English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese,
Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For January 25/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news
The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews21/english.january25.21.htm
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2006
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Bible Quotations For today
Do all things without murmuring and arguing, so that you
may be blameless and innocent, children of God without blemish
Letter to the Philippians 02/12-18/:”Therefore, my beloved, just as you have
always obeyed me, not only in my presence, but much more now in my absence, work
out your own salvation with fear and trembling; for it is God who is at work in
you, enabling you both to will and to work for his good pleasure. Do all things
without murmuring and arguing, so that you may be blameless and innocent,
children of God without blemish in the midst of a crooked and perverse
generation, in which you shine like stars in the world. It is by your holding
fast to the word of life that I can boast on the day of Christ that I did not
run in vain or labour in vain. But even if I am being poured out as a libation
over the sacrifice and the offering of your faith, I am glad and rejoice with
all of you and in the same way you also must be glad and rejoice with me.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on January 24-25/2021
Health Ministry: 3,010 new Corona cases, 50 deaths
Lebanon’s top Christian cleric lashes out at ‘stubborn and destructive’
officials
Major Surprise Expected in Port Blast Investigations
Israeli Warplanes Overfly Most Lebanese Regions
Israeli Troops Nab 7 Cows from Lebanon’s al-Wazzani
Al-Rahi to Politicians: Don't You Fear God?
Report: Hariri's Stance on New Government Unchanged
Lebanon’s PSP, FPM Dig up War Past in Heated Dispute
Frankly Speaking/Text-Video Interview With Bahaa Hariri/January 24/2021/Arab
News Web Site
Titles For The
Latest
English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on
January 24-25/2021
Biden will work with Israel to build
on regional normalization deals, says Sullivan
More than 20 injured by blast in Gaza home
Indonesia Says it Has Seized Iranian Tanker
UAE cabinet approves opening embassy in Tel Aviv, Israel opens embassy in Abu
Dhabi
Morocco PM Rejects ‘Betrayal’ Accusations after Signing Normalization Deal with
Israel
Germany to Use Corona Meds that Helped Trump
US condemns air attack on Riyadh, vows to protect stability of Kingdom
Kremlin Says U.S. Interfering in Russian 'Domestic Affairs'
Kremlin Says Putin Ready for Dialogue if US Willing
Over half of Syria’s children deprived of education, says UNICEF
Palestinians ask European Union to send observers to monitor long-awaited
elections
11 fighters from Iraq’s PMU militias killed in ISIS attack: Security sources
Kuwait emir reappoints prime minister to form new cabinet, KUNA reports
Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on January 24-25/2021
Turkey: Elderly Christian Man Still Missing Year Later/Uzay
Bulut/Gatestone Institute/January 24/2021
“This Is a Warning to Christians in All Parts of the World”: The Persecution of
Christians, December 2020/Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/January 24/2021
Biden will not wait for Israel to make moves on Iran/Alex Fishman|/Ynetnews/January
24/202
EU rewarding Iranian aggression by seeking return to nuclear deal/Dr. Majid
Rafizadeh/Arab News/January 24/2021
Iran must prove it is serious before Gulf talks can begin/Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami/Arab
News/January 24/2021
'Je ne regrette rien' won't do, M. Macron/Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib/Arab
News/January 24/2021
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on January 24-25/2021
Health Ministry: 3,010 new Corona cases, 50 deaths
NNA/January 24/2021
The Ministry of Public Health announced, Sunday, the registration of 3,010 new
Coronavirus cases, thus raising the cumulative number of confirmed cases to-date
to 279,579.
It added that 50 deaths were also reported within the past 24 hours.
Lebanon’s top Christian cleric lashes out at ‘stubborn and
destructive’ officials
Najia Houssari/Arab News/January 24/2021
President and prime-minister designate at loggerheads
BEIRUT: Lebanon’s top Christian cleric lashed out at “stubborn and destructive”
officials on Sunday for blocking the formation of a new government.
Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros Al-Rai used his sermon to denounce those who
were blocking the process, painting a grim picture of how Lebanon was struggling
during the pandemic and a financial crisis.
Politicians have failed to agree on a new administration since the last one
resigned after the devastating Aug. 4 explosion in Beirut. There has also been a
sharp increase in tension between President Michel Aoun and Prime
Minister-designate Saad Hariri. Al-Rai led mediation efforts to resolve the
deadlock and complications, but failed in his endeavors. The patriarch fumed at
“the obduracy of the officials in Lebanon in their stubborn and destructive
stances for the state as an entity and institutions.”“With what conscience, what
justification, what kind of authority and right, and by whose mandate do you not
form a government?” he demanded to know. “Why do you not form a government when
the people are crying out from pain, starving from poverty and dying from
disease?”Hospitals were full of patients, he continued. Clinics and pharmacies
lacked medicines, stores lacked food, and the monetary and economic crises had
reached their climax. “The economy is fading away, agricultural production is
destroyed, people are standing at the doors of banks hopelessly begging for
their money, the major military, financial and judicial state institutions are
hit in their prestige, morale and officials due to programmed campaigns and
malicious rumors.”Borders had no control, there was smuggling at the country’s
expense, sovereignty was incomplete, independence was suspended, corruption was
rampant, and unemployment and poverty affected more than half of the population,
he added. “The capital is afflicted, the port is destroyed, the wealth of oil
and gas is seized and the country (has) entered the orbit of final collapse.”
His anger followed an intense period of bickering between the country’s
political factions about why a government was not being formed.
Aoun said the president had a constitutional right to approve the entire Cabinet
formation before signing it off, while Hariri said the problem did not lie with
him but “rather with the president who objects and says that he does not approve
this or that name, but does not give an explanation for his objection.”
A statement on Saturday night from the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), led by
Aoun’s son-in-law MP Gebran Bassil, attacked Hariri. “The time of foreign
tutelage has ended and it is an illusion that some are trying to replace it with
internal hegemony,” it said. “This means giving up attempts to seize the
political rights of any Lebanese component.”
FPM MP Cesar Abi Khalil said that Aoun would not resign and that the FPM
lawmakers had not named Hariri to head the government because they did not trust
him with the task required at this stage.Insults lit up social media, with lurid
comments such as “Senile Aoun” and “Berri for theft and corruption,” a reference
to Lebanese Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri. Former minister Nazem El-Khoury said
that the patriarch had expressed the pain of all Lebanese people in his sermon.
He addressed the FPM, saying: “For those who claim to defend the rights
of Christians, please do not be more Christian than the patriarch of the
Maronites and the whole of Lebanon.” The Lebanese
daily Ad-Diyar reported on Sunday that a political and parliamentary official
was concerned about “attempts to disrupt solutions in Lebanon as if there was a
plot to bring down Lebanon.”The official expressed fears that what was required
was the “survival of the caretaker government headed by Hassan Diab until the
end of the term.”Diab formed his government last January to tackle the country’s
worst economic crisis in decades. His administration came to office after his
predecessor, Hariri, resigned in the face of mass protests.
Major Surprise Expected in Port Blast Investigations
Naharnet/Sunday, 24 January, 2021
The “coming days will carry a bombshell surprise” regarding the catastrophic
August 4 explosion at the port of Beirut, legal sources said. “This file will
not be closed and the investigation will not stop, no matter how much they try
to besiege the judiciary,” the sources told the al-Anbaa newspaper of the
Progressive Socialist Party. “Heavyweight figures shall be targeted,” the
sources added. Recent media reports have linked the
ammonium nitrate shipment that exploded at the port to pro-regime Syrian
businessmen.
Israeli Warplanes Overfly Most Lebanese Regions
Naharnet/Sunday, 24 January, 2021
Israeli warplanes on Sunday violated Lebanon's airspace over Beirut and several
regions. Over the capital, two fighter jets were heard and seen flying at medium
and high altitudes. The National News Agency meanwhile reported that Israeli
warplanes overflew the southern regions of Hasbaya, al-Orqoub, Sidon and Jezzine
at low altitude. The jets also overflew the heights of Mount Hermon and the
Israeli-occupied Golan Heights. TV networks also reported that the warplanes
overflew Lebanon’s eastern and western mountain ranges at medium altitude.
An intensification of Israeli overflights in Lebanon’s airspace usually precedes
Israeli airstrikes on neighboring Syria. Israel has recently intensified
low-altitude warplane missions in Lebanese skies, causing jitters among
residents and prompting Lebanon to file an urgent complaint to the U.N.
Israeli Troops Nab 7 Cows from Lebanon’s al-Wazzani
Naharnet/Sunday, 24 January, 2021
Fifteen Israeli soldiers on Sunday opened the border gate at al-Wazzani and
scoured the area facing the parks, Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency
reported. “Before their withdrawal, they seized seven cows,” the agency added.
Israeli forces had recently abducted a Lebanese shepherd from the Kfarshouba
area and accused him of being a Hizbullah spy. He was released several days
later. Another abduction attempt was also recorded in recent days.
Al-Rahi to Politicians: Don't You Fear God?
Naharnet/Sunday, 24 January, 2021
Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi on Sunday lashed out at Lebanon’s politicians
over their protracted failure to form a new government.
“Why don’t you form a government while the people are screaming from
pain, starving from poverty and dying from disease?” al-Rahi asked in his Sunday
Mass sermon. “Don’t you fear God, the people and the court of conscience and
history? Would a reasonable person believe that the dispute is over the
interpretation of a constitutional article that is clear as the sun?” the
patriarch added. “The constitution was devised for implementation, not debate,
and let it be a source of agreement not contention,” he urged, addressing
officials. He noted that in the face of the “fateful
challenges” that Lebanon is facing, “formal sacrifices become of little value
and it is enough for intentions to be good.”“Anyhow, making an initiative in
this direction would gain the respect of the people and the public and would
reflect a sense of responsibility,” al-Rahi added. He
also pointed out that “had there been neutrality in Lebanon, we would not have
witnessed any constitutional crisis, including the current crisis of government
formation.” “In addition to partisan interests that produce crises and wars in
Lebanon, the main reason remains partiality and the multiple allegiances,” al-Rahi
said.
Report: Hariri's Stance on New Government Unchanged
Naharnet/Sunday, 24 January, 2021
Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri has informed the club of ex-PMs that he
will maintain his stance regarding the formation of the new government, a source
close to the club said. Hariri told the former premiers that he “will not back
down from his vision for the formation of the government in harmony with the
initiative launched by French President Emmanuel Macron to rescue Lebanon,” the
source told Asharq al-Awsat newspaper in remarks published Sunday. “There is no
alternative” to the French initiative, the source quoted Hariri as saying.
The source also revealed that that the ex-PMs agreed in a meeting a few days ago
to “intensify the pressures towards President Michel Aoun so that he removes the
obstacles he is still putting in the way.”
Lebanon’s PSP, FPM Dig up War Past in Heated Dispute
Beirut - Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 24 January, 2021
A dispute resurged between Lebanon’s Progressive Socialist Party (PSP) and the
Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), over recent statements by former MP and PSP
leader Walid Jumblatt, in which he lashed out at President Michel Aoun, saying
that his son-in-law, former minister Gebran Bassil was seeking to control the
government. Jumblatt said Bassil wanted to have the “vetoing third” in the new
government, to be able to tighten his grip on power. He also spoke of “military
black rooms that control the judiciary and attack the army commander.”Bassil’s
FPM slammed “the low level of political rhetoric among some of those with dark
intentions and malevolent actions, by repeatedly talking about the age of the
president of the republic, in contradiction to moral values, or by trying to
drive a wedge between the FPM and the Lebanese army.” Recalling the 1975-90
civil war, the FPM said in a statement: “It is political profanity when we are
given lessons in patriotism by those who have killed, kidnapped, attacked the
army and seized its equipment and barracks, and established their own sanctuary,
rejecting state security.” The statement added: “The system that struck the
legitimacy, seized the country’s resources, and established for 15 years a
corrupt rule that led to the collapse of the state, is rejecting the values that
President Aoun represents, the state’s legitimacy he embodies and the auditing
and accountability he insists on implementing.” In response, PSP MP Bilal
Abdallah criticized those he called “the horns of decadent replies,” writing on
Twitter: “An owl, no matter how loud its voice, will not become an eagle, and a
cat, no matter how sharp its claws, will not become a tiger…”PSP Secretary Zafer
Nasser, attacked those who “falsified history and caused calamities, woe and
oppression… while trying to prove their loyalty to the decision-maker in (the
FPM), and almost suffocated with their anger, falling victim to their own
evil...”
فيديو ونص مقابلة باللغة الإنكليزية من موقع أرب نيوز
مع بهاء الحريري
Frankly Speaking/Text-Video Interview With Bahaa Hariri
January 24/2021/Arab News Web Site
Hezbollah should have no role in Lebanon’s future, says Bahaa Hariri, son of
Rafik Hariri.Bahaa Hariri appearing on the latests episode of Frankly Speaking,
with Frank Kane.
FRANK KANE/January 24, 2021
Broad alliance needed to implement unfinished business of 1989 Taif Agreement,
Bahaa Hariri tells Frankly Speaking.He contrasts contribution of “true friend”
Saudi Arabia with part played by Iran, which has never “given us a penny”
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/95258/%d9%81%d9%8a%d8%af%d9%8a%d9%88-%d9%88%d9%86%d8%b5-%d9%85%d9%82%d8%a7%d8%a8%d9%84%d8%a9-%d8%a8%d8%a7%d9%84%d9%84%d8%ba%d8%a9-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%a5%d9%86%d9%83%d9%84%d9%8a%d8%b2%d9%8a%d8%a9-%d9%85%d9%86/
DUBAI: Bahaa Hariri, the eldest son of slain Lebanese statesman Rafik Hariri, is
calling for a broad alliance — a “supermajority” — to coalesce around a plan to
agree on the way forward for Lebanon as it faces multiple crises.
Such an alliance is needed to implement the unfinished business of the Taif
Agreement, the peace deal brokered by Saudi Arabia 30 years ago, Bahaa said as
he gave a candid assessment of Lebanon’s situation on Frankly Speaking, the
televised interview in which senior Middle East policymakers are questioned on
their views about the most important issues of the day.
“We have to make sure that across the sectarian divide, the forces of moderation
go hand in hand to put (together) a complete comprehensive plan — whether it’s
an economic plan, a COVID-19 plan, a constitutional plan, a judiciary plan, or a
security plan,” he said, noting that Lebanese was “at the precipice.”
Bahaa, a billionaire Lebanese businessman, added: “We seek the full support of
Saudi Arabia to make sure of the full implementation of the Taif Accord. It is
key for us that Saudi Arabia helps us out and supports us in this. That's the
key.”
The Taif Agreement, signed in 1989 under Saudi auspices at the end of the bitter
civil war, had never been fully implemented, Bahaa said, but remained as a
blueprint for achieving progress in the country. “If we are going to come to the
Arab world and the international community, they’ll tell us you have an accord,
but three-quarters of it hasn’t been executed,” he said.
“If we want a new accord, it may take us another 10 years and maybe half a
million dead.”
Referring to the Taif Agreement, Bahaa said: “We need to make sure that this
accord is executed to the letter: The separation of religion from the executive
and the legislative branches; the establishment of a senate that protects
minorities; the establishment of an independent judiciary; and an electoral law
that meets the aspirations of all Lebanese. And that we have a new election.”
Having said that, Bahaa made it clear he had no plans to put himself forward as
a possible leader of Lebanon as it continues months-long attempts to form a new
administration. "I don't have all the answers to many questions and I don't want
to be the leader,” he said.
“Today, we don't have a civil war - we have complete mismanagement of a
configuration that is in complete divorce. That configuration, of course, is
Hezbollah, and the warlords and whoever supported them.
“The situation is only getting worse and that's why we believe that the economic
plan and the entire plan that we're putting together has to be around a
non-sectarian government, a technocratic government that takes the agenda moving
forward.”By the same token, Bahaa said there should be no role for Iran-backed
Hezbollah in the new agenda, and castigated Iran for its destructive
interference in Lebanon’s affairs.
“Iran has never given us a penny. It has always supported a terrorist
organization called Hezbollah, which is not the Lebanese people but only a sect
within the Lebanese people. It has killed people and has tried to destroy
everything we're trying, as good Lebanese, to move forward,” he said angrily.
Bahaa contrasted the part Iran has played with the role played by Saudi Arabia,
which he said had been a “true friend” of Lebanon. “Saudi Arabia has done a lot
for Lebanon. It has helped us with the Taif Accord, and on political stability.
It has helped us in putting billions of dollar deposits after Taif to stabilize
the currency,” he said.
“It was always in the lead in encouraging other GCC nations in pouring foreign
direct investment in the Central Bank to stabilize Lebanon, and encourage
foreign direct investments from the Arab world to invest in Lebanon.”
Bahaa would welcome constructive involvement from the international community to
help solve Lebanon’s ongoing crisis, but is wary of further involvement by
Emmanuel Macron after the French leader called for the involvement of Hezbollah
in the reform process.
“We welcomed (France’s) help, and we welcome any initiative, but as we have
said, it has to fall in line with the aspirations of the revolution,” Bahaa
said, referring to the protest movement that appeared in Lebanon in October 2019
and intensified after the horrific explosion at Beirut port last summer.
“We welcome all efforts from the international community, but the most important
thing is that it has to meet the aspirations of the Lebanese. The Lebanese want
total divorce of Hezbollah and the warlords. I don't think Lebanon can afford
any more patch-up solutions.”
Bahaa is also hopeful that the new Biden administration in the US, as well as
British and European governments, can be persuaded to get involved in the
Lebanese reform process. Equally, he is optimistic that the new opportunities
presented by the Abraham Accords, as well as the reopening of trade and economic
relations between Saudi Arabia and Qatar, can defuse tensions in the Middle East
and Lebanon.
Hezbollah is suing Hariri in the Lebanese judicial system after he blamed the
Iran-backed group for the explosion, but he is determined to defend the case
strenuously. “The alleged offense is that we have tarnished the reputation of a
branded global terrorist organization,” Bahaa said. “We believe that — based on
the most reputable investigative reporters of the world — that they control the
port. Fine, if that's the case. We have the best lawyers who will defend our
case.”
The Aug. 19, 2020, verdict of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, which
investigated the 2005 assassination of his father, represented “closure” in the
case, but added that there remained substantial evidence of the responsibility
of Hezbollah’s senior leadership.“These courts are not after a party; they are
after individuals. The courts were very clear in saying that they had evidence,
but not enough evidence to indict the others,” Bahaa said.
As for his father’s legacy, Bahaa said it has been squandered in the sense that
the opportunities presented by the Taif Agreement have been wasted by successive
Lebanese politicians who are responsible for the current dire condition of the
country. “We were almost there, and (the current political leaders) have to bear
the full brunt and the responsibility of what happened,” he said.
Speaking about his younger brother, Saad Hariri, who was prime minister of
Lebanon for six of the last 11 years, Bahaa said his fraternal affection
remains, but that political differences were insurmountable, especially relating
to Hezbollah and the influence of Lebanese “warlords” over the political
process.
Bahaa Hariri said the forces of moderation in Lebanon need to work together
across the sectarian divide to tackle the countries crises.
“He is my little brother and I love him very much. This will never change — not
today, not tomorrow, not till the end of my days,” Bahaa said. “But you cannot
solve the problems when these cronies are the problem, okay. This hasn't
happened just for a year or two; we've been on it for almost 16 years now.”
Thus, he rules out supporting Saad in his efforts to form a new government if he
includes terrorist-designated Hezbollah in the administration. “I have stark
differences politically with him,” Bahaa said. Asked if he would support Saad in
a Hezbollah-influenced government, his reply was: “Absolutely not.”
Bahaa judged that the current Lebanese president, Michel Aoun, was under also
the influence of “warlords,” and that international sanctions should be extended
to other members of the political establishment, in addition to Aoun’s
son-in-law Gebran Bassil, who was placed under US sanctions on corruption
charges last year.
“It’s not enough. I think others have to be sanctioned,” Bahaa said. “It is the
same for all the warlords, not only one. We cannot take one and isolate the
others.” However, he declined to identify further potential targets for
sanctions “because in the justice system you are innocent until proven guilty.”
Having been involved in business in Saudi Arabia, Bahaa believes the latest
peace breakthroughs in the Middle East can lead to a revival of economic
activity and an influx of foreign investment, despite the damage caused by the
COVID-19 pandemic.
The biggest venture of his new business enterprise - the $500 million Al-Abdali
development in Amman, Jordan - had been only marginally affected by the economic
slowdown, he said.
Watch full episode, Click on the link below below:
https://youtu.be/593KdjV2qQ0
.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=593KdjV2qQ0&feature=emb_title
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on January 24-25/2021
Biden will work with Israel to build on regional
normalization deals, says Sullivan
Reuters/Sunday 24 January 202
The Biden administration will work closely with Israel on regional security
issues and to build on the country’s regional normalization agreements, White
House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told his Israeli counterpart,
according to a statement on Sunday. “They discussed opportunities to enhance the
partnership over the coming months, including by building on the success of
Israel’s normalization arrangements with UAE, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco,”
according to a statement on Sullivan’s call on Saturday with Israel’s Meir Ben
Shabbat. Sullivan also extended an invitation to begin
a strategic dialogue in the near term, the statement said.
More than 20 injured by blast in Gaza home
AFP/January 24, 2021
GAZA CITY: More than 20 people were injured and several homes destroyed by a
large explosion Saturday in a residential area of the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip,
Palestinian officials said. The source of the accidental explosion was
apparently the home of a member of one of Gaza’s armed groups. “An explosion
occurred in a house in Beit Hanoun this morning, resulting in a number of
injuries,” the interior ministry said, adding that an investigation had been
launched into the cause of the blast. Medical sources said more than 20 people
were injured, two of them seriously. Witnesses said several homes were damaged
as a result of the explosion in the home of an “activist.” Police cordoned off
the area. There was no immediate official explanation of the explosion, but the
Israeli military said it was the result of militants “storing weapons in
residential homes.” Houses “have been turned into warehouses for weapons... and
missiles for terrorist organizations, and those who pay the price in the end are
innocent civilians,” the military’s Arabic-language spokesman, Avichay Adraee,
said on Twitter. Hamas seized control of Gaza from rival Palestinian movement
Fatah in a near civil war in 2007. Since then, Hamas has fought three
devastating wars with Israel, which has maintained a crippling blockade on the
territory of some two million people.
Indonesia Says it Has Seized Iranian Tanker
Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 24 January, 2021
Indonesian authorities said that they seized an Iranian tanker and Panamanian
tanker suspected of carrying out the illegal transfer of oil in their country's
waters Sunday. The tankers — the Iranian-flagged MT Horse and the
Panamanian-flagged MT Frea — were seized in waters off Indonesia's West
Kalimantan province, said Wisnu Pramadita, a spokesman for the Indonesian
Maritime Security Agency. He said the tankers are suspected of a variety of
violations, including not displaying national flags, shutting off their
identification systems, anchoring illegally as well as the illegal transfer fuel
between ships and spilling oil.
Authorities were escorting the two tankers to Batam island in Riau Islands
province for further investigation, AP quoted him as saying. Iranian state
television acknowledged the tanker’s seizure, citing Indonesian authorities. The
report did not elaborate. Iran has seen its sales abroad deeply impacted by US
sanctions after former President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew America from
Tehran’s nuclear deal with world powers in 2018. That cut a crucial source of
government revenue in Iran’s long-anemic economy. In the time since, Iran has
relied on black-market sales and deals with Venezuela to keep its sales going.
Iran’s state-owned fleet of oil tankers routinely travel turn off their
Automatic Identification System trackers to try and mask where they deliver
their cargo. Those AIS beacons, a safety measure so other ships know what’s
around them, can be tracked. Analysts say those ships often transfer their oil
to other ships, that then sell the crude under false pretenses.
UAE cabinet approves opening embassy in Tel Aviv, Israel
opens embassy in Abu Dhabi
Arab News/January 24/2021
DUBAI: Israel opened an embassy in Abu Dhabi on Sunday after the UAE said it
would do the same in Tel Aviv. The UAE and Israel signed a US-brokered peace
agreement on Sept. 15 to fully establish diplomatic ties and normalize
relations. Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco also signed
similar agreements and all four countries have began direct flights to and from
Israel. Israel’s government regards Jerusalem as its capital, although that is
not recognized by most of the international community. Palestinians claim East
Jerusalem as the capital of a future Palestinian state and most countries have
their embassies in Tel Aviv. The UAE approved the embassy during a cabinet
meeting chaired by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, vice president, prime minister
and Ruler of Dubai. Shortly after, Israel announced it had opened its embassy in
the Emirati capital, Abu Dhabi, as an additional step in implementing the peace
agreement. The mission will be headed by Eitan Naeh.
“The Israeli embassy in the United Arab Emirates will promote the full range of
relations between the two countries in all areas, and expand ties with the
Emirati government, economic bodies and the private sector, academic
institutions, the media, and more,” Israel's foreign ministry said.
The temporary embassy will work to advance Israel’s interests and to
serve its citizens, the ministry said. Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi said:
“The opening of the mission will enable the expansion of bilateral ties between
Israel and the UAE, and the full and quick implementation of the potential
inherent in our relations.”The ministry statement also said that an Israeli
Liaison Office in Rabat and Consulate General of Israel in Dubai are expected to
open in the coming days, as well as Israeli embassies in the Bahraini capital
Manama, “which has already been active for several weeks.”(With Reuters)
Morocco PM Rejects ‘Betrayal’ Accusations after Signing
Normalization Deal with Israel
Rabat - Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 24 January, 2021
Morocco’s Prime Minister Saad Eddine El Othmani has denounced statements
accusing him of “betraying” the Palestinian cause, after he signed a
normalization deal with Israel on Dec. 22. He justified this step by affirming
that his Justice and Development Party (PJD) cannot contradict with the state’s
choices and the King’s directives. In a speech before a PJD National Council
meeting, the PM said his party acted in support of King Mohammed VI’s national
effort “to defend the sovereignty of the homeland and consecrate the Moroccan
Sahara.”Bolstering Morocco’s sovereignty and enhancing its national unity are
among the party’s program and targets, he noted. Othmani said that he accepts
the criticism, however, he rejects any questioning of the party’s position and
that of Morocco, regarding the Palestinian cause. He asserted that there are no
compromises when it comes to the Palestinian cause, as well as the Sahara issue,
stressing that he still rejects the violations committed by Israel against
Palestinians and its settlements activities. The PM renewed support to the
Palestinians’ right to return to their country and establish a Palestinian state
with Jerusalem as its capital. He cited a royal statement on Dec. 10, which
stressed that recent “measures do not in any manner affect Morocco’s ongoing and
sustained commitment to the just Palestinian cause.”Othmani expressed surprise
by those who attacked his party and accused it of changing its position. “We
reject the attacks and any questioning of the party’s position and Morocco’s
position regarding the struggle of the Palestinian people,” he stressed, in
reference to remarks by the Palestinian Hamas movement. “What is required is
clarity and steadfastness in the positions, as well as strength to act on their
basis,” he said, calling on everyone to be “just, objective and humble.”
According to Othmani, the PJD’s strategy is based on being loyal to the king,
fulfilling the unified national principles, contributing to political and social
reform and maintaining its political and organizational unity.
Germany to Use Corona Meds that Helped Trump
Agence France Presse/January 24/2021
Germany will become the first European Union country to start using the same
experimental antibodies treatment credited with helping Donald Trump recover
from Covid-19, health minister Jens Spahn said Sunday. "The government has
bought 200,000 doses for 400 million euros ($486 million)," Spahn told the Bild
am Sonntag newspaper, working out at 2,000 euros per dose. The so-called
monoclonal antibody cocktails will be deployed to university hospitals in the
coming week, he said, adding that Germany was "the first country in the EU" to
use them in the fight against the pandemic. Spahn did not name the manufacturer
that will be supplying the drugs but confirmed it was the same medicine given to
then-US president Trump when he fell ill with Covid last October. "They work
like a passive vaccination. Administering these antibodies in the early stages
can help high-risk patients avoid a more serious progression," Spahn said.
Trump, who was briefly hospitalized with the coronavirus, was given the antibody
therapy developed by U.S. firm Regeneron, known as REGN-COV2, even before the
treatment had won regulatory approval. He later said the medicine did "a
fantastic job."US company Eli Lilly has developed a similar therapy. The novel
treatment is a combination or "cocktail" of two lab-made antibodies:
infection-fighting proteins that were developed to bind to the part of the new
coronavirus that it uses to invade human cells. The antibodies attach themselves
to different parts of the virus's spike protein, distorting its structure --
similar in a way to knocking a key out of shape so it no longer fits its lock.
Germany's order comes at a time of growing frustration in the EU over a
slower-than-expected rollout of vaccines. Vaccine makers Pfizer/BioNTech and
AstraZeneca have both said they would be delivering fewer doses to Europe than
anticipated in the short term because of production problems. The German
government has said it nonetheless expects to be able to offer all Germans a jab
by the end of August.
US condemns air attack on Riyadh, vows to protect stability of Kingdom
Arab News/January 24/2021
CHICAGO: The US on Sunday condemned an attempted air attack on Riyadh at the
weekend and said anyone who tried to undermine the Kingdom’s stability would be
held to account. The strike on the Saudi capital on Saturday, which was thwarted
by air defenses, “appears to have been an attempt to target civilians,” the
State Department said. “Such attacks contravene international law and undermine
all efforts to promote peace and stability,” it said. “As we work to de-escalate
tensions in the region through principled diplomacy, including by bringing an
end to the war in Yemen, we will also help our partner Saudi Arabia defend
against attacks on its territory and hold those who attempt to undermine
stability to account.” Britain also condemned the attack, which "undermined
regional peace." "We strongly condemn these attacks,
and we stand by our Saudi partners," Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said. The
attack came days after the US designated Iran-backed Houthi militias in Yemen as
a foreign terrorist organization. Yemenis on Sunday launched a social media
campaign to highlight Houthi crimes and to convince other countries to follow
the US.
The organizers said they wanted to “inform the world about the terrorism acts by
the Houthi militia against Yemenis and to call all free countries to designate
them as a terrorist organization.” Dozens of Yemeni journalists, human right
activists, intellectuals and officials have condemned the group’s human right
abuses, using the hashtag #HouthiTerrorismInYemen, and shared images and videos
that show Houthis blowing up the houses of their opponents. “The Houthis waged
numerous wars against civilians,” activist Mohammed Abdullah Qassem said. “Even
now, they are still attacking Taiz, Mareb, Al-Bayda, etc. They insist on ruling
Yemenis by force, based on the theory of the divine right to rule, the ideology
that the West overthrew centuries ago.” Meanwhile, Yemen government officials
and the Houthis militias began talks on Sunday to secure a second historic
agreement on an exchange of prisoners. The meeting in Amman, Jordan, aims to
free about 300 detainees, including high-ranking officials such as former
Defense Minister Mahmoud Al-Subaihi and the Yemen president’s brother Nasser
Mansour Hadi.
Previous talks led to the release of 1,065 inmates in October and rekindled
hopes of striking a deal to end the war.
*Saeed Al-Batati reported from Al-Mukalla
Kremlin Says U.S. Interfering in Russian 'Domestic Affairs'
Agence France Presse/January 24/2021
The Kremlin on Sunday accused the U.S. embassy of interfering in Russia's
domestic affairs after the mission distributed a "demonstration alert" to U.S.
citizens in Russia recommending they avoid protests. Nearly 3,500 protesters
were arrested at demonstrations in support of jailed Kremlin critic Alexei
Navalny on Saturday, a monitor reported, as Russian authorities probed violence
on the part of both protesters and police. Police clashed with demonstrators in
Moscow as tens of thousands took to the streets across the country on Saturday
following Navalny's call to demonstrate against President Vladimir Putin's
20-year rule. Ahead of the demonstrations, the U.S. embassy issued a safety
warning to Americans based in Russia. "Of course, these publications are
inappropriate," President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov told a state
TV channel. "And of course indirectly, they are absolutely an interference in
our domestic affairs," he added. He accused the U.S. embassy of "indirectly"
supporting the violation of Russian legislation and backing "unauthorized
protests." He said that if the Russian embassy in the United Sates issued
similar information "this would cause a certain feeling of discomfort in
Washington." The Russian foreign ministry on Saturday said the representatives
of the U.S. embassy would be summoned and would have to "explain themselves." A
U.S. mission spokeswoman earlier Sunday said U.S. embassies and consulates
around the world routinely issue safety messages to U.S. citizens. "This is a
common, routine practice of many countries' diplomatic missions," she told AFP.
On Saturday, the U.S. embassy in Moscow also said it was following the rallies,
adding that Washington supported "the right of all people to peaceful protest,
freedom of expression." "Steps being taken by Russian authorities are
suppressing those rights," embassy spokeswoman Rebecca Ross said on Twitter.
Kremlin Says Putin Ready for Dialogue if US Willing
Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 24 January, 2021
Russia is ready to set up a dialogue with the new US Biden administration in
which differences are expected to be aired, a Kremlin spokesman said on Sunday,
adding that President Vladimir Putin would respond in kind to US willingness to
talk. Relations between Moscow and Washington have been at their lowest since
the end of the Cold War, with the two sides at odds over Russia's role in
Ukraine and allegations of its meddling in US elections, which it denies, among
other issues. The United States on Saturday also called on Russian authorities
to release protesters and journalists detained at demonstrations supporting
detained Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny, and condemned what it called "harsh
tactics" used against them. "Of course, we count on success in setting up a
dialogue," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov was quoted as saying on TV by
Interfax news agency. "This will be the dialogue where, of course, differences
will have to be stated to a greater extent, points of differences. But at the
same time, a dialogue is a possibility to find some rational kernels, the little
parts where our relations are getting closer," he said. "And if the current US
administration i
Over half of Syria’s children deprived of education, says
UNICEF
AFP/Monday 25 January 2021
More than half of children in war-torn Syria are missing out on education, the
UN children’s agency UNICEF said Sunday, with a third of schools in ruins or
commandeered by fighters.
The figures are a sharp rise from previous estimates when UNICEF said a third of
Syrian children were out of school.
“After almost ten years of war in Syria, more than half of children continue to
be deprived of education,” UNICEF said in a statement, estimating there are over
2.4 million children out of school inside the country.
“This number has likely increased in 2020 due to the impact of the Covid-19
pandemic, which exacerbated the disruption to education in Syria,” said Ted
Chaiban, UNICEF’s chief for the Middle East and North Africa, alongside Syria
crisis boss Muhannad Hadi, in a joint statement. “The
education system in Syria is overstretched, underfunded, fragmented and unable
to provide safe, equitable and sustained services to millions of children,” they
added. Syria’s civil war erupted in 2011 after the violent repression of
protests, quickly spiraling into a complex conflict that pulled in numerous
actors, including jihadist groups and foreign powers.
Over 387,000 people have been killed, and more than half of Syria’s pre-war
population of 20 million have been forced to flee their homes. “One in three
schools inside Syria can no longer be used because they were destroyed, damaged
or are being used for military purposes,” the statement added.
The schools that remain operative, UNICEF said, are often overcrowded and
located in “buildings with insufficient water and sanitation facilities,
electricity, heating or ventilation.”UNICEF said it confirmed 52 attacks against
education facilities last year, bringing to nearly 700 the number of
UN-confirmed violations against schools and teaching staff.
Palestinians ask European Union to send observers to
monitor long-awaited elections
The Associated Press/Sunday 24 January 2021
Palestinian election officials on Sunday invited the European Union to send
observers to monitor upcoming elections planned for the Palestinian legislature
and presidency. The elections are seen as an important step toward ending a rift
that has left the Palestinians divided between rival governments since the
Islamic militant group Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip from the
internationally recognized Palestinian Authority in 2007. The PA has governed
only autonomous areas of the Israeli-occupied West Bank since then. Past
attempts at reconciliation have repeatedly failed. But Sunday’s invitation to
the European Union was a sign that the Palestinians are serious about holding
what will be their first elections in 15 years. The Central Elections Commission
said its chairman, Hanna Nasir, extended the invitation for both the European
Union and the European Parliament to send monitors. It said the invitation was
given to the local EU representative, Sven Kuhn von Burgsdorf, and Nasir
“stressed the importance of international observation to the electoral process,
particularly by the EU.”The Palestinians are looking to the EU to ensure that
the vote is transparent, and also in hopes of rallying pressure on Israel to
allow Palestinians in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem to vote.
The Palestinians claim east Jerusalem, captured by Israel in 1967, as the
capital of a future state. Israel considers all of Jerusalem to be its capital.
It has not said whether it will allow Palestinian residents in east Jerusalem,
home to the city’s major religious sites, to vote in Palestinian elections.
The EU supports the establishment of an independent Palestinian state
alongside Israel, with a capital in east Jerusalem.
The EU did not officially respond to the monitoring request. But Shadi Othman,
spokesman for the EU office to the Palestinians, confirmed the EU’s “readiness
to provide everything possible for the success of the electoral process.”
“The goal during the coming period is to make all efforts to reach free
and fair elections that produce elected representatives from the West Bank, east
Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip,” he said. Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas issued his decree on Jan. 15, scheduling parliamentary
elections for May 22 and presidential elections on July 31.
Uncertainty about voting in east Jerusalem is one of several potential
obstacles that could derail the planned election. Representatives from Abbas’
Fatah party and Hamas are expected to meet in Egypt next month in hopes of
working out logistics.
11 fighters from Iraq’s PMU militias killed in ISIS attack:
Security sources
AFP/Sunday 24 January 2021
At least 11 fighters from the Iranian-backed Popular Mobilization Units (PMU)
militias, known as Hashd al-Shaabi, were killed in an ambush by ISIS terrorist
group north of the Iraqi capital on Saturday, security sources said. The
extremists used light weapons and the cover of darkness to target the PMU
militias east of Tikrit, the capital of Iraq’s Salahaddin province, two days
after a twin suicide attack claimed by the group killed 32 people in Baghdad.
“ISIS launched an attack on the Hashed’s Brigade 22,” said one of the unit’s
officers Abu Ali al-Maliki. Al-Maliki told AFP the brigade commander was among
those killed before reinforcements from the federal police came to the unit’s
aid. PMU security sources said the total toll was 11
dead and 10 wounded. There was no immediate claim of
responsibility, but security sources interviewed by AFP blamed ISIS. Local and
Western sources have expressed concern over the readiness of Iraq’s security
forces, who have been worn down by the spread of COVID-19, political infighting
and corruption. This week’s attacks may be more illustrative of those
accumulated shortfalls than any significant ISIS comeback. Iraq declared the
group territorially defeated in late 2017, but has continued to battle extremist
sleeper cells, mostly in the country’s mountainous or desert areas.
Kuwait emir reappoints prime minister to form new cabinet,
KUNA reports
NNA/Reuters: Sunday 24 January 2021
Kuwait's emir has reappointed Sheikh Sabah al-Khalid al-Sabah as prime minister,
after the cabinet resigned last week in a standoff with parliament over its vote
to question the premier, the state news agency KUNA reported on Sunday.
The prime minister and the cabinet had been acting in a caretaker role since the
resignation. The emir tasked the prime minister with nominating a new cabinet.
--- Reuters
The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources
published on January
24-25/2021
Turkey: Elderly Christian Man Still Missing Year Later
Uzay Bulut/Gatestone Institute/January 24/2021
"About 20 people who knew us wanted to help us with the searches, but the
gendarmerie prevented them from coming.... and civilians were not allowed to
help. If the permission required had been given, we would have found my mother
right away...." — Father Remzi Diril, a priest of the Istanbul Chaldean Church
and one of the couple's sons, after his mother's body was found bullet wounds in
the head and back; interview with Milliyet, January 11, 2021. During the 1980s
and 1990s, Assyrians in southeast Turkey "suffered forced evictions, mass
displacement and the burning down of their homes and villages." They were
exposed to severe persecution "including abductions (including of priests),
forced conversions to Islam through rape and forced marriage, and murders. These
pressures, and other more insidious forms of discrimination, have decimated the
community." — Minority Rights Group International, World Directory of Minorities
and Indigenous Peoples, Assyrians, updated June 2018. Today, EU candidate and
NATO member Turkey is still not willing or able to provide security and basic
human rights for this persecuted minority.
One year after the abduction and disappearance of an elderly Christian couple in
southeast Turkey, their children are still asking the Turkish authorities for
help in locating their missing father and holding the perpetrators accountable.
Pictured: The village of Mehr/Kovankaya in Şırnak Province, where Hurmuz and
Şimuni Diril lived before their abduction and disappearance. One year after the
abduction and disappearance of an elderly Christian couple in southeast Turkey,
their children are still asking the Turkish authorities for help in locating
their missing father and holding the perpetrators accountable.
Hurmuz Diril (72) and Şimuni Diril (65) are Assyrian Christians who lived in the
village of Mehr/Kovankaya in Şırnak Province before their disappearance on
January 11, 2020. Two months later, on March 20, Şimuni Diril was found dead by
her children in a nearby river. There has since been no news concerning the
whereabouts of Hurmuz Diril. Father Remzi Diril, a priest of the Istanbul
Chaldean Church and one of the couple's sons, said in an interview with the
Turkish newspaper Milliyet that his mother's body had bullet wounds in the head
and back, and that his father was probably killed. He added that the search for
his parents by authorities has been insufficient:
"About 20 people who knew us wanted to help us with the searches, but the
gendarmerie prevented them from coming. Neither AFAD [Turkey's Disaster and
Emergency Management Presidency] helped us, and civilians were not allowed to
help. If the permission required had been given, we would have found my mother
right away at that time, and we would have found some traces of my father. We do
not know what happened to my father in the past year. We think that those who
killed my mother and threw her body into the water also killed my father. We
have been trying for a year to find out what happened to my father and we will
not stop looking for him."
The Iraqi Christian Relief Council (ICRC) is leading the efforts to bring the
diaspora Assyrian organizations and international human rights organizations to
a united front to demand justice for the Diril family. The ICRC sent an open
letter to Turkish Minister of Justice Abdulhamit Gül and Turkish Minister of
Interior Süleyman Soylu. The letter urges the Ministry of Justice to: "mobilize
prosecutors to respect the right to life of the victims and honor the procedural
requirements stemming from Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights
and bring perpetrators of these malicious actions before the judicial system.
"The Ministry of Justice to launch an investigation into the procedural failures
involving Şimuni Diril's autopsy report performed by Istanbul Forensic Medicine
Institute. We also request a full disclosure of the autopsy report to her
children and their attorneys.
"The Ministry of Interior to launch a serious investigation about Mr. Diril's
fate; to establish whether he is still alive or dead; to establish whether he is
a victim of abduction or murder."
An investigation was opened by prosecutors upon the disappearance of the couple,
but there is still a confidentiality status listed on the case file. Gulcan
Diril Uzumcu, the daughter of the kidnapped couple, said:
"The investigation remains ongoing. But the investigation file is conducted
confidentially, so we can only access a limited amount of information.
Authorities generally state that they will not allow the situation to remain 'a
murder by unknown assailants' and that they are hopeful about finding our
father.
"The government should fulfill its responsibilities for its citizens," Diril
added.
"From now on, we demand that our government speed up its steps and bring clarity
to the fate of our parents. We also ask international organizations to be
vigilant and observant about the rights violations we may experience."
Assyrians -- an ancient people indigenous to Iraq, Turkey, Syria and Iran -- for
centuries were builders of great Mesopotamian civilizations. Most Assyrians are
Christian and still speak Assyrian (also known as Syriac, Aramaic or
Neo-Aramaic), one of the oldest languages. Ancient Assyrians ruled the Assyrian
Empire, one of the world's earliest great empires, from 900 B.C.E. to 600 B.C.E.
Since the Islamic conquests of the Middle East beginning in the 7th Century C.E.,
however, Assyrians have been stateless and exposed to massacres and persecutions
within the Muslim-dominated Middle East.
The Diril family is one of the few Assyrian Christian families remaining in
southeast Turkey, where Assyrians have lived for millennia. The 1914-24 Assyrian
genocide largely exterminated the indigenous Assyrians in Turkey. Systematic
oppression and lack of official recognition of the community by Turkey, as well
as violent conflicts between the Kurdish PKK and the Turkish military near the
end of the last century also accelerated the Assyrian exodus from Turkey and the
collapse of their population.
The Diril couple are not the first Assyrians kidnapped in Turkey since the
genocide. Minority Rights Group International reports that during the 1980s and
1990s, Assyrians in southeast Turkey "suffered forced evictions, mass
displacement and the burning down of their homes and villages." They were
exposed to severe persecution "including abductions (including of priests),
forced conversions to Islam through rape and forced marriage, and murders. These
pressures, and other more insidious forms of discrimination, have decimated the
community."
Today, EU candidate and NATO member Turkey is still not willing or able to
provide security and basic human rights for this persecuted minority.
According to Juliana Taimoorazy, the founding president of the Iraqi Christian
Relief Council:
"The past year has been the most horrific year for the Diril family. The
suffering they have endured and how they have been kept in the dark regarding
the heinous crimes committed against their parents is truly abominable.
"Why the Turkish government has not taken this case more seriously is lost upon
me. This is an absolute human rights violation. And we are asking the
authorities to continue the investigation in a more effective and swift way and
shed light on this despicable crime.
"Our global Assyrian nation has been patiently waiting for answers from the
Turkish government. It is our solemn hope that Turkey's president Recep Tayyip
Erdogan and other officials will help this grieving family have closure by
bringing perpetrators to justice."
*Uzay Bulut, a Turkish journalist, is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the
Gatestone Institute.
© 2021 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.
“This Is a Warning to Christians in All Parts of the
World”: The Persecution of Christians, December 2020
Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/January 24/2021
ريموند إبراهيم/معهد جيتستون: هذا تحذير للمسيحيين في جميع أنحاء العالم: اضطهاد
المسيحيين خلال شهر كانون الأول/2020
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/95243/raymond-ibrahim-gatestone-this-is-a-warning-to-christians-in-all-parts-of-the-world-the-persecution-of-christians%d8%b1%d9%8a%d9%85%d9%88%d9%86%d8%af-%d8%a5%d8%a8%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%87%d9%8a%d9%85/
Muslim fighters tortured a 58-year-old Christian woman of
Armenian descent by hacking off her ears, hands, and feet before finally
executing her. — Medium.com, January 14, 2021, Artsakh.
As to why she was mutilated before being killed, jihadis often cite the Koran’s
calls to cut off the hands, feet, and throats of infidels (e.g., Koran 5:33,
47:4). — Artsakh.
One of the survivors… managed to escape his home in time and hide in the outside
bathroom: “through the ventilator of the latrine he saw the rebels killing 4
members of his family including his wife and 3 children.” — Virtueonline.org,
December 3, 2020, Democratic Republic of Congo.
“My husband began reading verses in the Koran that allowed men to beat their
wives if they disobey them, and after that he started beating me….” — Morning
Star News, December 17, 2020, Uganda.
In January, Muslim fighters tortured a 58-year-old Christian woman of Armenian
descent by hacking off her ears, hands and feet, before finally executing her.
The attack took place in the village of in Karintak, Artsakh (pictured). (Image
source: Adam Jones/Flickr via Wikimedia Commons)
The following are among the abuses inflicted on Christians by Muslims throughout
the month of December, 2020:
The Slaughter of Christians
Nigeria: In a video that appeared on Dec. 29, Islamic terrorists executed five
Christians. The footage shows five armed members of the Islamic State (West
African province) standing behind five men dressed in orange suits, and on their
knees with their arms tied behind their backs. The terrorists order each of the
men to say their names and the hostages oblige, each adding, “I am a Christian.”
One of the terrorists then says “This is a warning to Christians in all parts of
the world and those in Nigeria…. Use the heads of these five of your brethren to
continue with your ungodly celebrations,” a reference to Christmas. The five
Muslims then open fire into the back of the Christians’ heads and kill them.
A few days earlier, on Christmas Eve, and into the early morning of Christmas
Day, Muslim raiders terrorized a Christian village, where they slaughtered
between seven and 11 people, including a 5-year-old, and kidnapped 11 more (it
is believed that the five Christians who were executed on video were from among
these 11). Riding on trucks and motorcycles, the jihadis opened fire
indiscriminately, torched 10 homes and one church, and plundered the food
supplies meant to be distributed on Christmas Day. Although traumatized, some
Christians remained defiant. A text by Markus Bulus, a local, on Christmas Day
states:
“Whatever Boko Haram planned against us has failed. Whatever it is, we shall
still celebrate Christmas. Jesus, we’re so grateful this day even with the bad
experience we had last night. We have nothing to offer as our thanksgiving, but
we offer our hearts in deep supplication to your majesty on this Christmas Day.”
Elsewhere throughout month of December, Muslim Fulani herdsmen “killed 33
Christians, destroyed 18 homes and displaced more than 2,500 people.” Moreover,
according to a report released by the International Society for Civil Liberties
& the Rule of Law (“INTERSOCIETY”), between Jan. 2020 and Dec. 13, 2020, Muslims
massacred at least 2,200 Nigerian Christians. Of this figure, “Jihadist Fulani
Herdsmen,” it said, were responsible for about “1,300 Christian deaths, followed
by Boko Haram and its splinter groups (ISWAP and Ansaru) with 500 Christian
deaths…. Nigeria in 2020 has lost an average of six Christians per day and 180
per month.”
Uganda: A Muslim mob attacked and killed a man “a few days after he renounced
Islam to follow Christ.” On Nov. 30, Yusuf Kintu, 41, then an imam at a mosque,
converted to Christianity. Pastor Andrew Nyanma said:
“We had been talking on several occasions, but he was so argumentative when we
touched on matters related to faith. He was a brilliant Muslim Imam but also
respected other people’s faith. On this day [of his conversion], he was calm and
receptive.”
Three days later, his wife divorced him and left the house with his two youngest
children. On Dec. 6, one week after his conversion—or, in Muslim eyes,
apostasy—an angry Muslim mob rose up against him. According to one source, “the
local Muslim community was upset in [sic] Yusuf for leaving Islam and becoming a
Christian. Yusuf was seriously beaten and left unconscious.” Pastor Andrew found
him in the morning and took him to a hospital, where, on Dec, 7, Yusuf succumbed
to his injuries.
Egypt: On Dec. 10, two Muslim brothers went on a stabbing spree targeting
Christians in Alexandria. One man was killed and two others, severely injured,
were hospitalized. According to authorities, the brothers went on their
murderous rampage because they were “upset” that earlier that day, their mother
had died.
“The matter began with insults and curses to the shopkeepers for being
Christians,” said Fr. Michael Gamil, whose nearby church was also targeted. “The
Copts present responded with patience. Then, when one of them, Ramses, quietly
went to close and lock [sic] his shop door, they lunged at and stabbed him with
knives.” Ramses’ brother, who ran a grocery store nearby, saw what was
happening, rushed to his brother’s aid, and was also stabbed. The brothers then
barged into the clothing shop of another Christian man and stabbed him near his
heart. All three men were hospitalized with serious injuries in intensive care;
Ramses died of his wounds. The rampaging brothers then entered Fr. Michael’s
church and cursed at a partially blind priest. Discussing the alleged motive,
Fr. Michael said:
“They [Egyptian authorities] say they started cursing the Copts because their
mother died; and two years earlier, they cursed the Copts because their brother
died: what does [sic] [a familial] death and the Copts have to do with each
other?”
He emphasized that the two brothers had been in the habit of verbally harassing
and insulting Christians for years—although on that day, they clearly took their
hatred to another level.
Artsakh: Muslim fighters tortured a 58-year-old Christian woman of Armenian
descent by hacking off her ears, hands, and feet before finally executing her.
According to the Jan. 14 report:
“On the same day of talks between Erdogan and Putin, when Turkey’s leader said
he would like to create conditions of ‘coexistence’ between Armenians and Azeris,
officials located the body of an Armenian woman today who had been reported
missing.
“The woman has been identified as 58-year-old Alvard Tovmasyan who was a
resident of Karin Tak village, near the Shushi region of Artsakh currently
occupied by Azerbaijani forces.
“Tovmasyan was a second degree intellectually disabled person killed and
‘tortured beyond recognition’ outside of her home with her hands, ears, and feet
cut off, according to her brother Samvel Tovmasyan who confirmed her identity by
recognizing the clothes she was wearing.”
As to why she was mutilated before being killed, jihadis often cite the Koran’s
calls to cut off the hands, feet, and throats of infidels (e.g., Koran 5:33,
47:4).
According to a separate Dec. 15 news report, “Armenians are being brutalized”
and have “lost territory to their jihadist neighbors before agreeing to a
cease-fire enforced by Russia…. Prior to violating the so-called peace
agreement, the Turkish Muslims of Azerbaijan did as Muhammad commanded in
beheading Christians.” The report linked to a video of camouflaged soldiers
overpowering and forcing down a struggling, elderly Armenian man, and then
casually carving at his throat with a knife: “Azerbaijan has accused Armenia of
violating the peace deal first,” the report continues, “but observers note the
only provocation Muslims need to attack Armenians is their continued existence.”
Democratic Republic of Congo: Members of the Allied Democratic Forces, widely
acknowledged as “an insurgent jihadist group,” slaughtered at least 30
Christians and raped ten women and girls in five villages between Nov. 20 and
Dec. 3. One of the survivors, Tony Longi, managed to escape his home in time and
hide in the outside bathroom: “through the ventilator of the latrine he saw the
rebels killing 4 members of his family including his wife and 3 children.”
According to one local official, “We got information that as they killed the
Christians the[y] were saying that they were killing them because they refused
to convert to Islam.” Another report describing these raids said there were
“scenes of terrified Christians flooding into the streets as the jihadists
surrounded churches in each of the five villages armed with guns, machetes,
clubs, swords and axes.”
Attacks on Muslim Converts and Christian Preachers
Uganda: A Muslim man beat and forced his wife to drink pesticide on learning
that she had become Christian. Three months after Zubeda Nabirye, a 38-year-old
mother of three, had secretly converted, her husband discovered Bibles in her
possession and demanded if she had apostatized. She told him that “a friend had
given me the Bibles, and I was using it to compare it with what is written in
the Koran, and after all religion is a matter of personal choice… My husband
began reading verses in the Koran that allowed men to beat their wives if they
disobey them, and after that he started beating me with slaps and sticks. As if
this was not enough, he forced me to take Dithane M-45,” a toxic pesticide. He
forced the poison into his wife’s mouth; though she managed not to swallow most
of it, she “ingested some while he was trying to strangle her and hitting her
leg with sticks… He also injured her chest, neck and thigh.” It was late in the
night when “I regained consciousness and found myself surrounded by neighbors.”
One of them later explained that “we heard groaning from a nearby banana plant,
and there we found Zubeda Nabirye, who had just regained her consciousness but
with vomit and blood all over her body.” They took her to a nearby hospital.
According to the Dec. 17 report, “she suspects her husband took her to the
banana plants expecting she would die there.” Even so, she did “not file charges
with police over the assault as it could provoke further violence. She still
looks very weak and asks about the wellbeing of her three children,” who at the
time were staying with her husband’s mother due to COVID-19 travel restrictions:
“I am worried about my children [aged 9, 13, and 16], who are under the care of
my mother-in-law,” Zubeda said. “I know it will be very difficult for me to see
them and reunite with them.”
In a separate incident in Uganda, on Dec. 21, Muslims gang-raped a female church
pastor. The widowed mother of five was walking home from Christmas preparations
at her church when she heard someone crying for help in the dark. “When I
stopped,” explained the 50-year-old whose name is withheld for security reasons,
“I was surprised to see people coming from the bush, and one of them shouted in
the Arabic language, ‘Allah is greater—we have warned you several times to stop
converting Muslims to Christianity. Today we shall teach you a lesson that you
will not forget.'” One of the men covered her mouth with a chemical-doused
handkerchief that caused her to lose consciousness. She awoke three hours later
and was found by her nephew. “He saw blood on my torn skirt. He could not stop
tears rolling from his cheeks, crying and shouting for help, and he took me to a
nearby clinic for medical treatment.”
Two months earlier, a Muslim neighbor had complained to her: “I am warning you
not to come to our home. My children are now singing some Christian songs. I
know soon they will come to your church. We as Muslims have no relations with
infidels.” A church member said that the rape victim remains traumatized:
“Sometimes she is quiet for about one hour; … she is having severe headache[s],
swelling at her neck and severe pain in her private parts.” “I am hurt,”
confirmed the visibly emotional and tearful pastor from her hospital bed during
an interview on Christmas Eve. “I will miss Christmas celebration with my church
members…. I hope these Muslim rapists have not infected me with deadly diseases.
I forgive them,” added the mother of five who was widowed five years earlier.
Attacks on Churches
Pakistan: On Christmas day, a mob consisting of as many as 60 Muslim men
attacked a church during Christmas service. According to the Dec. 30 report,
“They aimed to kidnap and assault the women in attendance.” However, the
church’s security guards and male congregants “fought back with bare hands
against the staff-wielding intruders, giving the women time to escape. Many
Christian men suffered blunt trauma injuries and fractures in the fight.” Before
things got violent, the Muslim invaders had made derogatory comments about the
Christian women, adding that they were “looking dashing today. Let us have all
of them in our beds.” When one of the Christian defenders angrily rose up, “The
Muslims,” he said, “warned me never to stop them from doing whatever they wanted
to do with Christian girls.” The authorities, on arriving, “helped the defeated
Muslims escape, and blamed Christians for fighting back.” According to a
spokesman for the Christians:
“They scolded and threatened the Christian community, the Christian church,
saying it’s illegal to have their own security. Which is truly an unjustified
and illegal action by the police, because it was announced by the government of
Pakistan two years ago, that every church must have its own security. They must
have their own CCTV cameras, barbed wires, and medical equipment.”
Sudan: A temporary church structure of the Sudanese Church of Christ has been
burned down five times by what one pastor described as “radical Muslims.” They
also threatened to butcher the Christians if they dared erect another tent
again. According to the Dec. 22 report:
“Saying they didn’t want a Christian presence in the area, the extremists have
burned down the structures on Jan. 19, 2019, and this year on Jan. 4, Jan. 19,
Jan. 28, and Aug. 7…. The church decided to report the attacks to police after
the Aug. 7 arson in spite of the threats.”
The original church building, which had been in operation since 1993, was first
torched in 2019; since then, the 150-member congregation have been worshipping
inside tents, though all five have been “reduced to ashes along with Bibles and
prayer books.” Church members identified several of the assailants. Police
initially refused to file a case until an attorney got involved. Five of nine
suspects involved have been arrested.
Discrimination, Misogyny, and Violence against Christians
Egypt: In what human rights activists described as an “egregious miscarriage of
justice,” a court acquitted three Muslim men charged with assaulting a Christian
grandmother, including by spitting on and beating her, stripping her naked and
parading her in the streets of their village, on the accusation that her son was
romantically involved with a Muslim woman. Although this attack took place in
2016, and although video evidence and witnesses have identified the three Muslim
men, the Egyptian courts refused to render a decision. As a Dec. 21 press
release from Coptic Solidarity explains:
“After multiple delay tactics, including judges ‘recusing’ themselves and
retrials by different court circuits, the case reached this sad conclusion. The
Egyptian judiciary has revealed their true face of Islamist fanaticism and
blatant bias against Coptic victims. This is indeed shameful for a country that
has employed some form of a ‘modern’ justice system for 150 years.
“Upon hearing news of the court ruling, Mrs. Thabet [the victim], burst into
tears, simply saying ‘What shall I do after being so humiliated! My right is in
the hands of my Lord who shall render me His justice.'”
Pakistan/China: Christian and Hindu women in Pakistan are being marketed to
China as concubines and forced brides, a Dec. 9 report revealed. Due to China’s
longstanding one-child only policy and cultural preference to give birth to
boys, the nation suffers from an acute shortage of females, causing Chinese men
to import women from abroad. Speaking on Dec. 8, the top U.S. diplomat for
religious freedom, Samuel Brownback, said that “religious minorities, Christian
and Hindu women” from Pakistan are “being marketed as concubines and as forced
as brides [sic] into China.” This, he added., is because “there’s discrimination
against religious minorities that make [sic] them more vulnerable” in Muslim
Pakistan.
France: “Handwritten letters were mailed to seven black African priests with
their names and the address of the rectory where they live,” reported the Vicar
General of the Diocese of Avignon Pascal Molemb Emock: “The mail only says
‘Allah Akbar’ in French and in Arabic.” Because violent Islamic attacks on
clergymen and Christians in general have been escalating in France—five weeks
earlier a Muslim man crying “Allahu Akbar” entered a church in Nice and
slaughtered three Christians—an investigation was quickly opened. As a police
source explained on Dec. 9, “These are not direct death threats, but in the
context of a terrorist threat, this matter is taken very seriously.” “I am not
afraid for myself,” said one of the priests. “I will continue to live alone in
my rectory. But I am responsible for a community, I must be careful for the
parishioners.”
Iraq: Throughout November and December, at least 14 shops that sell alcohol in
Baghdad—most of which are owned by Christians—were firebombed. According to a
Dec. 16 report, these escalating attacks have “terrified shop-owners who fear
hardline Islamists are flexing their muscle against alcohol consumption.”
Discussing the situation, Andre, an Iraqi Christian, reported that the recent
bombing of his shop had cost him thousands of dollars in repairs. “These groups
want the last of the Christians to leave the country,” he said of the attackers:
“They’re targeting us.” He also blamed security forces for leaving their post
for hours, thereby providing the attackers with “time to place the explosives,
take pictures before and after and publish them on Facebook.” “Why doesn’t the
government arrest them?” he added, pointing out that he had even provided
authorities with the license plate number of the attacking vehicle as captured
by the store’s surveillance camera.
Christmastime Terror
Spain: On Christmas day, a Muslim of Moroccan background, known only as Muhammad
Q., stalked through a Christmas street celebration while brandishing a machete
and crying out, “Allahu akbar, I’m going to kill you,” at random passersby. He
lunged at police when they arrived and slightly injured them, though they
managed to subdue and arrest him. Subsequent investigations revealed that the
45-year-old had a criminal record relating to the sexual abuse of a minor and
ties to the Islamic State.
France: A group of Muslims thrashed another Muslim for participating in a
Christmas Day dinner. After Nabil, 20, published pictures of the dinner online,
a schoolmate expressed his “shock” via text that a fellow Muslim would celebrate
Christmas, at one point texting, “I’ll show you what a real Arab is.” Nabil and
his scandalized Muslim schoolmate then agreed to meet and discuss the matter;
but when Nabil arrived, the schoolmate and four other men ambushed and beat him,
leaving him with a bloodied and bruised face and a warning not to report the
incident to police, or else. Undeterred, he contacted local authorities who
subsequently arrested the schoolmate. During his trial, he continued to assert
his “shock” that Nabil had posted such pictures, adding “It is not Muslim to
celebrate Christmas.”
Western Europe: Some Christians in a few nations celebrated Christmas under
threat. According to a Dec. 3 report, British intelligence, relying on a former
al-Qaeda bomb-maker, warned that “a senior Isis commander is plotting a
Christmas terror campaign in European countries, including Britain.” The Muslim
terrorists had allegedly “decided to try and use the lifting of lockdown
restrictions during the Christmas period to launch attacks in Europe, in
particular against the UK, France and Germany.”
Germany: In a video that appears embedded in a Dec. 19 article, a Muslim cleric
living in Braunschweig declared that “Christmas is an insult to Allah”
*Raymond Ibrahim, author of Crucified Again and Sword and Scimitar, is a
Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Gatestone Institute, a Shillman Fellow at the
David Horowitz Freedom Center, and a Judith Rosen Friedman Fellow at the Middle
East Forum.
© 2021 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.
Biden will not wait for Israel to make moves on Iran
Alex Fishman|/Ynetnews/January 24/202
Analysis: The new U.S. administration is nothing like its predecessor and
Netanyahu's insistence on sidelining the defense establishment could leave
Jerusalem with little to no say in the upcoming nuclear negotiations with the
Islamic The new White House is eyeing Mideast expert and conflict resolution
specialist Robert Malley to head the talks on the U.S. return to the nuclear
agreement with Iran. Malley, who has a Jewish American mother and a Jewish
Egyptian father, was part of former president Bill Clinton’s team at the July
2000 Camp David summit and a senior official in Barack Obama’s administration.
By looking at the group’s previous studies on the Iranian nuclear agreement, one
can easily extrapolate the course of action the Biden administration will take
on the issue.
Firstly, there will be a freeze until after Iran holds its presidential
elections in June of this year.
After that, the U.S. will launch two separate negotiating tracks with Iran: one
on the nuclear program and another on the development of ballistic missiles and
Iranian interference in the Middle East. Washington's pledge to consult with its
regional allies before the start of these negotiations raises the question of
exactly who in Israel the U.S. will be talking to. It is currently unclear
who dictates Israel’s policy when it comes to the Iranian threat.
In December, National Security Advisor Meir Ben-Shabbat wrote to Defense
Minister Benny Gantz that Israel's position on Iran would be determined by Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who would be basing his strategy on the work of the
National Security Council.
Gantz hit back at Beb-Shabbat, saying that the Iranian issue was not anyone's
private business, and that the defense establishment would take an active role
in the decision-making process along with the security cabinet. Since then,
there has been no further communication on the issue between the branches of
Israel's defense establishment and everyone is busy producing their own working
papers. The prime minister does not see the need to include the IDF
Strategic Division from any decision-making processes regarding Iran, despite
the military having the most information about what is actually happening in the
Islamic republic and how to combat it. The Prime Minister’s Office, meanwhile,
has decided to sideline the Defense Ministry, despite it being in regular
contact with the U.S. administration on strategic issues. Netanyahu has decided
to tackle the Iranian issue the same way he decided to tackle the coronavirus
crisis - with him at the helm supported by the National Security Council alone.
The problem is that the U.S. will not wait for Israel to work through its
political divisions and will move ahead with new Iran talks - with or without
us.
Turkey fears the worst as Biden team takes charge
Yasar Yakis/Arab News/January 24/2021
The first signs of a gloomy picture between Turkey and the US came from a key
person in the new Biden administration last week. Secretary of State nominee
Antony Blinken on Tuesday said of Turkey: “The idea that a strategic — so-called
strategic — partner of ours would actually be in line with one of our biggest
strategic competitors in Russia is not acceptable.” He did not stop there.
During his Senate Foreign Relations Committee confirmation hearing, he said
that, after assessing the impact of the existing sanctions on Turkey, Washington
has to determine whether more pressure is needed.
Blinken is known for his criticisms of Turkey, but his reference to a NATO ally
as a “so-called strategic partner” before he has even assumed office suggests
that Ankara faces an uphill task with this administration. He probably does not
want to admit that Turkey has the right to maintain good relations with both the
US and Russia.
Another key figure in the new Biden team is retired army general Lloyd Austin,
who is now secretary of defense. In 2013, he was appointed commander of US
Central Command (CENTCOM), which was responsible for the defense of US interests
in the Middle East, Central Asia and South Asia. He cooperated with Turkey
within the framework of the US train-and-equip program, as part of the fight
against Daesh in Syria, but this program later turned into a failure. The
fighters of the Syrian armed opposition were trained in Turkey and sent to Syria
in 12 vehicles equipped with machine guns but, as soon as they crossed the
border, several fighters handed over their trucks, weapons and ammunition to the
Al-Nusra Front. After this drawback, Austin turned to the Kurdish fighters
because — despite Turkey’s strong opposition — the US found them more reliable
and better fighters. Austin was the first American military official to admit,
in a Senate hearing in September 2015, that the US was engaged with the Kurdish
fighters of the People’s Protection Units (YPG) and that they were providing
consultancy services and assistance to the Kurds.
Austin retired in 2016 but, while commanding CENTCOM, he played a crucial role
in arming Kurdish fighters. Now that he has become a top official responsible
for the implementation of US military plans not only in the Middle East but all
over the world, Turkey has reason to be worried.
The third senior official whose appointment did not cause Turkey to rejoice is
Brett McGurk, the White House’s special representative for the Middle East and
North Africa. He is considered the architect of US policy on the Syrian Kurds.
The Turkish media has published critical remarks about his relations with the
leadership of the Syrian Kurds.
Now that Austin has become a top official responsible for the implementation of
the US’ military plans, Ankara has reason to be worried. National Security
Adviser Jake Sullivan is another name that Turkey has had some misgivings over
in the past. In an article he wrote in 2017, he likened Turkey’s arrest of some
members of the US Embassy staff in Turkey to “hostage taking” and harshly
criticized Ankara’s military operations against the Kurds in Iraq. He also
criticized former US President Donald Trump for not being tough enough on
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the ruling Justice and Development
Party. He suggested imposing sanctions on the Turkish officials involved in
corruption and on defense industry officials.
Last but not the least is President Joe Biden himself. He has been critical of
Turkey on many occasions. As a senator, he either sponsored or supported many
resolutions against Turkey’s interests.
An important factor in the future of Turkey-US relations will be the details of
Biden’s Iran policy. Ankara may not like being used as a pawn in Washington’s
Iran policy, but it may not oppose trilateral cooperation with the US and Iraq.
Turkey needs Iraq’s cooperation to maintain pressure on the Kurdistan Workers’
Party (PKK), which is designated as a terrorist organization in the US. So
Washington may cooperate with Turkey in Iraq to put more pressure on Iran. Such
cooperation would not mean that the US would give up its cooperation with the
Syrian Kurds. Furthermore, because of his long public service, Biden is aware of
Turkey’s importance to the Euro-Atlantic community. Therefore, he will be able
to weigh up the pluses and minuses of any step that might antagonize Turkey.
There are other names too, but the ones mentioned above are expected to take
executive decisions that will affect Turkey in one way or another. November’s US
presidential election was closely monitored in Turkey and the Turkish
bureaucracy must have prepared for several scenarios in future negotiations.
Irrespective of the negative attitude Biden’s appointees may have had in the
past, one advantage is that most of them know Turkey fairly well. They will
probably try to keep Ankara under control without risking losing it as an ally.
A storm may be approaching, but the damage it will cause is still difficult to
forecast.
• Yasar Yakis is a former foreign minister of Turkey and founding member of the
ruling AK Party. Twitter: @yakis_yasar
EU rewarding Iranian aggression by seeking return to
nuclear deal
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab News/January 24/2021
د. مجيد رافيزادا: الإتحاد الأوروبي يكافئ إيران على عدوانيتها
بسعيها للعودة إلى الإتفاق النووي
The EU is redoubling its efforts and spending significant political capital to
push new US President Joe Biden into immediately returning America to the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) nuclear deal with Iran.
The bloc this month reiterated its “strong commitment” to the nuclear deal and
urged the US to swiftly rejoin it. It declared in a statement: “The EU
reiterates its strong commitment to and continued support for the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action. The JCPOA is a key element of the global nuclear
non-proliferation architecture and an achievement of multilateral diplomacy,
endorsed unanimously by the UN Security Council through resolution 2231.” It
added: “We welcome… Biden’s positive statements on the JCPOA, and look forward
to working with the incoming US administration.”
The EU appears more determined than ever to revive the nuclear deal in spite of
the fact that French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian last week acknowledged
that Tehran is violating the deal and rapidly acquiring nuclear weapons
capacity. “This has to stop because Iran and — I say this clearly — is in the
process of acquiring nuclear (weapons) capacity,” he was quoted as saying.
At an underground facility, Iran’s theocratic establishment is enriching uranium
to 20 percent purity, which is only a relatively short technical step away from
weapons-grade level.
Unfortunately, the European leaders are sending the wrong message to Iran: That
the regime’s violations and threats are paying off. The Iranian leaders have
ratcheted up their threats in recent months in order to get the JCPOA’s EU3
(Germany, the UK and France) and the US back to the nuclear deal as soon as
possible. Tehran has threatened that, if US sanctions are not lifted by Feb. 21,
it will expel International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors.
The Iranian regime has learned that, the more it threatens to instigate
instability and insecurity in the Middle East, the more the EU will double down
on its efforts to save the nuclear deal.
The European leaders are sending the wrong message to Iran: That the regime’s
violations and threats are paying off.
More fundamentally, the EU wants to see the sanctions on Iran quickly lifted
once the Iranian leaders rejoin the nuclear deal. But does the EU not remember
how the regime spent its influx of money as a result of the nuclear deal? The
billions of dollars of increased revenues were not spent on helping the Iranian
people, improving their living standards or promoting peace in the region, even
though it was outlined in the nuclear deal’s preamble that all signatories
“anticipate that full implementation of this JCPOA will positively contribute to
regional and international peace and security.” When the deal was finalized,
former US President Barack Obama famously said he was “confident” that it would
“meet the national security needs of the United States and our allies.” However,
this was not the case. The international community witnessed a greater
propensity for Houthi rocket launches at civilian targets in Saudi Arabia, the
deployment of Hezbollah foot soldiers in Syria, and constant violence by
Iranian-funded militias.
The EU also wants to return to the same nuclear deal that was drafted in 2015.
Does the EU not remember the negative consequences of that agreement? One of the
consequences was a worsening of relations with Europe’s traditional allies. The
Gulf states and Israel were excluded from the negotiations with Iran and this
resulted in a flawed deal that failed to recognize their rightful concerns about
missile proliferation and the funding of violent proxies within and next door to
their territories.
Furthermore, the deal was heavily tilted in favor of the Islamic Republic, as
unprecedented concessions were granted to the Iranian regime. For example, the
deal paved the way for Iran to legally enrich uranium and spin centrifuges at
any level it desires after the expiration of the JCPOA. The sunset clauses,
which enshrined that commitment, set a firm expiration date for the restrictions
on Iran’s nuclear program. The deal’s signatories also helped swiftly lift all
four rounds of UN sanctions against Iran — sanctions that had taken decades to
put in place. Furthermore, Iran’s military sites were exempt from inspection by
the IAEA. And the West helped the Iranian regime rejoin the global financial
system with full legitimacy, allowing billions of dollars to flow into the
treasury of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and its expanding militias
across the Middle East.
By these measures alone, the EU must have realized by now that the nuclear deal
with Iran, which the bloc is strongly rooting for once again, has demonstrably
failed.
Finally, doesn’t the EU recall the crimes that the regime committed on its soil
after the nuclear deal and before Trump pulled the US out of the JCPOA? The
regime assassinated dissidents on European soil, including Ahmad Mola Nissi — a
Dutch citizen of Iranian descent and a critic of the Tehran regime who was
gunned down at his front door in November 2017. The Dutch security service
publicly acknowledged that it had “strong indications” the Iranian government
had commissioned the murder.
In a nutshell, the EU is rewarding Iran for its heightened aggression. The more
the regime escalates its threats, the more the EU is increasing its efforts to
revive the nuclear deal and lift sanctions.
*-Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a Harvard-educated Iranian-American political
scientist. Twitter: @Dr_Rafizadeh
Iran must prove it is serious before Gulf talks can begin
Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami/Arab News/January 24/2021
د. محمد السلامي: على إيران أن تثبت جديته قبل أن بدأ أية
محادثات مع دول الخليج العربي
Qatari Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani last week urged
the Gulf states to hold talks with Iran. The senior Qatari official expressed
hope that this dialogue would take place, adding in an interview with Bloomberg
TV: “We still believe this should happen.”
On Twitter, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif responded to the Qatari
official’s proposal, saying: “Iran welcomes my brother (Al-Thani’s) call for
inclusive dialogue in our region. As we have consistently emphasized, the
solution to our challenges lies in collaboration to jointly form a ‘strong
region.’”
Speaking about the same issue on Friday, Zarif told the Iranian state Mehr News
Agency: “Our hands have always been extended to the Gulf states.” He added
provocatively: “The region now is ours, and its security is in favor of all of
us.”
In the same interview, Zarif even claimed that Iran’s regime had presented its
own proposal prior to those of other regional states, saying: “Before all these
proposals, we have introduced a proposal. The president of the republic last
year proposed a ‘Hormuz Peace Endeavor (HOPE).’” He added: “Our readiness for
negotiations, therefore, is nothing new. And as I mentioned in my response to
the Qatari foreign minister, this issue is a declaration of Iran’s long-term
policy.”
Zarif also said, gloatingly, that it should be made clear to some Arabian Gulf
states that they have wasted four years because of former US President Donald
Trump. He recalled that, when the late emir of Kuwait Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber
Al-Sabah floated a proposal for negotiations between the Gulf states and Iran,
which was accepted by Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, the Gulf states
allegedly responded by saying: “We should be patient as Trump has just taken
over the US administration.” Zarif said: “These countries have wasted four
years… Trump has gone, and we and they are the ones who remain.”
It should be noted here that none of the Gulf states officially responded to the
remarks by Zarif. However, given the timing of his statements, two key questions
arise: Is Iran serious about interacting, on a strategic rather than a tactical
basis, with any genuine proposal to de-escalate the current regional situation?
And can Iran reverse its current behavior in the region?
From the onset of the revolutionary regime, it has used brutal military force,
as seen in the eight-year Iraq-Iran War (1980-1988). Iran emerged from this war
devastated economically, politically and militarily, and in need of time to
recoup its strength and overcome the crises it was going through. Hence, the
regime opted for a soft approach, using diplomacy and cultural outreach, as well
as emphasizing civilizational commonalities during the second term of late
President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani (1993-1997) and particularly during the
tenure of Mohammed Khatami (1997-2005).
This ostensibly peaceful period witnessed one of the most dangerous phases of
the Iranian regime’s penetration into the Arab world. Iran took advantage of
this period of systematic openness in the region to embed its cells and entrench
its presence. It was able to conceal its hostile agenda through promoting
civilizational dialogue and staging exhibitions in several Arab and Gulf
capitals.
During this phase, Iran also focused on establishing so-called cultural centers
in Arab states and launching its operations through them. These centers were
directly linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and the office of the
Supreme Leader. One would have expected them to have been linked to the Ministry
of Education, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs or even to Iran’s diplomatic
consulates, but they were all bypassed, indicating Iran’s nefarious objectives
behind establishing them.
All parties are fed up with Tehran’s PR campaigns, soft power rhetoric, empty
diplomacy, and promises.
These centers intensified the regime’s activities regionally and globally,
providing handy diplomatic cover for its recruitment, propaganda and
indoctrination. This phase also saw Iran cooperating with the US and some
Western countries in the invasions of Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003.
Mohammed Ali Abtahi, Iran’s vice president under Khatami, said clearly: “If it
weren’t for Iran, Kabul and Baghdad wouldn’t have been toppled.”
Later in this phase, the Arab street, longing for triumphs, cheered Hezbollah’s
so-called victory in the 2006 Lebanese War, which exhausted and destroyed the
country. However, Iran, cheered on by some Arabs before its regional role was
exposed with the onset of the so-called Arab Spring in 2011, made no real gains
through the Lebanese War.
As a result, following the phase of political upheaval in the Arab region, Iran
left its soft power approach and returned to its original hard power approach.
This involved proxy wars, a dependence on armed Shiite militias in the Arab
region, sectarian rhetoric, and playing the Shiite victimhood card. The Iranian
regime also activated some of its long-dormant sleeper cells and launched major
intelligence activities in the region, especially in the Arabian Gulf.
The past few years have witnessed the dismantling of several Iranian espionage
cells in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the UAE and Yemen, not to mention
Iranian support for the Houthi movement in Yemen through the supply of weapons,
money and fighters. Also during this phase, Iran intensified its activities in
Bahrain and Kuwait.
Despite Iran’s interference, the Gulf states have not adopted a comprehensive
negative outlook toward Tehran. This is because they want to establish positive
fraternal relations between the two banks of the Arabian Gulf and to ensure
peaceful coexistence between Iran and themselves.
While the Arab region’s countries, particularly the Gulf states, do not oppose
dialogue with Iran, there is, sadly, distrust between Iran and most of the Gulf
states. To build confidence and reach a phase of serious dialogue — rather than
a dialogue for its own sake — the Iranian side must take steps on the ground to
prove its seriousness with regard to resolving the crises in its geographic
neighborhood. Naturally, the Gulf states are cautious, with the phrase “once
bitten, twice shy” quite apt for describing their cautiousness at this time.
All parties are fed up with Tehran’s PR campaigns, soft power rhetoric, empty
diplomacy, and promises. Instead, neighboring countries want Iran to undertake
genuine steps to prove its sincerity in seeking to become a normal state that
wants to improve its relations with the region and the world, and in being
prepared to abandon its expansionist projects, which have provoked regional
sectarian conflicts and terrorism.
Ayatollah Khomeini considered Saudi Arabia to be Iran’s No. 1 enemy, saying:
“Even if we abandon Al-Quds, settle differences with the US and reach
reconciliation with Saddam Hussein, we will never do this with Saudi Arabia.”
Has Iran really abandoned this position? Will Iran dissolve all its militias
across the region, from Lebanon in the north to Yemen in the south? Will it
pledge not to interfere in the internal affairs of other countries? Will it stop
its sectarian mobilization campaigns? What will it do about the attacks on the
Saudi diplomatic missions in Tehran and Mashhad? The answer to these questions
will indicate Tehran’s seriousness in reaching a settlement with the Arabian
Gulf states.
The benefits of reaching an understanding between the Gulf states and Iran are
so many that they require a separate article to be detailed.
*Dr. Mohammed Al-Sulami is head of the International Institute for Iranian
Studies (Rasanah). Twitter: @mohalsulami
'Je ne regrette rien' won't do, M. Macron
Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib/Arab News/January 24/2021
With the brutal words “no repentance nor apologies,” Emmanuel Macron stated his
position on the Algerian War and the abuses that came with colonization.
Instead, the French president would take part in “symbolic acts” aimed at
promoting reconciliation, his office declared.
The eight-year war of independence, in which an estimated 1 million Algerians
gave their lives in order to kick out a loathsome occupation that lasted 132
years, is still a thorn in the relations between the two countries, as well as
in the ties between France and its citizens of Algerian origin. Macron is
already facing a problem with the Muslim/Arab community in France, many of whom
are of Algerian descent. Question marks remain about how he is planning to
reconcile with the 5.7 million Muslims in France, who make up more than 8
percent of the population.
When he ran for president, Macron promoted himself as a centrist candidate,
offering a good compromise between the extreme right represented by Marine Le
Pen and the extreme left represented by Jean-Luc Melenchon, especially after
Francois Fillon, the former prime minister and candidate of the center-right,
exited the scene over corruption charges. Macron was a breath of fresh air for
French citizens of Maghrebin origin. As a presidential candidate in 2017, he
even described French colonization as a “crime against humanity” when he was
interviewed by an Algerian TV channel. However, as time passed, Macron realized
that, in a polarized society, a centrist risks losing support at both ends of
the political spectrum. He drifted to the right as public opinion radicalized
against Islam after a series of terrorist attacks.
Following the beheading of teacher Samuel Paty in Paris last October, Macron
made a speech in which he said Islam was a religion in crisis all over the world
and accused French Muslims of separatism. His speech, which took on an
ideological dimension, was highly offensive to Muslims and contributed to their
feelings of estrangement from the French republic. A state that considers them
to be separatists if they want to have any connection with their past and a
government that wants to dissolve them into an alien, secular Western culture is
not really a state or a government that represents them. A study by YouGov and
Arab News published in November, which surveyed 958 participants from all over
France, revealed that, even when they are well adapted to the country’s way of
life, French citizens of Arab origin feel excluded and stigmatized.
Even when they are well adapted to the country’s way of life, French citizens of
Arab origin feel excluded and stigmatized.
However, Macron’s method of integrating them by force and by adopting a
condescending attitude has the opposite effect. The president should ask himself
what his endgame is. Is it to entice French Muslims to adhere to the French
system or to please the extreme right? Is it to integrate French Muslims into
society or to isolate them in suburban ghettos? Denying their heritage will not
make them more French. Denying the crimes that were committed against their
ancestors by flat-out rejecting France’s responsibility for the atrocities of
the Algerian war of independence will not make them grateful toward the French
republic. If Macron’s objective is to reconcile with French Muslims, then
recognition should come first. Reconciliation cannot be conducted under
pressure. Acknowledging past mistakes and having the ability to accept the
“other,” with their own characteristics, are the first steps toward finding
common ground for a better future.
Again this question comes up: Why do French Muslims identify with their country
of origin more than they identify with France? It is because the French system
is not flexible enough to accept people who have a different creed, different
habits and different appearances. Recognition of their past and their grievances
is part of integrating them. The arrogant attitude that seeks to erase their
past and reject their grievances will only intensify their feelings of
estrangement. Of course, as French citizens, they should feel French first and
foremost. However, they only will have this sense of belonging when the French
system accepts them as a complete cultural experience and recognizes cultural
diversity within French society.
Macron’s insistence on “no repentance” not only affects French Muslims, but also
the overall sanity of French society. This attitude will normalize chauvinism
and eclipse the human rights that the republic claims to advocate by stirring
feelings of nationalist supremacy. What lesson will that teach the French youth?
Will it teach them about human rights? On the contrary, it will teach them blind
pride or, more likely, arrogance. It will teach them that, whatever they do to
other nations, it will be acceptable and that they have the right to infringe on
other nations’ rights. It offers a very bad lesson in civic education.
Recognition does not bring with it guilt. Rather, it will relieve the French
collective consciousness of its guilt. It is an expression of courage and
strength to face one’s past, with all its flaws, to embrace it and learn from
it. Denying the crimes that were committed against the Algerians will not make
France a better country, nor will it make history erase this episode. Grievances
and bitterness should be overcome; however, a frank discussion is needed to
achieve that. Denial will not improve the relations between French Algerians and
France. Macron should realize that “symbolic acts” will not do the job —
recognition is needed to achieve reconciliation.
*Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib is a specialist in US-Arab relations with a focus on
lobbying. She is co-founder of the Research Center for Cooperation and Peace
Building, a Lebanese NGO focused on Track II. She is also an affiliate scholar
with the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs at
the American University of Beirut.