LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
November 25/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.november25.19.htm
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Bible Quotations For today
Either make the tree good, and
its fruit good; or make the tree bad, and its fruit bad; for the tree is known
by its fruit
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 12/33-37/:”‘Either make
the tree good, and its fruit good; or make the tree bad, and its fruit bad; for
the tree is known by its fruit. You brood of vipers! How can you speak good
things, when you are evil? For out of the abundance of the heart the mouth
speaks. The good person brings good things out of a good treasure, and the evil
person brings evil things out of an evil treasure. I tell you, on the day of
judgement you will have to give an account for every careless word you utter;
for by your words you will be justified, and by your words you will be
condemned.”
Either make the tree good, and its fruit good; or make the tree bad, and its
fruit bad; for the tree is known by its fruit.
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese
Related News published on November 24-25/2019
Hizbullah, AMAL Supporters Attack Protesters as Roads Blocked across Lebanon
Lebanese Hezbollah supporters attack protesters near the Ring Bridge
American officials advocate US support to Lebanese military following aid freeze
Protesters Rally near U.S. Embassy to Deplore U.S. Statements
Protesters blast US official near US Embassy in Lebanon
Report: No Govt. Breakthrough Expected Next Week
Fneish Says No Govt. Can be Formed without Parliamentary Majority Consent
Minors Held for Removing FPM Banner Released
Five children arrested in Lebanon for tearing down Aoun poster: Reports
Children detained for tearing down political banner as protests continue in
Lebanon
Hariri's Press Office: Text messages sent from outside Lebanon
Banks' Association denounces campaign against its sector, urges politicians and
media to exercise national responsibility
Reports: Fakhoury in Poor Health, Lebanese Officials Encouraged Him to Return
Lebanon Anti-Graft Protesters March for Nature Too
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
November 24-25/2019
In Hiroshima, Pope Condemns 'Crime' of Nuclear Weapons
Iran is planning attacks on Israel: Netanyahu
Gantz Seeks Support from Netanyahu's Party to Form Government
Netanyahu’s Likud party plans for leadership primaries: Reports
Israel’s Netanyahu faces court, party challenges after indictment
Iran Vows to Punish 'Mercenaries' behind Street Violence
Iran’s Guards call for ‘maximum punishment’ of fuel unrest leaders
Iran accused of ‘stealing bodies from morgues’ to downplay protest toll
Six Protesters Killed in South Iraq as Unrest Intensifies
Thirteen dead in one of the ‘worst’ days of protest in southern Iraq
Turkish drones target Syria’s Ain Issa, nearby villages
Hong Kongers Vote in Record Numbers as Democracy Camp Seeks to Send Message
US Defense Secretary asks for navy chief’s resignation: Statement
Merkel ally calls for better Franco-German ties after NATO row
Romania’s Iohannis wins second presidential term with rule of law pledge
Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published
on November 24-25/2019
Burning the USA flag in Tyr By Hezbollah is condemned/Elias Bejjani/November
23/2019
Lebanon Is Totally Occupied by Iran …Help Liberate The Land Of The Holy
Cedars/Elias Bejjani/November 22/2019
American officials advocate US support to Lebanese military following aid
freeze/Emily Judd/Al Arabiya English/November 24/2019
Lebanon's revolution on its 39th day: An ongoing momentum/Tala Ramadan/Annahar/November
24/2019
After the Lebanon Protests: Between the Party of God and Party of the People/Maha
Yahya/November 24/2019
Lebanon’s amnesty law is the government’s last bid to save itself/Makram Rabah/Al
Arabiya/November 24/2019
Not afraid of change,’ Lebanese youth denounce sectarianism, corruption/Samar
Kadi/The Arab Weekly/November 25/2019
*A US-Iran military front is fast shaping up on the Syrian-Iraqi border – with a
role for the IDF/DEBKAfile/November 25/ 2019
Fourteen Years after Cartoon Crisis, Norway again Knuckles Under to Islam/Bruce
Bawer/Gatestone Institute/November 24/ 2019
Trump administration continues gifting stolen land to Netanyahu/Baria Alamuddin/Arabic
News/November 24, 2019
Popular resistance against Iranian regime will not die/Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arabic
News/November 24/2019
The liberal spirit captivating the Mideast’s revolutions/Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Arabic
News/November 24/2019
Time to address the violence Arab women face/Maria Hanif Al-Qassim/Arabic
News/November 24/2019
Turkey squeezed on S-400 air defense system/Yasar Yakis/Arabic News/November
24/2019
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese &
Lebanese Related News published on November 24-25/2019
Burning the USA flag in Tyr By Hezbollah is
condemned
Elias Bejjani/November 23/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/80807/%d9%81%d8%a7%d8%af%d9%8a%d8%a9-%d8%b3%d9%85%d8%b9%d8%a7%d9%86-%d8%b9%d8%a8%d9%8a%d8%af-%d8%a5%d9%8a%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%86-%d9%81%d9%8a-%d9%84%d8%a8%d9%86%d8%a7%d9%86-%d9%8a%d8%ad%d8%b1%d9%82%d9%88%d9%86/
Hezbollah has nothing to do with Lebanon or the Lebanese people.
This criminal and terrorist armed organization is Iranian 100% and savagely
occupies Lebanon since 2005, while taking the Lebanese peace loving Shiite
community a hostage by force and through terrorism and brutality.
The Lebanese people look at the USA as a great friendly country and appreciates
very much its on going support for Lebanon’s freedom, democracy, sovereignty and
independence.
Meanwhile Hezbollah is a terrorist Iranian militia and does nor speak on behalf
of the Lebanese or represent them in any way.
In this context, burning the USA flag in Tyr is condemned by each and every
sovereign and patriotic Lebanese in both occupied Lebanon and Diaspora.
Lebanon Is Totally Occupied by Iran …Help
Liberate The Land Of The Holy Cedars
Elias Bejjani/November 22/2019
لبنان وطن الحرف والرسالة والأرز المقدس تحتله إيران وميليشياتها وهو يحتاج لمساعدة
العالم الحر ليستعيد استقلاله
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/80773/elias-bejjani-lebanon-is-totally-occupied-by-iran-help-liberate-the-land-of-the-holy-cedars/
Lebanon, the land of the Holy Cedars and 7000 years deeply rooted glory,
holiness and history is sadly an occupied, impoverished, and oppressed country.
The stone age savage occupier is the terrorist Iranian armed Hezbollah militia.
This terrorist armed militia controls totally Lebanon’s decision making process
on all levels and in all domains including the peace and war one.
Meanwhile the majority of the Lebanese officials, as well as the politicians are
mere mercenaries appointed by Hezbollah and like puppets carry its wishes and
orders.
The USA and other democratic countries can help Lebanon and the Lebanese people
in reclaiming back their confiscated independence and stolen country through a
strong, loud and official stance in practically and not only rhetorically
supporting the immediate implementation of the three UN resolutions that
addresses Lebanon’s crisis: the armistice agreement, 1559 and 1701.
The Lebanese people after years (since 1975) of Syrian, Palestinian, and current
Iranian occupations and oppression are unable on their own to liberate their
country without a real and clear practical support from the UN and all the
democratic countries.. Help liberate Lebanon.
In this realm I quote Dr. Walid Phares’s response to ambassador Jeffrey
Feltman’s recent testimony before the House Subcommittee on the Middle East,
North Africa, and International Terrorism on “What’s Next for Lebanon? Examining
the Implications of Current Protests.
Ambassador Feltman told Congress said:
“Over the long term, U.S. interests in Lebanon would be best protected by what
the Lebanese people indicate that they want: a prosperous, democratic,
independent, fully sovereign, peaceful Lebanon, reliant (including for security)
on effective, transparent government institutions subject to public
accountability. With the right government in place and with renewed
international support, this should not be impossible to achieve.”
Dr. Walid Phares’s response:
Yes Mr. Ambassador that’s what a majority of Lebanese want. But between now and
then, there is a blocking force that will oppose moving Lebanon in that
direction. It is a force feared by many and countering it has no strategies, in
official policies. A force that is obstructing prosperity, reform, sovereignty,
and protective of corruption. And on top of it there are no plans to deal with
it. One can ignore it and pretend that it is not there, that eventually it will
just go away. But that is not reality…
From our Diaspora, we hail and command the courageous and patriotic Lebanese
citizens who bravely for the last 37 days are involved in the current ongoing
demonstrations and sit-ins in occupied Lebanon.
May Almighty God bless, safeguard Lebanon and grant its oppressed people the
power and will to free their country and reclaim it back from Hezbollah, the
Iranian terrorist Occupier.
Click here to read ambassador Jeffrey Feltman’s testimony text before the House
Subcommittee on the Middle East, North Africa, and International Terrorism on
“What’s Next for Lebanon? Examining the Implications of Current Protests.
In regards to the Iranian occupied Lebanon the help that the country and its
oppressed people need from the USA, Europe and all other free countries is the
immediate implementation of the UN three resolutions: the armistice agreement,
1559 and 1701. The USA sanctions on the Mullahs' regime for almost 40 years did
not actually make any difference except in hurting more the Iranian people.
Sanctions on Hezbollah while it occupies Lebanon and controls fully its rulers
is not going to change the current status quo..although sanctions on Lebanese
politicians who are Hezbollah puppets can help in deterring them.
Hizbullah, AMAL Supporters Attack Protesters as Roads
Blocked across Lebanon
Naharnet/November 25/2019
Supporters of Hizbullah and the AMAL Movement launched fresh attacks late Sunday
on anti-corruption protesters in central Beirut, as roads were blocked across
Lebanon in an escalation of anti-corruption protests. Fistfights first erupted
on the Ring flyover in central Beirut before the AMAL and Hizbullah supporters
descended on Riad al-Solh and Martyrs Square where they reportedly vandalized
tents and threatened protesters. Riot police and army troops later reinforced
their presence on the highway and separated between the two groups. The
Hizbullah and AMAL supporters resorted to stone throwing at this point and
shouted insults and sectarian slogans. The protesters responded with
"revolution" chants and other protest slogans.
Lebanese Hezbollah supporters attack protesters near the
Ring Bridge
Al Arabiya English/The Associated Press/Monday, 25 November 2019
Supporters of the Lebanese Hezbollah attacked protesters near the Ring Bridge in
Beirut on Sunday, amid heavy presence of security forces and anti-riot police.
The supporters, who were riding motorbikes with the flags of Hezbollah and Amal
Movement, stoned the protesters, who retaliated.
No injuries were immediately reported. The attacks occurred after protesters
blocked a major road that links eastern neighborhoods of the capital with
western parts. Since last month, Lebanese from all religious backgrounds have
taken to the streets en masse to cry out against what they view as an
incompetent and corrupt ruling class, forcing the government to resign.
American officials advocate US support to Lebanese military
following aid freeze
Emily Judd/Al Arabiya English/November 24/2019
US politicians and military officials are speaking up about their support for
the Lebanese military following confirmation that the Trump administration is
withholding $105 million in security aid to Lebanon. US Senator Chris Murphy
(D-CT), a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and US Central
Command (CENTCOM) chief General Kenneth McKenzie told Al Arabiya English they
approve of US support to the Lebanese military. Murphy told Al Arabiya English
in an exclusive interview that he is a “big supporter” of US engagement with the
Lebanese military.“I think they [Lebanese Armed Forces] are a partner for peace
and stability. An imperfect partner, but a partner nonetheless,” Murphy told Al
Arabiya English at the annual IISS Manama Dialogue conference in Bahrain.
McKenzie said that CENTCOM supports “continued assistance” to the Lebanese Armed
Forces (LAF), albeit their “record is not perfect.”“We think the LAF needs to be
the military element of the government of Lebanon. I would certainly support
continuous support to the LAF,” said McKenzie.
Earlier this month, it was reported the Trump administration has frozen $105
million in security aid to Lebanon, including military vehicles, weapons and
ammunition. David Hale, the top career diplomat at the State Department,
confirmed the freeze on Wednesday, saying there was apparently “a dispute over
the efficacy of the assistance.”The US State Department told Congress on October
31 that the White House budget office and National Security Council had decided
to withhold the foreign military assistance, according to two US officials,
speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity. The officials did not say why the
aid was blocked. The aid was frozen before massive demonstrations, protesting
against economic hardship and corruption, began in Lebanon on October 17. Nina
Shea, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, said that American leadership
should rally allies behind the demands of the protesters and the LAF, “which has
kept order until now.” “Either the LAF is supported to be the dominant force
that ensures an orderly transition and protects all the population, regardless
of religious identity - or they’re abandoned to the benefit of Hezbollah,
Iranian tyranny and other malign actors,” said Shea in an interview with Al
Arabiya English. The Trump administration, which has not publicly explained its
decision to withhold funding, has been pressing for the isolation of Lebanese
Hezbollah, which is allied with Iran and has seats in the government. Shea
called on American and allied diplomacy to quickly held build a consensus around
a “new accountable and Hezbollah-free government.”“With American policy
leadership, the Middle East could experience a moment like 1989, with Lebanon
and Iraq as the new Poland and Hungary - and Iran, the Soviet Union,” said Shea.
Protesters Rally near U.S. Embassy to Deplore U.S.
Statements
Associated Press/Naharnet/November 24/2019
A number of demonstrators who are part of the anti-corruption protest movement
that is sweeping the country on Sunday rallied near the U.S. embassy in Awkar to
denounce recent U.S. statements about the situation in Lebanon. Heightened
security measures were taken in the area as a security cordon was imposed
several hundred meters away from the embassy to prevent protesters from
approaching it. The National News Agency said protesters stressed that their
demo “is not aimed at proving their patriotism before the supporters of the
resistance (against Israel), but is rather aimed at rejecting the U.S. policy in
Lebanon and all the politicians who claim to be against the United States.” Some
protesters meanwhile said that improving living conditions in Lebanon is as
important as immunizing the country in the face of foreign interferences. At the
end of the demo, the majority of protesters started marching towards downtown
Beirut as a few stayed behind and said they would try to cross the metallic
barriers. The rally did not witness any confrontation with security forces in
contrast to demos held in the same area in the past. Most of those who
participated belong to leftist groups or are supporters of the official Syrian
Social Nationalist Party and its various splinter factions. U.S. Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo, U.S. State Department Spokesperson Morgan Ortagus and former
U.S. assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs Jeffrey Feltman have
commented on Lebanon’s protests in recent days. The protesters blasted the
comments by Feltman before the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on the
Middle East in which he said that "the demonstrations and the reactions to them
by Lebanese leaders and institutions fortunately coincide with U.S.
interests."Protesters have been holding demonstrations in Lebanon since Oct. 17,
demanding an end to widespread corruption and mismanagement by the political
class that has ruled the country for three decades.
Protesters blast US official near US Embassy in Lebanon
Associated Press/November 24/2019
BEIRUT: A few dozen people have demonstrated near the U.S. Embassy outside
Beirut against what they are calling America’s intervention in Lebanon’s
affairs. Lebanese troops and riot police employed tight security measures Sunday
near the embassy northeast of the city. The protesters later dispersed without
any reports of violence. Protesters have been holding demonstrations in Lebanon
since Oct. 17, demanding an end to widespread corruption and mismanagement by
the political class that has ruled the country for three decades.
The protests have since snowballed into calls for the entire political elite to
step aside. The protesters blasted recent comments by former U.S. Ambassador to
Lebanon Jeffrey Feltman before the House Subcommittee on the Middle East in
which he said that “the demonstrations and the reactions to them by Lebanese
leaders and institutions, fortunately, coincide with U.S. interests.”The
protests have since snowballed into calls for the entire political elite to step
aside.
Report: No Govt. Breakthrough Expected Next Week
Naharnet/November 24/2019
No breakthrough is expected next week in the negotiations to form a new
government, a ministerial source said. “Unless an unexpected development
happens, no breakthrough is expected next week, although Speaker Nabih Berri
expects progress in this regard, but it won’t happen over the next days,” the
source told Asharq al-Awsat newspaper in remarks published Sunday. “The forces
insisting on a techno-political government do not intend to search for a
replacement for Hariri without obtaining his own consent, because such a
government would remain incapable of seeking financial aid from the
international community, not to mention that it will be a one-sided and
unilateral government,” the source added. Hariri submitted his government’s
resignation on October 29 in the face of unprecedented protests against the
entire political class. President Michel Aoun has delayed the binding
parliamentary consultations to name a new premier, arguing that prior consensus
is needed on the shape of the new government amid the delicate situations in the
country.
Fneish Says No Govt. Can be Formed without Parliamentary
Majority Consent
Naharnet/November 24/2019
Caretaker Youth and Sport Minister Mohammed Fneish of Hizbullah emphasized
Sunday that the new government cannot be formed without the approval of the
parliamentary majority led by Hizbullah and the Free Patriotic Movement. “There
is a political equation in Lebanon called parliament and a government cannot be
formed without this parliament’s confidence,” Fneish said. “No government can be
formed without consensus between the PM-designate chosen by the parliamentary
majority and the president, and thus the formation of governments has mechanisms
that must be used so that we reach solutions,” he added. In an apparent jab at
caretaker PM Saad Hariri, Fneish said: “He who evades responsibility cannot
claim that he is innocent, seeing as every person has his history, policies and
stances, and therefore evading responsibility is not courage but rather
aggravation of the suffering of the Lebanese.”“Let no one think that the
Americans care about the suffering of the Lebanese,” the caretaker minister
added, noting that “America largely bears the responsibility for what’s
happening in Lebanon through the sanctions that hit Lebanon, through pressuring
us to accept a settlement with the Israeli enemy on the issue of border
demarcation, and through pressuring banks and the money transfers of the
Lebanese.”ves to us that he has failed, because he is ignorant of what’s
happening in Lebanon and is still insisting on his failure and ignorance,”
Fneish added. “If he believes that what’s happening will defeat and weaken the
resistance… I believe that this reassures us that our enemy is still foolish and
does not know the reality of our society and reality of the resistance’s
environment and its insistence on the resistance choice,” Fneish went on to say.
Moreover he added that “those who offered thousands of martyrs in defense of
this country will spare no political effort to strengthen the dignity and
security of the Lebanese.”
Minors Held for Removing FPM Banner Released
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/November 24/2019
Five youngsters including several minors were released at dawn Sunday after
being arrested around midnight for removing a banner hung outside the offices of
the Free Patriotic Movement in the Upper Metn town of Hammana. The National News
Agency said residents of the area were rallying outside the Hammana police
station when the five were released. Protest movement activists had reacted
angrily overnight on social media, after initial reports said minors were being
held for “tearing up a picture of President Michel Aoun.” It later turned out
that the reports were baseless. "Down with the regime that arrests children,"
said one user. "When a 12-year-old child manages to shake the state's throne,
you know the state is corrupt," another wrote. In a statement, the FPM warned
that “such actions are unfamiliar and create undesired tensions in this region,”
urging all sides and parties in the region to “preserve security and
stability.”It also stressed its keenness on “coexistence in Mount
Lebanon.”Security forces released the five detainees after midnight after taking
a statement from them, the Committee of Lawyers for the Defense of Protesters
said. The army said two of the children were 15 years old, while the third was
12. During the first month of demonstrations, security forces arrested 300
people including 12 minors who were released within the next 24 or 48 hours,
according to the lawyers' committee. But 11 people -- including two minors --
remain in detention accused of attacking a hotel in the southern city of Tyre in
the first week of the uprising.
Five children arrested in Lebanon for tearing down Aoun
poster: Reports
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 24 November 2019
Five children were arrested in Lebanon on Saturday after tearing down a poster
of President Michel Aoun in the Hammana municipality, several local news
stations reported. All of the boys were under the age of 18. Several social
media users took to Twitter to express their outrage, many pointing out that the
government is “targeting children instead of corrupt politicians.” Many shared
videos of the boys’ parents waiting outside of the police station, calling on
Lebanese people to stage a sit-in in front of the station until the boys are
released. Pictures reportedly showing three of the arrested boys also circulated
on social media, with many expressing their frustration after a judge
purportedly ordered for them to be kept at the station overnight. "Down with the
regime that arrests children," said one user. "When a 12-year-old child manages
to shake the state's throne, you know the state is corrupt," another wrote. A
surveillance video was also widely shared online, reportedly showing the
children tearing down the poster. According to Al-Jadeed TV, after nine hours in
detention, the children were released at 2:10 a.m. local time. A statement from
the Lebanese army read that they wanted to “clarify that intelligence did not
arrest the boys, but received them from the municipality after they were
arrested by its police which was doing frequent patrols after a series of
incidents witnessed in the area including unidentified persons burning the Ogero
building, and an attempt to burn the Free Patriotic Movement’s
center.”Nationwide protests in Lebanon have been ongoing for over a month,
fueled by perceptions of corruption among the sectarian politicians who have
governed Lebanon for decades and are blamed for leading the country into its
worst economic crisis since the 1975-90 civil war.
Children detained for tearing down political banner as
protests continue in Lebanon
The National/November 25/2019
Lebanese security forces briefly arrested five youths, including three minors,
for allegedly pulling down a sign for the president's political party, sparking
outrage on social media on Sunday. Defence lawyers said the five were taken into
custody on Saturday evening in the town of Hammana east of Beirut over claims
they tore down a sign for President Michel Aoun's Free Patriotic Movement.
Security forces released them after midnight after taking a statement from them,
the Committee of Lawyers for the Defence of Protesters said. The army said two
of the children were 15 years old and the third was 12.
The news sparked indignation on social media, the latest outcry in a country
that has been gripped by spontaneous anti-government protests since October 17.
"Down with the regime that arrests children," one user said. "When a 12-year-old
child manages to shake the state's throne, you know the state is corrupt,"
another wrote. During the first month of demonstrations, security forces
arrested 300 people including 12 minors who were released within 24 to 48 hours,
according to the lawyers' committee. But 11 people - including two youths -
remain in detention accused of attacking a hotel in the southern city of Tyre
during the first week of the uprising. Lebanese protesters denounce foreign
interference outside US embassy in Beirut Hezbollah accuses US of meddling in
Lebanon's crisis Burj Khalifa and Adnoc headquarters light up with Lebanese flag
for Independence Day The demonstrators managed to bring down the government less
than two weeks into the protests, but it remains in a caretaker capacity and no
new cabinet has since been formed.
Late on Sunday, protesters blocked major roads in several parts of the country
and called for a general strike the following day in protest at the lack of
progress in forming a fresh government. Earlier in the evening, hundreds had
gathered in protest centres in Beirut, the northern city of Tripoli and in Tyre.
In Beirut's Martyrs' Square, hundreds of women and men demanded their rights,
some waving the national red and white flag or chanting "Revolution,
Revolution!" Supporters of the militant Hezbollah group attacked demonstrators
protesting against Lebanon’s political elite in central Beirut.
The attacks by young men armed with clubs and metal rods chanting pro-Hezbollah
slogans began late on Sunday and continued after midnight as riot police and
soldiers tried to prevent them from reaching the protesters. Lebanon's protests
have brought together people of all ages from across the political spectrum,
tired of what they describe as sectarian politics three decades after a civil
war. In the latest show of unity, a festive mood had reigned on Sunday afternoon
as Lebanese came together in public spaces across the country on the second day
of the weekend. North of the capital women prepared traditional salads to share,
while a group of men danced on a beach south of the city, state television
footage showed. The Free Patriotic Movement party that Mr Aoun founded is now
led by his son-in-law, outgoing foreign minister Gibran Bassil, one of the most
reviled figures in the protests.
Hariri's Press Office: Text messages sent from outside
Lebanon
NNA/November 24/2019
Caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri's Press Office issued a statement today,
referring to "forged and suspicious" text messages that are being sent to
citizens from outside Lebanon. The statement indicated that "unknown parties
using telephone numbers from outside Lebanon are sending text messages to
citizens inviting them to alleged meetings with Prime Minister Hariri at Center
House, claiming that the invitations were issued by ministers, advisers or
assistants to the PM."The Press Office categorically denied the content of these
messages, noting that they have been forwarded to the relevant authorities for
necessary action.
Banks' Association denounces campaign against its sector, urges politicians and
media to exercise national responsibility
NNA/November 24/2019
In an issued statement this morning, the Association of Banks in Lebanon said
that the banking sector is facing a systematic campaign aimed at undermining its
reputation and the people's confidence in one of the most important productive
sectors in Lebanon. The Association's board of directors said in its statement
that it "deplores and condemns what has been said about Bank Audi, which adheres
to all applicable laws in Lebanon and international standards, as well as the
banking field laws, like all other banks in in the country." The statement
warned those behind this waged campaign to pay attention to the severe damage it
may cause to the banking sector; thus, weakening one of the most important
components of the Lebanese economy. The Association concluded its statement by
appealing to all political forces and the media to exercise national
responsibility in such exceptional and difficult circumstances, out of keen
concern for preserving the interests of the country and its citizens.
Reports: Fakhoury in Poor Health, Lebanese Officials
Encouraged Him to Return
Associated Press/Naharnet/November 24/2019
Lebanese-American citizen Amer Fakhoury, who has been held in Lebanon since
mid-September on suspicion that he tortured prisoners at the Israeli-run Khiam
prison, is in poor health and his condition is life-threatening, his family has
said, citing doctors.
No charges have been filed against Fakhoury. His lawyer, Celine Atallah, said it
remains unclear why he's being held. Fakhoury, however, was once a member of the
former Israeli-backed South Lebanon Army militia. He also worked as a senior
warden at a former prison described by human rights groups as a center for
torture.
His family insists he had no direct contact with prisoners and never abused
anyone, but several former prisoners and their relatives have accused him of
involvement in torture.
Fakhoury's family and his lawyer accuse Lebanese authorities of torturing him.
His family said this week that his health has gotten much worse; doctors told
them his condition is grave and life-threatening, including a bad infection, a
bleeding disorder and other problems. A court session that was to be held this
week has been postponed because of his illness.
A U.S. State Department spokesperson told the Associated Press that the U.S.
embassy conducted its most recent consular visit with Fakhoury on Nov. 7. No
details were provided.
"We take allegations of mistreatment seriously and whenever we receive credible
reports of mistreatment we raise our concerns directly with the host
government," the spokesperson said.
In New Hampshire, Fakhoury ran a Middle Eastern/Mediterranean restaurant, where
he struck up friendships with patrons and community members. Interested in
Republican politics, he once met Donald Trump on a presidential campaign visit.
He also hosted fundraisers for a GOP congressional candidate.
Fakhoury was one of many South Lebanon Army members who fled after Israel
withdrew from Lebanon in 2000 following an 18-year occupation, fearing reprisals
if they stayed in Lebanon. Others stayed and faced trial, receiving lenient
sentences.
Fakhoury's family says he came to the United States in 2001, where he started a
restaurant with his wife and put his four daughters through the University of
New Hampshire.
Fakhoury started looking into a visit to Lebanon after President Michel Aoun
last year encouraged former SLA members to return home. His lawyer said that,
like many others in the SLA, Fakhoury faced a charge in 1996 of collaborating
with Israel, which was eventually “dropped.”
"He was actually granted assurances from the government, who reviewed his file
and told him, 'Your file is clear. Come back, you can come back to your
country,'" the lawyer said.
He arrived in Beirut in mid-September, along with his wife and two of his
daughters.
Security officials held onto his passport for a routine check and let him go.
When he returned about a week later to retrieve it, al-Akhbar newspaper, which
is close to Hizbullah, published a story accusing him of playing a role in the
torture of inmates at the former Khiam prison. He was arrested a day after it
appeared.
Scores of protesters outside a military court connected to Fakhoury's case
carried signs dubbing him the "butcher of Khiam"; some demanded he get the death
penalty.
Fakhoury's family and lawyer said he worked at the prison from 1989 to 1996.
They said he handled paperwork, cleaned the prison and made sure inmates got
their food. "There's no legal basis for his arrest," the lawyer said. "There's
no legal basis for his detention. ... He's an American citizen, an innocent
American citizen who's being illegally detained.
"Before the mass anti-government protests started, the Lebanese General Security
Directorate said Fakhoury had possessed an Israeli passport. But the lawyer said
U.S. records show he didn't have one. Lebanon's laws prevent its citizens from
dealing with or making any contacts with Israel. Fakhoury's family said they are
working with U.S. Senator Jeanne Shaheen and the U.S. Embassy in Lebanon. They
also wrote to the White House but haven't received a response.Fakhoury's wife
visits him and the daughters received a brief phone call from him during which
he asked about his granddaughter and began to cry.
Lebanon Anti-Graft Protesters March for Nature Too
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/November 24/2019
Surrounded by sweeping pines, lemon trees and bean stalks, hundreds of Lebanese
protesters march along, chanting against a planned dam that would drown the
valley under their feet. Unprecedented protests about corruption in Lebanon
since October 17 have given new life to activism against the controversial
structure planned for a lush valley south of Beirut.
Since the start of the year, the future construction site in the Bisri Valley
has been cordoned off and several trees uprooted to make way for work to begin.
But emboldened by the anti-graft protests, nature lovers have since November 9
ignored the gates and barged through them, hoping to save what remains of their
country's ravaged ecosystem.
Environmental activists in Lebanon say they have their work cut out.
They cite overflowing landfills, a polluted coast, quarries gnawing into
mountains and state neglect compounding forest fires that hit the country last
month before the mass protests began. Standing on a shack roof near the Bisri
Valley, environmental activist Bassam Zeineddine encourages hundreds of fellow
hikers who have come to show their support for the dam protest.
"The trees are the only thing left that they haven't taken," he shouts,
referring to the country's embattled officials."They've left us nothing else --
not water, nor air," rails the member of the "Save the Bisri Valley" movement in
a country where the coastline, rivers and air are all polluted.
Protesters clap and cheer, before setting off to march around 20 kilometers (12
miles), walking stick in one hand and billowing Lebanese flag in the other.
Along earthen paths they head towards the heart of the valley, singing the
national anthem before swiftly reverting to chants from recent anti-graft
protests."We pay taxes, but their pockets are full!" they intone.
Chronic water shortages
The government says the Bisri dam is vital to tackling chronic water shortages.
But activists say it will ravage most of the region's farmland and historic
sites, and they also fear the consequences of building it on a seismic fault
line. Deep in the valley during their hike, the protesters find a cement-making
machine. Yellow diggers also sit idle, after several trucks left the site
earlier following recent sit-ins, in what the activists say was a small victory.
Nearby, walkers snap images of uprooted tree stumps.
Roland Nassour, 27, says an ongoing survey of the valley has found several oaks
and pines ripped from the soil, but that so far most of the valley's canopy has
thankfully been spared.
"The environment is a key part of the revolution," says Nassour, who is also
part of the movement to protect the Bisri Valley. On Monday, he was one of nine
activists called in for questioning by police after the construction company
complained that gates had been broken and signs ripped down.
"We're proud of what we did," says Nassour. Construction of the Bisri dam is
expected to cost $617 million (560 million euros), with most covered by a World
Bank loan. The authorities and the World Bank have said the dam will meet the
needs of 1.6 million residents suffering from water shortages in greater Beirut.
They insist the structure will be safe and that measures will be taken to lessen
seismic risks. The World Bank says the dam will have no impact on Lebanon's
overall biodiversity, promising to offset any loss in Bisri with reforestation
and "enhanced management" of the Chouf, a separate region nearby. They have also
pledged to dismantle a small church and rebuild it somewhere else -- a proposal
rejected by activists.
'A champion polluter' -
On the banks of a meandering river, the hikers catch their breath near some
lemon trees and toppled granite columns thought to be from the Roman era.
To the tune of famed Italian resistance song "Bella Ciao", they sing in the open
to save the valley, accompanied by maracas and a harmonica.
"We want nature, we don't want to sell it. We want flowers, we want plains, we
want forests and fields," they chant. "We don't want a dam in Bisri. We want a
nature reserve." Clutching his walking stick, avid hiker Lucien says he has come
to stress the need to "preserve a green Lebanon.""We need more nature reserves,"
says the 30-year-old who works in advertising. Mervat, a 59-year-old activist,
said mismanagement of the forest fires in October provided a spark for the
revolution. "Lebanon is a champion when it comes to pollution," said the former
laboratory supervisor from the southern city of Sidon. "We want solutions, but
the officials are not providing any."
Lebanon's revolution on its 39th day: An ongoing momentum
Tala Ramadan/Annahar/November 24/2019
BEIRUT: During early morning hours, protestors gathered around the US embassy in
Beirut to chant against the intervention of foreign countries in Lebanon’s
nationwide demonstrations. This came as a reaction for recent comments by former
US Ambassador to Lebanon, Jeffrey Feltman in which he said that “the
demonstrations and the reactions to them by Lebanese leaders and institutions,
fortunately, coincide with U.S. interests.” Although some skirmishes took place,
the protests have remained mostly non-violent. Meanwhile, a number of activists,
schoolchildren, and university students, in cooperation with the municipal
workshops, cleaned Al-Nour Square in Tripoli. Demonstrations were also happening
in the city. Students were marching through the main streets and all the inner
neighborhoods and were shouting slogans condemning the difficult living and
economic conditions and demanding the formation of a government as soon as
possible to respond to the demands of the popular movement. After the revival of
the “fist of revolution”, which was lifted in Martyrs' Square, a number of young
men made a phoenix from the tents of the previously broken tents, and a number
of demonstrators gathered in Martyrs Square and Riad El Solh, amid the
insistence of the participants to complete their revolution, while dozens of
demonstrators gathered at sea points to affirm the right of the Lebanese to
benefit from the beach and refuse to exploit the maritime property in illegal
ways. Potluck picnics also took place on the coast of Corniche Ain El Mreisseh,
Raouche, Saida, Marj Bisri and Sour where participants gathered around food and
revolutionary talks since 11 AM to revive the picnic folklore, a step
accentuating Lebanon’s unity. Protesters in Nabatieh also held a demonstration
in which they were divided among groups of different professions. The
demonstrations that began on October 17 against proposed taxes on WhatsApp calls
turned into a condemnation of the country’s political elite, who have run the
country since the 1975-90 civil war.
After the Lebanon Protests: Between the Party of God and Party of the People
Maha Yahya/November 24/2019
Summary: Lebanon’s protesters succeeded in one of their demands: the resignation
of the country’s embattled Prime Minister. After the seismic protests, what is
the best way forward?
Related Media and Tools
On October 28, Lebanon’s Prime Minister Saad Hariri resigned from office
following two weeks of nationwide protests. While the spark was a proposed tax
on the use of internet telephone calls, the protests quickly turned into a more
general condemnation of the country’s political leadership, its escalating
economic crisis and its sectarian power sharing system.
A COUNTRY IN CRISIS
Lebanon’s economic crisis has reached a breaking point. Public debt is estimated
at 150 percent of GDP, economic growth is negative, the dollar peg for the
Lebanese pound is wavering on the black market, and there are signs of inflation
as the prices of some basic goods have increased between 15 and 30 percent.
Meanwhile, perceptions of corruption are at an all-time high. Lebanon is ranked
by Transparency International as the 138th most corrupt state globally. While
the tipping point leading to the protests was economic dissatisfaction, there is
an abysmal trust gap between Lebanese political parties and the citizens they
represent. Protesters believe the country’s political and economic mismanagement
by a sectarian political class has only benefitted the elite. Living standards
have declined for citizens from all sects, along with their future prospects.
Protesters also denounced the sectarian power sharing system that prevails in
the country. This system distributes government positions among the country’s
different sects and ethnic groups in order to guarantee the representation of
diverse communities in government and mitigate the prospect of communal
conflict. However, the system has enabled sectarian political elites, mainly
warlords turned politicians, to hijack communal representation and create
patronage networks at the state’s expense.
WHY THESE PROTESTS WERE DIFFERENT
Maha Yahya
Yahya is director of the Carnegie Middle East Center, where her research focuses
on citizenship, pluralism, and social justice in the aftermath of the Arab
uprisings.
What was distinctive about the protests is that for the first time protesters
across the board were criticizing the leaders of their own sect. For the
political elite, the breadth of discontent was startling. No political leader or
party was spared.
Most surprising, perhaps, was the dissent that emerged from within the Shiite
community, who rarely publicly criticize the leaders of the two key political
parties, Hezbollah and Amal.
HEZBOLLAH’S REACTION
Hezbollah’s response to the protests was expressed in two speeches by its
secretary general, Hassan Nasrallah. He initially voiced understanding for the
protesters’ frustrations, but he rejected demands that the government and
president resign and that early elections be held on the basis of a new law. He
went on to depict the nationwide protests and public anger with the status quo
and deteriorating economic conditions as part of a conspiracy to undermine
Hezbollah and its legitimacy. As such, he chose to perpetuate the status quo and
a political order that has protected Hezbollah, a reaction that pro-Iran parties
have also demonstrated in Iraq, where over the past few weeks, hundreds of
demonstrators have been killed.
Meanwhile, Hezbollah’s regional patron, Iran’s supreme leader Sayed Ali Khameni,
is portraying the demonstrations in Lebanon and Iraq as an external plot against
their respective countries.
THE POLITICAL FALLOUT
Hariri’s resignation—under pressure following the street protests, and because
of his partners’ unwillingness to find a political solution to the crisis—has
allowed him to recover some of his political capital.
However, the cost to Hezbollah and their key partner, Lebanon’s president Michel
Aoun and his son-in-law, foreign minister Gebran Bassil, was significant. For
Aoun, the government’s resignation posed a significant blow to his legacy as did
the palpable antipathy on the streets to Gebran Bassil. For Hezbollah, it
weakened their key Christian partner in Lebanon.
Becoming a champion of the status quo also tarnished Hezbollah’s preferred image
as a defender of the poor and downtrodden. While the party holds power in
government, it has managed to dodge any accountability for the sorry state of
affairs in the country. Yet, its status as a defender of the rights of the
Shiite community within Lebanon has been eroded. Like other Lebanese, they
believe this sorry state of affairs to be the result of patronage politics and
clientelistic networks facilitated by Lebanon’s governance system that includes
Hezbollah.
For Hezbollah, addressing internal dissent is a difficult road to maneuver. It
is a military and religious party that is paternalistic and strictly
hierarchical in nature. The party has had to reduce salaries and curtail social
service provision as a result of dwindling finances. Faced with widespread
protests, its initial reaction was to deploy force and intimidation tactics.
The question now is how far Hezbollah is willing to go to prevent dissent. So
far, the party has restricted itself to dispatching thugs to break up protests
in Beirut and southern Lebanon. Along with the other major Shiite political
party, the Amal movement, it has also prohibited protests or signs of dissent in
the villages and towns of southern Lebanon. As one of the young protesters in
the area told me, “What is wrong with letting people voice their opinion? You
say you are hungry, and they respond you are a foreign agent.”
MOVING FORWARD
President Aoun and Hezbollah are faced with a dilemma. Granting concessions to
protesters risks creating a perception that they are weak. Yet resorting to more
force will only accelerate Lebanon’s economic collapse and its social
repercussions.
Given the economic situation, the Lebanese political class needs to move quickly
to name a new prime minister who is acceptable both to them and to the
protesters. The country cannot afford the time-consuming horse trading that
usually occurs when governments are formed. If there is an economic collapse and
the Lebanese pound loses value, Lebanese citizens could see their incomes,
pensions, and savings disappear, and half the population could fall into
poverty. The fallout in terms of public anger could pale in comparison to what
we’ve seen thus far.
THREE OPTIONS
In this context, Hezbollah and its allies are likely to negotiate with Lebanon’s
other political parties one of three choices. One option is to ask Hariri to
form a new government, where the ministers would be apolitical technocrats or a
mix of political and independent appointees named by the various political
parties. This option is unlikely at this point, since they already rejected a
change of cabinet under Hariri at the height of the protests.
A second more likely option is to endorse a national salvation government headed
by an independent Sunni, one acceptable to Hariri. This cabinet would also be
composed of independent candidates not mired in corruption, or a mix of experts
and political appointees. The mandate of such a government would be an economic
reform plan, but it would not necessarily organize early elections, as demanded
by the protestors. Consensus among the political class for such a cabinet is
necessary. State institutions are greatly influenced by the different political
parties, as they have the capacity to hinder or support the work of ministers.
Political parties may be forced to reach such a consensus, once they realize
that the country could descend into chaos should they fail to take action.
A third, least favorable option at this point, is that Hezbollah adopts a
rejectionist position, in coordination with the Amal Movement and Aoun’s Free
Patriotic Movement. This would place the country in even more jeopardy as it
could include forming a cabinet without Hariri’s bloc, something that would be
badly received by his supporters and by an international community that is
likely to interpret such a move as a Hezbollah takeover of the country. It could
also include a stronger show of force against unarmed protesters, which would
only destabilize the country, and possibly slide Lebanon into a civil conflict.
This is unlikely at the moment, as Hezbollah is keen to maintain stability in
its own back yard, given regional challenges.
A NATIONAL AWAKENING
History in Lebanon is being made. The country and its people are standing at one
of the most significant historic junctures in its one-hundred-year history. A
sense of national awakening is driving the demand to move from identity-based
politics to a government focused on the rights and responsibilities of
citizenship. This reflects a fundamental societal change, which will impact
Lebanon’s future. Its political leadership and Lebanese citizens on the street
can either steer the country onto a brighter and more sustainable path—or end up
trapped once more in a bitter civil conflict.
*Maha Yahya: Is director of the Carnegie Middle East Center, where her research
focuses on citizenship, pluralism, and social justice in the aftermath of the
Arab uprisings.
Lebanon’s amnesty law is the government’s
last bid to save itself
Makram Rabah/Al Arabiya/November 24/2019
There is a current standoff between the Lebanese people and the ruling
establishment, who for two consecutive weeks has been trying to force a
parliamentary session to pass an amnesty law, which would absolve the ruling
elite from a number of crimes, including tax evasion.
This standoff comes as part of a nationwide uprising, which has seen millions of
people take to the streets, demanding a change to the archaic and corrupt
governance structure that their country is infamous for.
This amnesty law is no mere legislation but rather part of an elaborate scheme
by the ruling elite to create schism and chaos in the midst of the protesters by
placing them at odds with each other while at the same time providing the
different political factions with legal leverage going forward.
The political elite envisioned that any opposition to this amnesty law would
mobilize the families of thousands of convicts awaiting amnesty, and thus turn
the national uprising into a sectarian brawl.
The proposed bill, submitted by two members of speaker Nabih Berri’s bloc, did
not follow proper procedure and never went through subcommittees for proper
revision and approval.
Perhaps more importantly, the parliament session and any other legislative
sessions at this moment in time are unconstitutional simply because article 32
of the Lebanese constitution clearly states that the parliament in its current
session “shall be reserved to the discussion of, and voting on the budget before
any other work. This session lasts until the end of the year.”
Therefore, the parliament cannot technically meet unless it passes the
much-anticipated budget or in case of “legislative necessity” which the current
amnesty bill is no justification for.
The most sinister part of the bill is that it places Lebanese factions in fierce
opposition, as the draft law is designed to cater to thousands of outlaws, some
predominately Shiites from the eastern part of the country who are in jail or on
the run for crimes connected to narcotics.
It also caters to a segment of Sunni Muslims who are branded locally as
“Islamists”, some of them accused of fighting the Lebanese army in the past few
years. By proposing this amnesty bill, both Hezbollah as well as Hariri can
muster up much of this popular support which they have lost during the uprising
against their excessive corruption and lack of vision.
Contrary to what it repeatedly claims, Hezbollah is in bad shape not only
because of the US sanctions on its patron, but because its arsenal of weapons
does not contain any economic tools to address the current challenges. It
believes that this protest against corruption and bad governance can be
suppressed by force, just like the uprising in Syria or the protests in Iraq and
Iran. The majority of the people on the street might not be chanting against
Iran and its Lebanese subsidiary, but they know full well that one of the main
reasons why the Lebanese temple of corruption remains standing is the fact that
Hezbollah’s weapons will it.
On the two separate occasions that speaker Berri tried to convene parliament,
the Lebanese people flocked to the parliament house and laid siege to the area
and preve
Berri’s brutish and condescending attitude is reflective of the mindset of the
entire political class, which ostensibly acknowledges the demands of the street,
yet refuses to take any step in the right direction to remedy or address any of
the political and economic reform challenges.
The ruling elite claims that the parliament session which also had other items
on the agenda was geared towards the adoption of judicial reform to fight
corruption and empower various governmental entities crucial for establishing
the rule of law. These claims however are fallacious and, just like the economic
reform plan set forth by the current caretaker cabinet of Saad Hariri, masks a
sense of immortality and a belief that they can still outsmart the public and
pass on more corruption and usurpation of power as reform.
The people on the streets know quite well what needs to be done to change the
current predicament, and their roadmap does not include parliamentary sessions
nor false promises from the decrepid political class. The road to salvation
passes through the gradual relinquishing of power to a capable and righteous
emergency cabinet that would respect the Lebanese constitution and empower the
judiciary and respect the separation of powers. Perhaps then, amnesty will give
way for rule of law and justice for all.
Not afraid of change,’ Lebanese youth denounce
sectarianism, corruption
Samar Kadi/The Arab Weekly/November 25/2019
BEIRUT - They have powered anti-government protests in Lebanon for more than a
month, forced the resignation of Prime Minister Saad Hariri, blocked parliament
and introduced innovative means for peaceful demonstrations. The Lebanese
millennial generation is the heart of the persisting revolution.
Lebanon’s parliament was blocked from its first session for two months on
November 19 after protesters prevented lawmakers from reaching the building.
Authorities announced the session had been postponed indefinitely.
“How are they having a session and not responding to the people? Those who are
in the session have nothing to do with us and it’s not what we asked for,” said
Maria, a young protester.
Young Lebanese, born after the civil war (1975-90) and commonly known as
millennials, are on the front line of protests demanding an overhaul of
Lebanon’s sectarian-based political establishment and economic reform. They
accuse the ruling class of being corrupt, inefficient and the cause of Lebanon’s
worst economic and financial crisis.
“The millennials who constitute the majority of Lebanese are not shaping the
revolution… they are the revolution that had started in their hearts and minds
way before October 17,” said Pierre Issa, secretary-general of the National Bloc
party, one of the few non-sectarian parties in Lebanon.
“When the protests began, the millennials were taken lightly and seen as
ridicule or utopian for seeking change. However, they passed quickly from the
ridicule stage to being seen as dangerous because they started to shake the
political establishment that has been entrenched for decades. Soon they will
become evident,” Issa said.
“The millennials want citizenship not sectarianism; a state of law not
clientelism; honesty and transparency not corruption; sovereignty instead of
affiliation with foreign powers; and democracy instead of the cult of the leader
and political inheritance.”
“Our generation opted for conformity (with the existing system) but the
millennials are not afraid of change. They are the ones who are leading the
revolt,” said Issa, 60.
“The youth are telling the politicians that the system they are clinging to is
dead. The ruling class is alien to them; it does not resemble them nor represent
them.”
Described as “confident, self-expressive, liberal, upbeat and open to change,”
millennials have a strong leaning towards civic responsibility and a more
optimistic outlook than their forebears.
They are also the most “connected” generation of all time and the most educated.
“The new generation has transcended sectarian and political alignments. They did
not experience the civil war but they inherited the warlords. They don’t
understand why they have to be framed by their religion. They are aware of their
rights and know that only a state of law can guarantee those rights,” said Mona
Fayyad, founder of the Democratic Renewal organisation. “They are leading the
revolution. We are learning from our children. This generation has no zaim
(sectarian leader).”
She cited one student criticising older generations, saying: “What have you been
doing for the past 30 years? Why did you accept to coexist with corruption and
graft? Why did you accept to live without electricity, without water and without
basic rights?”
Lebanon’s demonstrations revealed a diversity never seen before, uniting
citizens from all sects, regions and religious beliefs but also age groups,
including children.
Youth have been largely innovative in enhancing what takes place in the streets
and squares. They write revolutionary songs and create short movies and
satirical caricatures of the political elite. They then share them through
Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram and other social media platforms.
“Unlike previous generations, the millennials have a very powerful tool in their
hand that is the easy access to information,” Issa said. “Older generations
tended to be recipients of information and news. The millennial generation no
longer just receives information and ideas but interacts with them. In fact,
they have become creators of information and ideas.”
“Every time one shares a call or a statement on social media it goes viral and
the streets are packed. One blogger, for example, has 500,000 followers.”
The protesters want an independent cabinet of technocrats whom they can trust to
pull Lebanon out of its economic and financial crisis and stamp out corruption.
“We have to listen to them. They are so creative in their slogans, music,
drawings, decisions and actions,” Issa said.
Citing Lebanese poet Khalil Gibran, Issa added: “Our children are not ours; they
are the children of life. We should not try to force them to follow us. They are
the future, we are the past, they are dynamic and we are static… The day we
understand this, society will develop and evolve.”
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous
Reports And News published on November 24-25/2019
In Hiroshima, Pope Condemns 'Crime' of
Nuclear Weapons
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/November 24/2019
Pope Francis on Sunday condemned the use of nuclear weapons as "a crime," as he
brought his call for an end to atomic weapons to the Japanese city of Hiroshima.
"The use of atomic energy for purposes of war is today, more than ever, a crime
not only against the dignity of human beings but against any possible future for
our common home," the pontiff said at the city's Peace Memorial.
A US-Iran military front is fast shaping up on the
Syrian-Iraqi border – with a role for the IDF
DEBKAfile/November 25/ 2019
As the US military takes up new positions against Iran on the Syria-Iraq border,
a major Mid East event seems to be brewing, with a key role for Israel. This is
strongly indicated by the comings and goings of top US officials this weekend.
Gen. Mark Milley, Chairman of the US Chiefs of Staff, is in Israel as the guest
of Israel’s chief of staff Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi. On Saturday, Nov. 213, the
commander of US CENTCOM, Gen. Kenneth McKenzie predicted that Iran will probably
launch another attack in the Middle East. At a regional conference in Manama,
Bahrain, McKenzie said that although 14,000 additional US soldiers were deployed
in the Persian Gulf since the spring, they did not deter Iran from attacking a
Saudi oil field.
On Saturday too, Vice President Mike Pence paid an unannounced trip to Iraq for
a special briefing on the situation on the Syrian-Iraqi border at the US Al-Asad
Air Base. These movements came after the top-secret Israeli air strike last
Tuesday, Nov. 19, on a mysterious Iranian target near the Syrian town of Abu
Kamal close to the Iraqi border. Neither Israel nor Iran revealed what that was
about except to admit that it occurred.
Most significantly, Pence chose to arrive in Iraq at Irbil, capital of the
semiautonomous Kurdish Republic (KRG), rather than Baghdad and the first person
he met was the KRG’s president Nachirvan Barzani. He only put in a brief phone
call to Iraqi Prime Miniser Adel Abdul-Mahdi.
The vice president’s actions signified the revival of the US-Kurdish alliance –
not just with the Syrian branch but also with their Iraqi brethren. Indeed, the
outcry over the Trump administration’s desertion of the Syrian Kurds in the wake
of the Turkish invasion earlier this month neatly camouflaged the substantial
influx of US troops arriving in the Kurdish regions of eastern Syria this month.
American encampments there, far from being evacuated, have been substantially
augmented by new military facilities, two of them air bases.
DEBKAfile’s military sources have learned that US engineering units are erecting
one new base near Al Sur in the Deir Ez-Zour region and another near the town of
Amuda. Those bases are partly designed to counter the Russian air force’s
establishment of a military air base in the Kurdish town of Qamishli, so that
the US does not lose control of northeastern Syria near the Iraqi border to
Moscow. However, the newly boosted US deployment in that corner of Syria has a
more pressing mission. As Tehran tightens its grip on Baghdad and its
Revolutionary Guards elite Al Qods Brigades take over command of the Iraqi
Shiite militias stationed on the Iraqi-Syrian border, this part of Syria gains
in strategic importance. The topped-up US military presence is becoming the only
real obstruction for preventing Iran creating a direct bridge between its forces
in Iraq, Syria and Hizballah in Lebanon.
On this point, American and Israel’s strategic interests converge, especially
when both anticipate hostilities exploding in this part of the Syria-Iraq border
in the near future, and the importance of this region growing in the coming
weeks and months. The talks the top US soldier, Gen. Milley conducted in Israel
no doubt focused on the Israel Defense Forces’ role in these events.
Iran is planning attacks on Israel: Netanyahu
AFP, Jerusalem/Monday, 25 November 2019
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday accused Iran of planning
attacks against Israel and said everything possible would be done to prevent
them. The premier, who was indicted on corruption charges on Thursday and is
seen to be battling for his political life, made his remarks on a visit to an
army base near the border with conflict-ravaged Syria. “Iran’s aggression in our
region, and against us, continues,” Netanyahu said. He was speaking on the day
US General Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was in the
country to meet his Israeli counterpart Aviv Kohavi. The two generals discussed
“operational questions and regional developments,” an army statement said.
Speaking on the Israeli-annexed Golan Heights, Netanyahu said “we are taking all
necessary actions to prevent Iran from entrenching here in our region.”“This
includes the activity necessary to thwart the transfer of lethal weaponry from
Iran to Syria, whether by air or overland. “We will also take action to thwart
Iran’s effort to turn Iraq and Yemen into bases for launching rockets and
missiles” at Israel, he added. On Wednesday, in a rare confirmation of such
operations, Israel said its warplanes carried out a “very intense” attack
against Iranian forces and Syrian army targets in Syria. Britain-based
monitoring group the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 23 people were
killed in the strikes -- 21 fighters and two civilians. The previous day,
Israel’s “Iron Dome” missile defense system had intercepted four rockets fired
from Syria, with the army blaming an “Iranian force.”Attorney General Avichai
Mandelblit announced Thursday he had charged Netanyahu with bribery, fraud and
breach of trust, prompting speculation that the end of the premier’s decade-long
tenure was nigh.
Gantz Seeks Support from Netanyahu's Party to Form
Government
Agence France Presse/November 24/2019
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's centrist rival Benny Gantz Saturday
urged leaders of the premier's Likud party to join him in forming a government
after their chief's indictment on corruption charges. "In light of the
circumstances, I call for the formation of the largest possible government under
my leadership," Gantz told a news conference, addressing members of the
right-wing Likud. "I would be the prime minister for the first two years," he
said. And if Netanyahu "is cleared (of any wrongdoing) he could return and
become prime minister", Gantz added. Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit
announced Thursday he had charged Netanyahu with bribery, fraud and breach of
trust, prompting speculation that the end of the premier's decade-long tenure
was nigh. The indictment came as Israel edged closer to its third general
election in a year, after two inconclusive polls in April and September.
On Wednesday former army general Gantz, whose party gained one more seat than
Likud in the September poll, said he was unable to form a government and secure
a majority in the 120-seat Knesset, or parliament. Gantz, leader of the centrist
Blue and White coalition, was asked to form a government by President Reuven
Rivlin after Netanyahu also failed to do so. Netanyahu remains the country's
interim premier, however. Parliament now has less than three weeks to find a
candidate who can gain the support of more than half of the Knesset's 120
lawmakers, or a deeply unpopular third election will be called.
Gantz, speaking in Tel Aviv, said his proposal was "the only alternative to
holding new elections". Under Israeli law, while ministers cannot remain in
place after being indicted, a prime minister is not legally required to resign
unless convicted and with any appeals processes exhausted.
In addition to the premiership, Netanyahu holds portfolios including agriculture
and health, positions he may have to vacate in the coming days. Netanyahu, the
first Israeli prime minister to be indicted in office on corruption charges, has
denounced a "coup" against him, dismissed the charges as "false" and
"politically motivated" and vowed to hold onto power.
Netanyahu’s Likud party plans for leadership primaries:
Reports
Reuters, Jerusalem/Monday, 25 November 2019
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud party will hold leadership
primaries within the next six weeks, Israeli media reported on Sunday. The YNet
news website said Netanyahu had agreed with the head of Likud’s central
committee, Haim Katz, to hold the leadership vote. A Likud party spokesman was
not immediately reachable for comment. Earlier on Sunday, a watchdog group asked
Israel’s top court to order Prime Minister Netanyahu to step aside after his
indictment on corruption charges, adding to pressure he is facing from within
his ruling party. Netanyahu, a four-term conservative leader, has denied the
charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust and said he will stay in office
and defend himself. His indictment on Thursday came amid unprecedented political
disarray in Israel, after elections in April and September in which neither
Netanyahu nor his main challenger, centrist Benny Gantz, secured a governing
majority in parliament.
Israel’s Netanyahu faces court, party challenges after
indictment
Reuters, Jerusalem/Sunday, 24 November 2019
A watchdog group asked Israel’s top court on Sunday to order Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu to step aside after his indictment on corruption charges,
adding to pressure he is facing from within his ruling party. Netanyahu, a
four-term conservative leader, has denied the charges of bribery, fraud and
breach of trust and said he will stay in office and defend himself. His
indictment on Thursday came amid unprecedented political disarray in Israel,
after elections in April and September in which neither Netanyahu nor his main
challenger, centrist Benny Gantz, secured a governing majority in parliament. In
its petition to the Supreme Court, the Movement for Quality Government in Israel
said the first-ever criminal charges against a sitting Israeli prime minister
constituted “the crossing of a red line and a grave blow to public trust in
ruling institutions.”The court should force Netanyahu to resign or temporarily
recuse himself from prime ministerial duties, the movement said. It was not
immediately clear when the court might rule on the petition. Gantz’s mandate to
form a government - after an unsuccessful attempt by Netanyahu to do so -
expired on Wednesday. The next day, Israel’s president declared a three-week
period in which lawmakers can nominate one of their own to try to put together a
ruling coalition.
Should that fail, a new election - Israel’s third in a year - will be triggered.
Netanyahu’s hope of securing that parliamentary nomination was challenged by
Gideon Saar, a rival within his Likud party. Saar said on Saturday Netanyahu
would not able to win a third election and called on Likud to hold a leadership
ballot. “There is only one way in which we can save the country, extricate it
from the crisis and ensure the Likud’s continued rule - and that is if we go to
snap primaries today, within these 21 days,” Saar told Israel’s Channel 12
television. Saar has previously said he would consider running for the top Likud
slot. While voicing appreciation for Netanyahu’s record-long term and noting he
was innocent until proven otherwise, Saar criticised the premier’s attempts to
cast his criminal prosecution as a “coup attempt” involving police, prosecutors
and the media. “Not only is it wrong to say that, it’s also irresponsible to say
that. It’s completely out of touch,” Saar said. The Likud party spokesman
dismissed the challenge. “It is sad to see that while Prime Minister Netanyahu
keeps Israel safe on all fronts and works to preserve Likud rule, Gideon Saar,
as is his wont, is displaying zero loyalty and maximum subversion,” the
spokesman said. Opening the weekly cabinet meeting on Sunday, Netanyahu made no
mention of the political crisis or his legal woes, speaking about Israeli
security issues.
Iran Vows to Punish 'Mercenaries' behind Street Violence
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/November 24/2019
Iran will severely punish "mercenaries" arrested over a wave of street violence
that erupted after a sharp hike in fuel prices, a Revolutionary Guards commander
warned Sunday. The Islamic republic says it has restored calm after the unrest
that broke out on November 15, hours after the surprise announcement that petrol
prices would go up by as much as 200 percent. Citing law enforcement officials,
Fars news agency said Sunday that 180 ringleaders had been arrested over the
protests that saw highways blocked, banks and police stations set alight and
shops looted. "We will certainly respond in accordance to the viciousness
carried out by them," said Rear-Admiral Ali Fadavi, deputy commander in chief of
the Revolutionary Guards. "We have arrested all stooges and mercenaries who have
explicitly made confessions that they have been mercenaries of America, of
Monafeghin and others," he told a news conference in Tehran. Monafeghin is a
term Iran uses to refer to the People's Mujahedeen of Iran (MEK) opposition in
exile group, which it considers a "terrorist" cult. Fadavi added that "we have
arrested all of them and, God willing, the judiciary will give them maximum
punishments". The total number of people arrested over the unrest remained
unclear, but the UN human rights office put the figure at more than 1,000 on
Tuesday. Fadavi was speaking at a gathering of female members of the Basij, a
militia loyal to Iran's establishment. On Friday, a Basij commander said the
unrest sparked by the fuel price hike amounted to a "world war" against Iran
that had been thwarted. Brigadier General Salar Abnoosh said interrogations had
revealed that a "coalition of evil" of "Zionists, America and Saudi Arabia" was
behind the "sedition", according to ISNA news agency. Officials have confirmed
five deaths, while Amnesty International said more than 100 demonstrators were
believed to have been killed and the real toll could be as high as 200.
Iran’s Guards call for ‘maximum punishment’ of fuel unrest
leaders
Reuters, Geneva/Sunday, 24 November 2019
A senior commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards has urged the country’s
judiciary to mete out harsh sentences to what he described as “mercenaries”
involved in protests against a fuel price hike last week, the judiciary’s Mizan
news site reported. “We caught all the mercenaries who openly confessed they
were doing mercenary work for America and, God willing, the judicial system of
the country will give them maximum punishments,” Rear Admiral Ali Fadavi, a
deputy Guards commander, was quoted as saying. Iran’s clerical rulers have
blamed “thugs” linked to exiles and foreign foes - the United States, Israel -
for stirring up unrest which has led to some of the worst violence in the
country in a decade. Fadavi said several people were killed during the protests
after being shot at with a handgun from a close distance behind themselves,
which he said indicated the shooters were among the crowds.
Rights group Amnesty International said in a release earlier this week that
security forces shot into crowds of protesters from rooftops and, in one case,
from a helicopter. Amnesty said at least 115 people have died in the unrest.
Iran has rejected death toll figures as “speculative.”Iranian authorities have
said about 1,000 demonstrators have been arrested. The Center for Human Rights
in Iran, a New York-based advocacy group, said on its website that a tally based
on official figures and credible reports suggested that “a minimum of 2,755
people have been arrested with the actual minimum number likely being closer to
4,000.”
Draft law to impeach oil minister
With tensions over the gasoline price increases remaining high, some 50
lawmakers have submitted a proposal to parliament that could ultimately lead to
the impeachment of Iran’s Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh. “Parliament’s presiding
board has received the censure motion against Zanganeh over various issues
including ... gasoline price hikes,” said a member of the presiding board Ahmad
Amirabadi Farahani, the website of Iran’s Young Journalists Club reported. It
was not immediately clear whether the lawmakers would go through with the motion
or eventually withdraw it as has happened in some previous cases.
Protests began on November 15 in several towns after the government announced
gasoline price hikes of at least 50 percent. They spread to 100 cities and towns
and quickly turned political with protesters demanding top officials step down.
Iran accused of ‘stealing bodies from morgues’ to downplay
protest toll
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 24 November 2019
Authorities in Iran have been accused of stealing bodies from morgues and
spiriting away injured patients from hospitals in order to downplay the scale of
the crackdown on recent protests, a UK newspaper reported on Saturday. Exiled
Iranian opposition group Mojahedin-e Khalq (MEK) claims the regime is secretly
disposing of bodies from morgues, reported The Telegraph. According to the
report, one of the first to be injured when the protests broke out was Mehdi
Nekouee, a 20-year-old law student from the city of Shiraz. He was shot by the
Revolutionary Guard but has not been seen since.
His uncle Ahmed told The Telegraph that “he was critical but alive when he
arrived at hospital... we have heard nothing since.” His family now believes
that Mehdi, instead of being treated in a hospital, been taken away by the
intelligence services. A nurse at the hospital confirmed that Mehdi had indeed
been treated before he was removed, along with several other patients, but she
didn't know where to, The Telegraph reported. Protests began in several areas on
November 15 after the government announced gasoline price hikes of at least 50
percent and imposed rationing. The unrest, which turned violent, spread to at
least 100 towns and cities as demonstrators demanded senior officials step down.
Amnesty International meanwhile has updated the death toll to 115 from 106. Iran
rejected the death toll figures as “speculative having claimed earlier this week
that the figure is as low as 12.
United Nations officials also fear that 'a significant number of people' may
have been killed. Meanwhile, police said 180 “ringleaders” of the unrest had
been detained by its agents across the country, state television reported on
Saturday. On Friday the judiciary said the Revolutionary Guards had arrested
about 100 leaders of protests. About 1,000 demonstrators have been arrested,
Iranian media said nearly a week ago. The Center for Human Rights in Iran, a New
York-based advocacy group, said on its website that a tally based on official
figures and credible reports suggested that “a minimum of 2,755 people have been
arrested with the actual minimum number likely being closer to 4,000.” Iranian
troops and members of the elite Revolutionary Guards helped police quell violent
unrest in Kermanshah province this week, Iranian officials said on Saturday.
Rights group Amnesty International said at least 30 people were killed in
Kermanshah, making it the worst-hit by the protests. - With agencies
Six Protesters Killed in South Iraq as Unrest Intensifies
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/November 24/2019
Six protesters were killed Sunday in Iraq's south, where resurging
anti-government demonstrations turned up the heat on paralyzed politicians
facing the country's largest grassroots movement in decades. Three demonstrators
were killed and around 50 wounded in clashes with security forces near the key
southern port of Umm Qasr, the Iraqi Human Rights Commission reported. An AFP
correspondent said security forces had fired live rounds at protesters trying to
block access to the port. Since October 1, Iraq's capital and majority-Shiite
south have been swept by mass demonstrations over corruption, lack of jobs and
poor services that have escalated into calls for an overhaul of the ruling
system. Top leaders have publicly acknowledged the demands as legitimate
and promised measures to appease protesters, including hiring drives, electoral
reform and a cabinet reshuffle. But the rallies have continued, waning on some
days but swelling when demonstrators felt politicians were stalling. On Sunday,
protesters in the southern city of Nasiriyah blockaded five main bridges, shut
down schools and burned tires outside public offices in anger. They blocked
access to oil fields and companies around the city, torching as well its Shiite
endowment center, a government body that manages religious sites. Medical
sources said overnight three protesters had been shot dead and at least 47
others wounded by security forces in the city, some 300 kilometers (200 miles)
south of the capital Baghdad. An estimated 350 people have been killed and
thousands wounded since October 1, according to a tally compiled by AFP as
authorities are not providing precise or updated figures. That makes the
protests Iraq's deadliest grassroots movement in decades, but also its most
widespread.
Live rounds in Karbala
The rural and tribalistic south has carried the torch of the movement for weeks,
with students and teachers leading rallies outside schools and public offices.
In an attempt to resume classes, the education ministry issued a directive for
schools to open normally on Sunday, the first day of the work week in Iraq.But
protesters in Nasiriyah defied the order and shut down schools anyway, AFP's
correspondent said. In the oil-rich southern city of Basra, demonstrators
blocked main roads just before dawn, including those leading to the ports of Umm
Qasr and Khor al-Zubair. The ports, which bring in food and medicine to Iraq but
also export fuel products, have seen some delays in loading and offloading due
to the unrest in recent weeks. Clashes also pitted protesters against security
forces overnight in Karbala, one of Iraq's two Shiite holy cities. The two sides
lobbed Molotov cocktails at each other from behind barricades set up in small
alleyways. "They're throwing Molotov cocktails at us and at midnight, they
started shooting live rounds," one demonstrator said. The streets were lit only
by fires from the exploding makeshift grenades and green laser pointers used by
demonstrators to disrupt the riot police's vision. "Our demands are clear: the
downfall of this corrupt government," said another demonstrator, his face
wrapped in a black scarf.
Budget discussions
Iraq is the 12th most corrupt country in the world, says Transparency
International, and many protesters say the current political class is to blame.
They accuse elites of awarding public sector jobs based on bribes, nepotism or
sectarianism, leading to an unemployment rate of 25 percent.
Iraq's cabinet is currently discussing the 2020 budget before it is submitted to
parliament and government sources say it is expected to be one of the country's
largest yet. Sunday's violence came a day after the surprise visit of United
States Vice President Mike Pence to Iraq, where he dropped in on American troops
stationed in the country's west and met top leaders in the Kurdish region in the
north. He did not, however, meet officials in Baghdad for "security reasons."
The U.S. and Iraq have been close allies since the former led the 2003 invasion
that toppled ex-dictator Saddam Hussein, but ties are now at their "coldest",
officials from both countries have told AFP.
Thirteen dead in one of the ‘worst’ days of protest in
southern Iraq
The Associated Press, Baghdad/Sunday, 24 November 2019
Thirteen anti-government protesters were killed Sunday by Iraqi security forces
in one of the “worst” days of clashes in the country’s south, as protests swept
through the oil-rich area, officials said. Demonstrators outraged by rampant
government corruption and poor services burned tires and blocked main road
arteries. Security and hospital officials, who requested anonymity in line with
regulations, said seven protesters were killed in the southern province of
Basra, near the Umm Qasr port. Security forces used live fire and tear gas to
disperse the protesters. Earlier in Basra, which accounts for nearly 85 percent
of the country’s crude oil production, protesters burned tires in the city
center cutting main roads. Officials said four protesters were killed in
Nassiriya province, and one killed in both Najaf and Diwanieh provinces. One
security official in Basra said it was “one of the worst” days since the start
of the protest movement. At least 150 protesters were wounded. At least 342
people have died since demonstrations began October 1, when thousands of Iraqis,
mostly youth, took to the streets to decry corruption and poor services. The
leaderless uprising seeks to overthrow the political establishment. Security
forces appeared to have fired live rounds at protesters near the Umm Qasr port,
killing three according to an official from the Iraqi High Commission for Human
Rights, who requested anonymity in line with regulations. Protesters had cut
roads leading to Umm Qasr, the country’s main commodities port, halting all
trade activity. Security forces cleared the area of protesters on Thursday.
Turkish drones target Syria’s Ain Issa, nearby villages
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 24 November 2019
Turkish drones bombarded a camp in the northern town of Ain Issa and other
villages in Syria’s city of Raqqa on Sunday, according to the Syrian Observatory
for Human Rights. Pro-Turkey factions had also withdrew from all the sites they
had advanced to on the outskirts of Ain Issa. The SANA news agency had reported
that Turkish forces waged a “violent attack” on Ain Issa on Saturday. In a
statement on Facebook, the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (NES)
said that Turkish forces and their factions “continue to violate the ceasefire
agreement and occupy more of our areas.”
They said that the attack on Ain Issa displaced thousands and “exacerbated the
humanitarian crisis.”“Erdogan continues to use the Syrian refugees’ card as a
bargaining chip for political investments,” the statement read. Meanwhile Syrian
regime forces regained control of the village of Mushrafa, in the southeast of
Idlib following fierce battles with rebel factions and Hayyaat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS),
the Syrian Observatory reported on Sunday. Regime forces raided the areas where
the clashes were taking place, dropping several bombs on the countryside of
Idlib. Russian warplanes also carried out several raids on Sunday morning on
Maarat Harma and Al-Dar Al-Kabira in the southern countryside of Idlib, the
observatory added.
Hong Kongers Vote in Record Numbers as Democracy Camp Seeks
to Send Message
Naharnet/Naharnet/November 24/2019
Hong Kong's voters turned out in record numbers Sunday for local council
elections that the city's pro-democracy movement hopes will add pressure on the
Beijing-backed government to heed their demands after months of violent protest.
Lengthy queues snaked out of polling stations across the territory in the
election for 18 district councils, where high turnout is expected to benefit
democratic forces. The Electoral Affairs Commission said a record 47.26 percent
of the 4.13 million citizens registered to vote had cast their ballots by late
Sunday afternoon. It was already the highest turnout in Hong Kong's history of
district council elections post handover, with several hours of voting still to
go. The selection of 452 councilors -- handling community-level concerns such as
bus routes and garbage collection -- traditionally generates little excitement,
but has taken on new significance following months of political unrest.
Hong Kong has been buffeted by months of mass rallies and violent clashes
pitting police against protesters who are agitating for direct popular elections
of the semi-autonomous Chinese territory's government, as well as a probe into
alleged police brutality. District councils have long been dominated by the
pro-Beijing establishment, and voters seeking change hope that weakening that
grip will give their movement fresh momentum. "Even though one ballot can only
help a little, I still hope it can bring change to society and support street
protests in some way," 19-year-old student Michael Ng, voting for the first
time, told AFP.The vote is the closest Hong Kongers get to direct
representation.
- Voting for choice -
The territory's top-level legislature is elected by a mix of popular vote and
seats reserved for industry groups stacked with China loyalists, which ensures
Beijing's control of the city of around 7.3 million. The pro-democracy camp is
calling Sunday's vote a referendum on Chief Executive Carrie Lam and the
pro-Beijing government, who have resisted the movement's demands. "We are voting
to give our judgement on what has happened... we're also voting to make a choice
for what is yet to come," said Jimmy Sham, a pro-democracy candidate and a
prominent figure in the largely leaderless protest movement. But the polls are
not entirely symbolic: some candidates for next year's legislative elections
will be drawn from district councilors, and the bodies also will contribute 117
members to the 1,200-strong Beijing-controlled electoral college that chooses
the chief executive. Protests have been muted in recent days after pro-democracy
figures urged citizens to cease disruptions to avoid giving the government an
excuse to delay or suspend the polls. Police were deployed at some polling
stations and on city streets, but their presence was not particularly heavy. No
violence or other disturbances were reported. "I'm pleased to say that... we
should have a relatively peaceful and calm environment to conduct these
elections successfully," Lam said after voting in her constituency on Hong Kong
island. The political unrest kicked into high gear with giant rallies in June
against a bill backed by Lam that would allow extraditions to China's opaque
justice system. The bill was eventually withdrawn as public pressure grew, but
the anger that it unleashed sparked wider calls for democracy. Analysts expect
pro-democracy candidates to see gains in the district councils but still fall
short of a majority of slots. Campaigning has been marred by acrimony, with one
pro-democracy candidate having his ear bitten off in an attack, while 17 other
candidates of all stripes have been arrested over protest-related activities.
Election authorities banned leading democracy activist Joshua Wong from running
in the district poll for backing Hong Kong "self-determination."
US Defense Secretary asks for navy chief’s resignation:
Statement
AFP, Washington/Monday, 25 November 2019
US Defense Secretary Mark Esper on Sunday requested the navy chief’s resignation
amid a dispute over an elite SEAL commando whose demotion for misconduct was
reversed by President Donald Trump.Esper “asked for the resignation of Secretary
of the Navy Richard Spencer after losing trust and confidence in him regarding
his lack of candor over conversations with the White House involving the
handling of Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher,” the Department of Defense said in a
statement.
Merkel ally calls for better Franco-German ties after NATO
row
Reuters, Berlin/Sunday, 24 November 2019
Germany and France must bury their differences and pursue a constructive
partnership with concrete ideas, an ally of German Chancellor Angela Merkel said
after a public spat between the two European Union heavyweights over NATO.
Relations between the neighbors, traditionally the axis of the 28-member bloc,
have become particularly tricky since French President Emmanuel Macron came to
power as his ambitious plans for reform have often hit the buffers with cautious
Merkel. Many commentators say the fraught relationship between Berlin and Paris
is holding back the EU at a time when it needs to show a united front towards
other world powers, such as the United States and China. Macron irked some
allies, including Germany, this month by saying the NATO defense alliance was
experiencing brain death and casting doubt on its collective guarantee, whereby
an attack on one member is an attack on all in NATO. Merkel slapped down Macron
saying he had used “drastic words” and had overreacted. She saw NATO
differently, she said. Norbert Roettgen, a member of Merkel’s conservative
Christian Democrats (CDU) and head of the parliamentary foreign affairs
committee, told Germany’s Bild daily that he understood the chancellor. “But all
this doesn’t help, we have to get relations with France back on a constructive
track,” he told Monday’s edition of Bild, according to an extract released on
Sunday. “To do that we don’t always have to wait for Macron’s proposals, but we
must make some, or at least one, of our own,” he said, suggesting ideas such as
a common 5G network for the two countries or a bi-national sovereign bond for
innovation. “We could transform ourselves from the repairman into a driver of
German-French ideas,” he said. Bild daily also cited a report in the New York
Times which said Merkel had shown exasperation with Macron at a dinner to
celebrate the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall. “I understand
your desire for disruptive politics. But I’m tired of picking up the pieces.
Over and over, I have to glue together the cups you have broken so we can then
sit down and have a cup of tea together,” she was reported as saying to him.
Romania’s Iohannis wins second presidential term with rule
of law pledge
Reuters, Bucharest/Monday, 25 November 2019
Romania’s centrist President Klaus Iohannis won a presidential election runoff
on Sunday as expected, crushing his socialist challenger with a pledge to resume
judicial reforms slowed down by successive Social Democrat (PSD) governments.
Two separate exit polls showed Iohannis garnered 64 percent-67 percent of the
vote, with former prime minister Viorica Dancila of the left-leaning PSD taking
33-36 percent. “The winner today is modern Romania, European Romania, the normal
Romania,” Iohannis told reporters in his victory speech. Under a succession of
PSD governments, Romania, a European Union member state, has rolled back
anti-corruption measures in recent years. Along with ex-communist peers Poland
and Hungary, it has been heavily criticized by Brussels for its actions.
However, 60-year-old Iohannis has been credited by Western allies and the
European Union with trying to protect the rule of law, in particular by
challenging attempts to limit judges’ independence. The president’s powers are
mostly limited to nominating a prime minister on the basis of who can command a
majority, challenging laws in the Constitutional Court, and appointing some
chief prosecutors.
Iohannis is expected to install anti-graft and anti-mafia prosecutors who are
serious about tackling endemic corruption with the backing of Prime Minister
Ludovic Orban, who became head of a liberal minority government by winning a
parliamentary vote of confidence three weeks ago.
Teacher Andreea Mihai, 50, said “things should slowly return to normality. Both
Orban and Iohannis will work together in the same direction.” Dancila’s PSD had
increased the burden of proof in corruption cases, reorganized panels of judges
and set up a special unit to investigate magistrates for potential abuses, a
move widely seen as an instrument of political coercion. Romania’s judicial
reforms have been monitored by Brussels since it joined the EU in 2007; in
October, Brussels said the reforms were going backwards. Iohannis, a soft-spoken
ethnic German and former mayor of Sibiu, became president in 2014. He helped to
secure popular approval in a referendum last May that called for the government
to be banned from altering legislation by emergency decrees, and advocated a ban
on amnesties and pardons for graft-related crimes. Data from Romania’s election
commission, which is expected to announce partial official results on Monday,
showed turnout of about 50 percent, with a record 920,000 voters from the
country’s diaspora taking part.
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous
sources published on November 24-25/2019
Fourteen Years after Cartoon Crisis, Norway again Knuckles
Under to Islam
Bruce Bawer/Gatestone Institute/November 24/ 2019
While one can hardly imagine the Pakistani government responding to Norwegian
pressure to stop oppressing Ahmadiyya Muslims, Hindus, women, gays, and so on,
Pakistan has not hesitated to complain about developments in Norway that offend
its delicate cultural sensibilities.
So it was that the representative of a purportedly free country fell all over
himself assuring officials of an "Islamic Republic" that, at least when Islam is
in the picture, freedom of speech and of assembly in Norway have their limits.
Once again, alas, it appears that when the exercise of fundamental Norwegian
freedoms causes offense, the powers that be in Norway have no hesitation about
choosing the wrong side.
While one can hardly imagine the Pakistani government responding to Norwegian
pressure to stop oppressing Ahmadiyya Muslims, Hindus, women, gays, and so on,
Pakistan has not hesitated to complain about developments in Norway that offend
its delicate cultural sensibilities. Pictured: The Embassy of Pakistan in Oslo,
Norway, photographed on May 2, 2013.
There has long been what you might call a "special relationship" between Norway
and Pakistan. Although they have since been overtaken statistically by Somalis,
Iranians, and Iraqis, Pakistanis used to be the major Muslim immigrant group in
Norway. The area around the city of Kharian in the Punjab is even known as
"Little Norway" because so many people from this region have settled in Norway.
Indeed, many of those folks from Kharian, having made a bundle on Norwegian
welfare payments or by driving cabs in Oslo, running kebab joints, or whatever,
have built veritable palaces back home. They come complete with servants (or
near-slaves), and are the principal residences of some of their wives and
children and where they themselves spend months at a time.
So many Norwegian voters have "second homes" of this sort in or around Kharian
that Norwegian politicians have actually campaigned there. Muslim children born
in Norway are routinely sent back to Kharian and environs to go to school --
more specifically, to attend the madrassas, or Koran schools -- so that they
will not be poisoned by Western values. In recent years, Norwegian Muslim
politicians and journalists have proposed that the Norwegian government finance
at least one school in Kharian for local children who hold Norwegian passports.
Traffic back and forth between the two countries by people with double residency
is heavy: if some day you find yourself at Oslo Airport, you will invariably see
at least one long line consisting largely of bearded men, women in hijab, and
armies of children, each family accompanied by tons of luggage, who are awaiting
the next flight to Islamabad, Karachi, or Lahore.
It would be impossible to measure the amount of Norwegian taxpayer money that
has been injected into the Pakistani economy over the years. What is beyond
question is that it is a huge sum. You might think that wealth transfers,
however substantial, from a European country of six million people to an Asian
country of 213 million could hardly make much of a difference. Yet, despite its
tiny population, Norway, believe it or not, has a bigger economy than Pakistan
-- depending on how you measure, it has the world's approximately 30th highest
nominal GDP, more or less, as opposed to Pakistan's 40th or thereabouts. So all
those kroner matter.
For this reason alone, you might expect that Pakistani authorities would treat
their Norwegian counterparts with at least a modicum of respect, and that the
government in Oslo would wield some kind of clout in Pakistan. On the contrary,
this is an instance where the tail often seems to wag the dog. While one can
hardly imagine the Pakistani government responding to Norwegian pressure to stop
oppressing Ahmadiyya Muslims, Hindus, women, gays, and so on, Pakistan has not
hesitated to complain about developments in Norway that offend its delicate
cultural sensibilities.
On November 16, a group called Stop the Islamization of Norway (Stopp
Islamiseringen av Norge - SIAN) had publicly set fire to a copy of the Koran in
a garbage can in the city of Kristiansand. The event was attended by more than
thirty police officers, who were under secret orders from the chief of the
Norwegian police, Marie Benedicte Bjørnland, to try to prevent the burning
before it could take place; in fact SIAN managed to set the book alight and it
took a few seconds for the police to put out the flames.
Bjørnland later defended her directive by citing the so-called "racism clause"
of Norway's criminal law, even though, as legal experts pointed out, that clause
does not cover such actions, and the blasphemy law that might conceivably have
been used to justify Bjørnland's edict was repealed several years ago.
Nonetheless, politicians, commentators, and other public figures directed their
criticism not at Bjørnland but at SIAN. On November 23, it was reported that
Norway's Minister of Justice, Jøran Kallmyr, was giving Bjørnland his full
support. "Prosecutors," he explained, "have determined that burning the Koran
can become a crime."
"Can become a crime"? "Become", let me interject, is my own translation of the
relatively rare expression that Kallmyr used, "skli over i." Although his way of
expressing his reasoning is frankly somewhat baffling, he definitely did not say
that Koran burning is a crime, but rather that it could somehow become a crime.
He makes it sound like some kind of alchemical process.
Another piece of news came out on November 23: it turned out that for the
government of Pakistan, even Bjørnland's plan single-handedly to curb SIAN's
constitutional rights was not good enough. Kjell-Gunnar Eriksen, Norway's
ambassador to Pakistan, according to NRK's evening news show Dagsrevyen, had
been "called on the carpet" because of the Koran burning. Officials at the
department of foreign affairs in Islamabad ordered Eriksen to convey to his
superiors in Oslo the "deep concern" of the Pakistani government and people over
the act of "desecration." Eriksen, in response, underscored that Norwegian
authorities utterly deplore the Koran burning and that the police had put an end
to the demonstration. So it was that the representative of a purportedly free
country fell all over himself assuring officials of an "Islamic Republic" that,
at least when Islam is in the picture, freedom of speech and of assembly in
Norway have their limits.
One was reminded immediately of the pusillanimous behavior of Norwegian
authorities during the cartoon crisis of 2005-2006. After the Danish newspaper
Jyllands-Posten published drawings of Muhammad, sparking violence around the
Muslim world and a mass protest by Muslims in the streets of Copenhagen,
Denmark's then-prime minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen flatly refused to meet with
the ambassadors of several Muslim countries who wished to register their
outrage, because, he explained, Danes enjoyed freedom of expression and there
was therefore nothing to be discussed.
By contrast, in Norway, when Vebjørn Selbekk, the editor of a small Christian
newspaper, reprinted the cartoons, Norwegian authorities, from the prime
minister on down, could not stop apologizing, and pressured Selbekk so
mercilessly to join that he ultimately caved in, begging forgiveness of a
roomful of Muslim leaders in a ceremony organized and attended by several of the
highest-ranking leaders of the Norwegian government. Once again, alas, it
appears that when the exercise of fundamental Norwegian freedoms causes offense,
the powers that be in Norway have no hesitation about choosing the wrong side.
*Bruce Bawer is the author of the new novel The Alhambra (Swamp Fox Editions).
His book While Europe Slept (2006) was a New York Times bestseller and National
Book Critics Circle Award finalist. His other books include A Place at the Table
(1993), Stealing Jesus (1997), Surrender (2009), and The Victims' Revolution
(2012). A native New Yorker, he has lived in Europe since 1998.
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Trump administration continues gifting stolen land to
Netanyahu
Baria Alamuddin/Arabic News/November 24, 2019
In a week dominated by US impeachment and mass protests in Iran, Iraq, Lebanon,
Bolivia and Hong Kong, one earth-shattering development gained infinitely less
attention than it deserved: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s announcement that
the US no longer regards Israeli settlements on Palestinian land as illegal.
Even prior to this, the rate of announcements that fundamentally prejudice the
Palestinian question has been dizzying: US President Donald Trump’s recognition
of Jerusalem, and later the Golan Heights, as Israeli; Israel’s plan to
retrospectively legalize settlements; proposals from Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu’s Cabinet allies to annex much of the rural West Bank; US decisions to
halt funding and deny Palestinian refugees’ right of return; and Netanyahu’s
election pledge to annex the entire Jordan Valley.
In parallel, there has been a rapid upsurge in settlement construction and
expansion. Benefitting from cheap house prices and state subsidies, 620,000
Israelis now live on occupied land — 10 percent of Israel’s Jewish population.
Whereas settlers were once a crackpot messianic fringe movement, a succession of
right-wing leaders since September 2000 (when the West Bank settler population,
excluding East Jerusalem, was around 170,000) have succeeded in making the
settlement enterprise synonymous with the Israeli state. With settlement blocs
becoming a normalized, quasi-permanent part of Israel’s commuter belt, bank
mortgages are now easily available.
Israel is meanwhile in an advanced state of political meltdown, heading toward
its third inconclusive round of parliamentary elections. This is largely because
Netanyahu has blocked any configuration in which he does not continue as prime
minister; because he is determined to hold the country hostage to avoid stepping
down over corruption charges.
This is against a backdrop of intensifying skirmishes with Iranian proxies. As
well as the Syria and Lebanon borders being increasingly fissile, the recent
escalation in Gaza is a reminder of how easily all-out conflict can erupt with
little prior warning.
Jared Kushner’s “deal to end all deals” was a bad joke before it was farcically
voided of all content by Trump’s lavish gifts to Netanyahu (what gifts are
cheaper to give than those that are not yours in the first place?).
The settlement enterprise was never just about increased living space, but
rather plunging a poisoned dagger into aspirations for Palestinian statehood.
The settlement enterprise was never just about increased living space, but
rather plunging a poisoned dagger into aspirations for Palestinian statehood.
The geographical distribution of over 250 settlements and outposts calculatedly
dissects Palestinian land into ribbons, chokes off Palestinian access to East
Jerusalem, and isolates population centers from one another.
The Jordan Valley (around one-third of the West Bank) only has around 11,000
Jewish settlers. Yet the seizure of military zones and “nature reserves” has
left Palestinian farmers with only 12 percent of the land, in an area that once
generated most of Palestine’s agricultural produce. Construction permits for
Palestinians are almost impossible to obtain, and rudimentary shelters are
routinely demolished.
Given that Trump’s unilateral stances on Jerusalem, the Golan Heights and the
West Bank are also illegal and nakedly seek to help Netanyahu avoid jail, why
has the Trump administration not already been hauled before the courts to answer
for its gratuitous sabotage of regional security, along with enabling Turkey’s
ethnic cleansing of Syrian Kurds?
Prior to the 2003 invasion of Iraq and the 2011 Arab uprisings, for decades
Palestine was the principal grievance fueling regional instability and
radicalization. Palestine became a central element of Al-Qaeda recruitment
propaganda, and provided the central justification for Islamic Jihad and
Hezbollah taking up arms and accepting Iranian funding.
The Palestine issue was thus the Trojan horse that allowed both Sunni radicalism
and Iran-backed Shiite militancy to take root, despite the ayatollahs and the
late Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden having little sympathy for the
Palestinians.
With or without Arab and international backing, at some point the Palestinians,
pushed by dispossession and destitution, will erupt in a new intifada
(uprising). This is likely what Netanyahu wants, as it would provide a pretext
to militarily crack down, steal additional land and further restrict civil
freedoms.
What Netanyahu would never be able to grapple with would be a peaceful intifada
of all 4.5 million Palestinians under occupation, along with nearly 2 million
Palestinians living in Israel. Such a mass civil uprising would paralyze
Israel’s capacity to respond, and force the Palestinian question back onto the
international agenda.
Unilateral attempts to dictate Palestine’s status are further evidence that we
no longer live in a global system rooted in international law. These measures
violate so many UN resolutions, which for decades adopted consistent positions
on Jerusalem, occupied land, refugees and other questions.
If international law is not imposed consistently and rigorously, then it is
nothing. Dictators and warmongers will base their own genocidal, expansionist
schemes on what Israel and Iran have been allowed to get away with. With a
further 5 million Palestinians living just outside Palestine’s borders, vacuous
declarations of annexation are impotent against the time-bomb of demographics,
necessitating that an Israeli state seeking to devour all of Palestine can never
be a representative democracy, and may have to fully evolve into a military
dictatorship in a doomed attempt to crush mass popular dissent.
Such a nakedly apartheid state would struggle to win public solidarity anywhere
in the world, including among educated and conscientious Americans. With Israel
wholly reliant on foreign funding and military aid, this drift toward pariah
status erodes the fundamental tenets that ensure its very survival.
For their own ruthlessly partisan gain, Trump and Netanyahu boast that they have
realized all of Zionism’s most grandiose ambitions. Instead, they have
guaranteed its long-term demise.
*Baria Alamuddin is an award-winning journalist and broadcaster in the Middle
East and the UK. She is editor of the Media Services Syndicate and has
interviewed numerous heads of state.
Popular resistance against Iranian regime will not die
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arabic News/November 24/2019
The Iranian President Hassan Rouhani recently claimed victory and said that the
protests have been defeated after a wave of demonstrations swept the country due
to the hike in fuel prices last week.
From the perspective of Iran’s top authorities, including the so-called moderate
president of the Islamic Republic and the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
any protests in the country are a matter of national security and should be
dealt with immediately.
The Iranian leaders attempted to conceal the fact that the regime’s forces have
resorted to violent methods of cracking down to suppress the recent protests.
The Iranian authorities deployed brute force through the Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps (IRGC) and volunteer militia organization, the Basij. Its forces
fired at protesters, killing young people, and arrested many who are innocent,
including many university students mainly affiliated with Tehran University.
The regime’s recent violence against the protesters is considered the worst
since the crackdown on the “Green Revolution” in 2009. Amnesty International
said: “Verified video footage, eyewitness testimony from people on the ground
and information gathered from human rights activists outside Iran reveal a
harrowing pattern of unlawful killings by Iranian security forces, which have
used excessive and lethal force to crush largely peaceful protests in more than
100 cities across Iran sparked by a hike in fuel prices on Nov. 15. At least 106
protesters in 21 cities have been killed, according to credible reports received
by Amnesty International.”
The real death toll is believed to be much higher. The Iranian leadership also
immediately cut off modes of communication, such as the Internet and mobile
phones, in an attempt to prevent further mobilization against the regime — a
lesson it learned from the widespread protests in 2009 and late 2017.
But what it is important to point out is that, even if the regime succeeds at
brutally suppressing these recent waves of demonstrations, the deep frustration
and anger shared by many in the country against the regime will most likely
continue to simmer under the surface. There are several reasons why the Iranian
regime will continue to be plagued with demonstrations.
First, every time the regime cracks down on protests, it does not address
people’s underlying concerns. The Iranian regime does not appear to be concerned
about the demands and aspirations of its citizens. Instead, it continues to
prioritize supporting, financing, arming and training terrorist-designated
groups in the region — militias that advance the ruling mullahs’ objectives.
The gap between the wealth of the ordinary people, on the one hand, and the
wealth of the ruling politicians, their loyalists and gilded circles continues
to grow.
The fundamental problems of the Iranian people can be categorized into several
issues. The economic difficulties that ordinary Iranian people suffer from are
clearly evident in the country’s statistics. The rate of unemployment among
young people is high, even though many are highly educated and skilled.
Inflation continues to soar while the cost of everyday commodities such as foods
has been skyrocketing. For example, while the monthly salary of a teacher hovers
at about $200, the expenses for a four-person family in an average neighborhood
(food, rent, utilities) is more than 88 million rials, or about $2,500, making
it more expensive than the cost of living in some Western countries.
Many Iranians will continue to ask why should people suffer while their nation
is one of the wealthiest when it comes to natural resources — Iran has the
second and fourth-largest gas and oil reserves in the world respectively. It
also enjoys high levels of exports in chemicals, plastics, fruits, ceramic
products and metals.
Second, the gap between the wealth of the ordinary people, on the one hand, and
the wealth of the ruling politicians, their loyalists and gilded circles
continues to grow, which further contributes to the people’s increasing
frustration. While the overwhelming majority of the people are suffering
economically, the regime has significantly continued to increase the budget of
the IRGC and its affiliates such as the Quds Force, as well as invest in its
ballistic missile program.
Even when the regime receives billions of dollars in extra revenues — such as
when the 2015 nuclear deal was struck and sanctions lifted — the beneficiaries
of the extra revenue were not the ordinary people but the IRGC, Supreme Leader
Ali Khamenei and loyalists to the regime. For almost 40 years, the regime’s
authorities have declined to fairly redistribute wealth.
Third, people are frustrated with the widespread corruption at the top. There
exists no rule of law to hold the gilded circle of the regime’s leaders
accountable for how the wealth of the nation is being hemorrhaged.
The slogans that people have been chanting also show that resistance will
continue because of the disaffection with the regime’s political establishment
when it comes to human rights abuses, suppression of freedom of speech, press
and assembly, and a lack of rule of law and justice.
The popular resistance against the Islamic Republic will not die through the
regime’s crackdown and violent suppression. Demonstrations will most likely
resurface in the country and always have the potential to turn into nationwide
demonstrations.
• Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a Harvard-educated Iranian-American political
scientist. He is a leading expert on Iran and US foreign policy, a businessman
and president of the International American Council. Twitter: @Dr_Rafizadeh
The liberal spirit captivating the Mideast’s revolutions
Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Arabic News/November 24/2019
Reflecting on the three major events in the Middle East — Iran, Iraq and Lebanon
— we realize that they are more than trying to break free from failed regimes
and miserable economic conditions. They also share homogeneity in intellectual
identity, the profile of the individual and the society represented by the angry
street protesters in Tehran, Basra and Beirut. They are young people who have
risen against the formula of the political system, with its old features and
practices, even in Iraq, which is led by relatively new institutions and
regimes, but those in charge resemble their counterparts in Tehran and Beirut.
In addition to standing up against failure and corruption, this is a revolution
with calls for greater social change than bread and employment. It is against
religious extremism and in favor of social openness. It has a liberal spirit in
keeping with the region’s modern variables. In Iran, about 60 million people
under the age of 35 are unrelated to those in Qom and Tehran’s palaces. The same
proportion and crisis can be found in Iraq and Lebanon.
There are overt hostile manifestations against the dominance of conservatives
and clerics, even in two cities that depend spiritually and economically on
religious benefits such as Karbala and Najaf. The demonstrations raised blunt
slogans in their hostility to religious leaders. The images, voices and banners
in all three countries attack the existing conservative situation because it is
a boat for politicians and the rule of state entities. The result is that all
these regimes have succeeded in religious domination but have failed to provide
economic solutions for the country.
In addition to standing up against failure and corruption, this is a revolution
with calls for greater social change than bread and employment.
The regimes have deprived young people of their liberties, normal lives and the
right to shape their future. Do those who demonstrate in Beirut know the size of
the forces on the ground? Do those carrying pots fear those who hold guns?
Perhaps not, or perhaps they do not care because they want to declare their
desire for change. We also note that they have been too clever to fall for the
foxes of the dominant forces, such as the presidency, Hezbollah and the
beneficiaries of the status quo, who are trying to drag the angry to the
pitfalls of treason, such as the weapons of the resistance, the legitimacy of
the resistance or relationship with Israel. They avoided such pitfalls in order
to prevent the regime’s guards from accusing them of treason and considering
them the enemies of the nation who should be eliminated.
In Iran, they have gone far. The demonstrators rejected Ayatollah’s tutelage,
the extreme limits of the rebellion in Iranian society, which all the young
people had been taught to sanctify by the regime in order to ensure governance
after the overthrow of the Shah. This is not quite Western democratic
liberalism, but it has a great yearning for salvation, to topple the religious
establishment that has crouched on the chests of 90 million people for forty
years. The religious model in Iran and Iraq has failed. Even in Lebanon — where
in the name of the crescent and the cross, politicians share the country’s
resources from waste to oil — they have failed to serve their citizens.
Iran was a rich, radiant leader in the region under the Shah’s administration,
but all that ended because of the power of the clerics, who insisted on ruling
the country instead of mentoring and preaching the rulers. It was not enough for
them to cultivate the tragedy in Iran; they had to spread it across borders and
religions to neighboring Iraq. Modern political institutions there have become
an easy passage for Iranian clerics, using parliaments and presidencies to
influence and dominate civilian politicians.
And in Lebanon, sectarians have inherited the old French-Lebanese colony, where
people of different cultures and temples yearn for salvation and change. The
songs and melodies of the protesters have upset political leaders who do not
know how to deal with this different situation. The protesters do not raise the
flags of the US and Israel, they do not chant one sect against another, nor one
leader against another.
We are witnessing intellectual changes, not just living changes. Inadequate
institutions will fall if they do not adopt the project of the protesters and go
with them on the same path. And if they do not do that, they will not survive in
the long run, even if they survive this time.
*Abdulrahman Al-Rashed is a veteran columnist. He is the former general manager
of Al Arabiya news channel, and former editor-in-chief of Asharq Al-Awsat.
Twitter: @aalrashed
Time to address the violence Arab women face
Maria Hanif Al-Qassim/Arabic News/November 24/2019
Dear Arab man. I often write about women: Their complex realities, their daily
struggles and their inspiring triumphs. In the context of the Arab world, I also
write about the discrimination they face every day, in the hope that my humble
words can find a receptive ear and trigger some sort of positive change.
I write to a broad audience, hoping that my words will somehow find their way to
you — maybe even resonate with you. But I have hesitated countless times to
write to you openly. I have paused before addressing some critical issues
directly with you, my Arab male counterpart. Today, however, is the day I gather
all my courage to do so. Nov. 25 is designated by the UN General Assembly as the
International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women.
Not long ago, we witnessed the brutal murder of Palestinian Israa Ghareeb, who
is believed to have died at the hands of her own male family members: A
so-called honor killing. Israa’s pain-ridden screams and pleas have echoed
across the Middle East since the news of her demise broke. How can the role and
identity of a male relative so quickly change from protector to murderer when it
comes to the very person they are meant to care for? Many of us Arab women are
wondering.
The reactions across the Arab world ranged from outrage to disbelief to deep
sadness and heartbreak over the loss of an innocent 21-year-old. I felt a
glimmer of hope as I read through, listened to, and watched the reactions. It
was comforting to see both men and women refusing to let this so-called honor
killing pass without a fight. For once, it felt like times had changed.
A fight against centuries-old tradition and ideology is no easy feat, however —
that much was strikingly evident from the countless men across the Arab world
who shamelessly declared the act not only excusable, but honorable.
That made me realize we have a long way to go, and that it is time for us to
have an open dialogue if we are to hope for real and lasting change in our
societies.
Today, let us not try to pretend that real issues do not exist. Let us not
pretend that the majority of women in this region do not suffer a range of
abuses, or that women are not still at risk of losing their lives to crimes
disgustingly and audaciously justified in the guise of protecting a family’s
honor.
This letter is about staring crude reality in the face, admitting to our
shortcomings and taking responsibility for the violence against women in the
Arab world.
Too many men still view women through radically and dangerously distorted
lenses.
Abuse targeting women does exist in our region, and it comes in many forms:
Physical, emotional, sexual, psychological, economic and verbal. Many people in
our region downplay the extent to which abuse is prevalent around us, dismiss
some forms of abuse, or justify it in certain instances as a necessity to
discipline women or preserve family honor.
The fact of the matter is that more than a third of Arab women have experienced
some form of abuse. Considering that six out of every 10 women do not seek
protection from abuse means that the real prevalence may even be higher than
this figure. Underreporting of spousal violence is common in the Arab world,
which is attributed to many factors, such as shame, fear of retaliation, lack of
awareness about legal rights, fear of the legal system, and financial
insecurity.
A national survey in Morocco estimated the prevalence of physical violence
against women to be at 62 percent. Even in Tunisia — often considered the most
progressive country in the Middle East in terms of gender parity policies and
legislations — the state reports that more than half of Tunisian women have
experienced some form of domestic abuse.
In the Arab world, as many as four in every 10 female homicide victims are
killed by intimate partners. In Palestine, Israa was the 19th case of honor
killing in 2019, according to nongovernmental agencies. Palestinian police data
for 2018 indicate that honor killings accounted for 12 percent of total homicide
cases. In neighboring Jordan, a country known for having one of the highest
rates of honor crimes in the world, Human Rights Watch estimates that 15 to 20
women and girls are burned, beaten or stabbed to death every year by family
members; again, in the name of honor.
These figures are horrific, not least because they take into account only those
who have in some way voiced what they have been through, or have had someone do
it on their behalf. Can you imagine how drastically the figures would change if
all abused women in the Arab world spoke up, or if states were more transparent
about honor killings within their borders?
This brings us to the next point: How abuse is justified in our societies,
particularly within families. In Egypt, the prevalence of domestic violence has
not changed in over two decades, with almost a third of married women
experiencing a form of physical violence and abuse from their husbands. Often,
domestic violence occurs because an abuser believes that violent acts against
members of their family are acceptable, and at times even justified.
Too many men still view women through radically and dangerously distorted
lenses. The way the rape of women is used as a weapon of war is especially
telling. Women are still viewed as objects that can be used and discarded,
traded and abused to cause insult to other men. Is it any wonder then that women
are being abused at such alarming rates in this region?
It is imperative that we ask ourselves how a woman and a man, both creatures of
the same species, still stand at opposite ends on the spectrum of fairness and
justice. Violence toward a wife, a sister or a daughter is still violence. Men
do not own the women in their family and, as such, nothing warrants abusing
them, let alone taking their lives.
It is high time that we questioned everything we have learned about gender
norms, as agonizing as the process may be. That is the only way forward for our
frail societies, and the only way we will prevent tragic, untimely and unjust
deaths like Israa’s — after all, she was guilty of nothing more than being born
a woman.
*Maria Hanif Al-Qassim is an Emirati from Dubai who writes on development,
gender and social issues. Twitter: @maria_hanif
Turkey squeezed on S-400 air defense system
Yasar Yakis/Arabic News/November 24/2019
My last article focused on Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Nov. 13
visit to Washington as a whole. This article will focus on the most important
issue discussed during that visit — Ankara’s purchase of Russia’s S-400 air
defense system — because it has the potential to spoil many aspects of
Turkish-US relations. Moscow was not part of the talks in Washington, but the
outcome directly affects Turkish-Russian relations.
When the S-400 issue came up in the early 2010s between Turkey and the US,
Washington was furiously opposed to it, on the grounds that the air defense
system could identify weaknesses in NATO’s new-generation F-35 fighters, and
because purchasing Russian equipment would be a loss for member states’
industry.
At the time, Erdogan chose to use megaphone diplomacy with the US, addressing
the NATO ally with words that made domestic audiences in Turkey proud of their
president. But this antagonized decision-makers in Washington. He was confident
that “his good friend,” US President Donald Trump, would silence those who were
opposed to Turkey’s policy on this issue, and would find a way out of the
deadlock. This expectation is now being tarnished.
The background of the S-400 affair shows that Erdogan was originally right in
his approach. At the height of Middle Eastern crises, Turkey needed a reliable
air defense system. Some NATO countries agreed to help by temporarily deploying
their US-made patriot batteries in Turkey, but they withdrew them before the
threat was over. Therefore, Ankara decided that it would not rely on the
goodwill of other countries.
It opened a tender to acquire an air defense system. Several countries submitted
offers. The Russian bid was $8.4 billion, the US bid was $4.6 billion, the
Italian-French bid was $4.4 billion, and the Chinese bid was $3.44 billion.
Turkey could not take the Chinese offer because of US sanctions.
Initially the Russian bid was the highest, but by bargaining a slightly
different format, it was agreed for $2.5 billion. In addition, a new version of
the S-400 was scheduled to be manufactured in Turkey under the co-production
formula.
In light of this backdrop, Erdogan thought he could use his close relations with
Trump to persuade various departments in Washington that Turkey was right in
what it was doing. But Erdogan did not take into account the importance of the
separation of powers in the US, and the power of the legislative to limit the
actions of the president. Both leaders did their best to overcome the
difficulty.
The S-400 is not interoperable with the NATO Air Defense Ground Environment (NADGE),
and the deal drives a wedge between Turkey and other NATO allies.
The S-400 is not interoperable with the NATO Air Defense Ground Environment (NADGE),
and the deal drives a wedge between Turkey and other NATO allies. The US
Congress is adamant on imposing sanctions if the S-400 is deployed in Turkey.
The Washington Post reported that Trump had sent an ultimatum-like letter
shortly before his meeting with Erdogan, telling him that Turkey would face
sanctions if it did not refrain from deploying the S-400 and promise that it
would not buy other Russian weapons. Trump added that the US would like to send
observers to Turkey to verify whether the S-400 has been deployed.
After returning from Washington, Erdogan said in a meeting of the parliamentary
group of his ruling AK Party that he had explained the background to Trump, and
that the latter understood the reasons behind Turkey’s attitude, but because of
the impeachment process and next year’s US presidential elections, he had to
move cautiously.
Erdogan also said he explained to Trump that it would not be possible for Ankara
to give up the S-400, and that insisting on this would amount to interference in
Turkey’s sovereign right to acquire any air defense system that it wishes.
The two leaders chose the right way in this difficult atmosphere, and decided to
refer the issue to a committee that includes the foreign ministers of both
countries, with the participation of defense and intelligence experts. They will
meet on Dec. 4 on the sidelines of the NATO Summit in London.
A miracle on this complicated problem is unlikely in the foreseeable future.
Moscow will follow developments with the utmost attention. Since Turkey has
committed itself to paying for the system, there is no economic loss for Russia,
even if, due to strong US pressure, Ankara refrains from deploying it. But
Turkish-Russian relations will emerge bruised from this clash.
In light of this background, the deployment of the S-400 may be postponed until
the impeachment and election processes are over.
• Yasar Yakis is a former foreign minister of Turkey and founding member of the
ruling AK Party. Twitter: @yakis_yasar