LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS
BULLETIN
February 27/17
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The
Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For Today
Ash Monday
Store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust
consumes and where thieves do not break in and steal
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 06/16-21/:"‘Whenever you
fast, do not look dismal, like the hypocrites, for they disfigure their faces so
as to show others that they are fasting. Truly I tell you, they have received
their reward. But when you fast, put oil on your head and wash your face, so
that your fasting may be seen not by others but by your Father who is in secret;
and your Father who sees in secret will reward you. ‘Do not store up for
yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust consume and where thieves
break in and steal; but store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where
neither moth nor rust consumes and where thieves do not break in and steal.For
where your treasure is, there your heart will be also."
For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that
in him we might become the righteousness of God
Second Letter to the Corinthians 05/20-21//06,01-07/:"We are ambassadors for
Christ, since God is making his appeal through us; we entreat you on behalf of
Christ, be reconciled to God. For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no
sin, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God. As we work
together with him, we urge you also not to accept the grace of God in vain. For
he says, ‘At an acceptable time I have listened to you, and on a day of
salvation I have helped you.’ See, now is the acceptable time; see, now is the
day of salvation! We are putting no obstacle in anyone’s way, so that no fault
may be found with our ministry, but as servants of God we have commended
ourselves in every way: through great endurance, in afflictions, hardships,
calamities, beatings, imprisonments, riots, labours, sleepless nights, hunger;
by purity, knowledge, patience, kindness, holiness of spirit, genuine love,
truthful speech, and the power of God; with the weapons of righteousness for the
right hand and for the left;".
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources
published on February 26-27/17
Hezbollah’s latest threats: More rhetoric
than action/Ali al-Amin/The Arab/February 26/17
The hard and urgent mission of fighting corruption in Lebanon/Dalal Saoud/The
Arab Weekly/February 26/17
The Lebanese have shown a humanity the West could learn from/Gareth Smyth/The
Arab Weekly/February 26/17
Samir Frangié : « Mettons en avant le modèle libanais où chrétiens et musulmans
gèrent l’Etat ensemble/LE MONDE/February 26/17
Canada: Ontario unanimously passes “anti-islamophobia” motion/Jihad
Watch/February 26, 2017
Protest against Haifa's ammonia tank/Ahiya Raved|/Ynetnews/February 26/17
Six Years into Syria’s Revolution/Eyad Abu Shakra/Al Arabiya/February 26/17
Will Jubeir end a quarter-century estrangement/Abdulrahman al-Rashed/Al Arabiya/February
26/17
The two-state solution is the minimum required/Khairallah Khairallah/The Arab
Weekly/February 26/16
France: Deradicalization of Jihadists a "Total Fiasco"/"Deradicalization in and
of itself does not exist."/by Soeren Kern/Gatestone Institute/February 26/17
Titles For Latest Lebanese Related News published
on February 26-27/17
Bassil Threatens Return to Controversial Orthodox Gathering Electoral Law
Rahi: Increase of taxes, absence of electoral law are repulsive acts
Embassies Seek Clarifications on Foreign Ministry's Summoning of Kaag
Qaouq Says Lebanon Facing 'Unknown' Due to Failure to Agree on Electoral Law
Report Says ISG Statement on Elections and Security is 'Last Warning' to Lebanon
Alain Aoun: Not battling to change electoral law for our team, but rather for
allies and adversaries' representation
Moukhaiber for activating Lebanese Diaspora's participation in elections
Hashem: To endorse an electoral law that establishes grounds for changes in
political system
Zeaiter arrives in Dubai to partake in World Gulfood Exhibition Opening
Hamadeh: Salary scale on right track
Abu Arab: External agenda parties are causing tension inside Ain elHilweh Camp
Cautious Calm after Fierce Fatah-Islamist Clashes in Ain el-Hilweh
Ceasefire tentative agreement, withdrawal of militants from Ain elHilweh Camp
Hezbollah’s latest threats: More rhetoric than action
The hard and urgent mission of fighting corruption in Lebanon
The Lebanese have shown a humanity the West could learn from
Samir Frangié : « Mettons en avant le modèle libanais où chrétiens et musulmans
gèrent l’Etat ensemble
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin For
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on February 26-27/17
Egyptian Christians fearing terror flee
Sinai for 4th day
Canada: Ontario unanimously passes “anti-islamophobia” motion
Iran holds naval war games amid rising tensions with US
Syrian Opposition Accuses Damascus of 'Stalling' Talks
Bombings, air strikes in Syria rattle Geneva peace talks
Senior FSA officer: We’re ready for direct talks with Assad regime
Iraqi police commandos recapture new neighborhood in Mosul
Iran begins navy drill off Strait of Hormuz
Iran’s ex-president Ahmadinejad writes open letter to Trump
Saudi King Salman in Malaysia: We stand fully behind Islamic causes
Bomb hits bus carrying policemen in Bahrain, four injured
UN agency suspends Gaza staffer over Israeli claims
Egypt annoyed as Britain continues suspension of flights
Obama-Era Veteran Picked to Lead Democratic Party
Links From Jihad Watch Site for February 26-27/17
“Can I criticize Islam without fearing for my life?”
Nigeria: Muslim leader warns that regulations on polygamy violate the Qur’an
France: Muslim “human rights activist” to Le Pen: “I am going to slit your
throat Muslim-style”
UK: Oxford University protects lecturer on Islam from hard questions by
ex-Muslim
DNC’s Perez denounces Trump’s “racist executive action against Muslims”
Iran’s former President Ahmadinejad to Trump: “The contemporary U.S. belongs to
all nations”
Indian doctor freed from Islamic State captivity saw jihad suicide bombers as
young as 10
Canada: Ontario unanimously passes “anti-islamophobia” motion
Germany: Muslim migrant who raped and murdered EU official’s daughter lied about
being a minor
View from Sweden: Donald Trump was Right
Canada: Ryerson University TA is imam who asked Allah to kill the enemies of
Islam
Links From Christian Today Site
for February 26-27/17
Trump To Skip White House Press Dinner After Battles With Media
We Have To Help Christians Fleeing Islamic State, Says Egypt's President Sisi
US Will Start 'Aggressive' Cuts To Obama's Environmental Protection Rules
Vancouver Church Leaders Slam Franklin Graham: Statements 'Don't Convey Spirit
Of Christ'
Iraqi Forces Push Into Western Mosul And Launch Airstrikes In Syria
Inspirational Soul Survivor Leader Mike Pilavachi Is Suffering From Heart
Problems
Jerry Falwell Jnr Says Steve Bannon Suggested Him For Top Education Role
Opposition To Philippine's President Duterte Turn Historic Event Into Protest
March
Latest Lebanese Related News published
on February 26-27/17
Bassil Threatens Return to Controversial Orthodox
Gathering Electoral Law
Naharnet/February 26/17/Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil warned
Sunday that the FPM would insist anew on a controversial electoral law under
which each sect elects its own MPs should the parties reject a new draft
electoral law that he intends to propose. “Dialogue is necessary but not at the
expense of time... Dialogue is necessary in order to hold elections under a law
that represents us all and achieves reform and real representation,” said Bassil,
stressing that “there can be no stability in Lebanon without an electoral law
that represents all Lebanese fairly and restores the rights” of Christians. “Do
we want people's opinion? Do we want to stay confined to the 1960 law or should
we move forward?” Bassil asked. Reminding that he had proposed two hybrid
electoral laws and that the parties rejected them due to a dispute over “one or
two seats,” Bassil expressed his readiness to propose a third electoral law.
“But what will happen should the parties reject this third law? We will then
return to insisting on the Orthodox Gathering law, which we had sacrificed and
which achieves real equal power-sharing between Christians and Muslims and a
correct representation of the sects,” the FPM chief warned. “If the intention is
not to organize elections and procrastination, we are not a minority and no one
can strike deals at our expense and we are not willing to lose more time,” he
added.
Rahi: Increase of taxes, absence of electoral law are repulsive acts
Sun 26 Feb 2017/NNA - Maronite Patriarch, Cardinal Bechara Boutros Rahi, said on
Sunday that the increase of taxes and the failure to decree an electoral law are
two repulsive things. Cardinal Rahi chaired on Sunday a mass in Bkirky in
presence of President of Caritas, Father Paul Karam, and other figures. Rahi
said that "corruption, bribery, theft of public funds, wastefulness, and
smuggling are a heinous acts."The prelate stressed that the non-approval of the
electoral law after 12 years of debate, was also a vice. He called upon
political parties to spread joy among people through their legal,
administrative, procedural and legislative actions, in order to elevate
oppression and injustice.
Embassies Seek Clarifications on Foreign Ministry's
Summoning of Kaag
Naharnet/February 26/17/Western and European embassies have demanded
clarifications about the circumstances and reasons that led to the summoning of
U.N. Special for Lebanon Sigrid Kaag to the Foreign Ministry over a tweet
related to U.N. Security Council Resolution 1701, a media report said on
Sunday.Quoting European diplomatic sources, An Nahar newspaper said the
embassies are yet to receive an answer to their questions. According to the
Central News Agency, the U.N. has rejected the move and expressed its dismay
through a stricter statement that was issued in New York by U.N. spokesman
Farhan Haq, which “condemned the violation of international resolutions” and
warned against such Lebanese stances.In the wake of remarks by President Michel
Aoun that defended Hizbullah's arms as necessary to deter Israel, Kaag tweeted
on February 13 that UNSCR 1701 is “vital for Lebanon's stability and
security.”“Resolution calls for disarmament (of) all armed groups. No arms
outside control of state,” Kaag added. Aoun had stressed that Hizbullah's
weapons “do not contradict with the State,” noting that it is “more than
guaranteed” that the party will not “turn its arms inwards.”“As long as there is
Israeli-occupied land and as long as the army is not strong enough to fight
Israel, we sense that there is a need for the presence of the resistance's arms
so that they complete the army's weapons,” Aoun told Egypt's CBC television on
the eve of a visit to Cairo.
Qaouq Says Lebanon Facing 'Unknown' Due to Failure to Agree on Electoral Law
Naharnet/February 26/17/Hizbullah central council official Sheikh Nabil Qaouq
warned Sunday that the failure to agree on a new electoral law has started to
pose risks and an “unknown” future for the country. “This is due to some
parties' monopolization of unfair parliamentary representation and their
rejection of equal (Christian-Muslim) power-sharing, partnership and real
representation,” Qaouq said. “There is no solution to the parliamentary
elections dilemma other than agreeing on a new electoral law, because the
deformed 1960 law is aggrieving the Lebanese and disorienting the Taef Accord,”
the Hizbullah official added. “Hizbullah's stance is the same behind closed
doors and in public: the rejection of the 1960 law, extension and vacuum, and
calling for a new law that ensures correct and fair representation,” Qaouq went
on to say. The country has not organized parliamentary elections since 2009 and
the legislature has since extended its own mandate twice. While al-Mustaqbal
Movement has rejected that the electoral law be fully based on the proportional
representation system, arguing that Hizbullah's arms would prevent serious
competition in the party's strongholds, Druze leader MP Walid Jumblat has
totally rejected proportional representation, even within a hybrid law, warning
that it would “marginalize” the minority Druze community. The political parties
are meanwhile discussing several formats of a so-called hybrid law that mixes
proportional representation with the winner-takes-all system.
Report Says ISG Statement on Elections and Security is
'Last Warning' to Lebanon
Naharnet/February 26/17/The statement that was issued Wednesday by the
International Support Group for Lebanon was “the last warning” to the country,
diplomatic sources have said. It was issued out of fear of a possible delay of
the support programs that were launched in New York in 2013 by then-U.N. chief
Ban Ki-moon and then-President Michel Suleiman, An Nahar newspaper quoted the
sources as saying. The programs are aimed at rallying support for Lebanon to
help it cope with the repercussions of the Syrian crisis. In their statement,
the Members of the International Support Group encouraged all Lebanese parties
to “arrive at an early compromise, which would present an appropriate electoral
framework for Lebanon.”“The timely conduct of peaceful and transparent
parliamentary elections are an important step to preserve Lebanon’s democratic
tradition, and to meet the aspirations of the Lebanese people,” the ISG added,
noting that the ISG Members “stand ready to provide support.”The ISG Members
also reaffirmed “their commitment to the stability and security of Lebanon.”The
statement was issued days after U.N. Special Coordinator for Lebanon Sigrid Kaag
tweeted that U.N. Security Council Resolution 1701 is “vital for Lebanon's
stability and security” and that it “calls for disarmament of all armed
groups.”The tweet came after remarks by President Michel Aoun that defended
Hizbullah's arms as necessary to deter Israel. Lebanon's Foreign Ministry
summoned Kaag over the tweet, although the U.N. official clarified that it was
not in response to Aoun's statements. The ISG Members had repeatedly stressed
the importance of Lebanon's continued commitment to the Baabda Declaration and
U.N. resolutions, especially UNSCR 1701. They have also issued repeated calls on
the need to hold timely parliamentary elections in May 2017.
Alain Aoun: Not battling to change electoral law for our
team, but rather for allies and adversaries' representation
Sun 26 Feb 2017/NNA - "Change and Reform" Parliamentary Bloc Member, MP Alain
Aoun, said on Sunday that "the Free Patriotic Movement is not fighting to change
the electoral law for its own sake, since it is comfortable with all formulas,
but is rather battling for the sake of representation of allies and
adversaries."Speaking during the annual dinner organized by the Movement's Furn
el-Chebbak branch, Aoun stressed that the Movement "did not come to power to
repeat the experience of its predecessors, but to restore confidence in the
State which its citizens had lost hope in.""The Lebanese have lost confidence in
their State a long time ago, but we are seeking, as a political team that has
recently come to power, to restore trust to citizens, and to build a State that
is up to our aspirations," Aoun emphasized.
Moukhaiber for activating Lebanese Diaspora's participation
in elections
Sun 26 Feb 2017/NNA - MP Ghassan Moukhaiber called, on Sunday, for "activating
and facilitating the Lebanese Diaspora's participation in the upcoming
parliamentary elections, in order to allow for expatriates' representation
within Parliament."Speaking at a forum organized by the Lebanese World Cultural
Union during his participation in the French Chamber of Deputies in Paris,
Moukhaiber made several proposals concerning the amendment of the law in force
in this regards. He stressed on the importance of expatriates' voting, while
touching on the political and technical obstacles which prevented the timely
registration of expatriates with the relevant electoral centers."Electoral law
reform, especially in terms of expatriates' voting, is impossible in the absence
of a strong political determination," Moukhaiber underscored.
Hashem: To endorse an electoral law that establishes
grounds for changes in political system
Sun 26 Feb 2017/NNA - "Development and Liberation" Parliamentary Bloc Member,
Deputy Kassem Hashem, called on Sunday for "endorsing an electoral law that
allows for establishing foundation grounds for changes within the country's
political system."Following his meeting with figures from Arqoub villages in
Shebaa Farms, Hashem considered that the "positive discussion by the Cabinet
over the annual budget, as well as the ranks and salaries series, promises of
reaching its endorsement within the budget, after convincing all concerned sides
of its rightfulness, and of the fact that procrastination is no longer
permissible in this respect."Hashem hoped that "the tripartite meetings would
end next week by approving the budget, together with the salary scale, so that
the government can then devote its time and attention to fulfilling its promises
in approaching all pending dossiers and issues of concern to the Lebanese
people."
Zeaiter arrives in Dubai to partake in World Gulfood Exhibition Opening
Sun 26 Feb 2017/NNA - Agriculture Minister Ghazi Zeaiter arrived in Dubai, on
Sunday, in order to participate in the opening of the World Gulfood Industry
Exhibition, which includes products of a large number of food factories in
Lebanon. Zeaiter met upon arrival at the Lebanese Consulate in Dubai with
participants in the Exhibition. Discussions centered on the Ministry's
agricultural food industry strategies, which form part of the solution to the
problem of marketing agricultural products. In this context, Zeaiter expressed
his willingness to "cooperate with all stakeholders in the agricultural sector
during his tenure at the Ministry of Agriculture, and to work on improving the
quality of Lebanese products and increase agricultural exports to global
markets, especially to the Gulf markets."In addition, Zeaiter vowed to encourage
the consumption of Lebanese national products within the regions of Lebanese
expatriate presence in the world at large.
Hamadeh: Salary scale on right track
Sun 26 Feb 2017/NNA - Higher Learning and National Education Minister, Marwan
Hamadeh, said on Sunday that "we reached a consensus regarding the salary scale,
thus, placing it on the proper track in giving rights to those who deserve."
"However, I cannot say the same for the election law," added Hamadeh. The
Minister's fresh words came during the conclusion of the General Educational
Conference of the National Liberal Party's Secretariat of Education and Culture,
which was held at the Hilton Metropolitan Palace Hotel in Beirut under the
patronage of National Liberal Party Head, MP Dory Chamoun, and in the presence
of a number of prominent figures, teachers and students.In his address at the
Conference, Hamadeh stressed on the necessity of maintaining a free democratic
majority that believes in the republican system and the Taif Accord, as well as
in Lebanon being a parliamentary democratic Republic. With regards to the
Lebanese University, Hamadeh vowed to "spare no effort in restoring some balance
to this important educational edifice, in spite of the government's short term."
"I do not promise to reach magical solutions, but there are things that should
be stopped, such as favoritism in employing the University's faculty, whereby
such decisions ought to be made by a balanced University Council," asserted
Hamadeh.
Abu Arab: External agenda parties are causing tension
inside Ain elHilweh Camp
Sun 26 Feb 2017/NNA - Tension is still prevailing inside Ain el-Hilweh Refugee
Camp, whereby clashes kept intensifying every now and then throughout Sunday,
while snipers' bullets continued to be heard along Fawqani Street, NNA
correspondent in Sidon reported.
Meanwhile, Palestinian National Security Chief, Major General Soubhi Abu Arab,
accused "hired external agenda parties" of being responsible for the rising
tension within the Camp. He added: "Fateh has been, and still is keen on
preserving Ain el-Hilweh's security and the safety of its people, but if this
group persists in tampering with the situation, the Movement will not tolerate
it anymore and would fight back."
Abou Arab concluded by stating that "those attempting to increase tension inside
the Camp ought to be handed over to the Lebanese state, since they are hired by
foreign agendas to do so, and have nothing to do with the Palestinian cause
whatsoever."
Cautious Calm after Fierce Fatah-Islamist Clashes in Ain
el-Hilweh
Naharnet/February 26/17/Fierce clashes erupted Sunday afternoon between the
secular Fatah Movement and a number of hardline Islamist groups in the
Palestinian refugee camp of Ain el-Hilweh, state-run National News Agency
reported. The fighting was focused on the Sifsaf-Briksat frontier on al-Fawqani
street and the sounds of machineguns and rocket-propelled grenades echoed across
the city of Sidon, NNA said. Cautious calm engulfed the camp in the evening
after the national and Islamist Palestinian factions reached a tentative
ceasefire agreement under which the gunmen were supposed to be withdrawn from
the streets, media reports said. The clashes had renewed earlier in the day,
leaving several people injured. The agency identified one of the wounded as Alaa
Hammoudeh. “We will not allow the extremist groups to cross the line in the Ain
el-Hilweh camp and things are taking another direction today. A final solution
for these groups should be found,” Fatah official Mahmoud Abdul Hamid Issa, aka
al-Lino, told al-Jadeed TV. The Lebanese army meanwhile closed the Ain el-Hilweh
entrance that faces Sidon's state-run hospital to preserve the safety of
passersby.
Ceasefire tentative agreement, withdrawal of militants from
Ain elHilweh Camp
Sun 26 Feb 2017/NNA - Palestinian factions and the national and Islamic forces
inside Ain el-Hilweh Refugee Camp have reached, on Sunday evening, a tentative
agreement to cease fire and withdraw gunmen from the Camp's streets, in wake of
the second round of clashes witnessed between Fateh Movement and Islamic
militants, NNA correspondent in Sidon reported. The forces and factions inside
the Camp held an emergency meeting at the headquarters of the "Democratic
Front," which was crowned with the "cease-fire and withdrawal of insurgents"
agreement. Meanwhile, contacts are still underway to implement what was agreed
upon, alongside serious discussions over finding radical and permanent solutions
to the recurring security incidents within the Camp. However, and shortly after
said agreement, the sound of a bomb explosion was heard inside the Camp.
Hezbollah’s latest threats: More
rhetoric than action
Ali al-Amin/The Arab/February 26/17
Suddenly, and without notice, the familiar sounds of escalation have burst from
both sides of the Lebanese- Israeli border. Are we witnessing a new explosive
scene on Lebanese territory and across Israeli borders between Iran and its
proxy Hezbollah on one side and Israel on the other?
It has been almost 11 years that peace and stability have been broken in the
two safest zones in the Middle East — southern Lebanon and Galilee — but in
early February US President Donald Trump made statements suggesting there is a
new US policy aimed at limiting Iran’s influence in the Middle East.
For its part, Hezbollah is quite aware of the sensitivity of the international
game in the region. Knowing that the United States had closed an eye to its
involvement on the side of Syrian President Bashar Assad, Hezbollah carefully
avoided even the slightest hint that it was targeting US interests in Lebanon
and the region. Its verbal diatribes were directed against Israel. When Reuters
quoted a Hezbollah source saying it is warning Trump, the Hezbollah information
unit quickly denied the allegation.
Hezbollah’s warnings to Israel, voiced by Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah,
were also carefully chosen. Nasrallah always started with “If Israel attacks
Lebanon, Hezbollah will retaliate”, then said Hezbollah had a few surprises for
the Israeli Army and that Israeli intelligence about the party’s fighting
capacities was weak.In truth, though, the intended target of Nasrallah’s arrows
was the region’s Arab coalition, in particular Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates. It seems that the party reversed its position regarding the consensus
in Lebanon to revive the country’s relations with the region’s Arab states.
Hezbollah’s verbal escalation against Israel and the Arab states was, however,
not followed by any action against Israel. Instead, the party continues to ferry
fighters to battle zones in Syria, Yemen and Iraq.
Hezbollah has made fighting Israel its raison d’être. Responding to Nasrallah’s
surprises, Israeli Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman warned that in case of a
war all institutions of the Lebanese state would be targeted. He did not mention
Hezbollah by name, but Israel’s strategy is to make Hezbollah unpopular in
Lebanon. Hezbollah knows very well that given Lebanon’s dire financial and
economic conditions, it would not be easy to garner popular support in Lebanon
and the Arab world as it did in the war of 2006. Observers have interpreted
Hezbollah’s media campaign as a manoeuvre to pre-empt any Israeli field campaign
against it at Trump’s behest. Others see in it as a message from Iran reminding
that it has a crucial role in ensuring stability along the Israeli-Lebanese
border. If its interests and influence in the Arab region are threatened by the
United States, Iran is willing to take suicidal initiatives along Israel’s
northern borders. In Lebanon, two reactions and positions have emerged. The
first was voiced by Lebanese President Michel Aoun, who is preparing for his
party’s participation in upcoming parliamentary elections. His objective is to
ensure a Christian majority for his party and he needs Hezbollah’s political and
logistic support. It is not surprising that he has sided with preserving
Hezbollah’s fighting power because the Lebanese Army is not ready for a war
with Israel. The second position was expressed by the Lebanese government,
which lambasted Nasrallah’s positions regarding Arab countries. Lebanese Prime
Minister Saad Hariri qualified them as detrimental to Lebanon’s relations with
its Arab neighbours. In a speech commemorating Rafik Hariri’s assassination,
Saad Hariri said he would continue pushing for removing all illegal armed forces
in the country in favour of the legitimate military and security institutions.
In Lebanon, it looks as though Iran’s interests have the upper hand over those
of the Lebanese people. The latest storm kicked up by Hezbollah can only be
understood as part of a posturing display by Iran in reaction to perceived
American threats. The Trump administration seems determined to stand up to
Iran’s influence and role in Yemen. The presence of US Navy warships in the Gulf
is a clear message that Iran seems to have picked up.
Iran’s anti-Israel rhetoric was absent a year ago. Waiving Hezbollah’s flag,
hosting a pro-Palestine conference in Tehran and threatening to hit Israel’s
Dimona nuclear facilities, in addition to the flood of insults to Arab regimes,
are more talk than actions. Not a single bullet will be fired against the
Israelis.
Ali al-Amin is a Lebanese writer.
The hard and urgent mission of fighting corruption in Lebanon
Dalal Saoud/The Arab Weekly/February
26/17
Beirut - Setting up a state Ministry for Combating Corruption in the new cabinet
of Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri has raised eyebrows, leaving Lebanese
wondering how it is possible to eliminate widespread and ingrained corruption
that has permeated the lowest level of society.
Corruption in Lebanon is not just about a few leaders at the top who crossed the
line and abused their powers. It is about a system in which politicians, public
administration, parliament, police and the judiciary are involved in corrupt
conduct. Nepotism, bribery, kickbacks, embezzlement, favouritism and
mismanagement have become part of the daily life. Coupled with the absence of a
strong political will, transparency and accountability, they have greatly
affected the country’s economic and political performance as well as its
reputation.
Past shy attempts to combat corruption were never serious enough and turned to
be mere cosmetics to cover for bad governance. Nicolas Tueni, the new state
minister for Combating Corruption, said he is aware of the difficult mission
with which he was entrusted. Coming from outside traditional political circles
and as he said wealthy enough with “moral values” that make him “incorruptible”,
Tueni was enthusiastic enough to establish a mechanism to combat corruption and
take action.
“Lebanon is entering into the era of anti-corruption properly and surely,” a
confident Tueni said during an interview with The Arab Weekly.
He referred to four laws “fundamental” to his ministry, including the law to
access information that was issued on January 26th, the law against illicit
enrichment, the law establishing a high commission for anti-corruption and one
related to the protection of whistle-blowers.
“Our duty is to set up the legal framework and enlighten the president and
prime minister on any wrongdoings or any tender that the government can engage
itself in and lose money,” Tueni said. Journalists, former civil servants and
volunteers have been engaged in the anti-corruption drive, giving tips and
gathering information on suspected corruption cases, the minister said. Civil
society groups, such as Sakker El Dekkene (Close the Shop), have been active for
years in encouraging people to report acts of corruption, which are documented
and shared online. Seven cases are under investigation by the new ministry,
with one having been referred to Justice Minister Salim Jreissati, who ordered a
look into alleged corruption at Casino du Liban.
“Any wrongdoing will be punished… Any file I have will go to the Justice
Ministry,” Tueni assured. The urgency in tackling corruption was probably due
to deteriorating economic conditions. The situation reached an alarming level
because of the spillover of the war in Syria, fleeing Gulf investment and
tourists as well as the political disputes that paralysed the country for more
than two years. A year-end settlement led to the election of Michel Aoun as
president and the formation of Hariri’s cabinet.
“We explained that the cow has no more milk… We are saying to everyone
(politicians): If from now till the end of the year, you don’t solve the
problem, everything will explode,” Tueni said.
Restoring confidence in Lebanon by acting on rampant corruption is a must if the
tiny country expects European, Arab and other countries, as well as
international organisations, to continue investing in it and refraining from
shifting interest to other countries in the region.
The task is not easy, if not impossible, with the ruling elites and their
protégés, many of whom have been involved in corruption, greatly benefiting from
the power-sharing system. Illicit enrichment is so blunt while a project cannot
pass unless people in power secure personal gains.
The 2-year waste management crisis is one such example. Squandering public
funds persists in most sectors and is mostly visible with the failure in
restoring a constant power supply 27 years after the 1975-90 civil war ended.
In 2016, the state electricity company registered a deficit of $1.4 billion.
It is thus hard to measure the extent of corruption or estimate the losses.
Figures provided by former ministers range between $1.5 billion-$10 billion per
year. Tueni estimated losses in Lebanon treasury at $3.3 million.
Although he acknowledged that there is “no magic stick” to end corruption in
Lebanon, Tueni appeared determined to expose any corruption case, even if it
involves officials and followers from his own political camp.
Setting up the anti-corruption ministry has been hailed as “a good but yet
insufficient move” by Ziad Abdel Samad, the executive director of the Arab NGO
Network for Development. He emphasised the need for more laws to secure the
independence of the judiciary and the financial inspection authority and for
measures to stop squandering, smuggling, taxes not being collected and
spending from outside the budget. For Riad Tabbarah, director of the Centre for
Development Studies and Projects (MADMA), the system has proved to be “very
strong” and facing “no major pressures” to change it.
“We have new things coming up like the oil that is a whole field of corruption
that could last for another 50 years,” noted Tabbarah. That, Tueni said, would
not stop him from trying hard to fulfil his new mission. “Either I succeed or
leave,” he concluded.
The Lebanese have shown a
humanity the West could learn from
Gareth Smyth/The Arab Weekly/February 26/17
Unlike Europe, Lebanon has not been swept by malicious social-media rumours over
rapes and thefts.
When war broke out in Syria in 2011 no country appeared as vulnerable to
contagion as Lebanon. The assassination of former prime minister Rafik Hariri in
2005 had removed the figure with the widest national appeal and clearest
strategy, and tensions between Lebanon’s two main political blocs were rising
with the regional divide between Shias and Sunnis, and between Iran and Saudi
Arabia.
The main Sunni group, al- Mustaqbal, supported the Saudi and US line that Syrian
President Bashar Assad should leave power while Hezbollah, the main Shia party,
committed fighters alongside Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps to defend
Assad. As the first war refugees arrived in Lebanon, Hezbollah opposed
establishing camps out of fear they would become rebel bases and there was a
wider Lebanese wariness due to the experience of Palestinian camps, set up
impromptu in 1947.
As the war progressed — the number of refugees entering Lebanon passed 1
million in 2014 — the Lebanese began to contemplate the effects of the arrival
of so many Sunnis upsetting the country’s precarious sectarian balance and
making the Sunnis a majority.
Aside from politics, the refugee presence has added to the pressures of daily
life. Electricity and water supplies were already woeful. Cynicism of
politicians and corruption grew in 2015 as piles of rubbish built up when the
collection system broke down. Political wrangling centred on a new electoral
law, with no parliamentary elections since 2009 and parliament’s mandate
extended twice.
And yet, somehow, Lebanon has held together. The country has absorbed at least
1.5 million Syrian refugees, about 30% of the estimated total and equal to
one-third of its own population. During 2016, there were more Syrian babies born
in Lebanon than Lebanese ones.
To grasp the scale, just imagine 110 million Mexicans arriving in the United
States over four years — but remember that Lebanon’s population density has
reached 600 people per sq. km compared to just 35 in the United States.
In Europe and the United States, the refugee crisis has prompted a wave of
racism and right-wing populism that saw Britain vote in June to leave the
European Union and spurred November’s election of Donald Trump as US president.
Yet the United States has taken only about 15,000 Syrian refugees, 0.005% of its
population and 0.3% of the total number of refugees. Britain has taken 10,000,
0.015% of its population and 0.2% of refugees.
Of course there are signs of resentment in Lebanon, where the refugees’ presence
has pushed up rent and lowered wages. In a country with 20% unemployment,
Syrians work for as little as 30% of the rate a Lebanese worker expects. Some
towns have signs warning “foreigners” not to be in the streets after 8pm.
Few areas are unaffected, as Syrians are throughout Lebanon. Expensive cars with
Syrian plates are easily spotted in better-off parts of Beirut such as Hamra or
outside nightclubs in Manara. At the other end of the social scale, the
population of the Beirut Palestinian camp Shatila, established for 3,000
people on 1 sq. km of land in 1949 — has been swollen by Syrians to perhaps
40,000 people.
Yet, overall, civil peace has been maintained. “I haven’t heard of any increases
in crime,” one writer told me. “The Syrians have behaved very correctly.”
Unlike Europe, Lebanon has not been swept by malicious social-media rumours
over rapes and thefts.
It is too easy to say this is due simply to the Lebanese believing the Syrians
have no chance of acquiring nationality and therefore see their presence as
temporary. In fact, this is far from clear: There is every chance that many
Syrians will not return home, certainly not with Assad still in power.
No, the Lebanese have shown a humanity the purportedly civilised West might
learn from. Perhaps this comes from the Lebanese own experience of war and why
people flee. Perhaps they emerged more tolerant from their own crises.
Lebanon’s failures are real enough but its successes should be recognised and
applauded. The Lebanese should be supported more effectively by the
international community. Existing intelligence and military cooperation could
be extended, existing pledges of billions in aid should be honoured. If Lebanon
falters, many refugees will take a boat west and that would really be a crisis.
*Gareth Smyth has covered Middle Eastern affairs for 20 years and was chief
correspondent for The Financial Times in Iran.
Samir Frangié : « Mettons en avant
le modèle libanais où chrétiens et musulmans gèrent l’Etat ensemble »
LE MONDE | 24.02.2017
Propos recueillis par Laure Stephan (Beyrouth, correspondance)
L’arrivée de Michel Aoun à la présidence du Liban a conforté le Hezbollah au
pouvoir. Le parti chiite, alerte l’intellectuel Samir Frangié, reproduit la même
erreur que le camp chrétien avant la guerre civile, qui avait refusé de donner
leurs droits aux musulmans.
Intellectuel libanais, Samir Frangié est ancien journaliste et ancien député. Il
a été l’un des ténors du 14-Mars, ce mouvement né en 2005, dans la foulée de
l’assassinat de l’ancien premier ministre Rafic Hariri, qui a su, grâce à une
mobilisation pacifique, chasser du pays les forces d’occupation syriennes (présentes
au Liban depuis 1990). Auteur de Voyage au bout de la violence (Actes Sud,
2012), Samir Frangié plaide pour un « autre » Liban, débarrassé de son carcan
communautaire.
Vous avez été l’une des rares personnalités libanaises à vous enthousiasmer pour
les « printemps arabes ». Aujourd’hui, conservez-vous ce sentiment ?
Oui, même si les élans démocratiques inaugurés par ces « printemps » ontconnu
des reculs considérables. Au Yémen, la situation a pris la dimension d’un
conflit entre communautés musulmanes. En Syrie, cela a dégénéré avec la violence
du régime et la contre-violence. Mais il y a eu aussi des percées positives,
comme en Tunisie. Dans tous ces pays, cet élan de 2011 reste gravé dans la
mémoire des gens.
Beaucoup redoutaient que le conflit syrien ne s’exporte au Liban, mais ce ne fut
pas le cas, même si le pays a été déstabilisé par des attentats…
Les Libanais ont tiré des enseignements de leur guerre civile [1975-1990] : il
n’y a pas d’excitation à porter les armes. L’affrontement qui a eu lieu à
Beyrouth en mai 2008 [le Hezbollah chiite avait pris le contrôle de l’ouest de
la capitale, après que le gouvernement eut décidé de supprimer son réseau de
télécommunications parallèle] a montré qu’il existait dans le pays un conflit
sunnite-chiite larvé. Mais cette confrontation a aussi posé des limites : une
guerre au Liban ne ferait que multiplier les problèmes, sans en résoudre aucun.
Ce qui m’inquiète, en revanche, ce sont de possibles nouvelles opérations de
Daech [acronyme arabe de l’organisation Etat islamique] contre le Hezbollah, qui
pourraient contribuer à relancer les tensions communautaires au Liban.
Quel est l’avenir du Hezbollah dans la guerre en Syrie, où il se bat
officiellement depuis 2013 aux côtés du régime ?
Le Hezbollah sait pertinemment qu’il ne peut pas ramener Bachar Al-Assad au rang
de dirigeant, tel qu’il le fut avant la révolution. Il peut seulement retarder
sa chute et permettre une négociation sur l’avenir de la Syrie, sans la mener.
Le prix payé par la communauté chiite libanaise,...
L’accès à la totalité de l’article est protégé
Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News
published on February 26-27/17
Egyptian Christians fearing terror flee Sinai for 4th day
Associated Press/Feb. 26,
2017/ISMAILIA, Egypt: Egyptian Christians fearing attacks by ISIS militants are
fleeing the volatile northern part of the Sinai Peninsula for a fourth day,
after a string of sectarian killings there sent hundreds fleeing and raised
accusations the government is failing to protect the minority. Official Nabil
Shukrallah of the Evangelical Church in Ismailia, 120 kilometers (75 miles) east
of Cairo, says Sunday that over 100 families from the city of el-Arish and
nearby had passed through the church since Friday, some 500 people. He says the
families arrive scared, exhausted and in need of supplies, which were being
stockpiled at the church via donations from several parishes. They are then
transported to be housed in and around the city, in private homes and now also
housing provided by the government.
Canada: Ontario unanimously passes
“anti-islamophobia” motion
Jihad Watch/February 26, 2017
The Ontario legislature unanimously passed an anti-Islamophobia motion Thursday
afternoon, a marked difference from the heated debate happening among
Conservatives over a similar motion at the federal level….
Des Rosiers introduced the motion Dec. 1 in response to incidents in her
Ottawa-Vanier riding such as anti-Muslim graffiti, and young women wearing
hijabs who were spat on, she said. It took on extra urgency after six men were
shot to death at a mosque in Quebec, she said.
Also, “Ontario Attorney General Yasir Naqvi said the recent acts of hatred
against Muslims are not representative of the country Canadians want.” True
indeed, but it must be remembered amid all the hoopla about “Islamophobia” that
other groups also suffer from acts of hatred, yet only “Islamophobia” is the
subject of government motions. Antisemitism in Canada is reported to be
skyrocketing. Just two days ago, McGill University student board leader Igor
Sadiko, who advocates for the anti-Israel Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS)
movement, tweeted: “Punch a Zionist today.” It is intolerable that any group
should be targeted for hate because of race or religion.
The Center for Israel and Jewish Affairs stated this about bigotry, intolerance,
and the inappropriateness of the use of the word “Islamophobia”:
We believe the term “Islamophobia” should be replaced with a more precise
phrase, such as “anti-Muslim bigotry”, which was suggested by, among others,
former Justice Minister Irwin Cotler.
At her invitation, we offered MP Khalid thoughtful, constructive suggestions
that we believe would have allowed the motion to gain significantly more
support. You can read our letter to her here. Ms. Khalid did not respond to our
suggestions……
Several other faith communities reached out to us with similar concerns. We
relayed that to MP Khalid.
The paradox of this debate is that those who stand to lose the most by the
normalization of the term Islamophobia are Muslims as they are the primary
victims of Islamist extremism.
The Ontario legislature “anti-Islamophobia” motion was passed by a vote of 81-0;
a particularly surprising development was that the Progressive Conservative
caucus was urged by its leader, Patrick Brown, to support the motion two days
prior to the vote. Brown stated:
“Whether it’s hate against any faith, it’s wrong,” he said. “We always will
condemn any form of hate. In terms of Islamophobia, it’s real.”
Brown needs to have more faith in Canadians, who widely share his condemnation
of “any form of hate.” He is apparently determined to steer clear of making any
political waves about the global “Islamophobia” scheme, despite documented
evidence of its agenda. He also stated that “Islamophobia is real and we have to
condemn it unreservedly.” He received much applause from the establishment
media, which, of course, supports “anti-Islamophobia” motions, as well as from
Amira Elghawaby, communications director for the National Council of Canadian
Muslims (formerly CAIR-CAN). Elghawaby stated that the NCCM was “pleased that
Brown will support the Ontario motion.” CAIR was deemed an unindicted
co-conspirator in the largest terrorism financing trial in the history of the
United States — the Holy Land Foundation trial — during which the carefully
calculated Muslim Brotherhood plan for North America was revealed.
It is no secret that conservatives tend overall to hold nationalistic views on
issues of diversity and multiculturalism that liberals are often quick to label
racist; but Ontario Progressive Conservatives seem to be ill-informed, or
perhaps driven by political correctness, despite valid concerns voiced within
their own constituencies about the divisive nature of the “anti-Islamophobia”
motions. Although motions are not bills and do not translate into laws, they do
express unified and powerful attitudes and sentiments, so they inevitably guide
legislative business from the inside.
The “Islamophobia” initiative is anti-democratic and supremacist at its core. It
is not based on real concerns about discrimination, although it is presented as
such. It was devised by the Organization of Islamic Cooperation and is used as a
“thought terminating cliché” to beat down critics. Normative Islam is immutable
and proclaims that no law can be above the Sharia, which outlaws any criticism
of Muhammad and/or Islam. Author and writer Paul Marshall stated ten years ago:
The Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), in conjunction with the United
Nations Human Rights Council, is currently seeking to rewrite international
human rights standards to curtail any freedom of expression that threatens their
more authoritarian members. They are attempting to use charges of “Islamophobia”
and purported Western “insults to Islam” to provide international legitimacy for
their suppression of their critics in the name of respect for their religion.
The European response to this has been contradictory and confused.
Jihad Watch has also been reporting some other worrying trends in Canada:
The Liberal Party of Canada opted to support an “anti-Islamophobia” motion
(M-103) in Parliament. M-103 was the second anti-Islamophobia motion tabled, and
it stirred up opposition by some Conservative Members of Parliament. The first
was unanimously approved in October and sneaked through with hardly any
attention.
Six Canadian cities signed a charter against “Islamophobia” this past summer,
drafted by the National Council of Canadian Muslims.
Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre has been pressing to have Montreal declared a
“sanctuary city,” at a time when a surge of unvetted asylum seekers has been
streaming into Canada from the United States. Coderre is also president of the
World Association of Major Metropolises, an organization that has been doing a
great deal of business with Iran over the past two decades. The World
Association of Major Metropolises signed an agreement with Tehran last fall to
“boost mutual cooperation in various fields”; the Association is described as
“the largest association gathering the governments of major cities and
metropolitan areas all over the world.”
Fredericton, New Brunswick is also aiming to become a “sanctuary city.”
“Ontario legislature unanimously passes anti-Islamophobia motion”, The Canadian
Press, February 23, 2017:
The Ontario legislature unanimously passed an anti-Islamophobia motion Thursday
afternoon, a marked difference from the heated debate happening among
Conservatives over a similar motion at the federal level.
The vote passed 81-0.
The motion from Liberal backbencher Nathalie Des Rosiers called on the
legislature to “stand against all forms of hatred, hostility, prejudice, racism
and intolerance,” rebuke a “growing tide of anti-Muslim rhetoric and sentiments”
and condemn all forms of Islamophobia.
Des Rosiers introduced the motion Dec. 1 in response to incidents in her
Ottawa-Vanier riding such as anti-Muslim graffiti, and young women wearing
hijabs who were spat on, she said. It took on extra urgency after six men were
shot to death at a mosque in Quebec, she said.
Canadians shocked by mosque shooting
Attorney General Yasir Naqvi, who is Muslim, said Muslims and Canadians across
the country were shaken by the violence at the mosque.
“The day after the shooting in Quebec a father called my community office asking
in the morning is it safe for him to send his son to school,” he said. “That’s
not the society we live in. That’s not the society we’re building. Parents
should not be fearful for a nanosecond whether they should send their children
to school because of their faith. It’s real.”
Premier Kathleen Wynne said, as a lesbian, some people had tried to discourage
her from running in a riding with a large Muslim population. She disagreed and
said when she spoke to community members they discussed their differences but
also what binds them together, such as values about health, education and
family.
“It’s those commonalities that make it possible for us to create this country,
to create this province, and that’s why it enrages me — it enrages me that we
still have to have this conversation globally,” she said.
PC support in Ontario, not yet Ottawa
Progressive Conservative Leader Patrick Brown said Ontario’s legislature
“unequivocally opposes Islamophobia.”
“Islamophobia is real and we have to condemn it unreservedly,” he said.
“No matter the colour of your skin, which part of the world you come from, what
language you speak, whether you attend a mosque on Friday, a synagogue on a
Saturday or church on a Sunday, every distinct element of who we are as a people
comes together to form this beautiful mosaic that is Canada.”
The Tories’ support means the Ontario motion has not generated the political
debate seen over a similar item in the House of Commons…..
Iran holds naval war games amid rising tensions with US
Ynetnews/Reuters/26.02.17/Despite
President Trump’s previous warning that he is putting Iran ‘on notice’ and that
its recent ballistic missile test was ‘playing with fire,’ Tehran moves ahead
with naval drill. Iran launched naval drills at the mouth of the Gulf and the
Indian Ocean on Sunday, a naval commander said, as tensions with the United
States escalated after US President Donald Trump put Tehran "on notice."Since
taking office last month, Trump has pledged to get tough with Iran, warning the
Islamic Republic after its ballistic missile test on January 29 that it was
playing with fire and all US options were on the table. Iran's annual exercises
will be held in the Strait of Hormuz, the Gulf of Oman, the Bab el-Mandab and
northern parts of the Indian Ocean, to train in the fight against terrorism and
piracy, Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayyari said, according to state media. Millions
of barrels of oil are transported daily to Europe, the United States and Asia
through the Bab el-Mandab and the Strait of Hormuz, waterways that run along the
coasts of Yemen and Iran. Navy ships, submarines and helicopters will take part
in the drills across an area of about 2 million square kilometres (772,000
square miles) and marines will showcase their skills along Iran's southeastern
coast, the state news agency IRNA said. The US Navy's Fifth Fleet is based in
the region and protects shipping lanes in the Gulf and nearby waters. Last
month, a US Navy destroyer fired warning shots at four Iranian fast-attack
vessels near the Strait of Hormuz after they closed in at high speed. The
vessels belonged to Iran's Revolutionary Guards which are not participating in
the current war games.Trump said earlier this month that "Iran has been put
formally put on notice" for firing a ballistic missile, and later imposed new
sanctions on Tehran.
The US Navy's 5th Fleet, based in Bahrain, did not immediately respond to a
request for comment. Associated Press contributed to this report.
Syrian Opposition Accuses Damascus of 'Stalling' Talks
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/February 26/17/The main Syrian opposition group at
peace talks in Geneva accused Damascus on Sunday of "stalling", after its chief
envoy demanded all sides condemn the deadly suicide assault in Homs this
weekend. The High Negotiations Committee (HNC) made the charge after the Syrian
regime's chief negotiator Bashar al-Jaafari said any opposition delegates who
refused to condemn the attack were "accomplices of terrorism." "Jaafari is
stalling, they don't want to start the political transition," HNC spokesman
Salem al-Meslet told AFP in Geneva, where sputtering U.N.-sponsored peace talks
are taking place. He said that in previous Geneva meetings, and now this one,
"the only word that the regime knows is terrorism. In fact he is stalling by
only mentioning this word and the fight against terrorism. "Just as he is
insisting on condemning the incident that happened yesterday, we also demand the
regime delegation to tell everyone that they are committed to political
transition," he added. U.N. Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura launched the fourth
round of Geneva talks on Thursday, but as in previous meetings there appears
little prospect of the two sides meeting face-to-face. In Homs on Saturday
blasts targeted two security service bases, killing dozens including a top
intelligence chief and close confidant of Syrian President Bashar Assad. The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said in all 42 people were killed, but the
provincial governor put the figure at 30 dead in the attacks claimed by former
al-Qaida affiliate Fateh al-Sham Front. The Syrian regime's delegation chief in
Geneva vowed "retaliation" in response to the atrocity, and demanded all
opposition delegates condemn it. In response, HNC chief negotiator Nasr
al-Hariri said: "Our positions are clear in condemning terrorism and
terrorists." When asked to clarify if that meant he condemned the Homs attacks,
he said: "We condemn all terrorist operations committed by terrorist groups, and
if what happened in Homs is a terrorist operation then my remarks are clear."The
Homs attacks came a day after 77 people, mostly civilians, were killed in a
suicide bombing claimed by the Islamic State group in Al-Bab, said the
Observatory. The jihadists were ousted from the northern town this week by
Turkish-backed rebels.
Bombings, air strikes in Syria rattle Geneva peace talks
By Reuters Sunday, 26 February 2017/A United Nations peace envoy said a militant
attack in Syria on Saturday was a deliberate attempt to wreck peace talks in
Geneva, while the warring sides traded blame and appeared no closer to actual
negotiations.Suicide bombers stormed two Syrian security offices in Homs,
killing dozens with gunfire and explosions including the head of military
security, prompting airstrikes against the last rebel-held enclave in the
western city. “Spoilers were always expected, and should continue to be
expected, to try to influence the proceedings of the talks. It is in the
interest of all parties who are against terrorism and are committed to a
political process in Syria not to allow these attempts to succeed,” UN mediator
Staffan de Mistura said in a statement.De Mistura has met the two sides
separately in Geneva while he tries to get agreement on how talks to end the
six-year-old conflict should be arranged. He has warned not to expect any quick
breakthrough and to beware of letting the violence derail any fragile progress,
as happened repeatedly in the past. A ceasefire brokered by Russia and Turkey
with Iran's support is increasingly being violated by both sides. The jihadist
rebel alliance Tahrir al-Sham, which opposes the talks - although it has fought
alongside factions that are represented there - said that five suicide bombers
had carried out Saturday's attack. It celebrated with the words “thanks be to
God” but stopped short of explicitly claiming responsibility. Tahrir al-Sham was
formed this year from several groups including Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, which was
formerly known as the Nusra Front and was al Qaeda's Syrian branch until it
broke formal allegiance to the global jihadist movement in 2016.After a 2-1/2
hour-long meeting with de Mistura, the Syrian government's lead negotiator
Bashar al-Ja'afari spoke to reporters and repeatedly demanded the opposition
condemn the attacks or face the consequences. “If anyone refuses to condemn this
terrorist attack then he is an accomplice of terrorism and we will deal with
them accordingly,” Ja'afari said. He ruled out leaving the talks, saying he
would meet de Mistura again on Tuesday, but he implied that some of the
opponents that he had sat face-to-face with at Thursday's opening ceremony were
“sponsors of terrorism”. Warplanes also carried out six raids on Douma in the
eastern suburbs of Damascus, resulting in six deaths, and earlier, an air raid
in Hama killed four people from the same family, the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights said.
BLOCKING TALKS
Speaking to Reuters earlier on Saturday, Basma Kodmani, a negotiator from the
opposition High Negotiations Committee (HNC), said groups backing the talks had
abided by the ceasefire. But she questioned the government's commitment and
whether Russia, a key Assad ally, was ready to pressure it to curb the
violence.After Ja'afari's comments, the opposition condemned the attack but
accused the government of trying to use the events to derail the negotiations.
“We condemn all terrorist acts done by all terrorist groups. If the Homs
operation was done by any of those, it is clear what I say,” lead negotiator
Nasr al-Hariri told reporters. “They just want to remain in power. The regime is
trying to block the negotiations,” he added, saying they would not walk away
from the talks. Colonel Fateh Hassoun, a member of the opposition negotiating
team, pointed the finger squarely at the government forces for the Homs attack.
“What happened today is an operation the regime has implemented to retaliate
through another action against civilians besieged for the past 3-1/2 years, and
this is to send a message to the people, societies and the world that he is
fighting terrorism,” he said. Although Assad's government has controlled most of
Homs since 2014, rebels still control its al-Waer district, which warplanes
bombed on Saturday, wounding 50, the Observatory said. De Mistura handed a
working paper on procedural issues to delegations at the talks on Friday but
there appears little prospect of things moving to the key political issues that
he had hoped to be able to begin addressing. The envoy is looking to lay the
foundations for negotiations to end the conflict that has killed hundreds of
thousands and displaced millions. “In reality, nothing is happening,” said a
senior Western diplomat. “The paper handed out yesterday by de Mistura is
procedural. It is not the future of Syria.”
Senior FSA officer: We’re ready for direct talks with Assad regime
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English Sunday, 26 February 2017/A senior officer from
the Free Syrian Army has said the rebels are committed to a political solution
and are ready to take part in direct talks with the Assad regime. The same
officer also said recent talks in Astana did not provide any grounds to achieve
a political solution.He added the rebels consider ISIS, al-Qaeda and Iranian
militias as “terrorists”.
Iraqi police commandos recapture new neighborhood in Mosul
By Associated Press Sunday, 26 February 2017/A senior commander says Iraqi
militarized police have captured a neighborhood on the western side of Mosul
amid fierce clashes with ISIS militants. Maj. Gen. Haider al-Maturi of the
Federal Police Commandos Division told The Associated Press that his troops
entered the Tayaran neighborhood Sunday morning and it is now “under their full
control.”Al-Maturi said ISIS militants deployed at least 10 suicide car bombs,
but nine of them were blown up before reaching their targets. The 10th killed
two policemen and wounded five. Al-Maturi added that his forces arrested two
militants - an Iraqi and a foreigner who speaks Russian. Iraqi forces, backed by
aerial support by the U.S.-led international coalition, control eastern Mosul.
Iraq's second largest city is split roughly in half by the Tigris River.
Iran begins navy drill off Strait of Hormuz
The Associated Press, Tehran Sunday, 26 February 2017/Iran’s navy has begun an
annual drill near the strategic Strait of Hormuz, its first major exercise since
the inauguration of US President Donald Trump. Iranian state television quoted
navy chief Adm. Habibollah Sayyari on Sunday as saying the maneuver will cover
an area of 2 million square kilometers in the Sea of Oman and the Indian Ocean
near the strait. Nearly a third of all oil traded by sea passes through the
strait and it has been the scene of previous confrontations between the US and
Iran. But the drill does not involve Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guard, a
paramilitary force the US Navy often criticizes for harassing its vessels. The
US Navy’s 5th Fleet, based in Bahrain, did not immediately respond to a request
for comment.
Iran’s ex-president Ahmadinejad writes open letter to Trump
AFP Sunday, 26 February 2017/Iran’s ex-president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad published
Sunday an open letter to Donald Trump, welcoming his criticism of the US
political system but taking issue with his visa ban and attitude to women. Many
Iranians see the new US president as cut from the same cloth as Ahmadinejad, who
shocked the establishment with his sudden rise to power in 2005, combining
hardline rhetoric and populist economic policies to win a powerful following
among Iran’s lower classes. At times in the long and rambling letter, published
in English and Farsi on his website, he appears to find a kindred spirit in
Trump. “Your Excellency (Trump) has truthfully described the US political system
and electoral structure as corrupt and anti-public,” he writes. But much of the
letter is spent exhorting Trump to end interventions in the Middle East and
ditch the “arrogance” of past US administrations. Ahmadinejad also takes issue
with Trump’s visa ban on seven Muslim-majority countries, including Iran. “The
presence and constructive effort of the elite and scientists of different
nations, including the million-plus population of my Iranian compatriots has had
a major role in the development of the US... the contemporary US belongs to all
nations.” He also finishes with a short lecture on respecting women -- a
possible reference to Trump’s recorded claims that he has sexually assaulted
some. “The great men of history have paid the highest level of respect to women
and recognized their God-given capabilities,” Ahmadinejad writes. Ahmadinejad
has a fondness for writing to world leaders, having sent letters to former US
president Barack Obama, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and the pope -- as well
as an 18-page missive to previous US leader George W. Bush.
Saudi King Salman in Malaysia: We stand fully behind
Islamic causes
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English Sunday, 26 February 2017/Saudi Arabia’s King
Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud has said that his country stands behind Islamic
causes across the world. “We confirm that the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia stands
with all its might behind the Islamic causes in general and we are fully ready
for assistance and cooperation with your sisterly country as regards any effort
or movement that serves Muslims' issues,” King Salman said in a speech on Monday
during a dinner banquet held by Malaysia’s monarch. The visit to Malaysia is the
first by a Saudi king to Malaysia in more than a decade. It is part of a
month-long Asia tour that will see him visit Indonesia, Brunei, Japan, China,
the Maldives and Jordan “to meet with the leaders of those countries to discuss
bilateral relations and regional and international issues of common concern,” a
royal court statement carried on Saudi Arabia’s state media SPA reported.
Bomb hits bus carrying policemen in Bahrain, four injured
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English Sunday, 26 February 2017/A bomb has struck a
bus carrying Bahrain police on Sunday night, injuring four police officers. The
bus was stationed near Jaww Village and injured four policemen who are currently
in stable condition, according to tweets from Bahrain’s Ministry of Interior
account on Twitter. “Necessary steps are being taken,” the statement added.
UN agency suspends Gaza staffer over Israeli claims
By AFP, Jerusalem Monday, 27 February 2017/A United Nations agency said on
Sunday it was suspending a Gaza staffer accused of being politically active in
the Islamist group Hamas, which rules the coastal strip. UNRWA, the UN agency in
charge of Palestinian refugees, said the decision had already been taken ahead
of an Israeli call earlier Sunday to fire Suhail al-Hindi, head of the agency’s
staff union. “Before that communication, and in light of our ongoing independent
internal investigation, we had been presented with substantial information from
a number of sources which led us to take the decision this afternoon to suspend
Suhail al Hindi, pending the outcome of our investigation,” UNRWA spokeswoman
Chris Gunness wrote. COGAT, the Israeli defense ministry agency responsible for
civilian affairs in the Palestinian territories, says that al-Hindi was
appointed to the militant group’s leadership in a February 13 internal election.
He was chosen “as a senior Hamas member from Jabalia in northern Gaza”, it said
in an English-language statement. “He also holds positions as both the Chairman
of the Association of Palestinian Workers of UNRWA since 2012 and as an
elementary school principal in the Gaza Strip,” it added. “Due to the severity
of the situation, the head of COGAT, Major General Yoav Mordechai called on
UNRWA to terminate al-Hindi immediately,” it said. The Israeli foreign ministry
made the same allegation on Thursday on its official Twitter account. UNRWA
issued an initial denial the next day.
“Based on the due diligence carried out by the agency to date, UNRWA has neither
uncovered nor received evidence to contradict the staff member’s denial that he
was elected to political office.”Its Friday statement quoted Hindi as saying
that he has “no relation whatsoever with the issue”.It said that agency staff
are regularly advised that political activity or fundraising is considered
improper conduct.
Egypt annoyed as Britain continues
suspension of flights
By Reuters, Cairo Sunday, 26 February 2017/Egypt expressed frustration on
Saturday at Britain's refusal to lift a suspension of flights from the United
Kingdom to the Red Sea resort of Sharm al-Sheikh, imposed after Islamic State
brought down a Russian airliner in 2015. The issue of airline security came up
in talks involving visiting British Foreign Minister Boris Johnson, Egypt's
President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Foreign Minister Sameh Hassan Shoukry.
Johnson praised Egypt as a longstanding friend of Britain and said they were
strong allies against terrorism and extremist ideas, according to a British
statement. But Shoukry said Britain's continued suspension of flights to Sharm
al-Sheikh, once a popular destination for British holidaymakers, was
unjustified. Britain and Germany both imposed bans on flights to certain places
in Egypt following the downing of the Russian airliner over the Sinai Peninsula
in which all 224 people on board were killed. Russia suspended all flights to
Egypt and has yet to restore them. “The continuation of the halt of the British
airline to the Egyptian tourist destinations despite the progress that has been
made in securing airports is completely not understandable and unjustified,” an
Egyptian foreign ministry statement said. More than six years of political
turmoil in Egypt since the overthrow of Hosni Mubarak in 2011 have scared off
investors and tourists. The flight suspension was hitting Egypt's economy hard
and was "inconsistent with Britain's repeated promises to support Egypt", the
statement said. The British statement did not mention when flights would resume.
During Johnson's visit, Britain and Egypt completed a $150 million loan
guarantee agreement to help Egypt complete its program of economic reforms, the
British embassy said.
Obama-Era Veteran Picked to Lead Democratic Party
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/February 26/17/Opposition Democrats on Saturday
chose Tom Perez as their new leader, tapping an establishment figure to lead the
fight against President Donald Trump and the Republican Congress. Perez, a labor
secretary under former president Barack Obama and the party's first
Hispanic-American leader, immediately named the contest's runner-up, leftist
lawmaker Keith Ellison, as the party's deputy chairman. "Someday, they're going
to study this era in American history... and ask the question, of all of us,
where were you in 2017 when we had the worst president in the history of the
United States?" said Perez, 55. "And we will all be able to say, the united
Democratic party led the resistance, ensured this president was a one-term
president and elected Democrats across this country." Ellison, an 53-year-old
African American who is the first Muslim elected to the US Congress, warned that
"we don't have the luxury to walk out of this room divided."The fight over who
would chair the Democratic National Committee (DNC) appeared at times to be a
proxy battle between the supporters of defeated 2016 Democratic presidential
candidate Hillary Clinton and her leftist primary rival Bernie Sanders. Perez,
who won 235 votes against 200 for Ellison - a strong Sanders supporter - was
seen as the establishment pick. A third candidate, South Bend, Indiana Mayor
Pete Buttigieg -- a gay, 35-year-old Rhodes Scholar and military veteran --
dropped out of the race before the vote, which was held in Atlanta, Georgia.
Unlike in other democracies the leaders of the two main US parties wield little
influence on policy, with leading party lawmakers holding far more clout. But
this backstage role is taking on greater significance following Clinton's
surprise 2016 defeat, and as Democrats prepare for next year's midterm elections
and the 2020 presidential vote.
Perez 'will unite us'
Perez succeeds interim chair Donna Brazile, who took over after Representative
Debbie Wasserman Schultz was ousted in mid-2016 when leaked emails showed that
some DNC members, who are pledged to be neutral in presidential primaries,
favored Clinton over Sanders. The progressive group Democracy for America was
upset with the "incredibly disappointing" vote result. Choosing Perez "is
another missed opportunity for a Democratic Party desperately trying to regain
relevance, and proves... how out of touch party insiders are with the grassroots
movement currently in the streets," said the group's chair Jim Dean, an Ellison
supporter. But Obama, who has largely been silent since leaving office in
January, called for mending rifts."What unites our party is a belief in
opportunity -- the idea that however you started out, whatever you look like, or
whomever you love, America is the place where you can make it if you try," he
said. "I know that Tom Perez will unite us under that banner of opportunity, and
lay the groundwork for a new generation of Democratic leadership for this big,
bold, inclusive, dynamic America we love so much."
Crisis of confidence.
After the vote Trump offered what appeared to be tongue-in-cheek congratulations
on Twitter. "Congratulations to Thomas Perez, who has been named Chairman of the
DNC. I could not be happier for him, or for the Republican Party!" he wrote.
Perez's response: "Call me Tom. And don't get too happy. @keithellison and I,
and Democrats united across the country, will be your worst nightmare."
According to Republican National Committee chairwoman Ronna McDaniel, by
choosing Perez Democrats "only create deeper divisions within their own party by
pushing a far left agenda that rejects a majority of their base outside
Washington." During a televised DNC candidate debate late Wednesday, Perez said
Democrats need to "get back to basics" by making house calls in all 50 states
and reminding workers that the party represents their values and interests.
"When we lead with our message, our message of economic opportunity, that's how
we win," he said. Perez also warned that Democrats must reform their party's
presidential primary system, which he said has created "a crisis of confidence"
because of its lack of transparency.
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published
on February 26-27/17
Protest against Haifa's ammonia tank
Ahiya Raved|/Ynetnews/February 26/17
As Haifa District Court deliberates over a petition by Haifa Chemicals seeking
to keep the facility open, despite one report describing it as a ‘ticking time
bomb’ that could potentially claim half a million lives, 3,000 people gather
outside the court, calling for its immediate closure and relocation;
‘Hezbollah’s Secretary General was absolutely right about the destructive
potential of the ammonia tank.’
Three thousand people demonstrated in front of the Haifa District Court Sunday
in an effort to bring about the closure of the city’s ammonia tank, which was
ruled by a separate court to be a serious danger to public health.
Meanwhile, as the protestors called on the courts to act swiftly, inside the
court judges were considering and were preparing to rule on the petition filed
by Haifa Chemicals against closing it.
By 1:30pm, the court announced that a final decision would be taken on the
matter in the coming days, and would be given no later than Wednesday.
Haifa’s Court for Local Affairs had previously cited the serious health hazards
entailed in keeping the facility operational, and consequently ordered Haifa
Chemicals to close the ammonia tank within 10 days, a time limit which expired
last Tuesday.
However, the decision was scrapped after Haifa’s District Court permitted the
company to keep the tank open and active until the petition was heard.
With the onset of the protests, which got underway in the morning, roads in the
city were closed. Middle and high schools in Haifa and nearby cities were also
closed until 12:00pm to allow students to participate in the demonstration.
Overall, more than 33,000 students will be affected by the disruptions. National
Student Council Chairman Hanan Yazdi described the ammonia tank as "a ticking
time bomb. We cannot allow for this immense danger to exist in the heart of a
populated area."
The Haifa District Student Council Chairman Noy Krief added that "The ammonia
tank endangers and threatens hundreds of thousands of citizens living in the
Haifa district. I call on all teenagers to ask the hard questions, create a
discourse, become actively involved and go and protest for the relocation of the
ammonia tank."
The ammonia tank made headlines recently after a report by experts from the
Technion Institute of Technology claimed that it poses a severe risk in its
continued activity since it has not been properly inspected since it was built
30 years ago.
The report also claimed that "the ammonia ship that enters the Haifa Bay every
four weeks is akin to a ship carrying five primed atom bombs, each more deadly
than the one dropped on Hiroshima," and therefore constitutes a major security
weak point.
The report determined that any leakage, resulting from either a terror attack,
an earthquake (the Carmel Mountain is an active seismic area), or even an
accident could create a deadly cloud of highly poisonous gas that could kill
over half a million people, depending on the prevailing wind conditions.
The report was written by Prof. Ehud Keinan of the Technion Schulich Faculty of
Chemistry (formerly the faculty’s dean). It has been in the hands of Haifa’s
city council for over six months. The state objects to the conclusions of
Keinan’s report.
Among other things, the report concluded that “to take down the Twin Towers in
New York the terrorists didn’t need tens of tons of up-to-standard explosives,
but realized the destructive potential in a large passenger plane that is filled
with fuel and travelling at a high speed. Hezbollah’s Secretary General was
absolutely right about the destructive potential of the ammonia tank, and even
more; of the ammonia ship"
Six Years into Syria’s Revolution
Eyad Abu Shakra/Al Arabiya/February
26/17
Listening to UN envoy to Syria, Staffan de Mistura, and following the ongoing
infighting raging in Aleppo, Idlib and Hamah provinces, between the ‘Islamist’
armed opposition groups, are enough to uncover the terrible conspiracy that
seems to have succeeded in putting down the uprising of the Syrian masses before
it completed its sixth years.
It is also sufficient to watch the proliferation of ‘opposition platforms’ -
such an ugly and meaningless term - here and there like poisonous mushroom, if
not in capitals friendly or supportive of Bashar Al-Assad and Iran’s Mullahs,
then in the Humaymeem Russian Airforce Base in Latakia province from which
Russia’s air force bombers raze Syria’s villages, towns and cities… including
Aleppo.
Then, look no further than how rational enlightened personalities that spoke for
the ‘revolution’ a few years ago, have been pushed away by bearded-militiamen,
opportunist henchmen, and exclusionist sectarians.
Then keep in mind a conspiring international community which has exploited every
weakness in the political culture of a long suffering population, living for
more than half a century under a ‘police-state’ dictatorship; and examine fake
‘friendships’ that have drugged, dispirited and splintered the opposition while
helping a murderous regime to get back on its feet.
The bitter pill
Today, in what looks like a race against time, what has remained of the real
opposition is trying to swallow the bitter pill of including in their
negotiating team many from the fake ‘opposition’. Indeed, some of the latter
have been chosen by Russia, Al-Assad’s main military backer, while the
forthcoming negotiations are expected to be as useless as the previous ones, so
long they are under the same international sponsorship and UN special envoy.
This is also taking place after the international community shifted its
‘priorities’ away from regime change and building a democratic Syria, to
fighting terrorist groups which the regime and its backers, had helped create
and promote. And major world capitals had allowed it to grow and expand, when
for four years they stubbornly refused the demands of ‘safe havens’ and ‘no-fly
zones’.
The Syrian regime, as the Syrians have discovered lately, has been a ‘necessity’
for everybody but themselves. It has been a much needed servant to those keeping
it, despite its crimes; simply because its crimes have been serving their
interests
Furthermore, the fate of the Syrian people - for around six years being driven
towards death, displacement or despair - has become a matter of expediency,
while the new maps of the Middle East are being drawn, based on ambitions and
exchanged interests. Even those who still think the international political wind
is blowing in the favor of their religious, sectarian and ethnic interests may
eventually discover, like many before them, they were sacrificed for greater
deals cut above their heads.
For this instance, I recall the period when Western powers - namely USA and UK -
were busy preparing to bring down Saddam Hussein’s regime in Iraq. Particularly,
I remember the deep divisions that were the hallmark of the Iraqi opposition
factions. This fact was clear to all at the ‘London Conference’ before it was
concluded by a 22 points declaration in December 2002.
The new taboo
Before the destructive ill feelings later emerged, the above-mentioned
‘declaration’ recognized Iraq’s diversity, and claimed to respect the countries’
sects and parties. However, the most important part was, despite the divergence
between the words and the intentions of those who signed it, there was an
evident will - at least in Washington and London - to effect regime change in
Baghdad.
The divisions tearing apart the Iraqi opposition factions then were as bad if
not worse than those plaguing Syria’s opposition groups today. The difference,
however, between the two cases was that while the momentum to bring down Iraq’s
regime was obvious, the same could not be said about Syria’s. While intentions
and plans then claimed that the Iraqis, the Middle East and the whole world be
better off without the Baghdad regime, the approach to the situation was and
still is quite different.
It may not be possible here and now to discuss in full detail what made ousting
Saddam perfectly right, but is now taboo in Al-Assad’s case. But one can look,
first, at the interests of the major regional players; and second at the
international scene in 2002 and now.
In 2002 there was at least a tacit agreement between Israel and Iran to get rid
of a ‘common enemy’. The Iraqi regime had also lost a significant part of its
Arab ‘cover’ following its invasion of Kuwait, which created a climate of
mistrust and doubts throughout the Gulf region. This made it isolated and
vulnerable.
Political Islam
As for Turkey, it had not then taken forceful strides under the banner of
‘political Islam’ which is now established, after 15 years of the leadership of
Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his colleagues.
Vladimir Putin’s hesitant Russia of 2002, just emerging from the Boris Yeltsin
era, was totally different from the 2017 Putin’s Russia. It was not capable then
of doing what it is doing now - taking risks, threatening, conquering, even,
interfering in elections in major Western powers. And sure enough, both the USA
and the UK were under strong and decisive leaderships in 2002 unlike today.
During the last 15 years a lot has changed in Syria and Iraq, as well as in the
rest of the Arab world.
Iran, with American blessings embodied in the JCPOA fathered by Barack Obama, is
now the dominant force in several Arab capitals that seem to have forgotten
their Arab identities, such as Baghdad and Damascus. The ‘Arab Spring’ has
managed to uproot the desiccated shoots before the flowering of the buds. Even
Turkey, dreaming of combining the ‘opposites’: the Ottoman Caliphate and
Ataturk’s nationalism, has been brought back to reality by Russia’s old
animosities and America’s betrayal.
Finally, Israel under the Likud is now so relaxed and relieved thanks to the
‘Arab Fatigue’, that it is completing the ‘Judification’ of the whole Palestine.
Thus, circumstances in 2002 facilitated the disabling of the former Iraqi regime
through the creation of ‘no-fly zones’ and ‘safe havens’. On the contrary, the
role the Syrian regime has played since it came to power in the autumn of 1970,
has not only been accepted, but also required regionally and internationally. It
has been an excellent ‘mail box’, an effective ‘buffer zone’ on Israel’s
northern borders, and a valuable trap - serving Western powers - in catching and
blackmailing naïve and misguided Arab radicals.
The Syrian regime, as the Syrians have discovered lately, has been a ‘necessity’
for everybody but themselves. It has been a much needed servant to those keeping
it, despite its crimes; simply because its crimes have been serving their
interests.
*This article was first published on Asharq Al-Awsat.
Will Jubeir end a quarter-century estrangement?
Abdulrahman al-Rashed/Al Arabiya/February 26/17
The public opinion is like a herd of sheep. It’s led and it does not lead. The
rejection, anger, tension and accusations we witness today are only a result of
the political mood of the moment. This applies to Iraqi-Saudi relations, which
have been through several phases of tensions poisoned by regional disputes.
Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir surprised us yesterday when he appeared in
Baghdad after abandonment lasted for a quarter of a century. It’s an important
initiative amid these circumstances, which really call for reforming relations
between the two countries especially that there are no significant disputes that
can hamper Saudi-Iraqi relations.
Unfortunately, tension is not new but it has a history. Regardless of the
slogans made during political propaganda seasons – such as Iraq is the protector
of the Gulf’s eastern gate and center of stability – disputes with Baghdad are
old and frequent and they have been a source of unrest and wars mostly due to
problems related to domestic governance.
In the 1960’s and 1970’s, the domestic battles of the Baath Party, which had
seized power in Iraq, increased. The new governance led to crisis with Saudi
Arabia, which had finalized reconciliation with Egyptian President Gamal
Abdelnasser at the Khartoum Summit in 1967. Back then, the Baath Party launched
propaganda campaigns against Saudi Arabia inciting a coup and Baghdad embraced
Saudi opposition figures. Relations worsened for about 10 years and they did not
improve until after Saddam Hussein decided to turn towards Iran after the Shah’s
fall in the end of the 1970’s.
At the beginning of this war, Saudi Arabia was worried of any victory that
Saddam Hussein may achieve because it would provide him with superiority that
threatens it too. After his troops retreated and the Khomeini regime insisted on
going on with the war, Riyadh had no other option but to indirectly support him.
Jubeir’s visit to Baghdad is an important diplomatic step, one with dimensions
that may go beyond Iraq during this difficult time when the region needs
cooperation to decrease tensions, chaos and terrorism
The US, which realized that extremist Iranian clerics are more dangerous than
Baath figures in Baghdad, did the same. Relations remained friendly with
Saddam’s regime until the war ended as Iraq once again turned towards Gulf
countries and began to provoke problems with them. Iraq did not like the idea
that Gulf countries had established the Gulf Cooperation Council without it and
viewed this as deceit as it believed that Gulf countries exploited its
preoccupation with the war with Iran to establish their own regional alliance.
This was where Iraq began to slowly approach its enemy Iran and formed an
organization in response to the GCC and named it the Arab Cooperation Council,
thus hinting it was directed against Saudi Arabia and Gulf countries. It then
triggered two disputes. The first one was related to shares of oil production
and it targeted Kuwait in particular.
Iraq triggered the second dispute by resorting to blackmail, claiming it needs
more financial support. It then invaded Kuwait. Saddam was well-known for his
aggressive character whether against his rivals or his own friends in the Baath
Party or even against his family members. Due to his character, Saudi Arabia’s
relation with Baghdad continued deterioration for 12 years after the liberation
of Kuwait. Iraqi opposition figures met in Riyadh and other capitals and
expected Saddam to trigger another crisis once international sanctions were
lifted.
In the end, the Americans decided to get rid of his regime after economic
sanctions failed to topple or contain him. The weapons of mass destruction were
a mere excuse to militarily finalize the matter.
After Saddam’s downfall, the American governing council replaced him in Baghdad
but this council could not reassure Riyadh which had worries and fears from the
American project and thus abstained from cooperating with the US.
Iran intervened and offered to cooperate with American troops there. When Saudi
Arabia refused to allow the Americans to use their military base in al-Kharj in
Saudi Arabia to launch war, Qatar offered to cooperate so the Americans withdrew
their troops from Kharj and built an alternative base in Qatar. The latter base
became the center of their military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
On the diplomatic front, Saudi relations with the new Iraqi leaders were almost
non-existent as Saudi Arabia did not want to grant legitimacy to the new regime
under American military presence. At the same time, Saudi Arabia was not its
rival. The situation worsened during the reign of former Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki. When Haidar al-Abadi was elected instead, Saudi Arabia welcomed him.
However Abadi’s rivals, including Maliki and Iran, succeeded in weakening his
government and he did not succeed at developing his foreign relations despite
the ambassadors’ return to the country. Jubeir’s visit to Baghdad is an
important diplomatic step, one with dimensions that may go beyond Iraq during
this difficult time when the region needs cooperation to decrease tensions,
chaos and terrorism and diminish the possibilities of opening more war fronts.
**This article was first published in Asharq Al-Awsat on February 26 2017.
The two-state solution is the minimum required
With Trump, is the world entering a new era where occupation and colonisation
are valid options?
Khairallah Khairallah/The Arab Weekly/February 26/16
For US President Donald Trump, whether the Palestinians and the Israelis agree
on a single state or two states or not is irrelevant as long as they reach a
solution. That is asking for the impossible considering a US absence from the
process.
Trump was very clear about this during a news conference in Washington with
Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, who had gone to Washington with one
objective: Convince the United States to give up on a two-state solution.
So the US administration has abandoned the option of two independent states on
Palestinian land. What next? The answer is simple. The only option left is that
of a single state for both Israelis and Palestinians, meaning both Arabs and
Jews.
What to do then with those Palestinians who had refused to leave their land
following the creation of the state of Israel? Those Palestinians have become
known as the “Arabs of 1948” and are Israeli nationals. They are by far the
bravest of the Palestinian Arabs because they decided to hold onto their land
come what may and refused to become refugees like some of their countrymen who
had been taken in by Arab nation promises.
Let’s say the Arabs give in to Netanyahu’s insistence on the single-state
solution so he can please the 500,000 Israeli settlers in the occupied West
Bank. What do you think will happen ten or even 20 years from now when Arab
Palestinians likely become the majority population in this single state? The
recent history of South Africa might give us a clue. The racist white minority
in that country had, in the end, no choice but to recognise the black majority
and help make Nelson Mandela’s the country’s leader. The rest is history.
What Trump’s news conference with Netanyahu revealed was both men’s flagrant
lack of political vision, at least during the current stage of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Both leaders face real problems locally. Trump
is busy fending off challenges to his decisions from the courts, the media and
among representatives in Congress. Netanyahu is a hostage of his political
allies from the extreme right in Israel of the likes of the Jewish Home Party
headed by Naftali Bennett, who hates the phrase “two-state option”. Netanyahu
simply cannot ignore the settlers’ lobby.
Every president in the United States must deal with the power of the media.
Richard Nixon was taken down by the media before Watergate finished him. Trump
might have enough skeletons in his closet to make him vulnerable to scandals.
The Michael Flynn affair is perhaps the initial drops of a looming storm in case
the US president is unable to put an end to the confusion in his
administration.
The Trump administration will seemingly need weeks to get its act together and
start dealing with issues realistically, beginning with the topic of Islam and
Muslims, then the issue of Israeli occupation of the West Bank and recognising
the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people to a state of their own.
All this talk about a single-state solution is just a storm in an American
teacup. Going with that option means that Israel is slowly inching its way to
being a racist state and that the United States accepts that occupation triumphs
over international legitimacy. UN Security Council Resolution 242 of November
1967 clearly refuses military occupation.
With Trump, is the world entering a new era where occupation and colonisation
are valid options? We must wait and see. The only light at the end of the grim
tunnel resides in the fact that US governmental institutions are refusing to go
along with such moral reversals. The political system in America is immune to
major upheavals thanks to its checks and balances placing strict limits on the
executive branch.
What we know for sure is that, in the long run, the United States cannot resign
from the Middle East. Even now, the Trump administration seems to have a clear
grasp of the threat represented by Iran’s expansionist project in the region.
America’s policies in the region must show a minimum degree of fairness if the
new administration wishes to achieve its objective of fighting terrorism by
eliminating the Islamic State (ISIS) and the sectarian militias working for
Iran.
It is clear that Trump is still searching for the right team for his
administration. He has just appointed US Army Lieutenant- General H.R. McMaster
to replace Flynn as national security adviser. With Vice-President Mike Pence
and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and Secretary of Defense James Mattis at
the centre of Trump’s foreign policy team, there will, hopefully, be a return to
the basics, meaning more precisely returning to the two-state solution in the
case of the Palestinian territories.
This option is the minimum required for stability in the region and stability is
a prerequisite for winning the war on extremism and terrorism.
**Khairallah Khairallah is a Lebanese writer. The commentary was translated and
adapted from the Arabic. It was initially published in middle-east-online.com.
France: Deradicalization of Jihadists a "Total Fiasco"/"Deradicalization in and
of itself does not exist."
by Soeren Kern/Gatestone
Institute/February 26/17
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/9982/france-deradicalization
The report implies that deradicalization, either in specialized centers or in
prisons, does not work because most Islamic radicals do not want to be
deradicalized.
Although France is home to an estimated 8,250 hardcore Islamic radicals, only 17
submitted applications and just nine arrived. Not a single resident has
completed the full ten-month curriculum.
By housing Islamists in separate prison wings, they actually had become more
violent because they were emboldened by "the group effect," according to Justice
Minister Jean-Jacques Urvoas.
"Deradicalizing someone does not happen in six months. These people, who have
not been given an ideal and who have clung to Islamic State's ideology, are not
going to get rid of it just like that. There is no 'Open Sesame.'" — Senator
Esther Benbassa.
"The deradicalization program is a total fiasco. Everything must be rethought,
everything must be redesigned from scratch." — Senator Philippe Bas, the head of
the Senate committee that commissioned the report.
The French government's flagship program to deradicalize jihadists is a "total
failure" and must be "completely reconceptualized," according to the initial
conclusions of a parliamentary fact-finding commission on deradicalization.
The preliminary report reveals that the government has nothing to show for the
tens of millions of taxpayer euros it has spent over the past several years to
combat Islamic radicalization in France, where 238 people have been killed in
jihadist attacks since January 2015. The report implies that deradicalization,
either in specialized centers or in prisons, does not work because most Islamic
radicals do not want to be deradicalized.
The report, "Deindoctrination, Derecruitment and Reintegration of Jihadists in
France and Europe" (Désendoctrinement, désembrigadement et réinsertion des
djihadistes en France et en Europe) — the title avoids using the word "deradicalization"
because it is considered by some to be politically incorrect — was presented to
the Senate Committee on Constitutional and Legal Affairs on February 22.
The report is the preliminary version of a comprehensive study currently being
conducted by a cross-party task force charged with evaluating the effectiveness
of the government's deradicalization efforts. The final report is due in July.
Much of the criticism focuses on a €40 million ($42 million) plan to build 13
deradicalization centers — known as Centers for Prevention, Integration and
Citizenship (Centre de prévention, d'insertion et de citoyenneté, CPIC) — one in
each of France's metropolitan regions, aimed at deradicalizing would-be
jihadists.
The original plan, which was unveiled with great fanfare in May 2016, called for
each center to host a maximum of 25 individuals, aged 18 to 30, for periods of
ten months. The government said that 3,600 radicalized individuals would enter
these deradicalization centers during the next two years.
The government's first — and, until now, only — deradicalization center, housed
in the Château de Pontourny, an isolated 18th-century manor in central France,
opened in September 2016.
When Senators Esther Benbassa and Catherine Troendlé, both of whom are leading
the task force, visited Pontourny on February 3, they found only one resident at
the facility. That individual has since been imprisoned for committing "acts of
domestic violence."
After just five months of operation, Pontourny is now empty, even though it
employs 27 people, including five psychologists, a psychiatrist and nine
educators, at an annual cost of €2.5 million ($2.6 million).
The Château de Pontourny "Center for Prevention, Integration and Citizenship,"
in France. (Image source: 28 minutes - ARTE video screenshot)
Although France is home to an estimated 8,250 hardcore Islamic radicals, only 59
people have inquired about going to Pontourny since its opening. Of those, only
17 submitted applications and just nine arrived. Not a single resident has
completed the full ten-month curriculum.
One of the residents was a 24-year-old jihadist named Mustafa S., who was
arrested during a counter-terrorism operation near Strasbourg on January 20,
2017. Police said he has links to one of the authors of the November 2015
jihadist attack on the Bataclan Theater in Paris. Mustafa S. was arrested while
on leave from Pontourny: He was allegedly on his way to join the Islamic State
in Syria.
Another one of the residents of Pontourny was a 24-year-old pregnant woman named
Sabrina C., who lived in the facility from September 19 to December 15. She
revealed to a local newspaper that she has never been radicalized but took
advantage of Pontourny to escape her "family cocoon" and get some "fresh air":
"At no time did I feel interested in any religion whatsoever. My family is
Catholic, non-practicing, we go to church from time to time, but no more. My
boyfriend wanted me to wear the headscarf, but I always refused."
Sabrina's mother said the deradicalization facility "was an opportunity for our
daughter to attend vocational training, to learn cooking, to be near the
animals." Sabrina added that her stay there was a nightmare: "I wept every
night, I did not feel in my place. In Pontourny, they treated me like a
criminal." She speculated that the only reason she was allowed into the facility
was because the government needed "to make the numbers."
The government has also failed in its efforts to stamp out Islamic
radicalization in French prisons. In October 2016, the government reversed a
policy to house radicalized prisoners in separate units after an increase in
attacks on prison guards.
The original idea was to isolate Islamists to keep them from radicalizing other
inmates, but Justice Minister Jean-Jacques Urvoas admitted that by housing them
in separate prison wings, the Islamists actually had become more violent because
they were emboldened by what he called "the group effect."
The report also denounced the emergence of a "deradicalization industry" in
which associations and non-governmental organizations with no experience in
deradicalization have been awarded lucrative government contracts. "Several
associations, seeking public funding in times of fiscal shortage, turned to the
deradicalization sector without any real experience," according to Senator
Benbassa.
Benbassa said that the government's deradicalization program was ill-conceived
and rushed for political reasons amid a growing jihadist threat. "The government
was in panic as a result of the jihadist attacks," she said. "It was the panic
that guided its actions. Political time was short, it was necessary to reassure
the general public."
French-Iranian Sociologist Farhad Khosrokhavar, an expert in radicalization,
told France 24 that the government's only option for dealing with hardcore
jihadists is to lock them up:
"Some people can be deradicalized, but not everyone. It's impossible with the
hardcore jihadists, those who are totally convinced. These types of profiles are
very dangerous and represent about 10% to 15% of those who have been
radicalized. Prison might be one of the only ways of dealing with these die-hard
believers."
In an interview with L'Obs, Benbassa said the government has also failed to
address prevention:
"Young candidates for jihadism must be socialized. We must teach them a
profession, professionalize them and offer them an individualized follow-up.
This involves the help of the family, imams, local police officers, educators,
psychologists and business leaders, who can also intervene....
"I also think that our political leaders should adopt a little sobriety and
humility when approaching this complex phenomenon. The task is extremely
difficult. 'Deradicalizing' someone does not happen in six months. These people,
who have not been given an ideal and who have clung to Islamic State's ideology,
are not going to get rid of it just like that. There is no 'Open Sesame.'"
Senator Philippe Bas, the head of the Senate committee that commissioned the
report, described the government's deradicalization program this way: "It is a
total fiasco. Everything must be rethought, everything must be redesigned from
scratch."
*Soeren Kern is a Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute.
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