LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS
BULLETIN
June 14/17
Compiled &
Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The
Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For Today
I do not call you servants any longer, because the servant
does not know what the master is doing; but I have called you friends, because I
have made known to you everything that I have heard from my Father
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint John 15/15-17/:"I do not call you
servants any longer, because the servant does not know what the master is doing;
but I have called you friends, because I have made known to you everything that
I have heard from my Father. You did not choose me but I chose you. And I
appointed you to go and bear fruit, fruit that will last, so that the Father
will give you whatever you ask him in my name. I am giving you these commands so
that you may love one another."
When they had prayed, the place in which they were gathered
together was shaken; and they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and spoke the
word of God with boldness
Acts of the Apostles 04/23-31/:"After they were released, they went to their
friends and reported what the chief priests and the elders had said to them.
When they heard it, they raised their voices together to God and said,
‘Sovereign Lord, who made the heaven and the earth, the sea, and everything in
them, it is you who said by the Holy Spirit through our ancestor David, your
servant: "Why did the Gentiles rage, and the peoples imagine vain things? The
kings of the earth took their stand, and the rulers have gathered together
against the Lord and against his Messiah." For in this city, in fact, both Herod
and Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles and the peoples of Israel, gathered
together against your holy servant Jesus, whom you anointed, to do whatever your
hand and your plan had predestined to take place. And now, Lord, look at their
threats, and grant to your servants to speak your word with all boldness, while
you stretch out your hand to heal, and signs and wonders are performed through
the name of your holy servant Jesus.’ When they had prayed, the place in which
they were gathered together was shaken; and they were all filled with the Holy
Spirit and spoke the word of God with boldness."
Titles For Latest LCCC
Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on June
13-14/17
The Israeli Spy Affair Lebanon Is Obsessed With/Jerusalem Post/June 13/17
Two Choices to Resolve the Qatar Crisis/Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Asharq Al Awsat/June
13/17
Qatar’s Promotion of Regime Change and Mobilization of Finances/Michael
Stephens/The Washington Post/June 13/17
Egyptian Writers Debate Possibility That Israel Will Join Arab League After
Resolution Of Conflict With Palestinians/MEMRI/June 13/17
How to Send the Wrong Message to Palestinians/Bassam Tawil/Gatestone
Institute/June 13/17
Qatar: When a leader fails/Abdullah bin Bijad Al-Otaibi/Al Arabiya/June 13/17
Making sense of the new phase of street terrorism/Dr. Halla Diyab/Al Arabiya/June
13/17
Joint list a new chapter in the war against terror/Turki Aldakhil/Al Arabiya/June
13/17
Titles For Latest
Lebanese Related News published on
June 13-14/17
Common vision for vote law has been reached:
Official
Russian Ambassador To Israel: We Do Not Consider Hamas And Hizbullah To Be
Terrorists At All
Cyprus President in Beirut, Calls for Unifying Anti-Terrorism Efforts
Final Agreement Reached on Electoral Law
Bassil Welcomes New Electoral Law, Says It 'Greatly Improves Representation'
Jumblat Slams 'Complicated' Electoral Law as Marada Rejects 'Preferred Vote'
Mechanism
Garbage Dumped in Sea Off Lebanese Coast Sparks Outrage
Hariri Says New Electoral Law 'an Achievement for Entire Country'
Mustaqbal Urges Approval of Electoral Law in Wednesday Cabinet Session
Aoun Stresses 'Respect for Constitution' on Eve of Cabinet Meet on Vote Law
'Only prayer' can help with vote law: Berri
Cypriot FM Urges Lebanon to Agree on Vote Law
Judge Indicts Killer and Associates Involved in Hamoush's Murder
Adwan Says 'Turning Back is Impossible', Vote Law Will be Approved
Patriarch Yazegi welcomes Cypriot President
Ogasapian: Election law which discounts women quota is worst possible
Abu Faour: No vote on election law inside Cabinet
Hariri chairs meeting of ministerial panel tasked with devising election law
Geagea meets EU delegation at Maarab
The Israeli Spy Affair Lebanon Is Obsessed With
Titles For Latest
LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
June 13-14/17
Three Christians are sentenced
to 80 lashes by Sharia court in Iran for taking communion wine
Saudi King Salman, Russian President Discuss Counter-Terrorism in Phone Call
Qatar Ignores Gulf Requests, Stresses Adherence to Kuwait Mediation
Riyadh Condemns ‘Duality’ of Qatari Policy
King Salman to Receive Iraqi PM Wednesday in Jeddah
Qatar Makes ‘Siege’ Claims as its Tries to Counter Diplomatic Crisis
Egypt Urges Interpol to Issue Red Notices for 26 Qatar-Linked Terrorists
Hamas Delegation Returns to Gaza
Ankara Intervenes to Halt FSA Infighting in Syria’s al-Bab
Terrorist Attack in Awamiya Kills One Saudi Soldier, Wounds Two
France and Britain Announce Anti-Terror Action Plan
Qatar Foreign Minister Denounces 'Unfair', 'Illegal' Sanctions
Iraq PM Abadi Says Kurdish Referendum Untimely
Terrified Civilians Hide from Gunfire in Mosul Pre-School
France Launches Probe into LafargeHolcim's Syrian Activities
77 Killed In Bangladesh Landslides: Police
Report: IS chemical weapons capability degraded
North Korea releases U.S. student, Tillerson says
Egypt parliament committee passes Saudi islands deal
Latest Lebanese
Related News published on
June 13-14/17
Common vision for vote law has been reached: Official
The Daily Star/BEIRUT: The Ministerial Committee tasked with finalizing the vote
law Tuesday announced that a common vision for the vote law has been reached,
and it will be presented at a Cabinet meeting at the Baabda Palace.
A Ministerial Committee meeting headed by Prime Minister Saad Hariri was held
Tuesday evening, bringing together Education Minister Marwan Hamadeh, State
Minister for Parliamentary Affairs Ali Qanso, Social Affairs Minister Pierre
Abou Assi, Minister for the Displaced Talal Arslan, Interior Minister Nouhad
Machnouk, Industry Minister Hussein Hajj Hasan, Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil,
Culture Minister Ghattas Khoury, Finance Minister Ali Hasan Khalil, Public Works
Minister Youssef Fenianos, and Tourism Minister Avedis Kadanian.
A press release from Hariri's press office announced that the political parties'
comments on the draft law were presented in the meeting, reaching a common
vision which will be presented at a Cabinet meeting Wednesday at the Baabda
Palace.
After the meeting, Fenianos said "All the parties have voiced the observations
they have recorded, and they will be presented in the Cabinet."
As the meeting was underway, several politicians denounced the suggested
electoral law, saying it is the "worst possible law".Minister of State for
Women’s Affairs Jean Ogasapian voiced his opinion via Twitter, saying “some of
us have seen this evening that the proposed electoral law is the worst possible.
Indeed, a law that ignores the promise of the women’s quota is the worst.”
The National News Agency quoted MP Wael Abou Faour saying “the issue of
expatriates has been postponed. There will be no vote on the law, neither in the
committee meeting, nor in the cabinet, and whoever has objections, record them.
This law is the worst possible.”MP Hussein Khalil was quoted by local media also
saying that it is the worst law possible, adamant that it would not be voted on.
Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil confirmed on Tuesday that politicians have agreed
on a new parliamentary vote law that is proportional and allows Lebanese in the
diaspora to vote for lawmakers. “This law does not rectify representation but
has taken us from one place to another,” Bassil said following a Free Patriotic
Movement meeting in Beirut’s Sin al-Fil quarter, shortly after rival parties
finalized their deliberation on the vote law at the Grand Serail. “There are 15
constituencies that have improved the representation of Christians,” Bassil
said, admitting that not all of his demands were approved.
“The big achievement for all the Lebanese was through the increase of six seats
for the Lebanese in diaspora,” Bassil said. “The battle of improving
representation is continuous.”The agreement also includes a one-year technical
extension of lawmakers’ mandate. The agreement also introduces a magnetic voting
card that would reportedly allow Lebanese voters living outside their electoral
constituencies to vote at their constituency of residence, within Lebanon and
abroad.
Unapproved demands included granting servicemen the right to vote, and a quota
for women in Parliament, which was reportedly rejected by Hezbollah.
Bassil’s announcement followed a flurry of activity and mixed messages earlier
in the day.
Prime Minister Saad Hariri cancelled all of his scheduled appointments for
Tuesday to focus on the vote law issue. Five representatives of key political
blocs, including the FPM which Bassil leads, Amal Movement, Hezbollah,
Progressive Socialist Party, and Lebanese Forces, met as well. Lebanese Forces
MP George Adwan sounded positive on his way to the meeting, while Speaker Nabih
Berri had earlier seemed relatively pessimistic regarding the vote law
agreement.
"You have to pray, as only prayer is beneficial now," Berri was quoted as saying
in a Parliament statement Tuesday, when asked for updates about the new
electoral vote law.
President Michel Aoun, Berri and Hariri agreed on the basic outlines of the vote
law at Baabda Palace last week. Progress was delayed slightly when Bassil
demanded to link the vote law with “a political agreement” confirming parity
between Muslims and Christians in a constitutional text, as well as the
establishment of a Senate as stipulated by the 1989 Taif Accord.
Bassil’s proposal on equal Christian-Muslim standing in the Constitution has
been criticized publicly by Berri and implicitly by Hariri’s Future Movement
bloc, as both expressed concern that drafting a new foundational text at a time
of heightened regional tensions may exacerbate sectarian conflict in Lebanon.
The mechanism of a preferential vote and the vote tallying procedures were also
approved. “The new electoral law is a key milestone in the national and
political life in Lebanon,” Aoun said, adding that it would give the country a
new Parliament that “would honestly embody the choices and aspirations of the
Lebanese people in shaping the future of their country."
Russian Ambassador To Israel: We Do Not Consider Hamas And
Hizbullah To Be Terrorists At All
MEMRI/June 13/17/Russian Ambassador to Israel Alexander Shein said, in a June 9,
2017 interview with the Israeli Russian-language Channel 9 TV, that Russia did
not consider Hamas and Hizbullah to be terrorist organizations, since they have
not carried out attacks in Russian territory or against Russian interests
abroad. Interviewer: "Let me ask you quite a painful question regarding Russia's
attitude toward Hamas and Hizbullah. Let me ask you: Do you in Russia understand
that from our perspective, Hamas and Hizbullah are terrorists, who are no
different from ISIS? They carry out terror attacks and fire missiles at Israel –
and let me remind you that we have many Israelis with Russian citizenship – yet
Moscow continues to conduct a dialogue with them."
Alexander Shein: "We do not consider these organizations to be terrorist. True,
they are radical organizations, which sometimes adhere to extremist political
views. Let me explain why we do not – and can not – designate them as terrorist
organizations. Russian law – the Supreme Court, following an appeal by the
prosecution – defines terrorist organizations as such when they intentionally
conduct acts of terror in Russian territory, or against Russian interests abroad
– installations, embassies, offices, or citizens. You equate ISIS [with Hamas
and Hizbullah], but we think this is wrong."
Interviewer: "I do equate them, because when rockets were fired at Tel Aviv a
few years ago, and people were forced to run for shelter, it was indiscriminate
[fire], which did not distinguish between Russian, Israeli, or other passports.
They all faced the same rocket fire. So what is rocket fire if not an act of
terror or of war?"
Alexander Shein: "Of course we condemn such fire."
Interviewer: "That's all you can say? There are bad terrorists and good
terrorists?"
Alexander Shein: "No, we do not consider them to be terrorists at all." [...]
Cyprus President in Beirut, Calls for Unifying
Anti-Terrorism Efforts
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 13/17/Lebanese President Michel Aoun and his Cypriot
counterpart, President Nicos Anastasiades during a joint news conference
following talks at the Baabda Palace. (Dalati & Nohra) Beirut – Lebanese
President Michel Aoun and his Cypriot counterpart Nicos Anastasiades agreed on
Monday to unify efforts aimed at fighting terrorism and stressed the importance
of bilateral cooperation between the two countries. In a joint news conference
following an extensive meeting at the Baabda Palace on Monday, Aoun encouraged
further cooperation between Lebanon and Cyprus in oil and gas, as well as
collaboration in the energy sector. “We highly encourage the governments of both
of our countries to boost cooperation within the fields of gas and oil,” Aoun
said, highlighting the substantial need to bolster fruitful dialogue and
cooperation between Lebanon and Cyprus in the field of energy. The Lebanese
president also called for facilitating the conditions to export Lebanese
agricultural and industrial products to Cypriot markets. Underlining Lebanon’s
support for the unity of Cypriot lands, Aoun stressed the need to reach a
compromise that guarantees stability all across Cyprus, and among its entire
population. The Cypriot president, for his part, hailed the historic ties
between his country and Lebanon. “We are working to boost the existing ties
between the Cypriot and Lebanese peoples,” Anastasiades said. “Our relationship
exceeds the close geographical distance. It is deeply rooted in rigid bonds,” he
added. Following his talks with Aoun, the Cypriot president said that he had
underlined to need to consolidate relations at all levels in order to reach a
mutual vision towards peace and stability. “I assure you that Cyprus will pursue
efforts to help Lebanon face looming challenges,” he added. He also praised
Lebanon for hosting of more than two million Syrian refugees and pledged more
support through European Union channels
Final Agreement Reached on Electoral Law
Naharnet/June 13/17/A final political agreement was reached Tuesday afternoon on
the 15-district electoral law and the Cabinet is expected to approve it during
its session on Wednesday. "An agreement has been reached on the electoral law
and all obstacles have been resolved," LBCI television reported. According to
MTV, the draft law splits Beirut into two districts and moves the minorities
seat to the first district. The first district contains Ashrafieh, Rmeil, Saifi
and Medawwar while the second contains Bashoura, Marfa, Zokak al-Blat, Mazraa,
Ras Beirut, Ain el-Mreisseh, Minet el-Hosn and Mousaitbeh. The parties also
agreed that any electoral list has to reach a certain threshold to become
eligible to win seats. The threshold is determined by the so-called electoral
quotient: the total number of voters in a certain district divided by the number
of seats. The so-called preferred vote will meanwhile be counted in the
administrative district and not in the electoral district, a demand that the
Free Patriotic Movement had long called for. An agreement was also reached on
other technical details while no agreement was reached on the issues of
“allowing the armed forces to vote, lowering the voting age and introducing a
women's quota.”The parties also agreed that expat voting will be introduced in
the next elections and that the diaspora will be granted six seats. President
Michel Aoun and Prime Minister Saad Hariri are meanwhile supposed to agree on
the elections date, as per the agreement.
The political parties had intensified their meetings Tuesday to devise a final
format. Two simultaneous meetings were held at the Grand Serail according to
media reports.
The first meeting gathered PM Saad Hariri, Free Patriotic Movement head Jebran
Bassil, Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil, Hizbullah secretary-general's aide
Hussein al-Khalil and MPs Wael Abu Faour and George Adwan, while the second
meeting gathered MPs Ahmed Fatfat and Alain Aoun, Hariri's adviser Nader Hariri
and Justice Minister Salim Jreissati. Industry Minister Hussein al-Hajj Hassan,
Agriculture Minister Ghazi Zoaiter, Culture Minister Ghattas Khoury and Lebanese
Forces secretary-general Chantal Sarkis joined the meetings later, media reports
said.The all-party talks were followed by a meeting for the electoral law
ministerial panel. The two-hour meeting was dedicated to "hearing the remarks of
all political parties regarding the draft law in order to reach a common vision
that would be discussed during tomorrow's Cabinet session at the Baabda Palace,"
the National News Agency said. "The new law's draft is being finalized,"
Minister Hajj Hassan said after the meeting. Social Affairs Minister Pierre Bou
Assi meanwhile said "there are objections, but they won't impede the law.""The
atmosphere was positive and everyone was willing to offer concessions," Bou Assi
added.
Al-Jadeed television said the AMAL Movement, the Marada Movement and the
Lebanese Forces expressed reservations of the issue of counting the preferred
vote in the administrative district and not in the electoral district. "We
registered our objections and PM Hariri will raise them in Cabinet," Public
Works and Transport Minister Youssef Fenianos of Marada said.Hariri had
reassured Monday that Lebanon “will have an electoral law on Wednesday.”In
remarks published Sunday, MP Adwan had stressed that Parliament will pass the
new electoral law in its Friday session. This requires the approval of the draft
electoral law during Wednesday's Cabinet session. Adwan has played a key role in
promoting the draft electoral law.
Bassil Welcomes New Electoral Law, Says It 'Greatly
Improves Representation'
Naharnet/June 13/17/Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil welcomed Tuesday
the electoral law format that the political parties had agreed on earlier in the
day, noting that the new electoral system “will greatly improve representation.”
“We have managed to drop vacuum, extension and the 1960 law and the Lebanese
will have a law that will greatly improve representation,” said Bassil after the
weekly meeting of the Change and Reform parliamentary bloc. “Minorities in
Beirut have been done justice and their parliamentary seat has been returned to
its place in the first district,” Bassil added.“We had called for proportional
representation with restraints and this is what happened through the division of
districts,” the FPM chief boasted. He vowed however that “the battle for
improving representation will continue” until Christians become able to “elect
64 out of 64 MPs” with their own votes. Bassil also described Tuesday's
agreement as “an achievement for all Lebanese.” And while noting that it is up
to President Michel Aoun and Prime Minister Saad Hariri to set a date for the
elections, Bassil noted that the FPM wants the polls to be held “as soon as
possible.” As per the political agreement that was reached earlier in the day at
the Grand Serail, the so-called preferred vote will be counted in the 26
administrative districts and not in the 15 electoral districts, a demand that
the Free Patriotic Movement had long called for. The FPM argues that counting
the preferred vote in the smaller administrative districts would grant
Christians a higher ability to choose their representatives with their own
votes. The preferred vote is a mechanism through which a voter chooses their
preferred candidate on a certain electoral ballot, granting that candidate an
advantage during the distribution of seats on winners.
Jumblat Slams 'Complicated' Electoral Law as Marada Rejects
'Preferred Vote' Mechanism
Naharnet/June 13/17/Druze leader MP Walid Jumblat on Tuesday criticized the
proportional representation electoral law that the parties have agreed on as
“complicated,” as the Marada Movement rejected the mechanism of counting the
so-called “preferred vote.”“In Greece, the sun shines creating serenity and
beauty, while in Lebanon a complicated and complex electoral law is being born
-- a law that is complicated like its makers and fabricators,” Jumblat tweeted
sarcastically from Greece. Public Works and Transport Minister Youssef Fenianos
of the Marada Movement meanwhile expressed his movement's rejection of the
mechanism of counting the so-called “preferred vote.” “We are opposed to
counting the preferred vote in the administrative district and we want it to be
counted in the electoral district, because we have candidates in all northern
districts while the Free Patriotic Movement only has a single candidate in
Batroun,” Fenianos said after he took part in an electoral law meeting at the
Grand Serail. MP Wael Abu Faour of Jumblat's Democratic Gathering bloc meanwhile
described the law that has been agreed on as “the worst possible law.”As per the
political agreement that was reached earlier in the day at the Grand Serail, the
so-called preferred vote will be counted in the 26 administrative districts and
not in the 15 electoral districts, a demand that the Free Patriotic Movement had
long called for. The FPM argues that counting the preferred vote in the smaller
administrative districts would grant Christians a higher ability to choose their
representatives with their own votes. The preferred vote is a mechanism through
which a voter chooses their preferred candidate on a certain electoral ballot,
granting that candidate an advantage during the distribution of seats on
winners.
Garbage Dumped in Sea Off Lebanese Coast Sparks Outrage
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/June 13/17/A "mountain of garbage" dumped at sea
off Beirut under a deal between the government and a company has sparked outrage
in Lebanon, two years after mass protests over a waste crisis. For the past 10
days, civil society groups have shared images of trucks carrying rubbish and
tipping it into the Mediterranean, a process that is ongoing. Activists say the
waste from the "mountain of garbage" at Bourj Hammoud in north Beirut is
disposed of under an agreement between the government's Development and
Reconstruction Council (CDR) and a private company.
"They are taking garbage from this mountain that has been there for 20 years...
and throwing it into the sea," said Wadih al-Asmar, an activist from the "You
Stink" campaign behind the protests in 2015. Environment Minister Tareq al-Khatib
on Tuesday confirmed the existence of an agreement between the CDR and a private
firm to dump the waste at sea. Khatib said he had sent letters to the CDR to
"rectify" the situation and that he was trying to find the "best way to limit"
the damage. But activists vented their anger on social media, branding the
situation "shameful." "Waste is thrown into the open sea and the environment
minister justifies it... he gives them the green light," said the You Stink
campaign. Asmar, the campaign activist, denounced the disposal of the garbage at
sea without any treatment, saying it was "killing the marine ecosystem."Lebanon
experienced a major waste crisis in mid-2015, with garbage piling up in the
streets of Beirut and its surroundings after the closure of the country's main
landfill. This crisis triggered mass protests, with many taking aim at
politicians in a country that has suffered endemic corruption since the end of
the 1975-1990 civil war. In 2016, the government decided to reopen the landfill
temporarily and to create two more dumps, one in Bourj Hammoud next to the
"mountain of garbage" whose stench fills the air in the capital's northern
suburbs.
Hariri Says New Electoral Law 'an Achievement for Entire Country'
Naharnet/June 13/17/Prime Minister Saad Hariri on Tuesday described the new
electoral law that the political parties have agreed on as an “achievement for
the entire country.”“This is not an achievement for a party or a sect, but
rather for the entire country, and in my opinion it was the last controversial
essential topic in the country,” Hariri said at an iftar banquet at the Grand
Serail. “After this achievement, I can say that there are no more political
conflict issues that paralyze the country and obstruct our project for reviving
the economy and finding job opportunities for youths,” the premier added. “It is
the responsibility of all of us to preserve domestic stability and protect our
people and country from the storms that you are all witnessing around us in the
region,” Hariri went on to say.A final agreement was reached earlier on Tuesday
on a draft electoral law based on full proportional representation and 15
districts and the Cabinet is expected to approve it and send it to Parliament on
Wednesday.
Mustaqbal Urges Approval of Electoral Law in Wednesday
Cabinet Session
Naharnet/June 13/17/Al-Mustaqbal parliamentary bloc stressed Tuesday that “it is
urgent to approve the draft electoral law in tomorrow's Cabinet session.”The new
law “should fully respect the Taef Accord, the Constitution and the foundations
of Muslim-Christian coexistence,” said the bloc in a statement issued after its
weekly meeting. It warned that “failure to approve this law would plunge the
country into unknown dangers and would greatly harm legitimate state
institutions and the economic and social situations in the country, which have
been aggravated by the extraordinary circumstances that the Arab region is going
through.”And while voicing “appreciation” of the efforts that have been exerted
by the political parties until the moment, “which have led to an agreement on
the draft law's general lines,” Mustaqbal hoped “some flaws that are related to
the division of some districts will be addressed.”
A final agreement was reached earlier on Tuesday on a draft electoral law based
on full proportional representation and 15 districts and a ministerial committee
was expected to approve the final draft ahead of Wednesday's Cabinet session,
media reports said. Prime Minister Saad Hariri had reassured Monday that Lebanon
“will have an electoral law on Wednesday.”In remarks published Sunday, Lebanese
Forces deputy head MP George Adwan had stressed that Parliament will pass the
new electoral law in its Friday session. This requires the approval of the draft
electoral law during Wednesday's Cabinet session. Adwan has played a key role in
promoting the draft electoral law.
Aoun Stresses 'Respect for Constitution' on Eve of Cabinet
Meet on Vote Law
Naharnet/June 13/17/Ahead of a cabinet meeting scheduled for Wednesday to
address the country's controversial electoral law, President Michel Aoun held
deliberations with political parties on Tuesday focusing on the final details
that need to be discussed before the cabinet convenes, the National News Agency
reported. NNA said that the President has focused on the need to “respect the
constitution,” assuring that “an electoral law is an important step in Lebanon's
political and national life because it will pave way for the beginning of a
parliamentary council which is supposed to faithfully embody the choices and
aspirations of the Lebanese to shape the future of their country as they
wish.”In addition to that, the parliament “is the guarantor of national unity,
justice and equality among all Lebanese.”Political parties have agreed on the
law's general format but they are still discussing the mechanism of counting
votes going for so-called preferred candidates on the electoral ballots and
whether it should depend on the electoral districts or the administrative
districts. The Free Patriotic Movement argues that counting preferred votes in
the smaller administrative districts would grant Christians a higher ability to
choose their representatives with their own votes. The term of the parliament
ends on June 20.
'Only prayer' can help with vote law: Berri
The Daily Star/June 13/17 /BEIRUT: "You have to pray, as only prayer is beneficial now," said Speaker Nabih
Berri Tuesday, when asked for updates about the new electoral vote law, a
Parliament statement said. Berri was speaking after a meeting with Cypriot
President Nicos Anastasiades in Parliament in Downtown Beirut.
President Michel Aoun also commented on the vote law issue, stressing the
importance of a new electoral law and respect for Constitution. Aoun was
following up on the ongoing talks intended to finalize the new Parliamentary
vote law, a statement by his press office said. “The new electoral law is a key
milestone in the national and political life in Lebanon,” Aoun said, adding that
it would give the country a new Parliament that “would honestly embody the
choices and aspirations of the Lebanese people in shaping the future of their
country.” The draft vote law under discussion calls for a proportional voting
system.
Aoun, Speaker Nabih Berri and Prime Minister Saad Hariri agreed on the basic
outlines of the new vote law at Baabda Palace last week.
The agreement would divide Lebanon into 15 districts, each of which would elect
representatives on a proportional allocation. The proposed draft law will be
discussed during Wednesday Cabinet meeting in Baabda Palace. The rivals are
reportedly trying to work out some differences that emerged after Foreign
Minister and Free Patriotic Movement leader Gebran Bassil issued a string of new
demands. Talks have been complicated by Bassil’s call to link the vote law with
“a political agreement” confirming parity between Muslims and Christians in a
constitutional text as well as the establishment of a Senate as stipulated by
the 1989 Taif Accord. Bassil is also reportedly demanding that the number of
Parliament members be reduced from 128 to 108 in line with the Taif Accord,
arguing that the extra 20 seats were added in 1989 at the request of Syria – the
main power broker in Lebanon at the time – to consolidate its grip over the
country.
This is in addition to demanding that Lebanese expatriates be granted six
parliamentary seats. Bassil’s proposal on equal Christian-Muslim standing in the
Constitution has been criticized publicly by Berri and implicitly by Hariri’s
Future Movement bloc, as both expressed concern that drafting a new foundational
text at a time of heightened regional tensions may exacerbate sectarian conflict
in Lebanon. Other contentious issues that could jeopardize the vote law
agreement are the percentage each candidate needs to win an electoral seat in
any district, the mechanism of a preferential vote, the duration of a technical
extension of Parliament’s term and the vote tallying procedures in a
proportional system. Aoun also stressed that the constitution should be
respected, adding that "the constitution should be the foundation based on which
the constitutional institutions function." “It [Parliament] is the guarantor of
national unity, justice and equality among all the Lebanese,” he concluded. A
flurry of meetings on the vote law has also spurred activity at the Grand Serail,
local media reported.Prime Minister Saad Hariri cancelled all of his scheduled
appointments for Tuesday, local MTV Channel said. Hariri’s meetings will be
restricted to deliberations with five representatives of the key political
blocs, including Free Patriotic Movement, Amal Movement, Hezbollah, Progressive
Socialist Party, and Lebanese Forces. On his way to the meeting, LF MP George
Adwan was positive about the results of the meeting. “We are used to keep our
promises,” he said to MTV. “Hopefully, things are on their way to be resolved,”
Haj Hussein Khalil, aide to Hezbollah’s chief Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah, said
before the meeting.
Cypriot FM Urges Lebanon to Agree on Vote Law
Naharnet/June 13/17/Cypriot Foreign Minister Ioannis Kasoulides voiced hopes on
Tuesday that Lebanon agrees on a new electoral law for its parliamentary
elections in order to overcome the obstacles. “We hope that a new vote law is
reached soon in order to help solve the problems that Lebanon is suffering
from,” said the Minister in a joint press conference with his Lebanese
counterpart Jebran Bassil. The Minister also assured that his country will not
spare efforts in helping Lebanon in its fight against terrorism, he said: “We
can't watch Lebanon suffer from the burden of terrorism without offering the
help we can to address it.”Furthermore, the Minister assured that his country
will “offer the needed support through the import of Lebanese products and we
will work on developing trade commodity and cooperation between the two
countries.”For his part, Bassil said: “We are confident that Cyprus will
contribute to the discussion with trade authorities within the EU to promote
trade exchanges.”
Judge Indicts Killer and Associates Involved in Hamoush's
Murder
Naharnet/June 13/17/Judge Ziad Abou Haidar indicted on Tuesday Mohammed al-Ahmar
and his associates for the deliberate murder of Roy al-Hamoush and the file was
referred to the first investigative judge, media reports said on Tuesday. Al-Ahmar
and his two associates, H.M. and A.Gh., were arrested last week in two separate
operations after killing Hamoush overnight last Wednesday in the Karantina area.
Al-Ahmar, who reportedly shot Hamoush in the head, had been arrested Wednesday
evening in the Bourj Hammoud area by the Internal Security Forces Intelligence
Branch. VDL (100.5) said the culprits could face a death penalty. According to
reports, Roy and his friend Johnny Nassar were in the latter's car when it
crashed into the vehicle of the three culprits in the Jal el-Dib area. The
accident led to a dispute that soon escalated into a car pursuit. The three
suspects then managed to intercept Roy and his friend in the Karantina area
where Hamoush was shot dead at the hands of al-Ahmar. Nassar managed to escape
and inform authorities of the incident. According to reports, al-Ahmar has a
criminal record. President Michel Aoun has called on security and judicial
agencies to "probe the real causes of the crime and hand the culprits and
instigators the harshest penalties."
Adwan Says 'Turning Back is Impossible', Vote Law Will be
Approved
Naharnet/June 13/17/Lebanese Forces deputy leader MP George Adwan emphasized
that political parties have no choice but to agree on a new parliamentary
electoral law because it has become “impossible to turn back,” al-Joumhouria
daily reported on Tuesday. “In spite of everything said, we have no choice but
to agree on a new law because all other options are destructive to the country's
economy and stability. We have no choice because turning back now is
impossible,” Adwan told the daily before he joined an evening meeting at the
Grand Serail on Monday. “Mistaken are those who believe that we have other
choices, or those who believe that we have a choice to either reach a new law or
reach vacuum. Wisdom obliges us to agree because vacuum means there will be no
parliament, no government, no economy and no money. Who has a rational mind to
work in that direction?” he asked. “For our part, we will push through until an
agreement is reached,” pointed the MP. Referring to some details that still need
to be discussed, Adwan said the decision will be left to the cabinet to run a
vote on the controversial details. “The law will be approved because it is
impossible to turn back. Some major technical details still need to be covered,
but we won't allow that to obstruct the vote law. We have come a long way. The
decision will be left to the cabinet in a manner that simulates voting,” he
said. The meeting overnight at the Grand Serail gathered PM Saad Hariri, Foreign
Minister Jebran Bassil, Speaker Nabih Berri's aide Ali Hassan Khalil, Hizbullah
secretary-general's assistant Hussein al-Khalil, MP George Adwan and Prime
Minister Saad Hariri's adviser Nader Hariri. Adwan had stressed in remarks
published Sunday that parliament will pass the new electoral law in its Friday
session. This requires the approval of the draft electoral law during
Wednesday's cabinet session. Adwan has played a key role in promoting a draft
electoral law fully based on the proportional representation system and 15
electoral districts. The parties have agreed on the law's general format but
they are still discussing the mechanism of counting votes going for so-called
preferred candidates on the electoral ballots and whether it should depend on
the electoral districts or the administrative districts. The Free Patriotic
Movement argues that counting preferred votes in the smaller administrative
districts would grant Christians a higher ability to choose their
representatives with their own votes.
Patriarch Yazegi welcomes Cypriot President
Tue 13 Jun 2017/NNA - Greek Orthodox Patriarch Youhanna X Yazegi met, at Beirut
Orthodox Patriarchate on Tuesday, with Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades, and
an accompanying delegation.
The meeting was attended by Deputy House Speaker Farid Makari, Deputy Prime
Minister Ghassan Hasbani, Minister of Defense Yaacoub Sarraf, State Minister
Nicolas Tueni, former minister Elias Bou Saad, and a panel of priests and
bishops, among whom Orthodox Archbishop Elias Audi.
Ogasapian: Election law which discounts women quota is
worst possible
Tue 13 Jun 2017/NNA - Minister of State for Women's Affairs, Jean Ogasapian, on
Tuesday said in a tweet that an election law which disregards women's quota is
considered the worst possible.
Abu Faour: No vote on election law inside Cabinet
Tue 13 Jun 2017/NNA - Member of the Democratic Gathering bloc, Wael Abu Faour,
on Tuesday indicated that there will not be any vote on the election law inside
the Cabinet. "This law is the worst possible," he added.
Hariri chairs meeting of ministerial panel tasked with
devising election law
Tue 13 Jun 2017/NNA - Prime Minister Saad Hariri chaired at 5:30 pm on Tuesday a
meeting of the ministerial panel tasked with devising the election law draft.The
meeting was devoted to discussing and putting the final touches on the long
awaited election draft law. Attending the meeting had been Ministers: Marwan
Hamadeh, Ali Qanso, Pierre Abu Assi, Talal Erslan, Nuhad Mashnouq, Hussein Hajj
Hassan, Gebran Bassil, Ghattas Khoury, Ali Hassan Khalil, Youssef Fenianos, and
Avedis Guidanian.
Geagea meets EU delegation at Maarab
Tue 13 Jun 2017/NNA - Lebanese Forces party leader, Samir Geagea, on Tuesday met
at his Maarab residence with Managing Director for Middle East and North Africa
at the European External Action Service Nick Westcott, accompanied by EU
Ambassador to Lebanon Christina Lassen and a delegation. Talks reportedly
touched on the bilateral relations between the EU and Lebanon, and most recent
security and political developments in Lebanon and the broad region. Talks also
touched on the persistent impact of the Syrian crisis on Lebanon, especially the
brunt of the Syrian displacement. Geagea explained to the EU delegation the
repercussions of the Syrian refugees' crisis on Lebanon, stressing that Lebanon
can no longer absorb the huge influx of Syrian refugees especially in terms of
the deterioration of infrastructure and the simmering economic situation.
"Displacement predicament cannot be addressed at the expense of the Lebanese
citizen," Geagea stressed, indicating that the solution lies in the
establishment of safe zones in Syria. Geagea pointed out that "99% of the
displaced Syrians have shown a desire to live in these safe areas, provided
better living conditions are made available."
The Israeli Spy Affair Lebanon Is Obsessed With
جاسوس إسرائيلي يشغل لبنان
Jerusalem Post/June 13/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=56216
Lebanese media has been intently covering the story of an Iraqi citizen who was
allegedly deployed by Israel to spearhead an espionage ring in Lebanon. Lebanon
has been engaged in recent days with "the uncovering of a Mossad spy network" in
the country. As the reports mount, more and more new details regarding the
alleged espionage network are emerging in local media. The affair
allegedly began with the arrest a month and a half ago of "an Israeli security
service agent holding an Iraqi citizenship."According to a report by Lebanese
media, an investigation of the man masterminding the spy ring revealed that the
network was operating for a military security body called TASA ELITE and run by
Israeli officers based in Kurdistan. The reports in Lebanese media explained
that TASA ELITE's purpose was to gather information throughout the Arab world,
specifically in Syria, Lebanon and Iraq, reportedly under the guise of "fighting
terrorism" or "nations that support terror."The Iraqi citizen, who was arrested
after being closely tracked in Lebanon for a certain period, has been named as
Marbin Ben Y, and hails from Dahoc, a region in northern Iraq. He lives in a-Sabtia
in Eastern Beirut. According to the reports, the investigation revealed that the
suspect in question has been active since 2011, the year the Arab Spring had
erupted across the Middle East. It was further claimed that the suspect had
joined Kurdish Peshmerga forces in their fighting. He was also accused of
"managing security and military cooperation with Israel and... even publicly
hosting Israeli security advisers, claiming that they are fighting together
against ISIS." The reports alleged that the detained suspect denied the claims
that he was fighting with the Peshmerga, and instead explained that he arrived
in the country with family members in November 2014. He reportedly also said
that since then, he has been working for several companies that dealt in medical
equipment and water distribution.
Secret Account
According to Lebanese media, six months ago Marbin received a Facebook friend
request from an account under the name of "Ilan Nissim." After corresponding for
a while, Nissim disclosed himself to be an Israeli intelligence officer and
allegedly told Marbin that "he requested the friendship in light of his
opinions, among them hatred for Arabs and Muslims because of the ethnic
suffering of the Sarianit sect, that found relief only in Israel." According to
the report, he offered Marbin to gather intelligence on Hezbollah, the Lebanese
army and the governments in Syria and to enlist agents in Lebanon and Iraq.
Marbin was initially hesitant, fearing that he would be caught by the Lebanese
security agency and charged with treason. However, the reports claim that he was
eventually persuaded by the Israeli officer, who reassured him that no one would
disclose him. In the investigation Marbin reportedly stated that he gathered
information about several places as was requested and passed his summary to his
operative. Two weeks before his arrest, the agent requested that he gather
material about the burial spot of Israeli navigator Ron Arad. "The work took
place through the use of secret Facebook accounts that Nissim requested to
open," Marbin said.
"I never met the Israeli intelligence officer, even though I traveled between
Lebanon and Iraq all the time," he allegedly noted.
He even disclosed that he brought his brother into the network.
The Lebanese security services that looked into the alleged activities of TASA
ELITE, discovered that Nissim was the head. As stated, according to the reports,
the body is made up of selected officers from several armies around the world,
with its aim being to fight terror and illegal trading of civilians that were
kidnapped by terrorists or by nations that support terror. Nonetheless, in
the Lebanese media they are claiming that the archives of the company show that
the institute is made up of officers and people from the IDF, using IDF
equipment and even that activities are similar to Israel security services - the
Mossad, the Shin Ben (Israel Security Agency) and the IDF's intelligence unit.
From an investigation that was published in the Hezbollah-affiliated Lebanese
newspaper Al-Akhbar, Nissim was born in Jerusalem in 1966, and currently resides
in new York. According to the report, he is behind operations in Syria, Lebanon,
Iraq, Yemen, Afghanistan and more.
Al-Akhbar reported that Nissim was also responsible for training soldiers with
combat equipment, assassinations and enlistment of agents for the Mossad, their
goal being to gather intelligence. The publication also stated that Nissim
managed to visit several countries recently, including Iraq and the UAE, Cyprus,
Turkey, Jordan, northern Syria and the Syrian side of the Golan Heights. Lately
he was in Kurdistan, Iraq, next to Iraqi Peshmerga on the border. According to
the Lebanese army prosecutor, Marbin will stand for trial under the accusation
of "cooperation with the Israeli enemy and gathering security intelligence," and
his brother will be accused of "suspected cooperation with the enemy."
"Enlisting Marbin due to his stance on Facebook emphasizes that the enemy enjoys
displays of ethnic and sectarian racism in the region," Al-Akhbar wrote.
"Security forces are following the moods of people and groups on social media,
utilizing feelings of minorities and displaying Israel as the messiah for those
groups, especially with the intensifying battle in Syria and Iraq," the report
added. "Israel is exploiting ISIS' strengthening, in order to adopt a role of a
partner in 'the fight against terror' on a regional and international level,
especially in recent years, with the declaration of the close relationship
between several Arab nations and in light of future relations with the Kurdistan
province."
Latest LCCC Bulletin For
Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
June 13-14/17
Three Christians are sentenced to 80 lashes by Sharia court in Iran for taking
communion wine
The men are all due to be flogged in
public for falling foul of Islamic laws
The three men are all Christian converts from Muslim backgroundsUnder Sharia law
it is illegal for Muslims to convert to another religion
By Hannah Al-Othman For Mailoline
Three Christians in Iran have been sentenced to 80 lashes by a Sharia court
after they were found guilty of blasphemy for drinking holy communion wine.
Yaser Mosibzadeh, Saheb Fadayee and Mohammed Reza Omidi, also known as Youhan,
are due to be flogged in public after they were arrested at a house church
gathering in Rasht in May.
The trio spent weeks in prison before they were finally released on bail, but
they will now have to face the cruel and degrading punishment after they were
guilty by Islamist judges.
The three men are Christian converts from Muslim backgrounds, and the sentence
reflects the state’s hard-line refusal to recognise the right of Muslims to
change their religion.
Three Christians in Iran have been sentenced to 80 lashes by a Sharia court
after they were found guilty of blasphemy for drinking holy communion wine at a
house church in Iran.
Three Christians in Iran have been sentenced to 80 lashes by a Sharia court
after they were found guilty of blasphemy for drinking holy communion wine at a
house church in Iran .It is not illegal for Christians to drink alcohol in Iran but under Sharia law,
Muslims are forbidden from drinking and it is illegal for Muslims to convert to
another religion.
Security agents also raided the home of their pastor Yousef Nadarkhani and his
wife Fatemeh Pasandideh and arrested them at the same time, but the couple were
not jailed.
The men are appealing against the verdict, but they also face more serious
charges of ‘action against national security’, along with Pastor Nadarkhani.
There are believed to be about 300,000 Christians in Iran, with indigenous
Christian Armenian and Assyrian communities making up about one per cent of the
population .
There are believed to be about 300,000 Christians in Iran, with indigenous
Christian Armenian and Assyrian communities making up about one per cent of the
population.
They are due to be sentenced at a later date.
Iran stepped up its crackdown on Christian activists in 2015, and at least 108
Christians have been rounded up by police in the last year alone, with as many
as ninety prisoners currently languishing in jail for their faith.
Many Christian prisoners have been beaten and abused, and some have been
threatened with death, according to Christian charity Release International.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3944922/Three-Christians-sentenced-80-lashes-Sharia-court-Iran-taking-communion-wine.html
Saudi King Salman, Russian President Discuss Counter-Terrorism in Phone Call
Asharq Al-Awsat/Asharq Al Awsat/June 13/17/Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques
King Salman bin Abdulaziz received on Tuesday a telephone call from Russian
President Vladimir Putin, reported the Saudi Press Agency (SPA).The two leaders
discussed joint cooperation to confront extremism and terrorism in order to
achieve security and stability in the region. They also tackled the latest
developments in the region, as well as Saudi-Russian ties and ways to develop
them in all fields, said SPA.
Qatar Ignores Gulf Requests, Stresses Adherence to Kuwait
Mediation
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 13/17/Paris, Ankara, London, Kuwait – French President
Emmanuel Macron held talks on Monday with the Emir of Kuwait to discuss the rift
between Qatar and Arab states, the Elysee Palace said in a statement. Kuwaiti
Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad al-Jaber Al Sabah pledged to deploy all efforts to
resolve the ongoing crisis in the Gulf.“It is difficult for us, the generation
that built the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) 37 years ago, to see these
disagreements between its members, which may lead to undesirable consequences,”
he stated, as quoted by Kuwait’s news agency KUNA. “I personally lived through
the first building blocks of this council nearly four decades ago, so it is not
easy for someone like me as a leader to stand silent without doing everything I
can to bring brothers back together,” he added. Earlier on Monday, French
Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian met with his Qatari counterpart, Sheikh
Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, who said that his country supported Kuwait’s
mediation efforts and was ready to engage in talks in accordance with
international law. In a news conference held at the Qatari Embassy in Paris,
Sheikh Mohammed said: “Whatever is related to the collective security of the
Gulf countries, Qatar is ready to negotiate … but we have the right to react to
these accusations that we are interfering in their internal affairs.”The Qatari
minister, who earlier met in London with British Foreign Secretary Boris
Johnson, stressed that Doha was not interfering in other countries’ internal
affairs, adding that it has cooperated with “honesty and transparency” with the
different GCC states in all international issues. Sheikh Mohammed’s visit to
Paris came within a European tour that took him to London, Berlin, Brussels and
Moscow. He noted during the press conference that allegations over Qatar’s
support to the Muslim Brotherhood were “false”. The Qatari foreign minister also
said that Hamas was a resistance movement and not a terrorist group. In London,
Johnson said he would meet this week with his counterparts from Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait and the UAE within efforts to resolve the Gulf crisis through mediation.
“I have urged all sides to refrain from any further escalation and to engage in
mediation efforts,” he said, following his meeting with the Qatari minister.
Meanwhile, the ambassadors of Saudi Arabia, UAE and the Bahraini Embassy’s
charge d’affaires in Turkey met in Ankara on Monday with Turkish Minister of
Foreign Affairs Mevlut Cavusoglu.Turkish diplomatic sources said that
discussions during the meeting touched on latest developments in the Gulf and
efforts exerted by Turkey to ease tension in the region.
Riyadh Condemns ‘Duality’ of Qatari Policy
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 13/17/Jeddah – The Saudi cabinet renewed on Monday the
Kingdom’s praise of US President Donald Trump’s statements that called on Qatar
to “stop financing terrorism” as it condemned the emirate’s “duality in
policies.” It also hailed Trump’s praise of Saudi Arabia’s leading role in
confronting terror and drying up its funding. Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques
King Salman bin Abdulaziz chaired the cabinet session held at Jeddah’s al-Salam
palace. He informed the gatherers of the results of his meetings with Kuwait
Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmed al-Jaber Al Sabah, Bahrain King Hamad bin Issa Al
Khalifa and Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and telephone talks with
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Trump and French President Emmanuel
Macron. Following the cabinet meeting, Information Minister Dr. Awadh bin Saleh
al-Awadh told the Saudi Press Agency (SPA) that the gatherers addressed the
latest regional and international developments. He hailed King Salman’s order to
take into consideration humanitarian cases of Saudi-Qatari families in wake of
the severing of ties with the emirate. “This recognizes the brotherly Qatari
people, who are a natural extension of their brothers in Saudi Arabia,” said al-Awadh.
The cabinet also welcomed the announcement of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab
Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt to blacklist 59 individuals and 12 organization that
are linked to Qatar and “serving suspicious agendas.”“This is an indication of
the duality of the Qatari policy that on the one hand announces its fight
against terrorism, while financing and supporting it on the other,” explained
al-Awadh. On internal developments, the Saudi cabinet condemned the terrorist
bombing that targeted a security patrol in al-Qatif. An officer was killed and a
security member was wounded in the attack.
King Salman to Receive Iraqi PM Wednesday in Jeddah
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 13/17/Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Salman bin Abdul Aziz
al-Saud meets with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang at Ziguangge Pavilion in the
Zhongnanhai leaders' compound in Beijing in this file photo from March 14, 2014.
REUTERS/Lintao Zhang/Pool/Files
Jeddah – Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Salman bin Abdulaziz will meet
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi on Wednesday in Jeddah. Saudi Arabia’s Arab
Gulf Affairs Minister Thamer al-Sabhan told Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper that the
meeting would see discussions over bilateral relations and regional
developments. Abadi’s official trip to Saudi Arabia comes following a visit
conducted by Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir to Baghdad on February 25. An
official at the Iraqi foreign ministry said the two countries were holding
“honest” discussions over regional matters and they were seeking to further
boost bilateral relations. In earlier remarks to Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper,
Nizar Khairallah, the first deputy of the Iraqi foreign ministry, said that the
two countries were facing common challenges, including the fight against
terrorism. He underlined in this regard the importance of bilateral cooperation
between Baghdad and Riyadh to bolster intelligence efforts.Khairallah noted the
presence of shared interests in opening the land borders between the two
countries, as well as resuming the direct flight routes between the two
capitals.
Qatar Makes ‘Siege’ Claims as its Tries to Counter
Diplomatic Crisis
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 13/17/Jeddah – The trips of Qatari Foreign Minister Sheikh
Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani have not ceased. He has traveled to Russia to
western Europe in an attempt to exploit the diplomatic row to create a new
maneuver to cover the causes of the dispute and the severing of ties by Saudi
Arabia, Bahrain, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates and some other Islamic
countries. Qatar is now in the realm of the so-called resistance axis that some
turbulent countries, such as Iran and Syria, and some groups, such as the Muslim
Brotherhood and Hamas, are a part of. It is brandishing slogans that contradict
what Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Egypt and the UAE had announced when they cut their
ties with Qatar over its support of terrorism. The media that Qatar backs is
trying to create claims under the theme of the “siege” in order to liken the
situation in the country to that of the Gaza Strip that is truly besieged by
Israel. This is all part of Doha’s attempt to alter several of the facts. The
Qatari FM called for an end to what he called the “siege” against his country,
saying that it violates international law. According to the United Nations
however, the truth is that countries have the right to sever ties and close
their airspace. Sieges are military and legal methods that are adopted in North
Korea, for example. Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain have taken into account
the Saudi-Qatari families that extend from the Qatari people to the people of
these three countries. Doha has however exploited the media to turn the crisis
into a humanitarian one. Professor in international relations Abdul Latif al-Salemi
told Asharq Al-Awsat that the severing of ties is not much different than the US
administration’s demand for Qatar to stop supporting terrorism. Qatar through
its maneuvering is demonstrating that it is incapable of abandoning terrorist
factions, he added. Doha is attempting to turn its crisis into an international
one at a time when Arab countries are focusing on terrorism and ways to stop its
funding. Political researcher Aaref al-Masaad said that Qatar is seeking to
escalate the situation and it is insisting on continuing its support for
terrorism. This stands in contrast to major countries that are seeking to
support security and stability in the region. Qatar has therefore turned to its
real allies who share its political creed, such as Turkey and Iran, he told
Asharq Al-Awsat.
Egypt Urges Interpol to Issue Red Notices for 26
Qatar-Linked Terrorists
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 13/17/Cairo – Egypt has started taking the necessary
procedures to demand Interpol to blacklist 26 terrorists linked to Qatar,
Egyptian security sources said. It wants them to be added to Interpol’s Red
Notice in order to arrest them and hand them to Egyptian authorities. The
terrorists are the same ones that were blacklisted three days ago by Saudi
Arabia, Bahrain and Egypt.Former aide to the Egyptian Interior Minister Hani
Abdul Latif told Asharq Al-Awsat: “Contacting Interpol will confuse the
terrorists and leave them little room to maneuver.” Youssef al-Qaradawi, an
Egyptian national, who holds a Qatari passport, is among those who have been
blacklisted. Director of the Counter-Terrorism Unit in the Strategic Affairs and
National Security administration Abdul Mehdi Mutawe told Asharq Al-Awsat that he
believed that it would be difficult for Qaradawi to be handed over to Egypt
because he holds the Qatari passport. It is believed that dozens of extremist
Egyptians have been residing in Qatar, Turkey and other countries since the
ouster of former President Mohammed Morsi in 2013. These figures have been
inciting violence against Egyptian authorities and financing terrorist
operations inside Egypt. Abdul Latif explained that requests to Interpol are
first made by the General Prosecution in Egypt and later sent to the
international body. Once it received the Red Notice, it examines it with the
country that made the request. It may be distributed to all the countries that
are part of the Red Notice protocol agreement. The fact that Interpol was
approached in the first place will pressure the fugitives, Abdul Latif added.
This is all aimed at revealing all terrorist plots and the countries that are
backing them, he stressed. “We have always said that terrorism is backed by
international intelligence plots. I believe that this has become clear to the
whole world. International intelligence fabricates terrorism and uses it to
achieve its interests and goals,” he noted.
Hamas Delegation Returns to Gaza
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 13/17/Ramallah- Hamas delegation – led by Yahya Sinwar,
Hamad leader in Gaza, – returned to Gaza from Cairo on Monday after a one-week
visit that witnessed discussions with security Egyptian officials. Hamas
delegation arrived at Rafah crossing between Egypt and Gaza after a series of
security agreements – a Hamas source said that the “delegation was highly
appreciated and received high-level Egyptian hospitality. All mutual topics were
discussed seriously and thoroughly with the Egyptians.”The source added that the
dialogue took place between Hamas delegation and Cairo without a third party,
pointing out that Cairo showed its keenness to bring the Palestinian cause back
to the front. “Hamas delegation talked in Cairo about the Palestinians’ agony
and namely Gaza residents. The Egyptian party promised to exert monumental
efforts to find solutions for the discussed topics,” he added. Sources told
Asharq Al-Awsat that the delegation has agreed with the Egyptian officials on
expanding cooperation, developing ties and carrying on meetings — discussions
mainly focused on the security field and had no political dimensions at all.
Hamas has shown willingness to cooperate and deploy more soldiers on the border
as well as to stop the smuggling from and to Sinai. For its part, Egypt promised
to enhance the condition at Rafah crossing but linked this to security
developments. This is not the first meeting of its kind since Egyptian
intelligence officials met previously with Hamas officials several times since
March 2016 and asked them to detach themselves from the Brotherhood, control the
border, prosecute Salafists, prevent their movement from and to Sinai, cooperate
on any information related to the Egyptian national security and stop the
smuggling of weapons through Sinai.
Ankara Intervenes to Halt FSA Infighting in Syria’s al-Bab
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 13/17/Beirut – The clashes that erupted between the Free
Syrian Army’s Euphrates Shield unit and other factions in the Syrian city of al-Bab
and others regions in the northeastern Aleppo countryside have come to a halt.
Ankara had reportedly intervened to stop the infighting that has left scored
dead and injured. The “Dorar al-Sam” network reported informed sources as saying
that Turkey had intervened on Sunday night in order to stop the fighting between
the “al-Hamza Brigade” and “al-Sultan Murad” factions on the one side and the
“First Regiment” and “Ahrar al-Sham” on the other.
The network reported that clashes erupted when “al-Hamza Brigade” and “al-Sultan
Murad” attacked “First Regiment” and “Ahrar al-Sham” positions near al-Bab north
of Aleppo. Ten fighters from both sides of the attack were killed in the
clashes. The “Ahrar al-Sham” movement issued a statement saying that fighting
broke out between the so-called al-Bab military council and first regiment
rebels. The movement then intervened to stop the unrest, but they were instead
attacked in what was seen as a plan to uproot “Ahrar al-Sham”. It said that its
positions in Abla, Awlan and Qabasin were attacked by the “al-Hamza Brigade” and
“Sultan Murad” factions. The movement also accused these two Turkish-backed
groups of shelling their positions in Awlan near al-Bab, resulting in many
injuries among its members. Military sources told the “Ahrar al-Sham” network
that there was a plot to remove the movement from areas that have been recently
liberated from ISIS. The al-Bab city coordination authority also reported on the
infighting among the Free Syrian Army factions, urging calm and restraint. It
also demanded the formation of a judicial body that can investigate the claims
and accusation made by both sides of the fighting.
It stressed the need for the voice of “reason to prevail over the fighting that
creates divisions in society and depletes the revolution.”
Terrorist Attack in Awamiya Kills One Saudi Soldier, Wounds
Two
Asharq Al-Awsat/June 13/17/Qatif- A Saudi soldier has been killed and two other
security men were wounded in a terrorist attack in the Masoura district in the
village of Awamiya, Qatif province. A spokesman of the Interior Ministry said
that the incident took place in the Masoura district at around 11:30 on Sunday
evening while the officers were on duty and added that an investigation into the
terror attack had been launched. The officer who lost his life was identified as
Major Tariq Bin Abdul Lateef al-Allaqi. The other two officers are in stable
condition, the spokesman said. On May 29, another soldier was killed and five
others injured in Masoura after they were hit by a grenade while on patrol, as
they were performing their duty in maintaining peace in the same district. In
the beginning of June, two terrorists were killed in Qatif after being monitored
by the security bodies riding a stolen vehicle that was used in committing
criminal and terrorist crimes. Armed men are trying to seek cover in Masoura –
an old city that includes hundreds of abandoned houses and of narrow streets
that hinder advancement of security forces to purge the district from armed men.
As he received a delegation from Awamiya, Prince Saud Bin Naif, emir of the
Eastern Province, affirmed that the state is dedicated to implement development
plans for all regions and cities in the kingdom and no obstacle would hinder
that. Eastern Province emir asserted that terrorists who offended souls and
properties only represent themselves and not Qatif residents who are known for
their loyalty, fidelity and protection of their country.
France and
Britain Announce Anti-Terror Action Plan
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/June 13/17/The leaders of France and Britain on
Tuesday announced an anti-terror action plan to crack down on radicalization
through social media.
After talks with British Prime Minister Theresa May in Paris, French President
Emmanuel Macron said both countries agreed that social networks were not doing
enough to stamp out terror propaganda.
Speaking after terror attacks in Manchester and London, Macron said the two
countries had worked on a "very concrete" action plan. He said one of the key
measures would aim at preventing the incitement of "hate and terrorism" on the
internet. May said she and Macron agreed that "more should be done to tackle the
terrorist threat online."She said the British and French campaign was aimed to
"ensure the internet cannot... be used to host the radicalizing material that
leads to so much harm."May said the British government was already working with
social media companies "to halt the spread of extremist material and poisonous
propaganda that warps young minds," adding: "But we know they need to do more.
"Today we can announce that the UK and France will work together to encourage
organizations to do more and abide by their social responsibility to step up
their efforts to remove harmful content from their networks." The campaign
includes exploring the possibility of legal penalties against tech companies if
they fail to take the necessary action to remove unacceptable content, May said.
Britain was rocked by a suicide bombing at a pop concert in Manchester on May 22
which killed 22 people, including children, followed two weeks later by a knife
and van attack in central London, which left eight dead. France has been a
constant target for jihadist attacks since 2015, with more than 230 people
killed. After their press conference the two leaders headed to the Stade de
France to watch a friendly match between the French and English football teams.
Qatar Foreign Minister Denounces 'Unfair', 'Illegal'
Sanctions
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/June 13/17/Qatar on Monday denounced the sanctions
imposed against Doha by Saudi Arabia and its allies as "unfair" and "illegal",
as Britain announced talks to try to resolve the crisis. "Whatever relates to
our foreign affairs... no one has the right to discuss," Foreign Minister Sheikh
Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani told reporters during a visit to Paris. He
called for "dialogue based on clear foundations" over accusations that Qatar
supports extremist groups. "Qatar is willing to sit and negotiate about whatever
is related to Gulf security," he added.
Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain are among several countries
which last week announced the suspension of all ties to Qatar over what they say
is the state's support for extremist groups and its political proximity to
Shiite Iran.
Qatar denies the allegations. In London, British foreign minister Boris Johnson
called for calm and said he would meet this week with his counterparts from
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the UAE. "I have urged all sides to refrain from any
further escalation and to engage in mediation efforts," he said. While praising
Qatar's restraint during the crisis, he added: "In finding a resolution, I call
on Qatar to take seriously their neighbours' concerns. "Qatar is a partner of
the UK in the fight against terrorism but they urgently need to do more to
address support for extremist groups, building on the steps they have already
taken to tackle funding to those groups."- Kuwaiti mediation welcomed -In Paris,
Sheikh Mohammed, who is on a European tour to drum up support for Qatar, said
his country had no idea what had provoked the move against it.
"It's not about Iran or Al-Jazeera," he said, referring to the Qatar-based
broadcaster. "We have no clue about the real reasons."But he supported moves by
Kuwait to act as a mediator in the dispute "with the help of friendly countries
such as the United States," he added. Sheikh Mohammed's courting of Europe -- he
has also visited Germany and Russia in recent days -- though did not go down
well in parts of the Gulf. UAE's foreign minister Anwar Gargash took to Twitter
on Monday to claim Qatar had sought to "internationalise the crisis with its
brothers".And in Kuwait, which has not joined its neighbours in acting against
Qatar, foreign minister Sheikh Sabah al-Khaled Al-Sabah warned that the crisis
"may lead to undesirable consequences," according to a quote on state news
agency Kuna. - 'Illegal blockade' -Qatar is home to the largest US airbase in
the Middle East, Al-Udeid, making it a key ally in the US-led coalition against
IS in Iraq and Syria.In Doha, Qatar Airways called on the UN's aviation body to
declare the Gulf boycott against the carrier "illegal" and a violation of a 1944
convention on international air transport. In televised interviews on Monday,
Qatar Airways outspoken CEO Akbar Al Baker called the move an "illegal blockade"
and urged the United Nations' civil aviation branch to intervene. Qatar Airways
has made Doha a global hub in just a few years, but industry analysts say
banning it from Gulf states' airspace could threaten its position as a major
transcontinental carrier.
Al-Baker also criticised US President Donald Trump for comments he has made
linking Qatar to supporting terror. "I think that President Trump's comment
about my country is ill-placed, ill-informed, and I can again repeat that I'm
very disappointed in him." Qatar announced Monday that it had launched direct
shipping services to ports in Oman in a bid to bypass the Gulf "blockade".Saudi
Arabia has closed the Qatari peninsula's only land border, threatening imports
of both fresh food and raw materials needed to complete a $200 billion
infrastructure project for the 2022 football World Cup. However, one source told
AFP on Monday that Qatar's World Cup preparations continue "as normal". Iran,
Saudi Arabia's main regional rival, had announced Sunday that it had sent five
planes carrying produce to Qatar. Three ships carrying 350 tonnes of food were
also set to leave Iran for the emirate. On Tuesday, Morocco announced it would
send food by plane to Qatar.
Iraq PM Abadi Says Kurdish Referendum Untimely
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/June 13/17/Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi on
Tuesday said he understood the Kurdish minority's statehood aspirations but
bemoaned its leadership's decision to hold an independence referendum in
September. "Every part of Iraq has aspirations and has a dream, and we respect
that, even if we disagree with it," he said, responding to the Kurdish push to
achieve statehood. "We live in one homeland and they are our partners," Abadi
said, referring to the Kurds. "We have a constitution that we've voted on,
we have a federal parliament and a federal government," he said. "The referendum
at this time is not opportune." Abadi was speaking at a press conference in
Baghdad nearly a week after the presidency of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region
announced a referendum on independence for September 25. The Kurds had already
said they would aim to organise such a vote after the battle of Mosul against
the Islamic State group, which appears to be in its final stages, was won. Such
a referendum, the positive outcome of which is in little doubt, would be
non-binding and leave the approximately five million Kurds of northern Iraq some
way away from actual independence. The support of the federal Iraqi government,
of key neighbors such as Iran and Turkey and of major players such as the United
States is seen as essential to achieving a viable separation. Baghdad's reaction
to the announcement was seen internally as relatively meek given that the
break-up of the country is at stake. An Iraqi official told AFP on condition of
anonymity that an overly antagonistic reaction to the announcement of the
referendum would serve only to unite Kurdish factions against Baghdad and give
the independence drive more momentum. Internal division is one of the Kurds'
main weaknesses as they set the wheels in motion for an independence process
that is likely to last years. Washington and other Western partners of the
Kurdish administration have taken much the same line as Baghdad, recognizing
their legitimate independence aspirations but warning that the timing of the
referendum was not helpful.
Terrified Civilians Hide from Gunfire in Mosul Pre-School
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/June 13/17/The bullets of jihadists rain down
outside the Mosul kindergarten, where dozens of terrified Iraqi civilians are
sheltering from fighting in their northern city. Confused, scared and exhausted,
the civilians -- mostly women, including one in a wheelchair -- huddle in the
pre-school after Iraqi forces brought them in for protection. The sounds of
sniper fire, air strikes, and shelling echo all around them, as Iraqi forces
fight to dislodge Islamic State group fighters from a nearby building. Iraqi
forces are fighting to retake Mosul from IS, after the jihadist group overran
the city in 2014, imposing its brutal rule on its inhabitants. Naja Abdallah,
70, says she didn't dare leave her house until Iraqi forces arrived in her
district of west Mosul, and even then fled with family members under heavy fire.
"We had no more electricity, no water, no medicine -- nothing but God's mercy,"
she says, as sniper and artillery fire continue unabated in the al-Shifaa
district outside. Iraqi forces have managed to retake most of Mosul since
launching the battle for IS' last major Iraqi stronghold seven months ago, but
the advance has slowed in the last districts under jihadist control. IS' grip on
Mosul has been reduced to the Old City and several nearby areas, but the
jihadists are putting up significant resistance and up to 200,000 civilians may
be caught in the fighting. Iraqi fighters inside the pre-school have led women
to one room, while they check the identities of the men -- young and old --
somewhere else. The anti-IS forces thoroughly screen fleeing civilians in a bid
to make sure no jihadists escape among them.
'We won't let IS sleep'
Omran, a 24-year-old who has grown his beard long like all men under IS rule, is
one of those who is separated from his family for vetting. "We've lived through
tough, terrifying days. We've really been through a lot," he says, just before
he is whisked away. The fighting intensified around his home in recent days, he
says, and his family escaped to their neighbor’s house after their own was hit
in the fighting. "I hope to God it all gets better," Omran says. Women quietly
break down into tears after the men are taken away, as an Iraqi commander shouts
coordinates over the radio for warplanes and artillery gunmen to target the
jihadists. Sniper fire intensifies around the building, where civilians are
holed up with journalists and members of the interior ministry's elite Rapid
Response force fighting IS. Sniper fire hits and gravely wounds a reporter for a
local television station, and Iraqi forces intervene to evacuate him to a
medical point. "The sniper will either be killed or flee," says Rapid Response
officer Hussein Ali. The jihadists are putting up a fight but it's a weak one,
he says, an assault rifle in his hands and another slung over his back. "They
have nothing left but snipers and the mines they have been planting.""We won't
let the Dawaesh sleep," he adds, using an Arabic name for IS members. When the
gunfire subsides after about three hours, the Iraqi forces hold up a curtain
across the road to block off the view of any jihadist snipers and gradually lead
the civilians out of the pre-school to a nearby building. Iraqi fighters
accompany them from building to building all the way to the city's medical
school, where the soldiers rest for a few minutes before returning to the
frontline.
France Launches Probe into LafargeHolcim's Syrian
Activities
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/June 13/17/France has launched a judicial inquiry
into the Syrian activities of French-Swiss cement and construction giant
LafargeHolcim, Paris prosecutors said on Tuesday. Three judges -- one dealing
with anti-terrorism matters and two financial judges -- would handle the probe,
which was opened on June 9 and would look into the "financing of a terrorist
enterprise" and "endangering lives," the prosecutors said. Earlier this year,
LafargeHolcim admitted that it had resorted to "unacceptable practices" to
continue operations at one of its now-closed factories in Syria, and an internal
probe had confirmed that finding. In January, sources close to the case told AFP
that the French government had filed a legal complaint against Lafarge for
buying oil in Syria to power the Jalabiya factory, in violation of sanctions.
French cement maker Lafarge bought the factory in 2007 and invested some $680
million to get it working by 2010, representing the biggest foreign investment
in the country outside the petroleum sector. The plant, located in northern
Syria some 150 kilometres (95 miles) northeast of Aleppo, was finally evacuated
in 2014, and closed down before Lafarge merged with its Swiss competitor Holcim
in 2015. Lafarge is suspected of sourcing oil locally to operate the factory in
defiance of a 2012 EU ban on purchases of Syrian oil as part of a sanctions
package targeting the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. According to
an investigative piece published in French daily Le Monde last year, Lafarge
entered into deals with armed groups in Syria, including the Islamic State
group, to protect its business interests there. In April, LafargeHolcim said its
chief executive Eric Olsen would step down on July 15, even though the internal
probe had determined he was not responsible for any wrongdoings.
77 Killed In Bangladesh Landslides: Police
Tue 13 Jun 2017/NNA - Heavy monsoon rains and landslides have killed at least 77
people in southeast Bangladesh, burying many in their homes as they slept,
authorities said Tuesday. Three young children from the same family were among
those killed in the disaster, which comes just weeks after a cyclone battered
the area, destroying camps housing thousands of Rohingya refugees. Police warned
that the death toll would likely rise as emergency workers reached remote parts
of the Chittagong Hills, where telephone and transport links had been cut. "The
recovery work is still going on. The death toll could rise as many areas still
remained cut off," the head of the Department of Disaster Management Reaz Ahmed
told AFP. Many of the victims were from poor tribal communities in the remote
hill district of Rangamati, close to the Indian border, where 48 people were
killed when mudslides buried their homes.--AFP
Report: IS chemical weapons capability degraded
Tue 13 Jun 2017/NNA - A London-based military analysis group says the siege of
Mosul and targeted killings of experts in U.S.-led airstrikes have significantly
degraded the Islamic State group's ability to produce chemical weapons. In a new
report released Tuesday, IHS Markit says there has been a major reduction in IS'
use of chemical weapons outside the Iraqi city. It has recorded one alleged use
of chemical weapons by the group in Syria this year, as opposed to 13
allegations in the previous six months.All other recorded allegations of IS
using chemical agents in 2017 have been in Iraq--all but one of them inside
Mosul. Columb Strack, senior Middle East analyst for IHS Markit, says this
suggests IS has not established any further chemical weapons production sites
outside Mosul. ---AP
North Korea releases U.S. student, Tillerson says
Tue 13 Jun 2017/NNA - North Korea has released Otto Warmbier, a U.S. university
student who has been held captive there since January 2016, U.S. Secretary of
State Rex Tillerson said on Tuesday.
Warmbier, a University of Virginia student from suburban Cincinnati, is on his
way back to the United States, Tillerson said in a statement. The State
Department is continuing to discuss the situation of three other detained
Americans with North Korea, Tillerson said. ---Reuters
Egypt parliament
committee passes Saudi islands deal
Tue 13 Jun 2017/NNA - A controversial agreement for Cairo to hand over two Red
Sea islands to Saudi Arabia passed an Egyptian parliamentary committee Tuesday,
setting the stage for a vote in the house. Parliament's legislative committee
agreed the treaty after heated debate, with opponents even interrupting one
session with chanting. The agreement passed with 35 lawmakers for and eight
against, member of parliament Mostafa Bakry told AFP. Parliament's defence
committee will also examine the accord before it goes to a general vote. Courts
had struck down the agreement, signed in April 2016, but a year later another
court upheld it. The accord had sparked rare protests in Egypt, with President
Abdel Fattah al-Sisi accused of having bartered the islands of Tiran and Sanafir
for Saudi largesse.
The government has said the islands were Saudi to begin with, but were leased to
Egypt in the 1950s. Opponents of the agreement insist that Tiran and Sanafir are
Egyptian.--AFP
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
on
June 13-14/17
Two Choices to Resolve the Qatar Crisis
Abdulrahman Al-Rashed/Asharq Al Awsat/June 13/17
Those who know the history of Qatar’s disputes with its neighbors know that
finding a solution is easy. I will reveal this solution at the end of the
article, but first, here is a brief summary of the history of the crisis.
It began in the late 1990s after Qatar reignited the dispute with Bahrain over
the islands. In 1995, the Doha coup took place and new Prince Hamad rejected the
Saudi mediation and instead insisted on heading to the International Criminal
Court. This ultimately fell in Bahrain’s favor that won a ruling that granted it
power over most of the disputed land.
Had Qatar accepted the mediation of late King Fahd, it would have gotten more or
at least as much as Bahrain.
The Qatari government then turned against Saudi Arabia and renewed its dispute
over new border areas after it had resolved the first dispute through the
mediation of former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. That settlement saw Saudi
Arabia make concessions to Qatar in 1992. The second dispute was resolved in
2001 through appeasing both sides.
Qatar however reneged on its pledges and waged media wars of incitement against
Saudi Arabia. It harbored those who oppose the Kingdom and backed al-Qaeda and
its leader Osama bin Laden, who in his first speech called for changing the
regime in Saudi Arabia by force.
Despite the numerous settlements, Doha continued on financing and supporting
opposition groups that want to topple the governments of Saudi Arabia and
Bahrain.
After the 2011 Arab Spring revolts, Qatar sought to expand its incitement and
began to target the United Arab Emirates because it was backing those opposing
Doha. It then turned its attention to Egypt in an unprecedented and blatant way,
vowing to topple the regime of Abdul Fattah al-Sisi.
This would all have been understandable if the Qatar government itself accepted
change through democracy or by force. The problem however is that it is the
least tolerant Gulf state. It had sentenced a Qatari poet to 15 years in prison
over a poem!
Four Gulf countries finally said enough and they all announced that they were
severing ties with Qatar.
It appears that there a number of conditions that can restore the situation back
to normal, but it seems that they will not go with the reconciliation approaches
of 2013 and 2014. Qatar had at the time signed in Riyadh a pledge of 20 points,
of which only one has been implemented.
The truth is that the four countries can live in peace without having ties with
Qatar. It seems however that Qatar is the one who cannot tolerate this situation
given its outcry after the June 5 statement on cutting ties.
How can this problem be solved and how will Qatar be able to come out of the
crisis?
It wants to repeat its old methods of bringing in mediators and offering pledges
and perhaps change its behavior. It will then continue in its attempts to topple
the regimes of these four countries or incite strife against them.
It should be noted that Qatar in its last Riyadh agreement had vowed to stop the
incitement machine. Indeed, this was witnessed through its al-Jazeera channel
that has been adopting a calm approach in the three years that followed the
agreement. Qatar had in secret however set up websites and television stations
that had taken up the incitement mission.
It may have expelled a number of anti-Gulf figures from Doha, but it gave them
homes in Turkey and London. It has continued to finance and support them through
secret networks that it set up in those countries.
Qatar has since the eruption of the current crisis been adopting the same old
approach. It sought the help of Emir of Kuwait Sheikh Sabah, but these countries
have learned their lesson. They announced that they will continue in severing
ties and living in peace without Qatar. They will seek to put an end to anything
that has to do with it and destroy its internal networks.
Doha is faced with two options for resolving the crisis. It can either
completely concede to the demands of the four countries or live in isolation
from its surrounding.
Qatar’s Promotion of Regime Change and
Mobilization of Finances
Michael Stephens/The Washington Post/June 13/17
The decision by five Arab states to sever ties with Qatar marks another chapter
in a multiyear saga of turbulent relations between Qatar and its neighbors. A
split between Doha and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) was brewing for years.
At the heart of the problem lies an irreconcilable difference between these
countries about how to interpret the events of the 2011 Arab Spring and, more
important, how to react to them.
In contrast to its GCC neighbors, Qatar actively promoted regime change across
the Arab world. The Qataris mobilized finances and offered favorable media
coverage to many actors, including the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, Hamas in
Gaza, the Ennahda party in Tunisia and myriad militias in Libya and Syria.
In response, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia worked forcefully to
block Qatar’s interests in the region, helping to depose Egyptian president
Mohamed Morsi, a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, funding rival opposition
factions in Syria and supporting the government of Gen. Khalifa Haftar in Libya.
Although the Saudis and Emiratis began to resist Qatar’s regional activities,
Qatar’s rulers were no pushover. The emir, Sheikh Hamad Bin Khalifa al-Thani,
and his cousin, Prime Minister Hamad Bin Jasim al-Thani, were seasoned operators
on the international stage. For 20 years, they built “Brand Qatar” by forming a
crosscutting swathe of alliances across the region, stretching from Mauritania
to Afghanistan. And so the decision by Hamad to hand power to his son Tamim in
August 2013 presented an opportunity for the Saudis and Emiratis to put pressure
on the young monarch to force him into line.
In an environment increasingly hostile to Qatari foreign policy, Al Jazeera was
hemorrhaging viewers regionally, and Qatari foreign policy increasingly
struggled in Libya, Syria and Egypt in the face of GCC pressure.
So, the Emiratis, Saudis and Bahrainis urged Tamim to scale back Qatar’s
regional activities. Following six months of failed negotiations, the three
countries pulled their ambassadors from Doha in protest in early 2014.
With the help of Kuwait’s emir, Qatar agreed to acquiesce to each of the three
countries in a series of bilateral negotiations, leading to a repair in
relations by the GCC summit in December 2014. But it was not until December
2016, when Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz went to Doha, that the rift
was publicly mended.
But for all the goodwill that was shown, the core problem that underlay the
split had never healed. While the Qataris had toned down Al Jazeera and evicted
a few Muslim Brotherhood members from Doha, their ambition to be a regional
actor remained, as did their myriad of friendships with a host of political
Islamists across the region — friendships that the UAE in particular found hard
to accept.
In recent months, Qatar has once again drifted outside the GCC consensus.
Particularly galling for the UAE and Saudi Arabia has been Qatar’s interaction
with groups linked closely to the Muslim Brotherhood and al-Qaeda. Worse still
to them are its business dealings with Iranian regional affiliates. In April,
Qatar was involved in communications with the al-Qaeda-linked Hayat Tahrir al
Sham organization to guarantee population transfers in the country. Qatar
appeared to have brokered the deal by communicating with Iran, which in return
managed to secure the release of 26 Qataris royals kidnapped in Iraq in return
for a princely sum to be paid to Iranian client militia Kataib Hezbollah.
Qatar also helped Hamas publicly rebrand itself— and the group launched its new
policy objectives at a Doha hotel in May.
The United States has served as a key actor from which the Saudis can take their
lead. As Riyadh has moved closer to the United States in recent days, helped
with a promise of purchasing more American arms during President Trump’s visit
in May, there is little doubt the Saudis felt emboldened to ratchet up the
pressure against the Qataris.
The Emiratis also have found themselves in favor with the new Washington
administration, whose strong dislike for both Iran and Islamists fits well with
UAE policy priorities. Accordingly, there is a newfound confidence in Saudi
Arabia and the UAE that strong measures to force the Qataris back into their box
will find support in Washington.
Given that diplomatic attempts to isolate Qatar in 2014 seem to have had no
long-term effect on Doha’s behavior, it is not surprising that the Saudis have
decided to dramatically up the stakes this time around by closing off Qatar’s
only land border and— along with the UAE and Egypt— blocking all air travel to
the emirate, with Egypt denying Qatar Airways the use of its airspace.
The closure of land borders and the disruption to air traffic will have serious
consequences for the Qatari economy and its society that will quickly prove
prohibitively expensive, even for a rich state like Qatar. And so, serious
concessions will have to be made if relations in the GCC are to normalize to the
usual levels.
Egyptian Writers Debate Possibility That Israel Will Join
Arab League After Resolution Of Conflict With Palestinians
MEMRI/June 13/17
Following the Arab League summit in Jordan, in late April 2017, Egyptian
businessman Salah Diab, owner of the Egyptian daily Al-Masri Al-Yawm who goes by
the pen name Newton, published an exchange between himself and Egyptian
physician Yahya Nour Al-Din Taraf regarding the possibility of Israel joining
the Arab League once the Palestinian-Israeli conflict is resolved. The idea was
raised by Dr. Taraf in a letter he wrote to Newton, in which he noted that
Comoros had joined the Arab League in 1993 despite its geographical distance
from the Arab world and despite the fact that Arabic was only its third official
language, while Israel is situated in the middle of the Arab world and Arabic is
its second official language. Newton responded favorably to the idea and noted
that it corresponded to the Arab Peace Initiative of 2002. He added that it had
already been proposed in 1965 by Tunisia's first president Al-Habib Bourguiba as
part of his call to end the conflict with Israel.
This exchange, which was published by Newton in his newspaper on April 1, 2017,
sparked a critical response from 'Abd Al-'Aal Al-Baqouri, a columnist for the
official newspaper Al-Gomhouriyya. He wrote that in raising this idea, Newton
and Taraf were ignoring the fact that Israel is an aggressive country that has
thwarted a long series of peace initiatives over the years. The official Arab
position on the resolution of the conflict with Israel, he stated, demands
several things from Israel, adding that there is no justification for making
advance concessions, for example by considering Israel's incorporation into the
Arab League.
The following are excerpts from the exchange between Newton and Dr. Taraf and
from Al-Baqouri's response.
Al-Masri Al-Yawm Owner: "Fifty-Two Years Later, Everyone Finally Sees What
Bourguiba Saw" In 1965
In his letter to Newton, Dr. Taraf wrote: "Dear Newton, in your latest article
from last Thursday, titled 'On the Summit,' you mentioned the fact that the Arab
[League] summit had been held at the Dead Sea, a stone's throw from Israel. I
take this opportunity to ask: Is there anything in the Arab League's charter
that prevents Israel from joining it? Or, in other words: What qualifies an Arab
country to join the League if it wishes? Recently [in 1993,] the Arab League
welcomed the Comoros [as a member]; as you know, the Comoros are far to the
south and beyond the boundaries of the Arab homeland, and the languages spoken
there are Comorian, French, and Arabic. Israel, on the other hand, lies in the
heart of the Arab world, Arabic is its second official language after Hebrew,
and 20% of Israeli citizens are Arabs. Therefore, would Israel not meet the
criteria for membership in the league, if it requested to join it?
"Some may say that Israel is a usurping country that occupies an Arab country
that is a member of the [Arab] League – Palestine – and this prevents its
joining [the League] according to the League's charter. In that case, if the
Israelis and Palestinians reach an comprehensive and just solution to the
Palestinian problem, will that remove the obstacles to Israel's joining the
league?
"[Signed,] Dr. Yahya Nour Al-Din Tarraf." [1]
Newton responded as follows:
"On September 17, 1965, the Arab foreign ministers, who had convened in
Casablanca, rejected the memo sent by [the first president of Tunisia] Al-Habib
Bourguiba in April of that year, in which he demanded an end to the Arab-Israeli
conflict once and for all, by means of three main moves: Arab acceptance of the
principle of partition; an immediate declaration of a Palestinian state; and the
admission of Israel as a honorary member of the Arab League.[2]
"At the time, [Egyptian] President [Gamal] 'Abd Al-Nasser harshly attacked this
proposal. The entire Arab press blasted Bourguiba for his peace plan. During the
Palestinian conference held at League headquarters in Cairo [in 1965], 'Abd
Al-Nasser said: 'Bourguiba's statements constitute treason against the Arabs and
Arabism, and they do not serve anyone other than Israel and the Zionist
movement.' In a press statement responding to the rejection [of his proposal] by
the Arab foreign ministers, Bourguiba said: 'What the Arabs can achieve today,
they will never be able to achieve tomorrow.'
"Time has proven Bourguiba 100% right. [Saudi] King 'Abdallah bin 'Abd Al-'Aziz
made the same proposal [i.e. in the form of the Arab Peace Initiative] at the
2002 Beirut summit, and during the recent summit, on the shores of the Dead Sea,
all the Arabs proposed [the same thing]: Comprehensive peace with Israel
according to the same conditions that [Bourguiba] put forth. Fifty-two years
later, everyone finally sees what Bourguiba saw back then." [3]
Egyptian Journalist Responds: You Are Ignoring Israel's Aggression And Rejection
Of Peace
As stated, the exchange between Newton and Dr. Taraf prompted criticism from 'Abd
Al-'Aal Al-Baqouri, a columnist for the official Al-Gomhouriyya daily. He wrote:
"Dr. Yahya [Nour Al-Din Taraf] can surely answer his own question [as to whether
Israel should join the Arab League], for he is familiar with the terms of
membership [in it]... As everyone knows, Mauritania, Somalia, Djibouti and
Comoro... are sovereign states with established and recognized borders, as
required by the terms of membership in the Arab League [as set out in its]
charter.[4] How different [these countries are] from Israel in this sense. To
which Israel is Dr. Yahya Nour Al-Din Taraf referring? Israel according to the
partition plan of 1947? Israel after the 1948 war? Israel after the 1956
aggression or after the occupation of Sinai? Israel after the statement of
[David] Ben Gurion, its prime minister at the time, who said to the Knesset: 'We
have returned to the Western fatherland?'[5] Israel after the aggression of
1967? Israel after the withdrawal from Sinai? [Israel] after the withdrawal from
Gaza and its besieging of it? Israel, some of whose leaders announced today that
they want to annex the Jordan Valley or Eastern Jordan or various other parts of
Arab countries bordering Palestine, so as to achieve what they call 'greater
Israel'?...
"Moreover, in mentioning Bourguiba and reiterating his 1965 statements...
[Newton] ignored Israel's imperialist aggression in 1967, the consequences of
which burn us to this very day...
"[Some] issues pertaining to the path or paths towards [arriving at] a
settlement with the Zionists go back to before the founding of the Zionist
entity. This entity was established in 1948, but [unofficial] contacts between
the Arabs and Zionists began in the early 20th century. Furthermore, in the
period between the two World Wars, there were those among the Jews in Palestine
who called for peace and calm, but they encountered refusal and rejection on the
part of the extremist Zionists. The 'official' contacts between the Arabs and
the Zionists began after 1948, and especially after the aggression of 1967.
Despite [the failure of] the numerous attempts [to reach an agreement], the Arab
proponents of an agreement, with various approaches, refrained from reassessing
their positions, their modi operandi, and their measures. In general, it can be
said that they failed to understand the Israeli mentality that has prevailed
since 1967, for had they understood it, these people – who are certainly
honorable – would not have taken the steps that they did, but would have taken a
step back. But that did not happen..."[6]
[1] Al-Masri Al-Yawm (Egypt), April 1, 2017.
[2] Actually, Al-Bourguiba proposed that if Israel complied with U.N.
Resolutions 181 and 194, i.e. gave up a third of its territory, allowed the
refugees to return to their homes, and agreed to negotiations in which the Arab
countries would be represented mostly by the Palestinians, the Arab states would
recognize it and then present further demands to it. Michael M. Laskier,
"Between Bourgabism and Nasserism: Israel-Tunisia Relations and the Arab-Israeli
Conflict during the 1950s and 1960s," Iyyunim Bitkumat Yisrael 11, 2001, p. 47.
[3] Al-Masri Al-Yawm (Egypt), April 1, 2017.
[4] Al-Baqouri is referring to Article I of the Arab League charter, which
states: "The League of Arab States is composed of the independent Arab states
which have signed this Charter." It should be noted that no definition of
"independent Arab state" is given.
[5] Apparently a reference to a November 7, 1956 statement by Ben Gurion, when
he announced the conclusion of the 1956 Sinai campaign and said: "We have
returned to the place where the Torah was given."
[6] Al-Gomhouriyya (Egypt), April 5, 2017.
How to Send the Wrong Message to Palestinians
Bassam Tawil/Gatestone Institute/June 13/17
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10510/palestinians-wrong-message
In the eyes of many Arabs and Muslims, Trump is no longer the strong leader they
feared a few months ago. Rather, he has proven to them that he too is
susceptible to blackmail and intimidation. And when Trump caves, US credibility
suffers. Had Trump gone ahead and fulfilled his promise to move the embassy, he
would have earned the respect of many Arabs and Muslims, who would have looked
to him as a proper leader.
A further point ought to be of extreme interest to the US: When the Palestinians
and Arabs talk about the possibility that such a move would "harm" US interests
in the region and "trigger violence and bloodshed," they are actually
threatening to launch terror attacks against American nationals and interests.
That is why Trump's recent decision not to move the embassy to Jerusalem is
being understood in the Arab world as surrender to terrorism.
Consider what happened when Trump recently ordered a missile attack on Syria.
Many Arabs and Muslims took to social media to heap praise on Trump for
displaying courage. If and when Trump honors his promises, he will earn even
more respect in the Arab and Islamic countries.
US President Donald J. Trump's waiver delaying the relocation of the US embassy
in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem accomplishes two things.
First, it disappoints many Israelis for failing to fulfill his pre-election
promise. Second, and perhaps more importantly, it has sent precisely the wrong
message to the Palestinians. What the Palestinians and other Arabs heard in this
message is that the US president folds under pressure and threats.
This message of weakness and retreat harms not only Trump's credibility, but
also that of the US by making it appear a country that caves under threats of
violence.
In general, it is Trump's presentation of power that garners respect among many
Palestinians and Arabs. The Arabs admire and respect such figures because they
have been ruled for decades by ruthless tyrants and dictators such as Saddam
Hussein. But the Arabs also respect leaders who keep their promises, even if
they disagree with and oppose those promises.
Trump's decision to delay the relocation of the US embassy came after repeated
threats by the Palestinian Authority (PA) and some Arabs that such a move would
"plunge the entire region into violence and bloodshed." These threats began
during Trump's election campaign and escalated after he entered the White House.
President Donald Trump's decision to delay the relocation of the US embassy in
Israel (pictured) from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem came after repeated threats by the
Palestinian Authority that such a move would "plunge the entire region into
violence and bloodshed." (Image source: Krokodyl/Wikimedia Commons)
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and his cohorts in Ramallah
spearheaded the campaign of threats and intimidation. They even went as far as
threatening to revoke their recognition of Israel's right to exist if Trump
dared to fulfill his promise.
Last January, Abbas was quoted as saying that the transfer of the US embassy to
Jerusalem would prompt the Palestinians to withdraw their recognition of Israel.
"I wrote a letter to President Trump urging him to refrain from such a move. I
made it clear to him that such a move would not only deprive the US of playing
any legitimate role in solving the conflict, but would also destroy the
two-state solution."
Abbas's mufti, Sheikh Mohammed Hussein, warned Trump that transferring the
embassy to Jerusalem would be seen as an "aggression not only against the
Palestinians, but against all Arabs and Muslims as well." PLO Secretary-General
Saeb Erekat joined the chorus of threats by warning Trump that moving the
embassy to Jerusalem would "plunge the Middle East into violence and chaos."
The Palestinian threats were accompanied by threats from some Arab governments
and Islamic clerics. They too warned Trump that the transfer of the embassy to
Jerusalem would trigger a wave of violence and jeopardize US interests in the
Middle East. The former mufti of Egypt, Sheikh Ali Jum'ah, said that moving the
embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem would "constitute a grave escalation and
threaten US interests in the region." Another leading Egyptian Islamic cleric,
Sheikh Ibahim Reda, warned that such a move would "trigger a wave of tensions in
the region and constitute an aggression against Arabs and Muslims."
Such threats on the part of Palestinians are nothing new. In fact, Mahmoud Abbas
and his colleagues issue similar "warnings" whenever they do not get what they
want. This is one of their favored tactics against Israel.
For example, the Palestinians used to warn that Israel's construction of the
security barrier in the West Bank would result in violence and anarchy. In
reality, however, the security barrier has led to exactly opposite; it has
halted suicide bombings against Israel, and saved the lives not only of Jews,
but also Arabs who were killed in the wave of terrorism waged by the
Palestinians during the Second Intifada.
"Palestinians warn" is one of the most popular results on Google Search.
More recently, for example, the Palestinians "warned" Israel against introducing
a new curriculum for Arab schools in Jerusalem by claiming this would lead to
the "Judaization" and "Israelization" of Jerusalem.
Last month, the Palestinians came out with another "warning" -- this time, that
if Israel does not comply with the demands of Palestinian prisoners who went on
hunger strike, there would be a "new intifada."
After 40 days of the hunger strike, the prisoners backtracked and ended their
fast -- although most of their demands were not met by Israel.
All this is added to the daily threats Abbas and many Palestinians have been
making for the past two years regarding visits by Jews to the Temple Mount in
Jerusalem. Hardly a day passes without another threat being issued by the
Palestinians about these visits.
The Palestinians work hard to convince the world that routine and peaceful tours
of Jewish groups and individuals to the Temple Mount are part of an Israeli
"conspiracy" to destroy the Aqsa Mosque and "defile" Islamic religious sites.
They have also been warning that the visits would trigger a "religious war"
between Jews and Muslims and lead to a "big explosion" and an "earthquake" in
the Middle East.
True, the Palestinian incitement over the Temple Mount visits has resulted in a
wave of knife and car ramming attacks against Israelis, but no "religious war"
has erupted and the Arab and Islamic countries do not seem overly concerned
about Jewish visits to the Temple Mount.
These visits, by the way, have been taking place since 1967. The visits were
suspended temporarily during the Second Intifada for security reasons, and were
resumed about two years ago. It is also worth noting that Christian tourists
also continue to tour the holy site -- something that does not seem to bother
Abbas and his PA friends.
Israel, for its part, has learned to live with the incessant Palestinian threats
and warnings. But the international community continues to take these threats
seriously, ignoring the fact that by doing so they are constantly sending the
wrong message to the Palestinians. Surrendering to threats of violence only
emboldens the extremists and paves the way for more violence and bloodshed.
How moving the US embassy to Jerusalem "destroys" the so-called two-state
solution is rather a mystery.
If and when the US embassy is moved from Tel Aviv, it will be set up in the
western part of the city and not in East Jerusalem, which the Palestinians are
demanding as their future capital. Only one thing can be inferred from this --
that the Palestinians also see the western part of Jerusalem too as part of
their future capital.
The Palestinian and Arab threats of violence and chaos in the region sound
laughable given the current state of affairs in many Arab countries, including
Syria, Iraq, Egypt and Libya, where Muslims have been slaughtering each other --
and Christians -- for the past six years.
The turmoil in the Arab world -- including the recent tensions surrounding Qatar
-- is completely unrelated to US policies in particular, and the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict in general. Despite the myopia of Arab leaders and
Islamic clerics, blood is already spilled at a rather alarming rate in the Arab
countries.
The killings in Syria, Iraq and Libya will continue, regardless of whether Trump
moves the US embassy to Jerusalem or not.
A further point ought to be of extreme interest to the US: When the Palestinians
and Arabs talk about the possibility that such a move would "harm" US interests
in the region and "trigger violence and bloodshed," they are actually
threatening to launch terror attacks against American nationals and interests.
That is why Trump's recent decision not to move the embassy to Jerusalem is
being understood in the Arab world as a surrender to terrorism.
From the Arab world's point of view, it shows the US as cowing under the threat
of violence.
Does anyone seriously believe that the leaders of the Arab and Islamic countries
really care whether the embassy is located in Jerusalem or Tel Aviv? Don't these
leaders have enough to worry about, such as the Iranian threat to undermine the
stability of their regimes and the threat of Islamic terrorism?
Does anyone seriously believe that the Arab and Muslim masses, who have to deal
with massive unemployment, dictatorships and terrorism, really care whether the
US embassy moves from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem?
The Palestinians were hoping that the Arab and Muslim masses would erupt over
the Jewish visits to the Temple Mount, but most Arabs and Muslims remain
indifferent. In fact, the Arabs and Muslims do not really care about the
Palestinians; they have long turned their backs on their Palestinian brothers,
who are today almost entirely dependent on American and European funding.
Moving the US embassy to Jerusalem will not lead to more anarchy. Christians in
Egypt and Iraq are not being killed because of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Syrians are not being systematically slaughtered because of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The Islamic State terror group is not butchering
innocent civilians in the Arab world and some Western countries because it is
upset with Jewish visits to the Temple Mount or settlement construction.
Palestinians and Arabs heaved a sigh of relief upon learning of Trump's decision
to delay the transfer of the embassy to Jerusalem. They are now rubbing their
hands in satisfaction and saying to themselves that threats of violence work
because even someone like Trump will succumb.
In the eyes of many Arabs and Muslims, Trump is no longer the strong leader they
feared a few months ago. Rather, he has proven to them that he too is
susceptible to blackmail and intimidation. And when Trump caves, US credibility
suffers. Had Trump gone ahead and fulfilled his promise to move the embassy, he
would have earned the respect of many Arabs and Muslims, who would have looked
to him as a proper leader.
Consider what happened when Trump recently ordered a missile attack on Syria, in
response to the regime's continued killing of innocent civilians, including the
use of poison gas. Many Arabs and Muslims took to social media to heap praise on
Trump for displaying courage. If and when Trump honors his promises, he will
earn even more respect in the Arab and Islamic countries.
*Bassam Tawil is a Muslim based 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.
Qatar: When a leader fails
Abdullah bin Bijad Al-Otaibi/Al Arabiya/June 13/17
People hate to fail. Those who hate it most though are leaders who are
responsible for their people, state, interests and country’s future. Allying
with losers only leads to failure. Allying with terrorism and fundamentalism
also leads to failure because these are the worst in politics and media and in
managing affairs as their only successes are represented in bloodshed and
murder. Getting addicted to failure is the end result of any person who loses
all his bets, whose visions fail over the course of two decades and whom all his
allies also fail. In this case, he becomes friends with failure and he becomes
addicted to it. This is a general situation but when it comes to leaders and
officials, its repercussions are worse and more harmful. Sheikh Hamad bin
Khalifa bet on all the rivals of his neighbors in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).
He bet on all these rivals from Iran, to the Brotherhood and Turkey. He harmed
Kuwait the most by supporting chaotic groups and the Brotherhood and seeking to
sow divisions among the family. He did the same and more in Bahrain when he
supported the opposition, particularly terrorist opposition groups. He did not
value the fact that some Gulf leaders thought well of him regarding some
political and media orientations and instead he worked for long to destabilize
Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Oman. A failed leader insists on claiming victory when
he is defeated and claims he is powerful when weakness prevails. The most failed
leader is one who denies facts, ignores changes and insists on practicing
politics using the same old methods
Shattered delusions
Thinking so highly of one’s self for no good reason ends up badly. This is what
happened after the so-called Arab Spring. Qatar’s delusions shattered and the
facts surfaced. The maliciousness and schemes were thus exposed. Scandals and
losses were very significant as they could have destroyed Hamad’s small country
and weak governance. He then submitted under pressure and agreed to the charade
of giving up power. He tested his sons, and he imprisoned the strong ones and
granted the emirate to the weak one so he remains in control. In a joint
statement last week, Arab countries surrounding Qatar and Egypt announced
cutting ties with Qatar. They then issued a terror list linked to Qatar. It
included around 60 figures inside and outside Qatar and more than 10 Qatari
institutions. The crisis is escalating and not calming down, and it is expanding
not receding. How does a failed man think? First, he is persistent then he is
stubborn. He then commits mistakes. If it’s an ordinary person, the mistakes
affect him and his family but if he’s a leader, the mistakes affect his country,
government and people. A failed leader insists on claiming victory when he is
defeated and claims he is powerful when weakness prevails. The most failed
leader is one who denies facts, ignores changes and insists on practicing
politics using the same old methods via the same old vision, which proved to be
a failure.
The snowball effect
When you violate international laws and support, fund and sponsor terrorism,
then you would be dragging yourself toward failure in an attempt to find
yourself a place among major players. Illusions make one think he is capable of
overcoming all this but when the time comes and it all backfires, the snowball
effect worsens. At this point, one has to sit back and review what happened. He
must reconsider the situation and hold himself accountable. The failed leader is
the one who only bets on foreign states and organizations, which have their own
interests, agendas and ambitions. He ignores his own people while suppressing
them and fighting them instead of making them comfortable. He expels an entire
tribe and withdraws its members’ nationality and lets a big brotherhood and a
generous neighbor grab it. When the time comes, he resorts to sectarian and
fundamental centers of gravity in Iran and Turkey as he thinks he is protecting
himself from his people using foreigners. When you sponsor terrorism in the
region, and the world as part of this game of contradictions which Qatar has
been famous for, then an American military base, like the one in Al-Udeid,
becomes a threat considering US President Donald Trump’s engagement in the
current crisis and hints that Qatar must entirely stop supporting and funding
terrorism. Finally, a failed leader fears his people during difficult times as
he knows how unjust he was to them. His worries increase and suspicions take
over him, thus he ends up trusting no one but foreigners.
Making sense of the new phase of street terrorism
Dr. Halla Diyab/Al Arabiya/June 13/17
The recent London Bridge attack which left seven dead and 48 injured, has raised
question marks around whether we are witnessing an era of “street terrorism” in
the form of a modern Guerrilla warfare. If this is indeed the case, then this is
nothing less than sabotage spreading terror in the streets of Britain. This new
face of terrorism is deviated from the established understanding of extremism
and takes the shape of militant insurgency of a group of combatants who are
taking their fight against the system by spreading terror among the public. The
London Bridge attack marks a departure in mechanism from the Westminster attack
which was orchestrated and executed by one man; Khalid Masood. While with the
London Bridge attack the terrorist “Guerrilla” evolved into a ring of three
attackers who went on a rampage on the streets, targeting people at random,
ambushing them by either stabbing or running them down in a white van. The three
combatants were also wearing hoax suicide vests to spread fear among the public.
This rising phenomenon of modern guerrilla warfare does not stop at executing
physical violence in public. It aims in the long-run to create more
confrontation with the system, including the society, police forces and
policies. It invokes public chaos, division among communities and spreads the
culture of fear and lack of trust in the system and the ruling authority.
State’s structure and policies
Their idea is to create distrust in the public toward the authorities and have
them blame it for the chaos and violence caused by these insurgencies, something
which will have an impact on the state’s structure and policies. This is where a
departure from conventional terrorism is increasingly apparent. The three
perpetrators of the London Bridge attack are taking own law into their own
hands, by enacting what they believe to be justice by attacking people on a
Saturday night out with an aim to protect their twisted extremist ideology which
condemns and frowns upon drinking, and the weekend lifestyle of western people.
This marks the transition of the extremist ideology from rhetoric, a tactic of
manipulative debate taunting and social media activism, to commanding an ever
larger presence and voice by being physically in the British streets. The
dramatic trajectory of Khurram Butt, whose appearance in Channel 4’s documentary
sparked controversy. From a hardliner and ideological supporter of ISIS to
belligerent insurgent for the terrorist group, his journey highlights the path
from silent spectator and ideological follower to an active militant. His case
is testimony to the rapid transformation from an ideology to a violent act.
Street terrorism gives the impression that the extreme rhetoric is transmitted
from the ideological sphere onto a spatial manifestation of territorial
conquering
Long praised
“Street terrorism” in the shape of guerrilla warfare is a terror tactic long
praised by terrorist groups like al-Qaeda, and today the globally feared ISIS.
In April, al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri urged in an audio titled “Syria will
only bow to God”, released on the internet armed Syrian opposition to wage
guerrilla warfare against the Syrian government and its allies. The spirit of
guerrilla warfare travels to ISIS and grows to be a tactic of fusion with its
almost singular focus on efforts to take and hold land and simultaneously to win
the “hearts and minds,” of the population by means of terrorism.
Scenes staged by insurgency like the London Bridge attack serves the visual
component of the terrorist group. Street terrorism gives the impression that the
extreme rhetoric is transmitted from the ideological sphere onto a spatial
manifestation of territorial conquering.
Dynamic of deviation
The organized violence of the terrorist modern guerrilla warfare works to convey
the threats of the extremists, that they can invade the British streets, at any
given time or place, spreading horror, anxiety, fear and chaos. The evolution of
modern terrorist guerrilla warfare is a dynamic of their deviation. Their
manifestations are not static and traditionalist, but rather embryonic and
continuously finding shape and form. The new era of street terrorism, with its
deviations, not only highlights the dangerous growth of the extremist ideology
but also how the shape of this new facet of terrorism can evolve to street
insurgency. Within this evolution and multi-layered power, it is their danger
embedded. The shock result of the UK elections questions the impact and the
prospect of the rise of street terrorism on the trust of the British public in
the ruling authority. With these ideological hardliners relinquishing their
invisibility, shifting from wielding rhetoric to wielding a machete, the
question of how much the British public will continue to trust Theresa May’s
government, hangs in the balance.
Joint list a new chapter in the war against terror
Turki Aldakhil/Al Arabiya/June 13/17
A joint statement by Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain
last week placed several individuals and institutions, either funded by Qatar or
are Qatar-based, on a terror list. This is a heavy blow to extremism. Decisive
measures will be taken against entities and individuals and the latter will
submit to international law. This is a new chapter in fighting terrorism and its
sources.
The list did not only include those who are fighting or whose hands are stained
with blood but it included those who are accomplices in murder, violence and
terrorism. One of them is the godfather of suicide fatwas (religious edict)
which are described as “guerrilla” operations.
All organizations have been inspired by these fatwas as they provided them with
justifications to kill themselves, murder others and infiltrate civilians to
kill as many children, women, men and elderly people as possible. His followers
voiced surprise he was listed although a quick look on his fatwas, lectures and
seminars have enough of these justifications to make him a terror icon par
excellence.
The time we live in today is completely different. American President Donald
Trump’s stance from the Muslim Brotherhood is different than the stance of his
predecessor Barack Obama. Trump views the Brotherhood as a terrorist group that
produced extremist ideologies which inspired terrorism from al-Qaeda to ISIS.
Obama, however, thinks the group is a political movement that has the right to
participate in governance and he encouraged its leaders and entities.
Neglecting its expansion in the world for eight years greatly influenced the
spread of terrorism in Europe, United States and countries in the region because
the Brotherhood is against the state and against the concept of citizenship. The
Brotherhood thinks homelands are idols and that rulers lack legitimacy as the
only one who has the right to rule must be from within the group and must be
ideologically affiliated with them, otherwise there is no pledge of allegiance.
The joint list marks the beginning of a strong transformation in the mechanism
of combating terrorism. Countries’ silence over terrorism is itself an act of
terror by all standards
West infiltrated
The Brotherhood infiltrated the West in an unprecedented manner and contributed
to infuriating immigrants and exploited the pains and tragedies of Muslims
especially after the Syrian crisis. German Philosopher Jürgen Habermas noticed
this particularly as his country hosts the biggest number of refugees and he’s
alarmed by this issue.
In the book “Philosophy in a Time of Terror,” Habermas said: “The global terror
that culminated in the September 11 attack bears the anarchistic traits of an
impotent revolt directed against an enemy that cannot be defeated in any
pragmatic sense. The only possible effect it can have is to shock and alarm the
government and population. Technically speaking, since our complex societies are
highly susceptible to interferences and accidents, they certainly offer ideal
opportunities for a prompt disruption of normal activities. These disruptions
can, at a minimum expense, have considerably destructive consequences. Global
terrorism is extreme both in its lack of realistic goals and in its cynical
exploitation of the vulnerability of complex systems.”
Countries’ list of terror allows them to call a spade a spade. For a long time
now, the only party held accountable for terrorism has been the murderer while
inciters have been ignored and not listed. Inciters are accomplices to murder.
After all that Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Bahrain and the UAE suffered from as a
result of these terrorist individuals and cells, it turned out that they had
only crushed and eliminated certain terrorists while their groups kept breeding
dozens of them. Therefore, they had to dry out these swamps instead of
desperately killing insects around them.
The joint list marks the beginning of a strong transformation in the mechanism
of combating terrorism. Countries’ silence over terrorism is itself an act of
terror by all standards. The same applies to harboring and celebrating
terrorists or covering up dangerous terrorist operations.
I hope countries in the region partner up in this war against terrorism. It is
no secret that the list was announced few days after Trump, King Salman and
Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi inaugurated the Global Center for
Combating Extremist Ideology – named “Etidal” or moderation.
What’s more important is for others to think before they act. This is a decisive
phase. The times of “half terrorists” and of condemning practices but then
explaining and justifying them has come to an end. The world is now uniting
against words and deeds related to terrorism. No criminal will get away with his
crime.