LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
May 20/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.may20.19.htm
News Bulletin Achieves Since 2006
Click Here to enter the LCCC Arabic/English news bulletins Achieves since 2006
Bible Quotations For today
Stand firm in one spirit, strive side by side with one mind
for the faith of the gospel, and in no way be intimidated by your opponents. For
them this is evidence of their destruction, but of your salvation
Letter to the Philippians 01/21-30: “For to me, living is Christ and dying is
gain.If I am to live in the flesh, that means fruitful labour for me; and I do
not know which I prefer. I am hard pressed between the two: my desire is to
depart and be with Christ, for that is far better; but to remain in the flesh is
more necessary for you. Since I am convinced of this, I know that I will remain
and continue with all of you for your progress and joy in faith, so that I may
share abundantly in your boasting in Christ Jesus when I come to you again.
Only, live your life in a manner worthy of the gospel of Christ, so that,
whether I come and see you or am absent and hear about you, I will know that you
are standing firm in one spirit, striving side by side with one mind for the
faith of the gospel, and are in no way intimidated by your opponents. For them
this is evidence of their destruction, but of your salvation. And this is God’s
doing. For he has graciously granted you the privilege not only of believing in
Christ, but of suffering for him as well since you are having the same struggle
that you saw I had and now hear that I still have.
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese
& Lebanese Related News published on May 19-20/19
Rahi presides over Mass devoted to Sfeir
Report: Trump's Sanctions on Iran Are Hitting Hezbollah Hard
Economy Ministry Moves against Asmar after 'Moral Fall'
Kanaan Says 'Late State Budget is Not a Budget'
Jumblat Warns Arabs against War amid U.S.-Iran Tensions
Bassil Withdraws Recognition of GCLW Presidency in Bkirki Visit
Jabaq Says No Concerns over Sanctions
Head of Lebanon’s General Labor Confederation Arrested After Insulting Late
Patriarch Sfeir in Leak
Minister of Culture: Budget just around the corner
Minister: Lebanon Aims to Cut Debt Servicing Costs with 1% Interest Rate T-Bonds
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on May 19-20/19
Trump: If Iran wants to fight then that will be its official end
GOP ( Grand Old Party (Republican Party) Lawmaker on Iran Threat: Directive Was
to 'Kill and Kidnap American Soldiers'
Rocket fired on Iraqi capital's 'Green Zone', no casualties
Syria: Israel Raids on Iranian Base Near Damascus
Bomb Blast Hits Tourist Bus near Egypt Pyramids, Injuring 17
72-Hour Truce in Idlib, Moscow Continues to Attack ‘Terrorists’
US Fifth Fleet: GCC Countries Begin Enhanced Maritime Security Patrols
Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih: Recent Attacks Haven’t Affected Us
Saudi King Calls for Arab, Gulf Summits in Makkah
US Reports: Trump Might Declare War on Iran Without Congress Approval
China Says Opposes ‘Unilateral’ US Sanctions Against Iran
Trump: At Least Iran Doesn’t Know What to Think
UK Warns British-Iranian Dual Nationals from Traveling to Iran
Saudi Arabia Deposits $250 Million Into Sudan's Central Bank
Algerian Figures Call for Agreement That Meets Protesters’ Aspirations
Turkey Says to Produce S-500s with Russia after S-400 Missile Deal
May to Make MPs a Final 'Bold Offer' on Brexit Deal
Arab League Urges German Parliament to Reverse Anti-BDS Motion
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on May 19-20/19
GOP ( Grand Old Party (Republican Party) Lawmaker on Iran
Threat: Directive Was to 'Kill and Kidnap American Soldiers'/USA Today/May
19/2019
Pope calls for humble and free journalism that serves truth and goodness/Vatican
News/NNA/May 19/2019
Burkina Faso: The New Land of Islamic Jihad and Christian Slaughter/Raymond
Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/May 19/2019
Theresa May's Exit Won’t End Tories' Brexit Nightmare/Therese
Raphael/Bloomberg/May 19/2019
Sfeir’s Departure and the Strong Wall of Nationalism/Hazem Saghieh/Asharq Al-Awsat/May
19/2019
Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News
published on May 19-20/19
Rahi presides over Mass devoted to Sfeir
Sun 19 May 2019/NNA - Maronite Patriarch Cardinal Beshara Boutors
Rahi presided over Sunday's mass service devoted for late former Maronite
Patriarch Nasrallah Boutros Sfeir, in the "Church of Our Lady" in the
Patriarchal Edifice of Bkirki, in the presence of Minister of Foreign Affairs
Gibran Bassil, members of the Executive Council of the Labor Union and a
delegation of the National Federation of Trade Unions and employees in Lebanon.
In his religious sermon on the occasion, Rahi called on the Lebanese officials
to "exercise their responsibilities in dedication, determination and hard work,
in order to lift the Lebanese people from their social and economic
sufferings."Rahi concluded that, "political power does not take its moral
legitimacy from itself, but work for the public good."
Report: Trump's Sanctions on Iran Are
Hitting Hezbollah Hard
Kataeb.org/Sunday 19th May 2019/U.S. sanctions on Iran have
affected Tehran’s ability to fund its proxy in Lebanon, Hezbollah, forcing
drastic cuts, as reported by The Washington Post on Saturday. "Hezbollah, the
best funded and most senior of Tehran's proxies, has seen a sharp fall in its
revenue and is being forced to make draconian cuts to its spending, according to
Hezbollah officials, members and supporters," the newspaper wrote. Salaries and
social services for Hezbollah’s fighters, which are funded by Iran, have been
curtailed after the Trump administration pulled out from the 2015 nuclear deal
decreasing Iranian revenue by $10 billion since last November. According to the
report, essential expenses are being sustained, such as salaries to full-time
fighters and stipends to families of the militants who died in Syria. However,
draconian cuts are being applied as social benefits that used to be granted to
militants and their families (meals, gas, medicines, transportation and others)
have been canceled. Many of the group's fighters have been pulled out from Syria
or assigned to the reserves with lower salaries, said a Hezbollah employee with
one of the group's administrative units. “There is no doubt these sanctions have
had a negative impact; but ultimately, sanctions are a component of war, and we
are going to confront them in this context,” a senior Hezbollah official told
the newspaper. Programs on Hezbollah's television station Al-Manar have been
canceled and their staff laid off, according to another Hezbollah insider. The
Hezbollah official insisted that the cutbacks have not impacted the group's
military capabilities, affirming that this will be just another war to be won by
the group. "We are still getting arms from Iran. We are still ready to confront
Israel. Our role in Iraq and Syria remains. There is no person in Hezbollah who
left because they didn't get their salary, and the social services have not
stopped," he said. The sanctions "won't last forever," he predicted. "Just as we
were able to win militarily in Syria and Iraq, we will be victorious in this
war, too."
Economy Ministry Moves against Asmar after 'Moral Fall'
Naharnet/May 19/2019/Economy Minister Mansour Bteish announced
Sunday that the ministry will scrap a contract with General Confederation of
Lebanese Workers chief Beshara al-Asmar over his abusive remarks against late
former Maronite patriarch Nasrallah Sfeir. “After his condemned moral fall and
his detention by the judiciary, the Ministry of Economy and Commerce will,
tomorrow, scrap a Beirut Silos work contract with Beshara al-Asmar,” Bteish
tweeted. Asmar’s leaked remarks have sparked a storm of outrage in the country.
He has been summoned for interrogation and is still in detention, amid calls for
stripping him of his post. A video that went viral on social media on Friday
shows Asmar mocking Sfeir shortly before a televised press conference. Asmar was
unaware his microphone was on before the conference.
Kanaan Says 'Late State Budget is Not a Budget'
Naharnet/May 19/2019/The head of the Finance Parliamentary Committee MP Ibrahim
Kanaan stressed Sunday that a late state budget is not a real budget. “A budget
that is not approved on time is not a budget but rather a de facto situation and
the 2019 state budget is eight months late from its constitutional deadline and
it should have been passed before the fiscal year’s end so that we implement
it,” Kanaan said in an interview with Voice of Lebanon radio (93.3). The
approval of timely state budgets “has not taken place since the endorsement of
the Taef Accord,” Kanaan lamented. He added: “Finalizing the budget within a
month in Parliament depends on the responsiveness of ministries, administrations
and MPs, but what’s certain is that will not endorse it blindly. There are over
1,000 pages and credits for 24 ministries that should be scrutinized and all
viewpoints must be heard,” he added. “What’s practically happening in Cabinet is
preparation for the 2020 budget, after the (2019) missed its constitutional
deadline,” Kanaan went on to say, urging a new mentality in approaching state
budgets and “real reforms.”Lebanon has vowed to slash public spending to unlock
$11 billion worth of aid pledged by international donors during an April 2018
conference in Paris. Last month, Prime Minister Saad Hariri vowed to introduce
"the most austere budget in Lebanon's history" to combat the country's bulging
fiscal deficit, sparking fears among public sector employees that their salaries
may be cut. Lebanon is one of the world's most indebted countries, with public
debt estimated at 141 percent of GDP in 2018, according to credit ratings agency
Moody's.
Jumblat Warns Arabs against War amid U.S.-Iran Tensions
Naharnet/May 19/2019/Progressive Socialist Party leader ex-MP Walid Jumblat on
Sunday warned Arabs against getting involved in a war in the region amid the
escalating tensions between the United States and Iran. “Amid this huge and
scary confrontation between the U.S. and the Islamic Republic, and amid the
Israeli incitement to warm, we hope no one in the Arab world will get involved,
because war will only produce vast devastation,” Jumblat tweeted. Separately, he
hoped Lebanon’s state budget will be finalized as soon as possible and without
political bickering in order to “avoid the worse.”
Bassil Withdraws Recognition of GCLW Presidency in Bkirki
Visit
Naharnet/May 19/2019/Free Patriotic Movement chief MP Jebran Bassil on Sunday
visited the seat of the Maronite church in Bkirki at the head of a Strong
Lebanon bloc and FPM delegation, in the wake of a storm of condemnation sparked
by leaked remarks against revered late ex-patriarch Nasrallah Sfeir. “We stand
by Bkirki in its national message,” Bassil said, stressing that “this message
cannot be touched and this message will remain even after the departure of
Bkirki’s great figures.”“The insult against Bkirki and the Lebanese points to an
ethics problem in the country targeted against dignitaries, leaders and
dignities,” Bassil decried, referring to General Confederation of Lebanese
Workers chief Beshara al-Asmar’s leaked remarks against Sfeir, who passed away
last Sunday at the age of 99. “It is normal that we don’t recognize the GCLW’s
presidency until the current situation gets rectified,” Bassil added. Maronite
Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi for his part said that he was “deeply hurt, like all
people, by the disgraceful insult” against Sfeir. Asmar has been summoned for
interrogation and is still in detention, amid calls for stripping him of his
post. A video that went viral on social media on Friday shows Asmar mocking
Sfeir shortly before a televised press conference. Asmar was unaware his
microphone was on before the conference.
Jabaq Says No Concerns over Sanctions
Associated Press/Naharnet/May 19/2019/Health Minister Jamil Jabaq — named to the
post by Hizbullah — has said that he has overcome U.S. concerns about his
ministry potentially funneling finances to the militant organization by gaining
public trust and ensuring transparency. Jabaq told The Associated Press that
although he is not a member, he was picked to the post because Hizbullah has
trust in him. Jabak insisted he is working for all Lebanese. "People's trust in
you is what erases" concerns, said Jabaq, a physician who spoke at his private
clinic in the southern Beirut suburb of Dahiyeh. He has maintained his practice
since taking on the Health Ministry job. Jabaq was named in January by Hizbullah
after the group made significant gains in parliamentary elections, allowing it
to lobby and gain a bigger share in the Cabinet. After months of haggling,
Hizbullah increased the ministries it can name to three, including the strategic
Health Ministry. U.S. officials then warned against funneling the ministry's
resources to Hizbullah, which has an expansive social network of charity
institutions and many wounded members from its role in the war in neighboring
Syria.But the Iranian-backed Hizbullah is under various sanctions by the United
States, which labels the group a terrorist organization. Even Hizbullah
officials say the increasing U.S. sanctions, including on its ally Iran, are
hurting the group. Jabaq said Hizbullah avoided the sanctions on the ministry by
reaching a deal with President Michel Aoun to appoint a man trusted by the group
but not a member. "I treated many Hizbullah officials. They know through my work
how transparent I am," he said. Jabaq denied reports he was the personal
physician of the group's leader, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah. "I have not had the
honor," he said. Jabaq said his government won't accept any international
monitoring of its spending. Internal auditing and domestic scrutiny will do the
job, he said. "Internationally, there was fear at the start but after meetings
with all international organizations and the ambassadors, it became clear,
something they already knew, that I don't have a political affiliation," he
said. But Jabaq was cognizant of the challenges he faces. Domestically, nearly
1.8 million of Lebanon's more than 4 million residents are without health care.
Over 1 million Syrian refugees live in the country, adding pressure to Lebanon's
debilitated infrastructure. Jabaq has toured Lebanon to dispel concerns he was
biased toward Hizbullah. "What matters is that all civil groups working in
Lebanon get an equal share from the ministry of health in terms of medicine
support," he said. "Hizbullah and its institutions are part of Lebanese
society." Beaming with confidence that he has the public's trust, it is clearly
because of his successful campaign to reduce, in some cases by over 50 percent,
the price of medications for chronic and infectious diseases. As the government
negotiates spending cuts to deal with a deepening economic slump, Jabaq said he
successfully prevented cuts to his $500 million budget and is working to
increase it from 1.7 percent to 3 percent of the national budget. Jabaq is
negotiating a project with the World Bank to rehabilitate government hospitals
and primary health care centers to improve public services, particularly for the
poor. Lebanon has only 30 government hospitals but at least 120 private ones. He
said there will be a monitoring mechanism for spending in this project: "I have
nothing to hide," he said. A graduate of Zaghreb university in 1982, Jabaq
returned to Lebanon to work in a number of hospitals. He is the first physician
in the post in ten years and prides himself in knowing the secrets of the
profession. He is negotiating exporting Lebanese medicine to Iraq and boosting
medicinal tourism. Jabaq travels to Geneva on Sunday to attend the World Health
Organization's 72nd Assembly, where he said he will raise Lebanon's health
sector concerns, including the "dream" of medical care for every Lebanese.
Head of Lebanon’s General Labor Confederation Arrested
After Insulting Late Patriarch Sfeir in Leak
Beirut- Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 19 May, 2019/Head of Lebanon’s General Labor
Confederation Bechara Asmar was arrested on Saturday after he insulted late
patriarch Cardinal Mar Nasrallah Boutros Sfeir in a leaked video. Before
beginning his press conference, Asmar appeared in the video while mocking Sfeir,
who passed away a few days ago, as he was unaware the microphones were already
turned on. Acting Cassation Prosecutor, Judge Imad Qabalan, issued the arrest
warrant on Saturday, while a large number of Lebanese called on Asmar to resign
from his post. Qabalan also opened an investigation into Asmar and the five
other individuals who appear to be laughing at Asmar’s comments in the same
leaked video. Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rahi sternly condemned on Saturday
Asmar’s offensive remarks on Sfeir. In a statement issued by Bkirki’s press
office, the Patriarch welcomed the swift mobilization of the state prosecution.
"Such comments automatically disqualify their author from assuming
responsibilities relevant to public affairs," Rahi said. He added that the doors
of Bkirki would remain closed to Asmar until "he makes amends for his sin."In a
tweet posted on his account, Justice Minister Albert Serhan said the head of the
GLC had been remanded in custody. "I have been following up on Beshara Asmar's
affair with the acting state prosecutor since morning, and he informed me that
after his questioning, Asmar had been detained and that investigations with the
concerned side were still underway," Serhan said. In a separate tweet, Labor
Minister Camille Abousleiman said his ministry would take legal action against
the union leader. Asmar’s lawyer said head of the GLC clarified he did not mean
to insult Sfeir, adding there was “no clear, explicit or convincing
justification” for his arrest.
On Saturday, the Maronite League canceled the membership of Asmar and decided to
sue him over his insulting remarks.
Minister of Culture: Budget just around the corner
Sun 19 May 2019/NNA - Minister of Culture Mohamed Daoud said via Twitter: "The
approval of the budget at the Council of Ministers and its referral to the House
of Representatives is just around the corner. We affirm, in the name of the Amal
movement, our keenness on protect the rights and earnings of low-income
employees, public workers, retirees and the poor and middle classes. We will be
the spearhead in the fight against corruption."
Minister: Lebanon Aims to Cut Debt Servicing Costs with 1%
Interest Rate T-Bonds
Reuters/Sunday 19th May 2019/The Lebanese government aims to shave some 1
trillion Lebanese pounds ($660 million) from debt servicing costs in the draft
2019 state budget through issuing treasury bonds at an interest rate of 1%, the
finance minister said on Saturday. "This matter will happen through coordination
between the finance ministry, the central bank and the banks after the budget
approval to issue treasury bonds in Lebanese currency in the range of 11,000
billion Lebanese pounds at an interest rate of 1 percent," Ali Hassan Khalil
told Reuters. Khalil had earlier written on Twitter that the draft budget
includes a reduction of around 1 trillion Lebanese pounds in debt servicing
costs, without giving further details.The Lebanese state draft budget for 2019
will have a deficit below 9% of gross domestic product (GDP) and it may be less
than 8.5% of GDP, Khalil had told media reporters.The deficit was 11.2% of GDP
in 2018. Government discussions on the draft budget should be concluded on
Sunday, Khalil was also cited as saying by the National News Agency in the
discussion.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on May 19-20/19
Trump: If Iran wants to fight then that will
be its official end
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Monday, 20 May 2019/US President
Donald Trump threatened Iran in a tweet on Sunday, raising concerns about a
potential US-Iran conflict at a time when tensions between Washington and Tehran
have risen. “If Iran wants to fight, that will be the official end of Iran.
Never threaten the United States again,” Trump said in a tweet. Trump has
tightened economic sanctions against Iran, and his administration says it has
built up the US military presence in the region. It accuses Iran of threats to
US troops and interests. Tehran has described US moves as “psychological
warfare” and a “political game.”On Saturday, The head of Iran’s Revolutionary
Guards said that his country is in a full intelligence war with the United
States and “enemies of the Islamic Republic” which includes cyber and military
operations.
GOP ( Grand Old Party (Republican Party) Lawmaker on Iran
Threat: Directive Was to 'Kill and Kidnap American Soldiers'
USA Today/May 19/2019
A top Republican lawmaker said Friday that the threat from Iran picked up by
U.S. intelligence – which sparked a U.S. military deployment to the Middle East
and heightened tensions across the region – was very specific and involved the
possible kidnapping and killing of American soldiers.
"To the extent I can discuss it, it was human intelligence," Rep. Michael McCaul,
R-Texas, the ranking Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, told USA
TODAY on Friday. He was referring to intelligence information that prompted the
Pentagon to deploy an aircraft carrier, along with B-52 bombers and other
military forces, to the Middle East. Trump administration officials said the
move was made to counter what they described as credible threats from Iran to
U.S. forces in the region. McCaul said U.S. intelligence officials learned that
the head of Iran's Quds Force, a unit of Iran's military force, met with Iran's
proxy militias and said: "We are getting ready to have a proxy war and target
Americans."He said the same message was delivered to a Hezbollah proxy group.
Hezbollah is an Iranian-sponsored terrorist group. "One of the Hezbollah cells
is known for its kidnapping and killing operations, and their directive was to
go in and kill and kidnap American soldiers," McCaul said. McCaul made the
comments in a brief interview with USA TODAY after delivering remarks on U.S.
foreign policy at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank. He made
similar comments in a question-and-answer session at that event. The Guardian
newspaper first reported some details of this threat, citing unnamed sources.
The leader of Iran's Quds Force is Major General Qasem Soleimani, an extremely
powerful figure inside the country and across the region. Experts say he has
helped Iran extend its sphere of influence through proxy forces in Lebanon, Iraq
and Syria. "Without question, Soleimani is the most powerful general in the
Middle East today," Ali Soufan, a former FBI agent who handled several
high-profile terrorism cases, wrote in an analysis last fall. "More than anyone
else, Soleimani has been responsible for the creation of an arc of influence –
which Iran terms its 'Axis of Resistance' – extending from the Gulf of Oman
through Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon to the eastern shores of the Mediterranean
Sea," Soufan wrote. Until now, top Trump administration officials, including
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, have said the U.S. had specific, credible
threats that Iran or its proxies might be preparing attacks against American
forces or U.S. targets in the region, but they did not provide details.
In addition to the Pentagon deployment , the State Department on Wednesday
ordered all nonemergency employees to leave Iraq immediately. The U.S. has more
than 5,000 troops stationed in Iraq. McCaul did not directly answer a question
about new reporting that suggests the increasingly aggressive moves by both Iran
and the U.S. may have been spurred by a misreading of the intelligence threats.
The Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday that Iranian officials believed the
U.S. was planning an attack and that prompted Tehran to prepare for possible
counterstrikes. The U.S. intelligence officials may have misread Iran's
countermeasures as aggression, the Journal reported, noting there are divisions
within the Trump administration over the meaning of the intelligence gathered in
recent weeks.The State Department declined to comment on McCaul's remarks or the
Wall Street Journal story. A spokesman for the Director of National Intelligence
Dan Coats did not immediately respond to questions on these matters.
Rocket fired on Iraqi capital's 'Green Zone', no casualties
BAGHDAD (Reuters)May 19/2019/A rocket was fired into the Iraqi
capital Baghdad’s heavily-fortified Green Zone, which houses government
buildings and foreign embassies, on Sunday but caused no casualties, the Iraqi
military said. “A Katyusha rocket fell in the middle of the Green Zone without
causing any losses,” the military said in a statement, later specifying that it
landed near the Monument of the Unknown Soldier. The blast was heard across
central Baghdad on Sunday night, according to Reuters witnesses and residents.
The Katyusha multiple rocket launcher is an inexpensive type of rocket artillery
that can deliver explosives to a target quicker than conventional artillery, but
is less accurate. Police special forces found a rocket launcher in eastern
Baghdad’s al-Sina district, about 7 km (4.3 miles) away across the Tigris River
from the Green Zone, and sealed off the area, a police source told Reuters.
Syria: Israel Raids on Iranian Base Near Damascus
Beirut, Damascus, London- Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 19 May, 2019/Syrian air
defense batteries on Friday intercepted projectiles coming from Israel and
downed a number of them, state-owned news agency SANA reported.
"Our air defense systems intercepted luminous objects coming from the occupied
territories (Israel) and downed several of them," SANA said quoting a military
source. Head of Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights Rami Abdel
Rahman said three explosions shook southwest Damascus on Friday.
“They were Israeli strikes that targeted the Kiswah region where weapons
warehouses belonging to Iran and (its Lebanese proxy) Hezbollah are located,” he
told AFP. In April, Syrian air defense intercepted an Israeli air strike
targeting Mesyaf in central Hama province, wounding three combatants and
destroying buildings, according to SANA. Israel has carried out hundreds of air
strikes in Syria, most of them against what it says are Iranian and Hezbollah
targets.
Israeli shelling recently targeted Aleppo, and in March, Syria announced its air
defenses intercepted the Israeli aggression targeting the northeast of the city.
On January 21, Israeli fighter jets carried out strikes inside Syria, targeting
Iranian facilities and Syrian aerial defense batteries, as well as a site near
the Damascus International Airport. The strikes, according to the Observatory,
killed 21 people, including members of the Iranian forces and affiliated
fighters.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed during his visit to Chad not to
let Iran entrench itself militarily in the war-torn country.
In a detailed report, the Observatory said explosions were heard in the vicinity
of Damascus, caused by several Israeli missiles where at least three violent
explosions took place in the south and south-west of the capital. The flash of
one of the explosions was seen in the west of Jaramana, and it was not known
whether it was caused by interception by the air defenses to the missiles or the
missiles reached their targets in areas in the vicinity of the capital. SOHR
noted that the Israeli airstrikes targeted Masyaf area in the western
countryside of Hama on the 13th of April, killing several and injuring many
others. The Observatory documented the death of at least 14 Iranians and their
loyal groups, 9 of which were Syrians and non-Syrians residing on the Syrian
territory, while the other 5 include at least 3 Iranians.
They were all killed in the Israeli shelling that targeted the Accountant School
in Masyaf city, and the mid-range missiles development center in al-Zawi
village, and al-Talaee camp in Sheikh Ghadban village in Masyaf countryside.
The shelling injured more than 15 others, while the Observatory received
information about the killing of Russian and North Korean experts in the Israeli
bombardment.
On March 28, the Observatory learned that the explosions that rocked the area
near Aleppo International Airport and Industrial City in Sheikh Najjar were
caused by Israeli raids which targeted ammunition warehouses affiliated with the
Iranian forces.
SOHR stated in a report that on March 19, violent explosions rocked the suburbs
of Damascus, without information so far about the nature of the explosions. The
violent sound coincided with firing missiles by the anti-aircraft defenses
spread in the suburbs. Earlier in March, an explosion rocked Hodr town in the
northern sector of al-Quneitra countryside, caused by at least one rocket shell
on an area at the western outskirts of the town, without information about
causalities.On February 11, the Observatory recorded an Israeli missile attack
targeting Hezbollah and Iranian fighters in the areas of Jubata al-Khashab and
al-Quneitra.
Bomb Blast Hits Tourist Bus near Egypt Pyramids, Injuring
17
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 19/2019/A bomb blast hit a tourist bus near
Egypt's famed Giza pyramids on Sunday, wounding at least 17 people, including
South Africans, in the latest blow to the country's tourism industry. The
roadside bomb went off as the bus was being driven in Giza, also causing
injuries to Egyptians in a nearby car, medical and security sources said. There
were no deaths reported. "A device exploded and smashed the windows of a bus
carrying 25 people from South Africa and a private car carrying four Egyptians,"
the security source said. Video footage captured by AFP showed the bus and car
with broken windows on the side of the road. According to the security source,
the wounded were being treated for scratches caused by the broken glass.
Ndivhuwo Mabaya, spokesman for South Africa's department of international
relations, told AFP that "there might be South Africans involved" but declined
to give any figures. Sunday's incident comes after three Vietnamese
holidaymakers and their Egyptian guide were killed when a roadside bomb hit
their bus as it travelled near the Giza pyramids outside Cairo in December.
It also comes just little more than a month before the African Cup of Nations
hosted by Egypt is to kick off. Egypt has been battling an insurgency that
surged especially in the turbulent North Sinai region following the 2013
military ouster of Islamist president Mohamed Morsi, who was replaced by former
army general Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. In February 2018, the army launched a
nationwide operation against militants, focusing mainly on the North Sinai
region. Some 650 militants and around 45 soldiers have been killed since the
start of the offensive, according to separate statements by the armed forces.
Since first being elected in 2014, Sisi has presented himself as a bulwark
against terrorism, promising stability and increased security. Recently, the
country's vital tourism industry has started to slowly rebound after suffering
strong blows due to deadly attacks targeting tourists following the turmoil of
the 2011 uprising that toppled longtime ruler Hosni Mubarak. Figures by the
official statistics agency showed that tourist arrivals reached 8.3 million in
2017, compared with 5.3 million the previous year. Authorities have gone at
great lengths to lure tourists back, touting a series of archaeological finds
and a new museum next to the pyramids, as well as enhanced security at airports
and around ancient sites. But that figure was still far short of the record
influx of 2010 when more than 14 million visitors flocked to see the country's
sites.
72-Hour Truce in Idlib, Moscow Continues to Attack ‘Terrorists’
Moscow – Raed Jabr/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 19 May, 2019/Official Russian circles
avoided Saturday issuing a clear position on the temporary truce in Idlib as
Moscow accused armed factions in the area of continuing to breach the ceasefire.
The Russian Defense Ministry did not comment on Saturday on reports published by
official state media outlets quoting field sources in Syria as saying that a
72-hour truce was reached in Idlib and that the ceasefire will go into effect on
Saturday night. The sources did not offer further details about the truce.
Surprisingly, Moscow issued on Saturday a military statement saying: “Terrorists
were continuing to violate the truce in Idlib.” The chief of Russia's center for
the reconciliation of conflicting parties in Syria, Major-General Viktor
Kupchishin, said on Saturday that during the past 24 hours, illegitimate armed
groups violated the ceasefire in the two provinces of Latakia and Aleppo. The
Novosti news agency quoted Kupchishin as saying that over the past day,
terrorists attacked areas in the Latakia province and others in the Hama
province. Meanwhile, the Russian side of the Russian-Turkish commission
monitoring the implementation of the Syrian ceasefire said it has registered 10
ceasefire violations in Syria over the past 24 hours, while the Turkish side has
recorded 16 truce breaches, the Russian Ministry of Defense said in a daily
bulletin on Saturday. The Russian notice said that all violations registered by
Moscow were in Latakia and Idlib while the Turkish side registered the
violations in Idlib, Latakia, and Hama. In September 2018, several areas in the
countryside of Hama, Idlib, and the western countryside of Aleppo were included
in the de-escalation zones deal, reached between Russia and Turkey. However,
late last month, the Syrian army started an operation against Hayat Tahrir
al-Sham (HTS) in the northern countryside of Hama in central Syria and nearby
Idlib, saying the attacks were a response to the rebels' assault and
infiltration attempts into Syrian military sites in the region.
US Fifth Fleet: GCC Countries Begin Enhanced Maritime
Security Patrols
Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 19 May, 2019/Countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)
began "enhanced security patrols" in the international waters of the Arabian
Gulf area on Saturday, the US Navy's Fifth Fleet said on Sunday. The GCC
countries were "specifically increasing communication and coordination with each
other in support of regional naval cooperation and maritime security operations
in the Arabian Gulf," the statement said. Also Sunday, the US Navy said it has
conducted exercises in the Arabian Sea with the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft
carrier strike group in coordination with the US Marine Corps, highlighting US
"lethality and agility to respond to threat," as well as to deter conflict and
preserve US strategic interests. Taking part in exercises were the Kearsarge
Amphibious Ready Group and the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit, both deployed to
the US Fifth Fleet area of operations. The Navy said the exercises, conducted
Friday and Saturday, included air-to-air training and steaming in formation and
maneuvering. The White House has ordered the USS Abraham Lincoln and B-52s
bombers into the region over what US officials say are Iranian threats. Tension
grew when four vessels were subjected to sabotage acts near the territorial
waters of the United Arab Emirates last Sunday.
Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih: Recent Attacks
Haven’t Affected Us
Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 19 May, 2019/Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said on
Sunday that recent attacks on Saudi energy assets have not affected his
country's oil output. “Although it has not affected our supplies, such acts of
terrorism are deplorable," Falih said. "They threaten uninterrupted supplies of
energy to the world and put a global economy that is already facing headwinds at
further risk." Four commercial ships were sabotaged off the coast of the United
Arab Emirates last Sunday, and two days later drones attacked oil installations
west of the Saudi capital Riyadh. Iran-backed Houthi militias have claimed the
attack in Saudi Arabia. Falih called on Saudi Arabia's partners to condemn the
attacks. He was speaking in Jeddah ahead of a ministerial panel meeting of top
OPEC and non-OPEC oil producers. The minister recommended "gently" driving oil
inventories down at a time of plentiful global supplies.
Saudi King Calls for Arab, Gulf Summits in Makkah
Riyadh- Saleh Al- Zayed/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 19 May, 2019/The Custodian of
the Two Holy Mosques, King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, called on leaders of
GCC and Arab countries to hold two emergency summits in the Holy city of Makkah
on Ramadan 25 (May 30) to discuss ways to enhance regional security and
stability in the wake of the attacks on commercial vessels in UAE territorial
waters and on two Saudi pumping stations by Iranian-backed terrorist Houthi
militias. The announcement was made by an official source at the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs. The two summits will take place one day ahead of the 14th
summit of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, to which King Salman has
invited 57 members. The Saudi Press Agency quoted the ministry official as
saying that Arab and GCC leaders at the summits would discuss the recent
aggressions and their repercussions on the region. Last Sunday, four commercial
vessels had been sabotaged near Fujairah emirate, outside the Strait of Hormuz,
including two Saudi oil tankers and two days later drones attacked oil
installations west of the Saudi capital Riyadh. The UAE said on Sunday that
"critical circumstances" in the region require a united Gulf Arab and Arab
stand, amid heightened tensions with Iran following last week's attacks. A
foreign ministry statement published on state news agency WAM welcomed a call by
Saudi Arabia's King Salman to convene emergency summits in Makkah. For his part,
Saudi Foreign Minister Adel bin Ahmed Al-Jubeir said in a press conference held
on Sunday morning that the Kingdom is following with great concern the latest
developments at the regional and international arenas, which are escalating
because of the actions of the Iranian regime and its hostile proxies in the
region. “Saudi Arabia does not want a war in the region and does not seek to do
so and will do its utmost to prevent this war,” Jubeir said. However, the
Minister stressed that if the other side chooses war, the Kingdom will respond
firmly and decisively and will defend itself and its interests. The King’s call
for holding two urgent summits came as several procedures and warnings were
taken for fear of a possible confrontation in the Gulf between the United States
and Iran. A Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Notice to Airmen in the US
said that all commercial aircraft flying over the waters of the Persian Gulf and
the Gulf of Oman needed to be aware of Iran’s fighter jets and weaponry, the
Associated Press reported Saturday. And while reports published in the US said
President Donald Trump might order an attack on Iran without the Congress’
approval, Iraqi officials said ExxonMobil Corp. began evacuating staff from
Basra, south of Iraq.
US Reports: Trump Might Declare War on Iran Without Congress Approval
Washington- Atef Abdullatif/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 19 May, 2019/US
administration could launch a military strike against Iran without congressional
approval, according to US media reports. The administration is relying on key
elements drawing links between al-Qaeda and Iran and casting Iran as a terrorist
threat to the US. Sources in the reports indicated that these elements will give
Donald Trump's administration the justification it needs to fight Iran under the
still-in-effect 2001 use-of-force resolution without congressional approval.
President Trump has said more than once that he does not want to wage a war
against Iran, however, the reports noted that the possibility of a US military
strike against Tehran is still possible. The strike is particularly supported by
National Security Adviser John Bolton and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo,
according to US media reports. Congress would not give Trump the green light to
a strike unless it was needed, as Congress saw it. Most Democrats, and even some
Republicans, refuse to engage US forces in another war in the Middle East. With
Congress unlikely to grant Trump new authority to strike Iran under the current
circumstances, and amid a campaign of "maximum pressure" against the regime in
Tehran, media reports revealed that Trump administration sent strong signals
that they will be ready to make an end run around lawmakers, using the 2001
authorization for the use of military force, if necessary. The use of military
force law gave the president the power to use force against “nations,
organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided
the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such
organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international
terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or
persons.”The United States already included some of Iran's organizations,
including the Iran Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), as terrorist organizations,
and Trump and his administration can use the hawks to justify a military strike,
or even a war with Tehran, without the need for congressional approval. In
recent weeks, the Trump administration has accused Iran of assisting al-Qaeda
and being linked to a terrorist threat against the US embassy in Baghdad, Iraq.
That could give the US administration the justification it needs to fight Iran
under the still-in-effect 2001 use-of-force resolution without congressional
approval. Earlier this month, the US deployed an aircraft carrier strike group
“Abraham Lincoln” to the region. US officials said that a surge in US forces in
the region was a response in part to intelligence-gathering suggesting that the
Iranian regime had given proxies a green light to attack US personnel and assets
in the region. Lawyers familiar with the 2001 law and its applications say it's
obvious from those moves that the Trump administration is trying to enforce the
use-of-force resolution in case the President decided to strike Iran. Yale
University law professor Harold Koh, who served as the State Department's top
lawyer under Secretary Hillary Clinton, indicated that the whole thing is
building up to the notion that they don't have to go to Congress for approval.
“The theory of war powers has to be that Congress doesn't just sign off once,”
said Koh in a telephone interview with NBC News, adding that the “suggestion now
that Iran attacked us on 9/11 is ridiculous.” Meanwhile, Trump pushed back
Friday against reports of conflict between Pompeo and Bolton, calling sourcing
cited by reporters “bull----.”“Mike Pompeo is doing a great job. Bolton is doing
a great job. They make it sound like it’s a conflict,” the president said in a
speech to the National Association of Realtors. “At least Iran doesn’t know what
to think, which at this point may very well be a good thing!” Trump said in a
tweet.
China Says Opposes ‘Unilateral’ US Sanctions Against Iran
Beijing/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 19 May, 2019//The Chinese government's top
diplomat, State Councillor Wang Yi, told Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad
Zarif on Friday that China resolutely opposes “unilateral” sanctions imposed by
the United States. China supports Iran to safeguard its legitimate rights and
understands Iran's situation, Wang Yi said in a meeting with Zarif in Beijing,
according to a Chinese Foreign Ministry statement. Tensions have escalated in
recent days with increasing concerns about a potential US-Iran conflict. Iran
has said it is committed to its obligations under an international nuclear deal
despite the US withdrawal from the landmark agreement last year, and has called
the reimposition of US sanctions unacceptable. Zarif urged China to take
"concrete actions" to safeguard the 2015 nuclear deal as he warned of a
"dangerous" situation amid the escalating tensions with the US. US officials
said the deployment of an aircraft carrier strike group and B-52 bombers to the
Gulf, one of the world's most strategic waterways, was in reaction to
photographs showing that Iran had loaded missiles onto small traditional boats.
On Wednesday, the US State Department ordered the evacuation of most personnel
from the US embassy and consulate in Iraq over an alleged "imminent" threat from
Iraqi militias with close links to Tehran. Zarif said Thursday there is "no
possibility" of negotiations with the United States to reduce spiraling
tensions, Japan's Kyodo news agency reported. "No, there is no possibility for
negotiations," the news agency cited Zarif as telling reporters in Tokyo, where
he met with Japanese officials.
Trump: At Least Iran Doesn’t Know What to Think
Washington - Heba El Koudsy/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 19 May, 2019/US President
Donald Trump has criticized US media outlets for their “fraudulent” coverage of
Iran amid growing tension in the Gulf. “The Fake News Media is hurting our
Country with its fraudulent and highly inaccurate coverage of Iran,” he said on
Twitter on Friday. He described it as “poorly sourced” and “dangerous.” “At
least Iran doesn’t know what to think, which at this point may very well be a
good thing!” Trump continued. The United States is "sitting by the phone" but
has heard no message yet from Iran that it is willing to accept Trump's
overtures for direct talks, a senior Trump administration official said on
Friday. "We think they should de-escalate and come to negotiations," the
official, who declined to be identified, told a small group of reporters. Also
Friday, a State Department spokesman said Washington takes all alleged sanctions
violations seriously and will take action as appropriate, responding to a
question about a tanker unloading Iranian fuel oil at a Chinese port. Reuters on
Thursday reported that a tanker carrying nearly 130,000 tons of Iranian fuel oil
had unloaded its cargo into storage tanks near the Chinese city of Zhoushan.
“The United States takes all alleged sanctionable activities seriously and will
take action as appropriate. We are committed to enforcing our sanctions,
especially those related to Iran’s oil and petrochemicals sectors,” the State
Department spokesman said in an emailed response. He said the department was
aware of the specific report about the tanker but declined to comment on it.
Meanwhile, two Navy guided-missile destroyers, the USS McFaul and USS Gonzalez,
have traveled through the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday afternoon without
challenge from Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps, Pentagon defense officials
said. The McFaul and Gonzalez will be part of the Abraham Carrier Strike Group.
The USS Arlington amphibious transport dock ship and a Patriot surface-to-air
missile battery are being moved to the Middle East. Also, four B-52 bombers have
been sent to the region.
UK Warns British-Iranian Dual Nationals from Traveling to
Iran
Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 19 May, 2019/The UK banned on Friday British-Iranian
dual nationals from traveling to Iran, saying they faced an unacceptably higher
risk of arbitrary detention and mistreatment compared to other nationals. The
move comes as Britain continues to try to secure the release from jail of dual
national Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe. Tehran has also recently sentenced an
Iranian British Council employee, Aras Amiri, to 10 years in prison on charges
of spying. In a statement, the Foreign Office said British-Iranian dual
nationals faced an "unacceptably higher risk of arbitrary detention and
mistreatment" than nationals of other countries. "The security forces may be
suspicious of people with British connections, including those with links to
institutions based in the UK, or which receive public funds from, or have
perceived links to, the British government," the statement said.
Zaghari-Ratcliffe was arrested by Iranian authorities in 2016 as she was leaving
Tehran. Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who worked for the Thomson Reuters Foundation, was
put on trial and is now serving a five-year jail sentence for allegedly trying
to topple the Iranian government. "Dual nationals face an intolerable risk of
mistreatment if they visit Iran," Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said. "Despite
the UK providing repeated opportunities to resolve this issue, the Iranian
regime's conduct has worsened. "Having exhausted all other options, I must now
advise all British-Iranian dual nationals against travelling to Iran.
"The dangers they face include arbitrary detention and lack of access to basic
legal rights, as we have seen in the case of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, who has
been separated from her family since 2016." The Iranian government does not
recognize dual nationality, meaning the Foreign Office's ability to provide
consular support is limited. Hunt added: "Regrettably, I must also offer a
message of caution to Iranian nationals resident in the UK -- but who return to
visit family and friends -- especially where the Iranian government may perceive
them to have personal links to UK institutions or the British government."
Saudi Arabia Deposits $250 Million Into Sudan's Central Bank
Dubai, Khartoum/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 19 May, 2019/Saudi Arabia said on Sunday
it deposited $250 million with the Sudanese central bank, according to a
statement from the kingdom's ministry of finance. Saudi Arabia and the United
Arab Emirates pledged to send $3 billion worth of aid to Sudan, after mass
protests led to the ouster of President Omar al-Bashir last month. The move will
strengthen Sudan's "financial position, alleviate pressure on the Sudanese pound
and achieve more stability in the exchange rate,' the statement said. In a
related development, Sudanese protest leaders said Sunday they will insist a
civilian runs a planned new governing body in new talks with army rulers, as
Islamists warn against excluding sharia from the political roadmap. The Alliance
for Freedom and Change is determined that the country's new ruling body be "led
by a civilian as its chairman and with a limited military representation", it
said in a statement. The protesters' umbrella group said talks would resume with
the military council -- which has ruled Sudan since Bashir was deposed on April
11 -- at 9:00 pm (1900 GMT) on Sunday. Talks over a transfer of power by the
generals have repeatedly stalled, resulting in international pressure to return
to the table after the generals suspended negotiations earlier this week. The
generals insist the new body be military-led but the protest leaders demand a
majority civilian body. On Sunday the protest movement raised the ante by
insisting that the ruling body should be headed by a civilian. The military
council is headed by General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, and the generals have
previously said he would lead the new governing body. Before talks were
suspended the two sides had agreed on several key issues, including a three-year
transition period and the creation of a 300-member parliament, with two-thirds
of lawmakers to come from the protesters' umbrella group. The previous round of
talks was marred by violence after five protesters and an army major were shot
dead near the ongoing sit-in outside the military headquarters in central
Khartoum, where thousands have camped out for weeks. Initially, the protesters
gathered to demand Bashir resign -- but they have stayed put, to pressure the
generals into stepping aside. The protesters had also erected roadblocks on some
avenues in Khartoum, paralyzing large parts of the capital, to put further
pressure on the generals during negotiations, but the military rulers suspended
the last round of talks and demanded the barriers be removed. Protesters duly
took the roadblocks down in recent days -- but they warn they will put them back
up if the army fails to transfer power to a civilian administration. The
generals have allowed protesters to maintain their sit-in outside Khartoum's
army headquarters.
Algerian Figures Call for Agreement That Meets Protesters’
Aspirations
Algiers- Boualam Ghimrasah/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 19 May, 2019/Three prominent
Algerian figures called on the military leadership to start “frank and honest”
talks with representatives of the demonstrators, political parties and the civil
society supporting the civil movement to find a consensual political solution as
soon as possible. They said this solution should respond to legitimate popular
aspirations, which have been put forward every day for almost three months now.
As the situation in Algeria nears a dead-end, former Foreign Minister Ahmed
Talib Brahimi, dean of human rights activists in Algeria senior Lawyer Ali Yahya
Abdel Nour, 98, and the retired general, Rashid Ben Yels, proposed solutions.
The three figures are known for their engagement in public affairs, especially
at times of crises. “The deadlock witnessed nowadays carries grave dangers, in
addition to the tension in our regional environment,” the three figures said in
a joint statement. “Sticking to July 4 to hold elections will only postpone the
inevitable birth time of the new republic,” the statement added. “How can we
imagine holding free and fair elections that are already rejected by the vast
majority of people, being organized by institutions that are still run by
incompetent forces hostile to constructive change?” They wondered. They were
referring in their statement to acting head of state Abdelkader Bensalah and
Prime Minister Noureddine Bedoui, who are both stalwarts of Bouteflika’s regime.
However, they both, in fact, are kept in their positions by Army Chief Gaid
Salah under the pretext of “adhering to the constitution.”Demonstrators,
according to the statement, are calling for building a state of law with true
democracy after ousting Bouteflika. This law should be preceded by a short
transition period led by figures who had nothing to do with the former corrupt
system over the past 20 years. “This phase is necessary in order to develop
mechanisms and take measures that will allow the sovereign people to voice their
opinions with freedom and democracy and decide on their president through ballot
boxes,” the statement noted.
Turkey Says to Produce S-500s with Russia after S-400
Missile Deal
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 19/2019/Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
has said Turkey and Russia would jointly produce S-500 defense systems after
Ankara's controversial purchase of the S-400 missile defense system from Moscow.
Turkey's push to buy the S-400s has further strained already tense relations
with the United States which has repeatedly warned Ankara of the risks including
sanctions as a result of the purchase. "There is absolutely no question of
(Turkey) taking a step back from the S-400s purchase. That is a done deal,"
Erdogan said in Istanbul. "There will be joint production of the S-500 after the
S-400," Erdogan told an audience of young people asking questions.Ties between
NATO allies Turkey and the U.S. have frayed over multiple issues including
American support for a Syrian Kurdish militia viewed as terrorists by Ankara and
the U.S. failure to extradite a Muslim preacher blamed for the 2016 coup attempt
against Erdogan. Washington says the deal with Moscow is a threat to Western
defense and in April suspended deliveries of the F-35 stealth fighter jet to
Turkey in a bid to halt the purchase. Turkish pilots are in the U.S. receiving
training on the F-35s, manufactured by Lockheed Martin. Turkey is expected to
buy 100 of the jets in total. Erdogan said Turkey conducted technical studies
amid US concerns over the compatibility of the S-400s and the F-35s but found
there were no issues.He also insisted "sooner or later" Turkey would receive the
F-35 jets. Despite the threat of sanctions, Erdogan repeated that the S-400s
were expected to be delivered in July, "but this could be brought forward", he
added.
May to Make MPs a Final 'Bold Offer' on Brexit Deal
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 19/2019/British Prime Minister Theresa May
said Sunday she was preparing to make a "bold offer" to MPs in one final attempt
to get them to back her Brexit deal. May said that when she brings the
Withdrawal Agreement Bill before parliament early next month, it will come with
a new package of measures attached that she hopes can command majority support.
"I still believe there is a majority in parliament to be won for leaving with a
deal," May wrote in The Sunday Times newspaper. MPs three times rejected the
deal May struck with Brussels, forcing Britain's EU departure date to pushed
back from March 29 to April 12 and again to October 31. The bill is needed to
ratify the divorce agreement struck with the European Union. Her authority
weakened by the defeats, May on Thursday agreed to set out a timetable for her
departure following the vote in the week beginning June 3, regardless of whether
MPs back her deal at the fourth time of asking. Observers say she will likely
trigger a contest for the leadership of her governing Conservative Party once
the bill either falls or completes all of its stages through parliament.
- 'New and improved' -
"When the Withdrawal Agreement Bill comes before MPs, it will represent a new,
bold offer to MPs across the House of Commons, with an improved package of
measures that I believe can win new support," May wrote.
"I will not be simply asking MPs to think again. Instead I will ask them to look
at a new and improved deal with fresh pairs of eyes -- and to give it their
support."
The bill is expected to include new measures on workers' rights, future customs
arrangements with the EU, and on the use of technology to avoid the need for
border controls between the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland, an EU
member state and the UK's only land neighbor.It will not, however, seek to
re-open the withdrawal agreement, which Brussels repeatedly insisted could not
be re-negotiated, despite many MPs voting it down due to concerns about its
so-called "backstop" clauses on Northern Ireland.
- 'Huge betrayal' -
May said that in six weeks of Brexit compromise talks with the Labor main
opposition -- which collapsed on Friday -- common ground had been found on
rights and protections for workers and the environment, and on security.
She said the government now had a much clearer understanding of what it would
take to get a deal through. May's cabinet is due to consider the changes during
the week, and whether holding votes in parliament before June 3 to test support
for possible Brexit options would be worthwhile. Labor leader Jeremy Corbyn said
his party was still on course to vote against the bill. "Nothing I've heard
leads me to believe it's fundamentally any different to the previous bill that's
been put forward, so as of now we're not supporting it," he told BBC television.
Brexit Secretary Steve Barclay said the alternatives to the deal were not
leaving the EU, which he labelled a "huge betrayal" to the democratic system, or
a no-deal Brexit. "If parliament won't back a deal then it needs to confront
that reality," he told Sky News television.
- May's poll gloom -
May's gambit comes ahead of the European Parliament elections, to be held in
Britain on Thursday. The opinion polls make dire reading for the Conservatives,
with the newly-formed Brexit Party forecast to win the most seats, ratcheting up
the pressure on May. The latest survey out Sunday put euroskeptic figurehead
Nigel Farage's single-issue party way ahead on 34 percent, with Labour on 20
percent, the pro-EU Liberal Democrats on 15 percent and the Conservatives on 11
percent.
Furthermore, the poll said the Brexit Party had overtaken the Conservatives in
general election voting intentions too, with Labour leading on 29 percent,
Farage's party on 24 percent and the Conservatives on 22 percent. Opinium
Research conducted an online survey of 2,004 British adults between Tuesday and
Thursday for The Observer newspaper.
Arab League Urges German Parliament to Reverse Anti-BDS
Motion
The Arab League called Sunday on the German parliament to rescind a resolution
that condemned a boycott movement against Israel as "anti-semitic". The call by
the pan-Arab bloc comes after the Bundestag passed a motion on Friday against
the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, warning that its actions
were reminiscent of the Nazis' campaign against Jews. BDS, founded in 2005,
describes itself as a Palestinian-led movement, which calls for the boycott of
Israeli goods, services and culture as a means of pressuring the Jewish state to
end its occupation of Palestinian territories. The Arab League's assistant
secretary-general for Palestinian affairs Saeed Abu Ali said in a statement the
Bundestag's motion against BDS is "regrettable... unjustified... (and) biased"
in favor of Israel. He urged Germany's parliament to "reverse this erroneous
step and support the Palestinian people's right for liberation." The non-binding
resolution said the BDS movement's "Don't Buy" stickers on Israeli products
revive memories of the Nazis' slogan 'Don't buy from Jews', and other graffiti
on shop facades and windows. The Bundestag also pledged to reject any financial
support for the boycott movement, and to prevent BDS and its partners holding
events on its premises. The multi-party motion was backed by Chancellor Angela
Merkel's center-right CDU-CSU bloc, the Social Democratic Party, the liberal FDP
and the Greens.
Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on May 19-20/19
Pope calls for humble and free journalism
that serves truth and goodness
Vatican News/NNA/May 19/2019
Pope Francis is encouraging a humble and free journalism that does not indulge
in selling the “rotten food of misinformation” but rather offers the healthy
bread of truth and goodness.
“I therefore urge you to work according to truth and justice, so that
communication is truly an instrument for building, not for destroying; for
meeting, not for clashing; for dialoguing, not for monologizing; for orienting,
not for disorienting; for understanding, not for misunderstanding; for walking
in peace, not for sowing hatred; for giving a voice to those who have no voice,
not for being a megaphone to those who shout louder,” the Pope told some 400
journalists of the Foreign Press Association of Italy on Saturday. Pope Francis
expressed his and the Church’s esteem for their precious work, saying it
“contributes to the search for the truth, and only the truth makes us free.”
Humility and truth
Underscoring humility as the fundamental element of their profession, the
Argentine Pope said that the search for truth entails many difficulties and much
humility.
The presumption of already knowing everything, he said, blocks the search for
truth. An article, a tweet or a live report, he said, can do good but also evil
to others and sometimes to entire communities if one is not careful and
scrupulous.
Noting that certain "screaming” headlines can create a false representation of
reality, he urged journalists to resist the temptation to publish news that has
not been sufficiently verified.
Instead, he said, the humble journalist tries to know the facts correctly and
completely before telling and commenting on them. Such a journalism does not
feed "the excess of slogans that, instead of setting the thought in motion,
cancel it out".
Language that hurts
The Pope lamented the use of violent and derogatory language that hurts and
sometimes destroys people. In a time of too many hostile words, in which saying
bad things about others has become a habit for many, along with that of
classifying people, we must always remember that each person has his or her
intangible dignity, which can never be taken away. At a time when many people
are spreading fake news, “humility prevents you from selling the rotten food of
misinformation and invites you to offer the good bread of truth.”
On the side of victims
Emphasizing that “freedom of the press and of expression is an important
indicator of the state of health of a country,” the Pope shared the pain of
journalists killed while carrying out their work with courage and dedication to
report on what many people face during wars and the dramatic situations. He
said, “We need journalists who are on the side of the victims…, of those who are
persecuted, on the side of those who are excluded, discarded, discriminated
against.” Journalists, he said, are needed to recall the many forgotten
situations of suffering and wars, such as those of the Rohingya and the Yazidi.
He thanked them for helping the world not forget the lives that are suffocated
even before they are born; those that are just born that are extinguished by
hunger, hardship, lack of care, wars; the lives of child soldiers and the lives
of children violated.
He called on reporters to help the world not to forget those persecuted and
discriminated against for their faith or their ethnicity and the victims of
violence and trafficking in human beings. He said those forced to leave their
homes because of disasters, wars, terrorism, hunger and thirst, are not numbers,
but a face, a story and a desire for happiness. “There is a submerged ocean of
goodness that deserves to be known and that gives strength to our hope,” Pope
said, noting that women journalists are particularly sensitive to such stories
of life. At the end of his talk, Pope Francis gifted the journalists a copy each
of a book entitled, “Communicare il Bene” (Communicating the Good), containing
his talks to various groups of journalists and his messages for World
Communications Days.
Burkina Faso: The New Land of Islamic Jihad
and Christian Slaughter
ريموند إبراهيم/معهد كايتستون: بوركينو فاسو الإفريقية هي أرض الجهاد الإسلامي
الجديدة وذبح المسيحيين
Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/May 19/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/75033/%d8%b1%d9%8a%d9%85%d9%88%d9%86%d8%af-%d8%a5%d8%a8%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%87%d9%8a%d9%85-%d9%85%d8%b9%d9%87%d8%af-%d9%83%d8%a7%d9%8a%d8%aa%d8%b3%d8%aa%d9%88%d9%86-%d8%a8%d9%88%d8%b1%d9%83%d9%8a%d9%86%d9%88/
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/14243/burkina-faso-jihad-terrorism
"The assailants asked the Christians to convert to Islam, but the pastor and the
others refused. They ordered them to gather under a tree and took their Bibles
and mobile phones. Then they called them, one after the other, behind the church
building where they shot them dead." — Local Christian, reported by World Watch
Monitor, May 2, 2019.
"Much of the Islamic anger in Burkina Faso has to do with the teaching of
so-called Western thoughts and ideals. Besides churches, schools are also a
favorite target of the militants, who are pushing to make the country an Islamic
state and impose Sharia Law... Of 2,869 schools in Burkina Faso, 1,111 have been
closed in the last three years as a direct result of Islamic extremist
violence." — James Murphy, The New American, May 16, 2019.
As with other African Islamic terror groups, the motivating ideology fueling the
terrorists of Burkina Faso is distinctly Islamic and jihadi in nature. For
example, after eight Muslims were arrested for their role in terrorist attacks
that killed 14, their prosecutor said, "they all carried on their foreheads or
had white bands on which were written in Arabic the following expression —
translated as — 'there is no god but Allah and Muhammad is His Messenger.'" —
Africa News, July 3, 2018.
When five assailants opened fire on the French embassy in Ouagadougou, Burkina
Last Sunday, May 12, in the small West African nation of Burkina Faso, as many
as 30 armed Islamic terrorists stormed a Catholic church, slaughtered at least
six Christian worshippers — including the officiating priest — then burned the
church to the ground.
Ousmane Zongo, the mayor of Dablo, where the attack occurred, recalled the
incident: "Towards 9:00am, during mass, armed individuals burst into the
Catholic Church... They started firing as the congregation tried to flee....
They burned down the church, then shops and a small restaurant before going to
the health centre where they searched the premises and set fire to the head
nurse's vehicle.... The city is filled with panic. People are holed up at home.
Shops and stores are closed. It's practically a ghost town."
Discussing the situation in the country — which is 60% Muslim, 23% Christian,
and 17% animist or other — the BBC reports that "Jihadist violence has flared in
Burkina Faso since 2016.... Fighters affiliated to al-Qaeda and the Islamic
State group as well as the local Ansarul Islam [Champions of Islam] have been
active in the region."
Sadly, while a total of 12 Islamic terror attacks were registered in 2016,
nearly 160 were reported in just the first five months of 2019.
Last Sunday's assault is, in fact, the third church attack in only five weeks.
On Sunday, April 28, in Silgadji, Islamic terrorists stormed a Protestant church
near the end of the service and killed six Christian worshippers, including the
pastor, 80-year-old Pierre Oult, and his two sons. According to a local
Christian:
"The assailants asked the Christians to convert to Islam, but the pastor and the
others refused. They ordered them to gather under a tree and took their Bibles
and mobile phones. Then they called them, one after the other, behind the church
building where they shot them dead."
On April 5, Islamic gunmen entered another Catholic church and murdered four
Christians. The same report adds that "the fate of a Catholic priest kidnapped a
month ago remains unclear."
Considering the usual fate in store for Christians kidnapped in Burkina Faso,
optimism is not warranted. For example, in February, Muslim terrorists abducted
and murdered Antonio Cesar Fernandez, a 72-year-old Christian who had served as
a missionary in Africa since 1982. Others — including Kirk Woodman, a Canadian —
were also kidnapped and later found slaughtered.
The Islamic terrorists operating in Burkina Faso seem to be similar to other
African jihadi groups, such as Nigeria's Boko Haram and Somalia's Al Shabaab.
Like them, when not terrorizing churches and slaughtering Christians, they
target anything else that might be associated with the West. According to one
report:
"Much of the Islamic anger in Burkina Faso has to do with the teaching of
so-called Western thoughts and ideals. Besides churches, schools are also a
favorite target of the militants, who are pushing to make the country an Islamic
state and impose Sharia Law... Of 2,869 schools in Burkina Faso, 1,111 have been
closed in the last three years as a direct result of Islamic extremist
violence."
"A lot of schools have been torched," elaborated one head teacher whose own
school was set ablaze in the town of Foubé.
The jihadis have also targeted a hotel (20 killed) and a restaurant (18 killed)
popular with Western people.
As with other African Islamic terror groups, the motivating ideology fueling the
terrorists of Burkina Faso is distinctly Islamic and jihadi in nature. For
example, after eight Muslims were arrested for their role in terrorist attacks
that killed 14, their prosecutor said, "they all carried on their foreheads or
had white bands on which were written in Arabic the following expression —
translated as — 'there is no god but Allah and Muhammad is His Messenger.'"
Similarly, when they opened fire on the French embassy in Ouagadougou, the five
assailants were heard to cry the jihad's ancient war cry, "Allahu Akbar" ("Allah
is the greatest.").
Needless to say, such clear indicators of motive have not caused the
establishment to revise its narrative. When interviewed on last Sunday's church
carnage, Sten Hagberg, a Swedish professor of anthropology at Uppsala
University, offered the usual fare: The attack, he said, "has, to my mind, much
more to do with politics and economics than religion."
The situation in Burkina Faso is a reminder that, if groups like the Islamic
State are on the wane in Iraq and Syria, the jihad continues to spread like
wildfire in more obscure and forgotten nations around the world, and to consume
countless nameless and faceless innocents.
*Raymond Ibrahim, author of the new book, Sword and Scimitar, Fourteen Centuries
of War between Islam and the West, is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the
Gatestone Institute and a Judith Rosen Friedman Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Theresa May's Exit Won’t End Tories' Brexit Nightmare
Therese Raphael/Bloomberg/May 19/2019
This time it's for real. Theresa May didn't exactly say when she would leave 10
Downing Street, but on Thursday she promised to name her exit date in early
June.
The question is what difference changing leader will make for the Conservative
party. After a potentially messy leadership contest (one is already underway),
the party will likely rally behind a new chief – only to find that the old
problems are still with it.
When you consider May's ability to defy political gravity, it's tempting to
wonder if she means it. She has survived an election disaster, a no-confidence
vote by her MPs, historic parliamentary defeats, a long list of resignations,
open revolt from cabinet ministers, and an attempt to change the party rules
just so she could be pushed out a few months early.
She previously promised to leave before the next election and then after her
Brexit deal won approval from parliament; now she will step down regardless.
It was always possible she would wriggle out of her earlier vaguely worded
pledges. But the pressure to give a firm commitment was becoming irresistible.
The 1922 Committee of Conservative MPs that presides over leadership selection
looked poised to change the rules this time to allow a second confidence vote
within a year if May refused to go. Her closest government allies, and former
advisers, were publicly pressing her to call it quits. An extraordinary meeting
of senior Conservative activists from around the country on June 15 is expected
to vote to remove her; though non-binding, it would be a humiliating gesture.
Her actual departure date depends on how long it will take the Tories to settle
on a new leader (a few weeks would seem the minimum given that the party
membership is likely to vote on two candidates selected by Tory MPs). Still,
Britain will almost certainly have a new Conservative leader, and prime
minister, this summer.
The timing for the leadership battle could not be more awkward. Next week, the
Conservatives must endure the torture of a European Parliamentary election they
never wanted, swore to avoid, and in which they will almost certainly be
trounced by Nigel Farage's Brexit Party.
After that humiliation, another: May has promised to bring her Brexit plan back
to parliament for a fourth vote. Her hope is that the European elections will
focus minds on getting Brexit over the line. That looks unlikely. If, as Nigel
Farage is fond of saying in his stump speeches, the definition of insanity is
doing the same thing over and over for the same result, what would four failed
votes say?
Then, Donald Trump is coming for a state visit in early June; a Brexit-supporting
president who has reigned defiant will face a lame duck prime minister who
failed to deliver it. She will probably have to endure his praise for Boris
Johnson, a leadership contender whom Trump admires, criticism over Britain's
decision to parlay with China’s Huawei, and no doubt other indignities.
What will the Conservative Party get in return for dumping yet another leader
over Europe? Catharsis, perhaps. The only thing that members seem to agree on at
this point is that May should go. There will be hope that her successor can
forge a new Brexit policy, or at least unite disparate factions over some souped-up
version of the one that has been rejected.
That seems wishful thinking. Changing leader won’t change the parliamentary
arithmetic. Talks with the opposition Labour party to broker a compromise deal
have ended without agreement. Britain's legislature hasn’t been able to agree on
any other way forward. Neither has the Tory party itself. A large number of its
supporters fiercely desire a no-deal Brexit, something parliament has legislated
to avoid and another part of the party regards as lunacy. Even so, as I wrote
earlier this week, that outcome looks increasingly possible.
Replacing May doesn't change the fact that there will be no trade deal with
Europe of any kind without an agreement that keeps the Irish border open. It
won't suddenly make the European Union allow the UK to choose which of the four
single-market freedoms it wishes to have and at what price.
When Britain's current extension expires on Oct. 31, the choice will still be
what it is today: pass a deal that looks a lot like the terms of divorce May
negotiated, leave without a deal (most likely requiring a new vote) or decide
not to quit at all. Of course, the EU could decide to keep extending, but how
would that make a Brexit-supporting party leader look?
One hears over and over from May's detractors that she didn't really believe in
leaving the EU since she herself voted to remain. By choosing a true believer
for a leader, the obstacles to Brexit will melt away. That will quickly prove
unfounded. May's departure may be for real. But reality can look a lot harsher
closer up.
Sfeir’s Departure and the Strong Wall of Nationalism
Hazem Saghieh/Asharq Al-Awsat/May 19/2019
A week ago, former Maronite Patriarch Cardinal Nasrallah Boutros Sfeir passed
away. Social media sites and the remaining newspapers were full of sincere grief
and lamentation. A great sense of loss has affected the March 14 environment,
which has been shaken by years of defeats and a number of setbacks.
The Cardinal deserves the honor he has received based on his stance on national
issues. He sponsored, in partnership with Walid Jumblatt, the “reconciliation of
the mountain”, before backing the "Qornet Shehwan gathering". These events in
2000 and 2001, in a sense, have paved the way for the birth of the March 14
forces following the 2005 assassination of Rafik Hariri.
In addition, Sfeir did not visit Damascus during its hegemony over Lebanon. Even
his last political statement insisted that Hezbollah’s arms were illegal and
unacceptable, but were forcibly imposed by the status quo.
It is no exaggeration to say that he was one of the most prominent fathers of
the second Lebanese independence, which led to the withdrawal of the Syrian
military and security forces from Lebanon.
However, it was noted that some of those who participated in Sfeir’s tribute
were advocates of social, cultural, and sexual freedoms, hostility to any
authority, and rejected any restriction on the freedom of doubt and any
interference of religious institutions in public life. The holders of this
position have not registered any reservation dictated by their beliefs. In fact,
Sfeir, as a prominent cleric, did not share these values, nor was he required to
do so.
They, of course, do not tolerate conservative values and are not required to do
so. If we add to the freedoms the issue of Syrian refugees, it is doubtful that
the late Cardinal had the same sensitivities expressed by critics of racism. He
was, till the very end, very attentive to sectarian balances in his capacity as
a spiritual leader of a sect.
These words do not involve a value judgment. It is the designation of two
stances that are very difficult to converge. Reservation and understanding
should not be ignored in their artificial conformity. Yes, there is a wide
intersection in the national question, but beyond that, the issue is different.
Many countries have seen the bias of senior clerics towards national questions.
We find this, for example, in countries like Ireland or Poland, whose church has
sponsored its people’s revolt against the Communist and Soviet regimes. However,
those clergymen, were in definition, against divorce and abortion. Their
position with regards to women’s freedom and rights is often worse than that of
the communist regime. Thus, with those clerics, it is necessary to mix support
with criticism, that is, to adopt a color of critical support.
This section of Lebanese has done the same with political leaders who do not
necessarily share their values and convictions, such as Rafik Hariri, Ghassan
and Gebran Tueni, and before them Kamal Jumblatt and Bashir Gemayel: maximizing
support and reducing criticism.
When wars of identity are raging, it becomes difficult to be completely and
homogeneously aligned with values: these wars develop in us what brings together
and perpetuates our cohesion against the other side, which seeks to perpetuate
its own cohesion facing “us”. The search for fathers becomes urgent.
We have already witnessed, on a broader scale, similar cases in which an
emotional event, such as the death of a leader, is compounded by bitterness and
defeat that fall on his supporters: after the 1967 war, for example, the radical
left began insulting Jamal Abdel Nasser as a “petty bourgeois”, because of his
approval of the Rogers project and UN Resolution 242. Calls for toppling Abdel
Nasser’s regime became a daily activity of this portion of people, who presented
themselves as the "revolutionary" alternative to Nasserism. But when Abdel
Nasser died in September 1970, Al-Hurriya magazine - the most prominent
representative of this left and the sharpest voice in the Egyptian president’s
satire - came out with a famous cover: Nasser, the “reservoir of Arab dignity.”
The worst form of the search for the “protective father” is seen at some
pro-Hezbollah progressive figures. They are trying to suggest that the party
shares their feminist views and those related to cultural and sexual freedoms,
as well as their own rejection of racism and anti-Semitism; while Hezbollah, on
the other hand, is exclusively led by male clerics, disseminates anti-Semitic
literature in its areas of control, and claims nothing but the opposite of what
it tries to portray.
The transition from absolute support to critical support, here and there, is
useful to all and beneficial to the issues they are supposed to embrace. It
brings us to a higher level of politics, may carve small scales in the wall of
rigid nationalism, and make us gradually favor values over preferences.