LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
November 03/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For today
Our enemies are doomed! They 
have robbed and betrayed, although no one has robbed them or betrayed them. But 
their time to rob and betray will end, and they themselves will become victims 
of robbery and treachery.
Isaiah 33/01-24/ 
A Prayer for Help
Our enemies are doomed! They have robbed and betrayed, although no one has 
robbed them or betrayed them. But their time to rob and betray will end, and 
they themselves will become victims of robbery and treachery. Lord, have mercy 
on us. We have put our hope in you. Protect us day by day and save us in times 
of trouble.  When you fight for us, nations run away from the noise of 
battle. 4 Their belongings are pounced upon and taken as loot. How great the 
Lord is! He rules over everything. He will fill Jerusalem with justice and 
integrity  and give stability to the nation. He always protects his people 
and gives them wisdom and knowledge. Their greatest treasure is their reverence 
for the Lord.The brave are calling for help. The ambassadors who tried to bring 
about peace are crying bitterly.  The highways are so dangerous that no one 
travels on them. Treaties are broken and agreements are violated. No one is 
respected any more. 9 The land lies idle and deserted. The forests of Lebanon 
have withered, the fertile valley of Sharon is like a desert, and in Bashan and 
on Mount Carmel the leaves are falling from the trees.
The Lord Warns His Enemies
The Lord says to the nations, “Now I will act. I will show how powerful I am.  
You make worthless plans and everything you do is useless. My spirit is like a 
fire that will destroy you. You will crumble like rocks burned to make lime, 
like thorns burned to ashes. Let everyone near and far hear what I have done and 
acknowledge my power.”The sinful people of Zion are trembling with fright. They 
say, “God's judgment is like a fire that burns forever. Can any of us survive a 
fire like that?”  You can survive if you say and do what is right. Don't 
use your power to cheat the poor and don't accept bribes. Don't join with those 
who plan to commit murder or to do other evil things. 16 Then you will be safe; 
you will be as secure as if in a strong fortress. You will have food to eat and 
water to drink.
The Glorious Future
Once again you will see a king ruling in splendor over a land that stretches in 
all directions. Your old fears of foreign tax collectors and spies will be only 
a memory. You will no longer see any arrogant foreigners who speak a language 
that you can't understand.  Look at Zion, the city where we celebrate our 
religious festivals. Look at Jerusalem! What a safe place it will be to live in! 
It will be like a tent that is never moved, whose pegs are never pulled up and 
whose ropes never break. The Lord will show us his glory. We will live beside 
broad rivers and streams, but hostile ships will not sail on them. All the 
rigging on those ships is useless; the sails cannot be spread! We will seize all 
the wealth of enemy armies, and there will be so much that even the lame can get 
a share. The Lord himself will be our king; he will rule over us and protect us.  
No one who lives in our land will ever again complain of being sick, and all 
sins will be forgiven.
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese 
Related News published on November 02-03/2019
Western Powers Call for Speedy Formation of Lebanese Govt. of Technocrats
Lebanon's Banks See No ‘Extraordinary Movement’ of Money on Reopening
Lebanon: Protesters Pressure Political Parties to Speed up Cabinet Formation
Report: PM Could Be Named Tuesday, Stakes High for 14-Member Cabinet
Sfeir Says Banks See No Unusual Movement of Funds after Protests
Fitch: Changing Lebanon's Dollar Peg Would Be Painful, But Benefits 
Police Arrest Man for Making Threats to Bomb Bank
Protesters Rally near Baabda Palace, Several Hurt in Sidon Scuffle
Lebanon president seeks to solve ‘complications’ before new PM consultations
President Michel Aoun has not yet set a date to hold a formal consultations to 
Name A New PM
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on 
November 02-03/2019
Turkey to Send Captured ISIS Fighters to Home Countries
6 Civilians Killed in Russian Airstrike in Idlib
Foreign Ministers of Mini-Group on Syria Welcome Constitutional Committee 
Meeting
Protesters block roads to Iraqi port, demand end to foreign meddling
Iraqi security forces kill one, wound 91 protesters
ISIS affiliate in Egypt’s Sinai swears allegiance to new ISIS leader
Thirteen killed, 30 injured in explosion in Syrian border town: Reports
Amid Protests, Authorities Issue Warrants to Arrest, Summon 60 Officials in Iraq
Iraqi Protesters, Security Forces Clash in Baghdad
Ennahda Nominates Ghannouchi to Head the Next Tunisian Government
Israeli General Says Gaza Development Boosts ‘Terror’
Likud Accuses Gantz of Agreeing on a ‘Govt with Arabs’
Hamdok to Discuss Terror List with Congress, US Administration
Canada: Statement on International Day to End Impunity for Crimes Against 
Journalists
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous 
sources published on November 02-03/2019
Thabet Thabet Is Canadian Lebanese Patriot 
Held Hostage In Occupied Lebanon/Elias Bejjani/November 02/2019
While waiting for the next crisis or next war, is regretting being born in 
Lebanon./Roger Bejjani/Face Book/November 02/2019
The demographic analysis of the October popular uprise/Roger Bejjani/Face 
Book/November 02/2019
Lebanese protesters plan rally for ‘salvation’ government/Nagia Houssari/Arab 
News/2019
Protesters in Iraq and Lebanon are shunning Iran's influence/The 
National/November 02/2019
With Lebanon making fragile progress, now is the wrong time to pull US 
assistance/Jeffrey Feltman/brookings/November 02/2019
White House Freezes Military Aid to Lebanon, Against Wishes of Congress, State 
Dept. and Pentagon/Edward Wong, Vivian Yee and Michael Crowley/The New York 
Times/November 02/2019
Lebanon's government has fallen: but will anything change?/The National/November 
02/2019
From Iraq to Lebanon, Iran's expansionist project is under siege/Raghida Dergham/The 
National/November 02/2019
Why the key to Lebanon’s future may lie in its past/Dania Koleilat Khatib/Arab 
News/November 02/2019
Lebanese with special needs revolt/Maysaa Ajjan/Annahar/November 02/2019
Perils of a new East-West rift/Andrew 
Hammond/Arab News/November 02/2019
Flagship investment forum paves the way for Vision 2030/Basil M.K. Al-Ghalayini 
/Arab News/November 02/2019
World leaders ignore these protests at their peril/Yossi Mekelberg/Arab 
News/November 02/2019
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News 
published 
on November 02-03/2019
Thabet Thabet Is Canadian Lebanese Patriot 
Held Hostage In Occupied Lebanon
الحرية للمخطوف في لبنان الكندي اللبناني تابت تابت
Elias Bejjani/November 02/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/80128/elias-bejjani-thabet-thabet-is-canadian-lebanese-patriot-held-hostage-in-occupied-lebanon/
Mr. Tahbet Thabet is a Canadian – Lebanese citizen and a freedom peaceful 
advocate and activist.
Mr. Thabet was arbitrarily and unlawfully was arrested at the Lebanese Beirut 
airport few days ago while he was trying to enter Lebanon in a bid to visit his 
parents.
Up till today no one know where he is held, or why he was arrested and according 
to what charges. Based on its oppressive record the Lebanese authorities might 
fabricate a case of treason against him, as they do with many of the Lebanese 
Diaspora freedom advocates and activists.
We learned from unconfirmed resources that the Lebanese military authorities are 
not allowing him to see a lawyer or even meet with any visitor.
We call on the Canadian government and the Canadian embassy in Lebanon to follow 
up on Mr. Thabet’s case who is actually a hostage, no more no less.
We strongly believe that the Canadian Government, and the Canadian embassy in 
Lebanon both by law carry a legal and ethical obligation to ensure by all means 
that Mr. Thabet is not tortured and that he is set free and returned safely to 
Canada to be with his family.
Yes, Mr. Thabet has been very active on all the social media facilities in 
advocating for a free and independent Lebanon, and at the same criticizing and 
opposing the puppet subservient Lebanese authorises and officials. But he did 
not break any Canadian law and simply he was practising his own holy right in 
voicing his free and patriotic opinion in a very peaceful mean.
Meanwhile, we call on each and every free and patriotic Lebanese in the Iranian 
occupied Lebanon, as well in all Diaspora countries to consider Thabet’s case as 
their own. Yes as their own because each free and patriotic Diaspora Lebanese 
might confront the same hostage fate and be taken hostage when ever he or she 
decides to visit their home land at any time.
Once again Mr. Thabet is a genuine patriot and an active advocate for a free 
Lebanon.
It is worth mentioning that Mr. Thabet and before his immigrating to Canada has 
served in the Lebanese army as a Lebanese soldier.
We, call also on all the human rights’ organization, in Lebanon and world-wide 
to adopt Mr. Thabet’s case and work on freeing him as soon as possible.
While waiting for the next crisis or next war, is 
regretting being born in Lebanon.
Roger Bejjani/Face Book/November 02/2019
47 days after I turned 18, the war started in Lebanon between on the one hand 
the paramilitary Lebanese groups predominantly Christian and on the other hand 
the PLO/other paramilitary groups predominantly Muslim. The latter insisted on 
burning Lebanon for the service of the Palestinian and pan-Arab cause.
44 years later, and after going through all sorts of hell during those 44 years, 
we are @ the mercy of a terrorist organization that names Presidents, PMs, 
defines the foreign policy through few stooges and represents a permanent clear 
and present danger that threatens the livelihood of what’s left of this 
conglomerate of retarded and retrograded sects.
Not a single day of normal life in this country that I learned to hate.
The same shallow people who considered the young men and women of 1975 as 
gangsters (ze3ran), did applaud the election of Bachir, avoid today talking 
about Hezbollah and have lived recently the illusion of having a “revolution” 
against “corruption”.
The insurmontable problem is that there is nothing that can be done. Nothing. I 
don’t know who’s more reliable: the demonstrators or the governors.
Even splitting the country in 2 is impossible. Not on sectarian base but rather 
between secular peaceful haven and a resistance black hell hole is practically 
not doable.
The only concrete thing that is left for me at age 62, while waiting for the 
next crisis or next war, is regretting being born in Lebanon.
Our only chance is either:
(a) a successful uprise of the Iranian people against the Mollahs. Difficult 
task with the revolutionary guard and the Bassijs.
(b) a war that would wipe out Iranian and/or Hezbollah capabilities.
Peaceful demonstrations are cute and lovely but will not lead to the Lebanon we 
want, even if corruption is wiped out and all proven guilty of such are jailed. 
The country will never witness growth and stability and a secular peaceful state 
will remain a dream with Hezbollah.
The demographic analysis of the October popular uprise 
Roger Bejjani/Face Book/November 02/2019
The demographic analysis of the October popular uprise can be defined as 
follows:
1. A core group of communist hard liners, responsible of igniting the streets ( 
and responsible in killing 2 Syrian poor workers in their sleep the first night 
and destroying properties). Those do not represent even 1% of the total crowd.
2. Opportunistic party: Sab3a that tried to ride the wave. Probably another 1%.
3. Intellectuals (the best chunk of the protestors) with free minds and great 
ideas. Less than 1%.
4. Some uncommissioned parties’ members or parties’ sympathizers. Maybe 2%.
5. University students who want to finish with the sectarian corrupt anti- state 
building system (5%).
6. A certain bourgeoisie that firmly and truly believe that we need to change 
the way this country is governed (10%).
7. And 75% of the needy (genuinely) but quite ignorant people.
Whereas the non participating crowd were:
Amal, Hezbollah, PSP, PSNS, Aounist, Mustaqbal and most of the LF and Kataeb 
crowds (partisans and sympathizers).
The majority of Shi’a, Sunni, Druze and Christians did not participate in the 
protests.
Western Powers Call for Speedy Formation of Lebanese Govt. 
of Technocrats
Beirut - Khalil Fleihan/Saturday, 2 November, 2019 
Major powers have displayed great interest in the popular protests that swept 
Lebanon since October 17 and which led to Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s 
resignation on Tuesday. The foreign ministers of the United States, France, 
Germany and Italy have called on Lebanon to quickly form a new government of 
technocrats, free of any political or party representatives that were present in 
the resigned cabinet, said western ambassadors, according to a diplomatic 
source. President Michel Aoun and other political parties and movements have 
accepted this demand, the western diplomat told Asharq Al-Awsat. Despite 
Hariri’s resignation, the people took to the streets on Wednesday to demand Aoun 
to accept his resignation and criticize him for failing to call for binding 
parliamentary consultations required for naming the next prime minister. The 
ambassadors and protesters were not convinced by some justifications that were 
leaked by sources from the Baabda presidential palace to explain the delay. 
Consultations must normally kick off the day after a premier steps down. Baabda 
sources had said Aoun did not set the date for consultations because he was 
surprised by Hariri’s decision to quit and which he was not informed of. They 
also said that several heads of parliamentary blocs were traveling abroad. They 
also cited the numerous roads that were blocked by protesters and which hampered 
the travel of lawmakers, which forced the delay of the consultations. The 
ambassadors hoped that the process of political change would kick off in Lebanon 
without delay. The sources warned that the people should not be underestimated 
and that they would be ready to return to the streets in droves to press their 
demands, in spite of the rain and riot police that have recently prevented them 
from blocking roads.
Lebanon's Banks See No ‘Extraordinary Movement’ of Money on 
Reopening
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 2 November, 2019
Lebanon’s banks did not see “any extraordinary movement” of money on Friday or 
Saturday, the first two days they reopened to the public after a two-week 
closure due to nationwide protests, the head of the banking association said on 
Saturday. “The reaction was almost the way we expected and anticipated. However, 
people were asking a lot of questions and we provided as much assurances as 
possible,” Salim Sfeir, head of the Association of Banks in Lebanon, told 
Reuters by email. Central bank Governor Riad Salameh said the reopening of banks 
“in general ... did not cause any disturbance at any bank”. “This is important 
given the long period of shut down and the events our country went through,” he 
told Reuters in written comments.Analysts and bankers had cited widespread 
concern about a rush by depositors to withdraw their savings or transfer them 
abroad when the banks reopened. The nationwide protests that erupted on October 
17  tipped Lebanon into political turmoil as it grapples with the worst 
economic crisis since the 1975-90 civil war. The uprisings led Saad Hariri to 
quit as prime minister this week. “We are trying to counter rumors and avoid 
panic in order to prevent any unnecessary and unjustified withdrawals,” Sfeir 
said. When banks opened their doors on Friday, no formal capital controls were 
imposed, but customers encountered new curbs on transfers abroad and withdrawals 
from US dollar accounts, bankers and customers said. “No formal capital controls 
are considered,” Salameh said on Saturday, adding that such a move would require 
a vote in parliament. “The banks are professionally handling [the situation] and 
the central bank is backing them,” he said. A banking source said branch 
operations so far had been “better than expected”.Amid rain, protest activity 
was low on Saturday, but there were calls on social media for gatherings later 
in the day.
Lebanon: Protesters Pressure Political Parties to Speed up 
Cabinet Formation
Beirut - Nazeer Rida/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 2 November, 2019
Sporadic protests and ongoing street tension across Lebanon have put additional 
pressure on political parties to initiate contacts aimed at forming a “salvation 
government” capable of listening to the people’s demands following the 
resignation of Prime Minister Saad Hariri Sources told Asharq Al-Awsat on Friday 
that most parties were pushing for the formation of a smaller cabinet but have 
not yet agreed on the Sunni figure who will head it. The sources said all the 
parties agree that the next cabinet should be different from the one headed by 
Hariri, who resigned 13 days after mass protests gripped the country.
After clinching their first victory in bringing the government down, protesters 
are now asking for swift measures to form the new cabinet, resorting to road 
closures despite the Lebanese army’s repeated attempts to open major highways. 
Clashes with the army in Sidon left one person injured when protesters blocked 
the road near the southern city’s central bank branch. In Beirut, some 
protesters sat on the ground in Mar Elias street, while others stormed the 
headquarters of the Association of Banks in Lebanon in the city center to 
protest new banking policies. A group of protesters also organized a 
demonstration near the Presidential Palace in Baabda, giving political parties a 
two-week deadline to form a new government. The ongoing protests pushed several 
parties to announce their vision for the next cabinet. Lebanese Forces chief 
Samir Geagea called for a “salvation government,” formed of independents and 
experts. Hezbollah Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah said that the new 
government should be formed as soon as possible and should listen to the demands 
of the people. In his televised speech, Nasrallah stressed that the cabinet 
should also work to regain the people's confidence and be transparent.
Report: PM Could Be Named Tuesday, Stakes High for 
14-Member Cabinet
Naharnet/November 02/2019 
Caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri will likely be named to form a new 
government amid reports saying the size of the government could be reduced to 14 
ministers from the original 30, al-Liwaa daily reported on Saturday. An unnamed 
source told the daily that the ongoing consultations between political parties 
have reportedly “agreed” to reassign Hariri to form a new government, and that 
the decree could be issued on “Tuesday.” They said that discussions weighed the 
possibility of lining-up a “14-member cabinet, half of them technocrats and half 
politicians.”The source expected the “designation journey to take time due to 
the current circumstances and pressures.”
Sfeir Says Banks See No Unusual Movement of Funds after Protests
Naharnet/November 02/2019 
Chairman of the Association of Banks in Lebanon Salim Sfeir assured on Saturday 
that Lebanese banks have not seen "any unusual or extraordinary movements" of 
funds on Friday and Saturday after a two-week closure due to protests across the 
country, media reports said. Sfeir said the banks have reopened to the public 
and the reaction of people was almost “expected and anticipated.” He added that 
banks were keen on providing assurances to the people. Lebanon banks reopened 
for the first time in two weeks Friday as the country began to return to normal 
following mass demonstrations for radical political change. There has been 
widespread concern that the reopening of the banks will be accompanied by a mass 
withdrawal of deposits and transfer of funds abroad. In addition to fear of a 
devaluation of the Lebanese pound but the central bank said the currency was 
still pegged to the greenback at 1,507 pounds to the dollar.
Fitch: Changing Lebanon's Dollar Peg Would Be Painful, But 
Benefits 
Reuters/November 02/2019 
Changing Lebanon’s currency peg to the dollar would be a painful move that would 
see the country’s pound weaken sharply though it could also reap long-term 
benefits, ratings agency Fitch’s Director, Sovereigns Toby Iles said. The 
22-year-old currency peg has come under increasing scrutiny as the country 
grapples with its worst economic crisis in decades amid widespread protests that 
toppled the coalition government of Saad al-Hariri. “If you were to change the 
peg, it amounts to a repricing of the Lebanese economy ...and given the 
imbalances that one sees in Lebanon, such as the current account deficit, it 
would result in a much weaker currency,” Iles told Reuters. “The near-term costs 
of coming off the peg would be painful, even if an adjustment could bring 
long-term benefits.” A number of countries have unshackled currencies in recent 
years to allow economies to adjust to large current account deficits and other 
imbalances. The central bank has repeatedly ruled out a break in the peg which 
fixes the pound at 1,507.5 to the dollar. But with black market exchange rates 
indicating a discount of more than 20% in recent days, observers say a 
double-digit devaluation has become increasingly likely.
The possible imposition of capital controls as banks reopened on Friday 
following a two-week closure posed a “big question”, said Iles. “Even if it 
could help stem outflows in the near term, Lebanon needs inflows, and failure to 
get the inflows would mean a huge readjustment of the economy in a very short 
period of time, and a massive recession,” he said. “And how would that play into 
political dynamics?” The central bank promised not to introduce controls when 
banks re-opened. While no formal curbs were imposed, banks told customers they 
could not transfer funds abroad unless for specific reasons such as education, 
health or family support. Customers also faced limits on U.S. dollar account 
withdrawals. With 75% of deposits denominated in dollars, possible large 
withdrawals could hit FX reserves as banks face a big mismatch in FX 
liabilities, or short-term deposits, and FX assets, or dollars parked at the 
central bank which - apart from reserve requirements - had longer maturities, 
said Iles. “Would it allow banks to access their U.S. dollar deposits at the 
central bank ahead of maturity to make dollars available? If it did that, then 
any bank run on U.S. dollar deposits would feed through on lower FX reserves, 
and that would be kind of a self-reinforcing cycle.”
Police Arrest Man for Making Threats to Bomb Bank
Naharnet/November 02/2019 
Police on Saturday arrested a man for making threats to bomb a bank in the 
southern city of Tyre. Early on Saturday, the security forces cordoned off MEAB 
bank at the Jumblat roundabout in the city after finding a paper with threats to 
bomb the bank, the National News Agency reported.
Security Forces ran investigations and were able to arrest the culprit. The 
suspect, Lebanese, admitted his motives were on “personal backgrounds.”
Protesters Rally near Baabda Palace, Several Hurt in Sidon 
Scuffle
Naharnet/November 02/2019 
Around 30 protesters on Friday staged a symbolic rally near the presidential 
palace in Baabda, demanding “the speeding up of the (binding) parliamentary 
consultations” necessary to form a new government. “Consultations Now!” read the 
banners that they carried. In a statement recited at the sit-in, the protesters 
said the new government should comprise competent figures from outside the 
political class, warning that the cabinet formation process should not take more 
than two weeks. Another group of protesters meanwhile rallied outside al-Helou 
barracks in Corniche al-Mazraa to demand the release of an activist who was held 
in the morning in connection with the storming of the building of the 
Association of Banks in Lebanon in downtown Beirut. All others activists held 
over the move had been released earlier in the day. The protesters later left 
the area after being told that the activist will be released later in the day. 
They had blocked the road outside the barracks in both directions. In the 
southern city of Sidon, five protesters and two soldiers were meanwhile injured 
as the army intervened to reopen the blocked Elia roundabout, MTV said. 
Lebanon’s banks reopened for the first time in two weeks Friday as the country 
began to return to normal following mass demonstrations for radical political 
change. The unprecedented popular push to remove a political class seen as 
corrupt, incompetent and sectarian, had kept the country on lockdown since 
October 17. On Tuesday, Prime Minister Saad Hariri submitted his government's 
resignation in response to pressure from the street, despite warnings from some 
of his senior coalition partners against such a move. Hizbullah leader Sayyed 
Hassan Nasrallah on Friday said that his party did not back the government's 
resignation.
Instead, it would have preferred quick reforms combatting corruption, Nasrallah 
said in a televised speech.
He called for a swift replacement, warning against the chaos caused by a void in 
government, and urged dialogue between parliament and representatives of the 
protest movement. President Michel Aoun on Thursday said ministers in the next 
government should be picked for their skills, not their political affiliation, 
appearing to endorse demonstrators' demands for a government of technocrats. 
Aoun has asked Hariri's government to stay on in a caretaker capacity until a 
new one can be formed, but Lebanon has entered a phase of acute political 
uncertainty, even by its own dysfunctional standards. With a power-sharing 
system organized along communal and sectarian lines, the allocation of 
ministerial posts can typically take months, a delay Lebanon's donors say the 
debt-saddled country can ill afford.
Lebanon president seeks to solve ‘complications’ before new 
PM consultations
AFP, Tripoli, Lebanon/Sunday, 3 November 2019
Thousands of Lebanese flocked together in Tripoli on Saturday, an AFP reporter 
said, to keep a protest movement alive in a northern city dubbed “the bride of 
the revolution,” Despite its reputation for conservatism, impoverished Tripoli 
has emerged as a festive nerve center of anti-graft demonstrations across 
Lebanon since October 17. The movement has lost momentum in the capital since 
the government resigned this week, but in the Sunni-majority city of Tripoli 
late Saturday it was still going strong. In the main square, protesters waved 
Lebanese flags and held aloft mobile phones as torches, before bellowing out the 
national anthem in unison, the reporter said. “Everyone means everyone,” one 
poster read, reiterating a common slogan calling for all political leaders from 
across the sectarian spectrum to step down. Many people had journeyed from other 
parts of the country to join in. Ragheed Chehayeb, 38, said he had driven in 
from the central town of Aley. “I came to Tripoli to stand by their side because 
they’re the only ones continuing the revolution,” he said. Leila Fadl, 50, said 
she had travelled from the Shiite town of Nabatiyeh south of Beirut to Tripoli 
to show her support. “We feel the demands are the same, the suffering is the 
same,” she said. In Tripoli, more than half live at or below the poverty line 
and 26 percent suffer extreme poverty, a UN study found in 2015. On Tuesday 
embattled Prime Minister Saad Hariri announced his cabinet would step down. But 
it is still unclear what a new government would look like and if it would meet 
protesters’ demands that it include independent experts. Roads and banks have 
reopened after nearly two weeks of nationwide paralysis. Fahmy Karame, 49, 
called for a “rapid solution to the economic crisis.” “We’re waiting for a 
government of technocrats,” he said. In the Lebanese capital, hundreds protested 
on Saturday evening after a day of rain. “Down with the rule of the central 
bank,” they shouted at the top of their lungs, clapping their hands near the 
institution’s headquarters.Economic growth in Lebanon has stalled in recent 
years in the wake of repeated political crises, compounded by an eight-year 
civil war in neighboring Syria.
President Michel Aoun has not yet set a date to hold a formal consultations to 
Name A New PM
Reuters, Beirut/Saturday, 2 November 2019
Lebanon’s president said on Saturday he will soon set a date for formal 
consultations with lawmakers to pick a new prime minister following Saad 
al-Hariri’s resignation this week, but is working to resolve some complications 
first. President Michel Aoun is obliged to hold a formal period of consultations 
with members of parliament and designate the figure with the most support as the 
new prime minister who will be tasked with forming a government. Aoun has not 
yet set a date for those consultations to begin, but said he had been making the 
“necessary calls” to lay the ground for them to start.
“The challenges in front of the future government require a rapid but not hasty 
approach to the designation process, because rushing in such cases can have 
harmful consequences,” the presidency media office said in a statement. The 
statement said Aoun needed to resolve some complications but did not elaborate. 
Prime Minister Hariri resigned on Tuesday after nationwide anti-government 
protests. The protests have been less intense since he resigned, but 
demonstrators are still on the streets, and one of their main demands is for the 
rapid formation of a new government led by technocrats to carry out badly needed 
economic reforms. The nationwide protests that erupted on October 17 tipped 
Lebanon into political turmoil as it grapples with the worst economic crisis 
since the 1975-90 civil war. The uprisings caused banks to close for two weeks 
on security concerns. Analysts and bankers had cited widespread concern about a 
rush by depositors to withdraw their savings or transfer them abroad when the 
banks reopened. No formal capital controls were imposed when banks opened their 
doors on Friday, but customers encountered new curbs on transfers abroad and 
withdrawals from US dollar accounts, bankers and customers said. The head of 
Lebanon’s banking association said banks did not see “any extraordinary 
movement” of money on Friday or Saturday. Central bank Governor Riad Salameh 
said the reopening of banks “in general ... did not cause any disturbance at any 
bank”.
Lebanese protesters plan rally for ‘salvation’ government
Nagia Houssari/Arab News/2019
Future Movement warns ‘coexistence between Hariri and Bassil no longer possible’
BEIRUT: Protesters in Lebanon are planning mass demonstrations on Sunday in Riad 
Al-Solh and Martyrs’ Square in the heart of Beirut to further their demands for 
political reform in the country. Zeina Al-Helou, a public affairs analyst, told 
Arab News that “the call to bring down the government has been met, but there 
are other demands we want to achieve.” Protesters are now focused on forming a 
government from outside the ruling political groups, she said. “We did not 
topple Saad Hariri personally, but we toppled a government that includes 
Hezbollah, the Free Patriotic Movement and other political components, because 
their political practice over the years brought us to the situation we are in,” 
she added. Protests across the country eased on Saturday, the 17th day of 
unrest. Meanwhile, supporters of the Amal Movement staged a counter-protest near 
the home of Parliamentary Speaker Nabih Berri following a rumor on social media 
that protesters would rally there on Saturday to call for his resignation. Al-Helou 
said that although the social media rumor was false, “protesters’ enthusiasm has 
not cooled.”
“We are counting on people to join the central rally on Sunday. The protests are 
continuing,” she said.
“Protesters are in one valley and the political forces in power are in another,” 
she said.
Al-Helou said that the Lebanese authorities “are all betting on procrastination 
and negotiating their shares. They do not know that the people have something 
else in mind. “It is not our goal to bring in a government that follows the same 
approach and style. This is not what is required. People are more aware than the 
authorities and their demand is a salvation government with specific powers to 
reform the judiciary, adopt an electoral law, hold early elections and set laws 
to prevent collapse. It is not enough to have a technocrat government; it must 
understand and feel the people’s pain. “We will spare no effort to use the 
street as a means of pressure,” she added. Lebanon’s presidency has yet to issue 
a schedule of parliamentary consultations to appoint a replacement for Hariri, 
who resigned four days ago.
The protesters are in one valley and the political forces in power are in 
another. The Presidential Press Office said on Saturday that President Michel 
Aoun has been making the necessary contacts, “but the current situation in the 
country requires a calm handling.”
“Expediting consultations in such cases can have harmful repercussions,” the 
presidency said. Meanwhile, a leading figure in the Future Movement, Mustafa 
Alloush, said that communication “is no longer possible between Prime Minister 
Hariri and the head of the Free Patriotic Movement, Gibran Bassil, and the past 
experience between the two men made the coexistence between them intolerable 
after the dictates became boundless.”
“Bassil is a person who wants everything in the state. Coexistence with him is 
impossible,” Alloush said. “The sovereign government demanded by Hezbollah 
leader Hassan Nasrallah is a government that maintains the same balance of the 
outgoing government, and Hezbollah refuses to change the current structure,” 
Alloush said. “The structure of the current system is no longer useful today and 
the opposition must be a real force of pressure. We refuse to be in a government 
ruled by Gibran Bassil.”Supporters of the Free Patriotic Movement are due to 
hold a protest near the presidential palace on Sunday.
Protesters in Iraq and Lebanon are shunning Iran's 
influence
The National/November 02/2019
Tehran is no longer as powerful as it used to be, it is scrambling to keep its 
stranglehold on the two countries as the popularity of its proxies wanes
This past week has seen unprecedented and seismic upheaval across the region as 
Lebanese and Iraqi citizens of all sects have mobilised in their respective 
countries to demand better living conditions, the fall of a corrupt and 
sectarian ruling elite, and an end to foreign interference in their nations’ 
affairs.
In Iraq, protesters have been gathering for the past month to call for an 
overhaul of deeply entrenched flaws in the ruling class, yet their legitimate 
demands have been met with bullets and teargas by authorities and Iran-backed 
militias. The backlash has not stopped people from demonstrating and on Friday, 
Iraq saw its largest protests since the fall of Saddam Hussein, with thousands 
gathering in central Baghdad. At least 250 people have been killed in the past 
few months. In Lebanon, the protest movement that has seen more than one million 
pouring onto the street have yet to dissipate, even after prime minister Saad 
Hariri and his government stepped down last week.
Faced with an impasse, Iraqi president Barham Salih accepted prime minister Adel 
Abdul Mahdi’s resignation on condition it did not create a "constitutional 
vacuum". But just as Mr Hariri’s resignation did not resolve Lebanon’s woes, Mr 
Abdul Mahdi stepping down will not bring an end to Iraq’s crises. An overhaul of 
the sectarian-based political systems in Iraq and Lebanon is needed to weaken 
Iran’s grip on the two nations, which has contributed to the rise of clientelism 
and deep internal divisions that have led to today’s stalemate. But Tehran will 
not give up its scramble for power that easily.
On Wednesday, Qassem Soleimani, the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards 
Corps, went to Baghdad in a bid to stop Mr Abdul Mahdi’s resignation. This was 
not his first visit to Iraq since the uprising began on October 1. The day after 
protests erupted, Mr Soleimani headed a meeting with top Iraqi security 
officials in Baghdad, eclipsing the prime minister’s authority. The day after 
his visit, more than 100 people were killed at the hands of unidentified snipers 
and members of Iran-backed militias. The issue of militias is one that has 
brought troubles to Iraq for years, and today are under the banner of the 
Popular Mobilisation Forces (PMF). Although they were meant to be integrated 
into the Iraqi military after helping defeat ISIS and supposedly answerable to 
the prime minister, the 40 factions that make up the PMF have varying political 
allegiances and often act without accountability or authority. In September, the 
PMF even announced it would be launching its own airforce, separate to Iraqi 
defence forces. Tehran is anxious to keep wielding influence via such proxies – 
no matter the cost to Iraqi lives or sovereignty.
In Iraq and Lebanon, citizens are waking up to the reality that sectarianism 
only divides nations, giving foreign powers such as Iran a chance to interfere
Although Mr Soleimani’s presence in Baghdad signals Iran’s meddling is as brazen 
as ever, the fact the IRGC chief has felt the need to visit Iraq several times 
since the start of protests shows that Tehran is no longer as powerful as it 
used to be. It is scrambling to keep its stranglehold on the country as the 
popularity of its proxies wanes across the region. There is no better proof of 
this decline than the fact that Hezbollah’s elusive leader Hassan Nasrallah, who 
seldom makes public statements, has appeared in three televised speeches in two 
weeks since the start of Lebanon’s protests. Iran and its proxies are clutching 
at straws as their power is seriously challenged.
In both Iraq and Lebanon, citizens are waking up to the reality that 
sectarianism only divides nations, giving foreign powers such as Iran a chance 
to interfere with their sovereignty. Iran had sought to portray itself as a 
defender of Shiites, cashing in on sectarian divisions to finance armed proxies 
that terrorise ordinary civilians. But Iraq’s protests first broke out in the 
country’s Shiite-majority south, a sign that people in the community are tired 
of being manipulated by Tehran - a regime that claims to protect them but has 
not held back from spilling Iraqi blood in Karbala and Baghdad.
But protesters refuse to be intimidated. Despite the soaring death toll, they 
are taking to the streets of Iraq in even larger numbers and have attacked 
Iran’s proxy militias directly. Last week, they marched on the headquarters of 
Asaib Ahl Al Haq, a PMF militia, in Nasiriyah and were met with gunfire. In the 
southern city of Diwaniyah, 12 demonstrators were killed when the headquarters 
of the Badr Organisation, another PMF unit, was set alight.
The fact demonstrators are ready to give their lives to fight back against 
militias shows the extent of their rejection of these forces. These proxies have 
effectively stolen their right to self-determination and prevented a country 
with a wealth of oil, history and religious sites of significance for Sunnis and 
Shiites alike, from flourishing and providing its citizens with a decent living. 
Iraqis want a sovereign nation, one that prioritises their rights and needs 
above those of any other country. After decades of hardships, it is high time 
for Iraq’s leaders to heed these demands and stop the bloodshed.
With Lebanon making fragile progress, now is the wrong time to pull US 
assistance
جيفري فيلتمن ينتقد الإدارة الأميركية لتجميدها مساعدة للبنان بقيمة 105 مليون 
دولار في ظل وضع لبنان الحالي العش
Jeffrey Feltman/brookings/November 02/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/80119/%d8%ac%d9%8a%d9%81%d8%b1%d9%8a-%d9%81%d9%8a%d9%84%d8%aa%d9%85%d9%86-%d9%8a%d9%86%d8%aa%d9%82%d8%af-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%a5%d8%af%d8%a7%d8%b1%d8%a9-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%a3%d9%85%d9%8a%d8%b1%d9%83%d9%8a%d8%a9/
Lebanon’s protesters show that the once-unthinkable may now be 
plausible. The proxies of Iran and Syria in Lebanon, after years of solidarity, 
show tentative signs of diverging. With even Shia protesters on the street, and 
with Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah’s calls to disperse unheeded, 
Hezbollah’s façade of invincibility is showing cracks. The Lebanese army and 
security forces have responded with admirable courage, restraint, and 
independence in defying calls by Hezbollah leaders and private pleas from the 
presidential palace to clear the streets. In contrast with unprecedented and 
overt criticism of Hezbollah, public support for the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) 
is soaring.
These trends, while nascent and fragile, are promising and very much in U.S. 
interests. Yet rather than reinforcing them, the White House, in an 
astonishingly ill-timed decision, suspended $105 million in U.S. security 
assistance to the very institutions that have defied Hezbollah’s demands to end 
the protests. The Trump administration’s move gives both Damascus and Tehran the 
gift of a unifying message to the Lebanese about America’s unreliability as a 
partner. It also undercuts the argument that the LAF — with improving 
capabilities thanks primarily to U.S. support — provides better and more 
professional security for Lebanon than Hezbollah’s rockets, which only create 
dangers rather than provide genuine protection. (Those who argue that the LAF is 
mere cover for, or an enabler of, Hezbollah underestimate the increasing 
annoyance of LAF officers, who know how much the LAF’s capacities have grown 
thanks to the United States, with Hezbollah’s arrogance and constant belittling 
of the army. LAF pride and capabilities, both linked to years of sustained U.S. 
support, endanger Hezbollah’s “resistance” narrative.)
These trends, while nascent and fragile, are promising and very much in U.S. 
interests. Yet rather than reinforcing them, the White House [issued] an 
astonishingly ill-timed decision.
For years, Iranian and Syrian interests and tactics in Lebanon have largely 
coincided: They seek to discredit and divide the so-called “March 14” movement 
that emerged against Damascus and Tehran in the aftermath of the murder of 
former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri in 2005; “resist” U.S. and French efforts to 
bolster’s Lebanon’s sovereignty and independence; and use Lebanon to threaten 
Israel.
Meanwhile, Hezbollah has expanded its influence in, and in some cases control 
over, Lebanon’s domestic institutions via its 2006 memorandum of understanding 
with the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), a Christian party. The FPM gave 
Hezbollah, an Iranian-supported Shia terrorist group, the veneer of national, 
cross-sectarian political legitimacy it previously lacked. Hezbollah returned 
the favor by backing FPM founder Michel Aoun for president three years ago. 
Since 2006, Aoun and his son-in-law, Foreign Minister Gebran Bassile, have been 
reliable fronts for Hezbollah’s and thus Iran’s interests in Lebanon. Until 
recently, Aoun and Bassile probably saw no contradiction between their alliance 
with Hezbollah/Iran and Damascus’ interests in Lebanon.
The current demonstrations have the potential to shake the foundations of both 
the Iranian-Syrian solidarity in Lebanon and the Hezbollah-FPM relationship. 
Nasrallah has used speeches filled with innuendos and thugs on motorcycles in 
what so far have been unsuccessful attempts to undercut the demonstrations and 
prevent the Saad Hariri government from resigning. By contrast, some of Syria’s 
traditional allies in Lebanon, including Bashar al-Assad’s childhood friend 
Sleiman Franjieh, have remained conspicuously silent or even sent relatives to 
join the demonstrations. The notorious former security chief Jamil as-Sayyid, 
one of the enforcers of Syria’s pre-2005 control over Lebanon, has issued 
statements sympathizing with the anti-corruption and/or anti-establishment 
demands of the protesters.
Moreover, Lebanese political activists detected significance in the absence of a 
bilateral meeting between Aoun or Bassile and the Syrian delegation on the 
margins of this year’s U.N. General Assembly. In another reported example of how 
Aoun and Bassile are thought to be viewed in Damascus, no high-level Syrian 
official attended Aoun’s U.N. General Assembly address. The value of Hezbollah’s 
FPM-provided Christian veneer has declined precipitously, with Bassile now a 
favorite target of the protesters as a symbol of everything that ails Lebanon.
Iran and Syria may be starting to eye each other with suspicion in Lebanon; it 
would not be the first time that regional actors used Lebanon as the theater for 
their competition. Two Lebanese politicians speculated about a connection to 
what is happening in the Alawite regions of Syria, where Bashar al-Assad may 
view Iranian influence and Shia proselytizing as a threat to his secular, 
Alawite base. Assad, who would have considered Hezbollah a junior partner during 
the pre-2005 Syrian occupation of Lebanon, may also resent the current strength 
and presence of Hezbollah in Syria: Who’s the junior partner now? How much 
control can Assad exert over Hezbollah inside Syria? Given that Assad still 
needs Iran’s and Hezbollah’s help in Syria, he can, according to this theory, 
use Lebanon to send a message.
One can imagine that, if Michel Aoun’s ill health led to a presidential vacancy 
now, any Syrian-Iranian divergence would surface more visibly, with Hezbollah 
(and Iran) backing Bassile and Damascus wanting to restore its primacy in 
Lebanon via someone like Franjieh. The presumed candidacy of Lebanese Army 
Commander Joseph Aoun, with his enhanced credibility for independence, would be 
more aligned with the sentiments of the street. But the Lebanese president is 
elected by parliament, not the people. While the current Lebanese parliament 
reflects the very establishment that the protesters wish to topple, one hopes 
that the members of parliament will think about protesters’ views if they are 
put in a position as to whether to choose between Damascus, Tehran, or their own 
Lebanese constituents.
As inspiring as the current demonstrations are, it is hard to be optimistic when 
no leaders with broad cross-sectarian credibility are emerging to constructively 
channel the energy of the streets. The worrying economic and financial situation 
adds additional strains. Still, the potential for positive change exists in a 
way that a few weeks ago was unimaginable. We should not want to make it easier 
for the pro-Syrian and pro-Iranian forces to overcome any differences and 
prevail in the end over the protesters.
There’s an argument for the United States maintaining a low profile, to undercut 
Nasrallah’s predictable arguments about a U.S. conspiracy, and a guiding 
principle should always be “do no harm” when trends emerge that are clearly in 
U.S. interests. Instead, the White House suspension of security assistance at 
this of all times, gives Damascus’ and Tehran’s Lebanese allies a message around 
which to re-unite: that the United States is an unreliable partner and that the 
LAF will not get needed assistance, meaning Hezbollah’s arsenal remains 
essential to Lebanon’s security. American officials who are seeking to promote 
U.S. interests in Lebanon face a strange set of bedfellows — Iran, Syria, 
Hezbollah, and apparently the White House — and face the difficult task of 
pushing back against all four.
*Jeffrey Feltman/John C. Whitehead Visiting Fellow in International Diplomacy - 
Foreign Policy
https://www.brookings.edu/blog/order-from-chaos/2019/11/01/with-lebanon-making-fragile-progress-now-is-the-wrong-time-to-pull-u-s-assistance/
White House Freezes Military Aid to Lebanon, Against Wishes 
of Congress, State Dept. and Pentagon
نيويورك تيمز: البيت 
الأبيض يجمد مساعدة للبنان بقيمة 105 مليون دولار متخطياً رغبات الكونغرس ووزارة 
الخارجية ووزارة الدفاع
Edward Wong, Vivian Yee and Michael 
Crowley/The New York Times/November 02/2019
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The indefinite hold halts a $105 million package that the State Department and 
Congress had approved. Analysts say the winners could be Iran, Russia, the 
Islamic State and Al Qaeda.
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration has frozen all military aid to the 
Lebanese army, including a package worth $105 million that both the State 
Department and Congress approved in September, congressional officials said 
Friday.
The halt to American funding of the Lebanese Armed Forces, an important 
multisectarian group, comes at a critical time for Lebanon, as officials are 
grappling with the country’s largest street protests since its independence in 
1943 and a change in leadership forced by the demonstrations. A freeze on the 
assistance could give Iran and Russia an opening to exert greater influence over 
the Lebanese military, analysts say, and perhaps even allow the Islamic State 
and Al Qaeda to gain greater footholds in the country.
The delivery of military aid, especially in cases that involve White House 
intervention, has become a delicate and divisive issue in Washington. 
Congressional committees are overseeing an impeachment inquiry into whether 
President Trump held up $391 million in military aid to Ukraine in an effort to 
coerce Ukrainian leaders to do political favors for him. Though the president 
has denied it, senior administration officials have testified that there was 
indeed a quid pro quo, and the top American diplomat in Ukraine said he sent a 
cable telling Secretary of State Mike Pompeo that it was “folly” to withhold the 
aid.
The Pentagon and State Department pressed for the aid for the Lebanese Armed 
Forces, congressional aides said, and officials in both departments say the 
military organization is an important bulwark against extremist elements and 
armed factions of Hezbollah, the Iran-backed Shiite group that has political and 
military wings.
But officials on the national security staff at the White House recently asked 
the Office of Management and Budget to freeze all aid to the Lebanese military, 
two congressional officials said Friday. Officials at the State Department and 
Pentagon only learned of the halt in recent days. It is unclear if anyone has 
told the Lebanese government of the freeze.
The State Department referred questions about the freeze to the budget office, 
which did not have immediate comment, and the Defense Department referred 
questions to the White House, where officials declined to comment.
On Friday afternoon, Nathan A. Sales, the State Department’s top 
counterterrorism official, said, when asked about the freeze, that the Lebanese 
military was an important counterweight to Hezbollah, though he did not address 
the aid freeze itself.
“We see Hezbollah as a terrorist organization,” he said, “and that is why we 
have worked over the years, over many years, to strengthen the institutions of 
the Lebanese state, such as the Lebanese Armed Forces, to ensure that there is 
no felt need in Lebanon to rely on any purported services that Lebanon might 
receive from Hezbollah. That has been our policy and that remains our policy.”
Congressional aides got confirmation of the freeze on Thursday, and Reuters 
reported it. Congressional officials were surprised, since State Department 
officials notified Congress on Sept. 5 that the United States was moving ahead 
with a $105 million package of aid to the Lebanese military. The package is 
known as foreign military financing, which is major aid that is usually managed 
by the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, part of the Defense Department.
Mr. Trump has broadly criticized how the United States distributes foreign aid, 
and some conservative Middle East policy analysts have argued that aid to the 
Lebanese military could end up helping Hezbollah.
One congressional official said it was troubling that the White House had 
ordered the action against the recommendations of both the State and Defense 
Departments. The official said that the United States closely monitors how the 
aid is used, and that any fear that the money could fall into the hands of 
Hezbollah is a myth.
In December, Jim Mattis, who was defense secretary at the time, described the 
Lebanese Army Forces as “legitimate” and a partner of the American military. 
“They are helping to keep the situation stable right now,” he said, speaking of 
a flare-up in tensions between Hezbollah and Israel, two longtime enemies.
Other top American officials have given similar assessments. David Schenker, the 
State Department’s new assistant secretary of near eastern affairs, argued in an 
August 2017 paper that, although the Lebanese military had been “colluding” with 
Hezbollah, it had helped stabilize the country and repel militant Sunni 
influence. Earlier that year, General Joseph L. Votel, then the leader of United 
States Central Command, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that the 
Lebanese army had “demonstrated tremendous return on investment in recent 
years,” and that Washington should consider increasing its support.
Analysts said Friday that the United States was acting against its own goals by 
withdrawing the aid, especially at a time when Lebanese protesters are also 
questioning why the United States has stood by Lebanon’s government, which they 
oppose. Severing ties with the Lebanese army could create an opening for other 
sources of money, notably Iran or Russia, whose power in neighboring Syria has 
increased since Mr. Trump withdrew American troops last month from the 
Syria-Turkey border region.
“We still have U.S. interests in the region, and losing our toehold there — no 
matter how slim it may be now — will prevent us, in the future, from steering 
things in a better way for us and for Lebanon,” said David Daoud, a Hezbollah 
analyst at United Against Nuclear Iran, which advocates tougher United States 
policies on Iran.
“Does that mean we should be O.K. with what the L.A.F. is doing now?” he added. 
“Absolutely not. There should be more accountability, there should be a little 
bit more tough love, but to cut off the aid would be, I think, counterproductive 
for our interests.”
In recent years, though, some prominent conservatives in Washington — 
particularly those who view contesting Iranian influence as a central goal — 
have called for decreasing military aid to Lebanon’s army. In 2017, Elliott 
Abrams, a Middle East policy official under President George W. Bush, testified 
before the House of Representatives that Lebanon’s army “is increasingly 
intertwined with Hezbollah.”
“If we have tried to make the L.A.F. a counterbalance to Hezbollah, we have 
failed,” said Mr. Abrams, who has since become Mr. Trump’s special 
representative for Venezuela. “Perhaps things would be even worse today without 
our aid and our efforts, but that is a proposition that should be examined and 
tested.”
In June, several Republicans in Congress, led by Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, 
introduced a measure called the Countering Hezbollah in Lebanon’s Military Act, 
which would withhold 20 percent of American military assistance to the country 
unless the president can certify that the Lebanese military is taking “necessary 
steps to end Hezbollah and Iran’s influence over the L.A.F.,” as Mr. Cruz put it 
in a June statement.
Top Israeli officials share that alarm about the influence, but are also anxious 
that aid cuts to a key Lebanese government institution could exacerbate 
Lebanon’s growing political instability. Israel has, however, asked the United 
States and European nations to condition aid to Lebanon on Hezbollah’s missile 
factory shutdown.
The Lebanese Armed Forces is one of the few institutions in the country that 
enjoys broad popularity across all religious and political divides, in part 
because it employs people from all of Lebanon’s 18 officially recognized 
religious groups — including Shiite Muslims, who make up Hezbollah’s base.
Many Lebanese have relatives or friends in the army. Despite sporadic scuffles 
between security forces and protesters during Lebanon’s ongoing anti-government 
demonstrations, support for the army has not wavered. Protesters have chanted 
pro-army slogans, waved the army’s flag alongside the Lebanese flag and even 
handed roses to soldiers at roadblocks.
The United States provided more than $2.29 billion in military assistance to 
Lebanon between 2005 and 2019. The American ambassador to Lebanon, Elizabeth H. 
Richard, is a strong supporter of security aid to the army, viewing it as one 
way the United States can create good will. As recently as August, she 
congratulated the Lebanese army while viewing a military exercise, saying, “We 
are firm believers in this army and I hope every Lebanese believes in this army, 
as well.”
Like the Lebanese government and the Lebanese themselves, the army appears to 
treat Hezbollah, which has representation in parliament and in ministries, as a 
fact of life. It occasionally coordinates with Hezbollah, as it did in August, 
when Hezbollah claimed it had shot down two Israeli drones south of Beirut. 
After doing a preliminary investigation, Hezbollah turned the information over 
to the army.
Edward Wong and Michael Crowley reported from Washington, and Vivian Yee from 
Beirut. Thomas Gibbons-Neff contributed reporting from Kabul, Afghanistan. 
Isabel Kershner contributed reporting from Jerusalem.
Lebanon’s Prime Minister, Saad Hariri, Steps Down in Face of ProtestsOct. 29, 
2019
Edward Wong has been a diplomatic and international correspondent for The Times 
for more than 20 years, 13 of those in Iraq and China. He received a Livingston 
Award for his Iraq War coverage and was on a team of Pulitzer Prize finalists. 
He has been a Nieman Fellow at Harvard and a Ferris Professor of Journalism at 
Princeton. @ewong
Vivian Yee is an international correspondent covering the Middle East. She is 
based in Beirut. Previously, she wrote about immigration policy and immigrants 
in the United States during the Trump administration and reported on New York 
politics. @VivianHYee
*Michael Crowley is a White House correspondent, covering President Trump’s 
foreign policy. He joined The Times in 2019 from Politico, where he was the 
White House and national security editor, and a foreign affairs correspondent. @michaelcrowley
Lebanon's government has fallen: but will anything change?
The National/November 02/2019
Saad Hariri has resigned, but people on the streets are not rising up against 
one man, they are demanding the fall of an entire system
“We have reached a dead end.” So said a shell-shocked Saad Hariri, standing in 
front of a portrait of his late father Rafic, as he announced the resignation of 
the entire Lebanese government.
As crowds cheered in the street and waved flags, the sombre prime minister 
admitted: “No one is bigger than this country.”
The announcement follows an extraordinary fortnight in Lebanon. For 13 days, 
more than one million Lebanese people have taken to the streets, demanding the 
fall of the government and rising up against sectarian-based politics, 
widespread corruption, unemployment and poor access to basic services. That they 
have achieved their aim in such a short time might give them cause for 
celebration tonight but tomorrow, the sobering thought of what might replace the 
outgoing government will undoubtedly strike home. It is critical that those 
elements who already seek to sow divides among the Lebanese, such as Hezbollah, 
are not able to exploit this power vacuum. This is a precarious moment and it is 
vital whoever is responsible for taking the country forward seeks to establish 
stability and security quickly.
In truth, Mr Hariri was stuck between a rock and a hard place. Blamed for many 
of Lebanon’s failures, the clock was ticking on his time in power - but the fall 
of the government with him was an unexpected consequence of a great swelling of 
discontent over years of incompetence and inefficiency. Mr Hariri tried to quell 
public disquiet by announcing a host of sweeping government reforms eight days 
ago – but it was too little too late. A proposed cabinet shuffle also failed to 
stay the tide of resentment. The powerful Hezbollah and its Free Patriotic 
Movement ally refused to accept a change of leadership that might have 
de-escalated the situation. As a result, more than a million people took to the 
streets at the height of the demonstrations. Given these circumstances, Mr 
Hariri had little choice but to resign.
Now that he has quit, Lebanon is running out of time to find a consensus that 
will end the current crisis. If parliament cannot agree on a new prime minister, 
Mr Hariri might need to remain in power as head of a caretaker government. This 
could be a lengthy process taking years. For instance, before president Michel 
Aoun took up his role, the country was left without a head of state for two 
years. But even if parliament agrees on another prime minister, there is no 
guarantee that protesters will be satisfied with the new nominee.
It is critical that those elements who already seek to sow divides among the 
Lebanese, such as Hezbollah, are not able to exploit this power vacuum
Nor does the government's resignation resolve the country’s woes. People on the 
streets are not rising up against one man, they are demanding the fall of an 
entire system based on corrupt sectarian politics. Mr Hariri was simply the face 
of this system, and he was not even one of its worst offenders. He is, in fact, 
one of the rare political leaders in the country without blood on his hands. 
Many of Lebanon’s top officials today are warlords turned politicians, including 
Mr Aoun and parliamentary speaker Nabih Berri.
However, Mr Hariri’s rise to power is indicative of many of the flaws of 
Lebanon’s political system. He was a businessman for most of his life and only 
became a political figure in 2005 when he took on the leadership of the Future 
Movement after the assassination of his father, who was prime minister at the 
time. He has since been Lebanon’s prime minister twice, leading two unity 
governments. This tradition of political dynasties is one of the causes of 
opprobrium from protesters but Mr Hariri’s case is in no way unique. Mr Aoun’s 
son-in-law Gebran Bassil, who is also foreign minister and leader of the Free 
Patriotic Movement, has been vying for the presidency for years. Meanwhile, 
Druze leader Walid Jumblatt announced two years ago that his son Taymour will be 
his political successor.
His son’s legacy will be one of a plethora of political impasses that propelled 
him into the position of mediator. Lebanon does not have a two-party system. It 
is instead governed by a number of parties, none of which have a majority in 
parliament on their own. The country’s political system relies instead on 
coalitions between these factions and sectarian-based groups to be able to 
function. Despite these difficulties, Mr Hariri often managed to find 
compromises to get political leaders to resolve their differences. One of his 
biggest challenges was Hezbollah’s rising influence in the country, which his 
party has been unable to counter. Backed into a corner, he has led a unity 
government since 2016 in which the terrorist group wielded far too much power 
and left little room for sensible voices to be heard. With him gone, there is a 
chance that Hezbollah will take advantage and attempt to find a pro-Iranian 
replacement for Mr Hariri. This prospect is likely to anger protesters even more 
but the terror group has not shied away from using violence to intimidate those 
who oppose it and has already started targeting protesters. A government in 
which Hezbollah plays an even more powerful role must be avoided at all costs. 
Mr Hariri’s resignation might be a victory for the protest movement but for now, 
it is a cosmetic change only. A great mountain of tasks lies ahead of Lebanon’s 
future leader to put an end to the country’s problems.
From Iraq to Lebanon, Iran's expansionist project is under 
siege
Raghida Dergham/The National/November 02/2019
Tehran's leaders are in a state of panic – but the country has only itself to 
blame for this crisis
Iran’s projects in Iraq, Lebanon, Syria and Yemen are coming under siege to such 
an extent that its leaders are in a state of panic. In Syria, the Iranian 
project has been set back by a Russian-approved US-Turkish deal, effectively 
blocking the strategic causeway Tehran was planning to complete its crescent of 
power, stretching all the way from Tehran to the Mediterranean via Iraq, Syria 
and Lebanon. In Iraq, there is a Shiite backlash against Iran’s excessive 
meddling in Iraq, to the point that protesters are chanting: “Iran get out”, 
despite a violent backlash from the IRGC-backed Popular Mobilisation Forces, who 
have fired live ammunition at protesters in Karbala, the consecrated heartland 
of Shiite religious doctrine.
In Lebanon, fear of Hezbollah has collapsed along with the unity government of 
accord it forms part of and Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah is reduced to 
pointing the finger of blame. In Yemen, Iran’s expansionist project is facing a 
setback as the Saudi-Emirati exit strategy from the war is bearing fruit, giving 
Houthis a new path of belonging to a federalised Yemen, instead of looking 
towards Iran and its attempts at warmongering, with funds dwindling under US 
sanctions.
It is not clear what Iran will do under these circumstances but it faces some 
hard choices, especially if it insists on refusing to adjust and reform the 
regime’s expansionist logic. Perhaps the only thing Iran’s leaders can do now is 
to bet on US President Donald Trump not getting re-elected. This is now a 
distinct possibility. Mr Trump’s mercurial decision-making and disregard for US 
constitutional norms is wearing thin among Americans. However, even if Mr Trump 
is not re-elected, the US military and civilian establishment is pursuing a 
clear Iran policy based on military deterrence and maximum pressure through 
sanctions. This policy, which simultaneously seeks to avoid direct war with 
Iran, will remain in place unless Tehran or one of its proxies attacks US troops 
in the Middle East, triggering a military response, or exits the nuclear 
non-proliferation treaty, triggering an escalation in sanctions. This is a US 
doctrine, however, not Mr Trump’s.
General Kenneth McKenzie Jr, head of US Central Command (Centcom), last week 
addressed a conference held by the National Council for US-Arab relations. He 
said Iran remains a priority, but less so than China and Russia, in US strategic 
planning. He warned against false interpretations regarding the deployment and 
withdrawal of US troops in the Middle East and the Gulf, saying Iran continues 
to be monitored. And he spoke of deterrence “without provocation” as an 
important challenge to US calculations regarding Iran.
This means that the plans of some Iranian leaders attempting to lure the US into 
a military strike against Tehran have failed. Iran has only itself to blame for 
its crisis. Thanks to its regional expansionism, proxy warfare in sovereign 
countries and belligerent policies, it finds itself today besieged and heavily 
sanctioned, along with its extraterritorial militias. The Iranian regime’s logic 
is fundamentally flawed and unsuited to this time of a new, conscious 
generation.
This Generation Z is forging its future in Lebanon, away from Hezbollah’s 
dominion. They have been joined by the millennials, alongside their parents, the 
baby boomers. All have taken to the streets and are standing up to provocation. 
So far, they have thwarted the schemes of the corrupt class, who had, until now, 
been well versed in containing and frustrating such uprisings.
The young generation in Lebanon as well as in Iraq stand for victory against 
fear and blind obedience. They have risen up against corruption in their 
countries and against a political class that foolishly thought their power was 
permission to be greedy and venal. But this generation is also rising up against 
the 40-year-old presumption of the Iranian regime that it can dominate Arab 
youth through sectarianism, intimidation, oppression and Iranian-backed 
militias.
The young generation in Lebanon as well as in Iraq stand for victory against 
fear and blind obedience. They have risen up against corruption in their 
countries and against a political class that foolishly thought their power was 
permission to be greedy and venal
Hezbollah will not disappear tomorrow because of the uprising. Iraq’s Popular 
Mobilisation Forces will not agree to merge wholly with the Iraqi army after 
Iran prevented it from doing so. But these forces have been greatly weakened. 
They are facing the wrath of the same people they assumed would be their 
followers by default. The PMF will pay a heavy price for firing at Iraqi Shiite 
Muslims opposed to the militia’s allegiance to Iran, and for inviting the 
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to help suppress the protests with force. 
Iraq’s revolutionaries are demanding an end to Iranian meddling in Iraqi affairs 
and its neighbour’s domination over its fate.
Lebanon’s revolutionaries, meanwhile, want Hezbollah to stop declaring its 
allegiance to the Iranian regime as its first priority. Theirs is not the 
country of the Iranian regime and never will be because its political structure 
and demographic composition cannot allow such deviation from its civil 
trajectory. The protesters demanded and succeeded in toppling the government of 
accord that Hezbollah had formed with Saad Hariri, the prime minister who 
resigned last week, and Michel Aoun, the president who installed his demagogical 
and provocative son-in-law Gebran Bassil as his viceroy.
Hezbollah might resort to spilling blood if the uprising against corruption and 
the ruling class continues. It might decide that a victorious revolution could 
mean removing it from power and ending its domination of Lebanon as well as its 
central position in the Iranian regional project.
But what would the Lebanese army do if a decision is taken to deploy loyalist 
thugs and turn the arenas of peaceful protests into a battlefront? Will the 
military stay on the fence or will it stand with the people?
So far, army chief General Joseph Aoun is reassured by his forces’ cohesion and 
conduct. There is no fear of the army splitting. Rather, it is Hezbollah’s ranks 
that could split. So far, the army has not begun repressing protests, which 
would be a fateful and costly decision. In this context, Mr Trump’s decision to 
withhold $105 million in military assistance to Lebanon should be seen as a 
warning against making wrong decisions.
The nations concerned for Lebanon are not rushing to rescue it from collapse as 
long as the beleaguered administration remains in power. They want the desired 
change to take place immediately, beginning with the formation of a technocratic 
government, without the usual deals. Mr Hariri’s resignation is the first step, 
but it must not be the only step. All parties poised to rescue Lebanon 
economically are ready to step in, as soon as they received a signal of 
intention to form a technocratic government, enact laws to punish corruption and 
hold new, fair and just elections.
Mr Hariri’s resignation was important because it met a basic demand of the 
revolution. However, it triggered concern in the Sunni community, which is 
worried the political class will settle for his resignation in return for 
guaranteeing his safety and perhaps returning him to head a technocratic 
government.
His stepping down did weaken the Hezbollah-Aoun alliance, a major achievement 
that must be built upon. This is a revolutionary trajectory, not just a one-off, 
and must be seen through to its conclusion.
Why the key to Lebanon’s future may lie in its past
Dania Koleilat Khatib/Arab News/November 02/2019
As popular discontent grows with the current corrupt and sectarian political 
elite in Lebanon, I cannot but think of Fuad Chehab, who was president from 1958 
until 1964. Chehab brought stability to the country and built its institutions. 
He would have been so happy to see the Lebanese reject sectarian leaders and the 
“Fromagistes,” or the cheese eaters, as he used to call corrupt politicians.
Chehab became commander of the Lebanese army in 1945, and twice refused requests 
for his forces to intervene in uprisings against President Bechara El-Khoury. In 
1952, El-Khoury asked him to lead the country in a transitional period leading 
to the election of a new president by the parliament. Chehab did so for four 
days, until Camille Chamoun was elected to succeed El-Khoury.
What is most impressive about Chehab is that he was a military leader who 
rejected military coups at a time when they were the norm elsewhere. In Egypt 
and Iraq, military officers rose up and deposed royal regimes, but Chehab, more 
than any other general, was determined to preserve democracy, the constitution 
and the rule of law. In 1958, with protests again rocking the country, President 
Chamoun called for American help and US Marines landed in Beirut. Following this 
episode of high tension and foreign intervention, Chabab became president. His 
period in office was noted for prosperity, stability and security, which kept 
Lebanon shielded from foreign interference.
Saad Hariri’s resignation as prime minister last week did not prevent people 
from protesting. Some signalled that, as a goodwill gesture before the formation 
of a new government, the protesters should open the roads they had blocked. 
However, the issue is more than a change of government; it is about a change of 
reality, a change of a system that is built on corruption, clientelism and 
sectarianism.
Hariri has said he would be willing to return to office if he could form a 
government of technocrats, but a government of technocrats cannot carry out the 
necessary serious and drastic reforms as long as it is hostage to the corrupt 
political elites — the fromagistes, as Chehab called them. Lebanon’s “hirak,” 
the popular protest movement, has resulted in the emergence of different 
indigenous groups who gathered on regional, occupational and gender bases. They 
are putting forward demands for social and economic change, but their structure 
is very fluid. These small movements need maturity. If they are now put in the 
spotlight, they might clash. It is better to allow them the space to develop and 
to work on the maturity of their local and national agenda, and this is not 
possible when the fromagistes control power. Lebanon not only needs a person to 
take the country into a difficult transition, it also needs to revive the spirit 
of Chehabism. The new Chehabism will bind the different Lebanese across the 
different sects. Only a spirit that is based on the national identity and on 
institution building can take the country forward.
Saad Hariri’s resignation as prime minister last week did not prevent people 
from protesting.
At the end of his period in office, Chehab had a very pessimistic view of 
Lebanon — indeed after only two years he had offered to resign. He believed 
Lebanon was not ready to get over sectarianism. He also predicted that the 
Lebanese would clash with each other. He knew Lebanon was a fertile land for 
foreign interference.
Chebab refused to permit a change in the constitution to allow him to serve a 
second consecutive term as president, and he was succeeded in 1964 by Charles 
Helou. The election of Suleiman Frangieh in 1970 marked the end of the Chehab 
era. He purged Chebab officers, dismantled the security services and made the 
country more vulnerable to foreign intelligence activities. Frangieh lost the 
balance Chehab had created and preserved between Lebanon’s sovereignty and its 
role as a member of the Arab family of nations. Later presidents could not 
restore this balance, nor could they retain the independence of state 
institutions from the different sectarian political parties. Chebab’s biographer 
Nicolas Nassif wrote that the former president burned all his papers; he did not 
want anything he had written to justify his rule, and preferred to leave that 
task for history.
Today’s Lebanese leaders are totally unaware of the metamorphosis the Lebanese 
people are undergoing. They think they still have a chance, when they don’t. 
They cannot see that their narrative is dead. They are making promises; to 
remove secrecy from their bank accounts; to bring to justice those who embezzled 
money; to decrease the fiscal deficit — promises, promises, promises that cannot 
be fulfilled, because to do so would be to expose their own corruption and vile 
sectarianism.
To mark the completion of the first half of his presidency, Michel Aoun made a 
speech last week in which he promised to change Lebanon into a civil state. But 
how can someone who campaigned on a sectarian agenda, and used as a narrative 
“Christian rights” versus the rights of other denominations, work toward a civil 
state? There is a huge disconnect here
Now there are talks about consultations among the different “political parties” 
to create a new government, but these political leaders don’t understand that 
they belong to a bygone era. Their audience is eroding. They no longer have any 
popular legitimacy. Lebanon wants a new national leadership that will build 
institutions and conduct serious economic social and political reforms. Today, 
the Lebanese are mature enough to embrace the spirit of Fuad Chehab and a new 
Chehabism.
*Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib is a specialist in US-Arab relations with a focus on 
lobbying. She holds a PhD in politics from the University of Exeter and is an 
affiliated scholar with the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and 
International Affairs at the American University of Beirut.
Lebanese with special needs revolt
Maysaa Ajjan/Annahar/November 02/2019
BEIRUT: When Faten Merashly decided to take her 17 year old son Mahmoud Hijazi, 
who suffers from autism, to the second day of the protests in Riad El Solh, she 
didn’t know what to expect.
“It was Mahmoud’s idea that we go down and join the protesters,” Merashly told 
Annahar. “One night before he went to bed, he told me that he wanted to join the 
protests the next day.”
After carefully explaining to her son the concept of a protest and a revolution, 
Merashly brought two pieces of cardboard and began writing slogans on them, 
demanding the rights of autistic children to free therapy sessions and to 
inclusive schools, two causes that are dear to her heart.
“As the mother of an autistic child, you quickly learn that people with special 
needs are a forgotten segment of the population,” she told Annahar. “They have 
no rights to any free service- it’s just ink on paper, what they tell you about 
their rights.”
Merashly and her son were able to garner support from most if not all the 
protesters who joined them in their cause and took pictures with Mahmoud. “
I was so proud of Mahmoud for standing up for his rights and for remaining calm 
amidst the noise,” Merashly said. “Everyone was so friendly and understanding 
and compassionate to his case. Moreover, a lot of people who follow my Facebook 
page asked me to be a voice for them as they or a family member also have 
special needs.”
Merashly, who is still participating in protests to this day with her son, was 
not the only one protesting for the rights of people with special needs.
Sylvana Lakkis, President of the Lebanese union of people with physical 
disability, who is herself bound to a wheelchair, was among the many who turned 
up to protest.
“We have released a statement at the union stating that we have the same demands 
as the protesters,” Lakkis told Annahar. “Even though we are marginalized, we 
are still part of this country, and we can see that getting to our rights can 
not happen without repairs and peace.”
Annahar spoke to Ibrahim Abdallah, an activist and a member of the National 
Council on Disability, who explained that many people with special needs 
protested in Tyre, Tripoli, and Downtown Beirut. He also spoke of the history of 
the Lebanese laws on disabilities. 
“In May 2000, the Lebanese Parliament approved a new legislation, Law No. 220, 
which “secured” the basic rights for the disabled, such as the right to 
education, employment, healthcare and nurturing environment,” he said. “But 
effectively, it was only ink on paper.”
“We are now demanding for the Convention on the Rights of Persons with 
Disabilities which was issued by UNICEF in 2006. It was signed but not ratified 
by Lebanese law,” he added.
Abdallah ended his talk by saying that people with special needs can play a 
valuable role in society if their needs are met and if they are given the right 
training. “We are a marginalized group, and we will continue to participate 
actively in protests to ask for our basic human rights that we have been 
deprived of for too long,” he said.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports 
And News published on November 02-03/2019
Turkey to Send Captured ISIS Fighters to Home Countries
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 2 November, 2019
Turkey announced Saturday that it would send captured ISIS members back to their 
home countries, complaining about European inaction on the matter.
“That is not acceptable to us. It’s also irresponsible,” Interior Minister 
Suleyman Soylu said of Europe leaving Turkey to deal with the prisoners alone. 
“We will send the captured ISIS members to their countries,” he told reporters. 
Turkey has captured some escaped ISIS members in northeastern Syria over the 
last month after it launched a military incursion there. Ankara launched its 
offensive against the Kurdish People’s Protection Units following President 
Donald Trump’s abrupt withdrawal of 1,000 US troops from northern Syria in early 
October. The YPG helped the United States defeat ISIS in Syria. Last week, 
Ankara and Moscow agreed to remove the Kurdish fighters to a depth of at least 
30 km south of the border.Under the deal, Turkish and Russian troops in armored 
vehicles held their first joint ground patrols in northeast Syria on Friday.
6 Civilians Killed in Russian Airstrike in Idlib
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 2 November, 2019
A Russian air strike killed on Saturday six civilians including a child in the 
embattled opposition bastion of Idlib in northwestern Syria, the Syrian 
Observatory for Human Rights said. The strike hit the village of Jaballa in the 
south of the Idlib region, taking the lives of all six from the same family, it 
said.
The monitor, which relies on sources inside Syria, says it determines who 
carries out an air strike according to flight patterns, as well as aircraft and 
ammunition involved. Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said it was the 
bloodiest such Russian air raid in two months since Moscow announced a truce for 
the surrounding area on August 31. Since then, eight other civilians have been 
killed in Russian air strikes on different dates in the region, he said. Bashar 
al-Assad's forces launched a devastating military campaign against Idlib in 
April, killing around 1,000 civilians and forcing more than 400,000 people to 
flee their homes.But a ceasefire announced by the regime's major backer Moscow 
has largely held since late August, though the Observatory says skirmishes 
persist.
Foreign Ministers of Mini-Group on Syria Welcome Constitutional Committee 
Meeting
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 2 November, 2019
Foreign ministers of the mini-group on Syria welcomed the opening of the 
meetings of the Syrian Constitutional Committee in Geneva earlier this week. In 
a joint statement on Saturday, the group welcomed the efforts exerted by UN 
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and his special envoy, Geir Pedersen towards 
holding the meeting. It deemed the development a “positive” step that requires a 
great commitment. The mini-group includes the foreign ministers of Saudi Arabia, 
Egypt, France, Germany, Jordan, the UK and the United States. The 150-member 
UN-backed Constitutional Committee is composed of regime and opposition members, 
as well as civil society representative. It is meant to usher in reconciliation 
after more than eight years of war in Syria. It held its inaugural meeting 
Wednesday, a step forward in what the United Nations says will be a long road to 
political rapprochement.
During the meeting, the regime condemned what it called the occupation of its 
land while the opposition demanded justice and peace. A sub-group of 45 is 
charged with drafting a new constitution or revising the 2012 one. “This is an 
historic moment,” Pedersen said, while recognizing that it was not easy for the 
delegations to sit in the same room and the “road ahead will not be easy”. “But 
the fact that you are here sitting together face-to-face ready to start a 
dialogue and negotiations is I believe a powerful sign of hope for Syrians 
everywhere, both inside and outside the country.”
The co-chairs did not shake hands at the end of the 45-minute ceremony.
Protesters block roads to Iraqi port, demand end to foreign 
meddling
Reuters, Baghdad/Sunday, 3 November 2019
Security forces killed a protester and wounded 91 others in Baghdad on Saturday, 
security and medical sources said, as tens of thousands of Iraqis gathered in 
mass anti-government protests in the capital and blocked roads leading to a 
major port. Protesters have been congregating in the capital’s central Tahrir 
Square for weeks, demanding the fall of the political elite in the biggest wave 
of mass demonstrations since the fall of Saddam Hussein. Protests have 
accelerated dramatically in recent days, drawing huge crowds from across 
sectarian and ethnic divides. Clashes have focused on the ramparts to the 
Republic Bridge leading across the Tigris to the heavily fortified Green Zone of 
government buildings, where the protesters say out-of-touch leaders are holed up 
in their walled-off bastion of privilege.
Security forces on Saturday erected concrete walls on one of Baghdad’s main 
streets which leads into Tahrir Square in an attempt to reduce the turnout but a 
spontaneous protest in which crowds surrounded soldiers driving bulldozers 
forced them to take the structures down. “Take it down, take it down,” they 
chanted. The protests, driven by discontent over economic hardship and 
corruption, have broken nearly two years of relative stability in Iraq.
Despite the country’s oil wealth, many live in poverty with limited access to 
clean water, electricity, health care or education. The government of Prime 
Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi, in office for a year, has found no response to the 
protests. Thousands of protesters were blocking all roads leading to Iraq’s main 
Gulf port Umm Qasr near the oil-rich city of Basra, after security forces used 
live rounds and tear gas overnight. Operations at the port, which receives the 
vast bulk of Iraq’s imports of grain, vegetable oils and sugar, have been at a 
complete standstill since Wednesday.
Excessive force 
On Friday, both the teachers’ and lawyers’ unions said they would extend strikes 
they declared last week. Schools had been due to reopen on Sunday after a week 
of cancelled classes. Many see the political class as subservient to one or 
another of Baghdad’s main allies, the United States and Iran, who use Iraq as a 
proxy in a struggle for regional influence. “We don’t want anyone interfering in 
our affairs. It’s our country, our demands are clear,” said protester Ahmed Abu 
Mariam.
The root cause of grievances is the sectarian power-sharing system of governance 
introduced in Iraq after 2003. “We want an end to sectarian power-sharing, jobs 
should not be doled out based on whether you are Sunni or Shi’ite. We want all 
these parties gone and replaced with a presidential system,” said 22-year-old 
law student Abdulrahman Saad who has been camped out in Tahrir Square for nine 
days. Iraq’s official rights watchdog, the Iraqi High Commission for Human 
Rights, said authorities were violating human rights and using excessive force 
against protesters by firing rubber bullets and tear gas canisters, which have 
killed scores after striking them directly in the head and chest.
Iraqi security forces kill one, wound 91 protesters
Reuters, Baghdad/Saturday, 2 November 2019
Security forces killed a protester and wounded 91 others in Baghdad on Saturday, 
security and medical sources said, as thousands of Iraqis continued to gather in 
mass anti-government protests. Tens of thousands have been gathering in the 
capital’s central Tahrir Square this week, demanding the downfall of the 
political elite in the biggest wave of mass demonstrations since the fall of 
Saddam Hussein. Protests have accelerated dramatically in recent days, drawing 
huge crowds from across Iraq’s sectarian and ethnic divides.
They have been comparatively peaceful by day, becoming more violent after dark 
as police use tear gas and rubber bullets to battle self-proclaimed 
“revolutionary” youths. Clashes have focused on the ramparts to the Republic 
Bridge leading across the Tigris to the heavily fortified Green Zone of 
government buildings, where the protesters say out-of-touch leaders are holed up 
in their walled-off bastion of privilege. More than 250 people were killed in 
October, as security forces fired tear gas canisters and rubber bullets directly 
at crowds of protesters, hitting some in the head and chest.
An Iraqi government committee investigating violence from October 1-7 found that 
149 civilians were killed because security forces used excessive force and live 
fire to quell protests, according to its report.
ISIS affiliate in Egypt’s Sinai swears allegiance to new 
ISIS leader
Reuters, Cairo/Saturday, 2 November 2019
Egypt’s ISIS affiliate, Sinai Province, has sworn allegiance to the new leader 
named by the group following the death of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the affiliate 
said on Telegram on Saturday. Sinai Province, which has waged an insurgency 
against the Egyptian state, posted pictures of around two dozen fighters 
standing among trees, with a caption saying they were pledging allegiance to Abu 
Ibrahim al-Hashemi al-Quraishi. Quraishi was named on Thursday in an audio 
message that also confirmed Baghdadi’s death and vowed revenge against the 
United States. US special forces killed Baghdadi in a raid in northwest Syria. 
ISIS has resorted to guerrilla attacks since losing its last significant piece 
of territory in Syria in March, and has posted dozens of claims of 
responsibility for attacks in several countries since Baghdadi’s death. Egyptian 
ground and air forces launched a major offensive focused on North Sinai early 
last year. Military operations and militant attacks continue in the area.
Thirteen killed, 30 injured in explosion in Syrian border 
town: Reports
Reuters, Beirut/Saturday, 2 November 2019
At least 13 people have died Saturday in a car bomb blast near a market in the 
Syrian border town of Tal Abyad controlled by Turkish forces, Ankara and a 
rights watchdog said. Turkey's defense ministry said 13 civilians were killed 
and another 20 people injured in the attack, which it blamed on Kurdish 
fighters. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights meanwhile 
reported the deaths of 14 civilians and Turkish-backed rebels in the explosion.
Amid Protests, Authorities Issue Warrants to Arrest, Summon 60 Officials in Iraq
Baghdad - Hamza Mustafa/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 2 November, 2019
The Commission of Integrity, an entity connected with the Iraqi judiciary, said 
that warrants were issued to arrest and summon 60 Iraqi officials on corruption 
chargers. A statement by the commission said that the warrants targeted 
ministers and ex-ministers, several members of parliament, in addition to 
governors and local officials. According to the statement, a minister and five 
lawmakers and two ex-ministers have been summoned. This is the second wave of 
warrants announcement since October when 38 officials faced allegations of 
fraud. “One of the main reasons for all this widespread corruption in the 
country is sectarian and ethnic quotas, which made the blocs hire officials to 
the most important state posts on the basis of loyalty, not efficiency,” the 
commission’s former chief Moussa Faraj told Asharq Al-Awsat. The Supreme Federal 
Court had given protests further legitimacy in their demand for abolishing 
quotas in senior positions, which is the cornerstone of corruption, in a 
decision it took over a week ago. The court ruled that Paragraph 6 of Parliament 
Resolution 44 of 2008, which was adopted on December 24, 2008, is 
unconstitutional. The resolution gave legal cover for sectarian- and 
partisan-based appointments. Faraj hailed the move, saying it would end corrupt 
hiring. He added that it also means that appointments that were made according 
to the resolution are now null and void. Iraq is currently swept by a wave of 
protests against corruption.
Iraqi Protesters, Security Forces Clash in Baghdad
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 2 November, 2019
Iraqi security forces clashed with anti-government protesters near the capital's 
Tahrir Square on Saturday as anti-government rallies which have rocked Baghdad 
for a month cost more lives. The violence in Baghdad has been centered on two 
bridges linking Tahrir to the Green Zone on the west bank of the Tigris River 
where most government buildings and foreign embassies are located. Riot police 
deployed along the bridges on Saturday fired tear gas to keep back protesters, 
who have dug in to their positions behind their own barricade. One demonstrator 
was killed there overnight, and another died during the day on Saturday, medical 
sources confirmed to AFP. Dozens more were wounded in the clashes. The protests 
have evolved since October 1 from rage over corruption and unemployment into a 
wholesale condemnation of Iraq's political and religious class. The movement has 
swelled as students, trade unions and NGOs joined in. On Saturday, nearly 200 
Iraqis with special needs organized their own small march in Baghdad to show 
support. "Our rights have been overlooked for years because of corruption," said 
Muadh al-Kaabi, 30, a blind teacher who works in a special needs school. "There 
are four million people with special needs across Iraq -- and the numbers are 
only growing because of the wars we have been through," he told AFP. Iraq has 
suffered decades of back-to-back conflicts, including war with Iran, the US-led 
invasion of 2003 that toppled Saddam Hussein and years of sectarian infighting.
'Fake reforms' 
Since then, its political system has been gripped by clientelism, corruption and 
sectarianism, prompting protesters to call for the total "downfall of the 
regime."They have so far been unimpressed by the government's proposed reforms, 
including early elections. "We've been having elections for 16 years, and we've 
gotten nothing," said Haydar, 30, a protester in Tahrir. Another activist, 
Mohammad, 22, said the demonstrators should not accept such "fake reforms". 
"People are very aware of what's happening: we've gotten to an important phase 
and can't lose it all now," he added.
Protesters have occupied Tahrir Square for more than a week, repeatedly defying 
an army order to clear the streets between midnight and 6:00 am. The military on 
Saturday shortened that curfew to 2:00 am - 6:00 am, but many demonstrators 
planned to stay in the square overnight.
Buildings around the square are blanketed with the banners of young Iraqis who 
have died in the skirmishes with the riot police. Also Saturday, thousands of 
protesters were blocking all roads leading to Iraq's main Gulf port Umm Qasr, 
after security forces used live rounds and tear gas on them overnight, security 
sources said. Operations at the port have been at a complete standstill since 
Wednesday, after protesters first blocked its entrance on Tuesday. Umm Qasr 
receives the vast bulk of Iraq's imports of grain, vegetable oils and sugar, 
needed to feed a country heavily dependent on imported food. Over the past 
month, more than 250 people have been killed and thousands more wounded in the 
rallies. The latest official toll was provided on Wednesday, but medical sources 
said at least nine demonstrators have been killed since. Eight of them died 
around Tahrir, where clashes between riot police and security forces have 
escalated. The ninth victim was killed by the security guards of a local 
politician in the southern city of Nasiriyah. Rights group Amnesty International 
slammed Iraqi forces this week for using two types of military-grade tear gas 
canisters that have pierced protesters' skulls and lungs.
Ennahda Nominates Ghannouchi to Head the Next Tunisian 
Government
Tunis - Mongi Saidani/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 2 November, 2019
Ennahda spokesman Imad al-Khamiri has confirmed that the party’s only nominee 
for the premiership was Rached Ghannouchi. At a press conference he held on 
Friday, Khamiri denied the existence of a candidate from outside Ennahda 
leadership to head the government, explaining that the party preferred to start 
the debate on the future government’s program and its nature. Merging some 
ministries was one of the topics discussed. Khamiri said that consultations with 
the parties that will form the next parliament are continuing and will lead to 
the formation of a government within the constitutional deadlines.
He reiterated that the prime minister would be from within the movement, which 
has won 52 of the 217 parliamentary seats, while parties in the ongoing 
consultations say they will not be part of an Ennahda-led cabinet and demand 
that the new prime minister be assigned to an independent figure.
Regarding the chances of a government formation proposed by Ennahda obtaining a 
confidence vote in parliament, 109 out of 217, Khamiri stressed there are 
indicators of approval. He noted that Ennahda has so far held formal 
consultations with the Democratic Current and the People's Movement, Tahya 
Tounes and the Republican People's Union. Political observers noted that Ennahda 
is counting on the president for a breakthrough for the current deadlock. The 
country’s leader is expected to bring political parties closer and encourage a 
number of parties to partake in Ennahda’s government. But if it leads the 
political scene, the party will face a host of problems and difficulties, 
especially with the country’s balance of payments. At the news conference, 
Khamiri, also presented a document, called "a draft contract for the 
government", this is a contract that must be signed by any party participating 
in the new government. The program involves 120 points, 50 of which are 
considered a top priority.
Israeli General Says Gaza Development Boosts ‘Terror’
Tel Aviv - Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 2 November, 2019 
The head of the Israeli Southern Command, Maj. Gen. Herzi Halevi, has warned 
that the economic development of the Gaza Strip could lead to increased terror. 
"You have to show us that Gaza's economic development does not lead to the 
development of terrorist capabilities," Halevi told representatives of the World 
Zionist Organization at the Gaza Division. “When terrorist capabilities develop 
- then there will be war.”The Israeli army is “very strong,” he said. “The 
stronger the capabilities in Gaza are, the stronger will be the force that we 
will have to exert. And then we will take Gaza, once again, very much backwards 
in time," he added. Halevi’s remarks were a clear sign of Israel’s rejection to 
end the blockade on Gaza to end the suffering of its people. According to the 
Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, poverty has risen to 53 percent and 
unemployment to 80 percent in Gaza. The UN Relief and Works Agency, UNRWA, said 
in May that more than half of Gaza’s population depends on food aid from the 
international community. Some 620,000 abject poor cannot cover their basic food 
needs and have to survive on $1.6 per day, it added.
Likud Accuses Gantz of Agreeing on a ‘Govt with Arabs’
Tel Aviv - Nazir Magally/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 2 November, 2019
On the eve of negotiations between the Likud party of Prime Minister Benjamin 
Netanyahu and Benny Gantz’ Blue and White party, Likud officials slammed Gantz 
for meeting with Ayman Odeh and Ahmed Tibi from the Arab-dominated Joint List. 
Netanyahu failed to form a new government following the September 17 elections, 
and Gantz, the PM’s main opponent in the deadlocked polls, is now seeking to do 
so. The Likud officials accused Gantz of agreeing with hostile Arab parties on 
forming a coalition government. During a meeting for his bloc, Gantz said that 
Netanyahu is behaving in a selfish manner, disregarding the state’s interests. 
Political sources in Tel Aviv said that Netanyahu is trying to procrastinate on 
the government formation to avoid being prosecuted at a Tel Aviv court on 
corruption charges. Netanyahu prefers to appear at a court in Jerusalem in his 
position as prime minister. Gantz has contacted Odeh and Tibi, discussing with 
them their conditions to support the new government. They both commended the 
meeting as “positive” and highlighted what they said was a change in Gantz’ 
stance towards Arabs and their rights. But a government is impossible without 
the approval of Yisrael Beytenu chief Avigdor Lieberman who has garnered eight 
seats in the Knesset. Lieberman stated earlier that he is not interested in any 
partnership with the Arab parties. Netanyahu announced Friday that he will hold 
a meeting for heads of the right-wing bloc on Sunday in order to discuss the 
efforts to form the government. Reliable political sources said that Netanyahu’s 
actions are a sign that Israel will soon be heading toward a third election in a 
year’s time.
Hamdok to Discuss Terror List with Congress, US 
Administration
Washington - Khartoum - Elie Youssef and Ahmed Younis/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 
2 November, 2019
Sudanese Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok is expected to visit Washington soon to 
discuss with US officials prospects for Sudan’s removal from the State Sponsors 
of Terrorism list and lift the sanctions imposed on the country. His visit would 
come against the backdrop of US President Trump’s decision on the continuation 
of the national emergency with respect to Sudan, which has been effective since 
1997. Upon his return from the US, Sudanese Finance Minister Ibrahim El-Badawi 
told the press that Hamdok will visit the US soon and meet heads of 
congressional committees, Trump administration officials, the World Bank 
president, and the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) managing director. On 
Thursday, the White House said Trump determined that it was necessary to 
continue the national emergency declared in Executive Order 13067 on Sudan. 
“Despite recent positive developments, the crisis constituted by the actions and 
policies of the Government of Sudan that led to the declaration of a national 
emergency in Executive Order 13067 of November 3, 1997 ... has not been 
resolved,” the White House said. Under the Executive Order, the President 
declared a national emergency with respect to Sudan and took related steps to 
deal with the unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and 
foreign policy of the United States posed by the actions and policies of the 
Government of Sudan. On April 26, 2006, by Executive Order 13400, the President 
determined that the conflict in Sudan’s Darfur region posed an unusual and 
extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United 
States, and ordered the blocking of property of certain persons connected to the 
Darfur region. On January 13, 2017, by Executive Order 13761, US President 
Barack Obama found that positive efforts by the Government of Sudan improved 
certain conditions and therefore lifted some sanctions. In continuity of Obama’s 
steps, Trump issued in October 2018 an order lifting the US commercial ban and 
the sanctions that isolated Sudan from the global economy. However, he kept it 
on the list of countries sponsoring terrorism and imposed a ban on weapons sale 
and US aid. The Sudanese government is exerting relentless efforts to remove 
Sudan from the list and to end the sanctions.
Canada: Statement on International Day to End Impunity for Crimes Against 
Journalists
November 2, 2019 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
The Honourable Chrystia Freeland, Minister of Foreign Affairs, today issued the 
following statement:
“On this day, we remember all members of the media killed or harmed and all 
others who so courageously stand up for the media’s right to report freely and 
independently. Impunity for crimes against journalists must stop.
“Supporting honest and transparent reporting is essential for democratic 
societies and the rules-based international order. This includes investigating 
incidents of harassment or violence against journalists and ensuring that those 
responsible for ordering and committing attacks face justice.
“In July, alongside the United Kingdom, Canada co-hosted the first Global 
Conference for Media Freedom, which brought together governments, journalists, 
activists and other stakeholders. Canada remains firmly committed to defending 
media freedom at home and abroad, and we look forward to hosting the second 
Global Conference for Media Freedom in Canada next year.”
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous 
sources published on November 02-03/2019
Perils of a new East-West rift
Andrew Hammond/Arab News/November 02/2019
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will be one of the high-profile speakers at an 
event this week to mark the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. 
While that 1989 moment heralded much optimism, the promise of Western liberalism 
to transform the former Eastern bloc has been replaced by what some have called 
an “East-West rift.”
The backstory to this is, of course, the post-1989 ambition of former communist 
nations to emulate the West through modernization and integration. Liberal 
democracy was seen then as the only political game in town, at a time that 
Francis Fukuyama famously, albeit wrongly, proclaimed as “the end of history … 
the end-point of mankind’s ideological evolution.”
The extent to which this apparent orthodoxy is now seen to have failed is 
underlined by rising economic inequality and corruption in that region. 
Authoritarian anti-liberalism has grown across much of Eastern and Central 
Europe while liberalism has been tarnished in the West by the 2008-09 financial 
crash, Brexit, and the election of Donald Trump. 
In Hungary, for example, Prime Minister Viktor Orban, the poster child for the 
region’s right-wing populism, has forcefully adopted values that clash with 
those promoted by Western Europe and Brussels on democracy, the rule of law and 
wider freedoms. There are growing concerns in Brussels that, under Orban’s 
leadership, Hungary is following a Russian model; indeed the European Parliament 
voted last year to trigger the EU’s most serious disciplinary procedure, 
asserting that Hungary’s government posed a “systematic threat” to democracy and 
the rule of law.
This underlines that, while challenges to Brussels are often seen through the 
prism of Western European states, especially with Brexit, it is Hungary and 
other key states such as Poland that are proving thorns in the EU’s side. They 
lead the Visegrad group of former communist states, which also includes Slovakia 
and the Czech Republic and has a collective population of about 65 million. 
While Visegrad countries are by no means a monolithic bloc, they have agreed 
joint positioning in certain areas, including pushing back at proposals being 
floated for more, post-Brexit integration among the EU states.
Authoritarian anti-liberalism has grown across much of Eastern and Central 
Europe while liberalism has been tarnished in the West by the 2008-09 financial 
crash, Brexit, and the election of Donald Trump.
It is not just Brussels and Western Europe that have felt the wrath of key 
Eastern and Central European countries. Washington has also grown alarmed as a 
critical mass of these states turn toward Russia and China.
On a trip to the area in February that included the first visit to Slovakia by a 
US secretary of state in nearly two decades, Pompeo said Moscow and Beijing 
posed twin threats to the democratic and economic gains made since 1989. He said 
the region was particularly vulnerable to its dependence on Russian energy; 
Hungary imports most of its gas from Russia, but the agreement expires in 2020, 
providing significant leverage for Moscow.
Pompeo also said China’s advocacy of Huawei telecoms technology, especially in 
5G networks, was a threat to the region. However, Beijing’s ambitions go well 
beyond this: Chinese Premier Li Keqiang, for instance, regularly meets Eastern 
and Central European leaders for “16+1” summits to discuss deepening his 
nation’s regional economic and political influence. 
To combat those perceived Russian and Chinese threats, Pompeo and Trump have 
said they will reverse many years of what the secretary of state called “US 
disengagement” in the region. Trump and Polish President Andrzej Duda have 
discussed stepping up cooperation in security and energy. The US president said 
relations had “never been closer” and Washington may build a permanent military 
base in Poland. 
Trump and Energy Secretary Rick Perry have also spoken at recent Three Seas 
Initiative conferences. These feature the nations strategically located between 
the Black Sea, the Baltic and the Adriatic — Austria, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, 
Croatia, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and 
Slovenia — and are aimed at boosting regional connectivity in transport, digital 
and energy.
So the backlash against Western liberalism in the former Eastern bloc represents 
a political challenge not just to the EU and Western Europe, but to the US too. 
With Washington, Moscow, Beijing and indeed Brussels now all jockeying for 
position, international interest and rivalry in this increasingly important 
region is only likely to grow in the 2020s.
*Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics
Flagship investment forum paves the way for Vision 2030
Basil M.K. Al-Ghalayini /Arab News/November 02/2019
I received an invitation from my dear brother Yasir Al-Rumayyan, governor of the 
Public Investment Fund (PIF), to participate in the Future Investment Initiative 
(FII), which took place in the Saudi capital Riyadh last week. This is my third 
participation, which clearly showed the speedy evolution of this event in terms 
of speakers, content, participants and production. FII’s theme is “What is next 
for global business?” focusing on a sustainable future, innovations and the 
development of societies.
This year, in addition to over 300 speakers from a wide range of backgrounds and 
markets around the world, we saw heads of state spanning nations from India to 
Brazil and from the Middle East to Africa providing insightful information about 
their respective countries and economies. The world’s premier companies sent 
their top representatives to network and do business.
As for the giga-projects, my favorite topic, I remember during the first FII in 
2017, a groundbreaking announcement was made about NEOM city with an update last 
year by its new CEO at that time, Nadhmi Al-Nasr. I was expecting this year to 
see NEOM’s update on the agenda. Since it is a key pillar of the Kingdom’s FDI 
strategy, investors are anxious to know the latest updates on this 
tri-jurisdiction giga-project. By the same token, I was expecting to hear some 
updates about the Al-Qidiyya project as well. On the other hand, the 
presentation by Red Sea Company CEO John Pagano was impressive for potential 
investors in terms of content and visuals.
After the forum’s successful conclusion, King Salman issued a royal decree 
establishing the Future of Investment Initiative Institution. Its role is to 
organize investment-related events and support activities with the aim to be a 
center of global thought in line with the Kingdom’s Vision 2030.
What made FII special this year was its focus on artificial intelligence and 
innovations. The best ideas and brains from all over the world came to Riyadh to 
share their experiences and achievements. I even entered into a dialogue with a 
German manufacturer of electric cars to be potentially used in NEOM, Al-Qidiyya 
and other cities with affordable cost and more appealing to female drivers. 
Furthermore, the company is planning to set up its production facilities in 
Saudi Arabia, benefiting from the Kingdom’s raw materials, strategic location 
and young human capital.
During one session, I sat next to Richard Attias, whom I call “the Maestro” of 
this business concert. I saw him in action directing his team and hundreds of 
dedicated PIF young men and women. The management and execution of such a 
high-profile and critically demanding three-day event is something to be highly 
admired. The Future Investment Initiative, the flagship of the PIF, continues to 
pave the way for Vision 2030.
*Basil M.K. Al-Ghalayini is the Chairman and CEO of BMG Financial Group.
World leaders ignore these protests at their peril
Yossi Mekelberg/Arab News/November 02/2019
One of the US founding fathers, Thomas Jefferson, while serving as a diplomat in 
Paris, observed that “a little rebellion now and then is a good thing, and as 
necessary in the political world as storms in the physical.” Those were 
revolutionary times on both sides of the Atlantic, only two years before the 
French took to the streets and deposed Louis XVI, and as the US embarked on 
constitutionalizing and institutionalizing its own revolution of a decade 
before.
Revolutions break out when societies are aggravated beyond what they can 
tolerate, and their expectations are not met by their governments, but they all 
require a trigger that sends people to the streets. Such conditions nowadays are 
plentiful, and so are the triggers.
For Jefferson, people rebel when their governments rule as “wolves over sheep.” 
This year in many parts of the world, including Asia, Europe, Africa, Latin 
America and the Middle East, the “sheep” have taken the “wolves” to task, 
expressing forcefully through mass protests both their anger and their desire 
for immediate and profound change. Much reporting of this civil unrest 
emphasizes the often eye-catching triggers rather than the underlying causes 
that have been a long time brewing; revolutionary conditions are like a barrel 
of explosives one match away from exploding.
In Hong Kong it was proposed legislation that would have allowed the extradition 
of people to any jurisdiction in the world with which Hong Kong has no existing 
formal agreement, but most pertinently to mainland China, with all that this 
might entail for the curtailment of human rights. In Lebanon, the spark was an 
absurd government proposal to impose a new tax on calls through WhatsApp; in 
Ecuador, protests sparked by austerity measures including the end of fuel 
subsidies deteriorated to the point that government operations were temporarily 
moved from the capital Quito to the port city of Guayaquil. Across Iraq, a wave 
of unrest has claimed the lives of more than 220 people since protests broke out 
at the beginning of October against corruption, unemployment and failed public 
services.
This is happening not only in societies that are developing or in transition, 
but in developed countries too. In France, the gilets jaunes protests started as 
an online campaign against surging fuel costs before becoming a nationwide 
movement; in the UK the Extinction Rebellion movement has pulled publicity 
stunts in support of their demand that the government declare a climate and 
ecological emergency. There have been mass demonstrations in the streets of 
Bolivia, Venezuela, Egypt, Chile and Barcelona. Though more tranquil, but with a 
clear global agenda, the mass protests in support of the Fridays For Future 
movement led by Greta Thunberg also involve ordinary citizens willing to become 
politically involved and air their frustrations.
Revolutions break out when societies are aggravated beyond what they can 
tolerate, and their expectations are not met by their governments, but they all 
require a trigger that sends people to the streets. Such conditions nowadays are 
plentiful, and so are the triggers.
In what sense might these cross-continental political protests be part of a 
single phenomenon? They are not copycat movements, but they most certainly 
inspire each other, as they all represent a courageous defiance of government 
authority, even in places where the consequences could be dire, such as Iraq. 
Moreover, despite the unique circumstances of each of these centers of civil 
unrest, their grievances and motivations have much in common. There is little 
doubt that social media is contributing immensely to galvanizing the protesters, 
who share their experiences, and the strategies they use to stand up to their 
governments and security forces.
This shared global platform affects the nature of modern uprisings in a number 
of ways. First, there is no longer the need for a leader or leadership; protests 
are more spontaneous, and can quickly respond to the call to arms on social 
media. The protesters are led more by ideas and values, and by local organisers 
rather than a single charismatic leader such as a Lenin, a Mao or a Castro.
Second, through social media the protesters are more knowledgeable about the 
reasons for their protests — such as corrupt, self-serving and inefficient 
governing elites infected with nepotism and cronyism — at times when there is 
growing resentment against declining living standards and the lack social 
mobility, especially for young people.
Third, it is heart-warming to see that in places that have been mired in 
religious or ethnic sectarianism, protesters, mainly the young, are turning 
their back on these old divisions and uniting to demand that their governments 
stop failing to help them fulfil their potential and their aspirations, and 
respect their basic human right to live a decent life with dignity.
There is one more aspect that to my mind differentiates this wave of protests 
from those of the past. They don’t harbor radical ideologies; they don’t try to 
change the world order or the basic tenets that govern their societies. 
Paradoxically, they are almost anti-revolutionary revolutionaries who are asking 
for more competent and less corrupt leadership, but within the existing social 
structures. They hardly question the current institutional and constitutional 
arrangements.
However, governments should not underestimate such movements. Despite this 
paradox, or maybe because of it, there is great power in the numbers and 
conviction of these protesters, who share much in common in demanding a better 
life, and to be governed by those who put their countries first and not their 
own vested interests; governments for the many and not for the few. If 
governments refuse to listen to the voices on the streets, they may see these 
demonstrations gather momentum and turn into fully fledged revolutions — and not 
necessarily peaceful ones.
*Yossi Mekelberg is professor of international relations at Regent’s University 
London, where he is head of the International Relations and Social Sciences 
Program. He is also an associate fellow of the MENA Program at Chatham House. He 
is a regular contributor to the international written and electronic media. 
Twitter: @YMekelberg