English LCCC Newsbulletin For
Lebanese, Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For July 18/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news
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Bible Quotations For today
I am laying in Zion a stone that will make
people stumble, a rock that will make them fall, and whoever believes in him
will not be put to shame
Letter to the Romans 09/26-33:”‘And in the very
place where it was said to them, “You are not my people”, there they shall be
called children of the living God.’And Isaiah cries out concerning Israel,
‘Though the number of the children of Israel were like the sand of the sea, only
a remnant of them will be saved; for the Lord will execute his sentence on the
earth quickly and decisively.’ And as Isaiah predicted, ‘If the Lord of hosts
had not left survivors to us, we would have fared like Sodom and been made like
Gomorrah.’What then are we to say? Gentiles, who did not strive for
righteousness, have attained it, that is, righteousness through faith; but
Israel, who did strive for the righteousness that is based on the law, did not
succeed in fulfilling that law. Why not? Because they did not strive for it on
the basis of faith, but as if it were based on works. They have stumbled over
the stumbling-stone, as it is written, ‘See, I am laying in Zion a stone that
will make people stumble, a rock that will make them fall, and whoever believes
in him will not be put to shame.’”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials
published on July 17-18/2021
MoPH: 488 new coronavirus infections, one death
Fire breaks out on ship docked in Beirut port: Reports
President Aoun contacts Fahmy
Berri apologizes for not receiving well-wishers on Adha Eid
Hashem: To reach an understanding over a government away from malice
Akar partakes in UN Forum: To Expand Debt Relief Initiatives, Accelerate
Recovery of Stolen Assets
French Anti-Graft Judges Probe Riad Salameh
FPM: Central Bank bears double responsibility in controlling US dollar exchange
rate fluctuation
Geagea to a delegation of Beirut Fire Brigade martyrs’ families: We will not
abandon the cause…Parliamentary majority ought to lift immunities, not render
itself under suspicion
Abou Faour: Solution remains in the state's direct import of medicines
“Country overwhelmed with jurisprudence, transgressions & calculations,” tweets
Abdallah
Riots in Lebanon as Lebanon army chief warns against chaos
France to require 24-hour negative Covid test for unvaccinated travelers from UK
& 5 EU countries
France to host new international conference on Lebanon on Beirut blast
anniversary
EU Election Observation Mission Chief Visits Lebanon
Assad says Syria’s economy ‘depressed’ by funds frozen in Lebanon
Lebanon is dying a slow death …Iran is responsible for the slow death of
Lebanon/Jonathan Spyer/Jerusalem Post/July 17/2021
Titles For The Latest English LCCC
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
July 17-18/2021
Rights group slams Iran over attempted kidnapping
Protests continue in drought-hit Iranian northwest, demonstrator killed
Iranian deputy foreign minister says Vienna talks must await Iran’s new admin
One Shot Dead in Iran Water Shortage Protests
Assad Takes Oath after Criticized Re-Election
Egypt seeks global push in Ethiopian dam talks
Iraq arrests suspects for murder of prominent academic
Biden to host Iraqi PM, re-examine ‘strategic partnership’
Region’s crises raise questions about Arab League role
Libya PM says committed to elections, undecided whether to run
Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC
English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on
July 17-18/2021
The EU Leaders Join North Korea in Welcoming Iran's Mass Murderer
President/Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone Institute/July 17/2021
Turkey should prepare for new refugee influx from Afghanistan/Sinem Cengiz/Arab
News/July 17/2021
It is time for Biden to pull the plug on talks with Iran/Luke Coffey/Arab
News/July 17/2021
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese &
Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on July 17-18/2021
MoPH: 488 new coronavirus infections, one death
NNA/July 17/2021
Lebanon has recorded 488 new coronavirus cases and one death in the last 24
hours, as reported by the Ministry of Public Health on Saturday.
Fire breaks out on ship docked in Beirut port: Reports
Tamara Abueish, Al Arabiya English//17 July ,2021
A fire broke out on a ship docked in the Beirut port, where a massive explosion
occurred last August, Lebanese media reported on Saturday. The cause of the fire
remains unknown, according to the reports, but teams from the Lebanese Civil
Defense headed to the scene to extinguish it. On August 4 last year, a deadly
explosion at the same site killed over 200 people injured around 7,500 others.
Large parts of Lebanon’s capital city were also destroyed.Lebanon has been
suffering from an unprecedented economic crisis since 2019, heightened by the
coronavirus pandemic and the port blast.
President Aoun contacts Fahmy
NNA/July 27/2021
President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun, contacted the Minister of
Interior and Municipalities Brigadier General Mohamed Fahmy, and discussed with
him the general situation in the country. President Aoun asked Minister Fahmy to
take the necessary measures to ensure full readiness to face the recurrence of
fires as a result of high temperatures and the possibility of a heat wave
arriving in the country. Minister Fahmy assured President Aoun that he asked the
concerned agencies and municipalities to be ready to face any emergency, with
the possibility of using army helicopters when necessary. For the same purpose,
President Aoun contacted the Director General of Civil Defense, Brigadier
Raymond Khattar, and asked him for the civil defense services to be fully
prepared to face the possibility of fires, especially in forested areas. -------
Presidency Press Office
Berri apologizes for not receiving well-wishers on
Adha Eid
NNA/July 17/2021
House Speaker Nabih Berri apologized, in an issued statement today, for "not
receiving well-wishers on the Eid Al-Adha occasion, given the conditions that
Lebanon is going through, asking the Lord Almighty to bless the Lebanese with
many occasions and holidays to come with Lebanon being recovered."
He also wished "the Arab and Islamic nations security, progress and stability,
and the Palestinian people to realize their dream of liberation, return, and the
establishment of their independent state with Al-Quds Al-Sharif as its capital."
Hashem: To reach an understanding over a government
away from malice
NNA/July 17/2021
Member of the "Development and Liberation" Parliamentary Bloc, MP Qassem Hashem,
said via his Twitter this morning: “Discussing responsibilities and throwing
accusations among those concerned is futile, in light of the deteriorating
conditions whose repercussions the Lebanese are reaping in their daily needs…As
matters have reached this point, what is required is to avoid the mistakes and
sins committed against the Lebanese, and to reach an understanding over a
government away from hatred, narrow benefits and spite, if the survival of the
country is among your interests!”
Akar partakes in UN Forum: To Expand Debt Relief Initiatives, Accelerate
Recovery of Stolen Assets
NNA/July 17/2021
Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Defense, Acting Minister of Foreign Affairs
and Emigrants in the caretaker government, Zeina Akar, delivered a speech during
the political forum of the United Nations Economic and Social Council, in which
she hoped that "the Council and its affiliated bodies will continue to stand by
Lebanon as it faces, at this critical stage, an existential economic, financial
and social crisis that has wiped out most its development achievements in the
past three decades, forcing the state authority to rearrange priorities to work
urgently to eradicate poverty, ensure food security and sustainable access to
energy, and try to save education and health services, and secure vaccines for
all, including foreign workers and refugees.”“Lebanon renews its call to
mitigate the effects of forced displacement on sustainable development, based on
the principle of burden-sharing and responsibilities,” Akar said, appealing to
the Council to “seek to intensify its efforts with relevant stakeholders to
expand existing debt relief initiatives, to also include middle-income
countries, and to accelerate the stolen asset recovery process.”She pointed out
that today’s forum is held at a critical moment in history, as humanity faces
multiple challenges, the first of which being the Corona pandemic, alongside the
social and economic crisis, as well as the threat arising from climate change.
Referring to the COVID-19 worldwide vaccination, Akar expressed grave concern
towards the existence of a global vaccination gap in this regard, and renewed
the call for "equity in access to timely vaccines, increased production and
equitable distribution of vaccines, and fully-funded global access to the Corona
vaccine." She also underlined that "the current epidemic must not obscure the
challenges that previously existed in Lebanon, especially the crisis of the
displaced. Therefore, Lebanon renews its call to mitigate the effects of forced
displacement on sustainable development, based on the principle of
burden-sharing and responsibilities."Akar considered that the world is in need
of a more inclusive and interconnected multilateral system, in which the United
Nations and its agencies, international financial institutions, regional
organizations and other stakeholders work together effectively, with stronger
links between institutions. She added: “The 2030 Agenda calls for a
transformative change that requires a paradigm shift towards policy integration,
environmental sustainability, and the safeguarding of human rights, with a focus
on gender equality and social justice, promoting inclusion and strong
institutions.”“This would revitalize the Economic and Social Council within
multilateral, interconnected, comprehensive and effective frameworks that help
us achieve the desired goals,” Akar underscored.
French Anti-Graft Judges Probe Riad Salameh
Agence France Presse/July 17/2021
French anti-corruption judges have taken over the probe into the personal wealth
of Lebanon's central bank chief, prosecutors said, raising the likelihood he may
face money-laundering charges. France opened the probe into Riad Salameh, a
former Merrill Lynch banker, in May following a similar move by Switzerland,
where he has been under investigation for months. On July 2, France's Financial
Prosecutor's Office (PNF) handed over its findings for judicial inquiry into
allegations of aggravated money laundering, the office said on Friday. Salameh,
who owns several properties in France, is accused by critics at home of
transferring money abroad during a 2019 uprising against the government, when
ordinary people were prevented from doing so. The 71-year-old has also been
accused of being responsible for the collapse of the Lebanese pound, which has
sent the economy into a tailspin and prompted shortages of basic items such as
medicine and fuel. The French judges can summon Salameh for questioning and
collaborate with investigators in other countries, and also confiscate assets.
The inquiry was prompted by complaints filed by Swiss foundation Accountability
Now, France's Sherpa anti-corruption NGO, and the Collective Association of
Victims of Fraudulent and Criminal Practices in Lebanon, set up by savers
devastated by the post-2019 crisis. A lawyer for Salameh, Pierre-Olivier Sur,
said his client "denies these acts in their entirety," and called for access to
the investigators' findings. In media appearances, Salameh has said he legally
invested the roughly $23 million (19 million euros) he had when named central
bank governor in 1993, obtained from inheritances and his work at Merrill Lynch
in Beirut and Paris.
FPM: Central Bank bears double responsibility in
controlling US dollar exchange rate fluctuation
NNA/July 27/2021
The Free Patriotic Movement’s political bureau regretted, in an issued statement
following its periodic virtual meeting headed by MP Gebran Bassil today, that
“the Prime-Minister designate chose to apologize after nine months of his
designation, instead of taking the initiative to form a government that would
face the pressing challenges, both economically and financially.”The political
council called on all parliamentary forces and blocs to "deal with the current
stage with the highest degree of responsibility, because the increasing dangers
threaten the existence of the state and its institutions and forecast huge chaos
ahead, if a government is not formed as soon as possible to implement financial,
monetary and economic reforms, and to start negotiations with the International
Monetary Fund on the basis of a plan that gradually achieves financial and
monetary recovery."
Meanwhile and until a new government is formed, the FPM political council
stressed that “the caretaker government shoulders the responsibility of taking
all the required measures to control security and borders in order to prevent
smuggling, in addition to addressing all daily living dossiers, as it has a duty
to get out of its semi-complacency status and tend to people's problems.” It
added that “the caretaker government is also responsible for rationalizing
subsidy and initiating work on the ration card in implementation of the law as
approved by Parliament.”
The statement continued to emphasize that "the Lebanese Central Bank bears, at
this particular stage, a double responsibility to control the fluctuation in the
exchange rate of the US dollar, and it is able to do so by operating its
official platform in a serious manner, through which all buying and selling
operations are carried out exclusively and within official working hours…If it
fails to do so, leaving the market at the mercy of speculation and manipulation,
it is deemed a partner in the process of impoverishing the Lebanese and
depleting the national currency in wake of the money smuggled abroad, without
any solution so far, and in losing the value of deposits at an unprecedented
rate.” Over the Beirut Port blast investigations, the council confirmed its
support for lifting all immunities so that the judicial investigator can
continue his work, and so that the truth is unveiled, the perpetrators are
arrested and the innocent are released.
Geagea to a delegation of Beirut Fire Brigade
martyrs’ families: We will not abandon the cause…Parliamentary majority ought to
lift immunities, not render itself under suspicion
NNA/July 27/2021
"Lebanese Forces" Party Chief, Samir Geagea, underlined Saturday that the Beirut
Port explosion has been the party’s cause, par excellence, for nearly a year
to-date. “This cause is not just a detail for us, considering that more than 200
martyrs, six thousand wounded, tens of thousands of destroyed homes, hundreds of
thousands of displaced families, in addition to all material and moral losses,
were victims of the explosion…So, for all of these reasons, everything is worth
the case!” he asserted. Geagea's words came after his meeting today, at the
party's headquarters in Maarab, with a delegation of the families of the Beirut
Fire Brigade martyrs who lost their lives in the port explosion. He pointed out
that "the investigation into this case is currently suspended over the issue of
lifting immunities by the Parliament Council, as requested by the judicial
investigator," wondering about the delay in this matter and “why no General
Assembly session by the Parliament Council has been assigned to decide on these
immunities?” “It is not acceptable, after August 4, to replay the usual scene in
Parliament, where there are committees studying and reviewing issues here and
there…This matter is rejected, and the Parliament is required to meet as soon as
possible, and to facilitate the work of the judicial investigator. The more the
Parliament Council procrastinates and delays, the more we consider that the
parliamentary majority is predetermined to obstruct the work of the judicial
investigator,” affirmed Geagea. “It is very important that the parliamentary
majority does not place itself under suspicion, as we will continue to exert
pressure by all legitimate and legal means so that the Parliament Council
convenes the soonest possible and lifts the immunities of all MPs and ministers
as requested by the judicial investigator, for this is the only way to
facilitate the investigation in order to reach the truth,” he emphasized. “We
will not abandon the cause of the port explosion at any cost," pledged Geagea to
the victims’ families.
Abou Faour: Solution remains in the state's direct import of medicines
NNA/July 27/2021
In a series of tweets today by “Democratic Gathering” Member, MP Wael Abou Faour,
he said: “Drug import companies have monopolized the sector and have been
reaping profits since independence until today. In numbers only in the last ten
years, i.e. since 2012 to-date, the value of the drug import bill amounted to
ten billion and 790 million US dollars. The largest reduction in the percentage
of profits occurred during our tenure as a party at the Ministry of Health. If
we calculate the approximate 6 percent profit rate on imports, this means that
the pharmaceutical companies have received 650 million dollars in declared
profits only within ten years. Most of these companies do not wish to contribute
with the state and the citizen today, but rather aim to continue with the same
logic of greed and commercial profit, while the citizen is the victim. It is
clear that we still live in the ‘Republic of Traders’, which has ruled and
governed Lebanon since independence. The drug pricing must be revised towards
reducing companies' profits once again, and subsidizing the cheapest brand of
each drug, while adhering to compliance terms and quality conditions. The
solution remains in the state's direct import of medicines, if it is able to
bypass monopolies and trade relations between importers and manufacturers who
are no less greedy."
“Country overwhelmed with jurisprudence, transgressions & calculations,” tweets
Abdallah
NNA/July 27/2021
“The Parliament Council, through binding consultations called for by the First
Presidency, is the one to nominate a prime minister, to be designated by the
President of the Republic, in implementation of the Constitution....The country
has had enough of jurisprudence, transgressions, and calculations, which have
only resulted in deepening the crisis and postponing the radical solutions
necessary for the state’s survival and securing a decent life for the Lebanese
citizen,” stressed MP Bilal Abdallah via Twitter this morning.
Riots in Lebanon as Lebanon army chief warns against chaos
The Arab Weekly/July 27/2021
Aoun said the army’s personnel were “living with the anxiety of providing for
the basics of a good life.”
BEIRUT – Tension intensified in Lebanon on Friday, with riots leaving more than
two dozen people injured in the northern city of Tripoli, including soldiers who
were attacked with a hand grenade. Lebanon’s army chief General Joseph Aoun in
the meantime said the situation in the country was worsening and would further
escalate as a financial crisis stokes political and social tensions. “Our
responsibility is large in this period and we need to preserve the security of
the nation and its stability and prevent chaos,” General Aoun said in a speech
to army personnel posted on the army’s official Twitter account. Lebanon is in
the throes of an economic meltdown that is threatening its stability and has
been dubbed by the World Bank as one of the deepest depressions of modern
history. General Aoun was speaking one day after veteran Sunni politician Saad
al-Hariri abandoned efforts to form a government, plunging Lebanon deeper into
crisis. After Hariri’s announcement on Thursday protesters had blocked roads in
predominantly Sunni areas, burning tyres and garbage with some clashes resulting
in one army soldier being injured. On Friday, residents angry over rising
prices, electricity cuts that lasted for most of the day and severe shortages in
diesel and medicine, rioted in the streets of the northern city of Tripoli and
attacked Lebanese troops.
15 army soldiers were injured in the confrontations. The Lebanese Red Cross said
its paramedics took 19 injured to hospital. The Lebanese army said 10 soldiers
were injured by stones hurled by protesters while five others were wounded when
attacked with a hand grenade. It was not immediately clear who threw the
grenade. In Beirut, protesters briefly closed several main roads Friday,
prompting a swift intervention by the troops to clear them. Demonstrators also
closed the main highway linking Beirut with southern Lebanon. The army has long
been seen as one of the few institutions in Lebanon that can rally national
pride and create unity. Its split along sectarian lines at the start of
Lebanon’s civil war helped fuel a descent into militia rule. “Our nation trusts
us and so does the international community,” General Aoun said. “Everyone knows
that the military institution is the only one that is still effective.”Aoun said
the responsibility for the army was great at a time when its personnel were
“living with the anxiety of providing for the basics of a good life,” for their
families. Discontent has been brewing in the security forces as Lebanon’s
currency has lost more than 90% of its value against the dollar, driving down
soldiers’ wages. Many have taken extra jobs. Some have quit. “Our nation trusts
us and so does the international community,” General Aoun said. “Everyone knows
that the military institution is the only one that is still effective.”
France to require 24-hour negative Covid test for
unvaccinated travelers from UK & 5 EU countries
NNA/July 17/2021
Starting next week, unvaccinated visitors from the UK and five EU countries must
submit a negative PCR or antigen test for Covid that was taken less than 24
hours before departure if they want to enter France. The deadline for a negative
Covid-19 test was reduced from 48 hours before departure to 24 hours for
unvaccinated travelers from the UK to France. The same deadline for visitors
from Spain, Portugal, the Netherlands, Greece and Cyprus was reduced from 72
hours to 24. The change is set to take effect on Monday. At the same time,
Prime Minister Jean Castex said that restrictions for vaccinated travelers are
being lifted on Saturday. “Vaccines are effective against the virus, especially
the Delta variant,” he said. The PM added that travelers from countries on
France’s so-called ‘red list’ still have to self-isolate for seven days even if
they have been vaccinated. The change comes a day after the UK excluded France
from its plan to allow fully vaccinated British residents avoid quarantine upon
returning from ‘amber-list’ countries. People arriving from France still have to
self-isolate for 10 days and get tested twice due to the prevalence of the Beta
variant, formerly known as the South African variant, officials said. “We have
always been clear that we will not hesitate to take rapid action at our borders
to stop the spread of Covid-19 and protect the gains made by our successful
vaccination programme,” Health Secretary Sajid Javid said. French President
Emmanuel Macron said this week that all health workers must be immunized by
September 15, while the country’s scientists have called for mandatory
vaccination of everyone. Overall, 55% of the French population has been fully
vaccinated, according to the government.
France to host new international conference on Lebanon
on Beirut blast anniversary
The Arab Weekly/July 27/2021
The French announcement echoes exasperation over the failure of Lebanon’s
leaders to resolve the country’s crisis.
BEIRUT – One day after premier designate Saad Hariri gave up trying to form a
government, the French foreign ministry announced Friday President Emmanuel
Macron will host a new international conference on Lebanon next month on the
first anniversary of the Beirut port explosion.
Lebanese political sources told The Arab Weekly that the French announcement
reflects the exasperation of Paris over the failure of Lebanon’s leaders to end
a political and economic crisis that dates back to well before the explosion.
Hariri stepped down Thursday, saying he was unable to form a government, nine
months after accepting the challenge and as the country sinks deeper into
crisis. Macron will organise the international conference on August 4 with the
help of the United Nations, “to respond to the needs of the Lebanese whose
situation is deteriorating every day,” it said in a statement. The French leader
had in August 2020 hosted a first aid conference in the wake of the deadly
August 4 Beirut port explosion that shattered the Lebanese capital, rallying
some €250 million in pledges.The Lebanese sources, who spoke on condition of
anonymity, explained to The Arab Weekly that France is particularly frustrated
with the political class that has been responsible for the cabinet formation
deadlock.
Paris, the sources said, is mostly angry at Hariri, who wasted nine whole months
and failed to push the French reform initiative to resolve the country’s crisis.
Paris is also angry at President Michel Aoun, who blocked Hariri’s moves and
rejected the initiative of Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri.
Aoun, observers believe, has tried to maintain the status quo and the existing
power balances so as to serve the agenda of political ally Hezbollah and his
son-in-law, the leader of the Free Patriotic Movement, Gibran Bassil. The French
foreign ministry said Friday Hariri’s failure to form a government “confirms the
political deadlock which Lebanese leaders have deliberately continued for
months, even as Lebanon sinks into an unprecedented economic and social
crisis.”There is now an “absolute urgency” to remove this “deliberate and
unacceptable obstacle” and allow the formation of a government in Lebanon and
the rapid appointment of a prime minister, the statement added.
Experts argue that France has abandoned diplomatic niceties and started sending
direct messages to Lebanese officials, threatening to impose sanctions. This
comes as donors are pledging any aid will be coordinated by the UN and delivered
directly to the Lebanese people, in a clear rebuke of the country’s entrenched
and notoriously corrupt leaders. The international community is also frustrated
with the slow pace of investigations in Lebanon, when it comes to cases of
assassinations and corruption. The factors make Lebanese politicians, including
Hariri, increasingly wary about being targeted by French-European sanctions,
including a travel ban. The European Union said earlier this week it wanted to
agree by the end of July the legal framework for a sanctions regime targeting
Lebanese leaders, but cautioned that the measure would not be imposed
immediately. The EU first needs to set up a sanctions regime that could then see
individuals hit by travel bans and asset freezes, although it may also decide to
not list anybody immediately.
Criteria for EU sanctions such as travel bans and asset freezes for Lebanese
politicians are likely to include corruption, obstructing efforts to form a
government, financial misdeeds and human rights abuses, according to a
diplomatic note. The pressure of the EU and other Western nations is likely to
ratchet up in the coming days, especially after Hariri’s departure which leaves
the country rudderless at a time when Lebanese people are facing soaring
poverty, a plummeting currency and shortages of basic items from medicine to
fuel. The EU’s foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, said Friday Lebanese leaders
are responsible for solving “the current domestic, self-made crisis,” adding
that it is urgent to form a new cabinet quickly. He said that an agreement with
the International Monetary Fund remains essential to rescue the country from
financial collapse.“Lebanon’s stability and prosperity are crucial for the whole
region and for Europe,” Borrell added in a statement.
In the US, the Biden administration expressed disappointment that Lebanese
political leaders have squandered the last nine months since Hariri was named.
“All concerned parties need to work with urgency to put in place a government
that’s able to implement reforms immediately,” tweeted US Secretary of State
Antony Blinken. President Aoun will now have to call on parliament to pick a new
premier-designate, who will be tasked with assembling another cabinet. That in
turn will have to be approved by the president and political factions. This
takes the political process back to square one, prompting Lebanese media to warn
of many more months of drift, a delay the country can ill afford. With cabinet
and parliamentary seats distributed on confessional lines, negotiations will be
further complicated by the exit of Hariri, a key figure among the country’s
Sunni Muslims. Media reports have circulated the name of former premier Najib
Mikati, last in power in 2014, as a likely replacement. But Hariri has said he
would not endorse Mikati’s candidacy. Hariri has previously led three
governments in Lebanon and is the second candidate to fail at forming a cabinet
in less than a year.
He was nominated premier-designate in October 2020 to replace Mustapha Adib, a
relatively unknown diplomat. Adib had been nominated just weeks after the port
explosion, but quit less than a month later over resistance to his proposed line
up. Outgoing Prime Minister Hassan Diab, who resigned in the wake of the August
4 explosion, has stayed on in a caretaker capacity until political leaders can
agree on a new premier. On Friday, president Aoun said that his country will be
able to overcome the difficult situation it is currently going through at
various levels. He made the statements during his meeting at the Presidential
Palace, east of Beirut, with a delegation from the Notre Dame University-Louaize.
“Nothing should frustrate the Lebanese people, despite the severity of what they
are exposed to,” Aoun added, pledging to make all efforts to resolve the
country’s successive crises.
EU Election Observation Mission Chief Visits Lebanon
Naharnet/July 27/2021
Elena Valenciano, head of the European Union's Election Observation Mission
deployed during the last Lebanese elections, has spent the week in Beirut, to
follow up on the mission’s recommendations, the EU Delegation said.
Valenciano was accompanied by a team of electoral experts and EU officials and
met with a wide range of Lebanese officials. Valenciano met with President
Michel Aoun, caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab, caretaker Deputy PM Zeina
Akar and caretaker Minister of Interior Mohammed Fahmi. She also met with the
Supervisory Commission for Elections (SCE), and held meetings with the leaders
of the Free Patriotic Movement, the al-Mustaqbal Movement, the Lebanese Forces,
the Amal Movement, Hizbullah, the Kataeb Party, and the Progressive Socialist
Party, as well as representatives of emerging political movements and women
seeking to increase their presence in the political arena.
In addition, Valenciano met with representatives of organizations working on
different aspects of the electoral framework. Following these exchanges,
Valenciano noted that they converged on the prospects of elections next year.
“I am encouraged by the commitment of all political leaders to holding the
elections scheduled for 2022 on time,” she said. Valenciano referred to the
challenges currently facing Lebanon and the fact that "these had made it
difficult to proceed with much-needed legal reforms." "Lebanon has faced a
number of significant difficulties since the 2018 elections, and that context
has not been conducive to implementing the recommendations made by the European
Union election observation mission," she added. "We maintain that these should
be considered as part of the ongoing process of shaping the electoral framework
in Lebanon, and debated by Lebanese stakeholders at a later date," she went on
to say.
Valenciano also emphasized that in view of the elections foreseen next year,
some measures were nonetheless possible, necessary and urgent. “In the time
remaining before the elections scheduled for 2022, several measures should be
taken promptly, with a view to ensuring inclusive elections with equal access to
campaigning for all. To that end, the Supervisory Commission for Elections
urgently needs to be installed: its members need to be nominated, and the
Commission needs to be provided with the resources to fully carry out its
mandate of overseeing compliance with campaign spending limits, and regulating
equal access to media coverage for candidates and lists presenting their
programs to Lebanese citizens," she said. "Such measures, aiming to ensure a
level playing field for all election contenders, are particularly important in
times of political, economic and social crisis such as the one Lebanon is
currently going through,” she went on to say. Valenciano added that once
officially installed and provided with the resources to "genuinely" oversee
campaign finances and media coverage, the Commission should plan on how to make
full use of its legal mandate, including through publishing clear guidelines and
initiating constant communication to the media and the public in general.
Valenciano also emphasized the importance of Lebanese women gaining access to
elected positions of decision-making, after just 6 women were elected to the
outgoing parliament. “While we maintain that a minimum quota for women in
parliament would be an efficient way to rapidly improve the balance of women and
men in positions of power, I call on all political parties to markedly increase
the number of women in their candidate lists, and to ensure equal support and
prominence for their campaigns. I also call on the media to ensure that women
candidates and their campaigns be given equal coverage in the press.”Touching on
the profound challenges currently faced by Lebanon, Valenciano hoped voters
would take the opportunity of the elections to express their will, adding: "It
is precisely in times of crisis that it is all the more important that citizens
participate in shaping the country’s future."Valenciano added the upcoming
elections represent an opportunity to "consolidate recently introduced positive
developments, such as facilitating voting for Lebanese citizens from abroad."
Valenciano also said: “I wish to thank to all the Lebanese people who have given
me such a warm welcome, both during the election observation mission and on my
visits since then. I am with them in their best hopes for their country.”
Assad says Syria’s economy ‘depressed’ by funds frozen
in Lebanon
The Arab Weekly/July 27/2021
In a swearing-in speech, the Syrian president said his citizens’ frozen funds in
Lebanese banks are worth between $40 billion and $60 billion.
BEIRUT - Syrian President Bashar al-Assad said on Saturday the main impediment
to investment in the country was money stuck in ailing Lebanese banks. In a
speech after being sworn in as president for a fourth term, Assad said estimates
suggested the frozen funds were worth between $40 billion and $60 billion. “Both
figures are enough to depress an economy like ours,” he said. Lebanon is in the
throes of a deep economic meltdown that is threatening its stability. Lebanese
banks have locked depositors out of their accounts and blocked transfers abroad
since the start of the country’s crisis in late 2019.
Many Syrian front companies had long circumvented Western sanctions by using
Lebanon’s banking system to pay for goods which were then imported into Syria by
land. Assad also said Syria would continue working to overcome difficulties
caused by the Western sanctions imposed over its decade-long war.
“Sanctions haven’t prevented us from securing our basic needs but they have
created some choke points,” he said. “We will continue to work to overcome them
without announcing what methods we used before to do that or what we will use in
the future.”
Syrian authorities blame Western sanctions for widespread hardship, including
soaring prices and people struggling to afford food and basic supplies. Assad
secured a fourth term in office in a May election, winning more than 95% of the
votes. Opponents and the West say the election was marked by fraud but the
government said it showed the country was functioning normally despite the long
war. Assad’s biggest challenge, now that he has regained control of around 70%
of the country, is an economy in decline.
Syrian President Bashar Assad’s swearing-in ceremony was held at the
presidential palace and attended by clergymen, members of parliament, political
figures and army officers. In power since 2000, Assad’s re-election in a
landslide was never in doubt. His new term starts with the country still
devastated by 10 years of war and sliding deeper into a worsening economic
crisis. The UN estimates that more than 80% of Syrians live under the poverty
line. The Syrian currency is in a free fall and basic services and resources
have become scarce or are offered at exorbitant parallel market prices. Fighting
has largely subsided, but parts of Syria remain out of government-control and
foreign troops and militias are deployed in different parts of the country.
Nearly half of Syria’s pre-war population is either displaced or living in
neighboring countries or Europe as refugees. The war has left nearly half a
million killed, tens of thousands missing and devastated the infrastructure.
Lebanon is dying a slow death …Iran is responsible for the
slow death of Lebanon
Jonathan Spyer/Jerusalem Post/July 17/2021
جوناثان سباير/جيروزاليم بوست: لبنان يموت ببطء... إيران هي المسؤولية عن موت لبنان
البطيء
وضع لبنان الحالي هو مثابة تحذير صارخ لجميع البلدان التي تواجه تسلل إليها الحرس
الثوري الإيراني وميليشياته المختلفة.
يواجه لبنان حالياً أسوأ أزمة اقتصادية في تاريخه. هناك نقص يومي في الوقود
والكهرباء، ونقص مزمن في الإمدادات الطبية وفي فقدان الأدوية الأساسية في
المستشفيات. حوالي 77٪ من الأسر اللبنانية غير قادرة على شراء ما يكفي من الغذاء.
فقدت الليرة اللبنانية 90٪ من قيمتها خلال العامين الماضيين. في غضون ذلك، يُمنع
المواطنون اللبنانيون من سحب أكثر من 100 دولار في الأسبوع من ودائهم البنكية بسبب
انخفاض احتياطيات العملات الأجنبية. لقد وصل الوضع إلى نقطة اللاعودة مع احتمال
حقيقي لانتشار الجوع على نطاق واسع. لبنان اليوم بكل المقاييس دولة فاشلة ومنهارة.
BEHIND THE LINES: The current situation stands as a stark warning to all
countries faced with infiltration by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
and its various militia franchises.
Lebanon is currently in the grip of the worst economic crisis in its history.
There are daily shortages of fuel and electricity, a chronic lack of medical
supplies, and an absence of essential medicines in hospitals. Some 77% of
Lebanese households are unable to purchase sufficient food. The Lebanese pound
has lost 90% of its value over the last two years.
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/100691/jonathan-spyer-jerusalem-post-lebanon-is-dying-a-slow-death-iran-is-responsible-for-the-slow-death-of-lebanon-%d8%ac%d9%88%d9%86%d8%a7%d8%ab%d8%a7%d9%86-%d8%b3%d8%a8%d8%a7%d9%8a%d8%b1-%d8%ac/
BEHIND THE LINES: The current situation stands as a stark warning to all
countries faced with infiltration by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
and its various militia franchises.
Lebanon is currently in the grip of the worst economic crisis in its history.
There are daily shortages of fuel and electricity, a chronic lack of medical
supplies, and an absence of essential medicines in hospitals. Some 77% of
Lebanese households are unable to purchase sufficient food. The Lebanese pound
has lost 90% of its value over the last two years. Lebanese citizens, meanwhile,
are prevented from withdrawing more than $100 per week, as foreign currency
reserves grow thin. The situation is reaching a point of no return, with the
real possibility of widespread hunger. Lebanon is, today, by all measures a
failed and collapsing state.
How has the country reached this point? Less than two decades ago, Lebanon was
revamping its image as a center of commerce and tourism on the Mediterranean
coast. The “March 14” movement, named after the popular mobilization which
forced a Syrian withdrawal in 2005, was riding high. It was presented as one of
the few successes of what was then the US administration’s strategy of regional
democratization. I visited the country in that period, in 2007. A palpable
longing for normality could then be discerned among younger Lebanese. The civil
war was already a receding memory. What remained of it, among Sunnis and
Christians at least, was a kind of dread of the possibility that political
violence might return. The Israeli occupation in the south had ended in May
2000. Normality seemed within reach.
What went wrong? What went wrong was discernible also back then. Also then, it
was evident that there were two powers in Lebanon. The first, as represented by
the March 14 movement, was ostensibly forward-looking, oriented toward the West,
toward commerce and toward normality. The other power was that of Iran, via its
oldest franchise, the Lebanese Hezbollah movement. This interest had its own
military power that outmatched that of the state and dwarfed the other irregular
military presences in the country. It had its own economy, too, its own sources
of income, its own smuggling routes.
The project of the Iranian element was that the two Lebanons should continue to
exist indefinitely. The former was to provide a convenient carapace of normality
and legitimacy beneath which the latter could continue its allotted tasks in
Tehran’s long war against Israel. Supporters of the March 14 project had a
tendency to avoid the discussion of hard-power issues. This in retrospect was to
prove fatal.
Any chance that the Lebanon of March 14 might mount a defense in arms of its
vision of the country ended in the events of May and June 2008. In a brief
conflict on the streets of Beirut, the forces of Amal and Hezbollah
contemptuously brushed aside the haphazard military mobilizations of the
pro-March 14 Sunni and Druze forces.
From this point on, the die was cast. It was clear that there would be no
further attempt at real resistance to the Iranian project in Lebanon. What there
would be instead would be obfuscation and denial. The Iranian approach fitted
perfectly the desire of the Lebanese to ignore reality.
I remember addressing an audience of mainly young Lebanese in London at an event
in summer 2008, shortly after the violent events in Beirut. I warned that the
emerging prospect in the country was of Iranian occupation. No one, perhaps
understandably, wanted to hear this from an Israeli. “We’d rather have them than
you,” one young Lebanese woman called out, to applause from the audience. So be
it. Now she has her wish, and its consequences.
IN THE YEARS subsequent to 2008, events followed a downward spiral. The Syrian
civil war brought some 1.8 million refugees to Lebanon, further straining the
country’s fragile infrastructure. The war dealt a crippling blow to the tourism
sector, which had accounted for around 7.5% of Lebanon’s GDP. Growing Saudi and
US discontent at the reality of Iranian power in the country came to a head in
2015-2016. In early 2016, Riyadh announced the withdrawal of its deposits from
the Central Bank of Lebanon. This followed the cancellation of $4 billion of aid
to the Lebanese armed and security forces.
The US “Hezbollah International Financing Prevention Act” of 2015 hit hard at
the financial services sector, another key element in the Lebanese economy.
Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates issued advisories
against travel to Lebanon at that time. This ended the country’s traditional
role as a permissive playground for visitors seeking a congenial respite from
Gulf restrictions.
At this stage, Lebanon was seeking to manage a public debt of $69 billion,
totaling 150% of GDP. But as the official economy foundered, the parallel
Iran/Hezbollah shadow economy prospered. Not, however, in such a way that the
average citizen benefited. The porous or Hezbollah-supervised borders between
Lebanon and Syria allowed for smuggling of oil imports and their resale in
Syria, to the benefit of Hezbollah. Captagon amphetamine pills manufactured in
Syria, and cannabis were smuggled the other way, finding their destination in
European cities or in the Gulf via Hezbollah-supervised routes. Needless to say,
none of the profits from this burgeoning sector went to service the national
debt, or to benefit the crumbling public infrastructure.
In March 2020, against the background of countrywide, multi-sectarian protests
against corruption, poor public service, youth unemployment and mismanagement,
Lebanon defaulted for the first time on its debt payments. A reform plan was
approved by the International Monetary Fund, but following the government’s
resignation after the Beirut Port explosion in August 2020, negotiations became
stalled. The Lebanese economy contracted by 20% in 2020.
This is the background to the current grave crisis in Lebanon. All the elements
– US sanctions, Saudi and international withdrawal of aid and investment,
subsequent debt default and loss of confidence, resulting currency devaluation,
a shadow economy benefiting only itself, and a paralyzed political system – are
all directly traceable to the distorting effect that the presence of the
pervasive Iranian project on Lebanese soil has brought.
From this point of view, the current situation stands as a stark warning to all
countries faced with infiltration by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and
its various militia franchises. These are good at building paramilitary muscle
and converting it into political power. They have no knowledge of or interest in
economics. As a result, the net outcome of their taking of de facto power in a
country will be that country’s eventual ruin and impoverishment. Lebanon is now
the case study for this process.
From Israel’s point of view, there is little to be done but to continue to guard
the borders. There is no reason to suppose that the current chaos in Lebanon
will incline the Iranians and their proxies toward military adventures in the
south. When hunger and infrastructural collapse are a real prospect, no one is
likely to rally around the national colors – not those of Lebanon, and certainly
not those of Iran and its local agents.
Regarding any international response, international aid should be made
contingent on the disarming of the Iranian proxy, and the thorough reform of the
political system. Any other remedy runs the danger of offering support to
Lebanon’s current Iran-created dysfunctionality.
The key point: Lebanon was the first Arab state to undergo internal collapse,
and consequently the first to receive the intentions of the IRGC’s brand of
political-military takeover. With allowance for local variations, similar
Iranian efforts are now underway in Iraq, Syria and Yemen. Lebanon is the first
Arab state to have been brought to the point of destruction by this project. The
significance of the current events extends far beyond Lebanon’s borders. Iran is
responsible for the slow death of Lebanon.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News
published on July 17-18/2021
Rights group slams Iran over attempted
kidnapping
The Arab Weekly/July 27/2021
LONDON: Leading rights group Human Rights Watch (HRW) has warned that an alleged
plot this week by four Iranians to kidnap a dissident journalist living in New
York has heightened concerns about Tehran’s efforts to target its nationals and
critics abroad.
On July 13, the US Justice Department indicted the four Iranian nationals at a
New York federal court, which said that the four men allegedly “conspired to
kidnap a Brooklyn journalist, author and human rights activist for mobilizing
public opinion in Iran and around the world to bring about changes to the
regime’s laws and practices.” Sources, and the target herself, have claimed that
journalist and regime critic Masih Alinejad was the intended target of the
alleged kidnapping attempt this week. Michael Page, deputy Middle East director
at HRW, said: “For decades Iranian authorities have deployed vicious tactics to
harass, intimidate and harm Iranian activists living abroad. “Iran’s security
agencies have now allegedly attempted to kidnap another high-profile dissident
to dragoon back to Iran and face serious abuses.”Iranian-American journalist
Masih Alinejad said Wednesday she was shocked by an Iranian plot to kidnap her
from her New York home, as Tehran stiffly denied the allegations contained in a
US Justice Department indictment. More here. Alinejad has been subjected to
extensive targeted harassment and intimidation by various Iranian state
agencies, including the state broadcasting agency.
The activist and journalist has said that Tehran has repeatedly targeted her
family, including attempts to convince her to return to the region and countries
neighboring Iran. Last July, the Center for Human Rights in Iran said that an
Iranian court had sentenced Ali, her brother, to five years in prison for
“assembly and collusion against national security.”In addition to this charge,
Ali Alinejad was sentenced to two years for “insulting the Supreme Leader,” and
one year for “propaganda against the state.”His lawyer said that sections of
Ali’s hearing were focused on his sister’s journalism and campaigning efforts.
“However the Alinejad case plays out, Iranian authorities are doubtlessly
determined to silence dissent and spread fear among outspoken critics outside
the country,” Page said.
Protests continue in drought-hit Iranian northwest,
demonstrator killed
The Arab Weekly/July 27/2021
President Hassan Rouhani said this year’s drought was “unprecedented” with
average rainfall down 52 percent compared to the previous year.
TEHRAN – A demonstrator was shot dead during protests against water shortages in
drought-stricken southwestern Iran, state media reported Saturday, with an
official blaming the death on “opportunists and rioters”. The demonstrator was
killed in the Khuzestan province town of Shadegan, the official IRNA news agency
said. “Last night (Friday), a number of Shadegan’s people had gathered to
protest water shortages due to the drought, during which opportunists and
rioters shot dead one of the demonstrators,” the county’s acting governor, Omid
Sabripour, told IRNA.
Sabripour said the perpetrators “sought to agitate the people by shooting in the
air” and a “young Shadegan resident” was shot in the process. In separate
comments to the ISNA news agency, Sabripour said the fire was directed at both
the demonstrators and security forces. He added that the victim was a
“30-year-old passer-by” and that those responsible were identified and some
arrested last night, with a manhunt under way for the others. A persistent
drought in Khuzestan province has led to tensions over water since late March,
IRNA reported. Iran has endured repeated droughts over the past decade,
particularly in the south. Earlier this month, President Hassan Rouhani said
this year’s drought was “unprecedented” with average rainfall down 52 percent
compared to the previous year. Earlier this week, the government sent a
delegation to Khuzestan to tackle the water shortage. The province is Iran’s
main oil-producing region and one its wealthiest. It is also one of the few
areas of mainly Shia Iran to have a large Sunni Arab minority, which has
frequently complained of discrimination. In 2019, the province was a hotspot of
anti-government protests that had shaken other areas of the Islamic republic.
Farsi-language media based abroad said security forces had cracked down on
protesters demonstrating against severe water shortages on Thursday, but
domestic media played down the reports. Over the years, blistering summer
heatwaves and seasonal sandstorms blowing in from Saudi Arabia and neighbouring
Iraq have dried up Khuzestan’s once fertile plains. Scientists say climate
change amplifies droughts, and their intensity and frequency in turn threaten
food security.
Iranian deputy foreign minister says Vienna talks must
await Iran’s new admin
Reuters/18 July ,2021
Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator said on Saturday that the next round of talks in
Vienna must wait until the new Iranian administration takes office in early
August. “We’re in a transition period as a democratic transfer of power is
underway in our capital. Vienna talks must thus obviously await our new
administration,” Abbas Araqchi said on Twitter.Indirect US-Iranian talks on
reviving the 2015 deal have been on hold since the last round ended on June 20
and Iran has made clear it is not ready to resume before President-elect Ebrahim
Raisi takes over. In his tweet, Araqchi also said the United States and Britain
need to stop linking the exchange of prisoners with the nuclear deal.“Ten
prisoners on all sides may be released tomorrow if US&UK fulfil their part of a
deal,” he said. Iran, which is holding a handful of Iranian-Americans, has been
accused by rights activists of arresting dual nationals to try to extract a
concession from other countries. Iran has dismissed the charge. Iran said
earlier this week that it was holding talks on securing the release of Iranian
prisoners in American jails and other countries over violations of US sanctions.
In May, Washington denied a report by Iranian state televsion that the countries
had reached a prisoner swap deal in exchange for the release of $7 billion in
frozen Iranian oil funds under US sanctions in other countries. The hiatus in
nuclear talks, which US and European officials attribute to hard-line Raisi’s
election, has raised questions about next steps if the talks hit a dead end. The
US State Department has acknowledged it may need to rethink its stance.
One Shot Dead in Iran Water Shortage Protests
Agence France Presse/July 27/2021
A demonstrator was shot dead during protests against water shortages in
drought-hit Khuzestan in southwestern Iran, state media reported Saturday, with
an official blaming the death on "opportunists and rioters."The demonstrator was
killed in the Khuzestan province town of Shadegan, the official IRNA news agency
said. The province is Iran's main oil-producing region and one of its
wealthiest, but it has been hit by a persistent drought that has led to tensions
since late March. "Last night (Friday), a number of Shadegan's people had
gathered to protest water shortages due to the drought, during which
opportunists and rioters shot dead one of the demonstrators," the county's
acting governor, Omid Sabripour, told IRNA. Sabripour said the perpetrators
"sought to agitate the people by shooting in the air", and a "young Shadegan
resident" was shot in the process. In separate comments to the ISNA news agency,
Sabripour said the shooting was directed at both the demonstrators and security
forces. He added that the victim was a "30-year-old passer-by" and that those
responsible were identified. Some were arrested on Friday night, with a manhunt
launched for the others.
Iran has endured repeated droughts over the past decade, particularly in the
south. Earlier this month, President Hassan Rouhani said the drought was
"unprecedented", with average rainfall down 52 percent compared to the previous
year. The Islamic republic has also experienced regular floods in recent years,
made worse when torrential rain falls on sun-baked earth. In other parts of the
country, floods over the past three days have killed at least four people, with
two others missing, Iranian Red Crescent Society spokesman Mohammad-Hassan
Qosian told IRNA on Saturday. Another person was killed by lightning.
'Insecurity'
Khuzestan's governor on Friday dismissed videos of protests as false. "Some seek
to agitate the people and publish fake videos," Qasem Soleimani-Dashtaki told
IRNA. Videos on social media apparently showed protests in several Khuzestan
towns, including Susangerd, Mahshahr and Hamidiyeh as well as Shadegan.
Farsi-language media based abroad said security forces had cracked down on
protesters demonstrating against severe water shortages on Thursday, but
domestic media played down the reports. Khuzestan MP Abdollah Izadpanah warned
on Friday that "Khuzestan's insecurity means a lack of security for the whole
country." He blamed the water shortages on "mistakes and unjustified decisions"
such as the extraction of water from Khuzestan's rivers to other provinces, ISNA
reported. On Friday, the government sent a delegation to Khuzestan to address
the problem. This month, rolling blackouts began in the capital Tehran and
several other large cities, which officials blamed on the impact of the drought
on hydroelectric power generation, as well as surging demand. Power cuts in the
peak summer months are not uncommon in Iran, but the ongoing drought has
intensified the situation. Khuzestan is home to a large Sunni Arab minority,
which has frequently complained of marginalisation in mainly Shiite Iran. In
2019, the province was a hotspot of anti-government protests that had shaken
other areas of the Islamic republic. Over the years, blistering summer heatwaves
and seasonal sandstorms blowing in from Saudi Arabia and neighbouring Iraq have
dried up Khuzestan's once fertile plains. Scientists say climate change
amplifies droughts, and their intensity and frequency in turn threaten food
security.
Assad Takes Oath after Criticized Re-Election
Agence France Presse/July 27/2021
President Bashar al-Assad took the oath of office for a fourth term in
war-ravaged Syria Saturday, after taking 95 percent of the vote in a
controversial election dismissed abroad. Assad was sworn in on the constitution
and the Koran in the presence of more than 600 guests, including ministers,
businessmen, academics and journalists, organizers said. The elections "have
proven the strength of popular legitimacy that the people have conferred on the
state," 55-year-old Assad said, in his inauguration speech.
They "have discredited the declarations of Western officials on the legitimacy
of the state, the constitution and the homeland." He called on "those who bet on
the demise of the homeland" to return to its "embrace." "We tell each and every
one of them, you are exploited by the enemies of our country against your own
people, and the revolution with which they deceived you is an illusion," he
said. The vote extending Assad's grip on power was the second since the start of
a decade-long civil war that has killed more than 500,000 people, displaced
millions and battered the country's infrastructure.
On the eve of the May 26 election, the United States, Britain, France, Germany
and Italy said the poll was "neither free nor fair", and Syria's fragmented
opposition has called it a "farce."With his campaign slogan, "Hope through
work", Assad cast himself as the sole viable architect of a reconstruction phase
for the troubled country.
Economy new priority
In his speech Saturday, he outlined the priorities looking forward. "During more
than 10 years of war, our concerns were many, and dominated by security and the
unity of the homeland, but today these are mostly liberating those parts of the
homeland that still need to be, and facing the repercussions of the war for the
economy and people's livelihoods."Government forces control two-thirds of the
country, but several parts of the north remain beyond their control. Syria's
former Al-Qaeda affiliate and allied rebels run the rebel bastion of Idlib in
the northwest. Kurdish-led forces control a large swathe of the east after
expelling the Islamic State group from the region. And Turkey and its Syrian
proxies hold a long strip of territory along the northern border. Assad takes
his oath as the country faces a dire economic crisis. More than 80 percent of
the population live in poverty, and the Syrian pound has plunged in value
against the dollar, causing skyrocketing inflation. In recent weeks, the
government has hiked the price of unsubsidized petrol, bread, sugar and rice,
while power cuts can last up to 20 hours a day in areas it controls. Nationwide,
12.4 million people struggle to find enough food each day, the World Food
Program says. The Damascus government has blamed the country's economic woes on
Western sanctions and a deepening crisis in neighboring Lebanon. Assad was first
elected by referendum in 2000 following the death of his father Hafez al-Assad,
who had ruled Syria for 30 years.
Egypt seeks global push in Ethiopian dam talks
Arab News/July 17/2021
CAIRO: Egypt is keen to complete the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD)
negotiations to reach a fair and binding legal agreement that meets the
aspirations of all in the development, Minister of Irrigation Mohamed Abdel-Aty
said. Ethiopia is pinning its hopes of economic development and power generation
on the GERD, but Egypt fears it will threaten its water supply from the Nile.
Sudan is concerned about the dam’s safety and its own water flow. During his
visit to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) on Friday Abdel-Aty stressed
Egypt’s keenness to protect its water rights and achieve benefits for all in any
agreement on the dam. He highlighted a request by Cairo and Khartoum for the
participation of the US, EU and UN in any GERD negotiations to maximize their
chances of success, given the deadlock as a result of Ethiopia’s intransigence.
The minister said that Egypt and Sudan would not accept Addis Ababa’s unilateral
decision to fill and operate the GERD dam. Abdel-Aty said a high-tech rain
forecast center to be set up in the DRC will help to study the effects of
climate change and to identify measures to protect citizens from its risks. He
said Egypt has trained the staff at the center in the use of rain and flood
forecasting systems, aerial image analysis, hydrologic modeling and technical
reporting. He said the establishment of this center stems from Egypt’s keenness
to transfer its expertise in the field of integrated management of water
resources to its “brothers from the Nile Basin countries” with the aim of
maximizing the use of these resources. Egypt, he said, has been providing and is
still keen to provide all forms of support through bilateral cooperation
projects with the Nile Basin countries. He explained that Egypt has established
several rainwater harvesting dams and underground water stations to provide
clean drinking water in remote areas by using the solar energy technology in a
large number of underground wells. He said Egypt has established many farms,
fisheries and river marinas with the aim of developing the surrounding areas
economically, socially and environmentally, creating job opportunities,
developing fishing conditions and reducing swamp areas, which reduces diseases.
Iraq arrests suspects for murder of prominent academic
The Arab Weekly/July 27/2021
Kadhimi is trying to assuage doubts over his government’s ability to hold rogue
actors to account.
BAGHDAD – Iraq’s premier Mustafa al-Kadhimi announced Friday that suspects have
been arrested for the murder last year of academic Hisham al-Hashemi, one of
dozens of unpunished hits the country has suffered in recent years. A specialist
on Sunni extremism and a government adviser with a vast network of contacts
among top decision makers, Hashemi was shot dead outside his Baghdad home in
early July last year by gunmen on motorcycles. The academic had also become
outspoken against powerful Shia armed actors aligned with Iran that Washington
blames for rocket and other attacks against US interests and troops in Iraq. “We
promised to capture… (the) killers” of Hashemi, Kadhimi said on Twitter. “We
fulfilled that promise,” he added. A security source said that one of those
arrested for the murder, Ahmed al-Kenani, was linked to Kataeb Hezbollah, a
powerful pro-Iran faction that Hashemi criticised in his writings and media
commentary. Iraqi state television broadcast brief clips of the alleged
confession of Kenani, a 36-year-old police lieutenant. Wearing a brown jumpsuit,
he said he shot Hashemi with a pistol. A security source said that dozens of
military tanks and counter-terrorism units were deployed Friday in Baghdad’s
heavily fortified Green Zone, where the US Embassy — a frequent target of rocket
attacks — is located.
A fragile state
Friday’s announcement by the prime minister — seen by pro-Iran groups as too
close to Washington — marks the first reported arrests over the murder.
Surveillance footage of the attack shown on state television purports to show
Kenani carrying out the killing with three others, riding on two motorcycles.
Hashemi’s support for popular protests that erupted in 2019 against a government
seen by many as too close to Iran infuriated Tehran-backed Shiite factions in
Iraq’s Hashed al-Shaabi military network. Earlier this month, dozens of people
gathered in central Baghdad to remember him, holding pictures of the researcher
and lighting candles. The arrests represent “a positive step towards
establishing accountability and ending impunity… and we hope that all
perpetrators are held accountable,” Ali al-Bayati, a member of the Iraqi
government’s human rights commission, said Friday. But many doubt Kadhimi’s
ability to rein in armed factions. The Hashed-al-Shaabi holds the second biggest
bloc in Iraq’s parliament and controls vast financial assets. In a demonstration
of its clout, it secured last month the release of one of its commanders, Qassem
Muslah, after he was arrested on suspicion of ordering the killing of Ihab al-Wazni,
a pro-democracy activist. The judiciary said it had found “no proof” of Muslah’s
involvement in the murder.
Saving face?
Killings, attempted murder and abductions have targeted more than 70 activists
since a pro-democracy protest movement erupted against government corruption and
incompetence in 2019. Muslah’s release was a blow to Kadhimi’s efforts to win
over the protest movement, and the prime minister has also been seen as
powerless to stop attacks against US interests. US forces, who have 2,500 troops
deployed in Iraq as part of an international anti-Islamic State group coalition,
have been targeted almost 50 times this year in the country. The US launched
airstrikes against groups including Kataeb Hezbollah in February and June,
hitting camps it allegedly uses borderlands between Syria and Iraq, in
retaliation. On Friday, Kadhimi tried to assuage doubts over his government’s
ability to hold rogue actors to account. “We have arrested hundreds of criminals
— murderers of innocent Iraqis,” said Kadhimi, who is scheduled to visit
Washington later this month. “We don’t care about media spin: we carry out our
duties in the service of our people and in pursuit of justice,” he added. An
Amnesty International researcher meanwhile called for the investigation into
Hashemi’s murder to extend to the highest levels of responsibility. “A TV
confession…is not a substitute for a proper trial based on solid evidence of who
ordered the killing — not just who pulled the trigger,” Donatella Rovera said on
Twitter.
Biden to host Iraqi PM, re-examine ‘strategic partnership’
The Arab Weekly/July 27/2021
In Washington, Kadhimi is expected to push for a concrete timetable of American
troop withdrawal.
WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden will welcome Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi
to the White House this month, his office said Friday. The July 26 meeting will
“highlight the strategic partnership between the United States and Iraq,” the
White House said in a statement. Kadhimi and US envoy Brett McGurk discussed the
withdrawal of troops from Iraq Thursday in Baghdad. Some 3,500 foreign troops
are still on Iraqi territory, including 2,500 Americans, who have been posted to
help fight the Islamic State (ISIS) group since 2014. In Washington, Kadhimi is
expected to push for a concrete timetable of American troop withdrawal. The
implementation of their departure could take years. Iraq, long an arena for
bitter rivalry between the US and Iran despite their shared enmity towards ISIS,
has seen growing numbers of rocket and drone attacks on American targets in
recent months.
Kadhimi’s meeting with McGurk came a little more than a week after 14 rockets
were fired at the Ain al-Assad air base, which hosts American troops in western
Iraq, and three others which landed near the US embassy in Baghdad. They were
the latest in a spate of attacks targeting US military and diplomatic facilities
in Iraq. The attacks have been blamed on pro-Iranian armed groups within a
state-sponsored paramilitary force. Last month, the US launched air strikes
against pro-Iranian militias along the Iraq-Syria border. The security situation
has been complicated since last year’s US drone strike killing of Iran’s
expeditionary Quds Force commander Qassim Soleimani and senior Iraqi militia
commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis at Baghdad International Airport. That strike
was ordered by then-President Donald Trump. But with the Biden administration
seeking to revive an Obama-era nuclear accord with Iran, there have been signs
that Iran is looking to curb, at least for now, militia attacks on the US.
Soleimani’s successor Esmail Qaani last month called on Iranian-backed militias
to remain calm until after nuclear talks between Iran and the United States.
Region’s crises raise questions about Arab League role
The Arab Weekly/July 27/2021
No one in the region, including the Egyptians themselves, believes the Arab
League really matters, analysts say.
CAIRO – The Secretary-General of the Arab League, Ahmed Aboul Gheit, appeared
recently on more than one occasion to make strong statements suggesting that the
world is waiting for his position and that of the Arab League on current
developments. The reality however is that the Arab League does not usually do
more than follow developments from afar until regional and international powers
get hold of this or that crisis. But no one awaits the position of Aboul Gheit
as a person or an institution. As the head of the leading pan-Arab institution,
Aboul Gheit has been content since taking office as Secretary-General of the
League in 2016, with monitoring regional events and then making occcasional
statements where he tries to accommodate certain parties concerned with any one
particular issue. But more often, he refrains from intervening and keeps his
distance from most contentious issues.
This has made Aboul Gheit’s recent outspoken attitude towards certain crises
quite intriguing. This was the case in statements he made about the Nile dam and
the Libyan and Lebanese crises. But in reality, Aboul Gheit was just walking in
the footsteps of previous secretaries-general who made toeing Egypt’s position
another preset rule for the League. Aboul Gheit, they say, does not speak out
loudly except when Egypt needs his voice, whether it is the Nile dam issue, in
which Cairo finds itself in a tough predicament, or in the Libyan crisis, when
Cairo seeks to contain Turkish moves. He eventually adopted a handoff stance
there leaving Libya’s fate in the hands of foreign powers. His statements
towards the Lebanese crisis only echoed Cairo’s stance.
Analysts say that any sudden return to the fore (especially when Egypt’s
interests warrant it) does not mean that Aboul Gheit is an influential figure on
regional issues or that the League has begun to carry weight. No one in the
region , including the Egyptians themselves, believes the Arab League really
matters, analysts say. The League’s siding with Egypt on the issue of the
Renaissance Dam led Ethiopia to reject its intervention and accuse it of bias.
It said the Arab League’s position does not help solve the crisis but rather
complicates it. The League was not obviously pleased with Ethiopia’s complaint
to the UN Security Council, in which it portrayed the pan-Arab institution as an
intruder in comparison to the African Union that supports Addis Ababa and whose
mediation was approved by the Security Council. Although the Arab League is
completely absent from the Lebanese crisis, because it remains disconnected from
key domestic and external players there, its secretary-general pledged to
“continue to follow the situation in Lebanon and extend support to the country
in this delicate phase of its history.” He did not explain, however, the nature
of this support and its possible impact.
Aboul Gheit made his statements in New York on the sidelines of his
participation in the Security Council session on Libya. It is ironic that the
League, despite its presence in New York, had not met any of its
responsibilities towards the North African country and had left the main cards
there in the hands of Turkey and Russia. Analysts say that the current Secretary
of the Arab League tends to make strong statements to draw attention to himself,
especially when the issues at hand are of no major importance. On the other
hand, he makes usually brief statements when it comes to controversial issues,
such as Syria’s return to the Arab League. Egyptian sources say that Aboul Gheit
admitted privately that he was unable to do anything regarding the issue of
Syria’s return to the League and that he was convinced that real decision on the
issue remains in the hands of major powers who will green-light or block the
move.
The contradictions of the Arab League extend to the Palestinian cause, where the
institution has confined itself to general statement of condemnation and
eschewed the tough issues of Palestinian reconciliation and those of resuming
negotiations with Israel, dealing with Jewish settlements and defending the Arab
Peace Initiative. The same analysts says the coronavirus crisis has also
revealed the relative impotence of the League whose passive role was no match to
the impressive activism of another regional organisation, the African Union.
Libya PM says committed to elections, undecided whether to
run
The Arab Weekly/July 27/2021
“Haftar, he is a difficult military person, but we communicate with him. But
things are not easy,” Dbeibah said.
NEW YORK - Libya’s unity government Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah said on
Friday he was committed to holding elections on Dec. 24, but warned that some
lawmakers may be reluctant to give up power. Dbeibah, a businessman appointed
interim prime minister in February, said he has not yet decided whether to run
for office. Speaking to Reuters in New York, Dbeibah added it would be “very
difficult” to unify Libya’s military. UN special envoy for Libya, Jan Kubis,
said on Thursday that the The Libyan National Army (LNA) led by Field Marshal
Kahlifa Haftar has not allowed Dbeibah’s Government of National Unity (GNU) to
take control of the area it commands. “Of course, communicating with Haftar, he
is a difficult military person, but we communicate with him. But things are not
easy,” Dbeibah said. Libya has had little stability since a 2011 NATO-backed
uprising against long-time ruler Muammar Gadhafi. A UN-led peace process brought
a ceasefire last summer, after fighting between rival factions paused, and then
a unity government. Following a UN-backed conference in Berlin last month,
German and US officials said Turkey and Russia, which back opposing sides in
Libya, reached an initial understanding on a step-by-step withdrawal of their
foreign fighters. “I have not heard of this agreement regarding the withdrawal
of fighters. But we welcome any agreement … and we welcome the exit of any
forces, fighters or mercenaries with any support from any party,” Dbeibah said.
“We are talking with all parties regarding the withdrawal of foreign forces from
Libya.”UN sanctions monitors have reported that thousands of Syrians had been
fighting in Libya either alongside troops loyal to the Tripoli based Government
of National Accord (GNA) – who were also heavily backed by Turkish troops – or
with Russia’s Wagner group in support of eastern commander Khalifa Haftar. Under
the ceasefire reached last October, all foreign fighters were supposed to have
left Libya by January. Russia’s deputy UN Ambassador Dmitry Polyanskiy told the
Security Council on Thursday that Moscow supported a “step-by-step phased
withdrawal of all foreign forces and contingents.”“At the same time, we need to
make sure that the current balance of forces on the ground not be disrupted,
because it is thanks to this balance that the situation in Libya remains calm
and no threats of armed escalation emerge,” Polyanskiy added. Addressing the
Security Council, Dbeibah said the continued presence of foreign fighters poses
“a real and serious risk to the current political process and it also threatens
the efforts to continue the ceasefire” and to uniting the army in Libya.
The Latest LCCC English
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July 17-18/2021
The EU Leaders Join North Korea in Welcoming Iran's Mass
Murderer President
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone Institute/July 17/2021
د . ماجد رفي زاده/معهد جيتستون : قادة الاتحاد الأوروبي ينضمون إلى كوريا الشمالية
في الترحيب برئيس إيران القاتل الجماعي
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/100688/dr-majid-rafizadeh-gatestone-institute-the-eu-leaders-join-north-korea-in-welcoming-irans-mass-murderer-president-%d8%af-%d9%85%d8%a7%d8%ac%d8%af-%d8%b1%d9%81%d9%8a-%d8%b2%d8%a7%d8%af%d9%87/
By handpicking a mass murderer to be president, the Iranian regime is sending a
strong message to the Iranian people and the world that it will not respect
human rights.
How could a leader of a democratic country congratulate a mass murderer?
The people of Iran, like those of Hong Kong and now Cuba, have been struggling
and fighting to change their regime, while European governments and leaders of
democratic countries -- including the current administration in the United
States -- have basically been sending a message to the people: We do not care
about your aspiration for justice, rule of law and human rights; instead we are
going to partner with your authoritarian leaders.
Europe's leaders have also been totally disregarding calls by human rights
organizations to investigate Iran's mass murderer mullah -- who will also most
likely be the next Supreme Leader of Iran.
"That Ebrahim Raisi has risen to the presidency instead of being investigated
for the crimes against humanity of murder, enforced disappearance and torture,
is a grim reminder that impunity reigns supreme in Iran..... The circumstances
surrounding the fate of the victims and the whereabouts of their bodies are, to
this day, systematically concealed by the Iranian authorities, amounting to
ongoing crimes against humanity. — Agnès Callamard, Secretary General of Amnesty
International, June 19, 2021.
It is indeed shameful, and a blow to the people of Iran and advocates of human
rights and democracy, that European governments and leaders of democracies are
joining North Korea to congratulate Iran's mass murderer president -- and
wishing him success!
By handpicking a mass murderer to be president, the Iranian regime is sending a
strong message to the Iranian people and the world that it will not respect
human rights. Iran's President-elect Ebrahim Raisi in Tehran, on June 21, 2021.
The leaders of the European Union, who preach about human rights and democracy,
are not only turning a blind eye to the Iranian regime's handpicking of a mass
murderer, Ebrahim Raisi, to be the next president; they are also now joining
North Korea in congratulating the ruling mullahs and their new President Raisi.
Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen, issuing a message congratulating
Iran's new incoming president, stated that he is "confident" friendly
relationships between the Islamic Republic of Iran and Austria would continue.
"In his message," wrote the Islamic Republic News Agency, ".... he wished
success for president-elect Raisi and said that his country, as the host of
multinational negotiations over the Iran nuclear deal, is ready to make any
cooperation. He expressed hope that the Vienna talks will yield fruit in the
near future."
How could a leader of a democratic country congratulate a mass murderer? What
kind of message is he sending to the Iranian people who boycotted the elections
and called on the international community to investigate the new mullah
president?
By handpicking a mass murderer to be president, the Iranian regime is sending a
strong message to the Iranian people and the world that it will not respect
human rights. Yet, to enhance the regime's legitimacy, Iran's Ambassador to
Austria, Abbas Bagherpour, bragged:
"President @vanderbellen in an official message cordially congratulated
President-elect Dr. Ebrahim Raisi @raisi_com, wishing him every success,
referring to 7 centuries of friendly relations, re-assuring him of continuation
of multi-faceted bilateral relations in every fields."
Switzerland's President Guy Parmelin also congratulated the "Butcher of Tehran"
and wished him success. The Iranian Students' News Agency, a state-controlled
outlet, reported:
"Swiss President in the message wished success for Iranian President-elect
Ebrahim Raisi in his new position, expressed confidence that good bilateral
relations between Iran and Switzerland during the presidency of Raisi will be
strengthened more than ever.
"He also stressed that Switzerland is committed to strengthening dialogue and
cooperation with Iran aiming at increasing stability and prosperity in the
region, and considers it in the interest of all."
Those are more blows to the people of Iran. The people of Iran, like those of
Hong Kong and now Cuba, have been struggling and fighting to change their
regime, while European governments and leaders of democratic countries --
including the current administration in the United States (for instance here,
here and here) -- have basically been sending a message to the people: We do not
care about your aspiration for justice, rule of law and human rights; instead we
are going to partner with your authoritarian leaders.
The Iranian human rights lawyer Kaveh Moussavi tweeted:
"Shame on you, President of Austria, congratulating a mass murderer who through
massive fraud has muscled his way to the Presidency of Iran. We are going to
remember this abject cowardice when we rid Iran of this murderous kleptocracy!
Don't say we didn't warn you!"
Europe's leaders have also been completely disregarding calls by human rights
organizations to investigate Iran's mass murderer mullah -- he will also most
likely be the next Supreme Leader of Iran. Amnesty International's Secretary
General Agnès Callamard said out:
"That Ebrahim Raisi has risen to the presidency instead of being investigated
for the crimes against humanity of murder, enforced disappearance and torture,
is a grim reminder that impunity reigns supreme in Iran. In 2018, our
organization documented how Ebrahim Raisi had been a member of the 'death
commission' which forcibly disappeared and extrajudicially executed in secret
thousands of political dissidents in Evin and Gohardasht prisons near Tehran in
1988. The circumstances surrounding the fate of the victims and the whereabouts
of their bodies are, to this day, systematically concealed by the Iranian
authorities, amounting to ongoing crimes against humanity."
It was also under Raisi's watch as the head of Iran's Judiciary that nearly
1,500 people were killed during the widespread protests of 2019, many were
tortured, and high profile people such as the champion wrestler Navid Afkari
were executed.
Callamard added:
"As Head of the Iranian Judiciary, Ebrahim Raisi has presided over a spiralling
crackdown on human rights which has seen hundreds of peaceful dissidents, human
rights defenders and members of persecuted minority groups arbitrarily detained.
Under his watch, the judiciary has also granted blanket impunity to government
officials and security forces responsible for unlawfully killing hundreds of
men, women and children and subjecting thousands of protesters to mass arrests
and at least hundreds to enforced disappearance, and torture and other
ill-treatment during and in the aftermath of the nationwide protests of November
2019."
It is indeed shameful, and a blow to the people of Iran and advocates of human
rights and democracy, that European governments and leaders of democracies are
joining North Korea to congratulate Iran's mass murderer president -- and
wishing him success!
*Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a business strategist and advisor, Harvard-educated
scholar, political scientist, board member of Harvard International Review, and
president of the International American Council on the Middle East. He has
authored several books on Islam and US foreign policy. He can be reached at
Dr.Rafizadeh@Post.Harvard.Edu
© 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.
Turkey should prepare for new refugee influx from
Afghanistan
Sinem Cengiz/Arab News/July 17/2021
We often use numbers when discussing the topic of refugees, asylum seekers or
migrants who leave their home countries for a better future. However, the issue
is about more than just numbers; lives, integration with new societies in host
countries, and the future of coming generations are at stake. As Turkey’s last
ambassador to Syria, Omer Onhon, rightfully said: “While for the Netherlands or
Belgium the refugee issue might be just an academic topic to discuss at
conferences, for Turkey it is a huge reality that it may need to face for
years.”
After the US decided to withdraw its forces from Afghanistan, several reports
were published that highlighted a rising number of asylum seekers of Afghan
origin crossing Turkey’s eastern border due to the worsening security conditions
in their country. These reports triggered criticisms in the media, as well as in
parliament.
Turkey’s Deputy Interior Minister Ismail Catakli rejected claims that Afghan
refugees were crossing Turkey’s border with Iran in an uncontrolled manner,
saying that footage shared online does not reflect the truth. He added that
Turkey has completed 149 km of the planned 259-km security wall on the Iranian
border. Defense Minister Hulusi Akar also stated that the Turkish authorities
were closely following the developments in Afghanistan, including a potential
refugee influx toward Turkey, which already hosts millions of refugees.
A tough mission already awaits Turkey in Afghanistan, as it prepares to take
responsibility for security at Kabul airport, and there are also disquieting
challenges concerning the new refugee flow. For decades, Turkey has been a
critical refugee hotspot for hundreds of thousands of Afghans, who constitute
the second-largest group of refugees and asylum seekers registered in the
country. Its proximity to Europe has made it a transit hub for refugees fleeing
Iraq, Iran, Syria and Afghanistan as they make their “journey of hope.”
However, due to the deal signed between Turkey and the EU in 2016, the route to
Europe has largely been shut down, causing millions of refugees and asylum
seekers to stay within Turkey’s borders.
In June, Greece stated that Turkey was a safe country in which to seek
international protection. A joint decree from the Greek foreign and migration
ministries said that Turkey meets all criteria to examine asylum requests, as
“they (asylum seekers/refugees) are not in any danger … due to their race,
religion, citizenship, political beliefs or membership in some particular social
group, and can seek asylum in Turkey instead of in Greece.”This statement is
very problematic, firstly, as people who flee cannot be accepted or rejected
according to their “race, religion, citizenship or political beliefs.” This is
against the 1951 Refugee Convention. Secondly, they are not just numbers, but
humans. Once we stop categorizing these people according to their nations or
numbers, we may bring a possible solution a step closer. Finally, these people
should not be part of any political dispute between countries, as their lives
are at stake.
People fleeing Afghanistan generally do not consider Pakistan or Iran, which are
direct neighbors, when seeking refuge. In Iran, the economic conditions do not
allow refugees to find a better life, while Pakistan has its own problems
related to insecurity, poverty and unemployment. Many choose to travel to Turkey
and then stay there despite the crawling economic conditions in the country.
Once we stop categorizing these people according to their nations or numbers, we
may bring a possible solution a step closer.
In 2018, following a change in asylum procedures, the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees transferred refugee registration to the Turkish authorities. This has
raised questions over the number of asylum seekers in the country and whether
they are properly registered. The main opposition Republican People’s Party
(CHP) even recently submitted a motion in parliament seeking an investigation
into the issues Afghan-origin migrants and refugees face in Turkey. And several
reports have been published in Turkish media outlets questioning the
government's plan to deal with the new flow of refugees.
In today’s international media, it is hard to believe what is true or fake.
However, even if the footage circulating online was not filmed at Turkey’s
border, the reality remains that Turkey is a host country rather than just a
transit country for refugees and migrants. How the situation in Afghanistan will
affect Turkey in humanitarian terms is not hard to predict. Now that the Taliban
have strengthened, a new wave of refugees is expected to arrive in Turkey. The
country should prepare its plan clearly this time, calling on international
authorities to help it deal with the influx and avoid a new version of the Syria
case.
*Sinem Cengiz is a Turkish political analyst who specializes in Turkey’s
relations with the Middle East. Twitter: @SinemCngz
It is time for Biden to pull the plug on talks with Iran
Luke Coffey/Arab News/July 17/2021
This week US authorities charged four Iranian spies with plotting to kidnap an
American journalist from New York City, smuggle her to Venezuela using a
speedboat, and then fly her to Tehran. All of this because she criticized the
regime for its abuses of human rights.
Earlier in the month, Iranian-backed militias in Iraq and Syria targeted US
troops and diplomats using drones and rockets. Two American soldiers were
wounded in the attacks.
Iran is escalating tensions, probably to test the Biden administration on its
commitment to continuing the indirect talks with Tehran in Vienna about Iran’s
nuclear program. It is time for President Joe Biden to pull the plug on those
talks.
To be clear, in principle the US holding talks with Iran over its nuclear
program is not, in itself, a bad thing. But the conditions and circumstances
first must be right. Washington must enter talks with Tehran from a position of
strength. It cannot look desperate as it does so.
Despite the criticism he received at the time, former President Donald Trump was
correct in 2018 to withdraw from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA),
commonly referred to as the Iran nuclear deal. It was a bad deal when it was
signed in 2015 and remains a bad deal now. The Trump administration’s campaign
of maximum pressure was slowly nudging Tehran closer to the negotiating table on
terms that would most benefit the US.
However, Biden’s insistence on the campaign trail that the decision to leave the
JCPOA was terrible for US interests, and his commitment to rejoining the flawed
agreement, has weakened Washington’s negotiating position. His determination to
return to the deal, at almost any cost, has made the US look desperate. In the
eyes of Iran’s supreme leader, desperation is weakness. This is the reason why
the Iranian regime would even consider such an audacious kidnapping plot on US
soil as the one revealed this week. Even with Biden’s desire to rejoin the JCPOA,
however, it appears that the domestic political situations across Europe and in
Iran will prevent a renewed agreement in the near future.
In Europe, three countries matter most when it comes to the JCPOA talks: The UK,
Germany and France — and it is unlikely that any of them will get more involved
in the talks any time soon. Of the three, the UK is probably the most
open-minded about scrapping the 2015 nuclear deal and trying to negotiate a new
agreement with Iran. Prime Minister Boris Johnson previously has suggested he
supports a completely new deal but this view has not translated into a new UK
policy on the JCPOA. The domestic political churning in Germany and France means
that no major decisions on the Iran talks will be made in the near term.
Parliamentary elections in Germany in September are expected to be hotly
contested. In April, there will be a presidential election in France. It is
unlikely that authorities in either country will be willing to make any drastic
changes to their respective approaches to Iran or the JCPOA before these
elections take place. Another problem affecting Biden’s prospects of a
breakthrough in the talks is the domestic situation in Iran after the recent
presidential elections. The newly elected — or more accurately “selected” —
president, Ebrahim Raisi, is a well-known hard-liner. In fact, he holds the
dubious distinction of being the first Iranian president to enter office while
already under US sanctions (for his involvement in the mass executions of
political opponents three decades ago).
Sources in Iran claim that the talks in Vienna will not resume until after Raisi
formally takes over the reins of government, some time next month. This is a
delaying tactic, and it is possible he does not want to restart the talks at
all.
Raisi will not be as willing to talk to the US as his predecessor was. The
Europeans will not get involved in any meaningful way until major elections in
key countries have taken place. Meanwhile, Iran will continue to ratchet up the
pressure in the Middle East.
It is time, therefore, that Biden started dealing with the Iran that he is faced
with and not the Iran that he wants. Even though his administration has taken
the wrong approach so far, there is still time to correct course.
Biden must first finally acknowledge that the original 2015 deal is dead.
Reviving the JCPOA would let Tehran off the sanctions hook and undermine the
prospects for pressuring the regime to curb its malign activities across the
region.
Any new agreement should remove the sunset clauses regarding restrictions on
Iran’s nuclear activities, include a stronger verification mechanism, and
include restrictions on Iran’s ballistic missile program. In the meantime, the
US must maintain the sanctions on Iran. There should be no lifting them merely
in return for the promise of talks. Washington must enter talks with Tehran from
a position of strength. It cannot look desperate as it does so. It is realistic
to assume that Tehran would want economic incentives to restart talks. If this
is to happen, those economic incentives should be in the form of limited
disbursement of frozen Iranian assets and not the suspension of economic
sanctions. The Biden administration also needs to do a better job of consulting
regional allies regarding the status of the talks with Iran. It is concerning
that Biden has not yet visited the region since becoming president. Considering
the high stakes, his absence from the region is geopolitical negligence. At a
minimum, he should be routinely speaking to his counterparts in the Gulf — but
there is no substitute for face-to-face contact.
Since Biden entered the White House on Jan. 21, Iran has not demonstrated any
genuine desire to enter into meaningful talks or to change its malign behavior.
The recent kidnapping plot and the rocket attacks targeting US diplomats are the
latest examples of this. Until Biden changes his approach, and until Iran wants
to negotiate with the US more than the US wants to talk to Iran, nothing is
going to change.
*Luke Coffey is the director of the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign
Policy at the Heritage Foundation. Twitter: @LukeDCoffey