LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
March 15/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.march15.20.htm
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Bible Quotations For today
The Prodigal Son Parable
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Luke 15/11-32/:”The Lord Jesus
says: ‘There was a man who had two sons. The younger of them said to his father,
“Father, give me the share of the property that will belong to me.” So he
divided his property between them. A few days later the younger son gathered all
he had and travelled to a distant country, and there he squandered his property
in dissolute living. When he had spent everything, a severe famine took place
throughout that country, and he began to be in need.
So he went and hired himself out to one of the citizens of that country, who
sent him to his fields to feed the pigs. He would gladly have filled himself
with the pods that the pigs were eating; and no one gave him anything. But when
he came to himself he said, “How many of my father’s hired hands have bread
enough and to spare, but here I am dying of hunger! I will get up and go to my
father, and I will say to him, ‘Father, I have sinned against heaven and before
you; I am no longer worthy to be called your son; treat me like one of your
hired hands.’ “So he set off and went to his father. But while he was still far
off, his father saw him and was filled with compassion; he ran and put his arms
around him and kissed him. Then the son said to him, “Father, I have sinned
against heaven and before you; I am no longer worthy to be called your son.”But
the father said to his slaves, “Quickly, bring out a robe the best one and put
it on him; put a ring on his finger and sandals on his feet. And get the fatted
calf and kill it, and let us eat and celebrate; for this son of mine was dead
and is alive again; he was lost and is found!” And they began to celebrate. ‘Now
his elder son was in the field; and when he came and approached the house, he
heard music and dancing. He called one of the slaves and asked what was going
on. He replied, “Your brother has come, and your father has killed the fatted
calf, because he has got him back safe and sound.”Then he became angry and
refused to go in. His father came out and began to plead with him. But he
answered his father, “Listen! For all these years I have been working like a
slave for you, and I have never disobeyed your command; yet you have never given
me even a young goat so that I might celebrate with my friends. But when this
son of yours came back, who has devoured your property with prostitutes, you
killed the fatted calf for him!”Then the father said to him, “Son, you are
always with me, and all that is mine is yours. But we had to celebrate and
rejoice, because this brother of yours was dead and has come to life; he was
lost and has been found.” ’
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Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese
Related News & Editorials published on March 14-15/2020
93 coronavirus cases in Lebanon
Health Ministry: Number of confirmed COVID-19 cases rises to 93
Coronavirus: UAE suspends flights to Lebanon, Iraq, Turkey, Syria
Lebanon Closes Border Crossings with Syria over Coronavirus Concerns
Lebanon Purchases Medical Supplies As Cases Hit 93
US Ambassador to Beirut: Washington Backs Protesters’ Legitimate Demands
Geagea Vows to Sue Lebanese PM if Govt. Fails to Take Needed Measures against
Coronavirus
Lebanon: Controversy Surrounds Nationalization Decree
Exposure to Lebanese credits: Ashmore fund suffers $1 bln net outflow
Saudi Embassy reduces its working hours, effective Monday
Nehme urges food and consumer supply traders not to take advantage of prevailing
circumstances
Interior Minister’s Press Office denies news of transferring corona infected
patients to the Faculty of Information’s building in Wata al-Msaitbeh
Series of meetings at the Government Serail tackle raising level of preparedness
Aoun to address the Lebanese at the beginning of the cabinet’s session tomorrow
Ezzeddine contacts Abdel-Samad to follow up on the issue of distance learning
First Lebanese national joins the European Academy of Sciences and Arts
Bassil launches a campaign to confront Corona virus: A collective
responsibility, state of emergency inevitable
Al-Tabsh: Corona is not a disgrace!
Arslan: With awareness and responsibility we can cross this phase
Abdullah: The Lebanese individual and his safety is the main issue
Economic crisis may pave way for reforms to Lebanon's sponsorship system/Abby
Sewell, Al Arabiya English/Saturday, 14 March 2020
Restaurants and public life in Lebanon suffer amid new coronavirus
measures/Michal Kranz/Al Arabiya English/March 14/2020
Lebanon's Hezbollah won't oppose IMF aid under 'reasonable conditions':
chief/The New Arab & agencies/March 14/2020
Lebanon to declare emergency after a severe storm
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
March 14-15/2020
Iran Says Virus Death Toll Reaches 611
Iran Reports 97 New Virus Deaths, Taking Total to 611
Online users ridicule Iran plastic cover-up of Soleimani statue in northern Iran
Syria Death Toll 384,0000 after 9 Years of War
Rocket Attack Hits Iraq Base Housing Coalition Troops
Iraq's Protesters Struggle to Keep Waning Movement Going
US Declares Emergency as New Virus Epicenter Europe Locks Down
How to Clean the Bundle of Germs That Is Your Phone
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published on March 14-15/2020
After Everything That Has Happened, What Are
Iran’s Choices?/Zuhair Al-Harthi/Asharq Al Awsat/March 14/2020
European Union: Closing the Borders?/Judith Bergman/Gatestone Institute/March
14/2020
Iranians suffer from regime’s malpractice on coronavirus/Saeed Ghasseminejad and
Alireza Nader/Al Arabiya English/March 14/2020
Is Iran behind Rocket Attack that Killed US-led Coalition Forces in Iraq?/Seth
Frantzman/The Jerusalem Post/March 14/2020
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News &
Editorials published on March 14-15/2020
93 coronavirus cases in Lebanon
Perla Kantarjian/Annahar/March 14/2020
BEIRUT: According to a statement issued Saturday noon by the Ministry of Public
Health, the tally of coronavirus cases in Lebanon increased to 93. The number
entails the patients who underwent lab tests and tested positive, and was
confirmed by the Rafic Hariri University Hospital as well as numerous others.
The statement also said that tests were conducted on all suspected people who
arrived from countries with the COVID-19 outbreak, and whoever came in contact
with them. Additionally, the ministry urged the Lebanese citizens to abide by
all the demanded precautions issued by the concerned authorities and leave their
homes only if and when absolutely necessary. Also on Saturday, the United Arab
Emirates suspended flights to and from Lebanon, Syria, Turkey, and Iraq, to
prevent the spread of the COVID-19, which was declared a world pandemic by the
World Health Organization on Wednesday. On Sunday, the Council of Ministers in
Lebanon will hold an emergency session to look into the latest developments and
required procedures to restrict the spread of the coronavirus. The emergency
session will be followed by a Supreme Defense Council meeting.
Health Ministry: Number of confirmed COVID-19 cases rises
to 93
NNANNA/Saturday, March 14/2020
As of March 14, 2020 at noon, the total number of coronavirus cases in Lebanon
has risen to 93, the Health Ministry announced Saturday in a statement. The lab
tests include patients diagnosed at the Rafik Hariri University Hospital and a
number of other university hospitals, the Ministry’s statement said.The Health
Ministry also reminded citizens to remain at home and not to go out “unless
absolutely necessary.”
Coronavirus: UAE suspends flights to Lebanon, Iraq, Turkey,
Syria
Tamara Abueish, Al Arabiya English/Saturday, 14 March 2020T
The UAE will suspend flights to Lebanon, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey as of March 17
as a precautionary measure to prevent the spread of the deadly coronavirus,
Emirates News Agency (WAM) reported on Saturday. “The decision to suspend
flights to the four countries came after the General Authority of Civil Aviation
in the country evaluated the global situation,” the authority said in a
statement. The UAE has confirmed 85 cases of the deadly coronavirus. The UAE
also announced on Saturday restrictions on visas as additional measures to
contain the virus. Since the outbreak, the country has temporarily shut schools
and universities, ordered bars and night clubs to close, and closed several
tourist attractions.
Lebanon Closes Border Crossings with Syria over Coronavirus Concerns
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 14 March, 2020
The Lebanese government decided on Friday to close all border crossings with
Syria for a week starting next Monday as part of preventive measures to face the
coronavirus outbreak. The Lebanese Health Ministry said that the total number of
confirmed coronavirus cases is 77, including those diagnosed at the Rafic Hariri
University Hospital, and other university hospitals. Sources told Asharq Al-Awsat
that the Lebanese authorities informed Syria about a decision to close border
crossings as part of a series of measures taken in the past week to fight the
virus. “The decision would go into effect starting Monday to allow the Lebanese
living abroad to travel to Lebanon by land,” the sources said. Lebanon has
stopped all flights between Italy, South Korea, Iran and China for a week. It
banned the entry of passengers from France, Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Germany, Spain
and the UK. The source confirmed that tight measures were also imposed on
illegal border crossings with Syria after the military and security forces set
up earth mounds and observation towers. Lebanese officials on Friday held
meetings with representatives of international NGOs concerned with the Syrian
refugees to prevent a COVID-19 outbreak at the overcrowded camps. “Following
talks, they agreed to quickly establish two field hospitals in the Bekaa valley
and the north where Syrian refugees have a high presence,” the sources added.
Similar talks have been held with Palestinian officials to discuss preventive
measures at the Ain al-Hilweh Palestinian refugee camp in south Lebanon. “The
government’s measures to prevent the outbreak of coronavirus across Lebanon is
considered an unofficial state of emergency,” thee sources explained. Several
parties have criticized the government for not announcing a nationwide state of
emergency to limit the spread of the virus despite the rising number of
infections. Asharq Al-Awsat learned that international companies have informed
their employees to work from home.
Lebanon Purchases Medical Supplies As Cases Hit 93
Beirut- Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 14 March, 2020
The Governor of the Central Bank, Riad Salameh, has asked all Lebanese banks to
give priority to transfers aimed at purchasing medical supplies and equipment to
limit the spread of the new coronavirus, as confirmed cases reached 93 on
Saturday. Lebanon is grappling with an acute hard currency crunch that has led
commercial banks to impose strict controls on the withdrawal and transfer of
dollars abroad, restrictions that have hit imports even for critical goods.
Health officials have warned that Lebanon’s deep financial crisis raises serious
questions about its ability to contain a coronavirus outbreak if cases rapidly
increase, amid looming shortages for even basic essentials like masks and
gloves. Salameh "asked that all Lebanese banks give priority to transfers for
the purchase of medical supplies and equipment for combating coronavirus,” the
statement said. The Ministry of Health announced a case among its employees in
the central administration, who had been in contact with one of their diagnosed
relatives. The ministry said it was taking the necessary procedures to isolate
the employee, identify contacts outside and inside the ministry, collect
samples, and put those who had direct contact with the patient in quarantine.
Meanwhile, Education Minister Tarek al-Majzoub ordered the extension of schools
and universities closure. In a statement, the minister announced on Friday that
the schools and universities across Lebanon would remain closed nationwide in
order to ensure the safety of the educational sector. While Friday prayers in
mosques across Lebanon were suspended in implementation of the preventive
instructions to reduce gatherings, Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rai stressed
that caution was very necessary, urging everyone to stay home, and not go out
except when absolutely needed. The national committee to follow up on the
preventive measures and procedures for coronavirus, after its meeting on Friday,
required all private hospitals of category (A) to be equipped to receive
coronavirus patients within a period of one week, in line with the plan of the
Ministry of Public Health. The government on Wednesday announced heightened
countermeasures including a ban on flights from virus-hit countries and the
closure of restaurants, malls, and many public venues. Lebanon’s banks said they
will shut on Saturday in order to take steps to sanitize branches.
US Ambassador to Beirut: Washington Backs Protesters’ Legitimate Demands
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 14 March, 2020
US Ambassador to Lebanon Dorothy Shea has said that Washington backs the
“legitimate demands” of anti-government protesters. The diplomat met on Friday
Lebanese Prime Minister Hassan Diab in a protocol visit at the start of her new
mission. “The United States continues to back the protesters’ legitimate demands
for economic opportunity, accountability, and transparency. Only by meeting
those demands can Lebanon initiate the difficult process of restoring
international confidence,” she said in a statement released by the embassy. She
expressed honor to serve as the US ambassador to Lebanon and lauded the Lebanese
people for their hospitality, resilience, diversity, and entrepreneurship. Shea
said she discussed with Diab “the strength and potential of the US partnership
with Lebanon, and our shared stake in a Lebanon that is stable, secure, and
sovereign. This is a partnership that is vitally important not only to both of
our countries, but to all of the countries in the region.” The Lebanese people
“have rightly called for reform, an end to corruption, and the imposition of
effective policies necessary to extricate Lebanon from its unprecedented
economic crisis,” stated the ambassador. A wave of protests erupted last October
against the country's ruling elite, forcing the resignation of PM Saad Hariri.
Diab has pledged that his new government would work to address protester demands
and try to tackle Lebanon’s economic and financial strains. Shea said Friday
that the US seeks a “bright future for the Lebanese people, who deserve a
stable, secure, sovereign, and prosperous country.” “We stand with the Lebanese
people in encouraging their government to effect real change in its policies,
and to chart a course that will earn the confidence of those it means to govern
– and, in doing so, secure the support of the international community,” she
added.
Geagea Vows to Sue Lebanese PM if Govt.
Fails to Take Needed Measures against Coronavirus
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 14 March, 2020
Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea threatened on Friday to sue Prime Minister
Hassan Diab if the government fails to take the necessary measures to counter
the coronavirus outbreak in the country. In a televised address, he said Lebanon
was one of the countries most at risk from the new virus. “It is not an example
in how to fight the virus, but it is in the top half of the countries that are
affected by the outbreak,” he added. “The government has not taken all required
precautions,” he continued. He have the example how the first diagnosed patient
had arrived to Lebanon onboard a plane carrying 200 passengers, all of whom went
home. “We know that the incubation period of the virus can last up to 21 days,”
Geagea remarked. The government has failed to limit the spread of the virus, he
charged, saying it should have shut land, air and sea borders. The entire
country must be put on lockdown because it lacks sufficient medical equipment
and medicine to treat patients, he warned. The government should have taken
preventative, not treatment measures, he went on to say. “If the situation
persists and the government fails to assume its duties, then we will sue the
prime minister and health minister,” Geagea said. Lebanon has registered 93
cases of the virus. Former deputy PM Ghassan Hasbani said the government appears
to be basing its decisions on political considerations, citing its hesitation in
halting flights from Iran. The government has been late in taking precautions,
he added. The cabinet on Friday decided to shut Lebanon’s border with Syria
starting Monday in order to prevent the spread of the disease. Syrian
authorities have been informed of the closure, which will last one week.
Lebanon: Controversy Surrounds Nationalization Decree
Beirut- Youssef Diab/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 14 March, 2020
The Lebanese Presidency denied information circulated by activists on social
media, talking about the issuance of a new naturalization decree for a number of
people of foreign and Arab nationalities. The Presidency confirmed that the new
decree was for “the restoration of nationality for people of Lebanese
descent.”The restoration of citizenship decree included 423 people, mostly from
Brazil, the United States, Mexico, Argentina, Egypt, Uruguay, and South Africa.
A decree issued in the Official Gazette circulated on social media, including
the names of hundreds of naturalized persons, has sparked confusion, as it comes
after the naturalization decree issued in May 2018, which included Syrians,
Palestinians, Jordanians, Iraqis, and other citizens from Western countries. The
Information Office in the Lebanese Presidency denied the reports, stressing that
President Michel Aoun has issued a decree to restore the citizenship for a
number of people of Lebanese origins. “This news is false, fabricated, and
deliberately promoted for well-known reasons,” an official statement said.
“Restoring citizenship decrees, published in the latest issue of the Official
Gazette and reported by various media outlets, pertain to individuals residing
abroad and of Lebanese descent. These decrees are issued according to Law No. 41
(24/11/2015), which defines the conditions for regaining Lebanese citizenship,”
the statement added. The media office of Minister of Interior Mohamed Fahmi also
responded to the reports, saying in a statement: “Some have circulated on social
media a list of names published in the Official Gazette, claiming it was part of
a new naturalization decree.”“The media office of Minister Fahmi is keen to
clarify that the Minister has not filed any new decrees for naturalization since
he assumed his duties as Minister of Interior and that the aforementioned names
fall within decrees to restore Lebanese citizenship to those who deserve it, as
per Law 41 of 2015,” it added.
Exposure to Lebanese credits: Ashmore fund suffers $1 bln
net outflow
Reuters, Beirut/March 14/2020
An emerging debt fund run by investment manager Ashmore Group loaded with
securities from troubled Argentina, Lebanon and Ecuador has been hit by net
investor outflows of more than $1 billion since August, according to Morningstar
data.
Net returns of the Ashmore SICAV Emerging Markets Short Duration Fund, which has
net assets of $5.1 billion, are down 20.3 percent in the year to date, compared
to a 3.5 percent loss for the benchmark JPMorgan EMBI Global index, Refinitiv
data shows.
$318 million left in three months
Around $318 million left the fund in February after monthly outflows in August,
October and November. Between the end of last month and February last year, the
fund had net inflows of $1.04 billion, the Morningstar data showed. Since
August, net outflows totaled $1.1 billion. The reason is likely heavy exposure
to troubled credits -nearly a quarter of the fund is invested in Argentina and
Lebanon, up from around 8 percent from the same period in 2019, according to
Refinitv data from the end of January, as the emerging markets specialist bought
up bonds hammered by last year's financial turmoil in those countries. Ashmore,
which in total has about $100 billion assets under management, declined to
comment. But it last month defended the short duration fund's strategy, saying
it was designed to take account of bouts of volatility in high-yielding emerging
markets. It was too soon to judge the success of its " “dislocation” rades on
Lebanon and Argentina, it argued. Among the fund's holdings is a Lebanese $1.2
billion Eurobond which matured on Monday and will not be repaid. That issue has
lost nearly half its value in the past week. Lebanon declared on Saturday it
could not continue servicing debt. Argentine bonds have also fallen, and economy
minister Martin Guzman said this week the country will need “substantial relief”
as it restructures nearly $70 billion in debt with international bondholders.
The fund's largest weighting of 15 per cent is in Ecuador, the data showed.
While Ecuador has not defaulted, it is reeling after huge unrest last year and
the recent oil price collapse; its sovereign bonds have tumbled around 50 per
cent this year.
Saudi Embassy reduces its working hours, effective Monday
NNA/Saturday, March 14/2020
The Saudi Embassy in Beirut announced, in a statement on Saturday, that "in
accordance with the preventive and precautionary measures recommended by the
competent health authorities in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, as part of its
determined efforts to control the Corona virus and prevent its spread, and out
of concern to protect the health of the Embassy staff, its visitors and those
who benefit from its services, it was decided to reduce official working hours
temporarily, starting Monday, March 16, to be from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m."
Nehme urges food and consumer supply traders not to take advantage of prevailing
circumstances
NNA/Saturday, March 14/2020
Economy and Trade Minister Raoul Nehme met Saturday with suppliers, supermarkets
and food and consumer shops owners, and asked them to increase their working
hours temporarily, while taking precautionary measures, to enable citizens to
purchase their needs and mitigate mass gatherings to limit the spread of the
Corona virus.Nehme also urged them to “demonstrate national and social
responsibility, and not to take advantage of the current exceptional
circumstances by raising prices unjustifiably.”The Minister was, in turn,
reassured by suppliers during the meeting that food and consumer items are
available abundance and will not be cut off from the market; hence, there is no
need for citizens to rush to buy goods more than needed.
Interior Minister’s Press Office denies news of
transferring corona infected patients to the Faculty of Information’s building
in Wata al-Msaitbeh
NNA/Saturday, March 14/2020
The Press Office of the Minister of Interior and Municipalities, Mohamed Fahmy,
denied in an issued statement Saturday, the recent circulated news about “the
transfer of a number of patients infected with corona virus from the city’s
southern suburb to the Faculty of Information’s building in the area of Wata al-Msaitbeh,
amidst an armed presence.”The statement explained that the video attached to the
circulated news belongs to a previous popular movement in one of the Lebanese
regions, adding that the presence of a number of people in the Faculty of
Information’s building premises in Wata al-Msaitbeh is due to the fact that,
after suspecting the infection an engineer in the Engineering Syndicate’s branch
in Dbayeh, the Syndicate urged all engineers in said branch to come to the
Engineering Syndicate’s headquarters, adjacent to the Faculty of Information in
Wata al-Msaitbeh area, to undergo the necessary tests to ensure their safety.
Series of meetings at the Government Serail tackle raising
level of preparedness
NNA/Saturday, March 14/2020
Several meetings were held on Saturday at the Grand Serail to follow up the
procedures and measures related to the prevention from Corona virus. Bakery
owners unions, supermarkets and distributors unions, water distributors and
industrialists, health sector, army and security forces, insurance companies,
and agricultural unions respectively partook in those meetings, under the
supervision of the Prime Minister Hassan Diab, and with the presence of
Ministers of Defense Zeina Akar, Interior Mohammad Fahmi, Economy Raoul Nehme,
Industry Imad Hoballah, and Labor Lamia Yammine, in addition to the corona virus
committee members, General Mahmoud Al-Asmar and PM Consultant for Health
Affairs, Dr. Petra Khoury. Discussions touched on adopting required measures,
respecting the recommendations of the Ministry of Public Health, and taking all
necessary precautions in terms of hygiene and health practices. {PM Diab’s Press
Office}
Aoun to address the Lebanese at the beginning of the
cabinet’s session tomorrow
NNANNA/Saturday, March 14/2020
At the start of the cabinet’s meeting at Baabda President Palace tomorrow
afternoon, the President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun, is expected to
address the Lebanese on the developments related to combating the Corona
pandemic and the measures that will be adopted in this respect.
Ezzeddine contacts Abdel-Samad to follow up on the issue of
distance learning
NNA/Saturday, March 14/2020
As a follow-up on the issue of securing distance learning service for Lebanese
students, Women and Child Committee Chair, Deputy Enaya Ezzeddine, contacted
Saturday the Minister of Information, Dr. Manal Abdel-Samad Najd, briefing her
out the outcome of her meeting with Education Minister Tariq al-Majzoub, where
the idea of allocating TV hours for educational programs was raised. Ezzeddine
relayed Abdel-Samad’s great welcome of this initiative, expressing the readiness
of the Ministry of Information to place all its capabilities into rendering this
project a success. The MP had called for according the issue of distance
learning a high priority, so that students do not waste their time while staying
at home. "These sensitive conditions can be an occasion to transform the threat
into an opportunity by creating the platform to integrate technology in
educational curricula and learning methods, especially in public education,”
Ezzeddine asserted.
First Lebanese national joins the European Academy of Sciences and Arts
NNA/Saturday, March 14/2020
The European Academy of Sciences and Arts chose the Head of the Neuroscience
Research Center at the Lebanese University, Professor Youssef Fares, to join its
cadre, thus becoming the first Lebanese doctor among its members, and officially
honored by the Academy during a ceremony held in Salzburg, Austria. The Academy,
a European non-governmental and non-profit medical association based in Austria,
is home to a group of members who are the most distinguished scientists, artists
and business experts, among them Nobel Prize winners, who are elected in
recognition of their outstanding achievements in science, arts and governance.
The selection of Fares by the Academy denotes a global recognition for his
leadership in neurosurgery, and according to its criteria "his outstanding
contributions have led to advances in neuroscience, the development of health
care institutions, and the building of bridges between Europe and the Eastern
Mediterranean". Fares is the founding Director of the Center for Neuroscience
Research at the Lebanese University, Chairman and Director General of Al-Zahra
University Hospital, and he is currently the founding President of the Lebanese
Society for Spine Surgery and the editor of the leading journal, “Surgical
Neurology International”. Fares has more than a hundred researches and studies
published in international scientific journals, and has reaped a number of
honoring awards in recognition of his academic, research and medical work.
Bassil launches a campaign to confront Corona virus: A collective
responsibility, state of emergency inevitable
NNA/Saturday, March 14/2020
Free Patriotic Movement Chief, MP Gebran Bassil, launched Saturday a campaign to
confront the Corona virus spread, in a word on the occasion March 14th
commemoration, following an online meeting by the FPM National Council to
approve its political paper and budget, while adhering to safety standards and
preventive measures. “Our role is to confront, not to watch, for we are not
spectators, but people of action. Our duty is to contribute to drawing a road
map for rescue, implementing it and putting our potentials into place,” Bassil
said.
He added: “The Lebanese are known for their toughness, for no matter what the
difficulties, we managed to overcome them as a fortified, more healthy
society…but our responsibility this time is different….Our responsibility for
ourselves and others, our responsibility for everything that is around us and
those who live with us at home and in our society and our homeland, is to
protect ourselves and others. It is a collective and national responsibility par
excellence!"
“Today we remain in our place, not only for our sake but also for the sake of
others. We work in the Movement and contribute to the continuation of life, so
that we can give the example that the student is able to stay home and study
through e-learning…and the worker is sometimes able to stay in his safe place
and work from afar…Yet there is a group of people who are forced, due to the
nature of their work or their incentive to help others, to be in constant
mobility and contact with patients and those infected with the virus, which is
an example of courage and dedication, and hats off to them in respect,
especially those working in the health sector, including doctors, nurses,
hospital staff, and volunteers in the Lebanese Red Cross and others,” Bassil
went on.
He stressed that "infection and disease are not a disgrace. We are all exposed,
including our family members. Hence, reporting symptoms and undergoing the
necessary laboratory examination and self-quarantine when necessary, remain a
duty towards our society and our country."
“We stand behind the state in managing this crisis, and we adhere to its
guidelines and support any decision it takes because the epidemiological
situation is worrisome, and we are on the verge of reaching an epidemic
widespread, with the possibility of exceeding the medical capabilities to care
for critical cases, so it seems that a general quarantine decision is
inevitable, i.e. declaring a state of emergency, even if painful, to save the
largest number of precious lives,” Bassil underlined.
“Crises are a test for humanity, and we are people of confrontation, and not of
fleeing or standing idle…This time, confrontation lies in prevention and
protection in order to preserve Lebanon and fortify the immunity of our society.
Today, we meet electronically to show solidarity with each other and with our
society and our state. We meet to confront and resist the spread of the
epidemic, and we are all confident that together, through our solidarity, we
will defeat this epidemic and any other threat to Lebanon," Bassil concluded.
Al-Tabsh: Corona is not a disgrace!
NNA/Saturday, March 14/2020
MP Rola al-Tabash deemed via her Twitter account today that “Corona virus is not
a shame,” adding, "As a result of the wrong approach, the patient of corona and
his family are feeling guilty and fearful, which is pushing citizens to ignore
the symptoms that may appear and hide them from the doctor…”“Corona is not a
defect, but rather the defect lies in concealing symptoms and exposing oneself
and the surrounding to infection….I call for social solidarity, the key to
cordoning off and limiting the virus!” Tabsh underscored.
Arslan: With awareness and responsibility we can cross this
phase
NNA/Saturday, March 14/2020
Lebanese Democratic Party Head, MP Talal Arslan, tweeted Saturday on the Corona
virus issue, saying: "We are each responsible today, just as the state, the
government and the relevant ministries…We are required to observe home
quarantine to limit the spread of the Corona virus, and to adhere to all the
preventive instructions issued by the Ministry of Public Health and those
concerned...Through awareness and a sense of responsibility we can cross this
critical stage…#Stay home!"
Abdullah: The Lebanese individual and his safety is the main issue
NNA/Saturday, March 14/2020
MP Bilal Abdullah tweeted Saturday on the required measures regarding the Corona
virus, saying: "Awaiting the government's decisions over measures to tackle the
Corona epidemic, we are all called upon to stay in our homes, not to mix, and
practice voluntary quarantine when necessary...The Lebanese individual and his
safety is the issue today. Let us leave all our differences, contradictions and
struggles....and work together as one hand!
Economic crisis may pave way for reforms to Lebanon's
sponsorship system
Abby Sewell, Al Arabiya English/Saturday, 14 March 2020
Reforms to Lebanon’s “kafala” sponsorship system for importing migrant domestic
workers from Africa and Asia have long been sought by advocates who say the
current system is rife with human rights violations.
Over the past year, the reform efforts have found high-level support in the
Labor Ministry. Now, with the country’s economic crisis shrinking the purchasing
power of Lebanon’s lower and middle classes, some experts say the time is ripe
for “dismantling” the system.
A coalition including human rights groups, government officials, migrant
workers, and employers, as well as representatives of the embassies of the
workers’ countries, gathered this week in Beirut to discuss changes the Ministry
of Labor is considering making to the standard work contract for foreign
domestic workers, who currently number about 250,000 in Lebanon. The new
proposed contract aims to give the workers greater protections and could be a
step toward more sweeping legislative changes that would give domestic workers
the same legal rights as any other employees in the country.
“This will be quite a change in the way Lebanese employ domestic workers,”
Ryszard Cholewinski, senior migration specialist with the International Labour
Organization (ILO), which has been coordinating a working group studying
potential reforms, told Al Arabiya English. “It will not be a popular reform
with everyone, but we also feel that in this time of crisis – not just economic
but political – this is also an opportunity to put in place much needed reform.”
While details of the new contract are still being negotiated, as currently
proposed, it would address “what have been some of the most abusive elements
around the kafala sponsorship system when it comes to domestic workers,”
Cholewinski said. For instance, the proposed contract explicitly forbids the
common practices of employers confiscating workers’ passports and not allowing
them to leave the house on mandated one day off per week. The new contract also
increases domestic workers’ mandated annual leave from six days to 15.
And perhaps most important, it will include a clause allowing either the
employee or the employer to terminate employment at a month’s notice, which is
“very much a step forward when it comes to…addressing issues around forced labor
and trafficking,” Cholewinski said. The exact conditions of termination are
still being negotiated.
Under the current contract, workers only have the right to terminate the
contract if they're not paid for three months, if the employer or a family
member physically or sexually abused them and it's officially investigated and
proven, or if the employer forces them to work a job that they weren't
contracted to do.
At the request of former Labor Minister Camille Abousleiman in April of 2018,
the ILO convened a working group to recommend measures that could be taken by
the ministry to improve protections for migrant workers. While more sweeping
changes – such as removing the language that exempts domestic workers from
Lebanon’s labor law – would require approval by Parliament, the Labor Minister
can act administratively to change the standard contract. The formation of the
working group predated the mass protests that have swept across Lebanon since
October and the country’s ongoing economic crisis, but the crisis has added a
new urgency to the matter. As Human Rights Watch noted in a recent report, many
domestic workers have reported that their salaries have been slashed or gone
unpaid as their employers have lost their own jobs or received reduced payments.
Even those who are still receiving payment have seen the real value of their
already-low wages decrease as Lebanon’s currency has undergone a de facto
devaluation. For instance, a worker who gets 300,000 Lebanese lira a month – the
equivalent of $200 at the official exchange rate – now gets as little as $120 at
the black-market rate.
Speaking at the meeting convened to discuss the proposed changes, Ghassan Dibeh,
chair of the department of economics at the Lebanese American University said
that the economic crisis is also likely to bring about a major decrease in
demand for live-in domestic workers, given that many of the families who
previously employed them are from the now-struggling middle and lower classes.
“I think the current economic crisis will bring about the end of the kafala
system,” Dibeh said. “Its origin is economic, and its end will be economic.”
Indeed, Ali Amine, president of the Syndicate of Recruitment Agencies in
Lebanon, told the group that the number of foreign domestic workers coming to
Lebanon had dropped off steeply since 2018. Current Labor Minister Lamia Yammine
attended the opening session of this week’s meeting on the proposed reforms,
where she told the group that “Lebanon has been and will remain an active member
in the international rights system” and is committed to protecting “the rights
of all the workers on Lebanese soil, without discrimination.” Yammine declined
to be interviewed for this piece.
Some of the workers themselves said they are hopeful that real reforms may
finally be made. “Eleven years I’ve been working on this,” said Malani
Kandaarachige, a migrant worker from Sri Lanka who is one of the founders of the
Alliance of Migrant Domestic Workers in Lebanon. “We’re tired.”
Kandaarachige said she hopes the workers will be given meaningful input in the
final contract. “We want our voice as domestic workers, not for someone to give
us something to read or somebody to handle us,” she said. “We are the ones
facing the problems.”
Meriam Prado of the Philippines, also a founding member of the alliance, said
it’s the first time she has seen serious movement on reforms to the kafala
system. “There’s a lot of discussion to do, but we’re hoping for the best,” she
said.
Restaurants and public life in Lebanon suffer amid new
coronavirus measures
Michal Kranz/Al Arabiya English/March 14/2020
As the coronavirus case count in Lebanon climbed to 77 and state authorities
registered three deaths, Lebanese authorities closed restaurants, entertainment
centers and other public spaces last week.
State authorities had publicly admitted they had been unable to contain the
spread of the virus domestically, and along with the country’s syndicate of
restaurants announced Wednesday that establishments would close in the country
currently in the throngs of economic crisis.
“The stores are all closed, there aren’t people in the street, there is no
work,” Mehdi Wehbe, an employee at a clothing store in west Beirut that had
remained open, told Al Arabiya English. “They are trying to suspend employees
because the companies aren’t paying.”
Already hard-hit by multiple economic and fiscal crises over the last six
months, businesses in Lebanon have seen their fortunes decline further as a
result of the new measures to stop the spread of COVID-19, the medical term for
the new coronavirus. In Beirut’s popular shopping districts and nightlife hubs,
cafes, bars, and stores have been forced to close, and those that have remained
open have suffered losses as street life has nearly ground to a halt.
Some corporate employees have been unable to go to work, and shop owners stated
that many in the industry won’t be able to make ends meet in the case of
prolonged national paralysis.
“We in Lebanon in 2006 had a war, and we didn’t see this type of crisis,”
Mohammad al-Sibaai, a perfume vendor in Beirut’s Hamra area, told Al Arabiya
English. “It’s not a joke — there is death.”
In Hamra, Gemmayzeh, Mar Mikhael, and other previously-bustling popular Beirut
neighborhoods, stores, and businesses with seating or public gathering spaces
were shuttered, and street activity was markedly lower than usual. The popular
Barbar Restaurant, which has two locations in Beirut that are usually open for
24 hours a day and had operated throughout the Lebanese Civil War, had also been
forced to close, reportedly with pressure from tourism police.
Some small shops and eateries continued to operate, but with precautionary
measures in place.
“We don't [come into] contact with people, just by delivery,” Ahmad Itani, a
shop owner in the Verdun area, told Al Arabiya English. “It's better and more
comfortable for them.”
Like many others, al-Sibaai lamented that the outbreak of COVID-19 added another
layer of adversity in a country that had already been dealing with an economic
downturn.
Paul Eid, the manager of Mexican restaurant Taco de Madre in Mar Mikhael, told
Al Arabiya English that the virus outbreak has caused him to lose money.
“This affects us a lot because we lose a lot of customers, even when it comes to
delivery,” Eid said. “They are afraid to order. We are losing a lot of income.”
Others lamented similar problems.
Tony Saab, a shop owner in Mar Mikhael, told Al Arabiya English that while the
owners of establishments in previously popular areas understand the necessity of
the new social distancing measures, they cannot hold out for long.
“Because of corona, [business owners in the area] say it’s no problem if this
lasts to the end of the month,” Saab said. “But they have a problem if it goes
longer, because there is rent to pay.”
Another casualty of the new circumstances in the country has been social life.
Al-Sibaai, the perfume vendor, said he has started avoiding large gatherings,
and Renata Harb, an employee at a telecommunications aggregator who has started
working from home because of virus fears, said she doesn’t socialize much with
people anymore.
“I'm not worried for myself because you're always worried for the older people,
and my grandma lives with us,” Harb told Al Arabiya English. “I'm visiting my
friends right now but that's it. We're not going out at all.”
Despite the difficulties facing them however, some businesses are taking steps
to limit the spread of the virus as much as possible. Disinfection procedures
have taken place at currently-closed establishments. Some supermarkets, like
Olive and Cheese Fakhani in Verdun, have asked employees to wear masks and
gloves while working and have placed sanitizers throughout the market.
“We do all we can to keep our stocks fully loaded to be able to serve the
Lebanese people,” Khaled Itani, the branch manager of the supermarket, told Al
Arabiya English. “We’re being the impact we want to see in the society that we
live in basically.”
While many of the stores that remain open provide the bare essentials, some
businesses, like the Plan Bey gallery in Mar Mikhael, have held out amid the
widespread closures.
“Since all the museums are closed, we are trying to keep this place [open] for
the tourists to show them another perspective of Beirut,” gallery manager Ahmad
Haidar, who said he cleans the shop every thirty minutes, told Al Arabiya
English. “This place is not crowded by people so for now we are safe.”
Lebanon's Hezbollah won't oppose IMF aid under 'reasonable
conditions': chief
The New Arab & agencies/March 14/2020
Lebanon's powerful Hezbollah movement, which has strongly opposed foreign
interference in the country's crisis-hit economy, said on Friday it could accept
Beirut receiving an International Monetary Fund financial rescue package under
"reasonable conditions". "Any help within reasonable conditions, there's no
problem with it in principle," the Shia movement's chief Hassan Nasrallah said
in a televised address. But he warned that "Lebanon must not fall under
anybody's trusteeship or hand over its financial and economic administration" to
outside parties. One of the most indebted countries in the world, Lebanon has
been rocked by a months-long political and financial crisis. The country's pound
has tumbled in value and banks have imposed strict limits on dollar withdrawals
amid a strangulating liquidity crunch and mass protests against the political
class.
Lebanon said last week it would default on its Eurobond debt for the first time,
saying that was the only way to shore up its foreign currency reserves. Banking
experts have called for an IMF rescue package, saying it would secure
desperately-needed international assistance and reassure creditors. But the
powerful Shia movement Hezbollah, which along with its allies holds a majority
in parliament, has opposed such moves. It has rejected conditions and
"ready-made recipes" which global bodies could impose, warning against what it
called "foreign guardianship" over the economy. Hezbollah is backed by Iran,
whose arch foe the United States has a virtual veto on IMF decisions. The IMF on
Thursday urged Lebanon to quickly implement reforms to stabilise the economy.
"Given the severity of economic conditions in Lebanon, it's important that the
government designs and implements promptly a comprehensive package of reforms to
effectively address the economic challenges and improve Lebanon's economic
prospects," IMF spokesman Gerry Rice told reporters. While the country has not
requested aid from the Washington-based crisis lender, "We stand ready... to
assist the authorities in those efforts." Lebanon's debt burden is now
equivalent to nearly 170 percent of its gross domestic product. Despite a series
of crises, the country had never before defaulted, but in recent months it has
grappled with its worst economic turmoil since the 1975-1990 civil war.
Lebanon to declare emergency after a severe storm
Arab News/March 14/2020
BEIRUT: Lebanese people experienced terror on Thursday night when a severe storm
ravaged mountain and coastal regions, uprooted trees, caused floods and
destroyed cars, refugee tents and public statues.
Several flights were diverted to Larnaca and Antalya airports after strong winds
made landings at Beirut Rafic Hariri International Airport impossible.
The frightening weather conditions came on top of the novel coronavirus outbreak
in the country.
Social media users described their experience as they stayed at home in line
with the government’s directives aimed at limiting the spread of the virus.
“Lebanon is flying” was the second most trending hashtag after “Stay home”.
Users switched from mocking the situation to sensing its gravity.
“Here comes nature’s wrath after the unemployment, dollar, Eurobonds, banks and
imported coronavirus crises. The night of strong easterly winds uprooted trees,
damaged buildings and affected people. Disasters, disasters and the greatest
disaster of all is the dark horizons. May God protect what is left of Lebanon,”
tweeted former minister, Akram Chehayeb. The number of confirmed coronavirus
cases in the country has exceeded 80, and includes an employee of the Ministry
of Health. “The infected employee works in the Ministry’s central
administration. The virus was transmitted to her by one of her relatives,” the
Ministry of Health announced, noting that “we are taking all the necessary
measures to isolate her, identify those who were in contact with her inside and
outside of the Ministry and make sure they self-quarantine at home.”
“A civil or public health emergency might be announced. The people should expect
an increase of 20 cases in a single day in Lebanon,” said the Health Minister,
Hamad Hassan. He denied the claims that the Ministry is concealing the actual
number of cases.
60 hospital beds have been prepared at Rafik Hariri University Hospital (RHUH),
which is dedicated to coronavirus-infected patients, to handle the expected
increase in cases. The head of the Lebanese Forces, Samir Geagea, blamed the
government for the worsening situation, noting that “the government should adopt
a so-called ‘automatic quarantine’ after failing to close air, land and sea
crossings and take the necessary measures to prevent the spread of the virus.”
The Association of Banks in Lebanon announced that banks will be closed for
sterilization from Saturday, while the Minister of Education and Higher
Education, Tarek Al-Majzoub, extended the closure of schools and universities
for an additional week. This decision will be accompanied by efforts to set up
emergency programs to finish the educational curricula and make up for the lost
lessons. Worshipers stayed away from Friday prayers out of fear of transmission.
The storm caused great damage as it uprooted pine and oak trees along the roads
of Mount Lebanon, broke the windows of homes and shops, destroyed parked cars,
flooded roads, sent bricks flying from the roofs of houses and caused a power
cut when some electricity poles fell, which also disconnected cellphone lines in
the affected areas. The 120 kilometers per hour winds destroyed highway
billboards and crops, which doubled the losses of farmers who are already
struggling.
Some post-storm tweets considered that Friday the 13th and the destruction of a
statue of Mary in the storm were very bad signs.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News
published on March 14-15/2020
Iran Says Virus Death Toll Reaches 611
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 14 March, 2020
The new coronavirus outbreak has killed another 97 people in Iran, pushing the
death toll in the country to 611 amid 12,729 confirmed cases, Health ministry
spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour said Saturday. Iran is suffering from the worst
outbreak in the Middle East. The virus has also infected a number of senior
officials there. For most people, the new coronavirus causes only mild or
moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough. For some, especially older adults
and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness,
including pneumonia. The vast majority of people recover from the new virus in a
matter of weeks, but the outbreak has caused more than 5,000 deaths worldwide.
Jahanpour told a televised news conference on Saturday that more than 4,300 of
those with confirmed infections had recovered so far. Tehran province had the
highest number of new cases with 347, followed by Isfahan with 155 and the
northern region of Alborz with 134. "Naturally, the number of confirmed cases
will increase" even more as Iran steps up its laboratory sampling and tests, he
said.
Iran Reports 97 New Virus Deaths, Taking Total to 611
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 14/2020
Iran said on Saturday that the novel coronavirus has claimed 97 more lives,
raising the country's total to 611, as the number of confirmed cases jumped
again. Health ministry spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour said that "1,365 fresh cases
have been added to the number of confirmed infections in the past 24 hours",
bringing the total to 12,729. Jahanpour told a televised news conference that
more than 4,300 of those with confirmed infections had recovered so far. Tehran
province had the highest number of new cases with 347, followed by Isfahan with
155 and the northern region of Alborz with 134. "Naturally, the number of
confirmed cases will increase" even more as Iran steps up its laboratory
sampling and tests, he said. The outbreak in Iran is one of the deadliest
outside of China, where the disease originated. But Tehran's markets were still
crowded despite calls for people to stay at home, with many shopping ahead of
the country's New Year holidays which start on March 20. The ministry said
Friday that the average age of those who died was 67. The youngest was a
three-year-old leukaemia sufferer and the oldest 91. Four times as many men as
women died from the novel coronavirus. But in some of Iran's provinces alcohol
poisoning was killing even more people than the virus. At least 92 have died
from drinking methanol after rumours circulated that it can help to cure or
protect from the virus, and the number has been on the rise for the past few
days.
'Big nightmare'
Iran is also preparing for its traditional fire festival, or Chaharshanbe Soori,
held annually on the last Wednesday evening before the spring holiday of Nowrouz.
Iranians traditionally jump over fires and light fireworks to celebrate the
event, with many suffering burns and being hospitalised. The interior ministry
has ordered firefighters and medical services to be on the alert, but the head
of a hospital specialising in the treatment of burns suggested the government
ban the ceremony amid the virus outbreak. "People suffering burns while the
coronavirus is out there is a big nightmare," Mostafa Dehmardei, head of
Tehran's Motahari hospital, told semi-official news agency ISNA. Several
politicians and officials, both sitting and former, have been infected with the
new coronavirus, and some have died from the illness. The latest suspected case
of infection was Ali Akbar Velayati, who advises Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei on foreign policy. Iran's official coronavirus committee also held
its meeting chaired by President Hassan Rouhani on Friday via videoconference.
Pictures of the meeting that have been released show ministers with masks tuning
in from their offices. The foreign ministry on Friday thanked other countries
for sending aid in the form of cash and medical equipment to combat the
outbreak. The government and people of Iran would "never forget their friends"
at a time of hardship, spokesman Abbas Mousavi tweeted. He thanked Azerbaijan,
Britain, China, France, Germany, Japan, Qatar, Russia, Turkey and the United
Arab Emirates. Iran said Thursday that it has sought immediate financial
assistance from the International Monetary Fund to help it fight the virus, in
what would be its first such loan in decades.
Online users ridicule Iran plastic cover-up of Soleimani
statue in northern Iran
Yaghoub Fazeli, Al Arabiya EnglishSaturday, 14 March 2020
Authorities in northern Iran covered up with plastic a recently unveiled statue
of slain military commander Qassem Soleimani after it was subject to ridicule on
social media. Iran unveiled a seven-meter-long statue of Soleimani in the
northern city of Bandar Anzali in Gilan province last week. Some social media
users shared images of the statue on Twitter, expressing anger at the regime’s
willingness to spend resources on building the statue to commemorate the
general, who was killed in US airstrikes in Iraq on January 3, rather than on
medical resources to combat the coronavirus outbreak in the country.
The statue was also subject to ridicule by Iranian social media users, prompting
authorities to eventually cover up the statue.New images of the statue shared
online show the statue covered up in plastic. “I have a lot of requests for
Soleimani statues from Lebanon and Syria, but I decided to install this statue
in Gilan,” sculptor Rasoul Babaei had told the semi-official YJC news agency
following the unveiling of the statue. Babaei said he had started working on the
statue a few days after Soleimani was killed.
Syria Death Toll 384,0000 after 9 Years of War
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 14 March, 2020
At least 384,000 people have died in Syria, including more than 116,000
civilians, since the war began in March 2011, the Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights said Saturday. Sparked by deadly repression of peaceful pro-democracy
protests, the conflict has since turned into a complicated war involving
opposition factions, militant groups and foreign powers. As the war enters its
10th year, the regime of Bashar al-Assad now controls more than 70 percent of
Syrian territory, thanks to the military support of its allies Russia, Iran and
Lebanon's Hezbollah. The conflict is the "worst man-made disaster since World
War II," the United Nations human rights chief declared in 2017. Idlib was one
of the first provinces to join the uprisings against Assad, and is now the last
to remain in opposition hands. Despite a ceasefire agreed on March 6 between
Turkey and Russia, few believe the Syrian regime will back off its plans to
eventually retake the province.
Rocket Attack Hits Iraq Base Housing Coalition Troops
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 14 March, 2020
A barrage of rockets hit a base housing US and other coalition troops north of
Baghdad, just days after a similar attack killed two American troops and a
British soldier.There was no immediate word on casualties at Camp Taji. Iraq's
military said that 33 Katyusha rockets had been launched on the base. The
military found seven rocket launchers and 24 unused rockets in the nearby Abu
Izam area, it said in a statement, and promised to arrest those responsible.
Iraqi security officials said some rockets struck the coalition quarters while
others fell on a runway used by Iraqi forces. The attack was unusual because it
occurred during the day. Previous assaults on military bases housing US troops
typically occurred overnight. It was the 23rd such attack since late October on
installations across Iraq where American troops and diplomats are based, with
the latest rounds growing deadlier. The earlier attack against Camp Taji on
Wednesday prompted American airstrikes Friday against what US officials said
were mainly weapons facilities belonging to Kataib Hezbollah, the Iran-backed
militia group believed to be responsible. However, Iraq's military said those
airstrikes killed five security force members and a civilian.
Iraq's Protesters Struggle to Keep Waning Movement Going
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 14 March, 2020
At the once-bustling hub of the largest anti-government protest movement in
Iraq's modern history, crowds have dwindled, and donation boxes have sprouted
up. Loudspeakers resound with calls by activists for funds to keep their
hard-fought revolution alive.
The six-month-old movement has faced one setback after another, from the
shifting positions of a mercurial Shiite cleric to an apathetic political class
and, now, fears over an outbreak of the coronavirus that Iraq´s decrepit health
system has struggled to contain, with nearly 93 confirmed cases and nine deaths.
Where once Baghdad´s Tahrir Square had seen thousands every day, now only a few
hundred protesters turn up. Morale has been dampened among young Iraqis who
first took to the streets on Oct. 1 to decry rampant government corruption, poor
services, and unemployment.
Protesters have found it difficult to revive the strength of their leaderless
movement after scoring victories early on, like pressuring lawmakers to pass a
key electoral reform bill and forcing former Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi to
step down. Assassinations, abductions, and threats targeting prominent
protesters have contributed to blunting the momentum. A looming economic crisis
linked to the coronavirus pandemic and ongoing political dysfunction could
eventually bring a new jolt that inspires Iraqis back to the streets. But for
the moment, the movement is looking at what went wrong.
The difficulties of recent months caused the poles of authority among protesters
to shift from the capital to the south, while some say shunning any form of
central leadership was a mistake.
In Tahrir Square, a group of young men recently shared a hookah pipe under a
tarp by a tunnel replete with the wall art of their revolution. Together, they
embodied the spirit that first brought many into Iraq´s central squares to
protest.
Marwan Ali, 23, had attended university to study communication but could only
find work as a barber after graduation. Mohammed Abbas, 19, didn't bother
pursuing a higher education, convinced it wouldn't secure a job. So in October
he picked up a banner and joined the movement.
Hussein al-Hind, 22, was a teenager when he heeded a call by Iraq's top Shiite
cleric to take up arms and defeat the ISIS group with what would later become
the paramilitary Popular Mobilization Forces. He soon became disenchanted as his
one-time war heroes joined the ranks of the political class by running in the
May 2018 election. The young men have also suffered the violence that has met
the movement. Hind showed off two bullet wounds from clashes with riot police;
Abbas was detained by police for three days early on in the demonstrations;
Ali's family has received messages from unknown groups threatening his life.
Now, the future of their hard-fought protest movement depends on the ability of
these youth to keep to the streets.
When the conversation turned to the state of their movement, Marwan Ali took a
moment's pause. "We are disappointed," he said. Asked why he was still coming to
Tahrir, he said, "This isn't about the homeland anymore, we are here for the
blood of our martyrs." Over 500 people have been killed since October under fire
by security forces who have used live ammunition, tear gas, and recently pellet
guns to disperse crowds.
In nearby Khilani Square, clashes still rage between a core group of protesters
and security, with at least two demonstrators dead last week. The movement was
dealt a blow in January after radical Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who also
heads a major political bloc, withdrew support after elites selected a prime
minister candidate he backed, Mohammed Allawi. Sadr's reversal instilled a
climate of fear in the square as militiamen affiliated with his group, which
once protected protest sites, intimidated demonstrators who refused to back
Allawi, activists said. Allawi has since withdrawn from the post.
"We were tools in Sadr's game," said Kamal Jaban, an activist. It was an
eventuality that activists said they wanted to avoid when Sadr's followers first
joined the movement. As early as November, protesters bristled at the question
of leadership and were quick to diminish the credibility of those making claims
of authority over them. They tore down stages built by political parties in
protest plazas, fearing the fate of previous grassroots movements that fizzled
out when co-opted by political actors. Three months since, protesters said in
hindsight the lack of core leadership had hobbled their movement, enabling
figures like Sadr to do exactly what they had feared. "There is no one to
represent us, put pressure on the government," said Ali, under the tarp in
Tahrir. Sadr's move also diminished Tahrir Square´s status as the central voice
of the movement. Activists started looking to Haboubi Square in the southern
city of Nasiriya for orders. Nasiriya's protesters have been resilient against
infiltration by political parties, partly due to support from local tribes. In
hindsight, said Ali, this weakened the movement. "Tahrir Square became tainted
with Sadr supporters," he explained. "At first Nasiriya was listening to us, now
we listen to them."
It was Nasiriya that gave political elites a deadline to make progress on
protester demands, prompting an escalation in demonstrations across the country.
Later, calls from the southern city led protesters in Baghdad to block the
strategic Mohammed al-Qassim highway. When Haboubi Square raised the image of
activist Alaa Rikabi as their choice for prime minister, Tahrir did the same.
Other protesters said fatigue from months on the street was taking a toll as
donations for food and supplies were running short and temperatures dropped over
the winter.
"Weak turnout was expected some time ago because the protesters who have been
here for five months are tired, sleeping in cold and far from work, their
families, and school," said Murtada Emad, a protester and university student at
Babil College of Basic Education. "I left school, but my family is pressuring me
to go back."By February, protesters were marginalized as political bickering
over Allawi's government formation ignored the core demands of the street.
Allawi withdrew as prime minister-designate on March 1 after failing to secure
parliamentary support for his Cabinet. Back in Tahrir, Ali Jumaili, 22, said all
hope was not lost. "Every day, I sit on the sidewalk with my friends and weep
because of the weakening demonstrations," he said. "The revolution will repeat
itself with more vigor in the future."
US Declares Emergency as New Virus Epicenter Europe Locks
Down
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 14/2020
US President Donald Trump declared a national state of emergency as the World
Health Organization named Europe the new epicenter of the coronavirus, with
countries sealing borders, shutting schools and canceling events in a frenzied
attempt to slow the ballooning pandemic.
Wall Street stocks rallied Friday as financial markets endured a rollercoaster
ride after a week of spectacular losses triggered by fears that the deadly
outbreak will lead to a global recession. "To unleash the full power of the
federal government, I'm officially declaring a national emergency," Trump said,
announcing $50 billion in federal funds to battle the contagion. The measure
came as infections and deaths soared in Europe, with WHO chief Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus saying the continent now had "more reported cases and deaths than
the rest of the world combined, apart from China." He described it as a "tragic
milestone", and warned it was impossible to say when the virus would peak
globally. The overall death toll jumped to more than 5,000, including nearly
1,500 in Europe, with total infections topping 140,000 internationally,
according to an AFP tally based on official sources.
Italy, Spain as well as Iran -- which have emerged as virus hotspots -- all
clocked a dramatic rise in cases and fatalities in the past 24 hours, while
infections were reported in Kenya and Ethiopia, the first in east Africa.
Venezuela declared a "state of alert" after confirming its first two cases, and
Colombia closed its border with Venezuela and restricted the entry of foreigners
who have been to Europe and Asia in the last 14 days. Governments have been
pushing through tough restrictions to contain the spread of the disease and
unveiling big-bang emergency funding plans to try to limit the economic damage.
Trump said the US would buy large quantities of crude oil for strategic reserves
and waived student loan interest during the crisis, stressing that the "next
eight weeks were critical."The US House of Representatives early Saturday
overwhelmingly passed a virus relief package for Americans hit by the outbreak.
Leaders of the G7, the world's richest economies, will hold an extraordinary
summit via videoconference on Monday to discuss the pandemic. The virus has torn
up the sporting and cultural calendar, with top-flight events from Broadway to
English Premier League football scrapped. The outbreak reached new heights with
several public figures from Hollywood actors to politicians and even the
Canadian first lady catching the infection.
Worst in a century
COVID-19, which first emerged in China in December, has spread relentlessly
around the world even as cases in Asia have levelled out in recent days. South
Korea, once grappling with the largest outbreak outside China, saw newly
recovered patients exceed fresh infections for the first time and the lowest
number of new cases for three weeks. China this week claimed "the peak" of the
pandemic had passed its shores although it still has the biggest overall number
of deaths and infections. Beijing reported just 11 infections on Saturday, and
for first time since the start of the outbreak the majority of them were
imported cases from overseas. Italy, the hardest-hit country in Europe, recorded
its highest one-day toll with 250 deaths over the past 24 hours, while Spain
declared a state of alert after its infections raced past 3,000. A raft of
European countries shut their borders to foreigners, closed non-essential
businesses, restaurants and hotels and museums, and banned public gatherings.
France, the world's most visited country, closed the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre
over what President Emmanuel Macron called "the worst health crisis in France in
a century." The new measures came after Trump this week banned all travelers
from mainland Europe for 30 days, prompting a swift rebuke from Brussels which
is scrambling to shore up the EU economy. US schools are closing across the
country and an increasing number of Americans are staying home, while Louisiana
became the first state to postpone its Democratic presidential primary and
airlines announced further steps to ground planes. The Pentagon banned all its
military and civilian personnel from domestic travel from Monday to help stop
the spread of the virus. Asian stocks tumbled in volatile business following the
worst day on Wall Street since the crash of 1987 as traders scrambled to sell,
wiping trillions off market valuations. The Dow closed up 9.4 percent following
Trump's emergency measures. Trudeau in quarantine The virus is weighing
heavily on daily life. Shops, squares and cafes normally packed with people are
deserted in Italy, which has imposed nationwide lockdown measures
never-before-seen in peacetime. The illness is sparing no-one. Canadian Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau announced he was in self-imposed quarantine after his
wife tested positive, the day after Hollywood star Tom Hanks said he and his
wife were infected. Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro said Friday he had tested
negative after a top aide was confirmed infected. The virus has cut a
swathe through sporting events and put a major question mark over the Tokyo
Olympics, with Trump saying "maybe they postpone it for a year", sparking
furious denials from Japan. In Britain, where the government's softly-softly
strategy has raised some eyebrows, Queen Elizabeth II has put off engagements,
and local elections planned for May have been cancelled. With authorities
warning large gatherings should be avoided, entertainment venues such as
Disneyland have been closed and the lucrative Indian Premier League cricket
competition postponed.
How to Clean the Bundle of Germs That Is Your Phone
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 14 March, 2020
You're washing your hands countless times a day to try to ward off the
coronavirus. You should also wash that extension of your hand and breeding
ground for germs - your phone. Tests done by scientists show that the virus can
live for two to three days on plastic and stainless steel. The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention recommends cleaning all "high-touch" surfaces
daily, including phones, keyboards, and tablet computers. But cleaning your
phone improperly can damage it. You want to avoid getting moisture inside it or
scratching the surface. Don't spray cleaners directly on the phone, don't dunk
it in cleaning solutions, don't spray it with compressed-air devices used to
clean keyboards and avoid rubbing it with abrasive materials. Instead, start by
turning off the phone and unplugging all cables. Your phone shouldn't be
charging as you clean. You can use Clorox wipes or wipes with 70% alcohol, which
you can get at the drugstore, to wipe down your phone. Apple, which has
cautioned against using household cleaners on its phones, says to do that
"gently." AT&T has further recommended wringing out disinfectant wipes before
using them on a phone. You can also use soft cloths to clean the phone, like a
microfiber cleaning cloth or the cloths used to clean camera lenses or your
glasses. Google says you can dip the cloth in soap and water, as long as you're
careful not to get moisture in the phone. AT&T says paper towels work, too. You
can spray them with disinfectant. Again, don't spray the phone itself. Samsung,
the world's biggest phone manufacturer, says it's offering a free
phone-sanitizing service involving UV light inside US. Samsung stores and
service centers. It will expand to other countries in the next few weeks. The
phone-cleaning step is one of many measures public-health authorities are
recommending to try to slow the spread of the virus, which has infected 137,000
people worldwide. More than 5,000 have died. Most patients have only mild or
moderate symptoms, but the elderly and people with existing health conditions
are particularly vulnerable.
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources
published on March 14-15/2020
After Everything That Has Happened, What Are
Iran’s Choices?
Zuhair Al-Harthi/Asharq Al Awsat/March 14/2020
It is not for the sake of criminalization saying that Tehran has angered the
world with the manner in which it intervened in the affairs of neighboring
countries, planting sleeper cells and funding terrorism. All of these are
dangerous matters that have dragged it to confront painful choices. Iran has not
left a single illegitimate practice that it has not adopted. The most recent
among these practices was its irresponsible behavior as it facilitated the entry
of Saudi citizens into the country without stamping their passports as the new
Coronavirus was spreading. This has posed a serious threat to the health of
citizens and residents of the Kingdom. Saudi Arabia was right when it described
Iran’s actions as “undermining of international efforts to fight the virus” and
that consequently “Iran is directly responsible for the spread of the virus”.
News published earlier also confirmed Iran’s aggressive policy, as it prevented
international inspectors from entering two sites suspected of conducting nuclear
activity. We need only to rewind a little to remember when it provoked
neighboring countries by criminal piracy, planting landmines, confiscating cargo
ships, and disrupting maritime navigation which is vital to the global economy.
Despite this, the international community did not lift a finger, including the
international institution responsible for protecting it. A realistic reading of
what is happening in the area would conclude that Iran is the one who dragged
the region to where it is today with its aggressive behaviors and practices that
go against the principles of international law. Iran’s chronic dilemma is in
empowering its ideological vision over its national interest. This has been the
case since the Iranian revolution succeeded in February 1979, at exporting its
revolution, even if in different forms. The regime started favoring security and
military affairs over internal affairs, including its miserable economy,
erratically growing population, and the deterioration of its educational system
and society.
We respect the Iranian people and the Shiite sect, but we reject the Mulla-system.
Intervening in the affairs of others through sectarian vision, movements,
parties, and elements, seeking a larger role and influence in those countries.
Every once in a while, we hear Iranian officials talking about the importance of
cooperation and shared values between religions, brethren, and neighbors, only
to later see that those were only words, a PR stunt as it were, that culminates
in no action. The Iranian political mentality is expansionist and leans towards
escalation and creating crises. Some Arab leftists call for dialogue with Iran
to spite the Kingdom, and despite their awareness of what is really going on, I
would like to remind them that Iran is part of the problem, not the solution. It
is one of the sides in the regional conflict and does not want peace. How else
would it impose its opinion in conflicts and disputes that would not have
existed without its direct meddling? Years ago, Rafsanjani accused people in his
country of being responsible for the deterioration of relations between Riyadh
and Tehran, saying that they undermined what he had done to improve those
relations. That statement redeemed the Gulf countries from responsibility and
put Iran in a precarious position.
If we look at history we would see that Tehran’s escalations with the Gulf are
systematic, with the exception of the Khatimist era that witnessed some
improvements to the Gulf-Iranian relations. Iran creates enemies in order to
delude their people that it is in a defensive position, protecting its rights,
always depicting itself as a target extorted by other countries. It consequently
justifies repressing any protests or demonstrations internally as no voice is
louder than the voice of battle. This is exactly what happened.
Saudi Arabia was and still is a political and ideological fear for Iran and its
conservatives. They have consequently used several means in order to suffocate
the Kingdom and have tried very hard to put pressure on and negatively influence
it, knowing that their expansionist strategy would not succeed so long as Saudi
Arabia represents the voice of moderation and balanced discourse and is
influential in the area and the world.
What are the choices before the Iranian regime so long as it is aware that it
cannot resist Washington’s strategy and military capabilities? The answer is
clear: it must succumb to the just American and international demands in regards
to its nuclear program and ballistic missiles, cease its interventions in other
countries, and stop funding terrorism.
If Tehran remains intransigent, the sanctions will be implemented very strictly
and would lead to an unprecedented economic disaster. Despite this, whoever
listens to Iranians' statements sees that they have yet to let go of their
arrogance. Iran may succumb to the storm, but this will not save it from facing
difficult days ahead. The choice of war will always be on the table, even if
nobody wanted it. Iran knows that it would be the biggest loser if that were to
happen, as everybody knows who is more militarily powerful. Tehran’s behavior is
political suicide, and it has to succumb to reality and change its aggressive
behavior. It has to realize that it cannot change this state of affair if it
does not use the state instead of the revolution.
European Union: Closing the Borders?
Judith Bergman/Gatestone Institute/March 14/2020
Even Germany is unwilling to take any of the migrants shuttled by Erdogan to the
Greek-Turkish border.
"I thank Greece for being our European 'aspida' [the Greek word for shield]." —
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, March 3, 2020.
The "solidarity" with Greece expressed by leading EU representatives seems to
have come from having no alternatives other than relying on Greece to struggle
with the situation.
Even if the EU manages to resolve its issues with Erdogan, which is doubtful and
bound to be only temporary, Europe's fundamental problem will remain: As long as
migrants think that a better future awaits them in Europe, the welfare states,
which have shown themselves extremely accommodating in receiving migrants and
granting them all sorts of social rights, can continue expecting migrants to try
breaching Europe's borders.
Since February 27, Turkish officials have sent busloads of migrants --
predominantly young men from Afghanistan and Iran, according to several reports
-- to Turkey's border with Greece. Pictured: Masked migrants throw rocks at
Greek border guards along the fence at Pazarkulke border crossing in Edirne,
Turkey, on March 7, 2020.
On February 27, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan made good on his many
threats to send millions of migrants and refugees to Europe, despite a 2016 deal
between Europe and Turkey to hold them. Apparently seeking to make Europe
experience the full force of his intentions, Turkish officials sent busloads of
migrants -- predominantly young men from Afghanistan and Iran, according to
several reports -- to Turkey's border with Greece.
"We prepared a plan with our colleagues and we are committed to arranging free
buses for the refugees in Bolu towards the border town of Edirne," said Tanju
Özcan, the mayor of Bolu, a town in northern Turkey, 550 kilometers from the
border with Greece. "Refugees willing to go to Edirne can apply to the Bolu
municipality and its branches. We are ready to assure the transport whatever the
number [of refugees]."
In November, Erdogan had also threatened to release ISIS prisoners into Europe.
Whether the migrants Erdogan sent to the border with Greece at the end of
February currently include terrorists is not known. Migrating terrorists,
research has shown, are a serious issue that seems to receive only scant
attention in Europe.
In contrast to the migrant crisis of 2015, which saw more than a million
migrants and refugees cross into Europe through Greece -- as well as other
frontline European nations -- the current Greek government, which came into
power in July 2019, has made it clear that its borders are closed.
"Welcome in Greece are only those we choose. Those who are not welcome will be
returned. We will permanently shut the door to illegal human traffickers, to
those who want to enter even though they are not entitled to asylum," said Greek
Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis in November.
Even Germany is unwilling to take any of the migrants shuttled by Erdogan to the
Greek-Turkish border. "I understand that Turkey is facing a very big challenge
regarding Idlib," German Chancellor Angela Merkel stated.
"Still, for me it's unacceptable that he – President Erdogan and his government
– is not expressing this dissatisfaction in a dialogue with us as the European
Union, but rather on the back of the refugees. For me, that's not the way to go
forward."
"We must not allow refugees to be turned into pawns for geopolitical interests,"
announced German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas. "No matter who tries, they must
reckon with our resistance."
"Don't go to the border. The border is not open. If someone tells you that you
can go because the border is open... that is not true" the EU's foreign policy
chief, Josep Borrell, reportedly said. He also noted that the European Union
"will take all measures, in accordance with EU rules and International law, to
make full respect of the integrity of its borders".
President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, actually thanked
Greece for being Europe's "shield":
"This border is not only a Greek border but it is also a European border. And I
stand here today as a European at your side," she told the Greek Prime Minister
Kyriakos Mitsotakis.
"Turkey is not an enemy and people are not just means to reach a goal. We would
all do well to remember both in the days to come. I thank Greece for being our
European 'aspida' [the Greek word for shield]."
"As we have shown yesterday," the European Commission's vice-president for
Promoting our European Way of Life, Margaritis Schinas, told reporters, "when
Europe is tested, we are able to prove that we can hold the line and that our
unity will prevail."
On the face of it, the EU response appears to be a dramatic departure from the
kind of talk that EU representatives normally present to the world on the topic
of migration. As recently as on the UN's International Migrants Day -- which
takes place every year on December 18 -- the European Commission released a
statement according to which:
"On International Migrants Day, we stand strong in our unequivocal commitment to
respect and protect the dignity, human rights and fundamental freedoms of all
migrants [bold in original] as well as to ensure that migration takes place in a
safe, orderly and well-managed way... Openness and solidarity are core values of
the European Union".
Is it possible that even the highest functioning bureaucrats of the European
Union have realized that Europe -- or at the very least Greece -- has reached
its limit?
Probably not. As the chaotic situation on the border between Turkey and Greece
indicates, the EU does not have anything resembling a coherent migration policy
in place. This situation persists despite the fact that it has been five years
since Europe experienced its worst migration scenario in modern times, and even
though Erdogan has been threatening Europe with opening his borders for years.
Rather, the "solidarity" with Greece expressed by leading EU representatives
seems to have come from having no alternatives other than relying on Greece to
struggle with the situation. Greece has asked the EU to send aid from Frontex -
the European Border and Coast Guard Agency -- to launch a rapid border
intervention at its sea borders in the Aegean. Frontex has agreed and will ask
the EU member states to provide personnel and equipment.
The only "policy" in place appears to be the one enshrined in the Dublin
Regulation. According to it, the responsibility usually falls on the first EU
member state in which asylum seekers set foot. The regulation, in the words of
the former Greek Foreign Minister Georgios Katrougalos, "...brings all the
weight of the crisis to the frontline countries of the European Union".
EU member states are currently debating how to stop Erdogan from increasing the
pressure on the Greek border and generating a migrant crisis comparable in size
to the one in 2015. Whatever the EU decides on this matter, it will only amount
to crisis management. Even if the EU manages to resolve its issues with Erdogan,
which is doubtful and bound to be only temporary, Europe's fundamental problem
will remain:
As long as migrants think that a better future awaits them in Europe, the
welfare states, which have shown themselves extremely accommodating in receiving
migrants and granting them all sorts of social rights, can continue expecting
migrants to try breaching Europe's borders. International initiatives such as
the UN's International Migrants Day and the UN Global Migration compact, which
praise migration as necessary and beneficial, certainly do nothing to dissuade
migrants from trying. Expect the current migrant crisis to repeat itself many
times over in the years to come.
*Judith Bergman, a columnist, lawyer and political analyst, is a Distinguished
Senior Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
© 2020 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Iranians suffer from regime’s malpractice on coronavirus
Saeed Ghasseminejad and Alireza Nader/Al Arabiya English/March 14/2020
The Islamist regime in Tehran has set off a coronavirus bomb on its own
territory. The official death toll leaped to 611 on Friday, yet other
assessments indicate that close to 2,000 Iranians may already have died. Foreign
Minister Javad Zarif and his surrogates have blamed the United States and its
sanctions for the crisis, while the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary
Guards Corps (IRGC) pointed his finger at “Americans’ biological warfare.” Yet
responsibility for the epidemic in Iran belongs above all to the regime, whose
deception and failure is inflicting terrible suffering on the people of Iran
while posing a new kind of threat to international security.
Authorities knew that coronavirus had arrived in Iran by the end of January,
according to documents published by one whistleblower. Similar reports had
surfaced even earlier on social media, yet the regime rejected such claims,
persecuted their sources, and threatened to flog and imprison those who spread
rumors. The regime should have immediately banned travel between Iran and China.
Yet in late February, Mahan Air – a carrier the US sanctioned for its role in
IRGC terrorism – was still operating flights to China. While hiding the news of
the first infections from Iranians, the ruling clerics sent 3 million facemasks
to China. State media reported on Beijing’s gratitude and said Tehran was ready
to send even more medical aid. Now there is a shortage of masks in Iran, even
among healthcare workers. Responsible leaders would have prepared the healthcare
system for an emergency while mobilizing manufacturers to mass produce masks and
other medical goods.
The regime should have informed the public immediately of the threat to its
health yet chose to put politics first by trying to assemble massive crowds to
chant “Death to America” on the 41st anniversary of the Islamic revolution on
February 11. An even greater priority was to facilitate high turnout for
parliamentary elections on February 21. Turnout was the lowest ever, since the
public has become wise to the charade of voting, yet enough people congregated
at polling places to create health risks the regime could easily have prevented.
The city of Qom, a center of learning and pilgrimage destination for Shia
Muslims, became the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak in Iran, though the
origins of the virus in Qom are not quite clear. The presence of hundreds of
Chinese clerics in the seminaries was one possible reason. On February 19, the
regime acknowledged two deaths from coronavirus in Qom, its first admission of
fatalities, yet it opposed calls to quarantine the city.
Five days later, at a press conference that has come to symbolize the regime’s
exercise in denial, Deputy Health Minister Iraj Harirchi mocked quarantines as a
relic of the pre-World War I era, comparing them “to the plague, cholera, stuff
like that.” Harirchi sweated heavily during his remarks and admitted the next
day that he himself had coronavirus. Dozens of senior officials now have the
virus or have died from the virus, including four members of the cabinet.
The failure to quarantine Qom helped the virus to spread while demonstrating the
leadership’s rigid commitment to its religious ideology. Seyed Mohammad Saeedi,
the representative in Qom of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and custodian of the
Masumeh Shrine, said the city and its religious centers were a “place of
healing” and opposed any effort to shut them down. Large gatherings for
religious services continued.
Even after it acknowledged the presence of coronavirus, the regime downplayed
its deadliness. The regime used state broadcasting to understate the depth or
outbreak and the severity of the threat. In one segment, a television host
compared the virus to a cold and claimed she probably had caught it two weeks
earlier but fully recovered.
The combination of denial and downplaying prevented preparation for what was to
come. Hospitals lacked the necessary protective equipment, and the public faced
a shortage of disinfectants and alcohol, as well as the aforementioned masks.
Unlike China, Tehran failed to close non-essential businesses across the country
and quarantine Qom and other infected cities and regions. Instead, Iranians from
infection centers like Qom and Tehran have fled to northern provinces like
Mazandaran and Gilan, leading to mass outbreaks and even horrific reports of
mass burials of infected victims in cities like Rasht.
Most of the regime’s efforts to deflect blame from its own malpractice involve
the usual reliance on conspiracy theories and anti-Semitism. Neither the US nor
“Zionist elements” are engaged in bio-terrorism. Yet Western media often say the
suggestion that US sanctions prevented a more effective response to the crisis
is credible. Our research shows, however, that sanctions have not had any clear
effect on Iranian pharmaceutical imports, despite causing an overall plunge in
foreign trade. The American and Swiss governments even set up a special
financial channel to facilitate commerce in food, medicine, and other
humanitarian goods. Iran also rejected American offers of medical assistance.
The international community should awaken to the Islamic Republic as a critical
public health and safety threat. The regime in Iran isn’t just dangerous because
of its nuclear program; its failure to react to coronavirus has risked global
public health. Yet much of the world, especially Europe, sees the issue of Iran
through the false and binary choice of “war” or “engagement.” The coronavirus
pandemic in Iran is yet another warning call to a world mostly asleep to the
real threat of the Islamic Republic.
*Saeed Ghasseminejad is a senior Iran and financial economics advisor at the
Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), where he also contributes to FDD’s
Center on Economic and Financial Power (CEFP) and Center on Military and
Political Power (CMPP). Follow Saeed on Twitter @SGhasseminejad.
*Alireza Nader is founder and CEO of New Iran, a non-profit and non-partisan
advocacy organization in Washington.
Is Iran behind Rocket Attack that Killed US-led Coalition Forces in Iraq?
Seth Frantzman/The Jerusalem Post/March 14/2020
Two Americans were reportedly killed on Wednesday evening when more than a dozen
katyusha-style rockets hit the Taji base in Iraq where US-led Coalition troops
are based. It brings to four the number of Americans killed in a week. Two US
Marines were killed fighting ISIS earlier this week. However the attack on
Wednesday has all the finger prints of an Iranian-backed militia attack.
The US-led Coalition said that 15 small rockets had hit Camp Taji base at 7:35pm
and that assessments were ongoing.
According to Jennifer Griffin at Fox News, two Americans and one British soldier
were killed when 15 katyusha rockets struck the base at 7:52 in the evening.
ISIS does not have the capability to fire so many rockets. The rocket attack is
similar to an attack in December that killed a US contractor near K-1 base north
of Kirkuk. That attack was carried out Kataib Hezbollah, a pro-Iranian militia
in Iraq.
Kataib Hezbollah was responsible for a similar rocket attack that killed a US
contractor in December.
The US struck five Kataib Hezbollah targets in response. That cycle of
airstrikes led to a protest at the US embassy and the US killing IRGC commander
Qasem Soleimani and Kataib Hezbollah leader Abu Mahdi al-MUhandis on January 3.
US-Iran tensions have risen over the last year. In October and November there
were around a dozen rocket attacks on bases with US troops and on the Green
Zone. Since the January 3 airstrike Iran carried out a ballistic missile attack
on Ayn al-Assad base in Iraq, wounding more than 100 Americans who suffered
cuncussions.
The US had announced this week that it was seeking to deploy air defense against
missile attacks to Iraq. It has been attempting to do so since January but
bureaucratic hurdles have prevented the deployment. CENTCOM head General Kenneth
McKenzie was in Iraq on February 4 to request deployment of the air defense
systems and said on Tuesday that air defense was on the way to Iraq.
There are roughly 5,000 US personnel in Iraq at a half a dozen major
installations.
There are some 5,000 US personnel in Iraq at a half a dozen major installations.
Some 1,000 are at Ayn al-Assad with others at Camp Taji, Balad, Erbil, Baghdad
and smaller posts such as Q-West. Patriot missiles will not necessarily help
against the smaller rocket attacks, such as 107 mm rockets, that have been fired
in the past. Mortars have also been used to harass bases such as Balad Air Force
base.
Iran's Press TV boasted about the attack on Camp Taji, noting it was also
targeted on January 14. The Press TV report likely links Iran to the attack as
Iran appears to have received information about the number of katyusha rockets
fired. Iran says that as dozen rockets were fired. In recent weeks pro-Iranian
groups have threatened the US in Iraq.
Nasral Shammari, spokesman for Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba has posted videos
claiming that US soldiers are in the groups sights. Nujaba is an IRGC-linked
organization and has been sanctioned by the US. The US has also sanctioned
figures linked to Kataib Hezbollah, Asaib Ahl al-Haq and other pro-Iranian
groups.
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has slammed Hadi al-Amiri, head of the Badr
Organization, one of the most powerful pro-Iranian paramilitaries in Iraq. Amiri,
Abu Mahdi and other members of the pro-Iranian Popular Mobilization Units of
militias were all part of the storming of the US embassy compound in December.
The PMU is the umbrella group that includes all the pro-Iranian militias that
are alleged to have fired rockets in the past.
The PMU is also part of the Iraqi Security Forces since 2018 when it was
officially incorporated. A serious of airstrikes, which Iraq blamed on Israel,
targeted PMU munitions warehouses in July and August 2019. In addition reports
in 2018 and in December 2019 claimed that Iran has transferred ballistic
missiles to PMU warehouses. Groups like Kataib Hezbollah play a key role in
transferring Iranian munitions via Al-Qaim to Syria and onwards to Hezbollah.
After Abu Mahdi was killed in January the Iranian regime tasked Hezbollah in
Lebanon with uniting the PMU in Iraq. Hezbollah sent Mohammed al-Kawtharani to
Iraq in January to carry out Iran's orders. Kartharani is from Najaf. He is
close to Muqtada al-Sadr and also has worked with Amiri and others. A meeting in
January in Qom with members of the PMU and Sadr also sought to cement an
anti-American agenda.
It is known that Sadr returned from Qom in February due to the coronavirus
outbreak. Iran sent the head of the Supreme National Security Council Ali
Shamkhani this week to help coordinate Iraqi activities and the removal of US
forces. He held high-level meetings with political leaders, including Amiri. He
said the countdown to the removal of US forces had begun, echoing sentiments
expressed by Nujaba head Akram al-Kaabi in February. Shamkhani's visit may be
seen as a curtain raiser for the recent attack on US troops on March 11.
A US response to the killing is expected. The US has responded in the past after
the December casualty. Iran government media's boast that "a dozen US-led
Coalition" members were injured appears to implicate Iranian groups. Stars and
Stripes and other media have reported the casualty figures of two Americans and
one British personnel.
*Seth Frantzman, a Middle East Forum writing fellow, is the author of After
ISIS: America, Iran and the Struggle for the Middle East (2019), op-ed editor of
The Jerusalem Post, and founder of the Middle East Center for Reporting &
Analysis.