English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese,
Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For October 03/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.october03.20.htm
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Bible Quotations For today
Let the one who boasts, boast in the
Lord.’For it is not those who commend themselves that are approved, but those
whom the Lord commends
Second Letter to the Corinthians 10/12-18/:”We do
not dare to classify or compare ourselves with some of those who commend
themselves. But when they measure themselves by one another, and compare
themselves with one another, they do not show good sense. We, however, will not
boast beyond limits, but will keep within the field that God has assigned to us,
to reach out even as far as you. For we were not overstepping our limits when we
reached you; we were the first to come all the way to you with the good news of
Christ. We do not boast beyond limits, that is, in the labours of others; but
our hope is that, as your faith increases, our sphere of action among you may be
greatly enlarged, so that we may proclaim the good news in lands beyond you,
without boasting of work already done in someone else’s sphere of action. ‘Let
the one who boasts, boast in the Lord.’For it is not those who commend
themselves that are approved, but those whom the Lord commends.
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on October 02-03/2020
Occupied Lebanon Need the Implementation of UN Resolution 1559/Elias
Bejjani/October 01/2020
MoPH: 1291 new coronavirus cases, 12 deaths
Lebanon to Put More than 100 Districts on Coronavirus Lockdown
Pompeo Hails ‘Historic’ Lebanese-Israeli Decision to Kick off Maritime Talks
Schenker Says Hizbullah May Sabotage Talks with Israel, Sanctions Won't Stop
Aoun Says in Charge of Overseeing Border Talks with Israel
Lebanese-Israeli Framework Deal Revives Conflicts over Jurisdiction
Israel Welcomes Washington’s Role in Deal on ‘Direct Negotiations’ with Lebanon
Lebanon Asks Interpol to Arrest Russian Ship Captain, Owner over Port Explosion
Report: Popular Movements in Preparation to Mark Uprising
Lebanese Artists in Overdrive to Restore Beirut's Beauty
Druze Sheikh Akl visits Qabalan, underscores national constants
Lebanon will benefit from fixing its maritime border with Israel/Rami Rayess/Al
Arabiya/October 02/2020
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
October 02-03/2020
Coronavirus: US President Trump has ‘mild’ COVID-19
symptoms after testing positive
Trump Tests Positive for Covid, Upending Campaign Schedule
Armenia-Azerbaijan Clashes Rage as Macron Denounces 'Jihadist' Deployment
Canada probes alleged use of its tech in Armenia-Azerbaijan clash
Turkish Official Sees Ankara Unswayed over EU Sanctions on Eastern Mediterranean
Armenia-Azerbaijan Fighting Rages as Macron Says Turkey Crossed 'Red Line'
Pompeo visit shows strong US commitment to allies in Asia, says envoy Stilwell
US, Algeria Discuss Libyan Crisis and Situation in Sahel
An Iraqi Father Confronts Militia in Search for Missing Son
Inflation Slump in Europe Could Presage More Stimulus
Swiss Arrest 4 Suspected of Ties to ISIS Al-Qaida
The American Mideast Coalition for Democracy (AMCD) Supports the State
Department’s Efforts to Counter Iranian Disinformation
Titles For The Latest LCCC English
analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on October
02-03/2020
Why Colorful View of American Politics Is Wrong/Amir
Taheri/Asharq Al Awsat/October, 02/2020
Many Rivers, Too Many Dams/Philip Fearnside/The New York Times/October, 02/2020
Biden’s “Allah Willing” in Context/Raymond Ibrahim/October, 02/2020
Erdogan's Plan to Take Over the Palestinian Authority/Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone
Institute./October 2, 2020
What do Turkey and Russia want in Nagorno-Karabakh?/Con Coughlin/The
National/October 02/2020
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese &
Lebanese Related News & Editorials published
on October 02-03/2020
Occupied Lebanon Need the Implementation of UN
Resolution 1559
Elias Bejjani/October 01/2020
*There is no salvation for our beloved and blesses country from the Ammonite
Nitrate Party's occupation (The Terrorist Hezbollah) without the full
implementing of all the UN Resolutions, The Lebanese Armistice Accord with
Israel, the 1680, 1559 and 1701, and specifically the 1559. At the same time
declaring Lebanon a rogue state and placing it under the UN Chapter Seven. All
other means are futile and a waste of time.
*The Iranian Occupied Lebanon accepted to negotiate with the state of Israel and not with the so called "occupied Palestine" serious issues related to Lebanese-Israeli border demarcation. This negotiation is a bold prove that the liberation and resistance Iranian tags are a big lie and a mere bogus of dhimmitude
MoPH: 1291 new coronavirus cases, 12 deaths
NNA/Friday, 2 October, 2020
The Ministry of Public Health announced Friday that 1291 new coronavirus cases
and 12 more deaths had been recorded over the past 24 hours.
Lebanon to Put More than 100 Districts on Coronavirus Lockdown
Agence France Presse/October 02/2020
Lebanon is to put 111 villages and towns nationwide on lockdown for a week after
a series of record novel coronavirus daily infection rates, the interior
ministry said Friday. The move came after widespread objections to a nationwide
lockdown in August, as the country faces its worst economic crisis in decades.
From early Sunday and for eight days in the villages listed, residents were to
"remain at home", and "wear a mask covering their mouth and nose if forced to go
out", the ministry said in a statement.
State institutions and places of worship would close, but health centres and
delivery services would be exempted, it added. The head of a major Beirut public
hospital battling Covid-19, Firass Abiad, welcomed the new district-by-district
approach. "This will help identify hotspots and (implement) a more focused
approach to restrictive measures. This can be a good alternative to the
unpopular total lockdown," he said on Twitter. Cases have spiked in the
aftermath of a massive explosion at the Beirut port on August 4 that killed more
than 190 people and overwhelmed the capital's health services, with thousands of
wounded. The country has recorded 40,868 Covid-19 cases since February,
including 374 deaths. Authorities fear that a major spike would overwhelm the
country's fragile health sector.
Pompeo Hails ‘Historic’ Lebanese-Israeli Decision to Kick off Maritime Talks
Washington - Muath al-Amri/ Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 2 October, 2020
The United States welcomed Thursday the decision by the governments of Lebanon
and Israel to begin discussions on the maritime boundary, saying the “historic
agreement” between the two parties was brokered by the United States and is the
result of nearly three years of intense diplomatic engagement by Ambassador
David Satterfield and Assistant Secretary David Schenker. In a press statement,
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the agreement will allow both countries
to begin discussions, which have the potential to yield greater stability,
security and prosperity for Lebanese and Israeli citizens alike.
“Today’s announcement is a vital step forward that serves the interests of
Lebanon and Israel, of the region, and of the United States,” he said, adding
that both countries requested that the United States participate as mediator and
facilitator in the maritime discussions. Pompeo said the US looks forward to
commencement of the maritime boundary discussions soon, to be held in Naqoura,
Lebanon under the UN flag and hosted by the staff from the Office of the UN
Special Coordinator for Lebanon (UNSCOL).
Recognizing the positive experience of the Tripartite mechanism, he noted that
his country also looks forward to separate expert-level talks to define
unresolved issues related to the Blue Line, which offer the promise of another
positive step for regional stability. For his part, Schenker said the agreement
between both sides was brokered by the US and is a result of nearly three years
of intense diplomatic engagement. In a conference call on Thursday, the US
official said Hezbollah was not involved in the talks. “We don’t talk to
Hezbollah. So I know now the office of the president of Lebanon has the lead on
this issue, and that’s all I’ve got to say.” Schenker said the negotiations are
expected to kick off next Oct. 14. “I can confirm that for you later, but I
think that’s when it’s going to be in Naqoura,” he noted.
The official said these talks have nothing to do with the establishment of
diplomatic relations or normalization, but are solely focused on establishing a
mutually agreed maritime boundary so that both sides can take advantage of
potential national natural resources. Schenker said Lebanon has a bit of a
financial crisis and would benefit greatly from exploiting its natural
resources, which could help ameliorate some of the financial problems that it’s
having right now. “I think that the Lebanese people want very much to tap these
resources and to move ahead on what likely will be the most profitable of
Lebanon’s Blocks 8, 9 and 10 that are in the vicinity of the border, wherever
the border may be, and – but this is all speculation,” he added. Schenker added
that despite the agreement, the US will continue to designate individuals in
Lebanon who are the allies of Hezbollah for corruption under Global Magnitsky
Act.
Schenker Says Hizbullah May Sabotage Talks with Israel,
Sanctions Won't Stop
Naharnet/October 02/2020
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs David Schenker
announced Thursday that Washington will continue to slap sanctions on Lebanese
individuals despite the U.S.-mediated framework agreement between Lebanon and
Israel to launch talks over their disputed borders.
“We will continue to designate individuals in Lebanon who are the allies of
Hizbullah. We will continue to designate people for corruption under Global
Magnitsky Act,” Schenker told reporters. Noting that the U.S. will not “talk to
Hizbullah” in its border demarcation mediation, the U.S. diplomat warned that
the Iran-backed party might seek to sabotage the Lebanese-Israeli talks. And
pointing out that maritime border demarcation might help Lebanon economically,
Schenker said the indirect negotiations will not normalize ties between Lebanon
and Israel. He however added that “both sides seem eager to be able to get a
deal” on border demarcation.
Aoun Says in Charge of Overseeing Border Talks with Israel
Naharnet/October 02/2020
President Michel Aoun will be in charge of the border negotiations with Israel
in line with Article 52 of the Constitution, the Presidency said on Thursday. It
added that Aoun will oversee “the formation of the negotiating Lebanese
delegation” and will “follow up on the negotiation stages.”
The President “welcomes U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s announcement that
a framework agreement has been reached for negotiations over border demarcation
under the sponsorship and flag of the United Nations and with a facilitating
mediation from the United States,” the Presidency said.
The President “calls on the U.S. side to carry on with its impartial mediation,”
it added. Earlier in the day, Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri said the
negotiations will be carried out by the Lebanese Army under the supervision of
the President and the government, adding that his role in the file had ended
with the announcement with the framework agreement.
Lebanese-Israeli Framework Deal Revives Conflicts over
Jurisdiction
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 2 October, 2020
A statement issued by Lebanese President Michel Aoun on the formation of a
delegation to negotiate the demarcation of the maritime borders with Israel
through US mediation has revived a conflict over jurisdiction between the
country’s institutions. On Thursday, the Presidency Information Office said that
Aoun welcomed the announcement by US Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo, that a
framework agreement had been reached to negotiate the demarcation of borders
under the auspices of the United Nations and through facilitated mediation by
the United States. It added that Aoun “will undertake negotiations in accordance
with the provisions of Article 52 of the Constitution, starting with the
formation of the Lebanese negotiating delegation… hoping that the American side
will maintain an honest mediation.”Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri has worked on
this file since 2010, after he was chosen by successive presidents and prime
ministers to assume this role, with the agreement of Lebanon’s various political
forces. The Presidency’s statement came after Berri announced that the Lebanese
army would take over the negotiations at the UN headquarters in southern Lebanon
and that his role in this file had consequently ended.
Referring to accusations that he was taking over presidential powers, Berri said
on Thursday: “I am the last to consider violating the constitution. The
framework agreement that has been reached is only a framework that paves the way
forward.”Article 52 stipulates that the President of the Republic undertakes the
negotiation and conclusion of international treaties, with the agreement of the
prime minister. Treaties become valid and enforceable only after the approval of
the Council of Ministers. “The US is aware that the governments of Lebanon and
Israel are ready to demarcate their maritime borders based on the tripartite
agreements of April 1996 and currently under Resolution 1701,” Berri explained.
He also said that the US had been asked to play the role of a “mediator” in the
maritime demarcation process and was ready to do so. Head of the Free Patriotic
Movement and Aoun’s son-in-law, MP Gebran Bassil, had implicitly criticized
Berri’s dealing with the demarcation file. “This time, we have to negotiate, not
with the Persian way or the Arab way; rather, in our Lebanese way, with both
rigidity and flexibility...” Bassil said in a tweet.
Israel Welcomes Washington’s Role in Deal on ‘Direct
Negotiations’ with Lebanon
Tel Aviv - Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 2 October, 2020
Israeli Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz welcomed on Thursday the remarks of
Lebanese parliament Speaker Nabih Berri on starting negotiations with Israel on
the disputed maritime and land borders under the auspices of the UN. In a
statement, Steinitz said the talks are expected to take place after the Jewish
holiday of Sukkot, which ends on Oct. 9. “The two sides would hold US-brokered
talks on the maritime border, a major point of contention,” he said. On
Thursday, Lebanon and Israel said they have agreed to a framework for
US-mediated talks aimed at ending a long-running dispute along the border
between the two nations that have fought several conflicts. This would be the
first time officials from both countries meet for direct talks. Steinitz said
Israel looks forward to the opening of direct negotiations in the near future.
“Our objective is to end the dispute over the economic maritime demarcation of
the water between Israel and Lebanon in order to help develop natural resources
for the benefit of all peoples in the region,” he noted. Political sources in
Tel Aviv said there is a 50 percent chance that the two sides will start direct
talks this month, adding that a similar agreement was reached in May 2019 before
the Lebanon announced its withdrawal at the last minute when Hezbollah
interfered and foiled the efforts. “It is possible that Hezbollah has offered
its consent on the direct talks not to be accused of preventing Lebanon from
economically benefiting from the agreement, particularly at a time when Lebanon
is facing its worst economic crisis,” the sources said. The talks will start on
Oct. 14 and will be mediated by the United States at the headquarters of the UN
peacekeeping force, known as UNIFIL, in the Lebanese southern border town of
Naqoura under the banner of the UN. An Israeli official said his government
would be “flexible” during the negotiations if it senses a real desire by
Lebanon to reach an agreement. Currently, the two countries have been at odds
over an 850-square-kilometer maritime territory since the discovery of possible
marine gas fields off the coast. During indirect talks held between the two
sides in 2012, Israel agreed to a suggested compromise that provided a greater
portion of 58 percent of the area in dispute to Lebanon. However, Lebanon did
not respond to this concession. Analysts said Israel “does not have any profit
from seeing Lebanon suffer and collapse, but would be happy if gas is explored
and became a source of revenue to the Lebanese.”They also believe that
establishing gas wells in Lebanese economic waters will reduce the danger of
military operations being carried out against Israeli wells in the region.
Lebanon Asks Interpol to Arrest Russian Ship Captain, Owner
over Port Explosion
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 2 October, 2020
Lebanon has asked Interpol to issue arrest warrants for the Russian captain and
owner of the ship that brought the explosive material that detonated at Beirut
port in August, killing nearly 200 people, state media reported on Thursday.
About two months after the explosion that injured thousands and ravaged the
Lebanese capital, questions remain about why and how the cargo was abandoned in
Beirut. Authorities have blamed it on the huge stockpile of ammonium nitrate,
used for fertilizer but also for explosives, going up in flames after being
stored in poor conditions at the port for years. There have also been
accusations of negligence against Lebanese authorities. Nearly 20 people have
been detained in Lebanon after the blast including port and customs officials.
Lebanon’s public prosecution asked Interpol to issue warrants to detain the
owner and captain, state news agency NNA said on Thursday, without naming them.
Boris Prokoshev was captain of the Rhosus ship when it arrived in Beirut in
2013, and he had identified Igor Grechushkin, a Russian businessman in Cyprus,
as the owner. A security source and a judicial source said they were the two for
whom Lebanon asked for arrest warrants on Thursday. Russia’s national Interpol
bureau declined to comment. Grechushkin, 43, was questioned in Cyprus in August.
Attempts by Reuters to reach Grechushkin were unsuccessful. Cyprus police
spokesman Christos Andreou said, regarding an Interpol request on Thursday: “We
have not received such a request.” Prokoshev, who is in Russia, said he had not
heard anything about it and that he has not been contacted by investigators
before. He has told Reuters that 2,750 tons of the chemicals ended up in Beirut
after the ship’s owner told him to divert to Beirut to pick up extra cargo in
2013. He has also said Lebanese authorities paid little attention to the
ammonium nitrate, which had been stacked in the hull in large sacks. The Rhosus
had loaded ammonium nitrate in Georgia, shipping records show, before making the
unscheduled stop in Lebanon. But it never left, becoming tangled in a legal
dispute over unpaid port fees and ship defects. Beirut port authorities
impounded the vessel after it arrived in late 2013 due to outstanding debts,
according to a state security report which Reuters revealed in August. In 2014,
the ship was deemed unseaworthy and its cargo was unloaded in October and
warehoused in what was known as Hangar 12, the epicenter of the explosion. The
ship sank near the port’s breakwater in February 2018, the report said.
Report: Popular Movements in Preparation to Mark Uprising
Naharnet/October 02/2020
Lebanese activists of the October 17 uprising plan to kick start popular moves
in the upcoming stage mainly marking its one-year anniversary, MTV television
station reported on Friday. The station said groups of activists held a series
of meetings in the last few days to that end. Discussions focused on what kind
of rhetoric should be presented during the popular movements, with emphasis on
introducing constitutional amendments, “in light of the political authority's
violations,” said MTV. They will also demand early parliamentary elections.
Lebanese Artists in Overdrive to Restore Beirut's Beauty
Agence France Presse/October 02/2020
Lebanese stained glass artist Maya Husseini had hoped to retire after decades
spent designing colourful windows, but she has been flooded with work since the
blast that ripped through Beirut. "I can't possibly not try to restore what is
gone," said the 60-year-old woman, her bright red curly hair in a short bob.
The massive explosion at the capital's port on August 4 killed more than 190
people and wounded thousands more as it sent lethal shockwaves pummelling
through the city. But it also ravaged dozens of Beirut's most cherished heritage
buildings. Husseini is one of several artists slowly starting to restore
artworks devastated in the disaster. In her basement workshop on the outskirts
of Beirut, she gestured at what remained of windows of a 19th-century church she
had restored after the 1975-1990 civil war. A gaping mess of mangled metal,
dotted by a few surviving pieces of orange and blue glass, lay in a cardboard
box.
"At least seven projects I had worked on were blown away," Husseini said. They
included one of her first projects designing biblical scenes on glass for a
church, and the dazzling yellow and orange windows she had crafted for the famed
Sursock Museum. Before the blast, she had planned to retire after completing
glass windows for a last cathedral in Jordan. "But now I won't allow myself to
stop," she said.
Glass dust
On her work table, she picked a green piece of glass and lodged it between
curving lengths of soft lead to rebuild a window of flowers and leaves for a
private home. Even if she has now taken on apprentices, she said there is still
a lot of work ahead. "For some people who have asked me, I won't be able to
start anything for at least two years," she said. In neighbourhoods near the
port, the race is on to cover up 100 heritage buildings before the autumn rain.
The United Nations culture and education fund, UNESCO, has said it will hold a
conference to try to drum up hundreds of millions of dollars for restorations.
But until that aid arrives, Lebanese are doing what they can on their own. Among
them, artwork conservation specialist Gaby Maamary has decided to offer to
restore damaged paintings for free. He says he was inspired after seeing
Lebanese youths sweeping away seas of rubble and glass after the blast, and
decided to channels his skills towards preserving Beirut's heritage. "It's
something that you can lose easily if you don't pay attention," the 58-year-old
artist and university lecturer said. In his Beirut studio, he carefully held up
a 17th-century nature morte by Italian artist Elena Recco, depicting a cat
greedily eyeing up some dead fish. In several places, the canvas had been
slashed by flying shards of glass. Wearing white gloves, he turned over the back
of another canvas he had started cleaning, the untreated part a shade darker and
shimmering with fine glass dust. Nearby, he pointed to a work by late Lebanese
artist Sophie Yeramian whose dried paint had been cracked by the blast.
Saved from the trash
"We did not expect that amount of calls," he said. The initiative has taken him
to assess damage in art galleries, but also private homes. In one, he pulled a
painting worth tens of thousands of dollars out of the trash. To his horror, he
found another bound up in sticky tape. The owner had rushed to hospital with her
severely injured son after the explosion, and someone helping to clean up the
mess had not realised their worth. But even without sticky tape to complicate
matters, Maamary said conservation is a complex process that involves hours of
planning before even touching the artwork. "Sometimes the same step has to be
done several times, simply because we don't have the museum equipment," he said.
Bringing in specialised materials from abroad is also tricky, with bank
transfers blocked from Lebanon's crisis-hit banks. But drawing on the help of
friends and using what is locally available, Maamary is determined to carry on.
"We're going to continue doing that on a daily basis until we run out of
materials or means," he said.
Druze Sheikh Akl visits Qabalan, underscores national constants
NNA/October 02/2020
Sheikh Akl of the Druze community, Naim Hassan, visited this Friday the head of
the Supreme Islamic Shiite Council, Sheikh Abdel Amir Qabalan, in the presence
of Jaafarite Mufti, Sheikh Ahmad Qabalan. Conferees discussed the present
national crises and the efforts "to bring spiritual points of view closer, and
urging political components to communicate and concede in the interest of saving
the homeland."They also highlighted the importance of national constants
advocated by spiritual summits.
Lebanon will benefit from fixing its maritime border with
Israel
Rami Rayess/Al Arabiya/October 02/2020
Lebanon’s contested maritime border with Israel is one of the most important of
its seemingly endless problems. Solving the issue would benefit both parties and
provide a potentially essential source of income.
On Thursday Lebanon’s Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri announced that an agreement
has been reached on a framework of negotiations under the United Nations to
finally demarcate the maritime border with Israel.
Lebanon and Israel contest an estimated 856 square kilometers of the eastern
Mediterranean that is thought to hold enormous reserves of both oil and gas.
Both countries have made moves to begin developing these resources in the
disputed area. Israel announced its will to commence navigation in block 72,
which is adjacent to Lebanon’s block 9 that falls in the Lebanese territorial
waters. Official Lebanese data estimated Lebanon’s marine reserves to reach 96
trillion cubic feet of natural gas and 865 million barrels of oil. Lebanon is in
dire need for these resources, which offer some hope of reverting its current
catastrophic economic and financial situation.
Although Washington lacks a coherent “Lebanon policy,” as outlined by former US
undersecretary Jeffrey Feltman in a recent online webinar, the US nevertheless
seems highly interested in solving this issue. Washington generally restricts
its efforts to following sanctions on Hezbollah officials or affiliates and
barely coordinates with the French who are pushing to broker a political deal
that would help Lebanon confront its unprecedented social and economic crises.
This makes Washington’s commitment to leading tripartite negotiations to
complete the maritime demarcation significant. The Trump administration’s
objectives may be different from other stakeholders, in the sense that it wants
to add a new Middle Eastern foreign policy accomplishment to its record. It is
true that any such deal on border demarcation stands short in comparison to the
other normalization deals taking place between Gulf countries and Israel, but it
might add to US President Donald Trump’s achievements on the verge of
presidential elections scheduled for November 3.
Lebanon and Israel are only bound in a truce agreement that was signed in 1949
after the first Arab-Israeli war and the proclamation of Israel in 1948. The two
countries are therefore still in a state of war. Any peace treaty between
Lebanon and Israel is not at the negotiating desk now. The former has suffered
for years from Israeli occupation that lasted from 1978 until 200 and was
liberated without a peace treaty.
Yet demarcating maritime borders would be of benefit for both parties to
proclaim natural resources from the deep sea. Fortunately, talks on the issue
are taking place on a separate and independent path from any talk of a peace
treaty. US Undersecretary David Schenker announced on September 10 that Lebanon
and Israel “are getting closer” towards a framework deal on maritime borders.
Lebanon currently lacks a cabinet after it resigned in August following the
deadly Beirut port explosion. Government formation talks have stalled, with
Prime Minister-designate Mustafa Adib withdrawing his candidacy. The absence of
an active government hinders the progress of the maritime demarcation process as
well as all the other accumulated problems that Lebanon currently suffers from.
Progress on demarcating the maritime border with Israel might also give momentum
to solving Lebanon’s other border issues.
Lebanon’s borders with Syria are not demarcated as well. The Syrian regime has
refused to cooperate on this matter for decades. The borders of the two
countries are intertwined and barely controlled by the official apparatuses from
the Lebanese side. Smuggling of goods and fuel are complicating the economic
situation in Lebanon further. The consequent cabinets have failed to impose
their control on those borders and the problems persists.
Another border issue that still hangs between Lebanon, Syria and Israel is the
Shebaa farms, which is currently under Israeli occupation and its identity is
disputed between Lebanon and Syria. The latter has refused continued unofficial
Lebanese calls to provide the United Nations with the necessary documentation
that prove its Lebanese property. The Shebaa farms issue has sparked political
tension within the local Lebanese context as well since some parties consider it
a pretext for Hezbollah to maintain its weaponry.
Whether Syria or Israel, borders or otherwise, Lebanon has paid the price of
being the neighbor of two entities that do not recognize its sovereignty or
independence, each for their own interests and aims. The Lebanese suffering
continues.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on October 02-03/2020
Coronavirus: US President Trump has ‘mild’ COVID-19
symptoms after testing positive
The Associated Press, Washington/Friday 02 October
2020
President Donald Trump is experiencing “mild symptoms” of COVID-19 after
revealing Friday that he and first lady Melania Trump have tested positive for
the coronavirus. The White House physician said the president is expected to
continue carrying out his duties “without disruption” while recovering. A White
House official said Friday morning that the president was experiencing mild
symptoms but was working from the White House residence. Hours before Trump
announced he had contracted the virus, the White House said a top aide who had
traveled with him during the week had tested positive.
“Tonight, @FLOTUS and I tested positive for COVID-19. We will begin our
quarantine and recovery process immediately," Trump tweeted just before 1 a.m.
"We will get through this TOGETHER!” Vice President Mike Pence tested negative
for the virus on Friday morning and “remains in good health," his spokesman
said.
Trump Tests Positive for Covid, Upending Campaign Schedule
Agence France Presse/October 02/2020
US President Donald Trump said Friday he had tested positive for Covid-19 and
would quarantine inside the White House during his recovery, cancelling upcoming
appearances on the campaign trail ahead of a bitterly fought election.
The White House doctor said both Trump and First Lady Melania -- who also tested
positive -- were well and that Trump would continue his presidential "duties
without disruption". The two were tested after a close White House aide Hope
Hicks had tested positive earlier in the day, with the bombshell news breaking
as more restrictions loomed in Europe in an attempt to contain the deadly
pandemic. Hicks was on board Air Force One with the president as he traveled to
Cleveland, Ohio for the first presidential debate with his rival, Democrat Joe
Biden, on Tuesday. The president routinely receives tests for Covid-19, though
the exact frequency is not clear. US futures trading saw the Dow slump 1.7
percent on the news and the broader S&P 500 shed 1.6 percent, while the
safe-haven yen rose against the dollar.
Restrictions in Europe
Meanwhile, French authorities warned that Paris could be put on maximum alert to
halt the spread of the virus, and Spain extended drastic restrictions across its
capital Madrid. By 2000 GMT Thursday the pandemic had killed at least 1,019,267
people around the world and infected over 34 million, according to an AFP tally
based on official sources. French authorities said they may place Paris on
maximum virus alert as soon as Monday, potentially requiring all bars to close
as the number of cases surges. "We're in a phase where the situation is
worsening," Health Minister Olivier Veran said. Spain, fighting a second wave of
the virus, also extended drastic restrictions across its capital, despite fierce
opposition from Madrid's regional authorities, and most other regions have
agreed to tighten curbs in areas of rapid contagion. In Britain, chief
scientific adviser Patrick Vallance told reporters "things are definitely
heading in the wrong direction" as the government extended lockdowns to several
towns in northern England, effectively putting more than a quarter of the
country under tighter restrictions. And the Slovak and Czech governments both
decided to impose states of emergency to allow them to take quick decisions in
the face of considerable upticks in infections and deaths.
China 'unwinding'
On the other side of the globe in China, where the outbreak began late last
year, the Golden Week holiday marking the 1949 founding of the People's Republic
has taken on added significance this year. "People are travelling with a
vengeance!" said Huo Binxing, a banker from Beijing who was heading to Lhasa in
Tibet. "It's our first chance to unwind after such a stressful period." Also
spreading their wings were travelers to South Africa, where a first batch of
regional and international flights landed Thursday after a more than six-month
shutdown. While it reopened its borders to all African countries, South Africa
is barring tourists from around 50 nations with high infection rates, including
Britain, France, India, Russia and the US. The skies were far less bright in the
United States, where American and United airlines announced they would begin
furloughing 19,000 and 13,000 workers respectively as US officials have failed
to reach a deal on fresh aid.
Trump's misinformation
A study from Cornell University in the United States, meanwhile, said that Trump
has been the world's biggest driver of misinformation during the pandemic.
Evaluating 38 million articles published by English-language, traditional media
worldwide between January 1 and May 26 of this year, a team identified 522,472
news articles that reproduced or amplified misinformation related to the
pandemic. The most popular topic was "miracle cures" that appeared in 295,351
articles. The authors found comments by Trump drove major spikes in that theme.
In India, meanwhile, new research suggested that a small group of
super-spreaders was responsible for almost two-thirds of coronavirus cases in
the world's second-most populous nation. The study, published in the journal
Science, found that eight percent of all people carrying the virus were
responsible for 60 percent of new infections.
Armenia-Azerbaijan Clashes Rage as Macron Denounces 'Jihadist' Deployment
Agence France Presse/October 02/2020
Armenian and Azerbaijani forces have intensified their shelling as French
President Emmanuel Macron said jihadist militants had been deployed to Nagorny
Karabakh in a "serious" new development.
The West and Moscow renewed calls to halt several days of fighting over the
disputed Nagorny Karabakh region that has left more than 130 dead and threatened
to draw in regional powers Turkey and Russia.
In a joint appeal on Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin, US President
Donald Trump and Macron urged the two sides to return to negotiations aimed at
resolving their longstanding territorial dispute.
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and Azerbaijani leader Ilham Aliyev have
both rejected the idea of holding talks, with the Armenian leader stating:
"Nagorno-Karabakh cannot disarm, because it would lead to genocide."
"The people who live there face an existential threat," Pashinyan told French
newspaper Le Figaro.
But Russia suggested it was making progress in diplomatic efforts with Turkey, a
firm supporter of Azerbaijan in the conflict.
It said Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Turkish counterpart Mevlut Cavusoglu
had confirmed they were ready for "close coordination" to stabilise the
situation.
In Martuni, a small town in Karabakh around 25 kilometres (15 miles) from the
front line, residents took refuge in cellars as heavy shelling by Azerbaijan
killed four civilians and wounded 11.
Artak Aloyan, a 54-year-old construction worker sheltering in his basement with
an elderly neighbour, vowed to stay despite the worst clashes the contested
region has seen for years.
"I built this house with my own hands. I will not go anywhere, that's that," he
told AFP after a rocket attack. "I will die here in the last battle."
- 'Crushing strikes' -
The rival Caucasus nations have been locked in a bitter stalemate over Karabakh
since the collapse of the Soviet Union when the ethnic Armenian region broke
away from Azerbaijan.
In the fiercest clashes in years, 136 people have been confirmed dead in
fighting that has raged for five days.
The Armenian defence ministry said fighting had intensified and its troops had
repelled Azerbaijani attacks, downing helicopters and destroying drones and
armoured vehicles.
It said Azerbaijani forces had fired on two villages inside Armenia, close to
Karabakh, killing one civilian.
Armenian Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Avinyan said that 1,280 Azerbaijani troops
had been killed and 2,700 wounded since Sunday, with both sides making claims of
inflicting heavy casualties.
Azerbaijan's defence ministry said its forces had carried out "crushing
artillery strikes" on Armenian troops. It denied claims that one of its
helicopters was shot down and had crashed in Iran.
The two sides have accused each other of shelling civilian areas and ignored
repeated calls from international leaders to halt the fighting.
Putin, Macron and Trump called for an "immediate cessation of hostilities" and
urged the warring sides to commit to talks.
Yerevan is in a military alliance of ex-Soviet countries led by Moscow and has
accused Turkey of dispatching mercenaries from northern Syria to bolster
Azerbaijan's forces in the Karabakh conflict. It also claimed earlier this week
that a Turkish F-16 fighter jet flying in support of Baku's forces had downed an
Armenian SU-25 warplane, but Ankara and Baku denied the claim.
Pashinyan reiterated claims that mercenaries had joined the conflict, saying
Azerbaijan and Turkey were fighting "with the help and involvement of foreign
terrorist fighters". "This terrorism equally threatens the United States, Iran,
Russia, and France," he added. His calls were echoed by Macron, who earlier said
intelligence reports had established that 300 Syrian fighters drawn from
"jihadist groups" from the Syrian city of Aleppo had passed through Turkey en
route for Azerbaijan. The French president said that a "red line has been
crossed, which is unacceptable" and demanded an explanation from Ankara.
Azerbaijan's ally, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, has signalled his country's
full backing for Baku's military and on Thursday called for Armenian troops to
leave Karabakh.
Civilian casualties
Armenia has recorded the deaths of 104 soldiers and 13 civilians. Azerbaijan has
not reported any military casualties but said 19 civilians were killed after
Armenian shelling. Karabakh's declaration of independence from Azerbaijan
sparked a war in the early 1990s that claimed 30,000 lives, but it is still not
recognised as independent by any country, including Armenia.
Armenia and Karabakh declared martial law and military mobilisation Sunday,
while Azerbaijan imposed military rule and a curfew in large cities.
Talks to resolve the conflict have largely stalled since a 1994 ceasefire
agreement.
Canada probes alleged use of its tech in Armenia-Azerbaijan clash
AFP/Friday 02 October 2020
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Friday an investigation has been launched
into the alleged use of Canadian military technologies in the Armenia-Azerbaijan
conflict. Local media reported that Canadian imaging and targeting systems on
unmanned drones are being used by Azerbaijan in clashes with Armenia.
Arms-control advocates have documented the sale of the Wescam gear to Turkey, a
close ally of Azerbaijan. "In regards to the Canadian military equipment that
may have been used in this situation, the minister of foreign affairs
(Francois-Philippe Champagne) has launched an investigation into what exactly
happened," Trudeau told a news conference. "It is extremely important that the
terms of Canada's expectations of non-violation of human rights is always
respected and we will have more to say as more becomes clear." Ottawa announced
in October 2019 a freeze on the issuing of export permits for military shipments
to Turkey, after its incursions against Kurds in northern Syria. But it was
lifted in May. A government official said if it is now determined that the
military technologies have been misused, Ottawa will cancel export permits for
related shipments. Ankara is backing its longtime ally Baku in the fighting over
Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian province that broke away from Azerbaijan in
a bitterly fought war in the 1990s. Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a
simmering conflict for decades over the region and new fighting that erupted on
Sunday has been the heaviest in decades, with nearly 200 people confirmed
killed. Trudeau said his government is "extremely concerned about the situation
in Nagorno-Karabakh," calling for a "de-escalation of hostilities.""There is no
question, there is not a military solution to this conflict," he said. "It can
only be resolved through proper dialogue and engagement."
Turkish Official Sees Ankara Unswayed over EU Sanctions on
Eastern Mediterranean
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 2 October, 2020
Turkey would be even more determined to protect its territorial rights in the
Eastern Mediterranean if the European Union ultimately decides to impose
sanctions on it over offshore oil and gas exploration, a Turkish Foreign
Ministry official said. The senior official, who requested anonymity, said
sanctions would not deter Turkey and suggested they could imperil dialogue
planned between Ankara and Athens over disputed maritime boundaries and oil and
gas rights. The warning came as EU leaders broke a diplomatic deadlock early on
Friday and assured bloc member Cyprus it would punish Turkey if it continued
operations in disputed waters. Sanctions could come as soon as December if
“provocations” have not stopped, it said. Before the post-midnight deal, Cyprus
had demanded sanctions on Turkey over what it calls Ankara’s “gunboat diplomacy”
and violations of the island nation’s maritime shelf. Tensions have simmered
since Turkish and Greek frigates collided at sea in August near one of Turkey’s
exploration vessels, though things have cooled a bit since Turkey and Greece,
both members of NATO, said they would resume “exploratory talks” that ended in
2016.
The talks are an effort “to bring Greece into dialogue and finally Greece agreed
to that, and we hope to resume those soon”, likely this month, the Turkish
official said, according to Reuters. But “if the EU applies sanctions this will
not deter us. On the contrary this would increase our resolve and would be a
negative stance on the part of the European Union”, he said. “We will continue
our offshore program as we have been doing. Sanctions are not the right way
(and) will not deter us to protect our rights to our continental shelf and also
the rights of the Turkish Cypriots,” the official added.
Speaking to parliament on Thursday, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey
preferred to resolve disagreements in the Eastern Mediterranean through dialogue
and was not seeking tensions and clashes in the region.
Armenia-Azerbaijan Fighting Rages as Macron Says Turkey
Crossed 'Red Line'
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 2 October, 2020
Clashes raged between Armenian and Azerbaijani forces on Friday despite calls
for a ceasefire, as French President Emmanuel Macron warned Turkey against the
alleged deployment of extremists to the war zone. Macron said intelligence
reports had established that 300 fighters from "extremist groups" in Syria had
passed through Turkey en route to Azerbaijan, saying that "a red line has been
crossed" and demanding an explanation. Ankara is backing its longtime ally Baku
in the fighting over Nagorny Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian province that broke
away from Azerbaijan in a bitterly fought war in the 1990s.
Armenia and Azerbaijan have been locked in a simmering conflict for decades over
the region and new fighting that erupted on Sunday has been the heaviest in
decades. Nearly 200 people have been confirmed killed, including more than 30
civilians, and there are fears of the fighting expanding into an all-out,
multi-front war that could suck in regional powers Turkey and Russia. As the
clashes entered a sixth day on Friday, the defense ministry of Karabakh's
separatist government reported the deaths of 54 more of its troops.
It said there was fighting all along the frontline after "a relatively calmer
night". Azerbaijan's defense ministry also said the fighting was ongoing, and
both sides claimed to have inflicted heavy losses. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol
Pashinyan and Azerbaijani leader Ilham Aliyev have rejected calls for talks.
Russia, US, France appeal for talks
Russia and Western countries have pressed for an immediate ceasefire and
negotiations, while Turkey has been fierce in its support for Baku, accusing
Armenia of occupying Azerbaijani lands. Macron issued his warning to Ankara at
an EU summit in Brussels on Thursday, urging "all NATO partners to face up to
the behavior of a NATO member". In a joint appeal on Thursday, Russian President
Vladimir Putin, US President Donald Trump and Macron urged the two sides to
return to negotiations aimed at resolving their longstanding territorial
dispute. Russia also suggested it was making progress in diplomatic efforts with
Turkey. It said Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Turkish counterpart Mevlut
Cavusoglu had confirmed they were ready for "close coordination" to stabilize
the situation. Yerevan is in a military alliance of ex-Soviet countries led by
Moscow and has accused Turkey of directly supporting Azerbaijan in the fighting,
by deploying aircraft in support of Baku and sending mercenaries from northern
Syria to join the fighting. Armenia has recorded the deaths of 158 soldiers and
13 civilians since Sunday. Azerbaijan has not reported any military casualties
but said 19 civilians were killed after Armenian shelling.
Karabakh's declaration of independence from Azerbaijan sparked a war in the
early 1990s that claimed 30,000 lives, but it is still not recognized as
independent by any country, including Armenia. Armenia and Karabakh declared
martial law and military mobilization Sunday, while Azerbaijan imposed military
rule and a curfew in large cities. Talks to resolve the conflict have largely
stalled since a 1994 ceasefire agreement.
Pompeo visit shows strong US commitment to allies in Asia, says envoy Stilwell
Reuters, Washington/Friday 02 October 2020
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s visit to Asia next week demonstrates
Washington’s strong commitment to allies and partners in the region, the top
American diplomat for East Asia, David Stilwell, said on Friday. Pompeo said
earlier on Friday he would go ahead with the trip to Japan, South Korea and
Mongolia, even after President Donald Trump tested positive for the coronavirus.
Pompeo is currently in Europe, and is due to leave for Tokyo on Sunday. He told
reporters traveling with him on a visit to Croatia that both he and his wife
tested negative for COVID-19 20 minutes before landing in Dubrovnik on Friday.
Vietnam says China military drills harm maritime code talks over disputed
waters. China objects to Ladakh status, Indian border moves as the two forces
face each other.US, Australia, India ministers to meet in Japan next week on
Indo-Pacific issues. Pompeo, who is fourth in line to succeed the president if
necessary, said he had last seen Trump on September 15. In a briefing call on
the trip for reporters, Stilwell said the United States saw the decision by new
Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga to host Pompeo as a reaffirmation of an
ever-strengthening partnership.
Stilwell said a ministerial meeting of the Quad grouping of the United States,
Japan, Australia and India next Tuesday would probably not produce a joint
statement, adding that the group has shared values, but different perspectives.
Stilwell called the US-Japan relationship “the cornerstone of peace, security
and prosperity for the Indo-Pacific” region. He said the Quad, which China has
denounced as an attempt to contain its development, was focused on furthering “a
shared vision of a free open and inclusive Indo-Pacific ... “especially as
(China’s) tactics of aggression and coercion, increase in the region.” Recent
discussions among the Quad had focused on building cooperation on issues
including maritime security and on critical technology, infrastructure and
counterterrorism, Stilwell said. However, when asked whether the four-way
grouping would issue a joint statement, Stilwell said: “I think you’ll see
public availability related to this, as far as a joint statement, probably
not.”He said there were a lot of areas for discussion, but these could be
“free-form as well.”“This is the wonderful thing about the Quad. ... We have
shared values, but different perspectives, and from those come great ideas and
elegant solutions.”China-US relations have sunk to the lowest point in decades
in the run-up to the Nov. 3 US presidential election. The world’s two biggest
economies have clashed over issues ranging from trade and technological and
security rivalry to human rights and the response to the coronavirus, which
first surfaced in China late last year. Washington’s allies and partners in Asia
share US concerns about China’s increasingly assertive behavior and extensive
territorial claims, but analysts say they have been concerned about the tone of
some of Pompeo and Trump’s rhetoric against Beijing.
US, Algeria Discuss Libyan Crisis and Situation in Sahel
Algiers- Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 2 October, 2020
Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune held talks on Thursday with United
States Secretary of Defense Mark Esper, who is on a tour in the region.
Talks touched on a handful of topics including the settlement in Libya, the
situation in Sahel countries, and the combat against terrorism and organized
crime. The meeting was attended by Lt. Gen. Said Chengriha, the military's chief
of defense, the US delegation, and the Chargé d'Affaires at the Embassy of the
United States in Algeria, the Tunisian presidential statement added. This is the
first visit of a Pentagon chief to the North African country since 2006.
Observers see in this visit an opportunity to boost cooperation between two
countries who share strategic interests in the fight against extremists in the
Sahel and in discussing the ongoing conflict in Libya. Esper stated to AFP that
the US and Algeria have always been partners and he hoped that this visit would
promote this partnership and joint history. Concerned over the instability at
its border, Algeria attempts to activate its role in regional diplomacy and to
play a mediation role in the financial crises of Libya. "We would like to
strengthen our ties with Algeria, and we look forward to both increasing
engagements and furthering our cooperation," Gen. Stephen Townsend, the
commander of US Africa Command, said in a statement following his meeting with
Tebboune. “Algeria is a committed counterterrorism partner,” he added.
Commenting on the goals of this visit, political analyst Mansour Qadidir said
that the Americans seek to reposition in the region where new active players
surfaced such as Turkey. In the past years, the US built strong bilateral ties
with Algeria especially with the beginning of the war on terrorism following the
attacks of Sep. 11. Former Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika had stated
that Algeria pioneered in informing the White House that it backs an
international campaign against terrorism.
An Iraqi Father Confronts Militia in Search for Missing Son
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 2 October, 2020
In the span of 30 seconds, Ali Jasb, a young rights lawyer, vanished into the
night in southern Iraq. On an evening a year ago, a woman emerged from a dimly
lit street in the city of Amara and greeted Jasb. Almost immediately a black SUV
pulled up, two men forced him in, and the vehicle sped away. The woman climbed
into a waiting pickup truck and left. The fateful moment, captured by a
surveillance camera at 6:22 p.m. on Oct. 8, 2019, was the last sighting of the
21-year-old Jasb. Since that day, Jasb´s father has been on a search for justice
that has run repeatedly against one major obstacle: the increasing helplessness
of Iraq´s government in the face of powerful, Iranian-backed Shiite militias.
According to The Associated Press, judicial investigations show a clear
connection between Jasb´s abduction and the most powerful militia group in his
home city.
Still, his father, Jasb Aboud is determined to bring the head of that militia to
court. "I am afraid," he told the AP. "But I lost what was most valuable to me,
so I´ve got nothing else to lose." Jasb was abducted a week into historic
protests that had erupted on Oct. 1 and saw tens of thousands of youth rallying
against corruption and the ruling class. Hope for change inspired many,
including Jasb, to speak out against the influence of militias. He is among 53
protesters still missing since the movement began on Oct. 1, according to the
semi-official Iraqi High Commission for Human Rights.
When the nationwide protests erupted, Jasb participated and used his legal
expertise to form a committee to help those detained. He also openly criticized
militias. In his home city of Amara, capital of Missan province, that meant
Ansar Allah Al-Awfia, one of the more extreme pro-Iranian militias, led by a
local commander, Haidar al-Gharawi. It was incorporated under the
state-sponsored umbrella group, the Popular Mobilization Forces, created to
fight the ISIS group in 2014. Over the years, it came to control important
offices in the provincial government and many businesses in Missan, while being
notorious for illicit dealings along the border with Iran.
There was no response to repeated emails by the AP to the PMF seeking comment
for this story, and calls and messages to al-Awfia were not answered.
Curtailing the power of militias was a key promise of Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi
when he took office in May, following months of political deadlock when former
premier Adel Abdul-Mahdi resigned under pressure from protests.
But he was soon faced with the limits of his administration. Abdul-Mahdi had
allowed militias´ power to grow so much that "now, we almost don´t have a
state," said a high-level official, speaking on condition of anonymity because
of the sensitivity of the issue. Frequent rocket attacks targeted al-Kadhimi´s
seat of power in Baghdad, straining relations with the US. A raid on the
Iranian-backed Kataeb Hezbollah, suspected of firing the rockets, backfired when
most of those detained were set free - lack of evidence, the court said.
Activists continue to be targeted. The July shooting death of a high-profile
commentator and critic of Iran, Hisham al-Hashimi, stunned Baghdad. Two leading
activists in Basra were assassinated.
In the case of Jasb´s disappearance, investigators in Missan quickly came across
evidence of a link to al-Gharawi, the al-Awfia militia commander, according to
court documents seen by the AP.
Hours before his abduction, Jasb received a phone call from a woman seeking
legal help who asked to meet him later that evening, his father said. It was
when he went to meet her that he was snatched.
Key to the case was the mobile number that had called Jasb.
Investigators found it belonged to an illegally acquired SIM not registered with
the authorities. There is a thriving black market for such unregistered SIMs,
which cannot be traced to a user. Police identified other numbers that had
called the unknown SIM. Among them was a man named Sadam Hamed. He told
investigators that he knew nothing about the unknown number, but said his wife,
Fatima Saeed, sometimes used his phone to call a relative. That relative is
married to al-Awfia´s commander, al-Gharawi, according to his testimony.
The judge summoned Saeed for questioning but she never showed up. Both she and
Hamed had fled. There the investigation ground to a halt. For nine long months,
Jasb´s father waited for developments. Nothing happened. So Aboud went to
Baghdad and met a new lawyer, Wala al-Ameri.
They decided to attempt a bold gambit: To seek an arrest warrant against al-Gharawi
from a court in the capital, which would hopefully be far from the militia´s
sway in Missan. "The accused is a militia that has power in Missan, so it could
be that it has influence over witnesses, even the law," al-Ameri said.
But again they hit a dead end.
The Baghdad judge deemed there was insufficient evidence for a warrant against
al-Gharawi. He dismissed Hamed´s testimony and said only a statement from
someone who had seen the kidnapping could advance the case.
"Now it´s a case against the unknown," Aboud said.
In September, Prime Minister al-Kadhimi visited Missan and gave Jasb´s father an
audience. During their 15-minute meeting, Aboud laid out the court documents,
explained the details of the case, and named the militia he believes took his
son. Al-Kadhimi "put his hand to his chest and promised he would deliver him to
me," Aboud said. The premier might be Aboud´s last hope. There are witnesses to
his son´s abduction, but none dare speak out.
One man told the AP he was near a shop that night and saw everything. He belongs
to a powerful local tribe but spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear.
He recounted seeing the woman emerge and the men push Jasb into the vehicle. He
also saw police arrive afterward and search Jasb´s car. The AP confirmed that
the shop he named had a view of the site.
But would he testify?
"It would be my funeral the next day."
Inflation Slump in Europe Could Presage More Stimulus
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 2 October, 2020
Annual inflation in the 19-country eurozone sagged further below zero in
September, bolstering expectations that the European Central Bank will add to
its emergency stimulus efforts aimed at cushioning the impact of the pandemic on
the economy.
The consumer price index was down 0.3% in September, even lower than the minus
0.2% figure in August, according to new figures released Friday by the European
Union statistics agency.
Excluding volatile food and fuel prices, the inflation rate was 0.2% in
September, down from 0.4% in August. The so-called core inflation figure is
often considered the better measure of price movements in the economy as a
whole.
Low inflation is a major reason why analysts predict the ECB will add to its
1.35 trillion-euro ($1.6 trillion) program of regular bond purchases, which push
newly printed money into the financial system. The pandemic emergency purchases
are credited with keeping borrowing costs down and preventing turmoil on
financial markets that would have worsened the recession caused by the virus.
The ECB's goal is to have annual inflation of just under 2%. Economists say the
pandemic is contributing to low inflation as merchants keep prices down in hopes
of attracting customers amid restrictions on travel and activity.
While low inflation can benefit consumers up to a point, weak prices over a
period of time can be a sign of too much slack in the economy. Weak inflation
can also make it harder for indebted countries in the eurozone to improve their
competitiveness compared with the other members of the currency bloc.
The recent string of low inflation figures has been attributed to one-time
factors such as the late start of summer sales in France and Italy affecting the
prices of clothes and shoes. But it is also being attributed to businesses like
hotels and airlines, which have been among the hardest hit by the coronavirus
outbreak, slashing their prices to entice buyers. At the ECB's Sept. 10 meeting
President Christine Lagarde gave little indication that more stimulus was coming
but said the bank stood ready to adjust its programs if needed. The bank's
25-member governing council next meets on Oct. 29 and Dec. 10, although it can
enact new measures at any time.
Swiss Arrest 4 Suspected of Ties to ISIS Al-Qaida
Asharq Al-Awsat/Friday, 2 October, 2020
Authorities in Switzerland say they have arrested four people on suspicion of
having ties to the ISIS group and al-Qaida. The federal prosecutor's office said
police searched three houses in the western canton (state) of Fribourg early
Friday as part of two criminal investigations into alleged extremist activity.
The suspects are alleged to have violated Swiss law banning involvement with
al-Qaida, ISIS, and related organizations. Prosecutors said the four people
detained are also suspected of having "supported or participated in a criminal
organization."They identified the four suspects only as a 28-year-old Kosovar
woman, a 29-year-old Macedonian, a 26-year-old Kosovar man, and a 34-year-old
Swiss-Kosovar dual national. "As they had been in contact with each other, the
house searches and arrests were all carried out at the same time," prosecutors
said.
The American Mideast Coalition for Democracy (AMCD) Supports the State Department’s Efforts to Counter Iranian Disinformation
The American Mideast Coalition for Democracy
WASHINGTON, DC, UNITED STATES, September 29, 2020 /EINPresswire.com/
During
the Cold War, the United States carried on a robust counter-propaganda campaign
against the Soviet Union involving Radio Free Europe, Encounter magazine and
numerous efforts set out in speeches by every President since Eisenhower.
Senators and Congressmen from both parties and numberless op-ed writers
published strong attacks on the Soviets in newspapers and magazines across the
country and abroad. At that time our country was unafraid to engage in the war
of ideas with the communist bloc. Today, the American Mideast Coalition for
Democracy supports the State Department in its efforts to counter Islamist
propaganda emanating from Iran through the Iran Disinformation Project.
“Because President Obama turned US foreign policy on its head and sought to
partner with Islamists from the Sunni Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt to the Shi’a
mullahs of Iran, he split American policymakers and confused the public,” said
AMCD co-chair Tom Harb. “There are several media outlets that still cleave to
the pro-Islamist line, notably Mother Jones.”“The amount of money going from Iran to pro-Iranian regime journalists and
organizations is staggering, especially after the Iran deal which netted Iran
$150 billion from the US,” added AMCD vice-chair, Hossein Khorram. “It’s only
logical that a big chunk of that money would be used to further Iran’s interests
among policymakers in the US.”“Another big issue is that under the Obama-Biden administration, Voice of
America for Iran was taken over by pro-Iran regime personnel,” continued AMCD
co-chair John Hajjar. “In reversing the Obama-Biden policies, the Trump
administration has been resisted both inside and outside the Administration.
Pro-Iran regime people still occupy key roles in the State Department and they
partner with pro-Iran regime organizations such as the National Iranian American
Council (NIAC). This is still going on today.”AMCD fully supports the State Department’s efforts to counter Iranian
propaganda. AMCD receives no grants or funds of any kind from the State
Department or any government agency; we are entirely funded by our members. We
support the Trump Administration because it has set forth the right policies in
order to realize peace in the long-suffering Middle East.
Rebecca Bynum
The American Mideast Coalition for Democracy
+ 16157756801
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on October 02-03/2020
Why Colorful View of American Politics Is Wrong
Amir Taheri/Asharq Al Awsat/October, 02/2020
The way world media cover the current US election campaigns may foster the
impression that the nation is gripped by a crisis due to institutional racism
with black Americans as victims. Professional anti-Americans even claim that the
US perpetuates a version of apartheid.
How accurate are such claims?
There is no doubt that race, or skin color, remains a cause of friction with
small radical groups, both white and black, seeking to legitimize their agendas
by fomenting fear and loathing with racial themes.
On the right White supremacists try to portray black fellow citizens as genetic
criminals whose presence is a cause of anxiety. They cite figures showing that a
disproportionate number of blacks are in prison for breaking the law.
On the left, some radical anti-capitalists try to cast blacks as victims of
institutional racism and use the concept of victimhood to justify violence.
White supremacists forget that in most cases what they present as lawbreaking by
blacks is primarily caused by socio-economic factors, not skin color. Even then,
lawbreakers form a small minority of black Americans who account for 12 percent
of the population.
Promoters of victimhood, on the other side, ignore the fact that the
overwhelming majority of black Americans are proud of what two centuries of
struggle for equal rights within the democratic system has achieved.
The claim of institutional racism is hard to back by evidence. All institutions
of the US have been open, if not always welcoming, to blacks since the 1960s.
The current Congress is the most racially diverse in US history. It includes 56
blacks from 26 states, slightly less than the share of blacks in the total
population. Even then, this is higher than other democracies, for example France
and Great Britain, with large numbers of black citizens. Another important part
of US institutions, the US Senate, includes 10 non-white members out of 100.
Blacks are also well represented in another important part of the institutional
US: the judiciary. Of the nine members of the Supreme Court, two are blacks.
Below that level, 40 black judges sit on the crucial US courts of appeal. More
than 12 percent of judges on US district courts are black. Moves to speed up
representation started under President Lyndon Johnson in the 1960s but
accelerated under his successors.
Bill Clinton named 58 black judges, more than any other president. Barack Obama,
himself half black, comes second with 52 appointments of black judges. Jimmy
Carter with 28 and George W. Bush with 20 appointments come third and fourth.
Blacks also have a significant presence as public attorneys at district, state
and federal levels.
The first black governor of a state was PBS Pinchback of Louisiana who launched
a project in 1871 that became a model of black-white cooperation for reform.
Since then four other states have had black governors from both parties, not
counting “colored” ones from Asia and South America.
Even the diplomatic service, traditionally a niche for rich whites from New
England, has not been closed to blacks. Over the past 70 years, blacks have
accounted for seven percent of ambassadorial posts. But the black diplomatic
elite includes stars such as Ralph Bunche and Edith Sampson not to mention the
five black diplomats, out of 30, who served as permanent representative to the
United Nations. The US has also had two black secretaries of state, both under
George W. Bush.
On a broader level, since Johnson’s reforms, some 13 percent of all cabinet
posts have been filled by blacks. Blacks have also increased representation in
the US armed forces up to the highest grades including chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff. That however, is still not satisfactory. Although promotion of
blacks speeded up under Obama and President Donald Trump, blacks account for
over 43 percent of all military but only six percent of higher ranks. A similar
picture can be drawn for the police, which controlled by local government is not
a federal institution.
Blacks have increased their representation in non-governmental domains.
Hollywood blacks are no longer limited to actors given bit parts but include
major stars. The phenomenal success of the film “Black Panther” marked the
integration of the blacks in the America’s cinema on equal terms.
In the literary world such authors as Richard Wright, Ralph Ellison and Toni
Morrison have entered the canon of American literature. More recently, Colson
Whitehead became only the fourth novelist to win a Pulitzer Prize twice, joining
such iconic writers as William Faulkner, John Updike and Ruth Tarkington.
What is significant is that black progress toward equality in the US is no
longer dependent on tokenism and positive discrimination that blacks, such as
Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcom X, regarded as counter-productive.
Today, black Americans are rising in the world, so to speak, thanks to their own
struggle and self-improvement efforts rather than charity from bleeding-heart
liberals.
Fighting for equality by blacks also benefited poor whites, dismissed by some
supremacists as “trash”. Speaking in 2013, Angela Davis reminded the world that
the black fight for free education also benefited whites who had no money for
schooling their children. In some southern states, poor whites were mobilized to
register as voters when blacks won franchise.
The broader quest for equal rights for blacks may be tangentially linked to the
recent violence in some American cities. But, although most polls in the past
half century show that a majority of Americas endorse the quest for equal
rights, it is clear that they also oppose violence and the use of color as a
weapon against the democratic system.
The death of George Floyd on May 25 pushed support for Black Lives Matter (BLM)
to 53 percent with 28 percent opposed, among registered voters. However, when
violence, accompanied by looting, was pushed centerstage, support for BLM fell
to 48 percent with 38 percent opposed. One reason may have been the promotion by
media of firebrands like Shawn King as BLM leaders, downgrading the movement’s
less radical but real leaders such as Alicia Graza, Opal Tomei and Patrisse
Cullros.
While racists, both white and black, do exist in the United States it is wrong
to talk of across the board institutional racism. A majority of Americans of all
colors understand that slavery was an evil and harmed every American regardless
of color. They have also seen in real life that advancing equality benefits all,
not only those of any particular color.
Many Rivers, Too Many Dams
Philip Fearnside/The New York Times/October, 02/2020
Where rivers run free, dams are intruders.
Perhaps nowhere these days are they more threatening than in the Amazon basin.
Its namesake river is fed by more than 1,100 tributaries, many of them major
rivers themselves, and forms the largest drainage system in the world. About
one-fifth of all of the water that runs off the surface of the Earth ends up in
it.
The flows of these rivers can generate a lot of electricity, so it’s not
surprising that the Amazon River basin is seen by governments, speculators and
industries as a vast, untapped frontier for hydroelectric power and the
development that dams attract. At least 158 dams are either operating or under
construction now in the river basin, according to a study last year in the
journal Nature Communications, and an additional 351 have been proposed.
The study’s authors called the Amazon a “hot spot for future hydropower
expansion.”
But it is hard to know, really, what lies ahead. Plans for these big, disruptive
projects are often shrouded in secrecy, especially in Brazil, which includes
about two-thirds of the basin, because of the controversy they generate over the
environmental destruction and injustices they cause. New projects can appear out
of nowhere and dormant plans are sometimes resurrected as sudden priorities —
so-called vampire projects rising from the dead.
What is clear, as I argued in a 2017 article for the online magazine Yale
Environment 360 — even before Brazilians elected as their president Jair
Bolsonaro, who has been predictably disastrous for the Amazon — is that the dam
building is “driven by the country’s agricultural and heavy industrial
interests, is being carried out with little regard to the impacts on Indigenous
people and the environment, is proceeding with little effort to capitalize on
the nation’s vast renewable energy potential, and is often fueled by
corruption.”
One dam that appeared out of nowhere last year is the centerpiece of the Barão
do Rio Branco infrastructure project proposed soon after Mr. Bolsonaro took
office in January 2019. This project calls for a 2,000- to 3,000-megawatt dam on
the Trombetas River, an Amazon tributary that flows through an isolated and
mineral-rich region of northern Brazil.
The proposed dam would flood Quilombola lands upstream from the dam. These lands
were established by runaway slaves. The inundation would conflict with Brazil’s
often-violated and easily amended Constitution, which prohibits the removal of
Quilombola and Indigenous peoples from their lands. (The government says it will
consult with potentially affected communities, a promise that has proved mostly
hollow in other dam projects.) This dam would also threaten one of Amazonia’s
largest beaches for turtle reproduction, which lies downstream.
Not coincidentally, Mr. Bolsonaro is dismantling the country’s environmental
agencies and licensing system for infrastructure projects, and is reducing
protections for Indigenous peoples.
This has set the stage for a spree of dam building that could be enormously
destructive to a region of incredible biological diversity. At the same time,
Amazonia’s rain forests are being cleared for cattle ranges and soy farms, often
illegally.
Every year Brazil’s Ministry of Mines and Energy publishes an energy plan that
includes large dams of at least 30 megawatts of installed capacity to be
completed within 10 years. The most recent plan, which runs through 2029, lists
three dams: the Tabajara in Rondônia, the Castanheira in Mato Grosso and the Bem
Querer in Roraima.
This last dam would block the Rio Branco, known as the White River for its
color, which is caused by the high load of sediments it carries. These sediments
created and maintain the Anavilhanas Archipelago, a national park whose 400
islands in the Rio Negro just downstream from the confluence with the Rio Branco
make up one of the world’s largest riverine archipelagos. Its wetland ecosystems
depend on the sediments from the Rio Branco and are considered of international
importance for their biological diversity.
In addition to that plan, Brazil’s most recent “National Energy Plan,” which
goes through 2050, includes the Chacorão Dam on the Tapajós River, which would
flood part of the Munduruku Indigenous Land, as well as dams on the Tapajós and
its tributary Jamanxim River, which would inundate part of Sawré Muybu, another
Munduruku area that so far has been denied designation as an Indigenous land
precisely to make way for these dams.
Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador also have big plans for Amazonian dams. In 2010, Peru
and Brazil agreed to six large dams in Peru, to be built by Brazilian
contractors and financed by Brazil’s national bank. Most electricity from them
would be exported to Brazil. When this will happen is unclear: The main
contractor has since been swept up in an unrelated corruption scandal, along
with some political figures in Brazil. But the dams remained listed on Brazil’s
2050 energy expansion plan.
In Brazil, there is a constant testing of the legal limits, to see which laws
will be enforced and which will be ignored. The Belo Monte Dam, the biggest
hydroelectric project in the Amazon, stands as a concrete monument to this
reality. It became operational in 2016 after storms of protest from Indigenous
peoples, environmentalists and much of the public. The dam flooded roughly 200
square miles of lowlands and forest, uprooted more than 20,000 people and has
caused extensive damage to the river ecosystem.
A federal judge originally ruled that the license for the dam was illegal
because the people in the Indigenous lands affected were not consulted as
required by law. But construction was allowed to proceed and the dam stands
today. The project, which consists of two dams, removes 80 percent of the water
from a 45-mile stretch between them along which two Indigenous lands are.
Despite an estimated $18 billion price tag, the dam’s economic viability was
always in question. The natural seasonal cycle of the Xingu River includes a
long low-flow period that prevents Belo Monte from using many of its expensive
turbines during much of the year.
The study in Nature Communications found that some lowland dams in the Amazon
actually may exceed the carbon emissions rates of fossil fuel plants. Beyond
that, these tropical dams cause environmental damage that is much more serious
than their proponents admit, for benefits that are far less than claimed.
River ecosystems are turned into reservoirs, for instance, damaging aquatic
diversity. Dams can block annual fish migrations, like that of the giant catfish
of the Madeira River. According to one analysis, after Brazil built one dam on
the Madeira, in 2011, and another in 2013, fish catches in what had been the
world’s second greatest riverine fishery plummeted in Brazil, Bolivia and Peru.
Thousands of people lost their fishing-based livelihoods, and the steep decline
in fishing also led to social tensions in the region that persist today.
Another problem results when nutrient-rich sediments carried by these rivers are
trapped behind dams rather than carried downstream and deposited on flood
plains, where they are essential for agriculture. The nutrients also support the
food chain that fish downstream depend on, compromising catches along thousands
of miles of Amazonian rivers.
These huge impoundments also destroy forests, which drown in the sprawling
reservoirs behind them and are cut down to make way for the accompanying
development and to clear paths for transmission lines strung across vast
distances to deliver electricity to faraway consumers and industries. The rising
waters behind these dams can also displace thousands of people from their homes,
as they have done time and again in the Amazon.
Some proposed dams are important components of planned waterways that will allow
for the transportation of soybeans and other products by barge. This would
accelerate the clearing of forest and the transformation of cattle pasture for
soy cultivation. This switch from pasture to soy fields is already a key driver
of deforestation as cattle ranchers sell their lands to soy farmers and buy
cheap land deeper into forest areas to clear for new ranches.
There are more subtle consequences, too.
Mercury that occurs naturally in the soil as well as in runoff from gold mining
operations that can often be found upriver of dams can be transformed into
highly poisonous methylmercury through a chemical reaction at the bottom of
reservoirs, where there is almost no oxygen in the water. High levels of mercury
have been found in the hair of people living around the Tucuruí Dam in Pará and
the Balbina Dam in Amazonas.
And the lack of oxygen at the bottom of these reservoirs also causes another
chemical reaction that produces methane, a highly potent greenhouse gas. It
bubbles up to the surface, where it is released into the atmosphere. The gas
also enters the atmosphere when reservoir water passes through the turbines and
down the spillways of dams.
What all this adds up to is clear: The countries of the Amazon should be
extremely wary of damming more rivers in pursuit of electricity they mistakenly
see as clean and cheap. These projects are enormously expensive, wreak havoc on
the environment and are an injustice to the people who live near them. Moreover,
they often don’t add up financially. A 2014 study in the journal Energy Policy
warned that “in most countries large hydropower dams will be too costly in
absolute terms and take too long to build” to make sense.
Brazil has other ways to generate electricity — offshore turbines and solar
power, for instance — with the existing hydropower plants available to provide
backup. There are also ample opportunities to cut electricity use through
conservation and to redirect the economy from industries that are
electricity-intensive, like aluminum production, for export.
Amazonia’s free-flowing rivers are the lifeblood of its biologically rich
forests and the Indigenous peoples who have depended on them for centuries.
Treating Amazonia as a sacrifice zone for resource extraction is unjust and
unnecessary. The human and environmental costs are too high.
*Philip Fearnside is an ecologist at the National Institute for Research in
Amazonia in Brazil.
Biden’s “Allah Willing” in Context
Raymond Ibrahim/October, 02/2020
During the first presidential debate between Donald Trump and Joe Biden, while
the president was saying that he would release his tax returns once an ongoing
IRS audit ends, Biden interrupted him by saying, “When—insha’allah?”
The utterance of this Arabic phrase, which simply means “Allah willing,” by the
Democratic candidate is strange, and a bit revealing. For starters, why, in a
purely American setting, would Biden suddenly resort to Arabic? It would have
been one thing if he used this formulation before a Muslim audience—it would
then be chalked up to diplomacy, pandering, etc.—but why use it when around
Americans and during a distinctly American event such as a U.S. presidential
debate?
Secondly, while insha’allah does literally mean “Allah willing,” and is
regularly used to express modesty before the Supreme Being whenever Arabic
speakers are discussing future events—as in, “Next year I plan on visiting the
Arctic, insha’allah”—what very few non-native speakers of Arabic appreciate is
that it is also used with great frequency by those who utter it to signal that
they really have no intention of doing what they say they plan on doing, and by
their listeners to express doubt or cynicism.
For example, if Abdul tells Mustafa, “I promise to do X, Y, and Z,” and Mustafa
responds, “insha’allah,” say, with a knowing smile, he is essentially saying—and
Abdul knows he’s saying—“Sure you will.”
And it is precisely in this latter and subtle sense that Biden was using it:
while Trump was insisting that he would eventually release his tax returns,
Biden was saying, “Yea, right,” though—and again, this is the bizarre
part—through a distinctly Arabic idiom.
This would seem to suggest that Biden has been around many Arabic speakers—the
majority of whom were obviously Muslim, not least based on the Obama
administration’s well documented preference—to the point of being able to
instinctively think and utter jokes like them.
Such an interpretation sheds some light on a controversial thing Biden said in a
video directed at Muslims in late July: “Hadith from the Prophet Muhammad
instructs, ‘Whomever among you sees a wrong, let him change it with his hand. If
he is not able, then with his tongue. If he is not able, then with his heart.’”
Erdogan's Plan to Take Over the Palestinian Authority
Khaled Abu Toameh/Gatestone Institute./October 2, 2020
What we are witnessing is an Arab autocrat (Abbas) seeking the help of a Muslim
autocrat (Erdogan) in holding "free and fair" elections. Abbas, it seems, is
confident that Erdogan's observers would rubber-stamp the results of any
Palestinian election to ensure that the PA president emerges victorious
Now he [Erdogan] has a chance to use the Palestinian elections to try to bring
his Hamas friends to power after getting rid of Abbas.
"It is terrifying that Abbas speaks as if he lives in another world. Is there a
Palestinian interest in attacking the US administration, even if this
administration takes unfair positions against the Palestinians? Is there a
Palestinian interest in referring negatively to the peace accords between Israel
and the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain? There is a Palestinian need to return
to reality. There is a Palestinian need to come to terms with the truth." —
Khairallah Khairallah, Lebanese journalist and political commentator, al-Arabiya,
September 29, 2020.
What we are witnessing is an Arab autocrat (Mahmoud Abbas) seeking the help of a
Muslim autocrat (Recep Tayyip Erdogan) in holding "free and fair" elections.
Abbas, it seems, is confident that Erdogan's observers would rubber-stamp the
results of any Palestinian election to ensure that the Palestinian Authority
president emerges victorious.
On September 21, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas phoned Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and requested that Turkey send Turkish observers
to monitor Palestinian elections, if and when they are held.
The phone call came as Turkey hosted a meeting between Abbas's ruling Fatah
faction and the Iran-backed Hamas movement. At the meeting, the Fatah and Hamas
reportedly agreed to hold long overdue elections for the PA presidency and
parliament, the Palestine Legislative Council (PLC).
Abbas's request surprised many Palestinians and Arabs, especially in the wake of
charges that Erdogan had forged the 2018 presidential and parliamentary
elections in Turkey. Shortly after the voting ended, thousands of Twitter users
launched a hashtag called #Erdogan_forged_election, accusing him of rigging the
elections. This was not the first time that Erdogan has been accused of election
fraud. In 2014, Turkey's opposition accused Erdogan's party of rigging the
country's local elections.
What we are witnessing is an Arab autocrat (Abbas) seeking the help of a Muslim
autocrat (Erdogan) in holding "free and fair" elections. Abbas, it seems, is
confident that Erdogan's observers would rubber-stamp the results of any
Palestinian election to ensure that the PA president emerges victorious.
The 85-year-old Abbas, currently in the 15th year of his four-year-term in
office, appears to be an admirer of Erdogan's authoritarian rule. While Erdogan
is seeking to resurrect the Ottoman Empire and assume the role of Sultan (ruler
of a Muslim realm), Abbas is searching for ways to hold onto power until his
last day. Erdogan apparently wants to expand his influence in the Middle East by
meddling in the affairs of the Palestinians after already involving himself in
conflicts in Libya and Syria. Now he has a chance to use the Palestinian
elections to try to bring his Hamas friends to power after getting rid of Abbas.
Abbas, who has no intention of competing with Erdogan for the title of Sultan,
wants to maintain his status as president-for-life of the Palestinians. Abbas is
hoping that Erdogan will assist him in achieving his goal.
In January 2005, Abbas was elected president of the Palestinian Authority. The
next presidential election was supposed to take place in January 2009, but a
dispute that erupted between Fatah and Hamas has so far prevented the
Palestinians from holding presidential and parliamentary elections. The last
Palestinian parliamentary election was held in January 2006, when Hamas won most
of the Palestine Legislative Council seats.
A year later, Hamas staged a violent coup in the Gaza Strip, overthrowing
Abbas's PA and seizing full control of the coastal enclave, home to nearly two
million Palestinians. Since then, the Palestinians have been left without a
parliament due to the split between the PA-controlled West Bank and the
Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.
Several attempts by Egypt and other Arab countries to resolve the Fatah-Hamas
rift over the past 12 years have failed, leaving the Palestinians with two
separate mini-states: one in the West Bank, the other in the Gaza Strip.
Abbas, in the past 11 years, has more than once expressed his desire to end the
conflict with Hamas and pave the way for holding the long overdue elections.
Such statements have often been ridiculed by his critics.
"Palestinian elections are merely a lie we've been hearing for years and never
see happening on the ground," noted several social media users on Twitter. One
posted a video that included various statements by Abbas in which he talks about
holding new elections.
In 2009, Abbas announced: "I have issued a decree for holding presidential and
parliamentary elections on January 24, 2010."
In 2016, Abbas stated:
"We are continuing our sincere efforts to achieve Palestinian reconciliation
[with Hamas] by forming a national unity government on the basis of the PLO
program and holding presidential and parliamentary elections."
In 2017, Abbas, in a speech at the United Nations General Assembly, called on
Hamas to allow the Palestinian Authority to assume its responsibilities in the
Gaza Strip and hold general elections.
Last year, in another speech at the UN General Assembly, Abbas again announced
his intention to hold presidential and parliamentary elections. "Upon my return
to the homeland," he said, "I will call general elections in the West Bank, Gaza
Strip and Jerusalem."
In September 2020, during a videoconference meeting of leaders of Palestinian
factions, Abbas said:
"Despite all the obstacles you are aware of, we are preparing to hold the
parliamentary election, and then the presidential election, with the
participation of all the Palestinian factions."
Abbas has long managed to avoid fulfilling his election promise, once by blaming
Hamas and another time by blaming Israel. As far as Abbas is concerned, everyone
is to blame for the absence of free and fair elections except himself.
Now Palestinians and some Arabs are saying that they no longer believe Abbas. A
hashtag trending on Twitter under the name "The Election Play" shows that many
Palestinians and Arabs are skeptical of Abbas's real intentions.
"We have become used to the talk about elections," remarked Hesham Abo Al-Hosom,
a Palestinian political activist from the Gaza Strip. "The elections Abbas is
talking about are a play steeped in lies and delusions."
Palestinian social media user Rawan Armana commented: "We are fed up with
speeches, lies and deceit. We have lost confidence [in our leaders]."
Tareq Al-Farra, a member of Fatah, derided Abbas's repeated promise to hold
elections: "When will this play end? We are tired of statements about holding
general elections and achieving national unity. Stop your lies."
Yara Lolo, who describes herself as a supporter of Abbas's arch-rival, Mohammed
Dahlan, wrote: "The people who elect corrupt opportunists and swindlers are not
considered victims, but rather partners in crime."
Commenting on Abbas's request that Turkey monitor the Palestinian elections,
Egyptian social media user Ahmed Maka wrote:
"Did you know that the Palestinian Authority president called on Turkey to
monitor the Palestinian elections, despite the fact that Turkey itself rigged
the local elections [in Turkey], according to the testimony of international
observers?"
Lebanese political analyst Nidal Al-Sabeh also expressed concern over Abbas's
demand that Turkey monitor the Palestinian elections. The PA president's request
to Erdogan, Al-Sabeh said, "exposes to Abbas's stance against Egypt, Saudi
Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Syria, and his involvement with the
Qatari-Turkish project."
Khairallah Khairallah, a Lebanese journalist and political commentator, wondered
whether the proposed elections would lead to real change on the ground and put
an end to Hamas's "Taliban-style Islamic emirate" in the Gaza Strip:
"With the exception of Turkey, which hosted the Fatah-Hamas meeting to assert
its regional role, it is not known how the elections will lead to a profound
change that the Palestinians need more than ever... The elections can be the
gateway to a major change. Most of all, the elections can be a bridge to a
transformation that leads to the birth of a different Palestinian leadership. It
is terrifying that Abbas speaks as if he lives in another world. Is there a
Palestinian interest in attacking the US administration, even if this
administration takes unfair positions against the Palestinians? Is there a
Palestinian interest in referring negatively to the peace accords between Israel
and the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain? There is a Palestinian need to return
to reality. There is a Palestinian need to come to terms with the truth."
Khairallah called on the Palestinian factions to explain what they mean when
they talk about achieving national unity and holding new elections. "There is a
need to stop selling illusions," he added.
"There is a need to adapt to international and regional developments. There is a
need to acknowledge that national unity cannot be restored by appeasing Turkey
or Iran, or by acknowledging the legitimacy of what Hamas is doing in Gaza.
Palestinian elections cannot be held without a clear vision that is based above
all on preserving an independent Palestinian decision, away from the
interference of Turkey and Iran."
Palestinian political analyst Hani al-Masri said it was "useless" to talk about
holding elections while the Palestinians are divided.
"Without a unity government that provides an atmosphere of confidence and
respect for human rights and freedoms, combats corruption, and unifies
institutions, especially the judiciary, there can be no elections... What is
required is a new and strategic vision, a single leadership, and a true
partnership."
Erdogan's renewed interest in the Palestinian issue might be seen in the context
of his embrace of the Muslim Brotherhood and its affiliates, including Hamas. If
Erdogan is going to send Turkish observers to monitor the Palestinian elections,
it is because he would like to help his friends in Hamas win the vote.
A report by the Century Foundation on the Turkish government's ties to the
Muslim Brotherhood estimated that 20,000 Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood members
live on Turkish soil. Recently, another report revealed that Turkey has given
passports to a dozen members of Hamas in Istanbul.
Erdogan evidently cares about Hamas more than Abbas does. The Turkish leader
would certainly like to see Palestinians hold new elections -- and he is
prepared to provide all the help needed. By inviting Turkey to monitor the
elections, Abbas is playing into the hands of Erdogan and Hamas. Abbas is
advancing Turkey's mission of replacing his regime with a Muslim Brotherhood-led
government.
*Khaled Abu Toameh, an award-winning journalist based in Jerusalem, is a
Shillman Journalism Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
© 2020 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
What do Turkey and Russia want in Nagorno-Karabakh?
Con Coughlin/The National/October 02/2020
كون كوغلن: ذا انترناشيونال: ما ذا تريد كل من تركيا وروسيا في ناغورنو
كاراباخ
Armed conflict has flared between Armenia and Azerbaijan, and much larger powers
may be drawn into the fray
A frame grab from handout video provided by the Ministry of Defence of the
Republic of Azerbaijan allegedly shows an Armenian tank being destroyed by
Azerbaijan's military at Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, on the border of Armenia and
Azerbaijan. EPA
The prospect of a dramatic escalation in tensions between Turkey and Russia has
become a distinct possibility following the eruption of fresh violence between
Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh.
The conflict between the two states in the South Caucasus region, which dates
back to the breakup of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, primarily centres on
the decision by Nagorno-Karabakh, a predominantly Armenian region, to break away
from its former masters in Azerbaijan and ally itself with Yerevan.
The move prompted a full-scale war in 1992 after both countries gained
independence from the Soviet Union, claiming the lives of an estimated 30,000
people.
Since a Russian-brokered ceasefire in 1994, an uneasy truce has held. Talks
between France, Russia and the US have failed to bring about a full resolution,
with the result that flare-ups are frequent between the two countries.
The current outbreak of hostilities, though, is the most serious since the early
1990s, raising concerns that it could draw in regional powers such as Turkey and
Russia, and destabilise an area that serves as an important corridor for global
energy markets.
In the latest round of fighting, which began on Sunday, Azerbaijan has been
accused of launching a full-scale assault against Armenian positions, prompting
the declaration of martial law in Armenia and a mobilisation of Armenian forces.
In Azerbaijan, the authorities claim that 11 civilians have been killed and 34
wounded in shelling by Armenian forces. So far, the latest round of hostilities
is said to have claimed more than 100 lives.
The prospect of the conflict spreading beyond the narrow confines of territorial
questions between Armenia and Azerbaijan stems from the fact that both countries
enjoy the support of powerful regional neighbours.
Azerbaijan, a predominantly Muslim, Turkic country, is backed by Turkey, while
Armenia is closely allied with Moscow. Though they also enjoy good relations
with Azerbaijan, the Russians maintain an important military base in Armenia –
said to be the first country in the world to have adopted Christianity.
Relations between the Kremlin and Yerevan in recent years might best be
described as being lukewarm. Russian President Vladimir Putin does not regard
the current Armenian government as being sufficiently friendly to Moscow in
comparison with its predecessors. But the Armenians have made it clear they
would expect Russian backing if the conflict were to escalate further. “If
necessary, Armenia will turn to its allies,” Vardan Toghanyan, the Armenian
ambassador to Moscow, recently commented.
Azerbaijan's relationship with Turkey, by contrast, has only grown warmer.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was quick to demonstrate his support for
Baku, tweeting, “The Turkish people will support our Azerbaijani brothers with
all-out means as always.” He also denounced Armenia as “the biggest threat to
regional peace.”
Turkey has a long and troubled relationship with the Armenian people, with the
Turks accused of committing the Armenian genocide during the First World War.
That event was characterised, Armenia claims, by the systematic mass murder and
expulsion of around 1.5 million Armenians during the final days of the Ottoman
Empire.
The Armenians have made it clear they would expect Russian backing if the
conflict were to escalate further
The historical relationship with Azerbaijan lacks such dark chapters; much of
the Azerbaijani population speaks a dialect of Turkish, and Turkey was the first
country to recognise a newly independent Azerbaijan in 1991. The two countries
regularly hold joint military drills, including last month when Turkey was
accused of sending rocket launchers to the area. Since then, Armenian officials
have accused Ankara of supplying Azerbaijan with heavy weapons and mercenaries
to support its offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh.
On Tuesday, the Armenians even claimed that one of its warplanes had been shot
down by a Turkish F-16 fighter, a claim the Turks denounced as being “absolutely
untrue”.
Public support has been growing in Azerbaijan in recent months for a campaign to
recapture Nagorno-Karabakh, with thousands of protesters taking to the streets
in Baku in July, chanting “Karabakh or death”. Some Western diplomats believe
that Azerbaijan has been prompted to make its recent military moves in the
belief that the US, traditionally an impartial arbiter in the Caucasus, no
longer has any interest in resolving the conflict.
The bigger concern, though, is that the latest hostilities could lead to a
broader conflict between Turkey and Russia.
Although relations between Moscow and Ankara have improved in recent years, with
Mr Erdogan negotiating a multi-billion dollar arms deal with the Kremlin,
tensions are never far from the surface.
Mr Erdogan and Mr Putin are both committed to expanding their global influence,
and their rivalry often finds them supporting opposing factions, the most
infamous example occurring during the Syrian conflict in 2015 when the Turks
shot down a Russian warplane they claimed had strayed into Turkish airspace.
There have also been tensions between the two countries in Libya, where Moscow’s
support for Khalifa Haftar, Commander of the Libyan National Army, has brought
it into conflict with Ankara, which is providing military support for the
Tripoli-based Government of National Accord.
Turkey’s support for Azerbaijan in its conflict with Armenia therefore has the
potential to open up another area of rivalry with Moscow, one that could
seriously exacerbate tensions in the South Caucasus.
Whether that happens will depend to a large extent on Russia’s response.
Previously, the Kremlin has preferred diplomacy to military might to ease
tensions in the region, and a negotiated solution to the latest flare-up between
Armenia and Azerbaijan is still likely to remain Russia’s preferred outcome.
*Con Coughlin is a defence and foreign affairs columnist for The National