qaida-linked militants took over the province, squeezing out most other
factions after clashes with Turkey-backed opposition fighters.
Since then, government forces have intensified airstrikes and bombardment of
Idlib towns. Since mid-February, some 100,000 people have been displaced,
largely by government bombardment, and have fled to villages deeper in
rebel-held territory, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory of Human
Rights. The group said that around 140 people, including 69 civilians, have been
killed.The mounting violence points to how Syria's nearly 8-year-long civil war
still has the capability to burst once more into major bloodshed. The focus of
the US and other countries has been on defeating the ISIS group, which once held
eastern and northern Syria, and Assad's conflict with his opponents has quieted
in recent months after government victories and the truce. But the root of that
conflict remains. The militants, from an al-Qaida-linked group called Hayat
Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, Arabic for the Levant Liberation Committee, have also
stepped up their attacks - in retaliation, they say, for the government
bombardment. In the early hours of a cold morning earlier this month, militants
attacked several Syrian army positions and checkpoints on the edge of Idlib in
the village of Masasneh, killing nearly two dozen soldiers - one of the most
serious attacks on government forces since the truce reached in September. The
attack triggered hours of fighting and bombardment that killed and wounded
dozens of insurgents.
The Syrian Foreign Ministry warned afterward that the military was in "full
readiness" to deal with repeated violations of the truce.
Russia, which backs Assad, and Turkey, which supports opposition factions, put
together the truce in September. They agreed to establish a 15-20 kilometers
(9-12 miles) deep demilitarized zone in Idlib in which they said militants will
not have a presence. The deal also offered the Syrian government and Russia one
of their main demands - opening two key highways that pass through Idlib and
link northern Syria with Damascus and other cities. But neither provision was
implementing despite a deadline for opening the roads by the end of 2018.
Still, the truce has been vital to keeping a degree of calm and preventing an
all-out battle for Idlib that could be extremely bloody and drag in Russia and
Turkey. The US deputy ambassador at the United Nations, Jonathan Cohen, last
month expressed American concern over the increase in government airstrikes and
other violence in Idlib. "Terrorism cannot be used as a pretext for targeting
civilians," he said in a reference to al-Qaida-linked group's control of the
area. "Any major military operation in Idlib would be a reckless escalation of
the conflict and would result in a humanitarian catastrophe far beyond what
we've witnessed." The main immediate aim of the government operations appears to
be to eventually force open the key highways crossing though Idlib - the M5 that
links southern and northern Syria and the M4 that links the coastal city of
Latakia with the northern city of Aleppo, said Akram al-Ahmad, a Turkey-based
Syrian opposition activist who heads a monitoring group called the Syrian Press
Center. The towns most targeted by government bombardment have been Khan
Sheikhoun, Saraqeb, and Maaret al-Numan, which control the M5 highway. An HTS
military commander known as Abu Khaled al-Shami released a video statement
Wednesday expressing pride for killing government soldiers and vowing more
attacks. "Hayat Tahrir al-Sham will retaliate forcefully if regime forces try to
advance toward liberated areas," he said. The leaders of Russia and Turkey held
another summit in mid-February after which both leaders said there will be no
offensive by Syrian government forces on Idlib and promised to work together to
prevent the province from becoming a "stronghold of terrorists."On Friday,
Turkey's defense minister said Turkey and Russia will begin patrols in the
demilitarized zone in Idlib - though violence continued over the weekend despite
some patrols.
Turkey has struggled to rein in HTS.
According to al-Ahmad and Rami Abdurrahman who heads the Observatory, there
appears to be a split within HTS. On one side is its leader Abu Mohammed al-Golani,
who has gotten closer to Turkey, and on the other is an Egyptian religious
figure in the group known as Abu al-Yaqzan al-Masri, who represents hard-liners
in HTS opposing Turkey's role. Al-Masri defected from the group in February
along with other hard-liners. Another militant group in Idlib, Horas al-Din, is
also resisting the Turkish mediation. The group, made up mostly of non-Syrian
al-Qaida-linked fighters, rejected the demilitarized zone, calling it a "great
conspiracy." The Syrian regime has repeatedly vowed that its forces will
eventually retake the whole country. The regime "is determined more than ever to
regain control of its land and liberate from terrorism and illegitimate foreign
presence," said the Syrian ambassador to the United Nations, Bashar Ja'afari.
SDF Says Assault on ISIS Pocket Almost Over
Beirut- Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 March, 2019/The ISIS group was close to
defeat in its final pocket on Tuesday after ferocious bombardments overnight and
the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) said the offensive to capture the
area was nearly over. The besieged enclave of Baghouz is the last shred of
territory held by the militants who have been driven from roughly one-third of
Iraq and Syria over the past four years by its enemies, including a US-led
international coalition. “The operation is over, or as good as over, but
requires a little more time to be completed practically on the ground,” SDF
spokesman Kino Gabriel told al-Hadath TV. ISIS was still putting up resistance
with weapons including car bombs. The Baghouz enclave was targeted with barrages
of rockets overnight and fires raged inside, but the bombardments ceased on
Tuesday morning. The SDF has been laying siege to Baghouz for weeks but
repeatedly postponed its final assault to allow the evacuation of thousands of
civilians, many of them wives and children of ISIS militants. It finally resumed
the attack on Sunday, backed by coalition air strikes. Gabriel said 25 ISIS
militants had been confirmed killed so far in clashes, in addition to an unknown
number of militants killed by air strikes. Another SDF official earlier said 38
jihadists had been confirmed killed. The SDF, which is spearheaded by the
Kurdish YPG militia, has been advancing slowly into Baghouz to minimize its
losses from sniper fire and landmines. Three SDF fighters have been killed,
Mustafa Bali, head of the SDF media office, said on Twitter. Besieged by SDF,
ISIS called on supporters across the world to stage attacks in their defense,
according to a newly released audio recording. The brief, minute-and-a-half
recording, released by ISIS supporters on social media and reported by the SITE
Intelligence Group late on Monday said that men, women and children in Baghouz
are being subjected to a "holocaust by the Crusaders," which is militant jargon
for the US-led coalition against ISIS. In the audio, an unidentified ISIS
militant calls on Muslim "brothers, in Europe and in the whole world" to "rise
against the Crusaders and ... take revenge for your religion." As the man
speaks, cracks of gunfire can be heard in the background, apparently meant to
suggest that he is in Baghouz. ISIS' defenses include extensive tunnels and its
most hardened foreign fighters are holed up inside the enclave, the SDF has
said. However the United States does not believe any senior ISIS leaders are in
Baghouz, assessing they have gone elsewhere as part of the group’s shift toward
an insurgency, a US defense official has said. The group still operates in
remote territory elsewhere and it is widely assessed that it will continue to
represent a potent security threat. The bulk of the people evacuated from the
diminishing ISIS territory have been transported to a camp for internally
displaced people in al-Hol, in northeastern Syria, where the United Nations says
conditions are dire.The camp, designed to accommodate 20,000 people, is now
sheltering more than 66,000, the UN said. Obdurate support voiced by many
evacuees for ISIS, particularly among foreigners, has posed a complex security,
legal, and moral challenge.
Shtayyeh Begins Consultations to Form Fatah-dominated
Government
Ramallah - Kifah Ziboun/Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 March, 2019/Palestinian
Prime Minister-designate Mohammed Shtayyeh started consultations on the
formation of his new government with contacts within the Fatah movement.The new
government is expected to be significantly dominated by Fatah, with the
participation of factions in the PLO and independents. Well-informed sources
told Asharq Al-Awsat that Shtayyeh would meet with his colleagues in the Central
Committee for internal discussions and then meet PLO factions, civil society
organizations and independents to form a political government within two weeks.
The Palestinian law grants the prime minister-designate two weeks to form his
government. He may be granted another week, if he does not complete his task
within the deadline. Sources in the Fatah movement told Asharq Al-Awsat: “Fatah
will form this government with those who attend, or more accurately, those among
the Palestinian factions and the independents, who want to participate in the
government that aims to face the challenges.”The "Popular" and "Democratic"
fronts are expected to boycott the government, while other factions such as the
People’s Party, the Popular Struggle Front, the Palestine Liberation Front, the
Arab Front, and the Fida Party will likely participate in the new cabinet.
Deputy-head of Fatah movement, Mahmoud al-Alloul, said that Shattiyeh began his
contacts with all sides, stressing that the new government should be supported
at this special and difficult period. He added that the government’s first task
was to “withstand and meet all the current challenges.”The new cabinet will be
formed amid growing disagreements between Fatah and Hamas over government
sponsorship of the Gaza Strip, in addition to a deepening financial crisis in
light of a US decision to cut off funds and Israel’s retention of tax revenue
funds after a dispute over a deduction of money paid by the PA to families of
prisoners and fighters.
After Assuming Office, Raisi Pledges to Fight Corruption in
Iran
London - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 March, 2019/New head of the Iranian
judiciary, Ebrahim Raisi, pledged to fight corruption, calling on the government
and parliament to reform “the structures that generate corruption in the
country.”Appointed to his post last week, Raisi assumed office on Monday,
replacing Sadeq Larijani. In a speech on the occasion, he noted that the
regime’s structure yields corruption. “No one, regardless of his status, has the
right to circumvent the law and commit legal transgressions,” he said,
expressing his intention to confront corrupt judges, who “want to harm the
reputation of the judiciary.”His remarks came as the judiciary began prosecuting
officials responsible for embezzling USD6 billion from the sale of petrochemical
products during the term of former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. The
move sparked mixed reactions among Iranians. Supreme leader, Ali Khamenei,
appointed Raisi to the post through an official decree on Thursday, naming him
as the successor to Larijani, who served in the position for more than nine
years. Meanwhile, Larijani, who is currently chairman of the Expediency Council,
revealed that 17 million files of corruption are compiled annually by the
judiciary. He denied, however, any role played by the judiciary in the formation
of these files, and said that they were “the outcome of external problems.”
Experts to Asharq Al-Awsat: Iran Will Not Drag Iraq in its
Battle against US
Baghdad – Hamza Mustafa/ Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 March, 2019/Iranian
President Hassan Rouhani kicked off on Monday an official visit to Iraq in what
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif had described as a “historic”
trip, while Iraqi President Barham Salih deemed it as “very important.”
Zarif had held talks with his Iraqi counterpart Mohammed al-Hakim in Baghdad on
Sunday to prepare for Rouhani’s visit. He announced that Rouhani will hold talks
with Shiite authority Ali al-Sistani, even though the top cleric has since 2015
been refusing to meet with politicians, Iraqi or otherwise. The only officials
he is willing to meet are United Nations humanitarian representatives.
Meanwhile, Iraqi experts noted to Asharq Al-Awsat that Baghdad is unlikely to be
dragged into Tehran’s standoff with the United States. MP Abdullah al-Khraybit
said that Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi’s stances reveal that he refuses to
become part of any development that contradicts with Iraq’s interests. “No harm
can therefore come from Iraq signing as many agreements as possible with Iran
without having to fear that it will be harmed by the sanctions imposed on
Tehran,” he added. “Abdul Mahdi is driven by politics, not emotions, knowing
that Iraq needs Iran’s gas and electricity. There is no substitute for these
resources in the near future,” he remarked. “Regardless of the conflict between
the US and Iran, all sides in the region must realize that Iraq is beginning to
recover” and it can stand on its own two feet without having to be affiliated to
any power, he stressed. “Rouhani will therefore not be able to drag us with him”
even though he will address the US sanctions during his talks with Iraqi
officials, he continued. In fact, Iraq can take advantage of the standoff to
achieve its interests, remarked Khraybit. Head of the “Political Thinking
Center”, Dr. Ihsan al-Shammari said that Rouhani’s visit was a “turning point”
in Iraqi-Iranian relations, noting that it was taking place amid escalating
international tensions against Tehran. “This is why Iran is throwing is weight
on the Iraqi internal scene on all levels, as demonstrated in the frequent
visits by its officials to the country,” he said.“Iraq is no longer Iran’s
economic window, but its political one. It has become a meeting point for
several of Iran’s opponents,” he stated. “Tehran is thinking about using this
window to normalize ties with the US. Baghdad may become the destination for
negotiations between Washington and Tehran over the latter’s nuclear
program.”Iraqi economic expert Dr. Abdulrahman al-Shammari remarked that Baghdad
was not qualified to become part of the economic war between the US and Iran
because it needs Washington. He explained that despite the active trade between
Iran and Iran, these relations yield no more than $7 billion. Some $2.9 billion
go in Iraq’s purchases of gas and electricity and the rest is limited to private
sector trade. The situation is completely different with the US, he noted.
Washington grants Iraq more than $2 billion in for its Defense Ministry in the
form of training and equipment. Iraqi oil also makes up 16 percent of oil
imported by American companies, he revealed.
Iran: UK diplomatic protection of jailed mother will not
‘make things easier’
AFP, Tehran/Tuesday, 12 March 2019 /Iran’s foreign ministry warned the UK on
Tuesday that giving diplomatic protection to a British-Iranian mother jailed in
Tehran would not make the situation “easier”, state news agency IRNA reported.
Britain on Friday extended the status to Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who was
arrested in Tehran in 2016. “What is certain is that the British government’s
move lacks goodwill and is in no way constructive or positive,” said ministry
spokesman Bahram Ghasemi on Tuesday. “If it does not make the situation more
complicated, it will surely not make things easier.”Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who
worked for the Thomson Reuters Foundation -- the media organization’s
philanthropic arm -- is serving a five-year jail sentence for sedition. She has
denied all the charges against her. Diplomatic protection is a rarely-used
mechanism allowing governments to seek protection for their citizens on the
grounds that they have been wronged by another state. Britain’s Foreign
Secretary Jeremy Hunt said Friday that London would take the “extremely unusual”
step of extending diplomatic protection to the jailed mother. This would signify
the “formal recognition by the British government that her treatment fails to
meet Iran’s obligations under international law”, he said. But Ghasemi denied
this, saying Zaghari-Ratcliffe is “enjoying all legal and citizenship rights --
both throughout her trial proceedings and during the conviction period”,
including medical care. Tehran was informed of the UK’s decision via official
channels, and is currently studying the legal and political implications, the
spokesman said.Ghasemi dismissed the move as “merely reflecting a political
decision by the UK” and said that it would not “in itself bring about a new
legal status internally or internationally.”Iran’s envoy to London said last
week that the UK’s decision “contravenes international law”, as governments can
only exercise such protection for their own nationals. Writing on Twitter, Hamid
Baeidinejad said Iran does not recognize dual nationality. “Irrespective of UK
residency, MS Zaghari thus remains Iranian,” he wrote.
Iran: Human Rights Lawyer Sentenced to 38 Years in Prison,
148 Lashes
London - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 March, 2019/Nasrin Sotoudeh, an
internationally renowned human rights lawyer jailed in Iran, has been sentenced
to 38 years in prison and 148 lashes, announced her husband, while judiciary
authorities said she was sentenced to 7 years. Judge Mohammad Moqiseh at a
revolutionary court in Tehran, said on Monday that Sotoudeh had been sentenced
to five years for assembling against national security and two years for
insulting Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, Agence-France Presse reported
Iranian news outlets. Sotoudeh’s husband, Reza Khandan, wrote on Facebook that
the sentence was decades in jail and 148 lashes, unusually harsh even for
Iran.The news comes days after Chief of Judiciary Sadeq Larijani appointed a
hardline new head of the judiciary, Ebrahim Raisi. Earlier, French President
Emmanuel Macron invited Sotoudeh to give recommendations to the Group of
Seven (G7) nations. Macron, along with a group of human rights advocates,
gathered on February 19 at Elysees Palace in Paris to discuss potential
strategies that the G7 could employ to reduce violence and discrimination
against women. Macron's official letter was delivered to Khandan on March 7 via
the lawyer of the French Embassy in Tehran. A copy of the invitation has been
sent to the Iranian Foreign Ministry and the Iranian Bar Association. Khandan
was previously sentenced to five years in jail for security-related charges, and
one year for propaganda against the regime. State agencies reported one of
Sotoudeh's lawyers as saying that she chose not to be represented in court
because the case did not adhere to the “principles of a fair trial.” Last June,
Sotoudeh was arrested and told she had already been found guilty in absentia of
espionage charges and sentenced to five years by the court. In 2012, she was
awarded the European Parliament's prestigious Sakharov Prize for her work on
high-profile cases, including those of convicts on death row for offenses
committed as minors. Sotoudeh had previously served about half of a six-year
jail sentence imposed in 2010 for spreading propaganda and conspiring to harm
state security, charges she denied before being freed in 2013. Last year,
Sotoudeh represented a number of women who have removed their headscarf, or
hijab, in public to protest against Iran’s mandatory Islamic dress code for
women, according to the Center for Human Rights in Iran, a New York-based
advocacy group. Sotoudeh, who has represented Iranian opposition activists,
embarked on a 50-day hunger strike in 2012 against a travel ban on her daughter,
reported Reuters. Her case then caused an international outcry in which the
United States and the human rights group Amnesty International criticized Iran.
Former US Navy Veteran Tried in Iran on Security Charges
Tehran- Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 March, 2019/Mashhad prosecutor said Monday
that the verdict in the case of former US Navy veteran, who was arrested in the
summer of 2018, has been issued. He didn’t reveal the verdict and only said the
convict had been indicted on security charges as well as a complaint filed by an
individual. Gholamali Sadeghi, the Mashhad prosecutor, told ISNA news agency on
Monday that “a verdict for this case has been issued,” adding that he faced
unspecified security charges, AFP reported. Sadeghi's remarks contradict a
February statement by Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Hossein Panahi-Azar, who
said the convict faces no security or espionage charges. Micheal White, 46, a
former US Navy Veteran from California, was arrested in July 2018 in Iran, when
he was paying a visit to his girlfriend, according to remarks by his mother to
the New York Times. Iran announced the arrest of the US citizen after few
months, and on January 9, Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Qasimi
confirmed his arrest and denied him being ill-treated. “The US government has
been informed of this arrest through its Interests Office in Tehran,” Qasimi
stressed, denying "wrong" US media information about abusing White. US lawmakers
began working last week to legislate a new law that puts pressure on Iran to
release US detainees. White is the first American known to be detained since
Donald Trump became president. Trump has pursued a maximalist campaign against
Tehran that includes US withdrawal from Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers.
Joan White, Michael's mother, also revealed to the US newspaper that her son had
visited Iran “five or six times” to meet his Iranian girlfriend. She had asked
Switzerland, which represents US interests in Iran, to visit the consulate to
where her son was being held. There are at least three other US citizens
detained in Iran, two of them are Iranians. US-Iranian relations deteriorated
sharply last year after Washington unilaterally withdrew from the international
agreement on Iran's nuclear program and again imposed sanctions on Iran.
OCHA: Thousands Trapped in Yemen's Northern Flashpoint
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 March, 2019/A UN humanitarian agency says thousands
of Yemeni civilians caught in fierce clashes between warring factions are
trapped in an embattled northern district. The UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs, or OCHA, says the number of displaced in the district of
Hajjah has doubled over the past six months, the Associated Press (AP) reported.
Tuesday's report by OCHA says the impoverished governorate is home of Yemen's
most recent flashpoint district of Kusher where "thousands of civilians are
reportedly trapped between conflicting parties."According to AP, Yemen's Houthi
rebels are trying to gain control of Kusher after local tribesmen took up arms
against the Houthis.
Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on March 12-13/2019
US Is a Rich Country With Symptoms of a Developing Nation
Noah Smith/Bloomberg/March 12/2019
The other day I was late to dinner, but it wasn’t my fault. Traffic was backed
up throughout the city of San Francisco, because chunks of concrete had started
falling from the upper deck of the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge. Unfortunately,
this wasn't a particularly unusual occurrence -- in 2016, the Bay Bridge was
shut after concrete chunks began to fall from the walls of a tunnel. Nor are
such issues limited to bridges -- the $2.2 billion Transbay Transit Center was
closed in late 2018 when cracks were discovered in the beams.
These little examples are the kind of incidents that one might expect to see in
a developing country where things are built cheaply or badly. But California has
ruinously high construction costs; Governor Gavin Newsom recently canceled most
of the state’s high-speed rail plan after the price tag ballooned from $45
billion to $75 billion. And these problems aren’t limited to California; across
the country, construction costs for both the public and private sectors have
swelled as productivity has stagnated or fallen. It costs much more to build
each mile of train in the US than in heavily unionized France. No one seems to
be able to put their finger on the reason -- instead, the US simply seems
riddled with corruption, inefficient bidding, high land-acquisition costs,
overstaffing, regulatory barriers, poor maintenance, excessive reliance on
consultants and other problems. These seemingly minor inefficiencies add up to a
country that has forgotten how to build. Unsurprisingly, much of the country’s
infrastructure remains in a state of disrepair.
All of this raises a disturbing question: Is it possible for a rich,
industrialized country to fall back into the middle ranks? The United Nations
classifies countries as developed, developing and a middle category called “in
transition.” But it’s generally assumed that the economies in transition are on
their way up, not down.
The US is still a very rich nation -- richer than countries such as Germany,
Sweden, Japan, Canada or Denmark. But that wealth masks a number of glaring
areas where the US looks more dysfunctional than its peers. Construction costs
are one of these. Another is health care -- the US’s hybrid public-private
system ends up costing much more than other countries’ government-dominated
systems.
And this number is rising steadily. But for all this lavish spending, the US
tends to get worse health outcomes on many measures. Some alarming recent trends
highlight just how much the system is failing. Five years ago, life expectancy,
which is still rising in most other countries, began to fall in the US.
Most countries have also seen declines in maternal mortality. But in the US, the
rate has risen in recent years.
And thanks in part to high construction costs and in part to restrictions on
housing development, the country is facing a housing-affordability crisis.
It also has a tragic opioid epidemic. Suicide rates have risen substantially.
Whole cities have had their drinking water contaminated with lead. Measures of
corruption are rising. The list goes on. Other dysfunctions are more
long-standing. The US has an incredibly large prison population, and a violent
crime rate much higher than other developed nations. It also has more poverty
and hunger.
Some have suggested that the US is actually two countries in one -- a developed
nation for the rich and a developing one for the poor. But recent trends like
the fall in construction productivity and the rise in health costs suggest that
inequality isn't the whole story here. The US is simply becoming less efficient
along a broad spectrum of measures.
How long can this loss of efficiency go on without hurting the country’s overall
wealth? Nobody knows, but if the US does eventually backslide in terms of gross
domestic product, it wouldn’t be the first rich country to have done so in
recent years. Italy has already traveled that path.
Italy has been politically dysfunctional and divided for a long time. For almost
a decade, a corrupt, divisive, populist president, Silvio Berlusconi, made the
situation worse. The comparison with the US certainly doesn’t look encouraging.
The US shouldn’t wait and see if current trends persist. Instead, there needs to
be a national focus on reducing excessive costs in key industries, improving the
population’s health, increasing density in the country’s sprawling cities,
upgrading public transit, and reducing corruption and waste in both the public
and private sectors. If the US wants to remain a developed country, it should
try to look and act more like one.
Ethiopian Crash Throws the Spotlight Back on Boeing
Chris Bryant/Bloomberg/March 12/2019
These are worrying hours for Boeing Co. – and tragic ones for 157 families. The
second crash of a 737 Max jet in five months raises inevitable questions about
the safety of the US manufacturer’s flagship single-aisle aircraft, even though
it’s still not known what caused the latest disaster. The company must respond
with total transparency and hope there was nothing it could have done to have
avoided Sunday’s crash in Ethiopia.
We don’t know whether what happened to the Ethiopian Airlines plane was the same
thing that brought down a Lion Air jet in October and a rush to judgment helps
nobody, including the people who’ve lost their lives and their loved ones.
Superficially, there are similarities: Both jets were almost brand new, both
experienced difficulties shortly after takeoff and asked to return to the
airport. But the details are absolutely crucial here.
In the wake of the Lion Air crash in Indonesia, it emerged that the 737 Max
contains software that forces the plane’s nose down in certain circumstances to
prevent it stalling. Some pilots weren’t aware of the safety system and felt
they should have been told. The New York Times reported that the manufacturer
wanted to keep additional pilot training to a minimum (the 737 Max competes with
Airbus SE’s 320neo).
Boeing insisted, however, that all pilots know how to override the plane’s
automated systems. In view of the Lion Air disaster, it would be surprising if
the Ethiopian Airlines pilot was unaware of this procedure. So it’s quite
possible the causes of these two crashes are unrelated.
Until there is clarity about the circumstances of the latest disaster, though,
passengers will be anxious about flying on the aircraft. Airline owners of the
737 Max, which include Southwest Airlines Co. and American Airlines Group Inc.,
are monitoring the investigation closely. That the two crashes of a new model of
aircraft happened so closely together will add to the sense of urgency.
Given China’s and Ethiopian Airlines’ grounding of Boeing 737 Max planes after
the latest crash, there are naturally questions about whether this will now be
extended to the global fleet. Such a scenario would obviously be a huge
reputational blow to Boeing, which delivered more than 250 Max planes last year
and is ramping up production to fulfill more than 5,000 orders. The plane is
sold out until 2023.
The jet’s sales success is a big reason why Boeing’s shares are close to a
record high and analysts expect it to generate about $15 billion of free cash
flow this year.
But all of that is secondary to Sunday’s tragedy. Up until now, it was to the
credit of Boeing, Airbus and the airlines that passengers could board a
commercial aircraft knowing that a crash was incredibly unlikely. While this
remains the case, that there’s even a sliver of doubt about a top-selling
aircraft type is a shocking development. Passengers and airlines need answers,
quickly.
The World Really Is Getting Richer as Poor Countries Catch
Up
Noah Smith/Bloomberg/March 12/2019
Last month, Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates touched off a
high-profile debate about global poverty after tweeting out a graph from the
website Our World in Data showing that the number of people living on less than
$1.90 a day (adjusting for inflation and price difference between countries) has
fallen dramatically.
Anthropologist Jason Hickel, writing in the pages of the Guardian, took
exception, disputed the graph and denied Gates’s assertion. Two of Our World in
Data’s creators, Joe Hasell and Max Roser, defended their methodology for
measuring poverty, which Hickel then criticized more. The debate was well
summarized by Dylan Matthews in Vox.
It’s understandable that some people in the UK and the US would want to embrace
a narrative of increasing global immiseration. These rich countries are
struggling with their own economic problems — inequality, reduced mobility and
wage stagnation — and no doubt those in Hickel's camp also feel guilty for the
imperial conquests of past centuries. But that narrative is false. Hickel is
wrong, and Gates, Hasell and Roser are correct — global poverty has indeed been
dropping at a dramatic and unprecedented rate.
One of Hickel’s main arguments is that the poverty threshold used by Our World
in Data — $1.90 a day in 2011 international dollars — is too low. Hickel
suggests instead using a threshold of $7.40 a day to measure extreme poverty. If
this higher threshold is used, the total number of poor people in the world rose
steadily in the 1980s and 1990s, and only began to fall very gradually in the
late 2000s. Thus, Hickel declares, global poverty has risen rather than fallen.
But this argument is both economically and morally flawed. Although higher
poverty thresholds are important to look at, the lower thresholds are actually
more important. A person living on less than $1.90 a day is in danger of
starving to death, has no access to life-saving medical care, proper sanitation
or basic education. Let's imagine her income rose to $7.39 a day. That increase
would be utterly life-changing — still poor, but out of immediate danger and the
grueling daily struggle just to stay alive.
But by Hickel’s accounting, this gain in income would represent no reduction in
poverty, since $7.39 a day is still less than his chosen threshold of $7.40.
This is reflects an analytical failure because he doesn’t appreciate one of the
basic tenets of economics — the diminishing marginal utility of consumption,
meaning that the less money you have, the more each small increase matters.
In other words, by dismissing the use of very low poverty thresholds, Hickel is
willfully ignoring the most important improvement in living standards — the ones
that move people away from utter destitution.
Hickel’s second argument is that the poverty graph inaccurately measures the
past. Our World in Data’s poverty numbers for 1820 through 1980 are taken from a
paper by economists François Bourguignon and Christian Morrisson, although the
data from 1981 on come from the World Bank’s PovcalNet database. Hickel notes
that simply pasting together two different data sources is inappropriate for
drawing comparisons between the recent past and the distant past. He suggests
that the true income of people in pre-industrial societies was higher than the
economic historians estimate, since they had access to communal lands and other
natural resources that measures of market activity miss.
This may or may not be true; as Roser and Hasell note, economic historians do
try to account for these non-market sources of production. But even if Hickel is
right, that would hurt his argument instead of help.
The basic story of the Our World in Data graph is that the total number of
people in poverty rose steadily from 1820 through 1980 and then began to fall.
If Hickel is right, colonialism impoverished the world even more than the graph
would suggest. But if that’s true, the drop in poverty since 1981 — which is
based on World Bank data that Hickel doesn’t dispute — is even more impressive,
because it represents such a dramatic reversal of past trends.
But perhaps the biggest flaw in Hickel’s case is that it ignores all the other
data corroborating the story that poverty has fallen. Gates didn’t just tweet
that one graph — he tweeted a set of six. Two of the other graphs show dramatic
increases in literacy rates and years of education. A third shows a steep fall
in infant mortality. Still other graphs that Gates didn’t tweet show declines in
hunger and undernourishment. If global poverty had really increased, these
improvements would almost certainly not have been possible.
The truth is that the past 25 years have seen dramatic improvements in the lives
of the poor in many parts of the world. China has outperformed the field, of
course, but India, Bangladesh, Indonesia and other populous developing nations
have experienced steady growth in recent years. People will no doubt argue
endlessly over whether to credit market liberalization or deliberate industrial
policy with this miracle — some poor countries used the former, some the latter,
and others (such as China) used a mix of both.
But one thing seems clear — it was decolonization that ultimately made it
possible for poor countries to start catching up. Free from the crushing burden
of producing resources and crops for their colonial masters, many of these
countries were able to pursue their own destinies and to experiment with
economic policies until they found a mix that worked. The triumph of
decolonization is a story that even Hickel should be able to feel happy about.
Rouhani is in Baghdad to harness Iraq’s banks for beating US anti-Iran oil
sanctions'
DEBKAfile/March 12/19
Iran’s president Hassan Rouhani started a visit to Baghdad on Monday, March 11,
for the main purpose of harnessing Iraq’s banks as Tehran’s main mechanism for
beating the US sanction on its oil sales. This is revealed exclusively by
DEBKAfile. Rouhani will formalize the deal, which has been in discussion for
more than a month between Tehran and Iraqi prime minister Adel Abdel Mahdi. They
agreed in principle to set up a mechanism for enabling Iran’s foreign clients to
purchase oil and gas, in defiance of President Donald Trump’s sanctions, by
registering the transactions as purchases of Iraqi oil. Payment is to be
deposited in Iraqi banks in Baghdad and Basra, then quietly transferred in euros
to banks in Tehran.
Prime Minister Mahdi does not expect the Trump administration to make trouble
over this subterfuge. He is under enormous pressure from Iran and the Iraqi
Shiite militias under the thumb of Al Qods chief Gen. Qassem Soleimani to order
US forces to withdraw from Iraq. He therefore believes he holds over
Washington’s head a threat to give into Iran’s pressure and order the 5,200
American troops to pack up and leave their bases, should the US take action
against the Iraqi banks which collude in busting US sanctions.
This order would undermine the Trump administration’s strategy in the Middle
East and the Gulf. The US grants substantial financial and military support to
Baghdad to secure a linchpin for this strategy against Tehran’s grab for
dominant influence in the Iraqi capital.
However, the deal is in the bag. On Feb. 6, the governor of the Iraqi central
bank Abdolnasser Hemmat and his Iranian counterpart Ali Mohsen Ismail al-Alaq
reached an agreement in principle. Rouhani, who is accompanied on his three-day
visit to Baghdad by foreign minister Mohammed Javad Zarif and oil minister Bijan
Zangeneh, is to add the government’s seal to the transaction.
Meanwhile, Washington warned the Mahdi government against conniving with Tehran
to beat America’s anti-Iran sanctions. On Friday, March 8, Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo phoned the Iraqi prime minister with a caution. If Iraqi banks go
through with the sanctions-busting deal with Tehran, the US will block their
access to the international financial markets ruled by the US dollar.
Washington and Baghdad are on the brink of a showdown. It is marked by the
impending activation of Iraqi banks for breaking the US embargo on Iranian oil
sales, plus Baghdad’s threat to demand the removal of US forces. This impasse is
the reason why the US has in recent days sent additional forces to fortify its
bases in Iraq, as DEBKAfile’s military sources first reported on March 9. The
extra units have been drawn from US bases in Israel and Jordan.
Armed Opposition Groups in Iran
د.جوناسن سبيِّر: المجموعات المعارضة المسلحة في إيران
Dr. Jonathan Spyer/JISS/
Expert on Syria, Iraq, radical Islamic groups, and Kurds
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/72921/dr-jonathan-spyer-jiss-armed-opposition-groups-in-iran%D8%AF-%D8%AC%D9%88%D9%86%D8%A7%D8%B3%D9%86-%D8%B3%D8%A8%D9%8A%D9%91%D9%90%D8%B1-%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%85%D8%AC%D9%85%D8%B9%D9%88%D8%A7%D8%AA-%D8%A7/
Armed opposition groups emerging from the Kurdish, Baloch and Ahvazi Arab
minorities have stepped-up attacks on regime assets in Iran. Tehran is
responding by acting against these opponents, in Pakistan and Iraq and further
afield. But these insurgencies are not capable by themselves of calling the
regime’s viability into question, because of their relatively narrow bases of
support.
In recent years, the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) in Iran has
emerged as perhaps the leading practitioner in the Middle East of proxy and
irregular warfare. First in Lebanon, and later in Syria, Iraq, Yemen and the
Palestinian territories, the IRGC and its expeditionary Qods Force have
demonstrated peerless abilities in the field of the founding, organizing,
training, financing and deployment of proxy militias, mostly but not exclusively
Shi’a, in neighboring countries for the advancement of Iranian goals.
It is interesting, however, to note that the Iranian organs of state are today
not the only instigators and aggressors in the field of irregular and
paramilitary warfare. Rather, Iran is also the target of several domestic
Iranian organizations which seek to foment insurgency against the revolutionary
Islamic regime in Tehran. Most, but not all, of these organizations are based
among Iran’s ethno-religious minorities.
This article profiles the most significant of these groups and concludes with an
assessment of the extent and seriousness of armed opposition to the Iranian
regime. The third part analyzes the Iranian response to the challenge of the
armed opposition groups.
The article looks at armed opposition movements emerging from the Akhwazi Arab,
Kurdish and Baluch minorities in Iran. It begins with a profile of the Mojahedin
e-Khalq (MEK) organization, a non-sectarian leftist-Islamic group dedicated to
insurgency against the regime.
MEK: The Peoples’ Mojahedin Organization of Iran
The best known and most veteran grouping engaged in armed activities against the
Tehran regime is the MEK. A gathering of the movement in France was targeted by
the Iranian regime in June 2018. The MEK was founded in 1965 and took an active
part in the 1979 revolution against the Pahlavi dynasty in Iran, after which it
was forcibly suppressed by the IRGC. MEK members helped guard the US embassy in
Tehran during the period of the hostage crisis. The movement decamped en-masse
to Iraq, where it supported the Saddam Hussein regime during the Iran-Iraq War
of the 1980s. The MEK is alleged to have helped the Saddam regime in its
suppression of Shia and Kurdish uprisings.
Today, the MEK is widely regarded as Iran’s largest and most active external
opposition group. It has continued a sporadic armed campaign which has included
many acts of terrorism and assassinations. In the period 1999-2002 the MEK
increased its paramilitary activities against the regime. In Operation ‘Bahman’
in 2000 the movement succeeded in carrying out a mortar attack in Tehran on the
compound where the office of the Supreme Leader is located. At this time, the
movement also carried out frequent attacks from across the Iraqi border.
This period of increased military activity came to an end, however, with the US
invasion of Iraq. MEK ordered its members not to resist coalition forces during
the invasion of 2003, officially renounced violence and subsequently surrendered
its weapons to the Coalition. It was subsequently removed from the US list of
terror organizations.
Following this, 3000 MEK members were permitted to live at Camp Ashraf, north of
Baghdad. They were resident there under the provisions of the United Nations.
The MEK ceded its heavy weapons as part of this arrangement. The MEK was removed
by the Iraqi authorities from Camp Ashraf in 2012. This move was seen as part of
the growing closeness between the government of Iraq and the Iranian regime.
Camp Ashraf later became a base for the Badr Corps – a pro-Iranian Shia militia.
Subsequent to their removal from Camp Ashraf, the MEK shifted its main
headquarters to Albania, where it remains today. MEK was able to go to Albania
following a request from the Obama Administration that Albania accept the group.
MEK was instrumental in the earliest revelations concerning the Iranian nuclear
program, which the group revealed in 2002. Specifically, they are credited with
making public the existence of the Natanz enrichment facility. It has in the
current period turned toward a greater emphasis on public political activity.
MEK is active on social media, where its members seek to engage with regime
supporters. The Iranian regime allege the existence of a ‘troll farm’ maintained
by MEK in Albania, from where coordinated campaigns are launched on social media
to discredit Iranian regime messages, harass officials etc.
MEK developed a syncretic ideology including elements of both Shia Islam and
Marxism, influenced by the writings of the Iranian political theorist Ali
Shariati – a revolutionary Islamist who rejected the concept of Vilayet Faqih,
obedience to the religious leader, which is central to the present regime. The
movement now claims – in open courtship of U.S. support – to have moved beyond
this early outlook and to have abandoned revolutionary politics in favor of
liberal democracy, human rights protection and Middle East peace. Many analysts
identify an opportunistic and ‘mix and match’ element to the MEK’s current
outlook. Some refer to the movement as a ‘cult’ because of the absence of
democratic internal structures, and the adulation with which its members regard
MEK founding leaders Masoud and Maryam Rajavi.
MEK is reckoned according to a US Department of Defense estimate to have
somewhere between 5000-13,000 members. The membership consists almost entirely
of Iranian emigres, and the movement has offices throughout Europe and north
America.
The Iranian regime accuses MEK of being the recipient of assistance from the US
and Israel, though both countries deny this. Iranian regime propaganda further
claims that MEK has been involved in what it claims are Israeli assassinations
of Iranian nuclear scientists over the past decade. In September 2012, the US
removed the MEK from its list of designated terrorist organizations. Prominent
US figures, including current National Security Advisor John Bolton and former
New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani have appeared at MEK events.
According to most estimates, MEK lacks significant support within Iran. Among
other reasons, this is because of its support for Iraq during the traumatic and
long Iran-Iraq War, and the Shia Islamist nature of its core ideology.
Nevertheless, the movement retains a powerful (and wealthy) external
infrastructure. While it is currently favoring political over paramilitary
activity, it also, according to many reports, has a sophisticated network for
intelligence gathering within Iran.
Regarding the sourcing of the MEK’s funds, little concrete information is
available. It appears that the movement was supported by the Saddam Hussein
regime in Iraq prior to 2003. It also clearly maintains a number of charities
and NGOs in the west which enable it to raise money legally, and testimony of
former supporters indicate that members are heavily taxed as a requirement of
membership. A 2012 article in the International Business Times mentioned the
Iranian American Community of North Texas and the Iranian American Cultural
Association of Missouri as two examples of community groupings associated with
the MEK.
The less clear aspect is the issue of foreign government support for the MEK.
The Iranian regime and its mouthpieces allege that the MEK receives support from
Israel and Saudi Arabia. Specifically, pro-regime voices claim that Israel has
made use of MEK militants and networks inside Iran in order to carry out the
assassination of Iranian nuclear scientists. Such claims can of course by their
very nature be neither refuted nor confirmed.
Kurdish Groups
Kurds number around 10% of the Iranian population, or roughly 8 million people.
The majority of Iranian Kurds are resident within the area of northwestern Iran
which includes Kordestan, Kermanshah and western Azerbaijan provinces. Notably,
a significant minority of Iran’s Kurds are Shia Muslims. The population is
economically deprived and subject to discrimination at the hands of the
authorities. Iran, of course, presents itself as a state ruling in the name of
Islam, and hence indifferent to the question of the ethnic identities of its
citizens. Also, Kurds and their language are closely related to Persian. As a
result, Iran has never made the crude attempts to forcibly and completely
suppress Kurdish identity, language and culture in the way that both Kemalist
Turkey and Baathist Arab states have.
Nevertheless, the regime is deeply suspicious of any hint of ethnic separatism,
and responds to it with force and severe repression. For a short time, there was
a Kurdish (Mahabad) Republic during WW2, alongside an Azeri entity, when all of
northern Iran was conquered by the Soviet Union; but American pressure in 1946
forced Stalin to abandon it. The memory still feeds Iranian suspicions of both
Kurdish and Azeri nationalism.
There are today two main Iranian Kurdish movements engaged in activity against
the Iranian regime – namely PJAK (which is a franchise of the PKK) and the
Kurdish Democratic Party, which is itself split into two factions – the PDKI and
a splinter group, the KDP-I.
PDKI
The Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PDKI) is one of the most veteran of
the militarized political parties which characterize Kurdish political life.
Founded in 1945, it was active against the Pahlvi dynasty in Iran, and
cooperated with the leftist Tudeh party. As a result, it was the target of
repression and attempts at disruption at the hands of the SAVAK security
service.
The party took part in the 1979 revolution alongside Islamist and leftist
elements, and was subsequently suppressed by the new regime, which rejected
Kurdish separatist demands. The PDKI was supported and assisted by the Iraqi
regime in the early 1980s and sought to establish an autonomous area around the
towns of Nowdesheh and Qasr-e Shirin. This attempt was crushed by the Iranian
regime.
The PDKI external leadership has been targeted in subsequent years by the
Iranian authorities on a number of notable occasions. In July 1989, party leader
Abd’el Rahman Ghassemlou and a number of his associates were assassinated by the
IRGC in Vienna after being lured there to take part in talks with Iranian
government representatives. In 1992, Ghassemlou’s successor, Sadek Sharafkandi
was killed by the regime along with two other prominent PDKI figures, Fattah
Abdoli, Homayoun Ardalan, and their translator Nouri Dehkordi in the Mykonos
restaurant in Berlin. A German court subsequently issued an arrest warrant for
Iranian Intelligence Minister Ali Fallahian, accusing him of ordering the
murders, with the knowledge of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
The killings led to a long period of semi-paralysis by the PDKI. Having located
itself in northern Iraq in the KRG-controlled area, it was prevented both by its
own weakness, and by the opposition of the Kurdish authorities from carrying out
attacks against Iran from this area. From 1996 until 2016, a formal ceasefire
prevailed between Iran and the PDKI.
This long period of inactivity came to an end with the launching of the ‘Rasan’,
the PDKI’s current campaign, that started in early 2016. The Rasan is not,
however, an attempt to launch a general insurgency of the Kurds against the
Iranian regime. Rather, it consists in the main of organizational, educational
and propaganda activity carried out by PDKI cadres operating from across the
border in northern Iraq, making regular forays into the Kurdish towns of western
Iran. These cadres are armed. They defend themselves if facing capture at the
hands of the IRGC, but they do not at this stage seek confrontation. Rather,
they are seeking to recruit members, create networks of support and educate
Kurdish young people toward support for Kurdish nationalism. The intention is to
carry out the groundwork and create the frameworks for a future Kurdish
insurgency against the regime.
The KDP (I) which split from the PDKI in 2006, also maintains its headquarters
in Iraqi Kurdistan. The split took place because of a dispute over the
leadership succession in the party.
The PDKI has since 2016 been engaged in an attempt to lay the foundations for an
insurgency among the Kurdish population of Iran, as detailed above On September
8, 2018 the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) launched a missile
attack using Fateh 100 SRBMs on the facilities of the two Iranian Kurdish
Organizations – the PDKI and KDP-I at Koya (KRG). Drones flown over Koya prior
to the missile attack were launched from Kirkuk in Iraq, which is 40km from Koya,
and where there is a presence of Shia militia forces associated with Iran.
The September 2018 attacks indicate that Tehran takes Iranian Kurdish insurgent
activities seriously and is keen to deal a lethal blow to any putative Kurdish
uprising. Tehran is presumably concerned about the possible knock-on effects of
the growth of such a campaign. It remains to be seen if the PDKI can acquire the
skill level and support which alone could turn its ‘Rasan’ campaign into more
than an irritant for the Iranian regime.
Today, the PDKI has around 2000 fighters, based within Iran in the border area
between Iraqi Kurdistan and south western Iran.
PJAK
PJAK (Kurdistan Free Life Party) is a franchise of the PKK organization. Founded
in 2004, it has waged an intermittent armed struggle against the Iranian regime
in subsequent years. Like the PDKI, PJAK operates within Iran, from the
mountainous border area between Iraq and Iran. In the period 2004-11, the
organization waged a determined insurgency against the Iranian authorities in
Kordestan and Kermanshah provinces. Representative actions from this period
included an attack on a police station in Kermanshah on April 9, 2009 in which 8
PJAK members and 18 policemen were killed, according to an official Iranian
report.
On July 16, 2011, the Iranian armed forces launched a major counterattack
against PJAK into the mountainous region of northern Iraq. After three months of
fighting which saw around 180 PJAK fighters killed, PJAK retreated a kilometer
from the border and a ceasefire was declared. Some Kurdish sources maintain that
the ceasefire was agreed to by the Kurds as a quid pro quo for the Iranians
permitting the establishment of the autonomous Kurdish area in Syria. While this
cannot be verified with absolute certainty, it is plausible. Since this time,
PJAK has remained on ceasefire. The organization has around 3000 fighters,
however, and continues to maintain its bases in the Qandil area, presumably
benefitting from the large infrastructure of support available to PKK-associated
forces in that area.
PJAK’s ceasefire has come close to fraying on several occasions, and similarly
to the PDKI, the group continues to conduct political and educational activities
inside Iran, and to respond when attacked by Iranian state forces. This leads to
casualties on both sides. For example, 10 IRGC members were killed by PJAK
fighters in a clash in the Mariwan area in July ,2018. PJAK said it launched the
attack in retaliation for the assassination of one of its members, the political
activist Iqbal Muradi, in the Sulaimaniya province of the KRG.
A number of smaller Kurdish groups, including the PAK and Komala, maintain small
armed capabilities against the Iranian regime. As is the case elsewhere in their
region, the Iranian Kurds are handicapped by their factionalism and inability to
unify. The factionalism is the product of old organizational loyalties and
personal differences between leaders rather than major ideological disputes in
the case of the various iterations of the PDKI and Komala. The ideological
differences between PDKI and PJAK are substantive, however, in terms of strategy
and goals. Both PJAK and PDKI are well organized groups with a considerable
number of committed cadres.
The situation of the Kurdish organizations in the border area is further
complicated by the fact that the eastern part of the KRG is dominated by the
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) which itself has a close if ambiguous
relationship with the Iranian regime.
Baloch Groups
The Baloch are a small minority in Iran, constituting around 3% of the
population. Sistan-Balochestan Province, adjoining the Iranian border with
Pakistan, in the south east of the country is one of the country’s poorest
provinces. In an interview published on Iranian state news agency, Aftab News,
the representative of Zahedan in the Iranian Parliament, Alim Yar Mohammadi
said: “More than 75% of the people in Sistan and Baluchestan do not have access
to sufficient food. People live in circumstances of dire poverty, similar to
that witnessed in parts of Africa.” Eighteen years have passed since a major
drought hit the province. Its effects are still keenly felt.
Ali Asghar Mirshekari, the deputy security chief of Sistan-Baluchestan province
confirmed recently that the unemployment rate in the province is about 40
percent. Sistan and Baluchestan is the youngest province in the country. 35
percent of its inhabitants are people under the age of 16. There are around two
million ethnic Baloch in the province. They are Sunnis, in contrast to Shiite
Persian affiliation. The combination of the province’s poverty, and the ethnic
and religious discrimination faced by the Baloch by the state that is
predominantly Shiite and Persian has led to widespread support for oppositional
groups. The Baloch speak the Balochi language, which is related to both Persian
and Kurdish. However, neither education nor administrative functions are
permitted to take place in this language.
While a number of secular nationalist organizations exist, the armed Baloch
opposition to Iran has taken Islamist and jihadi form. The Jundallah movement
led by Abdelmalek Rigi was the first ethnic Baloch movement to launch armed
attacks against the Islamic Republic of Iran. Formed in 2002, the organization
began its campaign in 2005. Rigi was captured and executed by the Iranian
authorities in 2010. Since his death, the movement, now commanded by Mohammed
Dhahir Baluch, has sought to continue its attacks but the tempo has sharply
declined. Jundallah is Sunni Islamist in nature. On a number of occasions Rigi
denied that it had separatist goals, stressing instead that his fight was for
the rights of Sunni Muslims inside Iran. Iran accuses the Pakistani state
authorities, and the U.S., of direct involvement in Baluch terror attacks.
Jaish al-Adl
A number of other movements have emerged over the last decade. The most
important of these is the Jaish al-Adl movement, which may be seen as the main
Baloch insurgent group today. Iran claims that it is supported by Pakistan and
Saudi Arabia.
Founded in 2012, the group’s leader is Abdolmalek Mollazadeh (Salah al-Din al-Faruqi),
a former member of Jundallah. The group has claimed responsibility for several
attacks in the eastern Sistan-Balochistan province.
Jaish al Adl has three military branches, based on three regions in southeastern
Iran. The organization operates close to the Iranian-Pakistani borderline to
escape to Pakistan immediately after operations.
The military group Abdolmalek Mollazadeh, operates in the city of Sarbaz and
Rask, the Sheikh Zia’i military group in the Saravan area and the Maulvi
Nematollah Towhidi group in the area of Miriwa and Zahedan. In its first
operations, Nematullah’s group lost one of its main members, Zubair Ismaili.
The Abdolmalek and Sheikh Zia’i groups conduct the main operations of Jaish Al
Adl. The organization has also set up an intelligence branch named after Zubair
Ismaili, whose major mission is to identify Baluch Sunnis that are collaborating
with the Iranian regime. The list of recent actions carried out in the province
by Jaish l-Adl includes, according to the pro-regime, IRGC-associated Habilian
website: the killing of 9 IRGC members by long range weapons fired from inside
Pakistan, and the taking of 14 IRGC men as hostages on October 16, 2018. In
addition to Jaish al-Adl, a group called Ansar al-Furqan was founded in December
2013, from a merger between two other groups – Hizb al-Furqan and Harakat al-Ansar.
They are thought to have links to Jabhat al-Nusra in Syria, which is the
franchise of the al-Qaeda network in that country.
Ahvazi Arab groups
Constituting around 2% of the Iranian population, the Ahvazi Arabs are mostly
resident in Khuzestan province in south west Iran along the Gulf, an area rich
in natural resources. The majority of the Ahwazis are Shia Muslims similar to
the Arabs in South Iraq. The area has a long history of separatist activity,
dating back to before the 1979 Islamic Revolution., demanding an autonomous
status. A variety of nationalist and separatist organizations were formed in the
pre-1979 period, including the “Arabistan Liberation Front” and the “Al Ahwaz
Liberation Front”. An uprising took place in Khuzestan following the Islamic
Revolution which was bloodily suppressed by the new regime. The Iranian embassy
siege in London in 1980 was carried out by an Ahvazi Arab group demanding
autonomy for Khuzestan.
ASMLA
After a period of quiet, Ahvazi activity against the Iranian regime recommenced
in the late 1990s. In 1999, a new insurgent movement named the Arab Struggle
Movement for the Liberation of Arabistan (ASMLA) was established in Khuzestan.
Its goal is the independence of Khuzestan. Against a background of increased
civil unrest, ASMLA began a military campaign in 2005, taking responsibility for
the detonation of four bombs on June 12, 2005, in which 8 people were killed.
Additional major bombings took place on January 24, 2006, at the Saman bank and
the Environment Ministry offices in Ahwaz city. The armed wing of ASMLA which
carried out the attacks is known as the Mohiuddin al Nasser Martyrs Brigade.
The bombing campaign of the ASMLA has continued sporadically over the past
decade, and has included attacks on oil pipelines in the Khuzestan area. Broader
unrest among the Arab population of Khuzestan has also been notable over the
past decade. In 2005, and then again against the background of the ‘Arab Spring’
in 2011, riots and demonstrations in Ahvaz and the surrounding area, followed by
harsh government crackdown, arrests and executions have taken place. There are
today two separate structures claiming to speak for ASMLA.
On September 22, 2018, a shooting attack was carried out on a parade of the IRGC
in Ahvaz City. 25 people were killed, including both IRGC members and civilian
bystanders. A group calling itself the Ahvaz National Resistance and claiming to
be a wing of ASMLA claimed responsibility. ISIS also issued a separate claim of
responsibility. Yaghub Hur Totsari, spokesman for one of the two groups that
identify themselves as the Arab Struggle Movement for the Liberation of Ahvaz,
said the Ahvaz National Resistance, an umbrella organization of all armed
movements, claimed responsibility for the attack, but did not specify which
group carried out the operation. A wave of arrests followed the attack, with
over 600 Ahvazi Arabs detained. The location of many of these people remains
unknown. According to a report by a human rights group, a number of those
arrested have been executed. As of now, it appears likely that Ahvazi Arab
actions against the Iranian state will continue, probably with some support
coming in from anti-Iranian regimes in the Gulf and to some extent from Western
intelligence services.
International Support for Iranian Armed Opposition Movements
Official Iranian new sites often include allegations of foreign support for
armed movements engaged against the Iranian regime. Specifically, Israel and the
US are accused of support for or involvement with the MEK and Kurdish groups.
Pakistan is accused of support for Jaish al Adl among the Baloch, and Saudi
Arabia and the UAE are accused of support for ASMLA among the Ahwazi Arabs. Is
there any truth to these allegations? In all cases, what is alleged is not open
political alliance or support at a strategic level. Rather, the allegations
concern the activities of the intelligence services of the said countries, and
the field of clandestine warfare. This is an arena about which by its very
nature little is known. The Iranians have yet to produce conclusive evidence on
any of these files. As such, little can be said with certainty in this regard.
On a clearer level, European countries are clearly deeply concerned at the
recent evidence of renewed activity by the Iranian authorities against the
organizations noted here, on European soil. The attempted assassinations in
Denmark and the Netherlands led to new targeted EU sanctions against Iran in
January 2019. These included the freezing of funds and assets of individuals
associated with the Iranian Intelligence Ministry. There is no evidence,
however, of European support for Iranian opposition movements beyond the
granting of asylum and refugee status to some individuals associated with some
of the movements profiled here.
The Iranian Response
In the first years of the regime, as noted above, Iran conducted a global
struggle against those organized against it. This included assassinations on
foreign soil and widespread harassment of Iranian opposition activists in exile.
There is evidence that Teheran has now resumed activity of this type, and that
the tempo of it is increasing. This in turn is a response to the increase in the
volume of armed attacks against the regime from a variety of forces detailed
above. Iran has done little to address the grievances of its ethnic and
religious minority populations. These communities are not completely estranged
from the regime.
In the presidential elections of 2013, Hassan Rouhani promised economic and
social reforms and increased language rights, and as a result received 73% of
the vote in the Sistan Baluchistan region and 70% in Kurdistan. Little of
practical import, however, has come of these promises in subsequent years. The
Islamic Republic is officially a non-sectarian, Islamic state. In practice,
Persian is the language of education and administration. There is, however, no
active desire for minorities to disappear, and no systematic effort to eradicate
minority languages or identities, because of the notion of a common Islamic
identity.
Recent attacks by Iran against militant opposition groups include: a plot to
kill Adel Jubeir, then Saudi ambassador to Iran, using explosives in 2011, and a
(thwarted) plan to attack a rally organized by the MEK in Paris in June 2018.
More recently, the government of the Netherlands has accused Iran of carrying
out two assassinations of Iranian oppositionists on Dutch soil: Mohammad Reza
Kolahi Samadi of the MEK was shot dead in 2015, and Ahmed Molla Nissi, an Ahvazi
Arab activist, was killed in a similar way in 2017. Also, the government of
Denmark has accused Iran of a plot to kill three ASMLA activists resident in
Ringsted, south of Copenhagen, in September 2018. In September 2018, Iran fired
seven short-range ballistic missiles at the headquarters of the PDKI and a
related party in Koya, in the Kurdish controlled part of northern Iraq. At least
15 people were killed and 42 others injured.
Conclusion
There is growing Iranian concern about the activity of armed opposition groups
against it. This study suggests that the challenges the Iranians face in this
arena are manifold. At the same time, because of the narrow ethnic nature of the
armed groups (or, in the case of MEK, the only non-ethnic party engaged in armed
against Iran, because of its limited popularity within Iran), the current uptick
in armed activities against the regime should not be taken as an indication of
an imminent general breakdown of order in the country.
What is more likely in the period ahead is a steady continued increase in armed
activities, alongside continued low-level non-violent unrest. Meanwhile, the
Iranian state will continue to disregard international norms and borders in its
pursuit of its enemies. It is likely to act across the borders into Iraq and
Pakistan and to seek out its enemies further afield, as it has done recently in
Denmark, France and the Netherlands.
* Dr. Jonathan Spyer/Expert on Syria, Iraq, radical Islamic groups, and Kurds
*The Jerusalem Institute For Strategy and Security