LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
January 02/2018
Compiled &
Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
The Bulletin's Link on the
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Bible Quotations
A little yeast works through the whole batch of
dough.” I am confident in the Lord that you will take no other view. The one
who is throwing you into confusion, whoever that may be, will have to pay the
penalty
Galatians 05/01-26/"It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm,
then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery. Mark my
words! I, Paul, tell you that if you let yourselves be circumcised, Christ will
be of no value to you at all. Again I declare to every man who lets himself be
circumcised that he is obligated to obey the whole law. You who are trying to be
justified by the law have been alienated from Christ; you have fallen away from
grace. For through the Spirit we eagerly await by faith the righteousness for
which we hope. For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision has
any value. The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love.
You were running a good race. Who cut in on you to keep you from obeying the
truth? That kind of persuasion does not come from the one who calls you.“A
little yeast works through the whole batch of dough.” I am confident in the
Lord that you will take no other view. The one who is throwing you into
confusion, whoever that may be, will have to pay the penalty. Brothers and
sisters, if I am still preaching circumcision, why am I still being persecuted?
In that case the offense of the cross has been abolished. As for those
agitators, I wish they would go the whole way and emasculate themselves! You, my
brothers and sisters, were called to be free. But do not use your freedom to
indulge the flesh; rather, serve one another humbly in love. For the entire law
is fulfilled in keeping this one command: “Love your neighbor as yourself.” If
you bite and devour each other, watch out or you will be destroyed by each
other. So I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the
flesh. For the flesh desires what is contrary to the Spirit, and the Spirit
what is contrary to the flesh. They are in conflict with each other, so that you
are not to do whatever you want. But if you are led by the Spirit, you are not
under the law. The acts of the flesh are obvious: sexual immorality, impurity
and debauchery; idolatry and witchcraft; hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of
rage, selfish ambition, dissensions, factions and envy; drunkenness, orgies,
and the like. I warn you, as I did before, that those who live like this will
not inherit the kingdom of God. But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace,
forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.
Against such things there is no law. Those who belong to Christ Jesus have
crucified the flesh with its passions and desires. Since we live by the Spirit,
let us keep in step with the Spirit. Let us not become conceited, provoking and
envying each other."
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis &
editorials from miscellaneous sources published on January 01-02/18
Welcoming The New Year With Prayers, Repentance and
Forgiveness/Elias Bejjani/January 01/2017
The Battle for Iran/Change will not come easily, peacefully, or soon/Karim
Sadiadpour/The Atlantic/December 31/17
Happy New Year to Iran and western media/Mashari
Althaydi/Arabiya/December 01/17
Which way will the protests in Iran go/Ghassan Charbel/Arabiya/December 01/17
Titles For Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on
January 01-02/18
Welcoming The New Year With Prayers, Repentance and
Forgiveness
Rahi holds New Year's mass in Bkirki, says disputes, conflicts are contrary to
Christian message
ISF Says Most Shooters Identified after 4 Hurt by NYE Gunfire
Aoun Calls for 'Solidarity' in New Year
Hizbullah Reportedly Won't Mediate between Aoun and Berri
Hariri Hails 2017 'Achievements', Vows 'Timely, Fair' Elections
Hariri Expected to Meet Berri in Bid to End Row with Aoun
Hariri Urges Unity, Says 'No Political Crisis in Country'
Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin For
Miscellaneous Reports And News published
on January 01-02/18
Pope Francis urges world to jettison 'banality of
consumerism' and avoid 'empty chatter' in New Year's Day message
Israel Ruling Party Votes for Push to Annex West Bank
Abbas Slams Israel Ruling Party Vote for W. Bank Annexation
Two Christians Killed in New Year Attack on Egypt Liquor Store
Iran temporarily restricts access to social media
12 killed amid demonstrations that saw attempts to storm police stations and
military bases, state TV reports
Trump Threatens to Cut Aid to Pakistan, a 'Haven to Terrorists'
'Life is Really Difficult': Tehranis Share Economic Grievances
12 Charges Sought against Palestinian 'Slap Video' Teen
Trump Says 'Time for Change' in Iran
Kim Vows North Will Mass-Produce Nukes but Open to Talks with Seoul
36 dead in Kenya after head on collision between bus and truck
Costa Rica plane crash kills 12, including 10 U.S. citizens
UN chief calls for restraint amid reports security forces violently dispersed
Kinshasa protests
Latest Lebanese Related News published
on
January 01-02/18
Welcoming The New Year With Prayers, Repentance and
Forgiveness
Elias Bejjani/January 01/2017
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=61495
With day one of the New Year let
us with faith, love and hope share a set of righteous resolutions based on
repentance and forgiveness.
Let us take a solemn vow to be all through the 365 days forgiving, loving,
caring, modest, and fearing Almighty God in our conduct, rhetoric and thoughts.
Let us make our resolution an on going fight against the evil inside our minds,
and a promise to tame all our instincts of revenge selfishness, arrogance, lust
and enviousness.
Definitely it is very difficult to tame the desires of our human nature, BUT if
we belief in ourselves and trust in Almighty God, Our loving Father, shall lead
our steps to be triumphant.
With a spirit of faith and self-trust, let us all welcome the New Year, with
open hearts and extended hands to all others, especially to those family
members, relatives, friends and acquaintances with whom we were not in good
terms during the last year.
Let us close the last year’s messy pages and open new ones totally blank with
full readiness for forgiveness, and a genuine willingness for recognizing our
wrongdoings in a bid to come with a practical plan for repentance.
Let us all put our burdens, pains, sickness, deprivation, persecution, broken
hearts, disappointments, frustrations, bereavements, injustice, abandonment, and
anger in the hands of Almighty God and follow the teachings of His Gospel.
God, with his gracious wisdom and abundant generosity, shall definitely see in
every way possible that we all safely overcome with faith and hope all kinds of
failure temptations, hardships and difficulties.
Let us all trust in Our Father, Almighty God and recognize that we are all His
beloved children and that He has created us in his image.
We should never ever doubt God’s deep love for each and every one of us.
How could He not love us when we are His children?
How could He abandon us when He has sent his only son, Jesus Christ to defeat
death, give us the eternal life, suffer and be crucified so we, His children,
can become purified and absolved from the original sin, and be helped to walk
safely the path of eternal salvation.
Let us ask Almighty God to help us live in peace and harmony with ourselves and
others, lead our steps into the righteous paths, grant us the strength of
endurance and hold us back from the sin of hurting or hating others.
Let us pray that in this New Year, Our Father, Almighty God, shall grant us the
graces of love, meekness, humbleness, transparency, honesty and forgiveness.
Let us pray that in this New Year, Our Father, Almighty God, shall maintain our
hearts and minds pure, and free from grudges and selfishness.
Let us pray that in this New Year, Our Father, Almighty God, shall help us to
remember that vengeance is evil and forgiveness is a Godly grace.
Let us pray that Almighty God shall not allow vengeance to take control of our
lives.
When we trust in God and believe in His justice, we ought to leave all that is
judgment to Him and only to Him.
“Then the righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father. He
who has ears, let him hear”. (Matthew 13:43)
“Beloved, never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God, for it is
written, “Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord. To the contrary, if
your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty, give him something to drink;
for by so doing you will heap burning coals on his head. Do not be overcome by
evil, but overcome evil with good.” ( Romans 12:19-21)
These holy verse frees us from the burden of taking justice into our own hands.
It tells us “Never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God, for it
is written, Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord.’ God will repay
those who are righteous”..
Since God is going to take up our cause and see to it that justice is done, we
should lay it down, work hard not to succumb to our human destructive and evil
instincts.
With this New Year, let us pray from the depth of our hearts for all those who
hate and hold grudges against us. Let us ask almighty God to cure them from
these evil ailments and grant us the grace of forgiveness and the strength of
faith to keep loving them.
No one should forget that our live on this earth is too short, and that we must
be righteous to deserve the eternal one in Heaven where there will be no pain or
fights, but happiness and peace.
With the beginning of the New Year, let us all ask almighty God to shower on
every one the graces of health, prosperity, peace, faith, and hope.
Let us pray for peace and tranquility in all countries, especially where
devastating wars, conflicts, and discrimination are going on. Happy New Year.
Rahi holds New Year's mass in Bkirki, says disputes,
conflicts are contrary to Christian message
Mon 01 Jan 2018/NNA - Maronite Patriarch, Cardinal Beshara Rahi,
held Monday New Year's mass at Bkirki on the occasion of World Peace Day,
whereby he deemed that conflicts and disagreements should be addressed, in order
not to contradict the Christian message. "Conflicts and disputes, whatever their
causes, are incompatible with Christianity's message, especially if it continues
without any attempt to resolve it," Rahi said in his sermon. The Patriarch also
called on all political groups and officials in the public domain "to lead the
state and public administrations out of partisan, political and sectarian
subordination to be replaced with loyalty to the country and the interest of the
citizens, and put an end to financial and political corruption and protect
public money from waste and theft." Following the mass, felicitators paid a
visit to the Patriarch.
ISF Says Most Shooters Identified after 4 Hurt by NYE
Gunfire
Naharnet/December 01/17/Four people were lightly injured by celebratory gunfire
on New Year’s Eve and a large number of shooters have been identified while two
have been arrested, the Internal Security Forces announced on Monday.
“Investigations are underway to arrest the others and their names will be
announced in later statements,” the ISF pledged. It also noted that the NYE
celebrations went without any notable security incident and that only a few
people were injured in traffic accidents.
Aoun Calls for 'Solidarity' in New Year
Naharnet/December 01/17/President Michel Aoun on Monday called on Lebanese to
show “solidarity” in the new year. “Through our solidarity, will and effort, we
can make tomorrow better than yesterday and the new year better than the past
year,” Aoun said in a tweet marking the new year, wishing well-being to Lebanon
and the Lebanese. Aoun is engaged in a spat with Speaker Nabih Berri over a
controversial decree granting one-year seniority to a number of officers. After
the decree was signed by Aoun and Prime Minister Saad Hariri, Berri and Finance
Minister Ali Hassan Khalil insisted that the decree should have also carried the
finance minister's signature. Aoun and his aides have argued that the decree did
not require Khalil's signature because it did not entail any “financial burden,”
a point Berri and officials close to him have argued against.Ain el-Tineh
sources have meanwhile warned that the decree would tip sectarian balance in
favor of Christians in the army's highest echelons. The officers in question
were undergoing their first year of officer training at the Military Academy
when Syrian forces ousted Aoun’s military government from Baabda in 1990. They
were suspended by the pro-Damascus authorities until 1993 before they resumed
their officer training course as second-year cadets.
Hizbullah Reportedly Won't Mediate between Aoun and Berri
Naharnet/December 01/17/Hizbullah will not mediate between its allies President
Michel Aoun and Speaker Nabih Berri in the ongoing spat over the controversial
officers seniority decree, media reports said. “Until further announcement,
Hizbullah does not intend to launch a mediation,” ministerial sources told al-Hayat
newspaper in remarks published Monday. The party is concerned with “respecting
the Constitution and state institutions, which means that it backs the viewpoint
of its ally Berri but does not have the intention to spark a debate with its
other ally, Aoun,” the sources added. Other media reports had said that
Hizbullah would intervene after the holidays. The Aoun-Berri spat broke out
after the president and the premier signed a decree granting one-year seniority
to a number of officers. Berri and Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil have
insisted that the decree should have also carried the finance minister's
signature. Aoun and his aides have argued that the decree did not require
Khalil's signature because it did not entail any “financial burden,” a point
Berri and officials close to him have argued against. Ain el-Tineh sources have
meanwhile warned that the decree would tip sectarian balance in favor of
Christians in the army's highest echelons. The officers in question were
undergoing their first year of officer training at the Military Academy when
Syrian forces ousted Aoun’s military government from Baabda in 1990. They were
suspended by the pro-Damascus authorities until 1993 before they resumed their
officer training course as second-year cadets.
Hariri Hails 2017 'Achievements', Vows 'Timely, Fair'
Elections
Naharnet/December 01/17/Prime Minister Saad Hariri has acknowledged that the
past year was “difficult,” while noting that it involved “achievements” for the
country. Efforts in 2018 “will be focused on restoring confidence in the state,”
Hariri said in a TV interview. “I promise the Lebanese that the elections will
be timely and fair,” the premier added, referring to the May 2018 parliamentary
polls, which for the first time in Lebanon’s history will be held under a
proportional representation system. “The Lebanese people must take part in the
upcoming parliamentary elections and they should vote heavily for those whom
they believe are eligible of being in power,” Hariri went on to say, pointing
out that the results of the polls cannot be predicted in advance.
Hariri Expected to Meet Berri in Bid to End Row with Aoun
Naharnet/December 01/17/Prime Minister Saad Hariri is expected to visit Speaker
Nabih Berri ahead of this week’s cabinet session in search of a solution to the
crisis between the latter and the president, media reports said. “Hariri is
making efforts in several directions in a serious attempt to spare Cabinet an
atmosphere of tension in its first session of the new year,” ministerial sources
told al-Hayat newspaper in remarks published Monday. The premier had announced
Saturday that he was working on a solution to the crisis. The spat between Berri
and President Michel Aoun broke out after the president and the premier signed a
decree granting one-year seniority to a number of officers. Berri and Finance
Minister Ali Hassan Khalil have insisted that the decree should have also
carried the finance minister's signature. Aoun and his aides have argued that
the decree did not require Khalil's signature because it did not entail any
“financial burden,” a point Berri and officials close to him have argued
against. Ain el-Tineh sources have meanwhile warned that the decree would tip
sectarian balance in favor of Christians in the army's highest echelons. The
officers in question were undergoing their first year of officer training at the
Military Academy when Syrian forces ousted Aoun’s military government from
Baabda in 1990. They were suspended by the pro-Damascus authorities until 1993
before they resumed their officer training course as second-year cadets.
Hariri Urges Unity, Says 'No Political Crisis in Country'
Naharnet/December 01/17/Prime Minister Saad Hariri toured the capital Beirut on
Sunday on the occasion of New Year’s Eve and stressed that “there is no
political crisis in the country.”“We hope to remain united in order to build
this country,” Hariri said from the Dar al-Aytam orphanage. “I have chosen to be
at this place because children are the future,” he added. Hariri later inspected
the Helou Barracks of the Internal Security Forces. “There is no political
crisis in the country and all things can be resolved,” he said, referring to the
spat between President Michel Aoun and Speaker Nabih Berri. “I’m always
optimistic because we went through tougher difficulties,” he noted.
Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News
published on January 01-02/18
Pope Francis urges world to jettison
'banality of consumerism' and avoid 'empty chatter' in New Year's Day message
Mon 01 Jan 2018/NNA -
Pope Francis has recommended jettisoning life's "useless baggage" in 2018,
including what he called "empty chatter" and banal consumerism, and focusing
instead on building a peaceful and welcoming world, particularly for refugees
and migrants. Francis offered his reflections on paring down non-essentials as
he celebrated New Year's Day Mass Monday in St. Peter's Basilica and later
greeted some 40,000 people in St. Peter's Square. His advice included setting
aside a moment of silence daily to be with God. Doing so would help "keep our
freedom from being corroded by the banality of consumerism, the blare of
commercials, the stream of empty words and the overpowering waves of empty
chatter and loud shouting," Francis said. "At the beginning of the year, we too,
as Christians on our pilgrim way, feel the need to set out anew from the centre,
to leave behind the burdens of the past and to start over from the things that
really matter," he said. The Catholic church designates Jan. 1 as World Peace
Day, and in his comments after Mass to the crowd in the square outside the
basilica, Francis noted that this year's focus of the day was the search for
peace by migrants and refugees.
"I desire, yet again, to speak for these our brothers and sisters who invoke for
their future a horizon of peace," Francis said. "For this peace, which is the
right of everyone, many of them are willing to risk their life in a voyage that
is in the great majority of cases long and dangerous, willing to face hardships
and suffering," the pontiff said. In the past few years, hundreds of thousands
of migrants have crossed the Mediterranean from northern Africa in human
traffickers' unseaworthy boats, desperate to reach European shores. The pope's
foreign travels in 2017 included a voyage to Myanmar and Bangladesh, where the
suffering of minority Rohingya Muslims, who have fled from the first country to
take refuge in the second, was a central concern of his pilgrimage. Francis in
his appeal Monday said of refugees and migrants: "Let us not extinguish the hope
in their hearts. Let us not suffocate their expectations for peace." He called
for all to make commitments "to assure the refugees, the migrants, everyone, a
future of peace." He then prayed that people "work in this new year with
generosity to realize a world that is more united and welcoming." --- AP
Israel Ruling Party Votes for Push to Annex
West Bank
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 01/17/The central committee of
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud Party has voted for a
resolution urging Likud parliamentarians to push to annex the occupied West
Bank. The non-binding vote by the party's decision-making committee called on
its MPs "to spread Israeli sovereignty over Judea and Samaria (the West Bank)."
Netanyahu, who is a member of the central committee, was not present for the
vote. The prime minister says he still supports a two-state solution with the
Palestinians, although he has also pushed for Jewish settlement expansion in the
West Bank, which has been under Israeli occupation for 50 years. In October,
Netanyahu decided to postpone a vote on a controversial bill that critics say
would amount to the de facto annexation of Israeli settlements surrounding
Jerusalem. The bill had been expected to be voted on by a ministerial committee
in a move that would fast-track its progress through parliament. Israel occupied
the West Bank, including east Jerusalem, in the Six-Day War of 1967. It later
annexed east Jerusalem in a move never recognized by the international
community.It sees the entire city as its indivisible capital, while the
Palestinians want the eastern sector as the capital of their future state.
Israeli settlements are deemed illegal under international law and widely seen
as the main obstacle to peace. More than 600,000 Jewish settlers live in the
occupied West Bank and annexed east Jerusalem among 2.9 million Palestinians,
with frequent outbreaks of violence. Likud's central committee counts around
3,700 members, and according to Israeli media some 1,500 were present for
Sunday's vote.
Abbas Slams Israel Ruling Party Vote for W. Bank
Annexation
Naharnet/Agence France
Presse/Naharnet/December 01/17/Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Monday
harshly condemned a vote by Israel's ruling party in support of annexing large
parts of the West Bank and criticised the United States for its silence. Abbas
said the non-binding vote by the central committee of Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu's Likud party on Sunday "could not be taken without the full support
of the U.S. administration."He said in a statement that the White House "has
refused to condemn Israeli colonial settlements as well as the systematic
attacks and crimes of the Israeli occupation against the people of
Palestine.""We hope that this vote serves as a reminder for the international
community that the Israeli government, with the full support of the U.S.
administration, is not interested in a just and lasting peace," Abbas said.
"Rather its main goal is the consolidation of an apartheid regime in all of
historic Palestine." The Likud central committee backed a resolution urging
Israel to extend sovereignty over all settlement areas in the West Bank and
called for unlimited settlement construction. Netanyahu, who is a member of the
central committee, was not present for the vote. Taking such a measure could
effectively end hopes for a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict as there would be little area left for a Palestinian state. But a
significant number of members of Netanyahu's right-wing coalition say that is
precisely what they are seeking and openly oppose a Palestinian state. The prime
minister says he still supports a two-state solution with the Palestinians,
although he has also pushed for Jewish settlement expansion in the West Bank,
which has been under Israeli occupation for more than 50 years. Palestinian
anger at the U.S. is already high after President Donald Trump last month tore
up decades of careful policy to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.
Two Christians Killed in New Year Attack on
Egypt Liquor Store
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 01/17/A gunman killed two Copts
celebrating the New Year in an Egyptian alcohol shop early on Monday, judicial
and security sources said, the latest deadly violence against the Christian
minority. The shooting came just three days after a gunman, identified as a
wanted jihadist, killed nine people in an attack on a church south of the
capital. An assailant rode up in the back of a motorcycle taxi and opened fire
on the liquor store in Cairo's twin city Giza at around 1:30 am (2330 GMT
Sunday), when the streets were still bustling with New Year revelers, the
sources said. The store's Coptic owner survived but two of his friends who were
celebrating with him were killed. Police are still investigating the motive of
the attack, the sources said. Alcohol consumption is forbidden by Islam and
liquor stores, most of which are run by Copts, have come under attack in the
past by hardline Muslims who believe they should be banned. On January 2 last
year, a Muslim slit the throat of a Coptic liquor store owner in the
Mediterranean coastal city of Alexandria. The assailant was sentenced to death
after telling the court that he would kill all alcohol sellers if he could.
Egypt's Coptic Christians make up about 10 percent of the country's 93 million
people, and are the largest religious minority in the region. Dozens of
Christians have been killed in church bombings and shootings claimed by the
Islamic State group's Egypt affiliate over the past year.
Iran temporarily restricts access to social media
Sun 31 Dec 2017/NNA -
Iran will temporarily restrict access to some social media and messaging apps to
control protests, Iranian state television quoted an informed source as saying
on Sunday."It has been decided in the highest security level to restrict access
to Telegram (messaging app) and Instagram," the source said. --- Reuters
12 killed amid demonstrations that saw attempts to storm police stations and
military bases, state TV reports
Mon 01 Jan 2018/NNA - At least 12 people have now been killed in anti-government
protests in Iran and security forces have had to fight off "armed protestors"
trying to take over police stations and military bases, reports in the country's
state media suggest. Authorities had previously confirmed four deaths but the
total is now believed to have risen after tens of thousands of people joined the
protests, which began last week. Two people were killed in clashes on Sunday
night, adding to the two deaths confirmed on Saturday. Hundreds of people have
been arrested in the demonstrations. State TV reported that some "armed
protestors" had tried to storm security facilities. "Some armed protesters tried
to take over some police stations and military bases but faced serious
resistance from security forces", it said. As demonstrations continued, Hassan
Rouhani, the Iran President, insisted people were "absolutely free to criticise"
but said violence would not be tolerated. He said: “The government will show no
tolerance for those who damage public properties, violate public order and
create unrest in the society. “People are absolutely free to criticise the
government and protest but their protests should be in such a way as to improve
the situation in the country and their life.” “Criticism is different from
violence and and damaging public properties." ---Independent
Trump Threatens to Cut Aid to Pakistan, a 'Haven
to Terrorists'
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 01/17/U.S. President Donald
Trump lashed out at Pakistan on Monday in his first tweet of 2018, threatening
to cut off aid over what he said were its "lies and deceit" in offering "safe
haven to terrorists.""The United States has foolishly given Pakistan more than
33 billion dollars in aid over the last 15 years, and they have given us nothing
but lies & deceit, thinking of our leaders as fools," Trump said as the new year
kicked off. "They give safe haven to the terrorists we hunt in Afghanistan, with
little help. No more!"Last week, The New York Times reported that the Trump
administration was seriously weighing whether to withhold $255 million in
already delayed aid to Islamabad over its failure to crack down more effectively
on terror groups in Pakistan. U.S.-Pakistani ties, long contentious, have taken
a nosedive under Trump, who in August declared that "Pakistan often gives safe
haven to agents of chaos, violence and terror."Last month, Trump had already
hinted that he may cut off the aid."We make massive payments every year to
Pakistan. They have to help," he said in unveiling his national security
strategy.
'Pakistan on notice'
And in late December, Vice President Mike Pence told American troops during a
visit to Afghanistan, "President Trump has put Pakistan on notice."
The comments were an extension of repeated U.S. warnings that Pakistan must stop
offering cross-border havens to Taliban factions operating in Afghanistan as
well as armed jihadist groups fighting U.S. troops and their Afghan allies.
Pakistani Foreign Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif responded to Trump's tweet
Monday, telling Geo television in an Urdu-language interview, "The United States
should hold its own people accountable for its failures in Afghanistan." He said
all funds from the U.S. had been "properly audited" and that "services (were)
rendered."Islamabad has repeatedly denied the accusations of turning a blind eye
to militancy, lambasting the United States for ignoring the thousands who have
been killed on its soil and the billions spent fighting extremists. Lisa Curtis,
who is the South and Central Asia director on Trump's National Security Council,
wrote in an article published in February that the "activities and operations of
diverse terror groups on and from Pakistani soil, and the government's failure
to rein them in, threaten vital U.S. national security interests in the region."
"To accomplish U.S. counterterrorism objectives in the region and to reverse
extremist trends in Pakistani society, Pakistani authorities –- specifically the
country's military leaders, who control its foreign and security policies –-
need to take a comprehensive approach to shutting down all Islamist militant
groups that operate from Pakistani territory, not just those that attack the
Pakistani state," she said. Trump first signaled that the U.S. was reassessing
its fractious relations with Pakistan in August, when he accused Islamabad of
harboring "agents of chaos."The remarks triggered a series of high-level
diplomatic meetings in the U.S. and Pakistan, but Islamabad has given few signs
of concessions. After the September 11, 2001 terror attacks in the United
States, Washington forged a strategic alliance with Islamabad to help in its
fight against terrorists. But U.S. leaders have often complained that Pakistan,
which once supported the Taliban, has done too little to help.
'Life is Really Difficult': Tehranis Share
Economic Grievances
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 01/17/The streets of Iran's capital have
been relatively quiet as protests hit much of the country, but Tehranis still
have plenty to complain about and demand action from the government. "Life is
really difficult. The high prices really put me under pressure. My husband is a
government worker but his salary is no way enough for us to make ends meet,"
said Farzaneh Mirzaie, 42, a mother of two. She said much of her family worked
in a carpet factory in Kashan, a town 250 kilometers (150 miles) south of the
capital, but they have all recently lost their jobs.
"The owner of the factory cannot afford to buy thread for carpets and so he
sacked everyone. How should they survive?" It is a story heard up and down the
country as Iran struggles to recover from years of poor economic management and
crippling international sanctions. On Sunday night, Tehranis listened to
President Hassan Rouhani address the mass protests that have spread across Iran
since Thursday, in which he said people had the right to protest but should not
engage in violence. "He says it's free for people to protest but we're scared of
speaking. Even now, I'm scared of talking to you," said Sarita Mohammadi, a
35-year-old teacher. "If it's free to speak out and protest, then why have they
deployed so many forces out there in the streets?"
'We'll have to pay for it'
Many people are nonetheless put off by the violence they have seen from
protesters who have attacked banks, government buildings and symbols of the
regime. Sara, a 26-year-old student in conservative dress, agreed with the
government line that the protests were being "guided from abroad", but even she
felt the protests began over "people's economic hardship.""I'm not at all for
demonstrations in which public property is vandalised. When some break windows,
then we'll have to pay for it later," added Shiva Daneshvar, a 55-year-old
housewife. But everyone understands the frustration seething under Iranian
society. "I think people don't like to vandalise and set fire to places, but
this is the only way to make their voices heard," said Nasser Khalaf, 52, who
works for an oil company, adding that he has two unemployed sons in their
twenties. Many feel the nation has not been rewarded for enduring decades of
hardship -- the tumult of the 1979 revolution, eight years of brutal war with
Iraq in the 1980s and recent U.S. sanctions. "After 40 years they have realised
that all the hardship... was in vain," said Arya Rahmani, a 27-year-old nurse.
"I'm working in this society but I always have the stress of whether I'm going
to be sacked tomorrow.""Mr Rouhani says 'protest in a proper way', but what is
the proper way? If I come and say 'Mr Rouhani, I'm an educated person but I'm
unemployed'... well, he wouldn't give a damn."
Trump in 'his palace'
There was typical derision regarding U.S. President Donald Trump, who has
repeatedly tweeted his support for the protests in recent days, saying Monday
that it was "TIME FOR CHANGE!" "Verbal support is of no use," said Rahmani.
"He's living in his palace and here I'm arrested. What can Trump do?"
"It would be better if he didn't support the protests," added Khalaf, saying
that external support from opposition groups was also unwelcome. Many harbour a
deep mistrust of Trump after he barred Iranians from visiting the United States
as part of his ban on "terrorist" nations. "The government should improve the
people's situation to a level where Trump won't dare say such a thing," said
Mirzaie, the housewife.Underlying it all is a deep-seated frustration that their
country has failed to capitalise on its huge potential. "Our country is really
like gold. Whatever you can think of, you can find in Iran. But we are not
benefiting at all from the things we have in our country," said Mirzaie. It
remains unclear where the protests will go from here. Without a clear leadership
structure, the protests may struggle to stay focused, particularly if
authorities decide to crack down more firmly than they have so far. Khalaf, the
oil company employee, said that may be tougher than during the last mass
protests that followed allegations of election-rigging in 2009. "In 2009 when
people took to the streets it was only in Tehran and so they easily managed to
suppress it," he said. "When it is widespread, then less forces can be sent."
12 Charges Sought against Palestinian 'Slap
Video' Teen
Naharnet/Agence France
Presse/Naharnet/December 01/17/Israeli authorities are seeking 12 charges
against a Palestinian teenager arrested after a video of her slapping and
kicking two Israeli soldiers in the West Bank went viral, her lawyer said
Monday. Ahed Tamimi, 16, has been hailed as a hero by Palestinians who see her
as bravely standing up to Israel's occupation of the West Bank. Israelis accuse
her family of using her as a pawn in staged provocations. Tamimi's lawyer Gaby
Lasky spoke to journalists ahead of her hearing in a military court, saying the
charges include assault and relate to six different incidents. The accusations
also include stone-throwing, incitement and making threats, Lasky said.
Prosecutors are also seeking five charges against her mother Nariman, and had on
Sunday filed charges against her cousin Nour, 20. Ahed Tamimi's family says the
December 15 incident occurred in the yard of their home in Nabi Saleh, near
Ramallah. A video shows the cousins approaching two Israeli soldiers and telling
them to leave before shoving, kicking and slapping them. Ahed Tamimi is the most
aggressive of the two in the video. The heavily armed soldiers do not respond in
the face of what appears to be an attempt to provoke rather than seriously harm
them. They then move backwards after Ahed Tamimi's mother Nariman becomes
involved. Ahed Tamimi, arrested in the early hours of December 19, has been
involved in a series of previous confrontations, with older pictures of her
confronting soldiers widely published.
Trump Says 'Time for Change' in Iran
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 01/17/U.S. President Donald
Trump said Monday it was "time for change" in Iran and that the country's people
were "hungry" for freedom, after days of deadly protests against the government
in Tehran. "Iran is failing at every level despite the terrible deal made with
them by the Obama Administration," Trump tweeted, referring to the nuclear pact
sealed under his Democratic predecessor Barack Obama. "The great Iranian people
have been repressed for many years. They are hungry for food & for freedom.
Along with human rights, the wealth of Iran is being looted.
TIME FOR CHANGE!"T
rump has been vocal on Twitter about the protests in Iran since they erupted
last week. "The world is watching!" he said, reposting clips of his speech to
the United Nations General Assembly in September. "Oppressive regimes cannot
endure forever, and the day will come when the Iranian people will face a
choice," he tweeted, quoting from the speech. But Iranian President Hassan
Rouhani hit back, saying the U.S. leader -- whose "whole being is against the
nation of Iran -- had "no right" to sympathize with protesters.Ten people were
killed overnight in Iran, local media reported, bringing the death toll after
four days of protests to 12.
Kim Vows North Will Mass-Produce Nukes but Open to Talks with Seoul
Naharnet/Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 01/17/North Korean leader Kim
Jong-Un warned the United States Monday he has a "nuclear button" on his table
but offered an apparent olive branch to South Korea in a New Year message,
saying he was prepared for talks and may send a team to the Winter Olympics
there. Kim struck a generally defiant note after a year of rising tensions
marked by the North's multiple missile launches and its sixth and most powerful
nuclear test -- purportedly of a hydrogen bomb. "We must mass-produce nuclear
warheads and ballistic missiles and speed up their deployment," he said in his
annual televised address to the nation. He reiterated his claim that his country
had achieved its goal of becoming a nuclear state but insisted the expansion of
the weapons program was a defensive measure. "We should always keep readiness to
take immediate nuclear counter-attacks against the enemy's scheme for a nuclear
war."The North claims it needs nuclear weapons to protect itself from a hostile
Washington and has striven to create a warhead capable of targeting the U.S.
mainland with an atomic warhead. U.S. President Donald Trump has responded to
each test with his own amplified declarations, threatening to "totally destroy"
Pyongyang and taunting Kim, saying he was on "a suicide mission."But far from
persuading Kim to give up his nuclear drive, analysts say Trump's tough talk may
have prompted the North Korean leader to push through with his dangerous quest.
"(The North) can cope with any kind of nuclear threats from the U.S. and has a
strong nuclear deterrence that is able to prevent the U.S. from playing with
fire," Kim said Monday. "The nuclear button is always on my table. The U.S. must
realise this is not blackmail but reality."
'Make a breakthrough'
When asked for a response to Kim's claim that he had a nuclear button on his
desk, Trump said "We'll see, we'll see", in comments to reporters during the New
Year's Eve party at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida. Kim also sugared his
speech Monday with a conciliatory tone towards Seoul, indicating for the first
time that the North is considering taking part in the South's Winter Olympics
next month. "(The Olympics) will serve as a good chance to display our Korean
people's grace toward the world and we sincerely hope the Games will be a
success," he said. The North and the South should "depart from the past, improve
relations and take decisive measures to make a breakthrough in efforts to
achieve reunification", he said. South Korea's presidential Blue House welcomed
the dialogue offer. "Should the Olympics be staged succesfully, it will
contribute to peace not only on the Korean peninsula but in the region and the
world as well," it said in a statement. Some analysts said Kim may be trying
indirectly to lower the temperature with Washington. At a time when the risk of
a U.S. pre-emptive strike is "higher than ever", Koh Yu-Hwan, political science
professor at Dongguk University, said the speech indicated Kim was using the
Olympics gesture to "shift from confrontation to peaceful coexistence with the
United States." "When he said a nuclear launch button is always on his desk, he
is hinting it is not necessary for the North to stage nuclear or ICBM tests in
the foreseeable future," Koh told AFP, adding however that Kim also wanted to
build "massive nuclear retaliation capabilities." Professor Yang Moo-Jin of the
University of North Korean Studies in Seoul said Kim "is extending an olive
branch toward the South as the U.S. is expected to keep up with pressure and
sanctions on the country throughout this year... as a whole the emphasis is on
peace rather than confrontation." In December the United Nations Security
Council unanimously passed new, U.S.-drafted sanctions against Pyongyang,
restricting oil supplies vital for the impoverished state. The most recent set
of sanctions, which the North slammed as an "act of war", also received the
backing of China -- the country's sole major ally and economic lifeline.
Observers say Washington must open talks with the North to defuse tensions but
that remains a challenge. Pyongyang has always said it will only deal with the
U.S. from a position of equality as a nuclear state. Washington has long
insisted that it will not accept a nuclear-armed North.
36 dead in Kenya after head on collision between bus and truck
Sun 31 Dec 2017/NNA
- Thirty-six people were killed and 11 injured early Sunday morning in a head-on
collision between a bus and a truck on a road in central Kenya, police said.
“The death toll is now 36,” said Rift Valley traffic police chief Zero Arome,
explaining the initial toll of 30 had risen, “after six passengers succumbed to
injuries in hospital.”The accident occurred at 3:00am close to a notorious
stretch on the Nakuru-Eldoret highway. A bus travelling from Busia, in western
Kenya, collided with a truck coming from Nakuru town. Police said the death toll
for that stretch of road has now topped 100 this month alone. Arome said the
drivers of both vehicles were among the dead, as well as a three-year-old child,
while the injured had been taken to a Nakuru hospital. --- AFP
UN chief calls for restraint amid reports security forces violently dispersed
Kinshasa protests
Mon 01 Jan 2018/NNA - United Nations Secretary-General Antَnio Guterres has
called on the Government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) to
exercise restraint amid reports of a violent crackdown by national security
forces on demonstrations in the capital, Kinshasa, and a number of other cities.
In a statement issued late Sunday by his spokesperson, Mr. Guterres expressed
concern about reports of the violent dispersion of protests by national security
forces, resulting in the death of at least five people, the wounding of several
others and the arrest of over 120 persons. “The Secretary-General calls on the
Government and national security forces to exercise restraint and to uphold the
rights of the Congolese people to the freedom of speech and peaceful assembly,”
said the statement. The Secretary-General went on to urge all Congolese
political actors to remain fully committed to the 31 December 2016 political
agreement, “which remains the only viable path to the holding of elections, the
peaceful transfer of power and the consolidation of stability in the DRC.” That
agreement – facilitated by Conférence Episcopale Nationale du Congo (CENCO)
mediators, and reached in Kinshasa on 31 December 2016 – allowed President
Joseph Kabila to stay in power beyond the end of his term and has stipulated
that peaceful, credible and inclusive elections would be organized in DRC by the
end of December 2017. --- UN
Costa Rica plane crash kills 12, including 10
U.S. citizens
Mon 01 Jan 2018/NNA - A plane crash in Costa Rica on Sunday killed 10 U.S.
citizens and two local pilots, the Costa Rican government said. The cause of the
crash was not yet known, the country's security ministry said. It took place in
the mountainous area of Punta Islita, which is popular with tourists, in the
province of Guanacaste, about 230 km (140 miles) west of the capital of San Jos.
Enio Cubillo, director of Costa Rica's civil aviation agency, told local media
that the deceased included 10 foreign tourists and two Costa Rican pilots for
the aircraft, which was operated by local company Nature Air. Nature Air could
not immediately be reached for comment. Laura Chinchilla, who was president of
Costa Rica from 2010 to 2014, said on Twitter that her cousin, one of the crew
members, had died in the accident. "There are no people alive," Security
Minister Gustavo Mata said, adding that autopsies would be needed to confirm the
total number and identities of victims because their remains were badly burned.
Punta Islita, on Costa Rica's Pacific Coast, is popular among North American and
European tourists for its pristine beaches and lush landscape. ---Reuters
UN chief calls for restraint amid reports security forces
violently dispersed Kinshasa protests
Mon 01 Jan 2018/NNA -
United Nations Secretary-General Antَnio Guterres has called on the Government
of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) to exercise restraint amid reports
of a violent crackdown by national security forces on demonstrations in the
capital, Kinshasa, and a number of other cities. In a statement issued late
Sunday by his spokesperson, Mr. Guterres expressed concern about reports of the
violent dispersion of protests by national security forces, resulting in the
death of at least five people, the wounding of several others and the arrest of
over 120 persons.
“The Secretary-General calls on the Government and national security forces to
exercise restraint and to uphold the rights of the Congolese people to the
freedom of speech and peaceful assembly,” said the statement. The
Secretary-General went on to urge all Congolese political actors to remain fully
committed to the 31 December 2016 political agreement, “which remains the only
viable path to the holding of elections, the peaceful transfer of power and the
consolidation of stability in the DRC.” That agreement – facilitated by
Conférence Episcopale Nationale du Congo (CENCO) mediators, and reached in
Kinshasa on 31 December 2016 – allowed President Joseph Kabila to stay in power
beyond the end of his term and has stipulated that peaceful, credible and
inclusive elections would be organized in DRC by the end of December 2017. ---
UN
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from
miscellaneous sources published
on January 01-02/18
The Battle for Iran/Change will not come easily, peacefully, or soon.
المعركة من أجل إيران..التغيير لن يأت بسرعة وبسهولة وسلمياً
Karim Sadiadpour/The Atlantic/December 31/17
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/?p=61513
Protest movements in the Middle East face enormous repressive hurdles and rarely
have happy endings. Even when protesters “succeed” in toppling an autocrat,
they’ve rarely succeeded in ending autocracy.
In Iran, the obstacles to success are daunting. Whereas most Middle Eastern
countries are ruled by secular autocrats focused on repressing primarily
Islamist opposition, Iran is an Islamist autocracy focused on repressing secular
opposition. This dynamic—unarmed, unorganized, leaderless citizens seeking
economic dignity and pluralism, versus a heavily armed, organized, rapacious
ruling theocracy that espouses martyrdom—is not a recipe for success.
And yet, against this inauspicious backdrop, Iran’s mushrooming anti-government
protests—although so far much smaller in scale than the country’s 2009
uprising—have been unprecedented in their geographic scope and intensity. They
began December 28 in Mashhad, a Shiite pilgrimage city often considered a regime
stronghold, with protesters chanting slogans like “leave Syria alone, think
about us.” They soon spread to Qom, Iran’s holiest city, where protesters
expressed nostalgia for Reza Shah, the 20th-century modernizing autocrat who
ruthlessly repressed the clergy. They continued in provincial towns, with
thousands chanting, “we don’t want an Islamic Republic” in Najafabad, “death to
the revolutionary guards” in Rasht, and “death to the dictator” in Khoramabad.
They’ve since spread to Tehran, and hundreds have been arrested, the BBC
reported, citing Iranian officials.
What triggered these protests is a subject of debate—some evidence suggests they
were initially encouraged by hardline forces to embarrass President Hassan
Rouhani—but what has fueled them have been the same grievances that power
anti-government protests everywhere: rising living costs, endemic corruption,
fraud, mismanagement. In Iran, add to that bitter cocktail both political and
social repression, all conducted from the moral pedestal of Islamist theocracy.
While these grievances have been festering for years and indeed decades, among
the dozens of factors that distinguish today’s protests from 2009 is the
smartphone. In 2009—when an estimated 2 million to 3 million Iranians protested
silently in Tehran—fewer than 1 million Iranians owned such a device, and few
outside Tehran. Today, an astonishing 48 million Iranians are thought to have
smartphones, all of them equipped with social media and communication apps. The
app Telegram alone is thought to have 40 million users, elusive from government
control, but not immune to a communications shutdown if Tehran tries to throttle
the internet.
But while Iranians have a much better understanding how elsewhere is living, the
rest of the world has had a less clear idea of how Iranians are living given
Tehran’s effective distortion of Western media coverage. Since 2009 and even
before, the dogged professional journalists covering Iran—including The Wall
Street Journal’s Farnaz Fassihi, The New York Times’s Nazila Fathi, Newsweek’s
Maziar Bahar, Reuters’s Parisa Hafezi and Babak Dehghanpisheh, and dozens
more—have been intimidated, expelled, and in some cases imprisoned. The few
journalists remaining in Iran rightfully worry about their personal safety. Many
of the best Iranian writers, scholars, and artists of their generation have been
similarly banished from Iran.
A boy holding a placard with pictures of President Hassan Rouhani, Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini, and Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, poses for camera in front of a
model of Simorgh satellite-carrier rocket with Iranian flags everywhere.
Trump's Iran Strategy Would Be Smart—If He Were Credible
The Questions Raised By Trump's Iran Deal Decision
At the same time, the regime has provided visas and access to those whom they
know will provide friendlier coverage. Foreign Minister Javad Zarif has been
especially effective at manipulating Western journalists, analysts, and
officials. This has created an opening for a new breed of opinion journalists
and analysts—some of whom are simultaneously seeking and promoting business
opportunities in Iran—pulling punches in order to preserve their access.
What happens now?
The Iranian government has the highest per capita execution rate in the world,
treats women as second class citizens, persecutes gays and religious minorities,
and stifles free speech. While there is a natural inclination among decent
people everywhere to want a peaceful civil rights movement to succeed in Iran,
there are ample reasons to believe it will not. The regime’s coercive
apparatus—the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and the Bassij milita—are
organized, armed, and abundant, and well-practiced in the brutal science of
repression. Opponents of the government, in contrast, are unarmed, leaderless,
and rudderless. In addition, Iran has at its disposal tens of thousands of Shia
militiamen—including Lebanese Hezbollah—it has been cultivating for years and in
some cases decades. For these battle-hardened forces, crushing unarmed Iranian
protesters is a much easier task than fighting Syrian rebels or Sunni jihadists.
While some have expressed hope these protests might compel the Iranian
government to try and address popular grievances, history shows us the opposite
is more likely true. In the weeks and months to come, expect the regime to grow
ever more repressive. Iran’s security forces thrive when there is insecurity.
Some Iranians even fear the IRGC has allowed the protests to fester as a pretext
for expanding their authority in the name of national security.
What can the United States do?
It is only natural that popular agitations against a regime whose official
slogan is “Death to America” will elicit strong support from U.S. politicians.
The question, as always, is what is the most constructive way for Washington to
“support” such protests? In the aftermath of the 1991 Gulf war, President George
H.W. Bush infamously encouraged Iraqi Shiites to rise up against Saddam Hussein.
When they did so and were slaughtered, international outrage was directed at
Bush more than Saddam. In 2009 the Obama administration offered only tepid
support to the Green Movement uprisings in Iran, something Hillary Clinton later
described as her biggest regret as Secretary of State.
What should American leaders do, then? While carefully crafted expressions of
solidarity with the people, but not incitement, are good for posterity, given
Washington’s meager leverage over Tehran such statements likely have only
limited impact (In contrast to official statements about authoritarian regimes
over whom the U.S. has had actual leverage, like Mubarak’s Egypt). What’s more
important than public statements are U.S. policies that can inhibit the regime’s
coercive capacity and their ability to black out communications.
One concrete suggestion is to make it clear that companies and countries around
the world complicit in Iran’s repressive apparatus—including those providing
censorship technology—will face censure from the United States. The United
States should also mobilize global partners that do have working relations with
Iran—including Europe, Japan, South Korea, and India—to add their voices of
concern and condemnation to Tehran’s repression. EU foreign policy chief
Federica Mogherini has been noticeably silent.
Given the opacity of the Iranian system and its inaccessibility to independent
investigation, the days and weeks ahead are eminently unpredictable. Khamenei
and his IRGC backers appear firmly entrenched from thousands of miles away, but
we also know from history that authoritarian stability can be a chimera. In
August 1978, the CIA confidently assessed that the Pahlavi monarchy in Iran “is
not in a revolutionary or even a pre-revolutionary situation.” Five months later
the Shah—stricken with advanced cancer unbeknownst even to his family—left never
to come back. Khamenei’s health has been the source of wide speculation for
years, but tightly held as a national security secret.
“I’m a pessimist because of intelligence,” the Italian philosopher Antonio
Gramsci apparently liked to say, “but an optimist because of will.”
Two-thousand-five-hundred years of Persian civilization and a century-long quest
for democracy offer hope about the irrepressible Iranian will for change. But
the Islamic Republic’s four-decade history of brutality suggests that change
will not come easily, or peacefully, or soon.
https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2017/12/the-battle-for-iran/549446/
Happy New Year to Iran and western media
Mashari Althaydi/Arabiya/December
01/17
Happy New Year to all, and we say this especially to the Iranian people who have
given the Khameini regime a run for their money recently.
As 2017 came to a close, the Iranian regime was not boasting about taking down
the Syrians. Its fighters in Syria under its flag were not celebrating their
victories and were not expressing happiness over putting an end to the late
Yemeni President, Ali Abdullah Saleh.
They deterred those who rejected their divine authority until someone from
within decided to put matters into perspective. How will this big revolution
come to an end? Will the Khameini regime, shielded by the Iranian Revolutionary
Guard Cops (IRGC) funds and weapons, collapse?
We do not yet know answers to these questions as the protests are still in its
early stages. The Khameini guards may be able to put an end to it, temporarily
that is, however the purpose is clear. The incident has so far caused major
damage to the image, presence, propaganda and the future of the republic. It has
also spread terrorism and chaos in the region with the help of comrades Mohammed
Ali Jafari and Qasem Soleimani.
If this would have happened in Egypt, for example, how would have BBC, New York
Times, CNN or German Deutchwelle covered it?
Western media
Speaking of those protecting the Khameini regime, it is interesting to see
western media’s politeness, leniency and delicacy while dealing with the Iranian
uprising. This is something journalists, researchers and politicians have picked
up on.
We found Republican Senator, Ted Cruz, the former US presidential candidate,
attacking the US network CNN because of its marginalization and misinformation
regarding the Iranian people’s uprising.
We also found American researcher and politician Elliot Abrams criticizing The
New York Times’ coverage in an article of his in New York magazine. Abrams
described the American newspaper’s coverage as “suspicious,” which belittles the
value of the protests.
Even the British BBC, which initially focused on demonstrations supporting the
regime, spoke about the uprising against the regime. “It does not seem to be
operating on a large scale,” it said. The Iranian regime’s behavior toward this
uprising has so far led to the deal of 10 people, with dozens wounded or in
jails.
Social media
Social media platforms such as Telegram and Instagram were shut down in the
country and according to the Iranian Students’ News Agency, one of the IRGC
brigades, Ismail Kuthari, threatened saying that the regime will fight “with an
iron fist.”
If this would have happened in Egypt, for example, how would have BBC, New York
Times, CNN or German Deutchwelle covered this incident? Would they cover it
extensively and pursued which angle?
What does all this mean? How is it expected that the Saudi, Khaleeji and Arab
recipients understand? Of course, this exempts Iranian Arabs and those who
admire Qassem Soleimani’s heroism and his conquests.
As Shakespeare’s immortal play Hamlet says: “Something is rotten in the state of
Denmark”. On that note, here’s wishing a happy new year for the Iranian people.
Which way will the protests in Iran go?
Ghassan Charbel/Arabiya/December 01/17
The heat of revolts brings with it concerns. The victorious are delusional in
believing that they have come to stay forever and that they have left a
permanent mark on a country. The most successful revolutions are the ones that
are ripe enough to merge with the state that could at least ensure that it
receives a dignified farewell. A revolution’s rejection of a state and its
mentality means that a counter-revolution will erupt, sooner or later. The
rejection means being eliminated with a fatal and costly blow.
The Iranian revolution acts as if it is not similar to other revolts. It is
delusional in believing that it does not adhere to the laws of revolutions. It
wrongfully believes that it can erase the signs of its old age and the
disappointment of those whom it promised paradise. The Khomeini revolt refuses
to stop and learn from the experiences of the not so distant past. Six decades
before the Iranian revolution, Lenin’s uprising rattled the beginning of the
20th century. It believed that it had achieved salvation and prepared to build
the new type of human. It was delusional in believing that it will last forever
due to the strength of the party and army, severity of the agencies, skill of
its propaganda machine and might on the foreign front. A revolution’s rejection
of a state and its mentality means that a counter-revolution will erupt, sooner
or later
In the last week of February 1986, Moscow hosted the 27th Congress of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union. The world was waiting expectantly for the
new leader. The scene at the congress hall at the Kremlin was impressive indeed.
As a young journalist, I was affected by what I saw.
General Secretary of the Congress Mikhail Gorbachev sat in the middle of the
panel. He was flanked by his allies from Warsaw and the Socialist camp.
Countries revolving in the Moscow orbit. Among them was Fidel Castro, who came
to pledge his allegiance to the new czar. Other communist party leaders were
there, as well as generals of the Red Army and eastern Europe. Everything gave
the impression of strength. We are talking here about an empire that is armed to
the teeth. An empire that possess a nuclear arsenal capable of destroying the
world many times. An empire that sleeps on a sea of rockets that are pointed in
all directions.
Lenin’s mausoleum
I told myself that I should take the opportunity and visit Lenin’s mausoleum
that was only meters away from the congress hall on the other end of the Red
Square. The queue was long, but I was distracted by an elderly woman, who was
trying to persuade the people to buy a piece of soap. One of the members of the
police quickly intervened and demanded that she leave. We later found out that
the police organized strict measures to prevent beggars from coming near the
square so that visitors would not realize that Lenin’s revolution did not
succeed in ending poverty. The police organized a parallel campaign to prevent
the few opposition figures from carrying out protests in demand of freedom and
ending the phenomenon of waiting in long bitter lines to obtain their daily
needs.
Five years later, the Soviet Union, which had lost the battles of economy and
freedom, found itself without anyone to defend it. It collapsed under the weight
of an empire that exceeded its economic capabilities. It was killed by the
disappointment of its citizens, not the cannons of its enemies. During those
days, the people wondered: “Why are we spending billions of dollars to fortify
Castro’s regime instead of feeding the Soviet people?”
At times of rage, many declared angrily: “The steel of rockets does not satiate
us.” Another lesson. This time from 2017. Chinese leader Xi Jinping stood at
several platforms to underline reforms that helped his country escape poverty.
Due to the internal stability and prosperity it has achieved, China is now
progressing on the Silk Road and it is demanding a better position for itself
among world players.
Rouhani speech
Hassan Rouhani was unable to deliver similar speeches because his efforts in his
country were focused on paving a road to the Mediterranean through western
Syria, which is littered with mines. Iran hoped that the new year would be one
where it would be able to consolidate victories it has achieved over the years.
Its power in Baghdad has reached a point where it has a say in the minute
details of Iraqi life.
Its role in “disciplining” the Kurds was very clear. It could also speak of an
achievement in Syria. The fate of Bashar Assad is no longer a main issue at any
negotiations table. The Russian player disciplined the Syrian opposition before
it then broke ISIS’ back.
Iran is also banking on Lebanon’s Hezbollah and its allies garnering a
parliamentary majority in the May elections. This will give it the excuse to
place Lebanon within the “Iranian crescent”. In Yemen, Iran is banking on the
continuation of the war and that it would continue to use the Houthis in a war
of attrition with Saudi Arabia.
Iranian authorities have not hesitated in promoting these victories. The
Iranians witnessed General Qassem Soleimani walking among fighters in Syria and
Iraq. They saw his smiles after he was able to “secure” the Iraqi-Syrian border
and ensure the safety of convoys in reaching the Lebanese shores. All these
images, including those of Houthis launching Iranian rockets at Saudi Arabia,
were not enough to erase the disappointment on the internal Iranian scene.
Weary of hardships
The Iranians, or at least a majority of them, have grown weary of daily living
hardships. They suffer from a lack of services, rise in inflation and
unemployment and depletion of resources due to the sometimes organized disputes
between conservatives and reformists. They have grown weary of the programmed
democracy that is orchestrated from under the cloak of the supreme leader.
They have also grown weary of not being able to reap the rewards they have been
promised after signing the 2015 nuclear deal. Donald Trump has once again
brought up the shortcomings of the deal and the nuclear program, putting
Europeans in a tight spot. This means that the badly needed investments that
were promised will not happen.
The slogans that were chanted by the Iranians, or at least some of them, in the
past few days reflected their weariness from the Iranian intervention in
regional conflicts. They have spoken up against having their money spent on
militias that are doing Iran’s bidding in regional hotspots.
The regular Iranian is now aware that his country’s authorities are effectively
engaged in conflict with the majority of the people in the region and that their
meddling is paving the way for endless wars. Add to this, Iran’s lack of
acceptable rhetoric with which to address the international community.
It is too soon to tell how far the current protests will go. There is no doubt
that the regime will not hesitate in using the same force it used in suppressing
the 2009 Green Revolution if it saw a threat to its existence. It also certain
that the protests are very clear popular messages that foreign “adventures”
cannot cover up internal disappointments and “the steel of rockets does not
satiate us.”