LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS
BULLETIN
April 24/17
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The
Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For Today
Early on the first day of the week, while it was still
dark, Mary Magdalene came to the tomb and saw that the stone had been removed
from the tomb
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint John 20/01-10/:"Early on the
first day of the week, while it was still dark, Mary Magdalene came to the tomb
and saw that the stone had been removed from the tomb. So she ran and went to
Simon Peter and the other disciple, the one whom Jesus loved, and said to them,
‘They have taken the Lord out of the tomb, and we do not know where they have
laid him.’ Then Peter and the other disciple set out and went towards the tomb.
The two were running together, but the other disciple outran Peter and reached
the tomb first. He bent down to look in and saw the linen wrappings lying there,
but he did not go in. Then Simon Peter came, following him, and went into the
tomb. He saw the linen wrappings lying there, and the cloth that had been on
Jesus’ head, not lying with the linen wrappings but rolled up in a place by
itself. Then the other disciple, who reached the tomb first, also went in, and
he saw and believed; for as yet they did not understand the scripture, that he
must rise from the dead. Then the disciples returned to their homes."
For a little while you have had to suffer various trials,
so that the genuineness of your faith is tested
First Letter of 01/01-09/:"Peter, an apostle of Jesus Christ, To the exiles of
the Dispersion in Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia, who have been
chosen and destined by God the Father and sanctified by the Spirit to be
obedient to Jesus Christ and to be sprinkled with his blood: May grace and peace
be yours in abundance. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ!
By his great mercy he has given us a new birth into a living hope through the
resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, and into an inheritance that is
imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, kept in heaven for you,
who are being protected by the power of God through faith for a salvation ready
to be revealed in the last time. In this you rejoice, even if now for a little
while you have had to suffer various trials, so that the genuineness of your
faith being more precious than gold that, though perishable, is tested by fire
may be found to result in praise and glory and honour when Jesus Christ is
revealed. Although you have not seen him, you love him; and even though you do
not see him now, you believe in him and rejoice with an indescribable and
glorious joy, for you are receiving the outcome of your faith, the salvation of
your souls.
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published on April 23-24/17
Marine Le Pen… Extremism Knocking on France’s Door/Salman Al-dossary/Asharq
Al-Awsat/April 23/17/
A Young Prince is Reimagining Saudi Arabia/David Ignatius/The Washington
Post/April 23/17/
Islam in the Heart of England and France/Denis MacEoin/Gatestone Institute/April
23/17
The French elections have produced few surprises yet, but what of round 2/Dr.
Mohamed A. Ramady/Al Arabiya/April 24/17
Britain’s Mother Theresa/Trisha de Borchgrave/Al Arabiya/April 23/17
Titles For Latest Lebanese Related News published
on
April 23-24/17
Arab, Foreign Ambassadors Reportedly Laud Hariri's Southern Tour
Al-Rahi Says Polls under 1960 Law Better than 'Extension, Destructive Vacuum'
Hizbullah MP: Border Tour Misinterpreted, Resistance in Defensive Position
PSP Says Parties Interested in Its Electoral Law Proposal as Aoun Welcomes It
Mufti Slams Hizbullah Border Tour, Bassil's 'Sectarian Qualification' Law
Qaouq Says Lebanon to Face 'Disaster' if No New Electoral Law
Lebanese Activists Ramp Up Pressure on Reviled Rape Law
Army Commander: No Safe Haven for Terrorists in Lebanon
Lebanon: Jumblat Proposes New Hybrid Electoral Law
Parties, officials take part in Armenian genocide gathering in Antelias
Bassil: There is a cultural genocide attempt against our identity via systematic
demographic changes
Sami Gemayel: Is there a compromise on extension of Parliament's mandate,
adoption of 1960 law?
17,400 participants in Sidon Marathon: We run for development and peace
Riachy: After the Christian reconciliation, we can say out loud that Muslims
resemble us and those who distort their image are not Muslims
Fenianos followsup on veering ship in Sidon, gives instructions to save its crew
Kassem Hashem: To work on common, uniting points
Osseiran representing Berri: We need law that respects representation
Raad: US administration sponsors international terrorism
Delegation from Directorate General of Civil Aviation inspects Koleiaat Airport
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin For
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
April 23-24/17
Pope: Migrant Holding Centers Similar to
Concentration Camps
Report: Pro-Assad militia base targeted in alleged Israel airstrike
Israeli Attack on Syria Military Camp Kills Three
Saudi King Names Son as U.S. Envoy, Fires Army Chief, 3 Ministers
French election: Macron vs Le Pen in May 7 run-off vote
Labour leader Corbyn says could suspend Syria air strikes if elected
Why did Erdogan meet secretly with prominent American figures?
Pentagon chief visits African nation home to key US baseNorth
Korea says ready to strike US aircraft carrier
Latest Lebanese Related News published
on
April 23-24/17
Arab, Foreign
Ambassadors Reportedly Laud Hariri's Southern Tour
Naharnet/April 23/17/Arab and
foreign ambassadors have praised Prime Minister Saad Hariri's visit to south
Lebanon, media reports said. Al-Mustaqbal newspaper, which is affiliated with
Hariri's Mustaqbal Movement, reported Sunday that “Arab and foreign diplomats in
Lebanon have informed Lebanese political figures of their relief over PM Saad
Hariri's visit to the border.” “They said that it boosted confidence in the
presence of the state in the South,” the newspaper said. U.N. Special
Coordinator for Lebanon Sigrid Kaag had also welcomed Hariri's visit on Friday,
saying it “reflects the continued partnership” between Lebanon and the U.N. Kaag
lauded Hariri's reaffirmation of the government's commitment to U.N. Security
Council Resolution 1701, noting that the U.N. “stands ready to continue to
provide its good offices to help effect progress on outstanding obligations
under the resolution and towards a permanent ceasefire.”Hariri's visit to the
South came a day after Hizbullah took a group of over 100 local and
international journalists on a rare tour of the border with Israel. Members of
Hizbullah's armed wing stood guard on part of the tour, displaying weapons
despite a prohibition stipulated by UNSCR 1701 on any armed paramilitary
presence so close to the demarcation line.Hariri said Friday that "what happened
yesterday is something that we, as a government, are not concerned with and do
not accept."The premier, who was accompanied by the defense minister and army
chief, said his trip was intended "to tell the Lebanese armed forces that they
and only they are the legitimate force in charge of defending our borders."There
has been rising speculation about a new conflict between Hizbullah and Israel,
who fought a 34-day war in 2006 that ended after the approval of Resolution
1701. That conflict killed 1,200 people in Lebanon, mainly civilians, and 160
Israelis, mostly soldiers.
Al-Rahi Says Polls under 1960 Law Better than 'Extension,
Destructive Vacuum'
Naharnet/April 23/17/Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi on Sunday reiterated
that parliamentary elections under the controversial current law would be better
than another extension of parliament's term or parliamentary “vacuum.”“We are
praying and pleading so that the political forces, the parliamentary blocs and
the government be able to issue a new law that enjoys the consent of all
components in the country,” al-Rahi said in his Sunday Mass sermon. “Should they
fail after all the attempts, that would be the result of the fact that the
electoral laws are being devised to fit the interests of certain individuals and
groups, not the people and the whole of Lebanon,” al-Rahi noted. He added:
“Should no new law be passed for one reason or another, it would not be shameful
to acknowledge failure and go to parliamentary elections under the law that is
currently in effect with a necessary technical extension of parliament's term.”
The patriarch justified his suggestion by warning that “what would be greatly
shameful and detrimental would be going either to indefinite extension -- which
would be a usurpation of power and the people's will -- or to a vacuum that
would be destructive for state institutions.”
Al-Rahi cautioned that “more than ever, Lebanon today needs the confidence of
its sons and the confidence of the international community in its State.”“This
is the confidence upon which it builds its economic, commercial and political
ties with the other countries,” the patriarch added.
He also warned that “the domestic and regional situations do not allow
additional setbacks that prevent state institutions from performing their
numerous roles.”“No one has the right to manipulate Lebanon's fate, because it
belongs to the Lebanese people, not certain individuals or groups,” al-Rahi
added.
He also noted that the Lebanese are counting on President's Michel Aoun's
“wisdom and higher responsibility for the country's fate in order to spare
Lebanon any political, economic and social crisis linked to the electoral law
and its repercussions.”
Hizbullah MP: Border Tour Misinterpreted, Resistance in
Defensive Position
Naharnet/April 23/17/MP Ali Fayyad of Hizbullah's Loyalty to Resistance bloc
announced Sunday that the controversial tour that his party organized Thursday
for reporters on the Lebanese-Israeli border has been “deliberately
misinterpreted” by some Lebanese parties. “Some parties trying to stir disputes
based on exaggerated interpretations and sometimes deliberate misinterpretation,
especially that it is fully clear that the resistance is in a defensive position
and that it is seeking to consolidate the state of stability in the South based
on the equation of deterrence with the Israeli enemy,” Fayyad said.
Hizbullah's “steps are aimed at preserving the equation of deterrence and
preventing the enemy from pushing for the corrosion of this equation,” the MP
added. He reassured that “preserving stability in Lebanon and calm and security
in the southern towns is at the core of the resistance's policies and what it
does is aimed at achieving these objectives and not the opposite.”Fayyad noted
that “there is a certain interest for everyone to refrain from aggravating any
dispute that might affect the performance of institutions or the domestic
situations.” He also urged all parties to “take into consideration the explosive
regional environment surrounding Lebanon, the reckless U.S. escalation policies,
Israel's provocative practices and repeated threats, and the poisoned policies
of incitement that are being practiced by some regional forces.”Fayyad's remarks
come three days after Prime Minister Saad Hariri criticized Hizbullah's border
tour during a landmark visit to the South. Several other Lebanese parties have
also slammed Hizbullah's move. Hariri's visit to the South came a day after
Hizbullah took a group of over 100 local and international journalists on a rare
tour of the border with Israel that the party said was aimed at explaining the
unprecedented Israeli defensive measures on the frontier. Members of Hizbullah's
armed wing stood guard on part of the tour, displaying weapons despite a
prohibition stipulated by U.N. resolution 1701 on any armed paramilitary
presence near the border. Hariri said Friday that "what happened yesterday is
something that we, as a government, are not concerned with and do not
accept."The premier, who was accompanied by the defense minister and army chief,
said his trip was intended "to tell the Lebanese armed forces that they and only
they are the legitimate force in charge of defending our borders."There has been
rising speculation about a new conflict between Hizbullah and Israel, who fought
a 34-day war in 2006 that ended after the approval of Resolution 1701.That
conflict killed 1,200 people in Lebanon, mainly civilians, and 160 Israelis,
mostly soldiers.
PSP Says Parties Interested in Its Electoral Law Proposal
as Aoun Welcomes It
The Progressive Socialist Party has said that several political forces have
asked for copies of the electoral law format that the PSP has proposed. “The
party has started sending these copies to a host of parties and movements, such
as the Free Patriotic Movement, al-Mustaqbal Movement and AMAL Movement,” PSP
sources told al-Mustaqbal newspaper in remarks published Sunday. President
Michel Aoun has meanwhile welcomed the PSP's proposal seeing as any new
suggestion “might help in pushing for an agreement over a law,” the president's
visitors told the newspaper. Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil had
also welcomed the PSP's move on Saturday, saying “any PSP proposal or ideas
regarding the electoral law are something positive and a step forward.” Speaker
Nabih Berri is also expected to propose a new electoral law format next week.The
PSP's hybrid electoral law formula calls for electing 64 MPs under the
proportional representation system and 64 others under the winner-takes-all
system in 26 districts.
Mufti Slams Hizbullah Border Tour, Bassil's 'Sectarian
Qualification' Law
Naharnet/April 23/17/Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdul Latif Daryan on Sunday slammed
Hizbullah's border tour for journalists and the party's foreign roles as he
criticized an electoral law proposed by Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran
Bassil that involves sectarian voting in the first round.
“All disagreements are permissible except over three issues: coexistence, state
institutions and tampering with the security of the South. We can bear any
burden except the burden of undermining coexistence and what is being said about
religious or sectarian qualification violates the constitution and coexistence,”
Daryan warned in an address to the nation marking the Isra and Mi'raj Muslim
holiday. Turning to Hizbullah's border tour, the mufti said: “We reached U.N.
resolution 1701 after a destructive Israeli war, so why create excuses for the
enemy?” “We do not need bloodshed, displacement and destruction after which we
say that we emerged victorious,” Daryan added. “Since we have defeated the
enemies one thousand times, I want us to triumph over ourselves, our ambitions,
our greed and our ploys, even for a single time,” the mufti went on to say. “My
brothers, return to the greater jihad, which is the jihad of the soul, after you
roamed east and west,” Daryan added, addressing Hizbullah's members without
naming them. On Friday, the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL)
said contacts were underway with the Lebanese army over the presence of
Hizbullah gunmen during the media tour organized Thursday by Hizbullah along the
border with Israel. "As to reports speaking of the presence of armed individuals
among the delegation, UNIFIL reminds that this would be a breach of resolution
1701; and as per the resolution, the Lebanese authorities bear the main
responsibility to verify the presence of unauthorized armed individuals in the
area between the Blue Line and Litani River," a UNIFIL statement read. Hizbullah,
which fought a devastating war with Israel in 2006, on Thursday brought dozens
of journalists on a rare and highly-choreographed trip to the demarcation line
between Lebanon and Israel.
"This tour is to show the defensive measures that the enemy is taking," said
Hizbullah spokesman Mohamed Afif, on a hilltop along the so-called Blue Line.
Thursday's tour sought to paint Israel as afraid of a new conflict, while
depicting Hizbullah as ready for war despite having committed thousands of its
fighters to bolstering Syria's President Bashar al-Assad. Journalists were taken
from the southern Lebanese town of Naqoura, with Hizbullah fighters in full
military regalia stationed along the route alongside the group's yellow flag --
despite a ban by Resolution 1701 on any armed paramilitary presence in southern
Lebanon. Faces smeared with black and green camouflage, the fighters stood
silently holding guns and RPG launchers. "We do not fear war, we don't hesitate
to confront it. We yearn for it and we will confront it if it is imposed on us,
and God willing we will win," a Hizbullah commander dressed in military fatigues
and sunglasses told the reporters, reciting a famous statement for Hizbullah
chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah.
Qaouq Says Lebanon to Face 'Disaster' if No New Electoral
Law
Naharnet/April 23/17/Hizbullah central council official Sheikh Nabil Qaouq
warned Sunday that Lebanon would face a “disaster” should no new electoral law
be approved soon. “Lebanon would be approaching a disaster should no new
electoral law be approved before the expiry of the legal deadlines, seeing as
failure to approve it would drain all the political, social and economic
stability in Lebanon,” Qaouq said. He stressed that Hizbullah “has offered
concessions for the sake of allowing consensus over a new electoral law” and
that “it is not part of the complications and ongoing bickering over this law.”
“Those who would be affected from the correction of electoral representation are
the obstacle and they are the ones who are not concealing their intentions and
are still practicing political maneuvering,” Qaouq charged.“Those who have not
taken a responsible and patriotic decision to offer concessions for the sake of
rescuing the country are committing a national sin against our homeland
Lebanon,” the Hizbullah official warned.
Lebanese Activists Ramp Up Pressure on Reviled Rape Law
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 23/17/Lebanese activists have
ramped up their campaign to scrap a controversial law allowing rapists who marry
their victims to go free, with a dramatic installation on Saturday along
Beirut's sunny seaside. A proposal to scrap Article 522 of the penal code --
which deals with rape, assault, kidnapping and forced marriage -- was introduced
last year and approved by a parliamentary committee in February.It will go
before parliament on May 15 and activists hope that MPs will vote to eliminate
it. On Saturday they urged Lebanese citizens to sign a campaign to ramp up the
pressure on legislators at an open-air exhibit. Thirty-one wedding dresses made
of white lace and wrapping paper hung limply from makeshift nooses between four
palm trees along Beirut's corniche. "There are 31 days in a month and every
single day, a woman may be raped and forced to marry her rapist," said Alia
Awada, advocacy manager at Lebanese non-government organization ABAAD. "We are
trying as much as we can to shed light on this issue and tell parliament that
the time has come for them to vote on canceling Article 522."The reviled
article, which also deals with the rape of minors, allows offenders to escape
punishment by wedding their victims. "If a valid marriage contract exists
between the perpetrator of one of these crimes... and the abused, the
prosecution is suspended," it reads. "If a verdict has been issued, the
implementation is suspended."Awada said: "We called on all parliamentarians and
decision-makers in the Lebanese state with this message: every 'yes' from you is
a 'no' to a rapist."
- 'Stone age' -
Standing amid the fluttering wedding dresses, Minister for Women's Affairs Jean
Oghassabian described the article as being "from the stone age.""Its turn has
come, it's the second item on the agenda" at an upcoming legislative session on
May 15, Oghassabian, who is also an MP, told AFP. Lebanese artist Mireille
Honein, who designed the exhibition in Paris and brought it to her homeland this
week, said she made the dresses out of white paper "to highlight the ephemeral
nature of marriage and of laws." "And I hung them up, because this type of law
simply robs women of their essence, leaves them without an identity and suspends
them in a life that does not suit them and is shameful for those imposing it on
them," Honein told AFP. As passersby paused to look at the ghostly installation,
volunteers from ABAAD invited them to sign a petition demanding parliament
prioritize the article's elimination. Silver-haired Rafiq Ajouri, who hails from
a southern Lebanese village, was persuaded to sign on while on his morning
stroll along the corniche. "If I were to get raped, why wouldn't I get my
rights? I'd want people to stand beside me," he said. But the elderly man, who
has five sons and three daughters, hesitated when an ABAAD volunteer said women
should be allowed the same liberties as men. "They can have their freedoms, but
within limits. Why? Because they're girls."
Army Commander: No Safe Haven for Terrorists in Lebanon
Naharnet/April 23/17/Army Commander General Joseph Aoun stressed on Saturday
that terrorists and militants will not find a safe haven in any area in Lebanon.
“The security situation in the country is totally under the army's control. Any
attempts to disrupt security and stability will be faced firmly,” said Aoun in a
statement. The Army commander's comments came after the troops succeeded on
Saturday at arresting a group of terrorists, including an IS Emir who has
reportedly decreed the killing of Lebanese soldiers. “There is no safe haven for
terrorists in any region in Lebanon,” he stressed. At dawn on Saturday, the
Lebanese army arrested in Wadi al-Hosn in the outskirts of Arsal a group of ten
terrorists who have infiltrated Lebanon's territory earlier. Among the detainees
is the so-called Syrian legitimate IS Emir Alaa al-Halabi, aka al-Mlais, who has
ordered the killing of Lebanese soldiers.Among the detainees are arms dealers
and members of a smuggling networks who work in favor of terrorist groups, it
was reported.
Lebanon: Jumblat Proposes New Hybrid Electoral Law
Asharq Al-Awsat/April 23/17/Beirut – Head of Lebanon’s Progressive Socialist
Party MP Walid Jumblat presented on Saturday a new parliamentary electoral law
in a bid to end the ongoing crisis over the issue. The new hybrid law is a
combination of the proportional representation and winner-takes-all system.
At a time when the majority of political powers took their time in reviewing the
new law, “Hezbollah” renewed its commitment to the proportional representation
law. Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil was quick to hail Jumblat’s initiative,
saying: “The fact that the PSP has taken the initiative to present a draft-law
away from our opinion is a positive step forward.”The law, revealed in a press
conference by MP Ghazi al-Aridi, calls for the election of 64 lawmakers based on
the winner-takes-all system and for dividing Lebanon into 26 districts. The
remaining 64 MPs will be elected based on proportional representation and 11
electoral districts. “This draft law is complete on the national level and does
not omit anyone,” Aridi said.He explained that it caters to the concerns of all
political powers, stressing the need to reach an agreement on a new electoral
law before May 15. Speaker Nabih Berri had scheduled a parliamentary session for
May 15 during which lawmakers will vote to extend their term for a third time.
Lebanon last held parliamentary elections in 2009. The parliament has since
extended its term twice over the political powers’ failure to reach an agreement
over a new electoral law. On the political deadlock, “Hezbollah” MP Ali al-Moqdad
said: “As Lebanese, we are required to adopt a new law for the upcoming
elections, because the situation can no longer continue without polls.”The
party’s support for proportional representation was echoed by head of the Marada
Movement MP Suleiman Franjieh. “Complete proportionality offer correct
representation,” he stressed. Jumblat’s Druze rival Minister of the Displaced
Talal Arslan was quick to reject the MP’s new electoral law, saying that he
opposes all hybrid law proposals.He also backed proportional representation.
Parties, officials take part in Armenian genocide gathering
in Antelias
Bassil: There is a cultural genocide attempt against our identity via systematic
demographic changes
Sun 23 Apr 2017/NNA - Youth sectors of the three Armenian parties, Tashnag,
Hanshak and Ramgavar, organized a gathering on Sunday evening at the Armenian
Catholic Orthodox Church of the House of Kilikia in Antelias, as part of the
activities marking the 120th commemoration of the Armenian genocide. A student
and youth march organized by the Zawarian students' section of Tashnag Party set
out earlier this evening from Burj Hammoud in order to join in the gathering.
Also partaking in the gathering were: Free Patriotic Movement Head, Foreign
Affairs and Expatriates Minister Gebran Bassil; State Minister for Women's
Affairs Jean Ogassapian; Tashnag Party Secretary-General, MP Hagop Paqradunian;
Deputies Serge Tor Sarkisian and Sebouh Kalbakian, former Minister Sebouh
Hovnanian, as well as representatives of the three Armenian parties and crowds
of young citizens. In a word on the occasion, Minister Bassil considered that
"there is a cultural genocide targeting our identity through systematic
demographic changes." "We are fighting every day for our survival, because the
annihilation we are subjected to is not only to wipe out our people, but all our
culture and identity through deliberate demographic changes, which means that
they are trying to change our identities and erase them," he explained. "There
is an economic genocide, in addition to political obliteration, and each time we
survive, we get back into another labor," added Bassil. "So, we all fight to
keep this Eastern identity of a human wanting to live freely and harmoniously
alongside his fellow brethrens, for freedom is the common denominator that
brings us together. Therefore, we are one people, and we will have only one
weapon which is the weapon of peace and freedom and openness to the other,"
vowed Bassil.
Sami Gemayel: Is there a compromise on extension of
Parliament's mandate, adoption of 1960 law?
Sun 23 Apr 2017/NNA - Kataeb party leader, Sami Gemayel, on Sunday questioned
the government about the reasons behind its failure to put the electoral law on
its agenda after four months and with the expiry of constitutional deadlines. At
the party's annual dinner in Batroun, Gemayel said: "Why resorting to bids and
exchange of accusations? You all bear the responsibility of failing to approve
on election law, without exception." "Is there a compromise regarding the
extension of the Parliament's mandate and the return to 1960 law?" he said in
his speech. According to his remarks, the political life in Lebanon reached a
low level in everything. "Political performance must be based on constants and
principles, these values are essential for the building of the state," he said.
Gemayel promised that his party would be the first to defend citizens who
struggle to live in dignity in Lebanon.
17,400 participants in Sidon Marathon: We run for
development and peace
Sun 23 Apr 2017/NNA - More than 17,400 people participated on Sunday in Sidon
International Marathon, organized on April 23 under the title "We run for
development and peace," by Saida International Marathon Association and
sponsored by Bank Audi, Rotaract club and the municipality of the city. MP Bahia
Hariri, representing Prime Minister, Saad Hariri, and MP Fouad Siniora presented
medals to the winners at Rafiq Hariri Stadium. The Marathon was launched around
7.00 am from the north entrance of the capital of South Lebanon and lasted more
than five hours.
The race was supervised by the Lebanese Sports Federation in presence of
Lebanese and international referees.
Riachy: After the Christian reconciliation, we can say out
loud that Muslims resemble us and those who distort their image are not Muslims
Sun 23 Apr 2017/NNA - Under the patronage of Information Minister Melhem Riachy,
"Balsamat Association" held the second session of its "CAEL Festival" on Sunday,
in appreciation of the role and contributions of embassies in Lebanon. During
the event, Minister Riachy was honored along with the President's Advisor for
International Cooperation, former Minister Elias Bou Saab, and various Arab and
foreign ambassadors and prominent Lebanese figures, for their remarkable efforts
and achievements. In his word marking the occasion, Minister Riachy said: "All
the Lebanese, Muslims and Christians, as well as the Arab brethrens, are
concerned with the issue of awareness of the values of reconciliation, which
form the foundation for the civilization of peace.""When peace arrives, the
blessing is felt by both Muslims and Christians alike," he added. "In wake of
the Christian reconciliation, we are able to say out loud that Muslims resemble
us and those who distort their image are not Muslims," stressed Riachy. "Both
Muslims and Christians are present in this East, and the natural model of this
existence and its continuation, and the reality of the civilization of said
existence, is the Lebanese model," he added. "As Lebanese Christians, we are
responsible for presenting Islam to the Christian West," emphasized Riachy.
Fenianos followsup on veering ship in Sidon, gives
instructions to save its crew
Sun 23 Apr 2017 /NNA - Public Works and Transport Minister, Youssef Fenianos,
followed-up Sunday on the Ship "Nabil G" which veered off course nearby the
coast of Sidon.In this context, Fenianos contacted Land and Marine Transport
General Directorate and Sidon Port Management, giving instructions to rescue the
vessel and its crew after being reassured of their safety.
Kassem Hashem: To work on common, uniting points
Sun 23 Apr 2017/NNA - Liberation and Development Parliamentary Bloc Member, MP
Kassem Hashem, called, on Sunday, for "working on what is common and uniting
between various sides in the country, while staying away from any points of
division or separation.""The ideas and election formulas that have been proposed
recently are positive and contribute to enriching the debate and ongoing
dialogue on the expected election law," said Hashem. He pointed to the
importance that such approaches fall within the national framework and away from
any sectarian logic that takes the country to a place where the Lebanese do not
want under the current exceptional circumstances. Hashem's words came during his
tour today among Arqoub villages in the region of Hibarieh, Shebaa, Kfarhamam
and Ferdaus. He stressed on the need to deal with the work of institutions in a
manner that preserves political stability, and ensures a balanced political life
in the country. Hashem concluded by reiterating the "need for an extraordinary
development plan and allocating a special budget for the Southern borderline
areas, which are still paying a high national price in the face of the Israeli
enemy's aggression."
Osseiran representing Berri: We need law that respects representation
Sun 23 Apr 2017/NNA - "Development and Liberation" parliamentary bloc member, MP
Ali Osseiran, represented on Sunday House Speaker, Nabih Berri, at the launching
of Sidon International Marathon alongside head of the Future Parliament bloc
Fouad Siniora, MP Bahia Hariri, and several political, social, and sports
personalities.MP Osseiran said in a statement that the country was in dire need
for an electoral law that takes into account fair representation and spares the
country the repercussions of vacuum.
Raad: US administration sponsors international terrorism
Sun 23 Apr 2017/NNA - Head of Loyalty to the Resistance Parliamentary Bloc, MP
Mohammad Raad, summed up the ongoing regional struggle as one over oil, gas and
the future. Speaking during a funeral ceremony in Zahrani, attended by MPs
Abdulatif Zein and Ali Ousseiran, Raad noted that it was important to
distinguish the "real enemy.""We see that the American administration and its
regional agents comprised of certain regimes puppeteer these tools. Israel, for
instance, is incapable of making war decisions in the region without prior
permission from the US administration," said Raad.
"The master of hostilities that sponsors organized international terrorism is
the US administration. We are aware that it aims at dismantling our nation,
states and societies and weakening armies," added the MP, explaining that
targeting Syria was just another step towards achieving the US project.
"By targeting Syria, they target the resistance which has defeated the Israeli
enemy.""The enemy is not yet qualified to wage a war on Lebanon...we did not
defeat it with our technologically advanced weapons, but we defeated it with our
love for Imam Hussein," Raad concluded.
Delegation from Directorate General of Civil Aviation
inspects Koleiaat Airport
Sun 23 Apr 2017/NNA - Under the instructions of Minister of Public Works and
Transportation, Youssef Finianos, a delegation of the Directorate General of
Civil Aviation visited on Sunday Koleiaat Airport. The delegation was briefed
about the airport's condition and prepared a report in this regard.
Latest LCCC
Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
April 23-24/17
Pope: Migrant Holding Centers Similar to Concentration Camps
Asharq Al-Awsat English/April 23/17/Pope Francis lamented on Saturday the state
of holding centers where migrants are held in various European countries,
likening them to “concentration centers.” He therefore urged governments to get
migrants and refugees out of these centers. During a visit to a Rome basilica,
where he met migrants, Francis told of his trip to a camp on the Greek island of
Lesbos last year. Francis took some of the Lesbos refugees with him aboard his
plane back to Italy. He met a Muslim refugee from the Middle East there who told
him how “terrorists came to our country”. “I don’t know if he managed to leave
that concentration camp, because refugee camps, many of them, are of
concentration (type) because of the great number of people left there inside
them,” the pope said. The American Jewish Committee (AJC) later urged the pope
“to reconsider his regrettable choice of words” for using the term concentration
camp. “The conditions in which migrants are currently living in some European
countries may well be difficult, and deserve still greater international
attention, but concentration camps they certainly are not,” the AJC’s head,
David Harris, said in a statement. “The Nazis and their allies erected and used
concentration camps for slave labor and the extermination of millions of people
during World War II. There is no comparison to the magnitude of that tragedy,”
he said. Francis praised countries helping refugees and thanked them for
“bearing this extra burden, because it seems that international accords are more
important than human rights”. He did not elaborate but appeared to be referring
to agreements that keep migrants from crossing borders, such as deals between
the European Union (EU) and Libya and the EU and Turkey. Humanitarian groups
have criticized both deals. He praised Italians and Greeks for welcoming tens of
thousands of refugees and migrants rescued at sea. He said he hopes the same
generous spirit will “infect” other countries in Europe who have been resistant
to taking in the refugees. Noting that Italy had one of the world’s lowest birth
rates, he said: “If we also close the door to migrants, this is called suicide.”
Next week Francis makes a two-trip pilgrimage to Egypt, a predominantly Muslim
Arab nation where on April 9, on the Christian holy day of Palm Sunday, twin
suicide bombings of Coptic churches killed 44 people.
Report: Pro-Assad militia base targeted in alleged Israel airstrike
Anna Ahronheim/Jerusalem Post/April 23, 2017/The IDF struck a base belonging to
a pro-Syrian militia near Quneitra early Sunday morning, al-Jazeera reported. In
a statement released by The National Defense Forces (NDF), a pro-regime militia,
the alleged Israeli strike targeted the Naba Fawar base, killing three fighters
and wounding two others. The unconfirmed airstrike comes after the army
confirmed that the IDF struck several positions in Syria following projectiles
which landed in Israel’s Golan Heights on Friday, apparently errant fire from
the fighting in the war-torn country. Syria's official news agency SANA said
Israel struck a regime military position in the surroundings of Khan Arnabeh in
Quneitra countryside, “causing material damage.”Netanyahu: Israel welcomes US
airstrikes in Syria (credit: GPO) With various heavily armed radical groups
battling President Bashar Assad, Syria is Israel’s most unpredictable and
unstable neighbor and poses one of the largest risks for a sudden escalation. As
several battles rage in Syria, the errant rocket fire was likely due to fighting
between Hezbollah and regime troops against rebel groups near Ain Ayshaa,
Samadiniyah Sharqiyah & Madinat al-Baath near Quneitra. The border with Syria
has been tense since the war there erupted in 2011, and while Israel rarely
publicly admits to carrying out strikes, which are mostly limited to convoys of
advanced weaponry destined for Hezbollah, it is suspected of carrying out out
occasional retaliatory strikes on Syria after stray rockets or mortar rounds
struck Israeli territory.
Israeli Attack on Syria Military Camp Kills Three
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/April 23/17/An Israeli attack on a Syrian camp for
pro-government forces killed three fighters near the Golan Heights on Sunday, an
official from the forces said. The official told AFP that two fighters were also
wounded in the attack on the al-Fawwar camp near Quneitra in southwestern Syria,
adding that it was unclear whether the damage was inflicted by an air strike or
shelling. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group confirmed the
early Sunday attack but had no further details. Israel's army on Friday said it
targeted positions inside Syria in retaliation for mortar fire that hit the
northern part of the Golan Heights. Syria's official news agency SANA said
Friday that Israel had struck a Syrian army position in the province of Quneitra
on the Golan plateau, "causing damage." The Syrian government labels rebel
groups and jihadists fighting the regime as "terrorists" and accuses Israel of
backing them. Israel seized 1,200 square kilometers of the Golan from Syria in
the Six-Day War of 1967 and later annexed it in a move never recognized by the
international community. Around 510 square kilometers of the Golan are under
Syrian control.The two countries are still technically at war, although the
border remained largely quiet for decades until 2011, when the Syrian conflict
broke out. The Israeli side is hit sporadically by what are usually deemed to be
stray rounds, and Israel has recently taken to opening fire in retaliation.
Saudi King Names Son as U.S. Envoy, Fires Army Chief, 3 Ministers
Saudi Arabia on Saturday named an air force pilot son of King Salman as
ambassador to its major ally Washington, with which ties are improving under
President Donald Trump. The change came among a series of orders issued by the
king, who shuffled his cabinet, restored civil service benefits, and replaced
the head of the army which for two years has been fighting rebels in neighboring
Yemen. "Prince Abdullah bin Faisal bin Turki removed as ambassador to the US.
Prince Khaled bin Salman bin Abdulaziz appointed ambassador," the official Saudi
Press Agency reported, citing a royal order.Prince Abdullah had served for just
over a year, according to the website of the Saudi embassy in Washington. The
United States and Saudi Arabia have a decades-old relationship based on the
exchange of American security for Saudi oil. But ties between Riyadh and
Washington became increasingly frayed during the administration of president
Barack Obama. Saudi leaders felt Obama was reluctant to get involved in the
civil war in Syria and was tilting toward Riyadh's regional rival Iran. The
Saudis have found a more favorable ear in Washington under Trump, who took
office in January and has denounced Iran's "harmful influence" in the Middle
East. Washington provides some logistical and intelligence support, as well as
weapons, for the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen. The kingdom also belongs to the
U.S.-led coalition against the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria.
Prince Khaled, the new ambassador, is an air force pilot who flew missions as
part of that anti-IS coalition, said Salman al-Ansari, president of the Saudi
American Public Relation Affairs Committee (SAPRAC). Ansari, whose committee is
a private initiative to strengthen Saudi-US ties, described Prince Khaled as a
"very organized personality, savvy, youthful, and active." Another son of King
Salman, Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, 31, is second in line to the
throne and is one of the kingdom's most powerful figures.He holds the post of
defense minister and is pushing a wide-ranging social and economic reform
program.
Military bonuses
Among other orders issued by King Salman, the head of the army Lieutenant
General Eid al-Shalwi was removed. Fahad Bin Turki was promoted to replace him.
The army is helping to defend Saudi Arabia's southern border from rebel
incursions but analysts say that, in Yemen itself, coalition troops from the
United Arab Emirates have the most prominence in ground operations being
conducted with local forces. Saudi Arabia leads the air campaign but after two
years of coalition intervention analysts say Yemen is more unstable than ever,
and one called it a "quagmire."Saudi military personnel in the Yemen operation
will receive a salary bonus of two months, the king also ordered, despite a
budget deficit forecast to be $53 billion this year following a collapse in
global oil prices since 2014. The salaries of other civil servants were frozen
last year and benefits curbed, while the government cut subsidies and delayed
major projects. Salman on Saturday ended the restrictions on compensation for
state workers because he is "keen to provide comfort to the Saudi citizens," a
decree said, as the kingdom prepares to increase electricity and other prices.
Salman fired Minister of Civil Service Khaled al-Araj, who will be investigated
by a committee of the Royal Court. The Arab News reported late last year that
Araj was under investigation by the kingdom's anti-corruption commission for the
alleged "irregular hiring" of his son. In other changes, Salman dismissed
Minister of Information and Culture Adel al-Turaifi and replaced him with Awad
al-Awad. Minister of Communication and Information Technology Mohammed al-Suwaiyel
also lost his job, replaced by Abdullah al-Swaha. The king changed some regional
governors, along with numerous senior bureaucrats including the head of the
General Authority of Sports as the kingdom tries to provide more athletic
activities for its people. Under the reforms being directed by the Deputy Crown
Prince, Saudi Arabia is trying to make government operations more efficient and
officials more accountable.
French election: Macron vs Le Pen in May 7 run-off vote
Al Arabiya English and agencies Sunday, 23 April 2017/French state television
has projected Centrist Emmanuel Macron finished ahead of far-right leader Marine
Le Pen on Sunday to qualify alongside her for the runoff in France's
presidential election, initial projections suggested.
Macron was projected to score 23-24 percent, with Le Pen at 21.6-23 percent,
according to several polling institutes. Some 67,000 polling stations opened
Sunday at 0600 GMT under tight security monitored by more than 50,000 police
officers for some 47 million eligible voters, who will choose between 11
candidates. It’s the most unpredictable election in generations, according to Al
Arabiya's Paris correspondent. It’s the most unpredictable election in
generations, according to Al Arabiya’s Paris correspondent. “This was an
unprecedented election with a sitting president opting out of running for
re-elections for fear of losing because of her falling popularity. On the one
hand, we have a centrist candidate who opposes much of what far-right Le Pen
proposes, from security policies to her views on Islam,” Al Arabiya’s Hussein
Kneiber reported. France’s 10 percent unemployment, its lackluster economy and
security issues topped voters’ concerns. Turnout was is set to be around 80
percent, polling groups estimated, which would put it in line with 2012 and
confound fears of high abstention levels.
The voters will decide whether to back a pro-EU centrist newcomer, a
scandal-ridden veteran conservative who wants to slash public spending, a
far-left eurosceptic admirer of Fidel Castro or appoint France’s first woman
president who would shut borders and ditch the euro.
Polls suggest far-right nationalist Marine Le Pen and Emmanuel Macron, an
independent centrist and former economy minister, were in the lead. But
conservative Francois Fillon, a former prime minister, appeared to be closing
the gap, as was far-left candidate Jean-Luc Melenchon.
Macron, head of the political movement En Marche !, or Onwards !, and candidate
for the 2017 French presidential election, greets supporters during in the first
round of 2017 French presidential election at a polling station in Le Touquet.
(Reuters) The bitterly fought presidential election is crucial to the future of
Europe. The outcome will be anxiously monitored around the world as a sign of
whether the populist tide that saw Britain vote to leave the EU and Donald
Trump’s election in the United States is still rising, or starting to ebb.
Macron, 39, a centrist ex-banker who set up his party just a year ago, is the
opinion polls’ favorite to win the first round and beat far-right National Front
chief Le Pen in the two-person run-off on May 7. For them to win the top two
qualifying positions on Sunday would represent a seismic shift in the political
landscape, as the second round would feature neither of the mainstream parties
that have governed France for decades. Marine Le Pen, French National Front (FN)
political party leader and candidate for French 2017 presidential election,
leaves a polling booth as she votes in the first round of 2017 French
presidential election at a polling station in Henin-Beaumont. (Reuters)
“It wouldn’t be the classic left vs right divide but two views of the world
clashing,” said Ifop pollsters’ Jerome Fourquet. “Macron bills himself as the
progressist versus conservatives, Le Pen as the patriot versus the
globalists.”Months of campaigning has been dominated by scandals which have left
many voters agonizing over their choice. Some 20-30 percent might not vote and
about 30 percent of those who plan to show up at the polling stations are unsure
whom to vote for.
Labour leader Corbyn says could suspend Syria air strikes
if elected
By Reuters, London Sunday, 23 April 2017/The leader of Britain’s main opposition
Labour Party Jeremy Corbyn said on Sunday he could suspend British involvement
in air strikes against Syria if he was elected prime minister at a June 8
election. The veteran peace campaigner, whose Labour Party is around 20 points
behind the ruling Conservatives in opinion polls, set out his position on a
range of security and foreign policies, saying he would look again at Britain’s
nuclear deterrent and was against using nuclear weapons. His comments were
pounced upon by the Conservatives, who said that Corbyn posed a threat to
British security and was the best reason “for sticking with the strong
leadership of (Prime Minister) Theresa May”.Corbyn told the BBC’s Andrew Marr
Show that he believed that “the only solution in Syria is going to be a
political one”. “I want us to say ‘Listen, let’s get people around the table
quickly’ and a way of achieving that - suspending the strikes, possibly.”The
leftist leader, whose views on foreign policy have often been at odds with those
held by other lawmakers in his party, also said he would have to consider
whether he would authorize a drone strike against the leader of ISIS to limit
civilian casualties. May, who said she had called the early election to shore up
support for her divorce plan with the European Union and heal divisions in the
country, looks set to win a large majority, with some polls putting support for
her party at 50 percent.
Why did Erdogan meet secretly with prominent American
figures?
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English Sunday, 23 April 2017/Turkish president Recep
Tayyip Erdogan reportedly had a secret meeting with Rudy Giuliani former New
York mayor and Michael Mukasey, former Attorney General, to represent Istanbul
businessman Reza Zarrab, as the man could be a potential bargaining chip in a
national security deal with Turkey, Giuliani said in a court filing, reported
New York Times late March. Giuliani was hired recently, along with Michael
Mukasey, to represent Zarrab who was accused of conspiring to process hundreds
of millions of dollars' worth of financial transactions for Iranian businesses
or Iran's government from 2010 to 2015. Zarrab, 33 was a central player in a
massive 2013 corruption and bribery scandal in Turkey, though criminal charges
were ultimately dropped. He is a famous personality in Turkey because he is
married to Turkish pop star and TV personality Ebru Gundes. In papers unsealed
late Wednesday, Giuliani and Mukasey said they were hired "principally although
not exclusively on an effort to determine whether this case can be resolved as
part of some agreement between the United States and Turkey that will promote
the national security interests of the United States and redound to the benefit
of Mr. Zarrab."The two lawyers met recently with Turkey's president, Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, after notifying Attorney General Jeff Sessions and federal
prosecutors that they planned to settle the case on a "state-to-state basis" to
pursue the possibility of an agreement that could promote the security of the
United States and resolve the issues in this case," they wrote.At a court
hearing this month, Assistant U.S. Attorney Dennis Lockard expressed concern
that the defense lawyers' efforts were an attempt to make a political end-run
around a judicial proceeding. However, Giuliani and Mukasey defended their work,
with Mukasey writing that their behind-the-scenes maneuvering was "entirely
lawful and not at all unprecedented."
Pentagon chief visits African nation home to key US base
The Associated Press, Djibouti Sunday, 23 April 2017/US Defense Secretary Jim
Mattis on Sunday visited Djibouti to bolster ties with the tiny and impoverished
African country that is home to an important base for US counterterrorism
forces, including drones. Mattis, the first Trump administration official to
visit Djibouti, planned to meet with President Ismail Omar Guelleh and greet US
and French troops. He was accompanied by Marine Gen. Thomas Waldhauser, head of
US Africa Command.| The US operates drone aircraft from Djibouti for
surveillance and combat missions against al-Qaida-affiliated extremists in
Somalia and elsewhere in the region.
China building base
China is building a military base in Djibouti, a former French colony in the
Horn of Africa. For years the US has operated a fleet of armed drones from
Djibouti’s Camp Lemonnier, where French troops also are based. Djibouti took on
added importance to the US military after the September 11 attacks, in part as a
means of tracking and intercepting al-Qaida militants fleeing Afghanistan after
the US invaded that country in October 2001. Djibouti has a highly prized port
on the Gulf of Aden. The country is sandwiched between Somalia and Eritrea, and
also shares a border with Ethiopia.
Mattis is using the early months as defense secretary to renew or strengthen
relations with key defense allies and partners such as Djibouti, whose location
makes it a strategic link in the network of overseas US military bases. Djibouti
also has been instrumental to international efforts to counter piracy over the
past decade. Mattis’ predecessor at the Pentagon, Ash Carter, never visited
Djibouti during his two years as President Barack Obama’s defense secretary.
Over the past week Mattis has met with leaders in Saudi Arabia, Israel, Egypt
and Qatar. The US has a fleet of fighter, bomber, transport, surveillance and
refueling aircraft at Qatar’s al-Udeid air base, which also is home to an
operations center that coordinates US air missions throughout the Mideast and in
Afghanistan.
North Korea says ready to strike US aircraft carrier
By Reuters, Seoul Sunday, 23 April 2017/North Korea said on Sunday it was ready
to sink a US aircraft carrier to demonstrate its military might, as two Japanese
navy ships joined a US carrier group for exercises in the western Pacific. US
President Donald Trump ordered the USS Carl Vinson carrier strike group to sail
to waters off the Korean peninsula in response to rising tension over the
North’s nuclear and missile tests, and its threats to attack the United States
and its Asian allies. The United States has not specified where the carrier
strike group is as it approaches the area. US Vice President Mike Pence said on
Saturday it would arrive “within days” but gave no other details. North Korea
remained defiant. “Our revolutionary forces are combat-ready to sink a US
nuclear-powered aircraft carrier with a single strike,” the Rodong Sinmun, the
newspaper of the North’s ruling Workers’ Party, said in a commentary. The paper
likened the aircraft carrier to a “gross animal” and said a strike on it would
be “an actual example to show our military’s force”. The commentary was carried
on page three of the newspaper, after a two-page feature about leader Kim Jong
Un inspecting a pig farm.
Speaking during a visit to Greece, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said there
were already enough shows of force and confrontation at present and appealed for
calm. “We need to issue peaceful and rational sounds,” Wang said, according to a
statement issued by China’s Foreign Ministry.
Adding to the tensions, North Korea detained a Korean-American man in his
fifties on Friday, bringing the total number of US citizens held by Pyongyang to
three.
The man, Tony Kim, had been in North Korea for a month teaching accounting at
the Pyongyang University of Science and Technology (PUST), the institution’s
chancellor Chan-Mo Park told Reuters. He was arrested at Pyongyang International
Airport on his way out of the country.
North Korea will mark the 85th anniversary of the foundation of its Korean
People’s Army on Tuesday.
It has in the past marked important anniversaries with tests of its weapons.
North Korea has conducted five nuclear tests, two of them last year, and is
working to develop nuclear-tipped missiles that can reach the United States.
It has also carried out a series of ballistic missile tests in defiance of
United Nations sanctions.
North Korea’s growing nuclear and missile threat is perhaps the most serious
security challenge confronting Trump. He has vowed to prevent the North from
being able to hit the United States with a nuclear missile and has said all
options are on the table, including a military strike.
Worry in Japan
North Korea says its nuclear program is for self-defense and has warned the
United States of a nuclear attack in response to any aggression. It has also
threatened to lay waste to South Korea and Japan.
US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said on Friday North Korea’s recent statements
were provocative but had proven to be hollow in the past and should not be
trusted. “We’ve all come to hear their words repeatedly; their word has not
proven honest,” Mattis told a news conference in Tel Aviv, before the latest
threat to the aircraft carrier. Japan’s show of naval force reflects growing
concern that North Korea could strike it with nuclear or chemical warheads. Some
Japanese ruling party lawmakers are urging Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to acquire
strike weapons that could hit North Korean missile forces before any imminent
attack.
Japan’s navy, which is mostly a destroyer fleet, is the second largest in Asia
after China’s.
The two Japanese warships, the Samidare and Ashigara, left western Japan on
Friday to join the Carl Vinson and will “practice a variety of tactics” with the
US strike group, the Japan Maritime Self Defence Force said in a statement. The
Japanese force did not specify where the exercises were taking place, but by
Sunday the destroyers could have reached an area 2,500 km (1,500 miles) south of
Japan, which would be east of the Philippines.
From there, it could take three days to reach waters off the Korean peninsula.
Japan’s ships would accompany the Carl Vinson north at least into the East China
Sea, a source with knowledge of the plan said. US and South Korean officials
have been saying for weeks that the North could soon stage another nuclear test,
something the United States, China and others have warned against.
South Korea has put its forces on heightened alert. China, North Korea’s sole
major ally, opposes Pyongyang’s weapons programs and has appealed for calm. The
United States has called on China to do more to help defuse the tension. Last
Thursday, Trump praised Chinese efforts to rein in “the menace of North Korea”,
after North Korean state media warned the United States of a “super-mighty
pre-emptive strike”.
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Marine Le Pen… Extremism Knocking on France’s Door
Salman Al-dossary/Asharq Al-Awsat/April 23/17/
While French voters head to the first round of presidential elections on Sunday,
the duet of extremism and counter-extremism has thrown its shadow on the
country. The terrorist attacks claimed by ISIS have struck fear among the French
people.
Terrorist groups are the happiest with the extremist approach of presidential
candidate Marine Le Pen, the leader of the extremist right that has benefitted
the most from this terrorist wave. The more ISIS increases its terrorism, the
more Le Pen stresses her antagonism to Islam, not extremists.
When ISIS claimed responsibility for an armed attack on a police car in
Champs-Élysées earlier this week, Le Pen replied by calling for the closure of
“the Muslim mosques” in France, not extremist ones. This is only one new episode
of extremism and counter-extremism hitting Europe in the past five years and is
evident in the presidential elections in France.
Le Pen is always controversial in her attitude towards Islam and Muslims and her
incitement to hatred, discrimination and anti-Semitism have led a number of
European deputies to call for lifting her parliamentary immunity. Her extremist
stances have also taken on a racist edge where in the past she had targeted
French football players, especially those of Algerian origin, such as Karim
Benzema and Samir Nasri. She also targeted Franck Ribéry who is married to an
Algerian. She described them as immoral and haters of the French team and said
that they only want to accumulate money and mock the French people.
These extremist stances have made Le Pen – head of a party that had been shunned
during her father’s tenure – a strong presidential candidate. France Prime
Minister Bernard Cazeneuve had meanwhile accused her of exploiting the
Champs-Élysées attack to spread fear and sedition for political purposes.
Political exploitation of developments for electoral gains is understandable,
but they become a very dangerous matter once these methods encourage extremism
in the world. It is impossible to combat terrorism with extremism. On the
contrary, it expands its circles and grants its perpetrators illusory
justifications to incite their supporters.
There is no doubt that Le Pen’s rhetoric is not only backed by the extremists,
but it is starting to spread, especially after she pledged to take France out of
the Schengen agreement and to restore the French Franc to replace the unified
European currency (euro). In most communities, no matter how developed they are,
popular rhetoric will always be supported by various segments of society. Add to
that the exploitation of the fear of terrorist groups, then attempting to win
over voters will not be very difficult, even if they live in such a
democratically prestigious country as France. In the past, the bet was on the
French voters’ ability to limit the far-right’s advance to a certain limit line.
This line however has started to fade.
The French elections are being held at a time of tensions in Europe in wake of
the British people’s vote to exit the European Union and the rise of the
far-right in several parts of the continent. These polls have been dominated by
several main files in recent weeks before ISIS was able to impose itself as a
decisive voter after the Champs-Élysées attack. France is a nuclear power that
cannot be underestimated. It also enjoys the sixth largest economy in the world
and is a founding member of the EU, which makes its presidential elections an
anticipated event. It is unfortunate that counter-extremism is the solution that
some politicians and voters are looking for. If we add to that the Muslim
community in France’s failure to eliminate Le Pen’s stances from the minds of
the French community and their failure to show the true image of the tolerant
Islam then the extremists have found the road wide open for them to show the
tarnished image of Islam that Le Pen and her party have latched on to.It is not
surprising that ISIS, or “voter number one”, chose to carry out its attack two
days before the first round of the French elections. It is presenting a
priceless gift to Le Pen, pushing her to obtain the support of 40 percent of the
undecided voters. If ISIS is voting for of the leader of the far-right, then it
will definitely be the happiest should she win and become president.
**Salman Aldosary is the former editor-in-chief of Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper.
A Young Prince is Reimagining Saudi Arabia
David Ignatius/The Washington Post/April 23/17/
Two years into his campaign as change agent in this conservative oil kingdom,
Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman appears to be gaining the confidence and
political clout to push his agenda of economic and social reform. The young
prince outlined his plans in a nearly 90-minute conversation Tuesday night at
his office here. Aides said it was his first lengthy on-the-record interview in
months. He offered detailed explanations about foreign policy, plans to
privatize oil giant Saudi Aramco, strategy for investment in domestic industry,
and liberalization of the entertainment sector, despite opposition from some
people. Mohammed bin Salman said that the crucial requirement for reform is
public willingness to change. “The most concerning thing is if the Saudi people
are not convinced. If the Saudi people are convinced, the sky is the limit.” he
said.
Change seems increasingly desired in this young, restless country.
A recent Saudi poll found that 85 percent of the public, if forced to choose,
would support the government rather than other authorities, said Abdullah al-Hokail,
the head of the government’s public opinion center.
He added that 77 percent of those surveyed supported the government’s “Vision
2030” reform plan, and that 82 percent favored entertainment performances at
public gatherings. Though these aren’t independently verified numbers, they do
indicate the direction of popular feeling, which Saudis say is matched by
anecdotal evidence. “MBS,” as the deputy crown prince is known, said that he was
“very optimistic” about President Trump. He described Trump as “a president who
will bring America back to the right track” after Barack Obama, whom Saudi
officials mistrusted. “Trump has not yet completed 100 days, and he has restored
all the alliances of the US with its conventional allies.”A sign of the
kingdom’s embrace of the Trump administration was the visit here this week by US
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis. While the Obama administration had criticized the
Saudi war in Yemen, Mattis discussed the possibility of additional US support if
the Houthis there don’t agree to a UN-brokered settlement. (Writer’s note: I
traveled to Saudi Arabia as part of the press corps accompanying Mattis.)
Mohammed bin Salman has been courting Russia, as well as the United States, and
he offered an intriguing explanation of Saudi Arabia’s goal in this diplomacy.
“The main objective is not to have Russia place all its cards in the region
behind Iran,” he said. To convince Russia that Riyadh is a better bet than
Tehran, the Saudis have been “coordinating our oil policies recently” with
Moscow, he said, which “could be the most important economic deal for Russia in
modern times.”
There’s less apparent political tension than a year ago, when many analysts saw
a rivalry between Mohammed bin Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, who
is officially next in line for the throne.
The deputy crown prince appears to be firmly in control of Saudi military
strategy, foreign policy and economic planning. He has gathered a team of
technocrats who are much younger and more activist than the kingdom’s past
leadership.
Reform plans appear to be moving ahead slowly but steadily. Mohammed bin Salman
said that the budget deficit had been cut; non-oil revenue increased 46 percent
from 2014 to 2016 and is forecast to grow another 12 percent this year.
Unemployment and housing remain problems, he said, and improvement in those
areas isn’t likely until between 2019 and 2021. The biggest economic change is
the plan to privatize about 5 percent of Saudi Aramco, which Mohammed bin Salman
said will take place next year. This public offering would probably raise
hundreds of billions of dollars and be the largest such sale in financial
history. The exact size of the offering will depend on financial-market demand
and the availability of good options for investing the proceeds, the prince told
me.
The rationale for selling a share of the kingdom’s oil treasure is to raise
money to diversify the economy away from reliance on energy. One priority is
mining, which would tap an estimated $1.3 trillion in potential mineral wealth.
The Saudi official listed other investment targets: creating a domestic arms
industry, reducing the $60 billion to $80 billion the kingdom spends annually to
buy weapons abroad; producing automobiles in Saudi Arabia to replace the roughly
$14 billion the government spends annually for imported vehicles; and creating
domestic entertainment and tourism industries to capture some of the $22 billion
that Saudis spend traveling overseas each year.
The entertainment industry is a proxy for the larger puzzle of how to unlock the
Saudi economy. Changes have begun.
A Japanese orchestra performed here this month, before a mixed audience of
families. A Comic Con took place in Jeddah recently, with audience dressing up
as characters from the TV show “Supernatural” and other favorites. Comedy clubs
feature sketch comedians (but no female stand-up comics, yet).
These options are a modest revolution for a Saudi Arabia where the main
entertainment venues, until recently, were restaurants and shopping malls. The
modern world, in all its raucousness, is coming, for better or worse.
King Fahd International Stadium in Riyadh hosted a Monster Jam last month with
souped-up trucks. There are plans for a Six Flags theme park south of Riyadh.
Maya al-Athel, one of the dozens of young people hatching plans at the Saudi
General Entertainment Authority, said in an interview that she’d like to bring a
Museum of Ice Cream, like one she found in New York, to the kingdom.
“We want to boost the culture of entertainment,” said Ahmed al-Khatib, a former
investment banker who’s chairman of the entertainment authority. His target is
to create six public entertainment options every weekend for Saudis. But the
larger goal, he said, is “spreading happiness.”
The instigator of this attempt to reimagine the kingdom is the 31-year-old
deputy crown prince. With his brash demeanor, he’s the opposite of the
traditional Bedouin reserve of past Saudi leaders. Unlike so many Saudi princes,
he wasn’t educated in the West, which may have preserved the raw combative
energy that is part of his appeal for young Saudis.
The trick for Mohammed bin Salman is to maintain the alliance with the United
States, without seeming to be America’s puppet. “We have been influenced by US a
lot,” he said. “Not because anybody exerted pressure on us — if anyone puts
pressure on us, we go the other way. But if you put a movie in the cinema and I
watch it, I will be influenced.” Without this cultural nudge, he said, “we would
have ended up like North Korea.” With the United States as a continuing ally,
“undoubtedly, we’re going to merge more with the changes in the world.”
Mohammed bin Salman is careful when he talks about religious issues. So far, he
has treated the religious authorities as allies against radicalism rather than
cultural adversaries. He argues that extreme religious conservatism in Saudi
Arabia is a relatively recent phenomenon, born in reaction to the 1979 Iranian
revolution and the seizure of the Grand Mosque in Mecca by Sunni radicals later
that year as a reaction to the Shi’ite radicalism.
“I’m young. Seventy percent of our citizens are young,” the prince said. “We
don’t want to waste our lives in this whirlpool that we were in the past 30
years. We want to end this epoch now. We want, as the Saudi people, to enjoy the
coming days, and concentrate on developing our society and developing ourselves
as individuals and families, while retaining our religion and customs. We will
not continue to be in the post-’79 era,” he concluded. “That age is over.”
Islam in the Heart of England and France
Denis MacEoin/Gatestone Institute/April 23/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=54641
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10190/islam-england-france
"There are plenty of private Muslim schools and madrasas in this city. They
pretend that they all preach tolerance, love and peace, but that isn't true.
Behind their walls, they force-feed us with repetitive verses of the Qur'an,
about hate and intolerance." — Ali, an 18-year-old of French origin, whose
father was radicalized.
"In England, they are free to speak. They speak only of prohibitions, they
impose on one their rigid vision of Islam but, on the other hand, they listen to
no-one, most of all those who disagree with them." — Yasmina, speaking of
extremist Muslims in the UK.
"Birmingham is worse than Molenbeek" -- the Brussels borough that The Guardian
described as "becoming known as Europe's jihadi central." — French commentator,
republishing an article by Rachida Samouri.
The city of Birmingham in the West Midlands, the heart of England, the place
where the Industrial Revolution began, the second city of the UK and the
eighth-largest in Europe, today is Britain's most dangerous city. With a large
and growing Muslim population, five of its electoral wards have the highest
levels of radicalization and terrorism in the country.
In February, French journalist Rachida Samouri published an article in the
Parisian daily Le Figaro, in which she recounted her experiences during a visit
there. In "Birmingham à l'heure islamiste" ("Birmingham in the Time of Islam")
she describes her unease with the growing dislocation between normative British
values and those of the several Islamic enclaves. She mentions the Small Heath
quarter, where nearly 95% of the population is Muslim, where little girls wear
veils; most of the men wear beards, and women wear jilbabs and niqabs to cover
their bodies and faces. Market stalls close for the hours of prayer; the shops
display Islamic clothes and the bookshops are all religious. Women she
interviewed condemned France as a dictatorship based on secularism (laïcité),
which they said they regarded as "a pretext for attacking Muslims". They also
said that they approved of the UK because it allowed them to wear a full veil.
Another young woman, Yasmina, explained that, although she may go out to a club
at night, during the day she is forced to wear a veil and an abaya [full body
covering]. She then goes on to speak of the extremists:
"In England, they are free to speak. They speak only of prohibitions, they
impose on one their rigid vision of Islam but, on the other hand, they listen to
no-one, most of all those who disagree with them."
Speaking of the state schools, Samouri describes "an Islamization of education
unthinkable in our [French] secular republic". Later, she interviews Ali, an
18-year-old of French origin, whose father has become radicalized. Ali talks
about his experience of Islamic education:
"There are plenty of private Muslim schools and madrasas in this city. They
pretend that they all preach tolerance, love and peace, but that isn't true.
Behind their walls, they force-feed us with repetitive verses of the Qur'an,
about hate and intolerance."
Samouri cites Ali on the iron discipline imposed on him, the brutality used, the
punishment for refusing to learn the Qur'an by heart without understanding a
word of it, or for admitting he has a girlfriend.
Elsewhere, Samouri notes young Muslim preachers for whom "Shari'a law remains
the only safety for the soul and the only code of law to which we must refer".
She interviews members of a Shari'a "court" before speaking with Gina Khan, an
ex-Muslim who belongs to the anti-Shari'a organization One Law for All.
According to Samouri, Khan -- a secular feminist -- considers the tribunals "a
pretext for keeping women under pressure and a means for the religious
fundamentalists to extend their influence within the community".
Another teenager of French origin explains how his father prefers Birmingham to
France because "one can wear the veil without any problem and one can find
schools where boys and girls do not mix". "Birmingham," says Mobin, "is a little
like a Muslim country. We are among ourselves, we do not mix. It's hard".
Samouri herself finds this contrast between secular France and Muslim England
disturbing. She sums it up thus:
"A state within a state, or rather a rampant Islamization of one part of society
-- [is] something which France has succeeded in holding off for now, even if its
secularist model is starting to be put to the test".
Another French commentator, republishing Samouri's article, writes, "Birmingham
is worse than Molenbeek" -- the Brussels borough that The Guardian described as
"becoming known as Europe's jihadi central."
The comparison with Molenbeek may be somewhat exaggerated. What is perplexing is
that French writers should focus on a British city when, in truth, the situation
in France -- despite its secularism -- is in some ways far worse than in the UK.
Recent authors have commented on France's growing love for Islam and its
increasing weakness in the face of Islamist criminality. This weakness has been
framed by a politically-correct desire to stress a multiculturalist policy at
the expense of taking Muslim extremists and fundamentalist organizations at face
value and with zero tolerance for their anti-Western rhetoric and actions. The
result? Jihadist attacks in France have been among the worst in history. It is
calculated that the country has some some 751 no-go zones ("zones urbaines
sensibles"), places where extreme violence breaks out from time to time and
where the police, firefighters, and other public agents dare not enter for fear
of provoking further violence.
Many national authorities and much of the media deny that such enclaves exist,
but as the Norwegian expert Fjordman has recently explained:
If you say that there are some areas where even the police are afraid to go,
where the country's normal, secular laws barely apply, then it is indisputable
that such areas now exist in several Western European countries. France is one
of the hardest hit: it has a large population of Arab and African immigrants,
including millions of Muslims.
There are no such zones in the UK, certainly not at that level. There are Muslim
enclaves in several cities where a non-Muslim may not be welcome; places that
resemble Pakistan or Bangladesh more than England. But none of these is a no-go
zone in the French, German or Swedish sense -- places where the police,
ambulances, and fire brigades are attacked if they enter, and where the only way
in (to fight a fire, for example) is under armed escort.
Samouri opens her article with a bold-type paragraph stating:
"In the working-class quarters of the second city of England, the sectarian
lifestyle of the Islamists increasingly imposes itself and threatens to blow up
a society which has fallen victim to its multicultural utopia".
Has she seen something British commentators have missed?
The Molenbeek comparison may not be entirely exaggerated. In a 1000-page report,
"Islamist Terrorism: Analysis of Offences and Attacks in the UK (1998-2015),"
written by the respected analyst Hannah Stuart for Britain's Henry Jackson
Society, Birmingham is named more than once as Britain's leading source of
terrorism. [1]
One conclusion that stands out is that terror convictions have apparently
doubled in the past five years. Worse, the number of offenders not previously
known to the authorities has increased sharply. Women's involvement in
terrorism, although still less than men's, "has trebled over the same period".
Alarmingly, "Proportionally, offences involving beheadings or stabbings (planned
or otherwise) increased eleven-fold across the time periods, from 4% to 44%."
(p. xi)
Only 10% of the attacks are committed by "lone wolves"; almost 80% were
affiliated with, inspired by or linked to extremist networks -- with 25% linked
to al-Muhajiroun alone. As the report points out, that organization (which went
under various names) was once defended by some Whitehall officials -- a clear
indication of governmental naivety.
Omar Bakri Muhammed, who co-founded the British Islamist organization al-Muhajiroun,
admitted in a 2013 television interview that he and co-founder Anjem Choudary
sent western jihadists to fight in many different countries. (Image source:
MEMRI video screenshot)
A more important conclusion, however, is that a clear link is shown between
highly-segregated Muslim areas and terrorism. As the Times report on the Henry
Jackson Society review points out, this link "was previously denied by many". On
the one hand:
Nearly half of all British Muslims live in neighbourhoods where Muslims form
less than a fifth of the population. However, a disproportionately low number of
Islamist terrorists — 38% — come from such neighbourhoods. The city of
Leicester, which has a sizeable but well-integrated Muslim population, has bred
only two terrorists in the past 19 years.
But on the other hand:
Only 14% of British Muslims live in neighbourhoods that are more than 60%
Muslim. However, the report finds, 24% of all Islamist terrorists come from
these neighbourhoods. Birmingham, which has both a large and a highly segregated
Muslim population, is perhaps the key example of the phenomenon.
The report continues:
Just five of Britain's 9,500 council wards — all in Birmingham — account for 26
convicted terrorists, a tenth of the national total. The wards — Springfield,
Sparkbrook, Hodge Hill, Washwood Heath and Bordesley Green — contain sizeable
areas where the vast majority of the population is Muslim.
Birmingham as a whole, with 234,000 Muslims across its 40 council wards, had 39
convicted terrorists. That is many more than its Muslim population would
suggest, and more than West Yorkshire, Greater Manchester and Lancashire put
together, even though their combined Muslim population is about 650,000, nearly
three times that of Birmingham. There are pockets of high segregation in the
north of England but they are much smaller than in Birmingham.
The greatest single number of convicted terrorists, 117, comes from London, but
are much more widely spread across that city than in Birmingham and their
numbers are roughly proportionate to the capital's million-strong Muslim
community.
Hannah Stuart, the study's author, has observed that her work has raised
"difficult questions about how extremism takes root in deprived communities,
many of which have high levels of segregation. Much more needs to be done to
challenge extremism and promote pluralism and inclusivity on the ground."
Many observers say Birmingham has failed that test:
"It is a really strange situation," said Matt Bennett, the opposition spokesman
for education on the council. "You have this closed community which is cut off
from the rest of the city in lots of ways. The leadership of the council doesn't
particularly wish to engage directly with Asian people — what they like to do is
have a conversation with one person who they think can 'deliver' their support."
Clearly, lack of integration is, not surprisingly, the root of a growing
problem. This is the central theme of Dame Louise Casey's important report of
last December to the British government. Carried out under instructions of David
Cameron, prime minister at the time, "The Casey Review: A review into
opportunity and integration" identifies some Muslim communities (essentially
those formed by Pakistani and Bangladeshi immigrants and their offspring) as the
most resistant to integration within British society. Such communities do little
or nothing to encourage their children to join in non-Muslim education, events,
or activities; many of their women speak no English and play no role within
wider society, and large numbers say they prefer Islamic shari'a law to British
law.
Casey makes particular reference to the infamous Trojan Horse plot, uncovered in
2014, in which Muslim radicals conspired to introduce fundamentalist Salafi
doctrines and practices into a range of Birmingham schools -- not just private
Muslim faith schools but regular state schools (pp. 114 ff.): "a number of
schools in Birmingham had been taken over to ensure they were run on strict
Islamic principles..."
It is important to note that these were not 'Muslim' or 'faith' schools. [Former
British counterterrorism chief] Peter Clarke, in his July 2014 report said:
"I took particular note of the fact that the schools where it is alleged that
this has happened are state non-faith schools..."
He highlighted a range of inappropriate behaviour across the schools, such as
irregularities in employment practices, bullying, intimidation, changes to the
curriculum, inappropriate proselytizing in non-faith schools, unequal treatment
and segregation. Specific examples included:
a teachers' social media discussion called the "Park View Brotherhood", in which
homophobic, extremist and sectarian views were aired at Park View Academy and
others;
teachers using anti-Western messages in assemblies, saying that White people
would never have Muslim children's interests at heart;
the introduction of Friday Prayers in non-faith state schools, and pressure on
staff and students to attend. In one school, a public address system was
installed to call pupils to prayer, with a member of the staff shouting at
students who were in the playground, not attending prayer, and embarrassing some
girls when attention was drawn to them because girls who are menstruating are
not allowed to attend prayer; and
senior staff calling students and staff who do not attend prayers 'k****r'. (Kuffar,
the plural of kafir, an insulting term for "unbelievers". This affront
reproduces the Salafi technique of condemning moderate or reformist Muslims as
non-Muslims who may then be killed for being apostates.)
Casey then quotes Clarke's conclusion:
"There has been co-ordinated, deliberate and sustained action, carried out by a
number of associated individuals, to introduce an intolerant and aggressive
Islamic ethos into a few schools in Birmingham. This has been achieved in a
number of schools by gaining influence on the governing bodies, installing
sympathetic headteachers or senior members of staff, appointing like-minded
people to key positions, and seeking to remove head teachers they do not feel
sufficiently compliant."
The situation, Casey states, although improved from 2014, remains unstable. She
quotes Sir Michael Wilshaw, Her Majesty's Chief Inspector, in a letter to the
Secretary of State for Education, which declared as late as July 8, 2016, that
the situation "remains fragile", with:
a minority of people in the community who are still intent on destabilising
these schools;
a lack of co-ordinated support for the schools in developing good practice;
a culture of fear in which teachers operate having gone underground but still
there;
overt intimidation from some elements within the local community;
organised resistance to the personal, social and health education (PSHE)
curriculum and the promotion of equality.
Elsewhere, Casey notes two further issues in Birmingham alone, which shed light
on the city's Muslim population. Birmingham has the largest number of women who
are non-proficient in English (p. 96) and the largest number of mosques (161) in
the UK (p. 125).
For many years, the British government has fawned on its Muslim population;
evidently the government thought that Muslims would in due course integrate,
assimilate, and become fully British, as earlier immigrants had done. More than
one survey, however, has shown that the younger generations are even more
fundamentalist than their parents and grandparents, who came directly from
Muslim countries. The younger generations were born in Britain but at a time
when extremist Islam has been growing internationally, notably in countries with
which British Muslim families have close connections. Not only that, but a
plethora of fundamentalist preachers keep on passing through British Muslim
enclaves. These preachers freely lecture in mosques and Islamic centres to youth
organizations, and on college and university campuses.
Finally, it might be worth noting that Khalid Masood, a convert to Islam who
killed four and injured many more during his attack outside the Houses of
Parliament in March, had been living in Birmingham before he set out to wage
jihad in Britain's capital.
It is time for some hard thinking about the ways in which modern British
tolerance of the intolerant and its embrace of a wished-for, peace-loving
multiculturalism have furthered this regression. Birmingham is probably the
place to start.
**Dr. Denis MacEoin is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Gatestone Institute.
He has recently completed a book on causes for concern about Islam in the UK.
[1] Hard copies of the report may be purchased via PayPal here. Essays,
summaries etc. may be linked to from here. An excellent summary by Soeren Kern
is available online here.
© 2017 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.
The French elections have produced few surprises yet, but
what of round 2?
Dr. Mohamed A. Ramady/Al Arabiya/April 24/17
Despite last minute jitters over a late surge by far-left candidate Lean-Luc
Melenchon, independent centrist Emmanuel Macron and National Front leader Marine
Le Pen were the frontrunners. At the end of the first vote the pair held
significant leads over the initial four key contenders in presidential race.
With so much at stake, what can we expect from Macron or Le Pen? This will have
consequences far beyond France. Like Brexit in the UK or Trump in the US, one of
the big questions after the second and final vote, will likely focus on who is
appointed to the winning candidate’s team. Campaigning for the second round in
the French election will start in earnest, with behind the scenes manoeuvring by
both camps as the seek support for their candidacies. If Macron wins, then the
Socialists have indicated they will support whoever he chooses to appoint as
prime minister, but only under certain conditions. Macron will also seek support
from the centre-right. But the shift from Les Republicains could be much smaller
than the Socialist defections. The center-right is structurally and historically
the majority party in France, and they will want to protect their position, if
they are to win the next legislative elections, even under a Macron presidency.
And so with no absolute majority for Macron in the National Assembly, there
would be a need to seek support from within the reformist wing of the Socialist
Party, the UDI, and the left wing of the Republicans.
Taking a different path
But Macron could take a different path in choosing his Prime Minister. He could
select a PM with a high political profile, someone experienced and knowledgeable
of the political in-fights of parliament. Names being floated include Richard
Ferrand, current defense minister Yves Le Drian, and Gerard Collomb. The new
President could also flip the table and appoint a woman with a political
profile, perhaps Laurence Parisot, Liberal MEP Sylvie Goulard, or IMF President
Christine Lagarde, who has not given up on her political ambitions in France.
There are serious concerns in French political circles that a victory for the
National Front’s Le Pen, could be followed by a period of civil unrest . Macron
could appoint a PM who combines the two qualities, while also being little
known. That would point to Bariza Khiari, a woman and a senator since 2004, who
has the advantage of knowing the parliamentary mechanism, without being widely
known to the general public, and who would also tick an interesting diversity
box.
Political insiders expect Macron to tap a slate of experienced people for other
key government posts. This would start with Jean Pisani-Ferry, an economist who
has contributed to Macron’s program, and is expected to get an economic
ministry. Spokesman Benjamin Griveaux, who may be appointed minister of health,
and Laurence Haïm, who could get spokesman of the government or the ministry of
culture. Macron will also draw from a number of young local administrators with
hands-on government experience who have enthusiastically supported his campaign.
There are serious concerns in French political circles that a victory for the
National Front’s Le Pen, could be followed by a period of civil unrest. It is
feared there could be clashes between her supporters and her opponents, on the
streets of Paris following the first round results. It’s also feared she could
use that unrest to consolidate authority by drawing on wide presidential powers
provided in the Constitution of the Fifth Republic.
In the event of major disturbances, which the National Front could fuel during
the run-up to parliamentary elections, the call to introduce Article 16 of the
Constitution (relating to full powers) should not be ruled out. Full powers are
typically limited to 30 days, but Le Pen’s opponents fear that could well be
enough time to encourage a concerned electorate to spring an elections surprise,
which is a very Putin or Erdogan-styled show of strength. With a platform that
appeals to French nationalism: abandoning the Euro, a new referendum on EU
membership, fighting “Islamic” extremism and tougher immigration controls, a
future ‘President Le Pen’ would certainly require even more sweeping
presidential powers .
If that doesn't give Le Pen a working majority, the second option for the
National Front would be to conclude a government agreement with Les Republicains,
which for now seems like a stretch given the differences in economic policy
between the two parties.
Will Le Pen become more mainstream?
But it was apparent that in the presidential debate on April 4, Le Pen attempted
a turn towards more mainstream economic policies. Probably already with an eye
on fighting the second round, she proposed a reduction in taxation for small and
medium-sized enterprises. Both Macron and Le Pen are now positioning themselves
as champions of the forgotten fringes, as well as appealing to the centre, a
hard act to follow under normal circumstances.
A blue-brown coalition supporting a right wing government would be put to the
test from the outset with the first parliamentary votes – not least the vote on
the budget. The scenario of a relative majority for the FN in the National
Assembly, while difficult to envisage – given the widespread opposition
throughout France, would lead to opponents sending plenty of candidates to the
Assembly that are opposed to FN policies. For example, it is unlikely that even
one of the 18 constituencies of Paris will go to the FN.
If Le Pen aims at luring more traditional Gaullist voters, she could decide to
give the post of Prime Minister to a right-wing personality like Gérard Longuet,
Philippe de Villiers, Thierry Mariani (who is also in the race for foreign
minister) or Claude Guéant. Other hard-right personalities like Eric Ciotti,
Guillaume Peltier, Geoffroy Didier, Henri Guaino, Nadine Morano or Lionnel Luca
could also join the government team. Finally, a former adviser of Nicolas
Sarkozy, Patrick Buisson, could return to the Elysée or a ministry, along with
cadres of the micro-party “Common Sense,” now close to François Fillon. However,
in the event of a small victory, and with a view to seeking unity within her
party, Le Pen is expected to appoint a good number of more “mediocre,” extreme
party loyalists. The Ministry of the Interior could be given to David Rachline
or Steeve Briois, with the latter also in the race to be appointed Minister of
Finance. The Justice Department would seem likely to go to Gilbert Collard. But
his strained relations with a number of FN executives could work against him to
the benefit of an experienced personality like Jacques Bompard, despite
announcements to the contrary by Marine Le Pen. For the Gulf countries, a Macron
presidency would mean following the same French policies on Syria and the Middle
East. But a Le Pen presidency would see France recalibrate some of its Middle
East and global foreign policy relations. This would mean especially rebooting
warmer relations with Russia - and rather paradoxically - also with the USA.
President Trump is seemingly rooting for her, given Le Pen’s EU reformist agenda
and vow to fight the “establishment” and globalization. On May 7, French voters
will tell us which candidate they resonate with, and bring some modicum of
centrist stability or another political earthquake in Europe .
Britain’s Mother Theresa
Trisha de Borchgrave/Al Arabiya/April 23/17
British Prime Minister Theresa May’s surprising, though not astonishing,
announcement that she would ask Parliament for a general election on June 8
comes on the heels of a soul-searching referendum ten months ago, in which
Britain voted to leave its EU partner of forty-two years.
This was followed by a prolonged period of absorbing the complexities of this
undertaking, which has left many in government looking like a startled emoji. A
London-centric Brexit industry of bureaucrats, lawyers, lobbyists and
consultants has grown exponentially as a result.
Frustrated by accusations of “ill-founded arguments and muddled thinking” from
Britain’s former top EU civil servant Sir Ivan Rogers, and by a divided
Conservative party with a small majority in Parliament, May used the extolled
virtues of a walking holiday over Easter - on the hills of Snowdonia - to
conclude “reluctantly” that she would call the general election she promised
would not happen before 2020. So Britain’s Mother Theresa has promised to devote
herself tirelessly to the wellbeing of her nation, but with a pair of pliers to
de-claw all manner of Brexit objectors and Brexit hard-liners and a boot that
may even kick out Boris Johnson if she can deliver a landslide victory.
Devoted to Brexit
To all intents and purposes, this will be the Brexit election. Of the many
positions May is willing to negotiate Brexit from, over a barrel is not one of
them. So Britain’s Mother Theresa has promised to devote herself tirelessly to
the wellbeing of her nation, but with a pair of pliers to de-claw all manner of
Brexit objectors and Brexit hard-liners and a boot that may even kick out Boris
Johnson if she can deliver a landslide victory. The vicar’s daughter has laid
down the gauntlet to all Remainers, both in the political and private sector.
Like the blackmailer urging his victim to reconsider his behaviour, she has
demanded that they absolve themselves of their legitimate concerns in favour of
the national interest. And with a populist flourish - “the country is coming
together but Westminster is not” - she berated her democratic institutions for
undermining the will of the people. These include not only the opposition Labour
Party, Liberal Democrats, and Scottish National Party, but also the “unelected”
members of the upper Parliamentary Chamber, the House of Lords. In exercising
their parliamentary sovereignty to scrutinize the Brexit process, their
Lordships were, it seems, flouting the wishes of the 51 percent who had
clamoured to regain precisely this autonomy. May’s call for a snap election
resonates with as much integrity as the game of politics allows. Her call may
smack of dastardly opportunism, but only an unhealthy dose of self-doubt could
ignore today’s ripe mixture of political potential for the Conservative Party.
After all, the opposition is in tatters; the Labour Party is more than 20 points
behind in the polls and the Liberal Democrats hold only eight Parliamentary
seats - down from 57 at the general election two years ago. What’s more,
consumer confidence, job and economic growth, and the country’s still resilient
finances, despite the dire predictions of the referendum result, have boosted
the means of persuading the electorate to vote Tory. A victory for May under
these circumstances could bring her the closest a British leader has come to
ruling over a one-party state.
Voter’s predicament
Nevertheless, this seemingly impregnable position carries its own set of risks.
There has been scant evidence of buyer’s remorse from Brexit voters and an
audible harrumphing concession that Brexit is here to stay by some Remainers.
But Britain’s voters on June 8 will be an assortment difficult to categorize by
an already distrusted polling system. Those who neglected to have their say in
the EU referendum could well vote against May, and Remainers who see no
alternative leader, might not.And demographics might matter. As Baroness Liz
Symons recently indicated in the House of Lords, the majority of 500,000
teenagers who have celebrated their eligibility to vote since the EU referendum,
are pro-Remain, while a similar number of over 65’s who voted to leave, have
done so, beyond this life. Europhiles and Labour supporters will also be in a
quandary of whether to vote for May, and thereby allow her to control the
radical Brexiteers pushing for a free-fall Brexit, or to teach her one more
lesson in coalition governance with a party that is opposed to Brexit itself.
This is both a referendum and voter make-over. The odds are comfortably in May’s
favour, albeit in an age of the politically unthinkable. So like another
unassuming but wily pastor’s daughter who has used her penchant for home-bound
peregrinations to learn to tread the ruts of competing political agendas, Mother
Theresa might end up with Mutti Merkel’s other skill - staying power.
Or might “June put an end to May”, as one Remainer recently wished for on social
media? In the Prime Minister’s words: “Let us tomorrow vote for an election, let
us put forward our plans for Brexit and our alternative programs for
government…” All well and good, if only the electorate knew what that meant.