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Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For December 22/2019

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Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For December 22/2019

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The post Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For December 22/2019 appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.


A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For December 21- 22/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 66th Day

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Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For December 21-22/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 66th Day
Compiled By: Elias Bejjani
December 22/2019


Tites For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on December 21-22/2019
Paris Urges ‘Competent’ Lebanese Govt. to Implement Reforms
Diab Vows No Time Waste, Intensification of Consultations
Lebanon’s new PM-designate confident his government will get Western support
Diab Begins Non-Binding Consultations to Form Government
Lebanon PM-designate begins tough talks to form government/The country has not had a government since October
Lebanon’s new PM-designate begins consultations over next Cabinet
Berri Says Delay in Govt. Formation Accelerates ‘Economic Bankruptcy’
Diab at the end of consultations: We will form a mini government of independent experts as soon as possible; Dar AlFatwa’s visit will be after the government formation
Bassil after meeting Diab: We need clean and honest ministers
Hariri’s Press Office: Rebuttal of Al-Liwaa
Makhzoumi: It is not possible to facilitate the affairs of the Lebanese without a government
Salam says every person keen on preserving his homeland will not place obstacles
Mountain Guarantee Bloc expresses readiness to aid the PM-designate to succeed in his mission and meet the demands of the Lebanese people
Armenian Bloc: We will participate in the government according to its form
Demerjian: We count on the wisdom of the PMdesignate to bring in specialists who respect the law
Adwan after meeting with Diab: We do not have any demands as a Party; we are interested in a government of specialists
Ferzli after meeting Diab: We called for a reform government
Kataeb Bloc says the only solution today lies in early parliamentary elections
Development and Liberation Bloc after meeting Diab: For a rescue emergency government
Raad says government will not be confrontational
Jisr says Future Bloc will not participate in government
Berri insists on including all parties in cabinet after meeting with Diab
Geagea wishes ‘success’ to new government
Al-Rahi: We pray for the success of the PM-designate’s mission
Bassil Meets Hale at His Residence
S&P Rates Lebanon at CCC/C with Negative Outlook
Scuffles continue in Lebanon between Hariri supporters and security forces
Clashes Renew between Army, Mustaqbal Supporters in Corniche al-Mazraa

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on December 21-22/2019
Paris Urges ‘Competent’ Lebanese Govt. to Implement Reforms
Naharnet/December 21/2019
The French foreign ministry on Friday said that it is “up to the Lebanese officials” to form the new government, refusing to comment further on the appointment of Hassan Diab as PM-designate. A spokeswoman for the ministry however said that the formation of the new government should respect “the public interest of all Lebanese.”“The only criterion should be the competence of this government in order to serve the reforms that the people are awaiting,” she added.

Diab Vows No Time Waste, Intensification of Consultations
Naharnet/December 21/2019
Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab on Friday warned that the situation in Lebanon “does not allow for any waste of time,” vowing to “intensify consultations to reach the result that the Lebanese are hoping for.”“The responsibility for Lebanon’s rise is huge and everyone is aware of the economic and financial challenge that the country is going though. Let us begin a new journey that resembles the will of the people,” Diab tweeted. “Your demands are rightful and they represent a groundwork for building a new state,” Diab added, addressing citizens and protesters. Diab’s non-binding consultations with the parliamentary blocs on the shape and line-up of the new government are scheduled for Saturday. Earlier on Friday, Diab said that he plans to form a government of experts and independents to deal with the country’s crippling economic crisis. Diab spoke to reporters following a meeting with caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri, a day after he was asked by the president to form the country’s next government. Diab, a university professor and former education minister, won a majority of lawmakers’ votes after receiving backing from the powerful Hizbullah and its allies. However, he lacks the support of major Sunni figures, including the largest Sunni party headed by Hariri. That is particularly problematic for Diab, who as a Sunni, lacks support from his own community. Diab, however, emerged from Friday’s meeting with Hariri saying the atmosphere was “positive.” “As an expert and an independent, my inclination is to form a government that is truly made up of experts and independents” Diab said. Shortly after he spoke, scuffles broke out between Hariri’s supporters protesting on a Beirut street and army units, underlying the tension on the ground. “I ask them (protesters) to give us a chance to form an exceptional government” that can work on resolving the country’s many problems, accumulated over the past 30 years, Diab said. Diab faces a huge challenges in trying to form a consensual government that would also satisfy protesters who have been on the streets since mid-October, seeking to sweep away an entire political class they deem as corrupt. He also faces a mammoth task of dealing with the country’s economic and financial crisis in one of the most indebted countries of the world. Support from the Iran-backed Hizbullah guarantees Diab a thorny path, potentially inviting criticism from Western and Gulf nations that had supported Hariri. Friendly nations, including France, have made clear they will not support the heavily indebted nation before a reform-minded Cabinet is formed.

Lebanon’s new PM-designate confident his government will get Western support
Al Arabiya English/Saturday, 21 December 2019
Lebanon’s new Hezbollah-backed Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab said in an interview with Al Hadath that his appointment was constitutional and that he would not have trouble receiving Western support if the government is from independent “specialists.” Diab also added that he will be meeting with all parties and denominations, including the Sunnis. Diab’s nomination was rejected by the Sunnis after he failed to receive the support of former prime minister Saad Hariri and his party. Under the Lebanese sectarian political system the seat of the prime minister is left to a Sunni Muslim. Diab, an academic and former education minister, was designated on Thursday as the country’s next prime minister with the support of the heavily armed Shiite Muslim Lebanese Hezbollah and its allies. The US, UK, and Arab League have designated Hezbollah a terrorist organization. Analysts say Diab faced obstacles due to his reliance on Hezbollah’s support and a lack of real support from his Sunni sect or the protest movement. “Diab is already presented as a pro-Hezbollah PM which kills any possibility to get the international financial aid which is the only chance to get out of the crisis,” said Sami Nader, head of the Levant Institute for Strategic Affairs. Lebanon, in its worst economic crisis since the 1975-90 civil war, has been seeking a new government since Prime Minister Hariri resigned on October 29 in response to protests against the ruling elite.
With Agencies

Diab Begins Non-Binding Consultations to Form Government
Naharnet/December 21/2019
Lebanon’s premier-designate Hassan Diab begins Saturday non-binding consultations with heads of parliamentary blocs in order to form Lebanon’s much-delayed government amid wide protests rejecting his designation. Diab, a university professor and former education minister, will have to steer Lebanon out of its worst economic and financial crisis in decades. He’s also taking office against the backdrop of ongoing nationwide protests against the country’s ruling elite. Diab began his meetings Saturday at parliament with Speaker Nabih Berri, then held talks with former prime ministers, including caretaker premier Hariri. Berri did not make any statement to reporters after the meeting. Later a statement was released by Berri’s media office, he said the “new government is an opportunity for reunion” and should “represent all political parties starting with the protest movement, al-Mustaqbal Movement (of resigned PM Saad Hariri), the Lebanese Forces and the Progressive Socialist Party (PSP).”The PSP’s Democratic Gathering bloc of ex-MP Walid Jumblat officially announced non-participation in the consultations and the new government.
After holding talks with Diab, Hariri did not comment on the government formation, but urged his supporters to “express their opinion peacefully without assaulting the Lebanese army and security forces,” after Friday’s clashes between the two in Corniche al-Mazraa. “When PM Rafik Hariri was assassinated, we did not hurl stones at anyone. You can express your opinion peacefully and the Lebanese army is our army.”After meeting Diab, Hariri and Berri held talks on the sidelines of the consultations. Former PM Tammam Salam said after meeting the PM-designate: “We are in the midst of an uncomfortable situation in the country, especially that a large group does not agree with what is happening. What we witnessed yesterday in the streets is not permissible.” On Friday, scuffles broke out in Beirut and other areas between supporters of Hariri, and Lebanese troops and riot policemen. The ex-premier’s supporters were protesting Diab’s nomination. The scuffles left at least seven soldiers injured. “We look forward to forming an effective government of experts,” said Deputy Speaker Elie Ferzli, adding “we called for a small government, implementation of reforms and fighting corruption.” Al-Mustaqbal Movement bloc told Diab that it will not take part in the new government, and urged the PM-designate for a “swift government formation.”Development and Liberation bloc met Diab and called for an “emergency cabinet representing all parties and the popular movement ​in order to rescue the country from the current crisis.”
Hizbullah’s Loyalty to the Resistance bloc voiced calls for “serious dialogue in order to rescue the country,” said MP Mohammed Raad. “No one wants a government of confrontations. Rather, it must present the correct approach to energize the financial and economic situation.”
The Kataeb bloc said: “Staging early parliamentary elections is the only solution for the crisis paving way for the people to choose their representatives.” Lebanese banks have imposed unprecedented capital controls over the past weeks. Thousands have lost their jobs, while the economy is expected to contract in 2020. The new prime minister won a majority of lawmakers’ votes after receiving backing from Hizbullah and its allies, which have a majority of seats in parliament. However, he lacks the support of major Sunni figures, including the largest Sunni party headed by Hariri. That’s particularly problematic for Diab, who, as a Sunni, doesn’t have the backing of his own community. And under Lebanon’s sectarian power-sharing agreement, the prime minister must be Sunni. Hizbullah had backed Hariri for prime minister from the start, but the group differed with him over the shape of the new government.
Lebanon’s sustained, leaderless protests erupted in mid-October, and forced Hariri’s resignation within days. But politicians were later unable to agree on a new prime minister. The ongoing protests and paralysis have worsened the economic crisis.

Lebanon PM-designate begins tough talks to form government/The country has not had a government since October
Agence France Presse/December 22/2019
Lebanon’s prime minister-designate on Saturday launched consultations to form a desperately-needed government for a protest-hit country facing economic collapse, saying political leaders are warming up to a line-up of independent experts. Debt-burdened Lebanon has been without a fully functioning government since former prime minister Saad Hariri resigned on October 29 in the face of nationwide protests. Demonstrators are demanding an overhaul of the political establishment which they deem corrupt and inept, insisting on a government of independents and experts with no ties to the country’s sectarian parties.
But Shiite groups Amal and Hezbollah have been demanding a government that includes representatives of established parties. “Lebanon is in intensive care,” prime minister-designate Hassan Diab told reporters after meeting several political leaders on Saturday.
“All (political) sides are in line with my (proposal) for a government of independents and experts, including Hezbollah,” he said.
Mr Diab, a 60-year-old engineering professor and self-styled technocrat, said he is hoping to set up a 20-member government within four to six weeks. He said he would start talks with representatives of the popular movement on Sunday to form such a government. But the challenges he must overcome became clear however from the onset of Saturday’s talks with various officials and lawmakers. Parliament speaker Nabih Berri said he “insists on securing representation for all parliamentary groups,” in the next government — a position shared by his Shiite Amal party. Hezbollah MP Mohammad Raad after meeting Mr Diab said “wider representation” would help accelerate the formation of a government.
Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, who heads the Hezbollah-allied Free Patriotic Movement, said he would prefer a government that did not include high-profile political figures, but said that parliamentary blocs should be represented in some form. Mr Diab was designate prime minister on Thursday with backing from the Iran-backed Hezbollah, Amal and Bassil’s FPM. But Mr Hariri’s Sunni bloc did not endorse his nomination, along with other key Christian and Druze Muslim parties and all have said they will not take part in Diab’s government. Samir al-Jisr, an MP from Hariri’s Future Movement, said the government Diab would set up would be “supported by only one political stripe”.
On the ground, Sunni supporters of Hariri have blocked roads with burning tyres and scuffled with security forces in Beirut and other cities for the past two consecutive nights to voice their opposition for Diab. Hezbollah sought to appease the anger of the protesters on Saturday, insisting that the next government will not be lopsided. “No one should think the government will be one of confrontation or one endorsed by only one political stripe,” said Raad. The new government, he said, will seek to “revitalise” the economy that has taken a beating since the unprecedented protests began on October 17.
Since then, tensions have been heightened by the looming bankruptcy of the debt-burdened Lebanese state.
A dollar-liquidity crisis has pushed banks to impose informal capital controls on dollar deposits and the Lebanese pound, officially pegged to the US dollar, has lost around 30 percent of its value on the black market. The faltering economy has pushed several companies to close, while surviving businesses try to stay open by paying half-salaries and laying off employees. A recession of more than 0.2 percent is expected for this year, the World Bank says. The international community, donors, and financial organisations have warned that debt-saddled Lebanon could ill afford any delay in getting a new government. The United States, France and other allies of Lebanon have warned they would withhold financial support until a government that can demonstrate willingness to reform can be formed. Multi-confessional Lebanon is ruled by a complex political system that seeks to maintain a fragile equilibrium between political parties representing the country’s major confessional sects. It usually takes months to form a government as political groups haggle over the allocation of cabinet seats and the distribution of ministerial portfolios.

Lebanon’s new PM-designate begins consultations over next Cabinet
The Associated Press, Beirut/Saturday, 21 December 2019
Lebanon’s newly designated prime minister began his consultations on Saturday with parliamentary blocs to discuss the shape of the future government. Hassan Diab, a university professor and former education minister, will have to steer Lebanon out of its worst economic and financial crisis in decades. He’s also taking office against the backdrop of ongoing nationwide protests against the country’s ruling elite. The consultations began a day after scuffles broke out in Beirut and other areas between supporters of the outgoing prime minister, Saad Hariri, and Lebanese troops and riot policemen. The ex-premier’s supporters were protesting Diab’s nomination. The scuffles left at least seven soldiers injured. Diab began his meetings Saturday at parliament with Speaker Nabih Berri, then held talks with former prime ministers, including caretaker premier Hariri. The two men had also met the previous day, when Diab said he plans to form a government of experts and independents to deal with the country’s crippling economic crisis. Lebanese banks have imposed unprecedented capital controls over the past weeks. Thousands have lost their jobs, while the economy is expected to contract in 2020. Hariri cautioned his supports Saturday against violent protests, saying: “The army is ours and police forces are for all Lebanese.” A lawmaker from the bloc led by the Shia Amal group – headed by parliament speaker Berri – said the incoming government should focus on fighting corruption. “It should be an emergency government that works on solving the economic, financial, social and banking crisis,” said Anwar al-Khalil after the meeting with Diab. The new prime minister won a majority of lawmakers’ votes after receiving backing from Hezbollah group and its allies, which have a majority of seats in parliament.
However, he lacks the support of major Sunni figures, including the largest Sunni party headed by Hariri. That’s particularly problematic for Diab, who, as a Sunni, doesn’t have the backing of his own community. And under Lebanon’s sectarian power-sharing agreement, the prime minister must be Sunni. Hezbollah had backed Hariri for prime minister from the start, but the group differed with him over the shape of the new government. Lebanon’s sustained, leaderless protests erupted in mid-October, and forced Hariri’s resignation within days. But politicians were later unable to agree on a new prime minister. The ongoing protests and paralysis have worsened the economic crisis.

Berri Says Delay in Govt. Formation Accelerates ‘Economic Bankruptcy’

Naharnet/December 21/2019
Speaker Nabih Berri said on Saturday that protest-hit Lebanon faces the risk of “economic and financial bankruptcy” if the formation of a new government is not accelerated amid an unprecedented economic crisis gripping the country, al-Joumhouria daily reported. “After the designation (of PM Hassan Diab) the main efforts must focus on forming a rescue government to salvage the stifling economic and financial crisis,” said Berri in remarks to the daily. He warned that Lebanon faces a major risk if the formation is delayed further. “We are inevitably heading to economic and financial bankruptcy if we do not accelerate the formation of a government that rushes to take the necessary measures and reforms,” he said. Prime Minister Saad Hariri resigned on October 29, two week into nationwide protests demanding an overhaul of Lebanon’s entire political class. Diab’s designation on Thursday was met with dismay. Protesters who say he has the support of Hizbullah rallied and blockaded roads with burning car tyres to protest his nomination. Over the past two months, the Lebanese pound, officially pegged to the US dollar, has lost around 30 percent on the black market, while many companies have slashed wages and laid off staff. Diab himself suggested a timeframe of four to six weeks after consultations were due to begin on Saturday.

Diab at the end of consultations: We will form a mini government of independent experts as soon as possible; Dar AlFatwa’s visit will be after the government formation
NNA/December 21/2019
Prime Minister-designate in charge of forming the new government, Hassan Diab, announced at the end of the non-binding parliamentary consultations today, that he would work to “form a mini government comprised of independent specialists.””The prime minister is the one who forms the government, and I will not apologize,” he said. “Hassan Diab is a Lebanese citizen who loves his country and wants nothing for himself, but wishes to play a role in this difficult stage with the participation of all parties who have expressed their willingness to cooperate,” vowed the PM-designate. “The time for action has come, and in this delicate and sensitive stage we need every effort possible,” he emphasized, adding that “in light of the useful advice I have heard from the blocs and parliament members, we will work to form a government as soon as possible.”Responding to a question, Diab said: “I agree with all that is voiced by the popular movement in terms of forming a government of independent specialists and clean figures, who would seriously work on urgent files, especially the economic dossiers.”On his visit to Dar Al-Fatwa, the PM-designate announced that it would be in “due time”, and then specified that it would be “following the government formation.”

Bassil after meeting Diab: We need clean and honest ministers
NNA/December 21/2019
Caretaker Foreign Affairs and Expatriates Minister Gebran Bassil stressed Saturday on the need for “clean and honest” ministers, known for their good merit and competence, to be part of the next government.
Speaking on behalf of the “Strong Lebanon” Parliamentary Bloc after meeting with Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab, Bassil said: “We did not make any demands to the PM-designate…What we are asking for is the availability of elements of success and effectiveness for the new government.”“This is the government of all Lebanese, not against anyone,” Bassil reassured, adding, “The issue of our participation is not important, the important thing is for this government to succeed and that we all contribute to its success.”

Hariri’s Press Office: Rebuttal of Al-Liwaa
NNA/December 21/2019
The Press Office of Caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri, has issued the following: “Al-Liwaa” newspaper issued today a report alleging “a complete settlement between caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri and the Shiite duo that ended with the designation of Dr. Hassan Diab and the non-designation by the Future bloc of Ambassador Nawaf Salam” and other things attributed to the alleged settlement. The Press Office confirms that everything stated in the report is incorrect and consists of analyses and predictions, and that the only thing that has been agreed upon between Prime Minister Hariri and the Shiite duo is to work by all means to prevent sedition and protect civil peace.”

Makhzoumi: It is not possible to facilitate the affairs of the Lebanese without a government
NNA/December 21/2019
After meeting with Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab this evening, MP Fouad Makhzoumi stressed that “the goal is to facilitate the affairs of the Lebanese, and of course we know that this cannot be feasible without a government.””Our objection was due to the fact that we did not hear of a clear and frank program and rescue project prior to the parliamentary consultations, and therefore, we did not name a prime minister,” Makhzoumi said. “We are awaiting the proposed program,” he added. Makhzoumi hoped that the new Prime Minister would succeed in addressing all the issues at stake, most prominently in combatting corruption and implementing a rescue plan.

Salam says every person keen on preserving his homeland will not place obstacles
NNA/December 21/2019
Former Prime Minister Tamam Salam stressed Saturday that every Lebanese keen on preserving his homeland will not place any obstacles. “We voice our position and our opinion, taking into account the most important factor, which is the street. We hope that the street’s expression of its dissatisfaction or anger will not disturb the civil peace in the country nor target the army and security forces,” Salam underscored. His words came following his meeting today with Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab, within the framework of the non-binding consultations prior to forming the new government. Salam indicated that the binding consultations will take place, stating that he has no personal demand other than that of all the Lebanese, which is “to stop the deterioration, malpractice and mismanagement” prevailing in the country. He hoped for a suitable way out through forming a government that can carry the heavy weight, and be at the level of the aspirations of every citizen sincere to his country. “Today, we are in the context of the binding consultations. I would like to say that we are still in the midst of huge challenges and in the midst of an uncomfortable situation in the country, especially since a basic and large team does not agree to what is happening and has clearly expressed that,” added Salam. He noted that the peaceful demonstration is correct, while criticizing yesterday’s witnessed events which he deemed “harmful”.”

Mountain Guarantee Bloc expresses readiness to aid the PM-designate to succeed in his mission and meet the demands of the Lebanese people
NNA/December 21/2019
Members of the “Mountain Guarantee” Parliamentary Bloc, led by MP Talal Arslan, met this afternoon with Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab, whereby they expressed their full readiness to provide any assistance needed to ensure the success of his mission, within the framework that meets the demands of the Lebanese people. “We wished the PM-designate success in forming the government, and we hoped that this circumstance would be one that imposes complete national unity in the country, for the prevailing economic and financial situation is not a circumstantial stalemate condition, and does not entail only group of Lebanese citizens…Hence, everyone is required to strive so we can put a limit to the collapse that has occurred, and which might have huge repercussions on the social, economic and financial levels, shouldered by the entire Lebanese,” Arslan said on emerging.
He hoped that the new government would “meet the requirements of the civil movement in the country, which reflect our sufferings as Lebanese in general, namely in combatting corruption and the corrupt and approving the reform paper, which was previously agreed upon,” he added.
“The delicate phase that Lebanon has reached requires a rescue policy, par excellence,” underlined Arslan.

Armenian Bloc: We will participate in the government according to its form
NNA/December 21/2019
MP Agog Pakradounian announced, following the meeting of the Armenian Deputies Bloc with Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab this afternoon, that they will participate in the next government “according to its form.”He added: “The Bloc informed Diab of the need to form a government as soon as possible, and to pave the way for economic and social solutions to break the current impasse.”

Demerjian: We count on the wisdom of the PMdesignate to bring in specialists who respect the law
NNA/December 21/2019
Following his meeting with the Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab over the new government formation, Deputy Eddy Demerjian said that hopes are pinned on the wisdom of the PM-designate to bring in specialists who set their sights on the law and respect its proper implementation. “There is no salvation for Lebanon except through implementing and respecting the laws,” Demerjian emphasized.
He stressed before the PM-designate that “the social, financial and educational situation cannot bear any waiting period, because the whole economy is threatened.”Demerjian hoped that the new PM would accord immediate attention to the issue of justice implementation, so as to put an end to the selective unjust actions taking place in the country. Additionaly, he urged the PM-designate to rapidly intervene with the banking sector to ensure that the principle of free economy, enshrined in the constitution and laws, is not disrupted and that depositors’ rights are well-preserved.

Adwan after meeting with Diab: We do not have any demands as a Party; we are interested in a government of specialists
NNA/December 21/2019
Members of the “Strong Republic” Parliamentary Bloc met today with Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab, within the context of the non-binding consultations to form the new government.
Following the meeting, MP George Adwan spoke on behalf of his colleagues, saying: “The Lebanese Forces Party has no demands as a party. Rather, we are interested in a government of specialists who enjoy high morals and transparency and who are independent, meaning that their decision is not party-driven.”

Ferzli after meeting Diab: We called for a reform government
NNA/December 21/2019
Deputy House Speaker Elie Ferzli met today with Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab, following which he indicated that talks centered on the next cabinet, saying: “We called for a government that takes into account the demands that have long been echoed, and whose program implements the needed reforms.”Ferzli hoped that the new government would be formed the soonest possible away from any shallow obstacles. “I also insisted on deepening dialogue, again and again, with Prime Minister Saad Hariri to take matters in the right direction,” Ferzli added. We are looking forward to an effective government of specialists,” he emphasized. “We insist that the Prime Minister-designate exerts all required efforts to reach a common logic and a mutual relationship with the parliamentary blocs, for this is the duty of the PM-designate even if they [blocs] do not participate in the parliamentary consultations,” Ferzli corroborated.

Kataeb Bloc says the only solution today lies in early parliamentary elections
NNA/December 21/2019
Kataeb Party Chief, MP Sami Gemayel, announced today on behalf of his Bloc members, following their meeting with Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab, that the sole solution at this stage is through holding early parliamentary elections. “We have reiterated our position to the PM-designate, and we consider that there is a total estrangement between the largest part of the Lebanese people who have joined the uprising for the past 60 days, and the political forces who did not wish to hear their voices, which has served to widen the rift between the constitutional institutions and the people,” said Gemayel. “It is critical when the state is on one side while the people are on the other side. Unfortunately, there is a team that still imposes its will on the Lebanese people, and still wants, after facing their uprising in the street and trying to abort it on several occasions, to continue to impose its will through constitutional institutions. This is something we reject, and this path is wrong and will lead to more crises,” he underlined. Consequently, Gemayel affirmed his Party’s “full solidarity with the people’s uprising,” vowing to “continue together the struggle towards achieving real change.”

Development and Liberation Bloc after meeting Diab: For a rescue emergency government

NNA/December 21/2019
Prime Minister-designate, Hassan Diab, met on Saturday with members of the “Development and Liberation” Parliamentary Bloc, within the context of the non-binding consultations for forming the new government. On emerging, the Bloc’s Secretary-General, MP Anwar El-Khalil, stressed that “all efforts should be focused on forming a rescue emergency government” to help the country out of its suffocating economic, financial, social and banking crisis. El-Khalil highlighted the need for a cabinet that includes all parties in the country, calling on the PM-designate to also seek the representation of the civil movement which has become a necessity, so the latter would be a partner in the comprehensive rescue operation. “There are basic matters that the PM-designate should be concerned with, such as fighting corruption,” he added, noting that “combatting corruption begins with the process of implementing laws.”
“We wished the Prime Minister-designate all success in reaching the aspired goals,” said El-Khalil, noting that talks during the meeting did not dwell on any portfolio request, but merely focused on the exchange of views and perspectives on various dossiers.

Raad says government will not be confrontational
NNA/December 21/2019
“The more the government includes the participation of political counterparts, the more successful it will be,” Loyalty to the Resistance Parliamentary Bloc Head, Mohammad Raad, said after the meeting with Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab today.
He added: “We do not want a confrontational government or a “one-sided government.”

Jisr says Future Bloc will not participate in government
NNA/December 21/2019
MP Samir al-Jisr announced on Saturday after the Future Bloc’s meeting with Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab, that the Future Bloc will not participate in the new government, whether directly or indirectly.
“We hope that it would be composed of independent specialists,” al-Jisr said. “We consider that forming the cabinet of independent specialists can rebuild confidence between people and the authority, and we believe that this is the desire of all people, not just those who are in the civil movement,” he underlined. MP Jisr hoped that the PM-designate would form the new government in less time than he had declared; especially that it would be backed by “one-color” so there is no reason for any delay in its formation, as he explained.

Berri insists on including all parties in cabinet after meeting with Diab
NNA/December 21/2019
“I discussed with the Prime Minister-designate the government’s framework, in terms of its nature, size and distribution of portfolios, and I confirmed the program, especially with regard to fighting corruption and working on developing economic and financial issues,” House Speaker Nabih Berri said after meeting Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab this morning. ​​​​​Berri stressed the importance of representing all parliamentary blocs in the next government, in addition to the members of the civil movement activists.

Geagea wishes ‘success’ to new government
NNA/December 21/2019
“We don’t want anything from the government, and the Lebanese Forces will not be part of it, yet we hope it will succeed and be productive,” LF Party Leader Samir Geagea said Saturday after meeting with US Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs, David Hale.
He added: “The international community has bad experiences with Lebanon and therefore, will not contribute a single penny if it is not sure that the money will reach the Lebanese people.””We must save the country’s social and economic situation,” Geagea concluded.

Al-Rahi: We pray for the success of the PM-designate’s mission

NNA/December 21/2019
“We pray for the success of the new Prime Minister’s mission in forming the new government,” said Maronite Patriarch, Cardinal Mar Beshara Boutros al-Rahi, as he presided over this evening’s prayers in Bkiriki marking the holy season. “We call on politicians to remove obstacles and difficulties that stand in the PM-designate’s way, because people are tired and can no longer hear the politicians whose interests have brought the country to the bottom, politically, economically and financially,” said the Patriarch.
“Therefore, we pray for the Prime Minister-designate to form the government as soon as possible, and for it to gain confidence, and we appeal to politicians to put the interests of Lebanon and its people above all personal, factional, sectarian, or partisan considerations,” al-Rahi underlined. Meanwhile, the Patriarch regretted “the recent events in Beirut,” saying that “the right to opinion expression in a peaceful manner is sacred, but it is unacceptable to hit the army and security forces with stones.”
“We pray for the army and security forces that are carrying out their huge responsibilities patiently and enduringly, in maintaining security and preserving the squares and the freedom of movement on the roads,” said al-Rahi.

Bassil Meets Hale at His Residence
Naharnet/December 21/2019
Caretaker Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil on Saturday held talks with visiting U.S. Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs, David Hale, at his residence in al-Bayyada. Reports said Bassil invited the U.S. envoy for dinner. Hale had earlier in the day met with Lebanese Forces chief Samir Geagea in Maarab. On Friday he met with President Michel Aoun, Speaker Nabih Berri and caretaker PM Saad Hariri. Hale had said that Washington was ready to help — provided Lebanon forms a new government marked by “good governance and freedom from corruption.”

S&P Rates Lebanon at CCC/C with Negative Outlook
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 21/2019
International ratings agency Standard & Poor’s confirmed Lebanon’s rating at CCC/C with negative outlook for the country’s economy, reports said Saturday. The agency stated that “Lebanon may eventually face difficult political options regarding monetary and banking systems in the future.” It pointed out that “the dangers of the prolonged political vacuum increase the ambiguity over the policies,” noting that “the system of power-sharing based on religion in Lebanon can delay any political solution regarding the formation of the government.”“Standard and Poor’s,” noted that “potential reforms may not be sufficient to find a fundamental solution to the great financial and economic pressures.”

Scuffles continue in Lebanon between Hariri supporters and security forces
The Associated Press, Beirut/Saturday, 21 December 2019
On Friday night, the Lebanese army used tear gas to disperse hundreds of supporters of the outgoing Prime Minister, Saad Hariri, protesting the assignment of the new Prime Minister, Hassan Diab, who is supported by Hezbollah. The clashes between the army and the demonstrators took place in the Corniche of Mazraa, in the, Beirut. Scuffles on the major avenue in Beirut intensified after Sunnis who apparently support Hariri closed it to protest Diab’s nomination. When the army worked on opening the road in Beirut’s western Mazraa neighborhood, the protesters hurled stones and fire crackers at troops and riot policemen, injuring at least seven soldiers, the Lebanese army said. The scuffles had begun on Friday morning when protesters first closed the avenue in Mazraa where Hariri enjoys wide support. Hours after the avenue was reopened, protesters closed it again leading to the intense scuffles that lasted until shortly before midnight. Outgoing Interior Minister Raya El Hassan, a member of Hariri’s Future Movement, issued a statement urging protesters to leave the streets “to avoid dangers and strife.” The protesters had earlier blocked the main highway linking Beirut with southern Lebanon with burning tires, causing a miles-long traffic jam. The army opened the road briefly in the town of Naameh before protesters closed it again with flaming tires. The road closures in Beirut and Naameh were carried out by protesters angered by what they said was Hezbollah and its allies deciding who takes the country’s top Sunni post. Hezbollah has backed Hariri for prime minister from the start, but they differed over the shape of the new government. “I ask (protesters) to give us a chance to form an exceptional government” that can work on resolving the country’s many problems, accumulated over the past 30 years, Diab said.
It was not immediately clear if the riots that broke out in Beirut will affect Diab’s consultations with members of parliament scheduled for Saturday in preparation for the formation of the Cabinet. Diab faces huge challenges in trying to form a consensual government that would also satisfy protesters. Demonstrators have been on the streets since mid-October, seeking to sweep away an entire political class they deem as corrupt.

Clashes Renew between Army, Mustaqbal Supporters in Corniche al-Mazraa
Naharnet/December 21/2019
Fresh clashes erupted Friday evening between the army and Mustaqbal Movement supporters in Beirut’s Corniche al-Mazraa area. The confrontation erupted after troops reopened a key highway in the area. The protesters then retreated to the area’s internal streets and started hurling stones and firecrackers at the soldiers. They also started burning tires. The army responded by firing tear gas and was chasing the pro-Mustaqbal protesters. The road had been blocked since morning and minor scuffles had erupted in the afternoon. An army statement said seven soldiers were injured in the afternoon confrontation after protesters pelted them with stones. The army said the protesters sought to empty a truckload of rocks and sand to block the road but were prevented by the military. Clashes ensued afterwards which resulted in the injuries. The Mustaqbal supporters are protesting the appointment of Hassan Diab as PM-designate.

Titles For The Latest Lebanese LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on December 21-22/2019
The International Republican Institute understands the issues in Lebanon well/John Hajjar/Face Book/December 21/2019
Samir Geagea despite everything remains for me the most credible current political leader/Roger Bejjani//December 21/2019
New Lebanon PM meets with parliamentarians on road ahead/Associated Press/December 21/2019
Hezbollah-backed PM-designate faces backlash from Sunnis/Samar Kadi/The Arab Weekly/December 22/2019
Naming of prime minister-designate adds to Lebanon unrest/Simon Speakman Cordall/The Arab Weekly/December 22/2019
Beirut Christmas carolling comes with a revolutionary twist/Samar Kadi/The Arab Weekly/December 22/2019

The Latest Lebanese LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on December 21-22/2019
The International Republican Institute understands the issues in Lebanon well
John Hajjar/Face Book/December 21/2019
The International Republican Institute understands the issues in Lebanon well. The need to protect the protestors and ensure US aid helps them and not our enemies is paramount.
Dr.Walid Phares/December 19 at 10:44 PM
I had a good meeting at the International Republican Institute IRI headquarters in Washington DC today with the Middle East team, and John Hajjar of the AMCD regarding policies towards Lebanon. We discussed the US position regarding the Lebanese protests, Hezbollah, the newly appointed PM, the Lebanese Army, and US Aid. The Administration’s officials dealing with the Lebanon file are focusing on the most appropriate steps to be taken in the near and medium futures.
My suggested priority is the protection of the protesters, who are the only factor that can move the country toward change at this point. Everything else will depend on the willingness of the “Hirak” to continue its peaceful efforts. Short of which, Lebanon will fall back into the pre October 17 mode, which had lasted for 30 years or so.

Samir Geagea despite everything remains for me the most credible current political leader
Roger Bejjani//December 21/2019
Samir Geagea despite everything remains for me the most credible current political leader. He acts like a man of state without being. He has a sense of public responsibility. He tries to contain populism as much as possible in front of the most populists and cheap party in Lebanon’s history.
However, he has made 7 DRAMATIC MISTAKES IN THE LAST 4 years.
1. He joined the President’s theory “strong and representative” in a republic of the parliamentary system. The President in such a regime must be a judge and guardian of the constitution. The very idea of a representative President (leader of a political party) is a breach of the spirit of the constitution.
2. He ran for the presidential election with a program! A great mistake thus challenging the constitution.
3. the vile agreements of me3rab. Although Aoun would have been elected to wear with or without the fl, this agreement on a cult basis that developed into (Non-Fair) Power-sharing has turned out to be a disaster. Without this agreement, aoun would have been elected with the membership (sooner or later of mustaqbal) without the vote fl (6 MPS).
4. He turned his back on his natural allies of March 14, promising mountains and wonders with the orange idiots. (although he was the last of the tenor to leave on March 14).
5. The vote of the electoral law that already guaranteed a parliamentary majority to hizbollah on paper. This law would have been voted without the fl. Why vote for this hybrid and hezbollahi law?
6. Participation in government post parliamentary elections. Knowing that the government will be controlled by hizbollah, why do it? The place des fl should have been the lead of the political opposition.
7. Abstention to nominate hariri on 18 December 2019. If he had done so hariri would have been nominated with more than 70 votes. He is said to have removed the Prime Minister’s card from hizbollah and bassil. In the event that hariri has joined the concept of a national salvation cabinet of independent, it would have been stopped by Aoun / hezb. What would have reinforced the opposition around hariri, FL, kataebs etc…. The 1 Prime Minister nominated cannot be challenged, this card would have been in our hands.
With 7 BIG MISTAKES IN 4 years, Samir, who has the gift of the organization, should rethink the policy of the fl. Unfortunately I don’t see any other person able to take over this party.

New Lebanon PM meets with parliamentarians on road ahead
Associated Press/December 21/2019
BEIRUT: Lebanon’s new prime minister held consultations Saturday with parliamentary blocs in which they discussed the shape of the future government and said afterward that legislators all had one concern: To get the country out of its “strangling” economic crisis.
Hassan Diab, a university professor and former education minister, will have to steer Lebanon out of its worst economic and financial crisis in decades. He’s also taking office against the backdrop of ongoing nationwide protests against the country’s ruling elite.
“Lebanon is in the intensive care unit and needs efforts” by all sides, from political groups to protesters, Diab said.
Consultations began a day after scuffles broke out in Beirut and other areas between supporters of outgoing prime minister Saad Hariri and Lebanese troops and riot police. The ex-premier’s supporters were protesting Diab’s nomination. At least seven soldiers were injured.
Diab told reporters later that all members of parliament encouraged him to form a Cabinet “as soon as possible.” Cabinets usually take months to form in Lebanon because of bargaining between rival groups.
Diab said he hopes to form a government of about 20 ministers made up of independents and technocrats within few weeks. “It’s time to work and we ask God to make us successful.”He added that the situation in Lebanon cannot stand any delays amid its worst economic and financial crisis since the end of the 1975-90 civil war.
Lebanese banks have imposed unprecedented capital controls in recent weeks. Thousands have lost their jobs and the economy is expected to contract in 2020. Diab began his meetings Saturday at Parliament with Speaker Nabih Berri, then held talks with former prime ministers, including caretaker premier Hariri. He later met with blocs at the legislature.
Militant Hezbollah and its allies had previously insisted that a new government consist of politicians and experts but on Saturday, Diab said “all parties agree with me regarding a government made up of independents and experts, including Hezbollah.”
Legislator Paula Yacoubian, who backs the protest movement, said Diab told her “the government will be fully made up of independents and that he will step down if there is going to be members of the state’s political parties.”She added: “I heard very nice talk similar to what the people have been demanding.”
The protesters have been demanding a government that does not include members of political parties whom they blame for widespread corruption. Diab said he will meet with the protesters in the coming days without elaborating.
Earlier on Saturday, Hariri cautioned supporters after meeting Diab against violent protests, saying: “The army is ours and police forces are for all Lebanese.”Shortly before sunset Saturday, scores of protesters including Hariri supporters, closed two major intersections in Beirut demanding that Diab step aside, saying he failed to win wide support from Sunni legislators. Saturday’s protests were peaceful unlike those of the night before when stones and firecrackers were hurled at security forces.
The new prime minister won a majority of lawmakers’ votes after receiving backing from powerful Hezbollah and its allies, which have a majority of seats in parliament.
However, he lacks the support of major Sunni figures, including the largest Sunni party headed by Hariri. That’s particularly problematic for Diab, who, as a Sunni, doesn’t have the backing of his own community. And under Lebanon’s sectarian power-sharing agreement, the prime minister must be Sunni.
The head of Hezbollah’s 12-member bloc, Mohammad Raad, said the group wants a government that preserves what the Lebanese have achieved in “victories during the confrontation with the Israeli enemy and to maintain our national sovereignty, our maritime (oil and gas) wealth and land and to prevent the enemy from undermining its sovereignty and the national dignity.”
A lawmaker from the bloc led by the Shiite Amal group — headed by parliament speaker Berri — said the incoming government should focus on fighting corruption.
“It should be an emergency government that works on solving the economic, financial, social and banking crisis,” said Anwar al-Khalil after the meeting with Diab.
Samir al-Jisr of Hariri’s bloc said they will not take part in Diab’s government. Hezbollah’s ally, Gebran Bassil, who heads the largest bloc in parliament, said the future government “is not Hezbollah’s Cabinet but of all Lebanese and it is not against anyone.”
Michel Moawad, a harsh critic of the militant group, said Diab told him the new government will not be controlled by “Hezbollah and will not be confrontational.”
Hezbollah had backed Hariri for prime minister from the start, but the group differed with him over the shape of the new government.
Lebanon’s sustained, leaderless protests erupted in mid-October, and forced Hariri’s resignation within days. But politicians were later unable to agree on a new prime minister. The ongoing protests and paralysis have worsened the economic crisis.

Hezbollah-backed PM-designate faces backlash from Sunnis
Samar Kadi/The Arab Weekly/December 22/2019
BEIRUT – The nomination of Hezbollah-backed Hassan Diab as prime minister-designate to form Lebanon’s so-called “salvation government” will unlikely help the debt-ridden country to overcome its worst socio-economic and financial crisis since the 1975-90 civil war.
Diab’s designation, which came after caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri pulled out of the race, was endorsed by a weak majority in parliament comprising Iran-backed Hezbollah and its allies, Shia Amal Movement and President Michel Aoun’s Christian Free Patriotic Movement.
Hariri’s Future Movement bloc did not nominate a candidate in the much-delayed consultations with the president. Other blocs nominated former Ambassador to the United Nations Nawaf Salam.
Analysts said Diab’s failure to secure a consensus, especially from his Sunni community at exceptionally difficult times, makes it more complicated for him to form an inclusive government.
“Today we have a mobilisation of the Sunni community,” said political analyst Johnny Mounayar. “Whether they like Saad Hariri or not, the Sunnis feel that they have been humiliated and marginalised by Diab’s appointment. The mood is very tense and might be a prelude to Sunni-Shia friction.”Under Lebanon’s sectarian-based political system the prime minister should come from the Sunni community and is usually backed by the community’s main leaders.
“Diab has been stamped in the Western media as Hezbollah’s candidate and his government, regardless of how many ‘technocrats’ it will include, will be regarded as a Hezbollah-dominated administration,” Mounayar said. “A government dominated by Hezbollah, which has been targeted by increasingly biting US sanctions, is unlikely to secure billions of dollars in frozen aid for which Lebanon is in bad need.”
“We are obviously heading towards a polarised government which will not gain any international support because the US-Iran talks have not matured yet and Lebanon will be part of any US-Iran deal. The West wants to make Iran pay a price in Lebanon, Iraq and Syria,” Mounayar added.
Diab, a 60-year-old professor at American University of Beirut largely unknown to the public, served as minister of education from 2011-14 in a government formed after Hezbollah brought down a previous Hariri cabinet. Following Diab’s appointment, protesters gathered in Beirut’s Martyrs’ Square, the epicentre of the protests, and cut off roads. They rejected Diab and cast him as part of the old class of politicians they are revolting against.
“I see the country is going to waste. With this kind of government, no one will deal with it, no Arab, no Europe and no US,” Saeb Hujrat, a protester in the square, told the Associated Press.
In his first public address, Diab, who described himself as an “independent,” said he would work quickly to form a government in consultations with all political parties and representatives of the protest movement.
He said he is committed to a reform plan and described the current situation as “critical and sensitive” requiring exceptional efforts and collaboration. A daunting task awaits Diab and his efforts to form a government will almost certainly hit snags in the deeply divided country, even if Hezbollah and its allies sought to facilitate his mission, journalist Amin Kammourieh said.
“His (Diab’s) appointment could be a test,” Kammourieh said. “If (economic and political) pressures at home and from the international community exacerbated, Hezbollah and its allies might reconsider Diab’s eligibility or they would go for a unilateral government and take all the challenges that come with it.”
Visiting US Under-Secretary of State for Political Affairs David Hale encouraged Lebanese politicians to commit to the necessary reforms that can lead to a stable, prosperous and secure country.
“It’s time to put aside partisan interests and act in the national interest,” Hale said, adding the 2-month-old anti-government protests reflected the Lebanese people’s “longstanding and legitimate demands for economic and institutional reform, better governance and an end to endemic corruption.”
Demonstrators of all sectarian backgrounds have been in the streets every day since October 17 to demand the removal of the entire political leadership, seen as corrupt and incompetent.
Pierre Issa, secretary-general of the National Bloc party, which is participating in the protest movement, said protesters are mostly unhappy with Diab’s appointment and would continue demonstrating.
“We fear Diab might form a cosmetic cabinet of experts who are effectively controlled by political parties and this won’t solve the crisis,” Issa said.

Naming of prime minister-designate adds to Lebanon unrest
Simon Speakman Cordall/The Arab Weekly/December 22/2019
TUNIS – With unrest continuing across Lebanon, the naming of not widely known former minister Hassan Diab as prime minister-designate could open a new chapter in the fraught relations between the government and the country’s increasingly agitated population.
Anti-government demonstrators poured into central Beirut, protesting Diab being chosen for the post soon after the decision was announced. Across Lebanon, the Daily Star reported, roads were blocked as protesters rejected the former education minister’s selection.
For several weeks, protesters called for replacing Lebanon’s confessional system of government with a technocratic one. This would preclude parties representing the countries’ various sects from government.
While those demands were echoed among many senior politicians, the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), the Amal Movement and Iran-backed Hezbollah were insistent that any government include a mix of technocrats and politicians. Popular anger was initially triggered by a series of small events, including a proposed tax on the WhatsApp messaging service, it “morphed quickly into protesters demanding a drastic overhaul of the country’s political system,” said Emily Hawthorne, a MENA analyst at risk consultancy Stratfor. “That is much easier said than done in Lebanon, where a complicated confessional system of governance in some ways predates even the modern country’s founding and was reinforced after the civil war’s end in 1990. The entrenched system is trying to defend itself against political reforms that risk eroding their power with sectarian constituencies,” she said.
Diab’s backing by the Shia Hezbollah and Amal, as well as their largest Christian ally, the FPM, could prove problematic. His lack of support from Lebanon’s main Sunni bloc is unlikely to help him form a new government or secure the Western backing that Lebanon desperately needs.
The severity of Lebanon’s financial circumstances is difficult to overstate. The confessional system of government, in which roles and ministries are allocated by sect, has become overwhelmed by corruption and little of the country’s infrastructure is functional.
The Lebanese pound has fallen to one-third of its official rate while banks impose tight capital controls. Across Lebanon, companies are cutting jobs and squeezing salaries.
“A government with a Hezbollah-backed prime minister would be even less likely to secure support from the Gulf countries… and might also potentially reduce the chances of Lebanon getting support from the [International Monetary Fund] if the US raises concerns,” Jason Tuvey, a senior emerging markets economist at Capital Economics, told Reuters.
The increasingly sectarian nature of the violence in the streets continues, something Diab’s appointment is unlikely to ease.
On December 16, hundreds of men on motorbikes crowded Beirut’s streets, carrying flags of Shia groups as they chanted, “Shia, Shia,” setting tyres on fire, throwing stones at security forces and setting cars ablaze, witnesses said.
The men, reportedly incensed by a video criticising Amal officials, including parliament Speaker Nabih Berry and religious symbols such as Imam Ali, attempted to break through a security cordon around a makeshift campsite erected by anti-government protesters. Security services used tear gas to push them back. The latest violence came after an especially brutal mid-December weekend in which 40 people were injured after police intervened to separate Amal and Hezbollah supporters from attacking protesters in central Beirut. Violence, however, escalated and police resorted to rubber bullets, tear gas and water cannons in an attempt to regain control of Beirut’s city centre.
“From the start, there has always been a concern that the protests could either turn sectarian, violent or both,” said Mouna Yacoubian, a senior adviser at the United States Institute of Peace.
“Indeed, the fact that the protests have still remained relatively peaceful is remarkable in and of itself given Lebanon’s history of civil war and conflict,” Yacoubian said. “The current unrest is largely the result of sectarian actors instigating greater violence by attempting to inject a sectarian element into the protests and by resorting to more aggressive tactics, e.g. throwing stones, in confrontation with security forces.”Little of the violence appears to be directed by any of the parties’ leadership. While Amal and Hezbollah were initially critical of the anti-government protests, their position has become more accommodating, raising questions about the motivations behind the violence. “What is more concerning is the prospect that some of the violence is being generated from the grass roots and that party and religious leaders have less control over these elements,” Yacoubian said.

Beirut Christmas carolling comes with a revolutionary twist
Samar Kadi/The Arab Weekly/December 22/2019
BEIRUT – While the drums of the popular anti-government rebellion were beating in Beirut’s streets during violent clashes in recent days, Christmas carols and Muslim Sufi hymns were sung in churches for the annual Beirut Chants Festival.
The pre-Christmas event, with 28 free concerts over December 1-23, offered the public a much-needed break from the pressures of the political and socio-economic crisis gripping Lebanon as attendees indulged in peaceful and spiritual, yet revolutionary, musical performances.
“We believe that music should be free for all, as we believe in tolerance and coexistence among different cultures and religions because we believe in unity,” said Micheline Abi Samra, founder of Beirut Chants Festival.
“Definitely the intercultural Islamic-Christian aspect is always present in the festival, and every year it is more pronounced and more sophisticated. Quranic chants are being chanted in churches at the same time as Christmas carols to encourage tolerance and mutual acceptance and understanding and to get to know each other better,” Abi Samra said.
Since the festival was founded 12 years ago, Lebanon has united each December for concerts in that very spirit, using culture and music to spread a message of hope for the country. This year it is even more pronounced with the anti-government rebellion that united protesters across Lebanon’s religions and regions. The concerts draw thousands of people to churches around Beirut every night for one or two hours of music — some classical, some religious and some unexpected, such as the revolutionary and nationalistic songs that marked some of this year’s concerts.
“This year, it is a miracle that we are still going on. I myself cannot believe it when I look at the churches and I see that every single night crowds are more numerous with different ages, different backgrounds and yet they are one when they listen to beautiful music,” Abi Samra said.
Beirut Chants is not just about bringing culture to the masses and bonding over beautiful music; it is also about voicing a powerful message.
One of the most acclaimed concerts was a religious event that combined Quranic singing by Muslim cleric Sheikh Ahmad Hawili and soprano Ghada Shbeir at the Saint Joseph Church in downtown Beirut.
Sheikh Hawili, a Lebanese Sufi singer, and Shbeir, who has a doctorate in Syriac chants, the oldest form of Christian singing, enchanted the audience.
“I found it unique and mesmerising,” said audience member Randa Imad. “The fact that there are a cleric and a vocalist singing lyrics from the Quran and the Bible, sometimes as a duo or alternately, was fascinating. The church was packed. The atmosphere was great. They even placed seats in the alleys to accommodate the crowd.”
Beirut Chants began in 2007 when Abi Samra said she wanted to make use of the beautifully renovated churches in Beirut and thought to bring life to those spaces to “feel that the community is participating and living the Christmas spirit in a beautiful way.”
The revolutionary mood prevailing in Lebanon affected this year’s festival, intertwining with the Christmas spirit.
Members of the rebellious young generation seeking change while expressing their attachment to Lebanon were well-served by Lebanese musician, composer and pianist Guy Manoukian, accompanying al Fayha choir, a group of 100 singers from all denominations. National and patriotic songs inflamed the Assembly Hall at the American University of Beirut (AUB), where the concert took place. “What I lived in that particular concert I haven’t lived for 12 years since Beirut Chants started. The national mood and the ambiance were already there… Emotions were high. People sang along and cried,” Abi Samra said. The performance by an ensemble from the Balamand University Choir and soprano Reem Deeb at the Assembly Hall was another highlight of the festival. Deeb presented a surprise song that sounded as a perfect contribution to the revolutionary situation. Some of the lyrics translate as follows: “In times of pain and poverty, Beirut cries for people’s hunger and people’s eyes weep for people’s thirst, yet, the Christmas spirit gives people back their dignity and faith.”An AUB student who attended the performance said the surprise anthem was “a beautiful addition to the festival, especially in times of hopelessness.”The people who gave standing ovations at the concerts understood the message of love and tolerance and the big hope that the differences in the Lebanese society are its strengths, Abi Samra said. “We should work on more projects that make us all one nation,” she added. Lebanon has been rocked by unprecedented popular protests over official mismanagement and corruption since October 17.

The post A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For December 21- 22/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 66th Day appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

منى فياض/نصرالله يهتف: هيلا هيلا هو

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“نصرالله” يهتف: “هيلا هيلا هو”!
منى فياض/الحرة/22 كانون الأول/2019

عندما طالعت مقالة طوني عيسى في الجمهورية “ماذا لو فعلها حزب الله؟” تذكرت مقالة لي نشرتها قبل 13 عاما.

يشير عيسى إلى أن حزب الله وجد نفسه يتخبّط في مكان شديد الإحراج، فهو الحريص على صورته كمقاوم للاحتلال الإسرائيلي بعيدا عن الانغماس في الفساد الداخلي؛ اضطر إلى الوقوف في وجه انتفاضة لا تنادي إلا بمواجهة فساد طبقة ارتكبت أشنع الموبقات صراحة في حق الدولة والخزينة والمؤسسات والشعب… يتساءل عيسى: ماذا لو كشف حزب الله الفاسدين جميعا كونه الأقوى بجمع المعلومات والقدرات؟

تذكرت مقالة نشرتها في مطلع 2006 بعنوان “حكمة حزب الله”. استغربت في المقالة انتقال الحزب من كونه النموذج الإسلامي المقاوم والملتزم بالأخلاقيات والقيم الإسلامية من دون تعصب، إلى التحول فجأة شيعيا ومتعصبا لهذه الشيعية.

إنهم في مأزق. يريدون تغيير النظام فيما يدافعون بشراسة عمن يفرض بقاءه

في البداية، جعل حزب الله من نفسه المثال والمرجع للشباب وللجماهير العربية السنية في معظمها والتي تبنت خطابه الخالي من أي تعصب شيعي أو فئوي، لكنه تحول إلى ناطق أوحد باسم الشيعة الذين لطالما كانوا عروبيين ومتعددي الانتماءات!

سألت: كيف لمن يدعو إلى تحرير شعب من الاحتلال أن يقبل بأن يدافع عن النظام السوري المستبد؟ متمنية أن يبقي على صورته التي عهدناها كي نظل نفتخر بسلوك الحزب الأخلاقي والقيمي وأن يجعل لها الأولوية وأن يعمل لمصلحة الوطن وليس لمصلحة الحزب.

بينت الاحداث اللاحقة أن لا حكمة ولا من يحزنون، وأن تمنياتي، كمثل تمنيات طوني عيسى، ذهبت أدراج الرياح.

العباءة و”الخندق الغميق”

وضع “حزب الله” نفسه حاليا بمواجهة الشعب الذي ثار من أجل المطالب الاجتماعية والاقتصادية دون أن يشير إليه أو إلى سلاحه من قريب أو من بعيد. وبالرغم من أن الحزب يوافق ـ أو يدعي ذلك ـ على المطالب المحقة نجده يروج لفكرة المؤامرة الأميركية.

رفض المحتجون منذ البداية الخضوع لمنطق المؤامرة والأجندات الخارجية بجميع أشكالها. واعتبروا أنهم غير ملزمين بتعديل مطالبهم باسترداد حقوقهم المهدورة لأن طرفا خارجيا أو أكثر دعم هذا المطلب أو ذاك!

أمام الانقلاب الجذري في مزاج الشعب الذي رفض الطبقة السياسية وألاعيبها يأتي الرد: إما نحن أو الفوضى. إما حكومة بشروطنا أو لا حكومة. وفيما يؤكد المحتجون يوميا، ممارسة وخطابا، خروجهم من عباءة الطوائف وصراعاتها نجد أن المسؤولين يتصرفون انطلاقا من “موشور” (بريسم) طائفي. فالطائفية درعهم الواقي للاستمرار في الحكم والفساد. جميع الأسلحة مباحة في تمارين الفتنة. آخرها شعار “ضرب الميثاقية” التي ابتدعوها بأنفسهم عبر تكليفهم رئيس حكومة لا يرضى عنه الشارع السني الذي نزل إلى الأرض اعتراضا. هذا إلى جانب القمع واختراق الحركة الاحتجاجية عبر إدخال عامل فلسطين وإسرائيل بشكل مصطنع وبالقوة لاتهام الثوار بالتطبيع والخيانة.

جعلتهم تجربة الدفعة الأولى من نسخة ثورات 2011 يتوقعون انتهاء الاحتجاجات من تلقاء نفسها مع مرور الوقت. وإذ لم ينجح الوقت في استنزافها ببطء من خلال استخدام جرعات مدروسة من التوقيفات والقمع والتعتيم الإعلامي. أُنزل شباب “الخندق” بوجه الثوار للإرهاب والتكسير والتخريب تحت شعار “شيعة شيعة شيعة”، بحثا عن استفزاز الشارع المقابل والتلويح بالحرب الأهلية. فما الذي يدفع بالشباب إلى رفع شعار “شيعة شيعة شيعة” في مواجهة الثوار؟

حاولت مقالة أحمد محسن في رصيف22 في 16 من الشهر الجاري أن تقترب من شباب الخندق الغميق لتنقل شهاداتهم. ويبدو أن التسمية أصبحت مجازية لأنه تحول إلى مكان تجمّع لشباب الضاحية والأوزاعي للهجوم. يكتب الصحافي: “صحيح لديهم هراوات وعصي وُزّعت عليهم على عجل”. لكن صحيح أيضا: “لديهم أحلام في جيوبهم، وقد يخرجونها يوما ما مجددا، ويشهرونها هم أيضا. قد يخرجون من تحت “العباءة!”.

بالطبع لدى هؤلاء الشباب أحلام وآمال للمستقبل، ولكن هل الثورة هي التي تقف عائقا بوجه مستقبلهم وأحلامهم؟ عندما يقولون: “تعاطفنا معهم في البداية، فهم مثلنا ونحن مثلهم… علمنا أن هناك حشودا تتجه إلى وسط بيروت. كان الأمر مسليا في البداية. كان معنا ‘دربكّة’ وأعلام فريق النجمة”.

إذن الثورة تشكل لهم نافذة؛ لكنها تضعهم في مأزق أيضا ما جعلهم يتعاملون معها بنوع من التناقض الوجداني! إذ تجدهم فجأة يلجؤون إلى السردية التقليدية لتفسير انسحابهم: “لولا الحزب (حزب الله) والحركة (حركة أمل) لبقينا نمسح الأحذية في البلد (وسط بيروت)!”.

مع الثورة.. ضد الثورة

الاستناد إلى سردية الحرمان الأبدي لتبرير عدولهم عن الاستمرار في المشاركة بالثورة وانقلابهم على القائمين بها، تبرير أيديولوجي ووهمي، ولا يجيب عن السؤال المترتب عليه: لماذا لم توفر لهم قياداتهم، المشاركة في الحكم بفعالية منذ اتفاق الطائف قبل 30 عاما والتي هيمنت على الدولة تدريجيا منذ اغتيال الرئيس رفيق الحريري، حتى الآن البديل عن مسح الأحذية؟ لماذا لا يزالون يعانون من الفقر والبطالة الصريحة أو المقنعة بالرغم من آلاف التوظيفات، من خارج الأعراف، التي اشتهر بها رئيس المجلس النيابي؟ وأبرزها حاليا خمسة آلاف شرطي (شرطة مجلس النواب) تابعين لأمرته والعاملين لحسابه ويستخدمهم كعصا ميليشياوية بوجه المتظاهرين بعد أن كانت شرطة المجلس تقتصر على 40 عنصرا للتشريفات؟

حيرتهم تجعلهم يهجمون على الثوار في يوم ثم يشاركونهم في يوم آخر

ثم هل هم أفقر من أهالي طرابلس وعكار والبقاع! وهم إذ يوافقون الثوار على تغيير النظام يضعون لنفسهم حاجزا غير مرئي ليجعلهم بمواجهة الثوار: “ثمة سوء فهم كبير. تغيير النظام يعني أنا يحق لي أن أصير رئيسا للجمهورية، أو رئيسا للحكومة… أعطي هذ كمثل. نحن نعاني في الدخول إلى وظائف الدولة، ليس لأن الأحزاب هي التي تتحكم بذلك وحسب. نعاني فعلا من النظام، الذي يجبرنا على القبول بحصة أقل من عددنا، مقابل إهمال معيار الكفاءة”. وكأنها ليست مطالب الثوار نفسها!

الغريب أن إحساس التهميش يترافق مع الشعور الذي يراود كل شيعي عادي ممن نصادفهم في كل مكان من أنهم السلطة! ينقلبون على الثورة بينما أحد أهم العوائق أمامهم وأمام الثوار قياداتهم بالذات التي تريد تأبيد هذه السلطة وتريد إفشال الثورة!

ربما هذا سبب مأزقهم الوجداني: “أشعر أنّي أنتمي إلى المكانين”! إنهم مع الثورة وضدها في آن واحد.

المأزق
الأرجح أن هذا التبرير هو العذر الأسهل لانقيادهم لزعامتهم الطائفية التي أعطتهم الشعور بالتفوق المعنوي ولو تسببت بمفاقمة فقرهم. يستسهلون رمي الحقد الطبقي على ثورة تطالب بإنصافهم. يستمتعون بالضرب لحماية زعامتهم تأكيدا لتعصبهم للسيد كشخص مقدس غير قابل للمس: “نحب أن نضرب. ويجب أن نضرب. والذي يتحدث عن السيد يجب أن يُضرب”.

ونعلم جميعا أن الثوار لم يهينوا أحدا من القيادات الدينية فيما عدا السياسيين والذي يبدو أنهم هم من قام بذلك: “دعني أذكّرك، وأتحدى أي أحد أن ينكر القصة: نحن الذي ألّفنا ‘الهيلا هيلا هو’، ونحن الوحيدون الذين ما زلنا نرددها بصيغتها الأصلية”.

حيرتهم تجعلهم يهجمون على الثوار في يوم ثم يشاركونهم في يوم آخر: “نعم، شاركت وأفتخر. وبقيت أنزل وأعتصم حتى بعد مشاركتي في الهجوم. لا أحد طلب مني أن أنزل في اليوم الأول، ولا أحد طلب مني أن أرافق الشباب إلى المشكل. هناك مَن يطلب في الحالتين، ولكني أوكد لك أن غالبية الذين ينزلون مثلي، يلحقون بالبقية”.

ما الذي يقوله هذا الشاب؟ أولا أنهم كفوا عن النزول بعد أسبوع، أي حين طلبت إليهم القيادات الشيعية علنا الانسحاب من الساحات. ثانيا أن هناك من يعطي الأوامر بالنزول. وأن البعض ينزلون تلقائيا للمشاركة. بالطبع ضمن آلية الميمتيسم /المحاكاة، التي يتحدث عنها رينيه جيرارد.

حالة الانكار تحجب عنهم رؤية ما يجري تحت أنظارهم

الخلاصة على لسان أحدهم: “سأقول لك ما يريدون أن يسمعونه. عدد الشباب الذين يمشون خلف الأحزاب سيتراجع كثيرا، في حال تغيّرت أحوالنا الاقتصادية. ولكن تغيير الاقتصاد ليس ممكنا من دون تغيير النظام. نحن دعاة تغيير النظام الحقيقيون”.

نعم إنهم في مأزق. يريدون تغيير النظام فيما يدافعون بشراسة عمن يفرض بقاءه.

فإلى أين يذهب بهم الثنائي الشيعي وإلى أين يذهبون بالبلد؟ ولماذا لا تلبى مطالب الثورة والتنحي لفترة من أجل محاولة الإنقاذ؟ وهل يمكنهم تحمل نتائج الانهيار الاقتصادي الذي ينتظرنا جراء التمسك بالمكاسب؟ أم أن الرهان على تدهور الوضع الاجتماعي واشتعال العنف الذي يعطيهم الذريعة لنسخ السيناريو العراقي؟ وهل سيكون بإمكانهم الحفاظ على ولاء الشارع؟

يبدو أن حالة الانكار تحجب عنهم رؤية ما يجري تحت أنظارهم. نظرتهم تصطدم بالعوائق التي تضعها أمامهم النظريات المهيمنة المشوبة بالتخيلات التي تحجب الحقائق عن العقل. فنقاوة النظرة لا بد من أن ترتبط بصمت معين يسمح بالإنصات بعد أن تتوقف الخطابات الثرثارة للأيديولوجيات والعقائد

The post منى فياض/نصرالله يهتف: هيلا هيلا هو appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

المخرج يوسف ي. الخوري/إلى أهل السنّة في لبنان؛ لا تُعيدوا الكرّة

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إلى أهل السنّة في لبنان؛ لا تُعيدوا الكرّة…
المخرج يوسف ي. الخوري/22 كانون الأول/2019

عام 1980 كان الرهبان اللبنانيّون الموارنة على موعدٍ مع انتخاب رئيس عام جديد لهم. كانت المنافسة على المنصب حامية بين المرشَّحين الآباتي شربل قسيس (لولاية ثانية) والأب بولس نعمان الذي حُسمت المعركة لصالحه وفاز بالمنصب.

حضر السفير الأميركي في لبنان آنذاك “جون غانتر دين” للتهنئة، ولم يستطع أن يخفيَ دهشته حين وجد الآباتي قسيس يتقبّل التهاني مبتسمًا إلى جانب الآباتي الجديد.

أنهى “غانتر دين” زيارته، وقبيل مغادرته همس في أذن قسيس قائلًا: “لم أشهد في حياتي مرشّحًا راسبًا في الانتخابات يتقبل التهاني إلى جانب منافسه الرابح”! فأجابه قسيس بصوته الجَهَر: “انتهت الانتخابات يا صاحب السعادة وتبدّلت الأدوار، فالآباتي نعمان هو رئيسي الآن وأنا أدين له بالطاعة كما كان هو يطيعني حين كنت رئيسه”. شدّ “غانتر دين” على يد الآباتي قسيس وودّعه قائلًا: “إن في سلوككم الرهباني ديمقراطيةً لأعظمُ من ديمقراطية أمريكا نفسها”!

رويدًا، أخوتي من أهل السنّة، فالقصّة لم تنتهِ بعد والعبرة لم تكتمل!
بعد ذلك انسحب الآباتي شربل قسيس من الحياة السياسيّة بعد الدور الكبير الذي لعبه في بداية حرب الـ 1975، وأنشأ مزرعة للأبقار ومعملًا لإنتاج الحليب ومشتقاته، وقد شهدته بأم العين يحلب البقرات وينظّف الأرض من الرَوث بتواضع جبّار… (انتهت القصّة)

عادت بيَ الذاكرة إلى القصّة أعلاه بينما كنت استمع البارحة إلى مداخلة الشيخ حسن مرعب في برنامج “يوميّات ثورة” على تلفزيون الجديد، حيث كان يصرّخ – كمن يشتم – رافضًا تكليف الدكتور حسّان دياب بتشكيل الحكومة الجديدة، وداعيًّا إيّاه إلى الاعتذار عن التشكيل، ومتمسّكًا بعودة الرئيس سعد الحريري إلى هذا المنصب الذي – على ما بدا – يعتبره شيخنا ملكًا للسنّة يتصرّف به كما يتصرّف بأوقاف دار الفتوى، ومتّهمًا المسيحيّين المنتفضين بوجه أرذال السلطة بالـ “خيانة” لعدم مجاراتهم بعض أهل السنّة في رفض تكليف دياب بقطع الطرقات. كان الشيخ مرعب يصرّخ ويثير النعرات الطائفية بينما اللبنانيون يتضرّعون إلى العناية الإلهية كي لا تتحوّل احتجاجات البعض من الشارع السني إلى مواجهات مع القوى الأمنية بسبب هذا التكليف. كان يصرّخ ولا يستمع إلى محدّثَيْه الإعلاميَّيْن نانسي السبع وفيراس حاطوم حتى وصل بنا الأمر إلى الاعتقاد بأنّنا داخل حمامٍ تركي قُطعت فيه المياه فجأة. كان يصرّخ متناسيًّا أن مَن يُطالب بعودته إلى الرئاسة الثالثة في البلاد هو ابن الحريري القائل “ما في حدا أكبر من بلدو”.

أيّها الشيخ “مُرعِب” غير العزيز عليّ،
جلّ ما أتمنّاه أن تكون العبرة قد وصلتك من روايتي في صدر هذه الرسالة، خصوصًا أنّه بدا لي وأنا أسمعك مساء أمس أن الجامعة التي ردتها، والأئمة التي تتلمذت عليهم، والمراكز التي شغلتها وتشغلها، لم يعلّموك شيئًا من معاني الديمقراطيّة التي هي ركن أساسي في الجمهوريّة اللبنانيّة، لاسيّما فيما يتعلّق بتداول السلطات.

قد لا تعني لك شيئًا الديمقراطيّة أيّها الشيخ لكونك رجل دين يتبع لدار دينيّة، لكن كرجل دين عليك أقلّه أن تتحلّى ببعض المناقب كالحكمة وحفظ الجميل!

لا أعتقد انّه يغيب عن بالك أنّ الجمهورية اللبنانية التي كنت بالأمس تستخدم ضدها خطابًا مذهبيًّا حاقدًا، هي وليّة نعمتك وتتقاضى مرتّبك ومخصصاتك من موازنتها المُنهِكة، وعليه أسمح لنفسي كمواطن لبناني أن أردّ عليك كون الضرائب التي أسدّدها تُساهم في معيشتك.

من كثرة صراخك أثناء المقابلة السالفة الذكر، اختلطت علينا الصفة التي كنت تتكلّم من خلالها، وما هو مؤكّد بحسب تصريحك أنك لا تتكلّم باسم دار الفتوى، فيبقى إمّا أنّك تتكلّم كشيخ سني وإمّا كلبناني منتفض في وجه الأرذال من سلطته الحاكمة على غرارنا.

أمّا وقد خوّنت الشارع المسيحي المنتفض، فهذا يعني أنّك من المنتفضين، وبحسب صفتك هذه سأتابع حديثي معك؛ من منتفض إلى منتفض آخر، ومن ههنا ينسحب كلامي على أهل السنّة عامةً في لبنان والغاضبين منهم بسبب إِبعاد سعد الحريري خاصة.

أنا مثلكم يُقلقني ويُحيّرني كيف هبط علينا حسّان دياب في هذه المرحلة الخطيرة من مصير وطننا، وإذ لا نملك المعطيات اللازمة لمعرفة خفايا وصوله إلى التكليف، لا يعود بوسعنا سوى الحكم على أفعاله.

أداء الرجل، نرسيسيّته الظاهرة، ثقته الزائدة بنجاح مهمّته، تجاهله لموقف طائفته منه، كلّها أمور تدل بأنّ وراءه اتفاق ما وتوليفة، لكن هل هذا يكفي لاستنهاض الشارع في وجهه، خصوصًا أنّه بالأقوال يؤكّد بأنّ حكومته ستتشكّل من خبراء ومستقلّين، وستقوم بانتخابات نيابية مبكرة؟!

هذه بالتحديد هي مطالب الانتفاضة التي حسم السيّد حسن نصرالله في خطابه الأخير بأنّها لن تتحقّق، وعليه أسأل كيف أن اليوم بعضًا من المنتفضين يؤججون الشارع في وجه دياب بينما مَن هم في خندق حزب الله لا نسمع لهم حسًّا ولا حسيس؟! هل نجحت السلطة باستغلالكم لتحقيق مآربها يا بعض أهل السنّة من المنتفضين؟! أرجو أن يكون لا، وأرجو أن توفروا غضبكم للوقت المناسب، فما تقومون به اليوم ليس في ظرفه المناسب ويُضعف الانتفاضة للأسباب التالية:

1 – في الجوهر
ترفضون حسّان دياب لأنّه أتى بتوليفة، بينما كل الحكومات الحريرية السابقة لم تتشكّل إلّا بهذا الشكل؟!

لماذا تُطالبون بعودة سعد الحريري بينما الانتفاضة تعتبره واحدًا من الطبقة الفاسدة؟! إذا كان على مبدأ أن الرئيس ميشال عون والرئيس نبيه برّي لم يتمّ اسقاطهما هما الاخران، فهذا مُعيب ومُخزي ويدل على قلّة خبرة في التعاطي مع تطوّر الأحداث، لاسيّما أن الانتفاضة تتحرّك على مبدأ خذ وطالب، وأن تفشل بأخذ جزء مما تُطالب به، لا يعني اطلاقًا أن تُعيد ما أخذت.

لماذا زجّ الانتفاضة بصراعات مذهبيّة كرمى لسعد الحريري الذي فشلت كل حكوماته السابقة، وعقَدَ التسويات مع مَن وصفه الشيخ حسن مرعب بـ “باش كاتب”؟ لماذا تستميتون في المطالبة بعودة سعد وهو الذي تخلّى عن حلفائه ومناصريه ليصل بالتركيبة الحاليّة المتعثّرة إلى السلطة؟!

إذا سبق وأن اعترف الحريري بأحقيّة مطالب المنتفضين، وهذا يعني اعترافًا ضمنيًّا منه بأنّه من ضمن مجموعة “كلن يعني كلّن”، فلماذا أنتم ملكيون أكثر من الملك وتودّون تنصيبه على الحلوة والمرّة؟!

أولم يكن هو شخصيًّا مَن سهّل وصول دياب؟ استقال، استسلم، رفض إعادة تكليفه ولم يسمِّ!

أَوَلَيس هكذا سلوك مدعاة للشكّ بتورّط الحريري بالتوليفة التي أتت بدياب، خصوصًا أنّه إذا قاطعنا بعض المعلومات يتبيّن بما لا يقبل الشك أن الحريري لم يستقل تلبيةً لمطالب المنتفضين، بل لتحسين مكاسبه داخل السلطة الحاكمة!

لا بدّ من التساؤل عمّا إذا كان حسّان دياب فعلًا هو خارج الحركة الأميركية التي يدور في فلكها الرئيس الحريري نفسه، ليصنَّف كمرشح لجبران باسيل وحزب الله!

فالرجل شغل منصب نائب رئيس الجامعة الأميركيّة في بيروت للبرامج الخارجية الإقليمية، فكيف يصل إلى هكذا مركز إذا كان يدور في الفلك الإيراني؟!

إذا كان يُرضيكم الإصرار على أنّه أتى من ضمن توليفة، أقول نعم، لكن سعد الحريري ومن لفّ لفيفه ليسوا بمنأى عن هذه التوليفة مثلهم مثل الثنائي الشيعي والتيار الوطني الحر، فاحذروا الانجرار إلى تذهيب الانتفاضة وطعنها من الخاصرة!

2- في الأداء
إذا كان الدكتور حسّان دياب لا يفي بما يُطالب به المنتفضون، كان يجب التعبير عن هذا الأمر بوضوح بمجرد أن خلت الساحة له قبل التكليف. أما وقد غُضّ النظر عن تكليفه، وهو تكنوقراط، ولا براهين قاطعة على فساده، فتقضي الحكمة التروّي وترك الأمور لمجراها خصوصًا أن الدكتور المكلّف يعد بالاستجابة لمطالب المنتفضين.

ما كان يجب المطالبة بعودة الحريري باحتجاجات ومواجهات في الشارع، مما سهّل مساعي المتربّصين بالانتفاضة لأخذها إلى قضيّة مصلحيّة مذهبيّة!

كان بالحري التركيز على اسقاط التوليفة التي أتت بدياب وانتظار الأخير أن يخطئ، ولن يصمد كثيرًا قبل ارتكاب الخطأ إذا كان يكذب.

كيف ينزلق البعض من أهل السنّة إلى الادعاء أن دياب لا يمثّل طائفتهم لأن نوابهم لم يسمّوه، في حين يُفترض أن النوّاب هم أيضًا من فصيل “كلّن يعني كلّن”.

على المنسّقين بين جماعات المنتفضين ألّا يغيب عن بالهم بعد اليوم أنّ السلطة وأجهزتها الاستخباراتية لا تجلس منتظرة أو مترقّبة، بل تسعى بكل قوّتها وعلى الدوام لتفكيك صمود الشارع المنتفض، وبأقلّ الإيمان كان على هؤلاء المنسّقين استباق خطوة التكليف وتعميم موقف موحّد على جماهيرهم في هذا الشأن تداركًا لانقسام الشارع.

آن الأوان لضبط من يتكلّمون على شاشات التلفزة بحجّة أنّهم من المنتفضين، وغالبًا ما لا يكون ظهورهم موفّقًا. كما يجب وقبل كل شيء تجنّب السجالات أمام الكاميرات في الشارع مع الأفراد الذين لا تصبّ آراؤهم في خطّ الانتفاضة، فهؤلاء في معظم الأحيان مندسّون كالذين زايدوا أول من أمس بالضغط على وسائل الإعلام لوقف تغطية احتجاجات أبناء طريق الجديدة، أو هؤلاء الذين راحوا يتفاصحون بالهتاف “الله – حريري – طريق جديدي”.

آن الأوان لتفعيل وسائل الاتصال بين مجموعات المنتفضين، فوسائل الإعلام اللبنانيّة – المشهود لدورها الإيجابي في توسّع الانتفاضة – باتت اليوم مقيّدة وتتعرّض لضغوط كبيرة لفتح أثيرها لأبواق السلطة من أصحاب الكلام المنمّق والبغيض في آن، فاقتضى التنويه لأخذ الحيطة.

أخوتي أهلُ السنّة،
بالأمس كان ياسر عرفات وكانت منظّمة التحرير الفلسطينيّة وكنتم نصيرًا لهما، مفتيكم اعتبر المنظمة جيش المسلمين في لبنان، ورؤساء وزراء سنّة كانوا يعطّلون البلد انتصارًا لقضيتهما، فانجررتم مع حلفائكم إلى محاولات اسقاط النظام تحت حجّة اسقاط المارونية السياسية، فأتيتم عليها عن غير تبرير حقّ، وقضمتم البلد بفكيّ رفيق الحريري الذي حالف السلاح والحزب بغطاء سوري، والذي أورث ابنه حملًا ثقيلًا رزح تحته وأرزح معه البلد، لكن، وبالرغم من كل ذلك، أن ترفعوا شعار “لبنان أولًا” كان أجمل هديّة نالها لبنان منذ استقلاله،
وعليه، أدعوكم ألّا تُرجعونا إلى الوراء.

في اليوم السادس والستّون لانبعاث الفينيق.

The post المخرج يوسف ي. الخوري/إلى أهل السنّة في لبنان؛ لا تُعيدوا الكرّة appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

نشرة أخبار المنسقية العامة للمؤسسات اللبنانية الكندية باللغة العربية ليوم 23 كانون الأول/2019

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نشرة أخبار المنسقية العامة للمؤسسات اللبنانية الكندية باللغة العربية ليوم 23 كانون الأول/2019

اضغط هنا لقراءة نشرة أخبار المنسقية العامة المفصلة، اللبنانية والعربية ليوم 23 كانون الأول/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 23 كانون الأول/2019 appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For December 23/2019

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Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For December 23/2019

Click Here to read the whole and detailed LCCC English News Bulletin for December 23/2019

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 
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Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources

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A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For December 22- 23/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 67th Day

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A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For December 22-23/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 67th Day
Compiled By: Elias Bejjani
December 23/2019


Tites For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on December 22-23/2019
Report: Govt. May be Formed before Year’s End
Diab Vows ‘Govt. of Independents’, Says It Won’t be ‘Hizbullah’s Govt.’
Thousands protest against new PM, close roads in Lebanon
Thousands protest against new PM, close roads in Lebanon
US envoy David Hale meets Lebanese leaders amid protests at new prime minister
Protesters Denounce Diab’s Meeting with ‘Civil Society Figures’
Qaouq: Diab’s Designation Puts End to American Exploitation Attempt
Scuffles after Army Stops Buses Carrying Protesters from Tripoli
AMAL Bloc MP Says Diab Nomination was ‘Plan B’
Al-Rahi Urges No Roadblocks, Calls for ‘Cooperation’ with Diab
Rahi presides over Mass service in Bkirki
‘Revolution Fist’ raised at Zahle’s main roundabout
Italian Foreign Minister visits Beirut on Monday
Nawaf Salam: I was subjected to a defamation campaign to which I found no reason to respond, and I was touched by the confidence that many Lebanese accorded me
Army: What happened at the Madfoun Bridge checkpoint today was merely a ‘strict inspection’
Molotov Hurled at Christmas Tree in Dinniyeh
Lebanon’s new prime minister must stand up to Hezbollah

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on December 22-23/2019
Report: Govt. May be Formed before Year’s End
Naharnet/December 22/2019
Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab might form his government before the end of 2019, informed ministerial sources said. “The efforts are focused on saving time as much as possible in order to form the government before the beginning of the new year, which means within a week or 10 days, unless an obstacle arises,” the sources told An-Nahar newspaper in remarks published Sunday. “There is a greenlight for Diab to carry on with his plan, which he wants it to be a salvation plan, and all circumstances will be provided for his success, because any setback will undermine what’s left of the new presidential tenure,” the sources added. “Should a setback happen, it will be some sort of conspiracy which some inside and outside the country are seeking in order to stir chaos in the country,” the sources added. An-Nahar also reported that countries concerned with the Lebanese situation are awaiting the PM-designate’s first steps and the standards he will rely on in the formation of the government in order to voice stances.

Diab Vows ‘Govt. of Independents’, Says It Won’t be ‘Hizbullah’s Govt.’

Associated Press/Naharnet/December 22/2019
Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab held consultations Saturday with parliamentary blocs in which they discussed the shape of the future government and said afterward that legislators all had one concern: To get the country out of its “strangling” economic crisis. Diab, a university professor and former education minister, will have to steer Lebanon out of its worst economic and financial crisis in decades. He’s also taking office against the backdrop of ongoing nationwide protests against the country’s ruling elite.
“Lebanon is in the intensive care unit and needs efforts” by all sides, from political groups to protesters, Diab said. Consultations began a day after scuffles broke out in Beirut and other areas between supporters of outgoing prime minister Saad Hariri and Lebanese troops and riot police. The ex-premier’s supporters were protesting Diab’s nomination. At least seven soldiers were injured. Diab told reporters later that all members of parliament encouraged him to form a Cabinet “as soon as possible.” Cabinets usually take months to form in Lebanon because of bargaining between rival groups. Diab said he hopes to form a government of about 20 ministers made up of independents and technocrats within few weeks. “It’s time to work and we ask God to make us successful.”He added that the situation in Lebanon cannot stand any delays amid its worst economic and financial crisis since the end of the 1975-90 civil war.
Lebanese banks have imposed unprecedented capital controls in recent weeks. Thousands have lost their jobs and the economy is expected to contract in 2020. Diab began his meetings Saturday at Parliament with Speaker Nabih Berri, then held talks with former prime ministers, including caretaker premier Hariri. He later met with blocs at the legislature.
Hizbullah and its allies had previously insisted that a new government consist of politicians and experts but on Saturday, Diab said “all parties agree with me regarding a government made up of independents and experts, including Hizbullah.”
Legislator Paula Yacoubian, who backs the protest movement, said Diab told her “the government will be fully made up of independents and that he will step down if there is going to be members of the state’s political parties.”She added: “I heard very nice talk similar to what the people have been demanding.”The protesters have been demanding a government that does not include members of political parties whom they blame for widespread corruption. Media reports said that Diab will meet with representatives of the protest movement on Sunday.
Earlier on Saturday, Hariri cautioned supporters after meeting Diab against violent protests, saying: “The army is ours and police forces are for all Lebanese.”Shortly before sunset Saturday, scores of protesters including Hariri supporters, closed two major intersections in Beirut demanding that Diab step aside, saying he failed to win wide support from Sunni legislators. Saturday’s protests were peaceful unlike those of the night before when stones and firecrackers were hurled at security forces.
The new prime minister won a majority of lawmakers’ votes after receiving backing from powerful Hizbullah and its allies, which have a majority of seats in parliament. However, he lacks the support of major Sunni figures, including the largest Sunni party headed by Hariri. That’s particularly problematic for Diab, who, as a Sunni, doesn’t have the backing of his own community.
The head of Hizbullah’s 12-member bloc, Mohammed Raad, said the group wants a government that preserves what the Lebanese have achieved in “victories during the confrontation with the Israeli enemy and to maintain our national sovereignty, our maritime (oil and gas) wealth and land and to prevent the enemy from undermining its sovereignty and the national dignity.”A lawmaker from the bloc led by Speaker Nabih Berri said the incoming government should focus on fighting corruption. “It should be an emergency government that works on solving the economic, financial, social and banking crisis,” said Anwar al-Khalil after the meeting with Diab. Samir al-Jisr of Hariri’s bloc said they will not take part in Diab’s government. Hizbullah’s ally, Jebran Bassil, who heads the largest bloc in parliament, said the future government “is not Hizbullah’s Cabinet but of all Lebanese and it is not against anyone.”Michel Mouawad, a harsh critic of Hizbullah, said Diab told him the new government will not be controlled by “Hizbullah and will not be confrontational.” Hizbullah had backed Hariri for prime minister from the start, but the group differed with him over the shape of the new government. Lebanon’s sustained, leaderless protests erupted in mid-October, and forced Hariri’s resignation within days. But politicians were later unable to agree on a new prime minister. The ongoing protests and paralysis have worsened the economic crisis.

Thousands protest against new PM, close roads in Lebanon
Associated Press/December 22/2019
The protesters, many of whom came from northern Lebanon and the eastern Bekaa Valley, also gathered in Beirut’s central Martyrs Square
BEIRUT: Thousands of protesters demonstrated in central Beirut and elsewhere in Lebanon on Sunday against the country’s new prime minister, saying he should abandon the post because he is a member of the ruling elite. After sunset, protesters closed several roads and highways in Beirut and other parts of the country to rally against the nomination of Hassan Diab, who was backed by the militant Hezbollah group and its allies and failed to win the backing of the main Sunni Muslim groups. The protesters, many of whom came from northern Lebanon and the eastern Bekaa Valley, also gathered in Beirut’s central Martyrs Square, one of the key places of the protests which have been underway for more than two months. They later marched toward the parliament building guarded by scores of riot police. Unlike last week, when scuffles were reported between protesters and policemen outside the parliament, there was no violence on Sunday. Prime Minister-designate Diab, a university professor and former education minister, will have the task of steering Lebanon out of its worst economic and financial crisis in decades. He’s also taking office against the backdrop of ongoing nationwide protests against the country’s ruling elite that the protesters blame for widespread corruption and mismanagement. Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri, the head of the largest Sunni group in Lebanon, resigned on Oct. 29, meeting a key demand of the protesters. According to Lebanon’s power-sharing system, the prime minister has to be a Sunni. “We are not convinced by their choice,” protester Hanaa Saleh said about Diab’s nomination. “We don’t believe this movie.” Diab has vowed his government will not include politicians and will only consist of independents and experts. In Washington, a State Department spokesperson said that U.S. Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs David Hale had encouraged Lebanese leaders during his two-day visit last week “to put aside partisan interests and support formation of a government committed to and capable of undertaking meaningful, sustained reforms.”Hale “reaffirmed America’s longstanding partnership and enduring commitment to a secure, stable, and prosperous Lebanon,” said Morgan Ortagus.

Thousands protest against new PM, close roads in Lebanon
Arab News/December 22/2019
A small crowd of protesters rallied outside Diab’s house and slammed visitors who claimed to represent the country’s leaderless movement
The few who heeded Diab’s calls for talks included largely unknown individuals not recognized as representatives of the protest movement
BEIRUT: Thousands of protesters demonstrated in central Beirut and elsewhere in Lebanon on Sunday against the country’s new prime minister, saying he should abandon the post because he is a member of the ruling elite.
After sunset, protesters closed several roads and highways in Beirut and other parts of the country to rally against the nomination of Hassan Diab, who was backed by the militant Hezbollah group and its allies and failed to win the backing of the main Sunni Muslim groups.
The protesters, many of whom came from northern Lebanon and the eastern Bekaa Valley, also gathered in Beirut’s central Martyrs Square, one of the key places of the protests which have been underway for more than two months.
They later marched toward the parliament building guarded by scores of riot police. Unlike last week, when scuffles were reported between protesters and policemen outside the parliament, there was no violence on Sunday.
Prime Minister-designate Diab, a university professor and former education minister, will have the task of steering Lebanon out of its worst economic and financial crisis in decades. He’s also taking office against the backdrop of ongoing nationwide protests against the country’s ruling elite that the protesters blame for widespread corruption and mismanagement. Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri, the head of the largest Sunni group in Lebanon, resigned on Oct. 29, meeting a key demand of the protesters. According to Lebanon’s power-sharing system, the prime minister has to be a Sunni.
“We are not convinced by their choice,” protester Hanaa Saleh said about Diab’s nomination. “We don’t believe this movie.”
Diab has vowed his government will not include politicians and will only consist of independents and experts. In Washington, a State Department spokesperson said that US Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs David Hale had encouraged Lebanese leaders during his two-day visit last week “to put aside partisan interests and support formation of a government committed to and capable of undertaking meaningful, sustained reforms.”
Hale “reaffirmed America’s longstanding partnership and enduring commitment to a secure, stable, and prosperous Lebanon,” said Morgan Ortagus.
Morgan Ortagus’s twitter
@statedeptspox
Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs David Hale concluded a two-day trip to #Lebanon. He met with government officials and encouraged Lebanese leaders to put aside partisan interests to form a government that is committed to meaningful, sustained reforms.

US envoy David Hale meets Lebanese leaders amid protests at new prime minister
The National/December 22/2019
Protesters angered by his appointment gathered outside the Beirut home of prime minister-designate Hassan Diab
US Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs David Hale met Lebanon’s political leaders through the weekend as protests on the streets continued in the wake of Hassan Diab being named prime minister-designate. Hundreds of demonstrators gathered near the Beirut home of Mr Diab, an academic at the American University of Beirut and former education minister. Security forces moved in quickly after his appointment last week to secure the apartment building and surrounding street. Many have denounced the appointment of Mr Diab, calling instead for a true technocrat to lead the next administration despite the new appointee saying he will priorities experts over political candidates. Mr Diab was propelled to the post on Thursday by Lebanon’s March 8 bloc – led by the backing of Hezbollah, Amal and the Free Patriotic Movement. Lebanon has been rocked by two months of anti-government protest with thousands taking to the streets to denounce years of corruption, ineffectual leadership, crumbling public services and the worst financial crisis since the end of the 1975-1990 civil war. Meanwhile, Mr Hale, who previously served as US ambassador to Beirut, met Progressive Socialist leader Walid Jumblatt, who described the conversation it in a tweet afterwards as “friendly and honest.” He also met Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea and caretaker foreign minister Gibran Bassil, who is also head of the PFP. Mr Hale met on Friday with President Michel Aoun and caretaker prime minister Saad Hariri.
In a press briefing from Baabda, Mr Hale said he was in Lebanon at the request of Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to discuss the situation. “I’m here to encourage Lebanon’s political leaders to commit to and undertake meaningful, sustained reforms that can lead to a stable, prosperous and secure Lebanon. And that was the content of the conversation I just had with President Aoun. It is time to put aside the partisan interest for the national interest advancing reforms and forming a government that is committed to and capable of doing so.
He said the US has no role in saying who should and who should comprise any cabinet but added that “the unified nonsectarian and largely peaceful protests over the last 65 days … [shows] the Lebanese people’s longstanding and quite frankly legitimate demand for economic and institutional reform, better governance and an end to endemic corruption.”He urged the security forces to continue to protect the right of protesters and added that “violence has no place in civil discourse.” A statement released by the US government after the meetings said Mr Hale had called on the government, army, and security services to continue to guarantee the rights and safety of protesters.

Protesters Denounce Diab’s Meeting with ‘Civil Society Figures’
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/December 22/2019
Anti-government protesters on Sunday rallied outside the house of PM-designate Hassan Diab to denounce his meeting with a number of figures claiming to represent the protest movement that emerged after October 17.
The head of the so-called Lebanese Media Bank, Mohammed Noun, said he met with Diab in his personal capacity, calling for “cooperation and dialogue with the PM-designate in order to rescue the situation” and describing Diab as an “independent figure.”Noun also called on Diab to “pay attention to the Bekaa region and benefit from its resources, especially the Assi River,” decrying the “deprivation” of the Bekaa and Baalbek regions. Verbal clashes meanwhile ensued between Noun and a number of protesters outside Diab’s house in Tallet al-Khayyat. LBCI TV said Diab did not meet with any “influential groups” from the protest movement but rather with some individuals who said that they do not “represent the revolution.”The TV network identified the figures as Mohammed Noun, Walid Itani, the journalist Waad Hashem and a person from the al-Hajjar family. Protesters outside Diab’s house stressed that the aforementioned figures do not represent the protest movement. “Not a single group actually active on the ground met today with the prime minister-designate because they are not convinced” he can form a government of technocrats, said Wassef Harakeh, a prominent activist. “They want us to get mired in this game of consultations,” he told AFP. In the protest camp in central Beirut, crowds began gathering in the afternoon. “The people that visited the prime minister-designate today do not represent the revolution,” said Ali Haidar, a resident of Beirut’s southern suburbs. “These talks were a failure,” he told AFP from the protest camp. The area outside Diab’s residence also witnessed a sit-in by a group that supports caretaker PM Saad Hariri. Diab had announced that he would meet with representatives of the protest movement as part of his consultations to form a new government.

Qaouq: Diab’s Designation Puts End to American Exploitation Attempt

Naharnet/December 22/2019
The appointment of ex-minister Hassan Diab as premier-designate has put an end to Washington’s perceived attempt to “exploit” the crisis and the protests in Lebanon, a senior Hizbullah official said on Sunday.
Warning that “some are seeking to ignite strife,” Hizbullah central council member Sheikh Nabil Qaouq said “America has failed, because betting on exploiting the domestic crisis and investing in it has reached a dead end, after it tried to take advantage of the crisis to achieve political gains.” “PM-designate Diab’s appointment came to put an end to the American exploitation,” he added. Noting that there is “a real chance to form a government to rescue Lebanon from a worse situation,” Qaouq said Diab’s designation represents “a real chance for the Lebanese to rescue what can be rescued.”The Hizbullah official also urged all political forces to “show a responsible patriotic stance by giving a chance to the PM-designate to form a reformist salvation government, not a government aimed at confronting anyone, a government that would listen to the voices of all people, whether those present in the squares or in their homes.”
The new government should “seek to block strife and regain the confidence of those inside the country before that of those outside the country,” Qaouq urged. As for Hizbullah’s stance, he added: “We have not demanded or sought posts nor a government of confrontation and elimination and we are demanding the broadest participation.”

Scuffles after Army Stops Buses Carrying Protesters from Tripoli
Naharnet/December 22/2019
Scuffles erupted Sunday after army troops at the al-Madfoun checkpoint stopped buses carrying protesters from the northern city of Tripoli. The protesters were heading to a central demo in Beirut dubbed “Sunday of Rejection”, which comes after Hassan Diab was named PM-designate. Media reports said the altercation broke out after protesters rejected to be subject to security measures at the checkpoint. The issue was resolved and the buses were allowed to continue their journey after the passengers accepted to undergo the security measures, the reports said. Several passengers were meanwhile arrested and the reasons remain unclear. On December 14 and 15, central Beirut witnessed two of the most violent episodes of violence since nationwide anti-government demonstrations began more than two months ago. Security forces fired tear gas, rubber bullets and water cannons to disperse protesters after powerful firecrackers were hurled at riot police guarding Nejmeh Square. Protesters who came from Tripoli and Akkar took part in the demos last weekend. Caretaker Interior Minister Raya al-Hassan meanwhile blamed the violence on “infiltrators.”

AMAL Bloc MP Says Diab Nomination was ‘Plan B’
Naharnet/December 22/2019
The nomination of Hassab Diab for the PM post was “plan B” after all efforts to secure the return of caretaker PM Saad Hariri failed, an MP of Speaker Nabih Berri’s bloc said on Sunday. “Most of the protest movement’s groups have decided to give the PM-designate a chance to form his government in a manner that satisfies protesters on the streets,” MP Fadi Alameh of the Development and Liberation bloc said in a radio interview. Alameh called for forming “an inclusive emergency government that takes into consideration the sizes of the elected parliamentary blocs and the street protests that have been raging since more than two months.”He also said that the new government should “include everyone and should be composed of experts, even if they have political orientations.”Alameh also stressed that Berri has played a “facilitating” role.

Al-Rahi Urges No Roadblocks, Calls for ‘Cooperation’ with Diab
Naharnet/December 22/2019
Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi on Sunday urged protesters in all regions not to block the main roads during the holiday season. “What we witnessed two days ago, when the Lebanese Army and security forces were pelted with stones during a protest, violates the dignity of the army and the dignity of citizens who believe in the Lebanese state,” al-Rahi lamented in his Sunday Mass sermon, referring to a protest by al-Mustaqbal Movement supporters against the appointment of Hassan Diab as PM-designate. “We rather call for respect and cooperation. And on the eve of Christmas, we plead to all protesters not to block the main roads in all regions, so that citizens can move easily and celebrate joyfully. Do not deprive them of joy,” he added. Turning to the political developments, al-Rahi warned that “Lebanon, with its current state of paralysis and poverty, cannot withstand any delay or obstruction of the formation of the new government.”“We urged all political forces to cooperate with the premier-designate and facilitate the formation process,” the patriarch added.

Rahi presides over Mass service in Bkirki
NNA/December 22/2019
Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutors Rahi presided over Sunday Mass service in Bkirki. Speaking to a number of believers, Rahi blamed the practices of Lebanese politicians that led to the deterioration of the economic, social and financial conditions in the country. “The political officials who brought the country to an economic, financial and social meltdown did so because they neglected God’s voice in their conscience,” he said. Rahi also stressed the importance of forming an emergency, neutral, non-partisan cabinet to tend to the pending economic and financial dossiers. The Prelate denounced the hostilities against the Lebanese army and security forces in one of the protest demonstrations, saying: “Such behavior violates the dignity of the army and the dignity of the citizens who believe in the Lebanese state.”Finally, he called on “protestors not to cut off the main roads in all areas, so that citizens can move easily and enjoy the Christmas and New Year holidays.”

‘Revolution Fist’ raised at Zahle’s main roundabout
NNA/December 22/2019
The civil movement in Zahle raised this afternoon an embodiment of the “Revolution Fist” at the city’s main roundabout, during a popular celebration in which crowds from the towns of Saadnayel, Taalabaya, al-Marj, Bar Elias, Jdita and other neighboring areas participated, as national songs and Christmas carols echoed in the background. The celebration ended with the distribution of gifts marking the festive season to the participating children, while the women of the movement offered homemade sweets to those partaking in the popular ceremony.

Italian Foreign Minister visits Beirut on Monday
NNA/December 22/2019
In a press release by the Italian Embassy in Beirut today, it announced the visit of the Italian Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Luigi Di Maio, to Lebanon on Monday, December 23rd, 2019. Minister Di Maio will meet his Lebanese counterpart, caretaker Minister Gebran Bassil, and pay a visit to UNIFIL headquarters and to the Italian contingent operating within UNIFIL in South Lebanon.

Nawaf Salam: I was subjected to a defamation campaign to which I found no reason to respond, and I was touched by the confidence that many Lebanese accorded me
NNA/December 22/2019
In an issued statement by the Lebanese Judge at the International Court of Justice, Lebanon’s former ambassador to the United Nations, Nawaf Salam, he indicated that he was subjected to a “defamation campaign” to which he found no reason to respond “because it was not based on any evidence.”
He added: “I was deeply touched by the confidence that was shown to me by many of the young women and men of my country and the people of free opinion and noble stances in it, especially those who seek the establishment of a true democratic state.”
Salam said he remains committed to the principle of reservation, in light of his current role as a judge in the International Court of Justice. “What further confirms the groundless slanders directed against me is that the hundreds of stances I took and the addresses I made in defense of Lebanon, and the issues of the Arabs and Palestine, are fully documented,” he said, noting that “in none of them nor in any of my books and published articles can a single utterance be found that could be considered a base for any of these slanders.””What saddens me here is the belief by these individuals that they can continue to underestimate people’s minds, and work on the assumption that it would suffice to repeat the lie in order for it to become a reality,” added Salam. He concluded by stressing that what’s most important, in the end, is how deeply moved he felt by the trust invested in him by many Lebanese young men and women, “those who seek to have a true democratic state, a state of inclusive citizenship and social justice, a civil state that is based on the rule of law and which upholds the principle of accountability.”
“They have all my appreciation and a thousand greetings. Perhaps in this confidence, too, is the best response to this defamation campaign,” Salam underlined.

Army: What happened at the Madfoun Bridge checkpoint today was merely a ‘strict inspection’
NNA/December 22/2019
In a statement issued by the Lebanese Army Command’s Orientation Directorate this evening, it indicated that “contrary to what has been reported through some media outlets and social media platforms, the Army leadership clarifies that what happened at the Madfoun Bridge today was merely a strict inspection that falls within the framework of the security measures adopted by the army units.”The statement categorically denied that any of the buses were prevented from crossing. It also indicated that a number of individuals tried to object to the search operation, refusing to comply with the army checkpoint instructions and orders, and hence were briefly detained and then released. It added that several sticks and masks were found inside the buses.

Molotov Hurled at Christmas Tree in Dinniyeh
Naharnet/December 22/2019
Unknown assailants hurled a Molotov cocktail overnight at a Christmas tree that is being set up on the main street of the northern town of Sir al-Dinniyeh, the National News Agency reported on Sunday.
The attack burned the tree as the attackers fled to an unknown destination, NNA said. “This morning, organizers repaired the damages and are preparing the tree to be ready before Christmas Eve, which will be marked Tuesday,” the agency added. Security forces have since launched an investigation to arrest the suspects. A similar attack had targeted a Christmas tree in Tripoli in recent days. The perpetrators of that incident were eventually arrested.

Lebanon’s new prime minister must stand up to Hezbollah
The National/December 22/2019
The terror group’s backing helped Hassan Diab get the top job – now he must confront its influence
After nearly two months without a leader or a government while a major financial crisis looms on the horizon, Lebanese politicians have chosen a prime minister expected to lead the nation out of its current deadlock.
Hassan Diab is not officially a member of any political party but he is backed by Hezbollah and its allies. He is a relatively unknown politician and was working as a professor and vice president at the American University of Beirut, when he was assigned the job on Thursday. Mr Diab has been tasked with an almost impossible mission: to save a country on the verge of economic collapse, one which has been rocked by nationwide protests since October 17. But little is known about Mr Diab’s political ideas and his tangible achievements, aside from the abundance of academic papers, biographical details and inspirational quotes he has previously shared with the world via his website. His tenure as minister of education from 2011 to 2013 as part of former prime minister Najib Mikati’s Hezbollah-leaning government – the only cabinet position he has ever held prior to his nomination as prime minister – was marked by the renaming of a public school after his late mother, as well as publishing books costing the ministry an estimated $50,000 on what appears to be Mr Diab’s favourite topic: his life, aspirations and accolades. They included a 1,000-page publication titled Documentary of Events During Minister Hassan Diab’s Term at the Ministry of Education and Higher Education, detailing all the events he attended and speeches he gave as minister.
Protesters have queried whether these credentials and others cited on his 134-page curriculum vitae, available online, qualify him for the toughest job in Lebanon. In a section on his website entitled My Vision, he includes inspirational quotes by renowned men of letters, from Confucius to Ralph Waldo Emerson, whose words of wisdom are interspersed with citations from his own speeches. He writes, for example, that what he envisages “is nothing less than changing the world but I realise that the first step is to change oneself” – a laudable, if aspirational, intention and one that Lebanese citizens will no doubt be holding him to account for in the coming weeks.
So far, his profile has yet to convince Lebanese protesters to go home, or that the president has finally found the right person to end endemic corruption and mismanagement of government funds, and reform the country’s political system. Demonstrations continued over the weekend after Mr Diab’s nomination failed to secure Sunni support, even from Mr Mikati and his bloc, under which he had served. The only members of parliament who backed his nomination belong to Hezbollah and its allies Amal and the Free Patriotic Movement – a worrying sign of the group’s attempts to subvert the delicate balance of Lebanese politics. That Mr Diab comes with the backing of the likes of caretaker foreign minister Gebran Bassil – a man whose polarising rhetoric has stigmatised Syrian and Palestinian refugees – is deeply disconcerting. This does not bode well for the future of Lebanon as a Hezbollah-backed prime minister could attract more US sanctions and steer the country further away from the international community and its historic allies in the Arab world, at a time when Beirut needs them most. He has yet to convince Lebanese protesters to go home, or that the president has finally found the right person to end endemic corruption and mismanagement. Mr Diab has denied the claim that he is beholden to Hezbollah and insists he is the technocrat the protesters have been calling for to head a government of experts without political affiliations, one of the key demands of the uprising. He says he will prioritise winning support from US and western allies. Hezbollah and its affiliated groups oppose the idea of a government composed solely of technocrats and have been lobbying for a cabinet that includes sectarian politicians. Whether Mr Diab will manage to nominate a more neutral government and stand up to the very leaders who have made his political career so far remains to be seen. For the sake of Lebanon, one can only hope he will stick to his declaration to make his country – if not the world – a better place.


Titles For The Latest Lebanese LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on December 22-23/2019
What doesn’t kill Lebanon’s revolution only makes it stronger/Baria Alamuddin/Arab News/December 22/2019
Downtown Beirut now feels different/Perla Kantarjian/Annahar 22/2019
Bankrupt and exposed, Hezbollah has no answers for Lebanese/Eli Fawaz/December 22/2019
Naming of prime minister-designate adds to Lebanon unrest/Simon Speakman Cordall/The Arab Weekly/December 22/2019
Hezbollah-backed PM-designate faces backlash from Sunnis/Samar Kadi/The Arab Weekly/December 22/2019
Beirut Christmas carolling comes with a revolutionary twist/Samar Kadi/The Arab Weekly/December 22/2019′

The Latest Lebanese LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on December 22-23/2019
What doesn’t kill Lebanon’s revolution only makes it stronger
Baria Alamuddin/Arab News/December 22/2019
Protesters rail at Iranian interference, while foreign donors refuse to bankroll a militant-dominated regime — so the authorities nominate a Hezbollah-favored candidate to be prime minister.
Lebanese warn that their nation is held hostage by violent and unaccountable paramilitaries — so these same paramilitaries prove these claims true by escalating their attacks on peaceful rallies.
People demand abolishment of the corrupt, sectarian system — so the president stubbornly aims to force through a Cabinet apparently chosen to alienate ordinary Lebanese even more than its predecessors did.
In what some commentators are describing as a “counter-revolution” against the protest movement, Sunni politician Hassan Diab has been nominated as prime minister, having been wined and dined by Gebran Bassil at the presidential palace. Given the expected boycott by the main Sunni, Druze and Christian factions, the resulting Cabinet is likely to be a bizarre mixture of nonentities and Hezbollah acolytes. After two months of protests, citizens won’t be placated or deceived by such desperate, self-serving maneuvers.
Despite Hezbollah having murdered his father, Saad Hariri justified participation in previous Hezbollah-sponsored governments as the price to be paid for civil peace. Yet peace for its own sake, while Iran-aligned factions bankrupted the nation — financially, politically and morally — ultimately proved worthless.
Lebanon’s economy is in freefall. Over 10 percent of Lebanese companies went out of business in 2019, a further 22 percent cut staff by over 60 percent, and the collapse of several major corporations is just around the corner. Those lucky enough to retain their jobs have had their salaries slashed.
This is precisely why protesters must not back down now. If they return meekly to their homes, this painful process will simply reignite in the future — over and over again. Protests are about forcing the state to embark on emergency surgery, cutting away decades of accumulated cancerous tissue to save the patient’s life. If Lebanon is simply put to bed with an aspirin and a warm drink, the only possible prognosis is a slow and painful death.
Lebanon’s entrenched political class in its entirety (“kilon yanni kilon,” or “all of them means all of them,” as the protesters chant) has bled Lebanon white. In one decade it plunged from 63rd to 143rd place on the global Corruption Perceptions Index, and is thus among the most corrupt kleptocracies on the planet. One percent of the population hoards an estimated 25 percent of the nation’s wealth, forcing penniless citizens to shoulder a debt-to-GDP ratio of 150 percent, rendering debt-servicing an intolerable burden.
Bassil and Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah blame protesters for damaging the economy, but the protests were the straw that broke the camel’s back after their criminal enterprises left the coffers empty. Even before the demonstrations, GDP growth averaged 0-0.3 percent and in recent weeks the currency has lost 30 percent of its value.
Despite Hezbollah having murdered his father, Saad Hariri justified participation in previous Hezbollah-sponsored governments as the price to be paid for civil peace.
The economy has been cannibalized by entities hostile to Lebanon’s existence. The smuggling to Syria of over $1.7 billion in hard currency, and the exploitation of Lebanon’s financial networks to launder funds for Tehran, have crippled the banking system. International sanctions resulting from these abuses, and the reluctance of Gulf investors to risk their wealth in this morass of criminality, have worsened the plight of this erstwhile regional banking hub.
Lebanon’s modest population during peak tourist seasons is habitually dwarfed by the influx of millions of Khaleejis, Westerners, and Lebanon’s own vast diaspora. Yet how can tourism flourish when Beirut’s streets are teeming with theocratic militants noisily jostling for war with Israel? Panicking hotel owners report a collapse in occupancy from approaching 100 percent to below 10 percent. Everything inherently precious has been trampled underfoot by the thugs and terrorists who have labored to turn Lebanon into a pariah state.
A veteran Western diplomat commented to me that one of the best hopes for Lebanon emerging from the current stand-off was if France and its allies assertively intervened. Yet he feared that such multilateral diplomatic action via the EU and UN would be forthcoming only if there were widespread bloodletting perpetrated by Hezbollah against Christian and minority communities.
The endgame may be some distance away, but in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, Iran’s hegemonic project can end only in failure. Recent events have burnt away the last vestiges of support for Tehran’s proxies. In Iraq, Ayatollah Sistani’s call for fresh Iraqi elections (if free and fair) would produce a collapse in support for paramilitary elements who have spent the past two months massacring their own Shiite grassroots constituents. Hezbollah’s Lebanese supporters are either in demoralized denial, or have already begun to re-evaluate their allegiances.
What of Hezbollah’s manufactured outrage over a spurious critical social media post? They went on the rampage in Tripoli, attacked the home of a Sunni cleric, and firebombed a Christmas tree; do they believe such cartoonish gangsterism will endear them to citizens? Of course not. This is Tehran’s “axis of resistance” in its death throes, willing to countenance dragging Lebanon back toward sectarian strife in a final, desperate throw of the dice to cling on to power.
Lebanese genuinely fear a return to civil war, or Hezbollah returning to its favored tactic of political assassinations, particularly following reports that the Quds Force commander Qassim Soleimani threatened to assassinate Iraqi cleric Muqtada Al-Sadr if he continued to back protesters.
However, if people remain steadfastly united, determined and focused on their objectives, they can ultimately defeat these malevolent attempts to terrorize, brutalize and humiliate them; whether through threats, violence or political maneuvering, each new attempt to kill off the revolution has only made protesters more determined. This is merely the darkness before the dawn if citizens succeed in taking that final leap of faith; abolishing the last vestiges of a hated and predatory sectarian system that for too long has created only misery, poverty and national isolation.
• Baria Alamuddin is an award-winning journalist and broadcaster in the Middle East and the UK. She is editor of the Media Services Syndicate and has interviewed numerous heads of state.

Downtown Beirut now feels different
Perla Kantarjian/Annahar 22/2019
The tone of its streets is no longer strictly plush and exclusive, but inclusive and reflective of the diversity that weaves Lebanon’s copious social fabric.
BEIRUT: For years, the feelings of detachment and disinterest have accompanied my visits to the Beirut Central District. “I am out of place here,” I used to think. “This is where the café society and the country club set people are let loose.” However, that’s not the case anymore.
Ever since Lebanon’s October revolution, Beirut Central District has captured a special spot in my heart. I now intentionally pass through the core of Beirut, whether by foot or car, only to get a whiff of the air of revolution encircling and enveloping Martyrs’ Square, Riad El Solh square, and all the spots that gladly carried the weight of the thousands of protesters, along with their built-up rage and flaming persistence.
When I think of being on the streets of Beirut Central District before October 17, I clearly recall the depthless dialogues I used to overhear that acted as accelerating fuels for my walking speed. I remember how there, the atmosphere was heavily brimmed with the scent of 6$ croissants and dizzying perfumes.
Nonetheless, I also remember how the imagery I used to experience there, despite being displeasing, had always felt like an innate representation of Beirut’s business district. After all, things had been that way since the very first time I set foot there as a little girl.
For the last 64 days, however, the entire terrain of that area has regained the yearning and the admiration of thousands of Lebanese who deemed it “unwelcoming,” including myself.
These days, I enter Beirut Central District having already parked my car miles away to traipse through its now-responsive trails and experience the new rush of emotions that area has been stimulating in me ever since the dawn of the revolution.
The tone of its streets is no longer strictly plush and exclusive, but inclusive and reflective of the diversity that weaves Lebanon’s copious social fabric.
Now, walking around in the central district of Beirut feels venturous.
There, the revolutionaries have found a way to remind everyone of their resolute presence upon those streets. The words “REVOLUTION” and “reLOVEution” are sketched over its walls. Slogans like “TO HELL WITH CORRUPTION” and “ALL OF THEM MEANS ALL OF THEM” are spray-painted on shop fronts and fences. Now, the dialogues I overhear in Downtown Beirut are no longer concerning high-end fashion or first-rate travel destinations, but about how to use the central district of Beirut as a platform to express the Lebanese voice: their demands to overthrow a corrupt regime and bring back a Lebanon in which life doesn’t feel like a fatal struggle.
I look at the structural elements of Downtown Beirut and smile now; it’s where millions of Lebanese have cried, danced, sang, screamed, and revolted together for days and days. It’s where the “revolution fist” rose like a phoenix in a matter of a few hours, despite being burnt down to ashes by people who opposed what it represented.Lebanon’s October revolution took root on October 17 in the sacred grounds of Martyrs’ Square in Downtown Beirut, and like a domino effect, spread around and sprouted up its buds in countless areas in the country, marking this event the largest revolution Lebanon has ever witnessed.May the seed of the revolution grow peacefully and bear its desired fruit.

Bankrupt and exposed, Hezbollah has no answers for Lebanese
Eli Fawaz/December 22/2019
The protests in Lebanon, which erupted in October over a proposal to tax calls on the WhatsApp service, are, in contrast to the so-called Cedar Revolution of 2005, primarily economic in nature. But the economic grievance has channeled the people’s anger at Lebanon’s political system. For the first time, the Lebanese are blaming the sectarian system for the social, financial and economic crises they are experiencing.
The protest slogan “all of them means all of them” — a reference to Lebanon’s sectarian political leaders — expresses people’s distrust in and exasperation with the political class. For thirty years, the Lebanese have been deprived of basic services like electricity and clean water, waste management, reliable infrastructure, and a sound economy. Instead they find themselves broke, impoverished and ripped off by a corrupt, predatory political class that was using state funds to enrich itself and solidify its narrow support base.
This cross-sectarian, cross-regional disaffection with the sectarian system sounded the alarm for the most powerful actor in that system: Hezbollah. In fact, following the withdrawal of Syrian forces in 2005, Hezbollah has come to dominate the Lebanese political system. It quickly understood that the protests against the system posed a direct threat to its control.
Hezbollah’s control of Lebanese politics is attributable to certain key factors. First is the group’s military power, which it employs throughout the region, namely in Syria, Iraq and Yemen. It has leveraged this military power in Lebanon as well. On May 7, 2008, for example, Hezbollah fighters captured sections of west Beirut and attacked its domestic rivals in clashes that killed 62 people across the country. The fighting ended with a Qatari-negotiated agreement that gave Hezbollah veto power in a new national-unity government.
Hezbollah’s military supremacy in Lebanon is evident first and foremost in that it alone holds the decision to wage war against Israel. To that end, it has dug several cross-border attack tunnels from southern Lebanon into Israel. It has also allegedly established several facilities to assemble precision-guided missiles with Iranian supervision. In addition, it freely transports heavy equipment and fighters from Lebanon across the border to prosecute its wars in Syria and beyond.
The second factor is economic and financial. US sanctions on Hezbollah’s illicit financial activity have had an impact on Lebanon in that they revealed that the bubble Lebanon enjoyed for some years was largely the result of money laundering by Hezbollah and its business associates. We now know that Hezbollah was laundering up to two hundred million dollars a month through the Lebanese Canadian Bank, which the US Treasury Department sanctioned in 2011. This money laundering scheme spurred the construction boom of luxury residential towers in Beirut, with unjustified square meter prices rivaling those in New York. This scheme helped increase the gains of the banking sector by billions of dollars a year. Even though the result was a dramatic slowdown in growth, this artificial economy based on money laundering activities gave Hezbollah unmatched economic power.
This economic power extended to the micro-level. Because of the protection they enjoyed from the party, Hezbollah business associates were able to bring in to the country products, from home appliances to cellular phones and construction materials, without paying taxes and fees. This allowed them to sell below market price, making it almost impossible to compete with them.
The government and its agencies were not simply unable but also unwilling to stop Hezbollah from conducting these illicit activities. Rather, they were complicit. Everyone was benefiting one way or another from the Hezbollah-controlled status quo.
Today, Hezbollah is at an impasse. US sanctions targeting Hezbollah’s criminal and illicit financial empire from Latin America to Africa, coupled with a maximum pressure campaign on Iran, are taking a heavy toll on the group’s purse. The Lebanese economy has effectively collapsed because it has always counted on the artificial bubble created by Hezbollah’s illegal activities, for which Lebanon serves as a center. The state has no more funds and the world is watching as everything crumbles, demanding serious reforms before considering any financial aid.
According to some local statistics, 160,000 employees have either lost their jobs or are being paid half salary since the start of the crisis. Inflation has risen considerably, and the Lebanese pound has so far lost a third of its value to the dollar. Remittances, a main sources of capital inflow, have dropped significantly due to lack of confidence in the banking sector. The number of protesters is expected to grow in the coming months.
If it has been relatively easy for Hezbollah to control the Lebanese state and political system, it might prove much harder for it to control the street and the protesters. Resorting to violence, although an option, will most likely increase the possibility of civil war, something the party probably wants to avoid, as it will weaken its geopolitical position considerably. Meanwhile, accepting the terms of the protesters in imposing transparency, accountability, an end to corruption and the recovery of funds stolen by politicians would mean an end of the political system as it exists, and which Hezbollah controls.
The future is uncertain for Lebanon. But one thing is certain: the Lebanon that emerges from this tunnel will be different.

Naming of prime minister-designate adds to Lebanon unrest
Simon Speakman Cordall/The Arab Weekly/December 22/2019
TUNIS – With unrest continuing across Lebanon, the naming of not widely known former minister Hassan Diab as prime minister-designate could open a new chapter in the fraught relations between the government and the country’s increasingly agitated population.
Anti-government demonstrators poured into central Beirut, protesting Diab being chosen for the post soon after the decision was announced. Across Lebanon, the Daily Star reported, roads were blocked as protesters rejected the former education minister’s selection.
For several weeks, protesters called for replacing Lebanon’s confessional system of government with a technocratic one. This would preclude parties representing the countries’ various sects from government.
While those demands were echoed among many senior politicians, the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), the Amal Movement and Iran-backed Hezbollah were insistent that any government include a mix of technocrats and politicians.
Popular anger was initially triggered by a series of small events, including a proposed tax on the WhatsApp messaging service, it “morphed quickly into protesters demanding a drastic overhaul of the country’s political system,” said Emily Hawthorne, a MENA analyst at risk consultancy Stratfor.
“That is much easier said than done in Lebanon, where a complicated confessional system of governance in some ways predates even the modern country’s founding and was reinforced after the civil war’s end in 1990. The entrenched system is trying to defend itself against political reforms that risk eroding their power with sectarian constituencies,” she said.
Diab’s backing by the Shia Hezbollah and Amal, as well as their largest Christian ally, the FPM, could prove problematic. His lack of support from Lebanon’s main Sunni bloc is unlikely to help him form a new government or secure the Western backing that Lebanon desperately needs.
The severity of Lebanon’s financial circumstances is difficult to overstate. The confessional system of government, in which roles and ministries are allocated by sect, has become overwhelmed by corruption and little of the country’s infrastructure is functional.
The Lebanese pound has fallen to one-third of its official rate while banks impose tight capital controls. Across Lebanon, companies are cutting jobs and squeezing salaries.
“A government with a Hezbollah-backed prime minister would be even less likely to secure support from the Gulf countries… and might also potentially reduce the chances of Lebanon getting support from the [International Monetary Fund] if the US raises concerns,” Jason Tuvey, a senior emerging markets economist at Capital Economics, told Reuters.
The increasingly sectarian nature of the violence in the streets continues, something Diab’s appointment is unlikely to ease.
On December 16, hundreds of men on motorbikes crowded Beirut’s streets, carrying flags of Shia groups as they chanted, “Shia, Shia,” setting tyres on fire, throwing stones at security forces and setting cars ablaze, witnesses said.
The men, reportedly incensed by a video criticising Amal officials, including parliament Speaker Nabih Berry and religious symbols such as Imam Ali, attempted to break through a security cordon around a makeshift campsite erected by anti-government protesters. Security services used tear gas to push them back. The latest violence came after an especially brutal mid-December weekend in which 40 people were injured after police intervened to separate Amal and Hezbollah supporters from attacking protesters in central Beirut. Violence, however, escalated and police resorted to rubber bullets, tear gas and water cannons in an attempt to regain control of Beirut’s city centre. “From the start, there has always been a concern that the protests could either turn sectarian, violent or both,” said Mouna Yacoubian, a senior adviser at the United States Institute of Peace.
“Indeed, the fact that the protests have still remained relatively peaceful is remarkable in and of itself given Lebanon’s history of civil war and conflict,” Yacoubian said. “The current unrest is largely the result of sectarian actors instigating greater violence by attempting to inject a sectarian element into the protests and by resorting to more aggressive tactics, e.g. throwing stones, in confrontation with security forces.”Little of the violence appears to be directed by any of the parties’ leadership. While Amal and Hezbollah were initially critical of the anti-government protests, their position has become more accommodating, raising questions about the motivations behind the violence. “What is more concerning is the prospect that some of the violence is being generated from the grass roots and that party and religious leaders have less control over these elements,” Yacoubian said.

Hezbollah-backed PM-designate faces backlash from Sunnis
Samar Kadi/The Arab Weekly/December 22/2019
BEIRUT – The nomination of Hezbollah-backed Hassan Diab as prime minister-designate to form Lebanon’s so-called “salvation government” will unlikely help the debt-ridden country to overcome its worst socio-economic and financial crisis since the 1975-90 civil war.
Diab’s designation, which came after caretaker Prime Minister Saad Hariri pulled out of the race, was endorsed by a weak majority in parliament comprising Iran-backed Hezbollah and its allies, Shia Amal Movement and President Michel Aoun’s Christian Free Patriotic Movement.
Hariri’s Future Movement bloc did not nominate a candidate in the much-delayed consultations with the president. Other blocs nominated former Ambassador to the United Nations Nawaf Salam.
Analysts said Diab’s failure to secure a consensus, especially from his Sunni community at exceptionally difficult times, makes it more complicated for him to form an inclusive government.
“Today we have a mobilisation of the Sunni community,” said political analyst Johnny Mounayar. “Whether they like Saad Hariri or not, the Sunnis feel that they have been humiliated and marginalised by Diab’s appointment. The mood is very tense and might be a prelude to Sunni-Shia friction.”Under Lebanon’s sectarian-based political system the prime minister should come from the Sunni community and is usually backed by the community’s main leaders.
“Diab has been stamped in the Western media as Hezbollah’s candidate and his government, regardless of how many ‘technocrats’ it will include, will be regarded as a Hezbollah-dominated administration,” Mounayar said. “A government dominated by Hezbollah, which has been targeted by increasingly biting US sanctions, is unlikely to secure billions of dollars in frozen aid for which Lebanon is in bad need.”
“We are obviously heading towards a polarised government which will not gain any international support because the US-Iran talks have not matured yet and Lebanon will be part of any US-Iran deal. The West wants to make Iran pay a price in Lebanon, Iraq and Syria,” Mounayar added.
Diab, a 60-year-old professor at American University of Beirut largely unknown to the public, served as minister of education from 2011-14 in a government formed after Hezbollah brought down a previous Hariri cabinet.
Following Diab’s appointment, protesters gathered in Beirut’s Martyrs’ Square, the epicentre of the protests, and cut off roads. They rejected Diab and cast him as part of the old class of politicians they are revolting against.
“I see the country is going to waste. With this kind of government, no one will deal with it, no Arab, no Europe and no US,” Saeb Hujrat, a protester in the square, told the Associated Press.
In his first public address, Diab, who described himself as an “independent,” said he would work quickly to form a government in consultations with all political parties and representatives of the protest movement.
He said he is committed to a reform plan and described the current situation as “critical and sensitive” requiring exceptional efforts and collaboration.
A daunting task awaits Diab and his efforts to form a government will almost certainly hit snags in the deeply divided country, even if Hezbollah and its allies sought to facilitate his mission, journalist Amin Kammourieh said.
“His (Diab’s) appointment could be a test,” Kammourieh said. “If (economic and political) pressures at home and from the international community exacerbated, Hezbollah and its allies might reconsider Diab’s eligibility or they would go for a unilateral government and take all the challenges that come with it.”
Visiting US Under-Secretary of State for Political Affairs David Hale encouraged Lebanese politicians to commit to the necessary reforms that can lead to a stable, prosperous and secure country.
“It’s time to put aside partisan interests and act in the national interest,” Hale said, adding the 2-month-old anti-government protests reflected the Lebanese people’s “longstanding and legitimate demands for economic and institutional reform, better governance and an end to endemic corruption.”
Demonstrators of all sectarian backgrounds have been in the streets every day since October 17 to demand the removal of the entire political leadership, seen as corrupt and incompetent.
Pierre Issa, secretary-general of the National Bloc party, which is participating in the protest movement, said protesters are mostly unhappy with Diab’s appointment and would continue demonstrating.
“We fear Diab might form a cosmetic cabinet of experts who are effectively controlled by political parties and this won’t solve the crisis,” Issa said.

Beirut Christmas carolling comes with a revolutionary twist
Samar Kadi/The Arab Weekly/December 22/2019
BEIRUT – While the drums of the popular anti-government rebellion were beating in Beirut’s streets during violent clashes in recent days, Christmas carols and Muslim Sufi hymns were sung in churches for the annual Beirut Chants Festival. The pre-Christmas event, with 28 free concerts over December 1-23, offered the public a much-needed break from the pressures of the political and socio-economic crisis gripping Lebanon as attendees indulged in peaceful and spiritual, yet revolutionary, musical performances. “We believe that music should be free for all, as we believe in tolerance and coexistence among different cultures and religions because we believe in unity,” said Micheline Abi Samra, founder of Beirut Chants Festival. “Definitely the intercultural Islamic-Christian aspect is always present in the festival, and every year it is more pronounced and more sophisticated. Quranic chants are being chanted in churches at the same time as Christmas carols to encourage tolerance and mutual acceptance and understanding and to get to know each other better,” Abi Samra said.
Since the festival was founded 12 years ago, Lebanon has united each December for concerts in that very spirit, using culture and music to spread a message of hope for the country. This year it is even more pronounced with the anti-government rebellion that united protesters across Lebanon’s religions and regions.
The concerts draw thousands of people to churches around Beirut every night for one or two hours of music — some classical, some religious and some unexpected, such as the revolutionary and nationalistic songs that marked some of this year’s concerts.
“This year, it is a miracle that we are still going on. I myself cannot believe it when I look at the churches and I see that every single night crowds are more numerous with different ages, different backgrounds and yet they are one when they listen to beautiful music,” Abi Samra said.
Beirut Chants is not just about bringing culture to the masses and bonding over beautiful music; it is also about voicing a powerful message.
One of the most acclaimed concerts was a religious event that combined Quranic singing by Muslim cleric Sheikh Ahmad Hawili and soprano Ghada Shbeir at the Saint Joseph Church in downtown Beirut.
Sheikh Hawili, a Lebanese Sufi singer, and Shbeir, who has a doctorate in Syriac chants, the oldest form of Christian singing, enchanted the audience. “I found it unique and mesmerising,” said audience member Randa Imad. “The fact that there are a cleric and a vocalist singing lyrics from the Quran and the Bible, sometimes as a duo or alternately, was fascinating. The church was packed. The atmosphere was great. They even placed seats in the alleys to accommodate the crowd.”
Beirut Chants began in 2007 when Abi Samra said she wanted to make use of the beautifully renovated churches in Beirut and thought to bring life to those spaces to “feel that the community is participating and living the Christmas spirit in a beautiful way.”
The revolutionary mood prevailing in Lebanon affected this year’s festival, intertwining with the Christmas spirit.
Members of the rebellious young generation seeking change while expressing their attachment to Lebanon were well-served by Lebanese musician, composer and pianist Guy Manoukian, accompanying al Fayha choir, a group of 100 singers from all denominations. National and patriotic songs inflamed the Assembly Hall at the American University of Beirut (AUB), where the concert took place. “What I lived in that particular concert I haven’t lived for 12 years since Beirut Chants started. The national mood and the ambiance were already there… Emotions were high. People sang along and cried,” Abi Samra said. The performance by an ensemble from the Balamand University Choir and soprano Reem Deeb at the Assembly Hall was another highlight of the festival. Deeb presented a surprise song that sounded as a perfect contribution to the revolutionary situation. Some of the lyrics translate as follows: “In times of pain and poverty, Beirut cries for people’s hunger and people’s eyes weep for people’s thirst, yet, the Christmas spirit gives people back their dignity and faith.”
An AUB student who attended the performance said the surprise anthem was “a beautiful addition to the festival, especially in times of hopelessness.”
The people who gave standing ovations at the concerts understood the message of love and tolerance and the big hope that the differences in the Lebanese society are its strengths, Abi Samra said.
“We should work on more projects that make us all one nation,” she added. Lebanon has been rocked by unprecedented popular protests over official mismanagement and corruption since October 17.

The post A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For December 22- 23/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 67th Day appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

بارعة علم الدين: كل ما لا يقتل الثورة اللبنانية هو عملياً يقويها/Baria Alamuddin: What doesn’t kill Lebanon’s revolution only makes it stronger

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What doesn’t kill Lebanon’s revolution only makes it stronger
بارعة علم الدين/كل ما لا يقتل الثورة اللبنانية هو عملياً يقويها
Baria Alamuddin/Arab News/December 22/2019

Lebanese warn that their nation is held hostage by violent and unaccountable paramilitaries — so these same paramilitaries prove these claims true by escalating their attacks on peaceful rallies.

People demand abolishment of the corrupt, sectarian system — so the president stubbornly aims to force through a Cabinet apparently chosen to alienate ordinary Lebanese even more than its predecessors did.

In what some commentators are describing as a “counter-revolution” against the protest movement, Sunni politician Hassan Diab has been nominated as prime minister, having been wined and dined by Gebran Bassil at the presidential palace. Given the expected boycott by the main Sunni, Druze and Christian factions, the resulting Cabinet is likely to be a bizarre mixture of nonentities and Hezbollah acolytes.

After two months of protests, citizens won’t be placated or deceived by such desperate, self-serving maneuvers.

Despite Hezbollah having murdered his father, Saad Hariri justified participation in previous Hezbollah-sponsored governments as the price to be paid for civil peace. Yet peace for its own sake, while Iran-aligned factions bankrupted the nation — financially, politically and morally — ultimately proved worthless.

Lebanon’s economy is in freefall. Over 10 percent of Lebanese companies went out of business in 2019, a further 22 percent cut staff by over 60 percent, and the collapse of several major corporations is just around the corner. Those lucky enough to retain their jobs have had their salaries slashed.

This is precisely why protesters must not back down now. If they return meekly to their homes, this painful process will simply reignite in the future — over and over again. Protests are about forcing the state to embark on emergency surgery, cutting away decades of accumulated cancerous tissue to save the patient’s life. If Lebanon is simply put to bed with an aspirin and a warm drink, the only possible prognosis is a slow and painful death.

Lebanon’s entrenched political class in its entirety (“kilon yanni kilon,” or “all of them means all of them,” as the protesters chant) has bled Lebanon white.

In one decade it plunged from 63rd to 143rd place on the global Corruption Perceptions Index, and is thus among the most corrupt kleptocracies on the planet.

One percent of the population hoards an estimated 25 percent of the nation’s wealth, forcing penniless citizens to shoulder a debt-to-GDP ratio of 150 percent, rendering debt-servicing an intolerable burden.

Bassil and Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah blame protesters for damaging the economy, but the protests were the straw that broke the camel’s back after their criminal enterprises left the coffers empty. Even before the demonstrations, GDP growth averaged 0-0.3 percent and in recent weeks the currency has lost 30 percent of its value.

Despite Hezbollah having murdered his father, Saad Hariri justified participation in previous Hezbollah-sponsored governments as the price to be paid for civil peace.

The economy has been cannibalized by entities hostile to Lebanon’s existence. The smuggling to Syria of over $1.7 billion in hard currency, and the exploitation of Lebanon’s financial networks to launder funds for Tehran, have crippled the banking system.

International sanctions resulting from these abuses, and the reluctance of Gulf investors to risk their wealth in this morass of criminality, have worsened the plight of this erstwhile regional banking hub.

Lebanon’s modest population during peak tourist seasons is habitually dwarfed by the influx of millions of Khaleejis, Westerners, and Lebanon’s own vast diaspora. Yet how can tourism flourish when Beirut’s streets are teeming with theocratic militants noisily jostling for war with Israel?

Panicking hotel owners report a collapse in occupancy from approaching 100 percent to below 10 percent. Everything inherently precious has been trampled underfoot by the thugs and terrorists who have labored to turn Lebanon into a pariah state.

A veteran Western diplomat commented to me that one of the best hopes for Lebanon emerging from the current stand-off was if France and its allies assertively intervened. Yet he feared that such multilateral diplomatic action via the EU and UN would be forthcoming only if there were widespread bloodletting perpetrated by Hezbollah against Christian and minority communities.

The endgame may be some distance away, but in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, Iran’s hegemonic project can end only in failure. Recent events have burnt away the last vestiges of support for Tehran’s proxies. In Iraq, Ayatollah Sistani’s call for fresh Iraqi elections (if free and fair) would produce a collapse in support for paramilitary elements who have spent the past two months massacring their own Shiite grassroots constituents. Hezbollah’s Lebanese supporters are either in demoralized denial, or have already begun to re-evaluate their allegiances.

What of Hezbollah’s manufactured outrage over a spurious critical social media post? They went on the rampage in Tripoli, attacked the home of a Sunni cleric, and firebombed a Christmas tree; do they believe such cartoonish gangsterism will endear them to citizens? Of course not. This is Tehran’s “axis of resistance” in its death throes, willing to countenance dragging Lebanon back toward sectarian strife in a final, desperate throw of the dice to cling on to power.

Lebanese genuinely fear a return to civil war, or Hezbollah returning to its favored tactic of political assassinations, particularly following reports that the Quds Force commander Qassim Soleimani threatened to assassinate Iraqi cleric Muqtada Al-Sadr if he continued to back protesters.

However, if people remain steadfastly united, determined and focused on their objectives, they can ultimately defeat these malevolent attempts to terrorize, brutalize and humiliate them; whether through threats, violence or political maneuvering, each new attempt to kill off the revolution has only made protesters more determined. This is merely the darkness before the dawn if citizens succeed in taking that final leap of faith; abolishing the last vestiges of a hated and predatory sectarian system that for too long has created only misery, poverty and national isolation.

• Baria Alamuddin is an award-winning journalist and broadcaster in the Middle East and the UK. She is editor of the Media Services Syndicate and has interviewed numerous heads of state.

The post بارعة علم الدين: كل ما لا يقتل الثورة اللبنانية هو عملياً يقويها/Baria Alamuddin: What doesn’t kill Lebanon’s revolution only makes it stronger appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.


صلاح تقي الدين/حسان دياب رئيس حكومة الولي الفقيه في لبنان

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حسان دياب رئيس حكومة الولي الفقيه في لبنان
صلاح تقي الدين/العرب/الأحد 22 كانون الأول/2019

مشهد الأمس السبت في المجلس النيابي اللبناني جاء مكملاً لمشهد كورنيش المزرعة في بيروت الذي اندفع فيه مؤيدو رئيس الحكومة اللبنانية المستقيل سعد الحريري، وحتى معارضوه، إلى الشارع في مواجهة مع الجيش والقوى الأمنية تعبيراً عمّا سموه سرقة للتمثيل السني وفرضاً من الثنائي الشيعي – المسيحي لرئيس حكومة غير ميثاقي.

تقاطرت الوفود النيابية لتبليغ الرئيس المكلف حسان دياب موقفها ورؤيتها لحكومته، بعضها قاطع المجلس مثل كتلة اللقاء الديمقراطي والحزب التقدمي الاشتراكي، وبعضها جاء للتعبير عن رفضه لتلك الحكومة مثل الكتائب، والبعض الآخر كان شبيهاً بموقف الحريري ذاته الذي جاء ولم يأت، فبدت كتلة المستقبل حاضرة غائبة، ترفض المشاركة في حكومة دياب وفي الوقت نفسه تتمنى له التوفيق.

ولم يكد دياب يصل إلى منزله في محلة تلة الخياط في بيروت، عصر الخميس، عائداً من قصر بعبدا حيث تم تكليفه بتشكيل الحكومة اللبنانية الجديدة، حتى انفجر الشارع “السني” غضباً اعتراضاً على تسمية رئيس حكومة من قبل “حزب الله” والتيار العوني، ولعدم حصوله سوى على ترشيح خمسة نواب “سنّة” من أصل 27 نائباً يمثلون “الطائفة” في المجلس النيابي.

وفي الواقع، فإن الاتفاق الذي جرى بين “تكتل لبنان القوي” الذي يرأسه وزير الخارجية جبران باسيل، و”حزب الله” و”حركة أمل” التي يرأسها رئيس المجلس النيابي نبيه بري على تزكية دياب رئيسا مكلفا لتأليف الحكومة الجديدة بعد إعلان الرئيس سعد الحريري عزوفه عن المهمة، اعتبر استفزازاً للشارع السني وضربة “تحت الحزام” للحريري الذي كان قد طلب في مطلع الأسبوع الحالي من رئيس الجمهورية تأجيل الاستشارات النيابية الملزمة لتكليف رئيس للحكومة بعدما تبيّن له أن غالبية “المسيحيين” في المجلس النيابي لن تسمّيه لترؤس الحكومة الجديدة، فجاءت تسمية دياب فاقدة لغالبية “سنية” ومع ذلك تمت الاستشارات وضربت “الميثاقية”.

مهمة دياب في مرحلة ما بعد التشكيل ستكون على ما يبدو أصعب من التشكيل ذاته، فحتى لو نجح في إعلان حكومته فإنها لن تكون بمنأى عن التفكك والانهيار السريع تحت وقع ضربات الشارع ومطالبه، من جهة، ومن جهة أخرى بتأثير اللون الواحد الذي ستكون عليه، مهما جرى تطعيمها بهذا الوجه أو ذاك.

إنجازات ملتبسة
حلفاء الحريري وعلى رأسهم جنبلاط وجعجع ينتقدونه بقسوة لمجاملته للخصوم ثم لعدم تسمية السفير نواف سلام، ما يعكس اضطراباً في العلاقة ما بين الحريري ومحيطه أدى إلى حلول دياب محله، بميثاقية مسيحية شيعية منفردةحلفاء الحريري وعلى رأسهم جنبلاط وجعجع ينتقدونه بقسوة لمجاملته للخصوم ثم لعدم تسمية السفير نواف سلام، ما يعكس اضطراباً في العلاقة ما بين الحريري ومحيطه أدى إلى حلول دياب محله، بميثاقية مسيحية شيعية منفردة.

دياب المولود بيروت في العام 1959 يحمل البكالوريوس في الاتصالات، والماجستير والدكتوراه في هندسة الكمبيوتر. انضم بعدها إلى التدريس الجامعي في بيروت، أستاذا لمادة الهندسة الكهربائية وهندسة الحاسبات في كلية الهندسة والعمارة. وكان قد شغل منصب العميد المؤسس لكلية الهندسة والرئيس المؤسس في جامعة ظفار في عُمان. وعيّن في منصب نائب الرئيس للبرامج الخارجية الإقليمية في الجامعة الأميركية في بيروت.

تسلّم في العام 2011 حقيبة وزارة التربية والتعليم العالي في الحكومة اللبنانية التي شكّلها الرئيس نجيب ميقاتي، وهي كانت المرة الأولى التي يطلّ فيها دياب على الشأن العام السياسي، وقد اختير حينها نظراً لمكانته العلمية، وأسندت إليه الحقيبة التي كان يفترض أن يحقق فيها “إنجازات” تتماشى مع مؤهلاته العلمية، غير أن ما حققه كان مجلداً ضخماً طبع على نفقة الوزارة ضمّنه مواقفه وخطاباته وصوره خلال المناسبات التي شارك فيها بالظهور حتى مع شخصيات لا علاقة لها بمنصبه.

والمفارقة التي تم تداولها وتوثيقها هي أن دياب طبع هذا المجلد بقيمة 70 مليون ليرة، لم تدفعها خزينة الدولة اللبنانية إلى المطبعة إلا بعد مجيء سلفه الوزير إلياس أبوصعب إلى الوزارة وتمني دياب عليه شخصياً تسديدها.

ونشر ناشطون على مواقع التواصل الاجتماعي شهادة لأحد الأشخاص زعم فيها طلب دياب منه وساطة لتوظيف ابنه، فيما انبرى آخرون إلى مشاركة تقرير تلفزيوني قديم عن تسمية وزير التربية السابق مدرسة باسم والدته، بل أيضا تجاوز ذلك إلى أعمال من نوع آخر، حيث كان يطلب الأكل يومياً من المعهد الفندقي بالدكوانة، الذي يقع تحت وصاية وزارة التربية، ويدفع فاتورة هاتفه بسلفة من حساب الوزارة، كم أنه زُوِّدَ بجهاز كومبيوتر ليعمل عليه فأخذه معه وما زال البحث جاريا عنه إلى الآن لأنه يخص وزارة التربية فقط.

الكثير من اللغط رافق تولّي دياب لحقيبة التربية، وكنت قد نشرت في صحيفة المستقبل اللبنانية في الـ6 من ديسمبر عام 2012 تحقيقاً حول أوضاع الوزارة آنذاك، أوردت فيه فصلا جديدا من فصول الفضائح المتلاحقة، بطله هذه المرة وزير التربية حسّان دياب والمستفيد منها النائب والوزير السابق عبدالرحيم مراد وعائلته، وتتعلق بالمحاولات الحثيثة التي بذلها دياب لتمرير مرسوم في مجلس الوزراء بالترخيص لشركة “ديبلوماكس” التي يملكها أبناء مراد وصهره سمير أبي ناصيف، بإنشاء الجامعة الدولية في بيروت على العقار رقم 1111 من منطقة المصيطبة العقارية، وطلب نقل تسمية فروعها إلى تسمية الجامعة الجديدة، وهو ما قررّه مجلس الوزراء في جلسته المنعقدة بتاريخ 4/12/2012 دون أن ينشر من ضمن المقررات الرسمية للجلسة التي وزعّت على وسائل الإعلام. الأمر الذي يعد مخالفة من بين مخالفات كثيرة لازمت مسيرة الوزارة في تلك الحقبة.

ويبدو أن الضغوط التي مورست على رئيس الحكومة الأسبق نجيب ميقاتي أثمرت في تغاضي الأخير عن طلب تقدمت به جمعية وقف “النهضة الخيرية الإسلامية” التي احتضنت الفرع الأول للجامعة “اللبنانية الدولية” في البقاع فأذعن لرغبة فريق الممانعة ومهر مرسوم الموافقة على الترخيص بإنشاء جامعة “بيروت الدولية”.

ولأسباب كهذه، فإن كثيرين يعتبرون أن تجربة دياب كوزير خاضع لهيمنة باسيل والثنائي الشيعي ستنعكس على تجربته كرئيس للحكومة. باسيل الذي خرج مع نوابه من الاستشارات النيابية مع دياب ليقول إن هذه الحكومة لن تكون حكومة حزب الله، ليكون كمن يؤكد الأمر بنفيه، مكررا العناوين ذاتها، مع دعوته لتمثيل الحراك “من حصتنا” على حد قوله، في عودة إلى منطق المحاصصة.

خرق دستوري
دياب يواجه رفضاً شديداً من طائفته، تجسد في انفجار الشارع السني، حتى أن إمام المسجد الكبير وسط بيروت الشيخ محمود عكاوي وصف دياب في خطبة الجمعة بأنه “بلا غطاء سني”دياب يواجه رفضاً شديداً من طائفته، تجسد في انفجار الشارع السني، حتى أن إمام المسجد الكبير وسط بيروت الشيخ محمود عكاوي وصف دياب في خطبة الجمعة بأنه “بلا غطاء سني”

إلا أن مقاربة المسائل الشخصية في قضية تسمية دياب رئيساً مكلفاً بتشكيل الحكومة، لن تسهّل مهمته المعقدّة أصلاً ولن تضيف إليها تعقيدات، فالرجل وفقاً للبروتوكول المتبع كان عليه أن يبادر إلى زيارة رؤساء الحكومات السابقين في عرف درج عليه أسلافه منذ الاستقلال. ومن هؤلاء الرئيس ميقاتي الذي كان له الفضل في توزير دياب، والذي قال في تصريح بعد اجتماعه مع رئيس الجمهورية العماد ميشال عون خلال الاستشارات النيابية الملزمة “أخيرا حصلت الاستشارات الملزمة التي كنا ننادي بحصولها أياما معدودة بعد الاستقالة، وخلال فترة الخمسين يوما لاحظنا كيف تطورت الأمور حيث أن كل يوم تأخير كلفته كبيرة على الاقتصاد والأوضاع الاجتماعية لجميع اللبنانيين. في كتلة الوسط المستقل التي ستشارك في الاستشارات، بحثنا هذا الصباح في موضوع التسمية ووضعنا معايير لرئيس الوزراء المستعد والذي أبدى استعداده لتولّي هذه المهمة الصعبة. والمعايير هي قدرات هذا الشخص وحضوره وصفته التمثيلية، وبصراحة رغم احترامي الشخصي للمطروحين لم نجد أحدا لديه هذه المواصفات وبالتالي لم نسم أحدا واحتجبت عن التسمية”.

كان ميقاتي واضحاً في التعبير عن موقف رؤساء الحكومة السنّة السابقين حين قال “مع احترامي للأشخاص وصداقتي معهم ففي هذه الفترة نحتاج إلى شخص استثنائي وفريق عمل استثنائي. لا أريد أن أحبط آمال اللبنانيين ولكن عندي شك أن أيا من المطروحين يستطيع أن يتولى زمام الأمور في هذه المرحلة. نحن لا نتكلم عن الغطاء السني أو المسيحي، وأذكركم أن الرئيس الحريري طلب تأخير الاستشارات لأن القوات اللبنانية والتيار الوطني الحر رفضوا تسميته، وبالتالي هذا الأمر يجب أن تكون رسالة أننا غير راضين عن التسمية التي هبطت بالمظلة”. وعقب الاستشارات النيابية، غادر ميقاتي لبنان وهو لن يستقبل دياب. لكن ممثليه في المجلس النيابي قالوا إنهم استفسروا من الرئيس المكلف دياب لماذا لم يتصل من جانبه بميقاتي، فتلقوا وعداً منه بأنه سيفعل.
بينما استقبل الحريري دياب في بيت الوسط وكان إيجابيا كما نقل عنه الأخير، أما الرئيس سليم الحص والرئيس فؤاد السنيورة ففعلا الأمر ذاته، ولكن السنيورة طالب “باستعراض كل المخاطر المطروحة على الساحة الداخلية من الناحية الاقتصادية والدستورية والأمنية”، محذراً من “محاذير الخرق الدستوري الذي حصل”. بينما طالب الرئيس تمام سلام بضرورة “التأسيس لفريق عمل جديد، ويجب الإسراع في التكليف لحل الأزمة الراهنة”. متهماً عملية التكليف بأنها “معلّبة”. وكان لافتاً اعتذار النائب والوزير السابق نهاد المشنوق عن الحضور إلى الاستشارات النيابية ولقاء دياب، انسجاما مع موقف رئيسة كتلة المستقبل النائب بهية الحريري التي قاطعت استشارات بعبدا واستشارات المجلس النيابي معاً.

تكنوقراط الطوائف
مهمة دياب “معقدّة أصلاً”مهمة دياب “معقدّة أصلاً”
علت أصوات تقرأ في عمق المياه السياسية اللبنانية في لبنان لتصف الحريري بالوحيد بعد أن تخلى عنه حلفاؤه وخصومه، لكن الواقع يقول إن الحريري هو من فرض تلك الوحدة على ذاته، عبر مسيرة سياسية اتسمت بالهشاشة في المواقف المبدئية، الأمر الذي لم يغفره له البعض، وعلى رأسهم صديقه وصديق والده جنبلاط الذي سارع إلى انتقاد الحريري وتيار المستقبل بقسوة بسبب عدم تسمية نواف سلام، ما يعكس اضطراباً في العلاقة ما بين جنبلاط والحريري لا يقل عن اضطراب علاقته مع سمير جعجع الذي يحمّله نواب اللقاء التشاوري مسؤولية عدم تسمية الحريري.

غير أن دياب، الذي يبدو أنه مصمم على متابعة المهمة “المستحيلة” التي أوكلت إليه، قال في حديث تلفزيوني على أنه “سيكون لدينا نقلة نوعية بكثير من الأمور، وسيكون في الحكومة عدد كبير من النساء ومن الاختصاصات المطلوبة لمعالجة الكثير من الأمور”، لافتاً إلى أنه كاختصاصي هدفه “أن تكون الحكومة حكومة اختصاصيين. ونحن سنشرك الجميع في الحكومة، أي بمعنى كل اللبنانيات واللبنانيين والأحزاب المفروض أن يساندوا هذا العمل للوصول إلى أفضل مجلس وزراء”.

صحيح أن دياب أشار إلى أنه “منذ لحظة وصولي إلى المنزل، أكدت لأمين عام مجلس الوزراء أن الأولوية هي لزيارة مفتي الجمهورية سماحة الشيخ عبداللطيف دريان، وهذا الأمر سيحصل اليوم”، إلا أن خطيب جمعة المسجد الكبير وسط بيروت الشيخ محمود عكاوي اعترض في خطبته على تكليف دياب الذي قال عنه إنه “ليس له غطاء سنّي”، وتساءل عن “دور دار الفتوى من هذا التشرذم في الطائفة السنية التي أصبحت مكشوفة لا ظهر يحميها”. وحتى تاريخ كتابة هذه السطور ما يزال موقف دار الفتوى هو أن الأجواء الحالية غير ملائمة الآن لاستقبال دياب.

ضيف لبنان بالتوازي كان ديفيد هيل مساعد وزير الخارجية الأميركي أطل من خلال زياراته المكوكية معبّراً عن موقف واشنطن الذي يقول إنها لا تتدخل في تكليف الحكومة اللبنانية أو تأليفها. طاف هيل على القيادات السياسية اللبنانية، وتناول غداء استثنائيا في منزل الوزير جبران باسيل في تغيّر نوعي لطبيعة العلاقة ما بين الأخير والأميركيين الذين يغلف موقفهم من حكومة دياب غموض ينسجم مع مواقفهم من النفوذ الإيراني، في لبنان والعراق وسوريا واليمن والمنطقة العربية عموما، ذاته على مستوى الأفعال لا الأقوال. وهاهي إيران عبر أذرعها تستكمل الهيمنة على لبنان من خلال تعيينها المباشر لرئيس حكومته.

الأيام القليلة المقبلة ستكون مفصلية، فإذا ارتضى الناس في الشارع الذي لم يغادروه منذ الـ17 من أكتوبر الماضي بمجيء شخصية “تكنوقراط” كما يطالبون، ونجح دياب في تشكيل حكومة اختصاصيين، متجاوزاً بذلك شروط حزب الله الذي يريد المشاركة “السياسية” في هذه الحكومة، وكان قادراً على لجم طموحات باسيل في الإمساك بكل مفاصل الدولة بما فيها الوزارية، وهو الذي يشترط تسمية كل الوزراء المسيحيين فيها، فإن أمام رئيس الحكومة المكلف فرصة للنجاح. أما إذا لم يتمكن من تجاوز كل المطبّات التي سيواجهها، فسيكون عليه الاعتذار وحينها ستعود الكرة إلى ملعب الحريري من جديد إن عاجلاً أو آجلاً.

The post صلاح تقي الدين/حسان دياب رئيس حكومة الولي الفقيه في لبنان appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

الياس بجاني (من أرشيف سنة 2015): لا السعودية ولا إيران.. بل فقط لبنان

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لا السعودية ولا إيران.. بل فقط لبنان
الياس بجاني/21 أيلول/15

المقالة هذه هي من أرشيف سنة 2015

المشكلة العويصة في لبنان حالياً تكمن ليس فقط في أن لبنان الرسالة والاستقلال والسيادة والقرار الحر والتاريخ والهوية والفرادة قد تم تغيبه وتهميشه وأبلسته، بل تم قهره وكبت كل مقوماته الحضارية والفكرية والتاريخية والحقوقية بالقوة والتسلبط، حيث يمسك بقراره وحكمه ومصيره وأعناق شعبه المظلوم والمقهور والغارق بين جبال القمامة، يمسك بقراره مناصفة فريق سياسي غير مسلح مثاله الأعلى الحكم السعودي، وهو استراتيجياً وإقليميا ملحقاً به وتابعاً له.

وفريق ثاني ميليشياوي وإرهابي مسلح حتى أذنيه يريد بالقوة فرض النموذج الإيراني الملالوي على لبنان واللبنانيين وقد حول وطننا الحبيب والمسالم عن طريق البلطجة والإجرام والغزوات إلى معسكر إيراني وقاعدة للملالي ولحكمهم الساعي بالقوة والتمذهب إلى إقامة الإمبراطورية الفارسية على أنقاض كل الدول العربية وشعوبها.

أما الخطير هنا، بل الكارثي في حالة المحل والبؤس هذه أن القيادات المارونية تحديداً والمسيحية عموماً دينية وزمنية ودون استثناءات والتي هي من المفترض أن تحافظ على هذا اللبنان الحضاري والمنفتح الذي كانت في صلب وأساس وعمق تكوينه وقيامته كنموذج للتعايش، الخطير، بل المدمر هنا أنها أي القيادات المسيحية بمعظمها للأسف تخلت عن دورها الوطني والكياني والاستقلالي وارتضت عن غباء ونرسيسية وقلة إيمان وخور رجاء الالتحاق مناصفة بين الفريقين، السعودي والإيراني، أي تيار المستقبل وحزب الله، فتم تهميشها كلياً ولم تعد شريكة لا في القرار ولا في الحكم، بل أداة مسيرة وغير مخيرة.

وحال القيادات المسيحية كافة التعيس والتبعي في الفشل القاتل والتهميش المرعب يتمظهر حالياً بجلاء معيب ومذل في عدم قدرتها على إقرار قانون انتخابي عادل وإعادة الجنسية للمغتربين وعجزها عن انتخاب رئيس ماروني حر لرئاسة الجمهورية.

إن حال البشيريين والسياديين والأحرار من اللبنانيين وهم من كل الطوائف والمذاهب يرفضون هذا الواقع اللالبناني ويقاومون بعناد الذوبان في أي من المشروعين السعودي والإيراني على حد سواء.

ونعم نحن اللبنانيين قلباً وقالباً وإيماناً ومن كل الشرائح الإثنية والمذهبية لا يناسبنا أي من النموذجين، لا الإيراني المعسكر والمذهبي والإرهابي، ولا السعودي الديني الملكي، حيث أنهما جوهراً ومفاهيم وممارسات وحضارة وانفتاح وشرعة حقوق عالمية ومساواة وقبول للآخر هما كلياً نقيض لكل ما نحن فيه وعليه ونريده ونسعى لتحقيقه.

نعم إن الآلاف من أهلنا يعملون في السعودية وفي دول الخليج العربي، وبالتالي العرفان بالجميل لهذه الدول الصديقة والسلمية واجب وحق، وكذلك شكرها من القلب وبصدق على مساعداتها المالية الكبيرة لبلدنا وخصوصاً في الشدائد، ولكن ضميرياً ووطنياً ومصيراً ووجوداً وقراراً حراً واستقلالية وحريات ونظام حكم علينا كلبنانيين شرفاء وسياديين ودون لبس أو ذمية وتقية أن نبقي لبنان في لبنان، ونبقي كل دولة في دولتها كائن من كانت هذه الدولة.

في الخلاصة، نحن لا ننكر أبداً أن الخطر الإيراني أكبر بكثير من الخطر السعودي، ولكن هيمنتهما المالية والعسكرية والسياسية والمذهبية على الكيان اللبناني وعلى كل مقوماته الحياتية، وعلى اللحمة بين اللبنانيين، وعلى قرار وتموضع شرائح لبنانية متعددة، وعلى دور لبنان الرسالة هو واحد في عواقبه والكوارث، وبالتالي علينا أن لا نغفل أو نهمل أو نغض الطرف على هيمنة أي منهما ونقاومهما ونمنعهما من إلغاء هويتنا وضرب حضارتنا وقتل استقلالنا وإلحاقنا بأي منهما.

نعم للبنان، ونعم لكل من يريد مساعدتنا في أطر احترام فرادتنا ورسالتنا واستقلالنا ومكونات مجتمعاتنا، ولا للسعودية وإيران في لبنان كقوى هيمنة واحتلال.

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

The post الياس بجاني (من أرشيف سنة 2015): لا السعودية ولا إيران.. بل فقط لبنان appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

طُوبى لِلْمُضْطَهَدِينَ مِنْ أَجْلِ البِرّ، لأَنَّ لَهُم مَلَكُوتَ السَّماوات/Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven

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 طُوبى لِلْمُضْطَهَدِينَ مِنْ أَجْلِ البِرّ، لأَنَّ لَهُم مَلَكُوتَ السَّماوات
إنجيل القدّيس متّى05/من01حتى12/:”لَمَّا رأَى يَسُوعُ الجُمُوعَ صَعِدَ إِلى الجَبَل، وجَلَسَ فَدَنا مِنْهُ تَلاميذُهُ،وفَتَحَ فاهُ يُعَلِّمُهُم قَائِلاً: «طُوبى لِلْمَسَاكِينِ بِالرُّوح، لأَنَّ لَهُم مَلَكُوتَ السَّمَاوَات. طُوبى لِلْوُدَعَاء، لأَنَّهُم سَيَرِثُونَ الأَرض. طُوبى لِلْحَزَانى، لأَنَّهُم سَيُعَزَّون. طُوبى لِلْجِيَاعِ والعِطَاشِ إِلى البِرّ، لأَنَّهُم سَيُشْبَعُون.طُوبى لِلْرُّحَمَاء، لأَنَّهُم سَيُرْحَمُون. طُوبى لأَنْقِيَاءِ القُلُوب، لأَنَّهُم سَيُعَايِنُونَ الله. طُوبى لِفَاعِلي السَّلام، لأَنَّهُم سَيُدْعَونَ أَبْناءَ الله. طُوبى لِلْمُضْطَهَدِينَ مِنْ أَجْلِ البِرّ، لأَنَّ لَهُم مَلَكُوتَ السَّماوات. طُوبى لَكُم إِذَا عَيَّرُوكُم وٱضْطَهَدُوكُم، وٱفْتَرَوا عَلَيْكُم كُلَّ سُوءٍ مِنْ أَجْلي. إِفْرَحُوا وٱبْتَهِجُوا، لأَنَّ أَجْرَكُم عَظِيمٌ في السَّمَاوات، فَهكَذا ٱضْطَهَدُوا الأَنْبِيَاءَ مِنْ قَبْلِكُم.”

Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 05/01-12/:”When Jesus saw the crowds, he went up the mountain; and after he sat down, his disciples came to him. Then he began to speak, and taught them, saying: ‘Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.‘Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be  comforted. ‘Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth. ‘Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled. ‘Blessed are the merciful, for they will receive mercy. Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God. ‘Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God. ‘Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. ‘Blessed are you when people revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you.

إِنَّكُم لَمْ تَقْتَرِبُوا إِلى جَبَلٍ مَلْمُوس، ونارٍ مُتَّقِدَة، وضَبَابٍ وظَلامٍ وزَوبَعَة، وهُتَافِ بُوق، وصَوتِ كَلِمَاتٍ طَلَبَ الَّذِينَ سَمِعُوهَا أَلاَّ يُزَادُوا مِنهَا كَلِمَة
الرسالة إلى العبرانيّين12/من18حتى24/:”يا إخوَتِي، إِنَّكُم لَمْ تَقْتَرِبُوا إِلى جَبَلٍ مَلْمُوس، ونارٍ مُتَّقِدَة، وضَبَابٍ وظَلامٍ وزَوبَعَة، وهُتَافِ بُوق، وصَوتِ كَلِمَاتٍ طَلَبَ الَّذِينَ سَمِعُوهَا أَلاَّ يُزَادُوا مِنهَا كَلِمَة؛ لأَنَّهُم لَمْ يُطِيقُوا تَحَمُّلَ هذَا الأَمْر: «ولَو أَنَّ بَهِيمَةً مَسَّتِ الجَبَلَ تُرْجَم!». وكانَ المَنْظَرُ رَهِيبًا حَتَّى إِنَّ مُوسَى قال: «إِنِّي خَائِفٌ ومُرْتَعِد!». بَلِ ٱقْتَرَبْتُم إِلى جَبَلِ صِهْيُون، وإِلى مَدِينَةِ اللهِ الحَيّ، أُورَشَلِيمَ السَّماوِيَّة، وإِلى عَشَرَاتِ الأُلُوفِ منَ المَلائِكَة، وإِلى عِيدٍ حَافِل، وإِلى كَنِيسَةِ الأَبْكَارِ المَكْتُوبِينَ في السَّمَاوَات، وإِلى اللهِ ديَّانِ الجَمِيع، وإِلى أَرْواحِ الأَبْرَارِ الَّذِينَ بَلَغُوا الكَمَال، وإِلى وَسِيطِ العَهْدِ الجَدِيد، يَسُوع، وإِلى دَمِ رَشٍّ يَنْطِقُ بكَلاَمٍ أَفْضَلَ مِنْ دَمِ هَابِيل!”

You have not come to something that can be touched, a blazing fire, and darkness, and gloom, and a tempest
Letter to the Hebrews 12/18-24/:”You have not come to something that can be touched, a blazing fire, and darkness, and gloom, and a tempest, and the sound of a trumpet, and a voice whose words made the hearers beg that not another word be spoken to them. (For they could not endure the order that was given, ‘If even an animal touches the mountain, it shall be stoned to death.’Indeed, so terrifying was the sight that Moses said, ‘I tremble with fear.’)But you have come to Mount Zion and to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to innumerable angels in festal gathering, and to the assembly of the firstborn who are enrolled in heaven, and to God the judge of all, and to the spirits of the righteous made perfect, and to Jesus, the mediator of a new covenant, and to the sprinkled blood that speaks a better word than the blood of Abel.”

The post طُوبى لِلْمُضْطَهَدِينَ مِنْ أَجْلِ البِرّ، لأَنَّ لَهُم مَلَكُوتَ السَّماوات/Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

سورين كاري/معهد كايتستون: قرار البرلمان الألماني حظر حزب الله هو مجرد مهزلة قانونية/Soeren Kern: German Parliament’s Resolution to Ban Hezbollah is Just a Legal Charade

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German Parliament: Its Resolution to Ban Hezbollah is Just a Legal Charade
سورين كاري/معهد كايتستون: قرار البرلمان الألماني حظر حزب الله هو مجرد مهزلة قانونية
Soeren Kern/Gatestone Institute/December 23/2019

Germany, however, has refused to ban Hezbollah’s “political wing,” which continues to raise funds in the country.

A German foreign ministry official, Niels Annen, has said that such a ban would be counterproductive because “we focus on dialogue.” His comment has been understood to mean that the German government does not want to burn bridges with Hezbollah’s sponsor, the Islamic Republic of Iran.

“We don’t have a military wing and a political one; we don’t have Hezbollah on one hand and the resistance party on the other…. Every element of Hezbollah, from commanders to members as well as our various capabilities, is in the service of the resistance, and we have nothing but the resistance as a priority.” — Hezbollah’s deputy secretary general, Naim Qassem.

Germany’s Social Democratic Foreign Minister Heiko Maas, however, has refused to ban Hezbollah in its entirety. He recently repeated the German government’s distinction between Hezbollah’s legitimate and illegitimate activities in Germany.

“It remains to be seen to what extent the German federal government will…actually ‘exhaust all the resources of the rule of law’ to stop Hezbollah’s money laundering and terrorist financing in Germany.” — Bild, December 19, 2019.

The German government has refused to ban the terrorist group Hezbollah in its entirety. Foreign Minister Heiko Maas recently repeated the German government’s distinction between Hezbollah’s legitimate and illegitimate activities in Germany.

The German parliament has passed a non-binding resolution that calls on the German government to ban the activities of the Iran-backed Lebanese terrorist group Hezbollah — Arabic for “The Party of Allah” — in Germany.

The measure — supported by center-right Christian Democrats and the center-left Social Democrats, the two major parties that make up Germany’s ruling coalition, and also by the classical liberal Free Democrats — has been hailed as “important,” “significant,” and a “crucial step.”

The resolution, however, falls short of a complete ban on Hezbollah and appears aimed at providing the German government with political cover that would allow Germany to claim that it has banned the group even if it has not.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has faced increasing international pressure to ban Hezbollah, but she has refused to do so. Hezbollah has more than 1,000 operatives in Germany, according to German intelligence assessments.

The three-page resolution — “Effective Action against Hezbollah” (“Wirksames Vorgehen gegen die Hisbollah”) — was passed on December 19. An abridged translation of the text reads:

“Because of our history, Germany has a special responsibility towards the Jewish and democratic State of Israel. Israel’s security and right to exist are part of Germany’s raison d’état [Staatsräson]. The Bundestag calls on the federal government to confront actors in the Middle East that question Israel’s right to exist or openly threaten its security. In addition to Iran’s continually aggressive policies, the most important of these anti-Israeli forces is the terrorist group Hezbollah, which is closely linked to Iran, and due to its widespread presence also poses a particular threat to the stability of the entire Middle East.

“The German Bundestag is committed to Germany’s special responsibility towards Israel and its security. It adheres to the two-state solution, as confirmed by the United Nations Security Council in numerous resolutions: a Jewish and democratic state of Israel within secure borders and an independent, democratic and viable Palestinian state.

“According to the federal government, Hezbollah supporters primarily use Germany as a place of retreat and logistics. Its followers are under the watchful eye of the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution [German domestic intelligence]. There are around 1,000 supporters of Hezbollah in Germany, and this number is increasing. Hezbollah cannot currently be banned because its association structures cannot currently be determined.

“The federal government has already taken measures against the spread and support of Hezbollah in Germany with the 2008 ban on the ‘Al Manar TV’ television station, and the 2014 ban of the ‘Lebanon Orphan Project.’ In 2018 alone, the Federal Prosecutor General [Generalbundesanwalt] at the Federal Court of Justice [Bundesgerichtshof] initiated 36 investigations against individuals linked to Hezbollah….

“According to the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, it must be expected that Hezbollah will continue to plan and carry out terrorist actions against Israel or Israeli interests outside the Middle East. Our commitment to the protection of the State of Israel also requires that funding flows from Germany, which serve to finance Hezbollah in the Middle East, be prevented by all means.

“The German Bundestag views as an urgent priority a consistent national and common European approach against the activities of the terrorist organization Hezbollah….

“The German Bundestag calls on the federal government to:

“1. Continue closely to monitor the activities of Hezbollah supporters, particularly in Germany, and to pursue them by all means of the rule of law; this also includes combating money laundering and preventing terrorist financing from Germany;

“2. Impose an activity ban [Betätigungsverbot] on Hezbollah in order to prevent any activity by representatives of the organization in Germany that is against the principle of international understanding [respect for all people];

“3. Abandon the conceptual division of Hezbollah into a political and a military wing and to come to a common assessment at the European level to list the group;

“4. Continue actively to advocate for the right of existence of the Jewish and democratic State of Israel and the legitimate security interests of the State of Israel as a central principle of German foreign and security policy;

“5. Take measures, together with international partners, to reduce Hezbollah’s influence in the Middle East, particularly in Syria.”

The German government banned Hezbollah’s “military wing” in 2013, after the group was implicated in the July 2012 bombing of a bus carrying Israeli tourists in Burgas, Bulgaria. Five Israelis were killed in the attack.

Germany, however, has refused to ban Hezbollah’s “political wing,” which continues to raise funds in the country. A German foreign ministry official, Niels Annen, has said that such a ban would be counterproductive because “we focus on dialogue.” His comment has been understood to mean that the German government does not want to burn bridges with Hezbollah’s sponsor, the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Britain, the Netherlands, Israel, the United States, the 22-member Arab League and the six-member Gulf Cooperation Council see no distinction between Hezbollah’s military and civilian wings and all have banned the group in its entirety. Indeed, Hezbollah’s deputy secretary general, Naim Qassem, has clearly stated that the group is structurally unified:

“We don’t have a military wing and a political one; we don’t have Hezbollah on one hand and the resistance party on the other…. Every element of Hezbollah, from commanders to members as well as our various capabilities, is in the service of the resistance, and we have nothing but the resistance as a priority.”

On November 28, the German news magazine Der Spiegel reported that the German government had decided to ban Hezbollah in its entirety, and that a formal announcement would be made during a meeting of the interior ministers [Innenministerkonferenz] of Germany’s 16 federal states in early December. Der Spiegel wrote:

“This would mean that the activities and members of the militia in Germany would be treated as equal to the Kurdish PKK and the Islamic State. All activities of Hezbollah would be prohibited in Germany. For example, the flag of the Lebanese terror militia (green rifle on a yellow background) should no longer be shown.”

An interior ministry spokesman subsequently denied the report and no decision was announced during or after the meeting of German interior ministers.

The idea of banning Hezbollah in its entirety was first proposed by the conservative party Alternative for Germany (AfD). In June 2019, the German parliament discussed, but ultimately rejected, the idea of outlawing Hezbollah. The AfD had called on the government to “examine whether the conditions exist for a ban on Hezbollah as one organization, and, if necessary, to issue such a prohibition and implement it immediately.” Lawmakers from the ruling coalition said that they needed further to investigate the matter.

At the time, the author of the resolution, AfD MP Beatrix von Storch, said:

“Hezbollah is a terrorist organization. The Berlin government claims that you must distinguish between a legitimate political wing of Hezbollah and an illegitimate terrorist wing. This does not make sense to us, or to the voters.

“Hezbollah’s goal is the destruction of Israel and the Jews, and we should not be offering a safe haven for them to hide in Germany and to finance from our territory their armed struggle in Lebanon against Israel.”

The AfD abstained during the vote on the Bundestag resolution passed on December 19. Von Storch emphasized the importance of not only banning the entirety of Hezbollah in Germany, but also of dissolving its mosque associations and deporting all supporters from Germany. She said that the fact that the other parties, after a delay of six months, were now discussing a ban on Hezbollah activities in Germany was proof of the success of the AfD. Nevertheless, she said that the Bundestag’s resolution falls short:

“A ban on activities alone is completely inadequate and inappropriate in the fight against a terrorist organization. We therefore call for a total ban on Hezbollah in Germany and the dissolution of its mosque associations. The members of Hezbollah in Germany, around 1,000 followers, must be expelled expeditiously on the basis of Section 53 of the Residence Act. This also corresponds to the requirement of the Bundestag’s anti-Semitism resolution, which explicitly calls for measures to combat anti-Semitism, including an end to continued residency for offenders. If that does not apply to Hezbollah supporters, who want to ‘gas the Jews’ and destroy Israel, who will? We call on the federal government fully to implement the ban of Hezbollah before the next impending Al-Quds day [Jerusalem day].”

Von Storch was referring to the annual demonstrations, sponsored by Iran and supported by Hezbollah members across Germany, who, waving the Hezbollah flag, call for the destruction of Israel.

Others welcomed the anti-Hezbollah resolution as an important first step. Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz said that the Bundestag’s resolution “is an important step in the international struggle against terrorism, particularly against terrorist organization Hezbollah and its patron Iran.” He added:

“We welcome the important resolution adopted today by the German Bundestag, which calls Hezbollah for what it is: an-Iran sponsored terror organization, with no distinction between its military and political wings.

“Hezbollah threatens not only Israeli civilians, but also undermines Lebanese sovereignty and regional stability. We hope this resolution will encourage others in Europe to take similar action.

“The world must unite against Hezbollah, designate it a terrorist organization, and impose harsh sanctions against it in order to prevent the organization from carrying out terrorist activities on Iran’s behalf.”

Israel’s Ambassador to Germany, Jeremy Issacharoff, in an interview with The Times of Israel, said:

“We welcome the important and significant resolution adopted today by the Bundestag, which relates to Hezbollah for what it is: a terrorist organization, with no distinction between its military and ‘political’ wings.

“Hezbollah is indoctrinated, trained and financed by Iran and poses a threat not only to Israeli civilians, but also undermines Lebanese sovereignty and regional stability. As the resolution indicates, it poses a direct threat to German and Israeli security interests.”

“Foreign policy should reflect reality and the Bundestag’s resolution is clearly a crucial step that we hope will encourage others to take similar action against Hezbollah.”

The domestic spokesman for the CDU/CSU parliamentary group, Mathias Middelberg, said:

“It is unacceptable that Hezbollah is waging a terrorist fight against Israel in the Middle East, and that this is financed, among other things, by worldwide criminal activities. In view of Germany’s special responsibility towards Israel, we therefore call on the federal government to ban all activities for Hezbollah in Germany. Violators must be punished consistently.

“In addition, the separation between a political and a military arm should be abandoned and Hezbollah as a whole should be placed on the EU terror list. This could freeze Hezbollah’s funds and assets in Europe more extensively than before.”

The European Leadership Network (ELNET), a nonprofit dedicated to strengthening Europe-Israel relations, said that the resolution is an “important milestone in safeguarding Jewish life in Germany.”

The American ambassador to Germany, Richard Grenell, said that the American government was ready to assist Germany in its efforts against Hezbollah:

“We stand ready to support the government’s implementation of a ban and will continue to assist in any efforts to deny the world’s most well-armed terror group operating space in Germany. Today’s vote is an acknowledgment of Hezbollah’s destructive international terrorism, and the action needed to stop its activities throughout Europe.”

Germany’s Social Democratic Foreign Minister Heiko Maas, however, has refused to ban Hezbollah in its entirety. He recently repeated the German government’s distinction between Hezbollah’s legitimate and illegitimate activities in Germany:

“Lebanon’s political reality is complicated. However, this must not prevent us from exhausting the means available to us in Germany under the rule of law in order to stand up to Hezbollah’s criminal and terrorist activities.”

In fact, during Maas’ leadership of German foreign policy, the German government has become a leading proponent of anti-Israel resolutions at the United Nations. In 2018, for instance, of 21 anti-Israel UN resolutions, Germany approved 16 and abstained on four others. In May 2016, Germany approved an especially disgraceful UN resolution, co-sponsored by the Arab group of states and the Palestinian delegation, that unjustly singled out Israel at the annual assembly of the World Health Organization (WHO) as the world’s only violator of “mental, physical and environmental health.”

Germany’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Christoph Heusgen, has been ranked by the Los Angeles-based Simon Wiesenthal Center as one of the top ten global anti-Semites of 2019 due to his obsession with Israel at the UN.

Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Wiesenthal Center wrote:

“We listed Ambassador Heusgen’s name on the top ten list of anti-Semitic and anti-Israel incidents specifically because of his recent actions taken and words spoken at the United Nations. In defining anti-Semitism in the 21st century, the Simon Wiesenthal Center is guided by Natan Sharansky’s 3 D’s, which define when anti-Israel criticism crosses into anti-Semitism: delegitimization, double standard, and demonization.”

Germany’s largest newspaper, Bild, summed it up this way:

“It remains to be seen to what extent the German federal government will comply with the Bundestag’s proposal and will actually ‘exhaust all the resources of the rule of law’ to stop Hezbollah’s money laundering and terrorist financing in Germany.”

*Soeren Kern is a Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute.
© 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 سورين كاري/معهد كايتستون: قرار البرلمان الألماني حظر حزب الله هو مجرد مهزلة قانونية/Soeren Kern: German Parliament’s Resolution to Ban Hezbollah is Just a Legal Charade appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

يداعوت احرانوت/لعبة القط والفأر بين إيران وإسرائيل في سوريا/Ron Ben-Yishai/Ynetnews:Israel and Iran’s game of cat and mouse

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Israel and Iran’s game of cat and mouse
يداعوت احرانوت/لعبة القط والفأر بين إيران وإسرائيل في سوريا
Ron Ben-Yishai/Ynetnews/December 23/2019

يعتقد بأن الغارة الإسرائيلية الأخيرة على قواعد عسكرية إيرانية بالقرب من دمشق قد نتجح عنها 3 قتلى من التابعية الإيرانية وجرح عدد غير معلن من بينهم الشخص الثاني في الحرس الثوري الإيراني وقائد القوات الجوية الجنرال علي حاجي زادة

Analysis: The latest missile attack on Iranian targets near Damascus indicates the Revolutionary Guards have resumed with full force their attempts to militarily entrench themselves in the region, after a lull which stemmed from Russian pressure.

According to Syrian reports, Israel is believed to be behind Sunday night’s attack on Iranian targets in Syria. The missile attack apparently targeted arms shipments arriving at the Damascus military airport from Tehran.

After a period of relative calm, Iran has decided to resume the smuggling of high-precision missiles and anti-aircraft missiles – the kind of high-quality weapons known to the Israeli public as “tie-breakers” – and flood Syria with its proxy militias.

The UK-based human rights watchdog, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, reported shortly after the strikes that an ambulance was dispatched to the scene, meaning there probably were casualties.
According to later reports in Syrian media, at least three people, probably Iranian nationals, were killed in the attack.

Unverified reports in Syria also say the commander of Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Aerospace Force, Amir Ali Hajizadeh, was also hurt in the alleged Israeli attack.

Hajizadeh apparently oversaw the September drone strike on Saudi oil facilities that debilitated half of the Gulf country’s fossil fuel industry, and was in charge of shipping state-of-the-art anti-aircraft weapons from Iran into Syria.

In 2018, Hajizadeh oversaw a shipment of anti-aircraft missile batteries to Syria, which was targeted in alleged Israeli raid. Foreign sources reported that seven Iranian officers were killed in the attack.

The Iranians denied the reports the commander was injured.

This is probably true because had Hajizadeh been hurt, the Iranians would have retaliated with exceptional force since in his rank, the commander is second only to Revolutionary Guard chief Qasem Soleimani.

If it was indeed Israel that attacked near Damascus on Sunday, it signals that the Jewish State will not hesitate to act against any Iranian aggression in the region. The Iranians, meanwhile, also seem to have changed their policy on attacks attributed to the IDF and decided to respond to Israeli strikes even if Israel did not take accountability for them.

The latest developments in the region indicate the Iranians are making preparations to attack Israel, as evidenced by renewed arms shipments not only to Syria but to Lebanon as well.

In Lebanon the Iranians suffered a setback after their weapons production facilities became a target of a mysterious drone attack on a “fuel mixer” in Beirut, which foreign media also attributed to Israel.

In addition, the Iranians are building a military base in the Al Bukamal region near the Syria-Iraq border to establish a land corridor through Syria and Lebanon to the Mediterranean Sea, an effort that top Israeli diplomats and senior security officials have vowed to prevent.

Israeli actions in Syria are part of the defense establishment calls the “in-between wars” campaign, meant to prevent Iran from establishing its military presence in Syria and to allow the Israeli Air Force freedom of action in case an all-out war breaks out.
Therefore, as Iran resumes its efforts to entrench itself in Syria, the activity attributed to Israel is also expected to increase in the near future.

Over the recent weeks, the Russians have put enormous pressure on the Iranians to stop operating in Damascus International Airport and redirect its cargo flights to other airports in Syria, mainly the T-4 Airbase near the city of Homs. These flights also served as a way to transfer fighters of Iranian-backed militias to the Idlib region southeast of Aleppo.

Since these flights did not impose any danger to Israel, the army avoided attacking on Syrian soil.

However, given the increased Iranian activity near Israeli border, the military has appealed to the Russians regarding the Iranian violations and pointed out precise geographical locations where arms and personnel are transferred.

It is likely that as part of the de-confliction agreements, Israel had notified Russia about the attack a few minutes in advance.

We will probably see further Iranian attempts to establish a front in Syria and revive its precision-missile project. Israel, however, won’t stand and watch from the side.

ما حقيقة مقتل قائد القوات الجوية الايراني خلال الغارات الإسرائيلية أمس؟
جنوبية/23 كانون الأول/2019
بعد تداول اخبار عن مقتل قائد القوات الجوية في الحرس الثوري الإيراني خلال الغارات الإسرائيلية أمس الأحد على سوريا، نفت وكالة أنباء “فارس”، اليوم هذه الأخبار جملة وتفصيلا. ونقلت الوكالة عن مصدر مطلع قوله، إن الجنرال علي حاجي زادة بصحة تامة، والأنباء التي تحدثت عن مقتله محض أكاذيب.
وأضافت أن هذه الأنباء تم تناقلها بفي عض وسائل الإعلام العربية المغرضة، وأعيد نشرها على وسائل التواصل الاجتماعي عبر فضائيات معارضة”. وكانت وكالة “سانا” أفادت أمس الأحد، بأن الدفاعات الجوية السورية تصدت في أجواء العاصمة دمشق لصواريخ معادية قادمة من الأراضي المحتلة. وأشارت “سانا” إلى ورود أنباء عن سقوط أحد الأهداف المعادية في منطقة عقربا بريف دمشق.

8 عناصر جديدة في القصف الإسرائيلي قرب دمشق
لندن: إبراهيم حميدي/الشرق الأوسط/23 كانون الأول/2019

أفادت “وكالة الأنباء الرسمية السورية” (سانا) بأن وسائط الدفاع الجوي “تصدّت” ليل الأحد – الاثنين لـ”صواريخ معادية” قادمة من إسرائيل وأن أحدها سقط في عقربا جنوب دمشق، فيما ذكر “المرصد السوري لحقوق الإنسان” أن الضربات الإسرائيلية أدت إلى مقتل ثلاثة “مقاتلين أجانب” يُعتقد أنهم من إيران قرب العاصمة السورية.

لم تكن هذه الغارات الإسرائيلية الأولى على “مواقع إيرانية” في 2019، لكنها حملت بعض العناصر الجديدة، يمكن تلخيصها كما يلي:

1 – جاءت الضربة بعد أيام من محادثات رئيسي الأركان الروسي فاليري غيراسيموف والأميركي الجنرال مارك ميلي في جنيف لتأكيد “منع الاحتكاك” بين الجيشين في سوريا في ضوء قرار الرئيس دونالد ترمب البقاء عسكرياً شرق الفرات لـ”حماية النفط”. أحد الأمثلة الجديدة، كان استهداف أميركا لقيادي متطرف في “منطقة نفوذ روسيا” شمال غربي سوريا.

2 – تزامن اللقاء مع اجتماع مستشار الأمن القومي الإسرائيلي مئير بن شبات ونظيره الأميركي روبرت أوبراين في البيت الأبيض لزيادة التنسيق العسكري في سوريا و”مواجهة إيران” بعد قرار البقاء شرق الفرات والاحتفاظ بقاعدة التنف قرب العراق.

3 – يعتقد باستخدام إسرائيل صواريخ من البحر المتوسط في القصف الجديد، ما طرح تساؤلاً عن التنسيق بين تل أبيب وموسكو، خصوصاً أن لروسيا قاعدتين على ساحل المتوسط غرب سوريا.

4 – استهدف القصف مناطق جديدة في عقربا قريبة من مزار السيدة زينب، فيما كانت الغارات السابقة أصابت الكسوة ومطار دمشق وريفها ومواقع قيل إن فيها “مراكز وصواريخ إيرانية”.

5 – الأسبوع الماضي، استخدمت إسرائيل طائرات “اف-35” لقصف “مصنع إيراني” في البوكمال. وقيل إن الغارات ضربت الموقع مرات عدة لـ”إيصال رسالة إلى إيران بإمكانية الوصول إلى عمقها”.

6 – لم تعلق إسرائيل رسمياً على القصف و”أنباء مصدرها وسائل إعلام أجنبية”، على عكس المرات السابقة التي تسابق مسؤولون إسرائيليون بينهم رئيس الوزراء بنيامين نتانياهو لإعلان المسؤولية ضمن السباق الانتخابي أو لتشكيل الحكومة.

7 – في 20 الشهر الماضي، أعلن الجيش الإسرائيلي أنه قصف عشرات الأهداف “التابعة للحكومة السورية وإيران” داخل الأراضي السورية “رداً على صواريخ” أطلقت من سوريا على إسرائيل، فيما كان القصف الأخير “استباقياً وليس هجومياً”.

8 – جاء الهجوم بعد تهديد وزير الدفاع الإسرائيلي الجديد نفتالي بينيت الأسبوع الماضي بتحويل سوريا إلى “فيتنام إيرانية”، إذ قال الأحد: “لا بد من أن نتحول من العمل الوقائي إلى العمل الهجومي على اعتباره الإجراء الوحيد الذي يضمن لنا طرد إيران خارج سوريا. واننا نقول لهم – أي الإيرانيين – إن سوريا ستتحول إلى فيتنام الإيرانية، وستواصلون النزيف حتى مغادرة آخر جندي إيراني الأراضي السورية”.

إسرائيل تقصف مواقع إيرانية في سورية وتقتل 3 من “الحرس الثوري”
تعزيزات عسكرية للمعارضة في إدلب وتحركات لتسليم معرة النعمان للنظام دون قتال
دمشق – وكالات/23 كانون الأول/2019
شنت إسرائيل فجر أمس، غارات على سورية، استهدفت مطاري حماة والتيفور العسكريين ودمشق ومنطقة السيدة زينب، حيث قصفت بصواريخ أطلقت من بارجات إسرائيلية في البحر المتوسط. وأكد المرصد السوري لحقوق الإنسان في بيان، “سماع دوي ثلاثة انفجارات هزت مناطق دمشق وريفها، ناجمة عن تصدي الدفاعات الجوية التابعة للنظام لصواريخ يعتقد أنها إسرائيلية، طالت مواقع لقوات النظام والميليشيات الإيرانية في محيط دمشق”.
وذكر أن “الضربات الصاروخية الإسرائيلية أدت إلى مقتل ثلاثة أشخاص على الأقل من جنسيات غير سورية، يرجح أنهم من الجنسية الإيرانية (تابعين للحرس الثوري) وقتلوا بسقوط أحد الصواريخ على المنطقة الواقعة بين السيدة زينب وعقربا جنوب دمشق”.
من جانبها، أفادت وسائل إعلام النظام السوري بأن “الدفاعات الجوية السورية تصدت لصواريخ معادية آتية من إسرائيل”، مشيرة إلى إسقاط طائرة مسيرة في أجواء مدينة جبلة، وذلك بعد أن تم التصدي لطائرة مسيرة فوق مطار حماة العسكري.
بدروها، نفت وكالة “فارس” الإيرانية للأنباء مقتل قائد القوات الجوية في “الحرس الثوري” الجنرال علي حاجي زادة، خلال الغارات الإسرائيلية، مؤكدة أن “الأنباء التي تحدثت عن مقتل زادة شائعة”.من ناحية ثانية، أعلنت فصائل المعارضة السورية عن إرسال تعزيزات عسكرية إلى محافظة إدلب، التي تشهد معارك عنيفة بين قوات النظام وفصائل المعارضة .
وكشف مصدر في “الجيش الوطني”، التابع لـ”الجيش السوري الحر”، عن أن “نحو 1500 مقاتل مع عتادهم الكامل تمثل الدفعة الأولى توجهوا اليوم (أمس)، إلى جبهات ريف ادلب الجنوب الشرقي”، لمواجهة قوات النظام التي تتقدم تحت غطاء جوي روسي.
وشن الطيران الروسي غارات عدة على الطرف الشرقي لمدينة معرة النعمان، وبلدة جرجناز شرق مدينة المعرة بريف إدلب الشرقي.
وذكرت وكالة “الأناضول” التركية للأنباء أمس، أن تسعة مدنيين لقوا مصرعهم اثر الغارات الروسية على منطقة خفض التوتر بإدلب. من جهته، أعلن مركز حميميم لتنسيق المصالحة في سورية، التابع لوزارة الدفاع الروسية، عن مقتل ستة جنود سوريين، وإصابة 13 آخرين جراء تفجير انتحاري وقع في ريف إدلب، نفذته “هي’ تحرير الشام” (جبهة النصرة).
بدوره، كشف عضو لجنة المصالحة الوطنية عمر رحمون أمس، عن تحركات باتجاه تسليم مدينة معرة النعمان والقرى المجاورة لها لجيش النظام من دون قتال، فيما أفادت مصادر بمحاصرة قوات النظام، أول من أمس، النقطة التركية في بلدة الصرمان شرق معرة النعمان.
وفي الرقة، أفادت الأنباء بسقوط خمسة قتلى وعدد من الجرحى بانفجار سيارة مفخخة أمس، في بلدة سلوك بالريف الشمالي.
وفي دير الزور، تواصل الميليشيات الإيرانية ضغوطها بطرق مختلفة على السكان المحليين، بهدف تجنيد أبنائهم ضمن قواتها التي تسيطر على مساحات شاسعة في المحافظة الواقعة على الحدود مع العراق.
وكشفت مصادر محلية أن “ممارسات تلك الميليشيات تعددت وباتت تستهدف مختلف فئات المجتمع، بهدف إرغام وضم المزيد من الشبان للقتال في صفوفها، وقد وصلت إلى حد لا يحتمل”.وقالت إن “قادة تلك الميليشيات المدعومة إيرانياً، يتهمون بعض تجار دير الزور بعدم دفع رسوم الضرائب لها، ليتم فيما بعد إرغام أحد شبان عائلاتهم على التدريب العسكري في صفوفهم، مقابل السماح لهم بممارسة نشاطهم التجاري”.
وعلى الصعيد السياسي، أكد وزير الخارجية الروسي سيرغي لافروف خلال اجتماع مع وزير خارجية النظام السوري وليد المعلم، أمس، أن استكمال عملية استعادة سيطرة النظام على أراضي سورية كافة.
وأضاف إن روسيا ستبذل قصارى جهدها للمساعدة في استعادة سيادة سورية ووحدة أراضيها، مشيرا إلى أن سورية تعيش حالياً مرحلة الانتقال إلى الحياة السلمية.
من جهته، أكد المعلم أن “التآمر الأميركي – التركي – الإسرائيلي، بالإضافة الى بعض دول المنطقة مستمر لعرقلة جهودنا المشتركة للقضاء على الارهاب”، مندداً “بالعدوان التركي المستمر في الشمال السوري والسرقة المنظمة لثروات سورية النفطية من قبل الولايات المتحدة”، وواصفاً هذه التصرفات بأنها قرصنة كونها تمارس بقوة السلاح.
واتهم الولايات المتحدة باستخدام قاعدتها في التنف “لإرسال طائرات مسيرة لقصف منشآت نفطية في مدينة حمص”.

The post يداعوت احرانوت/لعبة القط والفأر بين إيران وإسرائيل في سوريا/Ron Ben-Yishai/Ynetnews:Israel and Iran’s game of cat and mouse appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For December 24/2019

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Detailed LCCC English News Bulletin For December 24/2019

Click Here to read the whole and detailed LCCC English News Bulletin for December 24/2019

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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

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A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For December 23- 24/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 68th Day

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A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For December 23-24/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 68th Day
Compiled By: Elias Bejjani
December 24/2019


Tites For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on December 23-24/2019
President Aoun holds political meetings at Baabda Palace
Prime Minister, Hassan Diab designate avows successful civil servants’ issue will top new cabinet’s agenda
Report: U.S. Plans to Withhold Aid if Hizbullah Gets Role in Lebanon Cabinet
Italian Foreign Minister in Beirut, Meets Bassil
Jumblat Says Lebanon and Mt. Lebanon ‘on Brink of Hunger’
Bou Saab Slams Israel Violation of Lebanon Skies after Syria Strike
Kanaan Promises to Reveal Good News on Thursday
Report: Hale, Bassil Discussed ‘Prisoner Swap’ Negotiations to ‘Free’ Fakhoury
Lower turnout as protesters rally against new Lebanon PM
Lebanon protesters shun Diab’s call for talks
Siniora: Future Movement will not participate in new government
Egyptian Ambassador: To accelerate formation of government that meets people’s aspirations
KSA Embassy confirms Fahd Al-Rakf has no official status
Hasbani confirms LF in harmony with its convictions
Minister of Economy promises harsh penalties against price manipulation
Kataeb party leader MP Sami Gemayel welcomes Rampling
Thousands protest against new PM, close roads in Lebanon

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on December 23-24/2019
President Aoun holds political meetings at Baabda Palace
NNA/December 23/2019
President Michel Aoun met former MP, Faisal Al-Daoud, this morning at Baabda Palace, and discussed with him the general situation and recent developments on the Lebanese scene.
Al-Daoud stressed his support for the President’s stances, especially his endeavor to establish a civil state, and expressed hope that demands of the Lebanese people will be fulfilled in light of the economic conditions that the country is going through.  Al-Daoud pointed out that “President Aoun is, today, able to achieve many of the issues which he promised the Lebanese to achieve, especially after the circumstances that freed him from the pressure of warlords in the country”. “We also hope that the next Government will be a rescue Government for Lebanon, that will manage the affairs of the state with a new mentality, especially in the field of fighting corruption, returning looted funds and launching the economic plan by activating production sectors” Al-Daoud said.
Former MP Emile Rahme:
The President received former MP, Emile Rahme, who considered that the current stage is a stage of concerted efforts to emerge from the crisis. “The way to achieve this is by forming a Government to function and address the deteriorating economic and financial situation in the country” Rahme added, wishing success in forming the Government quickly.
Former Minister Karim Pakradouni:
President Aoun met former Minister, Karim Pakradouni, and held a discussion with him concerning the current political situation and recent developments. —-Presidency Press Office

Prime Minister, Hassan Diab designate avows successful civil servants’ issue will top new cabinet’s agenda
NNA /December 23/2019
Prime Minister-designate, Hassan Diab, on Monday welcomed a delegation of 853 successful customs candidates, whose results were issued on June 21, 2019, in an exam competition that was administered in 2014. The appointment decree of the aforementioned delegation members has not been issued yet; however, Diab stressed the eligibility of his visitors’ demand. “The endorsement of the appointment decree will be one of the top priorities of the new government,” Diab pledged. Separately, Diab also met with a delegation of successful applicants to the Civil Service Council whose results were issued, yet their appointment remains pending. The delegation conveyed to the PM-designate their sufferings and their right to be appointed in the jobs they had applied for, “especially that the Civil Service Council is the right and proper place to assume state positions, away from political quotas.”
In turn, Diab stressed the eligibility of their demand, highlighting “the need to address these vocational and social files.”Diab had earlier met with a delegation representing 28 thousand young men and women who are candidates to join the Internal Security Forces and whose results have not been released to date.

Report: U.S. Plans to Withhold Aid if Hizbullah Gets Role in Lebanon Cabinet
Naharnet/December 23/2019
U.S. Diplomat David Hale reportedly told officials in Lebanon that his country is to withhold aid to the economic-stricken country if Hizbullah gets ministerial seats or indirectly controls the new government, Nidaa al-Watan daily reported on Monday. Informed political sources said Hale told officials he met in Beirut that the US intends to deny aid to a Lebanese government in which Hizbullah is represented, and that Washington does not intend to give a “password” for the Gulf countries to provide assistance to Lebanon, said the daily. The sources said Hale has relayed a “firm” message to officials regarding the position of Lebanon in the region, warning that “any bias” in this area would be “strictly” unacceptable. Haled reiterated persistence of US sanctions against Hizbullah and Iran and that the Lebanese state must distance itself from the party. During his two-day visit to Beirut last week, the US diplomat said Washington is ready to help Lebanon “but can do so only when Lebanon’s leaders undertake a credible, visible and demonstrable commitment to reform.”Hale had met with the president, parliament speaker and caretaker prime minister Hariri. He did not directly comment on the appointment of the new PM, Hassan Diab saying only that the United States “has no role in saying who should lead” a Cabinet in Lebanon or anywhere else. Early in December, the Trump administration quietly released $105 million in Foreign Military Financing funds for the Lebanese Armed Force after months of unexplained delay.

Italian Foreign Minister in Beirut, Meets Bassil
Naharnet/December 23/2019
The Italian Foreign Minister arrived in Beirut on an official visit, the Italian embassy in Beirut said on Monday. Luigi Di met with his Lebanese counterpart caretaker Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil and discussed the relations between Italy and Lebanon, and the latest developments in the Middle East, the National News Agency said. Maio will also visit the UNIFIL headquarters in al-Naqoura and his country’s battalion in south Lebanon. U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs David Hale was in Beirut last week. He met with senior officials. The diplomats visit Lebanon as the country grapples with nationwide protests against mismanagement and corruption.

Jumblat Says Lebanon and Mt. Lebanon ‘on Brink of Hunger’
Naharnet/December 23/2019
Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblat has warned that the Chouf and Aley regions and the entire country are “on the brink of hunger” due to the dire economic crisis. “The economy is on the verge of collapse if it is not already collapsing. Lebanon cannot continue on the same path it has followed for tens of years – a country of services, tourism, hotels, restaurants and banks without production – this is unhealthy,” said Jumblat in a phone call with a number of Lebanese expats in the U.S. and Canada, according to Lebanon’s official news agency. “There is also a need to control legitimate and illegitimate border crossings, because the source of income in Lebanon has various standards,” he added. He warned: “Lebanon and Mount Lebanon are on the brink of hunger, that’s why the party’s preliminary steps are backing needy families with diesel for a period of four months, distributing food parcels as of December 1 and encouraging the cultivation of wheat, lentil and grains.”“We are in the beginning of a long or rather very long crisis. The old Lebanon has ended but what’s more important is endurance in Mount Lebanon,” Jumblat added. As for his bloc’s vote for former Lebanese ambassador to the U.N. Nawaf Salam in the binding parliamentary consultations to name a new premier, Jumblat said he chose Salam because he supports “change.”“He is a reputable man who does not belong to the political class that we know and I wonder why (caretaker PM Saad) Hariri and the Lebanese Forces did not support him. This is a mistake, unless they want to keep the old system,” the PSP leader added.

Bou Saab Slams Israel Violation of Lebanon Skies after Syria Strike
Naharnet/December 23/2019
Caretaker Defense Minister Elias Bou Saab on Monday blasted Israel for violating Lebanon’s airspace to carry out a strike on military posts in Syria. “I’ve looked into the Lebanese Army’s report on the hostile Israeli violations of Lebanon’s skies yesterday, which targeted Syria via the Lebanese airspace,” Bou Saab tweeted. “This blatant aggression is condemned and deplorable,” he added. Bou Saab also called on the international community to “intervene to prevent such recurrent attacks on Lebanese sovereignty and to realize how dangerous they are.” The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Monday that air raids in Syria the previous night, blamed on Israel, killed at least three foreign pro-regime fighters south of the war-torn country’s capital. It said Sunday night’s attack hit Syrian regime and Iranian positions south of Damascus and that three non-Syrian loyalist fighters were killed by a rocket blast between the suburb of Aqraba and the nearby Sayyida Zeinab neighborhood, home to a shrine revered by Shiite Muslims. It did not specify their nationality but said they were likely Iranian. Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency meanwhile denied media reports claiming that General Amir Ali Hajizadeh, the commander of the Aerospace Force of Iran’s revolutionary guard, was among the dead. Since the beginning of the Syrian conflict in 2011, Israel has conducted hundreds of strikes in Syria against Iranian targets and pro-Tehran militias allied with the regime of President Bashar al-Assad, including posts and shipments belonging to Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hizbullah.

Kanaan Promises to Reveal Good News on Thursday
Naharnet/December 23/2019
MP Ibrahim Kanaan, the secretary of the Free Patriotic Movement-led Strong Lebanon bloc, on Monday announced that he would reveal good news to the Lebanese on Thursday. “Can we tell people about something other than nagging, collapse and the blocking of roads and livelihoods?” Kanaan tweeted. Can we talk to them about something other than “linking the price of the bread pack to the recovery of stolen finds or linking tuition fees, housing loans and bank deposits to parliamentary polls?” Kanaan added. “Yes we can, if we work more and talk less, and God willing, I will reveal some news on Thursday,” the MP went on to say.

Report: Hale, Bassil Discussed ‘Prisoner Swap’ Negotiations to ‘Free’ Fakhoury
Naharnet/December 23/2019
U.S. diplomat David Hale reportedly discussed during his visit to Lebanon last week with caretaker foreign Minister Jebran Bassil the possibility of a “prisoner swap” to free Lebanese-American ex-Israeli collaborator Amer Fakhoury in return for a Hizbullah “financier”, reports said. Hale and Bassil held a “lengthy meeting” at the latter’s residence in al-Bayyada on Saturday. Al-Liwaa daily quoted unnamed sources as saying that Hale and Bassil discussed the release of Fakhouri in return for freeing Lebanese businessman Qassem Tajeddine, arrested in the United States of America on charges of financing Hizbullah. Fakhoury was once a member of the former Israeli-backed South Lebanon Army. He also worked at the Khiam prison during Israel’s occupation of south Lebanon described by human rights groups as a center for torture. Former Minister Wiaam Wahhab affirmed in televised remarks on LBCI station the reports as “true.” He said that Hale “did discuss” the release of Fakhoury with Bassil in exchange for Tajeddine. Tajeddine was arrested in 2017 in Morocco. The US says he provided millions of dollars to Hizbullah. Fakhoury is jailed in Lebanon since September over collaboration with Israel accusations.

Lower turnout as protesters rally against new Lebanon PM
Al Jazeera/December 23/2019
Protesters call for economic, political reforms as Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab readies to pick new cabinet. Protesters have continued to take to the streets in Lebanon’s capital Beirut where police and demonstrators have clashed.
Prime Minister-designate Hassan Diab’s appointment has split the country into two camps: Sunni and Shia, as Diab is backed by Hezbollah. But some seem prepared to give Diab a shot at the job as Lebanon faces its worst economic crisis in decades. Al Jazeera’s Tony Birtley reports from Beirut.

Lebanon protesters shun Diab’s call for talks
AFP/December 23/2019
Prominent street leaders yesterday shunned an invitation by Lebanon’s prime minister-designate to sit for talks over the formation of a new government, saying they are not ready to extend support. Debt-burdened Lebanon has been without a fully functioning government since former prime minister Saad Hariri resigned on October 29 in the face of nationwide protests. Demonstrators are demanding an overhaul of the political establishment which they deem corrupt and inept, insisting on a government of independents and experts with no ties to the country’s sectarian parties. Hassan Diab, an engineering professor designated on Thursday to form a desperately-needed government, had asked protesters to give him a “chance” to form a cabinet of independent experts within four to six weeks. But the self-styled technocrat’s call for consultations with representatives of the popular movement yesterday failed to draw prominent street leaders or groups. A small crowd of protesters rallied outside Diab’s house and slammed visitors who claimed to represent the country’s leaderless movement. “You don’t represent us,” the protesters chanted.The few who heeded Diab’s calls for talks included largely unknown individuals not recognised as representatives of the protest movement. “Not a single group actually active on the ground met today with the prime minister-designate because they are not convinced” he can form a government of technocrats, said Wassef Harakeh, a prominent activist.
“They want us to get mired in this game of consultations,” he said.

Siniora: Future Movement will not participate in new government
NNA/December 23/2019
Former Prime Minister, Fouad Siniora, on Monday announced in an interview with Al-Arabiya news channel that the Future Movement had decided not to nominate anyone to form the new government, and therefore, Caretaker Prime Minister, Saad Hariri, had refrained from nominating any candidate for this task. “Now, the man in charge is Dr. Hassan Diab, who was not nominated by the Future Movement,” Siniora explained. Moreover, the former PM added that the Future Movement had expressed its decision that it would not partake in the new government “in line with its basic position that this government should comprise of independent members who are not affiliated with any political party.”

Egyptian Ambassador: To accelerate formation of government that meets people’s aspirations
NNA/December 23/2019
Ambassador of the Arab Republic of Egypt, Dr. Yasser Alawi, on Monday affirmed his country’s support for stability in Lebanon. The words of the Egyptian Ambassador came during his visit to MP Bahia Hariri’s residence in Majdelyoun. “Stability entails a swift formation of a government that meets the aspiration of the Lebanese people; this has become a national necessity so that the international and Arab communities will be able to provide the required support,” the diplomat added. He finally expressed his firm belief that “Lebanon has the ability to surpass and exit the prevailing crisis.”

KSA Embassy confirms Fahd Al-Rakf has no official status
NNA/December 23/2019
The Saudi Embassy in Lebanon on Monday issued a statement in which it stated that Mr. Fahd Al-Rakf, who claimed to be a Saudi expert in the Lebanese dossier during a phone intervention via LBCI TV channel on Sunday, December 22, 2019, was in fact a person without any official status. “His opinions represent him personally and do not reflect the position of the KSA,” the statement added after many of the Lebanese media outlets had given him the title of a Saudi government official.
Consequently, the embassy called on the Lebanese media to investigate the accuracy of the information that is being circulated, rely on official sources, and verify the status of people being hosted on TV programs.

Hasbani confirms LF in harmony with its convictions
NNA/December 23/2019
Caretaker Deputy Prime Minister, Ghassan Hasbani, on Monday said that the Lebanese Forces was in perfect harmony with its beliefs, stressing that the Prime Minister-designate must prove his independence. Interviewed by Free Lebanon radio station, Hasbani said that Lebanon had not yet plunged into total collapse, but was in the process of collapsing. He added that for this reason, political forces must be convinced that cheating investors and the international community will not get Lebanon anywhere.

Minister of Economy promises harsh penalties against price manipulation

NNA/December 23/2019
Caretaker Minister of Economy and Trade, Mansour Btiesh, on Monday warned business owners against the unjustifiable price increase of some market products. “Those who continue to cheat and manipulate prices will be subjected to maximum penalties — to the extent of eventually shutting down their businesses,” the Minister said in a statement issued today. “The Consumer Protection Directorate teams continue their monitoring tours, especially amid these difficult circumstances. The Ministry, which understands the price increment of some commodities, warns against the persistence of some business owners to unjustifiably increase the prices of some other products,” the Minister said. In his statement, Bteish pledged harsh penalties of LBP ten thousand to ten million, as well as imprisonment extending from three days to one month.

Kataeb party leader MP Sami Gemayel welcomes Rampling

NNA/December 23/2019
Kataeb party leader MP Sami Gemayel on Monday received British Ambassador to Lebanon, Chris Rampling. Both men discussed the most recent developments on the local and regional scenes. According to a press release published by Kataeb party, Gemayel warned against “the looming collapse while political leaders are wasting time disputing over the past.”


Titles For The Latest Lebanese LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on December 23-24/2019
German Parliament: Its Resolution to Ban Hezbollah is Just a Legal Charade/Soeren Kern/Gatestone Institute/December 23/2019
Lebanon’s food importers face challenges paying for goods/Nabila Rahhal/Al Arabiya English/December 23/2019
Pressure on Lebanon’s schools as tough times force children into state system/Reuters,/December 23/2019
Israel and Iran’s game of cat and mouse/Ron Ben-Yishai/Ynetnews/December 23/2019
Lebanon’s crisis is bad for my mental health/Christiane Waked/Khalegi Times/December 23/2019

The Latest Lebanese LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on December 23-24/2019
Thousands protest against new PM, close roads in Lebanon
Associated Press/December 22/2019
The protesters, many of whom came from northern Lebanon and the eastern Bekaa Valley, also gathered in Beirut’s central Martyrs Square
BEIRUT: Thousands of protesters demonstrated in central Beirut and elsewhere in Lebanon on Sunday against the country’s new prime minister, saying he should abandon the post because he is a member of the ruling elite.
After sunset, protesters closed several roads and highways in Beirut and other parts of the country to rally against the nomination of Hassan Diab, who was backed by the militant Hezbollah group and its allies and failed to win the backing of the main Sunni Muslim groups. The protesters, many of whom came from northern Lebanon and the eastern Bekaa Valley, also gathered in Beirut’s central Martyrs Square, one of the key places of the protests which have been underway for more than two months. They later marched toward the parliament building guarded by scores of riot police. Unlike last week, when scuffles were reported between protesters and policemen outside the parliament, there was no violence on Sunday. Prime Minister-designate Diab, a university professor and former education minister, will have the task of steering Lebanon out of its worst economic and financial crisis in decades. He’s also taking office against the backdrop of ongoing nationwide protests against the country’s ruling elite that the protesters blame for widespread corruption and mismanagement. Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri, the head of the largest Sunni group in Lebanon, resigned on Oct. 29, meeting a key demand of the protesters. According to Lebanon’s power-sharing system, the prime minister has to be a Sunni. “We are not convinced by their choice,” protester Hanaa Saleh said about Diab’s nomination. “We don’t believe this movie.”Diab has vowed his government will not include politicians and will only consist of independents and experts. In Washington, a State Department spokesperson said that U.S. Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs David Hale had encouraged Lebanese leaders during his two-day visit last week “to put aside partisan interests and support formation of a government committed to and capable of undertaking meaningful, sustained reforms.”Hale “reaffirmed America’s longstanding partnership and enduring commitment to a secure, stable, and prosperous Lebanon,” said Morgan Ortagus.

German Parliament: Its Resolution to Ban Hezbollah is Just a Legal Charade
سورين كاري/معهد كايتستون:  قرار البرلمان الألماني حظر حزب الله هو مجرد مهزلة قانونية
Soeren Kern/Gatestone Institute/December 23/2019
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Germany, however, has refused to ban Hezbollah’s “political wing,” which continues to raise funds in the country. A German foreign ministry official, Niels Annen, has said that such a ban would be counterproductive because “we focus on dialogue.” His comment has been understood to mean that the German government does not want to burn bridges with Hezbollah’s sponsor, the Islamic Republic of Iran.
“We don’t have a military wing and a political one; we don’t have Hezbollah on one hand and the resistance party on the other…. Every element of Hezbollah, from commanders to members as well as our various capabilities, is in the service of the resistance, and we have nothing but the resistance as a priority.” — Hezbollah’s deputy secretary general, Naim Qassem.
Germany’s Social Democratic Foreign Minister Heiko Maas, however, has refused to ban Hezbollah in its entirety. He recently repeated the German government’s distinction between Hezbollah’s legitimate and illegitimate activities in Germany.
“It remains to be seen to what extent the German federal government will…actually ‘exhaust all the resources of the rule of law’ to stop Hezbollah’s money laundering and terrorist financing in Germany.” — Bild, December 19, 2019.
The German government has refused to ban the terrorist group Hezbollah in its entirety. Foreign Minister Heiko Maas recently repeated the German government’s distinction between Hezbollah’s legitimate and illegitimate activities in Germany.
The German parliament has passed a non-binding resolution that calls on the German government to ban the activities of the Iran-backed Lebanese terrorist group Hezbollah — Arabic for “The Party of Allah” — in Germany.
The measure — supported by center-right Christian Democrats and the center-left Social Democrats, the two major parties that make up Germany’s ruling coalition, and also by the classical liberal Free Democrats — has been hailed as “important,” “significant,” and a “crucial step.”
The resolution, however, falls short of a complete ban on Hezbollah and appears aimed at providing the German government with political cover that would allow Germany to claim that it has banned the group even if it has not.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel has faced increasing international pressure to ban Hezbollah, but she has refused to do so. Hezbollah has more than 1,000 operatives in Germany, according to German intelligence assessments.
The three-page resolution — “Effective Action against Hezbollah” (“Wirksames Vorgehen gegen die Hisbollah”) — was passed on December 19. An abridged translation of the text reads:
“Because of our history, Germany has a special responsibility towards the Jewish and democratic State of Israel. Israel’s security and right to exist are part of Germany’s raison d’état [Staatsräson]. The Bundestag calls on the federal government to confront actors in the Middle East that question Israel’s right to exist or openly threaten its security. In addition to Iran’s continually aggressive policies, the most important of these anti-Israeli forces is the terrorist group Hezbollah, which is closely linked to Iran, and due to its widespread presence also poses a particular threat to the stability of the entire Middle East.
“The German Bundestag is committed to Germany’s special responsibility towards Israel and its security. It adheres to the two-state solution, as confirmed by the United Nations Security Council in numerous resolutions: a Jewish and democratic state of Israel within secure borders and an independent, democratic and viable Palestinian state.
“According to the federal government, Hezbollah supporters primarily use Germany as a place of retreat and logistics. Its followers are under the watchful eye of the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution [German domestic intelligence]. There are around 1,000 supporters of Hezbollah in Germany, and this number is increasing. Hezbollah cannot currently be banned because its association structures cannot currently be determined.
“The federal government has already taken measures against the spread and support of Hezbollah in Germany with the 2008 ban on the ‘Al Manar TV’ television station, and the 2014 ban of the ‘Lebanon Orphan Project.’ In 2018 alone, the Federal Prosecutor General [Generalbundesanwalt] at the Federal Court of Justice [Bundesgerichtshof] initiated 36 investigations against individuals linked to Hezbollah….
“According to the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, it must be expected that Hezbollah will continue to plan and carry out terrorist actions against Israel or Israeli interests outside the Middle East. Our commitment to the protection of the State of Israel also requires that funding flows from Germany, which serve to finance Hezbollah in the Middle East, be prevented by all means.
“The German Bundestag views as an urgent priority a consistent national and common European approach against the activities of the terrorist organization Hezbollah….
“The German Bundestag calls on the federal government to:
“1. Continue closely to monitor the activities of Hezbollah supporters, particularly in Germany, and to pursue them by all means of the rule of law; this also includes combating money laundering and preventing terrorist financing from Germany;
“2. Impose an activity ban [Betätigungsverbot] on Hezbollah in order to prevent any activity by representatives of the organization in Germany that is against the principle of international understanding [respect for all people];
“3. Abandon the conceptual division of Hezbollah into a political and a military wing and to come to a common assessment at the European level to list the group;
“4. Continue actively to advocate for the right of existence of the Jewish and democratic State of Israel and the legitimate security interests of the State of Israel as a central principle of German foreign and security policy;
“5. Take measures, together with international partners, to reduce Hezbollah’s influence in the Middle East, particularly in Syria.”
The German government banned Hezbollah’s “military wing” in 2013, after the group was implicated in the July 2012 bombing of a bus carrying Israeli tourists in Burgas, Bulgaria. Five Israelis were killed in the attack.
Germany, however, has refused to ban Hezbollah’s “political wing,” which continues to raise funds in the country. A German foreign ministry official, Niels Annen, has said that such a ban would be counterproductive because “we focus on dialogue.” His comment has been understood to mean that the German government does not want to burn bridges with Hezbollah’s sponsor, the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Britain, the Netherlands, Israel, the United States, the 22-member Arab League and the six-member Gulf Cooperation Council see no distinction between Hezbollah’s military and civilian wings and all have banned the group in its entirety. Indeed, Hezbollah’s deputy secretary general, Naim Qassem, has clearly stated that the group is structurally unified:
“We don’t have a military wing and a political one; we don’t have Hezbollah on one hand and the resistance party on the other…. Every element of Hezbollah, from commanders to members as well as our various capabilities, is in the service of the resistance, and we have nothing but the resistance as a priority.”
On November 28, the German news magazine Der Spiegel reported that the German government had decided to ban Hezbollah in its entirety, and that a formal announcement would be made during a meeting of the interior ministers [Innenministerkonferenz] of Germany’s 16 federal states in early December. Der Spiegel wrote:
“This would mean that the activities and members of the militia in Germany would be treated as equal to the Kurdish PKK and the Islamic State. All activities of Hezbollah would be prohibited in Germany. For example, the flag of the Lebanese terror militia (green rifle on a yellow background) should no longer be shown.”
An interior ministry spokesman subsequently denied the report and no decision was announced during or after the meeting of German interior ministers.
The idea of banning Hezbollah in its entirety was first proposed by the conservative party Alternative for Germany (AfD). In June 2019, the German parliament discussed, but ultimately rejected, the idea of outlawing Hezbollah. The AfD had called on the government to “examine whether the conditions exist for a ban on Hezbollah as one organization, and, if necessary, to issue such a prohibition and implement it immediately.” Lawmakers from the ruling coalition said that they needed further to investigate the matter.
At the time, the author of the resolution, AfD MP Beatrix von Storch, said:
“Hezbollah is a terrorist organization. The Berlin government claims that you must distinguish between a legitimate political wing of Hezbollah and an illegitimate terrorist wing. This does not make sense to us, or to the voters.
“Hezbollah’s goal is the destruction of Israel and the Jews, and we should not be offering a safe haven for them to hide in Germany and to finance from our territory their armed struggle in Lebanon against Israel.”
The AfD abstained during the vote on the Bundestag resolution passed on December 19. Von Storch emphasized the importance of not only banning the entirety of Hezbollah in Germany, but also of dissolving its mosque associations and deporting all supporters from Germany. She said that the fact that the other parties, after a delay of six months, were now discussing a ban on Hezbollah activities in Germany was proof of the success of the AfD. Nevertheless, she said that the Bundestag’s resolution falls short:
“A ban on activities alone is completely inadequate and inappropriate in the fight against a terrorist organization. We therefore call for a total ban on Hezbollah in Germany and the dissolution of its mosque associations. The members of Hezbollah in Germany, around 1,000 followers, must be expelled expeditiously on the basis of Section 53 of the Residence Act. This also corresponds to the requirement of the Bundestag’s anti-Semitism resolution, which explicitly calls for measures to combat anti-Semitism, including an end to continued residency for offenders. If that does not apply to Hezbollah supporters, who want to ‘gas the Jews’ and destroy Israel, who will? We call on the federal government fully to implement the ban of Hezbollah before the next impending Al-Quds day [Jerusalem day].”
Von Storch was referring to the annual demonstrations, sponsored by Iran and supported by Hezbollah members across Germany, who, waving the Hezbollah flag, call for the destruction of Israel.
Others welcomed the anti-Hezbollah resolution as an important first step. Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz said that the Bundestag’s resolution “is an important step in the international struggle against terrorism, particularly against terrorist organization Hezbollah and its patron Iran.” He added:
“We welcome the important resolution adopted today by the German Bundestag, which calls Hezbollah for what it is: an-Iran sponsored terror organization, with no distinction between its military and political wings.
“Hezbollah threatens not only Israeli civilians, but also undermines Lebanese sovereignty and regional stability. We hope this resolution will encourage others in Europe to take similar action.
“The world must unite against Hezbollah, designate it a terrorist organization, and impose harsh sanctions against it in order to prevent the organization from carrying out terrorist activities on Iran’s behalf.”
Israel’s Ambassador to Germany, Jeremy Issacharoff, in an interview with The Times of Israel, said:
“We welcome the important and significant resolution adopted today by the Bundestag, which relates to Hezbollah for what it is: a terrorist organization, with no distinction between its military and ‘political’ wings.
“Hezbollah is indoctrinated, trained and financed by Iran and poses a threat not only to Israeli civilians, but also undermines Lebanese sovereignty and regional stability. As the resolution indicates, it poses a direct threat to German and Israeli security interests.”
“Foreign policy should reflect reality and the Bundestag’s resolution is clearly a crucial step that we hope will encourage others to take similar action against Hezbollah.”
The domestic spokesman for the CDU/CSU parliamentary group, Mathias Middelberg, said:
“It is unacceptable that Hezbollah is waging a terrorist fight against Israel in the Middle East, and that this is financed, among other things, by worldwide criminal activities. In view of Germany’s special responsibility towards Israel, we therefore call on the federal government to ban all activities for Hezbollah in Germany. Violators must be punished consistently.
“In addition, the separation between a political and a military arm should be abandoned and Hezbollah as a whole should be placed on the EU terror list. This could freeze Hezbollah’s funds and assets in Europe more extensively than before.”
The European Leadership Network (ELNET), a nonprofit dedicated to strengthening Europe-Israel relations, said that the resolution is an “important milestone in safeguarding Jewish life in Germany.”
The American ambassador to Germany, Richard Grenell, said that the American government was ready to assist Germany in its efforts against Hezbollah:
“We stand ready to support the government’s implementation of a ban and will continue to assist in any efforts to deny the world’s most well-armed terror group operating space in Germany. Today’s vote is an acknowledgment of Hezbollah’s destructive international terrorism, and the action needed to stop its activities throughout Europe.”
Germany’s Social Democratic Foreign Minister Heiko Maas, however, has refused to ban Hezbollah in its entirety. He recently repeated the German government’s distinction between Hezbollah’s legitimate and illegitimate activities in Germany:
“Lebanon’s political reality is complicated. However, this must not prevent us from exhausting the means available to us in Germany under the rule of law in order to stand up to Hezbollah’s criminal and terrorist activities.”
In fact, during Maas’ leadership of German foreign policy, the German government has become a leading proponent of anti-Israel resolutions at the United Nations. In 2018, for instance, of 21 anti-Israel UN resolutions, Germany approved 16 and abstained on four others. In May 2016, Germany approved an especially disgraceful UN resolution, co-sponsored by the Arab group of states and the Palestinian delegation, that unjustly singled out Israel at the annual assembly of the World Health Organization (WHO) as the world’s only violator of “mental, physical and environmental health.”
Germany’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Christoph Heusgen, has been ranked by the Los Angeles-based Simon Wiesenthal Center as one of the top ten global anti-Semites of 2019 due to his obsession with Israel at the UN.
Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Wiesenthal Center wrote:
“We listed Ambassador Heusgen’s name on the top ten list of anti-Semitic and anti-Israel incidents specifically because of his recent actions taken and words spoken at the United Nations. In defining anti-Semitism in the 21st century, the Simon Wiesenthal Center is guided by Natan Sharansky’s 3 D’s, which define when anti-Israel criticism crosses into anti-Semitism: delegitimization, double standard, and demonization.”
Germany’s largest newspaper, Bild, summed it up this way:
“It remains to be seen to what extent the German federal government will comply with the Bundestag’s proposal and will actually ‘exhaust all the resources of the rule of law’ to stop Hezbollah’s money laundering and terrorist financing in Germany.”
*Soeren Kern is a Senior Fellow at the New York-based Gatestone Institute.
© 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.

Lebanon’s food importers face challenges paying for goods
Nabila Rahhal/Al Arabiya English/December 23/2019
Food producers and agro-industrialists in Lebanon are facing pressures from restrictive monetary policies and a shortage of dollars, amid an ongoing political and economic crisis.
Historically, Lebanon’s productivity sectors, mainly agriculture and industry, have been severely under-developed at the expense of the services sector, which is traditionally considered a pillar of the economy.
The country currently relies on imports across a wide variety of sectors – from the most basic consumer needs to technical equipment for local businesses.
Banks in Lebanon have already applied a system of unofficial capital controls in order to restrict the flow of foreign currency out of the country. Small businesses and individuals have reported limited access to both foreign and domestic currency.
An example of this came to light earlier this month when JP Morgan Chase, Citibank, BNY Mellon, and Standard Chartered Bank were named in a $1 billion lawsuit against Lebanese bank BankMed by oil trader IMMS. The lawsuit claims BankMed delayed and withheld IMMS’ funds when requested.
“Freezing all outgoing transfers, and financial credit facilities from the banking sector is amputating all production activities, and seriously jeopardizing the existence of our companies,” said Mounir Bissat, secretary of the Syndicate of Lebanese Food Industries.
Local food producers face trouble
Compared to other industries, agro-industrialists may seem to have it easy. But, that’s far from reality.
Food products have relatively constant demand from various customers; one has to eat after all.
Another advantage, according to Bissat, is that a good percentage of needed raw material is locally produced or available and therefore can be paid for in local currency.
Very few agro-industries in Lebanon are 100 percent locally produced as they rely on at least some imported goods, be it in their packaging or for some ingredients and components.
Meanwhile, liquidity in dollars is getting rarer by the day, and agro-industries rely primarily on dollars to settle their dues, according to Nayef Kassatly, owner of Lebanese juice and beverage producer Kassatly Chtaura.
Fady Aziz, founder of The Good Thymes, which produces zaatar mixes, echoed this concern as food producers face ongoing issues paying for goods due to the dollar shortage.
“All suppliers want cash money in dollars and we are not getting paid cash, or in dollars,” said Aziz.
Add to this what Bissat calls the “undeclared capital control” practiced by local banks and it does not look good for payments in agro-industry.
Still, he acknowledges that agro-industrialists are faring better than non-agro industries, which rely on imported goods for all of their production.
Meanwhile, not all food products are created equal, and another blow for local food producers is that consumers are only spending on the bare necessities these days.
Both Kassatly and Aziz said local consumers do not consider their products as necessities when compared to rice, eggs, bread and vegetables, for example.
Survival becomes the name of the game
Bissat places Lebanon’s central bank, Banque Du Liban’s governor responsible for applying measures “to ensure foreign currencies and transfer possibilities to the industrial sector, similar to the measures offered to the three other importing sectors: fuel, wheat, and pharmaceutical.”
Aziz says he will resort to producing some of his mixes in bulk and using minimal packaging to slash cost and price, while also discontinuing some products that require imported ingredients.
There might still be some hope for local food producers, but mainly in the export markets.
Many agro-industrialists have solid export markets in the Gulf Cooperation Council, as well neighboring Arab countries that can be targeted for sales in these difficult times.
“They used to be 35 percent of our turnover, and now we are trying to make it 50 percent to sustain our business. Thank God we have exports to maintain our credibility with suppliers – industries who only sell locally have a big problem,” said Kassatly.
Raed Malaeb, sales manager at Lebanon-based U Foods, which imports cheeses and meats, said that many agro-industrialists are resorting to the black market to buy dollars in order to pay for goods.
Since their clients pay them in Lebanese pounds, they have to exchange client’s cash dollars at the black market rate, which currently reaches 30 percent higher than the official exchange rate of 1,515 LBP, to make their own payments, ultimately driving their prices upwards, explains Malaeb.
Meanwhile, consumer behaviors are also tightening in restaurants, which are taking restrictive measures.
Malaeb says that purchasing orders in both supermarkets and restaurants are down by 40 percent year on year although the festive season is traditionally very busy for their company.
“Some restaurants are finding our prices prohibitive, and prefer to remove items from their menu to buying local varieties which may be of inferior quality,” says Malaeb.

Pressure on Lebanon’s schools as tough times force children into state system
Reuters,/December 23/2019
Lebanon’s economic crisis is forcing families to pull tens of thousands of children out of the private schools that educate most pupils in the country, and into a long-neglected state education system that is already struggling to cope.
Unlike in many countries where private schools are often mainly for the wealthy, Lebanon relies on them to educate two thirds of pupils, with working class families scrimping to afford hundreds of dollars a month in fees.
Those who cannot afford it end up in an under-funded state system that educates 300,000 Lebanese pupils and has put on a second shift in recent years for 200,000 Syrian refugees.
With the worst economic crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war having struck this year, 36,000 extra pupils have moved from private school into the state system, Education Minister Akram Chehayeb told Reuters. He expects still more children to follow, with no additional funds or staff to teach them.
“The pressure will increase on public schools,” he said. “Due to the 2019 budget, we can’t hire new teachers, while 1,400 retire every year.”
Eid Ramadan, a hairstylist, struggled to find more than $6,000 a year in total for private school for his two sons. This year he was forced to pull his younger son out.
“My kids are thankfully smart and understanding,” he said. “They know we were doing the impossible to keep them (in private school). But we’ve reached a point where we couldn’t. We’ve hit a brick wall.”
The country’s long-brewing economic troubles have spiraled into a financial crisis since October, when protests erupted against the ruling elite. Businesses have closed, workers have been laid off and wages cut. Banks are restricting access to cash and the Lebanese pound has slumped.
“The majority of the people can no longer pay thousands of dollars for tuition every year,” said Ramadan.
Salwa Hemadeh moved her 14-year-old daughter into a state school this year, having previously moved her three sons out of private education as the economy worsened and her husband’s job as a plasterer brought in less income. “She didn’t adapt well to the new school because it was so big and there were so many students. But we laid out the truth: either you get your education at this public school or you get no education,” she said.

Israel and Iran’s game of cat and mouse
يداعوت احرانوت/لعبة القط والفأر بين إيران وإسرائيل في سوريا
Ron Ben-Yishai/Ynetnews/December 23/2019

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يعتقد بأن الغارة الإسرائيلية الأخيرة على قواعد عسكرية إيرانية بالقر من دمشق قد نتجح عنها 3 قتلى من التابعية الإيرانية وجرح عدد غير معلن من بينهم الشخص الثاني في الحرس الثوري الإيراني وقائد القوات الجوية عامر علي حجزادا

Analysis: The latest missile attack on Iranian targets near Damascus indicates the Revolutionary Guards have resumed with full force their attempts to militarily entrench themselves in the region, after a lull which stemmed from Russian pressure
According to Syrian reports, Israel is believed to be behind Sunday night’s attack on Iranian targets in Syria. The missile attack apparently targeted arms shipments arriving at the Damascus military airport from Tehran.
After a period of relative calm, Iran has decided to resume the smuggling of high-precision missiles and anti-aircraft missiles – the kind of high-quality weapons known to the Israeli public as “tie-breakers” – and flood Syria with its proxy militias.
The UK-based human rights watchdog, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, reported shortly after the strikes that an ambulance was dispatched to the scene, meaning there probably were casualties.
According to later reports in Syrian media, at least three people, probably Iranian nationals, were killed in the attack.
Unverified reports in Syria also say the commander of Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Aerospace Force, Amir Ali Hajizadeh, was also hurt in the alleged Israeli attack.
Hajizadeh apparently oversaw the September drone strike on Saudi oil facilities that debilitated half of the Gulf country’s fossil fuel industry, and was in charge of shipping state-of-the-art anti-aircraft weapons from Iran into Syria.
In 2018, Hajizadeh oversaw a shipment of anti-aircraft missile batteries to Syria, which was targeted in alleged Israeli raid. Foreign sources reported that seven Iranian officers were killed in the attack.
The Iranians denied the reports the commander was injured.
This is probably true because had Hajizadeh been hurt, the Iranians would have retaliated with exceptional force since in his rank, the commander is second only to Revolutionary Guard chief Qasem Soleimani.
If it was indeed Israel that attacked near Damascus on Sunday, it signals that the Jewish State will not hesitate to act against any Iranian aggression in the region. The Iranians, meanwhile, also seem to have changed their policy on attacks attributed to the IDF and decided to respond to Israeli strikes even if Israel did not take accountability for them.
The latest developments in the region indicate the Iranians are making preparations to attack Israel, as evidenced by renewed arms shipments not only to Syria but to Lebanon as well.
In Lebanon the Iranians suffered a setback after their weapons production facilities became a target of a mysterious drone attack on a “fuel mixer” in Beirut, which foreign media also attributed to Israel.
In addition, the Iranians are building a military base in the Al Bukamal region near the Syria-Iraq border to establish a land corridor through Syria and Lebanon to the Mediterranean Sea, an effort that top Israeli diplomats and senior security officials have vowed to prevent.
Israeli actions in Syria are part of the defense establishment calls the “in-between wars” campaign, meant to prevent Iran from establishing its military presence in Syria and to allow the Israeli Air Force freedom of action in case an all-out war breaks out.
Therefore, as Iran resumes its efforts to entrench itself in Syria, the activity attributed to Israel is also expected to increase in the near future.
Over the recent weeks, the Russians have put enormous pressure on the Iranians to stop operating in Damascus International Airport and redirect its cargo flights to other airports in Syria, mainly the T-4 Airbase near the city of Homs. These flights also served as a way to transfer fighters of Iranian-backed militias to the Idlib region southeast of Aleppo.
Since these flights did not impose any danger to Israel, the army avoided attacking on Syrian soil.
However, given the increased Iranian activity near Israeli border, the military has appealed to the Russians regarding the Iranian violations and pointed out precise geographical locations where arms and personnel are transferred.
It is likely that as part of the de-confliction agreements, Israel had notified Russia about the attack a few minutes in advance.
We will probably see further Iranian attempts to establish a front in Syria and revive its precision-missile project. Israel, however, won’t stand and watch from the side.

Lebanon’s crisis is bad for my mental health

Christiane Waked/Khalegi Times/December 23/2019
Now this is not just about a particular day or a person, it is a pervasive feeling among many young people in Beirut.
Picture this, a 40 year-old-woman struggling to get out of her bed fearing that some woeful news will leave her with a heavy heart. It is mental illness perhaps that keeps the alarm bells on. Anxiety attacks keep her awake all night, and depression keeps the mood sombre all day long.
Now this is not just about a particular day or a person, it is a pervasive feeling among many young people in Beirut.
Writing about myself in third person is a defense mechanism. It helps me dissociate, cope better with pain. But depression often takes over my feelings, my core, and as a spider it spreads its net. Yes, depression is a constant state of my mind some days.
I am at war with myself, and this feeling made me a fighter long time ago.
I was born in Lebanon during war, like many others. And we were all raised in an environment infused with trauma, uncertainty, and constant panic. It intimidated the psyche of a whole generation that is now affected with mental illness.
Yes, the Lebanese are known for their resilience and wit. But today more than ever their survival skills are being tested again. Thirty years after the end of the civil war, the same old guard – corrupt, greedy, sectarian – is still in power and is using the same propaganda based on fear and ignorance to influence the minds of the young who did not live the war but who might be swayed to make the same mistakes of the past.
These warlords are responsible for the killing of scores of Lebanese during the civil war. They should also be held accountable for killing people’s ambitions and dreams, including mine. In Lebanon, unless you are backed by a corrupt politician and have ‘wasta’ which means nepotism, it is hard to find a job. And nowadays it has worsened, considering the socio-economic crisis the country is gripped in.
Corruption has been a way of life in the country for the last three decades, and is still rampant. It has impoverished the population and pushed Lebanon to become the third most indebted country in the world.
So since October 17 a revolution, that is uniting the Lebanese of all denominations, religious origins, and social classes, has been taking place on the streets. People are denouncing the corrupt and venting out the rage and frustration.
It’s a sort of collective cathartic movement that in some way is healing the Lebanese. I have been trying not to miss hearing the news since the protests started, and also hoping that I don’t get any flashbacks from the past. I was diagnosed many years ago with CPTSD, a complex form of post-traumatic stress disorder, that I had developed because of the traumas I had to face such as war, cancer, loss, etc.
Sometimes, I blame myself for coming back to Lebanon after living abroad for 17 years, other days, I feel a bit more heroic for now I am able to take care of my parents, especially my mother who is on dialysis.
Uncertainty looms around our daily lives. I wake up every day not knowing if the hospital would continue offering dialysis sessions for my mother. We are not sure until when we would be able to give my mother the medicines she critically needs. Pharmacies are running out of their stocks, and inventories in hospitals are not being replenished at the required pace.
Many organisations including Human Rights Watch warned that hospitals may soon not be able to provide patients with life-saving surgery and urgent medical care because of the financial crisis.
Most of the Lebanese like me feel trapped in a situation that is bigger than them, a regional cold war between Iran and the United States is holding the Lebanese as hostages.
Every day we hear about suicides because people can no longer pay hospital bills or provide food to their kids. Even though Lebanon is not in a war, prevailing conditions because of the economic crisis have made living conditions brutal and deeply traumatising.
I am not sure if being a Lebanese is the main cause of my mental problems. However, I am often consoled by a friend who says the fire that burns inside me is much brighter than the one that burns around me.
*Christiane Waked is a political analyst based in Beirut 

The post A Bundle Of English Reports, News and Editorials For December 23- 24/2019 Addressing the On Going Mass Demonstrations & Sit In-ins In Iranian Occupied Lebanon in its 68th Day appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.


نشرة أخبار المنسقية العامة للمؤسسات اللبنانية الكندية باللغة العربية ليوم 24 كانون الأول/2019

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نشرة أخبار المنسقية العامة للمؤسسات اللبنانية الكندية باللغة العربية ليوم 24 كانون الأول/2019

اضغط هنا لقراءة نشرة أخبار المنسقية العامة المفصلة، اللبنانية والعربية ليوم 24 كانون الأول/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 24 كانون الأول/2019 appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

أنور عقل ضو/اعتداءات متكررة على ناشطي عاليه.. الاشتراكيون ضد كمال جنبلاط

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اعتداءات متكررة على ناشطي عاليه.. الاشتراكيون ضد كمال جنبلاط!

أنور عقل ضو/المدن/24 كانون الأول/2019

عندما يقمع عناصر من حزبِ “الذين ليس على صدورهم قميص”، ثواراً ينادون بالخبز والحرية، فذلك يفضح إشكالية سياسية وبنيوية يعيشها الحزب التقدمي الاشتراكي، ترقى لثلاثة عقود. وهي أكبر من تكسير خيمة وتهديد الناس وقمعهم بالقوة. هي أزمة لم تستهدف الثوار بقدر ما استهدفت قيم كمال جنبلاط. ومن هنا، لا يمكن مقاربة الأمور انطلاقاً من حرق خيمة كحادثة عابرة، ذلك أن لظى اللهب أصاب أكثر من أشعلها، لأنه أضرم النار في إرث وذاكرة، واغترب عن تاريخ، لا بل وضاع في رحاب اللحظة ليفقد الكثير من هالة حضوره.

لا يمكن الإحاطة بما يشهده جبل لبنان الجنوبي، من المتن الأعلى وعاليه والشوف (ساحلاً وجبلاً) وأيضاً حاصبيا وراشيا، من استهداف مباشر لثورة 17 تشرين، إلا بوصفه نتيجة خطاب مأزوم أبقى “الاشتراكي” في غربة عن ناسه، ويواجه اختلالات تنظيمية بين من تخطى عباءة البطريركية السياسية ورمزيتها “قصر المختارة” وصار جزءاً من حراك الناس، وبين من يراقب وينتظر، وهذا ما أخلى الساحة لجمهور غير قادر على التعبير بعيداً من مخزون الغرائز القابل للتمظهر إشكالات وفوضى، وفوقية فارغة وتوجهات جوفاء.

الشويفات – خلدة
شهد الحزب التقدمي الاشتراكي، عقب استشهاد علاء أبو فخر، ما استعصى عليه استيعابه، وأحرج قياداته وأظهر عجزها. فـ”شهيده” سقط في موقع تجاوز فيه الحزب. وما فاقم الأمور أن هذا الاستشهاد لم يحسن توظيفه بالمعنى الإيجابي، والبناء عليه ليكون في حاضرة وجع الناس، فتخلف مرة جديدة. ومدينة الشويفات ومحيطها لا تزال تنتظر صحوة، إلا أن كثيرين مضوا أكثر في خيار الثورة.

وكان يمكن للشويفات – خلدة أن تشهد حركة انقسام “اشتراكي” أكثر حدة واتساعاً، إلا أن طبيعة النزاعات المحلية بين جمهور النائب طلال أرسلان وجمهور التقدمي الاشتراكي حال دون تراجع الحضور الجنبلاطي أكثر. فوسط العصبيات الدرزية – الدرزية ليس ثمة من هو في وارد إخلاء الساحة لأرسلان، فضلا عن أن ثمة “خوفاً” من بوابة الضاحية (حي السلم). والعصبية هنا جاءت لتعضد الحزب، من دون أن يتمكن من إعادة المغردين بعيداً منه إلى “بيت الطاعة” السياسي.

“لسنا أحجار دومينو ليحركها وليد بك كما يشاء”، يقول ناشط استقال من الحزب التقدمي الاشتراكي، مستدركا “نحن مع نهج الحزب عندما يكون الحزب معنا”. وأشار إلى أنه “رغم كل شيء لا يمكن أن ننقل البارودة من كتف إلى أخرى. فنحن اشتراكيون ونتأمل الحزب أن يلتحق بصفوف الناس، لكن لن ننتظره”، وقال: “استقالتي مؤقتة، لأنني على يقين أن الحزب سيكون في الموقع الصحيح. فهذا تاريخه”.

حراك عاليه
أما ما شهدته مدينة عاليه ليل الأحد، فهو نتاج “ثقافة” اغتربت عن مبادئ وأفكار، وتواجه اليوم إخفاقات وإرباكات. وقال الناشط في حراك عاليه، يسار العنداري، لـ”المدن”: “أنا فرد من هذا الحراك الشعبي ومن هذه الخيمة التي لا يمكن اختصارها بشخص واحد أو بحزب، أنا منتم للحزب الشيوعي، وعلى رأس السطح، ولا زلت. لكن لم أرفع منذ بدء الحراك سوى العلم اللبناني. وللأسف، تتابعت المحاولات من قبل البعض لحصر الثوار في عالية بجهة سياسية واحدة لتشويه الحراك”.

وأضاف: “تتابع سوق بعض التهم للنيل مني، ومنها بأني أتطاول على كمال جنبلاط. كيف أشتم رمزاً أضع صورته في منزلي وقرب صورتيّ تشي غيفارا وفرج الله الحلو. لقد تخلى العديد من أفراد الأحزاب الأخرى عن أحزابهم، وانضموا للحراك. للأسف، البعض ومنذ اليوم الأول للثورة يفبركون لنا الاتهامات ويكيلون الشتائم. ونتعرض للاستفزازات والترهيب والتهديد، ويروجون أننا نشتم وليد جنبلاط تحديداً والحزب التقدمي الاشتراكي، فقط لأننا نتمسك بشعار الحراك الشعبي كلن يعني كلن، ولا نميز بين أفرقاء السلطة”.

وأوضح العنداري: “بعد وصولنا من بلدة العبادية، حيث شاركنا في رفع شعار الثورة، تجّمعنا في الخيمة قبيل النزول للمشاركة في حشد ساحة الشهداء مع المواطنين من كل انحاء الوطن، وقد أخذنا صورة تذكارية جامعة في ساحة الشهداء، لنفاجأ بفيديو يصلنا من داخل الخيمة، لشباب يرفعون الأعلام الحزبية داخلها، ونعرفهم بوجوههم، ولا علاقة لشباب الحراك بهذا الأمر. فبادر شباب الحراك إلى إصدار بيان بأن هذا الأمر لا علاقة به بخيمة الحراك لا من قريب ولا من بعيد”. وأردف: “حوالى السابعة مساء، عند عودتنا من ساحة الشهداء برفقة عائلاتنا واطفالنا، تفاجأنا بالاعتداء علينا. ولم يكن الجيش حاضراً وتأخر كثيراً للوصول لردعهم”. وختم العنداري: “خيمتنا مشرعة أمام كل المنتفضين على المنظومة الحاكمة، والذين يناضلون لغد أفضل لكل المواطنين بمن فيهم من يوالي زعيم أو من يهاجمنا اليوم”.

ممنوع رفع قبضة الثورة
وأشار ناشط من حراك عاليه إلى “اننا شاركنا صباحا خيمة العبادية في رفع قبضة الثورة، كما شاركنا كافة المناطق في لبنان، والحقيقة أننا كنا نحاول رفع القبضة في عاليه منذ أسبوعين، لكن تريثنا وأرجأنا هذه الخطوة، فقد وصلتنا تهديدات بعدم رفعها، كما وصلنا اتصال من جهات أمنية تتمنى علينا عدم رفعها، وهذا ما حصل ويحصل منذ 67 يوما، بأننا نتمسك بسلمية هذه الثورة، وأننا كنا وما زلنا نتفادى المشاكل”.

الصايغ: كم الأفواه
وقال علاء الصايغ من منطقة الجرد الأعلى، وهو ناشط في حراك عاليه ومجموعة لـ “حقي” لـ”المدن”: “هو ثالث اعتداء على خيمة الحراك في عاليه، بعد سلسلة اعتداءات منذ بداية الثورة وسلسلة تصرفات قمعية لا تعبر سوى عن سياسة قوى الأمر الواقع التي تسعى إلى فرض السيطرة والتحكم برقاب الناس، ومرة جديدة تتساوى قوى المنظومة بأساليبها في الجنوب والشمال وبيروت والجبل والبقاع وكل المناطق، وتثبت مرة أخرى للشعب اللبناني أن هؤلاء أوجه مختلفة لعملة واحدة”. وتابع: “هذه الخيمة تم ترميمها منذ الاعتداء الأخير منذ حوالى 10 أيام واحتضنت شباب الحراك وكانوا يجتمعون فيها بشكل يومي خلال فترة 66 يوما الماضية”.

وانتقد الصايغ “كم الأفواه في كافة مناطق لبنان، علما أن هذا الإعتداء لا يمثل مدينة عاليه وأهلها الذين وقفوا مع شباب الثورة والحراك ومن الأيام الأولى. وقد طلبت القوى الأمنية اخلاء الخيمة لدواعٍ امنية، وقد تم الإعتداء وتكسير الخيمة كما تم الاعتداء على الثوار بالعصي والحجارة وهناك جريحان”.

بيان عاليه تنتفض
وصدر بيان عن “عاليه تنتفض”، جاء فيه: “تكررت الحركات المستفزة والقمعية للثوار خلال الشهرين الماضيين في منطقة عاليه. والآن عاليه تطلب من كل أهلها وقرى الجوار الذين لا يعرفون غير الضيافة والتواصل والأخلاق وحُب التنوع أن يتوجهوا حالاً إلى خيمة عاليه للوقوف موقف واحد ضد مظاهر لا تشبهها ولا تمثل قيما عرفناها فيها، ونطالب القوى الأمنية بتحمل كامل مسؤولياتها في حماية الثوار السلميين في عاليه”.

اضغط  هنا أوعلى الرابط في أسفل لمشاهدة وقائع الإعتداء على خيمة عاليه

https://www.almodon.com/file/get/c1856b2b-dd2a-4d24-bb9e-df95c3f7cfab

The post أنور عقل ضو/اعتداءات متكررة على ناشطي عاليه.. الاشتراكيون ضد كمال جنبلاط appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

منير الربيع: حسان دياب حياكة إيرانية خالصة.. ضد العرب لا الأميركيين/الحكومة “الوهمية”.. خدعة السلطة لتمزيق وحدة اللبنانيين

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الحكومة “الوهمية”.. خدعة السلطة لتمزيق وحدة اللبنانيين
منير الربيع/المدن/23 كانون الأول/2019

حسان دياب حياكة إيرانية خالصة.. ضد العرب لا الأميركيين
منير الربيع/المدن/24 كانون الأول/2019
منذ تكليف حسان دياب بتشكيل الحكومة، تجري عملية ضخ إعلامي أن الرجل جاء بنتيجة صفقة أميركية إيرانية، برعاية بعض الدول العربية. تارة يتم الحديث عن أن الرجل هو نتاج لمساع ومبادرة قامت بها سلطنة عمان، وتارة أخرى يتم الحديث عن أن دولة قطر كان لها علاقة في ذلك، إثر زيارة رئيس التيار الوطني الحرّ، جبران باسيل، إلى الدوحة للمشاركة في أحد المنتديات. وأنه عقد هناك لقاءات رتبت تسمية هذا الرجل.

الإصرار على إدراج اسم دولة عربية رعت وصول حسان دياب إلى رئاسة الحكومة، له هدف وحيد هو القول أن الرجل يحظى بغطاء عربي، ومدعوم عربياً. وهذا سيكون له نتائج إيجابية في التعامل مع لبنان مستقبلاً، خصوصاً في ضوء الحديث عن النية بتشكيل حكومة اختصاصيين، أغلبها من الوزراء المستقلين!

برعاية جميل السيّد
صحيح أنه لا يمكن في لبنان صوغ هكذا قرار (اختيار رئيس حكومة) من دون تقاطع ما بين القوى الدولية والإقليمية، لا سيما أن لبنان واحد من مسارح التجاذب الإيراني الأميركي، كما هو الحال بالنسبة إلى العراق.. إلا أن حقيقة ما يجري، أن ثمة عملية ابتزاز تقوم بها القوى اللبنانية، لوضع مسألة تشكيل الحكومة في بازار المفاوضات الدائرة في الإقليم والمنطقة.

وهي تبدأ من تفصيل يحظى باهتمام أميركي، لتطال جوانب أكثر اتساعاً. التفصيل المذكور هنا هو “العميل” عامر الفاخوري، الذي يحظى باهتمام أميركي استثنائي من دونالد ترامب مباشرة. وفيما لا يظهر أي اهتمام أميركي بموضوع تشكيل الحكومة اللبنانية بقدر ما يحظى الفاخوري من اهتمام، ارتأى حزب الله، والتيار الوطني الحرّ، اللعب في هذا الملعب الواسع لمقايضة الأميركيين بحكومة يشكلونها هم مقابل الفاخوري (!). تفاصيل ملف الفاخوري سنكشفها في سياق مقالة أخرى عن الضغوط التي مارسها الأميركيون على المسؤولين اللبنانيين بكل تلاوينهم أمنيين وسياسيين.

بالعودة إلى حسان دياب، فإن إسم الرجل كان يدور همساً بين مكونات 8 آذار. وأول من طرح إسمه هو النائب جميل السيد، الذي أقنع حزب الله والتيار الوطني الحر به. لكنه كان متروكاً جانباً لأن الحزب كان حريصاً على عودة الحريري، وكان يعمل حتى اللحظة الأخيرة لعودته. لكن بعد صدور بيان الحريري بالعزوف، بدأ الترتيب لتكليف حسان دياب. وهذا كان رهان باسيل أصلاً، الذي أراد استبعاد نفسه باستبعاد الحريري، عبر استخدام سلاح الحريري بالقول إنه يريد حكومة اختصاصيين. خطوة باسيل هذه كانت تهدف إلى تلميع صورته أمام الأميركيين عبر القول أنه مستعد للخروج من المشهد والموافقة على “حكومة التكنوقراط”، بعد وروده تحذيرات عديدة بأن العقوبات ستطاله. خروج باسيل هنا مقنّع. وهو كما عون يعرف أن حسان دياب إسم جاهز لتنفيذ كل ما يُطلب منه. فكل ما يريده الرجل هو لقب “دولة الرئيس”. ومعه فقط، يستعيد عون أمجاد رؤساء الجمهورية ما قبل الطائف.

تجربة ميقاتي
عندما زار باسيل الفاتيكان كان يبحث عن مساعدة فاتيكانية في موضوع تعويمه أميركياً. وهذا ما حاول فعله في قطر كذلك. حزب الله في المقابل يريد تشكيل حكومة، وغير قادر على تحمّل الوضع المتفلت من يديه. كما أنه غير قادر على الصبر أكثر إزاء قطع طريق الجنوب مراراً وتكراراً. وصلت المفاوضات مع الحريري إلى طريق مسدودة، بعد إحراقه لأسماء المرشحين، فيما حسان دياب طي الكتمان. وهو الذي كان يتردد على رئيس مجلس النواب نبيه بري، ولم يقطع التواصل معه. والرجل لديه علاقات بسلطنة عمان منذ كان أستاذاً في جامعة ظفار، وأحسن العلاقة مع الإيرانيين منذ كان وزيراً للتربية، عندما وقع مذكرة للتعاون التعليمي بين لبنان وإيران!

منذ اليوم الذي وصل فيه إلى الوزارة، كان الرجل مهجوساً بتجربة نجيب ميقاتي، يريد أن يكون رئيساً للحكومة بالطريقة ذاتها التي جاء فيها رئيس وزرائه. استمر العمل على هذا الهدف من خلال تودده لحزب الله وحركة أمل، وفتح العلاقة مع عون. يوم حصل الانقلاب على الحريري في 2011، كانت المعركة الإيرانية واضحة، وهي السيطرة على القرار في لبنان، تماماً كما كان الوضع في العراق حينها، بالإنقلاب على إياد علاوي لصالح نوري المالكي، بناء على النزاع بين الإيرانيين والأميركيين، والتاريخ اليوم يعيد نفسه بتغيّر الأسماء فقط.

وما يثبت ذلك، هو إعلان مستشار المرشد الإيراني علي أكبر ولايتي الذي رحب بتكليف دياب برئاسة الحكومة، قائلاً: “إن التظاهرات المتواصلة في لبنان بعد تكليف حسان دياب بتشكيل الحكومة الجديدة تتم بتحريض من قبل السعودية وإسرائيل”. هذا الكلام يبرر الضخ حول اشتراك دول خليجية بتكليف دياب، لنزع الصفة الإيرانية عنه، وإضفاء الصفة العربية عليه.

حكومة اللون الواحد
حسان دياب هو الرسالة الإيرانية الأكبر في لبنان تجاه الأميركيين. الرسالة تقول إن لبنان في يدنا، وهو الترجمة العملانية لموقف أطلقه سابقاً قاسم سليماني بالقول إن بلاده حققت انتصاراً بالحصول على أكثر من سبعين نائباً في البرلمان، تريد طهران أن تقول لواشنطن إن لبنان حصتنا وساحتنا. وذلك لإبعاد العرب عنه قدر الإمكان. تريد إيران أن يكون لبنان مجالاً للتفاوض بينهم وبين الأميركيين، وتغييب العرب عن أي تأثير فيه. تماماً كما هو حاصل في سوريا والعراق. تحت هذا العنوان الإيراني العريض، لعب جبران باسيل لإنضاج تخريجة تكليف دياب. وهي ليست إلا إستكمالاً لموقفه في استعداء العرب، يوم رفض إدانة ضربة أرامكو، وترجمة للغضب السعودي من الحريري يوم استقبل ولايتي في تشرين 2017 قبل أيام من استقالته من الرياض.

المشكلة مع حسان دياب ليست في شخصيته، إنما لارتضائه أن يكون عنصراً إيرانياً للابتعاد عن العرب. المشكلة التي يخلقها تكليفه تنعكس على القوى السياسية على اختلافاتها. فحزب الله وحركة أمل لا يريدان للحكومة أن تكون من لون واحد، بينما القوات اللبنانية والتقدمي الاشتراكي وتيار المستقبل يريدون إظهارها حكومة لون واحد، من خلال عدم المشاركة فيها. حزب الله يردّ على ذلك بالقول أنه حريص على مشاركة كل القوى، ويتهمها أنها تريد تعميق الأزمة أكثر. هنا العطب الأساسي الذي يصيب حكومة دياب العتيدة. وسيحرمها من أي إنجاز.

سواء كانت من لون واحد أم تضم الجميع. وبالتالي، تكون نسخة منقحة عن التجربة السابقة. ستسقط عاجلاً أم آجلاً في الشارع وتحت وقع الأزمة المالية والاقتصادية، والتي على ما يبدو أن لا بوادر لحلّها، خصوصاً أن لا مساعدات خارجية ستأتي. قد يغض الأميركيون الطرف عن هذه الحكومة. لكن الضغوط ستستمر، لأن موعد الصفقة لم يحن بعد. إيران تريد مفاوضة واشنطن على لبنان لا على دول الخليج. وحزب الله كذلك بالطبع. أما باسيل، فليس مفتوناً بالعرب ولا حريصاً عليهم. لذلك وقع الاختيار على حسان دياب الإيراني والأستاذ في الجامعة الأميركية.

الحكومة “الوهمية”.. خدعة السلطة لتمزيق وحدة اللبنانيين
منير الربيع/المدن/23 كانون الأول/2019
تفتقر قوى السلطة اللبنانية لأي مقومات الإبداع والابتكار في التعامل مع مجتمعها. طوال الشهرين الفائتين، أظهر المجتمع اللبناني تقدماً هائلاً على سلطة مكونة من قوى سياسية لا تزال تدور حول نفسها، وفي حلقتها المغلقة والمفرغة. الافتقار “الفكري” والإبداعي للسلطة اللبنانية، يوقع أفرقاءها على اختلافاتهم في شرور طروحاتهم وأساليبهم. فإما تأسرهم أو تظهر خواءهم وتناقضاتهم، أو أنهم حتى يدوسونها عندما تتضارب مع مصلحتهم. اللعبة الثابتة لدى هذه القوى هي التهديد بـ”الاستقرار” لإعادة اللبنانيين إلى حظائرهم الطائفية والمذهبية. وبحال لم يكن عنوان الاستقرار ملائماً لهم، يلجؤون فوراً إلى لعبة التجييش الطائفي والمذهبي، للقضاء على أي محاولة للتقدم.

السلطة تقطع الطرق!
إلى جانب عنوان “الحفاظ على الاستقرار” الأمني هنا، يتم تخيير اللبنانيين بين أمنهم الاجتماعي والسياسي، أو المعيشي والاقتصادي، في محاولة تاريخية متعمّدة للفصل بين الأمنين. وهذا بحدّ ذاته دليل على انعدام المنطق لصالح مخيّلات تتغذى على عوامل قلب الحقائق وتهشيم العقول. لعبت القوى السياسية لعبة منع قطع الطرق، وتأمين تسهيل إنتقال المواطنين، وذلك بهدف ضرب الانتفاضة وتحركاتها، وإقحام اللبنانيين في صراعات مع بعضهم البعض. لكن السلطة ذاتها تعود وتقع في شرّ مكيدتها، فتقوم هي بقطع الطرق أمام المواطنين، كما حصل أمس على حاجز المدفون من قطع للسير ومنع المرور باتجاه بيروت، فقط لمنع أعداد من المتظاهرين من التوجه إلى وسط العاصمة والمشاركة في التحركات الرافضة لتكليف حسان دياب بتشكيل الحكومة.

اتهمت السلطة السياسية المتظاهرين بأن تحركاتهم تؤدي إلى تهديد السلّم الأهلي، بينما هي التي استخدمت مجموعاتها الموالية للاصطدام مع المتظاهرين، وفبركة أسباب تبرّر ممارسة العنف ضد المتظاهرين، على أسس مذهبية وطائفية لإعادة شرذمة هذه التحركات الجامعة والمتخطية لكل الحسابات الفتنوية التي غذتها القوى السياسية، وأحكمت من خلالها القبضة على المجتمع وشرائحه المختلفة. حالة الإنحدار وصلت إلى حدّ أن تعتدي السلطة على الدستور، ليس في المجالات السياسية والمصلحية فقط، بل في منع اللبنانيين من التنقل بين المناطق، ربطاً بلعبة خبيثة ما بعد طائفية ومذهبية، وهي إثارة العصبيات المناطقية من قبيل منع أهالي طرابلس من التظاهر في العاصمة بيروت!

“الميثاقية” عكس معناها
الدليل الوحيد على هذه الممارسات، هو أن هذه السلطة والقوى السياسية تحجر على نفسها بنفسها، تدير مفاوضاتها في الغرف المغلقة، تقطع الطرق على نفسها وعلى مواطنيها، وتبتعد كل البعد عن هواجس الناس، في إعادة تدوير تركيبات غير قابلة للهضم الاجتماعي. إنها لعبة محروقة، إن دلت على شيء، فعلى تغيير محتم سيحصل عاجلاً أم آجلاً، لأن هذه السلطة التي تدعي لنفسها تحقيق الإنجاز وتجاوز زخم التحركات، ستكتشف فراغ ما أقدمت عليه. والأكيد أن حكومة حسان دياب، في المعادلة المنطقية ستكون حكومة خارجة عن الواقع وغير قابلة للمرور شعبياً. أساساً، لأنها بعيدة عن مطالب الناس، وتالياً بسبب الخلافات السياسية التي دبّت بين مختلف القوى التي كانت متواطئة، ولا تزال تبحث عن فرص للتواطؤ والالتفاف على طموحات اللبنانيين. لكنها أيضاً تقع في خلافات “مصلحية” فيما بينها، كالخلاف على عنوان “الميثاقية” المخترع ذات مرة في خريف 2006، الذي أمسك به حزب الله والتيار الوطني الحرّ لتحقيق أهداف سياسية، وما لبثوا أن انقلبوا عليه في آلية تكليف حسان دياب.

لكنهم بلا شك يعتبرون أن ثمة موافقة ضمنية من الحريري على هذا الخيار، أو بالحد الأدنى عدم ممانعة، لتتحول لعبة الميثاقية، إلى أداة تستخدم للإجهاز على المسار الانتفاضي وشرذمة التحركات في حسابات مذهبية وطائفية. فبعد خروج “شيعة شيعة شيعة” تحت عنوان أن حزب الله مستهدف ويراد استبعاده من السلطة، جاءت الانتفاضة “السنية” رفضاً لتجاوز السنة واختيار من لا يمثلهم. هذه اللعبة على الرغم من إظهارها للاختلافات بين القوى السياسية، إلا أنها تمثّل حاجة عميقة لهم جميعاً لإعادة إنتاج وتعويم أنفسهم، شيعياً، مسيحياً، وسنياً، تضع حكومة “التكنوقراط” التي سيتم تقديمها بعد تسخيفها في مواجهة الناس، لتفشل بعد فترة على مختلف المستويات، فتكون هذه القوى أعادت تجميع قواها، لتعود مجدداً متحدة ومتوافقة على دفتر الحسابات والمصالح.. على حساب الناس ومطالبهم.

الشيطنة والخداع
جهدت قوى السلطة على إتهام المتظاهرين بالإرتهان للخارج، لكنهم هم الذي يبحثون عن تعويم أنفسهم دولياً، والدخول في مفاوضات وتقديم تنازلات سياسية واستراتيجية للبحث عن إعادة الإمساك بالسلطة ومقوماتها، وإنتاج نفسها بالحصول على الرضى الدولي، وليس الإسراع في الإدعاءات أن ما جرى من تسوية هو نتاج لتقاطع مصالح إقليمية ودولية، أو بوادر لمفاوضات إيرانية أميركية، إلا إسقاط الكامل لمنطق هذه المنظومة، في محاولات لشيطنة التحركات بينما هي التي تقترف أفعال الشيطنة، والتسابق للحصول على الرضى الأميركي. وربما هذا الكلام وحده يجب أن يكون كفيلاً في إنزال الناس إلى الساحات لرفض هذا النوع من التسويات المنسوج بتدخلات خارجية وتقاطع مصالح إقليمية.
يسارع دياب إلى تشكيل حكومته، وهي ستكون صورياً حكومة مصغرة ومشكلة من اختصاصيين.

لكن القرار السياسي فيها واضح أنه خارجها وفوقها، وبلا أي برنامج واضح للخروج من الأزمة الاقتصادية الاجتماعية، وسط أوهام تتعايش على أن المساعدات المالية الخارجية ستأتي سريعاً فور تشكيلها. وذلك بهدف إشغال اللبنانيين وإلهائهم.. وخداعهم. ثمة حفلة تكاذب ومكابرة هائلة تقودها القوى السياسية للإنقلاب على الناس وخياراتهم. والهدف الأبعد، يبقى في إعادة إنتاج تركيبة جديدة خلال هذه الفترة الانتقالية بين القوى التي تدّعي خروجاً من المشهد الحكومي حالياً، والعودة لاحقاً بعد “مصالحات” إلى مقدمة المشهد.

The post منير الربيع: حسان دياب حياكة إيرانية خالصة.. ضد العرب لا الأميركيين/الحكومة “الوهمية”.. خدعة السلطة لتمزيق وحدة اللبنانيين appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

الشعب السالك في الظلمة أبصر نورا عظيما/The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light

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الشعب السالك في الظلمة أبصر نورا عظيما
سفر إشعياء/09/من01حتى07: الشعب السالك في الظلمة أبصر نورا عظيما. الجالسون في أرض ظلال الموت أشرق عليهم نور أكثرت الأمة. عظمت لها الفرح. يفرحون أمامك كالفرح في الحصاد. كالذين يبتهجون عندما يقتسمون غنيمة لأن نير ثقله، وعصا كتفه، وقضيب مسخره كسرتهن كما في يوم مديان لأن كل سلاح المتسلح في الوغى وكل رداء مدحرج في الدماء، يكون للحريق، مأكلا للنار لأنه يولد لنا ولد ونعطى ابنا، وتكون الرياسة على كتفه، ويدعى اسمه عجيبا مشيرا، إلها قديرا، أبا أبديا، رئيس السلام لنمو رياسته، وللسلام لا نهاية على كرسي داود وعلى مملكته، ليثبتها ويعضدها بالحق والبر، من الآن إلى الأبد. غيرة رب الجنود تصنع هذا

The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light
Book of Isaiah 09/01-07: The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light; Upon those who dwelt in the land of gloom a light has shone. You have brought them abundant joy and great rejoicing, As they rejoice before you as at the harvest, as men make merry when dividing spoils.
For the yoke that burdened them, the pole on their shoulder, And the rod of their taskmaster you have smashed, as on the day of Midian. For every boot that tramped in battle, every cloak rolled in blood, will be burned as fuel for flames. For a child is born to us, a son is given us; upon his shoulder dominion rests. They name him Wonder-Counselor, God-Hero, Father-Forever, Prince of Peace. His dominion is vast and forever peaceful, From David’s throne, and over his kingdom, which he confirms and sustains By judgment and justice, both now and forever. The zeal of the LORD of hosts will do this!

The post الشعب السالك في الظلمة أبصر نورا عظيما/The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

الياس بجاني: ذكرى الميلاد المجيد وواجبات المؤمن/Elias Bejjani:Christmas And The obligations Of The Righteous

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Christmas And The obligations Of The Righteous
Elias Bejjani/December 25/2019

ذكرى الميلاد المجيد وواجبات المؤمن
الياس بجاني/25 كانون الأول/2019

تحمل ذكرى ميلاد السيد يسوع المسيح معاني وعبر ومفاهيم مقدسة كثيرة من أهمها المحبة والعطاء والفداء والتواضع والتسامح.

الذكرى هي نموذج للمحبة لأن الله وهو محبة، ومن قدر وعظمة محبته لنا، نحن البشر أولاده، تجسد من أجلنا وولد من رحم امرأة، ولبس جسدنا البشري، وعاش على الأرض كإنسان بطبيعته البشرية، وذلك من أجل أن يعتقنا من الخطيئة الأصلية، ويرفعنا بالعماد بالماء والروح القدس إلى درجة القداسة.

الذكرى هي درس في العطاء لأن الله المتجسد أعطانا ذاته وافتدانا وتحمل كل العذابات ليخلصنا ويؤكد لنا بالقول والفعل أنه أب عطوف ومحب ومعطاء.

الذكرى تجسد كل معاني الفداء لأن الله المتجسد افتدانا وارتضى بفرح أن يُعذب ويصلب ويهان من أجلنا.. ومن أجل خلاصنا.

الذكرى هي صورة مشرفة للتواضع حيث قبل الله المتجسد أن يولد في مزود وأن يعيش حياته على الأرض ببساطة وتواضع.

الذكرى هي عمل تسامح لأن الله تجسد وتحمل ما تحمل من أجل غفران خطيئتنا وخلاصنا وإعتاقنا من عبودية الخطيئة الأصلية.

تعلمنا الذكرى أنه من واجبات كل مؤمن أن يمارس إيمانه بالأقوال والأفعال وليس فقط بالاكتفاء بمظاهر طقوس الزينة والهدايا والاحتفالات.

الذكرى المقدسة توجب علينا أن نمارس بمحبة كل القيم الميلادية  والإنجيلية وأن نمد يدنا لكل من هو بحاجة ونحن قادرين على مساعدته لأن الله وهبنا النعم والوزنات “مجانا” وعلينا واجب مقدس أن نعطيها مجاناً.. (مجانا أعطيتم مجانا تعطون)

الذكرى تلزمنا إيمانياً أن نغفر لكل من أساء إلينا، وأن نعتذر لكل من أخطئنا بحقه مع تقديم الكفارات أي التكفير والتعويض عما اقترفتاه من ذنوب وأذى.

الذكرى تلزمنا بتنفيذ الوصايا العشرة وفي مقدمها “محبة الوالدين”..

الذكرى تتطلب منا العودة للاستماع لضميرنا والذي هو صوت الله بداخلنا.

الذكرى تلزمنا الاعتراف بفضل وجميل وعطاءات وتضحيات كل من يساعدنا، وأن لا نغرق في أوحال وغياهب الجحود ونقع في تجارب غرائزنا ونعبد ثروات الأرض الفانية من مال وسلطة وعزوة.

الذكرى توجب علينا الصلاة من أجل عودة أهلنا المبعدين قسراً واللاجئين في إسرائيل منذ العام ألفين.

الذكرى تتطلب منا الخشوع والصلاة من أجل معرفة مصير أهلنا المغيبين تعسفاً وظلماً في السجون السورية…وكذلك الصلاة والعمل من أجل تحرير وطننا الغالي لبنان، من اغلال الإحتلال.

كما لا يجب أن يغيب عن بالنا ولو للحظة كل ما قدمه الشهداء الأبرار الذين ارتضوا أن يكونوا قرابين من أجل وطننا وهويتنا ووجودنا وانساننا وكرامتنا.

أعاد الله العيد على وطننا الحبيب وعلى أهلنا وعلى العالم أجمع بالمحبة والطمأنينة والسلام.
كل عيد ميلاد والجميع بخير

*الكاتب ناشط لبناني اغترابي
عنوان الكاتب الألكتروني
Phoenicia@hotmail.com

رابط موقع الكاتب الألكتروني
http://www.eliasbejjaninews.com

Christmas And The obligations Of The Righteous
Elias Bejjani/December 25/2019

Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is Christ the Lord. (Luke 02/11)

Glory to God in the highest, on earth peace, good will toward men (Luke 02/14)

The holy birth of Jesus Christ bears numerous blessed vital values and principles including love, giving, redemption, modesty and forgiveness.

Christmas is a role model of love because God, our Father Himself is love.

Accordingly and in a bid to cleanse us from our original sin He came down from heaven, was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary, and became man.

This is my commandment, that you love one another, even as I have loved you. (John15/12)
There is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. (John15/13)

Christmas is way of giving …God gave us Himself because He is a caring, generous, forgiving and loving and father.

Christmas embodies all principles of genuine redemption. Jesus Christ redeemed us and for our sake He joyfully was crucified, and tolerated all kinds of torture, humiliation and pain
Christmas is a dignified image of modesty ..Jesus Christ accepted to be born into a manger and to live his life on earth in an extremely simple and humble manner.

Let us continuously remind our selves that when our day comes that could be at any moment, we shall not be able to take any thing that is earthly with us for the Day of judgment except our work and acts, be righteous or evil.

Christmas is a holy act of forgiveness ….God, and because He is a loving and forgiving has Sent His Son Jesus Christ redeem to free us from the bondage of the original sin that Adam and Eve committed.

Christmas requires that we all genuinely pray and pray for those who are hurt, lonely, deserted by their beloved ones, feel betrayed, are enduring pain silently pain, suffer anguish, deprived from happiness, warmth and joy .

Christmas is ought to teach us that it is the duty of every believer to practice his/her faith not only verbally and via routine rituals, but and most importantly through actual deeds of righteousness….

Christmas’ spirit is not only rituals of decorations, festivities, gifts and joyful celebrations…But deeds in all ways and means by helping those who need help in all field and domains.

Christmas’s spirit is a calls to honour and actually abide by all Bible teachings and values.

In this realm we have a Biblical obligation to open our hearts and with love extend our hand to all those who are in need, and we are able to help him remembering always that Almighty God showered on us all sorts of graces and capabilities so we can share them with others.

Christmas is a time to hold to the Ten Commandments, foremost of which is “Honour your father and your mother”.
Christmas is a good time for us to attentively hear and positively respond to our conscience, which is the voice of God within us.

Christmas should revive in our minds and hearts the importance of fighting all kinds temptations so we do not become slaves to earthly wealth, or power of authority.

Christmas for us as patriotic and faithful Lebanese is a time to pray for the safe and dignified return of our Southern people who were forced to take refuge in Israel since the year 2000.

Christmas for each and every loving and caring Lebanese is a holy opportunity for calling loudly on all the Lebanese politicians and clergymen, as well as on the UN for the release of the thousands of Lebanese citizens who are arbitrarily and unjustly imprisoned in Syrian prisons.

Most importantly Christmas is a time for praying and working for the liberation of our dear homeland Lebanon, from the Iranian occupation.

No one should never ever lose sight for a moment or keep a blind eye on the sacrifices of our heroic righteous martyrs who willing sacrificed themselves for our homeland, identity, existence, and dignity. Our prayers goes for them on this Holy Day and for peace in each and evry country, especially in the chaotic and troubled Middle East.

May God Bless you all and shower upon you, your families, friends, and beloved ones all graces of joy, health, love, forgiveness, meekness and hope.

The post الياس بجاني: ذكرى الميلاد المجيد وواجبات المؤمن/Elias Bejjani:Christmas And The obligations Of The Righteous appeared first on Elias Bejjani News.

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