English LCCC Newsbulletin For
Lebanese, Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For September 07/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news
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Bible Quotations For today
Truly I tell you,
there is no one who has left house or wife or brothers or parents or children,
for the sake of the kingdom of God, who will not get back very much more in this
age, and in the age to come eternal life.
Saint Luke 18/18-30/:”A certain ruler asked him,
‘Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?’Jesus said to him, ‘Why
do you call me good? No one is good but God alone. You know the commandments:
“You shall not commit adultery; You shall not murder; You shall not steal; You
shall not bear false witness; Honour your father and mother.” ’He replied, ‘I
have kept all these since my youth.’When Jesus heard this, he said to him,
‘There is still one thing lacking. Sell all that you own and distribute the
money to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; then come, follow me.’
But when he heard this, he became sad; for he was very rich. Jesus looked at him
and said, ‘How hard it is for those who have wealth to enter the kingdom of God!
Indeed, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for
someone who is rich to enter the kingdom of God.’ Those who heard it said, ‘Then
who can be saved?’He replied, ‘What is impossible for mortals is possible for
God.’Then Peter said, ‘Look, we have left our homes and followed you.’ And he
said to them, ‘Truly I tell you, there is no one who has left house or wife or
brothers or parents or children, for the sake of the kingdom of God, who will
not get back very much more in this age, and in the age to come eternal life.”
Titles For The Latest English LCCC
Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on
September 06-07/2021
Miqati to Meet Aoun Tuesday as French-U.S. Efforts Intensify
Hizbullah to Meet Bassil Prior to 'Serious' Govt. Formation Bid
Report: Paris Says Bassil Not Iran Obstructing Govt. Formation
FPM MP Expects New Govt. in 'Next Few Hours'
Ibrahim to Meet with Aoun after Visiting Miqati
Lebanon Humanitarian Fund Allocates $6 Million to Respond to Fuel Crisis
Damascus positions itself as energy mafia for Lebanon/Seth J. Frantzman/Jerusalem
Post/September 06/2021
Aoun: Corrupt System Controls Lebanon
Geagea: Aoun’s Presidency Turned Lebanon into Failed State
Lebanon Ends 'Rupture' with Syria to Get Access to Egyptian Gas
6 Syrian Refugees Arrested in Lebanon at Risk of Deportation
Titles For The Latest English LCCC
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on September 06-07/2021
Israel’s IDF Chief: We have plans in place for when we decide to attack
Iran
France demands Iran answer questions about ‘undeclared nuclear material’
Taliban raise flag over resistance stronghold Panjshir after declaring victory
Panjshir Resistance Leader Calls for 'National Uprising' in Afghanistan
Iran 'Strongly' Condemns Taliban Offensive on Panjshir Valley
Afghans take to the streets protesting against Taliban in support of Ahmad
Massoud
Taliban ask former Afghan forces to integrate with group, won’t tolerate
‘insurgency’
Pope responds to Israeli criticism over comments on Jewish law
Jordan to Host Quartet Meeting to Discuss Gas Supplies to Lebanon
Egypt Opens Air Bridge to Help Sudanese Affected by Floods
Israel launches airstrikes against Gaza after incendiary balloon attacks
Police: 6 Palestinians Escape from High-security Israeli Prison
Libyan Minister to Asharq Al-Awsat: Elections Could Be Held in Phases
Son of Gaddafi Freed from Libyan Jail
Canada/Statement on passing of 1,000 days since Michael Kovrig and Michael
Spavor were arbitrarily detained in China
Algeria senses weakness of its diplomatic corps
New season of Turkish TV series puts ties with UAE at risk
In reward to Macron, Iraq signs $27 billion deal with TotalEnergies
Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC
English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on
September 06-07/2021
Erdogan's Plans for the Future of Afghanistan: China, Russia and
Terrorists/Burak Bekdil/Gatestone Institute/September 06/2021
Taliban lies will build a generation of Afghan women becoming second-class
citizens/Amal al-Breiki/Al Arabiya/September 06/2021
Iraq’s Assyrian Christians, Yazidis face extinction if Biden pulls US troops
out/Abraham Cooper/Al Arabiya/September 06/2021
The Latest English LCCC Lebanese &
Lebanese Related News & Editorials published
on September 06-07/2021
Miqati to Meet Aoun Tuesday as French-U.S. Efforts
Intensify
Naharnet/September 06/2021
A meeting Tuesday between President Michel Aoun and PM-designate Najib Miqati
might be the last chance to form a new government, a media report said.
“Miqati will visit the President tomorrow carrying a new line-up. But if no
pre-visit agreement was reached for the issue of the economy portfolio and if
Miqati does not drop his new demand for getting the energy portfolio, tomorrow
will be the date of plunging into the unknown, and it is not known whether
Miqati’s next step would be resignation,” informed sources told al-Akhbar
newspaper in remarks published Monday. MP Jamil al-Sayyed meanwhile announced
that Washington made high-level contacts with Aoun and Miqati over the past 24
hours to press for the formation of the new government as soon as possible.
“This was accompanied by an intensive French endeavor that resulted in a
near-final agreement on a government comprised of eight ministers for each
camp,” al-Akhbar added.
Hizbullah to Meet Bassil Prior to 'Serious' Govt.
Formation Bid
Naharnet/September 06/2021
A Hizbullah delegation will meet with Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran
Bassil on Monday to inform him that “there is a decisive inclination” to form a
new government, al-Liwaa newspaper said. The daily added that a “serious
attempt” to achieve a breakthrough in the formation efforts is expected on
Tuesday, when PM-designate Najib Miqati will meet with President Michel
Aoun.There will be efforts to “convince President Aoun that he does not have the
right to obtain the economy portfolio alongside the energy and social affairs
portfolios,” al-Liwaa said.
Report: Paris Says Bassil Not Iran Obstructing Govt.
Formation
Naharnet/September 06/2021
Iran is not obstructing the formation of the new government in Lebanon, a senior
French source has said, hours after phone talks between the French and Iranian
presidents. “Paris is convinced that Iran is not impeding the government’s
formation and there are no Iranian demands regarding the government. The one who
is obstructing it is (Free Patriotic Movement chief) Jebran Bassil, who wants
everything for himself,” the source told Annahar newspaper in remarks published
Monday. “Paris is asking Hizbullah to press its Aounist allies, but the party
does not want a dispute with them,” the source added. The source also said that
France is “constantly” telling PM-designate Najib Miqati to form the government,
noting that the latter was not selected by Paris for the post. Pointing out that
France is “not advising” Miqati not to step down, the source said that Paris is,
however, pressing the PM-designate to speed up the government’s formation.
FPM MP Expects New Govt. in 'Next Few Hours'
Naharnet/September 06/2021
The general atmosphere is “positive” and the new government is supposed to be
formed in the “next few hours,” a Free Patriotic Movement lawmaker said on
Monday. “To us, there are no longer obstacles that prevent the government’s
formation and most hurdles have been resolved,” MP Eddie Maalouf told al-Jadeed
TV, noting that “it is not true that the positive atmosphere is fake.”Denying
that President Michel Aoun and the FPM have been seeking a so-called blocking
one-third share, Maalouf said political rivals had “invented that to refrain
from forming the government.”Maalouf added that FPM chief Jebran Bassil has not
engaged in any government formation negotiations, denying media reports about an
expected visit by a Hizbullah delegation to Bassil. The lawmaker also said that
the FPM-led Strong Lebanon bloc will decide whether or not to grant the
government its confidence “based on its program,” adding that his bloc “has many
choices should the government not be formed, one of which would be resignation
from parliament.”
Ibrahim to Meet with Aoun after Visiting Miqati
Naharnet/September 06/2021
General Security chief Maj. Gen. Abbas Ibrahim has visited Prime
Minister-designate Najib Miqati to proceed with the discussion regarding the
distribution of the ministerial portfolios, media reports said. Informed sources
told al-Joumhouria newspaper that Ibrahim will also meet with President Michel
Aoun today, Monday, to inform him of the outcome of his meeting with Miqati and
“to suggest some ideas” that might help in the government formation process. The
sources also said that contacts have been made “away from the media,” without
revealing the identity of the participants. Other sources also reported to the
newspaper that “work is being done in complete secrecy” and that “its results
will be seen in the coming days.”The sources also advised against making "hasty
conclusions,” claiming that “things are going as they should.”
Lebanon Humanitarian Fund Allocates $6 Million to
Respond to Fuel Crisis
Naharnet/September 06/2021
The United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator for Lebanon, Najat Rochdi, has
announced a US$6 million allocation from the Lebanon Humanitarian Fund (LHF) to
ensure the continuation of critical health care services affected by the ongoing
fuel crisis in the country.
This will complement a $4 million allocation from the Central Emergency Response
Fund (CERF) in support of water services as announced last week by the Emergency
Relief Coordinator. The announcement comes as severe electricity and fuel
shortages have been affecting Lebanon, threatening essential services such as
health care and water provision, and putting 100,000 families on the brink of a
humanitarian catastrophe. The new LHF reserve allocation aims to facilitate
access to fuel for critical life saving health service providers, including 246
Primary Health Care centers, 554 dispensaries and 65 hospitals, to continue to
operate over the next three months. A central warehouse and distribution sites
at district level used to maintain cold chain and safe storage of essential
health commodities, such as vaccines and other temperature-sensitive critical
medicines, will also be supported. The fuel will be directly distributed to the
facilities. "The ongoing fuel crisis has brought additional hardship to the
vulnerable populations who have already been suffering from the severe
consequences of the compounded crises in the country. With generous
contributions from the donors, and as a complement to the CERF allocation, the
LHF will provide exceptional time-bound humanitarian support to ensure
continuation of critical health services in the country for a maximum of three
months, said Najat Rochdi, the Humanitarian Coordinator for Lebanon. “The
intervention is a one-off emergency support, which will not be extended beyond a
maximum duration of three months. The responsibility to ensure uninterrupted
provision of basic services including health care and water delivery remains
with the Government of Lebanon. All efforts should be expanded to implement
sustainable solutions to the on-going energy crisis the earliest possible,”
Rochdi added.
The LHF-supported interventions are part of the 2021-2022 Emergency Response
Plan for Lebanon (ERP) -- a time-bound humanitarian plan aiming to address the
immediate humanitarian needs of the most vulnerable populations affected by the
ongoing crisis. The LHF is a Country-based Pooled Fund led by the Humanitarian
Coordinator for Lebanon and managed by OCHA. Initiated in 2014, the Fund
supports the strategic delivery of timely, accountable and effective
humanitarian assistance to the most vulnerable people in Lebanon. The LHF
allocation complements a $4 million allocation from the CERF, which was
announced by the Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency
Relief Coordinator, Martin Griffiths, during his visit to Lebanon on 31 August
2021. The CERF funding aims to facilitate access to fuel for water
establishments servicing 2.3 million people across Lebanon.
Damascus positions itself as energy mafia for Lebanon
Seth J. Frantzman/Jerusalem Post/September 06/2021
Move by Syrian regime and Lebanon could gain legitimacy for Damascus as it could
try to get around US sanctions and move closer to Arab states.
Every good mafia don knows that the way to achieve more profit and power is to
position oneself between things that people want and semi-legal services that a
mafia can provide while corrupting institutions and law enforcers to allow the
service to continue.
This may involve gambling or corrupting unions or moving drugs in a traditional
mafia setting, but in a state setting, it can also mean putting a totalitarian
regime state seeking legitimacy and profits astride the energy needs of another
neighboring state. It seems the Assad family in Syria, which has plenty of
mafia-like characteristics and mafia-like friends in Iran and Hezbollah, is now
doing this to Lebanon’s energy sector.
A senior Lebanese delegation went to Syria last week with the intention of
trying to get Syria to be a conduit for electricity and natural gas. This would
help ease Lebanon’s fuel crises and the financial disaster that Lebanon is now
living with. According to the reports, sending the delegation was an attempt to
repair relations between Lebanon and Syria. This is mostly a false narrative
because Hezbollah, which effectively controls Lebanon, is an ally of the Syrian
regime and of Iran and Iran is an ally of the Syrian regime. Hezbollah sent many
fighters to support Bashar al-Assad’s regime during the war and Hezbollah
conducts Lebanese foreign policy on some issues, and insofar as it does, Lebanon
and Syria are allies.It is true that Syria occupied Lebanon for decades,
withdrawing only after Hezbollah assassinated former Lebanese Prime Minister
Rafic Hariri in 2005. For a short period, it seemed that those opposed to
Hezbollah and Syria might come to power under an alliance led by Saad Hariri,
son of Rafic. To prevent this, Hezbollah launched a war against Israel in 2006
and then engineered a dispute with Hariri and his allies in 2008 over
Hezbollah’s demand to have its own communications network to support its
state-within-a-state.
Fast forward to 2021. Lebanon is in a financial crisis. Most of the country is
now on the verge of poverty. The country is billions in debt. Dangerous ammonium
nitrate, stockpiled at the port, likely by Hezbollah, blew up last year and
destroyed part of Beirut, killing over 200 people. Hezbollah holds the
government hostage, has an ally in the president and has prevented a new Prime
Minister from being appointed, much as it prevented a president from being
appointed for years. This is the Hezbollah model: Hollow out Lebanon, turn it
into a province within "Hezbollahstan," and then use it as a conduit for cash
and corruption and weapons.
It is true that Syria occupied Lebanon for decades, withdrawing only after
Hezbollah assassinated former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafic Hariri in 2005. For
a short period, it seemed that those opposed to Hezbollah and Syria might come
to power under an alliance led by Saad Hariri, son of Rafic. To prevent this,
Hezbollah launched a war against Israel in 2006 and then engineered a dispute
with Hariri and his allies in 2008 over Hezbollah’s demand to have its own
communications network to support its state-within-a-state.
Fast forward to 2021. Lebanon is in a financial crisis. Most of the country is
now on the verge of poverty. The country is billions in debt. Dangerous ammonium
nitrate, stockpiled at the port, likely by Hezbollah, blew up last year and
destroyed part of Beirut, killing over 200 people. Hezbollah holds the
government hostage, has an ally in the president and has prevented a new Prime
Minister from being appointed, much as it prevented a president from being
appointed for years. This is the Hezbollah model: Hollow out Lebanon, turn it
into a province within "Hezbollahstan," and then use it as a conduit for cash
and corruption and weapons.
As Lebanon has sunk deeper into the swamp of Hezbollah’s grasp, it has become
poor and more lawless. Now the question is whether it can have basic things,
like gasoline at the pump, or electricity. Once a wealthy, prosperous and
open-minded country, Lebanon is slouching toward neverending disaster.
Enter the Syrian mafia state. When your neighbor is in distress the natural
thing for the mafia to do is to offer its support but in return for a favor. In
this case, Lebanon’s delegation went to Damascus with the caretaker Defense
Minister and acting Foreign Minister Zeina Akar, to ask Syria to enable Egyptian
natural gas to enter from Jordan. It’s an offer that Syria would like because it
makes Syria a broker for Lebanon, it gives Damascus legitimacy and leverage.
Magically, it transforms Damascus from a pariah, to “helping” Lebanon solve its
crisis. Damascus rides to the rescue, and Syria’s regime has wanted this
opportunity for years.
“The Lebanese side asked Syria’s help in facilitating the transfer of Egyptian
natural gas and Jordanian electricity through Syrian territories. The Syrian
side welcomed the request,” said Nasri Khoury, the head of Damascus-based Syrian
Lebanese Higher Council, a government-linked body for bilateral relations. He
spoke following a two-and-a-half-hour meeting in Damascus, according to the AP.
Now, the important part. “The meeting is also a test for US sanctions against
Iran and Syria, as Lebanon seeks to use Syrian pipelines and Iranian fuel
through Syrian ports to tackle its power crisis,” the AP report noted. This
means that the real incentive for Syria is that it can escape sanctions. Iran
has been shipping fuel to Syria this month as well, hoping to offload it in
Syria and transport it to Hezbollah. A US Senate delegation that recently
visited Lebanon warned against the Iranian fuel shipments.
According to a Reuters report, “the United States has been in talks with Egypt
and Jordan over a plan to ease Lebanon's power crisis. The Lebanese presidency
has said it involves using Egyptian gas to generate power in Jordan that would
be transmitted via Syria, which is under US sanctions including the so-called
Caesar act.”
That means that Syria is basically saying to the US that either it will
facilitate Iranian gasoline going to Lebanon or seek US support to go against
America’s own sanctions, to enable Syria to bring in gas and electricity from
Jordan and Egypt, empowering the Syrian regime as it becomes the new boss of
Lebanon’s electric and gas needs. This is a brilliant maneuver for Syria. Egypt
has been hinting it wants to bring Syria back into the fold. In addition, the
Gulf states, Jordan and Iraq want a stable Syria and have also put out feelers
to increase Damascus’ role in the Arab league and welcome it back into the Arab
camp. The point is that the Syrian regime was sidelined by the war and many
countries even worked with rebel groups.
Today, there is no appetite for more Syrian rebels. Countries want regimes and
stability. No one wants the extremism of power vacumes. But Syria’s regime,
backed by Russia and Iran wants things too. It wants trade, legitimacy and cash.
It knows that relying on Iran is like a poor man relying on another pauper. Iran
is under sanctions too. Syria wants the legitimacy that comes with brokering a
deal with Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon with quiet or tacit US support. This is the
magic wand around US sanctions. And Iranian gas can flow as well to help
Hezbollah. Everyone wins, in the Syrian regime view. Hezbollah wins. Iran wins.
Egypt and Jordan can also get things. Iraq may win as well, as trucks from Iran
transit Iraq to Albukamal.
A hidden aside to this may be why Russia brokered the deal in Dara’a that ended
months of fighting and saw 50,000 people displaced. Now Dara’a is quiet. The
short-lived rebellion there, the first since the regime retook the area in 2018,
was a threat to Damascus and its image. Now, with Russia as a broker again in
southern Syria, gas and energy can transit from Jordan. Big money and influence
may be at stake.
Regional media sense that something is afoot. Al-Jarida in Kuwait noted that
this was the first Lebanese visit of this kind since 2011. “This visit, the
first since 2011, has two objectives; The first is technical-economic research
related to the import of Egyptian gas and Jordanian electricity through Syrian
territory. The second is political, giving victory to Hezbollah and an
opportunity for President Michel Aoun to strengthen his political position,
based on his relationship and his openness to Syria.”
Al-Alam in Iran noted that “after the Syrian-Lebanese talks session at the
Syrian Foreign Ministry building, Majdi al-Khoury said: ‘The Lebanese side
requested the possibility of Syria's assistance to Lebanon in passing Egyptian
gas and Jordanian electricity through Syrian territory. The Syrian side welcomed
the request and confirmed Syria's readiness to meet that.’”
Aoun: Corrupt System Controls Lebanon
Asharq Al Awsat/September 06/2021
Lebanese President Michel Aoun continued on Sunday his verbal campaign against
what he calls the corrupt system, which he said controls the country and fears
accountability. “Failure of every plan for financial and economic recovery means
one thing, which is that the corrupt system that still controls the country and
the people fears accountability,” he said during a meeting with a youth
delegation at the Baabda Palace. Aoun explained that a recovery plan stems from
three main pillars: identifying losses, defining responsibilities and
accountability, and determining treatment methods.
He added that the failure to determine the financial losses and their
distribution between the central bank, banks and the state led to two serious
matters: First, ignoring those responsible for the financial ruin of the country
and second, holding the Lebanese people solely responsible for the financial
collapse, and depleting their deposits. “The people must know who is humiliating
them on a daily basis as they try to obtain their most basic rights and who is
preventing them from freely accessing their money at banks,” Aoun said. He added
that every popular revolution must aim to identify and distribute losses, define
responsibilities, hold officials accountable, and find solutions and identify
those who caused the financial disaster. The people alone should not be held
responsible for the crisis, he urged.
Geagea: Aoun’s Presidency Turned Lebanon into Failed State
Beirut, Tehran, London/Asharq Al Awsat/September 06/2021
Lebanese Force leader Samir Geagea slammed on Sunday President Michel Aoun,
saying his term was catastrophic for Lebanon. “His term is that of complete
collapse that is being managed by ruling groups that have surrendered authority
and state sovereignty,” he added during an address commemorating LF martyrs.
“They have turned Lebanon into a failed state that is ruled by the corrupt,
failures, thieves, traitors and criminals,” he stressed. “There can be no
salvation and progress with this ruling class, whose strong foundation is the
Hezbollah and Free Patriotic Movement,” he added. The FPM was founded by Aoun
and is now headed by his son-in-law Gebran Bassil. “Aoun’s presidency has been
very catastrophic for all Lebanese, especially the Christians,” remarked Geagea.
He acknowledged the criticism against the LF that had reached an agreement with
the FPM in 2016 that ensured Aoun’s election as president.
“We extremely regret that a move that was full of good intentions would
backfire,” he said. The Maarab agreement, he stressed, had national and
Christian intentions. It sought to end the presidential vacuum, achieve national
unity and mend historic wounds. “Unfortunately, the deal turned into an
unprecedented tragedy for Lebanon,” lamented Geagea. “Lebanon is in need of a
captain, who can steer the state ship towards safety, not a pirate, who has
taken the people hostage to his selfishness and is steering the ship according
to his interests.”Separately, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi informed his
French counterpart Emmanuel Macron on Sunday that Tehran supports the formation
of a strong Lebanese government. In telephone talks with Macron, he said Iran
was prepared to cooperate with France to that end. The formation of a strong
government “may ensure and protect the rights of the Lebanese people,” he was
quoted as saying by Iranian media. “We are ready to work with France towards
Lebanon and its development,” he stressed, adding that Iran, France and
Hezbollah’s efforts to form a strong government “fall in Lebanon’s favor.”
Lebanon Ends 'Rupture' with Syria to Get Access to Egyptian
Gas
Beirut - Nazir Rida/Asharq Al Awsat/September 06/2021
The Lebanese government ended on Saturday a rupture in official relations with
Syria, with a high-ranking ministerial delegation visiting Damascus and holding
talks to obtain its approval to allow the entry of gas and electric energy from
Egypt and Jordan through Syrian territories.
Lebanon’s deputy Prime Minister, Zeina Akar, led the first official government
visit to Syria since the outbreak of the conflict there, as Lebanon had
officially followed the principle of “disassociation,” amid major divisions
between the political forces over the relationship with Damascus and Hezbollah’s
participation in the fighting alongside the Syrian regime forces. Two weeks
after the announcement of the Lebanese presidency of Washington’s approval to
help Lebanon import electric energy and gas from Egypt and Jordan, through
Syria, the Lebanese delegation headed to Damascus to meet with Foreign Minister
Faisal Miqdad and Minister of Oil Bassam Tohme.
In a press conference following the meeting, the Secretary-General of the
Lebanese-Syrian Higher Council, Nasri Khoury, said: “The Lebanese side demanded
Syria’s assistance to Lebanon in obtaining Egyptian gas and Jordanian
electricity through Syrian territory. The Syrian side affirmed Syria’s readiness
to meet that request.”The two sides agreed to follow up on technical matters
through a joint technical team. Tohme told reporters that the goal of the joint
team was to determine the “readiness and safety of the infrastructure,” which
suffered “significant damage” during the conflict. Following the acute fuel
crisis in Lebanon, the US effort led to an initiative to draw electrical energy
from Jordan through Syria, by providing quantities of Egyptian gas to Jordan,
enabling it to produce additional quantities of electricity to be placed on the
grid linking Jordan with Lebanon via Syria. The initiative also provides for
facilitating the transport of Egyptian gas through Jordan and Syria, to reach
northern Lebanon. A similar agreement allows Egyptian gas to reach Lebanon to
operate gas-fired power stations, which have been out of service for 11 years.
The Arab Gas Pipeline extends by land from Egypt to Syria and Lebanon via
Jordan, and crosses from the Homs region in central Syria, all the way to Deir
Ammar in northern Lebanon.
6 Syrian Refugees Arrested in Lebanon at Risk of Deportation
Associated Press/September 06/2021
Lawyers of six Syrian refugees arrested in Lebanon said on Sunday that the
country's security services have given them a 24-hour ultimatum — either leave
Lebanon to a third country or be deported to Syria, the war-ravaged country they
fled. Lawyer Mohammed Sablouh said the move is highly unusual, is a violation of
Lebanon's international obligations and laws, and seriously endangers the men's
lives. The authorities "know very well that since the (men) were arrested
outside the embassy, they are therefore wanted by the Syrian regime, and there
is a really high probability they would be tortured or in grave danger," Sablouh
told The Associated Press. "This is a violation of the anti-torture convention
and Lebanese laws."There was no immediate comment from Lebanese security, and it
is not immediately clear who is responsible for the decision that came 10 days
after the men's arrest, and without a court ruling. The threat of deportation is
particularly concerning given that violence has recently resumed in the hometown
of most of the arrested Syrians. Five of the men are from the southern province
of Daraa, where clashes have recently erupted between government and allied
forces and opposition gunmen, wrecking a three-year old Russian-negotiated
truce. According to Lebanese law, the men should be put on trial, and could be
either sentenced to prison or sent home after serving their sentences. Lebanon
is home to over 1 million Syrian refugees, who now make up more than a quarter
of the population.
In Spring of 2019, Lebanon's Higher Defense Council, a government body in charge
of national security and headed by the President, decided to deport refugees who
entered Lebanon "illegally" after April 2019 — a clear violation of
international laws. Amnesty International said since then and up until August of
the same year, nearly 2,500 Syrians were forcibly deported back to Syria.
Deportations slowed down during the pandemic restrictions of 2020, according to
local monitors.
Sablouh said the lawyers will appeal to prosecutors on Monday for an immediate
stay of the order. The men were arrested in the last week of August, first by
the Lebanese army, for entering the country illegally. They were picked up
outside the Syrian embassy where they were to be issued passports.
Four days later, they were transferred to the custody of general security. On
Thursday, Amnesty International urged authorities against deporting the men,
saying it would endanger their lives and calling for their release, or sending
them to trial. "Arbitrary detention, enforced disappearance and torture remain
rife in Syria, and armed hostilities in some parts of the country have
intensified significantly," said Lynn Maalouf, regional deputy director for
Amnesty International. "No part of Syria is safe for returns and these men must
be protected." The ultimatum was made by telephone to lawyer Jihad Deeb, who
represents five of the six men, on Sunday — a weekend day making the ultimatum
even more impossible to meet. Meanwhile, the passports of the men were still
with the Syrian embassy. The caller said the men have 24 hours to produce
passports and visas to a third country, or they will be deported. Deeb said
three of the men were members of the opposition in Daraa, who had reached a
settlement with the Syrian government there, but escaped nearly three weeks ago
when they were asked to fight against other opposition members. "They told me: "Ustaz
(Mr.), please let them sentence us to death in Lebanon, but not send us back to
the Syrian regime," Deeb said.
The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
September 06-07/2021
Israel’s IDF Chief: We have plans in
place for when we decide to attack Iran
Tuqa Khalid, Al Arabiya English/06 September ,2021
Israel has put more extensive plans in place for when it decides to “attack”
Iran, Defense Force Chief of Staff Aviv Kochavi said on Monday. “We have greatly
accelerated our preparations for activities in Iran,” Kochavi told Israeli news
site Walla, adding that a considerable increase in the budget has been allocated
to that purpose, with more intelligence and operational capabilities assigned.
Israel views long time foe Iran as an existential threat. Tensions between the
two has heightened after a slew of tanker attacks, sabotage operations and
assassinations. He added that Israel was ramping up its operations to stem
Iran’s influence in Syria specifically. “The main goal is to reduce Iran’s
presence in the Middle East with an emphasis on Syria and elsewhere. Those
operations are taking place all over the Middle East, against Hamas [in
Palestine], against Hezbollah [in Lebanon],” Kochavi said. Iran has long been
accused of fanning the flames of violence in the Middle East through its network
of Shia proxies in the region, specifically in Iraq, Lebanon, and Yemen.
Hezbollah and Hamas have long enjoyed financial and military support from
Tehran. Israeli defense officials assess Iran spends nearly $1 billion annually
on Hezbollah, and $100 million on Hamas.
France demands Iran answer questions about ‘undeclared
nuclear material’
Tuqa Khalid, Al Arabiya English/06 September ,2021
France demanded Iran provide a full explanation about the presence of
“undeclared nuclear material” in the country, the foreign ministry said on
Monday. “Iran must immediately provide the necessary full and technically
credible explanations to the questions the Agency is asking about the presence
of undeclared nuclear material in Iran,” a ministry spokesman said. “We call on
Iran to confirm to the International Atomic Energy Agency the continued
implementation of temporary measures under the technical understanding reached
between them. Any interruption would compromise the IAEA’s knowledge of Iran’s
nuclear activities. Iran must immediately resume full cooperation with the IAEA,”
the official added. The IAEA had said in a report last month that Iran increased
the purity of its refined uranium from 20 percent to 60 percent in April.
Uranium can be used to make the core of a nuclear bomb. Weapons grade uranium is
approximately at 90 percent purity. The move to enrich uranium to higher purity
is a violation of the 2015 nuclear deal, which set a maximum limit of uranium
purity enrichment at 3.67 percent. Nuclear negotiations between Iran and the US
and its Western allies have stalled under the presidency of Ebrahim Raisi who
was sworn in last month. The hardline president said on Saturday Iran was ready
to hold talks regarding reviving the nuclear deal but not “under pressure” and
with the ultimate goal of sanctions on his country being lifted.
Taliban raise flag over resistance stronghold Panjshir
after declaring victory
Tuqa Khalid, Al Arabiya English/06 September ,2021
The Taliban raised the group’s flag outside the Governor's office in the Annaba
district of Panjshir, home of the resistance movement, after declaring the
province has been captured. Panjshir was the last part of Afghanistan where the
Taliban didn’t have complete control. It was also home to the anti-Taliban
movement the National Resistance Front (NRF) which mobilized under the
leadership of Ahmad Massoud, the slain hero of the anti-Soviet resistance Ahmad
Shah Massoud. After several days of intense fighting and heavy casualties on
both sides, the Taliban declared victory on Monday, while the resistance denied
defeat. Massoud released an audio message in which he called for a “national
uprising.”He accused the Taliban of using “foreign mercenaries” and promised
that the NRF will continue to fight. “We request other brothers and sisters,
wherever you are and with whatever means you are capable, to rise up and resist
against the imposition of a servile and subjugated future in Afghanistan,”
Massoud said. He said the Taliban have “grown more vicious, more cruel, more
fundamentalist and more discriminatory.”A day earlier, Massoud had heeded a call
by religious clerics to end the fighting and said he was ready to talk to the
Taliban about a ceasefire, given that the group withdraw from Panjshir. In his
audio message, he accused the Taliban of discarding that resolution to end
hostilities.
Panjshir Resistance Leader Calls for 'National Uprising'
in Afghanistan
Agence France Press/06 September ,2021
The leader of the resistance movement in Afghanistan's Panjshir Valley on Monday
called for a "national uprising" against the Taliban. In an audio message sent
to media, National Resistance Front commander Ahmad Massoud said: "Wherever you
are, inside or outside, I call on you to begin a national uprising for the
dignity, freedom and prosperity of our country."
Iran 'Strongly' Condemns Taliban Offensive on Panjshir Valley
Agence France Presse/06 September ,2021
Iran on Monday "strongly" condemned the Taliban's military offensive against
holdout fighters in Afghanistan's Panjshir Valley, as the Islamist group claimed
it had taken control of the area. "The news coming from Panjshir is truly
worrying," Iran's foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh told reporters.
"The assault is strongly condemned." Iran, the region's dominant Muslim Shiite
power, had until now refrained from criticizing the Taliban since the Sunni
group seized Kabul on August 15. The Taliban on Monday claimed victory in the
mountainous Panjshir area, with a spokesman declaring "our country is completely
taken out of the quagmire of war", three weeks after the Islamists captured the
capital. But the National Resistance Front (NRF) -- made up of anti-Taliban
militia and former Afghan security forces -- said its fighters were still
present in "strategic positions" across the valley, and that they were
continuing the struggle. "On the question of Panjshir, I have insisted on the
fact that it be resolved by dialogue in the presence of all the Afghan elders,"
Khatibzadeh said. "The Taliban must equally respect their obligations in terms
of international law, and their commitments," he added, affirming that "Iran
will work to put an end to all the suffering of the Afghan people in favor of
establishing a representative government for all Afghans". Alluding to Pakistan,
Khatibzadeh said Iran condemned "all foreign interference" in Afghan affairs.
"We would like to inform our friends, and those who might make the strategic
error of entering Afghanistan with different intentions, that Afghanistan is not
a country which accepts the enemy (or) the aggressor" on its soil, Iran's
foreign ministry spokesman added. Iran, which shares a 900 kilometer border with
Afghanistan, did not recognize the Taliban during their 1996 to 2001 stint in
power. Already host to nearly 3.5 million Afghans, and fearing a new influx,
Tehran has however sought to sketch a rapprochement with the Taliban since their
lightning seizure of Kabul amid the US withdrawal last month.
Afghans take to the streets protesting against Taliban
in support of Ahmad Massoud
Tuqa Khalid, Al Arabiya English/07 September ,2021
Hundreds of Afghans took to the streets in the capital Kabul and Mazar-i-Sharif
city Monday night protesting against Taliban rule in support of the resistance
movement led by Ahmad Massoud. Videos on social media showed crowds chanting
“death to Taliban, long live Afghanistan” as people marched in the dark streets.
Earlier in the day, the Taliban had announced it had captured Panjshir province,
the last stronghold of the anti-Taliban movement, the National Resistance Front
(NRF), which mobilized under the leadership of Ahmad Massoud, the slain hero of
the anti-Soviet resistance Ahmad Shah Massoud. After which, Massoud released an
audio message in which he called for a “national uprising.”“We request other
brothers and sisters, wherever you are and with whatever means you are capable,
to rise up and resist against the imposition of a servile and subjugated future
in Afghanistan,” Massoud said. In his audio message, Massoud accused the Taliban
of using “foreign mercenaries”, without naming a specific country. The chants by
the protesters also included “death to Pakistan.”The US has long accused
Pakistan of supporting the Taliban; a charge Islamabad denies. Pakistan's spy
chief Lieutenant General Faiz Hameed flew into Kabul on Saturday. It was not
clear what his agenda was, but a senior official in Pakistan said earlier in the
week that Hameed, who heads the powerful Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI)
agency, could help the Taliban reorganize the Afghan military.Regional media
reports, citing anonymous sources, said that Pakistan provided air support for
the Taliban in their strikes against the resistance fighters in Panjshir.
Taliban ask former Afghan forces to integrate with
group, won’t tolerate ‘insurgency’
AFP/06 September ,2021
The Taliban on Monday called on former members of the Afghan forces to integrate
with the new hardline rulers. “The Afghan forces who were trained in the past 20
years will be asked to rejoin the security departments alongside Taliban
members,” spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told a press conference in the capital
Kabul. The spokesman added that any insurgency against their rule would be “hit
hard”, after earlier saying they had captured the Panjshir Valley -- the last
pocket of resistance. “The [Taliban] is very sensitive about insurgencies.
Anyone who tries to start an insurgency will be hit hard. We will not allow
another,” Mujahid said. “Anyone who picks up arms and start another resistance,
without any doubts, will be our enemy.” “The war has ended, the country is
getting out of the crisis. It is now time for peace and reconstruction. We need
the people to support us.”Three weeks after seizing power but with no government
so far announced, the spokesman said an “interim” system would first be
announced to allow for changes. “Final decisions have been taken, we are now
working on the technical issues,” he said. “We will announce the new government
as soon as the technical issues are resolved.” A key issue for the Taliban is
the reopening of the airport in Kabul, which was the scene of a massive US-led
evacuation plan that ended last week. Qatar has been working with the Taliban on
getting the airport back up and running, and Mujahid said “serious efforts” were
under way to restore operations. “Technical teams from Qatar, Turkey and UAE are
working hard to repair the equipment,” he said, adding international flights
would resume “soon”. Since their sweep to power last month, the Taliban have
been met with widespread condemnation from the international community, with
many fearing the government will be similar to the brutal regime of 1996 to 2001
when they were first in power. Mujahid told the journalists at the press
conference that “Afghanistan has the right to be recognized”. “The international
community should open their embassies in Kabul,” he said.
Pope responds to Israeli criticism over comments on
Jewish law
Reuters/September 06/2021
For his part, the pope appeared to go out of his way in his last two public
appearances to try to clear up what the Vatican considers a misunderstanding.
Pope Francis has moved to allay Jewish concerns over comments he made about
their books of sacred law, following a demand for clarification from Israel's
top rabbis, Vatican and Jewish community sources said on Monday. Last month
Reuters reported exclusively that Rabbi Rasson Arousi, chair of the Commission
of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel for Dialogue with the Holy See, had written a
stern letter to the Vatican, saying Francis' comments appeared to suggest that
the Torah, or Jewish law, was obsolete. At a general audience on Aug. 11, the
pope said: "The law (Torah) however does not give life.""It does not offer the
fulfillment of the promise because it is not capable of being able to fulfill
it... Those who seek life need to look to the promise and to its fulfillment in
Christ." The Torah, the first five books of the Hebrew Bible, contains hundreds
of commandments for Jews to follow in their everyday lives. The measure of
adherence to the wide array of guidelines differs between Orthodox Jews and
Reform Jews. Arousi sent his letter on behalf of the Chief Rabbinate - the
supreme rabbinic authority for Judaism in Israel - to Cardinal Kurt Koch, whose
Vatican department includes a commission for religious relations with Jews.
In the letter Arousi asked Koch to "convey our distress to Pope Francis" and
asked for a clarification from the pope to "ensure that any derogatory
conclusions drawn from this homily are clearly repudiated."
RECONCILIATION
Francis then asked Koch to explain that his words on the Torah reflecting on the
writings of St. Paul in the New Testament should not be taken as a judgment on
Jewish law, the sources said. Last week Koch sent a letter to Arousi containing
a quote made by Pope Francis in 2015: "The Christian confessions find their
unity in Christ; Judaism finds its unity in the Torah." Jewish sources said they
saw the Vatican letter as a sign of reconciliation. For his part, the pope
appeared to go out of his way in his last two public appearances to try to clear
up what the Vatican considers a misunderstanding.At a general audience on Sept
1, Francis said his words on St. Paul's writings were "simply a catechesis
(teaching homily) ... and nothing else."At his weekly blessing on Sunday, he
offered best wishes to Jews for the upcoming Jewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah, and
for the subsequent holidays of Yom Kippur and Sukkot.
"May the new year be rich with fruits of peace, and good for those who walk
faithfully in the law of the Lord," he said. Both Jewish and Vatican sources
said the inclusion of the word "law" in what are normally routine greetings was
significant and intentional. Relations between Catholics and Jews were
revolutionized in 1965, when the Second Vatican Council repudiated the concept
of collective Jewish guilt for the death of Jesus and began decades of
inter-religious dialog. Francis and his two predecessors visited
synagogues.Francis has had a very good relationship with Jews. While still
archbishop in native Buenos Aires, he co-wrote a book with one of the city's
rabbis, Abraham Skorka, and has maintained a lasting friendship with him.
Jordan to Host Quartet Meeting to Discuss Gas Supplies
to Lebanon
Asharq Al Awsat/September 06/2021
Jordan will host a meeting of Egypt, Syria, and Lebanon’s energy ministers on
Wednesday to discuss the transit of Egyptian gas to Lebanon for electricity
generation. Observers said that Amman succeeded in lifting the siege imposed on
Syria in response to the energy crisis in Lebanon amid a surplus of electrical
energy production in Jordan. The infrastructure is almost ready for the transit
of Egyptian gas from Jordan and Syria to Lebanon. Damascus announced its
approval of Beirut’s request to help pass Egyptian gas and Jordanian electricity
through its territory and confirmed its readiness to help with transit for
Egyptian gas and Jordanian electricity, the Syrian Arabian News Agency (SANA)
reported Saturday. Jordanian King Abdullah II discussed the Lebanese energy
issues during his meetings with US President Joe Biden and Russian President
Vladimir Putin in the past two months. The monarch received in Amman a Lebanese
delegation headed by deputy Prime Minister and acting Minister of Foreign
Affairs and Emigrants Zeina Akar. Top political sources told Asharq Al-Awsat
there were also unannounced meetings at the royal palace with Lebanese political
leaders.
King Abdullah is seeking to support Lebanon’s state institutions and army to
maintain its security, stability and unity and ensure the speedy provision of
its energy needs. Amman is willing to supply Lebanon with Egyptian gas and
Jordanian electricity. However, according to Jordanian sources, the electricity
transmission networks require months to be prepared and will need immediate
support to protect power stations inside Syria. On Saturday, a Lebanese
ministerial delegation visited Damascus for the first time since the outbreak of
the conflict in 2011 to discuss gas and energy transit through Syria. Last
month, the Lebanese presidency announced that Washington has agreed to help
Lebanon secure electricity and natural gas from Egypt and Jordan through Syria.
This means that the US is willing to waive sanctions that prohibit any official
transactions with the Syrian government that have hampered Lebanon’s previous
attempts to secure gas from Egypt. Lebanon is suffering major fuel shortages,
which have impacted various sectors, including hospitals, in light of an
economic crisis described by the World Bank as one of the worst in modern times.
Egypt Opens Air Bridge to Help Sudanese Affected by Floods
Asharq Al Awsat/September 06/2021
Two military cargo aircraft carrying humanitarian aid arrived at Khartoum
International Airport from Egypt to support Sudanese affected by floods.
Minister of Social Development Ahmed Adam Bakheet told the press that the two
aircraft will be followed by seven others. Bakheet added that Sudan received
Egyptian aid during the pandemic and the floods last year, noting the historic
stances of the Egyptian leadership and people towards Sudan. He announced that
more aid will arrive by Thursday. The minister further appreciated the support
shown by the Egyptians, the leadership, and President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.
According to Bakheet, this would reinforce the historic bilateral ties. Egypt's
ambassador to Khartoum Hossam Issa said that the two aircraft carried medicine
and aid to those affected by the floods. The shipments also include tents and
medical equipment, he pointed out. Issa said this falls under the full
cooperation between the Sudanese and Egyptian institutions in dealing with flood
victims.
Israel launches airstrikes against Gaza after incendiary
balloon attacks
AFP/September 6/2021
Israel launched airstrikes against Gaza on Monday night, the army said,
retaliating after incendiary balloons launched from the blockaded Palestinian
enclave had started fires. Blaming Hamas for the balloons, the Israeli army said
it had targeted locations belonging to the group that controls the Gaza Strip.
“Overnight, IDF fighter jets struck a Hamas rocket manufacturing workshop, as
well as a Hamas military compound in Khan Yunis,” the Israeli army said in a
statement. “The strikes were in response to Hamas launching incendiary balloons
into Israeli territory,” the statement added. Witnesses said that the army had
also fired artillery at the north of Gaza. According to medical sources in the
Palestinian enclave, no one was killed. Earlier in the day, Israeli firefighters
had said that incendiary balloons had caused three bushfires at sites close to
the Gaza Strip. Launching the makeshift devices is a common tactic of Hamas
members in Gaza, which Israel has blockaded for nearly 15 years. Israel
frequently responds with airstrikes. Monday's strikes come after six
Palestinians broke out of an Israeli prison earlier in the day through a tunnel,
triggering a massive manhunt. Hamas and Israel fought a devastating 11-day
conflict in May, the worst between the two sides in years. Though it ended with
an Egypt-brokered ceasefire and a pledge for Qatari aid to ease poverty in the
Palestinian enclave, incendiary balloons and occasional border clashes have
continued in the months since.
Police: 6 Palestinians Escape from High-security Israeli
Prison
Asharq Al Awsat/September 06/2021
Six Palestinians escaped from a high-security Israeli prison on Monday, police
said, and Israeli media reports identified them as members of militant groups.
The reports said five of the prisoners belonged to the Islamic Jihad movement
and one was a former commander of an armed group affiliated with the mainstream
Fatah party. According to the reports, the six were cell mates and tunneled out
of Gilboa prison in northern Israel. "Overnight, we received a number of reports
about suspicious figures in agricultural fields and from the prison service,
which discovered very quickly that prisoners were missing from their cells and
that six escaped," national police spokesman Eli Levy told Kan Radio. Security
forces were searching for the men and believed they might try to reach the
nearby West Bank, Israeli-occupied territory where the Palestinian Authority
exercises limited self-rule, or the Jordanian border, Reuters quoted him as
saying. Israeli media reports identified one of the escaped prisoners as Zakaria
Zubeidi, a former commander of Fatah's Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades in the West Bank
city of Jenin.
Libyan Minister to Asharq Al-Awsat: Elections Could Be Held
in Phases
Asharq Al Awsat/September 06/2021
Libyan Finance Minister Dr. Khalid al-Mabrouk hoped that parliamentary and
presidential elections in his country will be held on time in December. In
remarks to Asharq Al-Awsat, he expressed concerns that security challenges may
force the elections to be held in phases. The Government of National Unity (GNU)
is determined to achieve all the goals it has set out for itself, starting with
addressing the people’s daily concerns, such as electricity and power shortages,
he added. The government is focused on holding the elections on time, “but major
challenges lie ahead,” he noted. If all else fails, the polls can be held in
phases, whereby the parliamentary elections are held first, to be followed by
the presidential ones next year, he suggested. The unification of the army
remains the GNU’s greatest challenge, continued Mabrouk, highlighting the role
of the 5+5 military committee in addressing this issue. It is, so far, moving
ahead at a steady pace, stated the minister.
Son of Gaddafi Freed from Libyan Jail
Asharq Al Awsat/September 06/2021
Saadi Gaddafi, a son of Libya's late leader Moammer Gaddafi who was overthrown
and killed in a 2011 uprising, has been freed from jail, a justice ministry
source confirmed to AFP Sunday. "Saadi Moammer Gaddafi has been freed from
prison," following a court ruling several years ago, the source said -- without
saying whether he was still in the country. Several media reports on Sunday
suggested Gaddafi had already taken a flight to Turkey. Another source, who
works at the prosecutor's office, confirmed to AFP that Gaddafi had been freed.
"The chief prosecutor asked, several months ago, for the execution of the
decision relating to Saadi Gaddafi as soon as all the required conditions had
been satisfied," said the source. Gaddafi was free to stay or leave, the source
added. Saadi, 47, fled to Niger following the 2011 NATO-backed uprising, but was
extradited to Libya in 2014.ة A former professional footballer in Italy, Saadi
had been held in a Tripoli prison, accused of crimes committed against
protesters and of the 2005 killing of Libyan football coach Bashir al-Rayani. In
April 2018, the court of appeal acquitted him of Rayani's murder.
Canada/Statement on passing of 1,000 days since Michael Kovrig and Michael
Spavor were arbitrarily detained in China
September 5, 2021 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
The Honourable Marc Garneau, Minister of Foreign Affairs, today issued the
following statement:
“Today marks 1,000 days since Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor were arbitrarily
detained in China.
“Both men are being arbitrarily detained. We strongly condemn the lack of a
transparent legal process.
“Years have been cruelly stolen from both men and their families. Despite this,
they have shown integrity and courage throughout this terrible ordeal.
“We are inspired by their resilience as we continue to work tirelessly with our
allies and international partners to do everything we can to bring them home.
“Canada is grateful to all who have joined in expressing their solidary for Mr.
Kovrig and Mr. Spavor, including the two dozen countries that sent diplomats to
the court proceedings and solidarity events.
“Arbitrarily detaining foreign citizens is unjust and immoral. Sixty-six
countries endorsed the Declaration Against Arbitrary Detention in State-to-State
Relations earlier this year and call for an end to this practice and for the
release of all individuals detained for diplomatic leverage.
“This must stop. Mr. Kovrig and Mr. Spavor must come home. The thoughts of all
Canadians and Canada’s partners around the world are with Mr. Kovrig, Mr. Spavor
and their families as they mark this difficult date.”
Algeria senses weakness of its diplomatic corps
The Arab Weekly/September 06/2021
ALGIERS--Algeria is sensing the weakness of its diplomacy in the region,
observers say, noting that the North African country’s ambition to play a more
active role and mediate in a number of complex conflicts has become more
obvious. Algeria, the observers note, has been increasingly keen to gain a
foothold in the diplomatic push to resolve the conflict in neighbouring Libya.
The country is also willing to play a key role in mediating the dispute over the
controversial Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam. Algeria’s desire to leverage its
diplomacy has apparently prompted president of Abdelmadjid Tebboune to
reconsider the country’s diplomatic approach, which over the last decade, has
been marked by stagnation and inefficiency . Tebboune on Sunday announced the
creation of seven special envoys “in order to lead Algeria’s international
action and to launch a vast movement in the diplomatic corps which will include
more than 70 diplomatic and consular posts,” according to Algeria’s official
news agency APS. Tebboune also unveiled the appointment of a number of veteran
figures to these new positions to deal with a range of regional and
international files of interest to Algeria.
The new special envoys are Ammar Blani, Ahmed Benyamina, Boudjemaa Delmi, Tawous
Haddadi Jellouli, Abdelkarim Harchaoui, Noureddine Aouam and Leila Zerrouki.
According to Algerian sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, the seven
have in the past held different diplomatic positions and exercised high
responsibilities within the state. The Algerian government is therefore hoping
to invest in their experience and competence to beef up the country’s diplomacy
and push for a more active role on regional and international fronts. The seven
diplomats, the same sources told The Arab Weekly, are expected to take over
various regional and international files. They will likely deal include the Arab
Maghreb Union, the Sahara conflict, the Sahel region, the African continent, the
African Union, the Middle East and the Arab League, along with relations with
Europe and America, international security, terrorism, cross-border crime,
Algerians abroad, economic cooperation and the Algerian contribution to
international forums.
Tebboune is also expected to conduct a broad diplomatic reshuffle that will
affect more than 70 ambassadors and consuls in a redeployment aimed at pumping
new blood into the country’s diplomatic corps, while also relying on veteran
figures. The Algerian ministry of foreign affairs, sources said, is expected to
invite senior diplomatic officials to an Algiers meeting to explain the new
roadmap, the plan for the redeployment of Algerian envoys around the world and
the need to reactivate Algeria’s role in a number of regional and international
issues. Over the last decade, the role of the Algerian diplomacy has seen a
remarkable decline, deepening the country’s external problems in the face of new
regional power balances, not least in some hotbeds of tension, such as Mali and
Libya. Former President Abdelaziz Bouteflika contributed to this waning of
influence by monopolising decisions on a number of Algeria’s relionships
including with France and Morocco. This factor limited the freedom of overseas
envoys and led to the absence of a genuine strategy to guide the work of
diplomatic corps. Algeria also failed to benefit from the influence of the
Algerians abroad. Bouteflika’s deteriorating health over more than five years,
contributed to the paralysis of the country’s diplomatic corps, as it was the
case with other state agencies and institutions. During the past few days,
Algerian rivalry with Morocco emerged over Libya, as Algeria hosted a meeting of
Libya’s neighbouring countries. This is an attempt to withdraw the project from
Rabat, which has been involved since 2014, the most important of which was the
signing, after months of wrangling, of the Skhirat Agreement which enshrined the
Libyan Political Agreement.
Tensions between Algiers and Rabat are rising. Earlier in August, Algeria cut
diplomatic relations with Morocco, citing what it called hostile actions by its
neighbour with which it has had strained relations for decades. Morocco rejected
the break as “completely unjustifiable” but pledged to continue acting as “a
loyal partner of the Algerian people.” Over the last few years, Morocco has
accumulated significant experience in dealing with the Libyan file, becoming
increasingly familiar with the details of the crisis that broke out in 2014. At
the time, Morocco hosted rounds of dialogue between the House of Representatives
(parliament) and the National Forum, which later became the High Council of
State headed by Khaled Al-Mashri, a Muslim Brotherhood leader.
Morocco has also been active when it comes to bridging differences between the
Libyan rivals, with Rabat’s efforts leading up to the signing of the coastal
resort of the Skhirat Agreement in December 2015. Morocco also hosted meetings
of rival Libyan politicians fin the city of Bouznika, which resulted in an
agreement on the distribution of sovereign positions between Libya’s three
regions. To catch up the pace, sources told The Arab Weekly that Algeria’s new
diplomatic strategy was included in a government’s work plan, which is expected
to be presented to parliament in the next few days.“In the coming years, our
country’s diplomatic activity will focus on defending the nation’s interests,
contributing to regional security and stability, strengthening ties with Africa
and the Arab world, developing partnerships and supporting peace in the world,
along with the redeployment of economic diplomacy in the service of the
country’s development,” a document on the new strategy reads. “Algeria will
undertake a proactive and multifaceted role in order to enable our country to
strengthen its position as an active actor, contributing, as was the case in the
past, to settling international crises and disputes and monitoring the course of
important developments in the history of the international community and the
life of mankind,” the document added. The document also revealed a new roadmap
for the diplomatic corps, who will directed to promote and defend the country’s
positions and approaches to various regional and international conflicts,
including the is of the Western Sahara, relations with Morocco, the Libyan
crisis and the situation near the southern border. “Algeria is working to
promote reconciliation among the Libyan people, with the organisation of fair
elections, away from any foreign meddling and interference. Algeria will also
redouble its efforts in the Sahel to help establish security and stability in
the region,” the document on the new strategy stated.
New season of Turkish TV series puts ties with UAE at risk
The Arab Weekly/September 06/2021
LONDON--Many are expecting Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s to block
the airing of a Turkish TV series that could renew tensions with UAE. Analysts
say his reaction will being seen as a real test for Ankara’s true intentions
toward Abu Dhabi.This comes at a time when relations between the two countries
are improving after years of estrangement and tension. In recent days, the
Turkish TRT1 television channel began airing the trailer for the second season
of the series Teskilat (The Organisation), officially sponsored and supported by
Turkey’s National Intelligence Organisation (MIT). The series portrays MIT
agents as fighting a covert war against a thinly-disguised Arab adversary, the
United Arab Emirates. The UAE-backed fictional organisation is led by Zayed Fadi,
a composite figure whose first name refers to the Abu Dhabi-based Palestinian
politician, Muhammad Dahlan, who is accused by the Turkish authorities of
coordinating with the Fethullah Gulen organisation and arranging an attempted
coup against Erdogan in 2016. In the fictional series, the character Zayed Fadi
leads an organisation affiliated with Dahlan and the name was deliberately
chosen, combining the names of United Arab Emirates Foreign Minister Abdullah
bin Zayed and the former leader of Fatah, Mohammad Yusuf Dahlan, whose nickname
is “Abu Fadi.”Turkey issued an arrest warrant for Dahlan on charges of links
with the FETO, Gulen’s organisation and the military leaders who carried out the
2016 coup attempt. The series narrates details about the targeting of the Zayed
Fadi’s organisation in Syria by a special unit of MIT, exposing links between
the organisation and other parties that Turkey considers an archenemy, notably
the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) in northern Iraq and northern Syria and the
neo-Nazi movement in Europe. TRT released this week a trailer for the second
season of Teskilat, suggesting that it will be moving ahead with the braodcast.
The airing of the trailer comes as experts are expecting complete calm between
the UAE and Turkey at a bilateral level as well as on regional issues.
In late August, Abu Dhabi’s Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed and Turkish
president Erdogan held talks, which marked the highest-level interaction in
years. These followed a rare visit earlier this month to Ankara by a United Arab
Emirates delegation, headed by UAE national security adviser Sheikh Tahnoun bin
Zayed Al Nahyan. Sheikh Tahnoun’s trip, which focused particularly on the
possibility of pumping UAE investments into Turkey, was the highest-level public
visit by an Emirati official to Turkey in years.
Improved Turkish political ties with Abu Dhabi, experts say, may usher in new
economic and trade prospects and by the same token, provide Turkey with a new
perspective on its relations with Arab Gulf countries. Economic gains reaped by
Turkey from overtures to Gulf countries, such as the UAE and Saudi Arabia, will
come in stark contrast to the negative fallouts at home and abroad resulting
from Erdogan’s current alliances in the region. Ankara reportedly wants to
shield its economic and trade relations from the impact of political differences
that led to its diplomatic isolation and the flight of Gulf and foreign
investors from Turkey, driven away by Erdogan’s interference in the economy and
his temperamental politics. Analysts expect the reconciliation momentum,
illustrated by Turkish-Emirati and Emirati-Qatari meetings, to defuse
confrontation on various regional contentious issues. This new momentum, they
say, also meets the United States’ desire for better relations between its
regional allies in order to prioritise tackling the Iranian challenge, with its
nuclear and regional dimensions. After talks held in Ankara on August 18 with
Sheikh Tahnoun, Erdogan said, “We discussed what type of investment could be
made in which areas”. In a later statement, Erdogan said he hoped to hold talks
with the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi on establishing closer economic ties and
that, “the United Arab Emirates will make serious investments in our country in
a very short time.” Erdogan’s statements at the time demonstrated Turkey’s
satisfaction at overcoming the obstacles to a normal relationship with the UAE,
in a way likely to reflect positively on the faltering Turkish economy. Analysts
describe the economic relations between the UAE and Turkey as “close and based
on common interest, as the volume of trade exchange between the two countries
exceeded $8 billion in 2020 and the UAE is Turkey’s second largest Arab trading
partner, while the volume of investments between the two countries recently
reached $5 billion.”
In reward to Macron, Iraq signs $27 billion deal with
TotalEnergies
The Arab Weekly/September 06/2021
BAGHDAD--French giant TotalEnergies on Sunday signed a $27-billion contract to
invest in oil, gas and solar production in Iraq, as the country faces an acute
energy crisis. The announcement of the deal, supposed in part to reduce Iraq’s
reliance on fossil fuels, came as Oil Minister Ihsan Ismail signed the contract
at a Baghdad ceremony with TotalEnergies chief Patrick Pouyanne.
A reward for Paris
Observers told The Arab Weekly that French President Emmanuel Macron has
recently shown his support for the Iraqi government and Iraq’s political system
that is currently controlled by Iran-backed militias. The position of the French
president, the observers added, allowed for the signing of the contract with
TotalEnergies, which came as reward to Paris for its support of the Iran-backed
political system in Iraq. The deal, which constitutes “the largest investment by
a Western company in Iraq,” as described by the Iraqi oil minister, is rooted in
political expediency, according to the same observers. It aims at encouraging
France to provide international cover for the militias’ control in Iraq as a
counter to the hostile position of Washington. Iraqi militias, with Iranian
support, are seeking to push the United States to withdraw its forces from Iraq
and believe that France, which is close to Iran and ready to recognise its
proxies in the region, can fill in the vacuum. These militias, observers say,
want to entice France with investments, exploiting the need of French companies
to compensate for the losses they incurred following the US invasion of Iraq in
2003.
The French president has recently made statements that were understood as
courting the militias, by focusing on the fight against terrorism and France’s
intention to keep its forces in Iraq. Macron, however, did not raise the issue
of corruption nor did he pressure the Iraqi government to implement reforms and
respond to the long-standing protesters’ demands. “No matter what choices the
Americans make, we will maintain our presence in Iraq to fight against
terrorism,” Macron told a news conference in Baghdad earlier in August. “We all
know that we must not lower our guard, because Daesh (the Islamic State group)
remains a threat, and I know that the fight against these terrorist groups is a
priority of your government,” Macron said earlier after a meeting with Iraqi
Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi. There are some 600 French troops in Iraq
along with an unspecified number of French special forces. Mostly based in
Baghdad, they have been training Iraqi soldiers and instructors.
Major investments
TotalEnergies has not directly confirmed the value nor duration of the contract,
which was signed after months of negotiations and several visits by
TotalEnergies’ chief. But the French major plans initially to invest $10 billion
in infrastructure, the proceeds of which will then allow a second round of
investments of $17 billion, the officials said. “Implementing these projects is
the challenge we face now,” Ismail said. “Happy to be in Basra where I visited
gas and oil fields,” Pouyanne tweeted in January. “Reducing flaring and
increasing gas production is a priority for Iraq as well as for Total. Let’s
work together!”Iraq has immense reserves of oil and gas. Despite being the
number two producer in the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, it
is experiencing an acute energy crisis and chronic blackouts that stoke social
discontent.Officials justify the lack of investment and the dilapidated state of
its energy network by citing falling oil prices, which represent more than 90
percent of state revenues.
‘Reduce gas imports’
The country is highly dependent on neighbouring Iran, which supplies a third of
its gas and electricity needs. However, Baghdad currently owes Tehran six
billion dollars for energy already supplied. The contract inked on Sunday with
TotalEnergies covers four projects, an Iraqi oil ministry source said ahead of
the signing ceremony. One of these aims to pipe seawater from the Gulf to
southern Iraqi oilfields. Water is used to extract oil from subterranean
deposits. Another is intended to increase production from the Artawi oilfield
near the southern port of Basra from 85,000 barrels per day to 210,000 bpd. A
third project will see the construction of a complex to exploit production from
the sector’s gas fields. Rather than flaring or burning off the excess, the plan
is to recover it for use in electricity generation. The premier’s office said
this will “reduce gas imports”. The fourth project will see the installation of
a solar farm in Artawi. The Iraqi source said that ultimately, the solar panels
should produce “1,000 megawatts” of electricity, the equivalent of the energy
produced by a nuclear reactor. “Iraq will not pay anything,” the source added.
Electricity produced by solar power “costs 45 percent less than that produced by
traditional power stations”, the Iraqi government said. In January, Ismail had
said the relationship with the French firm was “developing rapidly”. France’s
former Total, which has renamed itself TotalEnergies to symbolise a
diversification into cleaner sources of power, is one of the world’s top five
energy companies.
While still focused on oil and gas, the company has indicated that this year it
will devote 20 percent of its growth investments to electricity and renewable
energies. It has had a presence in Iraq since the 1920s.
The Latest LCCC English analysis &
editorials published on
September 06-07/2021
Erdogan's Plans for the Future of Afghanistan: China, Russia and
Terrorists
Burak Bekdil/Gatestone Institute/September 06/2021
The US and the EU should not buy Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's fake
pro-Western posture (such as when he offered to run the Kabul airport, then
fled) or his fake anti-radicalism (such as when he is courting the Afghan
terrorists). Erdogan's strategy, as a member of NATO, is clearly to bolster
Russia's and China's plans for the future of Afghanistan.
Iran, for its part, seems to be hoping to hit two birds with one stone: by
systematically facilitating the journey of illegal Afghans to Turkey and toward
Greece, it might destabilize both Turkey and Europe.
"The persistence of Erdoğan's relationship with Hekmatyar illustrates that it
was wishful thinking to believe that Erdoğan was ever anything more than a
jihadi in a business suit, no matter how many diplomats projected their hopes of
change on him." — Michael Rubin, Middle East expert, Washington Examiner, August
11, 2021.
Now, due to Erdogan's long-term anti-Western ideology, he will probably be
tempted to seek an alliance with whichever pro-sharia group(s) will, in the near
future, be governing Afghanistan.
The US and the EU should not buy Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's fake
pro-Western posture (such as when he offered to run the Kabul airport, then
fled) or his fake anti-radicalism (such as when he is courting the Afghan
terrorists). Pictured: The flag of Turkey hangs alongside the flag of
Afghanistan at the Kabul airport on August 17, 2021, days before Turkish troops
fled. (Photo by STR/AFP via Getty Images)
The US and the EU should not buy Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's fake
pro-Western posture (such as when he offered to run the Kabul airport, then
fled) or his fake anti-radicalism (such as when he is courting the Afghan
terrorists). Erdogan's strategy, as a member of NATO, is clearly to bolster
Russia's and China's plans for the future of Afghanistan.
When the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan in December 1979 in support of the
communist Afghan government, then in conflict with radical Muslim fighters,
Turkey was having its own civil war between ultra-left and ultra-right factions.
In September 1980, the Turkish military staged a coup d'état and banned all
political parties, including Islamist ones.
Turkish Islamists set up the Welfare Party, which would also later be banned. In
1985, halfway into the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, Erdoğan was the dynamic,
31-year-old Istanbul provincial chairman of the Welfare Party. It was at one
anti-U.S., anti-West event that Erdoğan invited a terrorist, Gulbuddin Hekmatyar,
to Istanbul.
Hekmatyar is a former mujahedeen and leader of the Hezb-e-Islami Gulbuddin
political party. Ordinary Afghan citizens knew him as the "Butcher of Kabul" for
shelling the city repeatedly for no other apparent reason than to make the
murder stop.
There is one particular image that has surfaced time and time again to haunt the
Turkish leader: A photo of Erdoğan sitting at the feet of Hekmatyar, who once
was officially designated as a terrorist by the United Nations and the U.S. That
photo was taken during the event in which Erdoğan hosted Hekmatyar in Istanbul
in 1985.
The photo is still telling today, when, after the collapse of the Afghan
government in August, Hekmatyar met with both Hamid Karzai, former President of
Afghanistan, and Abdullah Abdullah, Chairman of the High Council for National
Reconciliation and former Chief Executive, in Doha both seeking to form a
government.
A few weeks ago, as Taliban's footsteps were becoming louder in Kabul, Erdoğan
once again switched sides and celebrated his ideological love affair with
Afghanistan's terrorists. "The Taliban's understanding (or interpretation) of
Islam does not contradict ours," he said, shocking millions of secular Turks.
"Does it (Taliban's understanding of Islam) really not contradict ours? That
understanding is about gang-raping, killing women, locking them in their homes,
selling girls as slaves, banning schools for girls. When has ours turned into
this?" asked Gamze Taşçıer, an opposition member of parliament. "When has Turkey
become a shariah state?" scores of other intellectuals asked Erdoğan.
Erdoğan's overtures to the Taliban, moreover, were not just limited to
highlighting his tolerance to shariah. "Our relevant institutions," Erdoğan
said, "are working on it, including talks with the Taliban, and I may also
receive the leader of the Taliban."
There are two more important ramifications of the Taliban's advance and Turkey's
subsequent leniency. First, the Taliban's capture of Kabul has ruined a Turkish
plan to leave troops in the Afghan capital to operate the Hamid Karzai
International Airport, a risk-filled task for which no other nation had
volunteered.
Erdoğan had sought the job, it seems, to highlight Turkey's strategic importance
to the Western nations, most notably the U.S. With that, he was likely hoping to
have more leverage on the Biden administration when Turkey and the U.S.
negotiated their most difficult divergences, including potential new sanctions
on the Turkish government due to Turkey's acquisition of Russian-made S-400 air
defense system. In short, Erdoğan was likely hoping to use the Kabul airport
deal to reset deeply problematic ties with the U.S. by putting bilateral
relations into a transactional frame. That way, Erdoğan's Turkey would score a
point in portraying itself as a reliable Western ally.
Only a couple of weeks before the Taliban's capture of Kabul, Ankara and
Washington were trying to iron out their differences for the terms and
conditions of the Turkish control over Kabul's airport. As recently as August
11, Turkey still seemed intent on running and guarding Kabul airport after other
foreign troops had withdrawn from Afghanistan.
Meanwhile, on August 28, after speculation on social media that Greece would
open its border to Afghan refugees until September 1, thousands of Afghan
refugees flooded Turkey's land border with Greece.
Iran, for its part, seems to be hoping to hit two birds with one stone: by
systematically facilitating the journey of illegal Afghans to Turkey and toward
Greece, it might destabilize both Turkey and Europe. The mullahs in Iran would
presumably be only too happy to transport tens of thousands of Afghans to their
country's difficult border with Turkey. The rest would then be the problem of
Sunni Turks and the West.
As the Middle East scholar and former Pentagon official Michael Rubin wrote,
Erdoğan is also possibly seeking to utilize his partnership with Hekmatyar to
help shape Afghanistan's post-war political order. "The U.S. should not let
them," Rubin wrote.
"The persistence of Erdoğan's relationship with Hekmatyar illustrates that it
was wishful thinking to believe that Erdoğan was ever anything more than a
jihadi in a business suit, no matter how many diplomats projected their hopes of
change on him."
In short, there is this designated terrorist, Hekmatyar, whose relations with
Erdogan date back to 1985. Hekmatyar is now in talks with both the Taliban and
Erdogan for the future of Afghanistan, while Erdogan is in talks with the
Taliban and probably trying to figure out where to jump next.
Erdogan had been trying to appease the U.S. by guarding the Kabul airport, but
that plan collapsed after the Taliban advanced into Kabul. Erdogan therefore
lost a bargaining chip for his future dealings with Biden and the US. Now, due
to Erdogan's long-term anti-Western ideology, he will probably be tempted to
seek an alliance with whichever pro-sharia group(s) will, in the near future, be
governing Afghanistan.
*Burak Bekdil, one of Turkey's leading journalists, was recently fired from the
country's most noted newspaper after 29 years, for writing in Gatestone what is
taking place in Turkey. He is a Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
© 2021 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Taliban lies will build a generation of Afghan women
becoming second-class citizens
Amal al-Breiki/Al Arabiya/September 06/2021
When the Taliban seized Kabul early August, the world was reminded of the city’s
capitulation in the fall of 1996. The era of the Taliban rule was particularly
grave on Afghan women, swept away from society, leaving behind empty classrooms
and offices. They were bound to the rims of their homes, burqas and Mahrams
(male ‘guardians’). The world watches for fear of a return to the past. More so,
Afghan women whose mothers and aunts tell ghastly tales of that time, and remain
engraved within. It is now the next generation that will recite the same
tragedies.
The cautious optimism expressed by international officials towards the Taliban’s
duplicitous attempts at being moderate is ultimately foolish. The Taliban’s
misogynistic and sexist nature will inevitably overpower its ongoing momentary
attempts at moderation. The recent reports of female officials, activists,
journalists, and their families, hiding from the militants are self-explanatory.
Afghan women know what is most likely to come, and the world does too, yet it
stands in complete ineptitude.
Afghanistan lived in a parallel social landscape, between distinct private and
public spheres during the Taliban rule. Decrees were enacted to segregate women
from the fundamentals of civil life, denying them access to political and
economic participation in a country where women once occupied 40 percent of
public jobs.Moreover, medical care was cut short, and women’s health was
prioritized last.
A 1998 study - Women’s health and human rights in Afghanistan – revealed the
overall poor health of Afghan women under the Taliban. The study reported severe
cases of post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, depression, and suicidal
tendencies. In addition, women were targeted and severely punished by the
militias based on misguided readings of religious doctrine. Afghan women had
become second-class citizens and were treated accordingly.
The panic resulting from the Taliban’s return is justified as it leads to
profound anxiety. After the overthrow of the Taliban in 2001, Afghan women
gradually re-emerged from the background and following the Bonn Agreement and
the establishment of the interim administration confidence grew. Women became
part of the nation’s workforce, including fulfilling roles in schools,
universities, and offices, where previously they were forbidden to pursue
careers.
The Ministry of Women’s Affairs was established, and women were introduced as
ministers, governors, ambassadors, and police officers. Yet, within this
seemingly assuring environment, threats to women remained. In many cases women
were assassinated.
Women gather to demand their rights under the Taliban rule during a protest in
Kabul, Afghanistan, Friday, Sept. 3, 2021. As the world watches intently for
clues on how the Taliban will govern, their treatment of the media will be a key
indicator, along with their policies toward women. When they ruled
Today, the scenes being witnessed are a replication of history. We saw women and
girls rushing home from their classes, offices, places that defined them for the
past two decades.
Removing certificates off their walls, burning documents, masquerading any
indications of careers built, and dreams realized. Afghan women are mourning
their country, their sacrificed lives, and the lives of generations to come.
As Afghanistan changes hands, experts continue to debate the discrepancies
between the 1990s Taliban and the present one. What has unraveled in the past
few weeks of blatant human rights violations only serves to show that it is a
clear case of history repeating itself.
Fawzia Koofi, a prominent Afghan politician and women’s rights activist, asked
the inevitable question: “where are women?” in a Tweet. It followed the
Taliban’s political office meeting with the High Council for National
Reconciliation on August 21, 2021.
The question has loomed over every new peace agreement meeting and discussion
held over the years. The future looks grim without the slightest consideration
of women being involved in the negotiations. In early July 2021, a meeting
attended by the Minister of Women’s Affairs, female politicians, and government
advisors discussed the country’s current situation and called for a woman
representative on behalf of the Ministry, and ultimately all Afghan women, to be
present during the ongoing peace process.
The failure of past peace attempts was due to many underlying factors. Still, it
cannot be ignored that the exclusion of women was an imperative one. Many case
studies suggest that women’s participation in politically negotiated settlements
has a lasting impact on peace. Only when the other half of the population is
included and their rights respected will the implementation process succeed.
More importantly, power-sharing deals would be incomplete if they compromise
Afghan women’s rights under any circumstances.
If we assume that the Taliban is to honor its commitments, it will still need to
make room for Afghan women in their government, to listen closely to their
demands and act on them.
Hollow statements and keeping women out of the decision-making process will no
longer do with a generation of women and girls growing up knowing what is
rightfully theirs.
The international community that abandoned them has the responsibility to listen
to Afghan women’s voices that have warned of the reality of living under Taliban
rule. They must ensure their safety.
Reports of the Taliban likely securing a seat at the UN Commission on the Status
of Women is a slap in the face of every Afghan woman, but it begs the question
of whether the move will actually place the burden on the Taliban to make sure
they deliver on promises toward the treatment of women. Is it merely a PR
stunt?Given the militia’s long record of brutal oppression against women, the
Taliban’s pledge to fulfil its human rights commitments will more than likely
fail to materialize.
إبراهام كوبر/العربية: المسيحيون الآشوريون واليزيديون سوف
يواجهون خطر الانقراض إذا سحب بايدن القوات الأمريكية من العراق
Iraq’s Assyrian Christians, Yazidis face extinction if Biden pulls US troops out
Abraham Cooper/Al Arabiya/September 06/2021
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/102125/abraham-cooper-iraqs-assyrian-christians-yazidis-face-extinction-if-biden-pulls-us-troops-out-%d8%a5%d8%a8%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%87%d8%a7%d9%85-%d9%83%d9%88%d8%a8%d8%b1-%d8%a7%d9%84%d9%85%d8%b3/
Against the backdrop of the 9.0-magnitude man-made earthquake that was the
disastrous US pullout from Afghanistan, two Christian leaders, Pastor Johnnie
Moore and Juliana Taimoorazy, convened a news conference last week under the
auspices of the Simon Wiesenthal Center. With the participation of Jameel Chomer,
country director of the Yazda organization, via Zoom from Iraq, we released an
open letter to the president of the United States urging him not to repeat the
Afghanistan humanitarian debacle in Iraq.
Signed by Chomer and Taimoorazy, founder and president of the Iraqi Christian
Relief Council, it read in part: “Mr. President, we urge you to resist pressure
to withdraw all troops from Iraq. Recent blood-soaked history has shown that
without such a presence, the history of Assyrians and Yazidis on their ancient
lands would end.”
Today, there are only a reported 2,500 US soldiers left in Iraq. But for the
battered and depleted Assyrian Christians and the Yazidis, two minorities who
live side-by-side peacefully, a total pullout by the US could mean the demise of
two ancient peoples in the Nineveh plains.
The greatest disaster for both was the ascendancy of ISIS, the world’s most
brutal terrorist groups. ISIS was able to fill a void left by the US; a void
with beheadings, murders, pillaging and rapes. That void was created when, in
2011, then-President Obama decided to remove all 45,000 remaining US forces from
Iraq. On November 29 of that year, then-Vice President Joe Biden declared during
an official visit to Iraq: “We are embarking on a new … and a comprehensive
relationship between the United States and Iraq as sovereign partners,” Biden
made the remarks after meeting with then-Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and
other Iraqi officials.
Apparently, ISIS never got the memo. The bottom line is that the US created a
vacuum that enabled the terrorist group to plunder, pillage, murder and rape its
way through Iraq. Beyond the havoc and suffering it unleashed in Syria, in 2014,
ISIS took the key Iraqi city of Mosul and seized towns and villages in the
Nineveh plains. Thousands of Christians fled in front of the advancing ISIS
forces, heading for refuge in Iraq’s northern Kurdish region or leaving the
country altogether. ISIS went on to kill thousands of Iraqi citizens –
irrespective of religion – over the next few years, destroying mosques,
monasteries, shrines, churches, and tombs in Iraq and Syria, The Associated
Press reported.
Meanwhile, ISIS fighters attacked the Iraqi town of Sinjar in August 2014 – home
to the Yazidis. More than 30,000 Yazidi families were stranded in the Sinjar
Mountains. A Yazidi lawmaker reported that 500 men have been killed, 70 children
have died of thirst and women are being sold into slavery. The horrific
suffering of that people was just beginning.
Throughout that period, the world also watched in horror as ISIS would broadcast
the beheadings of American, British and Japanese journalists. ISIS would unleash
deadly far-flung terrorist attacks from Paris and Nigeria. Eventually, the US
would rush back troops to Iraq to quell ISIS. And a semblance of stability
eventually returned to the decimated areas.
Yet on July 27, Joe Biden, now president, announced the remaining symbolic US
forces will be leaving Iraq again “for good.” If, G-d forbid, that happens, our
friend Jameel Chomer faces the very real possibility of falling into the
clutches of a rejuvenated ISIS. Why should we care? Jameel served as an
interpreter and cultural advisor for the US army for almost six years in Iraq
and has been desperately trying to get his family to the US for years. Sound
familiar?
We can only pray that President Biden and his military and foreign policy brain
trust will reconsider such a move in the wake of the disaster now facing Afghans
of all faiths and sects not aligned with the Taliban’s medieval brand of Islam.
If President Biden doesn’t cancel that move, two historic peoples – the Assyrian
Christians and Yazidis – will be no more. And the keys to the Nineveh Plains
will surely be scooped up by Iran as part of a long coveted strategic prize –
unfettered access to the Mediterranean Sea and a new powerful front to threaten
the very existence of another people, the nation of Israel.