LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS
BULLETIN
March 16/17
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The
Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
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Bible Quotations For Today
So also the Son of Man is about to suffer at their hands
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 17/10-13/:"And the
disciples asked him, ‘Why, then, do the scribes say that Elijah must come
first?’He replied, ‘Elijah is indeed coming and will restore all things; but I
tell you that Elijah has already come, and they did not recognize him, but they
did to him whatever they pleased. So also the Son of Man is about to suffer at
their hands.’Then the disciples understood that he was speaking to them about
John the Baptist."
Be sure that Almighty God shows no partiality
Letter to the Galatians 02/01-07/:"Then after fourteen years I went up again to
Jerusalem with Barnabas, taking Titus along with me. I went up in response to a
revelation. Then I laid before them (though only in a private meeting with the
acknowledged leaders) the gospel that I proclaim among the Gentiles, in order to
make sure that I was not running, or had not run, in vain. But even Titus, who
was with me, was not compelled to be circumcised, though he was a Greek. But
because of false believers secretly brought in, who slipped in to spy on the
freedom we have in Christ Jesus, so that they might enslave us
we did not submit to them even for a moment, so that the truth of the gospel
might always remain with you. And from those who were supposed to be
acknowledged leaders (what they actually were makes no difference to me; God
shows no partiality) those leaders contributed nothing to me. On the contrary,
when they saw that I had been entrusted with the gospel for the uncircumcised,
just as Peter had been entrusted with the gospel for the circumcised."
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources
published On March 15-16/17
UN report: Israel imposes 'apartheid regime'
on PalestiniansYnetnews/Reuters/March 15/17
On wresting control over religious discourse/Abdulrahman al-Rashed/Al Arabiya/March
15/17
The US withdrawal brings back Russia to Afghanistan/Huda al Husseini/Al Arabiya/March
15/17
Should we seek comfort in the death of Arab liberalism/Mamdouh AlMuhaini/Al
Arabiya/March 15/17
An optimistic book during troubled times/Turki Aldakhil/Al Arabiya/March 15/17
OPEC and non-OPEC production agreement: To renew or not to renew/Dr. Mohamed A.
Ramady/Al Arabiya/March 15/17
Titles For Latest Lebanese Related News published
On March 15-16/17
House of Parliament endorses 11% VAT
ISF thwarts abduction attempt in Bikfaya
Alain Aoun eulogizes salary scale via twitter
Aoun in Rome to Meet Pope Francis
Legislature Tackles Crucial Wage Scale File Amid Mounting Protests
Jumblat Lashes Out at Bassil's Suggestion for Christian-Chaired Senate
Gemayel Warns of 'Revolution' if New Taxes Approved
Hizbullah Says Damascus Blasts 'Mark 2011 Conspiracy'
Central Bank Governor Denies Resignation Reports
Missing Child Found Dead on Seashore in North Lebanon
Bassil: Rejecting the Other and Proportional Representation Leads to Civil War,
Disintegration
Reports: Morocco Arrests Hizbullah-Linked Businessman at Washington's Request
Hezbollah condemns terrorist dual bombings in Syria
Media & Youth: A hatelove relationship?
Hajj Hasan: We adhere to every drop of water, we will defend our resources
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin For
Miscellaneous Reports And News published On March 15-16/17
Consensus on strong US-Saudi strategic
relationship
UN envoy urges speedier Syria talks to avoid seventh year of war
Latest Russian-Backed Talks on Syria Flop after Rebel No-Show
Syrian Rebels Deny They'll Attend Astana Talks
Bombings Kill 32 in Damascus as War Enters Seventh Year
Iraqi forces seize Iron Bridge in battle for Mosul
Dutch Vote in Key Test for Far-Right
Israel ex-Defense Chief Says Erdogan Seeking 'Neo-Ottoman Empire'
13 Held for 'Corruption' at Israel Weapons Giant
Trump Envoy Holds Fresh Talks on Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Nearly 100,000 Iraqis Flee Battle for West Mosul
Libya Government Forces Overrun Tripoli Militia HQ
Saudi soldier killed by gunmen: ministry
Saudi policeman shot dead by unknown assailants in Qatif
After EU headscarf ruling, UK says govt should not tell women what to wear
Links From Jihad Watch Site for March 15-16/17
Federal judge blocks new Trump travel ban
Saudi prince hails Trump as “strong President” in fight against “dangerous” Iran
Former jihadist turned Christian evangelist warns of educational jihad against
West
Switzerland: 500 Muslims accused of spreading jihadist propaganda online
Hugh Fitzgerald: One Minute and 33 Seconds, Or Pauline Hanson Ill-Prepared
Clarion Project tries to show that Islamic reform is possible, instead only
shows how easy it is to be fooled
Robert Spencer Video: Why Trump is Wise to Refer to “Radical Islamic Terrorism”
Zuhdi Jasser’s assistant attended Garland jihad shooters’ mosque in Phoenix
Dallas: Imam targeted by the Islamic State, but says “I’m more afraid of my wife
walking into Walmart”
Robert Spencer: Fake University Harvard Uses Fake Professor’s List to Smear Real
News Sites
Mattis withdraws pro-Muslim Brotherhood Obama-era Mattis pick for undersecretary
for policy
Iranian official boasts of “guerrilla movement” in US from Iran and “all Islamic
countries”
Robert Spencer in PJ Media: CNN’s Reza Aslan Losing Fight to Make ‘Islamophobia’
Happen
Pakistan PM: Blasphemy “unpardonable sin,” international orgs should eliminate
all blasphemous content
Links From Christian Today Site
On March 15-16/17
Now Manchester University dragged into Holocaust denial row over David Irving
books
Sir Mo Farah says he is 'completely devastated' by East Africa crisis as
charities launch major appeal
Samaritans' Purse workers kidnapped by rebels in South Sudan have been released
Don't fear refugees, say US evangelical leaders: 'Jesus threw off the
protections of heaven'
Surprising research reveals 'mostly Catholic' colleges have higher rates of
sexual encounters
God is great', cry Islamist extremists as they shoot dead a Christian mum and
son, wound husband
Pakistani Christian asylum seekers face pressure to leave Thailand
Religious groups slam EU court ruling allowing companies to ban displays of
faith
Ma'agan Michael sails again: boat from biblical times discovered off coast of
Israel to be 'relaunched'
Pope Francis victim of 'fake news' story that God ordered him to change the Ten
Commandments
First ever Anglican Evensong service takes place at St Peter's Basilica in Rome
Latest Lebanese Related News published
On March 15-16/17
House of Parliament endorses 11% VAT
Wed 15 Mar 2017/NNA - The House of Parliament has endorsed a 1% increase
to the Value Added Tax (VAT) to become 11% instead of 10%. The price of stamps
has also increased from LBP 3000 to LBP 4000. It is to note that the House of
Parliament is currently convening in session under the chairmanship of Deputy
House Speaker, Farid Makari.
ISF thwarts abduction attempt in Bikfaya
Wed 15 Mar 2017/NNA - The Internal Security Forces and a patrol of the
Intelligence branch have managed to foil an attempt to kidnap a Syrian national
on Bhersaf-Bikfaya highway, according to a statement issued by the ISF. A
Lebanese man was arrested and his pistol and car were confiscated. The inmate
admitted to having planned this operation. Meanwhile, work is underway to arrest
the other people involved in this case.
Alain Aoun eulogizes salary scale via twitter
Wed 15 Mar 2017/NNA - Member of Parliament, Alain Aoun, eulogized the heatedly
debated salary scale via twitter on Wednesday evening, warning that it is
currently in danger of being "hit by snipers who have taken their positions amid
the ongoing parliament session.""The wages scale has been thrown in the middle
of the ring. May God have mercy," a very pessimistic Alain Aoun tweeted.
Aoun in Rome to Meet Pope Francis
Naharnet/March 15/17/President Michel Aoun made his first official visit to
Europe and has traveled on Wednesday to Rome where he is scheduled to hold a
meeting with Pope Francis on Thursday to discuss the latest developments since
his election as president. Upon his arrival at Rome's Ciampino Airport, Aoun
told reporters: “On behalf of the Lebanese I bring to the Pope a message of love
that Lebanon has recovered and is on the road to unity. “Levantine Christians
are looking forward to this visit with a glimmer of hope to emphasize that
Lebanon remains to be the most powerful model for the future of the East and
world.”The President's first official visit to Europe did not take place in
Paris, as the tradition calls, but in the Vatican which could be due to the fact
that the mandate of the current French presidency will end in May. Aoun will
hold a closed meeting with the Pope on Thursday before noon. Talks will focus on
issues of concern for Lebanon and the Vatican, and about the Christians in
Lebanon and the region in light of the developments threatening their presence
at more than one level, al-Joumhouria daily reported. According to media
reports, the president will inform Pope Francis of the revival of Lebanon's
state institutions, a beneficial effect according to him of the end of the
presidential vacancy, and the return of Lebanon on the international and Arab
political scene. He will also keep him informed of the ongoing discussions to
adopt a new electoral law. Before the President leaves the Vatican, he will meet
Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Vatican Secretary of State. Aoun will also deliver
two speeches at two meetings during his stay, one of them will be on Thursday
where he will address the Lebanese community in an assembly called upon by
Lebanese chargé d'affaires to the Vatican, Albert Samaha.
Aoun is accompanied by his wife, his son-in-law Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil
and all the family members.
Legislature Tackles Crucial Wage Scale File Amid Mounting
Protests
Naharnet/March 15/17/A legislative session to tackle several pressing issues
including the long-awaited wage scale file began at the parliament at noon on
Wednesday in parallel with protests staged outside the parliament by the
secondary, elementary and technical school teachers in a bid to pressure the
interlocutors into approving a “fair” salary scale. Deputy Speaker Farid Makari
chaired the meeting instead of Speaker Nabih Berri because of family reasons.
The parliament is set to discuss 26 items on its agenda amid mounting doubts
about approving the wage scale due to the various demands surfacing by economic
bodies and public sector teachers. Before the session began, MP Emile Rahmeh
said: “Approving the wage scale is the people's right. We must fight corruption
to be able to fund it,” and stressed the need to approve a wage scale that meets
approval of teachers, judges and the military.
For his part, MP Serje Tersarkisian announced that he will propose the
cancellation of a tax, known as R8, that imposes taxes on multiple job
employees. Lebanese Forces MP George Adwan said: “Failure to approve the salary
scale is shameful. The potentials are available if we stop wasting money.” In
parallel with the parliament session, secondary, elementary and technical school
teachers held a protest in Riad al-Solh Square objecting against what they
described as “unfair scale for their employment positions."
Lebanon's economic bodies have also held an “emergency” meeting Tuesday evening,
on the eve of the parliament convention, and announced total refusal of imposing
taxes to finance the salary scale for what they described as “disastrous
repercussions on the overall economic situation, which is suffering primarily
from recession."They also pointed out that the damage will reflect on the
working class and the low-income earners.
Jumblat Lashes Out at Bassil's Suggestion for
Christian-Chaired Senate
Leader of the Democratic Gathering bloc MP Walid Jumblat lashed out at a
proposal made by Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil to create a Senate under a
Christian leadership and stressed that the proposal violates the Taef Accord.
The Druze leader explained that establishing a Senate was first suggested in the
Taef accord so as to eliminate political sectarianism. “A Senate is linked to
the abolition of politician sectarianism according to the Taef accord,” said
Jumblat in a tweet on Wednesday. Free Patriotic Movement leader Jebran Bassil
suggested the creation of a Christian-chaired Senate although the Taef Agreement
stipulates that its chairmanship should be allotted to the Druze community.
Bassil had announced early this week a proposal for the upcoming parliamentary
polls that calls for electing 64 MPs according to the proportional
representation system in five electorates whereas the other 64 would be elected
by their respective sects under a winner-takes-all system in 14 electorates. He
said it would pave way for the creation of a Senate under a "Christian non-Maronite
leadership to respect parity." The Taef Agreement -negotiated in Saudi
Arabia-was an agreement reached to provide the basis for the ending of the civil
war and the return to political normalcy in Lebanon. It was designed to end the
decades-long Lebanese Civil War, reassert Lebanese authority in Southern
Lebanon.
Gemayel Warns of 'Revolution' if New Taxes Approved
Naharnet/March 15/17/Kataeb Party chief MP Sami Gemayel warned during
Wednesday's legislative session that a “revolution” might erupt in the country
should parliament approve new taxes to fund the long-stalled new wage scale.
“Should the revenues be approved and a revolution erupts in the country, don't
blame anyone but yourselves,” Gemayel told parliament. “I wonder how it is
possible to approve millions of dollars for developmental projects in five
minutes whereas a wage scale that costs $800 million is taking hours,” he added.
“Which is better: impoverishing people with taxes or addressing the sources of
the squandering of public funds?” Gemayel asked rhetorically. Lebanon's Economic
Committees have held an “emergency” meeting after which they announced their
total refusal of imposing taxes to finance the salary scale, warning of
“disastrous repercussions on the overall economic situation.” They also pointed
out that such a move would reflect negatively on the working class and
low-income earners. Gemayel had recently launched a scathing attack on the
country's ruling class, accusing it of impotence and of stealing public money.
He warned that any attempt to impose new taxes would be an “extortion” attempt
“seeing as the money will end up in the pockets of officials.”“The new wage
scale should be funded through putting an end to the squandering and theft of
public money and through introducing real reform and change... not through
hiking taxes,” Gemayel emphasized.
Hizbullah Says Damascus Blasts 'Mark 2011 Conspiracy'
Naharnet/March 15/17/Hizbullah on Wednesday condemned the twin suicide bombings
that rocked Syria's capital Damascus, describing them as “a terrorist crime that
comes on the anniversary of the conspiracy that started targeting Syria and its
State and people in 2011.”The attacks “confirm that what this State is facing is
nothing but a foreign criminal plot that is being implemented by local players
in order to break the Syrian will and hand over the country to greedy foreign
and Arab conspirators,” Hizbullah's media department said in a statement. “This
terrorist crime is also a futile response to the grand victories that the Syrian
army and its allies are achieving on more than one front in Syria against
takfiri terrorism and the criminal militants,” the party added. Wednesday's
first attack saw a suicide bomber rush inside a courthouse in central Damascus
and blow himself up, leaving 32 people dead and 100 others wounded. The second
blast hit a restaurant in the Rabweh district in the west of the city less than
two hours later, injuring 25 people. More than 320,000 people have been killed
in the nearly six years of Syria's conflict, which started with peaceful
anti-regime protests in March 2011 before spiraling into a complex and brutal
civil war involving regional and international players. Hizbullah has sent
thousands of its fighters across the border in support of the regime, arguing
that its intervention was necessary to protect Lebanon from extremist groups and
prevent the fall of Syria into the hands of hostile forces including its
archenemy Israel.
Central Bank Governor Denies Resignation Reports
Naharnet/March 15/17/Governor of Central Bank of Lebanon Riad Salameh denied on
Wednesday reports claiming that he submitted his resignation to President Michel
Aoun, Salameh's media office said in a statement. “Media outlets have circulated
news reports on Wednesday claiming that the Central Bank Governor has placed his
resignation at the disposal of the President,” said a statement issued by
Salameh's media office. “The Central Bank governor's media office assures that
the news are inaccurate and have no relevance to the truth,” concluded the
statement.
Missing Child Found Dead on Seashore in North Lebanon
Naharnet/March 15/17/A Syrian child who went missing on Tuesday in the outskirts
of the northern town of al-Mhammara was found dead on the seashore in Abdeh port
north Lebanon, the State-run National News Agency reported on Wednesday.
Lebanese Army troops found the dead body of Rasoul Mamdouh Shehadeh lying on the
seashore near the fishermen port in said area, reported NNA. The Lebanese Red
Cross transported the child's body to Abdullah al-Rasi State Hospital in Halba.
NNA added that the father of the child had filed a missing complaint at the
police station in the area. He said his son went missing at 14:30 on Tuesday.
The child was lastly seen near his tent in the Palestinian refugee camp of Nahr
al-Bared area in the outskirts of al-Mhammara.
Bassil: Rejecting the Other and Proportional Representation
Leads to Civil War, Disintegration
Naharnet/March 15/17/Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil warned Tuesday
that rejecting a proportional representation system that allows political
minorities to be represented in the political system would lead the country into
“civil war and disintegration.”“Whoever rejects proportional representation
would be rejecting the other and the right to diversity, and whoever rejects the
right to diversity would be leading the country into civil war and
disintegration,” said Bassil during the FPM's annual dinner. “That's why we have
endorsed proportional representation in the FPM and are demanding it for the
country,” he added. “We are proud that we are a popular majority that is
demanding proportional representation, and we're being subjected to blackmail
and political enticing for the sake of some parliamentary seats but we won't
back down,” Bassil went on to say. He added: “We want to eliminate corruption,
feudalism and monopolization, that's why we want proportional representation,
even if it comes at our expense.”Bassil had on Monday proposed an electoral law
format under which 64 MPs would be elected according to the proportional
representation system in five electorates whereas the other 64 would be elected
by their respective sects under a winner-takes-all system in 14 electorates.
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.
Reports: Morocco Arrests Hizbullah-Linked Businessman at
Washington's Request
Naharnet/March 15/17/Prominent Lebanese businessman Qassem Tajeddine, who is
close to Hizbullah, has been arrested in Morocco at Washington's request, media
reports said on Tuesday. LBCI television said Tajeddine, 61, was arrested at
Casablanca's airport on Monday morning. Information obtained by LBCI said the
arrest was made “at the request of U.S. intelligence.”MTV said Tajeddine arrived
at Casablanca's airport from Africa and was scheduled to travel to Beirut aboard
a Royal Air Maroc plane. Residents of the southern town of Hanaway, Tajeddine's
hometown, described the arrest as a “kidnap,” noting that “U.S. intelligence
agencies have pressed Morocco to detain him.”According to MTV, Tajeddine's
family has communicated with the Foreign Ministry and Minister Jebran Bassil is
“following up on the case in person.” “Speaker Nabih Berri has also been
following up on the issue from the very first moment,” MTV added. Progressive
Socialist Party leader MP Walid Jumblat had on Monday urged Lebanese authorities
to follow up on the case. “Regardless of the motives and circumstances behind
Hajj Qassem Tajeddine's arrest, logic says that our State should ask about him,”
Jumblat tweeted. The man and his brothers, Hussein and Ali, have been
blacklisted by the United States since 2009. According to reports, the U.S.
Treasury has put him on its sanctions lists and accused him of laundering money
and using the funds to “support terrorist activities.”Tajeddine is also accused
of running several companies that “cover up for Hizbullah's activities in
Africa.”Angola had frozen the economic activities of the Tajeddine family in
recent years, “also at Washington's request,” media reports have said. Together
with his two brothers, Qassem Tajeddine has built a global foodstuffs and real
estate network in several countries across the world. The man is also involved
in real estate projects in Lebanon. In 2003, he was jailed for two months in
Belgium where he was interrogated over charges of “laundering money on behalf of
Hizbullah.”
Hezbollah condemns terrorist dual bombings in Syria
Wed 15 Mar 2017/NNA - Hezbollah on Wednesday issued a statement condemning and
deploring the dual terrorist bombings that rocked Damascus today, considering
such cruel action as committed by inner hands for the purpose of breaking the
Syrian will and handing Syria to foreign greedy seekers, foreign and some Arabs.
Hezbollah called for besieging the terrorists and destroying them.
Media & Youth: A hatelove relationship?
Wed 15 Mar 2017/NNA - To reflect on the issues concerning the relationship
between youth and media in North Africa and the Levant, the Forum "Media &
Youth: A Hate-Love Relationship?", organised on 15 and 16 March in Beirut, gives
the floor to 80 young people from Algeria, Egypt, Lebanon, Libya, Jordan,
Morocco, Tunisia, Palestine, and Syria, who have launched media projects and
initiatives that enable the youth to speak out or to participate in public
debate. The Forum is discussing a range of topics: the role of media in helping
young people find employment, media literacy, holding authorities accountable
through the media, youth expectations about the media, and more.
The programme includes two major debates:
- Traditional Media and Youth: Disenchantment
- Media, a gateway for youth employment?
Twelve workshops and nine presentations of projects or initiatives complete the
programme.Funded by the European Union in the framework of the Neighbourhood
Policy with the countries of the Middle East and North Africa, the Forum is
organised in partnership with CFI, the French media cooperation agency, and the
Lebanese Samir Kassir Foundation. The event was opened on 15 March by Ambassador
Christina Lassen, Head of the Delegation of the European Union to Lebanon, in
the presence of Mrs Gisèle Khoury, President of the Samir Kassir Foundation and
Mr Etienne Fiatte, Managing Director of CFI.
Hajj Hasan: We adhere to every drop of water, we will defend our resources
Tue 14 Mar 2017/NNA - Industry Minister, Hussein Hajj Hasan, said, "We adhere to
every drop of water and we are here to defend our interests, resources and
land."Minister Hajj Hasan's words came Tuesday during opening a conference on
oil resources in Lebanon organized by the Sciences faculty of Lebanese
University in Fanar.
Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published On
March 15-16/17
Consensus on strong
US-Saudi strategic relationship
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English
Wednesday, 15 March 2017
US President Donald J. Trump and Saudi Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman
at their meeting at the White House on Tuesday, reaffirmed their support for a
strong, broad, and enduring strategic partnership based on a shared interest and
commitment to the stability and prosperity of the Middle East region. The two
leaders directed their teams to explore additional steps across a broad range of
political, military, security, economic, cultural, and social dimensions to
further strengthen and elevate the United States-Saudi strategic relationship
for the benefit of both countries.
US and Saudi officials intend to consult on additional steps to deepen
commercial ties and promote investment, and to expand cooperation in the energy
sector. The US President and the Saudi Deputy Crown Prince, who is also the
Saudi Minister of Defense, noted the importance of confronting Iran’s
destabilizing regional activities while continuing to evaluate and strictly
enforce the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action. President Trump expressed his
strong desire to achieve a comprehensive, just, and lasting settlement to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and to continue the two countries’ consultations to
help reach solutions for regional issues.
Ongoing security cooperation
More broadly, the President Trump and Mohammed bin Salman noted the ongoing
security and military cooperation between the two countries in confronting ISIS
and other transnational terrorist organizations that pose a threat to all
nations. The US and Saudi Arabia also announced their determination to
strengthen their cooperation in the economic, commercial, investment, and energy
fields, with the aim of realizing growth and prosperity in the two countries and
the global economy. President Trump provided his support for developing a new
United States-Saudi program, undertaken by joint US-Saudi working groups, and
its unique initiatives in energy, industry, infrastructure, and technology worth
potentially more than $200 billion in direct and indirect investments within the
next four years.
Support for US investments
Trump also provided his support for United States investments in Saudi Arabia
and the facilitation of bilateral trade, which will result in sizable
opportunities for both countries. On energy, the two countries affirmed their
desire to continue bilateral consultations in a way that enhances the growth of
the global economy and limits supply disruption and market volatility. The two
countries highlighted that expanded economic cooperation could create as many as
one million direct American jobs within the next four years, millions of
indirect American jobs, as well as jobs in Saudi Arabia.
The Deputy Crown Prince reviewed Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 program for the
President and agreed to put in place specific bilateral programs to help both
countries benefit from new opportunities created by the Kingdom’s implementation
of those new economic plans.
UN envoy urges speedier Syria talks to avoid seventh year
of war
Reuters, Geneva Wednesday, 15 March 2017/Negotiations to end the war in Syria
must speed up, UN Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura told Reuters on Wednesday, on
the sixth anniversary of the start of the conflict. So far talks to end the war,
which has killed hundreds of thousands, driven 5 million into neighbouring
countries and left 13.5 million in urgent need of humanitarian aid, have gone
almost nowhere.“It’s becoming one of the longest and most cruel wars of recent
years,” de Mistura said. “That’s why there is a need for an acceleration of any
type of negotiations - in Astana, in Geneva, in New York, wherever.”De Mistura
is trying to mediate a political agreement between Syria’s warring sides, and
after a procedural round of talks in Geneva ended on March 3, he plans to bring
the negotiators back for in-depth discussions on March 23. Complementary talks
on Syria’s shaky ceasefire and confidence-building measures such as prisoner
releases are now nearing the end of a third round in Kazakhstan’s capital,
Astana. They have made no real progress either. The Astana talks are run by
Russia, Turkey and Iran, backers of the warring sides, and have little UN
involvement.
Britain’s special representative for Syria Gareth Bayley said the Astana talks
were never meant to replace Geneva, but were a good thing if they reduced
violence, improved the humanitarian situation and freed detainees. “That means
the pressure is now on the Astana process to ensure any ceasefire holds,” Bayley
said in an emailed statement to mark the anniversary.Rebel groups say they
cannot be expected to negotiate if the ceasefire is not observed. They blame
forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for continually breaking it.
“The forced surrender deal on the besieged areas of Al-Waer this week, as well
as continued pressure on opposition-held areas in the Damascus suburbs, are not
encouraging. They highlight the need for Russia to pressure the Assad regime to
uphold the ceasefire,” Bayley said. Assad has made major advances on the
battlefield with Russian and Iranian help, but the UN has repeatedly warned
there can be no military solution to the war, and UN investigators say pro-Assad
forces have continued to commit war crimes despite the supposed ceasefire. De
Mistura has said the Geneva talks are not hostage to progress in Astana, but
they go hand-in-hand: the ceasefire needs to take hold to support the political
process, and political progress is needed to make the ceasefire last. UN
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called on the warring sides to “enhance (the
ceasefire) further” and to make the Geneva talks succeed, while UN humanitarian
chief Stephen O’Brien urged them to “regain their sense of humanity”.“We join
Syrians in hoping that 2017 will be the year the carnage finally ends,” O’Brien
said in a statement to mark the anniversary.
Latest Russian-Backed Talks
on Syria Flop after Rebel No-Show
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 15/17/Russian-led peace efforts for Syria
floundered Wednesday as a third round of talks ended with no progress after
rebels refused to show up to a meeting in Kazakhstan. Regime supporters Russia
and Iran along with rebel-backer Turkey have been pushing negotiations in Astana
since January after gains on the ground by Damascus turned the tables in the
six-year war. The latest two-day meeting saw a delegation from Damascus meet
with representatives from the three powers, but leaders of armed rebel groups
stayed away for the first time over alleged violations of a fragile ceasefire
deal. Russian envoy Alexander Lavrentiev and Syrian regime negotiator Bashar al-Jaafari
slammed the opposition's no-show and said it was a blow to any peace efforts.
"They want to break up political negotiations. There are forces that insist on a
military solution," complained Lavrentiev after the end of the meeting. Jaafari
said the rebel boycott signaled the opposition's "disrespect for the process as
a whole."The failure of the latest round of talks casts a further cloud over
stuttering Russian attempts to turn itself from a military player into a
peacebroker after its intervention to support leader Bashar Assad. Lavrentiev
announced that a new meeting was planned for April 18-19 in Tehran, but it seems
unlikely that rebels would agree to head to talks hosted by one of Assad's main
backers. Kazakhstan's deputy foreign minister Akylbek Kamaldinov said that there
would be a future round of negotiations in Astana on May 3-4. The Astana talks
were initially seen as an attempt by Moscow, Ankara and Tehran to sideline the
West over Syria but they have increasingly been billed as a supplement to
U.N.-led talks in Geneva, the most recent of which ended this month with no
breakthrough. Both sides have been invited to a new round of talks in Geneva
from March 23. Over 320,000 people have died in the conflict in Syria that U.N.
High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein on Tuesday called the
"worst man-made disaster the world has seen since World War II."
Syrian Rebels Deny They'll Attend Astana Talks
Associated Press/Naharnet/March
15/17/An official from one of Syria's rebel factions has denied reports that
rebels will send representatives to the present round of talks with the Syrian
government underway in Astana, Kazakhstan. Mamoun Haj Mousa, from the Suqour
al-Sham Brigade, says there are no plans for factions to attend the talks —
contrary to reports by the Kazakhstan Foreign Ministry. Another opposition
official, Yahya al-Aridi, said of the Kazakh Foreign Ministry announcement: "Let
them say what they wish." The Astana talks, brokered by Russia and Turkey, are
centered on reaching a cease-fire in Syria and getting humanitarian relief to
millions of suffering civilians. They run parallel to the U.N.-mediated
political talks in Geneva aimed at ending Syria's civil war. Rebels announced
earlier this week they would not attend Astana because of repeated cease-fire
violations by the government. Kazakhstan says peace talks in the capital,
Astana, over ending the fighting in Syria have been extended and will be
attended by representatives of Syrian rebel forces. "We expect the arrival of
representatives from the Northern and Southern fronts of the armed Syrian
opposition," Foreign Ministry spokesman Onuar Zhainakov said Wednesday,
according to Russia's Interfax news agency. Syrian rebels had previously
boycotted this third summit in Astana, citing the government's continued
bombardment of opposition-held areas in Homs and Damascus. A government
delegation led by Syria's U.N. ambassador, Bashar al-Jaafari, began meetings
Tuesday with Russian officials in Astana. Talks in Astana are running parallel
to political talks in Geneva between the government and the opposition. The
Astana talks are centered on cease-fire and humanitarian efforts, but have
brought few results.
Bombings Kill 32 in Damascus as War Enters Seventh Year
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 15/17/Two suicide bombings hit Damascus
Wednesday including an attack at a central courthouse that killed at least 32
people, as Syria's war entered its seventh year with the regime now claiming the
upper hand. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blasts, the
second wave of deadly attacks in the capital in less than a week after twin
bombings killed 74 on Saturday. But they came with the rebels fighting President
Bashar Assad's regime increasingly divided and dispirited after a series of
battlefield setbacks. Negotiations to end the conflict have meanwhile made
little progress, with rebels this week declining to attend negotiations in
Kazakhstan. Wednesday's first attack saw a suicide bomber rush inside the
building and blow himself up when police tried to prevent him from entering the
courthouse in the centre of Damascus, state media reported. A police source told
AFP that 32 people were killed and 100 wounded. The second blast hit a
restaurant in the western Rabweh neighborhood, wounding 25 people, the source
said. "We were terrified because the sound of the explosion was enormous," a
lawyer who was in the courthouse during the first attack told AFP. "We took
refuge in the library which is on a higher floor," the lawyer said, speaking on
condition of anonymity. "It was a bloody scene." State television broadcast
scenes from the building showing blood smeared on the floor of the lobby but
also splattered across its ceiling. It interviewed a man receiving treatment
with a bandage over his eye who said the attacker was wearing a military jacket.
"He had his hands up and screamed 'God is greatest' and then the blast
happened," he told state television. "I fell to the ground and blood came out of
my eye." AFP correspondents in Damascus said the streets emptied after the two
blasts, with several roads also blocked by security forces.
Rebels under pressure
Damascus was already reeling from Saturday's bombings, which mainly killed Iraqi
pilgrims in the city to visit Shiite shrines. That attack was claimed by former
al-Qaida affiliate Fateh al-Sham Front, part of a rebel alliance that controls
large parts of the northwestern Idlib province. Rebel forces suffered a series
of reversals during the sixth year of the war, including being forced from their
onetime stronghold of east Aleppo in December. The loss was an especially
difficult blow to rebels who had imagined marching on Damascus in the early days
of the civil war. The conflict began in 2011 with peaceful demonstrations
inspired by similar movements during the so-called "Arab Spring", calling on
Assad to implement reforms. They started on March 15 after the arrest and
torture of a group of students from the southern province of Daraa accused of
writing anti-Assad graffiti. The protests were put down violently, prompting
demonstrators to pick up weapons and causing the uprising to spiral into an
increasingly complex and brutal civil war that has also drawn in regional and
international players. Rebel forces captured large parts of the country and
several key cities. The Islamic State jihadist group emerged from the chaos to
seize control of significant territory in Syria and neighboring Iraq. But a key
turning point came in September 2015 when Russia began a military intervention
in support of Assad's government, which has since regained much of the ground it
lost. Under pressure from air strikes by a U.S.-led coalition, IS has also
retreated to bastions like its de facto Syrian capital Raqa. - 'Savage horror'
-The conflict has killed more than 320,000 people, with over the half the
country's population displaced either within Syria or becoming refugees. The war
has also ravaged the country's infrastructure and set the economy back
decades."When we began to demonstrate, I never thought it would come to this. We
thought it would end in two, three months, a year at most," Abdallah al-Hussein,
a 32-year-old footballer from the town of Saraqeb in Idlib province, told AFP.
"Whether this war is ended with weapons or peacefully doesn't matter. People
want to live in peace."The brutality of the war has provoked international
outcry, with the U.N.'s High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein
this week describing the country as "a torture chamber, a place of savage horror
and absolute injustice." But the international community has remained divided
between a pro-regime bloc led by Russia and Iran, and a pro-opposition bloc led
by the United States, Turkey and Gulf nations, along with European countries. In
recent months the opposition's backers have dialed back their support, with
Turkey now working with former rival Russia on peace talks and U.S. President
Donald Trump's administration showing little interest in the conflict or
negotiations to end it.
Iraqi forces seize Iron
Bridge in battle for Mosul
Agencies Wednesday, 15 March 2017/Iraqi government forces battling ISIS
militants in Mosul on Wednesday took control of the Iron Bridge linking the
eastern sector with the ISIS-held Old City, federal police said. Federal police
and Interior Ministry Rapid Response units seized the bridge, a police statement
said, quoting a commander. The government now hold three of the five bridges
crossing the Tigris river which bisects Mosul. Nearly 100,000 Iraqis flee battle
for west Mosul . Nearly 100,000 Iraqis have fled the battle to retake west Mosul
from ISIS, the International Organization for Migration said on Wednesday. Iraqi
forces launched a major push last month to recapture west Mosul, which is the
most populated urban area still held by ISIS, with an estimated 750,000
residents when the battle began. Between February 25 and March 15, more than
97,000 people have been displaced from west Mosul, the IOM said on its official
Twitter account. Displaced residents from Mosul's al-Nasser neighbourhood
evacuate the area on March 14, 2017 as Iraqi forces continue to advance in the
embattled city combatting ISIS. (AFP) It marks an increase of around 17,000 from
the displacement figure the IOM released the previous day, though this does not
necessarily indicate that all of those additional people fled in the past 24
hours. According to the IOM, more than 238,000 people are currently displaced
due to fighting in the Mosul area, while more fled but later returned to their
homes.
Dutch Vote in Key Test for Far-Right
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 15/17/Millions of Dutch voters went to the
polls Wednesday in a key test of the "patriotic revolution" promised by
far-right MP Geert Wilders, as final opinion polls showed his support deflating.
Following last year's shock Brexit referendum, and Donald Trump's victory in the
US, the Dutch vote is being closely watched to gauge support for populism in
Europe ahead of key elections in France and Germany this year. Wilders voted in
a school in The Hague, mobbed by television cameras, just after final polls
showed he was trailing the Liberal VVD party of outgoing Prime Minister Mark
Rutte. "Whatever the outcome of the election today the genie will not go back
into the bottle. And this patriotic revolution, whether today or tomorrow, will
stay," Wilders said. "I think that with what's happening in America, perhaps in
other European countries, that once again the normal people want to be patriotic
in their own country that has its own sovereignty again."Amid the tussle between
Rutte and Wilders, many of the 12.9 million eligible voters were still
hesitating between 28 parties in the running. "This is a crucial election for
The Netherlands," Rutte said as he voted. "This is a chance for a big democracy
like The Netherlands to make a point... to stop this... domino effect of the
wrong sort of populism."Rutte is bidding for a third term as premier of the
country -- one of the largest economies in the eurozone and a founding father of
the European Union.
'Patriot or irritating?' -Final polls appeared to show Rutte consolidating a
lead over Wilders, crediting the VVD with 24 to 28 seats -- well down on its 40
outgoing seats. After months leading the polls, Wilders has slipped recently and
was seen barely clinging onto second place with between 19 and 22 MPs -- up on
the 12 MPs his Freedom Party (PVV) had before. Wilders has pledged to close the
borders to Muslim immigrants, shut mosques, ban sales of the Koran and leave the
EU. "I see this rightwing populist making gains and I will not live in such a
world," said Esther Zand, 52, who voted for Labour.
"He's a rather irritating gentleman," she added of Wilders. Snapping at his
heels are long-standing parties the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA), credited
with 19 to 21 seats, and the Democracy Party (D66) with around 17 to 19 MPs.
Both would be natural coalition partners for Rutte. "I am hoping for a strong
centre" coalition, said Alexander van der Hooft. "But I'm afraid it's going to
be very fragmented and difficult to form a government," he told AFP. Seeking to
highlight his differences with the fiery, Twitter-loving Wilders, Rutte has been
highlighting the country's economic growth and stability during his six years in
power. Complicating the political landscape, Turkey has gatecrashed the scene
with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan unleashing a string of invective and Nazi
jibes at the Dutch for barring his ministers from addressing a pro-Ankara rally
in Rotterdam. Rutte's handling of the crisis -- barring one Turkish minister
from flying into the country, and expelling another -- appears to have boosted
his image. Wilders though won support Tuesday from ideological ally French
far-right presidential hopeful Marine Le Pen who called him "a patriot".
- 'Breath of fresh air' -Lines formed early at some polling stations, and first
estimates showed turnout was slightly higher at this point in the day than in
the last vote in 2012, when final participation was about 74 percent.
Voting ends at 2000 GMT with exit polls expected soon after. The official count
is being done by hand following fears of possible hacking. It reportedly takes
an average of three months to form a coalition, but observers say it may take
longer with four or even five parties needed to reach the 76-seat majority. "I
voted strategically," said Roger Overdevest, 47, adding that he voted VVD, not
"as a vote against Wilders, but as a vote against the left". While traditional
Labour appears to be sinking, the ecologist left-wing GroenLinks and its
charismatic young leader Jesse Klaver could win 16 to 18 seats. "I hope
GroenLinks will win. Jesse Klaver is a breath of fresh air. To me the current
cabinet has not done enough for the environment," said lawyer Marloes van
Heugten.
Israel ex-Defense Chief Says Erdogan Seeking 'Neo-Ottoman Empire'
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 15/17/Israeli ex-defense minister Moshe
Yaalon accused Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday of seeking a
"neo-Ottoman empire" while warning of growing instability in the Middle East.
Yaalon, seeking to build a campaign to become Israel's next prime minister,
spoke of his concerns while addressing regional issues in a meeting with foreign
journalists. The ex-minister, forced out of office last year as Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu sought to expand his right-wing coalition, accused Erdogan of
pursuing "hegemony by establishing (a) neo-Ottoman empire using the Muslim
Brotherhood ideology, not just within Turkey." He also accused NATO-member
Turkey of working against Western interests. His comments came with Turkey and
the European Union undergoing an explosive crisis after key EU members the
Netherlands and Germany blocked Turkish ministers from holding rallies to back
constitutional changes expanding Erdogan's powers. Yaalon named Turkey under
Erdogan as one of three "radical" elements seeking to expand their influence in
the Middle East, also mentioning Iran and jihadists such as the Islamic State
group. He said he believed the situation had evolved in that way because of what
he called former U.S. president Barack Obama's administration's decision to
"disengage" from the Middle East. "And the vacuum has been filled by these three
elements struggling for hegemony in the region," he said. Yaalon also took
implicit shots at Israel's influential far-right while seeking to build his
campaign to become the country's next premier.With four-term premier Netanyahu's
legal woes mounting, challengers have circled in anticipation of the possibility
that he would be forced to resign. Yaalon, who has also served as military chief
of staff, has sought to present himself as a practical and experienced hand who
can move the country away from what some see as a drift too far to the
right.Earlier this week, he quit Netanyahu's Likud party and has announced plans
to start his own. "All the slogans, the ideas which are good for likes on
Facebook, this is not a policy," Yaalon said, implicitly referring to far-right
figures such as Education Minister Naftali Bennett, who also aims to be premier.
"I've heard too many slogans in our politics in the last couple of years,
ignoring the reality on the ground, ignoring the facts -- at the end, ignoring
our interest." Yaalon said those advocating drastic steps such as annexing most
of the occupied West Bank -- as Bennett has done -- were more concerned with
populist rhetoric than solving the problem. The 66-year-old clashed with Bennett
and other hardliners before leaving the government last year, particularly over
the case of an Israeli soldier caught on video shooting dead a wounded
Palestinian assailant as he lay on the ground. Yaalon and top military brass
condemned the actions of the soldier, since convicted of manslaughter, while
Bennett and others defended him. Yaalon said the conflict with the Palestinians
should be managed for now to avoid further eruptions of violence. "We are not
going to reach a final settlement in the coming future," he said.
13 Held for 'Corruption' at
Israel Weapons Giant
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 15/17/More than a dozen employees of
Israel's giant state-owned weapons manufacturer have been arrested over
allegations of "systematic" corruption, police said on Wednesday. The 13 staff
of Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) included top directors, heads of department
and a prominent former military official, police said in a statement. The
investigation concerns suspicions of bribes paid to win IAI tenders, as well as
allegations of theft, breaches of trust and money laundering. The police did not
provide any further details on the suspects or say whether the alleged
corruption affected trade with foreign countries. But "the investigation
revealed systematic criminal practices," the police said. Everywhere we looked,
we found elements of corruption," police spokesman Meirav Lapidot told army
radio. Investigators searched the homes and offices of suspects. A court was
expected to rule on the extension of their custody on Wednesday, police said.
IAI is wholly owned by the Israeli government and is the country's leading
weapons manufacturer. The company employed nearly 16,000 people, according to
2015 figures, and had revenues of $3.7 billion (3.48 billion euros) last year.
The group accounts for nearly half of Israeli arms exports, with more than three
quarters of its sales abroad. With US firm Boeing, it has developed Israel's
anti-ballistic missile system, the Arrow 3.
Trump Envoy Holds Fresh Talks on Israeli-Palestinian
Conflict
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 15/17/A top adviser to U.S. President Donald
Trump held further talks on the Middle East conflict Wednesday, meeting Israeli
President Reuven Rivlin as he seeks to restart negotiations with the
Palestinians. Jason Greenblatt, Trump's special representative for international
negotiations, met with Rivlin after holding talks with Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier in the week.
Rivlin's spokesman said the president, whose role is mainly ceremonial, told
Greenblatt the "building of confidence between Israelis and Palestinians was a
first and critically important step toward any possible solution." Greenblatt
thanked Rivlin for his thoughts on how Israelis and Palestinians could live side
by side, a statement from the president's office said. He was expected to visit
a Palestinian refugee camp and meet religious leaders before leaving on
Thursday. Before the visit, U.S. officials said he was seeking to lay the
groundwork for renewed peace negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians. A
U.S. consulate statement on the meeting with Abbas on Tuesday evening said the
two men reaffirmed their commitment to a "genuine and lasting peace between
Israel and the Palestinians.""President Abbas told Mr Greenblatt that he
believes that under President Trump's leadership a historic peace deal is
possible," the statement said, adding that Abbas committed to tackling
Palestinian incitement. "Greenblatt underscored President Trump's commitment to
working with Israelis and Palestinians to achieve a lasting peace through direct
negotiations."The meeting followed five hours of talks with Netanyahu in
Jerusalem on Monday night. The peace process has been deadlocked since April
2014 following the collapse of indirect negotiations led by then US secretary of
state John Kerry. The visit comes after Trump cast uncertainty over years of
international efforts to foster a two-state solution to the conflict when he met
Netanyahu at the White House last month. At that meeting, Trump broke with
decades of U.S. policy by saying he was not bound to a two-state solution to the
conflict and would be open to one state if it meant peace. The consulate
statement Tuesday said Abbas stressed to Greenblatt the two-state solution was
the best route to peace, but did not give the U.S. envoy's response. Settlements
in the occupied West Bank are also a key area of contention. The international
community considers continuing settlement growth in the West Bank a major
obstacle to peace. Israeli media reported on Wednesday that Netanyahu expects to
reach understandings with the United States on settlement construction in the
West Bank in the coming weeks. The Jerusalem Post newspaper reported Netanyahu
had discussed with Greenblatt plans to build a new settlement for residents of
Amona, an outpost that was demolished last month in accordance with a high court
ruling.
Nearly 100,000 Iraqis Flee Battle for West Mosul
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 15/17/Nearly 100,000 Iraqis have fled the
battle to retake west Mosul from the Islamic State jihadist group, the
International Organization for Migration said on Wednesday. Iraqi forces
launched a major push last month to recapture west Mosul, which is the most
populated urban area still held by IS, with an estimated 750,000 residents when
the battle began. Between February 25 and March 15, more than 97,000 people have
been displaced from west Mosul, the IOM said on its official Twitter account. It
marks an increase of around 17,000 from the displacement figure the IOM released
the previous day, though this does not necessarily indicate that all of those
additional people fled in the past 24 hours. IS overran large areas north and
west of Baghdad in 2014, but Iraqi forces backed by US-led air strikes have
since retaken most of the territory they lost. Iraqi forces launched the
operation to recapture Mosul from IS in October, retaking its east before
setting their sights on its smaller but more densely populated west. According
to the IOM, more than 238,000 people are currently displaced due to fighting in
the Mosul area, while more fled but later returned to their homes.
Libya Government Forces Overrun Tripoli Militia HQ
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 15/17/Forces loyal to Libya's UN-backed
unity government overran the headquarters of a rival militia on Wednesday as
artillery exchanges rocked the capital for a third day, a security source said.
Libya has experienced years of violence and lawlessness since the NATO-backed
ouster of longtime dictator Moamer Kadhafi in 2011, with rival parliaments and
governments trading barbs and militias fighting over territory and the country's
vast oil wealth. Militia loyal to former prime minister Khalifa Ghweil, whose
administration was replaced by the UN-backed Government of National Accord last
year, have stepped up a campaign of defiance against its authority. But
overnight, government forces launched an assault on the militia's headquarters
in the Guest Palace, a complex of luxury villas in the city centre, and overran
it after heavy fighting. "It's over. Ghweil's forces have pulled out and GNA
forces have taken control of the area," a witness told AFP. A security source
confirmed the militia's withdrawal. He had no immediate word on any casualties.
It was the third straight day of fighting between government forces and the
militia, who are mainly drawn from Ghweil's hometown, third city Misrata. The
sound of gunfire and explosions was heard from multiple neighbourhoods of the
capital. A rocket hit the Al-Khadhra Hospital without causing any casualties, a
medic said. Overnight, gunmen stormed the headquarters of Al-Nabaa television, a
privately owned channel known for its Islamist leanings, witnesses said. The
channel remained off the air on Wednesday. The fighting brought life in the
capital to a standstill with schools and shops closed. It came despite an appeal
from UN Libya envoy Martin Kobler on Tuesday for an "immediate ceasefire".
"Civilians at grave risk in ongoing clashes," Kobler said on Twitter. The
clashes erupted in the neighbourhoods of Hay al-Andalus and Gargaresh on Monday
evening, prompting the government to deploy tanks. They came as heavy fighting
rocked the east of Libya where forces loyal to military strongman Khalifa Haftar
announced their recapture of two key oil ports on Tuesday. Haftar's forces,
which do not recognise the UN-backed government, mounted a day-long assault by
land, sea and air to retake the ports of Ras Lanuf and Al-Sidra, after they were
seized by a rival, Islamist-led force earlier this month.
Saudi soldier killed by
gunmen: ministry
Wed 15 Mar 2017 /NNA - A Saudi soldier was killed by gunmen late on Tuesday in
the Eastern city of Qatif, in an incident the interior ministry said was carried
out by "terrorist elements."The security patrol came under fire upon approaching
a suspicious vehicle, the statement carried by state news agency SPA, adding
that the gunmen fled the area.There was no immediate claim of responsibility for
the attack.--Reuters
Saudi policeman shot dead by unknown assailants in Qatif
Wed 15 Mar 2017/NNA - Saudi Interior Ministry said on Wednesday that a policeman
was shot dead by unknown assailants in Qatif on the Gulf coast yesterday
evening. The interior ministry said in a statement gunfire broke out at about
7:30 pm on Tuesday when police tried to intercept a suspicious car near the
central hospital in Qatif. Someone in the car started shooting, mortally
wounding one of the officers, it said. Police stopped the suspects’ car but they
managed to escape "while shooting randomly." They made their getaway after
stealing the car of a doctor, the ministry added.Police found Molotov cocktails
in the suspects' abandoned vehicle, which also had been stolen.--Al Arabiya
After EU headscarf ruling,
UK says govt should not tell women what to wear
Reuters, London Wednesday, 15 March 2017/It is not right for government to tell
women what to wear, British Prime Minister Theresa May said on Wednesday, after
the European Union’s top court ruled that companies may ban staff from wearing
Islamic headscarves under certain conditions.
The Court of Justice’s ruling on Tuesday, which also applied to other visible
religious symbols, set off a storm of complaints from rights groups and
religious leaders.Asked about the ruling, May told parliament: “We have ... a
strong tradition in this country of freedom of expression, and it is the right
of all women to choose how they dress and we don’t intend to legislate on this
issue.”“There will be times when it is right for a veil to be asked to be
removed, such as border security or perhaps in courts, and individual
institutions can make their own policies, but it is not for government to tell
women what they can and can’t wear.”
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published
On March 15-16/17
UN report: Israel imposes 'apartheid regime'
on Palestinians
Ynetnews/Reuters/March 15/17
For the first time, a UN body makes the charge that 'Israel has established an
apartheid regime that dominates the Palestinian people as a whole'; report cites
'strategic fragmentation' of Palestinians and 'distinct laws, policies and
practices' as the method employed by Israel to impose its 'racist' dominion; UN
spokesman says report 'does not relect the views of the secretary-general.'A UN
agency published a report on Wednesday accusing Israel of imposing an "apartheid
regime" of racial discrimination on the Palestinian people, and said it was the
first time a UN body had clearly made the charge.
The report commissioned by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Western
Asia (ESCWA) concluded "Israel has established an apartheid regime that
dominates the Palestinian people as a whole". The accusation—often directed at
Israel by its critics - is fiercely rejected by the Jewish state.
UN Under-Secretary General and ESCWA Executive Secretary Rima Khalaf said the
report was the "first of its type" from a UN body that "clearly and frankly
concludes that Israel is a racist state that has established an apartheid system
that persecutes the Palestinian people".
Khalaf was speaking at an event to launch the report at ESCWA's Beirut
headquarters. ESCWA comprises 18 Arab states in Western Asia, according to its
website. Its aims include to support economic and social development in member
states. The report was prepared at the request of member states, Khalaf said.
The report said it had established on the "basis of scholarly inquiry and
overwhelming evidence, that Israel is guilty of the crime of apartheid".
However, only a ruling by an international tribunal in that sense would make
such an assessment truly authoritative," it added.
The report said the "strategic fragmentation of the Palestinian people" was the
main method through which Israel imposes apartheid, with Palestinians divided
into four groups oppressed through "distinct laws, policies and practices".
It identified the four sets of Palestinians as: Palestinian citizens of Israel;
Palestinians in east Jerusalem; Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip;
and Palestinians living as refugees or in exile.
Israel’s Ambassador to the UN Danny Danon harshly attacked the report. “The UN
Secretary-General must categorically denounce this lying report. The attempts to
discredit the only democracy in the Middle East are shameful and shocking,” he
said. “It is not surprising that a committee that stands at the head of calls
for boycotts against Israel and compares Israel to the most horrific regimes in
human history publishes a report like this.”Israel's Foreign Ministry spokesman
likened the report to Der Sturmer—a Nazi propaganda publication that was
strongly anti-Semitic. Shortly after news broke of the report, a spokesperson
for UN Secretary-General António Guterres, Stephane Dujarric, sought calm
tensions which risked spilling over into yet another a diplomatic sparring match
between Israel and the world body, by assuring that the report had been compiled
without consultation with the UN secretariat and that it therefore does not
reflect Guterres's position.
"The report as it stands does not reflect the views of the secretary-general
(Antonio Guterres)," said Dujarric, adding that the report itself notes that it
reflects the views of the authors. ESCWA hoped the report would inform further
deliberations on the root causes of the problem in the United Nations, among
member states, and in society, Khalaf said. It was authored by Richard Falk, a
former UN human rights investigator for the Palestinian territories and a fierce
critic of Israel, and Virginia Tilley, professor of political science at
Southern Illinois University. Before leaving his post as UN special rapporteur
on human rights in the Palestinian territories in 2014, Falk said Israeli
policies bore unacceptable characteristics of colonialism, apartheid and ethnic
cleansing. The United States accused him of being biased against Israel.'
On wresting control over religious discourse
Abdulrahman al-Rashed/Al Arabiya/March 15/17
Due to the international crisis confronting Islam and Muslims, figures from
across the world concerned over the state of affairs gathered for a meeting in
Al-Azhar in Egypt’s Cairo. These figures include muftis, preachers, scholars and
politicians from China, Uganda and North and South America. They agree that
extremism is a major threat and must be confronted by all means. At the
international conference of the Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs, the best
and most direct address came from Tawfiq al-Sudairi, the Saudi deputy minister
for Islamic Affairs, Endowment, Dawa and Guidance. He called for wresting the
religious discourse from extremists and half-educated people “who harmed the
religion’s tolerant teachings and who’ve been directed by opportunists.” He also
called for “unifying efforts on the political, intellectual, security and
religious fronts to confront deviant ideologies.”
There is no controversy over their consensus against terrorism. This is a
settled matter and perhaps no longer requires reiteration. The more important
matter, which requires consensus and a plan of action, is extremism, which has
developed into a broad challenge. No one can say that terrorism exists without
any form of extremism embracing it. It is impossible for a terrorist to be born
in a moderate and centrist environment. Even terrorists who came out of liberal
or tolerant societies are the victims of extremist ideology that surrounds them
in their virtual environment, like chat rooms and social networking websites.
Tens of thousands have joined terrorist groups and all of them are graduates of
extremist rhetoric. Terrorism is the final step in the ladder of extremism. It
is not possible to neutralize terrorism without fighting extremism. Those
concerned must keep this in mind
Challenge of extremism
Truth be told, terrorists, despite their threat to the world, are less
threatening than extremists as the harm caused by the latter is more grave on
Muslim societies as well as other communities. What extremists do is worse than
the acts of organizations like ISIS and al-Nusra Front whose members are few
among a sea of extremists. Terrorism is the final step in the ladder of
extremism. It is not possible to neutralize terrorism without fighting
extremism. Those concerned must keep this in mind. When we talk of extremism, we
must not confuse it with extremist tendencies of some individual Muslims.
Conservatives have the right to their beliefs within the capacity they see as
appropriate. This is their right, and this is the case in all religions.
However, this becomes extremism when they try to impose what they want on
everyone. Most dangerous extremist activities are generally based on exploiting
religious activities that had no political purpose in the past. These are
related to collecting of funds, education, dawa, media and charity. They hijack
them and even expand their operations to include students, women and foreigners.
These extremist movements even have organized activities, which include
travelling across the world to poor and progressive countries to exploit wars
and famine. They also use the injustice being done to some Muslims and use it to
plant the seeds of extremism, which stays for a long time and eventually becomes
a local culture. If you can imagine this, you can understand how extremism
spreads and how terrorism emerged. You will also realize that fighting extremism
is more important than fighting terrorism. Sudairi’s statements at the
conference in Cairo leads us to the core of this crisis. A plan of action, which
requires collective efforts, must be devised to achieve what he called for.
This article was first published in Asharq Al-Awsat on March 14, 2017.
The US withdrawal brings back Russia to Afghanistan
Huda al Husseini/Al Arabiya/March 15/17
The reason behind Russia’s return to the Afghan scene through its openness to
Taliban is because it believes that the Western military presence led by the
United States in that country is no longer efficient, exposing the region to the
consequences of the possible American withdrawal. In mid-eighties, Afghanistan
was considered as the “bleeding wound” of the Soviet Union. At the end of that
decade, many said that it was the Russian Vietnam, from which it withdrew after
its defeat. Last month, Moscow hosted a conference on Afghanistan. The first was
held in December, and with Iran, China, India and Afghanistan participating. The
US was not invited. The return of the Russian influence in Afghanistan overlaps
now with the broader approach of Russian foreign policy, where Moscow is seeking
to mediate agreements that allow Russia to expand on the geopolitical level at
Washington’s expense. It is trying to broker an Afghan peace deal, hoping it
would be able then to replace United States as the protector of Afghanistan.
Russia has presented itself as a main interlocutor in South Asia. It wants to
use this influence to stop the expansion of terror to its territories and
prevent the smuggling of drugs to its people.
Triggering chaos
Russia is asking the US to withdraw from Central Asia, but at the same time it
fears that any rushed withdrawal would trigger a state of chaos in Afghanistan,
endangering Russia and the neighboring countries. Moscow is worried about two
things: unstable Afghanistan becoming a fertile land for cross-border terrorism,
and the resumption of opium flows towards Russia and Central Asia. According to
UN reports, Russia has the world’s highest number of opium consumers, leading to
deaths through overdoses and the spread of AIDS. The return of the Russian
influence in Afghanistan overlaps now with the broader approach of Russian
foreign policy, where Moscow is seeking to mediate agreements that allow Russia
to expand on the geopolitical level at Washington’s expense. In 2013, Moscow
considered Taliban to be the main cause of these two problems. It expressed its
reservations about the US efforts to conduct negotiations with Taliban
representatives in Qatar. However, since 2013, Russian and Taliban
representatives started to hold discussions in Tajikistan, along with envoys
from several countries in Central Asia. A Western diplomat says: “We must wait
to understand the return of Russia to Afghanistan in the context of its
continuous interventions in Syria and its geopolitical ambitions in the broader
Middle East. Add to that, its role in Syria has made it a target for extremist
Islamists who have established cells in Afghanistan.”“It seems that Russia wants
to use the rivalry between Taliban and ISIS, so that it can ensure that
Afghanistan would not become another haven for ISIS, threatening Moscow,” he
adds.
Filling the vacuum
During the presidency of former US President Barack Obama, the United States
showed a desire to withdraw from the Middle East. This was clear because Obama
refused to intervene in Syria. Russia then sought to fill the vacuum, so it
strengthened its relations with Egypt, Iraq, Iran, Israel, and to some extent,
some of the Gulf States. As for Southern Asia, Russia has deepened its relations
with Pakistan while maintaining good relations with India. “Russia will not
become the main foreign sponsor of these countries and replace the United
States, but a broader presence in Afghanistan would allow Moscow to influence
any development in the countries which previously represented by the former
Soviet Union,” a source revealed to this writer.In December of last year, Zamir
Kabulov, the Russian Ambassador to Afghanistan, said that their concerns are
that ISIS threatens Afghanistan and all Central Asian countries, namely
Pakistan, China, Iran, India and even Russia. “We have good relations with
Taliban to ensure the security of our political offices, consulates and the
security of Central Asia,” he says.
Exaggeration
On the other hand, Ahmad Murid Partaw, who is the former Afghan Senior National
Representative to the US central command, states in February in an article that
he wrote in the ‘Foreign Policy’ magazine under the title: ‘The delusion of the
Islamic State in Afghanistan’ that “Russia, China and Iran are exaggerating when
talking about the ISIS in Afghanistan. They are using this pretext to interfere
in our internal affairs and counter the dominant US influence in the region”.
Moscow is surely aware that the international intervention led by the United
States failed to put Afghanistan on the path of stability and progress. The
Russian Ambassador Kabulov says that the 1 trillion dollars spent by the United
States during the past 15 years, went in vain. He described the ongoing US
presence (with thousands of soldiers and a bilateral convention on security that
was recently signed with Kabul) as a long-term US desire to maintain a foothold
in the center of Eurasia, after it had lost in 1979 an Iranian regime that was
loyal to the US, and after the expulsion of US troops from Central Asia.
Moscow believes that Taliban is less threatening to its interests in the long
term, and is better than the chaotic Afghanistan, especially with the pro-US
government in Kabul, and the presence of US forces all over the country.
Moscow says that Taliban with its Pashtun majority, has proved to be
considerably flexible during the past two decades. It differs from those
cross-border extremist groups, namely ISIS and al-Qaeda that are targeting
Russia and the West, and accuses them of plotting against Islam.
Russia has also taken into account the branches of Taliban, like Haqqani’s
network, but it believes that it is time to accept Taliban in an Afghan
political frame! Taliban has interacted with Moscow that wants to put an end to
the US military presence in Afghanistan. It started to uncover its plan as
Sayyed Mohammad Akbar Agha, a former commander of Taliban living in Kabul and
endorsing the Islamic rule in Afghanistan, said that Taliban wants closer ties
with Moscow to save Afghanistan from the US curse. In an interview with the
Moscow Time newspaper published on February 13, he said: “We are ready to work
with Russia in order to liberate ourselves from the US; history has proven that
we are closer to Russia and the republics of the former Soviet Union than those
of the West.”Neither the legitimate government of Afghanistan nor Washington was
able to uproot Taliban or stabilize the region. This is why Moscow believes that
the best way to protect its borders and its allies’ borders in Central Asia from
the infiltration of terrorists is to strengthen Taliban’s calls seeking a new
political framework.
Aid
Russia believes that financial and military aid might encourage Taliban to face
the real threat, i.e. cross-border extremists. Moscow is convinced that
Taliban’s reinforced influence at the expense of the Afghan government, leading
to the withdrawal of the US troops, would be better for its interestd.
It is clear that Russia and Taliban have common interests in facing ISIS and the
US military presence in Afghanistan. Iran and China share these interests at a
time when the Afghan regular forces continue to confront Taliban’s terrorism,
which has increased its operations in various areas, among which was the attack
that killed the UAE Ambassador to Afghanistan and the Kandahar governor.
It is worth noting that further evidence have appeared in Afghanistan, showing
that Chinese ground forces are operating in Afghanistan and conducting joint
patrols with Afghan forces all over the 50 km joint borders between the two
countries in order to stop Uighur fighters returning from Mosul and Raqqa. In
addition to that, there are speculations that Beijing is getting ready to play a
greater role in stabilizing the security in Afghanistan “when the United States
and NATO withdraw from the country.”
The big role of China in Afghanistan is not clear yet. The US Department of
Defense refuses to discuss this development. The US spokesman said on Monday:
“We know that the Chinese troops are present there!”
According to a political analyst, Taliban is not interested in peace and
security. It wants to win the war in Afghanistan and take advantage of the
negotiations with the regional and international powers to improve its position.
Thus, it is very unlikely that Taliban will stop their terrorist activities.
Consequently, Moscow will not be able to achieve reconciliation between Kabul
and Taliban. Moreover, the memory of the Soviet invasion has not faded yet for
Afghans, so Russia does not have good chances to succeed as long as the United
States is military present in Afghanistan.
**This feature first appeared in Asharq Al-Awsat.
Should we seek comfort in the death of Arab liberalism?
Mamdouh AlMuhaini/Al Arabiya/March 15/17
Arab liberal intellectuals receive little attention when they are alive and are
almost completely forgotten after death. Apart from a thorough report, which Al-Arabiya.net
published, liberal Kuwaiti author and intellectual Ahmad al-Rubei was completely
forgotten during the ninth anniversary of his death last week. Few years ago,
famous liberal Algerian thinker Mohammed Arkun died and was silently buried in
Morocco. I have recently watched what may be the only documentary about Arkun’s
life and enlightening ideas.
I recall my meeting with late Syrian philosopher Georges Tarabichi few years ago
in Paris. He seemed isolated and alone. He was pleased in a sad way when I told
him that there a number of youth read his books and are influenced by them.
There is nothing strange about that. Arab liberals’ ideas spread during the
first half of the past century which was called the phase of the second Arab
renaissance. However, these ideas died quickly as suppressive military regimes
rose to power with their eliminatory nationalistic rhetoric. These ideas further
receded as waves of religious extremism raged in the end of the 1970s.
The control of revolutionary and Islamic movements over the street, media,
schools and universities greatly weakened liberal rhetoric and liberal figures
who were besieged with all sorts of accusations. Enthusiastic nationalists
accused them of being agents of foreign parties while religious extremists
accused them of apostasy. Ordinary people viewed them as Europeanized and
Americanized but no more than that.
However, does this mean Arab liberalism, which was stained by intellectuals,
clerics and a wide category of people, is dead? Are we ready to bury them and
accept condolences? The truth is the complete opposite. Liberal ideas, despite
the educational blackout and people’s disregard, are restoring life in a
stronger manner than before. There are several reasons that have led to this
vital recovery. The most important reason relates to the nature of liberal ideas
which rationality increases with time. Almost everything these liberals said
turned out to be right despite the constant resistance against it.
Liberal principles are viable and can be developed but the nature of the new and
changing world suit them more than any other intellectual order
Religious tolerance
The idea of religious tolerance is one of their most important principles. They
have called for religious reforms and personally embraced modern and
enlightening concepts. As we know, these ideas only received a little attention.
The tragic situation in Arab countries, where sectarianism and political
problems escalated and where terrorist groups spread, proves that these liberals
were right. Unfortunately, they were proved right after a lot of bloodshed. The
idea of scientific method which liberal thinkers, like Salama Moussa, called for
decades ago has proved itself to be valid particularly given Arab universities’
retreating educational levels and the increase of scientific miracles’
scientists who are mere swindlers. Most countries compete over scientific
awards, like the Nobel Prize and others, and it’s shameful that Arab scientists
are absent in this field.Awards themselves are not important, however, they do
reflect the extent of nations’ civilization. Since academic institutions fought
real scientists and embraced ideologically-oriented figures, their level
dropped, just as expected. The same applies to medical or research institutions,
which flourished in other countries. Liberals are lecturers of the political
realism which hates slogans and conspiracy theories and which believes in
communication and openness. Their political school did not succeed and
afterwards we witnessed how Arab leaders who raised slogans of Arabism and one
nation killed their own people before they were dragged out to be hanged, and
murdered. These liberals have also called for individual personal freedoms. If
we take a quick look around the world, we would realize that the happiest cities
and capitals are the ones that guarantee individual freedom while the most
miserable ones are those which restrain people.
The intellectual order
Liberal principles are viable and can be developed but the nature of the new and
changing world suit them more than any other intellectual order. The
international order is in fact a liberal system that has been established
following the 30-year war between the Catholics and the Protestants and it was
formally established after the signing the Peace of Westphalia in 1648. This
order developed with time while the telecommunications and aviation revolution
ended national borders among countries. Communist countries tried to establish
their own private global order but they eventually failed after China, the last
of those which opposed this new order, joined the others. Economic development
and the development of concepts related to human rights have become major
supporters of the liberal spirit. Economic development is mostly based on the
freedom of market, movement and thought. Major financial hubs are present in New
York and London and not in Kabul and Mogadishu. The development of human right
is a development of the concept of freedom and reflects respect for humankind.
This is why racists and people who believe in ethnic or national superiority
have become outcasts. The new liberal world expelled them just like it expelled
terrorists like Osama bin Laden, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and Ayman al-Zawahiri and
forced them to hide in caves. Slavery vanished thanks to humane thoughts and the
development of women’s rights, which transformed women from being follower of
men to becoming his supervisor. This is how the liberal world flourished outside
Arab countries and regressed within the region. A long time ago, Arab liberal
thinkers called for joining this civilized club but no one listened to them.
Considering the failure of other ideological movements’ rhetoric, which produced
ISIS, Popular Mobilization, Bashar al-Assad and Hassan Nasrallah, and after its
been proven that liberal formula is the most successful across the world, Arab
liberal thoughts have restored some credibility and legitimacy which its rivals
undermined.
This article is also available in Arabic.
An optimistic book during troubled times
Turki Aldakhil/Al Arabiya/March 15/17
During a recent event, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of
the UAE Armed Forces Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed read excerpts of the book
Reflections on Happiness and Positivity which is written by Sheikh Mohammed bin
Rashid al-Maktoum, the Vice President, Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of
Dubai. The book discussed visions and goals on the social and individual levels.
Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed then commented: “The worst thing you can do is to
wait.”We don’t commend this book just because it is written by Sheikh Mohammed
bin Rashid, who is very popular across the region due to his successful
development model. We also praise it considering the circumstances in which it
was released. There is widespread chaos in the region as violence has spread and
blood is being shed. Failed states surrounding the Gulf has unfortunately
increased the huge burden on the region and the world. The book comes is mean to
reassure generations that sustainable development based on well-devised plans is
what guarantees an affluent life for people and provides fulfillment and
comfort. This is the best-selling book at the most important exhibition in the
Arab world, the Riyadh International Book Fair. Young men and women are the
fair’s most frequent visitors. This clearly indicates that the new generations
desire a better future and want to overcome calamities, difficulties and the
events of the past five years.
Ideologies alone do not achieve development. It is also important to be inspired
by the experiences of other rising nations
Essential elements
A longing for life’s essential elements always exists. First of them would be
good education which has been achieved through Gulf scholarship programs. Gulf
students, both male and female, tour the world and learn about new cultures.
They interact with people who speak a different language and whose heritage is
completely different than everything they’re used to. Then comes the quality of
life. Gulf leaders emphasize its importance as good life implies good
healthcare, which ensures a decent living for people and their families without
having to immigrate or finding a job outside their country. Amid all this
controversy and the growing desire to improve living conditions, Sheikh Mohammed
bin Rashid’s book talks about an atmosphere of optimism for the future
generations. “In it, we propose an administrative and developmental vision
that’s based on optimism and positivity. In this book, I tried to answer many of
the deep questions related to development. I based my answers on my experience
in life and I adopted a simple narrative style to make the book closer to
youths. ‘Reflections on Happiness and Positivity’ narrates lessons, models and
stories based on a different life philosophy: positivity as a perspective and
making people happy as an aim and way of life. It’s through this book that we
try– even if slightly – to create hope, transfer our experience to our region
and revive civilization in the Arab world,” Sheikh Mohammed writes in the book.
Collapse of regimes
It is painful to watch countries that used to be pillars of the Arab world 25
years ago fall apart one after another due to slogans wise people warn against.
Some of these slogans are leftist, reactionary xenophobic while some of them
just simply oppose the West. All these have resulted in the collapse of regimes
and everything the wise men warned of happened. Ideologies alone do not achieve
development. It is also important to be inspired by the experiences of other
rising nations. This is what creates civilized and developed experiences and the
West has been the pioneer of modern renaissance.
The significance of Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid’s book is marked by its historic
release. In it, he also bravely voices his opinion and accurately conveys his
ideas. Talking about this book inevitably leads to discussing the future. Sheikh
Mohammed bin Zayed noted that he was not praising the book because its author is
a ruler and a prominent figure. He was praising it because of its content, which
is based on the experiences of the majestic place called Dubai.
**This article was first published in Al-Bayan on March 15, 2016.
OPEC and non-OPEC production agreement: To renew or not to renew?
Dr. Mohamed A. Ramady/Al Arabiya/March 15/17
With crude oil prices dipping below $50 a barrel for the West Texas Intermediate
benchmark on hedge fund short selling, although there was a later rally, market
speculation is again turning to the levels of compliance and the odds on an
extension of the OPEC-non OPEC oil output agreement reached last November in
Vienna. Saudi Arabia and Russia, the architects of an oil production cut that
has stabilized prices, presented a united front on compliance just as rising US
inventories have sparked doubts about the OPEC and non-OPEC deal. This is the
catch 22 situation that the oil producers are facing, as higher oil prices
invite more US oil production, with further cycles of potential cuts to prop up
prices. The figures for US oil production make for grim reading for OPEC. The US
Energy Information Administration lifted its forecast for US crude oil output,
which will average 9.21 million barrels a day in 2017, up from 8.98 million
projected in February 2017. For 2018, US production will rise to an average 9.73
million barrels a day, up from 9.53 million barrels projected in February 2017,
and it will exceed 10 million barrels a day in December 2018.
Is the energy market justified in panicking over oil producer’s agreement
intentions? Since the OPEC and some of its rivals, including Russia, agreed to
cut output in late 2016, oil prices have stabilized at around $50-$55 a barrel,
up from $45-$50 a barrel before. With the market starting to believe the cuts
were backfiring by reviving US oil production, Saudi Energy Minister Khalid Al-Falih
and his Russian counterpart Alexander Novak offered a united front, and insisted
the cuts will work.“The market had low expectations, which we have exceeded by a
large degree,” Al-Falih said about the compliance level. "We are definitely on
the right track and are picking up speed in terms of delivery. “Novak, who
personally negotiated the cuts with Al-Falih last year, said that compliance
with the curbs would improve in the next three months and promised that Moscow
would cut production further.
Russian cuts
Russia has to date trimmed output by perhaps 118,000 bpd, or a little over a
third of its target 300,000 bpd in cuts under the terms of the Vienna agreement.
However, Novak reassured al-Falih that another 40,000 bpd in cuts was coming
“soon” and that Russia will be fully compliant with the targeted 300,000 bpd in
cuts by the May 25 OPEC ministerial meeting in Vienna. The Iraqi oil minister
and Mexico’s deputy energy minister, alongside the OPEC secretary general,
repeated similar upbeat messages as these countries are lagging behind their cut
commitments. Khalid Al-Falih, acknowledged that global crude inventories aren’t
draining as quickly as he expected, opening the door for an extension of the
production cuts into the second half of the year. Under current circumstances,
Saudi Arabia is highly likely to extend its 538,000 bpd of output cuts under the
terms of the Vienna agreement when it comes up for review at the ministerial
meeting in late May
The potential rollover is a subtle yet significant shift from just six weeks
ago, when the minister said that an extension probably wouldn’t be needed. Under
current circumstances, Saudi Arabia is highly likely to extend its 538,000 bpd
of output cuts under the terms of the Vienna agreement when it comes up for
review at the ministerial meeting in late May.
That extension however, will be contingent on the non-OPEC producing countries,
including Russia, and the other OPEC producers, bringing their compliance fully
in line with the agreed output cuts by the time of the technical committee
review in mid-May.
Once again all eyes are on the key oil producer Saudi Arabia and under what
scenario would the Kingdom acquiesce to cut production further to keep prices
stable and not slip below the psychological $ 50 barrier. The Saudis might be
further willing to trim output below its current 9.8 million bpd, if needed, to
ensure this does not happen, as OPEC seems to be eyeing a $55 average as the
equilibrium price that should bring global supply and demand into balance some
time in the second half of this year.
Deepening strategic alliance
Saudi confidence in oil prices stabilizing above the $50 floor is largely built
on Riyadh’s deepening strategic alliance with Moscow on oil policy and on the
Mideast regional developments. This is a relationship the Saudis have been
methodically nurturing through all of last year when the emphasis moved from the
futile freeze talks to actual production cuts, with OPEC taking the first step
in the Algiers meeting in August. The Russians made it clear then that any
participation from their side, along with other non-OPEC countries, can only
come about after concrete OPEC decisions were taken. Since December 2016, Russia
is now no longer hanging back to see how OPEC manages its oil policy but is
increasingly integrated into and leading OPEC oil policy alongside Saudi Arabia
as the two key global oil powers. Russia’s Novak, for instance, co-chairs with
the Kuwaiti oil minister Essam Al-Marzouq, the OPEC-non OPEC compliance
committee, which will next meet in Kuwait on March 26 to review the levels of
compliance among the 26 participating oil producers through mid-March.
The next key meeting will be in the technical committee review of compliance
levels in mid-May, followed by the full ministerial OPEC-non OPEC meeting in
Vienna on May 25, when the November output agreement will be considered for
another six-month extension.
The issue of Iran and how to accommodate it following its production cut
exemption in December is also an important one for Saudi Arabia, in particular,
and there is likelihood that Iran will at the May meeting accept an end to its
exemption from the quota agreement and to cap its output at around its current
levels of 3.6 million bpd. The Iranians have found it very difficult to push
their output much beyond current levels.
What’s more, Tehran may feel more cooperative on a hard quota cap by the time of
the May 25 meeting because Washington under President Donald Trump, may
re-impose or continue to threaten to re-impose US sanctions, which could make it
even more difficult for Tehran to find the investment and technology to boost
its oil field output. Despite the implied threat of a return to the November
2014 market share strategy if the other OPEC and non-OPEC oil producers fail to
comply with their promised output cuts, the Saudis are in fact limited by how
much they can endure a bout of oil market instability, much less another
collapse in oil prices.
Maximizing revenues
While Riyadh is not hurting as much as other oil producers, it still needs to
maximize its crude oil revenues while its undergoes the dramatic economic
transformation that entails among other changes a shift to new state revenue
through investment income and other sources of non-crude oil revenue like
petrochemical sales. Another critical driver to the Saudi oil policy to keep oil
prices reasonably stable and above $50 and around that $55 equilibrium price
benchmark is to provide the ideal financial and economic backdrop to its
on-going bond issues and its eventual partial IPO of Saudi Aramco.
While there are limits to output cuts much below the current 9.8 million bpd in
output, there may be room for further output cuts through lower domestic energy
demand due to subsidy cuts and demand rationalization.
In the final analysis, for a renewal to take place, it is imperative that all
sides comply with their commitments, as Minister Falih pointed out that “it is
unfair for Saudi Arabia to bear all the burden and have free riders gain from
the current agreement”.
This should indeed focus the minds of all the production cut participants, for
without Saudi Arabia, the pact cannot survive.