LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS
BULLETIN
March 13/17
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The
Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/newselias/english.march13.17.htm
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Bible Quotations For Today
I told you that you would die in your sins, for you will
die in your sins unless you believe that I am he
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint John 08/21-27/:"Again he said to
them, ‘I am going away, and you will search for me, but you will die in your
sin. Where I am going, you cannot come.’Then the Jews said, ‘Is he going to kill
himself? Is that what he means by saying, "Where I am going, you cannot
come"?’He said to them, ‘You are from below, I am from above; you are of this
world, I am not of this world. I told you that you would die in your sins, for
you will die in your sins unless you believe that I am he.’They said to him,
‘Who are you?’ Jesus said to them, ‘Why do I speak to you at all? I have much to
say about you and much to condemn; but the one who sent me is true, and I
declare to the world what I have heard from him.’They did not understand that he
was speaking to them about the Father."
Pay close attention to yourself and to your teaching; continue in these things,
for in doing this you will save both yourself and your hearers
First Letter to Timothy 04/09-16/:"The saying is sure and worthy of full
acceptance. For to this end we toil and struggle, because we have our hope set
on the living God, who is the Saviour of all people, especially of those who
believe. These are the things you must insist on and teach. Let no one despise
your youth, but set the believers an example in speech and conduct, in love, in
faith, in purity. Until I arrive, give attention to the public reading of
scripture, to exhorting, to teaching. Do not neglect the gift that is in you,
which was given to you through prophecy with the laying on of hands by the
council of elders.
Put these things into practice, devote yourself to them, so that all may see
your progress. Pay close attention to yourself and to your teaching; continue in
these things, for in doing this you will save both yourself and your hearers."
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources
published On March 12-13/17
The Bleeding Women: Faith & Hope/Elias
Bejjani/March 12/17
Iranian backed militia forms Golan liberation brigade/Roi Kais|/Ynetnews/March
12/17
Trump kicks the ball to Abbas's court/Smadar Perry|/Ynetnews/March 12/17
Death and Destruction for Christmas/Muslim Persecution of Christians, December
2016/Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/March 12, 2017
A Month of Islam and Multiculturalism in Britain: February 2017/Soeren Kern/Gatestone
Institute/March 12, 2017
Iran's Economy Post-Nuclear Deal: A Misleading IMF Scorecard/Patrick Clawson/The
Washington Institute/March 12, 2017
Significant escalation in Trump’s war with media on cards/Ahmad al-Farraj/Al
Arabiya/March 12/17
Iran and Israel’s conflict in Syria/Abdulrahman al-Rashed/Al Arabiya/March 12/17
Gulf Arabs, poetry and prose/Turki Aldakhil/Al Arabiya/March 12/17
Youth have crucial role in shaping UAE’s future/Yasser Hareb/Al Arabiya/March
12/17
A CIA conflict with internet companies/Mashari Althaydi/Al Arabiya/March 12/17
Titles For Latest Lebanese Related News published
On March 12-13/17
The Bleeding Women: Faith & Hope
Saudi-Lebanese relations suffer setback
Aoun’s Hezbollah remarks threaten US military aid
Lebanon seeking a long-delayed Syrian refugee policy
New Lebanese Army Commander in First Visit to Bkirki
Wednesday Legislative Session to Tackle Budget, Wage Scale amid Growing
Objections
Jumblat Says Proportional Representation Must Preserve 'Partnership'
Bassil Says Constitution 'Can be Amended', Promises New Electoral Law Proposal
AMAL MP Warns of 'Vacuum, Chaos' if No New Electoral Law
Abu Faour: No One Can Persecute Us through Electoral Law
Public Administration Employees Reject Proposed Duty Hours Increase
Iraqi Ambassador visits Imam of Nabatiyeh: We appreciate his role in the care of
Iraqi refugees
Hobeich: To think about the people when passing electoral laws
Hariri mourns Stavro Jabra, Melhem Imad
Hashem, Saad head to Islamabad
King Abdullah II of Jordan receives Siniora
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin For
Miscellaneous Reports And News published On March 12-13/17
Iraqi Forces Take Third of West Mosul,
Jihadists 'Trapped'
Dutch Expel Turkish Minister as Police Break Up Protests
Assad: Several European countries' policies toward Syria and the region have led
to the spread of terrorism
Ex-Qaida Affiliate in Syria Claims Damascus Carnage
Iranian speaker rebuffs Netanyahu for Purim comparison: 'Study the Torah'
Palestinian Police Use Tear Gas, Batons to Disperse Protest
Parade Sees Tributes to Israeli Soldier Convicted of Killing Palestinian
Robust and Concrete Measures Should Be Taken Immediately Against Iran Regime
Arab Media Coverage of Iran Opposition Unveiling IRGC Activities in London Press
Conference
Internal Factions Flare in Iran Over Upcoming Farce Elections
Behind the Iran Regime's Hippocratic Style of Negotiations
Trump’s White House planning meeting with Saudi Arabia’s deputy crown prince
Saudi Arabia: Security forces kill wanted person in al-Qatif region
Former Saudi justice minister tells EU parliament: Terrorism has no religion
Yemeni army is approaching Sanaa, spokesman says
15 killed, dozens missing in Ethiopia garbage dump landslide
Links From Jihad Watch Site for March 12-13/17
Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards now opposite Israeli troops on 1967
ceasefire line in Golan Heights
Islamic State turned Mosul church into base for Islamic religious police
Palestinian children at UK taxpayer-funded school pretend to execute Israeli
soldier
Judge refuses to halt Trump’s new immigration order
UK: 5,500 cases of FGM in 2016 alone, not a single prosecution
New Jersey: Rocks thrown through pastor’s window after Muslim center plans nixed
Reza Aslan blames rise of “Islamophobia” on Robert Spencer, Pamela Geller, Frank
Gaffney and Daniel Pipes
Netherlands bars Turkish ministers, Turks riot, Erdogan vows retaliation in
“harshest ways” against “Nazis”
UK: Muslims barrage Muslima in hijab with death threats for twerking
North Dakota: Muslim calls 911 47 times to say he supports the Islamic State and
hates Trump
Hugh Fitzgerald: The Once and Future Al-Andalus
Abu Dhabi: Non-Muslim couple imprisoned for sex before marriage
Links From Christian Today Site
On March 12-13/17
Leprosy: How The Biblical Disease Is Still Costing Lives Today, And How You Can
Help
At Least 40 Killed In Damascus Bombing Targeting Shi'ites
Jordan Soldier Who Shot Israeli Schoolchildren Freed After End Of Sentence
Why The Future Of The Church Of England Is In The Balance After The Sheffield
Debacle
Why What Emma Watson Wears Is Our Problem, Not Hers
How To Make Britain (Really) Great Again – And America Too
Man Faces 10-year Sentence After Scaling White House Fence
Tomb Of Jonah In Mosul Shows ISIS Preserving Artefacts To Sell For Loot
Latest Lebanese Related News published
On March 12-13/17
The Bleeding Women: Faith & Hope
Elias Bejjani/March 12/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=36973
(John 6:68): “Lord, to whom would we go? You have the words of eternal life”
Whenever we are in real trouble encountering devastating and harsh conditions
either physically or materially, we unconsciously react with sadness, anger,
confusion, helplessness and feel abandoned. When in a big mess, we expect our
family members and friends to automatically run to our rescue. But in the
majority of such difficult situations, we discover with great disappointment
that in reality our heartfelt expectations do not unfold as we wish.
What is frustrating and shocking is that very few of our family members and
friends would stand beside us during hardships and endeavour to genuinely offer
the needed help. Those who have already walked through these rocky life paths
and adversities definitely know very well the bitter taste of disappointment.
They know exactly the real meaning of the well-know saying, “a friend in need is
a friend indeed”.
Sadly our weak human nature is driven by inborn instincts that often make us
side with the rich, powerful, healthy and strong over the poor, weak, needy and
sick. Those who have no faith in Almighty God find it very difficult to cope in
a real mess.
Meanwhile, those whose faith is solid stand up with courage, refuse to give up
hope, and call on their Almighty Father for help through praying and worshiping.
They know for sure that our Great Father is loving and passionate. He will not
abandon any one of us when calling on Him for mercy and help because He said and
promised so. Matthew 11/28-30: “Come to me, all you who labor and are heavily
burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me,
for I am gentle and lowly in heart; and you will find rest for your souls. For
my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.”
One might ask, ‘Why should I pray?’ And, ‘Do I have to ask God for help, can’t
He help me without praying to Him?’ The answer is ‘no’. We need to pray and when
we do so with faith and confidence God listens and responds (Mark 11/:24):
“Therefore I tell you, all things whatever you pray and ask for, believe that
you have received them, and you shall have them”
Yes, we have to make the effort and be adamant and persistent. We have to ask
and knock in a bid to show our mere submission to Him and He with no doubt shall
provide. (Matthew 7/7 & 8): “Ask, and it will be given you. Seek, and you will
find. Knock, and it will be opened for you. For everyone who asks receives. He
who seeks finds. To him who knocks it will be opened”.
On this second Sunday of Lent in our Catholic Church’s Eastern Maronite rite, we
cite and recall the miraculous cure of the bleeding woman in Matthew 9/20-22,
Mark 5/25-34, and Luke 8/43-48. As we learn from the Holy Gospel, the bleeding
woman’s great faith made her believe without a shred of doubt that her twelve
years of chronic bleeding would stop immediately if she touched Jesus’ garment.
She knew deeply in her heart that Jesus would cure her even without asking him.
Her faith cured the bleeding and made her well. Her prayers were heard and
responded to.
Luke 8/:43-49: “A woman who had a flow of blood for twelve years, who had spent
all her living on physicians, and could not be healed by any, came behind him
(Jesus), and touched the fringe of his cloak, and immediately the flow of her
blood stopped. Jesus said, “Who touched me?” When all denied it, Peter and those
with him said, “Master, the multitudes press and jostle you, and you say, ‘Who
touched me?’” 8:46 But Jesus said, “Someone did touch me, for I perceived that
power has gone out of me.” When the woman saw that she was not hidden, she came
trembling, and falling down before him declared to him in the presence of all
the people the reason why she had touched him, and how she was healed
immediately. He said to her, “Daughter, cheer up. Your faith has made you well.
Go in peace.”
The woman’s faith cured her chronic bleeding and put her back in the society as
a normal and acceptable citizen. During that era women with uterus bleeding were
looked upon as sinners, defiled and totally banned from entering synagogues for
praying. Meanwhile, because of her sickness she was physically unable to be a
mother and bear children. Sadly she was socially and religiously abandoned,
humiliated and alienated. But her faith and hope empowered her with the needed
strength and perseverance and enabled her to cope successfully against all odds.
Hallelujah! Faith can do miracles. Yes indeed. (Luke17/5 & 6): ” The apostles
said to the Lord, “Increase our faith.” The Lord said, “If you had faith like a
grain of mustard seed, you would tell this sycamore tree, ‘Be uprooted, and be
planted in the sea,’ and it would obey you”. How badly do we today need to have
a faith like that of this women?
Let us all on this second Lent Sunday pray with solid faith.
Let us ask Almighty God who cured the bleeding women, and who was crucified on
the cross to absolve our original sin, that He would endow His Holy graces of
peace, tranquility, and love all over the world. And that He would strengthen
the faith, patience and hope of all those persecuted, imprisoned, and deprived
for courageously witnessing the Gospel’s message and truth.
Saudi-Lebanese relations suffer
setback
The Arab Weekly/The Arab
Weekly/March 12/17
London - Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud has cancelled a planned trip
to Lebanon, delivering Saudi- Lebanese relations a major setback, local media
said.
The Saudi monarch, who is visiting the Far East, pulled out of the Lebanese
visit, scheduled for this month, allegedly over displeasure concerning
statements by Lebanese President Michel Aoun regarding Hezbollah’s weapons, a
report in the Lebanese daily An- Nahar stated.
The article, which quoted unidentified Saudi sources, said King Salman’s visit
was meant to express Riyadh’s wish to help Lebanon and “encourage it to fulfil
its Arab and international obligations and the settlement that ended the
presidential vacuum”.
“The visit was supposed to give Lebanon a strong moral and political boost from
Saudi Arabia and other Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries and ensure the
unconditional return of Arab and Gulf tourists to Beirut. It was to be
accompanied by tangible economic support for the Lebanese state,” the sources
added.
The report in An-Nahar coincided with a visit from French Defence Minister
Jean-Yves Le Drian to Beirut. A statement from Aoun’s office said France was
committed to “well-organised and robust Lebanese armed forces”.
There was, however, no mention of Saudi Arabia unfreezing a $3 billion military
and security aid package, which the kingdom had suspended out of concern that it
would benefit Hezbollah.
Earlier this year, French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault said he was
confident Riyadh would restore the aid package. That was, however, before the
Lebanese president’s statement on Hezbollah’s arms.
The suspension of the military grant and subsequent travel bans stemmed from the
failure of Lebanon to condemn an attack on the kingdom’s diplomatic missions in
Iran in January 2016.
During a televised interview with Egyptian media in February, Aoun defended
Hezbollah’s refusal to disarm, describing the Iran-sponsored militia as
complementary to the Lebanese army. Aoun told Egypt’s CBC that Tehran’s
support for the militia “could continue indefinitely”.
“As long as the Lebanese army is not strong enough to battle Israel… we feel
the need for its existence,” Aoun said, adding that: “It is no longer an urgent
matter to discuss the need to strip Hezbollah of its weapons, because Israel
continues to occupy our lands and is seeking to take over Lebanon’s waters.”
Aoun’s defence of Hezbollah arms drew international condemnation as well as a
scolding by the United Nations. UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon Sigrid Kaag
tweeted the day after Aoun’s interview in Egypt that: “UN Resolution 1701 is
vital for Lebanon’s stability and security. The resolution calls for
disarmament of all armed groups. No arms outside control of state.”
Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri called Hezbollah’s arms illegitimate. He
told supporters in Beirut that he would not change his stance on Hezbollah or
the Syrian regime, both of which are accused of assassinating his father, former
prime minister Rafik Hariri, in a 2005 car bombing.
In February 2016, after Lebanon refused to back Riyadh in its dispute with
Tehran, Saudi Arabia and fellow GCC members the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait,
Qatar and Bahrain banned their citizens from travelling to Lebanon and asked
those living there to leave due to safety concerns.
Relations improved late last year with a deal in which Aoun became president
under the condition that Future Movement leader Saad Hariri, who is backed by
Saudi Arabia, be installed as prime minister.
Relations between Saudi Arabia and Lebanon appeared to be warmest in February
when the kingdom stated it would be appointing a new ambassador in Beirut,
having withdrawn its envoy in the summer of 2016.
The announcement was made on the Lebanese presidency’s official Twitter account
on February 6th after Aoun met with Saudi Gulf Affairs Minister Thamer al-Sabhan,
who delivered the message that the kingdom’s national carrier would be
increasing flights to Beirut, with the return of Saudi tourists to support
Lebanon’s tourism industry. That was before Aoun’s interview on Egyptian
television.
Aoun’s Hezbollah remarks threaten US military aid
Nicholas Blanford/The Arab Weekly/The Arab Weekly/March 12/17
Beirut - Recent visits by US civilian and military officials to Beirut come amid
concerns that the administration of US President Donald Trump could reduce
financial assistance to the Lebanese Army, which is playing a vital role in
defending Lebanon against the Islamic State (ISIS) and other extremist groups.
Lebanese President Michel Aoun caused a diplomatic and political stir in
February when he said the militant Shia Hezbollah, Iran’s most prized proxy
force, was a “complement” to the Lebanese Army in helping defend the tiny
Mediterranean country against Israeli aggression.
Aoun’s comments raised questions in the United States about the continued
funding of a military that is said to collude with what Washington classifies
as a “terrorist” organisation.
“Lebanon’s new president is legitimising Hezbollah’s military role, which is
independent of control by the Lebanese state,” wrote Elliott Abrams, senior
fellow for Middle East Studies at the Council for Foreign Relations and former
US deputy national security adviser.
“If it is true that LAF (Lebanese Armed Forces)-Hezbollah cooperation is
increasing, the United States should demand that the trend be halted and
reversed,” he wrote.
Aoun’s comments also earned a retort from the top UN diplomat in Lebanon who
said Hezbollah was required to disarm under UN Security Council resolutions
rather than serve as a defence force for Lebanon.
Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud was also reported to have postponed a
planned visit to Beirut to protest the comments by Aoun, a Christian who was
backed by Hezbollah to become president.
Saudi Arabia is one of several Arab countries that classify Hezbollah as a
“terrorist” organisation.
In February, US Army General Joseph Votel, the head of the US military’s Central
Command, visited Beirut to discuss the military assistance programme and the
war against ISIS.
Several hundred militants from ISIS and Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, considered an
al-Qaeda affiliate, are holed up in barren mountains near the town of Arsal in
Lebanon’s north-eastern corner adjacent to the Syrian border.
The United States has provided weaponry, including self-propelled 155mm
artillery and missile-firing Cessna reconnaissance aircraft, to help the
Lebanese military keep the armed groups at bay.
Votel was preceded in Beirut by US Senator Bob Corker, R-Tennessee, and
chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, who inspected front-line
army positions around Arsal. He said the United States is committed to working
with the Lebanese Army, which is the fifth largest recipient of US military
assistance — more than $1.4 billion since 2005.
However, the country is vulnerable to spillover from the war in neighbouring
Syria and Washington is not alone in recognising that improving Lebanon’s
military capabilities helps safeguard the country from jihadist groups such as
ISIS.
In 2016, Britain’s then-Defence minister, Philip Hammond, said Lebanon was
Europe’s “first line of defence” against ISIS. Britain has invested heavily in
Lebanon’s military, helping train and equip four new regiments that are
deploying along the Syrian border.
But Hezbollah’s presence complicates international goodwill for the Lebanese
Army. The Party of God’s opponents have long questioned the army’s relationship
with the Iran-backed group, the most powerful non-state player in the region.
In December, Israel accused the Lebanese Army of supplying weapons directly to
Hezbollah and claimed that Lebanese soldiers and Hezbollah militants jointly
patrol Lebanon’s southern border with Israel.
More recently, Israeli security officials asserted that the Lebanese Army,
strengthened by international support, is expected to fight alongside Hezbollah
in the next war with the Jewish state.
In reality, Hezbollah’s battle plans have no space for Lebanon’s military. The
army will likely seek to defend its positions in any conflict and perhaps
strike at targets of opportunity but it is not expected to coordinate with
Hezbollah. The relationship between the army and Hezbollah is subtle and
nuanced, with both parties knowing where each other’s red lines lie.
Lebanon’s army is in no position, politically or militarily, to forcibly disarm
Hezbollah in accordance with UN resolutions. To do so would trigger serious
sectarian violence.
Hezbollah is careful not to malign the one state institution that the Lebanese
see as a guarantor of civil peace.
There is coordination on some levels, particularly between military
intelligence and Hezbollah’s own security apparatus but, on the whole, they
leave each other alone.
Trump has stated that he wants to slash US overseas financial assistance but
there is a good chance US support for Lebanon’s military will continue
uninterrupted — at least for now.
US Defense Secretary James Mattis is familiar with the Lebanese Army and its
needs from his time as head of the Central Command and Washington sources say he
seeks to maintain the current level of support.
US security officials are aware of the political realities of Lebanon and the
complex nature of the army-Hezbollah relationship but, given the Trump
administration’s animus towards Iran, more comments like those made by Aoun
linking the army to Hezbollah will provide grist to those seeking to disrupt US
military assistance to Lebanon.
**Nicholas Blanford is the author of Warriors of God: Inside Hezbollah’s
Thirty-Year Struggle Against Israel (Random House 2011). He lives in Beirut.
Lebanon seeking a long-delayed Syrian refugee policy
Samar Kadi/The Arab Weekly/March 12/17
Beirut - They constitute more than one-fourth of the population, their needs are
huge and some have been staying in Lebanon for almost six years, putting
pressure on the small country’s vulnerable infrastructure. However, Syrian
refugees will only be repatriated once their safe and voluntary return is
assured, whether through the creation of safe zones or a political settlement
that would end their country’s civil war.
“The Syrian refugee crisis is overwhelming and Lebanon cannot continue dealing
with it in an improvised and reactive way, hence the creation of a ministry to
deal with this issue,” said Lebanese State Minister for Refugee Affairs Mouin
Merhebi, who holds the government’s newly created portfolio.
Merhebi said the ministry was specifically established to devise a clear policy
for the government on the issue of Syrian refugees.
“We need to have a national strategy coupled with a working plan. In fact, we
are late, and this should have happened much, much earlier,” Merhebi said. “I am
sure that their number has reached 2 million at some point but it has decreased
after a few have returned to Syria, while others were resettled in third
countries or migrated to Europe.”
An estimated 1.011 million refugees are registered with the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR)
in Lebanon but the government puts the figure at 1.5 million.
“We have stopped registering the refugees through UNHCR since 2015. As such, we
do not know their exact number… I believe it was a wrong decision, because we
should know who is in our country, what is their condition and what are they
doing in order to be able to track them,” Merhebi said.
About one-in-four people living in Lebanon is a refugee from the Syrian war,
giving Lebanon more refugees per person than any other country.
Unlike the neighbouring countries — Turkey, Jordan and Iraq — hosting refugees
from Syria, Lebanon has no formal refugee camps. With refugees scattered across
the country, government control over them is a much harder task.
“The problem is that certain political groups (Christians) opposed the creation
of camps fearing that some Lebanese (Sunnis) wanted to resettle the Syrians in
Lebanon. This is not true. I am a Sunni and I humanely welcome anyone who is
exposed to tyranny, killing and massacre but I am against the resettlement of
any refugee. They are here on a temporary basis, not indefinitely,” Merhebi
said.
Lebanon’s experience with Palestinian refugees, 400,000 of whom have lived in
the country for more than 60 years after UN camps were established for them in
Lebanon, has left deep scars. Many say that creating formal refugee camps for
Syrians would encourage them to settle in Lebanon permanently.
Merhebi said Lebanon would welcome the creation of safe zones in Syria to
facilitate the repatriation of refugees, stressing that it should be part of a
global arrangement that would ensure the refugees’ safe and voluntary return.
“We are keen on their return to preserve the Arab character of Syria. We are
keen on them to return to prevent the ‘Persianisation’ of Syria and to rebuild
their country,” said Merhebi, a member of Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s Future
Movement, a staunch opponent of the Syrian regime. “Lebanon supports UN efforts
to settle the Syrian crisis and consequently ensure the safe return of refugees
to their country.”
“If safe zones are established, we would consider it a good thing because this
would reduce the killings in Syria. Lebanon will ensure that Syrian refugees
return willingly and voluntarily. There will be no forceful repatriation by the
Lebanese government, in line with our commitments to international human
rights,” he said.
Many hurdles hinder the eventual return of refugees, including scores of
unregistered children born to Syrian refugee parents who are considered
stateless. Aid agencies suggest the number of children whose births remain
unregistered in Lebanon could be as high as 50,000.
“This is an important matter that we will tackle in the national policy. If we
are really keen on them to return one day, they should be registered somewhere,
have papers to be able to cross the frontier back to Syria,” Merhebi noted.
Syrian refugees are mainly concentrated in remote underprivileged areas in
northern Lebanon and the eastern Bekaa Valley, where a creaky infrastructure
existed long before the Syrian crisis. Half of the Lebanese population in these
areas lack essential services, which were further depleted with the massive
influx of refugees.
The World Bank said the refugee crisis has inflicted $15 billion in economic
losses on Lebanon, already crippled by $75 billion in public debt.
“Our economy cannot put up with this anymore. We call on the international
community to assist Lebanon and invest in stabilising it because that will help
combat extremism and terrorism, to which people are driven by injustices,
marginalisation and hopelessness,” Merhebi added.
**Samar Kadi is the Arab Weekly society and travel section editor.
New Lebanese Army Commander in First Visit to Bkirki
Naharnet/March 12/17/Newly-appointed
Army Commander General Joseph Aoun took part in Sunday Mass in Bkirki, four days
after the government named him as the new army chief. Aoun has pledged to boost
the military's capabilities and to do everything in his capacity so that the
army remains “the certain guarantee for Lebanon's unity, sovereignty,
independence and dignity.”The security appointments that were approved on
Wednesday ended a deadlock that twice forced an extension of the term of the
army's sitting head. A ministerial source has said that Aoun's appointment had
"the consensus of all the political forces," describing him as "well-known and
removed from any political conflicts."Joseph Aoun is not related to President
Michel Aoun, himself a former army chief, although the two served together in
the military.
Lebanon's already fractious political scene has faced tensions linked to the war
in neighboring Syria since March 2011.
Wednesday Legislative Session to Tackle Budget, Wage Scale
amid Growing Objections
Naharnet/March 12/17/The 2017 state budget is expected to be approved by Cabinet
and referred to Parliament on Monday evening and the legislature is scheduled to
discuss both the budget and the new wage scale during its Wednesday legislative
session. In remarks to An Nahar newspaper published Sunday, ministerial sources
said the parliamentary debate of the wage scale is expected to be “tense,”
especially when it comes to linking its costs, revenues and taxes to the state
budget. The session will also be held amid growing objections from the Economic
Committees and other parties against the proposed taxes and amid an open-ended
strike by public school teachers. The teachers are protesting the wage scale
degrees that were granted to them by the Joint Parliamentary Committees on
Friday. “This key juncture will be a very critical test for all the political
parties as well as for the ruling political class and the government,” the
sources added, noting that Parliament might revise some of the taxes that affect
low-income citizens.
Jumblat Says Proportional Representation Must Preserve
'Partnership'
Naharnet/March 12/17/Druze leader MP Walid Jumblat on Sunday renewed his
reservations over the proportional representation electoral system, noting that
he would back such a law only if it preserves an accepted level of “partnership.”“The
best thing is clarity. Yes to proportional representation that achieves the
minimum requirements of partnership and no to a proportional representation law
that leads to divorce and isolation,” Jumblat tweeted. “Enough with the
outsmarting attempts and our patience is very long,” he added. Jumblat has
repeatedly rejected proportional representation, warning that it would
“marginalize” his minority Druze community, whose presence is concentrated in
the Chouf and Aley districts. In a recent conference for his Progressive
Socialist Party, Jumblat called for implementing the reforms stipulated by the
1989 Taef Accord or holding the elections under an “amended” version of the
controversial 1960 electoral law. The Druze later announced that he might accept
a so-called hybrid electoral law that mixes proportional representation with the
winner-takes-all system.
Bassil Says Constitution 'Can be Amended', Promises New
Electoral Law Proposal
Naharnet/March 12/17/Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil announced
Sunday that he will launch a new initiative regarding the stalled electoral law
while noting that the constitution can be amended if there is consensus. “There
can be no political reform in Lebanon without an electoral law, and tomorrow we
will launch a new initiative for the FPM in this regard,” Bassil said during the
FPM's second political convention. “We are the sons of a cause before anything
else. We are not a party but rather the movement of the president of the
republic and the movement of the strong republic,” Bassil added.He also noted
that the country's constitution “should not be rigid.”“Any amendment can be
introduced as long as it enjoys national consensus,” Bassil added.
AMAL MP Warns of 'Vacuum, Chaos' if No New Electoral Law
Naharnet/March 12/17/MP Hani Qobeissi of AMAL Movement's Development and
Liberation bloc warned Sunday that Lebanon will be plunged into “vacuum” and
“chaos” should the political parties fail to agree on a new electoral law.
“Vacuum means chaos,” Qobeissi cautioned, urging all parties to “shoulder the
responsibility and offer concessions in order to reach a fair electoral law that
represents everyone and achieves partnership.”“The approach of monopolization
cannot rescue the country,” the lawmaker warned, adding that “only partnership
can preserve national unity.”AMAL leader and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri has
stressed that “protecting Lebanon and preserving diversity in the Lebanese
formula can only be realized through passing a new electoral law based on
proportional representation.”The country has not organized parliamentary
elections since 2009 and the legislature has instead twice extended its own
mandate. The last polls were held under an amended version of the 1960 electoral
law and the next vote is scheduled for May. Hizbullah has repeatedly called for
an electoral law fully based on proportional representation but al-Mustaqbal
Movement and Druze leader MP Walid Jumblat have both rejected the proposal.
Mustaqbal argues that Hizbullah's arms would prevent serious competition in the
party's strongholds while Jumblat has warned that such an electoral system would
“marginalize” the minority Druze community whose presence is concentrated in the
Chouf and Aley areas. The political parties are meanwhile discussing a so-called
hybrid electoral law that mixes proportional representation with the
winner-takes-all system.
Abu Faour: No One Can Persecute Us through Electoral Law
Naharnet/March 12/17/Former minister Wael Abu Faour, who is close
to Druze leader MP Walid Jumblat, stressed Sunday that no one in Lebanon can
“persecute” the Progressive Socialist Party or the minority Druze community.
“After all these proposals and suggestions, where is reform in the electoral
law?” Abu Faour asked during a PSP ceremony. “They are not seeking an electoral
law but rather an appointments law, seeing as they are tailoring the law to
secure the election of known candidates,” the ex-minister added. And lamenting
that “every electoral law proposal” has so far been targeted at eliminating a
certain political party, including the PSP, Abu Faour said: “Although we do not
suffer the phobia of persecution, no one will be able to persecute us, neither
through the electoral law nor through anything else.” Jumblat on Sunday renewed
his reservations over the proportional representation electoral system, noting
that he would back such a law only if it preserves an accepted level of
“partnership.”“The best thing is clarity. Yes to proportional representation
that achieves the minimum requirements of partnership and no to a proportional
representation law that leads to divorce and isolation,” Jumblat tweeted.
“Enough with the outsmarting attempts and our patience is very long,” he added.
Jumblat has repeatedly rejected proportional representation, warning that it
would “marginalize” his minority Druze community, whose presence is concentrated
in the Chouf and Aley districts. In a recent conference for his Progressive
Socialist Party, Jumblat called for implementing the reforms stipulated by the
1989 Taef Accord or holding the elections under an “amended” version of the
controversial 1960 electoral law. The Druze later announced that he might accept
a so-called hybrid electoral law that mixes proportional representation with the
winner-takes-all system.
Public Administration Employees Reject Proposed Duty Hours
Increase
Naharnet/March 12/17/The Association of Public Administration Employees has
rejected a proposed increase in duty hours, amid reports saying civil servants
will be asked to work until 5:00 PM instead of 2:00 PM. “Correcting the wages of
public employees is a natural right after decades of injustice, and therefore it
should not come at the expense of employees' rights, which are enshrined in the
applicable laws and regulations and the international treaties on which Lebanon
has signed,” the association said in a statement. “An uncalculated increase in
duty hours will not boost productivity as they are claiming and it will
represent a useless burden that will aggravate the burdens of women who work in
the public sector,” the association added. The proposed increase in duty hours
is reportedly one of the reforms that were approved by the Joint Parliamentary
Committees as part of the new wage scale draft law. Parliament will begin
debating the bill on Wednesday.
Iraqi Ambassador visits Imam of Nabatiyeh: We appreciate
his role in the care of Iraqi refugees
Sun 12 Mar 2017/NNA - Iraqi Ambassador in Beirut, Ali al-Ameri, visited on
Sunday Imam of Nabatiyeh, Sheikh Abdul-Hussein al-Sadiq, at his home in
Nabatiyeh. Following the encounter, the Iraqi Ambassador expressed "deep
appreciation for His Eminence, Sheikh al-Sadiq's role in caring for Iraqi
refugees and standing by them in an effort to alleviate their pain, ever since
the days of the falling regime to-date." In turn, Imam al-Sadiq expressed his
sincere gratitude to Ambassador al-Ameri for his visit, stressing on the
"historic ties between Jabal Amel and Iraq, especially among the scholars of
Jabal Amel and Najaf, which formed the platform for their culture and sciences
Hobeich: To think about the people when passing electoral
laws
Sun 12 Mar 2017/NNA - Akkar - MP Hadi Hobeich called, on Sunday, for "thinking
about the people when passing electoral laws," adding that "in order to truly
have a fair election law, we ought to allow the real voice of the people to
reach the Parliament, and not the voice of blocs and parties that endorse said
law."In his issued statement, Hobeich said "all people reject the sixty-law, and
if the decree to call on electorate bodies is not signed within days, there
could be a tendency to postpone the elections.""The new mandate and the existing
political consensus should not fall under the pressure of the absence of an
electoral law," asserted Hobeich.He concluded by hoping to reach a "just and
fair law with uniform standards during the upcoming period."
Hariri mourns Stavro Jabra, Melhem Imad
Sun 12 Mar 2017/NNA - Prime Minister, Saad Hariri, offered on Sunday his
condolences for the passing away of caricaturist Stavro Jabra and cartoonist
Melhem Imad via twitter.
Hashem, Saad head to Islamabad
Sun 12 Mar 2017/NNA - MPs Qassem Hashem and Antoine Saad left Beirut on Sunday
afternoon heading to Pakistan's Islamabad to partake in the conference on Asian
parliaments.
King Abdullah II of Jordan receives Siniora
Sun 12 Mar 2017/NNA - King Abdullah II of Jordan received on Sunday Future
Parliamentary bloc head, Fouad Siniora, in the framework of his meeting with
Arab and International Relations Council, chaired by Mohammad Jassem Saker.
Talks focused on the regional situation and most recent developments in the arab
region.
Latest LCCC Bulletin For
Miscellaneous Reports And News published On March 12-13/17
Iraqi Forces Take Third of West Mosul, Jihadists 'Trapped'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March
12/17/Iraqi forces seized a third of west Mosul and trapped Islamic State group
fighters inside as they made further gains in their battle to retake the city,
officials said Sunday. Fierce fighting has shaken Mosul in recent days as
thousands of U.S.-backed Iraqi soldiers and police battle to reclaim the
country's second city. A renewed push against the jihadists launched last Sunday
has seen IS forced from several neighborhoods and key sites, including the main
local government headquarters and the famed Mosul museum. By Sunday, Iraqi
forces were tightening the noose. "ISIS is trapped. Just last night, the 9th
Iraqi army division... cut off the last road out of Mosul," the U.S. envoy to
the anti-IS coalition, Brett McGurk, told journalists in Baghdad. "Any of the
fighters who are left in Mosul, they're going to die there," he said. "We are
very committed to not just defeating them in Mosul, but making sure these guys
cannot escape." Staff Major General Maan al-Saadi of the elite Counter-Terrorism
Service told AFP that "more than a third" of west Mosul was now under the
control of security forces. CTS forces were battling IS inside the Mosul al-Jadida
and al-Aghawat areas on Sunday, he said. Iraq's Joint Operations Command (JOC)
said that forces from the Rapid Response Division, another special forces unit,
and the federal police were also attacking the Bab al-Toub area on the edge of
Mosul's Old City. "The battle is not easy... we are fighting an irregular enemy
who hides among the citizens and uses tactics of booby-trapping, explosions and
suicide bombers, and the operation is taking place with precision to preserve
the lives of the citizens," the JOC's spokesman, Brigadier General Yahya Rasool,
told AFP. IS resistance "has begun to weaken in a big way," he added. IS seized
Mosul in mid-2014 and swept across areas north and west of Baghdad, taking
control of swathes of territory and declaring a "caliphate" straddling the
border with Syria.
Mass grave
Backed by a U.S.-led air strikes and other support, Iraqi forces have since
retaken much of the territory they lost. The operation to recapture Mosul --
then the last Iraqi city under IS control -- was launched in October.
After recapturing the east of the city, Iraqi forces last month set their sites
on the west, where hundreds of thousands of civilians remain trapped. Northwest
of Mosul, Iraqi forces on Saturday announced they had uncovered a mass grave
containing the remains of hundreds of people executed by IS inside the infamous
Badush prison, taken this week. The Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary forces found
"a large mass grave containing the remains of around 500 civilian prisoners in (Badush)
prison who were executed by (IS) gangs," the military said. According to Human
Rights Watch, IS gunmen executed up to 600 inmates from the prison in June 2014,
forcing them to kneel along a nearby ravine and then shooting them with assault
rifles. The U.S.-led coalition launched air strikes against IS in Syria and Iraq
in 2014 and is providing a range of support to allied forces in both countries.
In Syria the coalition is backing an Arab-Kurdish alliance known as the Syrian
Democratic Forces (SDF) that is pushing towards the jihadists' de facto capital
Raqa. On Sunday the SDF fought fierce battles with IS jihadists east of Raqa,
around the village of Khas Ajil, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
SDF forces took control of five villages as they continued a slow advance, the
monitoring group said, and several coalition air strikes hit the outskirts of
Raqa early on Sunday. Turkish-backed rebels are also advancing against IS in
northern Syria, as are government troops supported by Russia.
Toll rises in Damascus bombings
The Britain-based Observatory also reported fighting on Sunday in eastern Aleppo
province where the jihadists forced regime troops to fall back from the
outskirts of the Jarrah military airport. Russian and Syrian strikes hit IS-held
areas in the province, Observatory said, with eight civilians, mostly from the
same family, killed in a strike on the village of Maskanah. Syria's former
al-Qaida affiliate Fateh al-Sham Front meanwhile said Sunday it was behind twin
bombings targeting Shiite pilgrims in the center of Damascus that killed 74
people. "On Saturday... a twin attack was carried out by two heroes of Islam...
in the center of the capital Damascus, killing and wounding dozens," a statement
said. The Observatory said 43 Iraqi pilgrims were among those killed when a
roadside bomb detonated as a bus carrying pilgrims made its way through the Ban
al-Saghir area of Damascus's famed Old City and a suicide bomber blew himself
up. The attack also killed 11 Syrian civilians and 20 members of pro-government
security forces, it said. Shiite shrines have been a frequent target of attack
for Sunni extremists of IS and al-Qaida during Syria's devastating six-year war.
Dutch Expel Turkish Minister as Police Break Up Protests
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 12/17/Dutch police used water cannon and
horses early Sunday to break up protests outside the Turkish consulate in
Rotterdam as the city expelled a Turkish minister, amid an escalating diplomatic
row with Ankara. After several hours of calm demonstrations, police moved in to
disperse over 1,000 people gathered close to the consulate, charging the crowd
on horseback and using dogs to regain control. Protesters hit back, throwing
rocks at riot police, while hundreds of cars jammed the streets blaring their
horns and revving their engines. Tensions finally tipped over into violence
after a day of fast-moving events, triggered when Turkish Foreign Minister
Mevlut Cavusoglu said he planned to attend a pro-Turkish government rally in
Rotterdam. The Netherlands, which holds general elections on Wednesday, had
repeatedly said Cavusoglu was not welcome to campaign for Turkey's April
referendum in the country and refused his plane permission to land. Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan reacted angrily accusing the Dutch -- who were
once under Nazi occupation -- of being "the vestiges of Nazis." The Dutch
decision to ban Cavusoglu from visiting came after Germany and other European
nations also blocked similar campaign events. "They are the vestiges of the
Nazis, they are fascists," Erdogan told an Istanbul rally on Saturday, days
after he angrily compared moves to block rallies in Germany to "Nazi
practices.""Ban our foreign minister from flying however much you like, but from
now on let's see how your flights will land in Turkey," Erdogan said.
Minister expelled
But later, Turkey's Family Minister Fatma Betul Sayan Kaya appeared at the scene
after reportedly traveling by car overland from Germany. She was stopped just
outside the consulate by Dutch police, and after several hours of negotiations
escorted back to the German border. Kaya was "on the way from Rotterdam to
Germany", mayor Ahmed Aboutaleb told reporters, adding: "She has been expelled
back to the country she came from."The Dutch government criticized Kaya as
"irresponsible" for attempting to visit after being told she was not welcome and
said it told Turkey it could not compromise on public order and security. "The
search for a reasonable solution proved impossible, and the verbal attacks that
followed today from the Turkish authorities are unacceptable," it said in a
statement. "In this context Minster Kaya's visit was irresponsible. Through
contacts with the Turkish authorities, the message was repeatedly conveyed that
Minister Kaya is not welcome in the Netherlands... nevertheless she decided to
travel."Kaya complained of her treatment, and could be seen in images on Dutch
NOS television appearing to argue with Dutch police about the situation. "We've
been here for about four hours. We were not even offered water," she told the
NTV television channel. "I was told to leave the country and return to Germany
as soon as possible," she added. Cavusoglu meanwhile flew to France where he is
expected to address a rally on Sunday in the eastern city of Metz. A French
official said the visit had been cleared by the foreign ministry in Paris. As
the row raged, Turkish foreign ministry sources said the Dutch embassy in Ankara
and consulate in Istanbul had both been sealed off for "security reasons."Dutch
Prime Minister Mark Rutte said Erdogan's criticism was "crazy.""I understand
that they are angry but this is way out of line," he said. "I really think we
made the right decision here."
'Don't return' Cavusoglu, speaking in Istanbul, said the ban was "unacceptable.""Why
are you taking sides in the referendum?" he said, adding: "Is the foreign
minister of Turkey a terrorist?"The Turkish foreign ministry said the Dutch
charge d'affaires in Ankara was summoned and told Turkey did not want the Dutch
ambassador -- currently on holiday -- to return "for a while."The Netherlands is
home to some 400,000 people of Turkish origin, and Ankara is keen to harness
votes of the diaspora in Europe ahead of the April 16 referendum on creating an
executive presidency. The Turkish government argues the changes would ensure
stability and create more efficient governance, but opponents say it would lead
to one-man rule and further inflame tensions in its diverse society. The latest
row came after NATO allies Turkey and Germany sparred over the cancellation of a
series of referendum campaign events there. Germany is home to 1.4 million
people eligible to vote in Turkey -- the fourth-largest electoral base after
Istanbul, Ankara and Izmir.Although Berlin insisted the cancellations by local
authorities were for logistical reasons, Turkish officials repeatedly hit back.
Assad: Several European
countries' policies toward Syria and the region have led to the spread of
terrorism
Sun 12 Mar 2017/NNA - Damascus -
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad deemed, on Sunday, that "the wrong policies
pursued by many European countries toward Syria and the region, and their
support to terrorism, extremism and imposing of economic sanctions, have led to
the spread of terrorism which we are witnessing today, and the huge numbers of
refugees seeking those countries."President Assad's words came during a meeting
with a delegation of European Parliamentarians headed by European Parliament
Foreign Relations Committee Deputy Chairman, Javier Couso. "The extent of
deception practiced by most of Western media over the years of war in Syria, and
the loss of credibility even before Western public opinion itself, contributed
to the increased frequency of visits by European Parliamentarians to Syria to
see the reality and deliver a true picture of what is happening to their
people," said Assad. The Syrian news agency "SANA" quoted members of the
delegation, who belong to multiple European States and Parties, in confirming
"their determination to pursue their efforts to correct the wrong perspectives
and views, both at the political and popular levels, towards what is happening
in Syria."The Syrian news agency also disclosed the delegation's determination
"to continue to work towards the resumption of diplomacy relations between the
Union and Syria, and the lifting of the imposed sanctions that would contribute
to the return of peace and stability to this country."On another note, Syrian
Deputy Prime Minister, Foreign Affairs and Expatriates Minister Walid al-Moallem
also met with the European Parliamentary delegation, stressing Syria's "support
to all sincere efforts to find a political settlement to its crisis, by
encouraging dialogue between the Syrians themselves who seek Syria's interest
above all, without any outside interference, in addition to promoting national
reconciliation."
Ex-Qaida Affiliate in Syria Claims Damascus Carnage
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March
12/17/Syria's former al-Qaida affiliate Fateh al-Sham Front on Sunday said in a
statement it was behind twin bombings targeting Shiite pilgrims in the center of
Damascus that killed 74 people. "On Saturday... a twin attack was carried out by
two heroes of Islam... in the center of the capital Damascus, killing and
wounding dozens," the statement said. Without elaborating, it called the
bombings "a message to Iran and its militias."Iran and the Tehran-backed
Hizbullah movement of Lebanon are close allies of the Syrian government. The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 43 Iraqi pilgrims were among those
killed when a roadside bomb detonated as a bus carrying pilgrims made its way
through the Ban al-Saghir area of Damascus' famed Old City and a suicide bomber
blew himself up.The Britain-based monitor said 11 bystanders and eight children
were among the dead, as were 20 members of the pro-government security forces.
State television gave a toll of 40 killed and 120 wounded by "two bombs
detonated by terrorists," while Iraq's foreign ministry said around 40 of its
nationals had died.In January, Fateh al-Sham Front also claimed responsibility
for twin suicide bombings in the high-security Kafr Sousa district of Damascus
that killed 10 people, eight of them soldiers.Damascus, stronghold of President
Bashar Assad's government, has been largely spared the violence that has rocked
other major cities in Syria's six-year war. But periodic bombings have targeted
Shiite shrines and were subsequently claimed by Sunni extremists, including the
Islamic State jihadist group.
Iranian speaker rebuffs Netanyahu
for Purim comparison: 'Study the Torah'
Jerusalem Post/March 12/17
"He has distorted the Iranians' pre-Islam historical era and attempted to
misrepresent events," Iran's parliament speaker says of PM. Iran's parliament
speaker on Sunday condemned a parallel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has
made between present-day Iran and the plot to annihilate the Jews in ancient
Persia as marked this weekend during the Jewish holiday of Purim. In his
dismissal of the comparison Netanyahu made last week during a meeting with
Russian President Vladimir Putin, Iran's Ali Larijani advised the Israeli
premier study the Hebrew bible. He has distorted the Iranians' pre-Islam
historical era and attempted to misrepresent events," Iranian Fars News Agency
quoted Larijani as saying of Netanyahu. "Apparently, he neither is familiar with
the history nor has studied the Torah." "Of course, nothing more than presenting
such lies is expected from a wicked Zionist," he added in a parliamentary
address in Tehran. Larijani remarks came in reference to comments Netanyahu made
during a meeting Thursday with Putin in Moscow about Iranian activities in the
region. In his third visit to Russia in the last 11 months - a testament to
Moscow’s influence in the region as a result of its intense engagement in Syria
- Netanyahu used a Purim greeting by Putin as a peg to blast Tehran. “I thank
you for your good wishes on Purim,” the prime minister said. “Some 2,500 years
ago in ancient Persia, there was an attempt to wipe out the Jews, which did not
succeed, and which we commemorate with this holiday.” Today, Netanyahu said,
Iran – the heir of the Persians – has similar designs: to wipe out the Jewish
state. “They say this clearly, and it is etched on their ballistic missiles,” he
said. While convening with Putin, Netanyahu focused on Iran's involvement in the
Syrian civil war, warning of the Islamic Republic and its proxies establishing a
"permanent presence" in Syria, which shares a border with northern Israel's
Golan region. According to Iranian media on Sunday, the country's parliament
speaker Larijani claimed that the prime minister's remarks demonstrate Israel
"is behind the war in Syria.” "He has set preconditions for peace in Syria and
stated clearly that the war in Syria has targeted the anti-Zionism resistance,"
Larijani charged.
**Herb Keinon contributed to this report.
Palestinian Police Use Tear Gas, Batons to Disperse Protest
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March
12/17/Palestinian security forces used tear gas and batons to disperse a protest
Sunday at a court involved in the case of five Palestinians, including one
recently killed by Israeli forces, activists and lawyers said. The crowd
dispersed included journalists and activists while the protest in the
Palestinian political capital Ramallah had been peaceful, a group of human
rights organizations said in a statement. Police said protesters had "blocked
the road in front of the court" and that "they refused to comply when security
forces ordered them to clear the way." "Forces then deployed in accordance with
the law," they said. Bassel al-Aaraj, 31, was killed on March 5 by Israeli
soldiers in Ramallah. According to the Israeli army, he opened fire at soldiers
who came to arrest him at his home and was shot dead. Palestinian cities such as
Ramallah in the occupied West Bank are meant to be under Palestinian security
control, though Israeli forces regularly carry out raids there. Aaraj was
involved in both protests against Israel's occupation of the West Bank as well
as the Palestinian leadership. He was wanted by the Israelis, but had also been
detained for several months by the Palestinian Authority with four others for
illegal possession of arms and endangering the lives of others.Israel accused
him of being the head of a cell planning attacks against Israel. Israel and the
Palestinian Authority coordinate on security matters, drawing criticism from
many Palestinians.The killing of Aaraj provoked an outpouring of support among
Palestinians, including with graffiti in Ramallah and on social media. The four
other suspects were not present in court because they have since been arrested
by Israel. Aaraj's name was withdrawn from the list of suspects on Sunday, his
lawyer said. "What we suffered today is an attack on our rights," his father
Mahmud al-Aaraj told reporters after the protest was dispersed.Mohannad Karajeh,
a lawyer defending the accused Palestinians, said he planned to file a complaint
on behalf of 12 protesters caught up in the dispersal. The Palestinian
journalists' union denounced "shameful aggression."
Parade Sees Tributes to Israeli
Soldier Convicted of Killing Palestinian
Israeli settlers celebrating a
Jewish holiday in the occupied West Bank Sunday paid tribute to a soldier who
shot dead a wounded Palestinian assailant, with some even dressing up as him. A
parade in the city of Hebron for Purim, which sees participants dress up, began
at the spot where the shooting which deeply divided Israeli society occurred on
the same holiday last year. The parade traditionally begins there, but this year
it took on particular significance -- a prominent far-right lawyer dressed up as
the soldier, Sgt. Elor Azaria, who has been convicted of manslaughter. At least
one other person also dressed up in tribute to Azaria, and a loudspeaker
announcement as the parade began thanked the soldier, drawing cheers from some
in the crowd. The lawyer, Itamar Ben-Gvir, wore an army uniform with a picture
of Azaria taped to his chest. He posed alongside Benzi Gopstein, who heads the
far-right group Lehava and who dressed as U.S. President Donald Trump, his hair
dyed orange. Ben-Gvir said their message was that Azaria would have been treated
as a hero had the shooting occurred under a Trump presidency. "It's not possible
that a soldier kills a terrorist and he's judged and arrested, and it is simply
a disgrace," the 40-year-old said. Several hundred people took part in the
parade in Hebron, where the presence of some 500 Israeli settlers in the heart
of the city of some 200,000 Palestinians leads to near-constant tension.
Security was tight, with a large deployment of Israeli soldiers and police. "I
think it's very normal that people feel that he saved us from a terrorist who
tried to kill us, and a lot of people support him," Tzipi Schlissel, 51, who
lives down the street from where last year's incident occurred, said of Azaria.
"I think the terrorist who gets support from a lot of people in the world is an
evil person that came to kill people, and he can't complain that he got killed
when he came to kill other people," added Schlissel, who said her father was
killed in an attack years ago.
Party atmosphere
Despite the tributes to Azaria, the parade was more celebration than politics,
with children and adults dressed as everything from cartoon characters to
clowns. They paraded through a part of the flashpoint city under tight Israeli
control, with checkpoints restricting access. Traditional and dance music blared
from speakers, and some drank from whisky or wine bottles. One man leaned
against on a tree and vomited. A group of Palestinians watched from a terrace
above at one point on the route, a Palestinian flag flapping in the wind above.
Purim celebrates a story from Hebrew scripture in which the Jews of the Persian
empire were rescued from annihilation. Every year, Jews celebrate by giving each
other presents and wearing costumes. The March 2016 shooting was caught on video
and spread widely online. It showed Abdul Fatah al-Sharif, 21, lying wounded on
the ground, shot along with another Palestinian after the army said he stabbed
and wounded a soldier. Azaria then shot him in the head without any apparent
provocation. The soldier was sentenced by a military court on February 21 to 18
months in jail after an exceptional trial that highlighted deep divisions in
public opinion.
He has appealed the conviction, but prosecutors have also appealed the sentence,
calling it "excessively lenient". A number of politicians, including Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, have called for Azaria to be pardoned, despite the
military top brass strongly condemning the soldier's actions. Palestinians have
described the shooting as another example of the abuses under Israel's
occupation. A Palestinian operating a souvenir shop near where the parade passed
expressed dismay when asked about the support being given to Azaria. "It's not
good that settlers support the soldiers who do these things," said Saddam Ali
Jabari, 18.
Robust and Concrete Measures Should Be Taken Immediately Against Iran Regime
NCRI Iran News/Sunday, 12 March
2017/
A defiant Iran pokes the world in the eye
It has become an alarming and dangerous pattern: Provocations by Iran against
many nations in the region, as well as the UK, the US and its allies. On March
4, US officials said several Iranian assault crafts came dangerously close to a
US Navy ship, within 150 meters. A similar incident occurred two days earlier.
Wrote Dr. Majid Rafizadeh, in the ‘Arab News’ on March 10, 2017. The article
continues as follows:
These swift assault vessels operate under Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC),
which has been empowered and emboldened by continuing sanctions relief, and by
the lack of a robust reaction against Tehran from the international community.
These incidents clearly highlight that Iran is trying to showcase its military
power and regional preeminence to the US. Some of Iran’s Persian-language
newspapers boasted about its military capacity to counter the US Navy and
dominate the Strait of Hormuz, through which about a third of all oil traded by
sea passes. Iran has frequently exploited the strait’s strategic location by
threatening to shut it down or conducting military exercises that are meant to
intimidate. Tehran has been openly boasting about its power in a very dangerous
way. Despite Iran’s intentional provocations, the US Navy and military have been
trying to avoid escalation because this could lead to direct regional
confrontation. Pentagon spokesman Jeff Davis said due to “a combination of
unsafe or unprofessional behavior” by Iran’s Navy, a US ship altered course to
avoid a collision. “It’s concerning because it can result in a miscalculation or
an accidental provocation that we don’t want.”
Iran is also trying to send a message to its proxies and hard-line supporters
that neither the international community nor the Trump administration can take
any serious action against its ambitions.
Tehran believes all talk about countering its actions is simply rhetoric. When
Navy Commander Habibollah Sayyari was asked by journalists what Iran would do if
the US, UK and France took a “counter-measure against Iran,” he said those
countries’ officials “talk a lot.”
Further demonstrating its defiance, Tehran insists on continuing to feel out and
test the Trump administration. Their goal is to discover whether President
Donald Trump genuinely means what he has said about his policy on Iran. In
September 2016, Trump famously said if it tried to harass the US Navy while he
was in office, he would order Iranian boats “shot out of the water.” These
provocations are not limited to harassing the US or UK navies. Last weekend,
Iran test-fired a pair of ballistic missiles, said US officials. According to
Fox News: “One of Iran’s ballistic missile tests was successful, destroying a
floating barge approximately 155 miles away, two US officials with knowledge of
the launch told Fox News. The launches of the Fateh-110 short-range ballistic
missiles were the first tests of the missile in two years, one official
said.”This would be Iran’s 14th ballistic missile tested since the nuclear deal.
It is blatantly breaching UN Security Council Resolution 2231, which “calls upon
Iran not to undertake any activity related to ballistic missiles designed to be
capable of delivering nuclear weapons, including launches using such ballistic
missile technology.” In a destabilizing and defiant move, Iran also held a
military excise in the Strait of Hormuz on Feb. 26. It is clearly not changing
the core religious and revolutionary pillars of its foreign policy, which
includes pursuing regional hegemony and encouraging anti-Americanism. Iran has
ratcheted up its provocations and interventionist policies. For it to take the
international community seriously, robust and concrete measures should be taken
immediately.
Arab Media Coverage of Iran Opposition Unveiling IRGC Activities in London Press
Conference
NCRI Iran News/Sunday, 12 March 2017/ The Iranian opposition held a press
conference in the UK Parliament on Tuesday to reveal details about the smuggling
of arms and ammunition by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) through Iran’s
southern docks to Gulf countries. These new revelations gained widespread
coverage in international and Arabic media. The National Council of Resistance
of Iran (NCRI) shed light on the widespread arms smuggling carried out by the
IRGC, providing aerial images and documents proving the role of IRGC commanders
in this regard.
“This evidence we have has been obtained through a network of the People's
Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK) supporters associated with the NCRI.
This new information has been gathered from inside the Iranian regime’s military
apparatus and the IRGC itself,” said Hossein Abedini. “This evidence proves
three IRGC-associated companies are in charge of smuggling arms to Yemen.”“The
timing of this information is important because it is provided after a new US
administration is in power and the West’s attitude regarding Iran is changing.
Eyes have now opened to Iran’s actions and there is a serious leniency to punish
Tehran as the leading sponsor of terrorism,” said Qassan Ibrahim, an Arab
journalist at al-Akhbariye. A study shows the IRGC has, for more than three
decades, meddled in the internal affairs of 14 regional countries. This review
shows the type and volume of this interference, and the support terrorist groups
receive in pursuing Iran’s expansionist objectives. The evaluation of the IRGC
activities show Iran’s meddling, especially in Iraq, Syria, Yemen and Lebanon,
has increased since the Iran nuclear deal. “The IRGC sends arms, ammunition and
military equipment to Yemen and groups fighting as proxy forces on behalf of
Iran in order to provoke divides in the Middle East. These reasons show Iran
uses the IRGC to spread terrorism in the region and it is important these forces
be designated as terrorists,” said Struan Stevenson, President of the European
Iraqi Freedom Association. Included in the evidence gathered in this
comprehensive study is the IRGC’s use of front companies to manage 90 docks -
45% of Iran’s piers, with an annual revenue of $12 billion. The effort to
smuggle weapons from Iran to neighboring countries and from there to associated
militias is aimed at disrupting regional stability.
This study ends with recommendations calling for actions against Iran’s IRGC,
and most importantly, based on United Nations Security Council Resolution 2231
on stopping missile-related activities and smuggling weapons to neighboring
countries and their militias, especially Syria and Iraq.
The NCRI in the UK made another call to the international community to place
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards on the terrorist list. The report emphasizes the
IRGC has 12 terrorist groups in 12 countries.
Iran is taking advantage of the current struggle against Daesh (ISIS/ISIL) in
Iraq and Syria to pursue its own plans and agenda in the region. The Iranian
opposition unveiled information about docks controlled by the IRGC. This
information, provided for the first time by the People's Mojahedin Organization
of Iran (PMOI/MEK), highlights the fact the IRGC must be placed on the terrorist
list. The Iranian opposition emphasized the time has come to hold this regime
accountable because Tehran has committed crimes in the region, in particular the
execution of 120,000 dissidents.
Internal Factions Flare in Iran Over Upcoming Farce
Elections
NCRI Iran News/Sunday, 12 March 2017/ As hostilities increase over upcoming
so-called presidential elections in Iran in May, officials and media linked to
The Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei are lashing out at Iranian President Hassan
Rouhani’s faction over the failures of the Iran nuclear agreement in relieving
the pressures of sanctions. “The main questions are about the unfulfilled
promises by the government, including all sanctions that were to be lifted on
the first day of the JCPOA implementation. This has not only never materialized,
but in fact dozens of sanctions have been added,” said Hossein Shariatmadari,
Khamenei’s representative from the Keyhan daily. Former Revolutionary Guards
chief Mohsen Rezaie published an open-letter .“You and your friends have spoken
of war and anti-war recently. Due to the threats to our national security in the
use of such language, I saw it fit to remind you that the Trump administration
is now in power in the US… conditions in the region have changed and your
government needs to move forward with more caution. If such remarks were useful
during the Obama days, such language towards the current US government will
allow pro-war advocates to take advantage of these remarks… without a doubt our
status has changed in comparison to the former US administration,” he said.
Media outlets and figures loyal to Rouhani responded in the same fashion.
“Unfortunately, some people keep on denying our achievements. The public should
know the nuclear deal is not the victory of all victories, but it’s also no
humiliating treaty,” said Ali Akbar Salehi, chief of Atomic Energy Organization
in Iran. Aftab-e Yazd daily referred to the corruption witnessed in previous
cabinets linked to the rival faction. “If not for the nuclear deal, sanctions
would have increased, and considering the lack of goods, prices would skyrocket
causing inflation, and since money would no longer enter the country through
legal means, it would be wasted and the country would witness numerous cases of
embezzlement,” the piece read in part.
Behind the Iran Regime's Hippocratic Style of Negotiations
NCRI Iran News/Sunday, 12 March 2017/Should the Gulf Negotiate Iran or De Facto
Aggressor: ‘The Revolutionary Guard’?Iran’s elite revolutionary guard, an armed
force intended to protect Tehran’s theocratic regime, has registered disruptive
and intrusive activity in 14 regional states. The guards operations in Syria
alone cost the cleric-led regime some $100 billion. Wrote Salman Al-Dossary,
former editor in chief of Asharq – Al –Awsat on this newspaper on March 12,
2017. The article continues as follows: A paper written by two Brussels-based
human rights groups presented, in detail, all unwarranted intrusions and funding
of terror groups carried out by the guard in order to achieve the regime’s
expansionist ambitions. All the more, the research shows Iran’s elite guard
stepping up its meddling in Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon ever since Tehran went into
its nuclear talks with the world’s super powers. Anyone, party or nation who had
firsthand experienced Iran’s bitter attitude and aggressive behavior hardly
finds the abovementioned revelations a surprise. And as positive indicatives
point towards the United States President Donald Trump seriously considering to
enlist Iran’s revolutionary guard as a terrorist organization, it is very
embarrassing for any party that still has faith in composed and rational talks
being held between Gulf States and Iran. Iran and Gulf states cannot be seen as
counterparts to an argument, as one party orients itself towards delivering
progress to its people and stabilizing the region whilst the other is a
self-styled state that aims to destabilize the region, spreading terrorism
everywhere. The latter cannot be simply rewarded a seat to negotiate what can
possibly adhere to its hostility. Struan Stevenson President of the European
Iraqi Freedom Association, who’s body published the study on the revolutionary
guard concluding that “[Iranian] meddling in the affairs of other regional
countries is institutionalized and the IRGC (the revolutionary guard) top brass
has been directly involved,” the report said, directly implicating the Iranian
military and state apparatus in destabilization operations around the Middle
East.” The report also criticizes the guard for undertaking a “hidden
occupation” of four countries, namely Iraq, Syria, Yemen and Lebanon. The
European study said: “Every month, hundreds of forces from Iraq, Syria, Yemen,
Afghanistan and Lebanon – countries where the [Iranian] regime is involved in
frontline combat – receive military training and are subsequently dispatched to
wage terrorism and war.” With all that being said, it is clear that the struggle
with Iran is that the problem lies not with its people or its limited-power
government or unproductive parliament, but with its guard serving a bellicose
expansionist agenda as stipulated in the national constitution. The guard is
placed just under the upper hand of the supreme leader which positions it at a
place of unconstrained jurisdiction and power and just above Iran’s national
army. More so, the study revealed that the guard operates some 90 dummy
companies that control 90 Iranian ports – making up for 45 percent of national
ports – and which run a whopping $12 billion in annual revenue. The elite guard
uses the very same ports to import arms to its militias in neighboring countries
that upon delivery aid in further destabilizing security of their respective
states. It cannot be trusted that Iran is serious with its negotiations whilst
it fosters a home militia (the revolutionary guard) that has literally been
placed itself above the law. Iran is far and foremost the greatest winner in the
recent calls for negotiations with Gulf States. After having exploited the
talks, Iran will employ a stronger expansionist agenda, buying itself more time
to extend profits it reaps from regional states. More so, Iran will not stop at
the talks failing but will relish in having branded itself a peaceful negotiable
state as opposed to Gulf states being the ones having ‘refused’ to instate peace
and stability. Should we blame Iran? Of course not, its transgressions had gone
beyond that– blocs that allowed for such a cliché and fruitless rhetoric to go
into a vicious cycle are those who should be held accountable.
Trump’s White House planning meeting with Saudi Arabia’s deputy crown prince
By Staff writer, Al Arabiya English Sunday, 12 March 2017/The current United
States administration is planning a meeting this coming week with Saudi Deputy
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, CBS News has learned. The visit comes as the
United States expands its military mission against al-Qaeda in the Arabian
Peninsula (AQAP) in Yemen, a country on the brink of widespread famine and torn
apart by civil war involving Iranian-backed Houthi militias. The White House has
not yet announced the visit, as is still confirming details. The Trump
Administration has been considering its approach to the Yemeni war, and eyeing a
tougher approach to roll back Iranian interference in the country. That attack
coupled with ballistic missile testing prompted then-National Security Advisor
Mike Flynn to issue an ominous statement from the White House podium warning
Tehran that it was being put “on notice.”
US President Donald Trump has already supported the expansion of a separate
military campaign in Yemen against AQAP. The White House is reportedly still
determining who will be meeting with the Saudi Deputy Crown Prince during his
trip. Saudi Deputy Crown Prince, Second Deputy Premier and Minister of Defense
Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz had earlier met with US Senator John McCain
last month. During the meeting, they reviewed relations between Saudi Arabia and
the US and ways of enhancing them.
Saudi Arabia: Security forces kill wanted person in al-Qatif
region
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 12 March 2017/A wanted person has been
fatally wounded during an operation by Saudi security forces in eastern Saudi
Arabia, the interior ministry said on Sunday. The wanted man killed during a
raid on Saturday morning targeting wanted people in Awamiya was identified as
Walid Talal Ali al-Arayedh. The interior ministry said security forces came
under fire while pursuing wanted men who had been hiding in houses vacated by
inhabitants to pave the way for a development project intended to revamp the
area. "Security men came under heavy gunfire at the Musawara neighborhood from
an unknown source, which required an appropriate response," the statement,
carried by state news agency SPA said.
Former Saudi justice minister tells EU parliament:
Terrorism has no religion
Staff writer, Al Arabiya EnglishMonday, 13 March 2017/The Secretary General of
Muslim World League (MWL) Sheikh Dr. Mohammed bin Abdulkarim Al-Issa has warned
of the extremist reaction against Islam as a result of Islamophobia, indicating
that it will generate more sufferings and increase numbers of extremists who
were before normal moderate persons coexisting with their societies in
non-Muslim countries and respecting their constitutions, laws and cultures. This
came in a speech delivered by Dr. Al-Issa, who is a former justice minister of
Saudi Arabia, at a conference hosted by the European Parliament in Brussels in
the presence of senior officials from European parliamentarians, politicians, a
number of followers of religions and cultures, and leaders and activists of
Muslim communities in Europe. He told those in attendance that “terrorism had no
links to religion but was groups created over the years came from several parts
of the world with one goal in mind”.
Yemeni army is approaching Sanaa, spokesman says
Staff writer, Al Arabiya EnglishSunday, 12 March 2017/The spokesman of Yemen’s
armed forces has announced on Sunday that they are approaching the cities of
Arhab and Sanaa. According to the government-run Yemeni news agency, Abdullah
Bamajalli – who is also a consultant at the General Staff of Yemen – confirmed
that battles are continuing to liberate Nahm, eastern front of Sanaa, a
development preceded by liberating a series of mountains, including Dorah, al-Ayani,
al-Safeh, al-Dhabeeb, al-Tibab al-Hamaraa, west of Al Garn mountain, and al-Safeenah.
He added that a number of sites located between the directorate of Nahm and Bani
Hashish were liberated while great breakthroughs and advances were achieved by
the national army and the popular resistance in Al Masloub directorate and the
western coast front as well as other fronts of Taiz. Yemeni government and WFP
discuss mechanisms of food aid delivery . Meanwhile, the Yemeni government and
the World Food Programme discussed further means of food aid delivery to those
in need throughout the country. Prime Minister of Yemen Dr. Ahmed Obaid bin
Dhager said during his meeting with Ertharin Cousin, Executive Director of the
WFP, that his government is ready to provide all necessary assistance to the WFP
and other international food agencies so that food and medicine can reach all
citizens.
15 killed, dozens missing in Ethiopia garbage dump landslide
Sun 12 Mar 2017/NNA - Fifteen people
have been killed in a landslide at a massive garbage dump on the outskirts of
Ethiopia's capital and several dozen people are missing, officials and residents
said Sunday. Addis Ababa Mayor Diriba Kuma said 15 bodies had been recovered
since the landslide on Saturday night at the Koshe Garbage Landfill buried
several makeshift homes and concrete buildings. The landfill has been a dumping
ground for the capital's garbage for more than 50 years. About 150 people were
at the site when the landslide occurred, resident Assefa Teklemahimanot told The
Associated Press. The mayor said 37 people had been rescued and were receiving
medical treatment. Many people at the site had been scavenging items to make a
living, but others live at the landfill because renting homes, largely built of
mud and sticks, is relatively inexpensive there. An AP reporter saw four bodies
taken away by ambulances after being pulled from the debris. Elderly women
cried, and others stood anxiously waiting for news of loved ones. Six excavators
dug through the ruins."My house was right inside there," said a shaken Tebeju
Asres, pointing to where one of the excavators was digging in deep, black mud.
"My mother and three of my sisters were there when the landslide happened. Now I
don't know the fate of all of them."The resumption of garbage dumping at the
site in recent months likely caused the landslide, Assefa said. The dumping had
stopped in recent years, but it resumed after farmers in a nearby restive region
where a new garbage landfill complex was being built blocked dumping in their
area. Smaller landslides have occurred at the Koshe landfill in the past two
years but only two or three people were killed, Assefa said. "In the long run,
we will conduct a resettling program to relocate people who live in and around
the landfill," the Addis Ababa mayor said. Around 500 waste-pickers are believed
to work at the landfill every day, sorting through the debris from the capital's
estimated 4 million residents. City officials say close to 300 000 tons of waste
are collected each year from the capital, most of it dumped at the landfill.
Since 2010, city officials have warned that the landfill was running out of room
and was being closed in by nearby housing and schools. City officials in recent
years have been trying to turn the garbage into a source of clean energy with a
$120 million investment. The Koshe waste-to-energy facility, which has been
under construction since 2013, is expected to generate 50 megawatts of
electricity upon completion. Ethiopia, which has one of Africa's fastest growing
economies, is under a state of emergency imposed in October after several months
of sometimes deadly protests demanding wider political freedoms. ---AP
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published
On March 12-13/17
Iranian backed
militia forms Golan liberation brigade
Roi Kais|/Ynetnews/March 12/17
An Iraqi Shiite brigade, who is backed by Iran, declares its intentions:
liberate the Golan; trained and armed by Iran with Russian weaponry, this branch
of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps poses possible threat to Israel.
Equipped with Russian-made tanks (via the Syrian army), Iranian rockets and
operating as an elite unit trained by the Islamic Republic, a brigade formed by
the Iraqi Shiite militia declared that its target is to liberate the Golan. This
brigade is the reason behind the message Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
conveyed in Russia, according to which Israel will not tolerate permanent
Iranian presence in Syria. "The declaration regarding the formation of the
liberation of the Golan brigade is not only a media campaign, but the real goal
of the movement," said the secretary general of the militia, Akram al-Kabi. So
who is this militia? Intelligence researcher Ronen Solomon, owner of the Intel
Times blog, traced this significant branch of Iran's Revolutionary Guard.
"The militia's name first surfaced in 2013 when it deployed its divisions in
Syria, in the areas of Sayyidah Zaynab of the Damascus suburbs (which is sacred
to the Shiites), Idlib, Aleppo, Homs, Al-Klmon near the Lebanese border, and
Iraq under the auspices of the Revolutionary Guard," Solomon explained.
"That same year, the militia released a series of videos that expressed loyalty
to the commander of the Revolutionary Guard's Quds Force, Qasem Soleimani, and
even adopted the resistance symbols of Hezbollah," continued Solomon.
The organization in question is an extension of the Popular Mobilization Forces
in Iraq that includes several Shiite militias who are perceived as controversial
due to their religious zeal.
The organization, according to Solomon's analysis, is one of the Shiite militias
deployed to Syria by Iran to help Hezbollah and the Syrian army in securing the
Shiite holy places, but also to conquer the strategic city of Aleppo, in
addition to reinforcing Hezbollah's defense in the Al-Klmon Mountains. "All
activity is coordinated with Russia, who has been providing the forces with
aerial backup and assisting in transferring weapons of their production."
Solomon claimed that the Iraqi militia has an elite unit trained by Iran, which
operates in similar fashion to Hezbollah's elite Radwan Force. "Iran provided
the militia with multi barrel rocket launchers… and even though the rockets are
not precise, they hold deadly impact, which has proven itself in Iraq against
American bases and now, in pounding rebel outposts in northern Syria."In recent
months, there have been records of the Syrian militia fighters equipped with
Russian T-90 tanks, which they probably received indirectly from Russia through
the Syrian army, according to Solomon's assessment. He noted that "the fighting
in Iraq and Syria has made them proficient in guerrilla warfare and urban
warfare."
Solomon also linked between this militia and the reports concerning an attempt
by the Quds Force to use an Iraqi citizen with a Norwegian citizenship against
Israel from Jordan territory in July 2015. Jordan arrested the citizen, who was
captured with 45 kilograms of powerful explosives.
Sheikh al-Kabi, who heads the militia, occasionally exchanges his traditional
garb with a military uniform: "He wanders back and forth on the Iraq—Iran axis,
Syria and Lebanon … and holds meetings with security officials working from the
Iranian government, and even visits in Lebanon with Hezbollah leader Hassan
Nasrallah."In September 2015, Al-Kabi gave a speech to his fighters in Aleppo,
going so far as to directly accuse Israel of attacking his organization, a claim
which to this day remains unproven. Al-Kabi neglected to specify where and where
Israel had allegedly attacked, but this accusation is a first of its kind.
Usually, the attacks attributed to Israel in Syria are meant to prevent arms
shipments from being transferred to Hezbollah in Lebanon. However, on the
backdrop of the formation of this brigade along with Netanyahu's quicksilver
visit to Russia, it is quite possible that one day, Israel will find itself in
conflict with this Shiite militia.
Trump kicks the ball to Abbas's court
Smadar Perry|/Ynetnews/March 12/17
Op-ed: In his belated first phone call with the Palestinian leader, the new US
president sent out a clear message: If you really are committed to peace, stop
running around international institutions, do your part, and I'll handle
Netanyahu.
Here are two quick conclusions drawn from the first phone call between US
President Donald Trump and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. The first
conclusion: The new US administration managed to exasperate Abbas. The
Palestinian Authority insisted on keeping score: 49 days since entering the
White House, Trump has called Netanyahu twice and warmly welcomed him to
Washington, with the two of them looking like a couple of lovebirds. Trump has
also called all of the other players in the region, who are keeping the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict at arm's length: Jordan's King Abdullah II, with
whom the American president also met, Egypt's President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi,
Saudi King Salman and the three rulers of the Persian Gulf kingdoms. Abbas found
himself last on the list.
Trump also made sure to declare that he didn't care if the Palestinian issue
would be resolved with one state or two states, but warned Netanyahu—in a
message received by Lieberman as well—to calm down with settlement construction.
And if that wasn't enough, Trump insisted on appointing the hawkish ambassador
David Friedman, but did—for now—drop his plans to move the American Embassy to
Jerusalem. The second conclusion: Until further notice, we can expect only
meaningless platitudes. White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer confirmed
reports that Trump invited Abbas to Washington very soon. Meanwhile Palestinian
officials described the phone call as "excellent" and "serious and pleasant,"
while the Palestinian leader said he was looking forward to work with the new
president. This was only a short phone call, with both sides saying only what is
expected of them: Trump claims he made a decision to restart the talks without
trying to impose solutions, while Abbas stressed he would be committed to any
effort that would lead to the establishment of a Palestinian state alongside the
State of Israel. In other words: Trump kicked the ball to Ramallah's court.
Abbas wants a Palestinian state? Ahlan Wasahlan, no problem. Come to Washington,
you'll be welcomed with a red carpet, and we'll think together how to restart
the process. This, on the condition you realize in advance that not all of your
demands will be met. Just don't try to sell me tales about the Palestinian
public opinion.
We must not forget that Trump is coming into this with insights from the
business world. He has been warned that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is a
quagmire, that his predecessors invested precious efforts and time in finding a
creative solution by forming work teams and spending dozens of millions and
dollars. We also must not forget that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is not at
the top of Trump's priorities when it comes to our neighborhood. It's much more
important to him to catch ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and get rid of ISIS
in general.
So when Trump informs Abbas that it is time to end 70 years of suffering for the
Palestinians, he means: If you really are committed, stop running around
international institutions, do your part, and I'll handle Netanyahu.The
statements coming out of Washington and Ramallah show Trump's advisors have done
their homework. From Abbas's point of view, the White House's treatment of
Netanyahu appears too friendly, done at his expense. Trump's team advised the
president to have Abbas in Washington even before the Arab League's summit
convenes in Jordan at the end of the month to give him support.
From Abbas's point of view, a lot is riding on his meeting with Trump at the
White House. It would be a rare opportunity for him to give Trump the
Palestinian version, the facts and data the American president did not get from
Netanyahu. He has already started laying the groundwork with the new American
administration by sending the head of the Palestinian intelligence service,
Majid Faraj, to brief his counterparts in Washington on just how deep the PA's
security cooperation with Israel is, as proof Ramallah wasn't encouraging terror
attacks.Now, it is Trump envoy Jason Greenblatt's turn to skip between Jerusalem
and Ramallah. After all, the mystery of what Trump really wants, what his goals
are, and how much is he really willing to invest, has yet to be revealed.
Death and Destruction for Christmas/Muslim Persecution of
Christians, December 2016
Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/March 12, 2017
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=53240
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10029/christmas-death
Nothing has been done by Pope Francis or the Bishop of Abu Dhabi to get me
released, in spite of contact being made by my captors." — Rev. Tom Uzhunnalil,
a Catholic priest who was kidnapped on March 4, 2016 in Yemen, when Islamic
terrorists raided a nursing home and killed 16 people, including several nuns
and aid workers.
"Christians continue to be the most persecuted believers in the world with over
90,000 followers of Christ being killed in the last year." — Massimo Introvigne,
prominent statistician and researcher, interviewed on Vatican Radio.
As in previous years, the month of Christmas saw an uptick in Islamic attacks on
Christians — much of it in the context of targeting Christmas festivities and
worship.
The one that claimed the most lives took place in Egypt. On Sunday, December 11,
2016, an Islamic suicide bomber entered the St. Peter Cathedral in Cairo during
mass, detonated himself, killed at least 27 worshippers, mostly women and
children, and wounded nearly 70. A witness said:
"I found bodies, many of them women, lying on the pews. It was a horrible scene.
I saw a headless woman being carried away. Everyone was in a state of shock. We
were scooping up people's flesh off the floor. There were children. What have
they done to deserve this? I wish I had died with them instead of seeing these
scenes."
The death toll and severity of the attack (pictures and videos of the aftermath
here) surpassed even the New Year's Day bombing of an Alexandrian church in
which 23 people were killed in 2011. A few weeks before the St. Peter's bombing,
a man hurled an improvised bomb at St. George Church, packed with thousands of
worshippers, in Samalout. Had the bomb detonated, casualties would likely have
been higher. In a separate December incident, Islamic slogans and messages of
hate — including "you will die Christians" — were painted on the floor of the
Virgin Mary church in Damietta.
In Germany, Anis Amri, a Muslim asylum seeker from Tunisia, seized a large
truck, murdered its driver, and pushed him onto the passenger seat, then drove
the truck into a Christmas market in Berlin. Twelve shoppers were killed and 65
were injured, some severely. Four days later, Amri was killed in a shootout with
police near Milan. ISIS claimed responsibility despite original reports claiming
the man had no ties to Islamic terror groups.
Police confer at the site of the December 19, 2016 truck-ramming attack in
Berlin, Germany. Anis Amri, a Muslim asylum seeker from Tunisia, murdered a
Polish truck driver and 12 shoppers at a Christmas market. (Image source: RT
video screenshot)
In Turkey, a gunman dressed as Santa Claus entered a nightclub in Istanbul
during New Year celebrations and shot 39 people dead, and several dozens
wounded. The Islamic State later claimed the terrorist attack and portrayed it
as an assault on Christian infidels and their Muslims sympathizers. An ISIS
spokesman said that a "heroic soldier of the caliphate ... attacked the most
famous nightclub where Christians were celebrating their pagan feast," and
partly for Turkey being "the servant of the cross." Separately, and ironically,
Turkey's National Ministry of Education issued an email to about 35
German-funded teachers in Istanbul. It said: "No more Christmas celebration
and/or lessons on Christmas including carol singing is permitted, effective
immediately." A report adds, "That Turkey is the homeland of the real 'Santa
Claus' is an irony largely lost on most media: St Nicholas, who secretly left
gifts for poor children, was in fact Bishop Nicholas who lived in c.300 AD" --
in formerly Christian Turkey, before Islam overran it.
In the Philippines, as Christians were celebrating Christmas Eve Mass in a
Catholic church in Mindanao, a grenade exploded by the entrance. Sixteen people
were wounded. According to the report, "No group has claimed responsibility for
the Mindanao attack, but Muslim rebels and Islamist extremists are known to be
active in the province, where there have been blasts in the past."
On Christmas Day in Cameroon, an Islamic suicide bomber targeting Christians
killed a young student and a woman, and injured five others, in an attack on a
market full of Christmas shoppers in Mora. Authorities said the bomber, who also
died in the attack, was from the Islamic terror group, Boko Haram, based in
neighboring Nigeria. They also said that the casualties would have been much
higher had a "vigilance committee" not spotted the jihadi, who was pretending to
be a beggar, and prevented him from entering the crowded market.
During Christmas weekend in Baghdad, Iraq, two Christian shops were attacked
with gunfire. Three were confirmed dead; local activists say as many as nine
were killed. The shops were presumably targeted for carrying alcohol. "What a
bloody gift they gave us for Christmas," Joseph Warda, a human rights activist,
said.
A Muslim migrant in Italy who, according to police, "wanted to destroy Christian
symbols," set a church nativity scene on fire and destroyed a separate statue of
Mary. He was caught by the church's priest, who notified authorities. They
rushed to the scene and fought to restrain the man. who was reportedly suffering
from a "visible psycho-physical crisis."
A fortnight before Christmas in a region of Germany that contains more than a
million Muslims, approximately 50 public Christian statues (of Jesus, Mary,
etc.) were beheaded, and crucifixes broken. Many local Germans were left
"shocked and scared," the report said. Police called the incident a "religiously
motivated attack."
The Islamic State published the names and addresses of thousands of churches in
the United States and called on its adherents to attack them during the holiday
season, according to a message posted late-night Wednesday in the group's
"Secrets of Jihadis" social media group. One Arabic-language message called "for
bloody celebrations in the Christian New Year" and announced the group's plans
to mobilize lone wolf attackers to "turn the Christian New Year into a bloody
horror movie." Manuals for the use and preparations of weapons and explosives
for aspiring assailants were also available on the same social media site.
Police in Australia arrested seven men — described as "self-radicalized" and
"inspired by the Islamic State" — for planning a series of bomb attacks in the
heart of Melbourne on Christmas Day. Among their targets was St. Paul's
Cathedral. Four hundred police were involved in the raid, and more were deployed
on Christmas Day as a precautionary measure.
In Pakistan, 43 people, mostly Christian, died, and another 120 were
hospitalized, after they drank tainted alcohol at a Christmas celebration.
Joseph Arshad, Christian bishop of Faisalabad, while visiting the sick in the
hospital, said, "This tragic event turned the joyous festivity of Christmas into
mourning with many lives still hang in the balance due to critical conditions"
of many patients. A judiciary inquiry needs to be conducted to bring the
perpetrators to justice."
In Uganda, 19 masked Muslim shouting "Allahu Akbar" and "Away from here; this
village is not for Christians but for Allah," stormed a church compound during
Christmas Day service, and savagely beat 15 Christians. Five were seriously
wounded; bones were broken. "Previously at an all-night Christmas Eve service, a
Muslim had put his faith in Jesus Christ and had been immediately healed of
illness," said the report:
Yasiini Mugoya said he returned home and shared the gospel of Christ with his
fellow Muslims early on Christmas morning. "They started beating me and forced
me to lead them to the church compound where the Christians had prayed for me
and I had received salvation and healing. When we arrived at the church, the
Muslims started attacking the church members."
In Indonesia, Muslims yelling "Allahu Akbar" stormed a building where hundreds
of Christians were lighting candles and singing "Silent Night" as part of a
Christmas service, and forced the celebrations to be stopped. The pastor had
just said "Christmas is not a day for hatred but Christmas is a day for
reconciliation and peace." Separately, the nation's military and paramilitary
personnel — a total of 150,000 people — were on high alert as militant Muslims
stepped up their anti-Christmas threats. Security forces killed three Islamic
terrorists discovered with bombs which they had apparently been planning to use;
another dozen or so Islamic terrorists were arrested also for planning Christmas
attacks.
Anti-terrorist forces in Bangladesh foiled a planned suicide attack on a
Catholic church during Christmas. The conspirators, who belong to the "New Group
of Mujahidin," planned to bomb Holy Spirit church in Dhaka, the capital, but
were tracked and arrested on Christmas Eve.
Authorities from Christian-majority Kenya said intelligence revealed that Al-Shabaab,
an Islamic terror group in neighboring Somalia, was planning a series of
terrorist attacks during the Christmas season, and would include houses of
worship. The nation was placed on high alert; citizens were asked to be vigilant
and report suspicious activities.
In Yemen, on Christmas Day, a video was released of a Catholic priest who was
kidnapped on March 4, 2016, when Islamic terrorists raided a nursing home and
killed 16 people, including several nuns and aid workers. In the video, Rev. Tom
Uzhunnalil, who appeared weak and out of breath, said "Nothing has been done by
Pope Francis or the Bishop of Abu Dhabi to get me released, in spite of contact
being made by my captors." He also implored the Catholic pope: "Dear Pope
Francis, dear Holy Father, as a father please take care of my life."
South Sudan: Flyers and posters were found plastered on churches all throughout
the country during the Christmas season. They contained anti-Christian rhetoric
and "included calls for Muslims to neither visit nor congratulate their
Christian neighbours on the festive season," said a report.
More stories of Christian experiences under ISIS continued to emerge in
December. "I just want to go home," said 80-year-old Victoria Behman Akouma, now
in a refugee camp. When ISIS took over her town in August 2014, "They asked me
to convert to Islam, but I told them I will die a Christian and that they can
kill me if they want to."
Based on the findings of Massimo Introvigne, a prominent statistician and
researcher in Italy who was interviewed on Vatican Radio, "Christians continue
to be the most persecuted believers in the world with over 90,000 followers of
Christ being killed in the last year," in 2016 alone; this comes out to one
death every 6 minutes, the majority of which occur in Africa.
The rest of the accounts of Muslim persecution of Christians to surface in the
month of December, though with little direct relation to Christmas, include:
Austria: A 22-year-old Muslim asylum seeker from Afghanistan stabbed a Christian
woman with a knife for reading from the Bible in the asylum center. According to
the report, the man "had taken offence to the fact that the woman had been
invited by Christian residents of the property to discuss the Bible. When he
found out what she was doing, he stormed into the kitchen where the woman was
standing and tried to plunge the knife into her upper body." The 50-year-old
woman's thick winter coat deflected the knife...."
Democratic Republic of Congo: In a region where Islamic terrorists associated
with the Allied Democratic Forces are highly active and where many people of the
Christian-majority nation have been killed, a young nun was shot dead in her
office. According to the pontifical institute's World and Mission magazine,
Sister Marie Claire joins a growing list of clergy in Africa "who have given
their lives for the Gospel."
Greece: Unknown vandals set fire to the Church of Archangel in the village of
Lagolio, on the island of Crete. The only clue to their identity was that they
wrote "Allahu Akbar" in Arabic on the walls, "infuriating locals," said a
report. Although local residents managed to put out the fire before it spread,
icons and other sacred items were burned.
Uganda: Muslim relatives beat a 30-year-old former Islamic teacher unconscious,
after he publicly confessed that he had converted to Christianity. Then, on
December 8, Muslims attacked his 60-year-old mother who, after visiting and
listening to her son, also embraced Christianity. The men gashed her head open
and broke her hand. Separately, Muslims destroyed the home of a single mother
because she converted from Islam to Christianity. On December 23, she received a
letter in Arabic reading, "Be warned that if you do not return to Islam, then
your days are numbered. We do not want to be associated with infidels. You have
become a disgrace to Allah and the Muslim community at Kitoikawononi." The next
day, Christmas Eve, Muslims came and razed the woman's home to the ground. Her
three children and she are now homeless.
Indonesia: A man entered an elementary school in East Nusa Tenggara (NTT),
walked to the back of a classroom and began stabbing children. Seven children
were injured. The man, reportedly a Muslim, recently migrated to the largely
Christian village. Angered villagers stormed the police station, overpowered the
police, and killed the attacker. Again separately, a group from the Islamic
Defenders Front (FPI) stormed and threatened a car dealership that had asked its
employees to wear Christmas themed outfits.
Pakistan: A Muslim man beat and kicked a 58-year-old Christian woman unconscious
after she refused to clean his home because she was already overbooked with two
other homes. "She offered to come back another day with a team of a further two
cleaners, however the landlord wanted his home cleaned immediately," said a
report.
When Bashiran [the woman] refused, stating that she was too old to take on
another job, especially of this size on her own, Afzal [the man] became angry.
He glared at Bashiran and accused her of disrespect as Christians should not be
refusing to take orders from Muslims. Bashiran was pushed to the floor, and Mr
Afzal began kicking and punching her until she became unconscious."
Police refused to register the crime; when the family pressed the case, the
Muslims threatened to kill the Christian family unless they dropped it. In still
another separate incident, a Christian boy was videotaped being publicly beaten
for drinking water from a fountain located inside a mosque. The video shows the
boy yelling and screaming after being whipped with wooden sticks and beaten with
shoes.
Egypt: A "reconciliation meeting" was held by top officials in Naghameesh, where
a building Christians were using to hold church services was torched by angry
Muslims. Although the "brotherhood of all Egyptians" — Christians and Muslims —
was the main theme, when it came to the question of giving their fellow
Christian brothers the same right to worship, the majority of Muslim leaders and
family members at the reconciliation meeting continued to refuse them a place in
which to pray. Authorities submitted to the decision and did nothing to support
the Christians. "We don't understand what is so dangerous about the Copts
praying and exercising their legal rights in this matter," one local Christian
said.
Separately, but around the same time, the Egyptian government boasted that it is
opening 10 new mosques every week; that there are 3,200 closed mosques that need
renovating; that the government is currently working on 1,300 of them; that it
will take about 60 million Egyptian pounds to renovate them, but that the
government has allotted ten times that much, although a total of three billion
is needed, and that the Egyptian government is dedicated to spending that much —
for "whoever abuses public funds [which should be used for Islamic worship],
enters a war with Allah, " according to Dr. Muhammad Mukhtar Gom'a, Minister of
Awqaf (endowments). But when the nation's more than 10 million Christian
minority seeks to build or renovate a church — and pay all expenses from their
own pockets — Muslims riot and authorities submit.
Iran: "Between May and August 2016 security forces arrested at least 79
Christians," said a December report, even though "the true number of Christians
apprehended by the authorities could be notably higher," because "many" arrests
are never recorded. "At the time of writing some of these 79 Christians remain
in detention and have still not been formally charged."
About this Series
While not all, or even most, Muslims are involved, persecution of Christians by
Muslims is growing.
The report posits that such Muslim persecution is not random but rather
systematic, and takes place irrespective of language, ethnicity, or location.
*Raymond Ibrahim is the author of Crucified Again: Exposing Islam's New War on
Christians (published by Regnery with Gatestone Institute, April 2013).
A Month of Islam and Multiculturalism in Britain: February
2017
Soeren Kern/Gatestone Institute/March 12, 2017
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/10042/britain-islam-february
Muslim pupils outnumber Christian children in more than 30 church schools,
including one Church of England primary school that has a "100% Muslim
population." — Sunday Times.
Six Muslim men shouted "Allahu Akbar" as they were sentenced at Sheffield Crown
Court for a total of 81 years for sexually abusing two girls — including one who
became pregnant at age 12 — in Rotherham.
"By 2030, one in three people will be a Muslim in the world — that is a huge
population." — Romanna Bint-Abubaker, founder of modest fashion website Haute
Elan.
A Chatham House survey of more than 10,000 people from ten European countries
found that an average of 55% agreed that all further migration from mainly
Muslim countries should be stopped.
February 1. Jim Walker, a 71-year-old volunteer at Carnforth Station, was banned
from the premises after someone complained about an alleged racist comment.
Walker, who, for more than a decade, has been winding a famous clock at the
station, was overheard discussing a newspaper article about young migrants
entering Britain from the French port of Calais. Walker said:
"Carnforth Station Trust received a complaint from a visitor who was not happy
about me speaking to somebody about the issue.... What they are doing is
outrageous. It is absolutely unbelievable, it is a violation of free speech....
"I must be the only man in Carnforth who has a document saying where he can and
can't walk and all for expressing a point of view and quoting an editorial from
a newspaper. Now [winding the clock] is no longer possible."
February 1. Prime Minister Theresa May told the House of Commons that women
should feel free to wear the hijab, a traditional Islamic headscarf. Several
European countries have imposed bans on parts of Muslim religious dress. "What a
woman wears is a woman's choice," May said after she was asked — on world hijab
day — if she supported the right of women to wear the garment.
On February 1 ("world hijab day"), UK Prime Minister Theresa May said that women
should feel free to wear the hijab, a traditional Islamic headscarf, stating:
"What a woman wears is a woman's choice." Pictured above: Theresa May (then Home
Secretary) wears a headscarf while attending an interfaith event at Al Madina
Mosque in East London, in February 2015. (Image source: Imams Online video
screenshot)
February 2. Six Muslim men shouted "Allahu Akbar" as they were sentenced at
Sheffield Crown Court for a total of 81 years for sexually abusing two girls —
including one who became pregnant at age 12 — in Rotherham. Three brothers and
three other men were convicted of crimes including rape, indecent assault and
false imprisonment after the pre-teen victims were "systematically groomed."
February 4. Almost half of the new homes built in the next five years will go to
migrants, according to government figures. Soaring immigration means that
Britain will need to accommodate as many as 243,000 new households each year for
the next 22 years. It is estimated that an extra 5.3 million new properties
could be needed to meet the growth in population, and an extra 2.4 million of
the new homes will be needed for migrants alone. In other words, one new home
must be built every five minutes to house Britain's burgeoning migrant
population.
February 5. Muslim pupils outnumber Christian children in more than 30 church
schools, including one Church of England primary school that has a "100% Muslim
population," according to the Sunday Times. St. Thomas in Werneth, Oldham, is
reported by the local diocese to have no Christian pupils, while at Staincliffe
Church of England Junior School in Batley, West Yorkshire, 98% of pupils "come
from a Muslim background." The Church of England estimated that about 20 of its
schools had more Muslim pupils than Christians and 15 Roman Catholic schools had
majority Muslim pupils, according to the Catholic Education Service. Some church
schools include Islamic prayers in their services.
February 6. The Deputy Mayor of London, Sophie Linden, warned that people who
inflict female genital mutilation (FGM) on girls have escaped justice "for too
long." Linden said that "inconsistencies in the way these crimes are recorded"
had allowed perpetrators to avoid charges, despite FGM being a "widespread"
problem. Although FGM has been illegal in Britain since 1985, no one has ever
been successfully prosecuted for such offenses.
February 7. Zakaria Bulhan, a 19-year-old Norwegian national of Somali origin,
was sentenced to indefinite confinement at Broadmoor Hospital after he admitted
to killing American tourist Darlene Horton and wounding five others in a rampage
in central London on August 3, 2016. Bulhan, from Tooting, South London, pled
guilty at the Old Bailey to "manslaughter by diminished responsibility" on the
grounds that he was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia at the time of the
attacks. He had been charged with murder and attempted murder, but the court
accepted his plea. During his arrest, Bulhan repeatedly muttered "Allah, Allah,
Allah," and police found a Muslim prayer book, "Fortress of the Muslim," in his
pants pocket. The court decided that Islam was not a factor in Bulhan's
behavior.
February 7. A Chatham House survey of more than 10,000 people from ten European
countries found that an average of 55% agreed that all further migration from
mainly Muslim countries should be stopped, 25% neither agreed nor disagreed and
20% disagreed. Majorities in all but two of the ten states agreed, ranging from
71% in Poland, 65% in Austria, 53% in Germany and 51% in Italy to 47% in the
United Kingdom and 41% in Spain.
February 9. A 44-year-old man from Hertfordshire was arrested at Gatwick Airport
on terrorism charges after he disembarked from a flight from Iraq. He was
charged under Section 5 of the 2006 Terrorism Act: suspicion of preparation of
terrorist acts.
February 12. A National Health Service (NHS) project based on research by Leeds
University claimed that Muslims with mental health issues could be helped by
re-embracing Islam. Traditionally, therapists have shied away from talking about
religion as part of treatment. Lead researcher Dr. Ghazala Mir, of the
university's Leeds Institute of Health Sciences, said:
"We know that in Muslim populations people can get quicker results from
faith-sensitive therapies that have been tested elsewhere in the world. They
tend to use religion as a coping resource more than people in other religious
groups."
Mir has helped to create a new treatment. Patients are asked if faith was part
of their life when they were well. Those who stopped being religious because of
depression are re-introduced slowly using a self-help booklet, which highlights
passages from the Koran that illustrate that "even people with strong faith" can
become depressed and that it does not mean Allah is displeased.
February 13. Nadeem Muhammed, a 43-year-old Pakistani national, appeared at
Westminster Magistrates' Court in London after security officials at Manchester
Airport discovered a pipe bomb in his hand luggage prior to boarding a flight to
Italy. Muhammed, who lives in Greater Manchester, was arrested on January 30 but
was later released on bail and was allowed to travel. He was re-arrested when he
returned to Britain on February 11 and charged with possessing an improvised
explosive device.
February 14. Clayton McKenna, a 22-year-old Briton who converted to Islam while
in prison, appeared at Newcastle Crown Court after he carried an axe through the
streets of Boldon Colliery, apparently with which to confront his Christian
father over "religious differences." McKenna allegedly told police that he was
on his way to his father's home "to ask him to bow down to me." Judge Penny
Moreland told McKenna:
"It appears you were sober, you had not been drinking or taking drugs. There has
been an examination by the mental health team and they are satisfied there are
no mental health issues I ought to be taking into account.
"You made a series of statements, both at the scene and in interview shortly
afterwards, as to what you intended to do and what was in your mind. It is right
to say they were confused and contradictory.
"The statements included a suggestion that you were going to use violence
against your father, amongst a number of reasons you said was because he was a
Christian and you were a recent convert to Islam.
"I am concerned that there is no real explanation for your confused thinking
that morning, nor for those threats made, even though they appear to have been
without substance."
February 15. Faisal Bashir, a 43-year-old father of two from Ilford, was forced
to move out of his home after he renounced Islam and stopped attending mosque.
Bashir said he was subject to harassment, but police dismissed his pleas for
help as "just a nuisance." He explained:
"These people knew I had become an atheist and soon enough my whole family was
being harassed. At least once a week they would hang around near my house,
shouting and swearing at me. I was called an apostate, a non-believer, I was
told I had betrayed my God and my faith. Sometimes they would even say things to
my children — they are far too little to know what was happening, they were very
frightened.
"Police always said they could not really do anything because no physical
altercation ever took place. But I am not the kind of person to get violent with
anybody. Also, it was always different people so they claimed they could not log
it as similar complaint. Eventually a police officer told me I should just move
house to get away from it all.
"We were not left with any other choice.... The new house is over a mile away,
but they still managed to find us again."
The Chairman of the Ilford-based British Pakistani Christian Association (BPCA),
Wilson Chowdhry, said:
"Police and councils up and down the country just don't understand the level of
animosity people choosing to leave Islam can face."
February 16. Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, Britain's top police officer, urged Muslim
scholars to step up their efforts to counter the violent ideology of the Islamic
State. He said he believed that IS fighters and terrorists were "political
criminals" who were carrying out "horrific violence" which had no justification
in Islam. In an interview with the Evening Standard, Hogan-Howe repeated the
politically correct dogma that the Islamic State is not Islamic:
"The hardest part for the Western world is to interrupt this philosophy that
Daesh [Islamic State] is perpetuating which is that Islam in any way supports
this horrific use of violence.
"There is no interpretation I would argue that could say that, but some people
are getting away with that. Muslim scholars have got to come up and be really
challenging of that and be very clear that this can never be acceptable. There
is no interpretation that can ever conclude it is okay to kill people. We cannot
be at all sensitive to religious beliefs. We have all got to say that is wrong.
"The Muslim community feel particularly sensitive because Islamism is about
people who profess to be Muslims. I would argue that they are political
criminals — it just happens to be masked in religion. But when you are dealing
with that issue you have to be sensitive to the majority who are good people
trying to do the right thing."
February 18. Britain's first-ever "modest" fashion event was held in London with
more than 40 designers displaying garments that comply with Muslim values. Event
organizer Romanna Bint-Abubaker, founder of modest fashion website Haute Elan,
told Sky News:
"The fastest growing global consumer is at the moment the Muslim market. By
2030, one in three people will be a Muslim in the world — that is a huge
population."
February 19. Counter-terrorism police launched an investigation into claims that
Trish O'Donnell, head of Clarksfield Primary School in Oldham, was being forced
to work from home after death threats from Muslim parents opposed to her Western
values. O'Donnell reportedly has been subject to "harassment and intimidation"
in the form of "aggressive verbal abuse" and "threats to blow up her car" from
parents pushing conservative Muslim ideals. The school is mostly filled with
Pakistani pupils who do not speak English as a first language.
February 20. Members of Parliament debated U.S. President Donald J. Trump's
state visit to Britain. Left-wing MPs called for the invitation to be withdrawn
to protest Trump's travel ban on people from seven Muslim-majority countries.
Conservative Party MPs accused their opponents of hypocrisy and insulting the
American people. The debate was triggered after an online parliamentary petition
seeking to prevent Trump from making a state visit attracted nearly two million
signatures. A counter-petition received over 300,000 signatures. After three
hours of debate, Sir Alan Duncan, the deputy foreign secretary, reaffirmed the
government's intention to host Trump on a state visit, tentatively set for
October 5-8, 2017.
February 21. Rezzas Abdulla, a 33-year-old man from South Shields, was sentenced
to eight months in prison, a sentence then suspended so that he could receive
treatment for mental health problems, for assaulting a woman and her nine-month
old baby. Rebecca Telford, 25, and her daughter Layla-Jean, were strolling in
South Shields in January 2016 when Abdulla leaned into the baby carriage and
spat into the baby's mouth, and allegedly said, "white people shouldn't breed,"
before launching into a tirade of racial abuse. Telford told police:
"There was no eye contact and no words had been exchanged. I had never seen him
before. I believe he spat on her purely because we are white, I was a lone
female and an easy target."
February 22. Jamal al-Harith, a 50-year-old British convert to Islam, blew
himself up at an Iraqi army base in Mosul on February 20. He had received £1
million (€1.1 million; $1.2 million) in compensation from the British government
after being freed from Guantánamo Bay in 2004. Al-Harith, originally named
Ronald Fiddler, was born in Manchester to parents of Jamaican origin and took
the name Jamal al-Harith when he converted to Islam. He was also known more
recently as Abu-Zakariya al-Britani. Captured in Afghanistan in early 2002, and
released from Guantánamo Bay after two years, he later joined IS.
February 23. The BBC paid "very substantial" libel damages and broadcast a full
apology to Chowdhury Mueen-Uddin, founder member of the Muslim Council of
Britain, who was falsely accused of calling for the lynching of author Salman
Rushdie.
February 26. Shahriar Ashrafkhorasani, a 33-year-old Iranian-born convert from
Islam and who is set to be ordained as a Church of England priest, accused
Oxford University of discrimination and bias after he was told he could not ask
a lecturer critical questions about Islam. During a seminar about love in
religion, Minlib Dallh, a research fellow at Regent's Park College in Oxford,
allegedly pointed at Ashrafkhorasani and said: "Everybody can ask a question
except you." Ashrafkhorasani said that Dallh had discovered during a coffee
break that he was a convert from Islam. He said that Dallh refused to let him
ask questions about the lecturer's description of Islam as a religion of love
and peace. Dallh's project was partly being sponsored by the King of Jordan.
Bishop Michael Nazir-Ali, who was a senior fellow at Wycliffe Hall until last
year, said that a "politically correct" atmosphere is "very widespread in the
university as a whole." He added: "If people are taking money from these
[Muslim] sources, then that can limit the critical approach to the study of
Islam and Muslim civilization generally."
February 27. A spokesman for the West Midlands Police wrote on social media that
parents caught practicing female genital mutilation (FMG) on their children
should not be prosecuted. He revealed that the force is opposed to
"prosecuting/jailing" parents for FGM because it would be "unlikely to benefit"
children who fall victim to the crime. He added that the best course of action
is to focus on "education." Tim Loughton, a member of the Home Affairs
Committee, condemned the reluctance to pursue prosecution:
"It is absolutely key to expose perpetrators and to nail them for it. The police
must go after offenders. This is deeply disturbing because a key part of
eradicating the violence of FGM is exposing, prosecuting, and nailing the
perpetrators. Every time a prosecution fails to materialize, it encourages those
that are behind this that it is not a serious crime, and they can get away it."
February 28. Patrick Kabele, a 32-year-old convert to Islam, was found guilty of
preparing terrorist acts — namely attempting to travel to Syria — contrary to
the 2006 Terrorism Act. During his trial, jurors at Woolwich Crown Court heard
how Kabele, from Willesden in North London, tried to join the Islamic State in
Syria, where he wanted to buy a "nine-year-old virgin, the younger the better."
He added that if he had enough money, he would buy four wives. Kabele was
arrested after he tried to board a flight from Gatwick to Istanbul, Turkey on
August 20, 2016 with £3,000 in cash. Kabele, who was born in Uganda and became a
British citizen, told police after his arrest that he did not "owe an oath of
allegiance" to the United Kingdom.
*Soeren Kern is a Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute.
Follow him on Facebook and on Twitter.
© 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.
Iran's Economy Post-Nuclear Deal: A Misleading IMF
Scorecard
Patrick Clawson/The Washington Institute/March 12, 2017
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=53242
Iran's budget and banking system are being held hostage by unaccountable
revolutionary institutions like the IRGC, but for some reason the IMF is not
calling Tehran out on the glaring lack of transparency.
On February 27, the International Monetary Fund released its annual report about
the Iranian economy. The report is important not only for what it reveals about
the Islamic Republic's economic situation, but also for what it says about how
respected international technical agencies respond to a government that has no
effective control over revolutionary institutions that act at cross-purposes to
its policies.
IRAN'S BUDGETS ARE FICTION
The IMF report praises Tehran for carrying out a "prudent fiscal policy" that
has "kept the budget deficit low in spite of challenging circumstances." It
adds, "Over the past 5 years, the overall fiscal deficit of the central
government was kept below 2 percent of GDP despite the drop in oil revenues."
Yet a closer look at the report's specifics shows that none of that praise is
true in any meaningful sense. In fact, the authors openly acknowledge that
President Hassan Rouhani's government has "recognized" arrears equal to 25% of
GDP, and mention in passing that total arrears may turn out to be 3,980 trillion
rials (about $130 billion USD), which would be 36% of GDP. A government whose
annual deficits are "below 2 percent of GDP" does not accumulate arrears of 25%
-- that is only possible with the type of massive annual deficits characteristic
of imprudent fiscal policy.
Moreover, Iran itself has reported annual government spending to be 18% of GDP.
If it has in fact run up the huge arrears reported by the IMF, then its actual
expenditures are probably more like 25% of GDP. To put the gap between Tehran's
claims and the IMF's findings in perspective, that would be like the U.S.
government spending around $1.2 trillion more per year than it publicly
disclosed.
Buried in the report's supplement is the explanation for how those arrears
occurred: "Non-central government agencies can commit government funds (e.g.,
through public guarantees) and shift the cost of these commitments to the
central government, who then fund these obligations. Moreover, there is no
system to record these commitments or monitor arrears." Note the present tense
in those sentences: there has been no change in the procedures that caused the
massive arrears. And the key problem hinted at here is that the Rouhani
government has no control over institutions that report directly to Supreme
Leader Ali Khamenei -- the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), clerical
foundations, and other such entities can incur major debt for which the
government is then liable.
Yet while the IMF report offers a "staff appraisal" highlighting the specific
steps Iran should take to address some of its most pressing economic issues,
there is not one word about "non-central government agencies" spending money
without authorization or even any record. Similarly, nothing is said about how
to stop a new round of arrears from piling atop the 25-35% of GDP already
accrued. In other words, the Iranian government does not even know about, much
less control, much of the country's spending, and the main international agency
responsible for evaluating Tehran's fiscal policy is glossing over this massive
problem.
BANKING MESS
The concerns are equally daunting in Iran's banking system. There too, the
government has limited control, and the IMF barely mentions the substantive
issues.
Part of the problem is bankrupt banks and inadequate regulation. In 2016, the
Securities and Exchange Organization (SEO) of Iran required banks and other
firms listed on the Tehran Stock Exchange to use the International Financial
Reporting Standards (IFRS). These standards are used by most advanced countries,
and the SEO had been urging firms to use them for years (although U.S.
institutions do not use the IFRS, they are held to even more rigid standards).
When it was later disclosed that Bank Saderat would report huge losses under the
IFRS, the SEO suspended all trading in shares of several banks. And when trading
in Bank Mellat shares resumed in January, their value promptly dropped 38%,
dragging down the entire Tehran Stock Exchange index. Market analyst Ali
Nikoogoftar explained the problem in the January 28 edition of Tehran's
Financial Tribune: "This is a watershed for the banks. For years, banks were
paying dividends which had no real financial backing, since they were using
unpaid loans and debts as profit." In fact, some Iranian analysts estimate that
30% or more of bank loans are nonperforming -- if that is true, recapitalizing
state-owned banks could require 15-20% of GDP, a cost that would have to be
borne by the government.
The supplement to the IMF report also has a section on "impediments to
correspondent banking with Iran," with a subsection on "potential policy options
that can facilitate the reconnection to non-U.S. global banks." Yet these
sections do not contain one word about the failure of Iranian banks to meet up
to the requirements of the Basel III accords adopted by regulators in most
industrialized countries, which place a heavy burden on banks doing business
with institutions that do not live up to its standards. Under "Pillar II" of
those accords, banks have to apply appropriate accounting standards (e.g., the
IFRS), implement sound risk-management practices, and value loans accurately. No
Iranian bank meets those standards, nor the Basel III requirements on capital
and liquidity coverage.
Getting Iranian banks to report their financial results accurately is only part
of the challenge. At least as large a problem is the fact that non-bank
financial institutions controlled by revolutionary and clerical institutions,
including most IRGC entities, refuse to come under the authority of the Central
Bank of Iran (CBI). The latest IMF report, unlike previous ones, barely touches
on this problem. For instance, it notes that Iran's new draft banking bill
grants the CBI "the power to supervise all deposit-taking institutions." Yet
that sentence omits the main obstacle to using such authority: the CBI has
little information about the size of such institutions, which are ubiquitous in
Iran.
This is not just a regulatory concern -- it also affects monetary policy. By any
reasonable definition, Iran's money supply includes deposits in non-bank
financial institutions. Since the CBI has no idea how much is in those
institutions, it has no reliable notion about the size of the country's money
supply or what interest rates such institutions have adopted. In effect, Iran's
monetary policy is being shaped by the activities of these unaccountable
revolutionary entities, not by the CBI alone. And once again, the agency
responsible for evaluating Tehran's performance on such matters has glossed over
the problem.
EXPECTING BETTER FROM INTERNATIONAL AGENCIES
The IMF report's failure to highlight glaring discrepancies and contradictions
in Iran's economic accounts is discouraging. The IMF is tasked with providing
technical advice about fiscal matters to countries worldwide, so surely it
should be expected to say something about the need for Iran to control its
expenditures, avoid arrears equal to 25% of its GDP, and prevent these massive
arrears from draining the private sector? One might also hope that the agency
would offer advice on how the government can recapitalize the banking system and
at least monitor -- if not control -- the non-bank financial institutions that
currently ignore the CBI.
In global security terms, the Iran-related reports issued by another technical
oversight institution -- the International Atomic Energy Agency -- are even more
important given the existential dangers posed by nuclear proliferation. Thus
far, however, the IAEA has done no better than the IMF in holding Tehran
accountable. Quite the reverse: the IMF report at least provides enough raw
information for readers to figure out that its rosy judgments about certain
issues are unfounded, while the IAEA has withheld much of the data needed to
even form an independent opinion on whether Iran is living up to its nuclear
obligations. It is particularly worrisome that some of the same revolutionary
institutions who ignore the central government in the economic sphere have also
been key actors in the nuclear program. Hopefully the IAEA will do better than
the IMF at detecting and reporting on the activities of such institutions going
forward.
SCARING OFF BANKS AND INVESTORS
Iran should be an attractive place for foreign companies looking to trade and
invest. The economy is growing; non-oil GDP will be up 0.8% in the Iranian year
ending March 21, and it may increase more than 3% next year. Iran's current
account has been in surplus every year for more than a decade, and the country
has ample foreign exchange reserves. Even with arrears at 35% of GDP and bank
capitalization requirements at 20%, Iran's public debt would be smaller relative
to GDP than that of the United States and most other countries.
Yet not paying government bills and not providing accurate financial reports are
good ways to scare off investors and trading partners. When such basic business
documents as audited bank financial reports and government financial statements
turn out to be largely fiction, it is hardly surprising that foreign firms lack
confidence in Iranian assurances about more secretive and sensitive issues
(e.g., what role the IRGC might play in controlling a given company). And when
fiscal and banking policy are thrown into turmoil by revolutionary institutions
that pay no attention to such powerful agencies as the CBI and Ministry of
Economic Affairs and Finance, foreign firms have to be concerned about how these
actors might interfere in their business. In short, if Iranian officials want to
know why foreign banks and investors are reluctant to do business there, they
should look in the mirror.
**Patrick Clawson is the Morningstar Senior Fellow and director of research at
The Washington Institute. Previously, he worked as a senior economist at the IMF
and World Bank, among other posts.
Significant escalation in Trump’s war with media on
cards
Ahmad al-Farraj/Al Arabiya/March 12/17
President Trump suffered greatly from the biased US media. It is the same media
that significantly contributed to his rise as a star because the media outlets
were not expecting to be helping him on the political level and when they
realized that they are promoting an undesirable political star, they turned
against him. But it was too late. The media, especially the left-aligned ones,
started to attack Trump from his first day as an elected-president. They dug up
his archives at times, and chased leaked news at other times. Trump and his
close aides did not know how to properly deal with the media. A senior
strategist and mastermind at the Trump administration, Steve Bannon, said that
according to Trump’s administration, the media has become an opposition party.
However, when things escalated, Trump made a very smart move, which was unusual
for him. How did he do that? President Trump decided to give a speech before
Congress. We have tackled his speech in the previous piece, stating that it was
a successful step because it was a conciliatory speech, not giving his opponents
the opportunity to criticize him. However, the biased media did not let Trump
enjoy the outcome of his speech with positive reactions. One day after the
speech, while Trump was proudly moving forward hoping to close some files with
which the media was haunting him, everyone was surprised by the report in the
Washington Post newspaper that Attorney General Jeff Sessions has had contacts
with the Russians. Sessions is one of the biggest Trump advocate, having
declared his support for him from the very first day.
So, who is Sessions and why is his contact with the Russians a big problem that
the Trump administration might not be able to overcome easily?
Sessions is a lawyer and former judge from Alabama in the south of the US, where
racism has always been widespread. This state has a long history in working
against the liberation of Black people for more than a century and a half; it
also has a longer history in resisting the Civil Rights Act, which made white
and black people equal in the Sixties. Sessions had served as the minister of
justice in the state of Alabama and Black people claim that during his term
there were racist tendencies. This accusation had deprived him of being
appointed as a federal judge in the mid-eighties when the Senate voted against
his appointment.
Why did the Washington Post newspaper chose to publish the news about Sessions’
scandal the day following Trump’s conciliatory speech? Why did the New York
Times publish another scandalous report against Trump on the same day? Sessions
then ran for the Senate and won. He served until he was nominated by Trump as
Attorney General in the new administration. After a long hearings, the Senate
voted on his appointment. He took office three weeks ago and then the scandal of
his communication with the Russians surfaced. There is no doubt that Sessions’
contact with the Russians is a scandal. He denied it when he was being
questioned in the Senate under oath, and this is a crime that is punishable by
law.
However, for the sake of objectivity, we should also link the harsh attack on
Sessions with the media and left-wing’s war on Trump.
Why did the Washington Post newspaper chose to publish the news about Sessions’
scandal the day following Trump’s conciliatory speech? Why did the New York
Times publish another scandalous report against Trump on the same day? It is
difficult to believe that it is a pure coincidence that the Washington Post got
its information about Sessions’ scandal directly after Trump’s speech. The only
logical explanation is that the newspaper and those who stand behind it, do not
want Trump’s presidency to witness one positive day, and therefore we should
expect a significant escalation in Trump’s war with the media.
We will be following up on this feud for sure!
**This article is also available in Arabic.
Iran and Israel’s conflict in Syria
Abdulrahman al-Rashed/Al Arabiya/March 12/17
Due to the weakness of the Syrian forces, a number of regional and international
powers have warned against sealing a peace deal in Syria that parties who
support the regime and Iran, can benefit from. This is what Israel said as it
believes that any plan to end the war there must not allow Iran to stay in Syria
as a military power; otherwise, it will view this as a threat to its security.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu talked about this and said he will
inform Russian President Vladimir Putin of this message considering he is the
godfather of the Syrian solution. Netanyahu said that Israel does not object to
the arrangements of a solution in Syria but it strongly opposes the possibility
of military presence by Iran and its proxies in Syria. Truth be told, Iran and
its proxies’ military presence poses a threat to other countries as well.
Allowing Iran and its Lebanese, Iraqi and other militias to stay in Syria will
threaten regional balance and affect the security of Turkey, Iraq, Jordan and
the Gulf. It’s not unlikely for Iran to finally be convinced of reaching
agreements with Israel and end the role of its agents which threaten Israel,
like Hezbollah in Lebanon or Hamas in Gaza. However, their threat on other
countries will remain for years.
According to some official statements, it’s unlikely that Israel will accept any
reassurances made by Iran or by a party that reflects its stance, such as the
Syrian government, if they intend to keep thousands of fighters and experts for
a very long time without a regional solution in which Iran and Israel are part
of.
So why has Israel begun to voice its opinion regarding the Geneva negotiations
when it has been silent during the past six years of war? It’s probably because
the aspects of a political solution have become clearer. Israel has since the
beginning been against any change in Damascus because it had co-existed with the
regime for almost half a century. Despite their disagreements and estrangement,
Israel thought its neighbor Syria was more secure and restrained than Egypt and
Jordan which it has peace deals with.
Weakness shines through
However, the Syrian regime’s military capabilities are weak and Iran wants to
compensate for that by providing its own forces and militias. This alters the
security and political formula in the entire region and not just in Syria. The
Syrian regime’s military capabilities are weak and Iran wants to compensate for
that by providing its own forces and militias. This alters the security and
political formula in the entire region and not just in Syria. Is it possible for
the Syrian regime forces to end the fighting and solidify peace with all this
increased Russian support they’re receiving? Russia is not only supplying the
regime with fighting troops but it has also provided the regime with police
forces that organize traffic in some Syrian cities! The region’s countries,
particularly Israel, Jordan and the Gulf, will most probably not oppose it if
the Russians assume the task of filling the security and military vacuum through
its forces or through international troops when needed as long these forces do
not include Iranian Revolutionary Guards’ troops or other foreign militias.
However, is Russia willing to carry out this huge task? Or will the Syrian
government accept to give up its Iranian ally? Will the Iranians accept to exit
Syria without any gains or as the proverb says will they leave the mawlid
without chickpeas? We must not forget that Iran has through Syria and via the
use of terrorist groups turned the Americans’ life in Iraq into hell. It’s doing
the same against Saudis in Yemen and also against Israel through. I think the
success of a possible agreement in Syria is based on interpreting the role of
Iran and its militias. The new American administration agrees with most of the
region’s countries that it’s important to diminish Iran’s expansion in the
region’s land and sea and not allow it to expand on a vast area that includes
Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. This is all greatly linked to a Syrian agreement to end
the war.
**This article was first published in Asharq Al-Awsat on March 12, 2017.
Gulf Arabs, poetry and prose
Turki Aldakhil/Al Arabiya/March 12/17
Emirati Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan had recently taken
part in the children’s television show Sesame Street and read out a story to
kids. The minister said he participated following an invitation from Minister of
State for Happiness Ohood bint Khalfan Al-Roumi. This is part of the Gulf
countries’ political plan to encourage reading. There is also a video in which
Saudi King Salman talks about getting children accustomed to reading. King
Salman used to give each one of his children a book and gave them one week to
read and understand. After reading the book, they must explain to others what
it’s about. King Salman’s library is one of the biggest libraries in the world.
It’s through reading that one can overcome scientific and practical problems.
Reading allows one to invest in himself. It nurtures, refines and trains one’s
character. Nations that have excelled are ones that have taught their children
how to read at an early age. Many western and Asian countries are examples of
this. Reading did not die with the emergence of tablets or due to the digital
revolution. Paper books are still a friend to kids and adults.
**This article was first published in Okaz.
Youth have crucial role in shaping UAE’s future
Yasser Hareb/Al Arabiya/March 12/17
A few days ago, I talked in Snapchat about the program Lahza (Moment) which I
present during Ramadan every year and about a new scientific program which I am
currently producing for another Arabic channel and which will be presented by a
promising Emirati young man who is interested in space science. I received a
letter from a group of young men and women saying we, in the UAE, have many
government-launched science projects. According to them, the UAE has a space
center, a plan to reach Mars by 2021 and a plan to colonize the Red Planet in
2117. We have the Barakah Nuclear Power Plant for peaceful nuclear energy, the
Masdar City and events that are all year-long and that discuss the future and
how to enable the youth. I read the message and said to myself: “True, there is
a new Arab model being created here in the UAE.” I recalled the quote of Sheikh
Mohammed Bin Zayed – God bless him – as he spoke about youth and education and
said: “If our investment today is right, we will celebrate exporting the last
barrel of oil after 50 years.”
Workshop
The Mohammed Bin Zayed Majlis for Future Generations’ workshop wrapped up on
Wednesday.
Thousands of students from different UAE universities attended, listening to top
officials and experts in different fields from the UAE and other countries.
These talks empowered what the Emirati government and its leadership talk about
in terms of the future and youth.
Workshops were held on creative innovation to find solutions for future
challenges in the fields of transportation and education. There were
brainstorming sessions held between students to come up with innovative
solutions in cooperation with IBM Watson, the supercomputer, and to plan for the
future using modern tools and not via pen and paper. Sheikh Mohammed Bin Zayed
always uses the word “my children” to address young Emirati men and women. If
you sit with him, you will not attract his attention by talking about funds and
investments but by talking about new ideas, philosophy and human development. I
once attended an Iftar banquet he hosted during Ramadan.
At the event, Nasa administrator Charles Bolden was seated next to him and for
40 minutes the conversation between them was about the future of humanity and
how life will be in the future. The initiative of The Mohammed Bin Zayed Majlis
for Future Generations confirms to young people – despite their different fields
or ages – that they are a major pillar in development which is an essential
principle for the UAE’s strategic plans. Sheikh Mohammed Bin Zayed does not need
my praise. You all know him well. The initiative of The Mohammed Bin Zayed
Majlis for Future Generations confirms to young people – despite their different
fields or ages – that they are a major pillar in development which is an
essential principle for the UAE’s strategic plans. Perhaps this experience
inspires Arab countries to mould their youth and include them in planning for
the future and equip them with modern tools so that they become efficient
citizens and not just consumers.At the end of the address delivered by Sheikh
Abdullah Bin Zayed at the opening of the Majlis’ events, he told students:
“Those who achieved great change in life are not the ones who learnt more but
the ones who were more serious. I hope the young men and women of the UAE are
aware that after all these opportunities have been made available to them and
all this interest they received at an early age, they bear a great
responsibility and are tasked with the precious mission of pushing this great
country to be among the top ranks of human civilization. This will not be
achieved unless you are serious and dedicated in life and loyal at work.”
**This article is also available in Arabic.
A CIA conflict with internet companies
Mashari Althaydi/Al Arabiya/March 12/17
It was always said that the work of a journalist is similar to the intelligence
agent or the security services analyst because the journalist and the security
agent are both looking for information, at any price. This was back in the old
days when the spy used to break into the neighborhood or sit in a cafe reading
his newspaper upside down. Back then, the journalist used to carry around his
small notebook and chase sources in dark backstreets. Now, the scene has evolved
and both parties (journalists and security agents) have clashed at the highest
imaginable level. Last Wednesday, the CIA accused Wikileaks, the whistleblowing
website belonging to Australian hacker Assange, of helping US rivals by
revealing the methods used by the agency to turn your iPhone or Samsung TV for
example, into spying tools. Wikileaks revealed information exposing more than a
thousand hacking programs that allow controlling electronic devices such as
smart phones, televisions connected to the Internet and even cars, in order to
spy on their users! This is to be added to the spy scandal of the US “traitor”
(as per the American description), Edward Snowden in 2013, who revealed how the
National Security Agency hacked Google, Microsoft and Apple. Security agencies
are a mighty complex of strength in term of technology. They usually attract
genius members to employ their skills for the benefit of the system… the same
applies to companies.
Security
From a security point of view, the monopoly of social media companies, smart
phone manufacturers and all digital communications systems as well as car
displays and modern televisions manufacturers in this thrilling world, is
abusing security to make many steps forward in the race for information.
In this regard, we recall how the American security services clashed with Apple
Company when the latter refused to unlock the phone of the terrorist who killed
people in San Bernardino in December 2015. In August 2016, a deputy in the
British Parliament complained about the non-cooperation of Internet companies
that own the most interactive applications, when they were asked to check some
accounts or their contents, explaining that this falls under the “protection of
the terms” of these companies. This is a terrible dilemma between the
necessities of security measures regardless how tough and interfering they are,
and the interests of big companies that claim that they are keen on protecting
the privacy of their users, but in fact, they only want to increase the numbers
of clients and users. If it was really a matter of privacy, how did Whatsapp
sell the numbers of the users to Facebook breaching prior pledges to protect
privacy and data? The officer and the trader, including the journalist, are all
striving to get into your privacy, while you grant them your most valuable
product… that is your life.
*The article was first published in Asharq Al-Awsat.