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ترى هل جسر الرنك بمفهوم قادة أمل وحزب الله هو الطريق الذي يوصل إلى القدس؟ .. يا حرام مضيعين الطريق

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ترى هل جسر الرنك بمفهوم قادة أمل وحزب الله هو الطريق الذي يوصل إلى القدس؟ يا حرام مضيعين الطريق

الياس بجاني/25 تشرين الثاني/2019

زعران وشبيحة أمل وحزب الله من فرسان الضاحية والخندق الغميق يشنون غارات همجية وبربرية منذ ساعات لتحرير جسر الرنك في بيروت بالحجارة والعصي والشتائم وكل المفردات الزقاقية.

فرسان أمل وحزب الله من الشبيحة والزعران والشوارعيين “مضيعين طريق القدس”، ولهذا ارادوا تحرير الجسر من “الصهاينة ويهود الداخل وعملاء السفارات”، وإعلانه ممراً وطريقاً جديداً لتحرير فلسطين.

مساكين هولاء الشباب المغرر بهم فهم وقادتهم مضيعين طريق فلسطين، وفعلاً خوش مقاومة وخوش تحرير.

وأبلغ تعبير عن واقع حال الإحتلال الإيراني  السرطاني والكارثي للبنان جاء قبل قليل من خلال شعار نادى به الثوار وهم يواجهون زعران وشبيحة أمل وهو: “لبنان مش إيران”.. وهذا ما لم يدركه بعد السيد نصرالله وأسياده في إيران.

ونعم لبنان هو لبنان وليس إيران، ولا يمكن أن يكون غير ذاته…لبنان السلام والمحبة والرسالة.

في الخلاصة فإن قادة أمل وحزب الله هم أعداء الثورة والثوار… أما شبيحتهم من الشباب فهم فعلاً مغرر بهم وضحايا لثقافة الموت التي هي غير ثقافة اللبنانيين.. والمواجهة مستمرة.

والسؤال يبقى، شو بعدو ناطر الرئيس عون ما بيبلش بالإستشارات لتأليف الحكومة؟

وهل هناك من وضع أخطر مما هو حاصل؟

تحية للقوى الأمنية التي قامت بواجباتها اليوم على أكمل وجه وبسلمية ورقي ودون عنف…وألف تحية لشباب وصبايا الثورة السلمية والحضارية.

*الكاتب ناشط لبناني اغترابي
عنوان الكاتب الالكتروني
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The post ترى هل جسر الرنك بمفهوم قادة أمل وحزب الله هو الطريق الذي يوصل إلى القدس؟ .. يا حرام مضيعين الطريق appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.


نشرة أخبار المنسقية العامة للمؤسسات اللبنانية الكندية باللغة العربية ليوم 25 تشرين الثاني/2019

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نشرة أخبار المنسقية العامة للمؤسسات اللبنانية الكندية باللغة العربية ليوم 25 تشرين الثاني/2019

اضغط هنا لقراءة نشرة أخبار المنسقية العامة المفصلة، اللبنانية والعربية ليوم 25 تشرين الثاني/2019

ارشيف نشرات أخبار موقعنا اليومية/عربية وانكليزية منذ العام 2006/اضغط هنا لدخول صفحة الأرشيف

عناوين أقسام نشرة المنسقية باللغة العربية
الزوادة الإيمانية لليوم
تعليقات الياس بجاني وخلفياتها
الأخبار اللبنانية
المتفرقات اللبنانية
الأخبار الإقليمية والدولية
المقالات والتعليقات والتحاليل السياسية الشاملة
المؤتمرات والندوات والبيانات والمقابلات والمناسبات الخاصة والردود وغيره

The post نشرة أخبار المنسقية العامة للمؤسسات اللبنانية الكندية باللغة العربية ليوم 25 تشرين الثاني/2019 appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For November 25/2019

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Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For November 25/2019

Click Here to read the whole and detailed LCCC English News Bulletin for November 25/2019

Click Here to enter the LCCC  Arabic/English news bulletins Achieves since 2006

Titles Of The LCCC English News Bulletin
Bible Quotations For today
Latest LCCC English Lebanese & Lebanese Related News 
Latest LCCC English Miscellaneous Reports And News
Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources

The post Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For November 25/2019 appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For November 24-25/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 39th Day

Next: وكُلُّ عَبْدٍ وحُرّ، ٱخْتَبَأُوا في ٱلمَغَاوِرِ وصُخُورِ ٱلجبَال، وهُم يَقُولُون لِلجِبَالِ وٱلصُّخُور: «أُسْقُطِي عَلَيْنا وَخَبِّئِينا مِنْ وَجْهِ ٱلجَالِسِ عَلَى ٱلعَرْش، وَمِنْ غَضَبِ ٱلحَمَل!»؛ لأَنَّ يَومَ غَضَبِهِ ٱلعَظِيمَ قد أَتَى، فَمَنْ يَسْتَطِيعُ ٱلوُقُوف؟/Everyone, slave and free, hid in the caves and among the rocks of the mountains, calling to the mountains and rocks, ‘Fall on us and hide us from the face of the one seated on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb; for the great day of their wrath has come, and who is able to stand?
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A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For November 24-25/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 38th Day
Compiled By: Elias Bejjani
November 24-25/2019


Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on November 24-25/2019
Hizbullah, AMAL Supporters Attack Protesters as Roads Blocked across Lebanon
Lebanese Hezbollah supporters attack protesters near the Ring Bridge
American officials advocate US support to Lebanese military following aid freeze
Protesters Rally near U.S. Embassy to Deplore U.S. Statements
Protesters blast US official near US Embassy in Lebanon
Report: No Govt. Breakthrough Expected Next Week
Fneish Says No Govt. Can be Formed without Parliamentary Majority Consent
Minors Held for Removing FPM Banner Released
Five children arrested in Lebanon for tearing down Aoun poster: Reports
Children detained for tearing down political banner as protests continue in Lebanon
Hariri’s Press Office: Text messages sent from outside Lebanon
Banks’ Association denounces campaign against its sector, urges politicians and media to exercise national responsibility
Reports: Fakhoury in Poor Health, Lebanese Officials Encouraged Him to Return
Lebanon Anti-Graft Protesters March for Nature Too


The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on November 24-25/2019
Hizbullah, AMAL Supporters Attack Protesters as Roads Blocked across Lebanon
Naharnet/November 25/2019
Supporters of Hizbullah and the AMAL Movement launched fresh attacks late Sunday on anti-corruption protesters in central Beirut, as roads were blocked across Lebanon in an escalation of anti-corruption protests. Fistfights first erupted on the Ring flyover in central Beirut before the AMAL and Hizbullah supporters descended on Riad al-Solh and Martyrs Square where they reportedly vandalized tents and threatened protesters. Riot police and army troops later reinforced their presence on the highway and separated between the two groups. The Hizbullah and AMAL supporters resorted to stone throwing at this point and shouted insults and sectarian slogans. The protesters responded with “revolution” chants and other protest slogans.

Lebanese Hezbollah supporters attack protesters near the Ring Bridge
Al Arabiya English/The Associated Press/Monday, 25 November 2019
Supporters of the Lebanese Hezbollah attacked protesters near the Ring Bridge in Beirut on Sunday, amid heavy presence of security forces and anti-riot police. The supporters, who were riding motorbikes with the flags of Hezbollah and Amal Movement, stoned the protesters, who retaliated.
No injuries were immediately reported. The attacks occurred after protesters blocked a major road that links eastern neighborhoods of the capital with western parts. Since last month, Lebanese from all religious backgrounds have taken to the streets en masse to cry out against what they view as an incompetent and corrupt ruling class, forcing the government to resign.

American officials advocate US support to Lebanese military following aid freeze
Emily Judd/Al Arabiya English/November 24/2019
US politicians and military officials are speaking up about their support for the Lebanese military following confirmation that the Trump administration is withholding $105 million in security aid to Lebanon. US Senator Chris Murphy (D-CT), a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and US Central Command (CENTCOM) chief General Kenneth McKenzie told Al Arabiya English they approve of US support to the Lebanese military. Murphy told Al Arabiya English in an exclusive interview that he is a “big supporter” of US engagement with the Lebanese military.“I think they [Lebanese Armed Forces] are a partner for peace and stability. An imperfect partner, but a partner nonetheless,” Murphy told Al Arabiya English at the annual IISS Manama Dialogue conference in Bahrain. McKenzie said that CENTCOM supports “continued assistance” to the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF), albeit their “record is not perfect.”“We think the LAF needs to be the military element of the government of Lebanon. I would certainly support continuous support to the LAF,” said McKenzie.
Earlier this month, it was reported the Trump administration has frozen $105 million in security aid to Lebanon, including military vehicles, weapons and ammunition. David Hale, the top career diplomat at the State Department, confirmed the freeze on Wednesday, saying there was apparently “a dispute over the efficacy of the assistance.”The US State Department told Congress on October 31 that the White House budget office and National Security Council had decided to withhold the foreign military assistance, according to two US officials, speaking to Reuters on condition of anonymity. The officials did not say why the aid was blocked. The aid was frozen before massive demonstrations, protesting against economic hardship and corruption, began in Lebanon on October 17. Nina Shea, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, said that American leadership should rally allies behind the demands of the protesters and the LAF, “which has kept order until now.” “Either the LAF is supported to be the dominant force that ensures an orderly transition and protects all the population, regardless of religious identity – or they’re abandoned to the benefit of Hezbollah, Iranian tyranny and other malign actors,” said Shea in an interview with Al Arabiya English. The Trump administration, which has not publicly explained its decision to withhold funding, has been pressing for the isolation of Lebanese Hezbollah, which is allied with Iran and has seats in the government. Shea called on American and allied diplomacy to quickly held build a consensus around a “new accountable and Hezbollah-free government.”“With American policy leadership, the Middle East could experience a moment like 1989, with Lebanon and Iraq as the new Poland and Hungary – and Iran, the Soviet Union,” said Shea.

Protesters Rally near U.S. Embassy to Deplore U.S. Statements
Associated Press/Naharnet/November 24/2019
A number of demonstrators who are part of the anti-corruption protest movement that is sweeping the country on Sunday rallied near the U.S. embassy in Awkar to denounce recent U.S. statements about the situation in Lebanon. Heightened security measures were taken in the area as a security cordon was imposed several hundred meters away from the embassy to prevent protesters from approaching it. The National News Agency said protesters stressed that their demo “is not aimed at proving their patriotism before the supporters of the resistance (against Israel), but is rather aimed at rejecting the U.S. policy in Lebanon and all the politicians who claim to be against the United States.” Some protesters meanwhile said that improving living conditions in Lebanon is as important as immunizing the country in the face of foreign interferences. At the end of the demo, the majority of protesters started marching towards downtown Beirut as a few stayed behind and said they would try to cross the metallic barriers. The rally did not witness any confrontation with security forces in contrast to demos held in the same area in the past. Most of those who participated belong to leftist groups or are supporters of the official Syrian Social Nationalist Party and its various splinter factions. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, U.S. State Department Spokesperson Morgan Ortagus and former U.S. assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs Jeffrey Feltman have commented on Lebanon’s protests in recent days. The protesters blasted the comments by Feltman before the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on the Middle East in which he said that “the demonstrations and the reactions to them by Lebanese leaders and institutions fortunately coincide with U.S. interests.”Protesters have been holding demonstrations in Lebanon since Oct. 17, demanding an end to widespread corruption and mismanagement by the political class that has ruled the country for three decades.

Protesters blast US official near US Embassy in Lebanon

Associated Press/November 24/2019
BEIRUT: A few dozen people have demonstrated near the U.S. Embassy outside Beirut against what they are calling America’s intervention in Lebanon’s affairs. Lebanese troops and riot police employed tight security measures Sunday near the embassy northeast of the city. The protesters later dispersed without any reports of violence. Protesters have been holding demonstrations in Lebanon since Oct. 17, demanding an end to widespread corruption and mismanagement by the political class that has ruled the country for three decades.
The protests have since snowballed into calls for the entire political elite to step aside. The protesters blasted recent comments by former U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon Jeffrey Feltman before the House Subcommittee on the Middle East in which he said that “the demonstrations and the reactions to them by Lebanese leaders and institutions, fortunately, coincide with U.S. interests.”The protests have since snowballed into calls for the entire political elite to step aside.

Report: No Govt. Breakthrough Expected Next Week
Naharnet/November 24/2019
No breakthrough is expected next week in the negotiations to form a new government, a ministerial source said. “Unless an unexpected development happens, no breakthrough is expected next week, although Speaker Nabih Berri expects progress in this regard, but it won’t happen over the next days,” the source told Asharq al-Awsat newspaper in remarks published Sunday. “The forces insisting on a techno-political government do not intend to search for a replacement for Hariri without obtaining his own consent, because such a government would remain incapable of seeking financial aid from the international community, not to mention that it will be a one-sided and unilateral government,” the source added. Hariri submitted his government’s resignation on October 29 in the face of unprecedented protests against the entire political class. President Michel Aoun has delayed the binding parliamentary consultations to name a new premier, arguing that prior consensus is needed on the shape of the new government amid the delicate situations in the country.

Fneish Says No Govt. Can be Formed without Parliamentary Majority Consent
Naharnet/November 24/2019
Caretaker Youth and Sport Minister Mohammed Fneish of Hizbullah emphasized Sunday that the new government cannot be formed without the approval of the parliamentary majority led by Hizbullah and the Free Patriotic Movement. “There is a political equation in Lebanon called parliament and a government cannot be formed without this parliament’s confidence,” Fneish said. “No government can be formed without consensus between the PM-designate chosen by the parliamentary majority and the president, and thus the formation of governments has mechanisms that must be used so that we reach solutions,” he added. In an apparent jab at caretaker PM Saad Hariri, Fneish said: “He who evades responsibility cannot claim that he is innocent, seeing as every person has his history, policies and stances, and therefore evading responsibility is not courage but rather aggravation of the suffering of the Lebanese.”“Let no one think that the Americans care about the suffering of the Lebanese,” the caretaker minister added, noting that “America largely bears the responsibility for what’s happening in Lebanon through the sanctions that hit Lebanon, through pressuring us to accept a settlement with the Israeli enemy on the issue of border demarcation, and through pressuring banks and the money transfers of the Lebanese.”ves to us that he has failed, because he is ignorant of what’s happening in Lebanon and is still insisting on his failure and ignorance,” Fneish added. “If he believes that what’s happening will defeat and weaken the resistance… I believe that this reassures us that our enemy is still foolish and does not know the reality of our society and reality of the resistance’s environment and its insistence on the resistance choice,” Fneish went on to say. Moreover he added that “those who offered thousands of martyrs in defense of this country will spare no political effort to strengthen the dignity and security of the Lebanese.”

Minors Held for Removing FPM Banner Released

Agence France Presse/Naharnet/November 24/2019
Five youngsters including several minors were released at dawn Sunday after being arrested around midnight for removing a banner hung outside the offices of the Free Patriotic Movement in the Upper Metn town of Hammana. The National News Agency said residents of the area were rallying outside the Hammana police station when the five were released. Protest movement activists had reacted angrily overnight on social media, after initial reports said minors were being held for “tearing up a picture of President Michel Aoun.” It later turned out that the reports were baseless. “Down with the regime that arrests children,” said one user. “When a 12-year-old child manages to shake the state’s throne, you know the state is corrupt,” another wrote. In a statement, the FPM warned that “such actions are unfamiliar and create undesired tensions in this region,” urging all sides and parties in the region to “preserve security and stability.”It also stressed its keenness on “coexistence in Mount Lebanon.”Security forces released the five detainees after midnight after taking a statement from them, the Committee of Lawyers for the Defense of Protesters said. The army said two of the children were 15 years old, while the third was 12. During the first month of demonstrations, security forces arrested 300 people including 12 minors who were released within the next 24 or 48 hours, according to the lawyers’ committee. But 11 people — including two minors — remain in detention accused of attacking a hotel in the southern city of Tyre in the first week of the uprising.

Five children arrested in Lebanon for tearing down Aoun poster: Reports
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Sunday, 24 November 2019
Five children were arrested in Lebanon on Saturday after tearing down a poster of President Michel Aoun in the Hammana municipality, several local news stations reported. All of the boys were under the age of 18. Several social media users took to Twitter to express their outrage, many pointing out that the government is “targeting children instead of corrupt politicians.” Many shared videos of the boys’ parents waiting outside of the police station, calling on Lebanese people to stage a sit-in in front of the station until the boys are released. Pictures reportedly showing three of the arrested boys also circulated on social media, with many expressing their frustration after a judge purportedly ordered for them to be kept at the station overnight. “Down with the regime that arrests children,” said one user. “When a 12-year-old child manages to shake the state’s throne, you know the state is corrupt,” another wrote. A surveillance video was also widely shared online, reportedly showing the children tearing down the poster. According to Al-Jadeed TV, after nine hours in detention, the children were released at 2:10 a.m. local time. A statement from the Lebanese army read that they wanted to “clarify that intelligence did not arrest the boys, but received them from the municipality after they were arrested by its police which was doing frequent patrols after a series of incidents witnessed in the area including unidentified persons burning the Ogero building, and an attempt to burn the Free Patriotic Movement’s center.”Nationwide protests in Lebanon have been ongoing for over a month, fueled by perceptions of corruption among the sectarian politicians who have governed Lebanon for decades and are blamed for leading the country into its worst economic crisis since the 1975-90 civil war.

Children detained for tearing down political banner as protests continue in Lebanon
The National/November 25/2019
Lebanese security forces briefly arrested five youths, including three minors, for allegedly pulling down a sign for the president’s political party, sparking outrage on social media on Sunday. Defence lawyers said the five were taken into custody on Saturday evening in the town of Hammana east of Beirut over claims they tore down a sign for President Michel Aoun’s Free Patriotic Movement. Security forces released them after midnight after taking a statement from them, the Committee of Lawyers for the Defence of Protesters said. The army said two of the children were 15 years old and the third was 12.
The news sparked indignation on social media, the latest outcry in a country that has been gripped by spontaneous anti-government protests since October 17. “Down with the regime that arrests children,” one user said. “When a 12-year-old child manages to shake the state’s throne, you know the state is corrupt,” another wrote. During the first month of demonstrations, security forces arrested 300 people including 12 minors who were released within 24 to 48 hours, according to the lawyers’ committee. But 11 people – including two youths – remain in detention accused of attacking a hotel in the southern city of Tyre during the first week of the uprising. Lebanese protesters denounce foreign interference outside US embassy in Beirut Hezbollah accuses US of meddling in Lebanon’s crisis Burj Khalifa and Adnoc headquarters light up with Lebanese flag for Independence Day The demonstrators managed to bring down the government less than two weeks into the protests, but it remains in a caretaker capacity and no new cabinet has since been formed.
Late on Sunday, protesters blocked major roads in several parts of the country and called for a general strike the following day in protest at the lack of progress in forming a fresh government. Earlier in the evening, hundreds had gathered in protest centres in Beirut, the northern city of Tripoli and in Tyre.
In Beirut’s Martyrs’ Square, hundreds of women and men demanded their rights, some waving the national red and white flag or chanting “Revolution, Revolution!” Supporters of the militant Hezbollah group attacked demonstrators protesting against Lebanon’s political elite in central Beirut.
The attacks by young men armed with clubs and metal rods chanting pro-Hezbollah slogans began late on Sunday and continued after midnight as riot police and soldiers tried to prevent them from reaching the protesters. Lebanon’s protests have brought together people of all ages from across the political spectrum, tired of what they describe as sectarian politics three decades after a civil war. In the latest show of unity, a festive mood had reigned on Sunday afternoon as Lebanese came together in public spaces across the country on the second day of the weekend. North of the capital women prepared traditional salads to share, while a group of men danced on a beach south of the city, state television footage showed. The Free Patriotic Movement party that Mr Aoun founded is now led by his son-in-law, outgoing foreign minister Gibran Bassil, one of the most reviled figures in the protests.

Hariri’s Press Office: Text messages sent from outside Lebanon
NNA/November 24/2019
Caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s Press Office issued a statement today, referring to “forged and suspicious” text messages that are being sent to citizens from outside Lebanon. The statement indicated that “unknown parties using telephone numbers from outside Lebanon are sending text messages to citizens inviting them to alleged meetings with Prime Minister Hariri at Center House, claiming that the invitations were issued by ministers, advisers or assistants to the PM.”The Press Office categorically denied the content of these messages, noting that they have been forwarded to the relevant authorities for necessary action.

Banks’ Association denounces campaign against its sector, urges politicians and media to exercise national responsibility

NNA/November 24/2019
In an issued statement this morning, the Association of Banks in Lebanon said that the banking sector is facing a systematic campaign aimed at undermining its reputation and the people’s confidence in one of the most important productive sectors in Lebanon. The Association’s board of directors said in its statement that it “deplores and condemns what has been said about Bank Audi, which adheres to all applicable laws in Lebanon and international standards, as well as the banking field laws, like all other banks in in the country.” The statement warned those behind this waged campaign to pay attention to the severe damage it may cause to the banking sector; thus, weakening one of the most important components of the Lebanese economy. The Association concluded its statement by appealing to all political forces and the media to exercise national responsibility in such exceptional and difficult circumstances, out of keen concern for preserving the interests of the country and its citizens.

Reports: Fakhoury in Poor Health, Lebanese Officials Encouraged Him to Return
Associated Press/Naharnet/November 24/2019
Lebanese-American citizen Amer Fakhoury, who has been held in Lebanon since mid-September on suspicion that he tortured prisoners at the Israeli-run Khiam prison, is in poor health and his condition is life-threatening, his family has said, citing doctors.
No charges have been filed against Fakhoury. His lawyer, Celine Atallah, said it remains unclear why he’s being held. Fakhoury, however, was once a member of the former Israeli-backed South Lebanon Army militia. He also worked as a senior warden at a former prison described by human rights groups as a center for torture.
His family insists he had no direct contact with prisoners and never abused anyone, but several former prisoners and their relatives have accused him of involvement in torture.
Fakhoury’s family and his lawyer accuse Lebanese authorities of torturing him.
His family said this week that his health has gotten much worse; doctors told them his condition is grave and life-threatening, including a bad infection, a bleeding disorder and other problems. A court session that was to be held this week has been postponed because of his illness.
A U.S. State Department spokesperson told the Associated Press that the U.S. embassy conducted its most recent consular visit with Fakhoury on Nov. 7. No details were provided.
“We take allegations of mistreatment seriously and whenever we receive credible reports of mistreatment we raise our concerns directly with the host government,” the spokesperson said.
In New Hampshire, Fakhoury ran a Middle Eastern/Mediterranean restaurant, where he struck up friendships with patrons and community members. Interested in Republican politics, he once met Donald Trump on a presidential campaign visit. He also hosted fundraisers for a GOP congressional candidate.
Fakhoury was one of many South Lebanon Army members who fled after Israel withdrew from Lebanon in 2000 following an 18-year occupation, fearing reprisals if they stayed in Lebanon. Others stayed and faced trial, receiving lenient sentences.
Fakhoury’s family says he came to the United States in 2001, where he started a restaurant with his wife and put his four daughters through the University of New Hampshire.
Fakhoury started looking into a visit to Lebanon after President Michel Aoun last year encouraged former SLA members to return home. His lawyer said that, like many others in the SLA, Fakhoury faced a charge in 1996 of collaborating with Israel, which was eventually “dropped.”
“He was actually granted assurances from the government, who reviewed his file and told him, ‘Your file is clear. Come back, you can come back to your country,'” the lawyer said.
He arrived in Beirut in mid-September, along with his wife and two of his daughters.
Security officials held onto his passport for a routine check and let him go. When he returned about a week later to retrieve it, al-Akhbar newspaper, which is close to Hizbullah, published a story accusing him of playing a role in the torture of inmates at the former Khiam prison. He was arrested a day after it appeared.
Scores of protesters outside a military court connected to Fakhoury’s case carried signs dubbing him the “butcher of Khiam”; some demanded he get the death penalty.
Fakhoury’s family and lawyer said he worked at the prison from 1989 to 1996. They said he handled paperwork, cleaned the prison and made sure inmates got their food. “There’s no legal basis for his arrest,” the lawyer said. “There’s no legal basis for his detention. … He’s an American citizen, an innocent American citizen who’s being illegally detained.
“Before the mass anti-government protests started, the Lebanese General Security Directorate said Fakhoury had possessed an Israeli passport. But the lawyer said U.S. records show he didn’t have one. Lebanon’s laws prevent its citizens from dealing with or making any contacts with Israel. Fakhoury’s family said they are working with U.S. Senator Jeanne Shaheen and the U.S. Embassy in Lebanon. They also wrote to the White House but haven’t received a response.Fakhoury’s wife visits him and the daughters received a brief phone call from him during which he asked about his granddaughter and began to cry.

Lebanon Anti-Graft Protesters March for Nature Too
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/November 24/2019
Surrounded by sweeping pines, lemon trees and bean stalks, hundreds of Lebanese protesters march along, chanting against a planned dam that would drown the valley under their feet. Unprecedented protests about corruption in Lebanon since October 17 have given new life to activism against the controversial structure planned for a lush valley south of Beirut.
Since the start of the year, the future construction site in the Bisri Valley has been cordoned off and several trees uprooted to make way for work to begin. But emboldened by the anti-graft protests, nature lovers have since November 9 ignored the gates and barged through them, hoping to save what remains of their country’s ravaged ecosystem.
Environmental activists in Lebanon say they have their work cut out.
They cite overflowing landfills, a polluted coast, quarries gnawing into mountains and state neglect compounding forest fires that hit the country last month before the mass protests began. Standing on a shack roof near the Bisri Valley, environmental activist Bassam Zeineddine encourages hundreds of fellow hikers who have come to show their support for the dam protest.
“The trees are the only thing left that they haven’t taken,” he shouts, referring to the country’s embattled officials.”They’ve left us nothing else — not water, nor air,” rails the member of the “Save the Bisri Valley” movement in a country where the coastline, rivers and air are all polluted.
Protesters clap and cheer, before setting off to march around 20 kilometers (12 miles), walking stick in one hand and billowing Lebanese flag in the other.
Along earthen paths they head towards the heart of the valley, singing the national anthem before swiftly reverting to chants from recent anti-graft protests.”We pay taxes, but their pockets are full!” they intone.
Chronic water shortages
The government says the Bisri dam is vital to tackling chronic water shortages. But activists say it will ravage most of the region’s farmland and historic sites, and they also fear the consequences of building it on a seismic fault line. Deep in the valley during their hike, the protesters find a cement-making machine. Yellow diggers also sit idle, after several trucks left the site earlier following recent sit-ins, in what the activists say was a small victory.
Nearby, walkers snap images of uprooted tree stumps.
Roland Nassour, 27, says an ongoing survey of the valley has found several oaks and pines ripped from the soil, but that so far most of the valley’s canopy has thankfully been spared.
“The environment is a key part of the revolution,” says Nassour, who is also part of the movement to protect the Bisri Valley. On Monday, he was one of nine activists called in for questioning by police after the construction company complained that gates had been broken and signs ripped down.
“We’re proud of what we did,” says Nassour. Construction of the Bisri dam is expected to cost $617 million (560 million euros), with most covered by a World Bank loan. The authorities and the World Bank have said the dam will meet the needs of 1.6 million residents suffering from water shortages in greater Beirut. They insist the structure will be safe and that measures will be taken to lessen seismic risks. The World Bank says the dam will have no impact on Lebanon’s overall biodiversity, promising to offset any loss in Bisri with reforestation and “enhanced management” of the Chouf, a separate region nearby. They have also pledged to dismantle a small church and rebuild it somewhere else — a proposal rejected by activists.
‘A champion polluter’ –
On the banks of a meandering river, the hikers catch their breath near some lemon trees and toppled granite columns thought to be from the Roman era.
To the tune of famed Italian resistance song “Bella Ciao”, they sing in the open to save the valley, accompanied by maracas and a harmonica.
“We want nature, we don’t want to sell it. We want flowers, we want plains, we want forests and fields,” they chant. “We don’t want a dam in Bisri. We want a nature reserve.” Clutching his walking stick, avid hiker Lucien says he has come to stress the need to “preserve a green Lebanon.””We need more nature reserves,” says the 30-year-old who works in advertising. Mervat, a 59-year-old activist, said mismanagement of the forest fires in October provided a spark for the revolution. “Lebanon is a champion when it comes to pollution,” said the former laboratory supervisor from the southern city of Sidon. “We want solutions, but the officials are not providing any.”

Titles For The Latest Lebanese LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 24-25/2019
Burning the USA flag in Tyr By Hezbollah is condemned/Elias Bejjani/November 23/2019
Lebanon Is Totally Occupied by Iran …Help Liberate The Land Of The Holy Cedars/Elias Bejjani/November 22/2019
American officials advocate US support to Lebanese military following aid freeze/Emily Judd/Al Arabiya English/November 24/2019
Lebanon’s revolution on its 39th day: An ongoing momentum/Tala Ramadan/Annahar/November 24/2019
After the Lebanon Protests: Between the Party of God and Party of the People/Maha Yahya/November 24/2019
Lebanon’s amnesty law is the government’s last bid to save itself/Makram Rabah/Al Arabiya/November 24/2019
Not afraid of change,’ Lebanese youth denounce sectarianism, corruption/Samar Kadi/The Arab Weekly/November 25/2019

The Latest Lebanese LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 24-25/2019
Burning the USA flag in Tyr By Hezbollah is condemned
Elias Bejjani/November 23/2019
Hezbollah has nothing to do with Lebanon or the Lebanese people.
This criminal and terrorist armed organization is Iranian 100% and savagely occupies Lebanon since 2005, while taking the Lebanese peace loving Shiite community a hostage by force and through terrorism and brutality.
The Lebanese people look at the USA as a great friendly country and appreciates very much its on going support for Lebanon’s freedom, democracy, sovereignty and independence.
Meanwhile Hezbollah is a terrorist Iranian militia and does nor speak on behalf of the Lebanese or represent them in any way.
In this context, burning the USA flag in Tyr is condemned by each and every sovereign and patriotic Lebanese in both occupied Lebanon and Diaspora.

Lebanon Is Totally Occupied by Iran …Help Liberate The Land Of The Holy Cedars
Elias Bejjani/November 22/2019
لبنان وطن الحرف والرسالة والأرز المقدس تحتله إيران وميليشياتها وهو يحتاج لمساعدة العالم الحر ليستعيد استقلاله

Lebanon, the land of the Holy Cedars and 7000 years deeply rooted glory, holiness and history is sadly an occupied, impoverished, and oppressed country.
The stone age savage occupier is the terrorist Iranian armed Hezbollah militia.
This terrorist armed militia controls totally Lebanon’s decision making process on all levels and in all domains including the peace and war one.
Meanwhile the majority of the Lebanese officials, as well as the politicians are mere mercenaries appointed by Hezbollah and like puppets carry its wishes and orders.
The USA and other democratic countries can help Lebanon and the Lebanese people in reclaiming back their confiscated independence and stolen country through a strong, loud and official stance in practically and not only rhetorically supporting the immediate implementation of the three UN resolutions that addresses Lebanon’s crisis: the armistice agreement, 1559 and 1701.
The Lebanese people after years (since 1975) of Syrian, Palestinian, and current Iranian occupations and oppression are unable on their own to liberate their country without a real and clear practical support from the UN and all the democratic countries.. Help liberate Lebanon.
In this realm I quote Dr. Walid Phares’s response to ambassador Jeffrey Feltman’s recent testimony before the House Subcommittee on the Middle East, North Africa, and International Terrorism on “What’s Next for Lebanon? Examining the Implications of Current Protests.
Ambassador Feltman told Congress said:
“Over the long term, U.S. interests in Lebanon would be best protected by what the Lebanese people indicate that they want: a prosperous, democratic, independent, fully sovereign, peaceful Lebanon, reliant (including for security) on effective, transparent government institutions subject to public accountability. With the right government in place and with renewed international support, this should not be impossible to achieve.”
Dr. Walid Phares’s response:
Yes Mr. Ambassador that’s what a majority of Lebanese want. But between now and then, there is a blocking force that will oppose moving Lebanon in that direction. It is a force feared by many and countering it has no strategies, in official policies. A force that is obstructing prosperity, reform, sovereignty, and protective of corruption. And on top of it there are no plans to deal with it. One can ignore it and pretend that it is not there, that eventually it will just go away. But that is not reality…
From our Diaspora, we hail and command the courageous and patriotic Lebanese citizens who bravely for the last 37 days are involved in the current ongoing demonstrations and sit-ins in occupied Lebanon.
May Almighty God bless, safeguard Lebanon and grant its oppressed people the power and will to free their country and reclaim it back from Hezbollah, the Iranian terrorist Occupier.
Click here to read ambassador Jeffrey Feltman’s testimony text before the House Subcommittee on the Middle East, North Africa, and International Terrorism on “What’s Next for Lebanon? Examining the Implications of Current Protests.
In regards to the Iranian occupied Lebanon the help that the country and its oppressed people need from the USA, Europe and all other free countries is the immediate implementation of the UN three resolutions: the armistice agreement, 1559 and 1701. The USA sanctions on the Mullahs’ regime for almost 40 years did not actually make any difference except in hurting more the Iranian people. Sanctions on Hezbollah while it occupies Lebanon and controls fully its rulers is not going to change the current status quo..although sanctions on Lebanese politicians who are Hezbollah puppets can help in deterring them

Lebanon’s revolution on its 39th day: An ongoing momentum
Tala Ramadan/Annahar/November 24/2019
BEIRUT: During early morning hours, protestors gathered around the US embassy in Beirut to chant against the intervention of foreign countries in Lebanon’s nationwide demonstrations. This came as a reaction for recent comments by former US Ambassador to Lebanon, Jeffrey Feltman in which he said that “the demonstrations and the reactions to them by Lebanese leaders and institutions, fortunately, coincide with U.S. interests.” Although some skirmishes took place, the protests have remained mostly non-violent. Meanwhile, a number of activists, schoolchildren, and university students, in cooperation with the municipal workshops, cleaned Al-Nour Square in Tripoli. Demonstrations were also happening in the city. Students were marching through the main streets and all the inner neighborhoods and were shouting slogans condemning the difficult living and economic conditions and demanding the formation of a government as soon as possible to respond to the demands of the popular movement. After the revival of the “fist of revolution”, which was lifted in Martyrs’ Square, a number of young men made a phoenix from the tents of the previously broken tents, and a number of demonstrators gathered in Martyrs Square and Riad El Solh, amid the insistence of the participants to complete their revolution, while dozens of demonstrators gathered at sea points to affirm the right of the Lebanese to benefit from the beach and refuse to exploit the maritime property in illegal ways. Potluck picnics also took place on the coast of Corniche Ain El Mreisseh, Raouche, Saida, Marj Bisri and Sour where participants gathered around food and revolutionary talks since 11 AM to revive the picnic folklore, a step accentuating Lebanon’s unity. Protesters in Nabatieh also held a demonstration in which they were divided among groups of different professions. The demonstrations that began on October 17 against proposed taxes on WhatsApp calls turned into a condemnation of the country’s political elite, who have run the country since the 1975-90 civil war.

After the Lebanon Protests: Between the Party of God and Party of the People
Maha Yahya/November 24/2019
Summary: Lebanon’s protesters succeeded in one of their demands: the resignation of the country’s embattled Prime Minister. After the seismic protests, what is the best way forward?
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On October 28, Lebanon’s Prime Minister Saad Hariri resigned from office following two weeks of nationwide protests. While the spark was a proposed tax on the use of internet telephone calls, the protests quickly turned into a more general condemnation of the country’s political leadership, its escalating economic crisis and its sectarian power sharing system.
A COUNTRY IN CRISIS
Lebanon’s economic crisis has reached a breaking point. Public debt is estimated at 150 percent of GDP, economic growth is negative, the dollar peg for the Lebanese pound is wavering on the black market, and there are signs of inflation as the prices of some basic goods have increased between 15 and 30 percent.
Meanwhile, perceptions of corruption are at an all-time high. Lebanon is ranked by Transparency International as the 138th most corrupt state globally. While the tipping point leading to the protests was economic dissatisfaction, there is an abysmal trust gap between Lebanese political parties and the citizens they represent. Protesters believe the country’s political and economic mismanagement by a sectarian political class has only benefitted the elite. Living standards have declined for citizens from all sects, along with their future prospects.
Protesters also denounced the sectarian power sharing system that prevails in the country. This system distributes government positions among the country’s different sects and ethnic groups in order to guarantee the representation of diverse communities in government and mitigate the prospect of communal conflict. However, the system has enabled sectarian political elites, mainly warlords turned politicians, to hijack communal representation and create patronage networks at the state’s expense.
WHY THESE PROTESTS WERE DIFFERENT
Maha Yahya
Yahya is director of the Carnegie Middle East Center, where her research focuses on citizenship, pluralism, and social justice in the aftermath of the Arab uprisings.
What was distinctive about the protests is that for the first time protesters across the board were criticizing the leaders of their own sect. For the political elite, the breadth of discontent was startling. No political leader or party was spared.
Most surprising, perhaps, was the dissent that emerged from within the Shiite community, who rarely publicly criticize the leaders of the two key political parties, Hezbollah and Amal.
HEZBOLLAH’S REACTION
Hezbollah’s response to the protests was expressed in two speeches by its secretary general, Hassan Nasrallah. He initially voiced understanding for the protesters’ frustrations, but he rejected demands that the government and president resign and that early elections be held on the basis of a new law. He went on to depict the nationwide protests and public anger with the status quo and deteriorating economic conditions as part of a conspiracy to undermine Hezbollah and its legitimacy. As such, he chose to perpetuate the status quo and a political order that has protected Hezbollah, a reaction that pro-Iran parties have also demonstrated in Iraq, where over the past few weeks, hundreds of demonstrators have been killed.
Meanwhile, Hezbollah’s regional patron, Iran’s supreme leader Sayed Ali Khameni, is portraying the demonstrations in Lebanon and Iraq as an external plot against their respective countries.
THE POLITICAL FALLOUT
Hariri’s resignation—under pressure following the street protests, and because of his partners’ unwillingness to find a political solution to the crisis—has allowed him to recover some of his political capital.
However, the cost to Hezbollah and their key partner, Lebanon’s president Michel Aoun and his son-in-law, foreign minister Gebran Bassil, was significant. For Aoun, the government’s resignation posed a significant blow to his legacy as did the palpable antipathy on the streets to Gebran Bassil. For Hezbollah, it weakened their key Christian partner in Lebanon.
Becoming a champion of the status quo also tarnished Hezbollah’s preferred image as a defender of the poor and downtrodden. While the party holds power in government, it has managed to dodge any accountability for the sorry state of affairs in the country. Yet, its status as a defender of the rights of the Shiite community within Lebanon has been eroded. Like other Lebanese, they believe this sorry state of affairs to be the result of patronage politics and clientelistic networks facilitated by Lebanon’s governance system that includes Hezbollah.
For Hezbollah, addressing internal dissent is a difficult road to maneuver. It is a military and religious party that is paternalistic and strictly hierarchical in nature. The party has had to reduce salaries and curtail social service provision as a result of dwindling finances. Faced with widespread protests, its initial reaction was to deploy force and intimidation tactics.
The question now is how far Hezbollah is willing to go to prevent dissent. So far, the party has restricted itself to dispatching thugs to break up protests in Beirut and southern Lebanon. Along with the other major Shiite political party, the Amal movement, it has also prohibited protests or signs of dissent in the villages and towns of southern Lebanon. As one of the young protesters in the area told me, “What is wrong with letting people voice their opinion? You say you are hungry, and they respond you are a foreign agent.”
MOVING FORWARD
President Aoun and Hezbollah are faced with a dilemma. Granting concessions to protesters risks creating a perception that they are weak. Yet resorting to more force will only accelerate Lebanon’s economic collapse and its social repercussions.
Given the economic situation, the Lebanese political class needs to move quickly to name a new prime minister who is acceptable both to them and to the protesters. The country cannot afford the time-consuming horse trading that usually occurs when governments are formed. If there is an economic collapse and the Lebanese pound loses value, Lebanese citizens could see their incomes, pensions, and savings disappear, and half the population could fall into poverty. The fallout in terms of public anger could pale in comparison to what we’ve seen thus far.
THREE OPTIONS
In this context, Hezbollah and its allies are likely to negotiate with Lebanon’s other political parties one of three choices. One option is to ask Hariri to form a new government, where the ministers would be apolitical technocrats or a mix of political and independent appointees named by the various political parties. This option is unlikely at this point, since they already rejected a change of cabinet under Hariri at the height of the protests.
A second more likely option is to endorse a national salvation government headed by an independent Sunni, one acceptable to Hariri. This cabinet would also be composed of independent candidates not mired in corruption, or a mix of experts and political appointees. The mandate of such a government would be an economic reform plan, but it would not necessarily organize early elections, as demanded by the protestors. Consensus among the political class for such a cabinet is necessary. State institutions are greatly influenced by the different political parties, as they have the capacity to hinder or support the work of ministers. Political parties may be forced to reach such a consensus, once they realize that the country could descend into chaos should they fail to take action.
A third, least favorable option at this point, is that Hezbollah adopts a rejectionist position, in coordination with the Amal Movement and Aoun’s Free Patriotic Movement. This would place the country in even more jeopardy as it could include forming a cabinet without Hariri’s bloc, something that would be badly received by his supporters and by an international community that is likely to interpret such a move as a Hezbollah takeover of the country. It could also include a stronger show of force against unarmed protesters, which would only destabilize the country, and possibly slide Lebanon into a civil conflict. This is unlikely at the moment, as Hezbollah is keen to maintain stability in its own back yard, given regional challenges.
A NATIONAL AWAKENING
History in Lebanon is being made. The country and its people are standing at one of the most significant historic junctures in its one-hundred-year history. A sense of national awakening is driving the demand to move from identity-based politics to a government focused on the rights and responsibilities of citizenship. This reflects a fundamental societal change, which will impact Lebanon’s future. Its political leadership and Lebanese citizens on the street can either steer the country onto a brighter and more sustainable path—or end up trapped once more in a bitter civil conflict.
*Maha Yahya: Is director of the Carnegie Middle East Center, where her research focuses on citizenship, pluralism, and social justice in the aftermath of the Arab uprisings.

Lebanon’s amnesty law is the government’s last bid to save itself
Makram Rabah/Al Arabiya/November 24/2019
There is a current standoff between the Lebanese people and the ruling establishment, who for two consecutive weeks has been trying to force a parliamentary session to pass an amnesty law, which would absolve the ruling elite from a number of crimes, including tax evasion.
This standoff comes as part of a nationwide uprising, which has seen millions of people take to the streets, demanding a change to the archaic and corrupt governance structure that their country is infamous for.
This amnesty law is no mere legislation but rather part of an elaborate scheme by the ruling elite to create schism and chaos in the midst of the protesters by placing them at odds with each other while at the same time providing the different political factions with legal leverage going forward.
The political elite envisioned that any opposition to this amnesty law would mobilize the families of thousands of convicts awaiting amnesty, and thus turn the national uprising into a sectarian brawl.
The proposed bill, submitted by two members of speaker Nabih Berri’s bloc, did not follow proper procedure and never went through subcommittees for proper revision and approval.
Perhaps more importantly, the parliament session and any other legislative sessions at this moment in time are unconstitutional simply because article 32 of the Lebanese constitution clearly states that the parliament in its current session “shall be reserved to the discussion of, and voting on the budget before any other work. This session lasts until the end of the year.”
Therefore, the parliament cannot technically meet unless it passes the much-anticipated budget or in case of “legislative necessity” which the current amnesty bill is no justification for.
The most sinister part of the bill is that it places Lebanese factions in fierce opposition, as the draft law is designed to cater to thousands of outlaws, some predominately Shiites from the eastern part of the country who are in jail or on the run for crimes connected to narcotics.
It also caters to a segment of Sunni Muslims who are branded locally as “Islamists”, some of them accused of fighting the Lebanese army in the past few years. By proposing this amnesty bill, both Hezbollah as well as Hariri can muster up much of this popular support which they have lost during the uprising against their excessive corruption and lack of vision.
Contrary to what it repeatedly claims, Hezbollah is in bad shape not only because of the US sanctions on its patron, but because its arsenal of weapons does not contain any economic tools to address the current challenges. It believes that this protest against corruption and bad governance can be suppressed by force, just like the uprising in Syria or the protests in Iraq and Iran. The majority of the people on the street might not be chanting against Iran and its Lebanese subsidiary, but they know full well that one of the main reasons why the Lebanese temple of corruption remains standing is the fact that Hezbollah’s weapons will it.
On the two separate occasions that speaker Berri tried to convene parliament, the Lebanese people flocked to the parliament house and laid siege to the area and preve
Berri’s brutish and condescending attitude is reflective of the mindset of the entire political class, which ostensibly acknowledges the demands of the street, yet refuses to take any step in the right direction to remedy or address any of the political and economic reform challenges.
The ruling elite claims that the parliament session which also had other items on the agenda was geared towards the adoption of judicial reform to fight corruption and empower various governmental entities crucial for establishing the rule of law. These claims however are fallacious and, just like the economic reform plan set forth by the current caretaker cabinet of Saad Hariri, masks a sense of immortality and a belief that they can still outsmart the public and pass on more corruption and usurpation of power as reform.
The people on the streets know quite well what needs to be done to change the current predicament, and their roadmap does not include parliamentary sessions nor false promises from the decrepid political class. The road to salvation passes through the gradual relinquishing of power to a capable and righteous emergency cabinet that would respect the Lebanese constitution and empower the judiciary and respect the separation of powers. Perhaps then, amnesty will give way for rule of law and justice for all.

Not afraid of change,’ Lebanese youth denounce sectarianism, corruption
Samar Kadi/The Arab Weekly/November 25/2019
BEIRUT – They have powered anti-government protests in Lebanon for more than a month, forced the resignation of Prime Minister Saad Hariri, blocked parliament and introduced innovative means for peaceful demonstrations. The Lebanese millennial generation is the heart of the persisting revolution.
Lebanon’s parliament was blocked from its first session for two months on November 19 after protesters prevented lawmakers from reaching the building. Authorities announced the session had been postponed indefinitely.
“How are they having a session and not responding to the people? Those who are in the session have nothing to do with us and it’s not what we asked for,” said Maria, a young protester.
Young Lebanese, born after the civil war (1975-90) and commonly known as millennials, are on the front line of protests demanding an overhaul of Lebanon’s sectarian-based political establishment and economic reform. They accuse the ruling class of being corrupt, inefficient and the cause of Lebanon’s worst economic and financial crisis.
“The millennials who constitute the majority of Lebanese are not shaping the revolution… they are the revolution that had started in their hearts and minds way before October 17,” said Pierre Issa, secretary-general of the National Bloc party, one of the few non-sectarian parties in Lebanon.
“When the protests began, the millennials were taken lightly and seen as ridicule or utopian for seeking change. However, they passed quickly from the ridicule stage to being seen as dangerous because they started to shake the political establishment that has been entrenched for decades. Soon they will become evident,” Issa said.
“The millennials want citizenship not sectarianism; a state of law not clientelism; honesty and transparency not corruption; sovereignty instead of affiliation with foreign powers; and democracy instead of the cult of the leader and political inheritance.”
“Our generation opted for conformity (with the existing system) but the millennials are not afraid of change. They are the ones who are leading the revolt,” said Issa, 60.
“The youth are telling the politicians that the system they are clinging to is dead. The ruling class is alien to them; it does not resemble them nor represent them.”
Described as “confident, self-expressive, liberal, upbeat and open to change,” millennials have a strong leaning towards civic responsibility and a more optimistic outlook than their forebears.
They are also the most “connected” generation of all time and the most educated.
“The new generation has transcended sectarian and political alignments. They did not experience the civil war but they inherited the warlords. They don’t understand why they have to be framed by their religion. They are aware of their rights and know that only a state of law can guarantee those rights,” said Mona Fayyad, founder of the Democratic Renewal organisation. “They are leading the revolution. We are learning from our children. This generation has no zaim (sectarian leader).”
She cited one student criticising older generations, saying: “What have you been doing for the past 30 years? Why did you accept to coexist with corruption and graft? Why did you accept to live without electricity, without water and without basic rights?”
Lebanon’s demonstrations revealed a diversity never seen before, uniting citizens from all sects, regions and religious beliefs but also age groups, including children.
Youth have been largely innovative in enhancing what takes place in the streets and squares. They write revolutionary songs and create short movies and satirical caricatures of the political elite. They then share them through Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram and other social media platforms.
“Unlike previous generations, the millennials have a very powerful tool in their hand that is the easy access to information,” Issa said. “Older generations tended to be recipients of information and news. The millennial generation no longer just receives information and ideas but interacts with them. In fact, they have become creators of information and ideas.”
“Every time one shares a call or a statement on social media it goes viral and the streets are packed. One blogger, for example, has 500,000 followers.”
The protesters want an independent cabinet of technocrats whom they can trust to pull Lebanon out of its economic and financial crisis and stamp out corruption.
“We have to listen to them. They are so creative in their slogans, music, drawings, decisions and actions,” Issa said.
Citing Lebanese poet Khalil Gibran, Issa added: “Our children are not ours; they are the children of life. We should not try to force them to follow us. They are the future, we are the past, they are dynamic and we are static… The day we understand this, society will develop and evolve.” 

The post A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For November 24-25/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 39th Day appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

وكُلُّ عَبْدٍ وحُرّ، ٱخْتَبَأُوا في ٱلمَغَاوِرِ وصُخُورِ ٱلجبَال، وهُم يَقُولُون لِلجِبَالِ وٱلصُّخُور: «أُسْقُطِي عَلَيْنا وَخَبِّئِينا مِنْ وَجْهِ ٱلجَالِسِ عَلَى ٱلعَرْش، وَمِنْ غَضَبِ ٱلحَمَل!»؛ لأَنَّ يَومَ غَضَبِهِ ٱلعَظِيمَ قد أَتَى، فَمَنْ يَسْتَطِيعُ ٱلوُقُوف؟/Everyone, slave and free, hid in the caves and among the rocks of the mountains, calling to the mountains and rocks, ‘Fall on us and hide us from the face of the one seated on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb; for the great day of their wrath has come, and who is able to stand?

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وكُلُّ عَبْدٍ وحُرّ، ٱخْتَبَأُوا في ٱلمَغَاوِرِ وصُخُورِ ٱلجبَال، وهُم يَقُولُون لِلجِبَالِ وٱلصُّخُور: «أُسْقُطِي عَلَيْنا وَخَبِّئِينا مِنْ وَجْهِ ٱلجَالِسِ عَلَى ٱلعَرْش، وَمِنْ غَضَبِ ٱلحَمَل!»؛ لأَنَّ يَومَ غَضَبِهِ ٱلعَظِيمَ قد أَتَى، فَمَنْ يَسْتَطِيعُ ٱلوُقُوف”؟
رؤيا القدّيس يوحنّا06/من09حتى17/:”يا إِخوَتِي، لَمَّا فَتَحَ ٱلختْمَ ٱلخَامِس، رَأَيْتُ تَحْتَ ٱلمَذبَحِ نُفُوسَ ٱلْمَذبُوحِينَ مِنْ أَجْلِ كَلِمَةِ ٱللهِ وَمِنْ أَجْلِ ٱلشَّهادَةِ ٱلَّتي شَهِدُوهَا.وَصَاحُوا بِصَوْتٍ عَظِيمٍ قائِلِين: «حَتَّى مَتَى، أَيُّهَا ٱلسَّيِّدُ ٱلقُدُّوسُ ٱلحقّ، لا تَدِينُ سُكَّانَ ٱلأَرْض، وَتَنْتَقِمُ مِنْهُم لِدَمِنَا؟». فَأُعطِيَ لَهُم، لِكُلِّ وَاحِدٍ مِنْهُم، حُلَّةٌ بَيْضَاء، وَقِيلَ لَهُم أَنْ يَسْتَرِيحُوا بَعْدُ وَقْتًا قَلِيلاً، إِلى أَنْ يَكْتَمِلَ عَدَدُ رِفَاقِهِمْ في ٱلخِدْمَة، وَإِخْوَتِهِمِ ٱلَّذِينَ سَيُقْتَلُونَ هُمْ أَيْضًا مِثْلَهُم. وَرَأَيْتُ، لَمَّا فَتَحَ ٱلخَتْمَ ٱلسَّادِس، فإِذَا زَلْزَالٌ عَظِيمٌ قَدْ حَدَثَ، وَصَارَتِ ٱلشَّمْسُ سَوْدَاءَ كَمِسْحٍ مِنْ شَعْر، وَصَارَ ٱلقَمَرُ كُلُّهُ مِثْلَ ٱلدَّم، وَسَقَطَتْ كَوَاكِبُ ٱلسَّمَاءِ على ٱلأَرْض، كَمَا تُسْقِطُ ٱلتِّينَةُ ثِمَارَهَا ٱلفَجَّة، حِينَ تَهُزُّهَا رِيحٌ عاصِفَة، وَٱنْطَوَتِ ٱلسَّمَاءُ كَمَا يُطْوَى ٱلكِتَاب، وزُحْزِحَ كُلُّ جَبَلٍ وَجَزِيرَةٍ من مَوَاضِعِها، وَمُلُوكُ ٱلأَرْضِ وٱلعُظَمَاءُ وٱلقُوَّادُ وٱلأَغْنِيَاءُ وٱلأَقْوِيَاء، وكُلُّ عَبْدٍ وحُرّ، ٱخْتَبَأُوا في ٱلمَغَاوِرِ وصُخُورِ ٱلجبَال، وهُم يَقُولُون لِلجِبَالِ وٱلصُّخُور: «أُسْقُطِي عَلَيْنا وَخَبِّئِينا مِنْ وَجْهِ ٱلجَالِسِ عَلَى ٱلعَرْش، وَمِنْ غَضَبِ ٱلحَمَل!»؛ لأَنَّ يَومَ غَضَبِهِ ٱلعَظِيمَ قد أَتَى، فَمَنْ يَسْتَطِيعُ ٱلوُقُوف”؟

Everyone, slave and free, hid in the caves and among the rocks of the mountains, calling to the mountains and rocks, ‘Fall on us and hide us from the face of the one seated on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb; for the great day of their wrath has come, and who is able to stand?’”
Book of Revelation 06/09-17/:”When he opened the fifth seal, I saw under the altar the souls of those who had been slaughtered for the word of God and for the testimony they had given; they cried out with a loud voice, ‘Sovereign Lord, holy and true, how long will it be before you judge and avenge our blood on the inhabitants of the earth?’They were each given a white robe and told to rest a little longer, until the number would be complete both of their fellow-servants and of their brothers and sisters, who were soon to be killed as they themselves had been killed. When he opened the sixth seal, I looked, and there came a great earthquake; the sun became black as sackcloth, the full moon became like blood, and the stars of the sky fell to the earth as the fig tree drops its winter fruit when shaken by a gale. The sky vanished like a scroll rolling itself up, and every mountain and island was removed from its place. Then the kings of the earth and the magnates and the generals and the rich and the powerful, and everyone, slave and free, hid in the caves and among the rocks of the mountains, calling to the mountains and rocks, ‘Fall on us and hide us from the face of the one seated on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb; for the great day of their wrath has come, and who is able to stand?

إنَّ الرُّوحَ النَّجِس، إِذَا خَرَجَ مِنَ الإِنْسَان، يَطُوفُ في أَمَاكِنَ لا مَاءَ فيهَا، يَطْلُبُ الرَّاحَةَ فلا يَجِدُهَا
إنجيل القدّيس متّى12/من43حتى45/:”قالَ الربُّ يَسوع: «إِنَّ الرُّوحَ النَّجِس، إِذَا خَرَجَ مِنَ الإِنْسَان، يَطُوفُ في أَمَاكِنَ لا مَاءَ فيهَا، يَطْلُبُ الرَّاحَةَ فلا يَجِدُهَا. حينَئِذٍ يَقُول: سَأَعُودُ إِلى بَيْتِي الَّذي خَرَجْتُ مِنْهُ. ويَعُودُ فَيَجِدُهُ خَالِيًا، مَكْنُوسًا، مُزَيَّنًا. حينَئِذٍ يَذْهَبُ ويَجْلُبُ مَعَهُ سَبْعَةَ أَرْوَاحٍ آخَرِينَ أَكْثَرَ مِنْهُ شَرًّا، ويَدْخُلُونَ ويَسْكُنُونَ في ذلِكَ الإِنْسَان، فَتَكُونُ حَالَتُهُ الأَخِيْرَةُ أَسْوَأَ مِنْ حَالَتِهِ الأُولى. هكَذَا سَيَكُونُ أَيْضًا لِهذَا الجِيلِ الشِّرِّير!».

When the unclean spirit has gone out of a person, it wanders through waterless regions looking for a resting-place,but it finds none.
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 12/43-45/:”‘When the unclean spirit has gone out of a person, it wanders through waterless regions looking for a resting-place, but it finds none. Then it says, “I will return to my house from which I came.” When it comes, it finds it empty, swept, and put in order. Then it goes and brings along seven other spirits more evil than itself, and they enter and live there; and the last state of that person is worse than the first. So will it be also with this evil generation.’”

The post وكُلُّ عَبْدٍ وحُرّ، ٱخْتَبَأُوا في ٱلمَغَاوِرِ وصُخُورِ ٱلجبَال، وهُم يَقُولُون لِلجِبَالِ وٱلصُّخُور: «أُسْقُطِي عَلَيْنا وَخَبِّئِينا مِنْ وَجْهِ ٱلجَالِسِ عَلَى ٱلعَرْش، وَمِنْ غَضَبِ ٱلحَمَل!»؛ لأَنَّ يَومَ غَضَبِهِ ٱلعَظِيمَ قد أَتَى، فَمَنْ يَسْتَطِيعُ ٱلوُقُوف؟/Everyone, slave and free, hid in the caves and among the rocks of the mountains, calling to the mountains and rocks, ‘Fall on us and hide us from the face of the one seated on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb; for the great day of their wrath has come, and who is able to stand? appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

بيان صادر عن الأمانة العامة للمجلس العالمي لثورة الأرز: على قيادة الجيش أن تقوم بوضع خطة عملانية لحماية المتظاهرين والمجتمع المدني

Previous: وكُلُّ عَبْدٍ وحُرّ، ٱخْتَبَأُوا في ٱلمَغَاوِرِ وصُخُورِ ٱلجبَال، وهُم يَقُولُون لِلجِبَالِ وٱلصُّخُور: «أُسْقُطِي عَلَيْنا وَخَبِّئِينا مِنْ وَجْهِ ٱلجَالِسِ عَلَى ٱلعَرْش، وَمِنْ غَضَبِ ٱلحَمَل!»؛ لأَنَّ يَومَ غَضَبِهِ ٱلعَظِيمَ قد أَتَى، فَمَنْ يَسْتَطِيعُ ٱلوُقُوف؟/Everyone, slave and free, hid in the caves and among the rocks of the mountains, calling to the mountains and rocks, ‘Fall on us and hide us from the face of the one seated on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb; for the great day of their wrath has come, and who is able to stand?
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بيان صادر عن الأمانة العامة للمجلس العالمي لثورة الأرز: على قيادة الجيش أن تقوم بوضع خطة عملانية لحماية المتظاهرين والمجتمع المدني.

المجلس العالمي لثورة الأرز
25 تشرين الثاني/2019

بعد أكثر من شهر على ثورة اللبنانيين من أجل حكم يمثل تطلعات الشعب وينهي حالة الفساد والتبعية التي أوصلت البلاد إلى الانهيار الاقتصادي لا بل الآفلاس يقوم عناصر مأجورة تابعة لحزب الله وأمل بمهاجمة المتظاهرين المرة تلو الأخرة في محاولة منهم لكم الأفواه. ولكن هذه المرة كان الهجوم أكثر عنفا وعددا ما يظهر وكأنه تنفيذا لتعليمات خارجية جديدة وصارمة تشبه ما يحدث في شوارع إيران من قبل الحرس الثوري والعراق من قبل الحشد الشعبي.

إن المجلس العالمي لثورة الأرز وهو يراقب ما يجري على أرض الوطن يطلب من الجيش اللبناني القيام بحماية المتظاهرين سلميا ومنع أي تحرش بهم من أية جهة أتى، ولذا فعلى قيادة الجيش أن تقوم بوضع خطة عملانية لحماية ساحات التظاهر ومنع القوى المأجورة من التعرض للجماهير المعبرة عن رأي غالبية المواطنين، وبنفس الوقت نطالب الأمم المتحدة أن ترعى تنفيذ مثل هذه الخطة من قبل الجيش اللبناني وتأمين حاجاته اللوجستية إذا دعت

الحاجة
إن لبنان يمر بظروف صعبة ولكنها ضرورية من أجل النهوض من الوضع المأساوي الذي وصل إليه من هنا على الجميع في الوطن وبلاد الانتشار التكاتف من أجل مستقبل أفضل في بلد جدير بالحياة.

*The World Council of the Cedars Revolution
 1200-G Street NW, Suite 800 Washington DC, USA 20005 (202) 506 9540 www.cedarsrevolution.net cedarsrevolution@gmail.com Representing the hopes and aspirations of many millions of Lebanese in Lebanon and throughout the Diaspora

The post بيان صادر عن الأمانة العامة للمجلس العالمي لثورة الأرز: على قيادة الجيش أن تقوم بوضع خطة عملانية لحماية المتظاهرين والمجتمع المدني appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

 المحامي عبد الحميد الأحدب/التأخر عن اجراء الاستشارات يشكل مخالفة واضحة للدستور

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التأخر عن اجراء الاستشارات يشكل مخالفة واضحة للدستور
 المحامي عبد الحميد الأحدب/25 تشرين الثاني/2019

وضع الدستور على عاتق رئيس الجمهورية موجب اجراء استشارات نيابية ملزمة، وذلك في “المادة (2) 53” منه، ولكنه لم يحدد له مهلة لمباشرة هذه الاستشارات. من المسلم به انه إذا القى الدستور موجباً على عاتق رئيس الجمهورية ولم يحدد له مهلة لتنفيذه فإن الموجب يبقى قائماً ضمن “المهلة المعقولة” بمفهومها الدستوري. إلاّ إذا كانت هناك قوة قاهرة تحول او تعيق تنفيذ الموجب الذي ألقاه الدستور على عاتق رئيس الجمهورية، أي مباشرة الاستشارات النيابية الملزمة.

بحسب رئيس مؤسسة “جوستيسيا” للإنماء وحقوق الإنسان، الدكتور بول مرقس، يوجد في الفقه الإداري والدستوري مفهوم “المهلة المعقولة” délai raisonnable التي يترتب على السلطة الدستورية او الادارية التقيد بها لأجل القيام بإجراء دستوري او اداري معين. وهذه المهلة تُحدّد بالأيّام وليس بالأسابيع أو الأشهر.

استناداً الى مؤسسة “جوستيسيا”، فان المهلة المعقولة لدعوة رئيس الجمهورية الى استشارات نيابية هي عدة ايام لا تتجاوز الاسبوع.
ان القوة القاهرة، في الاوضاع الراهنة، ليست لصالح تمديد المهلة بل لصالح تقصيرها حيث تتطلب الظروف قراراً او موقفاً سريعاً. هذه المهلة يجب ألا تتجاوز الأيام القليلة وإلاّ يكون هناك تأخير. كما تجدر الإشارة الى ان الرئيس الذي وتماشياً مع “المهلة المعقولة” هو ملزم بممارسة مهمته بهمة وعناية diligence وإلاّ يصبح بطئه يعادل خرق الدستور بمعنى المادة 60 من الدستور.

ان المشترع اللبناني يعطي للمهلة المعقولة مضموناً اخلاقياً Contenu moral. فالمادة 287 موجبات وعقود مثلاً، تنص على ما يلي:
جاء في النص الأصلي الفرنسي للمادة 287 موجبات في فقرتها الثالثة ما يلي:

L’approbation ne peut intervenir qu’après que les parties ont donné communication de la reprise au créancier et elle doit intervenir dans le délai fixé au cours de ladite communication, sinon, dans un délai moralement nécessaire pour prendre parti.
Une fois ce délai expiré, l’approbation est considéré comme ayant été refusée .

والاجتهاد كما الفقه أعطى الأرجحية للنص الفرنسي الذي هو الأصل على النص العربي الذي هو مترجم: تمييز – هيئة عامة- قرار اعدادي (نقض) رقم 1 تاريخ 5 تموز 1970 دعوى حنا ضد شقير (الرؤساء أبو خير، برجاوي- طليع- حاتم- ن ق ل 1092 صفحة 103- العدل صفحة 421 وفيه بحث في مدى توافق قانون رجب 1304 المعروف بقانون المرابحة وقانون المراباة usure الصادر في 24 حزيران 1939 وقانون العقوبات الصادر في 8 آذار 1943 المادة 66 وكذلك قرار محكمة التمييز (الهيئة العامة) صادر في 5/3/1970 الرؤساء برجاوي- نجيم- أبو خير- حاتم- طليع.

ان المفهوم الاخلاقي للمهلة المعقولة في القانون الدستوري يفرض نفسه لان الدستور هو اسمى تشريع في البلاد وعند وجود ثغرات فيه يصار الى الاستعانة ليس فقط بقواعد المنطق بل ايضاً بالقاعدة الاخلاقية Règle morale.

ان القانون الدولي، وتحديداً القانون الاوروبي، اتخذ هذا المنحى اذ اعتمد المعيار النوعي للمهلة المعقولة Critère qualitatif. فقد قضى بان المهلة المعقولة، عند توفر الضرورات الاقتصادية والاجتماعية الملحة، كما هو الحال في الظروف الحاضرة، يجب ان تفسر بالعجلة القصوى Prompitude الموازية للتدابير الفورية والنجدات السريعة
يراجع:

“52. Il ne faut pas oublier non plus que l’affaire présentait un enjeu considérable non seulement pour les requérants, mais aussi pour la société espagnole en général, en raison de ses vastes incidences sociales et économiques. Le grand nombre des personnes impliquées- salariés, actionnaires et tiers-, ainsi que le volume des capitaux en cause, militaient pour une prompte solution du litige.
53. A la lumière de l’ensemble des circonstances de la cause, la cour conclut au dépassement du délai raisonnable prévu à l’article 6 par. 1 (art.6-1), lequel a donc été violé sur ce point. » CEDH, Cour (Plénière), 23 juin 1993, no. 12952/87. Lire en ligne :
https://www.doctrine.fr/d/…/HFJUD/CHAMBER/1993/CEDH001-62395

ان الدستور يلزم رئيس الجمهورية بالدعوة الى اجراء الاستشارات النيابية الملزمة ضمن “مهلة معقولة” بالمعنى المشار اليه علاه.
ان العجلة القصوى لا بل “التدابير الفورية” تفرض نفسها في الظروف الحاضرة لان البلد ينهار يوماً بعد يوم وهو على شفير الهاوية.
ان الظروف الاستثنائية في الوقت الحاضر تقلص حدود السلطة الاستنسابية – في حال افترضنا وجودها – الى اقصى الحدود والقول بعكس ذلك يجعل من السلطة الاستنسابية pouvoir discrétionnaire قريبة من السلطة التعسفية pouvoir arbitraire
Le recours au raisonnable pour qualifier le délai viserait « à tracer une limite entre discrétionnaire et arbitraire» (J. Salmon, “le concept de raisonnable en droit international public», pp. 462-467).

إن التأجيل الذي يزيد عن حده والذي يتجاوز “المهلة المعقولة” يؤدي الى الاختناق والمزيد من التدهور.

ان “المهلة المعقولة” بالمعنى المشار اليه اعلاه تعد بالأيام وليس بالأسابيع، بينما لم تباشر الاستشارات على الرغم من انقضاء أكثر من ثلاثة أسابيع على استقالة الحكومة.

ان الدساتير في البلدان الراقية تعطي لرئيس الجمهورية صفة الاب الصالح Le bon père de famille الذي يعتمد، عند خلو النص من تحديد للمهلة، مفهوم المهلة المعقولة وفقاً للمعنى الذي اعطيناه اعلاه.

[…] l’administration ne doit-elle pas ainsi se conduire de manière raisonnable, prudente tel un bon père de famille ? (Le raisonnable en droit administrative (Sous la direction de Mme Sophie THERON), 1ère édition, volume 13).

ان التأخر في تحديد موعد للاستشارات الملزمة الذي نصت عليه المادة 53 فقرة 2 من الدستور يشكل ليس فقط مخالفة لهذه المادة نصاً وروحاً بل ايضاً مخالفة لليمين التي حلفها فخامة الرئيس والمنصوص عليها في المادة 50 من الدستور.

The post  المحامي عبد الحميد الأحدب/التأخر عن اجراء الاستشارات يشكل مخالفة واضحة للدستور appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

علي الأمين/السلطة وحزب الله…بكاؤكما لا يُجدي على الإنتفاضة

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السلطة و”حزب الله”… “بكاؤكما لا يُجدي” على الإنتفاضة!

علي الأمين/نداء الوطن/25 تشرين الثاني 2019

ما يزعج أقطاب السلطة في لبنان اليوم، أن انتفاضة 17 تشرين، لا تستعين إلا بذاتها، ترفع شعاراتها وتحدد خطوات المواجهة ضد عقم السلطة وفسادها من دون أن تستقوي بطائفة أو بجهة حزبية أو طرف إقليمي ودولي.

وما يربك السلطة في لبنان أن الحركة الشعبية التي تتنفس من رئة لبنانية تدرك أنها حققت إنجازاً في أن التغيير في لبنان لن يتحقق في ظل معادلة الحكم والحكومة التي ارتسمت وترسخت منذ التسوية الرئاسية، وهي أي السلطة التي يديرها “حزب الله” ويحامي عنها، باتت أعجز من أن تقنع عموم اللبنانيين بأنها تستطيع أن تدير الأزمة في الدولة، فكيف أن تدير عملية انقاذها وإخراج اللبنانيين من المأزق الذي أوقعتهم فيه؟

عجز السلطة هذه يدفعها إلى الاستقتال من أجل العودة إلى الوراء، صارت تحلم وتستجدي العودة إلى “الانقسام الآذاري”، تريد من اللبنانيين أن يعودوا إلى زمن الانقسام بين 8 و14 آذار، تريد بقوة أن تلتقط أيّ إشارة دولية أو إقليمية مهما بلغت من الهشاشة، لتستعيد أناشيد ومقولات المؤامرة على “حزب الله” وسلاحه وعلى المقاومة التي يشرف عليها ويديرها “الأخ الأكبر” في طهران.

ومن يراقب اللغة التي لا يزال “حزب الله” عاجزاً عن تجديدها تجاه جمهوره، هو أن من يدير انتفاضة اللبنانيين اليوم، هم شركاء له في السلطة أي “تيار المستقبل” و”الحزب التقدمي الاشتراكي” و”حزب القوات اللبنانية”، لا يريد الاعتراف بحقيقة أن ثمة انتفاضة حقيقية، بل يريد دوماً أن يحيلها إلى فعل الشركاء الذين كانوا أسلموا القيادة والطاعة له طيلة السنوات الثلاث الماضية.

انه يستجدي الانقسام في السلطة، لأنه السبيل لبقائه وصياً على السلطة، يدير خلافاتها ويوزع فسادها بين اقطابها بـ”العدل والقسطاس”، وإلا ما معنى أن يتحاشى “حزب الله” اليوم فتح ملفات الفساد، ولا يتعامل مع المفسدين كما العملاء، كما وصفهم أمينه العام؟لم يتنبه “حزب الله” أو لا يريد الالتفات الى أن اللبنانيين باتوا يعرفون عطب السلطة، ويدركون أن لا قيامة للبنان ومؤسساته من غير طريق الدولة، ويدركون أن ملفات الفساد ليست حكراً على طرف دون آخر، لأن المعادلة الحاكمة لادارة الدولة، جرى تركيبها على أسس الفساد، طاقة استمرارها الفساد ولا شيء سواه، لذا لن يسمح صاحب السلطة بفتح ملف الفساد والهدر على مصراعيه، بل يريده وسيلة ابتزاز، وطاقة استمرار السلطة التي اثبتت الأرقام والوقائع عجزها عن الاستمرار.

طموح “حزب الله” اليوم أن يعيد تركيب المعادلة نفسها، حكومة سياسية مطعمة بتكنوقراط، باختصار حكومة يرأسها هو، وفيها عدد من وزراء التكنوقراط، قادر على التحكم بادائهم من خلال السطوة الأمنية وسلاح التخوين.

الذهاب باتجاه المؤامرة الأميركية ومؤامرة جنبلاط أو الحريري وجعجع، لم تعد مجدية، ولن توقف هذا الانهيار الذي تعاني منه ما سمي “التسوية الرئاسية”، ولن يكفي توجيه تظاهرة أو عشرات التظاهرات نحو السفارة الأميركية ليعيد التموضع السياسي الى ما يشتهيه “حزب الله”، إذ ليس من الفطنة ولا من السياسة ولا  حتى الحنكة، أن تجعل الدولة تتسول وتستجدي العون الخارجي من “الدول المتآمرة” ثم بعد ذلك تريد من هذه الدول ألّا تتدخل أو أن تطلق مواقف في الشأن اللبناني.

مقتضى الانسجام مع الذات هو أن تتعلم دروساً في الاقتصاد، اذ ليس من الجائز أن يخرج حاكم لبنان الفعلي بعد استفحال الأزمة الاقتصادية والنقدية المستمرة منذ عقود، كما يقول هو، أنه لا يفهم كثيراً في الاقتصاد!

التظاهر أمام السفارة الأميركية وأمام دول الاستكبار العالمي، لم يعد مجدياً، المجدي للبنانيين بعد كل الفرص التي اخذتها الحكومات المتعاقبة، وبعد الانتصارات الإلهية والكونية التي حققتها الممانعة، وبعد كل الكلام عن الانكفاء الأميركي، أن تقول للبنانيين كلاماً في الاقتصاد، لا شعارات لا تغني أو تسمن من جوع، هدير الاحتجاجات في إيران في وجه “حسين العصر” ينصت لها اللبنانيون، ويتعلمون منها، كما ملحمة الثوار العراقيين التي لا تتوقف وتشير بالأصبع إلى معادلة الفساد التي حققت “الانتصارات الإلهية”.

The post علي الأمين/السلطة وحزب الله… بكاؤكما لا يُجدي على الإنتفاضة appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.


الياس بجاني: خينا الرئيس إيلي الفرزلي شخصية تعود بثقافتها وخطابها ومسرحيتها إلى زمن سوق عكاظ

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خينا الرئيس إيلي الفرزلي شخصية تعود بثقافتها وخطابها ومسرحيتها إلى زمن سوق عكاظ

الياس بجاني/25 تشرين الثاني/2019

ايلي الفرزلي بالشخصي مهضوم، وبليغ لغوياً، ومسرحي في مقارباته، وخفيف الظل، أما في السياسة والشؤون الوطنية فهو شخصية انتهازية ووصولية تعود بثقافتها وخطابها وخياراتها إلى زمن سوق عكاظ الجاهلي حيث كانت القاعدة يومها للشعراء والمتعلمين “قدح ومدح بالأجرة”.

فالرجل في زمن الاحتلال السوري كما يعرف القاصي والداني كان سورياً وبعثياً أسدياً أكثر من حافظ الأسد وابنه وكل أهل القرداحة وضواحيها، وهلقتنيي بزمن احتلال حزب الله الإرهابي والغزواتي فهو ملالوي ولاهي ومقاومتي نفاقي أكثر مليون مرة من السيد حسن نصرالله والشيخ نعيم قاسم والشيخ نبيل قاووق وكل ملالي إيران.

الفرزلي ومرة أخرى بالسياسة وليس بالشخصي هو سياسي من غير زمن ثورة 17 تشرين الأول 2019، ومن غير ثقافة السياديين والكيانيين اللبنانيين رغم تغنيه الدائم “بالكتاب”الدستور. 

من الواجب الوطني الحذر من نتعاته وتكويعاته وفذلكاته وتحليلاته وتحريماته.

في زمن الاحتلال السوري كان من أشد وأعنف المهاجمين والمشيطنين للعماد ميشال عون، ومن منا لا يذكر تلك المواجهة التلفزيونية الحامية الوطيس بينه وبين عون عبر محطة الجزيرة بمساندة ميدانية وبعثية من غالب وناصر قنديل؟ واليوم هو من حاشية عون ومن أهم مستشاريه والمنظرين والمسوّقين له… وهكذا دواليك.

في لبنان هناك كثر من نموذج خينا ايلي الفرزلي في العمل السياسي،  وبالتالي الخيار بالطبع هو للمواطن، إما في أن يصدق هؤلاء، أو أن يهزأ بهم ولا يأخذهم على محمل من الجد والجدية ويعري انتهازيتهم ودجلهم.

نتمنى أن يكون صدر خينا الفرزلي رحباً لأن العامل في السياسة من حق المواطن إن يواليه أو أن ينتقده ويشكف حقيقته السياسية والولائية…وبس هيك.

*استاذنا الفرزلي المحترم الآن ع ال LBC مع البير كوستنيان وعلى السياديين التنبه لأفخاخه ونتعاته وتفننه في عمليات التبرير المرّضيةRationalization

*الكاتب ناشط لبناني اغترابي
عنوان الكاتب الالكتروني
Phoenicia@hotmail.com
رابط موقع الكاتب الالكتروني على الإنترنت
http://www.eliasbejjaninew.com

The post الياس بجاني: خينا الرئيس إيلي الفرزلي شخصية تعود بثقافتها وخطابها ومسرحيتها إلى زمن سوق عكاظ appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

نشرة أخبار المنسقية العامة للمؤسسات اللبنانية الكندية باللغة العربية ليوم 26 تشرين الثاني/2019

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نشرة أخبار المنسقية العامة للمؤسسات اللبنانية الكندية باللغة العربية ليوم 26 تشرين الثاني/2019

اضغط هنا لقراءة نشرة أخبار المنسقية العامة المفصلة، اللبنانية والعربية ليوم 26 تشرين الثاني/2019

ارشيف نشرات أخبار موقعنا اليومية/عربية وانكليزية منذ العام 2006/اضغط هنا لدخول صفحة الأرشيف

عناوين أقسام نشرة المنسقية باللغة العربية
الزوادة الإيمانية لليوم
تعليقات الياس بجاني وخلفياتها
الأخبار اللبنانية
المتفرقات اللبنانية
الأخبار الإقليمية والدولية
المقالات والتعليقات والتحاليل السياسية الشاملة
المؤتمرات والندوات والبيانات والمقابلات والمناسبات الخاصة والردود وغيره

The post نشرة أخبار المنسقية العامة للمؤسسات اللبنانية الكندية باللغة العربية ليوم 26 تشرين الثاني/2019 appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For November 26/2019

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Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For November 26/2019

Click Here to read the whole and detailed LCCC English News Bulletin for November 26/2019

Click Here to enter the LCCC  Arabic/English news bulletins Achieves since 2006

Titles Of The LCCC English News Bulletin
Bible Quotations For today
Latest LCCC English Lebanese & Lebanese Related News 
Latest LCCC English Miscellaneous Reports And News
Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources

The post Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For November 26/2019 appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For November 25-26/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 40th Day

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A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For November 25-26/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 40th Day
Compiled By: Elias Bejjani
November 25-26/2019

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on November 25-26/2019
U.N. Security Council Urges Lebanese to Avoid ‘Violence’, Hold ‘Dialogue’ & keep protests peaceful
Gunfire, Tensions as Hizbullah, AMAL Supporters Roam Streets on Motorbikes
Al-Rahi Slams Attack on Protesters as ‘Attack on Lebanon’
Hizbullah Calls Car Crash near Jiye Roadblock a ‘Terrorist Crime’
Kubis Urges Lebanese Parties to ‘Control Supporters’, Avoid Exploiting Protests
Report: British Envoy in Beirut, An ‘Initiative’ Likely to Help Lebanon
UK Envoy: Ready to Support Lebanon but Govt. Formation a Domestic Issue
Aoun, Hariri Meet UK Envoy, Discuss Lebanon Situation
Protesters Defiant despite Attack by Hizbullah, AMAL Supporters
Key Beirut road reopens after rival groups clash overnight, businesses call for strike
Lebanese army opens main north Beirut road as other cities’ roads remain blocked
Lebanese Hezbollah supporters attack protesters near the Ring Bridge
Lebanese protesters clash with supporters of Hezbollah, Amal in Beirut
Key Lebanon Roads Blocked after Hizbullah, AMAL Supporters Attack Protesters
Hizbullah, AMAL Supporters Attack Protesters as Roads Blocked across Lebanon
Vehicles Vandalized in Beirut Streets during Night Clashes
Berri Warns against Strife, Urges Security Forces to Keep Roads Open
State Prosecutor Orders Probe into Central Beirut Violence
Judge orders Lebanese bank to release depositor’s funds
Hezbollah denies statement attributed to Sherry on Ring Bridge incidents
Army chief meets Murphy, Moore, retired military officers’ delegation
Students, Instructors join protesters at Halba Square
Jumblatt: Roads should remain open so that average citizens can ensure daily living needs
Batish, Lazarrini tackle current economic situation
Abu Fakhr’s family refrains from decision to block Khaldeh Triangle
Arrest warrant against killer of Alaa Abu Fakhr’
Protesters stage sit-in on Baabda road, up calls for speedy PM designation
Investigations launched into Ring scuffles under supervision of Judge Oweidat.

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on November 25-26/2019
U.N. Security Council Urges Lebanese to Avoid ‘Violence’, Hold ‘Dialogue’ & keep protests peaceful
Agence France Presse/November 25/2019
The U.N. Security Council on Monday called for “the peaceful character of the protests” in Lebanon to be upheld after overnight attacks by supporters of Hizbullah and AMAL. Members “called on all actors to conduct intensive national dialogue and to maintain the peaceful character of the protests by avoiding violence and respecting the right to peaceful assembly in protest,” it said in a statement approved unanimously at the end of a regular council meeting on Lebanon. They also commended “the role of the Lebanese Armed Forces and other State security institutions in protecting this right.”
The members of the Security Council also noted that “this is a critical time for Lebanon,” stressed the importance of “the timely formation of a new government able to respond to the aspirations of the Lebanese people and to restore the stability of the country within the constitutional framework.”
At around midnight on Sunday, Hizbullah and AMAL Movement supporters attacked protesters at the Ring flyover near the capital’s main protest camp.
Brandishing party flags, they hurled stones at peaceful demonstrators and taunted them with insults as riot police deployed to contain the violence and eventually fired tear gas. The attackers also ravaged a nearby encampment, tearing down tents and damaging storefronts in their most serious assault on the protesters so far. At least 10 demonstrators were wounded, according to civil defense.

Gunfire, Tensions as Hizbullah, AMAL Supporters Roam Streets on Motorbikes
Naharnet/November 25/2019
Army troops and security forces quickly intervened Monday evening after supporters of the AMAL Movement and Hizbullah arrived at Beirut’s Martyrs Square on scooters and hurled insults and a few rocks at protesters who have an encampment in the area. The situation was quickly brought under control although tensions remain high. Security forces later reinforced their presence in the capital’s Martyrs Square and Riad al-Solh. Media reports said the motorbikes arrived from the Beirut southern suburb of Msharrafiyeh, where supporters of the two parties were holding a sit-in in protest at a car crash that killed two people near a roadblock in Jiye. Later on Monday, gunfire erupted in the Beirut area of Cola after convoys of motorcycles passed in the area. The convoys had roamed several streets in Beirut and its suburbs. TV networks said the gunshots were fired in the air, causing no injuries. The army immediately sent reinforcements to the area. Supporters of al-Mustaqbal Movement had earlier blocked the Qasqas road in Beirut after Hizbullah and AMAL supporters passed in the area on motorbikes and shouted slogans. MTV said gunshots were also fired in the air there. The army quickly intervened and deployed in the area. Al-Mustaqbal meanwhile issued a statement urging its supporters not to be dragged into “provocations aimed at igniting strife” and to “refrain from taking part in any street protests or convoys.”Elsewhere, supporters of Hizbullah and AMAL attacked the main protest site in the southern city of Tyre and torched the tents of protesters.

Al-Rahi Slams Attack on Protesters as ‘Attack on Lebanon’
Naharnet/November 25/2019
Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi on Monday condemned the overnight attack on protesters in central Beirut as an “attack on Lebanon.” “The attack did not only target peaceful youths, but also the army and security forces,” he said during a visit to Cairo. “We condemn this approach towards a sacred cause, because the young men and women are demanding the welfare of Lebanon and its people and institutions and the attack against them is an attack on Lebanon and the sacred cause,” the patriarch added. He also condemned the attacks on “public and private properties, cars and shops,” while urging protesters to “show restraint” and “cooperate with security forces and the army to preserve the public welfare.” At around midnight on Sunday, Hizbullah and AMAL Movement supporters attacked protesters at the Ring flyover near the capital’s main protest camp. Brandishing party flags, they hurled stones at peaceful demonstrators and taunted them with insults as riot police deployed to contain the violence and eventually fired tear gas. The attackers also ravaged a nearby encampment, tearing down tents and damaging storefronts in their most serious assault on the protesters so far. At least 10 demonstrators were wounded, civil defense said, without specifying the extent of their injuries. On Monday morning, scattered stones, shattered glass and the mangled remains of tents littered the ground in the main protest camp.Around the square, car windows had been smashed with rocks.

Hizbullah Calls Car Crash near Jiye Roadblock a ‘Terrorist Crime’
Naharnet/November 25/2019
Hizbullah on Monday described as a “terrorist crime” the car crash that resulted in the death of two citizens near a protest roadblock on Jiye’s highway. “The horrible crime resulted from militia-like attacks by groups of bandits who are practicing the ugliest forms of humiliation and terrorism against innocent civilians commuting on roads,” Hizbullah’s media department said in a statement. “This vicious attack that targeted the two dear martyrs is an attack on all Lebanese and a threat to civil peace and social stability, that’s why we call on everyone to fully shoulder their responsibilities in order to unveil the circumstances of this terrorist crime and punish the attackers,” the party added. The two victims have been identified as Hussein Shalhoub and his relative Sanaa al-Jundi. Shalhoub’s daughter who was with them in the car escaped unharmed. CCTV footage shows the speeding car hitting a metallic barrier before driving into a pole placed on the ground and catching fire. Protesters in the area said the metallic barrier was erected by the army and that they were hundreds of meters away. Some social media users have accused protesters of hurling rocks at the car, accusations denied by the protesters. Pro-Hizbullah media outlets have in recent weeks accused political rivals, especially al-Mustaqbal Movement, of playing a role in the blocking of some roads in the country, particularly the Jiye highway which links Beirut to the South.

Kubis Urges Lebanese Parties to ‘Control Supporters’, Avoid Exploiting Protests
Naharnet/November 25/2019
U.N. Special Coordinator for Lebanon Jan Kubis on Monday urged Lebanon’s political parties to “control their supporters” and refrain from exploiting the protests that have been sweeping the country since October 17. “The attack of last night of groups under Hizbullah & Amal flags on demonstrators again exposed how dangerous are such actions of political activists, how easily they can trigger confrontation, even sectarian ones, how challenging it is for security forces to protect law and order,” Kubis said in a tweet. “I urge all Lebanese political forces to control their supporters, to avoid using the national protests for pursuing their political agenda,” he added. At around midnight on Sunday, Hizbullah and AMAL Movement supporters attacked protesters at the Ring flyover near the capital’s main protest camp. Brandishing party flags, they hurled stones at demonstrators and taunted them with insults as riot police deployed to contain the violence and eventually fired tear gas. The attackers also ravaged a nearby encampment, tearing down tents and damaging storefronts in their most serious assault on the protesters so far. Hizbullah, the Free Patriotic Movement and their allies have meanwhile accused al-Mustaqbal Movement, the Lebanese Forces and the Progressive Socialist Party of taking advantage of the protests to advance their political agendas. The three parties deny the accusations, saying some of their supporters have joined the popular uprising without being instructed to do so.

Report: British Envoy in Beirut, An ‘Initiative’ Likely to Help Lebanon
Naharnet/November 25/2019
A British envoy arrived in Beirut on Monday to meet with senior Lebanese officials in light of the latest developments in the country. Richard Moore, Director General for Political Affairs at the Foreign & Commonwealth Office first met President Michel Aoun early morning.
He will also meet Speaker Nabih Berri, caretaker PM Saad Hariri and a number of officials, European diplomatic sources told al-Jomhouria daily. Britain has provided strong support to Lebanon in recent years in the military, technical and logistical fields and reinforcing land units and border regiments, especially the education and health sectors. “It is preparing to expand this initiative diplomatically and internationally, which is the first British move at this level,” said the daily. The sources linked the visit to the results of the US-French-British tripartite meeting held in Paris last Tuesday as part of an international effort to help Lebanon. The meeting was hosted by the French envoy to Beirut, Director of the Middle East and North Africa at the French Foreign Ministry Christophe Farnaud, in the presence of his US and British counterparts respectively, David Schenker and Stephanie al-Qaq and Moore. Last week France sent Farnaud to Lebanon where he held talks with all the political actors. The sources said that Britain wants to expand and invest the Paris tripartite meeting and turn it to a direct British-French initiative to help Lebanon out of the current crisis with US support, to present it to the Atlantic Conference in Paris this at the end of the week. Ongoing nationwide anti-government protests in Lebanon since October 17 have brought down the government, but a new government has yet to be formed.

UK Envoy: Ready to Support Lebanon but Govt. Formation a Domestic Issue
Naharnet/November 25/2019
Richard Moore, Director General for Political Affairs at the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office, is visiting Lebanon on Monday for high level meetings with Lebanese officials, accompanied by Her Majesty’s Ambassador to Lebanon Chris Rampling, a press release said.
His meetings will include discussions with President General Michel Aoun, Caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri, Speaker Nabih Berri, Caretaker Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil, and the LAF Commander-in-Chief General Joseph Aoun. In his meetings, Richard Moore will listen to the views of interlocutors on the current situation in Lebanon, and underline the urgent need to form a government and implement policies that reflect the aspirations of the Lebanese people including for better governance. It is vital that a new government is formed quickly so that it is able to implement the economic reforms which will help Lebanon regain long-term stability and more inclusive growth. Director General Richard Moore said: ‘I am pleased to be able to visit Beirut again, at what is perhaps a seminal moment for Lebanon. We have been following developments here closely, as the UK has long been an important partner and supporter for Lebanon, for example investing $200m last year to support Lebanese security, stability, prosperity and sovereignty. We and partners in the international community stand ready to continue our support to Lebanon. But let me be clear that the matter of choosing leaders and a Cabinet is a domestic issue for the Lebanese. The people of Lebanon have been clear in their demand for improved governance, and they should be heard. As protests continue, we recognise that the security agencies have a difficult but essential role in safeguarding Lebanese security. It is vital that the right to peaceful protest continues to be respected, and suppressing the protest movement through violence or intimidation from any organisation is completely unacceptable.’Ambassador Rampling said: ‘We are pleased to have Director General Moore here at this crucial time for Lebanon. As well as listening to the views of Lebanese interlocutors, our meetings today reiterate the importance the UK places on having a new, capable, responsive Lebanese government, able to implement the overdue reforms that will benefit all Lebanese.’

Aoun, Hariri Meet UK Envoy, Discuss Lebanon Situation
Naharnet/November 25/2019
President Michel Aoun and caretaker PM Saad Hariri separately held meetings Monday with Richard Moore, Director General for Political Affairs at the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office where talks discussed the latest developments. Aoun met Moore at Baabda palace and discussed with him the current general situation, the bilateral relations between Lebanon and the UK and the repercussions of the massive presence of displaced Syrians in Lebanon. During the meeting, Aoun commended the Lebanese-British ties and cooperation in various fields, especially the UK support for the Lebanese army and its land border regiments. The President maintained that the signature of a Lebanese-British partnership agreement “was the last diplomatic accomplishment made before the resignation of the government.”The two men also dwelt on the file of Syrian refugees and the repercussions of their massive presence in Lebanon on all sectors.For his part, Moore briefed Aoun on the recent meeting in Paris attended by representatives of France, the UK, and USA. He also underlined his country’s commitment to helping Lebanon and supporting its constitutional legitimacy. The meeting took place in presence of British Ambassador to Lebanon, Chris Rampling, and Caretaker State Minister for Presidency Affairs, Salim Jreissati. Later during the day, Hariri met Moore at the Center House accompanied by British Ambassador to Lebanon Chris Rampling, in the presence of former Minister Ghattas Khoury. “The meeting focused on the developments in Lebanon and the mission undertaken by the British envoy in Lebanon,” said Hariri’s office. Before meeting Hariri, Moore met with outgoing minister Jebran Bassil. Before his meeting with officials, Moore said in a statement released by the UK embassy, that “Britain and partners in international community stand ready to support Lebanon but choosing leaders and a Cabinet is a domestic issue for the Lebanese.”

Key Beirut road reopens after rival groups clash overnight, businesses call for strike
Arab News/November 25/2019
BEIRUT: A key road has reopened in the Lebanese capital following clashes throughout the night between rival groups. The confrontations began when protesters blocked the street and were attacked by supporters of the two main Shiite political parties, Hezbollah and Amal. Both sides threw stones at each other for hours as security forces formed a barrier separating them. Lebanon’s massive protests against corruption and mismanagement by the country’s political elite are now in their second month, but have so far remained largely peaceful. The confrontations on the Ring Road, which broke out late Sunday and dragged into Monday morning, were some of the worst since the nationwide demonstrations began on Oct. 17. Iran-backed Hezbollah says the protests are being exploited by foreign powers with an agenda against the group. Meanwhile, a business group representing much of Lebanon’s private sector called on Monday for a three-day general strike to press the country’s divided politicians to form a government and end the crisis that has brought the economy to a standstill. Despite the unprecedented nationwide protests, which led to the resignation of Prime Minister Saad Al-Hariri on Oct. 29 and a worsening economic crisis, deeply divided politicians have yet to agree on a new government.

Lebanese army opens main north Beirut road as other cities’ roads remain blocked
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Monday, 25 November 2019
The Lebanese army opened up the main road in Jal el-Dib, just north of Beirut, on Monday and removed protesters’ tents in the area, an Al Arabiya correspondent reported. Eight people were arrested during the operation, the correspondent reported. Meanwhile, protesters continue to block most of the main and secondary roads in and around Lebanon’s Tripoli, the National News Agency (NNA) reported on Monday. The news agency added that protesters burned car tires and trash cans under a main bridge in Tripoli, while some public workers attempted to open inner roads in various neighborhoods. The city is seeing a gradual flow of traffic and the reopening of shops, schools, and universities, as well as government buildings and banks. However, many students and employees have still not been able to reach their workplaces or educational institutions. NNA also reported that roads in Sidon are witnessing normal traffic as of Monday morning, while schools and other educational institutions remained closed. Lebanon is expected to witness a general strike across the country on Monday, Al Arabiya’s correspondent reported, as the army takes action against protesters blocking roads.

Lebanese Hezbollah supporters attack protesters near the Ring Bridge
Al Arabiya English, The Associated Press/Monday, 25 November 2019
A group of Hezbollah supporters attacked demonstrators protesting against Lebanon’s political elite in central Beirut late Sunday, triggering confrontations as security forces separated the two sides. The Lebanese Civil Defense hospitalized five protesters with different injuries, one of whom was subjected to a knife attack. The attacks by young men armed with clubs and metal rods chanting pro-Hezbollah slogans continued into the early hours of Monday as riot police and soldiers formed a human barrier preventing them from reaching the protesters. The supporters, who were riding motorbikes with the flags of Hezbollah and Amal Movement, stoned the protesters, who retaliated. The attacks by young men armed with clubs and metal rods chanting pro-Hezbollah slogans began late Sunday and continued after midnight as riot police and soldiers tried to prevent them from reaching the protesters.
The attacks occurred after protesters blocked a major road that links eastern neighborhoods of the capital with western parts. Since last month, Lebanese from all religious backgrounds have taken to the streets en masse to cry out against what they view as an incompetent and corrupt ruling class, forcing the government to resign.

Lebanese protesters clash with supporters of Hezbollah, Amal in Beirut
BEIRUT (Reuters) November 25/2019
Clashes broke out between anti-government demonstrators and supporters of the Shi’ite groups Hezbollah and Amal in the Lebanese capital, Beirut, early on Monday, as tensions escalated when demonstrators blocked a main bridge. Lebanon has faced five weeks of anti-government protests, fueled by anger at corruption among the sectarian politicians who have governed Lebanon for decades. Demonstrators want to see the entire ruling class gone from power. Hezbollah and Amal were both represented in the coalition government led by Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri, who quit on Oct. 29 after the protests began. The heavily armed Hezbollah, which is backed by Iran, had opposed Hariri’s resignation. Army soldiers and riot police formed a barrier separating the protesters from the supporters of the Shi’ite groups on a main road known as the Ring Bridge as rocks were thrown by both sides, television footage broadcast by Lebanese media showed. Security forces fired tear gas to disperse the crowds, three local television stations reported. Supporters of Hezbollah and Amal waved the groups’ flags. Earlier, they had chanted: “Shia, Shia” and slogans in support of Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah. On the other side, demonstrators chanted: “Revolution, revolution”. Lebanese broadcaster al-Jadeed reported that fighting apparently broke out when Hezbollah and Amal supporters blamed other demonstrators for making offensive comments about Nasrallah. Reuters could not independently verify the report. The ground was strewn with rocks. A motorcycle was set on fire. The Lebanese civil defense said on its Twitter account that it was administering first aid to five people suffering from “various injuries.” It was the worst tension in Beirut since a mob loyal to Hezbollah and Amal attacked and destroyed the main protest camp in central Beirut last month. The protests have been overwhelmingly peaceful. Reporting by Issam Abdullah, Laila Bassam and Nadine Awadalla in Beirut; Additional reporting by Nayera Abdullah in Cairo; Editing by Peter Cooney. Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Key Lebanon Roads Blocked after Hizbullah, AMAL Supporters Attack Protesters
Associated Press/Agence France Presse/Naharnet/November 25/2019
Key roads around Lebanon were blocked by anti-government protesters on Monday following clashes throughout the night with AMAL and Hizbullah supporters. Protesters responded with anger at the night attacks blocking key roads around the country and in Beirut’s vital streets.
The confrontations began when protesters blocked the street and were attacked by supporters of Hizbullah and AMAL, with army reinforcements intervening to diffuse tensions. Shortly before midnight on Sunday, men on foot and scooters arrived at a roadblock set up by the protesters across a key street in the capital, local television showed. They shouted insults and chanted in support of the chiefs of Hizbullah and AMAL, before briefly breaking through and attacking some demonstrators. Those at the roadblock chanted “peaceful, peaceful”, as the security forces and army reinforcements deployed in a thick line between both sides in the early hours of Monday morning. The counter-protesters also headed to a main nerve centre of protests nearby and destroyed tents there. Lebanon’s massive protests against corruption and mismanagement by the country’s political elite are now in their second month, but have so far remained largely peaceful. The confrontations on the Ring Road, which broke out late Sunday and dragged into Monday morning, were some of the worst since the nationwide demonstrations began on Oct. 17. Iran-backed Hizbullah alleges the protests are being exploited by foreign powers with an agenda against the group.

Hizbullah, AMAL Supporters Attack Protesters as Roads Blocked across Lebanon
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/November 25/2019
Supporters of Hizbullah and the AMAL Movement launched fresh attacks late Sunday on anti-corruption protesters in central Beirut, as roads were blocked across Lebanon in an escalation of anti-corruption protests. Shortly before midnight on Sunday, men on foot and scooters arrived at a roadblock set up by anti-graft protesters across the Ring flyover in central Beirut. Fistfights first erupted before the AMAL and Hizbullah supporters descended on Riad al-Solh and Martyrs Square where they reportedly vandalized tents and threatened protesters. They shouted insults and chanted in support of the chiefs of the Shiite movements Hizbulah and AMAL, before briefly breaking through and attacking some demonstrators. Those at the roadblock chanted “peaceful, peaceful”, as the security forces and army reinforcements deployed in a thick line between both sides in the early hours of Monday morning. The tensions came after a peaceful day of demonstrations, more than a month into a spontaneous nationwide street movement against the political elite. On Saturday, Lebanese security forces briefly detained five youths, including three minors, for allegedly pulling down a sign for President Michel Aoun’s political party in the town of Hammana east of Beirut, sparking outrage on social media. Security forces released them after midnight, the Committee of Lawyers for the Defence of Protesters said. The army said two of the children were 15 years old and the third was 12. “Down with the regime that arrests children,” a Twitter user said.
“When a 12-year-old child manages to shake the state’s throne, you know the state is corrupt,” another wrote.
Hundreds of arrests
During the first month of demonstrations, security forces arrested 300 people including 12 minors who were released within 24 to 48 hours, according to the lawyers’ committee. But 11 people — including two minors — remain in detention accused of attacking a hotel in the southern city of Tyre during the first week of the uprising. The demonstrators managed to bring down the government less than two weeks into the protests, but it remains in a caretaker capacity and no new cabinet has since been formed. Late Sunday, protesters blocked major roads in several parts of the country and called for a general strike the following day in protest at the lack of progress in forming a fresh government. Earlier, hundreds had gathered in protest centres in Beirut, the northern city of Tripoli and in Tyre. In Beirut’s Martyrs’ Square, hundreds of women and men demanded their rights, some waving the national red and white flag or chanting “Revolution, Revolution!” Lebanon’s protests have brought together people of all ages from across the political spectrum, tired of what they describe as sectarian politics three decades after a civil war. In the latest show of unity, a festive mood had reigned Sunday afternoon as Lebanese came together in public spaces across the country on the second day of the weekend. North of the capital women prepared traditional salads to share, while a group of men danced on a beach south of the city, state television footage showed. The Free Patriotic Movement party that Aoun founded is now led by his son-in-law, outgoing foreign minister Jebran Bassil, one of the most reviled figures in the protests. Hizbollah is the only party not to have disarmed after the 1975-1990 civil war and plays a key role in Lebanese politics.

Vehicles Vandalized in Beirut Streets during Night Clashes
Naharnet/November 25/2019
Dozens of vehicles in Monot street and Saifi village, east of Beirut Central District, were vandalized after AMAL and Hizbullah supporters attacked anti-government protesters after midnight on Sunday across the Ring Bridge thoroughfare.With army reinforcements intervening to diffuse tensions, AMAL and Hizbullah supporters reportedly tried to find a way out fleeing through side roads of Monot, Saifi and other. According to witnesses, a group of men chanting ‘Shia, Shia’ torched vehicles and smashed with metal rods and stone bricks the windows of an entire row of cars parked on the side of Monot street and Saifi. An old man, a taxi driver, had his cab parked in Monot and all smashed up. “I live here, I woke up to the scene, I hope someone would compensate for me,” he told LBCI. “I am one of the residents of Monot street,” a young female whose car was torched told LBCI reporter. “We were at home, we were not taking part in any of the protests taking place in the Ring area. At around 2:00 a.m. we heard people screaming and chanting ‘Shia Shia’ and then we heard the sound of shattering glass. They did all that to the entire vehicles parked here,” she said. Clashes erupted throughout the night between rival groups, some of the worst violence since protests against the country’s ruling elite began last month. The confrontations began Sunday evening after supporters of the country’s two main Shiite political parties, Hizbullah and the AMAL Movement of Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, attacked protesters who had blocked a main Beirut thoroughfare known as the Ring Road. The young men arrived on scooters carrying clubs and metal rods and chanting pro-Hizbullah slogans, beating up several of the protesters. Both sides then threw stones at each other for hours as security forces formed a barrier to keep them apart. The clashes lasted until early Monday morning. Lebanon’s massive protests against corruption and mismanagement by the country’s leaders are now in their second month, but have so far remained largely peaceful.

Berri Warns against Strife, Urges Security Forces to Keep Roads Open

Naharnet/November 25/2019
Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri on Monday condemned the overnight incidents in central Beirut and on the Jiye highway between the capital and the South. The incidents “are condemned by all standards, seeing as the struggle for livelihood was baptized in blood with the martyrdom of Hussein Shalhoub and Sanaa al-Jundi,” Berri said, referring to a car crash in which the two citizens were killed near a roadblock on the Jiye highway. CCTV footage shows the speeding car hitting a metallic barrier before driving into a pole placed on the ground and catching fire. Protesters in the area said the metallic barrier was erected by the army and that they were hundreds of meters away. Some social media users have accused protesters of hurling rocks at the car. Berri urged security forces and army troops to keep the country’s roads open. “We call on all Lebanese to avoid descending into the dangerous implications of strife and we renew the call for security forces and the Lebanese Army to take strict measures to keep the country’s routes passable,” the Speaker added. He also called for “preserving the right to express opinions under the ceiling of the law and in a manner that does not harm civil peace, the dignities of all people and public and private property.”The Ring highway in central Beirut and the nearby Riad al-Solh, Martyrs Square and Monot areas had overnight witnessed an attack by supporters of Hizbullah and Berri’s AMAL Movement. Brandishing party flags, they hurled stones at peaceful demonstrators and taunted them with insults as riot police deployed to contain the violence. The attackers also ravaged a nearby encampment, tearing down tents and damaging storefronts in their most serious assault on the protesters so far. At least 10 demonstrators were wounded, civil defense said, without specifying the extent of their injuries.

State Prosecutor Orders Probe into Central Beirut Violence
Naharnet/November 25/2019
Judicial and security authorities on Monday launched investigations into the overnight incidents that rocked central Beirut, under the supervision of State Prosecutor Ghassan Oueidat, state-run National News Agency said. NNA said the violence “resulted in the injury of a large number of servicemen and civilians, the vandalizing of cars and shops on Monot Street, and aggression and intimidation against innocent civilians.” Oueidat tasked the Beirut judicial police department and the central Beirut police station to hear the testimonies of the injured servicemen and civilians, both in and outside hospitals, the agency said.
He also asked for retrieving CCTV footage from the buildings around the area of the clashes in order to “identify and arrest the assailants.”At around midnight on Sunday, Hizbullah and AMAL Movement supporters attacked protesters at the Ring flyover near the capital’s main protest camp.
Brandishing party flags, they hurled stones at peaceful demonstrators and taunted them with insults as riot police deployed to contain the violence and eventually fired tear gas. The attackers also ravaged a nearby encampment, tearing down tents and damaging storefronts in their most serious assault on the protesters so far. At least 10 demonstrators were wounded, civil defense said, without specifying the extent of their injuries. On Monday morning, scattered stones, shattered glass and the mangled remains of tents littered the ground in the main protest camp. Around the square, car windows had been smashed with rocks.

Judge orders Lebanese bank to release depositor’s funds
Annahar/November 25/2019
BEIRUT: A judge has ordered Bank Byblos to release a depositor’s funds in their entirety, marking the first ruling of the such since Lebanese commercial banks began implementing informal capital controls. Ahmad Mezher, a judge in Nabatiyeh, ordered the Nabatiyeh branch of Byblos Bank to release EUR 129,000 that had been deposited in a current account. The judge ordered the bank to pay in cash or any other method of the depositor’s choosing. The bank had refused to release the funds as demanded by the depositor, citing the “extraordinary measures” Lebanon is currently facing, which the judge had found to be “illegal.”Failing to release the funds would result in the bank incurring $13,000 in damages daily.  Banks have clamped limits on withdrawals of U.S. dollars as the Central Bank’s sources for dollars continue to wane, further exacerbated by a popular uprising broke out more than a month ago. Politicians are paralyzed, struggling to form a new government in the face of tens of thousands of protesters in the streets for the past month in an unprecedented uprising demanding the entire leadership go. A similar lawsuit has been filed in Beirut against the Association of Banks, its head Salim Sfeir, and member banks of the association.

Hezbollah denies statement attributed to Sherry on Ring Bridge incidents
NNA /November 25/2019
Hezbollah’s Media Relations Bureau denied the statement attributed to MP Amin Sherri by one of the media outlets on the incidents of the Ring Bridge.”MP Sherri did not make any statement to any media,” statement stressed.

Army chief meets Murphy, Moore, retired military officers’ delegation
NNA /November 25/2019
Army Commander Joseph Aoun received at his Yarzeh office US Senator Chris Murphy, at the top of a delegation, in the presence of US Ambassador to Lebanon, Elizabeth Richard. Maj. Gen. Aoun also met with a British delegation, chaired by Director General for Political Affairs at the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Richard Moore, accompanied by British Ambassador to Lebanon, Chris Rampling, and Embassy’s Military Attaché Alex Hilton. Talks reportedly touched on the bilateral relations between the two countries. On the other hand, Aoun received a delegation of retired military officers who voiced their full support to the military institution’s efforts to maintain security and stability.

Students, Instructors join protesters at Halba Square
NNA /November 25/2019
Several students and instructors from Halba and the various Akkari towns have joined protesters gathering at Halba Square, upping calls for their rights to education and job opportunities, as well as demanding change, NNA correspondent reported on Monday. Protesters have also called for an-all inclusive university for the district of Akkar and held dialogue sessions in this regard.

Jumblatt: Roads should remain open so that average citizens can ensure daily living needs
NNA /November 25/2019
Progressive Socialist Party Leader, Walid Jumblatt, on Monday said via his Twitter account that blocking roads from any side could only lead to problems, tensions, and casualties. “I condemn yesterday’s incidents in downtown Beirut and on the road leading south Lebanon, and I offer my condolences to the families of the victims,” Jumblatt tweeted.

Batish, Lazarrini tackle current economic situation
NNA /November 25/2019
Caretaker Minister of Economy and Trade, Mansour Batish, received this Monday in his office at the Ministry the UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Lebanon, Philippe Lazzarini, with whom he held a tour d’horizon on the current political and economic situation in light of the accurate stage and its gravity on Lebanon.Discussions also touched on the importance of according the economic dossier the needed priority to obtain the consensus of all Lebanese parties.

Abu Fakhr’s family refrains from decision to block Khaldeh Triangle
NNA /November 25/2019
Earlier on Monday, the family of Alaa Abu Fakhr called for blocking Khaldeh Triangle road at 5:00 pm in objection to a decision to release Colonel Nidal Daou, on bail, in the case of Abu Fakhr’s assassination. However, the family has officially refrained from its decision to block the aforementioned region in light of General Prosector Judge Sawan’s decision to appeal the release of Daou. ‘

Arrest warrant against killer of Alaa Abu Fakhr’
NNA /November 25/2019
Acting Military Investigative Judge, Fadi Sawwan, issued Monday a arrest warrant against army adjutant Charbel Ojeil, for the intentional killing of Alaa Abu Fakhr. Judge Sawwan also interrogated General Nidal D. over his role in the crime, and released him upon presentation of the proof of residence.

Protesters stage sit-in on Baabda road, up calls for speedy PM designation
NNA /November 25/2019
Protestors on Monday gathered on the road leading to Baabda presidential palace, under the pedestrian bridge, amid stringent security measures. They carried banners calling for speeding up the designation of a prime minister, NNA reporter said.

Investigations launched into Ring scuffles under supervision of Judge Oweidat
NNA /November 25/2019
The judicial and security services have launched investigations into the Ring scuffles that took place at midnight yesterday, under the supervision of the Attorney General of the Court of Cassation, Judge Ghassan Oweidat. Yesterday’s scuffles in Ring area have resulted in the injury of a large number of military men and civilians, damages to cars and commercial shops in Monot Street, as well as assaults on innocent citizens.

Titles For The Latest Lebanese LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 24-25/2019
Lebanon investigates clashes between protesters and Hezbollah supportersSunniva Rose/The National/November 25/2019
How filmmaker Elie Kamal used Lebanon’s abandoned railways to explore his country’s past/Kaleem Aftab/The National/November 25/2019
The call for a post-sectarian Middle East in Baghdad and Beirut/Zaid M. Belbagi/Arab News/November 25/2019
Protesters Defiant despite Attack by Hizbullah, AMAL Supporters/Agence France Presse/Naharnet/November 25/2019

The Latest Lebanese LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 24-25/2019
Protesters Defiant despite Attack by Hizbullah, AMAL Supporters
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/November 25/2019
Security forces cleared road blocks across Lebanon Monday, facing off against protesters who took to the streets from the early morning despite being attacked overnight by Hizbullah and AMAL Movement supporters. Demonstrators demanding a complete government overhaul have stayed mobilized since protests began on October 17, but a bitterly divided political class has yet to find a way out of the crisis. Frustrated by the stalemate, protesters had called for road blocks and a general strike on Monday, but an attack by Hizbullah and AMAL supporters on Sunday night weakened the turnout.
Political parties “are trying to instill fear in us as a people, so we don’t progress and stay at home,” said Dany Ayyash, 21, who was blocking a key road in Beirut’s Hamra district early Monday. “This is what happened today. There was supposed to be a general strike and yet the people are still at home sleeping.”
At around midnight on Sunday, Hizbullah and AMAL supporters attacked protesters at the Ring flyover near the capital’s main protest camp. Brandishing party flags, they hurled stones at peaceful demonstrators and taunted them with insults as riot police deployed to contain the violence. The attackers also ravaged a nearby encampment, tearing down tents and damaging storefronts in their most serious assault on the protesters so far. At least 10 demonstrators were wounded, civil defense said, without specifying the extent of their injuries.
Tense aftermath
On Monday morning, scattered stones, shattered glass and the mangled remains of tents littered the ground in the main protest camp. Around the square, car windows had been smashed with rocks. But the demonstrators said they would not cave in. “The attack gave us all — at least the ones here right now — a sense of determination,” Ayyash said. Nearby, security forces deployed along the road after shoving aside demonstrators who had been sitting on the ground. Salim Mourad, a 31-year-old protester, showed AFP his torn shirt collar, saying riot police dragged him by his shirt.
“We don’t want violence,” he said. Security forces also deployed across main arteries in north and east Lebanon Monday, removing metal barricades and dirt barricades raised by demonstrators earlier. The army said it arrested nine people north of Beirut at dawn after they tried to block roads using burning petrol and shattered glass. It also arrested four other “rioters”, releasing three shortly afterwards. The security forces have come under fresh criticism following Sunday’s attack, with protesters accusing them of being lax with Hizbullah and AMAL supporters, most of whom were allowed to walk away. “The thugs throw stones and insult security forces but they don’t confront them,” said Elie, 24, who was among the protesters attacked. “They don’t arrest them the way they arrest us.”Such criticism prompted caretaker Interior Minister Raya al-Hassan on Monday to respond by saying the army and police remain the only “guarantors of the country’s stability.”
Political paralysis
Political leaders have failed to select a new government nearly one month since Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s cabinet resigned, bowing to popular pressure. President Michel Aoun, whose powers include initiating parliamentary consultations to appoint a new premier, said he was open to a government that would include technocrats and representatives of the popular movement — both key demands of the protesters. But demonstrators say they reject any government that would also include representatives of established parties. The United States, France, the World Bank and credit rating agencies have all urged officials to accelerate cabinet formation, warning of a deteriorating economic and political crisis. In the latest diplomatic push, senior British foreign office official Richard Moore was in Lebanon on Monday. He would “underline the urgent need to form a government” during meetings with the president, prime minister, foreign minister, the speaker and the army chief, a British embassy statement said. “The people of Lebanon have been clear in their demand for improved governance, and they should be heard,” Moore, the director general for political affairs, was quoted as saying.

Lebanon investigates clashes between protesters and Hezbollah supporters
Sunniva Rose/The National/November 25/2019
Group and its Amal allies clashed with other demonstrators on Sunday before police joined in to break it up
Lebanon’s judicial and security authorities are investigating violent clashes between protesters blocking one of Beirut’s main motorways and supporters of two Shiite parties, Hezbollah and Amal, on Sunday.
Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency reported that a large number of soldiers and civilians were injured in the clashes, and cars and shops were destroyed. Witnesses said fighting broke out shortly after dozens of people gathered about 9pm to block a motorway known as The Ring, which has become a hot spot for protests. A group of young men arrived on motorbikes and began cursing Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, a woman said.
To try to defuse any tension, protesters sang the national anthem and popular slogans, but a fight broke out between Hezbollah supporters and other demonstrators. A video on social media showed protesters chanting “Hezbollah are terrorists”.Others who carried Hezbollah’s yellow flag responded with shouts of “God, Syria, Bashar and that’s all”, a reference to Syria’s President Bashar Al Assad, a Hezbollah ally, local newspaper The Daily Star reported.
The pro-Hezbollah group threw rocks at protesters before the army charged and fired tear gas to disperse the crowd in the early hours of the morning.
Although two similar incidents have occurred on the same Beirut road over the past few weeks, this is the first time that an official investigation has been announced. Other clashes occurred between those who support Hezbollah and those who do not, but the slogans on Sunday evening were noticeably more sectarian than before. The Ring links Christian eastern neighbourhoods of the capital with Shiite-dominated western parts. Protesters stayed on the motorway until dawn, but it had been cleared and traffic had returned to normal by mid-morning. Joseph Tawk, a columnist at Al Joumhouria newspaper, posted a video of himself on Twitter after he was beaten up on Sunday evening at The Ring. Smiling despite a bloody nose, he accused the thugs who attacked him of not representing the Shiite community.
“We are not thugs,” Tawk said. “We are Lebanese men and women. We are chanting slogans peacefully. We want a country. What do you want? Just sectarian leaders and Hezbollah?”The UN special co-ordinator for Lebanon, Jan Kubis, urged all Lebanese political factions to try to calm their supporters.
Nationwide anti-government protests began on October 17 after the government tried to introduce new taxes.
Protesters now say they reject the entire Lebanese political system, which they accuse of corruption, and are demanding elections.
On Sunday evening, Hezbollah and Amal supporters also ransacked about 40 tents that had been set up near Al Amin Mosque in central Beirut by civil activists and people affiliated to local universities. Watching men reassembling the tents the next morning, activist Riad Issa said he believed the violence on Sunday was fuelled by ignorance. “The people who used violence against us are like us,” Mr Issa said. “They are also oppressed by politicians.
“But maybe they have not arrived at the point where they can free themselves from sectarianism.”Asked why the Shiite community felt threatened by the protests, Mr Issa said he believed it was because they felt that Hezbollah was being asked to give up its weapons.
“They think it’s against them but it’s not true,” he said. “We want a technocratic government without politicians because they have failed us for the past 30 years. “We do not want Hezbollah, but at the same time we do not want the Free Patriotic Movement and the Future Movement.”

How filmmaker Elie Kamal used Lebanon’s abandoned railways to explore his country’s past
Kaleem Aftab/The National/November 25/2019
Growing up in east Beirut in the 1990s, Elie Kamal was encouraged by his parents to play on the train tracks. “For someone who hears ‘Go play on the railway’, who has a functioning railway in their country, that will feel so dangerous,” the director says.
His debut feature film, Beirut Terminus, which had its premiere in the Horizons of Arab Cinema section of the 41st Cairo International Film Festival this week, shows why loitering on the lines was not as shocking as it sounds. “In Lebanon, we don’t have a lot of parks or public spaces,” says the director, 34. But there are lots of disused railway stations and tracks.
“Because they still belong to the state, no one was allowed to build on them. They have been left alone, and over time have become overgrown and turned into fields. So they are safe places for children to play.”
As Kamal grew out of messing about on the tracks, he began looking into the history of the railway system in Lebanon and how this state of disrepair came to be. His essay film, Beirut Terminus, which received production support from the Enjaaz fund at Dubai Film Market, posits that the rise and fall of the railways is a metaphor for the country.
Kamal went to film school in Beirut and then in Belgium, where he honed his cinematography skills. He is the film’s director, cameraman and editor. For six years, he has shot the deserted train stations in an attempt to analyse, question and understand the history of his homeland, from its creation following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire to the protests of the present day. The images Kamal documents of abandoned locomotives and animals grazing where there once stood stations are beautiful – each frame could be hung in a gallery – and are the backbone of this artistic movie.
The pictures are given context by the director’s narration, in which he muses over his life and relationship with the divided country. It’s all contextualised by texts delivering a history of the nation, most notably of who invaded and when. The first railway in what is now Lebanon opened in 1895 during the Ottoman era, linking Beirut to Damascus. In later years, lines opened to Aleppo and Tripoli. It was the golden age of the railway.
‘Beirut Terminus’ has no dialogue, but is told through the director’s narration and with the use of repeated images. Courtesy of the artist
‘Beirut Terminus’ has no dialogue, but is told through the director’s narration and with the use of repeated images
In the Second World War, the Allies extended one line to Palestine. But it was quickly closed down after the 1948 war. The new Lebanese government took control of the railways, and it suffered from a lack of investment. The Civil War accelerated the network’s decline, and the railway was abandoned. The last route to remain open, carrying cement materials from Beirut to Chekka, closed in 1997. “The railway now looks like a skeleton, a body left to rot,” argues Kamal. “It’s a corpse. And if you don’t pump blood into the veins, eventually it dies.”
Today, the tracks that remain divide the city. “The line is not used to join people from different places together, but as a separation,” Kamal says. “You cannot cross from one region to another, and that was really problematic for someone like me. I opened my eyes, and then there was a civil war, and then for no reason that I could understand, I could not cross from one side to another because you are from a different religion.”
Kamal uses infra-red, which makes the trees in his shots look autumnal. Courtesy of the artist
A still from “Beirut Terminus’ by Elie Kamal
The tracks separated east Beirut where the Christians like him traditionally live, from west Beirut, where Muslims are the majority. Growing up, however, listening to radio plays with his mother, Kamal realised he had much in common with those on the western side of the city, more than he did with his close neighbours in the east. The stillness of the images in Beirut Express is a contrast to the movement usually associated with trains. The mood and aesthetic are in the same vein as Ron Fricke’s 1992 war documentary Baraka and his 2011 follow-up, Samsara. These films have no dialogue, but tell a story through the use of poetic narration and repetition of images. Another strong influence is the work of German auteur Werner Herzog, who developed the theory of “ecstatic truth”, a hypothesis claiming that a more insightful truth can be found by looking at emotional feelings and landscapes rather than factual evidence. Kamal’s background is in cinematography, which perhaps explains the emphasis on the visual and aural elements of Beirut Terminus. One of his stylish features is the use of infrared, which makes the trees look autumnal, and the world rose-tinted.
“I was thinking about how to show this land, but in a different way,” he says. “This land has a lot of bloodshed on it. During research, I discovered that forensic teams and the police sometimes use infrared at crime scenes to gather evidence. So when I shot in infrared, it seemed that I could transform all the foliage and greenery into red and that way all the blood that was re-shed could resurface.”
The film lands in Cairo as protests are happening in his home town. “On the streets of Beirut, people are crossing from one side to the other. All these ghosts and myths that we have about the other being the enemy doesn’t exist. It was only in the minds of the few, and this is really beautiful.”
Cairo International Film Festival runs until Friday, November 29 as a professional analyst of international security issues and Middle East political and business risk. Twitter: @KBAresearch

The call for a post-sectarian Middle East in Baghdad and Beirut
Zaid M. Belbagi//Arab News/November 25/2019
Water, electricity and access to economic opportunities are not sectarian trophies to award, but basic human rights. What events in Baghdad and Beirut have in common is that citizens, rather than succumbing to sectarian strife, are united in their aspiration for better lives and representative government.
In a region known for endemic corruption, authoritarian rulers and sectarian bloodletting, citizens uniting in their calls to bring an end to dysfunctional government, irrespective of confessional and tribal divides, is a welcome development.
Not dissimilar to Europe in the Middle Ages, the Arab world has been ravaged by a Thirty Years’ War fought along ethnic and ideological lines. Citizens have found themselves at what the Arab Human Development Report has described as “a historical crossroads — caught between oppression at home and violation from abroad, Arabs are increasingly excluded from determining their own future.”
Such instability has lent itself to crude government structures, where sectarian allegiances have determined access to services. This has perpetuated the failure of government in societies rapidly in need of meeting the demands of a growing youth population.
According to Benjamin Barthe, Middle East correspondent for Le Monde, “people are fed up of behind the door deals between former warlords turned communitarian chiefs, that prioritize their own political ambitions and personal financial interests over the well-being of the nation.”
In the Lebanese context, sectarian divisions are breaking down as members of different sects have joined hands in challenging established parties and the zuama (strongmen) who lead them. In Iraq, crumbling public services and acute economic problems have brought about extraordinary circumstances whereby Iraqi citizens have thrown caution to the wind and taken to the streets under live fire to demand better government.
In some respects this has been a return to the pre-2003 status quo, when Iraq had been under Baathist rule for decades, wherein the state superseded local groups and religious affiliations. After the US-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein, by destroying the state structure, sectarian militias and parties thrived as they acted as security providers for their communities.
If the protest movements succeed in driving real change, there is a possibility that they can contribute to building a truly non-sectarian and fair government in the Arab world.
Until Iraqi citizens came together this year, politics in Iraq had become wholly sectarian, with all parties operating along religious lines.
In both countries, government offices and representation in Parliament are distributed on the basis of sectarian quotas. Not only has this given confessional-based parties and militias a strong foothold, it has also resulted in the intervention of foreign powers in political life. In Lebanon, Hezbollah’s long dominance of Shiite politics is the primary example of this phenomenon, but Christian and Druze militia operate on the same principle. Their involvement has resulted in a complete hollowing out of the Lebanese state, empowering Iran at the expense of the Lebanese government.
In Iraq, given Iran’s bloody experience of the 1980-88 war, it has invested great resources into supporting successive pliant governments in Baghdad, more concerned with supporting Tehran’s interests than in meeting the needs of Iraqi citizens. Remarkably, however, in both Lebanon and Iraq, the protest movements have cut across sectarian lines, suggesting that they could be moving toward a post-sectarian era in their development through the erosion of the control of traditional confession-based leadership.
In Lebanon, the protest movement amazed many as Hezbollah, the longtime protector of the Shiite community, showed itself to be completely out of touch with events. Despite its impressive political organization and its substantial military muscle, for it to be challenged by the country’s Shiite community was telling of the extent of public discontent.
Similarly, Sunni Prime Minister Saad Hariri was forced to resign as his Sunni constituents lost confidence in his leadership and Maronite President Michel Aoun is under pressure from his Christian constituency to follow suit.
In Iraq, catastrophic service provision led to some of the largest protests against the Iraqi government and its Iranian leanings in Shiite-dominated cities and towns.
The spontaneous nature of recent events has taken the region by surprise. Though, without a doubt, they provide a telling barometer of public discontent with failing state structures governed along sectarian lines, they also raise questions in regards to the ability of the protesters to overhaul their respective systems.
A complete dismantling of the current, though comprised, systems of government could force both countries into a state of lawlessness and chaos. If the protest movements succeed, however, in driving real change, there is a possibility that they can contribute to building a truly non-sectarian and fair government in the Arab world.
*Zaid M. Belbagi is a political commentator, and an adviser to private clients between London and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). Twitter: @Moulay_Zaid.

The post A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For November 25-26/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 40th Day appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

عَاقِبَتُهُمُ الهَلاك، أُولئِكَ الَّذينَ إِلهُهُم بَطْنُهُم، ومَجْدُهُم في عَارِهِم، وفي أُمُورِ الأَرْضِ هُمُّهُم/Their end is destruction; their god is the belly; and their glory is in their shame; their minds are set on earthly things

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عَاقِبَتُهُمُ الهَلاك، أُولئِكَ الَّذينَ إِلهُهُم بَطْنُهُم، ومَجْدُهُم في عَارِهِم، وفي أُمُورِ الأَرْضِ هُمُّهُم
رسالة القدّيس بولس إلى أهل فيلبّي/03/17//21/04/01/:”يا إِخوَتِي، إِقْتَدُوا بِي، وٱنْظُرُوا إِلى الَّذِينَ يَسْلُكُونَ على مِثَالِنَا. فَكَثِيرٌ مِنْ أُولئِكَ الَّذِينَ كُنْتُ أُكَلِّمُكُم عَنْهُم مِرَارًا، وأُكَلِّمُكُم عَنْهُمُ الآنَ باكِيًا، يَسْلُكُونَ كأَعْدَاءٍ لِصَلِيبِ المَسِيح، أُولئِكَ الَّذِينَ عَاقِبَتُهُمُ الهَلاك، أُولئِكَ الَّذينَ إِلهُهُم بَطْنُهُم، ومَجْدُهُم في عَارِهِم، وفي أُمُورِ الأَرْضِ هُمُّهُم. أَمَّا نَحْنُ فمَدِينَتُنَا في السَّمَاوَات، ومِنْهَا نَنْتَظِرُ الرَّبَّ يَسُوعَ المَسِيحَ مُخَلِّصًا. وهوَ سَيُغَيِّرُ جَسَدَ هَوَانِنَا، فيَجْعَلُهُ على صُورَةِ جَسَدِ مَجْدِهِ، وَفْقًا لِعَمَلِ قُدْرَتِهِ، الَّتي بِهَا يُخْضِعُ لِنَفْسِهِ كُلَّ شَيء.إِذًا، يَا إِخْوَتِي، الَّذِينَ أُحِبُّهُم وأَشْتَاقُ إِلَيْهِم، وأَنْتُم فَرَحِي وإِكْلِيلي، أُثْبُتُوا هكذَا في الرَّبّ، أَيُّهَا الأَحِبَّاء”

Their end is destruction; their god is the belly; and their glory is in their shame; their minds are set on earthly things
Letter to the Philippians 03,17/21.04,01/:”Brothers and sisters, join in imitating me, and observe those who live according to the example you have in us. For many live as enemies of the cross of Christ; I have often told you of them, and now I tell you even with tears. Their end is destruction; their god is the belly; and their glory is in their shame; their minds are set on earthly things. But our citizenship is in heaven, and it is from there that we are expecting a Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ. He will transform the body of our humiliation so that it may be conformed to the body of his glory, by the power that also enables him to make all things subject to himself. Therefore, my brothers and sisters, whom I love and long for, my joy and crown, stand firm in the Lord in this way, my beloved.”

فَسَوْفَ يَقُومُ مُسَحَاءُ كَذَبَةٌ وأَنْبِيَاءُ كَذَبَة، ويَأْتُونَ بِآيَاتٍ عَظِيمَةٍ وخَوارِق، لِيُضِلُّوا المُخْتَارِينَ أَنْفُسَهُم، لَو قَدِرُوا
إنجيل القدّيس متّى24/من23حتى31/:”قالَ الربُّ يَسوع: «إِنْ قَالَ لَكُم أَحَد: هُوَذَا المَسِيحُ هُنَا أَوْ هُنَاك! فَلا تُصَدِّقُوا. فَسَوْفَ يَقُومُ مُسَحَاءُ كَذَبَةٌ وأَنْبِيَاءُ كَذَبَة، ويَأْتُونَ بِآيَاتٍ عَظِيمَةٍ وخَوارِق، لِيُضِلُّوا المُخْتَارِينَ أَنْفُسَهُم، لَو قَدِرُوا. هَا إِنِّي قَدْ أَنْبَأْتُكُم! فَإِنْ قَالُوا لَكُم: هَا هُوَ في البَرِّيَّة! فلا تَخْرُجُوا، أَو: هَا هُوَ في دَاخِلِ البَيْت! فَلا تُصَدِّقُوا. فكَمَا أَنَّ البَرْقَ يُومِضُ مِنَ المَشَارِق، ويَسْطَعُ حَتَّى المَغَارِب، هكَذَا يَكُونُ مَجِيءُ ٱبْنِ الإِنْسَان. حَيْثُ تَكُونُ الجُثَّةُ هُنَاكَ تَجْتَمِعُ النُّسُور. وحَالاً بَعْدَ ضِيقِ تِلْكَ الأَيَّام، أَلشَّمْسُ تُظْلِم، والقَمَرُ لا يُعْطِي ضَوءَهُ، والنُّجُومُ تَتَسَاقَطُ مِنَ السَّمَاء، وقُوَّاتُ السَّمَاوَاتِ تَتَزَعْزَع. وحينَئِذٍ تَظْهَرُ في السَّمَاءِ عَلامَةُ ٱبْنِ الإِنْسَان، فَتَنْتَحِبُ قَبَائِلُ الأَرْضِ كُلُّها، وتَرَى ٱبْنَ الإِنْسَانِ آتِيًا على سُحُبِ السَّمَاءِ بِقُدْرَةٍ ومَجْدٍ عَظِيم. ويُرْسِلُ مَلائِكَتَهُ يَنْفُخُونَ في بُوقٍ عَظِيم، فيَجْمَعُونَ مُخْتَارِيهِ مِنَ الرِّيَاحِ الأَرْبَع، مِنْ أَقَاصي السَّمَاوَاتِ إِلى أَقَاصِيهَا.”

For false messiahs and false prophets will appear and produce great signs and omens, to lead astray, if possible, even the elect
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 24/23-31/:”If anyone says to you, “Look! Here is the Messiah!” or “There he is!” do not believe it. For false messiahs and false prophets will appear and produce great signs and omens, to lead astray, if possible, even the elect. Take note, I have told you beforehand. So, if they say to you, “Look! He is in the wilderness”, do not go out. If they say, “Look! He is in the inner rooms”, do not believe it. For as the lightning comes from the east and flashes as far as the west, so will be the coming of the Son of Man. Wherever the corpse is, there the vultures will gather. ‘Immediately after the suffering of those days the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light; the stars will fall from heaven, and the powers of heaven will be shaken. Then the sign of the Son of Man will appear in heaven, and then all the tribes of the earth will mourn, and they will see “the Son of Man coming on the clouds of heaven” with power and great glory. And he will send out his angels with a loud trumpet call, and they will gather his elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other.

The post عَاقِبَتُهُمُ الهَلاك، أُولئِكَ الَّذينَ إِلهُهُم بَطْنُهُم، ومَجْدُهُم في عَارِهِم، وفي أُمُورِ الأَرْضِ هُمُّهُم/Their end is destruction; their god is the belly; and their glory is in their shame; their minds are set on earthly things appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

ريموند إبراهيم: الإسلام والغرب: الدوافع وراء السرديات الكاذبة/Raymond Ibrahim: Islam and the West: Motives behind the False Narrative

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Islam and the West: Motives behind the False Narrative
ريموند إبراهيم: الإسلام والغرب: الدوافع وراء السرديات الكاذبة
 Raymond Ibrahim/November 26/2019 

 Any honest and objective appraisal of Islam’s historic jihad on the Christian world must be eye-opening, to say the very least. In the first century of its existence (between 632-732) Islam permanently conquered, Arabized, and Islamized nearly three-quarters of the post-Roman Christian world, thereby permanently severing it. Europe came to be known as “the West” because it was literally the remaining and westernmost appendage of Christendom not to be swallowed up by Islam.

 For roughly a millennium thereafter, Arabs, Berbers, Turks, and Tatars—all of whom called and saw themselves as Muslims—launched raid after raid, all justified and lauded as jihads, into virtually every corner of Europe. They reached as far as Iceland and provoked the U.S. into its first war as a nation. The devastation was indescribable; some regions in Europe, particularly in Spain and the Balkans, remain inhabitable due to the incessant raiding. Some 15 million Europeans were enslaved during this perennial jihad and, according to contemporary records, treated horrifically.

In short, “if we … ask ourselves how and when the modern notion of Europe and the European identity was born,” writes historian Franco Cardini, “we realize the extent to which Islam was a factor (albeit a negative one) in its creation. Repeated Muslim aggression against Europe between the seventh to eighth centuries, then between the fourteenth and the eighteenth centuries … was a ‘violent midwife’ to Europe.”

Here the inevitable question arises: How could such a long, well-documented history of unmitigated Islamic aggression that had immense repercussions on the development of Western civilization now be presented as the antithesis of reality?

The answer revolves around a number of modern philosophies—from the Enlightenment to moral/cultural relativism—that have each contributed to an all-pervasive “Narrative” concerning the historic relationship between Islam and the West. In presenting the West as aggressor and Islam as victim—hence the latter’s ongoing “grievance”-based animosity—this history is as entrenched as it is the reverse of reality.

To understand this, one must first understand that, despite its many manifestations, permutations, and emphases over the centuries, the Narrative’s unspoken driving force has largely been the same: to demonize and thus justify a break away from Europe’s traditional heritage, religion, identity, and mores.

If this sounds farfetched, consider: whereas by any objective standard the West is responsible for practically every boon taken for granted today—from scientific, technological, economic and medicinal advances, to the abolition of slavery and anti-discrimination laws—today no people of any race or civilization despise their heritage except Western people. Clearly something is amiss.

Or consider how leftists/liberals/progressives who forever whine against any vestige of Western traditionalism, habitually make common cause with Islam—despite the latter’s truly oppressive qualities. Thus feminists denounce the Western “patriarchy”—but say nothing against the Muslim treatment of women as chattel; homosexuals denounce Christian bakeries—but say nothing against the Muslim execution of homosexuals; multiculturalists denounce Christians who refuse to suppress their faith to accommodate the religious sensibilities of Muslim minorities—but say nothing against the entrenched and open Muslim persecution of Christians.

The reason for these discrepancies is simple: “The enemy [Islam] of my enemy [Christianity] is my friend.”

From here, how and why such a formally well-known history of Muslim aggression against Europe was not merely suppressed but reversed should start making sense: of all non-European, non-Christian peoples, only Muslims lived alongside and interacted with (that is, constantly encroached and warred on) Europe for over a millennium; this made Muslims the only people—the only foil—that could be used to support the Narrative’s argument against premodern Europe. But first an intellectually satisfying way of casting Muslims as victims not conquerors was needed.

Enter literary professor Edward Said’s 1978 book, Orientalism. Its central thesis is that the Orientalists—the Europeans who began the academic study of the East centuries ago—were not writing objectively about Muslims and their history, but rather intentionally slandering and stereotyping them in order to justify dominating them during the colonial era.

This made perfect sense—but only because the postmodern Western mind had already been primed for it. For if, as Marxist Materialism teaches, ideas/religions have no influence on history (and thus, economic want, not “jihad,” caused Muslims to expand); if, as Relativism and its spawn Multiculturalism teach, there are no absolute truths, religious or otherwise (and thus no culture or civilization is “better” than another); if, as pop psychology teaches, violent and negative behavior is always a product of societal injustices (and thus the more Muslims behave violently, the more that only proves they are frustrated victims)—then what does one make of the aforementioned centuries of European writings that uniformly depict Muslims as ideologically driven by violence and lust?

Simple: dismiss them all as bigoted and hypocritical lies by nefarious Christians and Europeans intent on demonizing a superior, more tolerant faith and civilization. Thus a whole new academic approach to Islam—stripped of all historic writings not conforming to the Narrative—was born. History would no longer shape ideas and attitudes; rather, preexisting ideas and attitudes—wishful thinking—would shape history.

Bernard Lewis, himself a target of Edward Said’s Orientalism, summarized this new approach—or “pseudo history”—well:
According to a currently fashionable epistemological view, absolute truth is either nonexistent or unattainable. Therefore, truth doesn’t matter; facts don’t matter. All discourse is a manifestation of a power relationship, and all knowledge is slanted. Therefore, accuracy doesn’t matter; evidence doesn’t matter. All that matters is the attitude—the motives and purposes—of the user of knowledge, and this may simply be claimed for oneself or imputed to another. In imputing motives, the irrelevance of truth, facts, evidence, and even plausibility is a great help. The mere assertion suffices” (Islam and the West, 115).

Orientalism’s success lay less in anything intrinsic to it—American classicist Bruce Thornton characterizes it as an “incoherent amalgam of dubious postmodern theory, sentimental Third Worldism, glaring historical errors, and Western guilt”—and more because it fit the West’s prevailing zeitgeist (which, of course, thrives on “dubious postmodern theory, sentimental Third Worldism, glaring historical errors, and Western guilt”).

Nor does the Narrative predominate today because people are well read or pay attention to academe; as French historian Marc Ferro demonstrated in his Cinema and History (1988), the overwhelming majority of Western people’s knowledge of history comes from movies. And almost any major film dealing with premodern Europeans and Muslims—Robin Hood (1991), Kingdom of Heaven (2005), etc.—contrasts hypocritical, intolerant, and fanatical Christians with sophisticated, advanced, and tolerant Muslims. Commenting on such films back in 1997, Lewis wrote, “The misrepresentation of the past in the cinema is probably the most fertile and effective source of such misinformation at the present time…”

Twenty years later the Narrative has only metastasized and infected all aspects of public life, including politics and so-called “mainstream news.” Meanwhile, social and other media giants—YouTube, Google, Facebook, Twitter—increasingly censor material that contradicts the Narrative.
Such is how a previously well-known history was turned upside down and used to weaken the West—the greatest sin of which is ever again to think or behave like its “awful” ancestors did concerning Islam.

For more on the true history between Islam and the West, see the author’s recent Sword and Scimitar: Fourteen Centuries of War between Islam and the West — a book that CAIR and its Islamist allies did everything they could to prevent the U.S. Army War College from learning about.

The post ريموند إبراهيم: الإسلام والغرب: الدوافع وراء السرديات الكاذبة/Raymond Ibrahim: Islam and the West: Motives behind the False Narrative appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

د. مجيد رافيزادا/كيتستون: ستمتلك إيران القنبلة النووية خلال أشهر قليلة/Majid Rafizadeh: Iran to Have Nuclear Bomb in a Few Months

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Iran to Have Nuclear Bomb in a Few Months?
د. مجيد رافيزادا/كيتستون: ستمتلك إيران القنبلة النووية خلال أشهر قليلة
Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone Institute/November 26/2019

This marks a dangerous phase in Iran’s nuclear defiance. Tehran is now using a kind of prototype centrifuge that enriches uranium almost 50 times faster.

Although Iran is a party to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), it refuses to allow the International Atomic Energy Agency to inspect its sites. The IAEA is also not allowed to inspect or monitor Iran’s military sites where nuclear activities are most likely being carried out.

That is why, before it is too late, which it is fast becoming, it is incumbent on the US and the international community to take seriously Iran’s nuclear advances and urgently address its rush to obtain nuclear weapons.

This marks a dangerous phase in Iran’s nuclear defiance. Tehran is now using a kind of prototype centrifuge that enriches uranium almost 50 times faster. Pictured: The Natanz nuclear enrichment facility in Iran.

The Iranian government is shortening its nuclear breakout time — the amount of time required to produce enough weapons-grade uranium for a single nuclear weapon. Tehran has accomplished this through several steps in the last few months.

Iran’s government first increased its enriched uranium stockpile beyond the 300 kilogram limit; it enriched uranium to levels beyond the cap of 3.67 percent, and then activated 20 IR-4 and 20 IR-6 advanced centrifuges. The Iranian leaders even boasted that their government is now exploring new uranium enrichment programs and producing centrifuges.

Most recently, the head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, Ali Akbar Salehi, declared that Iran has an adequate supply of 20% enriched uranium., “Right now we have enough 20% uranium,” he told the Iranian Students News Agency, ISNA, “but we can produce more as needed”. He added that the country is resuming uranium enrichment at a far higher level at the Fordow nuclear facility — an underground uranium enrichment facility which is reportedly located on one of bases of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC­­) — injecting uranium gas into centrifuges, and operating 60 IR-6 advanced centrifuges.

This marks a dangerous phase in Iran’s nuclear defiance. Tehran is now using a kind of prototype centrifuge that enriches uranium almost 50 times faster.

Iran’s nuclear breakout time in 2015 was estimated at less than one year. Tehran has advanced its nuclear program since then. In an interview with Iran’s state-owned Channel 2, Salehi admitted that the “nuclear deal” initiated by then-US President Barack Obama not only failed to restrict Iran’s nuclear program; it actually helped Iran to advance its nuclear program through the flow of funds thanks to the lifting of sanctions. “If we have to go back and withdraw from the nuclear deal,” he stated, “we certainly do not go back to where we were before … We will be standing in a much, much higher position.”

Although Iran is a party to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), it refuses to allow the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to inspect its sites. The IAEA is also not allowed to inspect or monitor Iran’s military sites, where nuclear activities are most likely being carried out.

Among the many concessions that the Obama administration granted to the Iranian government, one was accepting the Iranian leaders’ demand that military sites would be out of the IAEA’s reach. Because of this surrender, at various high-profile sites such as the Parchin military complex, located southeast of Tehran, the regime has been free to engage in nuclear activities without the risk of inspection.

The Iranian leaders keep claiming that their nuclear activities are solely for peaceful purposes. This claim is bogus. If the Islamic Republic is advancing its nuclear program for peaceful purposes, why has Tehran repeatedly failed to report its nuclear facilities, including those at Natanz and Arak, to the IAEA?

Also, why does the Iranian government keep refusing to answer the IAEA’s questions regarding a secret nuclear facility, reportedly located in the suburbs of Tehran? Two nonpartisan organizations based in Washington — the Institute for Science and International Security and the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies — last year released a detailed report on Iran’s clandestine nuclear activities at this site.

In addition, why did the Iranian government place an S-300 anti-aircraft missile system at the Fordow underground nuclear site after the 2015 nuclear agreement? Finally, why does the Iranian regime never adequately address reports about its efforts to obtain illegal nuclear technology and equipment? Germany’s domestic intelligence agency, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, revealed in its annual report for 2016 that the Iranian government had pursued a “clandestine” path to obtain illicit nuclear technology and equipment from German companies “at what is, even by international standards, a quantitatively high level.”

The truth is that, from the perspective of the ruling clerics of Iran, obtaining nuclear weapons is a must to help Tehran advance its hegemonic ambitions to dominate the region. Also, by having nuclear weapons, the Iranian government can more powerfully support terror groups and proxies to destabilize the region without being concerned that the West might strike Iranian military targets.

Most of all, in the view of the ruling clerics, having nuclear weapons can ensure the survival of their theocratic, anti-American and anti-Semitic establishment.

That is why, before it is too late, which it is fast becoming, it is incumbent on the US and the international community to take seriously Iran’s nuclear advances and urgently address its rush to obtain nuclear weapons.

*Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a business strategist and advisor, Harvard-educated scholar, political scientist, board member of Harvard International Review, and president of the International American Council on the Middle East. He has authored several books on Islam and US foreign policy. He can be reached at Dr.Rafizadeh@Post.Harvard.Edu

*Follow Majid Rafizadeh on Twitter
© 2019 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.

The post د. مجيد رافيزادا/كيتستون: ستمتلك إيران القنبلة النووية خلال أشهر قليلة/Majid Rafizadeh: Iran to Have Nuclear Bomb in a Few Months appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.


عاموس هاريل/هآرتس: إسرائيل وأميركا يسعيان للحصول على تطمينات حول إيران ولكن لأسباب مختلفة لكل منهما/Amos Harel/Haaretz: U.S. and Israel Seek Assurances on Iran From Each Other, but for Very Different Reasons

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Analysis/U.S. and Israel Seek Assurances on Iran From Each Other, but for Very Different Reasons
عاموس هاريل/هآرتس: إسرائيل وأميركا يسعيان للحصول على تطمينات حول إيران ولكن لأسباب مختلفة لكل منهما
Amos Harel/Haaretz/November 26/2019

With Netanyahu’s legal woes and a new defense minister looking to score political points, Israel’s security establishment has one responsible adult

Israel has hosted a series of senior defense officials in recent weeks, climaxing in Sunday’s visit by the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Mark Milley, who was hosted by Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Aviv Kochavi.

Both countries took care to stress that ties between their respective defense establishments are particularly close. But two other considerations that aren’t talked about publicly are also apparently motivating this aerial convoy of senior American officials. Both have to do with calming fears – Israel’s fear of American abandonment and America’s fear of unilateral Israeli action.

The Israeli fear stems from the Trump administration’s recent moves: It has refrained from responding to Iranian attacks in the Gulf, including one that did serious damage to Saudi oil facilities, another that downed an expensive American drone, and has withdrawn American soldiers from the Kurdish regions of northeast Syria, opening the way for a Turkish ground invasion. Israel is scared by America’s apparent desire to quit the region, which leaves Iran with more room to maneuver.

The Americans, in contrast, are apparently worried about decisions Israel might make in the future. Senior Israeli officials speak ceaselessly about the dangers posed by Iran’s efforts to entrench itself militarily in southern Syria, smuggle advanced weaponry to Hezbollah and bolster its presence in Iraq and Yemen. Increased military friction between Israel and Iran plus its satellites could drag the Americans into a regional war, which, judging by his public statements, U.S. President Donald Trump doesn’t want.

This is somewhat reminiscent of the series of senior Pentagon officials who visited Israel in the summer of 2011 and again the following summer. At both junctures, as we later discovered, Israel was considering attacking Iran’s nuclear facilities on its own. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and then-Defense Minister Ehud Barak favored such an attack; the American generals were sent to take the pulse of their Israeli counterparts who opposed it.

As far as we know, no such attack is currently on the agenda, since Iran is still committed in principle to its nuclear deal with five major powers (the sixth, America, quit the deal in May 2018), and its recent violations of the deal haven’t yet crossed the line that Israel deems intolerable.

Nevertheless, Israeli officials’ recent statements about Iran have been unusually aggressive.

On Sunday, Netanyahu and Defense Minister Naftali Bennett toured the Syrian and Lebanese borders. Netanyahu announced that Israel would work to thwart arms smuggling from Iran to Syria and block its efforts “to turn Iraq and Yemen into bases for launching missiles.” Bennett added that Iranian forces in Syria “have nothing to look for here.”

Monday, at the official memorial ceremony for soldiers who died in the 1956 Sinai war, Bennett said, “it’s clear to our enemies that we’ll respond to any attempt to prevent us from living. Our response will be very precise and very painful. I’m aiming these remarks not only at those who threaten our lives on the southern front, but also at those in the north.”

Senior Israeli officials have also referred to the domestic woes the Iranian regime is facing – a massive wave of protests in Iraq and Lebanon that has taken on an anti-Iranian flavor, and last week’s violent protests in Iran in response to a hike in gas prices. The warnings about possible Iranian moves against Israel aren’t a false alarm. But it’s impossible to completely separate Israeli officials’ considerations from the domestic situation, primarily the decision to indict Netanyahu and the impasse in efforts to form a government

For years, Netanyahu was justly praised for showing responsibility and restraint in employing military force, especially his stubborn refusal to bow to populist pressure for another pointless war in the Gaza Strip. On the northern front, too, he generally acted with finesse which prevented a full-scale clash with Iran.

But he has had one documented slip: A week before September’s election, Attorney General Avichai Mendelblit had to intervene (with the army’s encouragement) to stop him from an operation in Gaza that could have forced a postponement of the election, and which he planned to launch without vetting it with the security cabinet.

A person who in recent years was in the know about the “campaign between the wars,” the IDF’s operations beyond Israel’s borders, was asked last week about how much the continued conflict between Iran and Israel depended on actions taken by the latter. The answer was: “20 to 80,” in other words Israel is the one who will dictate to a great extent how things develop. This situation will require all the oversight bodies – the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, attorney general, the media – to be on heightened alert. And mostly, it places particular responsibility on Kochavi, who testified after the recent targeted killing in Gaza that all the decisions were made in a business-like manner and were not influenced by political considerations.

Given the circumstances in which Netanyahu is preoccupied with his own personal fate and the new defense minister needs to take advantage of the relatively short time he has at his disposal to make himself stand out politically, all eyes are on Kochavi. He pushed to take an aggressive line in the recent operations in Gaza and Syria, and he is now the responsible adult. In addition, a number of other senior defense officials are identified more with Netanyahu than Kochavi is, or are examining the events mostly from the tactical viewpoint, which emphasizes the need for continuing with counter-operations. The previous IDF chief of staff, Gadi Eisenkot, demonstrated an especially strong backbone – sometimes it seemed as If he was almost roaring for battle with the politicians. Now Kochavi is facing, against his will, a similar test.

The military cannot be completely protected against the political considerations that preoccupy the establishment. The General Staff is not a monastery and its generals are well aware of what is going on in the country. But the commanders of the division that Bennett and Netanyahu visited on Sunday, and the pilots who undertake their night-time missions, must be certain that the security decisions about life or death matters are made for the right reasons. Given Netanyahu’s apocalyptic mood, reflected in the last few days in the vicious attacks against prosecutors and the police, the doubts about his decision-making have been growing.

At the beginning of the decade, the defense establishment was rocked by the Harpaz affair, which was mainly an unrestrained conflict between then chief of staff, Gabi Ashkenazi, and Barak. Netanyahu, as prime minister, showed zero interest in the affair. He suddenly remembered it only in the course of the last year when Ashkenazi entered political life and Mendelblit – who as Military Advocate General was almost court martialed for criminally delaying the handling of a forged document – began to be perceived, as far as Netanyahu was concerned, as a real threat. During this period, the question came up of how the military could preserve its moral and professional compass, while the defense leadership wallowed in mudslinging. This question is now even more resounding when the prime minister is in trouble and the security crisis can ruin all the politicians’ plans.

The post عاموس هاريل/هآرتس: إسرائيل وأميركا يسعيان للحصول على تطمينات حول إيران ولكن لأسباب مختلفة لكل منهما/Amos Harel/Haaretz: U.S. and Israel Seek Assurances on Iran From Each Other, but for Very Different Reasons appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

الياس بجاني: تحية إكبار وإعجاب لأبطال الثورة السلمية في بعلبك وصور وكفررمان والنباطية

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تحية إكبار وإعجاب لأبطال الثورة السلمية في بعلبك وصور وكفررمان والنباطية
الياس بجاني/26 تشرين الثاني/2019

تحية إكبار لأهلنا الأحرار من البيئة الشيعية الكريمة في صور وبعلبك والنباطية وكفار رمان، وفي كل بلدات الجنوب والبقاع تحديداً.

فهؤلاء هم عملياً أمل ورجاء وتطلعات كل لبنان وكل أهله في نجاح ثورة التحرر الحضارية والسلمية من الظلم والعبودية وحكم الميليشيات والأوليغارشيات.

هؤلاء الأبطال الميامين بشجاعة وإصرار وإيمان صلب كصخور لبنان يعيدون لوطن الأرز صورته التعايشية المشرّقة والسلمية والحضارية الحقيقية التي شوهها ويشوهها أتباع نظام الملالي في لبنان من ربع الميليشياويين والفكر المنغلق والظلامي، وفي مقدمهم حركة أمل وحزب الله ومعهم أصحاب شركات العديد من الأحزاب التجارية المتورطين في سمسرات وصفقات، وكذلك أهل الحكم المحكومين من حزب الله والمستقوين بفائض سلاحه.

تحية لهؤلاء الأبطال المؤمنين بلبنانيتهم، وبهوية لبنان الموحدة والجامعة والمجموعة بمحبة تحت مظلة العلم اللبناني، والفخورين عن قناعة بتميز ووحدة شعب لبنان بكافة شرائحه.

تحية إكبار لهؤلاء الأحرار الرافضين التقوقع والتعصب والمذهبية الذين بصدورهم العارية يقاومون بسلمية وعناد غزوات وتعديات شبيحة مسلحين هائجين ومتوترين ومنظمين ومجيشين هم تابعين للمجموعات العسكرية في حركة أمل وحزب الله.

احرقوا خيمهم وشيطنوهم وخونوهم وربطوهم بالسفارات واعتدوا عليهم وأهانوهم في حين أنهم من أنقى وأشرف وأصدق الشرائح اللبنانية الحرة الواعية وطنياً.

اليوم في مدينة الشمس، بعلبك الأبية تعرض هؤلاء الأحرار والشرفاء لمسلسل من الغزوات والاعتداءات الجاهلية والإرهابية بهدف إرهابهم ومنعهم من التعبير عن أرائهم والشهادة للحق وقتل مطالبهم المحقة المشروعة وإلحاقهم بالقوة بقوافل ثقافة الغنمية والقطعان.

يبقى أن كل غزوات الجاهليين من شبيحة حركة أمل وحزب الله التي تمظهرت ببربريتها والهمجية على جسر الرنغ وفي شوارع مار يوسف ومونو وساحاتي رياض الصلح والشهداء وفي صور والنباطية وكفر رمان وبعلبك وفي العشرات من قرى وبلدات الجنوب والبقاع…. هذه كلها ممارسات وتصرفات لا تمثل غير ثقافة وشرود أصحابها وفقط أصحابها ومعهم القيمين على حزبيهما، في حين أن غالبية الشعب اللبناني وبكافة شرائحه المذهبية والمناطقية والمجتمعية هي في غير مكان وفي غير ثقافة وفي غير مزاج.

في الخلاصة، فإن حزب الله لا يمثل غير نظام الملالي في إيران، وهو يحتل لبنان عسكرياً ويأخذ بيئته وكل لبنان وكل شرائحه، وكل الدولة اللبنانية رهائن بالقوة.

وبالتالي لن يتمكن لبنان من حل أي مشكلة يواجهها وفي أي مجال كان قبل أن تسود الدولة على الدويلة، ويعود حزب الله وحركة أمل إلى الدولة بشروط الدولة، وتطبق وتنفذ عملياً القرارات الدولية الثلاثة الخاصة بلبنان وهي: اتفاقية الهدنة، وال 1559 وال 1701، وإلا فالج لا تعالج.

*الكاتب ناشط لبناني اغترابي
عنوان الكاتب الالكتروني
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رابط موقع الكاتب الالكتروني على الإنترنت
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15 جريحا في بعلبك: عناصر من حزب الله يطلقون النار على المتظاهرين
مرصد نيوز/26 تشرين الثاني/2019
تشهد مدينة بعلبك في هذه الأثناء توترات، وذلك بعدما اعتصم مناصرون لحركة أمل وحزب الله في ساحة خليل مطران في بعلبك في مقابل تظاهرة الحراك الشعبي في المدينة.
وبحسب “المركزية” اقدم عناصر من حزب الله على عن اطلاق الرصاص على المتظاهرين في بعلبك، وتفيد المعلومات عن سقوط 15 جريحاً وتكسير مكبرات الصوت وفرض طوق أمني في المنطقة. وكان قد حوصر مجموعة من المتظاهرين في احد المحال في ساحة خليل مطران من قبل عناصر امل وحزب الله.وقد عمل الجيش على الفصل بين المتظاهرين بعد وقوع تلاسن وتدافع بين الجانبين.


مناصرو «امل» و«حزب الله» يهاجمون المتظاهرين في بعلبك
جنوبية/26 تشرين الثاني/2019
تشهد مدينة بعلبك في هذه الأثناء توترات، وذلك بعدما اعتصم مناصرون ل​حركة أمل​ و​حزب الله​ في ساحة خليل مطران في ​بعلبك​ في مقابل ​تظاهرة​ ​الحراك الشعبي​ في المدينة. » وقد عمل الجيش​ على الفصل بين المتظاهرين بعد وقوع تلاسن وتدافع بين الجانبين.


ازالة الاعلام اللبنانية من قبل مناصري «حزب الله» في بعلبك!
جنوبية/26 تشرين الثاني/2019
فيما شهدت مدينة بعلبك اليوم توترات بعدما اقدم مناصرون ل​حركة أمل​ و​حزب الله​ في ساحة خليل مطران في ​المدينة​ بالاعتداء على ​تظاهرة​ ​الحراك الشعبي.​ انتشر فيديو على مواقع التواصل الاجتماعي يظهر مناصرو أمل وحزب الله يعملون على ازالة الاعلام اللبنانية التي كان قد رفعها المتظاهرون في ساحة الاعتصام. هذا وبحسب “المركزية” اقدم عناصر من حزب الله على عن اطلاق الرصاص على المتظاهرين في بعلبك، وتفيد المعلومات عن سقوط 15 جريحاً وتكسير مكبرات الصوت وفرض طوق أمني في المنطقة.

The post الياس بجاني: تحية إكبار وإعجاب لأبطال الثورة السلمية في بعلبك وصور وكفررمان والنباطية appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

يوسف بزي: في اليوم الأربعون الشبيحة ينشرون إرهابهم في العاصمة/خضر حسان: مع غزوة صُوْر هنا خسرت الشيعية السياسية/وليد حسين: حزب الله يتسلل بمجموعات مدنية إلى الساحات ويستوطنها/بولا أسطيح: اتهامات للثنائي الشيعي بتوجيه رسائل أمنية ومصادره تشدد على فتح الطرق وتحذيرات من مواجهات أهلية

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اليوم الأربعون: الشبيحة ينشرون إرهابهم في العاصمة
يوسف بزي/المدن/26 تشرين الثاني/2019

غزوة صُوْر: هنا خسرت “الشيعية السياسية”
خضر حسان/المدن/26 تشرين الثاني/2019

حزب الله يتسلل بمجموعات مدنية إلى الساحات و”يستوطنها”!
وليد حسين/المدن/26 تشرين الثاني/2019

اتهامات لـ«الثنائي الشيعي» بتوجيه رسائل أمنية ومصادره تشدد على فتح الطرق… وتحذيرات من مواجهات أهلية
بولا أسطيح/الشرق الأوسط/26 تشرين الثاني/2019

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اليوم الأربعون: الشبيحة ينشرون إرهابهم في العاصمة
يوسف بزي/المدن/26 تشرين الثاني/2019
في اليوم الأربعين للثورة، أصر شبيحة حركة أمل وحزب الله أن لا يغادروا المشهد. بل وأن يعيدوا تذكير اللبنانيين بما اقترفوه يوم 29 تشرين الأول، حين هاجمت مجموعات من زعرانهم ساحتي الشهداء ورياض الصلح واعتدوا وحرقوا وضربوا وخربوا كل ما تطاله أيديهم.. وتفوقوا يومها في ممارسة العنف على الشابات خصوصاً. كان انتصاراً مشيناً ولا شك. لكن بلا حياء أصلاً. أبى حزب الله وحركة أمل أن يمر اليوم الأربعون للثورة من دون أن يتركا بصمتهما الخاصة، بصمة العنف والغلّ. وليعيدا إلى أذهان اللبنانيين المعضلة إياها: التعايش مع فائض القوة، ومع هذا الاستعراض الدائم للقوة، وهذا الشغف في بسط القوة العارية والفاحشة. مشهد جسر الرينغ المروع، هو حتى الآن وطوال الأربعين يوماً الاقتراح السياسي الوحيد الذي يقدمه حسن نصرالله (وخلفه دوماً نبيه برّي) للشعب اللبناني الثائر. وأبعد من ذلك، هو مشهد واعد بالأسوأ عن سابق تصور وتصميم. وعد بالدم والميليشيات والوحشية والعدوان والاستباحة.
يصرّ حزب الله على شيطنة الثورة وعلى معاداتها. ويصر أكثر على دفعها بعيداً عن طابعها السلمي والمدني. وهو يحتقر أصلاً الكلمتين الأخيرتين. يسخر من هذه “السلمية” بوصفها حيلة محرجة تريد تكبيل سلاحه. فحزب الحروب، المدمن على الحروب حتى في لحظات السلم، لا يسعه أن يظهر بعض اللياقة تجاه متظاهرين سلميين مدنيين.
لكن ماذا يفعل “مقاتلو” أو “مجاهدو” حزب الله على جسر الرينغ؟ ضد من ودفاعاً عن ماذا؟ هل بات جسر الرينغ أيضاً طريقاً إلى القدس؟ هل هؤلاء الشابات والشبان يهددون صواريخه الدقيقة التي تطال ما بعد حيفا؟ بل هل هؤلاء اللبنانيون ينوون سبيّ السيدة زينب مرة ثانية؟ هل المطالبة بدولة أفضل، باقتصاد أحسن، بفساد أقل.. يهدد المعتقدات الشيعية وطقوسها؟ من يأتون بهذه العداوة كلها وبهذا الكراهية العميقة تجاه مواطنيهم، ومن أين هذا العزم على الأذى، والاستعداد للقتل والاعتداء وإسالة الدماء؟ ليل الأحد – الإثنين، بدا وعيداً مقصوداً من حركة أمل وحزب الله تجاه الشعب اللبناني: الاستعداد لرمي البلد في الفوضى. الاستعداد لإطلاق شرارة طائفية ومذهبية. لم تقم الثورة بوجه حزب الله. لا بل أكثر ما تجنبته بحرص شديد هو التصادم السياسي أو الميداني مع جمهور حزب الله. لكن الحزب الذي يرى منذ اليوم الأول أن الثورة خطرة عليه، وعلى ما كرسه منذ العام 2006، لم يتوقف على حض جمهوره ومواليه على مخاصمة الساحات والناس والثورة، بوصفها “مؤامرة صهيو أميركية”.
والمحيّر حقاً أن “الثنائي الشيعي” الذي يدرك مأزق النظام، وعمق الأزمة الاقتصادية، وفشل الدولة وانهيار صيغة الحكم، لا يعمل على تقديم أي فكرة سياسية قابلة للتداول. ليس مستعداً لأي مراجعة أو المبادرة لحوار فعلي. كان يمكنه أن يلهينا ويرضينا لسنوات مثلاً في مناقشة “الاستراتيجية الدفاعية”. لكن وبصراحة، يبدو أن العنجهية باتت متحكمة فيه. شيء من لوثة الأسدية ونشوة “الانتصار” على الشعب السوري، جعلت حزب الله أكثر تكبراً وعناداً وصلفاً. ثم أن تجربة “اليوم المجيد” (7 أيار 2008) كانت أشبه بنزهة، ليس من الصعب تكرارها عسكرياً، وتكرار ثمارها السياسية التي أدت إلى هيمنة الحزب على الكيان اللبناني وقراره الرسمي. هل من مفر من الصدام مع حزب الله؟ مخرج لائق للبلد وله؟ هل من اقتراح يقدمه الحزب غير الغلبة على اللبنانيين؟ ما نراه فجر الإثنين ليس إشراقاً.. بل دخان كثيف وأطياف سوداء في سماء لبنان.

غزوة صُوْر: هنا خسرت “الشيعية السياسية”
خضر حسان/المدن/26 تشرين الثاني/2019
لبرهة، يمكن أن ينتهي المشهد ببضع كلمات. هجوم من شبّان غاضبين على مكان الاعتصام في ساحة العَلَم في مدينة صور، تكسير الخيام وإحراقها. قد يكتفي بعض اللبنانيين من خارج النطاق الجغرافي لمنطقة صور والجنوب عموماً بهذا المشهد، وربما لا ينتبه من هم خارج هذه البيئة الاجتماعية والثقافية إلى الكثير من التفاصيل، التي نعرفها نحن الذين نعيش في صلب تلك البيئة، تفاصيل صغيرة تجعلنا نتأكد مراراً بأن الشيعية السياسية خسرت. فوضوية مقابل ثقافةبنى الشيعة في لبنان صعودهم السياسي والاجتماعي، على قاعدة المظلومية التي استقت أسسها من المظلومية الدينية. فهُم دخلوا السلطة من الباب العريض لاتفاق الطائف للتعويض عما فاتهم من غياب عن السلطة أيام المارونية السياسية. وتعاظم نفوذهم السياسي والعسكري مع انتقال حزب الله من ذراع محلية إلى إقليمية.
وما زال الشيعة يرددون خطاب المظلومية، علماً أنهم يظلمون شيعة آخرين يخالفون رأي الثنائية الحزبية الحاكمة. وهذا ما أظهَرَ أن المظلومية فعلياً ليست شيعية وإنما حزبية ضيقة، ومن يعارض الثنائية اليوم، وإن كان شيعياً وفق الانتماء الديني، فلن يُدرَج اسمه على صكوك الغفران.
وهذا الحال، أفضى إلى فوضوية في أتم الجهوزية للاعتداء على الآخرين باسم المظلومية، حتى وإن كان الآخرون يستعملون الثقافة لإعلان عدم تأييدهم للثنائية، فبنظر أهل الثقافة، الاختلاف لا يعني العداء مطلقاً. فائض القوة التي يملكها الثنائي الحزبي الشيعي في الجنوب، تحوّلت إلى سمة هي حكماً لا تقبل الديموقراطية. حتى أن الثنائي لا يجيد ادعاء الديموقراطية.
ولو أنه أجادها، لبسط سيطرته برحابة صدر وباعَ الديموقراطية لخصومه “من كيسهم”. لكن كيف يُعطي من لا يملك؟. وعليه، كان يمكن للحزب والحركة عدم التعرض للمعتصمين في صور، وهم من أبناء المدينة وقراها.
وأبعد من ذلك، غالبية من بقي في الشارع هم من الشيوعيين واليساريين، وأبناء منطقة صور يعرفون المعتصمين بالأسماء، ويعلمون أن بينهم أسرى محررين من سجون العدو الاسرائيلي، ومقاومين لا يجرؤ أحد على التفكير في محاولة التشكيك بوطنيتهم.
أما من لم يحمل السلاح ضد اسرائيل، فناضل بالسياسة والثقافة والفن، وبالتأكيد، لا غبار على وطنية هؤلاء. فلماذا الاعتداء عليهم؟.
الاعتداء في هذه الحالة ليس تعبيراً عن الغضب الآني، ولا هو مرتبط بشتم رموز حزبية أو دينية، وانما مرتبط بفوضوية إلغائية لم تندثر منذ الثمانينيات، وإن لبس أبناؤها ربطة العنق أو أطالوا التأمل خلال الصلاة.
الحادث ليس فردياً
المعتدون ليسوا أفراداً، بل هم أبناء تنظيمين معروفين مسلحين قادرين على تحريك الشارع وضبطه وإفلاته ساعة يشاءان. ولا ضرر من تبادل الأدوار بينهما.
إذ يعتدي أحدهما ويلعب الثاني دور “أبو ملحم”. لكن أبناء صور يدركون أن “الحارة ضيقة” ويعرفون كيف تُنَظَّم مثل تلك “العَراضات”.
وبما أن الاعتداء منظّم، فهو إذن من جهات شيعية تدّعي المظلومية، لكنها أيضاً مطمئنة البال إلى عدم المساءلة القانونية.
والاطمئنان من جهة، يستدعي الخوف على الدولة والمجتمع، ومن جهة أخرى، فالنار والتهديد أسقطا منطق الدولة وهيبة القوى الأمنية، وأكدا أن كل كلام القيادات السياسية الرسمية حول الدولة والتمسك بالجيش، هو كلام حق يراد به باطل.
والأهم، أن محاولة الإمام الشيعي جعفر الصادق، حث الشيعة على الانخراط في البيئات التي يعيشون ضمنها، والتخلي عن الانكفاء والبكاء الذي دأبوا على ممارسته بعد مقتل إمامهم الحسين بن علي، قد أحرقته الشيعية الحزبية حين دمّرت وأحرقت خيام المطالبين بوطن أفضل.
هكذا ببساطة، ثنائي شيعي توهّم غزوةَ، فغزا.. كسر.. أحرق.. وانصَرَف.. فغداً يوم آخر.

حزب الله يتسلل بمجموعات مدنية إلى الساحات و”يستوطنها”!
وليد حسين/المدن/26 تشرين الثاني/2019
مازالت القوى السياسية تتعامل مع الثورة الشعبية على أساس أنها “حراك مدني”، سيختفي مع مرور الوقت. وما زالت تمعن في المماطلة لتأليف حكومة جديدة.
إضراب وقطع طرق
وسط هذه المراوحة، توالت الدعوات من الناشطين والمجموعات لإعلان الإضراب العام يوم الاثنين، والعودة إلى خيار قطع الطرق. فالتظاهر في الساحات، على حد تعبير أحد الناشطين، أشبه بنشر أساسات بناية اللعازارية بسكين. بالتالي، العودة إلى خيار قطع الطرق، وشل حركة البلد، قد تجعل قوى السلطة ترضخ للشارع، وتستعجل إجراء الاستشارات النيابية لتكليف رئيس حكومة. ولفت إلى أن قطع الطرق سيشمل كل المناطق اللبنانية. وتوجهت مجموعة كبيرة من المتظاهرين في ساحتي رياض الصلح والشهداء إلى جسر الرينغ مساء الأحد، وعملت على إقفاله بالأخشاب والحجارة، ومستوعبات النفايات، وسط هتافات “هيلا هيلا هيلا هو الطريق مسكر يا حلو”، و”ثورة ثورة” و”الشعب يريد اسقاط النظام”.. وغيرها من الهتافات، التي تعبر عن غضب المتظاهرين من المسؤولين والسلطة. وقال بعض المتظاهرين إن إقفال الطريق أتى بعد مماطلة السلطة “الحرامية” في تنفيذ طلبات الشعب، وإن المسؤولين لم يروا بعد المشاكل الاقتصادية والمعيشية التي يعيشها اللبنانيين. وقال والد الشهيد عمر زكريا، الذي سقط كأول شهيد للثورة، أنه هنا ليأخذ بثأر ابنه، وبقية الشهداء الذين سقطوا في الثورة.
إشكال أمني.. والخندق الغميق
ووسط الهتافات وتجمع الناس بالمئات على الجسر، الذي أقفل بالاتجاهين عند مفترق برج الغزال، عمد شبان يركبون دراجة نارية إلى استفزاز المتظاهرين وافتعال مشاكل معهم. إذ قاموا بشتمهم قائلين: “طز عليكن وعلى الثورة الله.. ونصرالله وبس”. وبدا لافتاً الغياب التام للقوى الأمنية ومكافحة الشغب. ثم تطورت الحادثة ووقع إشكال بين المتظاهرين بعد أن أقدم أحد الشبان على شتم حسن نصرالله، إذ عمد أحد المتواجدين إلى الاعتداء عليه رافضاً شتم “السيد”، فتدخل بعض المتظاهرين وانهالوا عليه بالضرب. فأقدم الأخير على الاتصال بشباب من الخندق الغميق، وهدد المتظاهرين بإحضار آلاف الشبان، كما قال شهود عيان. وما هي إلا دقائق حتى حضر عشرات الشبان من الخندق، وحاولوا افتعال صدام مع المتظاهرين بحجة ضرب صديقهم، وبدأوا بالصراخ والوعيد. فتدخلت القوى الأمنية التي حضرت بعد هذا الإشكال، ووقفت بينهم وبين المتظاهرين. وبدت لافتة التهديدات التي أطلقها أحد الملتحين الذي صرخ أمام الجميع مهدداً: “قدام كل القوى الأمنية الحاضرة والحاضر يعلم الغايب ما رح نسمح بشتم بري والسيد”.
مجموعة “مدنية” مقاومة!
“المجتمع المدني المقاوم”!
أمام المرواغة التي تقوم بها قوى السلطة، واستعصاء الحلول، بدأ حزب الله بالدخول إلى ساحتي رياض الصلح والشهداء، عبر “مجموعات مدنية” في الأيام الأخيرة. ووفق ما قال بعض الناشطين المخيمين في الساحة لـ”المدن”: بدأ الحزب بتنظيم مجموعات تحت مسمى “المجتمع المدني المقاوم”، وأوعز إلى بعض الأشخاص المعروفين بتاريخهم اليساري بتركيب خيم جديدة تضم شباب وشابات. وتعمل تلك المجموعات تحت مسميات مختلفة، بعضها ينشط في بيروت وفي جبل لبنان وفي البقاع. ورغم تقليل الناشطين من خطورة هذه الخطوة، لأنها نابعة من اعتقاد حزب الله بأن الناس التي ثارت ضد السلطة السياسية الفاسدة مسيرة من قوى سياسية مثل القوات اللبنانية والحزب التقدمي الاشتراكي وتيار المستقبل، وليس بفعل الأزمة الاقتصادية التي تطال جميع اللبنانيين بمن فيهم جمهور حزب الله.. إلا أن هناك تخوفاً من محاولات حزب الله خلق انقسامات سياسية بين المتظاهرين على قاعدة “قوى وطنية” و”قوى غير وطنية تعمل على ضرب المقاومة”. كما هناك تخوف من إقدام هذه المجموعات، التي نبتت فجأة، على افتعال صدامات مع المتظاهرين وخلق فوضى يومية تثني الناس عن المشاركة في التظاهرات.
الإعلامي الممانع المستوزر!
ولفت ناشطون إلى أن إحدى إرهاصات هذه التحولات التي يريدها حزب الله، بانت في التظاهرة التي نظمتها بعض المجموعات اليسارية المجهرية أمام السفارة الأميركية، في عوكر، حيث رفعت صور القائد العسكري في حزب الله عماد مغنية. كما بدأت تظهر دعوات للتظاهر باسم “ثوار الضاحية الجنوبية” وغيرها من المسميات. بالإضافة إلى مجموعة “المجتمع المدني المقاوم” لاحظ الناشطون تأسيس “تكتل أوعى” من قبل أحد اليساريين الموالين لحزب الله. والهدف من هذه المجموعات كما يقول الناشطون التشويش على المتظاهرين، عبر رفع شعارات فئوية، وهتافات تطال مسؤولين سياسيين معينين، والدفاع عن أمين عام حزب الله حسن نصرالله ورئيس حركة أمل. إلى ذلك بدأت بعض الشخصيات الإعلامية الممانعة، بلعب دورها في هذا السياق، عبر المشاركة في التظاهرات وفي حلقات النقاش بالساحات، سعياً لتسويق نفسها كشخصيات ثورية (سيقترحها حزب الله)، في لائحة التوزير، باسم الثورة واللبنانيين المنتفضين منذ نحو أربعين يوماً. 

اتهامات لـ«الثنائي الشيعي» بتوجيه رسائل أمنية ومصادره تشدد على فتح الطرق… وتحذيرات من مواجهات أهلية
بولا أسطيح/الشرق الأوسط/26 تشرين الثاني/2019
لم تكن أعمال الشغب التي قام بها عشرات الشبان المؤيدين لحركة «أمل» و«حزب الله»، ليل الأحد – الاثنين، في منطقة الرينغ في العاصمة بيروت والمواجهات التي خاضوها مع عدد من المتظاهرين والمحتجين الأولى من نوعها؛ إذ سبقتها عمليات مماثلة، أبرزها نهاية الشهر الماضي حين أقدم العشرات على تحطيم خيم الناشطين وإضرام النار بها في ساحتي الشهداء ورياض الصلح وسط العاصمة.
إلا أن الأحداث التي تم تسجيلها ليل الأحد – الاثنين، اتخذت طابعاً أكثر حدة باعتبار أنه تخللها كباش مباشر بين الناشطين في الحراك المدني ومناصري «الثنائي الشيعي»؛ ما أدى إلى سقوط عدد من الجرحى، ودفع أكثر من طرف سياسي للحديث عن «رسائل أمنية» أريد توجيهها عشية الدعوة إلى عصيان مدني. وفيما تنصلت قيادتا «حركة أمل» و«حزب الله» من المواجهات في طريق الرينغ في الأشرفية اعتراضاً على عدم تكليف شخصية لتشكيل حكومة حتى الساعة، اعتبر رئيس مجلس النواب نبيه بري أن «ما حصل على طرقات الوطن بالأمس مدان بكل المقاييس، سواء في وسط العاصمة أو على الشريان الرئيسي الذي يربط العاصمة بجنوب الجنوب، حيث تعمدت لقمة العيش بالدم فسقط الشهيدان حسين شلهوب وسناء الجندي (بعد تعرضهما لحادث بسبب قطع الطرقات)».
ودعا «كل اللبنانيين على مختلف توجهاتهم وانتماءاتهم، إلى درء الفتنة وتجنب الوقوع بمنزلقاتها الخطرة»، كما حث القوى الأمنية والجيش على «ضرورة التشدد بإبقاء أوصال الوطن سالكة أمام كل اللبنانيين، مع المحافظة على الحق بإبداء الرأي تحت سقف القانون وبما لا يمس بالسلم الأهلي وبأعراض وكرامات الناس وبالممتلكات العامة والخاصة».
ولم يصدر أي بيان عن «حزب الله» أو «أمل» ينفي علاقتهما بالشبان الذين تهجموا على المتظاهرين في الرينغ، إلا أن مصادر «الثنائي الشيعي» نفت تماماً أن تكون هناك رسالة أمنية أريد توجيهها من التحرك الأخير. وقالت لـ«الشرق الأوسط»، إن «لدى مناصري الطرفين، أي (حزب الله) و(حركة أمل)، حساسية من التعرض للأمين العام للحزب (حسن نصر الله) كما لرئيس (حركة أمل) نبيه بري. ومن هنا كانت ردة الفعل عفوية». وأضافت أن «ما يعنينا إبقاء الطرقات مفتوحة، سواء طريق بيروت – الجنوب أو بيروت – البقاع… أما كل ما عداه مما يقوم به المتظاهرون أو يقولونه فلا يعنينا».
وبخلاف مصادر «الثنائي»، يؤكد عضو تكتل «الجمهورية القوية» النائب وهبة قاطيشا، أن «ما حصل في الرينغ تحرك منظم من قيادة الثنائي الشيعي المتماسكة والقوية، من منطلق أن كثافة المشاركة بالأحداث، إضافة إلى امتلاك القوى المهاجمة الأدوات للتسكير والتخريب والتدمير، كلها تؤكد أن ما كنا بصدده ليس عملاً فردياً». ولفت في تصريح لـ«الشرق الأوسط» إلى أنه «كان هناك هدفان أساسيان للعملية، الأول تخويف المشاركين في الحراك لحثهم على الخروج من الشارع، والآخر استدراج المتظاهرين للفوضى، وقد فشلوا في تحقيق الهدفين». وقال قاطيشا، إن «هناك استراتيجية واضحة للحراك تقول بسلميته، وباعتبار أن كل المشاركين فيه أصحاب حق، فسيكون من الصعب جداً كسره حتى ولو حاولوا من جديد».

وفي حين أشار الكاتب المتخصص في شؤون «حزب الله» قاسم قصير إلى أنه «حتى الساعة لا معلومات مؤكدة حول ما إذا كان ما حصل في الرينغ بقرار من قيادتي (أمل) و(حزب الله)، أم بإطار ردة فعل عفوية على قطع الطريق»، اعتبر أن ما جرى «يشكل بلا شك رسالة للجميع بأن الوضع خطير، وبأنه في حال استمراره على ما هو عليه فسيؤدي إلى مزيد من الأفعال والردود عليها».
وقال قصير لـ«الشرق الأوسط»، إن «هناك احتمالاً كبيراً بأن تكون جهات دخلت على خط الحراك كما خرقت الفريق الذي يقوم بردة الفعل»، موضحاً أن «ما هو مؤكد اليوم وجود قرار واضح لدى قيادة الجيش برفض قطع الطرقات مجدداً، واقتناعاً بخطورة الوضع؛ إذ إنه يبدو أن هناك من يراهن على صدام بين الجيش و(حزب الله)، نعتقد أن أياً منهما لا يريده». وقال النائب شامل روكز: «إذا كان مشهد جسر الرينغ المؤسف والخطير نتيجة ردات فعل على قطع الطرقات حسب التبريرات، فالأخطر والمستغرب بشدة هو التعرض للممتلكات العامة والخاصة في منطقة سكنية خارج إطار الصراعات مثل شارع مونو المعتبر أكاديمياً بامتياز». واعتبر النائب نديم الجميل، أن «ما شهدناه من اعتداءات سافلة على الأملاك الخاصة في أطراف الأشرفية من زمر من الخارجين على القانون ينذر بعواقب وخيمة، ويؤجج لوضع شارع في مواجهة شارع، وبالتالي سيؤدي إلى فلتان أمني خطير». 

 

The post يوسف بزي: في اليوم الأربعون الشبيحة ينشرون إرهابهم في العاصمة/خضر حسان: مع غزوة صُوْر هنا خسرت الشيعية السياسية/وليد حسين: حزب الله يتسلل بمجموعات مدنية إلى الساحات ويستوطنها/بولا أسطيح: اتهامات للثنائي الشيعي بتوجيه رسائل أمنية ومصادره تشدد على فتح الطرق وتحذيرات من مواجهات أهلية appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For November 27/2019

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Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For November 27/2019

Click Here to read the whole and detailed LCCC English News Bulletin for November 27/2019

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A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For November 26-27/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 41th Day

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A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For November 26-27/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 41th Day
Compiled By: Elias Bejjani
November 26-27/2019

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on November 26-26/2019
U.N. Experts, Amnesty Decry Force, Violence against Lebanese Protesters
Saad Hariri rules himself out as next Lebanese prime minister
Hariri refuses to head new Lebanon government as tensions rise
Lebanon: Hariri Takes ‘Decisive’ Decision Not to Be PM
Hariri Announces He Doesn’t Want to Head New Govt.
PM Candidate Khatib Says Ready to Form Govt. if ‘Consensus’ Reached
Report: ‘Shadow Government’ Could Be Formed to Speak for Protesters
Consultations to Name PM to be Held ‘Thursday’, Govt. Won’t be ‘Confrontational’
Confrontation between FPM, Kataeb Supporters in Bikfaya
FPM Supporters Scuffle with Protesters in Baabda as Baalbek Protest Site Attacked
10 Lebanese hurt in clashes between supporters of Aoun, Kateb
Protesters in Tyre Defiant Despite Attack
Report: Army Determined to Ban Road Blockages after Clashes
Jabaq Warns Health Sector at Threat over Dollar Shortage
Lebanese Businessman buys Nazi items; plans to donate to Jewish group
Lebanon Clashes Threaten to Crack Open Fault Lines

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on November 26-27/2019
U.N. Experts, Amnesty Decry Force, Violence against Lebanese Protesters
Agence France Presse/Associated Press/Naharnet/November 26/2019
Lebanon’s security forces have reportedly used “excessive force and failed to adequately protect protesters from violent attacks by others,” despite the overwhelmingly peaceful nature of the past month’s demonstrations across the country, U.N. human rights experts have said.
“The State is responsible under international law to protect peaceful protesters and ensure a safe and enabling environment for people to exercise their freedom of expression and peaceful assembly,” said the experts. “Even where roadblocks are used as a means of protest, which may in rare cases warrant dispersal of protesters, only the minimum use of force necessary should be used and only if less intrusive and discriminatory means of managing the situation have failed,” they added. The experts held that “although the overall response by security forces appears to have been largely proportionate and responsible, actions by the authorities raise several areas of concern.”“Lebanon’s Internal Security Forces and the Lebanese Armed Forces have reportedly used live ammunition, rubber bullets and large quantities of tear gas to disperse protesters, and have at times hit, kicked and beaten protesters with batons while making arrests. Some protesters are alleged to have been ill-treated while being taken to police stations and some have been released bearing marks of abuse,” they said. The experts said Security forces have reportedly failed to intervene to protect peaceful protesters or arrest perpetrators on at least six occasions in Beirut, Bint Jbeil, Nabatieh and Tyre. “They have also reportedly attempted to stop protesters and journalists from filming their actions, including by force, arrest, or confiscating equipment,” the experts said. The Lebanese Red Cross and Lebanese Civil Defense reported treating 1,790 people for protest-related injuries, including at least six members of the security forces, between 17 to 30 October. The experts have written to the Lebanese authorities to register their concerns, and called on the Government to explain the measures it has taken to “ensure the use of force is exercised in compliance with international law; investigate allegations of excessive use of force and ill-treatment of protesters; and identify the measures it has taken to address the root causes of protests and longstanding socioeconomic grievances.”Meanwhile, international rights group Amnesty International has called on authorities to do more to protect protesters, warning that the attacks of the past two days “could well signal a dangerous escalation.””The past two days’ seemingly coordinated attacks could well signal a dangerous escalation. The authorities must act immediately to protect protesters and uphold the right to peaceful assembly,” said Lynn Maalouf, Amnesty’s Middle East research head. “The images of the men carrying flags of two of the political parties in government, Hizbullah and AMAL, armed with steel batons, knives and stones, chasing and beating protesters in alleyways, setting alight tents and destroying private property in the past two days are extremely worrying and warrant the authorities’ firm and immediate action,” Maalouf added.

Saad Hariri rules himself out as next Lebanese prime minister
The National/November 26/2019
Parties no closer to forming new administration weeks after government resigned in face of mass rallies
Caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri on Tuesday again ruled himself out as Lebanon’s next head of government, as the month-long protest movement faced threats of violence.Mr Hariri resigned on October 29 during nationwide protests against Lebanon’s ruling elite.
His decision ended a coalition government including the powerful, Iran-backed Hezbollah, which opposed his decision. Lebanon’s main parties have since been locked in talks and unable to agree on a new government despite the worst economic crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war.”I am sticking by the rule ‘not me, rather someone else’, to form a government that addresses the aspirations of the young men and women,” Mr Hariri said. “I have full hope and confidence, after announcing this clear and decisive decision, that the president of the republic will immediately call the binding parliamentary consultations” to decide on a new prime minister.
Mr Hariri warned his former colleagues that “denial by political leadership is more dangerous than Lebanon’s political and economic crisis”.
President Michel Aoun has reportedly finally scheduled talks with political parties at Baabda Palace for Thursday, to begin consultations on a prime minister to form the next government. But with no names put forward who could calm anger on the streets and appease political parties, it is unclear if there will be a development that can avert the impending financial collapse.Throwing further doubt on the possible outcome of the talks, reports in Lebanese media said that Speaker Nabih Berri, leader of the Amal Movement, was no longer set on Mr Hariri’s return.
Mr Berri told told visitors that he supported no one in particular and that his priority was to find someone who would protect the country. Over Monday night, hundreds of Hezbollah and allied Amal Movement supporters took to the streets in mass convoys waving the parties’ flags.
Men shot into the air and one man fired a rocket-propelled grenade into the sky. The sudden development was reportedly sparked by the deaths of two people when their car hit metal barriers being used to block roads near Beirut.
Hussein and Jundi Chalhoub were killed when their car hit the debris, spun out of control, hit a concrete barrier and caught fire.
In Downtown Beirut, some protesters who have been camped out in the capital since October 17 fled but others arrived with steel bars and bats to defend themselves. Until now the protest movement has been largely peaceful, so the latest developments have caused concerns.
The UN Security Council on Monday called on “all actors to conduct intensive national dialogue and maintain the peaceful character of the protests by avoiding violence and respecting the right to peaceful assembly in protest”.red is a dangerous path that could lead to confrontation and conflict #Lebanon
But on Tuesday, the Internal Security Forces intervened near the Presidential Palace to break up scuffles between supporters of Mr Aoun and protesters. More business groups and unions have backed a general strike, threatening to increase the protests’ pressure on officials. The Lebanese Economic Bodies group, which includes industrialists and bankers, called for the closure of private institutions from Thursday to Saturday to push major parties to form a new government and avert further economic damage. “The political forces have not assumed their national responsibilities and have not shown the seriousness necessary to produce solutions to the current crisis,” the group said. The Order of Nurses also threatened an open-ended strike, saying its members had not been paid and were overworked.Their demands echoed the main issues for many protesters – poor government services and underfunding by the state.

Hariri refuses to head new Lebanon government as tensions rise
Najia Houssari/November 26/2019
BEIRUT: Lebanon’s caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri on Tuesday struck his name off a list of candidates to head a new Lebanese government. Hariri, who recently resigned as premier under pressure from protesters, said he refused “to be falsely held responsible for delaying the formation of the new government.”His sudden announcement will come as a blow to President Michel Aoun, Hezbollah and the Amal Movement, which together were pinning their hopes on having Hariri’s support to help establish a techno-political administration in the country. The former PM’s decision came as national protests throughout Lebanon against the political elite entered their 41st day and followed rioting in Beirut between anti-government demonstrators and Hezbollah and Amal supporters. Russia pledged its support for the Lebanese state during the current “delicate” period, while the UN Security Council called on “all actors to conduct intensive national dialogue.”In a statement, Hariri said he was “sticking to the rule ‘not me, but someone else’ to form a government that meets the aspirations of young men and women. The state of chronic denial seemed to use my positions and proposals of solutions as a pretext to continue its intransigence and maneuvers and its refusal to listen to the people’s voices and their rightful demands.”He reiterated his commitment to a government of technocrats to end “the severe economic crisis” gripping Lebanon and urged Aoun to “immediately call for binding parliamentary consultations, to designate a new prime minister to form a new government.”

Lebanon: Hariri Takes ‘Decisive’ Decision Not to Be PM
Beirut- Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 26 November, 2019
Lebanon’s Saad al-Hariri said on Tuesday he did not want to be prime minister of a new government, calling his decision “decisive” and saying he was confident President Michel Aoun would convene consultations to designate someone else. Hariri resigned on Oct. 29 in the face of nationwide protests against Lebanon’s ruling elite. His decision toppled a coalition government including the powerful, Iran-backed Shiite Muslim group Hezbollah, which opposed the decision. Since then, Lebanon’s main parties have been locked in talks and unable to agree on a new government despite the worst economic crisis since the 1975-90 civil war. “I am sticking by the rule ‘not me, rather someone else’ to form a government that addresses the aspirations of the young men and women,” Hariri, Lebanon’s leading Sunni Muslim politician, said in a statement. “I have full hope and confidence, after announcing this clear and decisive decision, that the president of the republic….will immediately call the binding parliamentary consultations” to designate a new prime minister, he said. The prime minister must be a Sunni Muslim according to Lebanon’s sectarian power-sharing system. Hariri said: “It is clear that what is more dangerous than the major national crisis and sharp economic crisis our country is passing through – and which is preventing us from dealing with these two intertwined crises – is the state of chronic denial being expressed on several occasions over the past few weeks.”

Hariri Announces He Doesn’t Want to Head New Govt.
Associated Press/Naharnet/Agence France Presse/Naharnet/November 26/2019
Caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri openly declared Tuesday that he is withdrawing his candidacy for the premiership. In response to the “irresponsible practices” of political leaders, Hariri said he felt compelled to make his intentions known. “I announce to the Lebanese people that I strongly adhere to the rule of ‘not me, but someone else,'” he said in a written statement. Hariri did not name an alternative candidate, but said his decision aims to “open doors to a solution” to the political deadlock. He hoped President Michel Aoun would “immediately call for binding parliamentary consultations to appoint a new premier.”Hariri also insisted that a new government made up of experts is needed to get Lebanon out of its crisis. The announcement comes nearly a month after he resigned amid ongoing protests as well as a severe economic and financial crisis. The nationwide anti-government protests erupted on October 17 and have since targeted corruption and mismanagement by the country’s ruling elite. Hariri’s press office later issued a statement in response to reports on some news websites and social media accounts, which suggested that the caretaker PM “has proposed a number of premiership candidates.”“With all his due respect to all the reported names, PM Hariri’s choice will be announced in a statement following the call for the binding parliamentary consultations,” the office said. “Any other suggestions are mere attempts at dropping certain candidates or promoting others,” the office added.

PM Candidate Khatib Says Ready to Form Govt. if ‘Consensus’ Reached
Naharnet/November 26/2019
Samir Khatib, whose name emerged Tuesday as a strong candidate for the PM post, has announced that he is willing to form the new government should there be “consensus” on his nomination. “I’m ready to assume the mission of forming and leading a government and to serve the country amid these extraordinary circumstances and I will try to rescue the country should there be consensus on my nomination and if the various parties intend to rescue the country,” Khatib, the director general of the Khatib & Alami engineering firm, said in remarks to MTV. He added: “I have been contacted by the various parties in order to be tasked with forming the government seeing as I’m unbiased and noncontroversial and because I run a successful firm in which I succeeded thanks to my competence.”Khatib also noted that he is a “secular man,” adding that he has a “special personal relation” with caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri. Earlier in the day, Hariri had announced that he will not head the next government, a move he said aims to expedite the formation a new cabinet in the protest-hit country. Hariri had submitted his administration’s resignation on October 29, bowing to popular pressure from a nationwide street movement demanding a complete government haul. Hariri did not name an alternative candidate, but said his decision aims to “open doors to a solution.”He hoped President Michel Aoun would “immediately call for binding parliamentary consultations to appoint a new premier.”
Presidential palace sources meanwhile told reporters that the consultations will likely be held on Thursday, although an official statement is yet to be released. Officials from the Free Patriotic Movement, the party founded by Aoun, have accused Hariri of delaying the process by refusing to accept any other candidate for the premiership, a charge Hariri has denied. The United States, Britain, France, the U.N., World Bank and credit rating agencies have all urged officials to streamline the process in the wake of a twin political and economic crisis gripping the country. A former finance minister, Mohammed Safadi, had been considered to replace Hariri but withdrew his bid after more protests. Aoun’s powers include initiating the required parliamentary consultations to appoint a new premier. The president has said he was open to a government that would include technocrats and representatives of the popular movement, both key demands of the protesters. However, the demonstrators say they will reject any government that consists of representatives of the established parties.

Report: ‘Shadow Government’ Could Be Formed to Speak for Protesters
Naharnet/November 26/2019
Lebanon’s protesters are reportedly inclined to form a “revolutionary government” to manage the affairs of the popular movement if President Michel Aoun fails to initiate the binding parliamentary consultations by the end of this week, the Kuwaiti al-Anbaa daily reported on Tuesday.
Asked if the “revolutionary government” was meant to rebel against the constitutional authority, a senior source told the daily: “It is a shadow government, similar to the youth shadow government proposed by An-Nahar Editor-in-Chief Jebran Tueni before his assassination.”
He said: “A decree was issued by the Cabinet in 2006 and two were formed between 2007 and 2008. It consisted of university students and people of competence. “A revolutionary shadow government will not have a president, and will be the mouthpiece of the movement to negotiate with the authorities and all parties,” added the source who refused to be named. Outgoing Prime Minister Saad Hariri resigned on October 29, nearly two weeks into the unprecedented nationwide protests demanding the wholesale removal of a ruling elite seen as corrupt and incompetent. President Michel Aoun has said he will support the formation of a government including technocrats but he has not yet announced consultations over a new line-up.

Consultations to Name PM to be Held ‘Thursday’, Govt. Won’t be ‘Confrontational’
Naharnet/November 26/2019
The binding parliamentary consultations to name a new premier will be held on Thursday and the new government will not be a “confrontation government,” Baabda sources said on Tuesday. “We will seek to agree with caretaker PM Saad Hariri on an alternative candidate and we prefer this option, or else we will go to parliamentary consultations and we are holding talks over several candidates,” the sources told LBCI television. “The government will not be a confrontation government — except against corruption and the economic and social crises. It will not be a confrontation government against PM Saad Hariri or against the international community and it will not be one-sided,” the sources added. “The government will be in charge of major files and it will be a salvation, reformist government,” the sources said. The remarks come shortly after Hariri issued a statement in which he openly announced that he does not want to head the new government. The Baabda sources did not express relief over Hariri’s statement but said they were still hoping that the caretaker PM “will facilitate the mission of finding a candidate to replace him.”As for the international community’s response to the formation of a government not led by Hariri, the sources said: “There is international consent on the formation of a techno-political government not led by Saad Hariri.”“Their main concern is Lebanon’s economic, security and political stability,” the sources added. The privately-owned Central News Agency meanwhile said that the engineer Samir Khatib, the director general of the Khatib & Alami engineering firm, could be nominated for the premiership. OTV meanwhile reported that contacts will be intensified over the next 36 hours to reach an agreement on a candidate. Prominent ministerial source meanwhile told MTV that “there is no agreement so far on a premiership candidate” and that Hariri’s statement “increases the ambiguity of the situation.”The TV network also said that President Michel Aoun will not officially call for the consultations on Tuesday.

Confrontation between FPM, Kataeb Supporters in Bikfaya
Naharnet/November 26/2019
A confrontation erupted Tuesday evening between supporters of the Free Patriotic Movement and the Kataeb Party in the Northern Metn town of Bikfaya. The standoff started after a pro-FPM convoy comprised of dozens of cars arrived outside the residence of former president and Kataeb leader Amin Gemayel. Bikfaya residents and Kataeb supporters later blocked the town’s entrance to prevent the entry of the convoy, asking the FPM supporters to take the Dahr al-Sowwan-Baabdat road. Kataeb supporters later attacked the cars and pelted them with stones, wounding a female FPM supporter in the head.
Video footage showed a number of cars with smashed windows and supporters of the two parties chanting rival slogans. The army intervened quickly and separated between the two groups. The National News Agency meanwhile said that the army was negotiating with the two parties in order to end the standoff.
Bikfaya is a stronghold of Kataeb and the hometown of its founder Pierre Gemayel. Media reports said the FPM supporters accused ex-president Amin Gemayel of corruption in the files of the Dbaye marina and the Puma aircraft controversy.

FPM Supporters Scuffle with Protesters in Baabda as Baalbek Protest Site Attacked
Naharnet/November 26/2019
Supporters of the Free Patriotic Movement on Tuesday briefly scuffled with protesters near the presidential palace in Baabda, as backers of Hizbullah and the AMAL Movement attacked the main protest site in the eastern city of Baalbek. The civil society protesters in Baabda were led by groups from the Sabaa Party. The FPM supporters sought to prevent protesters from chanting against President Michel Aoun before the scuffles erupted. Security forces quickly intervened to contain the situation and the army has since reinforced its presence in the area. Elsewhere, Hizbullah and AMAL supporters attacked the protest site at the Khalil Mutran Square in Baalbek and vandalized the encampment. Tensions have surged across the country since Sunday night, when supporters of the two political parties attacked protesters in central Beirut. A deadly car crash near a protest roadblock on Jiye’s highway has aggravated the already high tensions.

10 Lebanese hurt in clashes between supporters of Aoun, Kateb
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Wednesday, 27 November 2019
Clashes erupted on Tuesday between supporters of the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) and supporters of the Kataeb Party in the town of Bikfaya, near the residence of former President Amine Gemayel, in Mount Lebanon. The clashes started when a convoy of President Michel Aoun’s Free Patriotic Movement supporters attempted to drive through the area which is historically known as a stronghold of the Gemayel family. According to local Lebanese media the Army intervened to push back local residents as the convoy of the FPM supporters was trying to drive through and supporters of the Kataeb started criticizing President Aoun. The Lebanese Red Cross reported that 10 people were injured in the clashes, five were transferred to a hospital for treatment. Lebanon’s Defense Minister Elias Bou Saab told a local Lebanese TV that the scuffle was unfortunate, and that Lebanese people should rely on the army. Earlier in the day, supporters of Shia groups Hezbollah and Amal attacked anti-government protesters in a public square in Baalbek city, east of Lebanon, destroying tents used as a gathering place by the protesters and chanting religious slogans. Also a convoy of cars carrying Hezbollah flag fired gun shots in the air which resulted in injuries to 15 people. Late on Monday night, clashes erupted between supporters of Lebanon’s caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri, and Shia groups Hezbollah and Amal in Beirut late on Monday, state news agency NNA reported. The clashes marked the second consecutive night of violence linked to Lebanon’s political crisis, threatening to tip largely peaceful demonstrations directed at the country’s ruling elite in a more bloody direction.

Protesters in Tyre Defiant Despite Attack
Naharnet/November 26/2019
Protesters in the southern city of Tyre remained defiant on Tuesday and returned to their encampments smashed the day before by supporters of Hizbullah and AMAL Movement. Late on Tuesday, supporters of the two main Shiite groups torched the tents of demonstrators in al-Alam Square in the Shiite majority city of Tyre. Demonstrators demanding a complete government overhaul have stayed mobilised from north to south Lebanon since protests began on October 17. But a bitterly divided political class has yet to find a way forward.
Frustrated by the stalemate, protesters had called for roadblocks and a general strike on Monday, but an attack by Hizbullah and Amal supporters on Sunday night weakened the turnout. They also attacked demonstrators at a flyover near the Beirut’s main protest camp, and ravaged an encampment in Beirut’s Riad al-solh and Martyr Square tearing down tents and damaging storefronts in their most serious assault on protesters so far.

Report: Army Determined to Ban Road Blockages after Clashes
Naharnet/November 26/2019
Following Monday’s violence between Lebanese protesters and supporters of Hizbullah, the security and military forces are “determined” to ban road blockages in order to spare Lebanon from a “worst-case scenario,” al-Joumhouria daily reported on Tuesday.
A prominent security source disclosed that during recent security meetings, discussions have focused on this scenario considering it the “most dangerous because congestion will generate a blast and road blockages will end with clashes,” he told the daily. The violence began on Sunday when supporters of Hizbullah and AMAL Movement attacked protesters who had blocked a main Beirut thoroughfare known as the Ring Road — a move the protesters said was aimed at exerting pressure on politicians to form a new government after Prime Minister Saad Hariri offered his resignation Oct. 29.
“Security and military engagement will be different in the next stage, hitting with an iron fist will be the policy to adopt in the coming phase after we saw the street sliding off limits. The decision has been made to strictly ban road blockages from now on, and the military will be decisive in this regard,” affirmed the source who spoke on condition of anonymity. On Monday evening, Army troops and security forces quickly intervened after Hizbullah and AMAL supporters arrived at Beirut’s Martyrs Square on scooters and hurled insults and a few rocks at protesters who have an encampment in the area. Later on Monday, gunfire erupted in the Beirut area of Cola after convoys of motorcycles passed in the area. The convoys had roamed several streets in Beirut and its suburbs. Supporters of al-Mustaqbal Movement had earlier blocked the Qasqas road in Beirut after Hizbullah and AMAL supporters passed in the area on motorbikes and shouted slogans. MTV said gunshots were also fired in the air there. The army quickly intervened and deployed in the area.

Jabaq Warns Health Sector at Threat over Dollar Shortage
Agence France PresseNaharnet/November 26/2019
Caretaker Health Minister Jamil Jabaq on Tuesday urged the central bank to release U.S. dollars over a hard currency shortage limiting medical imports to the protest-hit country. “The sector is under serious threat,” Jabaq, who is close to Hizbullah, told a news conference.
“A hospital without medical supplies cannot operate.”The Lebanese pound has been pegged to the greenback at around 1,500 for two decades and the currencies are used interchangeably in daily life. But amid a deepening economic crisis, banks have gradually been reducing access to dollars in recent months, forcing importers to resort to money changers offering a higher exchange rate and sparking price hikes. On the open market, the dollar has been selling for 2,000 pounds. Jabak said the central bank was ready to supply medical equipment importers with only half the dollars they need at the official rate.
He urged the banking institution to provide all necessary dollars at this rate avoid hospitals raising their prices and patients footing the bill. “We hope all those concerned — especially the central bank governor — release these funds,” he said. “I don’t think the Lebanese people, with everything they are going through, can put up with their medical bills being increased.” Importers warned on Sunday that the country’s stock would only last weeks, as dialysis filters, heart valves and supplies for respirators had already started to run low. Lebanon has been gripped since October 17 by unprecedented anti-government protests over a wide variety of issues, including a crumbling economy. The government stepped down less than two weeks into the nationwide demonstrations, but a new cabinet has not been formed. Earlier this month, hospitals threatened to close to all but emergency patients for a day if the central bank did not release the key dollars for medical imports. Last month, before the protests, the central bank said it would facilitate access to dollars for importers of petroleum products, wheat and medicine. A group representing companies in the private sector have called for a general strike on Thursday, Friday and Saturday.

Lebanese Businessman buys Nazi items; plans to donate to Jewish group

The Associated Press, Berlin/Monday, 25 November 2019
A Lebanese-born Swiss real estate mogul said on Monday that he had purchased Adolf Hitler’s top hat and other Nazi memorabilia from a German auction in order to keep them out of the hands of neo-Nazis, and has agreed to donate them to a Jewish group. Abdallah Chatila, a Lebanese Christian who has lived in Switzerland for decades, told The Associated Press he paid some 600,000 euros ($660,000) for the items at the Munich auction last week, intending to destroy them after reading of Jewish groups’ objections to the sale. “I wanted to make sure that these pieces wouldn’t fall into bad hands, to the wrong side of the story, so I decided to buy them,” he said in a telephone interview. Shortly before the auction, however, he decided it would be better to donate them to a Jewish organization, and got in touch with the Keren Hayesod-United Israel Appeal group. Chatila is never going to even see the items – which also include a silver-plated edition of Hitler’s “Mein Kampf” and a typewriter used by the dictator’s secretary – that will be sent directly to the group, he said. “I have no direct interest whatsoever, I just thought it was the right thing to do,” he said. Neither Keren Hayesod nor the Hermann Historica auction house responded to requests for comment. Keren Hayesod’s European director told France’s Le Point magazine, however, that while no final decision had been made on what to do with the items, they’d likely be sent to Israel’s Yad Vashem memorial which has a selection of Nazi artifacts. The European Jewish Association, which had led the campaign against the auction going ahead, applauded Chatila for stepping in. “Such a conscience, such an act of selfless generosity to do something that you feel strongly about is the equivalent of finding a precious diamond in an Everest of coal,” EJA chairman Rabbi Menachem Margolin wrote Chatila in a letter provided to the AP.“You have set an example for the world to follow when it comes to this macabre and sickening trade in Nazi trinkets.”

Lebanon Clashes Threaten to Crack Open Fault Lines
Associated Press/Naharnet/November 26/2019
Clashes between Lebanese protesters and supporters of Hizbullah group are putting Lebanon’s military and security forces in a delicate position, threatening to crack open the country’s dangerous fault lines amid a political deadlock.
For weeks, the Lebanese security forces have taken pains to protect anti-government protesters, in stark contrast to Iraq, where police have killed more than 340 people over the past month in a bloody response to similar protests.
The overnight violence — some of the worst since protests against the country’s ruling elite began last month — gave a preview into a worst-case scenario for Lebanon’s crisis, with the country’s U.S.-trained military increasingly in the middle between pro- and anti-Hizbullah factions.
By attacking protesters Sunday night, Hizbullah sent a message that it is willing to use force to protect its political power. Confronting the powerful Iranian-backed Hizbullah, however, is out of the question for the military as doing so would wreck the neutral position it seeks to maintain and could split its ranks.
“The army is in a difficult position facing multiple challenges and moving cautiously between the lines,” said Fadia Kiwan, professor of political science at Saint Joseph University in Beirut.
She said the military has sought to protect the protesters and freedom of expression but is increasingly grappling with how to deal with road closures and violence. The U.N. Security Council urged all actors in Lebanon on Monday to engage in “intensive national dialogue and to maintain the peaceful character of the protests” by respecting the right to peaceful assembly and protest.
Calling this “a very critical time for Lebanon,” the U.N.’s most powerful body also commended Lebanon’s armed forces and state security institutions for their role in protecting the right to peaceful assembly and protest.
Sunday night’s clashes brought into full display the political and sectarian divisions that protesters have said they want to end.
“Shiite, Shiite, Shiite!” Hizbullah supporters waving the group’s yellow flag shouted, taunting the protesters, many of them Christians. The protesters chanted back, “This is Lebanon, not Iran,” and “Terrorist, terrorist, Hizbullah is a terrorist” — the first time they have used such a chant.
The violence began when supporters of Hizbullah and the other main Shiite faction, Amal, attacked protesters who had blocked a main Beirut thoroughfare known as the Ring Road — a move the protesters said was aimed at exerting pressure on politicians to form a new government after Prime Minister Saad Hariri offered his resignation Oct. 29.
Carrying clubs and metal rods, the Hizbullah followers arrived on scooters, chanting pro-Hizbullah slogans. They beat up several protesters. Both sides chanted insults, then threw stones at each other for hours.
Security forces stood between them but did little to stop the fighting. Finally, after several hours, they fired tear gas at both sides to disperse them. The road was eventually opened before daybreak Monday.
By that time, protesters’ tents were destroyed in areas close to the Ring Road. The windshields of cars parked near Riad Solh Square and Martyrs Square — the central hubs of the protests — were smashed as were the windows of some shops. The nationwide protests have so far been overwhelmingly peaceful since they started Oct. 17. Politicians have failed to agree on a new Cabinet since Hariri’s government resigned Oct. 29. Hizbullah and Amal insist Hariri form a new government made up of technocrats and politicians, but Hariri — echoing protester demands — says it must be made up only of experts who would focus on Lebanon’s economic crisis.
As the deadlock drags on, tempers are rising.
“The situation is moving toward a dangerous phase because after 40 days of protests, people are beginning to get tired and frustrated and might resort to actions that are out of control,” Kiwan said.
One person has been killed by security forces during the protests, while six have died in incidents related to the demonstrations. In the latest, a man and his sister-in-law burned to death Monday after their car hit a metal barricade erected by protesters on a highway linking Beirut with the country’s south.
Hizbullah issued a blistering statement Monday condemning the road closure, painting the protests as a danger to the country. It called the deaths the result of “a militia attack carried out by groups of bandits who practice the ugliest methods of humiliation and terrorism against people.”
In the increasingly tense atmosphere, “the role of the army is getting bigger,” Kiwan said. The army is one of the few state institutions that enjoy wide support and respect among the public as it is seen as a unifying force in the deeply divided country. It has for the most part worked to defuse tensions and protect protesters, though on two occasions it allowed Hizbullah and Amal supporters to wreck tents at the main protest site in downtown Beirut.
Hisham Jaber, a retired Lebanese general who heads the Middle East Center for Studies and Political Research, said the army is in a “delicate” position and could not have done more than it did Sunday night.
The military is already at the center of a debate in U.S. policy-making circles. The Trump administration is now withholding more than $100 million in U.S. military assistance to Lebanon that has been approved by Congress, without providing an explanation for the hold.
That has raised concerns among some in the U.S. security community who see the aid — largely used to buy U.S.-made military equipment — as key to countering Iran’s influence in Lebanon. Others, however, including pro-Israel lawmakers in Congress, have sought to defund the military, arguing it has been compromised by Hizbullah, which the U.S. designates as a terrorist organization.
U.S. administrations have long believed that a strong Lebanese army could be a counter to Hizbullah’s weapons and could deprive the militants of the excuse to keep their arms.
The 70,000-strong force split along sectarian lines during Lebanon’s 1975-90 civil war. Since then, it has largely succeeded in achieving a level of stability by maintaining a tough balancing act that includes coordinating with Hizbullah on security matters.
Jaber said it is impossible for the security forces to clash with Hizbullah because “this will lead to divisions within the army.”
“Hizbullah is a main part of the Lebanese people,” he said. “Getting the army into a battle with them would lead to pulling away part of the Lebanese army, and this could be followed by other groups splitting from the army.”
“The Lebanese army is the pole of the tent. If the pole collapses, the whole country will collapse. It is the duty of the army to protect state institutions.”

Titles For The Latest Lebanese LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 26-27/2019
Analysis/In Lebanon, Hezbollah flexes in bid to sectarianize a non-partisan movement/James Haines-Young/The National/November 26/2019
Containing Hezbollah a long-term process/Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib/Arab News/November 26/2019
Hariri withdraws candidacy as parliamentary consultations set for Thursday/Georgi Azar/Annahar/November 26/2019
The sectarianization of Lebanon and smearing a revolution/Georgi Azar/Annahar/November 26/2019
Moral Leadership and the Lebanese Military/Aram Nerguizian/Carnegie MEC/November 26/2019
Is the Lebanese miracle dead?/Ishac Diwan/Annahar/November 26/2019
A reading in Lebanon’s current financial crisis/Mohammad Ibrahim Fheili/Annahar/November 26/2019
Student Protest Against Dollarisation of tuition fees/Fatima Dia/Annahar /November 26/2019

The Latest Lebanese LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 26-27/2019
Analysis/In Lebanon, Hezbollah flexes in bid to sectarianize a non-partisan movement
James Haines-Young/The National/November 26/2019
The latest incursion from the Shiite party seeks to push the political narrative onto old ground A man fired hundreds of rounds into the air from a rifle as another stood in the middle of a street, took aim, and fired a rocket-propelled grenade into the sky.
Convoys of men on mopeds circled the Lebanese capital of Beirut, gunfire echoed through several neighbourhoods around the country and tents in the south were pulled down and set on fire. On Monday night, it seemed as though the gathering momentum of Lebanon’s month-long protest had finally hit the most worrying roadblock in its demand for a competent, non-sectarian government – Hezbollah and its arms. But protesters picked up the pieces on Tuesday and while the mood was more muted than it has been in recent days, it was far from defeated.
Since October 17, near-daily rallies have paralysed Lebanon, eventually forcing Prime Minister Saad Hariri to announce his resignation on October 29, collapsing government. Since then, politicians have been deadlocked and there remains no sign of a new administration – either one representing the political parties, as sought by many of parliament’s blocs, or the non-political leadership demanded by the streets.
In mid-October, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah warned that if he orders his supporters to mobilise they would not leave without results. His comments were both an attempt to belittle the mass rallies that have regularly gathered tens or hundreds of thousands in a country of just 4.5 million but also a warning that Hezbollah too could show the strength of its popular support.
While Monday’s actions – just the latest by Hezbollah and its allied Amal Movement – stopped short of a mass Hezbollah mobilisation, they are an attempt to sectarianize a broadly non-sectarian movement. Sami Nader, the Director of Levant Institute for Strategic Affairs in Beirut, told The National that the incident was not a counter-revolution but a way to reframe the protests in terms that Lebanese leaders have long used. “It’s like a systematic attempt to drag the revolution onto the sectarian turf because it’s obvious that a revolution that doesn’t carry any political slogan or any sectarian slogans was a huge challenge for them [Hezbollah and politicians] to deal with,” he said. For decades, before and after the 1975-1990 civil war, much of the political debate in Lebanon has been framed around confession and sect. Each party maintains support by playing the role of protectors of their respective faith.
“The current forces including Hezbollah [want to bend the] curve to where they can be masters of the game and play on the sectarian feeling that ‘we are threatened and we must defend the Shiite rights,’” Mr Nader said.But the current protests have rejected the well-trodden verse and are demanding a new Lebanon. Mr Nader said he was confident the latest incidents would not derail the movement. “This will boost the revolution, it will not back down,” he said. “Most of the people who are on the streets don’t have anything to lose and they are claiming their right.”Farah Merhi, an accountant in Beirut, had her car set ablaze in Monday night’s chaos. But on Tuesday, she took to social media to share a picture of herself smiling through the burned wreckage. “You burnt my car,” she wrote. “But you will never burn my smile… this too shall pass.”

Containing Hezbollah a long-term process
Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib/Arab News/November 26/2019
Jeffrey Feltman, the former US ambassador to Lebanon last week testified before the House Subcommittee on the Middle East, North Africa and International Terrorism on the prospects for Lebanon. (AFP)
Jeffrey Feltman, the former US ambassador to Lebanon and John C. Whitehead visiting fellow at the Brookings Institution, last week testified before the House Subcommittee on the Middle East, North Africa and International Terrorism on the prospects for Lebanon. He explicitly said that the current demonstrations coincide with the US interest, as the protests target the entire political configuration, including US archenemy Hezbollah.
Feltman’s testimony rendered Hezbollah nervous, especially when he compared the situation to 2005. Following the assassination of Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, mass demonstrations erupted against the Syrian presence in Lebanon. Feltman said that, if it were not for the US and French position, then the Syrians would not have left Lebanon and they would have repressed the demonstrations brutally. Hence the US should take a firm stand and support the Lebanese protesters who are demanding “kellun yaani kellun” — meaning they want to get rid of the entire political elite, including Hezbollah. Of course, the US should support the Lebanese people; however, it should be realistic in its expectations. Feltman missed one difference in his comparison: Hezbollah is indigenous, Bashar Assad’s forces were not. Hezbollah will not disappear or leave like Assad’s forces did in 2005. At best, it can be contained.
However, in order to be contained, Hezbollah should be offered a proper exit. A graceful exit would minimize the “resistance’s” aversion to the organic changes the country is witnessing and prevent Lebanon from descending into violence. While Feltman rightly signaled that fewer and fewer Lebanese listen to Nasrallah and that he is losing his grip on the Shiite population, it is important to note that he still has an audience. There is no guarantee that the Shiite Lebanese will abandon Hezbollah if early elections are held. The US should not forget that Hezbollah has — for more than 30 years — been providing services to the Shiite population that the Lebanese state has not, from education to health care and job opportunities. Feltman said that Hezbollah’s resistance narrative is faltering and, if it attacks the protesters as it did in 2008, the pretext will totally “evaporate.”
However, a confrontation with Israel can revive the resistance narrative. Such a confrontation would definitely not be in Lebanon or the US’ interest. Hence Hezbollah should not get desperate to the point where it would venture into a war that would lead to the destruction of the country. This was the scenario in 2005, which led to Tel Aviv’s war on Lebanon in 2006. When fingers started to be pointed at Hezbollah following the murder of Hariri and the group felt cornered, war with Israel offered the proper distraction. It has been getting stronger ever since then.
In the absence of real, in-depth reforms, the country is going to crash and no one is going to bail out the current configuration.
Today, Hezbollah is opposed to a government of technocrats. It is scared to lose the current understanding through which it is allowed to operate freely. Pro-Hezbollah Member of Parliament Jamil Al-Sayyed said in September: “You have your corruption and we have our arms. There is a quid pro quo in the current political system where Hezbollah accepts and gives cover for other factions’ corruption and they turn a blind eye to its arsenal. Every ministerial statement affirms an almost sacred trilogy: “Army, people, resistance.” A government of technocrats might not preserve this balance. This is why we see Nasrallah clinging on to people like Saad Hariri and Gebran Bassil. The devil you know is better than the one you don’t. But, in the absence of real, in-depth reforms, the country is going to crash and no one is going to bail out the current configuration, which has lost the trust of the Lebanese people and the international community. In this respect, Hezbollah might be willing to negotiate and accept a technocrat government if it is offered some face-saving measures.
Feltman has a deep understanding of the Lebanese case and said clearly that the calls in Washington to push the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF) to confront Hezbollah are counterproductive. A confrontation between Hezbollah and the LAF would lead to civil war and the chaos created by such a conflict would favor Iran and Sunni extremists. However, Feltman did not elaborate further. Not pressuring the LAF to disarm Hezbollah by force is not enough to prevent an internal conflict in Lebanon. Hezbollah needs a face-saving exit, otherwise it might fight back — something it has done in the past.
The American ambassador has an overly optimistic view of the situation. He thinks that early electoral elections would strip Hezbollah of the political partners that give it a multiplier effect. However, if elections were held today, the results would not be substantially different for the simple reason that the protesters do not have a structure or enough maturity to present viable alternatives. Early elections might even “reaffirm” Hezbollah’s legitimacy. Containing Hezbollah is a long-term process.
In this respect, the US should be realistic and pragmatic. Washington’s objective should be to support the Lebanese people’s desire to have a clean government of technocrats that enjoys transparency, provides basic services and conducts reforms. In such an environment, Hezbollah’s narrative would not be popular, nor would its services be needed. As Feltman stated, the US should think long term.
• Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib is a specialist in US-Arab relations with a focus on lobbying. She holds a PhD in politics from the University of Exeter and is an affiliated scholar with the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs at the American University of Beirut.

Hariri withdraws candidacy as parliamentary consultations set for Thursday
Georgi Azar/Annahar/November 26/2019
Saad Hariri resigned on October 29 in the wake of a popular uprising against the ruling elite, which has governed over Lebanon for the past 30 years. BEIRUT: Caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri has taken himself out of the running to head the next government, urging President Michel Aoun to begin parliamentary consultations to appoint a new premier. Hariri accused his rivals of being in a “state of chronic denial” and refusing to acknowledge the dire economic threats facing Lebanon. “It is clear that what’s more dangerous than the severe economic crisis Lebanon is going through is the state of chronic denial that has been expressed on many occasions over the past weeks,” Hariri said in a statement issued Tuesday.
Hariri announced that he is steadfast in “the belief centered around not me, but someone else,” in reference to reports that he was hindering the formation of the Cabinet. The embattled prime minister had faced severe opposition to form a Cabinet comprised solely of independent technocrats, which he says is the “only solution moving forward to the severe economic crisis.”Hariri resigned on October 29 in the wake of a popular uprising against the ruling elite, which has governed over Lebanon for the past 30 years. Sources also told Annahar that Aoun will kick off binding parliamentary consultations on Thursday, maintaining that any government will be tasked solely with tackling the many ailments currently facing Lebanon.  The Cabinet will include both technocrats and political figures, the sources said, signaling that Hariri’s approval of the future premier is still being sought. The Free Patriotic Movement, along with their Shiite allies Hezbollah, have rejected the formation of a completely independent government, seeking instead a “techno-political” Cabinet. Sources say Hezbollah’s tight grip on the Cabinet and its determination to be included stems from fear of a potential isolation and a scheme to remove its military arsenal.

The sectarianization of Lebanon and smearing a revolution
Georgi Azar/Annahar/November 26/2019
Hezbollah and Amal supporters, as we have become accustomed to seeing, are front and center in these latest clashes.
BEIRUT: For 40 days, Lebanese from all walks of life have demonstrated a sense of responsibility rarely witnessed in today’s hypersensitive world. They have risked their own freedom to achieve freedom for all, putting aside differences that had divided them for so long. Religion, sect and class had become second fiddle, paving the way for a clear set of demands: a government by the people, for the people. 40 days later and our elected parliamentarians and president have yet to appoint to a new Prime Minister. A number of theories for the delay have been presented, yet it begs the question as to whether this signals a consorted effort by some to pit Lebanese against one another in a bid to buy time. After 40 days of peaceful civil disobedience, Lebanon has now been dragged to the cusp of civil strife, bordering the outbreak of war.Hezbollah and Amal supporters, as we have become accustomed to seeing, are front and center in these latest clashes. They have attacked peaceful demonstrators in Beirut and Sour, destroying both public and private properties while flexing their militia-like muscles.
The lawlessness that has swiped over parts of the country is astoundingly conspicuous and eye-opening. The army and various law enforcement, which have been swift to arrest peaceful demonstrators for far less egregious crimes, have shown an extreme reluctance to address the issue.
No arrests have been made and no official has condemned the violence exhibited by these Hezbollah and Amal affiliates. Instead, Amal leader Nabih Berri placed the blame at the feet of the peaceful protestors, warning of the dangers of roadblocks. These men could even be heard chanting for a rerun of the May 7, 2008 armed clashes which resulted in 12 deaths and brought Lebanon to the brink of war. Chants of “Shia, Shia, Shia,” echoed through Beirut’s cross-sectarian neighborhoods as hundreds of thugs descended on their trademark minibikes. They had seemingly taken offense to the Ring Bridge being closed Sunday night and yet lashed out at nearby residents’ belongings. Cars were destroyed and set on fire. Windows bashed and threats spray-painted on walls. Hours later, protesters’ tents in Sour were trashed and burned. The resistance, for all its previous glory, is being sullied and its reputation dragged through the mud.An armed scuffle also broke out between Hezbollah and Future Movement supporters in the Cola neighborhood of Beirut, holding a mirror to the broader Shia-Sunni struggle in the region. Hezbollah, which now finds itself backed into a corner as popular support and foreign funding wanes, is seemingly resorting to scare tactics. Wise Lebanese should be wary of falling into the trap, as history is filled with plots that have highjacked a peaceful political revolution. The intervention of these tribal-minded aggressors in what had been a nonviolent revolution will surely add a combustible new dimension to the uprising in Lebanon. It is our duty, and that of the armed forces, to ensure that history doesn’t repeat itself.

Moral Leadership and the Lebanese Military
Aram Nerguizian/Carnegie MEC/November 26/2019
After more than a month of protests targeting Lebanon’s sectarian postwar political order, pressure has increased on the Lebanese armed forces to maintain internal stability and civil peace. To that end, the military and its leadership have avoided engaging in major public statements or press appearances, preserving the institution’s neutrality and avoiding the politicization of the armed forces. However, both the protest movement and the sectarian political elites they oppose continue to struggle with deciphering the military’s intentions, priorities, and objectives.
The protest movement remains uncertain about the role of the military as protests enter their sixth week. Social media is littered with protestors’ comments that range from praise for the military’s efforts to uphold civil peace to acrimony over the absence or heavy-handedness of military personnel. Discussions with protest organizers often contrast the deployment in force of elite units to clear roadblocks, at times by force, and a far less aggressive posture by units when Hezbollah and Amal supporters recently destroyed the protestors’ encampments in Beirut’s central district.
In discussions, Lebanon’s sectarian political leaders show growing frustration with the military’s perceived inability or unwillingness to bring the protest movement to heel. Partisans of the predominantly Christian Lebanese Forces and Kataeb parties, which claim to support the protests, point to the vigorous lifting of roadblocks in the Metn district as proof that the military is not “on their side.” Protestors in the country’s predominantly Sunni north increasingly accuse the military of being “Aounists”—a reference to the officers promoted under President Michel Aoun when he was still commander of the armed forces. By contrast, there are persistent tensions between the leadership of the Free Patriotic Movement and the military, and the former are aghast at how the armed forces have sought to negotiate and mitigate road closures.
Meanwhile, Lebanon’s principal Shi‘a factions, Hezbollah and Amal, are increasingly interpreting the actions of the Lebanese military as complicit with the pro-Western March 14 forces, going so far as to insinuate that the military and military intelligence are siding with the protest movement.
If the military is to counteract such accusations, it must address three challenges: first, it must proactively articulate strategic guidelines to clarify its intent; second, it must adopt modern best practices tied to strategic communication; and third, it must actively track and correct instances where individual military personnel or units act out of step with the guidelines set by headquarters.
For the military to clarify its strategic and tactical objectives is arguably the most critical challenge. Early on, the military tried to make plain its mission priorities: protecting the public and key government institutions and standing for and with the protestors. However, this did little to articulate for the public at large what those priorities meant in the real world. Discussions with Lebanese military officials indicate that the military’s strategic objective is simply to buy time and maintain civil peace long enough to allow for a suitable political settlement to be found to the country’s political crisis. Allowing protests in Beirut and Tripoli to go on unabated falls under those objectives. By contrast, lifting roadblocks are meant to be limited timebound tactical actions that seek to accommodate the demands of Lebanon’s caretaker government. Contrary to the assumptions of some in the protest movement and the political class, they are not a strategic effort to deal a death blow to one manifestation of the protest movement.
The next challenge is addressing the military’s inability thus far to communicate this nuance to the public. The military’s Orientation Directorate is tasked with public engagement, the posting of official bulletins, and keeping the public informed on non-sensitive military affairs. However, the directorate has largely failed to adapt quickly or decisively enough to the realities of this age of social networks, citizen journalism, and alternative and fake news. Like other militaries around the world, the Lebanese military will have to rapidly adapt its existing public diplomacy capabilities to proactively and persistently engage, educate, and react to the public at large.
In the longer term, this may mean establishing a new communications directorate (a “J-9” in military parlance). However, in the short term it can mean dusting off and expanding on the strategic communication lessons learned during the 2017 Fajr al-Jurud campaign against the Islamic State and tasking a timebound strategic communications cell until the military can adapt structurally.
If the military can address its intent and how to signal it, the next challenge will be to strictly ensure that all units adhere to that intent in practice. The military will have to pay close attention to how it deploys units with varying levels of experience with public order actions in support of stabilization operations, while also working to show the public that it is acting fairly and consistently across Lebanon. This means carefully calibrating how the military uses its regular and elite units at roadblocks and in places such as Beirut’s central district to reassure protesters and deter potential aggressive elements on either side of Lebanon’s sectarian political dividing lines.
No less important are the perceived actions of non-combat units such as the Directorate of Military Intelligence, which have regular and recurring contact with both protesters and political factions on the ground. Establishing and maintaining uniformity across the force in terms of actions and intent become even more important as telltale signs of fatigue, stress, and lapses of judgment become increasingly apparent after more than a month of protests.
On November 17, the army commander, General Joseph Aoun, publicly restated the military’s objectives and priorities, emphasizing both the protestors’ right to freedom of assembly and the tactical imperative of keeping major roads open. This first major public statement went in the right direction to try and educate the public about what the military was doing and why. Whether such public engagement was enough, or succeeded in communicating with a youth-driven protest movement, was debatable. However, the military must adapt accordingly. Be that as it may, the address communicated a fundamental belief that the Lebanese military was not, as one officer put it, a “hope killer.”
As the crisis persists and more Lebanese look to the armed forces for leadership, addressing intent, signaling it, and then ensuring it is uniform will be critical. And none of this can be accomplished by a military merely reacting to events. It must seize the initiative. The military must work to ensure it is not increasingly perceived as “the military of the regime,” as one officer put it. It must also strive to remain “the military of the nation.”To that end, how the Lebanese military engages with and channels the demands of the protest movement as well as the needs of the country’s leading sectarian forces will determine whether it can stake out a position for itself allowing it to control the moral high ground.

Is the Lebanese miracle dead?
Ishac Diwan/Annahar/November 26/2019
The revolutionaries in the street aspire to build their country rather than be forced to leave it. They believe that it is way below its potential and that they can do much better with their collective energy and skills.
Our economic and political elites want us to believe that once we get through the rough spot of the moment, it should be possible to revive the Lebanese Miracle economy. A more sober diagnostic is that the ongoing financial difficulties do not reflect a passing liquidity problem, but, instead, the sure signs of the bankruptcy of the post-civil-war model. These signs preceded the October 17 revolution and were actually its driver. How to transition to a new model, without killing the patient, should now be our central concern.
Exports of goods and services in the past few years have been annually around $5 billion, and imports around $20 billion. The difference – which Lebanon needs to pay for all its imports – has been financed by external inflows of capital, largely into the country’s banks, at the tune of 20% of GDP on average over the past two decades. Lebanon has become dependent on capital inflows like rentier-countries depend on oil sales, and like a heart depends on blood flow.
But depositors count on their bank to invest their assets prudently. Instead, our banks have invested massively in public debt, and this ended up being a bad investment, as it is now clear that the economy will be unable to outgrow its debt burden. The Central Bank adopted a Ponzi-like scheme to attract more capital, but this too has run out of steam. New inflows into the system have now dried up – worse, bank depositors are looking for the exits.
To continue with the medical metaphor, the sudden stop of capital inflows resembles a heart attack. To repair Lebanon’s heart, it will be necessary to remove the fat blocking the arteries – in effect, to clean up the banks’ balance sheets so they become solvent again, which will require the recapitalization of banks and the much-dreaded haircut on deposits.
To keep heart attacks from recurring, there is also a need to stop producing so much fat, in other words, to normalize Lebanon’s metabolism. The recurrent external deficits reflect an excess of spending over income. Not only the state, but also the business sector, and many households have been spending more than they earn, year after year. The country needs to consume less of its income and work harder. For consumption to rise over time, the country will need to invest its savings more judiciously.
This requires, in turn, that Lebanon rebuild its productive capacities like a healthy body needs to build up solid muscles. Economic growth is now close to zero. This was partly due to external reasons. Tourism and exports were hit by political instability, and remittances are down with the region-wide fall in oil revenues. But instead of working harder to face the challenging environment, the old model has atrophied our muscles. The artificial rise in wealth has pushed up real wages, making foreign goods cheaper. Displaced from the tradable sectors, more youths had to seek employment abroad. Corruption and poor infrastructure have further increased the cost of doing business. To grow again, Lebanon’s productive muscles need to be rebuilt.
But there can be no healthy body in the absence of a well-functioning brain – a Polity where decisions about the country’s future are made. The massive capital inflows have distorted the country’s governance system. The borrowing spree has deepened inequality, producing an economic elite that earns high return on its capital without having to take risks and innovate, because of the high-interest rates policy. It has also allowed a sectarian political elite to get entrenched by building its legitimacy on patronage and clientelism, rather than on performance.
The large rents that the political elites drew by milking the public sector, and an increasingly cronystic private sector, have allowed for the formation of an overgrown ruling coalition. This may have delivered some political stability in the midst of a chaotic region. But the coalition has been too unwieldy to be able to even collect garbage or provide electricity effectively, let alone to address the long-term national challenges facing the economy. Now that the regional chaos is subsiding, it is high time to come back to a more competitive political system where ruling parties are disciplined by an active opposition.
To move forward effectively, it is essential that we first convince ourselves that the old model cannot be fixed. Its core functions have broken down. The banking sector will not be able to attract large external deposits anymore. Oil prices will not recover their earlier peaks. GCC jobs will not be as plentiful as in the past, and assistance from oil producers will be scarcer. The international community will not offer support if the system is not fixed. But more importantly, the public itself has now irreversibly rejected the old model. The street is denouncing loudly its sectarianism and corruption, its weak state, and its artificial economy.
The revolutionaries in the street aspire to build their country rather than be forced to leave it. They believe that it is way below its potential and that they can do much better with their collective energy and skills. They want a state that serves society and business. They want performance to replace corruption, and meritocracy to replace connections. In addition to tourism and finance, they aspire to build a vibrant high-tech industry, an environmentally conscious agriculture, a cultural production powerhouse, and to connect in more synergetic ways with their successful diaspora. They want social justice, not rising inequality.
What is increasingly clear, however, is that the Lebanese will inherit a country in near ruin – over-indebted, with an inefficient state, a weak banking sector, and an economy that no longer allows for the importation of even the basic necessities. The birth of the Third Republic will be painful, but revolutionaries rarely inherit a well-functioning country.
The magnitude of the needed transition is similar to what Greece went through recently, and the danger along the current path resembles the present situation in Venezuela. It might take a decade before a full recovery is achieved if the full battery of reforms that are by now well known are implemented successfully. In the immediate future, the remaining reserves at the Central Bank need to be carefully rationed to protect the import of basic necessities until exports pick up. To smooth the transition, Lebanon also needs all the external help it can get.
In the coming months, not only will private wealth go down as balance sheet losses are distributed, but incomes will also have to fall to constrain imports, and wages to increase exports. The main challenge will be to build up enough social cohesion to avoid getting locked in a destructive distributive fight. The real Lebanese miracle will come to life when the country, starting from a lower-income base, will get solidly onto a rising path that can increasingly fulfill its newly rediscovered creative potential.
*Ishac Diwan is a professor of economics at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris.

A reading in Lebanon’s current financial crisis
Mohammad Ibrahim Fheili/Annahar/November 26/2019
Everyone who benefited from the imperfections of recent months and years must contribute to the rescue efforts.
The struggle to prevent a total collapse continues, and the crisis lingers. A key policy mistake, which led to the current financial crisis in Lebanon, is that corrective and preventive actions were not taken sooner. There is a need for collective effort by the management of Banks operating in Lebanon, their clients, and the Central Bank to rectify the situation. There is a collective responsibility here due to the failure to act in due time.
At least until now, the current financial crisis is neither a crisis of default nor total insolvency; instead, it’s that of liquidity! In recent months, banks confronted nagging demands:
● To secure resources to absorb losses incurred from deteriorating loan quality; since 2015, banks have been aggressively expensing their income to allocate provisions for loan loss reserves
● To extend credit to struggling local businesses trying to survive the steep economic downturn
● To refrain from paying dividends (including the current year 2019) and to retain the profits as instructed by the Central Bank of Lebanon.
● To meet the panic-driven depositors’ demand for withdrawals, be it in cash or transfers outside of Lebanon. Banks have been meeting clients’ demands in full, provided it’s in checks (not in cash) of the same currency, and transfers outside Lebanon are excluded except when it’s for humanitarian needs – to cover child support living outside Lebanon, the imports of pharmaceutical products, wheat, and oil, just to name a few.
At the root cause of this crisis we find:
a) Commercial banks paid more attention to the growth and health of their uses of funds (i.e., assets – loans, holding of government securities, deposits at the Central Bank, and deposits at other financial institutions mostly correspondent banks) and setting aside enough provisions to absorb any anticipated losses from deteriorations in the quality of their assets, excluding government securities.
b) Liquidity Concerns didn’t get the much-needed attention from the board of directors, nor did chief risk officers make a proper assessment of it through stress testing plausible scenarios considering the state of the economy, the political chaos, and the fate of the uses of funds.
c) In the situation as of late 2017, banks:
I. used all they were permitted to use, in regulation, out of their required reserves (i.e. technically used up their deposit cushion) to fund their appetite to extend housing and other types of subsidized loans;
II. noticeably reduced their holding of excess reserves and locked this excess liquidity in deposits at the central bank (BDL), which, in turn, used it to bail out an ailing fiscal government rendering the asset of the bank illiquid;
III. favored investing their available liquidity with the troubled Central government over investing it with the private sector. Under the circumstances, both are non-liquid forms of usage of funds.
To add insult to injury, the Central Bank of Lebanon used most of its available liquidity to finance the mounting government deficits and helped in meeting the hard-to-satisfy spending appetite of the corrupt members of the government.
To sum up, banks concentrated the majority of their uses of funds in relatively non-liquid assets; and the central bank deployed a significant portion of its available funds with the central government. Consequently, the financial community watched helplessly the emerging of the worst version of a liquidity crisis to date.However, the crisis didn’t hit all financial institutions evenly. The severity of the crisis had to do with each financial institution’s appetite for risk-taking behavior. As bad as it is, this is not the end of life in banking as we know it. The crisis is still manageable; rescue efforts remain possible; and complete recovery is, given time, possible.
The focus now should be on preserving the integrity and stability of the entire financial community in Lebanon and refrain from treating individual financial institutions as endangered species and in need of protection at any cost. Those who polluted the banking sector with their bad decisions and un-satiated risk-taking behavior must pay. Losing one, two, three or even more financial institutions is manageable – I dare say somewhat desirable! Institutions that stand strong and survive the crisis will be able to absorb losses and safeguard all depositors in failing institutions from any potential loss.
Everyone who benefited from the imperfections of recent months and years must contribute to the rescue efforts.
Who are they?
▪ Politicians who never had to worry about responsible government spending. Today is the time to wise up and act responsibly!
▪ Depositors who enjoyed the excessively high-interest rates on their deposits combined with unrestricted access to their deposit funds be it in time and/or demand deposits. It is time to change these rules of engagement!
▪ Borrowers, households and business owners, who exploited the subsidized loanable fund market, and uncontrollably expanded their credit obligations to include exposures to banks and to shadow banks. Now is the time for abstinence!
▪ Banks that enjoyed loose regulatory enforcement and, to a greater extent, a laissez-faire banking landscape. It has been obvious that banks have been chaperoned, not regulated as they should be, by the Central Bank of Lebanon. It’s time for some whipping! The Central Bank of Lebanon needs to stop being so accommodating and to hold banks accountable for non-compliance with financial regulations. The regulator is a whip, not a chaperone!
Major efforts have been undertaken by commercial banks to protect, not to control, depositors’ funds, and to delay or completely avoid a total collapse by introducing some controls:
● Withdrawals of deposited funds outside the banking system.
● Changing the currency denomination of deposit balances from Lebanese Pound to US Dollars.
● The transfer of funds outside Lebanon.
These are controls, with well-defined boundaries, and don’t qualify as capital controls because they are not legislated; they are set and implemented at the discretion of the management of each individual bank based on its own demand for and availability of liquidity; they are circumstantial and easily revoked. Restrictions on capital flows, on the other hand, should they prove necessary, perpetuate external imbalances, and undermine trust.
Any policy measure that undermines the credibility of these controls runs the risk of triggering a depositor runs. On the other hand, rumors about a haircut inflict harm and create fear; it’s unlikely to happen! However, if it happens, it’s unlikely for it to target small depositors.
*Mohammad Ibrahim Fheili is a risk & capacity building expert.

Student Protest Against Dollarisation of tuition fees
Fatima Dia/Annahar /November 26/2019
Students carried a banner in front of college hall, saying “We will not pay the price,” referring tot he politicians’ mistake which led to the current economic state of the country.
BEIRUT: Students at the American University of Beirut gathered in front of College Hall on the Beirut campus, in protest against the policy of dollarisation of tuition fees, today, on Nov. 26.
This policy means students are not allowed to pay their tuition with Lebanese Pounds, only with dollars. The main issue with this restriction lies in the fluctuating exchange rate between the Lebanese pound and the American dollar— the country is in the mid of an economic crisis, where the national debt of Lebanon is at $91.97 billion US in 2019, according to a study on statica.com.
Students carried a banner in front of college hall, saying “We will not pay the price,” referring tot he politicians’ mistake which led to the current economic state of the country.
It’s bad, that’s a common consensus, especially now, in this crumbling economy where everything is uncertain,” said AUB student Karine Ballout. “Personally, my parents are struggling to pay tuition, because their salaries are in lira [Lebanese Pounds], our bank accounts are in lira.”
Hassan Chehaitly, another AUB student, expressed discontent in the fact that the university is asking for dollars, when people are unable to even withdraw from banks and ATMs. Chehaitly described the situation as having become “theft, and a bourgeoisie.”
Students were not the only ones present in the protest, with staff and faculty present in support of the students’ demands. AUB professor from the faculty of Agriculture, Jad Chaaban, said it was unfair of the university to price the tuition in a foreign currency, specially when there’s a huge risk on that currency.
“The university should let students on Lebanese soil pay in Lebanese pounds,” he added. “It’s only fair to the students and their parents, who actually make most of their income in Lebanese pounds.”
Haitham Khoury, another professor, at the Olayan School of Business, echoed Chaaban’s sentiment, adding that they’re supportive out of a “sense of justice and what’s right.” Khoury added that the way to have access to the cross section of the Lebanese society, is by removing the dollarisation policy— and protesting the way the students were, “is the way to do it.”
The protests against dollarisation were not confined to the AUB campus; Lebanese American University students showed solidarity at their own campus with chants and banners. In addition to solidarity, the students do not want LAU to take the same measures.
“It’s our right to pay with our national currency,” said Lea Fakih. “And what’s going to happen when the price of the [Lebanese pound] drops with the inflation that’s happening in the country, is that people are not going to afford to study at LAU or AUB, because of the conversion rate. We can’t afford to do that.”According to the protesting students, another key issue that arises with the dollarisation of tuition fee is a direction of inaccessibility and non-inclusivity in both AUB and LAU.
“[AUB] is already less accessible and less inclusive, you live in such a privileged environment here, and when you get out into the world you see it’s completely different, and with the dollarisation it’s also making it harder on people with financial aid,” said ballout.
In addition to the increased classification of the environment in these universities, students claim it is not their responsibility to pay the price, echoing the message from the banner held during the protest.
“It’s not our responsibility to pay the price of the economic problems of the country,” said Fakih. “It’s becoming more inaccessible and more non-inclusive, and they’re basically forcing us to pay the price of the economic deterioration that was caused by the politicians who we do not identify with. They have robbed us, and completely benefited from this. A lot of people won’t be able to graduate, myself included.”
Annahar contacted AUB regarding the student-led protest, but received no response.

The post A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For November 26-27/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 41th Day appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

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