LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS
BULLETIN
June 07/17
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
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Bible Quotations For Today
God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in
spirit and truth
Jesus cried out, ‘Let anyone who is thirsty come to me, and
let the one who believes in me drink.
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint John 07/37-39/:"On the last day
of the festival, the great day, while Jesus was standing there, he cried out,
‘Let anyone who is thirsty come to me,
and let the one who believes in me drink. As the scripture has said, "Out of the
believer’s heart shall flow rivers of living water." ’Now he said this about the
Spirit, which believers in him were to receive; for as yet there was no Spirit,
because Jesus was not yet glorified.
The 3000 persons who accepted Peter's message that day were
baptized and Joined the disciples
Acts of the Apostles 02/40-47/:"He testified with many other arguments and
exhorted them, saying, ‘Save yourselves from this corrupt generation.’So those
who welcomed his message were baptized, and that day about three thousand
persons were added. They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and
fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers. Awe came upon everyone,
because many wonders and signs were being done by the apostles. All who believed
were together and had all things in common; they would sell their possessions
and goods and distribute the proceeds to all, as any had need. Day by day, as
they spent much time together in the temple, they broke bread at home and ate
their food with glad and generous hearts, praising God and having the goodwill
of all the people. And day by day the Lord added to their number those who were
being saved.
Titles For Latest LCCC
Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on June
06-07/17
François Bainy/What is happening with Qatar can happen any moment with
Lebanon/François Bainy/Face Book/June 05/17
Qatar, which Isolated Itself/Salman Al-dossary/ASharq Al Awsat/June 06/17
Saudi Arabia's Global Center for Combating Extremist Ideology/A. Z. Mohamed/Gatestone
Institute/June 06/17
Finland: Now We Want a Mega-Mosque/Judith Bergman/Gatestone Institute/June 06/17
Address by Minister Freeland on Canada’s foreign policy priorities/June 06/17
Germany: Surge in Stabbings and Knife Crimes/Soeren Kern/Gatestone
Institute/June 06/17
Titles For Latest
Lebanese Related News published on
June 06-07/17
Report: FPM Raises New 'Complexities', Could Abolish Vote Law Hopes
Lebanese Army, Security Agencies Tightening Noose on ISIS in Lebanon
Hariri Tests His Popularity in Northern Lebanon Ahead of Elections
Aoun Meets Senior U.S. General, Hopes for Continued Military Aid
Hariri Says Country to Devise Vote Law 'Entirely Made in Lebanon'
Change and Reform: Proportional Representation 'Restraints' Necessary to Protect
Equal Power-Sharing
Mashnouq Confirms IS Plot to Blow Up Dahieh Restaurant Foiled
Mustaqbal Lauds Electoral Law Agreement, Says System Must Respect Coexistence
Aoun Chairs Meeting on Israel Theft of Lebanon Water, Says Country Won't Bow to
Pressures
Bassil meets US Central Command Commander over military aids
Kidianian launching Beirut International Awards Festivals (BIAF): Lebanon
capable of outshining at all times
Hariri meets U.S., Canadian Ambassadors
Physicians' Order confirms Nader Saab licensed to practice plastic surgery
François Bainy/What is happening with Qatar can happen any moment with Lebanon/
Cosmetic industry in Lebanon: A video and the death of a lady/Diana Moukalled/ArabNews/June
07/17
Titles For Latest
LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
June 06-07/17
Police Shoot, Injure Attacker outside Paris' Notre-Dame Cathedral
Kuwaiti Emir discusses latest GCC development with King Salman in Saudi
Saudi FM: Qatar must change its policies
Qatar’s Policy of Contradictions Threatens Arab States’ Stability, Unity
Flirting with Doha, Tehran Calls to ‘Reject Tension’
Qatar Airways Licenses Revoked, Offices Shut in Saudi Arabia
Washington Worried about Qatar’s Behaviors, Wants to Redirect it to Right Track
Trump Voices Support for Isolation of Qatar, Says It’s the Beginning of the End
of Terrorism
Turkey Offers Mediation to Resolve Qatar Dispute
Egypt’s Al-Azhar: Severing ties with Qatar necessary to protect the Arab world
Conflicting Stances Emerge on Combating ISIS beyond Iraqi Borders
Russian FM: De-escalation Zones are Not Precursor to Dividing Syria
U.S.-Backed Fighters Thrust into IS Bastion Raqa
Looters Target West Mosul
UNICEF: 100,000 Iraqi Children in Extreme Danger in Western Mosul
Palestinian Presidency Accuses Israel of Sabotaging Peace Efforts
Algerian, Egyptian, Tunisian Foreign Ministers Discuss Political Solution for
Libyan Crisis
Houthi Rebels Refuse to Cooperate with ‘Biased’ UN Envoy
Two Afghan ISIS Suspects Arrested in Izmir for Plotting Terrorist Attack
Latest Lebanese
Related News published on
June 06-07/17
Report: FPM Raises New
'Complexities', Could Abolish Vote Law Hopes
Naharnet/June 06/17/The Free
Patriotic Movement has raised a series of “last minute” demands that could
hinder an agreement on an electoral law after reports that complexities
obstructing the agreement were eased, media reports said on Tuesday. “A series
of new complexities, some of which are impossible to approve, have been put
forward by the FPM at the last minute,” informed sources told al-Akhbar daily on
condition of anonymity. “The political blocs, including friends and allies of
the FPM, no longer hide a feeling that (FPM chief) Foreign Minister Jebran
Bassil and President Michel Aoun's demands have intentions that go beyond the
parliamentary elections to endeavors to amend the Taef accord in under pressure
negotiations,” they added. “This logic has become a threat to the agreement on
the election itself, because the new/old complexities require a national debate
that does not end in days or months, and perhaps founds for a constituent
assembly that restructures the Lebanese regime after the Taef agreement.” Al-Akhbar
added that several well-informed sources summarized the “ambitions” of the FPM
as follows:
The FPM has first demanded a reduction in the number of parliament seats from
128 to 108, and is currently demanding the distribution of the 20 seats --added
after the Taef accord-- to expatriates, the quota of women and those who run
outside the confessional regime. The request was highly rejected by Hizbullah
and its allies. Another FPM request is permitting a military vote which was
highly rejected by several political blocs pressing the need to keep the
military institution away from political bickering and alignments. They assured
that the army reflects the demographic and sectarian distribution of the
Lebanese ... The military institution carries great responsibilities at the
level of safeguarding the Lebanese from terror threats and the imminent Israeli
danger. Moreover, the sources said that President Aoun wants a political
agreement similar to the Baabda Declaration, before the full agreement on an
electoral law. The “Aoun Declaration” includes the agreement on a senate,
decentralization and a new constitutional amendment that proves equality in the
constitution (although it is proven) and amends the articles on the abolition of
political sectarianism thus closing the horizon to the possibility of forming a
national civil state, in favor of consolidating the distribution of shares on
sectarian basis, according to the sources.
Lebanese Army, Security Agencies
Tightening Noose on ISIS in Lebanon
Nazeer Rida/Asharq Al-Awsat/June
06/17/Beirut – The Lebanese authorities are beginning to tighten the noose
around extremist groups and those associated with them. The Lebanese army, in
cooperation with security agencies, has been pursuing suspected ISIS members
active on the internal scene, cracking down on lone wolves and dismantling
terror cells. The military has also started to surround the extremists along the
border with Syria and they have started to “suffer” after their supply lines
were severed. The army intensified its shelling against armed extremists along
the border, most notably on the outskirts of Arsal and Ras Baalbek, amid reports
that ISIS was seeking to “change its position in the area.”It appeared as if the
organization was seeking to break through the siege that has been imposed on it
by the army. A prominent security source told Asharq Al-Awsat: “That it has
become impossible for these ISIS members to contact their command in
Raqqa.”“They have lost their mobility and are now surrounded and subject to
constant shelling,” it added. All of their supply lines have been cut, which has
prompted them to take “semi-suicidal” actions in the area, it revealed. ISIS had
carried out last week attacks against the al-Nusra Front on the outskirts of
Arsal. Over 50 militants from both groups were killed as ISIS attempted to seize
a refugee camp in Arsal. Around 10,000 civilians live in the camp. The security
source explained that this camp is not located in the residential neighborhoods
of the town of Arsal. Its inhabitant receive food, aid and supplies, which is
why ISIS is attempting to take seize it. ISIS is now surrounded by Lebanon and
Syria and it no longer has any food or supply route. It is seeking to use the
civilians in the camp as human shields in order to prolong its presence in the
area, warned the source. Estimates in 2016 said that there are no more than
1,000 ISIS members present along the Lebanese-Syrian border. Their numbers have
been dwindling due to the Lebanese army’s constant shelling and due to fighting
with al-Nusra Front. This has not prevented ISIS from carrying out attacks
however. On the internal scene, the efforts of the security agencies have
resulted in the arrest of numerous suspects linked to ISIS. The detainees do not
form terror cells, because the majority of them have been dismantled, said the
security source. The terrorist groups have therefore resorted to the lone wolf
tactic after the cells have been broken up. The source assured however that the
security scene inside the country is stable.
Hariri Tests His Popularity in
Northern Lebanon Ahead of Elections
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 06/17/Beirut –
The visit of Prime Minister Saad Hariri to the North of Lebanon surpassed the
cadre of inspecting the needs of this unprivileged region and rather takes a
political dimension to constitute a real test for the leader’s popularity in the
area, considered a popular reservoir for Hariri’s political party, the Future
Movement. Hariri’s visits, which kicked off with meetings around the Iftar
tables hosted by the Prime Minister, had started in the city of Tripoli and then
moved to Akkar, Dinniyeh and ended up in Minieh. Those visits appeared as an
attempt to prove that Hariri was still the strongest leader in the Sunni arena,
at a time when other political figures try to enter the north of Lebanon and
take a bite from Hariri’s popular assets, such as former Justice Minister Asharf
Rifi. Hariri spoke at several Iftars held in the North and said he chose Rafic
Hariri’s line, the line of moderation, which in no way constitutes a line of
weakness. “If moderation had the flavor of weakness, they would not have killed
Rafic Hariri,” he said during a speech delivered during an Iftar organized in
the “Citadel” hall in Bebnin by the Future Movement coordinating committee in
Akkar. Member of the Future Movement politburo Mustafa Alloush told Ahsarq Al-Awsat
on Monday: “The number of people who attended the Iftars were more than
expected. Those welcomed Prime Minister Hariri’s speeches.”However, Alloush said
that it was still too early to say that Hariri’s popular asset returned to what
it was years ago. Asked whether Hariri was still the strongest despite the
emergence of other Sunni leaders, such as Rifi or former Prime Minister Najib
Mikati, Alloush said: “We cannot compare the person of Prime Minister Hariri
with other politicians because the popular force of Hariri is stretched across
the entire Lebanese territories.” Meanwhile, Khaldoun Sherif, a political figure
close to Mikati, told Asharq Al-Awsat that Hariri is now the prime minister of
the entire country and counted that his presence in power would repair what he
has lost during the years spent outside the country. “Hariri needs to restore
his electoral force in all Lebanon and not only in the north.”On Monday, Hariri
met with the families of the Islamist detainees at Al-Khair Mosque in Minieh and
listened to their demands to accelerate the determination of the fate of their
children. Hariri said: “We all know that there is injustice in Syria against the
Syrian people, we reject it and empathize with the oppressed.” However, he said,
“Everyone should be careful not to join the extremists under the pretext of
supporting the Syrian brothers, or to hide behind religious slogans for
irresponsible objectives.”
Aoun Meets Senior U.S.
General, Hopes for Continued Military Aid
Naharnet/June 06/17/President Michel Aoun stressed Tuesday that “Lebanon is
determined to carry on with its fight against terrorist groups and the pursuit
of their sleeper cells,” during talks in Baabda with the head of U.S. Central
Command (CENTCOM) Commander General Joseph Votel.
“The army is continuing its airstrikes and land operations against the posts of
these groups, inflicting heavy casualties on their members,” Aoun added in the
meeting, which was also attended by U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon Elizabeth Richard
and a U.S. military delegation. “The preemptive military operations that the
army is carrying out against the posts of the terrorist groups are being
conducted with utmost precision and competency,” the president went on to say.
Thanking Votel for “the support that the United States is offering to the
Lebanese army,” Aoun hoped the military assistance will continue to “enable the
army to play its role in preserving security and stability in the country.”Votel
for his part relayed to Aoun the keenness of the U.S. administration on
maintaining support for the Lebanese army, the National News Agency said. Votel
also held talks on Tuesday with Speaker Nabih Berri, Prime Minister Saad Hariri,
Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil and Army Commander General Joseph Aoun. A U.S.
Embassy statement had said that Votel was expected to discuss “key security
issues” with Lebanese leaders.“General Votel will reaffirm the U.S. government’s
commitment to the Lebanese-American partnership to counter the threat of
terrorism and support the Lebanese Armed Forces in their capacity as the sole
defender of Lebanon,” the statement added. Votel last visited Lebanon in
February during which he held meetings with top Lebanese officials.
Hariri Says Country to Devise Vote Law 'Entirely Made in
Lebanon'
Naharnet/June 06/17/Prime Minister Saad Hariri hailed the Lebanese officials'
efforts to devise a new electoral law, describing it as an unprecedented move
since the Taef agreement. “It is the first time since the Taef agreement that we
Lebanese sit together to agree on an electoral law and solve our issues by
ourselves,” said Hariri during an Iftar for the economic, banking and industrial
bodies on Monday at the Grand Serail. “In the past, things were imposed upon us,
starting with the budget, to the electoral law and the appointments. But after
the assassination of my father, everything changed,” he added. Hariri stressed
that meetings are ongoing to achieve a new electoral law, which will be based on
proportional representation and 15 electoral constituencies. Separately, Hariri
paid tribute to the Lebanese army and its former commander Jean Qahwaji, for
“maintaining security,” and to the governor of the Central Bank Riad Salameh for
“maintaining financial stability during the past period.”Hariri announced that
his focus during the coming phase will be on the economy, adding that the
government is working on a vast economic project for the country to satisfy
people's needs on the level of infrastructure and provide jobs for the youth.
Change and Reform: Proportional Representation 'Restraints' Necessary to Protect
Equal Power-Sharing
Naharnet/June 06/17/The Change and Reform parliamentary bloc stressed Tuesday
that the proposed proportional representation electoral law must be accompanied
by several “restraints” that would preserve “the equal Christian-Muslim
power-sharing that is stipulated by the Constitution.”“Even if proportional
representation preserves the presence of majorities and minorities, some things
must be taken into consideration in order not to undermine the equal
power-sharing that is stipulated by the Constitution,” Change and Reform
secretary MP Ibrahim Kanaan said after the bloc's weekly meeting in Rabieh.
“Obstruction is coming from those who are not honoring agreements, especially
that they have backed down from the issue of enshrining (parliamentary) equal
power-sharing in the Constitution and the from the issue of creating a Senate,”
Kanaan noted. Adding that the so-called preferred candidate of each voter should
be picked according to the current 26 administrative districts so that
minorities can “preserve the value of the their votes in the electoral process,”
the lawmaker also noted that any candidate should get at least 40% of the votes
of their religious community to be eligible to win a seat. “Are we practicing
obstruction when we demand that the Lebanese diaspora be granted six seats? We
resort to them during every national, social and economic crisis and when time
comes for them to express their opinion, we deprive them of voting,” Kanaan
lamented.
He also emphasized that the Change and Reform bloc supports holding the
elections in October or November.
Mashnouq Confirms IS Plot to Blow Up Dahieh Restaurant
Foiled
Naharnet/June 06/17/Interior Minister Nouhad al-Mashnouq confirmed Tuesday that
Lebanon's security agencies have foiled an Islamic State plot to blow up a
restaurant in Beirut's southern suburbs during the holy month of Ramadan.
Mashnouq made the confirmation during a meeting at the ministry with British
Ambassador to Lebanon Hugo Shorter during which he offered condolences over the
victims of the London terrorist attacks. “A successful preemptive operation has
thwarted a bombing that terrorists were preparing for Beirut's southern
suburbs,” Mashnouq told the ambassador, adding that the operation involved
“cooperation between General Security and the Intelligence Branch” of the
Internal Security Forces. “This is a proof of the high professionalism of the
Lebanese security agencies and the importance of cooperation and coordination
among the various security agencies,” Mashnouq added. Al-Akhbar newspaper had
reported Tuesday that General Security in coordination with the ISF Intelligence
Branch had “dismantled an IS-linked cell that had been plotting to stage a
suicide attack on a restaurant at iftar time.”Media reports said the cell
comprised two Palestinians and a Yemeni. “One of them was arrested at al-Rabih
Project in Tariq al-Jedideh on Thursday night while another suspect was arrested
in Sidon,” al-Akhbar said. “A suicide vest that one of the would-be bombers had
intended to use was seized” at the al-Rabih Project, the daily added. According
to the detainees' confessions, one of them was supposed to blow himself up in
the restaurant while the two others were involved in planning. “They were
receiving their orders from a Raqa-based IS leader through a Ain el-Hilweh
intermediary,” al-Akhbar said.
Mustaqbal Lauds Electoral Law Agreement, Says System Must
Respect Coexistence
Naharnet/June 06/17/Al-Mustaqbal parliamentary bloc on Tuesday lauded the
political efforts that “led to an agreement on the general format of the new
electoral law,” while stressing that the final formula should not harm religious
coexistence in the country. “The main issue in the process of approving and
implementing the new electoral system lies in conforming to the Taef Accord and
full respect for the Constitution,” said the bloc in a statement issued after
its weekly meeting. It emphasized that the new law should be based on
“coexistence and unified existence, away from religious and sectarian bigotry.”
The political parties have recently agreed that the new electoral law will be
based on proportional representation and 15 electoral districts but a lot of
technical details and electoral rules are yet to be agreed on.
Aoun Chairs Meeting on Israel Theft of Lebanon Water, Says
Country Won't Bow to Pressures
Naharnet/June 06/17/Michel Aoun chaired a meeting of a committee tasked with
addressing solutions to Israel's theft of Lebanon's water resources, the
National News Agency reported on Tuesday. The Baabda Palace meeting was held in
the presence of Energy and Water Minister Cesar Abi Khalil, NNA said. "Lebanon
cannot give up its rights in its territory and water for any reason and it will
not bow to the pressures that are being exerted on it," Aoun stressed during the
meeting. "Lebanon will take the necessary measures to put an end to the
encroachment on its water, because water security is equally important as
military, economic and social security," the president added. Since its invasion
of Lebanon in 1982, Israel has reportedly been taking more or less water from
Lebanon's Litani River. In 1978, Israel invaded Lebanon it was able to grasp
control of nearly 30% of the Litani River. During the 1982 occupation of Lebanon
the Israelis benefited from the Wazzani and the Litani’s waters, transferring
water from them to Israel.Moreover, reports say that in 1989 Israel installed
pipes withdrawing from the Hasbanai and Wazzani rivers.
Bassil meets US Central Command Commander over military
aids
Tue 06 Jun 2017/NNA - Foreign and Expatriates Minister Gebran Bassil met on
Tuesday with the head of US Central Command (CENTCOM) Commander General Joseph
Votel, on top of a military delegation, and in the presence of US Ambassador to
Lebanon Elizabeth Richard.
Talks reportedly touched on the US aids to the Lebanese army.
Kidianian launching Beirut International Awards Festivals (BIAF): Lebanon
capable of outshining at all times
Tue 06 Jun 2017/NNA - Tourism Minister, Owadis Kidanian, on Tuesday said that
the launch of several festivals in Lebanon indicates that the country is
recovering and moving in the right direction, notably in the field of tourism.
Minister Kidanian's words came during the launching of the functions of the
"Beirut International Festivals" by the Beirut International Awards Festivals (BIAF)
at a press conference followed by a Suhour banquet at the Royal Hotel-Dbayeh.
The Suhour banquet was attended by Prime Minister Saad Hariri's Representative,
Telecom Minister Jamal al-Jarrah, MP Serge Torserkisian, and scores of concerned
dignitaries. Minister Kidanian said that the Festival honors the Lebanese
creativity and innovation at the artistic and cultural levels, lauding the
Lebanese people's capability to pioneer in the various cultural, artistic and
touristic walks of life.
"All this proves that Lebanon can overcome all difficulties and outshine at all
times," Kidanian said.
Hariri meets U.S., Canadian Ambassadors
Tue 06 Jun 2017/NNA - Prime Minister Saad Hariri met, at the Grand Serail on
Thursday, with Canadian Ambassador to Lebanon, Michelle Cameron, over the
current general situation and the bilateral relations. Hariri also met with
Minister of Finance, Ali Hassan Khalil, and MP Bahiya Hariri, in presence of
Head of the Council for Development and Reconstruction, Nabil Jisr. Talks
reportedly touched on an array of developments affairs particular to the city of
Sidon. The Prime Minister also received Minister of Economy and Trade, Raed
Khoury, accompanied by President Michel Aoun's advisor for Arab affairs, Fadi
Osseili. In the afternoon, Hariri welcomed a delegation of the Lebanese
Businessmen Associations, headed by Fouad Zmokhol. The PM later met with U.S.
Central Command (CENTCOM) Commander General Joseph Votel, in presence of U.S.
Ambassador to Lebanon Elizabeth Richard.
Physicians' Order confirms Nader Saab licensed to practice
plastic surgery
Tue 06 Jun 2017/NNA - The Order of Physicians in Beirut confirmed on Tuesday
that Dr. Nader Saab was legally licensed to practice plastic surgery and that
his Naccache-based hospital was certified to operate as per a Cabinet decree.
"Unlike what has been said in the past days, Dr. Saab is registered at the Order
with a license to practice general medicine number 4580/2000 and a license to
practice plastic surgery number 8552/2004, both issued by the Ministry of Public
Health," the Order clarified in a statement. "Dr. Nader Saab Hospital is also
certified as per decree number 12798 issued by the Cabinet on 3/7/2004," it
added. The statement also explained that the Order had decided to suspend Dr.
Saab twice as a temporary measure against his advertising his work.
François Bainy/What
is happening with Qatar can happen any moment with Lebanon,
ما يحدث في قطر قد يستنسخ في لبنان في أي لحظة
فلنتجنب دفن رؤسنا في الرمال
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=55987
Thank You Qatar, Good Bye Obama, Watch out Lebanon.
By: François Bainy/Face Book/June 05/17
Less than two weeks after the end of the Arab-Islamic Summit in Ryad falls the
Giant Sponsor of the Terrorism. Don't underestimate the event because it is only
the beginning. Let's have a look at the impact of this incident on the Lebanese
scene.
First, Those who considered this summit as a plain exhibition should review
their position.
Second: Those who thought that President Trump was interested by the Saudi Money
have no idea how complex is the American system when it comes to arm sale to our
region.
Third: Those who spread around gossips and whispers that the US policy is the
same no matter who is the President are still living in the Obama era and are so
blind that it is hard for them to see and perceive that President Trump is a man
of deal which means a man of word and principles
Fourth: The main points of the agenda meeting in Ryad were the terrorism, Syria
and the Iranian expansion in the Middle-East
Fifth: Qatar sponsored and financed ISIS and Iran at the same time with the
knowledge and the instruction of the Obama Administration.
What has Lebanon to do with all that???
First let us compare Lebanon with Qatar
Qatar is one of the wealthiest countries on the planet and Lebanon is sorry to
say that) one of the most corrupt countries in the world... Being rich like
Qatar does not allow you the right to threat the world order by financing
terrorism. Being corrupt like Lebanon does not allow our country to support
indefinitely and sponsor the Iranian terrorism at the official level. Even
before the start of the Arab-Islamic Summit Lebanon was under watch and vetoing
the presence of the Lebanese President Michel Aoun is a clear indication, not
only from the Arab league but also from the new US Administration, that Lebanon
is officially sponsoring and sheltering Hezbollah Terrorism, That same
terrorists that killed 249 marines and Kidnapped and killed American Diplomats
and citizens in Beirut. The Minister of Foreign affairs M.Gebrane Bassil
declares that Hezbollah is not a terrorist organization every time that US
Secretary Tellerson delivers a note stating that Hezbollah is an Iranian backed
Terrorist Organisation. Saudi Arabia is monitoring closely Prime Minister Saad
Hariri and might call him to visit Saudi Arabia soon in order to give
explanations about Bassil's declarations if they represent the Lebanese
Government's position, and if not he should have to contain him and put every
one in his right place. If not... What is happening with Qatar can happen any
moment with Lebanon, Let's not hide our head in the sand.
Cosmetic industry in
Lebanon: A video and the death of a lady
Diana Moukalled/ArabNews/June 07/17
The death of an Iraqi woman in a private hospital owned by a famous Lebanese
cosmetic surgeon has shocked the Lebanese public. She died during a liposuction
procedure. It turned out the hospital did not have a recovery room, as required
by medical rules, which led to medical complications that could have been
avoided had such a room been available.
An investigation has been launched into popular cosmetic surgeries in Lebanon
and the whole cosmetic industry, especially since the surgeon appeared with a
semi-naked young woman in a video just a few days before, explaining what women
seeking to be attractive should do.
The video shocked the Lebanese public because it presented an imperfect
understanding of the role of women solely as objects of beauty. This “beauty”
appeared in a vulgar and banal way in the leaked video.
The surgeon, who has closed his hospital and is under investigation, is an icon
of Lebanon’s cosmetic industry, which attracts people from inside the country
and abroad. Lebanon is 24th in the world in terms of cosmetic surgeries per
capita, according to the International Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery.
Despite successes and good reputations in Lebanon, there are many professional
violations. Last year, then-Health Minister Wael Abu Faour ordered the closure
of some 80 cosmetic centers due to violations of required standards and
conditions.
It is true that commodification is an international problem, but in the West it
occurs in parallel with laws that empower women. In Lebanon, there are attempts
to convince us that modernity is equal to commodification.
Observers of those seeking beauty in Lebanon realize there is social acceptance
of a plastic appearance among women. This is not the case in any other society
that has given freedom and equality to women. What is happening is akin to
commodification, turning women into mere objects. This approach holds a woman’s
body hostage to one function: Sexual desire, as if the body has no significance
without it.
In Lebanon we were occupied by the leaked video. The unfortunate story made us
understand that women suffer from disregard to their bodies and lives. It is
unfair to say Lebanon is the only country fond of cosmetic surgery, but there is
something particular to our society we need to consider. This surgeon would not
have achieved success without the public desire for a perfect body designed to
satisfy desires.
It is true that commodification is an international problem, but in the West it
occurs in parallel with laws that empower women. In Lebanon, and in the East in
general, there are attempts to convince us that modernity is equal to
commodification.
Latest LCCC Bulletin For
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
June 06-07/17
Police Shoot, Injure
Attacker outside Paris' Notre-Dame Cathedral
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June
06/17/French police shot and injured a man who attacked an officer with a hammer
outside Paris's Notre Dame cathedral Tuesday, while shouting "this is for
Syria."Police sources said the officer sustained only minor neck injuries in the
assault, which comes with France on high alert after jihadists killed seven
people in London on Saturday. The suspect later claimed to be a "soldier of the
caliphate" of the Islamic State group, according to a source close to the
investigation. The policeman's colleague opened fire on the man, hitting him in
the chest in panicked scenes around the Gothic cathedral that is one of France's
most visited tourist attractions. The man lay bleeding on the ground as police
sealed off the area and searched for possible accomplices. About an hour after
the attack he was taken to hospital and police declared the situation to be
under control. Interior Minister Gerard Collomb said the man had shouted "this
is for Syria" as he lunged at the officer. He said the man had also been
carrying "kitchen knives" and was found in possession of a card identifying him
as an Algerian student. Anti-terrorist prosecutors were put in charge of the
investigation. A witness told AFP he heard someone "shout very loudly.""Then
there was a crowd surge and people panicked. I heard two shots and saw a man
lying on the ground in a pool of blood," he said.
Notre Dame, which is situated on the banks of the Seine river in the heart of
Paris, draws 13 million visitors a year. Over 1,000 people were inside the
cathedral at the time of the attack. Authorities in Paris asked the public to
stay away from the area. Pictures on social media showed people sitting in the
pews with their hands in the air -- apparently at the request of police. Andre
Finot, the cathedral's head of communications, described the situation as calm.
"People are talking to each other, praying and continuing their visit," he said.
In September, Notre Dame was already the scene of a scare after a car full of
gas canisters was found parked nearby.The car was tracked to an all-female
terrorist cell, allegedly acting on the orders of Syria-based Islamic State
jihadists.
Renewed state of emergency
Tuesday's incident comes three days after extremists used a van and knives to
crush to death and kill seven people enjoying a night out in London. One of the
victims was French. France is still under the state of emergency imposed after
the November 2015 attacks in Paris, when Islamic State jihadists killed 130
people in a night of carnage at venues across the city. President Emmanuel
Macron's new centrist government recently announced plans to extend the
emergency measures in November, drawing some criticism from rights groups. The
authorities have pointed to a string of attacks since January 2015 that have
claimed the lives of over 230 people as justification for boosting the powers of
the police. While France has been Islamic State's main target in western Europe,
the focus in recent weeks has shifted to Britain. Two weeks before the London
attack, a suicide bomber killed 22 people including seven children at a concert
by U.S. singer Ariana Grande in the northwestern English city of Manchester. The
last fatal attack in France dates to April 20, when a policeman was shot dead on
Paris's prestigious Champs-Elysees avenue, three days before the first round of
the presidential election. Previous major attacks targeted the Charlie Hebdo
satirical magazine in January 2015 and in November that year, gunmen and suicide
bombers attacked venues around Paris including the Bataclan concert hall,
killing 130 people. Then in July last year, a radicalized Tunisian man drove a
lorry at high speed through a Bastille Day fireworks display on the Nice
waterfront, massacring 86 people. Since then there have been a series of smaller
attacks, often targeting security forces.
Kuwaiti Emir discusses latest GCC
development with King Salman in Saudi
Staff writer, Al Arabiya
EnglishTuesday, 6 June 2017/Kuwaiti Emir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, has
arrived in the Saudi city of Jeddah on Tuesday as Kuwait-led mediation efforts
are taking shape in the crisis of severing ties with Qatar. Bahrain's King Hamad
bin Isa Al-Khalifa is set to travelt o Saudi Arabia on Wednesday to join his
Kuwaiti counterpart in meetings with Saudi Arabia's King Salman bin Abdulaziz.
Qatar's foreign minister said on Tuesday Doha was ready for mediation efforts
after the Arab world's biggest powers severed ties with it, adding that Qatar's
ruler had delayed a speech in order to give Kuwait a chance to ease regional
tensions. Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain severed
diplomatic relations with Qatar in a coordinated move on Monday. Yemen, Libya's
eastern-based government and the Maldives joined later and transport links were
shut down. Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani spoke by telephone overnight with his
counterpart in Kuwait, which has maintained diplomatic ties with Qatar, and
decided to postpone a speech to the Qatari people as requested. Qatar wants to
give Kuwait's Emir Sheikh Sabah the ability to "proceed and communicate with the
parties to the crisis and to try to contain the issue," Sheikh Mohammed bin
Abdulrahman al-Thani said in comments to Qatar-based Al Jazeera television.
Kuwait had an important role in a previous Gulf rift in 2014 and Qatar's Sheikh
Tamim "regards him as a parent and respects his desire to postpone any speech or
step until there is a clearer picture of the crisis," Al Jazeera quoted the
foreign minister as saying.
Saudi FM: Qatar must change its policies
Staff writer, Al Arabiya
EnglishTuesday, 6 June 2017/Qatar must “change their policies” and stop
supporting “extremist groups”, the Saudi foreign minister said Tuesday in Paris,
a day after his nation and its allies cut off ties with the Gulf state. Saudi
Arabia’s Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir said that harming Qatar was not
Riyadh’s goal, but that it had to make a necessary choice. “Qatar has to stop
its support of groups such as Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood,” Jubeir said in
statements on Tuesday. “We decided to make it clear that enough is enough,”
Jubeir added. “We want Qatar to be an ally in finding peace and stability in the
region.” His statements come as Kuwait has begun mediation efforts in Saudi
Arabia to ease tensions between Qatar and several of its Gulf neighbors.
Qatar’s Policy of Contradictions Threatens Arab States’
Stability, Unity
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 06/17/Jeddah – Qatari Emir’s inflammatory statements, which
were blamed by the Qatari media on an alleged “cyber hacking”, were only a mere
indication of the long crisis between the Arab peninsula and its neighbors, due
to its controversial policies that have threatened the region’s stability and
unity.
Qatar has sought to instigate crises all over the region, beginning with the
coup perpetrated by the former emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa, against his
father in 1995.
Doha failed to absorb the lessons, even after the wave of anger against it,
which has led Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain to withdraw their ambassadors
from the country in March 2014. Qatar was acting outside a unified Arab
consensus and its reactions have caused security confusion in the stable Gulf
States.
While the “Muslim Brotherhood” – one of the extremist movements in the Gulf –
was its main collaborator and partner, the Arab peninsula has responded to all
accusations by adopting controversial policies within the Arab and Islamic
region.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia has been very patient with Qatar, even during the crisis of March
2014. The Kingdom was keen on preserving the GCC unity and respecting the values
of good neighborliness. However, Qatar’s movements, especially within states
bordering Saudi Arabia, have made the country lose its credibility within the
GCC.
Riyadh had previously presented a file that contains clear evidence on financial
support provided by a Qatari emir to extremist groups in the Kingdom, with the
knowledge of the Qatari leadership. Saudi Arabia has in fact many proofs of
Doha’s policies against it.
The collapse of the Muslim Brotherhood has paved the way for the emergence of
quasi anti-Saudi movements, which have encouraged Qatar to penetrate into the
Saudi entity, aiming to gain popular support.
The United Arab Emirates (UAE)
Qatari Scholar Youssuf Al-Qaradawi has led a staunch attack against Gulf States,
in particular the UAE, following the fall of the Muslim Brotherhood in different
parts of the region.
While the Qatari foreign ministry said that Qaradawi’s remarks were only his
personal views and did not reflect the country’s official stance towards the
Emirates, Doha was known to support outlaw groups and conspirators, who sought
to topple the Emirati regime, through the Brotherhood. In fact, the latter was
accused of rallying members within the UAE to hamper stability in the ambitious
and prosperous Gulf state.
Bahrain
The Kingdom of Bahrain was the third country to pull its ambassador out of Doha.
Qatari-owned Al Jazeera channel has long sought to inflame feuds that have
resulted from developments over the past years.
Doha succeeded in fueling a silenced dispute when Al Jazeera English Channel
aired a documentary on events and protests in Bahrain in February 2011.
The documentary showed that the protests were only aimed at achieving service
needs and easing confessional tensions between the Sunni and Shi’ite
communities.
Egypt
Egypt, on many occasions, stood up against Qatar, especially following the
success of the June 30 revolution, which has toppled the Muslim Brotherhood
regime in the African state. Qatari media channels launched a harsh religious
and political campaign against Cairo, accusing it of perpetrating an internal
coup, as the Brotherhood was Doha’s right arm to spread its influence over
Egypt.
Not only Qatar adopted a policy of enmity towards the Arab state, but also
provided a safe haven to the leaders of the Brotherhood, who were accused by
Egyptian courts of perpetrating terrorist acts that targeted Egypt’s safety and
security.
Syria
One of the main vices perpetrated by Qatar in Syria is the division of the
moderate Syrian opposition since 2012 and its support to al-Nusra Front, which
is affiliated to al-Qaeda terrorist group. Qatar’s continuous sponsorship of the
Brotherhood has made it end in backing extremists and terrorist-designated
movements.
Libya
Qatar offered support to members of al-Qaeda terrorist group, in particular
Abdul Hakim Belhaj to spread control over Libya. According to Libyan Army
Commander General Khalifa Haftar, Doha has financed mercenaries and extremist
groups. He noted that some of those people have received payments from Qatar, as
well as from other states and from terrorist militias inside Libya.
Al Jazeera Channel
When Hamad came to power, he instated Al-Jazeera channel as a means to change
the Arab media landscape. However, the channel soon began to influence Qatar’s
interests and relations with its Arab neighbors. Instigating crises was
something new to Gulf countries, and Saudi Arabia occupied a wide space in every
political program.
Through the channel, Doha has shown failure to commit to GCC values, by
broadcasting views and opinions that contradict unified stances, especially when
it came to defense and security matters.
Iran and its wings
The Qatari emir conducted several visits to Iran, mainly during the Arab
uprisings in 2011, when Sheikh Hamad traveled to Tehran and met with then
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to discuss shared interests in the wake of
regional developments.
Both Tamim and his father believe that Iran represents a strong religious and
regional power. They have reiterated on several occasions that Doha was an ally
to Tehran and was seeking to consolidate bilateral ties with the Persian state.
In October 2015, the two countries forged a military and security agreement
under the slogan of fighting terrorism.
Doha has also offered to cooperate with Hezbollah – which some Gulf countries
have designated as a terrorist organization.
Lebanon
In 2010, Saudi Arabia was seeking to crystallize reconciliation between Lebanon
and Syria, when Qatar intervened and further complicated the crisis by
presenting Hezbollah as a pressure card in the negotiations. Bashar al-Assad was
tempted by Qatar’s economic deals at the expense of finding a sustainable
solution to the crisis.
Hamas
After Hamas gained control over Gaza Strip in 2007, Qatar began to promote its
influential role in the area under the pretext of healing the humanitarian
crisis there.
Doha poured money on Hamas Movement, which is known to support the Muslim
Brotherhood, despite anger by Fatah Movement, who was aware that the money would
be used to buy arms. This has also severed divisions among Palestinians.
9/11 Attacks
Qatar has long supported terrorism and sponsored its members. In the late 1990s,
the United States received information about a senior Qatari official who
provided refuge to a terrorist accused of plotting airplane attacks against the
US.
When the FBI issued the report ahead of the September 11 attacks, it said that
the official, Khaled Sheikh Mohammed, had managed to escape from Qatar. He was
the mastermind of the New York terrorist attacks.
Flirting with Doha, Tehran Calls to ‘Reject Tension’
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 06/17/London – Following Saudi Arabia, UAE, Bahrain and
Egypt announced severing ties with Qatar, Iran’s foreign ministry spokesman,
Bahram Ghasemi, called on Gulf states to “renounce tension through
dialogue.”Other Tehran officials tried to build bridges with Doha by attacking
countries that joined the boycott. Former diplomats have warned their government
of the consequences of “investing the Qatar’s card in Gulf tensions.”“The era of
cutting diplomatic ties and closing borders … is not a way to resolve crisis,”
Hamid Aboutalebi, deputy chief of staff of Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani,
tweeted on Monday. Aboutalebi reiterated his country’s disdain and criticism of
the Arab-Islamic-US summit held in Riyadh in May, unleashing a wave of harsh
criticism towards each of Saudi Arabia, Egypt, UAE and Bahrain. Iran’s Foreign
Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif on Monday urged Qatar and neighboring Gulf Arab
countries that have severed diplomatic ties with it to engage in dialogue to
resolve their dispute. “Neighbors are permanent- geography can’t be changed.
Coercion is never the solution. Dialogue is imperative,” Zarif tweeted.
According to AFP, foreign ministry spokesman Ghasemi said in a statement that a
solution to the differences between Qatar and its three Gulf neighbors “is only
possible through political and peaceful methods and dialogue between the
parties”. “Using sanctions in today’s integrated world is inefficient, to be
condemned and unacceptable,” Ghasemi added of Qatar’s neighbors closing all
land, sea and air links with it. Mohammad-Ali Abtahi, head of the office of
former reformist president Mohammad Khatami, attacked Saudi policy, saying
severing relations with Qatar was an “Arab earthquake.” He called on Iran to
abstain from interfering and that rationale prevails with what concerns Iranian
involvement in intra-Gulf affairs. “Turkey, Iran and Iraq should hold a
tripartite meeting to call on the OIC Council to resolve the issue of Qatar,”
Mohsen Rezaee, the Secretary of Iran’s Expediency Council said. He also attacked
gulf states, especially Saudi Arabia, over their opposition of Qatar and Iranian
foreign policy. On the other hand, the former director of the Middle East
Affairs in the Iranian Foreign Minister called for “carefully handling” the
Arab-Arab relations issue, saying that the differences are “old.”Qatar’s support
for the Muslim Brotherhood in countries such as Egypt, Sudan, Tunisia, Yemen and
Syria has caused tension, he said. Qatari refusal to stop this support forced
the tension to go public.
Qatar Airways Licenses Revoked, Offices Shut in Saudi
Arabia
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 06/17/Saudi Arabia’s General Authority of Civil Aviation
revoked on Tuesday all operating licenses granted to Qatar Airways as part of
the Kingdom’s severing of diplomatic ties with its neighbor. It also announced
that all of its offices in Saudi Arabia will be closed within 48 hours, reported
the Saudi Press Agency (SPA). “We urge all passengers who purchased tickets to
or from Qatar to check the airline website or contact their travel agent online
for a refund,” said the General Authority of Civil Aviation in a statement.
Saudi Arabia has also closed its border with Qatar, effectively blocking food
imports and a segment of the country’s exports after Riyadh accused Doha of
supporting extremism and terrorism. Qatari share prices closed down 7.58 percent
on Monday after five Arab countries — Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt, Bahrain and
Yemen — announced they were cutting diplomatic ties with the emirate. Saudi
Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt announced the suspension of all flights to
and from Qatar as of Tuesday morning. The Gulf states have also ordered Qataris
to leave within 14 days and banned their own citizens from traveling to Qatar.
On Monday, Qatar Airways suspended all flights to Saudi Arabia, the United Arab
Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain until further notice. In a statement issued on its
website, the carrier said the suspension of its flights will go into effect
Tuesday. It is offering customers affected by the decision a refund on unused
tickets. The decision comes after major Gulf carriers, including the Middle
East’s largest carrier in Dubai, Emirates Airways, suspended flights to Qatar.
The route between Doha, Qatar and Dubai is popular among business travelers and
both are major transit hubs for travelers between Asia and Europe.
Washington Worried about Qatar’s Behaviors, Wants to
Redirect it to Right Track
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 06/17/London, Washington – The White House said on Monday
that US President Donald Trump is committed to working to deescalate tensions in
Gulf after some countries broke ties with Qatar. The United States does not want
to see a “permanent rift” among Gulf countries, a senior US administration
official said, Reuters reported. The official, however, added: “There’s an
acknowledgment that a lot of Qatari behavior is quite worrisome not just to our
Gulf neighbors but to the US.”“We want to bring them in the right direction.”For
his part, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson called on Gulf states to stay
united and work out their differences. “We certainly would encourage the parties
to sit down together and address these differences,” he said while in Sydney.
“If there’s any role that we can play in terms of helping them address those, we
think it is important that the GCC Remain united.” Tillerson said despite the
impasse, he did not expect it to have “any significant impact, if any impact at
all, on the unified fight against terrorism in the region or globally,” which
was supported by US Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis. Mattis, speaking alongside
Tillerson in Australia, also said he doesn’t believe the rift will affect the
ISIS fight. “I am positive there will be no implications coming out of this
dramatic situation at all, and I say that based on the commitment that each of
these nations that you just referred to have made to this fight,” Mattis said.
Mattis also criticized Iran because of its efforts to destabilize the region,
noting the Iranian support for the Head of Syrian regime and its role in the war
in Yemen. For his part, Spokesman at US Air Forces Central Command Lieutenant
Colonel Damien Pickart told Reuters: “We’ve seen no impact to our operations and
all flights continue as planned.” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, in a
phone conservation with his Qatari counterpart Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman
al-Thani on Monday, called for a resolution to differences between Qatar and
other Arab countries through talks, the ministry said. It also said “a serous
concern has been expressed by the appearance of a new hotbed of tension within
the Arab world”.
Trump Voices Support for Isolation of Qatar, Says It’s the
Beginning of the End of Terrorism
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 06/17/President Donald Trump of the United States
considered isolating Qatar as the beginning of the end to the horror of
terrorism, pointing out that all reference was pointing to Qatar in financing
radical ideology. Through his account in Twitter, the US President said: “The
Gulf states would take a hard stance on funding extremism. All reference was
pointing to Qatar. Perhaps, this will be the beginning of the end of the horror
of terrorism.”“So good to see the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia visit with the Saudi
King and 50 leaders of the countries already paying off,” he added. “They would
take a hard stance on funding terrorism; all reference was pointing to Qatar.
Perhaps, this will be the beginning of the end to the horror of terrorism,”
Trump said.Saudi Arabia and several Arab allies, including Egypt, the United
Arab Emirates and Bahrain, cut diplomatic ties and transport links with Qatar on
Monday for the country’s role in supporting activities which undermine the
security of the region. The Gulf states and Egypt banned all flights to and from
Qatar and ordered Qatari citizens to leave within 14 days.
Turkey Offers Mediation to Resolve Qatar Dispute
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 06/17/Ankara – Turkey said on Monday that it was “saddened”
by the Arab and Islamic countries’ decision to sever diplomatic ties with Qatar,
saying it was ready to mediate with them to “reach a solution to the crisis.”The
Turkish Foreign Ministry hoped in a statement that members of the Gulf
Cooperation Council would be able to reach a solution to the crisis through
dialogue and bridging the divide over differences. It called on all sides “not
to forget the challenges the region is experiencing, starting with combating
terrorism, which requires everyone to work together.” Turkey’s Foreign Minister
Mevlut Cavusoglu told a new conference after meeting his German counterpart
Sigmar Gabriel on Monday: “We see the stability in the Gulf region as our own
unity and solidarity.”“Countries may of course have some issues, but dialogue
must continue under every circumstance for problems to be resolved peacefully.
We are saddened by the current picture and will give any support for its
normalization,” he added. Cavusoglu later discussed the developments with his
Iranian counterpart Mohammed Javad Zarif during a telephone call. He revealed
that they shared the same position on the need to resolve the dispute with Qatar
through dialogue, said diplomatic sources.The dispute was also tackled at a
Turkish cabinet session chaired by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Monday.
Egypt’s Al-Azhar: Severing ties with Qatar necessary to
protect the Arab world
Staff writer, Al Arabiya EnglishTuesday, 6 June 2017/Egypt’s Al-Azhar praised
the position taken by several Arab leaders to suspend ties with the Qatari
government to ensure the unity and stability of the Arab nations, it said in a
statement on Tuesday. Al-Azhar said that it is closely following regional
developments during the past several days and reiterates its support for the
joint Arab position in its decision to cut ties with Qatar who have supported
and harbored extremist groups and who have intervened openly in the internal
affairs of neighboring countries. The Egyptian institution also expressed hopes
that efforts from Arab nations will redouble to stop attempts “exerted by the
oppressive regimes, which constitutes a threat to the security and stability of
the Arab region, hoping they will wake up from their negligence and return to
their senses”. As a response to Qatar’s continued aggressive policies in the
region, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain all severed
diplomatic relations with Qatar in a coordinated move on Monday. Yemen, Libya's
eastern-based government and the Maldives joined later and transport links were
shut down.
Conflicting Stances Emerge on Combating ISIS beyond Iraqi
Borders
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 06/17/Baghdad – As the battle for the city of Mosul draws
to its end with the expulsion of ISIS, conflicting views have started to emerge
on whether the militants should be pursued beyond Iraq’s borders, specifically
inside Syria. Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi, Sunni political forces and Moqtada
al-Sadr’s movement oppose chasing ISIS outside of Iraq. The premier has
repeatedly expressed this stance even though he announced last week a plan,
devised with the People’s Mobilization Forces (PMF), to protect the Iraqi-Syrian
border. This plan seeks to isolate the ISIS militants in Iraq from their
colleagues in Syria. Abadi later told a gathering of Sunni and Shi’ite clerics:
“We do not want our forces and sons to take part in fighting beyond the borders.
We do not want to destabilize the security of countries as our constitution
prohibits this.”The prime minister’s position stands in contrast to that of the
PMF commanders. Deputy head of the PMF Abou Mehdi al-Mohandis said over the
weekend: “We will pursue terrorism, even if it was outside of Iraq, if it
threatens Iraqi territories and national security.”Some observers have spoken of
the difficulty that Abadi may face in reining in fighters who want to keep on
combating the terrorists even after they are eliminated from Iraq. Security
analyst Hisham al-Hashemi said that the PM has no choice but to deal with such
individuals from a legal angle. He can bar the air force from backing them and
warn them that they may be targeted by US strikes. He told Asharq Al-Awsat:
“There is a segment within the PMF that is allied with Iran and that wants to
chase ISIS in Syria. It is seeking to create a passage from Baghdad to al-Tanf
and leading to Damascus in order to provide the Syrian regime with supplies.” He
confirmed that some members of the PMF have already headed to Syria but without
the government’s knowledge. They instead earn their salaries from Iran. Another
PMF leader, Laith al-Athari believed that all members of the forces, even if
they want to fight ISIS abroad, should adhere to the orders of the commander of
the armed forces. He stressed to Asharq Al-Awsat that any PMF involvement in the
battle against ISIS in Syria should be coordinated with the Iraqi government and
Damascus regime. “Terrorism will be a threat as long as it remains on our
border. We will head to Syria if we are asked. We have a common enemy and goal
to destroy it, but liberating our land is a priority,” he stated.
Russian FM: De-escalation Zones are Not Precursor to
Dividing Syria
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 06/17/Moscow – The establishment of de-escalation zones in
Syria is not a precursor to the partition of the country, Russian Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov said Monday, adding that these areas will lead to a full
ceasefire throughout Syria. He denied all claims that initiators of
de-escalation zones will bring about Syria’s division noting that these
“provocative statements” are similar to those used in relation to the situation
in Aleppo. Speaking on the sidelines of an economic forum in St. Petersburg on
Friday, Russian President Vladimir Putin voiced his concerns over dividing
Syria. Lavrov pointed out that Putin has repeatedly stressed that the
de-escalation zones are not aimed at creating preconditions for Syria’s breakup.
“Seeing as it is extremely difficult to impose a ceasefire in the entire country
in one session, a decision was made to begin with these zones,” he told a press
conference. The work on a final agreement related to details of monitoring the
ceasefire and of implementing crossing points to and from the safe zones was
underway, he stressed. “These zones have been agreed on and now efforts are
underway to hammer out specific details linked to ensuring the monitoring of
ceasefire commitments and on setting up checkpoints for civilians and
humanitarian assistance, he said. In an article published on Monday, Asharq Al-Awsat
said that the Astana statement included the formation of a committee of members
of the guarantor countries to discuss all details concerning the de-escalation
zones. It should have been completed by June 4. Based on Lavrov’s statement, it
seems the committee has not accomplished that yet, and many sources indicated
that the experts are facing setbacks, especially concerning the choice of
countries that will send troops to monitor the operations. Russia announced that
Astana 5 will be held on June 12 and 13. Kazakh Foreign Minister Kairat
Abdrakhmanov told reporters on Monday that the agenda of the meetings is still
unclear, adding that the participants will most likely focus on discussing the
details and implementation of the memo of de-escalation zones. “Now the
countries-guarantors – the Russian Federation, the Turkish Republic and the
Islamic Republic of Iran – are holding active and intense consultations between
each other to finally set the dates of the next round of the Astana process
meeting on the Syrian settlement,” Abdrakhmanov said.
U.S.-Backed Fighters Thrust into IS Bastion Raqa
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 06/17U.S.-backed fighters broke into the city
of Raqa on Tuesday as they launched a final assault to drive the Islamic State
group from its de facto Syrian capital. The attack on the northern city at the
heart of IS' Syrian territory has been seven months in the making and is backed
by air support, military advisers and weapons deliveries from the U.S.-led
coalition. Seized by the jihadists in early 2014, Raqa became notorious as a hub
for IS' operations in Syria, Iraq and beyond. The city has been the scene of
some of the group's worst atrocities, including gruesome executions, public
displays of bodies and the trafficking of women. It was one of the twin pivots
of IS' so-called "caliphate," with Mosul in neighboring Iraq -- where
U.S.-backed forces are also bearing down on the jihadists. After months
sealing off access routes to the city from the east, north and west, the
U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces on Tuesday entered the city limits for the
first time. "Our forces entered the city of Raqa from the eastern district of
al-Meshleb," SDF commander Rojda Felat told AFP, adding that clashes were also
raging on the city's northern outskirts. "They are fighting street battles
inside Raqa now, and we have experience in urban warfare," she said.
'Decisive blow
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said clashes in al-Meshleb had forced IS
members to withdraw from more than half of the district. The SDF was also trying
to push into Raqa's northwestern district of al-Andalus, the monitor said, as
fighting continued to the north, east and west of the city. The advance in al-Meshleb
was backed by heavy air strikes by the U.S.-led coalition, the Observatory said.
The coalition began its air campaign against IS in Iraq in August 2014,
expanding its operations to Syria the following month. The coalition appears
keen to expel IS from its last major urban bastions before the "caliphate" turns
three years old later this month. Defeating IS in Raqa would "deliver a decisive
blow to the idea of ISIS as a physical caliphate," coalition commander
Lieutenant General Steve Townsend said. Warning the fight would be "long and
difficult," Townsend framed the offensive as part of a greater struggle against
IS, which has claimed attacks in many countries including last month's deadly
bombing in Manchester. "We all saw the heinous attack in Manchester," he said.
"ISIS threatens all our nations, not just Iraq and Syria, but in our homelands
as well."The SDF launched its operation to take Raqa -- dubbed "Wrath of the
Euphrates" -- in November. It then scored a series of victories in the wider
province, including capturing the strategic town of Tabqa and its adjacent dam
in May. On Tuesday, SDF spokesman Talal Sello made the long-awaited announcement
that the battle for Raqa itself had begun. "We declare today the start of the
great battle to liberate the city of Raqa, the so-called capital of terrorism
and terrorists," Sello told reporters in the village of Hazima, north of the
city. "With the international coalition's warplanes and the state-of-the-art
weapons they provided to us, we will seize Raqa from Daesh," Sello told AFP,
using an Arabic acronym for IS.
Concerns for civilians
Sello urged civilians inside the city to keep away from IS positions and from
the front lines. The United Nations said it was concerned for the safety of more
than 400,000 men, women and children in Raqa province who may be caught up in
the violence. As the SDF has drawn closer to the city, reports of civilian
casualties in coalition air strikes have swelled. On Monday, the Observatory
said a coalition bombing raid killed 21 civilians as they tried to escape Raqa
by dinghy on the Euphrates River. The same route leading out of the city's
southern districts has been used by IS fighters, it said.An estimated 300,000
civilians were believed to have been living under IS rule in Raqa, including
80,000 displaced from other parts of Syria.Thousands have fled in recent months
to other parts of the province or to makeshift camps in territory newly captured
by the SDF. On Tuesday, the International Rescue Committee said it was "deeply
concerned for the safety of civilians in Raqa" after a drop in numbers fleeing
the city in the past week. This "may indicate ISIS intends to use the 200,000
people still trapped in the city as human shields," the aid group said, using
another acronym for IS. It also urged the "utmost care" to prevent civilian
casualties after "a worrying number of civilians killed from coalition
airstrikes across Raqa in recent months."There are also risks for civilians who
try to escape the last cities under jihadist rule. On Tuesday, U.N. human rights
chief Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein accused IS of murdering 163 people to prevent them
from fleeing Mosul last week. More than 320,000 people have been killed since
civil war erupted in Syria in 2011 with anti-government protests.
Looters Target West Mosul
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 06/17/Mosul – Men, women and children walk down a main road
in west Mosul with arms full and carts loaded, but they are not among the people
fleeing fighting in the city. The operation to retake Mosul from ISIS has pushed
hundreds of thousands of residents to flee their homes – leaving behind
belongings they could not carry and that are vulnerable to theft. “It was ISIS’s!
Shouldn’t we take revenge on them?” one of two young men – each carrying a
ceiling fan on one shoulder and a bundle on the other – said, after being
stopped by soldiers. “My house has been looted, we have nothing!” “You want
revenge? If you’re brave, take a gun, the front is right there,” a soldier
replied, pointing in the direction of the sound of gunfire and explosions. “You
stole it from the houses of other people,” the soldier said, ordering them to
“return it the place where you took it.” “It was ISIS’s, I swear to God! People
took chairs, tables. We just took clothes – we don’t have clothes anymore,” the
young man said. “Are you not ashamed? Are you not Muslims? Go! Bring it back to
where you took it,” the soldier said. There was no violence between people in
the al-Rifai area, which was recaptured by Iraqi forces a few days earlier. They
simply came and went peacefully with some arriving with empty hands and leaving
with full bags or carts loaded with a refrigerator or sofa. “All these people
are not from here,” a man with a bicycle indignantly told a policeman. With
fighting raging a few hundred meters away, security forces controlled the
comings and goings as best they can. But, according to AFP, it was difficult to
systematically check if people owned what they were carrying. In some cases,
people had items that were obviously not high on the list of essentials for
someone fleeing a war: the young men with the fans, a teenager with a couch
protruding from his wagon, a boy pushing a table with wheels.Some were turned
back by security forces, but others slipped through. Most justified their
actions by saying they were taking items that belonged to members of ISIS, which
itself confiscated property including homes and vehicles during its nearly
three-year rule of Mosul. “It’s a lie. ISIS can’t access buildings,” said Abbas
Ali, a policeman. “They come from other neighborhoods to steal from the houses.”
Others honestly said their houses have been looted and that they came to find
items to refurnish them. “They say they have nothing but it doesn’t justify
stealing the belongings of others. These are the houses of people who fled,” Ali
said. “They are stopped and told to bring the belongings back where they found
them. What more can we do?”A boy passed by dragging a plastic container stuffed
with a curtain that, when lifted up by police, revealed hidden metal cables. Ali
confronted the boy: “Are these not electrical cables? When the people come back,
will they not want electricity?” “I found them already cut, by God,” the boy
said, intimidated. “Return them to their place,” the policeman ordered. “It’s
your city that you’re looting!”
UNICEF: 100,000 Iraqi Children in Extreme Danger in
Western Mosul
Erbil – Civilians living under siege in the remaining ISIS-held neighborhoods of
Iraq’s Mosul are under extreme danger, warned the United Nations children’s
agency on Monday. About 100,000 children are trapped in extremely dangerous
conditions, warned the UN Children Fund as fierce battles between Iraqi forces
and ISIS militants raged on in an attempt to liberate the eastern city. Children
were being used as human shields by the insurgents or were caught in the
crossfire of the battle, UNICEF said in a statement. Some had been forced to
take part in the fighting. Hospitals and clinics had come under attack, it said.
“We are receiving alarming reports of civilians including several children being
killed in west Mosul,” UNICEF said. “Some were reportedly killed as they
desperately tried to flee the fighting which is intensifying by the hour,”A
Reuters TV crew on Saturday saw the bodies of dozens of civilians, including
children, lying in a frontline street, apparently killed while fleeing the
enclave. Iraqi government forces retook eastern Mosul in January and began a new
push on May 27 to capture the remaining ISIS-held enclave in the city’s western
side. The Mosul offensive started in October with air and ground support from a
US-led international coalition. It has taken much longer than expected as the
militants are dug in the middle of civilians. About 700,000 people, about a
third of the pre-war population of Mosul, have already fled, seeking refuge
either with friends and relatives or in camps. “Attacks on civilians and
civilian infrastructure including hospitals, clinics, schools, homes and water
systems should stop immediately,” UNICEF said. Human rights committee official
in Nineveh Ghazwan Hamed said that upon their arrival in refugee camps, children
are enrolled in psychological programs that are run by the government and
international organizations. “The country is passing through extraordinary
circumstances. Given the situation, the government cannot offer everything,
especially since the area the children are now living in are military zones,” he
explained.
Palestinian Presidency Accuses Israel of Sabotaging Peace
Efforts
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 06/17/The Palestinian presidency accused on Tuesday Israel
of sabotaging US efforts aimed at resuming the peace process. Presidential
spokesman Nabil Abu Rudaina rejected in a statement Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu’s recent remarks that Israel will maintain is security
control even after a peace deal is reached. “Israel is working on complicating
matters,” he added. These statements do not help efforts aimed at finding a
solution that will achieve security and stability in the region and the world,
he continued. Netanyahu’s statements are a message to the US administration and
entire international community that Israel is not prepared to achieve peace
based on the principles of justice and international law, stressed Abu Rudaina.
Furthermore, he declared that Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ meeting with
US President Donald Trump last month were “serious and clear and they paved the
way for creating a rare chance to achieve peace.”Israel is attempting to waste
this chance through making such statements that reject the bases of the
political process, he noted. He warned that obstructing Arab and international
efforts, especially American ones, to launch a serious peace process “will
inflame the conflict in the region and lead it towards more fragmentation in
light of the regional and international division.” Netanyahu had announced
during Israeli celebrations marking the 50th anniversary of the 1967 war:
“Whether we reach a political settlement or not, we will continue to impose our
security control over the land west of the Jordan River.”He also demanded that
Palestinians recognize that Israel is the national home of the Jewish people,
saying that this is central demand in reaching peace.
Algerian, Egyptian, Tunisian Foreign Ministers Discuss
Political Solution for Libyan Crisis
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 06/17/Algeria – The foreign ministers of Algeria, Tunisia
and Egypt have held a tripartite meeting on Monday in Algeria, to discuss the
situation in Libya and find a political solution for the crisis in order to
tackle later security issues, especially combating ISIS.
The meeting, which will end today, will be followed by a communique that
presents the results of the three neighboring countries’ efforts to resolve the
Libyan crisis. According to Spokesperson for Algeria’s foreign Ministry
Abdelaziz Benali Cherif, the tripartite ministerial meeting of Abdelkader
Messahel, Khemaies Jhinaoui and Sameh Shoukry is “part of continuous
consultations between Algeria, Tunisia and Egypt over the crisis hitting Libya
since 2011, as foreign ministers of these three nations are due to assess the
political and security developments there.” “The meeting aims to reinforce the
political process in Libya……on the path towards sustainable peace and national
reconciliation,” the spokesperson said. “It will also be an opportunity to
examine all the factors that can contribute to promote a coordinated approach to
accompany the Libyan people in their quest for a political solution to the
crisis facing that brother and neighbor.” The tripartite meeting follows those
held in Algeria on May 8 and in Tunisia on February 19-20. Confronting the
threats of terrorism in Libya has overshadowed discussions between the three
ministers, a diplomatic source told Asharq Al-Awsat. The source said that
Shoukry defended the Egyptian military action in eastern Libya and justified the
protection of Egyptian national security from the threats imposed by terrorists.
The Tunisian Foreign Ministry said that the meeting in Algeria lies in the
framework of following up the implementation of Tunisian President Beji Caid
Essebsi’s initiative for the comprehensive political settlement in Libya, during
which the efforts of the three countries will be reviewed to bring together the
Libyan parties, the regional and international efforts to launch an inter-Libyan
dialogue on the basis of the political agreement and the Tunis Ministerial
Declaration signed on February 20, 2017.
Houthi Rebels Refuse to Cooperate with ‘Biased’ UN Envoy
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 06/17/Houthi rebels in the Yemeni capital Sanaa have
demanded the replacement of UN envoy, Ismail Ould Sheikh Ahmad, saying that he
was no longer welcome in the areas it controls in the city. The head of the
rebel-installed Supreme Political Council, Saleh al-Samad, accused the envoy of
bias and said he would no longer be allowed entry to rebel-held areas. “We say
unanimously that the envoy is no longer welcome here,” Samad said in a televised
speech late Monday. “There will be no more contact with Ismail Ould Sheikh Ahmad
and he is not welcome here.” The UN envoy has conducted months of shuttle
diplomacy with the Saudi-backed government. Samad said the decision was taken
jointly by the Houthi rebels and their allies in former president Ali Abdullah
Saleh’s camp. The Houthis later issued a statement supporting Samad’s position.
The announcement comes after an abortive visit by the envoy to Sanaa last month
in which he was mobbed by protesters and failed to secure any meetings with
rebel representatives. He had been trying to broker a ceasefire for the holy
Muslim fasting month of Ramadan which began on May 27.Last Tuesday, Sheikh Ahmad
told the UN Security Council that serious negotiations on the first steps to a
cessation of hostilities in Yemen had been slow and the key parties were
reluctant to even discuss the concessions needed for peace. “I will not hide
from this council that we are not close to a comprehensive agreement,” he said,
adding that Houthi officials refused to meet with him. Sheikh Ahmad also
expressed deep concern over the attack against his convoy. He urged an
investigation of the attack and said “despite its gravity, it has increased my
determination to continue with my efforts to find a negotiated political
settlement that best serves the interests of the Yemeni people.”The Security
Council reiterated its backing for the UN envoy after the briefing.
Two Afghan ISIS Suspects Arrested in Izmir for Plotting
Terrorist Attack
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 06/17/Ankara – A court in the western Turkish city of Izmir
on Monday sentenced two Afghans for being pro-ISIS and for carrying out
reconnaissance in favor of the terrorist organization, preparing for a terrorist
attack. Security sources said the anti-terrorist and intelligence forces of the
Izmir Security Directorate arrested the two Afghan militants at the main bus
station in the city after suspicion and seized from them documents related to
ISIS. Sources pointed out that investigations have revealed that the detainees
belong to the terrorist organization and have links to the areas of clashes in
Syria and Iraq and that they came to Izmir to carry out reconnaissance in
preparation for the implementation of a terrorist attack in the city. Following
the investigation, the two suspects were transferred to the Public Prosecutor’s
Office, which in turn referred them to the court that sentenced them to jail.
Turkish security forces continue its intensified campaigns throughout the
country, targeting terrorist organizations, mainly ISIS, in which 4,000 ISIS
suspects and militants have been arrested since the beginning of 2017. Due to
these operations, ISIS has failed to commit any terrorist attack in Turkey
following the attack that was carried out by the Uzbek ISIS militant, Abdulkadir
Masharipov, who operated under the cover name Abu Mohammed Horasani, on Reina
nightclub, killing 39 people and injuring 69 others of different nationalities.
Izmir has witnessed a series of security campaigns that resulted in the arrest
of about 100 ISIS sleeper cells, most of them from Uzbekistan and Central Asian
countries, in connection with Masharipov, who was arrested on January 16 in
Istanbul. In this context, the Turkish Interior Ministry announced on Monday
that a total of 48 outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) terrorists have been
neutralized in 548 operations across Turkey over the past week; a number of ISIS
militants were also detained in the same period.
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on
June 06-07/17
Qatar, which
Isolated Itself
Salman Al-dossary/ASharq Al Awsat/June 06/17
No country in the world was as patient with Qatar’s political transgressions as
Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and UAE have been for the past two decades.
For 21 years, Qatar disregarded all concepts of Gulf unity and neighborly
behavior. Twenty-one years and the repercussions of Qatar’s policies are
worsening year after year.
The Gulf’s 21 years of patience was understood by Qatar as weakness, not wisdom
of not wanting to lose a brotherly country.
The three countries repeatedly exerted political and diplomatic efforts without
any true response from the other party.
In 2014, the Emir of Qatar pledged and agreed to the Riyadh agreement to end his
country’s harmful policies. Yet, and as usual, it didn’t commit to any of its
pledges and ambassadors were withdrawn during that time.
Interference in internal affairs and creating chaos and instability became
intolerable. Six countries therefore decided to cut all diplomatic relations
with Qatar in an attempt to end Doha’s disastrous methods and unprecedented
isolation.
The surprise did not lie in severing diplomatic relations, seen as a harsh and
unavoidable solution, but in Gulf countries’ tolerance of the damage of Qatar’s
foreign policy for two decades.
Qatar had exploited Saudi Arabia’s will not to lose the younger brother.
The small gulf country manipulated and fooled everyone until it cut all
political and brotherhood ties.
In the statement following the decision to cut ties with Qatar, Saudi Arabia
said: “The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has taken this decisive decision as a result
of grave violations committed by the authorities in Doha over the years, in
secret and in public. These violations were aimed at dividing Saudi ranks,
creating incitement against the state and infringing on its sovereignty, as well
as harboring terrorist and sectarian groups aimed at destabilizing the region.”
How terrible what Qatar has done! How patient Saudi Arabia has been!
Had Iran done that, no one would have justified this aggression, yet it was
Qatar who did that.
Even though it easily can, Saudi Arabia never intervened in the internal affairs
of Qatar. So, how can Doha defy logic and do that?
The question is whether Qatar will be able to return to the Gulf fold or not.
This time, Qatar only has one way to go, while all other roads are blocked. The
real and honest return hinges not only on a change in policies, which is
possible but temporary, but actual and necessary change should take place in the
main policy that Doha has adopted. It believes that it should be the most
important state in world, tossing aside geopolitical basics.
This strategy made Qatar embrace terrorist groups like the Muslim Brotherhood,
ISIS and al-Qaeda. It promoted their schemes and rhetoric, allowing it to commit
grave violations against the sovereignty of fraternal countries.
Sooner or later, this strategy will end and Qatar will not be able to defy logic
and reason for long. The decisions to sever all ties and close borders and
cancel aviation licenses will be enough because Qatar knows it can’t exist
without its surrounding. It is quite aware of the very high tax it can’t pay if
it chooses to manipulate history and geography.
Hopefully, the brotherly country Qatar will learn the lesson this time as money
doesn’t buy geography or history. Ambitions are accessed through doors, not tiny
holes. Countries can manipulate a little and contradict a lot, but they cannot
hold out against the facts and reality. A country can’t be isolated from its
neighbors and surrounding.
It is true that the severing of relations this time has been the most damaging
to Doha in history, but it is a chance for it to wake up, return to its senses
and change its political strategy.
If Doha did that tomorrow, then it will be welcomed with open arms before open
borders.
Saudi Arabia's Global Center for Combating Extremist
Ideology
An Exercise in Futility?
A. Z. Mohamed/Gatestone Institute/June 06/17
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10484/saudi-arabia-extremist-ideology
The GCCEI needs to examine, among other things, the way in which its patron,
Saudi Arabia, has participated in, if not spearheaded, the very extremism that
it is claiming now to combat: the connection between Wahhabism and terrorism;
the hostility of its regime to democracy; the abuse of human rights; and the
suppression of moderate interpretations of Islam.
When Trump stated that fighting extremism and terrorism "transcends every other
consideration," he was, in effect, giving them unwritten permission to continue
repressing their citizens and whatever else they wished.
The GCCEI will be managed by a board of 12 directors appointed every five years,
and the number of directors from each member state will be based on that
country's financial contribution to the center. In other words, the center will
be ruled by -- and further the interests of -- wealthy absolute monarchies.
During his trip to Saudi Arabia, Israel and Europe in May, U.S. President Donald
Trump inaugurated the Global Center for Combating Extremist Ideology (GCCEI) in
Riyadh -- an endeavor that its appointed secretary-general, Nasir Al-Biqami of
Umm al-Qura University in Mecca, described as the "fruit of collaboration
between Muslim countries that believe in the importance of combating terrorism."
However admirable a goal from the point of view of the West, this initiative has
little chance of success, given the repressive regimes involved and the
extremist worldview of the individuals who will be funded to promote it.
U.S. President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump join King Salman bin
Abdulaziz Al Saud of Saudi Arabia, and the President of Egypt, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi,
in the inaugural opening of the Global Center for Combating Extremist Ideology,
May 21, 2017. (Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead)
As Elliott Abrams, senior fellow for Middle Eastern studies at the Council on
Foreign Relations (CFR) and top adviser to former U.S. President George W. Bush,
wrote:
"Partnerships with repressive regimes may in some cases exacerbate rather than
solve the problem for us. Gradual reform is exactly the right approach, but will
we see President Trump pushing President Sisi of Egypt (with whom he is
friendly), or Erdogan of Turkey, or the Bahrainis, for gradual reform?"
Pointing to the weakness of Trump's praise of Bahrain and Saudi Arabia for
"working to undermine... radicalism," Abrams stated:
"This is quite wrong. The Sunni royal family's oppression of the country's Shia
majority is in fact creating a breeding ground for radicalism and opening a door
for Iranian subversion. ... Saudi Arabia's Wahhabi Islam is at least a gateway
drug for extremism. All around the world, Saudi money is being used to suppress
indigenous forms of Islam. Saudi preachers, mosques, and schools teach that
local and moderate versions of Islam are impure and must be replaced by the only
true version: the Saudi Wahhabi version. But that version of Islam treats
unbelievers with contempt and often hatred, oppresses women, and opposes
democracy."
Steven A. Cook, Eni Enrico Mattei senior fellow for Middle East and Africa
studies at the CFR, highlighted a different problem with the U.S.
administration's approach and establishment of the GCCEI, writing:
"The new Global Center for Combating Extremist Ideology seems to be the logical
extension of Obama's efforts in the same area. In February 2015, the United
States hosted a summit on combating violent extremism, which produced follow-up
regional meetings to tackle various aspects of this phenomenon. It may have
amounted to little more than extended speechifying..."
Cook referred to Trump's efforts as "picking up where Obama left off." He
continued:
"Even on Iran, which Trump identified as the source of extremism and instability
in the Middle East, the White House issued waivers on May 17 regarding Iranian
sanctions, in keeping with the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (know more
commonly as the Iran nuclear deal)."
The only way, therefore, that the GCCEI can become more than simply another
heavily-funded, failed organization -- and contribute credibly to the war on
global extremism and terror -- is for its member states to engage in genuine
introspection and undertake serious study of the roots of radicalism.
The GCCEI needs to examine, among other things, the way in which its patron,
Saudi Arabia, has participated in, if not spearheaded, the very extremism that
it is claiming now to combat: the connection between Wahhabism and terrorism;
the hostility of its regime to democracy; the abuse of human rights; and the
suppression of moderate interpretations of Islam.
The other Muslim/Arab states taking part in the initiative, too, must address
the possible correlation between their regimes' repression, humiliation and
torture of their people and the adoption of violence on the part of individuals.
Only after acknowledging and scrutinizing these questions can internal reform
take place.
Is the GCCEI interested, willing or able to undertake such measures, or will it
serve as an arena for Saudi propaganda and short-sighted state-security work?
The latter is more likely, for a number of reasons.
First, Muslim/Arab leaders have come to learn, from past experience, that much
of the White House's approach to the Middle East begins and ends with lip
service. Second, when Trump stated that fighting extremism and terrorism
"transcends every other consideration," he was, in effect, giving them unwritten
permission to continue cracking down on their citizens.
Third, according to its website, the GCCEI -- called Etidal ("moderation") in
Arabic -- will be managed by a board of 12 directors appointed every five years,
and the number of directors from each member state will be based on that
country's financial contribution to the center. In other words, the center will
be ruled by -- and further the interests of -- wealthy absolute monarchies.
Finally, GCCEI research on how terrorist groups function, coupled with
innovative monitoring techniques that the center develops, will provide
additional fodder to the arsenals employed by member states not only to tackle
terrorism committed by groups they oppose, but to enhance the political
stronghold of their regimes.
**A.Z. Mohamed is a Muslim born and raised in the Middle East.
© 2017 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Finland: Now We
Want a Mega-Mosque
Judith Bergman/Gatestone Institute/June 06/17
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10431/finland-mega-mosque
The mosque boasts that it has been "able to organize many activities". One of
these, it says, "is to spread Islam to the non-Muslims in Finland".
Now Muslims in Finland want a mega-mosque. The idea that mega-mosques "prevent
radicalization" is clearly popular among proponents of Finnish mega mosques, but
on what evidence is this view based? Can they name one country where this was
actually the case?
Finland would be wise to look at what the establishment of Saudi and Gulf
state-funded mosques in the rest of Europe has already done to the continent in
terms of Islamization and radicalization.
In recent years, Muslims in Finland have been complaining about not having an
official mosque. This is not entirely true; the Finnish Tartars have an official
mosque with a minaret -- in Träskända -- which other Muslims are free to use.
There are also around 80 small mosques in Finland, around 30 of them in
converted buildings or private flats in Helsinki, although many of them are
referred to as "prayer rooms". One such mosque is the Masjid Iman mosque,
located in Helsinki on the Munkkiniemen street. According to its website, the
214-square-meter mosque, which calls itself "The Islamic Multicultural Dawah
Center", was established in 1999 and is "one of the well-known mosques in the
Helsinki area". As is increasingly taking place, the mosque, according to the
website, was formerly a church. The mosque boasts that it has been "able to
organize many activities". One of these, it says, "is to spread Islam to the
non-Muslims in Finland".
Now Muslims in Finland want a mega-mosque. Two years ago, a Finnish convert, Pia
Jardi, spokesperson for the mega-mosque project, known as "Oasis", said, "There
is a need for a grand mosque because so far we do not have one in Helsinki. A
mosque would signal to the Muslims that they are a part of society". Another
board member of the Oasis project, Imam and then chair of the Islamic Society of
Finland, Anas Hajjar, was less modest. In October 2015, he told Yle, a Finnish
news outlet, "...the need for mosques in the capital region keeps growing... We
need three mosques in Helsinki, and one in Esbo and one in Vanda". According to
Hajjar, the planned mega-mosque will be 20,000 square meters, but besides the
actual mosque, there will also be sports and youth facilities. The actual prayer
room will accommodate 1,500 people. Hajjar told Yle that mega-mosques, "prevent
radicalization, as they make young Muslims feel like part of society".
Anas Hajjar has been linked to the Muslim Brotherhood. In 2014, after the United
Arab Emirates designated the Muslim Brotherhood and its local affiliates a
terrorist organization, Anas Hajjar's organization, The Islamic Society of
Finland, was included on the list. The Helsinki Times reported the surprise of
The Islamic Society of Finland at its inclusion on the terror watch list: "We're
very surprised by such a decision, and we have no idea why we're on the list. We
condemn such, outright arbitrary, decisions," said the society's director of
public relations, Abdihakim Yasin.
"The need for mosques in Finland is urgent," Susanne Dahlgren, a lecturer in
Islam at Tammerfors university, told Yle in October 2015. "Mosques do not
contribute to radicalization. On the contrary, they send a welcoming
message."[1]
The chair of the Helsinki Finns Party, Seppo Kanerva, also said in July 2015
that he supports establishing a grand mosque in the capital, so long as it does
not have a minaret with "someone wailing at five in the morning". The proposed
mosque was "welcome" he said; it would promote peace between different
religions:
"If we build churches, then why not mosques, so long as it's built using its own
money? It's a question of civil peace. If a suitable location can be found, and
the funding comes from elsewhere, then let it go ahead."
The idea that mega-mosques "prevent radicalization" is clearly popular among
proponents of Finnish mega-mosques, but on what evidence is this view based?
Nearly every European country today has one or several mega-mosques, which were,
according to Hajjar and Sardi, supposed to make the Muslims of that country less
radical by making them feel "part of society". Can they name one country where
this was actually the case?
In December 2016, the Oasis foundation for the establishment of the grand mosque
of Helsinki was officially established. Muslim Brotherhood-linked Anas Hajjar is
one of the board members. According to the Oasis foundation, the royal family of
Bahrain is going to fund the project with more than 100 million euros. The
Finnish news outlet Kirkkojakaupunki reported: "the Foundation is also ready to
receive funding from Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates if they
agree to the same conditions as Bahrain".
According to Pia Jardi, the "conditions" include:
"no radical teachings or ways of operation... The plan is clear that the
activities of the mosque will be managed by Finnish Muslims and that activities
will also be organised in Finnish. The Friday sermons, for example, must be
organised in both Arabic and Finnish."
Why would Finns believe that those rules will be upheld once Bahrain -- and
possibly Saudi Arabia and Qatar -- have bought and paid for the mosque? Why
would these nations, which spread Islamic extremism across the planet, act any
differently in Finland, than they have done in any other country where they have
sponsored building mosques and "cultural centers"?
"I personally believe that the large mosque envisaged at Kalasatama is a Muslim
Brotherhood-driven project", a Finnish researcher, Alan Salehzadeh, wrote in
March 2017. "The political Islamic agenda of the Muslim Brotherhood is led by
the governments of Turkey, Qatar, Bahrain and the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood",
he explained.
"In Finland, dozens of mosques are already working today whose establishment has
been supported by influential countries such as Iran, Turkey and Saudi Arabia.
... Erdogan has called for the resistance of the Turkish diaspora and to be
faithful only to Turkey".
Finnish politicians are also wary of agreeing to the project. Tarja Mankkinen,
the interior minister responsible for Finland's anti-radicalization policy, said
the ministry found many "positive aspects" in the mosque project, but that
"the challenge is that the mosque is planned to be funded by Bahrain and
possibly by other Gulf countries.
"The role of the actors who fund the mosque and its activities might consist a
[security] risk if it decreases the feeling of belonging to the Finnish society
among the Muslim population."
Jan Vapaavuori, the newly elected (April 2017) mayor of Helsinki, opposes the
mosque. "I do not think that such a mosque is needed in Helsinki. I will
certainly work towards making sure the mosque will not be built in Helsinki," he
said.
Radicalization is unfortunately becoming a real issue in the country. According
to the International Centre for Counter Terrorism in the Hague, in an April 2016
research paper about "The Foreign fighter Phenomenon in the European Union" (p.
44):
"By August 2015, at least 70 individuals from Finland had travelled to
Syria/Iraq, with approximately one dozen having died abroad and around 35
believed to still be in the conflict zone... The majority... are 'home-grown',
and they are either born in Finland or have lived there since childhood".
Seventy ISIS fighters from such a relatively small Muslim population is a
relatively high number; the solution to that radicalization is most definitely
not a Bahraini and Gulf state-funded mega-mosque in the Finnish capital. Finland
would be wise to look at what the establishment of Saudi and Gulf state-funded
mosques in the rest of Europe has already done to the continent in terms of
Islamization and radicalization.
**Judith Bergman is a writer, columnist, lawyer and political analyst.
[1] There are approximately 65,000 Muslims out of a population of 5.5 million
people in Finland. The majority of Finland's Muslims are immigrants who came to
Finland since the 1990s. In 2015, during the migrant crisis propelled by Angela
Merkel's opening of Europe's borders, Finland received 32,000 asylum seekers. In
2013, there had been just 3,200 of them.
© 2017 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No
part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied
or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.
Address by Minister Freeland on Canada’s foreign policy
priorities
June 6, 2017 – Ottawa, Canada
Check against delivery. This speech has been translated in accordance with the
Government of Canada’s official languages policy and edited for posting and
distribution in accordance with its communications policy.
Mr. Speaker,
Here is a question: Is Canada an essential country, at this time in the life of
our planet?
Most of us here would agree that it is. But if we assert this, we are called to
explain why. And we are called to consider the specifics of what we must do as a
consequence.
International relationships that had seemed immutable for 70 years are being
called into question. From Europe, to Asia, to our own North American home,
long-standing pacts that have formed the bedrock of our security and prosperity
for generations are being tested.
And new shared human imperatives—the fight against climate change first among
them—call for renewed, uncommon resolve.
Turning aside from our responsibilities is not an option. Instead we must think
carefully and deeply about what is happening, and find a way forward.
By definition, the path we choose must be one that serves the interests of all
Canadians and upholds our broadly held national values; that preserves and
nurtures Canadian prosperity and security; and that contributes to our
collective goal of a better, safer, more just, more prosperous, and sustainable
world. One we can pass onto our children and grandchildren, with a sense of
having done the right thing.
This is no small order, Mr. Speaker. It is what I would like to spend few
minutes talking about today.
Since before the end of the Second World War, beginning with the international
conference at Bretton Woods in 1944, Canada has been deeply engaged in, and
greatly enjoyed the benefits of, a global order based on rules.
These were principles and standards that were applied, perhaps not perfectly at
all times by all states, but certainly by the vast majority of democratic
states, most of the time.
The system had at its heart the core notions of territorial integrity, human
rights, democracy, respect for the rule of law, and an aspiration to free and
friendly trade.
The common volition toward this order arose from a fervent determination not to
repeat the immediate past.
Humankind had learned through the direct experience of horror and hardship, Mr.
Speaker, that the narrow pursuit of national self-interest, the law of the
jungle, led to nothing but carnage and poverty.
Two global conflicts and the Great Depression, all in the span of less than half
a century, taught our parents and grandparents that national borders must be
inviolate; that international trading relationships created not only prosperity
but also peace; and that a true world community, one based on shared aspirations
and standards, was not only desirable but essential to our very survival.
That deep yearning toward lasting peace led to the creation of international
institutions that endure to this day—with the nations of Western Europe,
together with their transatlantic allies, the United States and Canada, at their
foundation
In each of these evolutions in how we humans organize ourselves, Canadians
played pivotal roles.
There was Bretton Woods itself, where the Canadian delegation was instrumental
in drafting provisions of the fledgling International Monetary Fund and
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development.
A few years later in 1947, a Canadian, Dana Wilgress, played a leading role at
the meetings in Geneva that led to the development of the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade, precursor to the WTO.
It is a Canadian, John Humphrey, who is generally credited as the principal
author of the Universal Declaration on Human Rights, which was adopted by the UN
General Assembly in 1948. That was the first of what became a series of
declarations to set international standards in this vital area.
And let us not neglect the great Canadian perhaps best known for advancing the
cause of humanitarian internationalism—Lester B. Pearson. He was awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize for his leadership during the Suez crisis in 1956, for the
creation of modern peacekeeping.
These institutions may seem commonplace now, Mr. Speaker. We may take them for
granted. We should not. Seventy years ago they were revolutionary. And they set
the stage for the longest period of peace and prosperity in our history.
It was the same appreciation of the common interests of the human family, in
caring for our common home, that led us to the acid rain treaty of the Mulroney
era. It is what led us to the Montreal Protocol of 1987 to phase out CFCs and
preserve the ozone layer. It is what led us to Paris, Mr. Speaker, with 194
signatories at our side. That is global co-operation.
And it is important to note that when sacrifice was required to support and
strengthen the global order—military power, in defence of our principles and our
alliances—Canada was there. In the Suez, in Korea, in the Congo, in Cyprus, in
the First Gulf War, in the Balkans, in Afghanistan, up to and including today in
Iraq, among many other places, Canada has been there.
As the Prime Minister has often said, that is what Canadians do. We step up.
Today it is worth reminding ourselves why we step up—why we devote time and
resources to foreign policy, defence and development, why we have sent Canadian
soldiers, sailors, aviators, diplomats, aid workers, intelligence officers,
doctors, nurses, medics and engineers into situations of danger, disaster, and
chaos overseas, even at times when Canadian territory was not directly at risk.
Why do we spend billions on defence, if we are not immediately threatened?
For some countries—Israel, Latvia come to mind—the answer is self-evident.
Countries that face a clear and immediate existential challenge know they need
to spend on military and foreign policy. And they know why.
For a few lucky countries—like Canada and the United States—that feel protected
by geography and are good neighbours, the answer is less obvious. Indeed, you
could easily imagine a Canadian view that says, we are safe on our continent,
and we have things to do at home, so let's turn inward. Let’s say Canada first.
Here’s why that would be wrong.
First, though no foreign adversary is poised to invade us, we do face clear
challenges. Climate change is by definition a shared menace, affecting every
single person on this planet. Civil war, poverty, drought and natural disasters
anywhere in the world threaten us as well—not least because these catastrophes
spawn globally destabilizing mass migrations. The dictatorship in North Korea,
crimes against humanity in Syria, the monstrous extremists of Daesh, and Russian
military adventurism and expansionism also all pose clear strategic threats to
the liberal democratic world, including Canada.
Our ability to act against such threats alone is limited. It requires
cooperation with like-minded countries.
On the military front, Canada’s geography has meant that we have always been
able to count on American self-interest to provide a protective umbrella beneath
which we have found indirect shelter.
Some think, some even say, we should therefore free ride on U.S. military power.
Why invest billions to maintain a capable, professional, well-funded and
well-equipped Canadian military?
The answer is obvious: To rely solely on the U.S. security umbrella would make
us a client state. And although we have an incredibly good relationship with our
American friends and neighbours, such a dependence would not be in Canada’s
interest.
That is why doing our fair share is clearly necessary. It is why our commitment
to NORAD, and to our strategic relationship with the United States, is so
critical. It is by pulling our weight in this partnership, and in all our
international partnerships, that we, in fact, have weight.
To put it plainly: Canadian diplomacy and development sometimes require the
backing of hard power. Force is of course always a last resort. But the
principled use of force, together with our allies and governed by international
law, is part of our history and must be part of our future.
To have that capacity requires a substantial investment, which this government
is committed to making. The Minister of Defence will elaborate fully on that
tomorrow. I know he will make Canadians justly proud.
Whatever their politics, Canadians understand that, as a middle power living
next to the world’s only super power, Canada has a huge interest in an
international order based on rules. One in which might is not always right. One
in which more powerful countries are constrained in their treatment of smaller
ones by standards that are internationally respected, enforced and upheld.
The single most important pillar of this, which emerged following the carnage of
the First and Second World Wars, is the sanctity of borders. And that principle,
today, is under siege.
This is why the democratic world has united behind Ukraine. The illegal seizure
of Ukrainian territory by Russia is the first time since the end of the Second
World War that a European power has annexed by force the territory of another
European country. This is not something we can accept or ignore.
The atrocities of Daesh directly challenge both the sanctity of borders and the
liberal international order itself. They create chaos, not only because of the
carnage they perpetrate on their innocent victims, but because of the
humanitarian crises and migratory explosions that follow. This is why the world
has united against this scourge; violent extremism challenges our way of life.
We will always oppose it.
Another key benefit for Canada from an international system based on rules, is
of course free trade. In this sphere as well, beggar-thy-neighbour policies hit
middle powers soonest and hardest. That is the implacable lesson of the 1930s,
and the Great Depression. Rising trade barriers hurt the people they are
intended to help. They curb growth, stifle innovation and kill employment. This
is a lesson we should learn from history. We should not need to teach it to
ourselves again through painful experience.
The international order an earlier generation built faces two big challenges,
both unprecedented.
The first is the rapid emergence of the global South and Asia—most prominently,
China—and the need to integrate these countries into the world’s economic and
political system in a way that is additive, that preserves the best of the old
order that preceded their rise, and that addresses the existential threat of
climate change. This is a problem that simply cannot be solved by nations
working alone. We must work together.
I have focused these remarks on the development of the postwar international
order—a process that was led primarily by the Atlantic powers of North America
and Western Europe.
But we recognize that the global balance of power has changed greatly since
then—and will continue to evolve as more nations prosper.
The G20, in whose creation Canada was instrumental, was an early acknowledgement
of this emerging reality. The countries of Latin America and the Caribbean,
Africa and Asia are on the ascendant, delivering ever-increasing living
standards to fast-growing populations bursting with innovation, creativity and
enterprise.
This is not a trend anyone should fear: it is one we should embrace. Let us
recognize that the peace and prosperity we in the West have enjoyed these past
70 years are desired by all, and increasingly within reach of all. And, as
Canadians, let us be agents of that change.
Let us seize the great opportunity we now have to help the people of the world’s
fastest-growing countries join the global middle class and the multilateral
system that supports it. Peace and prosperity are every person’s birthright. The
second great challenge is an exhaustion in the West of the belief among working
people, the middle class, that the globalized system can help them better their
lives. This is an enormous crisis of confidence. It has the potential, if we let
it, to undermine global prosperity itself.
At the root of this anxiety around the world is a pervasive sense that too many
people have been left behind, betrayed by a system they were promised would make
them better off, but hasn’t.
Here’s the key: it’s true that the system is flawed. But international trade is
the wrong target, Mr. Speaker. The real culprit is domestic policy that fails to
appreciate that continued growth, and political stability, depend on domestic
measures that share the wealth.
Admittedly, this is a complicated problem. If there were easy solutions
everybody would be applying them.
But let’s be clear on this point: it is wrong to view the woes of our middle
class as the result of fiendish behaviour by foreigners.
The truth is that the nature of work has changed because of profound, and
generally benign, global economic innovation. This transformation, driven
primarily by automation and the digital revolution, is broadly positive.
Managed fairly, it has the potential to increase prosperity for all—not just the
global one percent. That means supporting families, supporting pensioners, and
supporting education and retraining—as the Minister of Finance did in his recent
budget.
By better supporting the middle class, and those working hard to join it, Canada
is defining an approach to globalization that can be a model. At the same time,
we strongly support the global 2030 Goals for Sustainable Development, Mr.
Speaker. The world abroad and the world at home are not two solitudes. They are
connected.
Likewise, by embracing multiculturalism and diversity, Canadians are embodying a
way of life that works. We can say this in all humility, but also without any
false self-effacement: Canadians know about living side-by side with people of
diverse origins and beliefs, whose ancestors hail from the far corners of the
globe, in harmony and peace. We’re good at it. Watch how we do it.
We say this in the full knowledge that we also have problems of our own to
overcome—most egregiously the injustices suffered by Indigenous people in
Canada. We must never flinch from acknowledging this great failure, even as we
do the hard work of seeking restoration and reconciliation.
Now, it is clearly not our role to impose our values around the world, Mr.
Speaker. No one appointed us the world's policeman. But it is our role to
clearly stand for these rights both in Canada and abroad.
It is our role to provide refuge to the persecuted and downtrodden, to the
extent we are able, as we are so proud to have done for more than 40,000 Syrian
refugees.
It is our role to set a standard for how states should treat women, gays and
lesbians, transgendered people, racial, ethnic, cultural, linguistic and
religious minorities, and Indigenous people.
We can and must play an active role in the preservation and strengthening of the
global order from which we have benefited so greatly. Doing so is in our
interest, because our own open society is most secure in a world of open
societies. And it is under threat in a world where open societies are under
threat.
In short, Canadian liberalism is a precious idea. It would not long survive in a
world dominated by the clash of great powers and their vassals, struggling for
supremacy or, at best, an uneasy détente.
Canada can work for better, Mr. Speaker. We must work for better.
Let me pause here and address the United States, directly. As the Prime Minister
said last week: Canada is deeply disappointed by the decision by the U.S.
federal government to withdraw from the Paris Agreement on climate.
That said, we will continue to seek opportunities for constructive progress on
the environment, wherever we can find them, with our counterparts in Washington
and across the great United States, at all levels of government and with
partners in business, labour and civil society.
As I have said, we Canadians can rightly be proud of the role we played in
building the postwar order, and the unprecedented peace and prosperity that
followed.
Yet even as we celebrate our own part in that project, it’s only fair for us to
acknowledge the larger contribution of the United States. For in blood, in
treasure, in strategic vision, in leadership, America has paid the lion's share.
The United States has truly been the indispensable nation, Mr. Speaker. For
their unique, seven-decades-long contribution to our shared peace and
prosperity, and on behalf of all Canadians, I would like to profoundly thank our
American friends.
As I have argued, Canada believes strongly that this stable, predictable
international order has been deeply in our national interest. And we believe it
has helped foster peace and prosperity for our southern neighbours, too.
Yet it would be naive or hypocritical to claim before this House that all
Americans today agree. Indeed, many of the voters in last year's presidential
election cast their ballots, animated in part by a desire to shrug off the
burden of world leadership. To say this is not controversial: it is simply a
fact.
Canada is grateful, and will always be grateful, to our neighbour for the
outsized role it has played in the world. And we seek and will continue to seek
to persuade our friends that their continued international leadership is very
much in their national interest—as well as that of the rest of the free world.
Yet we also recognize that this is ultimately not our decision to make. It is a
choice Americans must make for themselves.
The fact that our friend and ally has come to question the very worth of its
mantle of global leadership, puts into sharper focus the need for the rest of us
to set our own clear and sovereign course. For Canada that course must be the
renewal, indeed the strengthening, of the postwar multilateral order.
We will follow this path, with open hands and open hearts extended to our
American friends, seeking to make common cause as we have so often in the past.
And indeed, as we continue to do now on multiple fronts—from border security, to
the defence of North America through NORAD, to the fight against Daesh, to our
efforts within NATO, to nurturing and improving our trading relationship, which
is the strongest in the world.
And, at the same time, we will work with other like-minded people and countries
who share our aims.
Mr. Speaker, to put this in sharper focus, those aims are as follows:
First, we will robustly support the rules-based international order, and all its
institutions, and seek ways to strengthen and improve them.
We will strongly support the multilateral forums where such discussions are
held—including the G7, the G20, the OAS, APEC, the WTO, the Commonwealth and La
Francophonie, the Arctic Council, and of course NATO and the UN.
A cornerstone of our multilateral agenda is our steadfast commitment to the
Transatlantic Alliance. Our bond is manifest in CETA, our historic trade
agreement with the European Union—which we believe in and warmly support—and in
our military deployment this summer to Latvia.
There can be no clearer sign that NATO and Article 5 are at the heart of
Canada’s national security policy.
We will strive for leadership in all these multilateral forums. We are honoured
to be hosting the G7 next year, and we are energetically pursuing a two-year
term on the UN Security Council. We seek this UN seat because we wish to be
heard. For we are safer and more prosperous, Mr. Speaker, when more of the world
shares Canadian values.
Those values include feminism, and the promotion of the rights of women and
girls.
It is important, and historic, that we have a prime minister and a government
proud to proclaim ourselves feminists. Women’s rights are human rights. That
includes sexual reproductive rights and the right to safe and accessible
abortions. These rights are at the core of our foreign policy.
To that end, in the coming days, my colleague the Minister of International
Development and La Francophonie will unveil Canada’s first feminist
international assistance policy, which will target women’s rights and gender
equality. We will put Canada at the forefront of this global effort.
This is a matter of basic justice and also basic economics. We know that
empowering women, overseas and here at home, makes families and countries more
prosperous. Canada’s values are informed by our historical duality of French and
English; by our cooperative brand of federalism; by our multi-cultural,
multi-ethnic and multi-linguistic citizenry; and by our geography—bridging
Atlantic, Pacific and Arctic. Our values are informed by the traditions and
aspirations of the Indigenous people in Canada. And our values include an
unshakeable commitment to pluralism, human rights and the rule of law.
Second: We will make the necessary investments in our military, to not only
redress years of neglect and underfunding, but also to place the Canadian Armed
Forces on a new footing—with the equipment, training, resources and consistent,
predictable financing they need to do their difficult, dangerous and important
work.
We owe this to our women and men in uniform. We will not let them down, Mr.
Speaker.
Canada’s broader interest in investing in a capable, professional and robust
military is very clear: If middle powers do not implicate themselves in the
furtherance of peace and stability around the world, that will be left to the
Great Powers to settle among themselves. This would not be in Canada’s interest.
Third, we are a trading nation. Far from seeing trade as a zero-sum game, we
believe in trading relationships that benefit all parties. We look forward to
working with our continental partners to modernize the North American Free Trade
Agreement, and to making a great trading partnership even better. We will also
intensify our efforts to diversify Canadian trade worldwide. We will actively
seek new trade agreements that further Canadian economic interests and that
reflect our values—with the Canada-EU Trade Agreement as our template.
We are proud of the role Canada has played in creating a rules-based
international trading order. We believe in the WTO and will continue our work to
make it stronger, and more responsive to the needs of ordinary people in Canada
and around the world.
We believe in progressive trade that works for working people. That is why we
are very proud that this month, Canada will ratify the last of the fundamental
conventions of the International Labour Organization.
In summary, we will be tireless in pursing our national interest, tireless in
upholding progressive Canadian values, tireless in working to create a
rules-based international order for the 21st century. Seventy years ago Canada
played a pivotal role in forming the postwar international order. We are now
called—by virtue of our unique experience, expertise, geography, diversity and
values—to do this again, for a new century.
Mr. Speaker, these are ambitious objectives. There is no guarantee of success.
We set them, not in the assumption that success will come easily, but in the
certain knowledge that it will not. We will venture, in noble and good causes.
We will risk. We will enjoy victories—and we will suffer defeats. But we will
keep working toward a better world, Mr. Speaker, because that is what Canadians
do.
Let me conclude on a personal note.
A popular criticism today of the argument I am making here, is that all such
ideas are abstract, perhaps of interest to the so-called Laurentian elite, or
the media, or the Ottawa bubble, but not at all relevant to “real” Canadians.
That line of reasoning is the ultimate, elite condescension; it is nonsense. And
in reply, I offer the example of my grandfather, John Wilbur Freeland.
He was born in Peace River, Alberta—the son of a pioneer family. Wilbur was 24
in 1940, and making a bit of a living as a cowboy and boxer. His nickname was
“Pretty Boy” Freeland.
My grandpa was the opposite of an Upper Canada elite. But in the darkest days of
the Second World War, Wilbur enlisted to serve. Two of his brothers, Carleton
and Warren, joined up too. Wilbur and Carleton came home. Warren did not.
My grandfather told me they signed up partly for the excitement—Europe, even at
war, was an exotic destination for the youths of the Peace Country.
But there was more to it than a young man’s thirst for adventure. My grandfather
was one of a generation of Canadians who intuitively understood the connection
between their lives, and those of people they’d never met, whose speech they
couldn’t comprehend, who lived on a continent so far away as to constitute, back
then, another world.
That generation of Canadians—the Greatest Generation, we call them, with good
reason—had survived the Great Depression. They were born in the aftermath of the
First World War. They appreciated viscerally that a world without fixed borders
or rules for the global economy, was a world of strife and poverty. They sought
to prevent that from ever happening again.
That is why they risked and gave their lives to fight in a European war. That is
why, when they came home, they cheerfully contributed to the great project of
rebuilding Europe and creating a postwar world order. That is why they counted
themselves lucky to be able to do so.
They were our parents, and grandparents, and great-grandparents. The challenge
we face today is significant, to be sure. But it pales next to the task they
faced, and met.
Our job today is to preserve their achievement, and to build on it; to use the
multilateral structures they created as the foundation for planetary accords and
institutions fit for the new realities of this century.
They rose to their generation’s great challenge. And so can we.
Contacts
Media Relations Office
Global Affairs Canada
343-203-7700
media@international.gc.ca
Germany: Surge in Stabbings and Knife Crimes
Soeren Kern/Gatestone Institute/June 06/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=56033
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10488/germany-stabbings
Not only are knife-related crimes surging, but the perpetrators and victims of
such crimes are increasingly younger and increasingly female.
Germany's knife-crime problem is being exacerbated by its lenient judicial
system, in which offenders receive relatively light sentences, even for serious
crimes. In many instances, individuals who are arrested for knife-related crimes
are released after questioning from police. This practice allows criminal
suspects to continue committing crimes with virtual impunity.
More than 1,600 knife-related crimes were reported in Germany during just the
first five months of 2017 — an average of 300 such crimes each month, or ten a
day.
A Syrian migrant was stabbed to death in northern Germany by another Syrian
because he was eating ice cream during Ramadan. The murder — which occurred in
broad daylight in a busy pedestrian shopping area in Oldenburg and caused great
consternation among local citizens — is not just the latest example of Sharia
law being enforced on German streets. The crime also highlighted the growing
epidemic of knife violence in Germany.
Knives, axes and machetes have become weapons of choice for criminals in
Germany, which has some of the strictest gun laws in Europe. Knives are not only
being used to carry out jihadist attacks, but increasingly to commit homicides,
robberies, home invasions, sexual assaults, honor killings and many other kinds
of violent crime.
Reliable statistics on knife violence in Germany do not exist. A search of
German police blotters, however, shows that during the past ten years the number
of knife-related crimes in Germany has increased by more than 1,200%. Around
4,000 such crimes were reported to police in 2016, up from just 300 in 2007.
It is also impossible to determine how many of these knife crimes involved
migrants. Increased censorship by the police and the media, aimed at stemming
anti-immigration sentiments, makes the public incapable of knowing the names and
national origins of many perpetrators or victims.
The surge in knife-related violence in Germany does, however, coincide with
Chancellor Angela Merkel's decision to allow in some two million migrants from
Africa, Asia and the Middle East. The number of reported knife crimes in Germany
jumped by 600% during the past four years — from about 550 in 2013 to nearly
4,000 in 2016.
Police reports show that both migrants and non-migrants are responsible for the
increase in knife crimes in Germany. Merkel's open-door migration policies
appear to have set in motion a self-reinforcing cycle of violence in which more
and more people are carrying knives in public — including for self-defense. Her
policies appear to be leading to more and more stabbings, especially when
alcohol is involved.
Not only are knife-related crimes surging, but the perpetrators and victims of
such crimes are increasingly younger and increasingly female:
In Bochum, a 19-year-old woman stabbed two boys, aged 12 and 13 years. Police
said the three had been arguing when the woman pulled out a knife. The boys ran
away and tried to hide in a parking garage, but the woman pursued and attacked
them.
In Soest, a 16-year-old boy stabbed a 17-year-old classmate seven times in the
chest in a dispute over a girl. The victim was hospitalized with
life-threatening injuries to his heart. The assailant was released after a
psychiatrist persuaded prosecutors that he could not be held responsible for his
actions because he acted in the "heat of passion" (im Affekt).
In Essen, two boys, aged 11 and 13, pulled a knife on a 20-year-old woman in an
effort to rob her of her cellphone. She resisted and called police, who detained
the attackers.
In Wuppertal, a "southern looking man" (südländisches Erscheinungsbild) stabbed
a 13-year-old boy after he looked at his attacker supposedly "the wrong way."
In Kirchdorf, a "southerner" (südländische Erscheinung) pulled a knife on a
12-year-old girl.
In Nachrodt-Wiblingwerde, a group of teenagers drew a knife on a 17-year-old
girl after she "provoked" them.
In Berlin-Neukölln, a 16-year-old boy was stabbed during an altercation with a
32-year-old man.
In Neumünster, a 15-year-old stabbed a 19-year-old after two groups of teenagers
got into an altercation.
In Gevelsberg, a "dark-skinned" man (dunkelhäutig) stabbed a 14-year-old girl
near the central train station as she was walking home.
Some knife attacks appear to have political or religious motives:
In Hanover, a 16-year-old German-Moroccan girl stabbed a police officer in the
neck with a kitchen knife. Police said the incident, which occurred at the
central train station, was the first jihadist attack in Germany inspired by the
Islamic State. "The perpetrator did not display any emotion," a police
spokesperson said. "Her only concern was for her headscarf. She was concerned
that her headscarf be put back on properly after she was arrested. Whether the
police officer survived, she did not care."
In Prien am Chiemsee, an Afghan man stabbed to death an Afghan woman who had
converted to Christianity. The attacker ambushed the woman as she was exiting a
grocery store with her two children.
In Munich, a man shouting "Allahu Akbar" and "infidels must die" stabbed one
person to death and slashed three others in an attack at a train station.
In Würzburg, on a train, an Afghan asylum seeker shouting "Allahu Akbar"
attacked five people with an axe.
In Oberhausen, a man shouting "Allahu Akhbar" stabbed a 66-year-old woman and a
57-year-old man who were picnicking.
Knife attacks are also common during brawls involving feuding ethnic groups:
In Gelsenkirchen, gangs of Syrian and Lebanese youths got into a mass knife
fight in the city center. Police said that the level of violence was "brutal."
In Mülheim, around 80 members of two rival Lebanese clans got into a knife fight
in the center of the city. It took hundreds of police, armed with machine guns,
dogs and helicopters, more than three hours to restore order.
In Hanover, members of two rival Kurdish clans got into a knife fight in front
of the central train station.
In Mainz-Gonsenheim, several people were stabbed during a mass brawl between
Syrians and Iranians.
In Dortmund, an immense brawl ensued after a member of one ethnic group pulled a
knife on someone from another ethnic group.
In Neumünster, a 15-year-old stabbed a 19-year-old after two groups of teenagers
from feuding ethnic groups got into an altercation.
In Gütersloh, two men were stabbed and seriously wounded during a fight between
two feuding ethnic groups.
In Leipzig, an Iraqi man was stabbed and seriously injured during a massive
brawl in front of a Kebab restaurant. When police tried to intervene, the mob
attacked them with bottles and stones
In Hamm-Herringen, two men were stabbed and seriously wounded during a fight
between two feuding ethnic groups.
Other knife attacks are seemingly random:
In Hamburg, a 16-year-old boy and his 15-year-old girlfriend were walking along
the banks of the Alster, a lake in the heart of the city, when a stranger
ambushed them from behind and plunged a knife into his back. The attacker then
pushed the girl into the water and walked away. The girl survived but the boy
died. The suspect, a "southern-looking" (südländischer Erscheinung) man in his
early twenties, remains at large. Police say the victims were not robbed and
there is no evident motive for the crime: they said that the suspect appears to
have randomly stabbed the boy just because he felt like it.
In Bremen, a 29-year-old man was randomly stabbed and seriously wounded at the
Waterfront shopping center. The entire facility was closed after the attack.
In Dessau-Roßlau, two Syrian asylum seekers randomly stabbed two German female
passersby in a pedestrian zone in broad daylight.
In Düsseldorf, a man brandishing a machete randomly stabbed an 80-year-old man
in the Kalkum district. He remains at large.
In Wrohm, an Eritrean migrant randomly stabbed a 51-year-old woman.
Knife-related incidents are also becoming increasingly common on public
transport hubs:
In Hamburg-Billstedt, two brothers were stabbed during a robbery at the
Legienstraße subway station.
In Frankfurt, two "presumably East Europeans" (mutmaßlich Osteuropäer) wielding
knives attacked commuters at the "Bonames Mitte" subway station.
In Dortmund-Bochum, two feuding ethnic groups got into a knife fight on the S-1
line.
In Dresden, a man carrying a 20-centimer (8-inch) knife was arrested at the
central train station.
In Schönefeld, a man randomly pulled a knife on a traveler at the airport. It
remains unclear how the perpetrator passed the knife through airport security.
In Baden-Baden, a man wielding a knife threatened passengers on a train.
Knives appear to be the weapon of choice in so-called honor killings:
In Kiel, a German-Turkish man stabbed to death his estranged Turkish wife in
front of a daycare center.
In Bocholt, a Lebanese man stabbed to death his Moroccan wife, the mother of his
three children, because he thought she wanted to divorce him.
In Scheeßel, an Iraqi man stabbed to death his wife. Police described the murder
as an honor killing.
In Ahaus, a Nigerian asylum seeker stabbed to death a Hindu woman after she
seemingly offended his honor by rejecting his romantic advances. The woman was
employed at the asylum shelter where her attacker lived.
In Hanover-Mühlenberg, a Serbian man stabbed his ex-girlfriend after she ended
their relationship and had begun seeing someone else.
In Berlin, a 32-year-old Bosnian man stabbed to death his former girlfriend
after she ended their abusive relationship.
In Hanau, a Syrian refugee stabbed to death his 30-year-old sister, who was 23
weeks pregnant and was accused of having brought shame to her family. Her unborn
child also died in the attack.
In Freiburg, a Syrian asylum seeker stabbed his wife, a Kurdish Christian who
had moved out of the couple's apartment, but had returned to collect some
personal belongings.
In Köln-Buchheim, an Iraqi man stabbed to death his 19-year-old daughter because
he did not approve of her boyfriend. The man may never face justice; he is
believed to have fled to Iraq.
In Bonn, a Palestinian brandishing a "Rambo knife" and shouting "Allahu Akbar"
tried to behead a doctor. The attacker's 19-year-old son had complained about
the doctor's treatment for a fractured leg. The man, holding the doctor down on
the floor, said: "Apologize to my son. Go down on your knees and kiss his hand."
Germany's knife-crime problem is being exacerbated by its lenient judicial
system, in which offenders receive relatively light sentences, even for serious
crimes. In many instances, individuals who are arrested for knife-related crimes
are released after questioning from police. This practice allows criminal
suspects to continue committing crimes with virtual impunity.
In Berlin, for example, a migrant who stabbed and seriously injured another
migrant after he refused to give him alcohol and drugs was released and
financially compensated because no witnesses to the crime could be found.
Also in the German capital, investigators discovered that Anis Amri, the
24-year-old suspect in the December 2016 Berlin terrorist attack in which 12
people died, had been involved in a knife-fight in the city's Neukölln district
in July 2016, but police failed to arrest him. Had Amri been deported, as he
should have been, the Berlin attack possibly could have been prevented.
According to Arnold Plickert, the deputy national chairman of the GdP police
union, much of the knife-violence in Germany can be attributed to certain
segments of society that live according to their own rules, not those of the
German state. In an interview with knife-blog.com, a German forum for knife
enthusiasts, he said:
"We are monitoring a specific target group, which mainly consists of young males
who are armed in everyday life and basically are dedicated to armed
confrontation. We see this particularly in large Arab families, Lebanese clans,
for whom knives are standard gear. Knives are also basic equipment for career
criminals and members of youth gangs."
Plickert also noted changes in German society, including a growing disrespect
for police and rescue workers: "From my point of view, I can say that the
inhibition threshold to the use of violence has significantly decreased."
Meanwhile, more than 1,600 knife-related crimes were reported in Germany during
just the first five months of 2017 — an average of 300 such crimes each month,
or ten a day. Notable knife-related incidents during the month of May include:
In Freiburg, a Turkish man stabbed another Turk sitting in the passenger seat of
a car stopped at a traffic light. In Karlsruhe, a Somali asylum seeker stabbed
another Somali asylum seeker. Police said the attack was an act of revenge: the
stabbing victim had recently stabbed the stabber. In Aachen, a North African man
pulled a knife on a security guard at a grocery store after he was caught
shoplifting.
In Schwerin, a Syrian man pulled a knife on another Syrian man in a dispute over
a 15-year-old girl who is not Syrian. In Gelsenkirchen, a 20-year-old pulled a
knife on a 46-year-old man during a traffic incident. In Bad Oldesloe, four
teenagers pulled a knife and robbed a 61-year-old man. In Wiesbaden, a
"southern-looking" man pulled a knife and tried to rob a man at a sports
complex. In Hofheim, a man with an "Eastern European accent" pulled a knife and
tried to rob a store.
In Peine, an asylum seeker from Sudan stabbed and seriously wounded an asylum
seeker from the Ivory Coast. In Kassel, a Syrian migrant stabbed a Turkish man
during a dispute over money. In Bad Reichenhall, a man stabbed another man in
the neck during an altercation at a bar. In Bühl, a man stabbed several people
at a public swimming pool. In Wiesbaden, a man was stabbed and seriously wounded
during an altercation at a city park.
In Augsburg, two men were stabbed by a random attacker at a grill fest. In
Hamburg, an unknown assailant stabbed a migrant from Guinea-Bissau. In Rheine,
two men speaking German with a French accent pulled a knife on a woman and
robbed her.
In Berlin, a man stabbed and seriously wounded his former girlfriend and her new
partner during an altercation at a restaurant in Waidmannslust. In Duisburg, a
man pulled a knife on a cashier at a supermarket. In Salzgitter, a man stabbed
another man in a restaurant. In Freiburg, an Eastern European-looking man (osteuropäisch)
stabbed a 15-year-old boy during an altercation at a restaurant. In Danndorf,
three men were stabbed during an altercation over drugs.
In Mölln, a man stabbed a co-worker in the back. In Michelstadt, a man stabbed
another man during an altercation. In Essen, a man pulled a knife on his wife at
the central train station. In Karlsruhe, a man was stabbed by his girlfriend's
former boyfriend. In Cologne-Ostheim, a 16-year-old student pulled a knife on
his classmates and teacher.
In Neuenburg, two men were stabbed during an altercation at a restaurant. In
Kassel, a man was stabbed in the neck during an altercation at a café. In
Dortmund, a man was robbed at knifepoint at the central bus station.
In Cottbus, members of Syrian gang stabbed five Germans. In Lich, a man was
stabbed during an altercation. In Kassel, a man was randomly stabbed by a man
with a "southern appearance" (südländisches Äußeres). In Preetz, a man pulled a
knife on shoppers at a supermarket. In Dortmund, two men were stabbed during an
altercation in the city center. In Frankfurt-Schwanheim, a man wielding a knife
robbed a local post office.
In Pforzheim, a 53-year-old Tajik man stabbed to death his 50-year-old wife at
her place of employment, a Christian daycare center. It remains unclear if the
woman was a convert to Christianity. In Wardenburg, an Iraqi man stabbed to
death his wife, the mother of his five children, while she was asleep in her
bed.
In Tübingen, a man was stabbed and seriously injured at the central train
station during an altercation. In Hamburg-St. Georg, two men were stabbed and
seriously injured near the train station. In Berlin-Wedding, two brothers were
stabbed during an altercation with another man at a Kebab restaurant. In
Kreuztal, a 53-year-old man was stabbed and seriously wounded during an
altercation at his home.
In Lübeck, a 21-year-old man was stabbed and seriously injured during an
altercation between two groups near the central bus station. In Diez, a woman
stabbed a man in the back. In Ründeroth, a 17-year-old was stabbed and seriously
wounded at a local festival. In Neuendettelsau, an Ethiopian asylum seeker
stabbed his girlfriend in the stomach at a restaurant after she allegedly
"provoked" him. The woman, five months pregnant, survived but the unborn baby
died.
**Soeren Kern is a Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute.
Follow him on Facebook and on Twitter.
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