Tuesday, 9 September 2014

Flooding washes away parts of major Nevada freeway


Heavy rains and flash flooding that washed away portions of the roadway prompted Nevada officials to close a nearly 50-mile stretch of Interstate 15, a major trucking artery that leads north from Las Vegas to Salt Lake City.


Nevada transportation officials said Tuesday the corridor could be closed for three to four days while they scramble to repair eroded pavement. They were diverting Utah- and Arizona-bound traffic to smaller roads, including U.S. 93.


"I don't think it can be overstated just how important I-15 is to the three states," Utah Department of Transportation spokesman John Gleason said. "I would say the detours, in the best-case scenario, are not as convenient as I-15."


Seasonal monsoon moisture combined with the remnants of Tropical Storm Norbert to dump rain throughout the Southwest on Monday. Floodwaters submerged vehicles and homes in Nevada and Arizona and are blamed for at least two deaths in southern Arizona.


A woman died after her car was swept away and became trapped against a bridge in Tucson, and a 76-year-old woman drowned when her husband tried to drive across a flooded wash in Pinal County.


Phoenix recorded record rainfall for a single day, turning freeways into small lakes and sending rescuers scrambling to get drivers out of inundated cars. On Tuesday, many in the metro area focused on mop-up, while a flash-flood watch was issued for much of the rest of the state through the evening.


Parts of Nevada also saw downpours, and 190 people from an Indian reservation about 50 miles northeast of Las Vegas were evacuated after more than 4 inches of rain fell on the rural, sparsely populated community of Moapa, pushing the Virgin River to near-flood stage. Some homes were damaged.


Strong thunderstorms also wreaked havoc in Southern California's deserts. Rescue crews answered more than 40 flood-related calls about stranded cars during the Monday morning commute in the La Quinta and Indian Wells areas near Palm Springs, Riverside County fire spokeswoman Jody Hagemann said. Numerous cars got stuck in high water in Coachella Valley, said Mike Radford, spokesman for the Indio CHP office.


In suburban Phoenix, crews in Mesa were trying to keep floodwaters away from around 125 homes after retention basins and channels along the U.S. 60 freeway reached or exceeded capacity, allowing water to flow into a handful of neighborhoods.


Crews worked into the night to disconnect power to submerged transformers, provide sandbags to threatened homes, and pump water from affected areas. A temporary shelter was being set up at a recreation center.


Norbert's effects likely will hang around Tuesday, National Weather Service meteorologist Charlotte Dewey said. But she warned any additional precipitation could quickly cause new flooding because the ground is already saturated.


Sections of the two main north-south and east-west freeways through Phoenix — Interstates 10 and 17 — were closed during the Monday morning commute, snarling traffic all across the metro area.


Cars and SUVs sat in water up to their hoods on I-10 before the water receded and sunshine emerged. By late morning, trucks were able to take away several dozen vehicles that had been swamped.


The National Weather Service recorded 3.29 inches of rain at the Phoenix airport, by far the most precipitation the city has ever received in one day. The previous record was 2.91 inches in 1939.


Other Phoenix metro areas received staggering amounts of rain for the desert region. Chandler recorded 5.63 inches, while Mesa had 4.41 inches.


Monsoon storms from the Pacific Ocean and Gulf of Mexico can bring heavy rain and wind to Phoenix in the summer months. The last six years have produced a highly erratic pattern as Phoenix has gone from huge rainfall one summer to scant precipitation the next, said meteorologist Charlotte Dewey.


In Tucson, nearly 2 inches of rain in a short period turned normally dry washes into raging torrents. A woman was found dead after her car was swept about two blocks by water 10 to 15 feet deep then wedged and submerged against a bridge, Tucson Fire Department spokesman Barrett Baker said.


"This is the worst thing in the world for us," Baker said. "We talk all summer really about the dangers of washes."


In Tempe, part of a grocery store roof collapsed because of the rain, but none of the people inside was injured, police Lt. Mike Pooley said.


Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer declared a state of emergency because of the flooding and told nonessential state workers to stay home.


Scattered electricity outages were reported, with more than 10,000 customers losing power.



Associated Press writers Astrid Galvan in Tucson, Ariz., and Paul Davenport, Bob Christie and Alina Hartounian in Phoenix contributed to this report.


Economic forecast in much of world: Dim to gloomy


The Great Recession officially ended more than five years ago. Yet the feeling of many people around the world can be summarized in one word: Gloom.


In a survey of 48,643 people in 44 countries out Tuesday, the Pew Research Center found that 60 percent say their own country's economy is performing poorly.


Dissatisfaction runs highest in the world's most advanced economies, where 64 percent say conditions are bad. In the United States, 58 percent give the American economy poor marks.


The deepest despair was recorded in countries hit hardest by the European debt crisis: 97 percent of Greeks, 96 percent of Italians and 93 percent of Spaniards said their economies were performing poorly. Unemployment rates are extraordinarily high in all three: 27 percent in Greece, 13 percent in Italy, 25 percent in Spain.


There are exceptions to the pervasive gloom: 89 percent of Chinese are positive about their country's economy, even though it's slowed markedly from the double-digit growth of a few years ago. In Vietnam, 87 percent of respondents gave the economy high marks. In Germany, 85 percent did.


In the countries that Pew characterizes as "emerging economies," 59 percent said conditions were unsatisfactory. Only in low-income "developing economies" did a majority (51 percent) call economic conditions "good."


Brazil has seen the steepest drop in economic confidence: Just 32 percent of Brazilians were positive about their economy, down from 59 percent in 2013.


Perceptions are improving in the United Kingdom: Last year, just 15 percent said the U.K. economy was in good shape. This year, the figure had jumped to 43 percent.


Eighty percent of Chinese said their economy would be stronger in a year, making them the world's most optimistic people. Just 15 percent of Japanese expected an improved economy next year, the lowest among the countries surveyed.


People in advanced economies ranked high levels of government debt as their biggest economic problem, followed by rising prices, a lack of jobs and the income gap between the rich and poor.


People in middle-income countries saw rising prices as their biggest problem. Those in low-income countries regarded a weak job market as their No. 1 problem.



The First Lady Holds Prep Rally to Encourage Higher Ed Preparation


Students at Booker T. Washington High School Listen to First Lady Michelle Obama

Students at Booker T. Washington High School in Atlanta listen to First Lady Michelle Obama speak on preparing for higher education. Photo courtesy of the U.S. Department of Education by Joshua Hoover.




First Lady Michelle Obama was at Booker T. Washington High School in Atlanta, Ga., yesterday, to help kick off the Department of Education’s annual back-to-school bus tour, and to encourage students to take charge of their futures and complete an education beyond high school as part of her Reach Higher initiative.


Booker T. Washington High School opened its doors in 1924 and was the first public high school for African-Americans in Georgia. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is among the school’s graduates. The First Lady began her visit by joining Secretary of Education Arne Duncan for a quick stop at a college fair, and to listen to students talk about their experience in searching out schools and getting help from their counselors.


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Developer plans remake of area near Faneuil Hall


A Boston real estate developer is proposing to transform a cluster of office buildings near Faneuil Hall into a vibrant commercial complex featuring restaurants, retail and hotel space.


Related Beal's proposal for Congress Square calls for adding 50,000-plus square feet of restaurant and retail space to the ground floors of five buildings. The plan calls for turning a little-used alley into a pedestrian zone connecting with Faneuil Hall.


Related bought 343,000-square-feet of primarily office space from Fidelity Investments in December for $87.25 million. Fidelity will move out of three of the buildings by year's end and the others by the end of October 2015.


Related's executive vice president says the plan is to "rejuvenate the entire block."


The plan unveiled Monday needs the approval of the Boston Redevelopment Authority.



US stocks open lower; Home Depot falls


Stocks are opening slightly lower, pulling the Standard & Poor's 500 index back below 2,000 points.


The S&P 500 fell five points, or 0.3 percent, to 1,996, as of 9:35 a.m. Eastern time Tuesday.


The Dow Jones industrial average fell 66 points, or 0.4 percent, to 17,046. The Nasdaq composite fell 13 points, or 0.3 percent, to 4,578.


Home Depot fell 1 percent after the company confirmed that its payment systems had been hacked, potentially exposing millions of shoppers who used credit and debit cards at its stores.


Annie's soared 37 percent in early trading after the maker of rabbit-shaped mac and cheese agreed to be acquired by General Mills.


Bond prices fell. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.50 percent.



Hawks discipline GM Ferry for racist comments


he fallout from racially charged comments by Atlanta Hawks' leadership continued on Tuesday as general manager Danny Ferry was disciplined for making inflammatory comments about Luol Deng.


Hawks CEO Steve Koonin has imposed undisclosed discipline on Ferry for comments the GM made to the ownership group in June when the team pursued Deng as a free agent.


Atlanta's WSB-TV obtained a letter from Hawks co-owner Michael Gearon Jr. which cites Ferry telling the ownership group that Deng "has a little African in him."


Gearon's letter to co-owner Bruce Levenson said Ferry went on to say, "Not in a bad way, but he's like a guy who would have a nice store out front and sell you counterfeit stuff out of the back.


"Ferry completed the racial slur by describing the player (and impliedly all persons of African descent) as a two-faced liar and cheat."


In the letter, Gearon recommended that Ferry resign or be fired.


Gearon said he and the other co-owners "were appalled that anyone would make such a racist slur under any circumstance, much less the GM of an NBA franchise on a major conference call."


Gearon declined to comment when contacted by The Associated Press on Tuesday and Deng's agent, Ron Shade, could not be immediately reached.


Hawks spokesman Garin Narain said the team's investigation of Ferry's comments uncovered a racially inflammatory email written two years ago by Levenson. That discovery led to Levenson's announcement Sunday that he will sell his controlling share of the team.


Ferry apologized Tuesday but said he was only repeating comments he had heard about Deng.


"In regards to the insensitive remarks that were used during our due diligence process, I was repeating comments that were gathered from numerous sources during background conversations and scouting about different players," Ferry said in a statement released by the team.


"I repeated those comments during a telephone conversation reviewing the draft and free agency process. Those words do not reflect my views, or words that I would use to describe an individual and I certainly regret it. I apologize to those I offended and to Luol, who I reached out to Monday morning."


In his letter to Levenson, Gearon compared Ferry's comments to comments made former Clippers owner Donald Sterling, who was forced to sell the team this year when his racist comments were disclosed.


"We believe these comments by Ferry were far worse than Sterling's because they were not from a private personal conversation — they were in a business environment on a business matter in front of a dozen or more people," Gearon wrote. "If Ferry would make such a slur in a semi-public forum, we can only imagine what he has said in smaller groups or to individuals."


Gearon also said in the letter that he wanted to point out Ferry's comments to Levenson because he wasn't sure Levenson was listening to the full conference call. Gearon said his belief, confirmed by his consultations with two attorneys, was the fallout from Ferry's comments could be "devastating."


Gearon noted Levenson had condemned Sterling on national TV.


Added Gearon: "We believe these comments by Ferry were far worse than Sterling's because they were not from a private personal conversation — they were in a business environment on a business matter in front of a dozen or more people."


Gearon warned Levenson he believed Ferry's comments "could be fatal to the franchise" if made public.


In his letter of apology, Ferry pledged he would learn from the incident.


"I am committed to learning from this and deeply regret this situation," Ferry said. "I fully understand we have work to do in order to help us create a better organization; one that our players and fans will be proud of, on and off the court, and that is where my focus is moving forward."



Janay Rice Defends Husband Ray Rice on Instagram


Yesterday, after TMZ revealed the full, horrific video of Ray Rice hitting and knocking his then-fiancée, now wife, Janay Rice, unconscious in an elevator, the NFL finally suspended the running back and the Baltimore Ravens terminated his contract. The news flooded Twitter, with the majority of reactions falling in the finally category, but Janay herself responded to this morning via Instagram:



Orignally published on Elle.com



Bou Saab urges world to fund refugee education



BEIRUT: Lebanon’s Education Ministry called Tuesday on the international community to provide the required funds to enable Lebanon to educate thousands of refugee children in its public schools.


After a meeting with representatives of the World Bank and the British Development Ministry, Bou Saab stressed “the importance of an explicit commitment by the international community to the financial support” of the RACE project: Reaching All Children with Education.


According to Bou Saab, if not enough funds are donated to this project, 100,000 refugee children will be left without education next year.


The minister spoke to An-Nahar about the problems facing the plan, particularly the high cost of absorbing an additional 100,000 students into Lebanon's school system.


“There is an approved plan the ministry had prepared that is estimated to cost $200 million for an additional 100,000 refugee students to be funded by international organizations,” he said, according to an article published in the newspaper Monday. “Half of the needed amount was secured.”


After Tuesday’s meeting, the minister warned that the international community has yet to commit to funding the entire project.


The minister explained that Lebanon would be unable to accommodate many refugee students seeking enrollment this year because priority would be given to Lebanese children.


The minister issued a decree in August restricting registration to Lebanese students for a certain period, after which Palestinian, Iraqi and Syrian children could start registering.


The ministry extended the deadline for Lebanese students to enroll to the end of this week.



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Imposter passed as Lebanese diplomat in Colombia


BOGOTA: A Colombian man is being investigated for posing as a Lebanese diplomat after giving lectures on the Middle East and advising the Colombian military under a false identity, local media reported.


Jeyson Puello, a resident of the northeast city of Valledupar, was using diplomatic papers with a UN seal to pass himself off as Jason Ali Hakim Abdullaziz Al Nayb, supposedly a high-ranking diplomat and former Lebanese foreign minister, news reports said.


Despite his perfect Spanish and ordinary clothing, Puello managed to get into official meetings and establish a network of army contacts under the assumed identity.


But a curious colonel who noticed the "diplomat" always arrived at meetings on foot contacted the Lebanese embassy in Bogota.


"There's no person by that name," he was told in a letter printed in newsweekly Semana.


The letter called on Colombian authorities to investigate and try the "imposter."


Police caught Puello by sending a fake invitation to "the honorable ambassador."


He was briefly detained but has been released pending further investigation.


Puello had two diplomatic accreditations, one from the Colombian foreign ministry and another identifying him as the Lebanese ambassador, said daily newspaper El Tiempo.


The Colombian foreign ministry declined to comment.


The incident comes 50 years after a seminarian in Neiva, in central Colombia, passed himself off as India's ambassador, living a lavish life until the ruse was discovered. The episode inspired the 1987 film "El Embajador de la India" (The Indian Ambassador).



Iran envoy expresses support for Lebanese Army


Mortar attack kills 5 in Syrian capital


Syria's state-run news agency SANA says mortar attacks on the capital Damascus and its suburbs have killed five people...



France condemns Lebanese soldiers’ beheading


France condemns Lebanese soldiers’ beheading


The beheading of Lebanese soldiers Abbas Medlej and Ali al-Sayyed at the hands of ISIS militants reveals ISIS’s...



Families of captured Lebanese servicemen meet ministerial committee


Kidnapped Lebanese soldier's family allowed visit


After more than a month in captivity, one of the at least 22 Lebanese soldiers and policemen held by Islamist...



Alcoa, others, moving some retirees to exchanges


Alcoa Inc. is sending its white-collar retirees to a private exchange to shop for health insurance as the aluminum maker joins the growing ranks of large companies looking for ways to control benefit costs.


The move, which does not affect retirees covered under union contracts, is the latest example of major changes in the way corporate America provides health insurance to workers and retirees.


With health costs rising dramatically and the Affordable Care Act reforming many parts of the nation's health care system, companies are trying to shift more responsibility to employees through greater cost-sharing.


Like Alcoa, IBM and Time Warner are moving thousands of retirees to private exchanges instead of offering them company-administered health plans. Department store chain Sears and drugstore chain Walgreens are sending their workers to private exchanges.


Alcoa spokeswoman Melissa Lelii confirmed on Monday that salaried retirees will be moved to a private exchange set up by Towers Watson, a consulting firm that runs private exchanges. She declined to provide any other details, including how many people are affected by the change, how benefits may change or how much Alcoa's contribution to health benefits would be reduced.


Lelii said the majority of retirees "will see a greater benefit with the health care exchange options" but declined to provide specifics.


Typically, private exchanges are set up by a consulting company or an insurance carrier and offer a broad range of health plans. Employers contribute a set amount that may cover most or all of the cost of a basic plan. It's up to the worker or retiree to pay for a higher level of coverage.


"If they want the Cadillac plan, they may have to kick in more money than they are paying today," said J.T. Shilling, head of the Pittsburgh office of benefits consulting firm Mercer. "But at least they have the option rather than the company just saying, 'We're going to cut benefits.' "


Though not commonplace, Shilling said, nearly every company is asking itself whether a private exchange makes sense as a way to continue offering health benefits to employees.


Interest has picked up since the inauguration of HealthCare.gov, the government's online exchange set up under President Obama's health law.


"The public exchanges opened people's eyes to the power of shopping and the power of choice," Shilling said.


Private exchanges may help employers avoid a 40 percent excise tax on high-value health plans that will take effect in 2018, according to Towers Watson.


The firm estimates that three out of five large employers will be subject to the so-called Cadillac tax if they don't take steps to reduce their contribution to health benefits.


Alcoa, which is based in New York but has an operations center in Pittsburgh, may have been able to provide rich employee benefits in the past, but it is facing serious competitive pressure today, said John Tumazos of Tumazos Very Independent Research in Holmdel, New Jersey. There is an oversupply of aluminum caused by increasing Chinese production, which has depressed the metal's price, he said. Alcoa has responded by closing smelters across the nation and trimming expenses.


"They're not the pre-eminent company they once were," he said. "They haven't taken the controls off of cost. They're still attacking any and every cost."


Alcoa will host information meetings on the changes on Oct. 1 and 2 at the DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel in Green Tree.


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Online: http://bitly.com/Yt7PC7



How to handle an auto recall if parts aren't ready


In July, two scary notices arrived in Amaris McGee's mailbox.


They came from General Motors, and each told her the gray 2005 Chevy Malibu she drives to work every day is being recalled for safety problems. But neither problem can be fixed yet because the parts aren't ready.


Like millions of others caught in GM's massive recall crisis, the 25-year-old corporate chef in Dallas can't afford to rent or buy another car. So she drives the Malibu even though the brake lights sometimes don't work, increasing the risk of getting rear-ended. And it's possible that the transmission shift cable can break without warning, leaving the car stuck in gear when the shifter shows it's in park.


She avoids the freeways, nervously driving 2 miles to work every day on side streets while she waits for another notice telling her the parts have arrived.


"It's my only car, so I have to drive it," she said. "I don't want anyone to get hurt because of something with my car, even though it's beyond my control."


Almost always, automakers or U.S. safety regulators send out recall notices before parts are ready. Sometimes the companies or dealers offer free loaner cars, but most of the time they don't. That presents car owners with a difficult question: should they keep driving and hope the problem doesn't affect them, or rent a car until the dealer gets parts, which can take months or even a year?


Adding to driver anxiety is the fact that news coverage of a recall often comes before the notices, because most automakers follow federal law and report problems to the government to avoid fines and embarrassing publicity.


There are steps you can take to give yourself peace of mind or even get your car fixed before the parts are officially available, said Carroll Lachnit, consumer advice editor at the Edmunds.com automotive website.


First, anyone can check to see if their car is under recall on a new site offered by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, http://1.usa.gov/1pLtKcZ. Type in your vehicle identification number (VIN), which can be found on the driver's side of the dashboard near the windshield. It's also often on state registration or insurance paperwork.


With a VIN, the site will tell you if there are unfixed recalls on your car, even if they are old. It also will tell you if the car company is waiting for parts.


If parts aren't available, Lachnit suggests clicking on links that take you to the NHTSA recall database, and looking at the documents for symptoms of the problem, and to see if it has caused any crashes or injuries. If your car has the symptoms, it's time to contact the dealer.


"You have to kind of assess how serious the problem is to make some noise and get some resolution," Lachnit says. "They may have parts."


Most of the time, GM starts recalls with about 30 percent of the parts it needs, spokesman Alan Adler said, so parts are available to those who are having problems. He suggests working with a dealer to get the repairs done even before notices are mailed by the company telling you to come in for repairs.


But even if your car hasn't shown symptoms, it's still unnerving to drive it knowing that something could cause you to crash at any moment. Automakers have recalled more than 40 million vehicles in the U.S. so far this year, a record. Many are for serious safety issues such as loss of steering or engine power, air bag failures or vehicle fires.


GM alone has recalled 29 million cars in North America. In most cases, automakers must line up companies to build replacement parts. They also must test the parts and ship them to thousands of dealers, and they have to tell mechanics how to fix things. Experts say no company, no matter how large, could quickly handle millions of parts.


"We've got this huge backlog," conceded GM's Adler. "We're working through these issues as soon as we can."


The same thing happens to other manufacturers. For example, Toyota in April recalled about 1.3 million older vehicles, including the popular RAV4 crossover, for air bag problems. At first there were no parts available. But the company is now telling owners with air bag warning lights illuminated on their dash to take cars to dealers.


For Malibus and 2.4 million other recalled midsize cars like McGee's, Adler says 900,000 parts have been shipped to fix the brake light problem. Letters telling U.S. customers to get the cars fixed are going out now at the rate of 60,000 per day. But parts still aren't available for the transmission cable problem in McGee's car.


McGee says she'll contact her dealer about getting the car fixed before she gets a letter telling her to do so. And she's unhappy with GM because of how long it's taken to find and fix the problem. "I'd like this rectified as soon as possible," she said.



Salam discusses security with EU, Saudi ambassadors


BEIRUT: Security developments in Lebanon were the topic of discussion at meetings between the prime minister and the health minister, the telecommunications minister, and the ambassadors of Saudi Arabia and the European Union Tuesday.


“What happened yesterday was extremely dangerous,” Health Minister Wael Abu Faour said after the meeting with Prime Minister Tammam Salam. “All the political parties and leaders should be responsible enough to limit the actions and the reactions in the streets.”


Faour said the kidnapped soldiers and policeman’s case should be a reason for all the Lebanese to unite, and not “a source of civil strife among [them].”


One day after the kidnappings and road blocks in the Bekaa Valley, Salam was also visited by the outgoing Saudi Ambassador to Lebanon Ali Awad Asiri and the EU Ambassador Angelina Eichhorst.


State Minister Nabil de Freij attended the meeting with Eichhorst, in which the partnership in development between Lebanon and Europe was also discussed.


Telecommunications Minister Boutros Harb also visited Salam Tuesday, and criticized his political rivals Hezbollah and the Free Patriotic Movement, whose leaders had met earlier in the day.


“The statement should have included a voice of support to the Cabinet and the Army, however it was empty,” Harb said, referring to the statement released after MP Michel Aoun’s visit to Hezbollah’s General Secretary Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah.


The Bekaa Valley witnessed chaos Monday, after three residents of Arsal and another from Saadnayel were kidnapped by armed groups. The Army performed wide raids and searches Tuesday in an attempt to find the kidnappers, some of whom demanded ransoms, while others acted in response to the kidnapping of servicemen by ISIS in Arsal last month.



Burlington Stores 2Q results beat Street's view


Burlington Stores said Tuesday that its fiscal second-quarter loss narrowed as sales improved and its income tax expense declined.


Its performance beat analysts' estimates, and the discount retailer raised its fiscal 2014 guidance.


Shares rose in Tuesday premarket trading.


The Burlington, New Jersey, company lost $6.5 million for the three months ended Aug. 2. That compares with a loss of $25 million a year earlier.


Excluding certain items, it lost a penny per share.


Analysts, on average, expected a loss of 8 cents per share, according to a FactSet survey.


Burlington Stores' stock gained $2.32, or 6.4 percent, to $38.38 shortly before the market open.


Income tax expense fell to $4.3 million from $14.2 million.


Revenue increased to $1.05 billion from $971.5 million, beating Wall Street's estimate of $1.03 billion.


Sales at stores open at least a year, a key gauge of a retailer's health, rose 4.7 percent. This figure excludes results from stores recently opened or closed.


The company now predicts full-year adjusted earnings in a range of $1.52 to $1.58 per share. Its prior guidance was for adjusted earnings between $1.25 and $1.35 per share. Total sales are forecast to rise 6.5 percent to 7.2 percent, up from a previous outlook for a 5.8 percent to 6.8 percent rise.


Analysts expect earnings of $1.52 per share.


For the third quarter, Burlington Stores Inc. foresees adjusted earnings between 9 cents and 12 cents per share. Revenue is anticipated to climb 6.4 percent to 7.4 percent. Wall Street is calling for earnings of 11 cents per share.



VP Webb says FIFA's bad image affecting football


FIFA Vice President Jeffrey Webb says the governing body's image problems are harming football and it must work to regain trust over "ethics and morals."


But Webb stopped short of criticizing Sepp Blatter, who has led FIFA since 1998 and is standing for a fifth term, instead praising the president for driving up revenue.


FIFA remains synonymous with corruption despite governance changes, and Webb sees its image as tarnished.


Webb believes FIFA's "image and public perception is definitely affecting the game ... that is definitely perhaps the number one challenge."


Addressing the SoccerEx conference, Webb said "from an ethics and morals standpoint I believe we have a lot of work to do .... to build up trust and confidence."


But Webb said Blatter's work building FIFA's business has been "tremendous."



Home Depot confirms breach in US, Canada stores


Shares of Home Depot sank before the opening bell Tuesday after confirming that its payment systems had been hacked, potentially exposing millions of shoppers who used credit and debit cards at its more than 2,000 U.S. and Canadian stores.


The breach could turn out to be one of the biggest in history. Home Depot did not say how many cards might be affected, but the largest U.S. home improvement chain did say late Monday that its investigation into the breach goes as far back as April.


The news comes nearly a week after a website that focuses on cybersecurity reported on Tuesday a possible hack of Home Depot's data. The company said later that day that it was investigating the potential breach.


"We apologize for the frustration and anxiety this causes our customers, and I want to thank them for their patience and support as we work through this issue," Chairman and CEO Frank Blake said in a press release.


Home Depot is the latest retailer to have a data breach. Others include Target, luxury retailer Neiman Marcus, grocer Supervalu, restaurant chain P.F. Chang's and the thrift store operations of Goodwill.


In December, Target Corp. disclosed a massive data breach that was the second-largest in history, resulting in the theft of 40 million debit and credit card numbers and the potential exposure of personal information of up to 70 million shoppers.


Forrester Research analyst John Kindervag said the Home Depot breach could affect similar numbers of shoppers or cards, noting that months' worth of data may have been compromised.


"From what I'm hearing, people think this will be as big as Target or bigger," he said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press.


The retail breaches have rattled shoppers' confidence at a time when privacy concerns are high. It's also increased pressure on retailers to increase security so that customers can feel safe that their personal data is secure when they're out shopping.


Retailers, banks and card companies have responded to the breaches by speeding the adoption of microchips in U.S. credit and debit cards. That technology helps makes transactions more secure.


Home Depot, which said malware was used in the hack, has announced that it plans to have chip-enabled checkout terminals at all of its U.S. stores by the end of this year.


In the meantime, the Atlanta company said its IT department also is looking into the breach and is working with outside firms, its banking partners, and the U.S. Secret Service. It added that customers will not be held responsible for fraudulent charges to their accounts.


The possible breach at Home Depot was first reported by Brian Krebs of Krebs on Security. Krebs said multiple banks reported "evidence that Home Depot stores may be the source of a massive new batch of stolen credit and debit cards."


If Target's breach is any indication, the fallout from the Home Depot breach could be severe.


The Target hack cost the company hurt the company's profit and revenue. Target's chief information officer and CEO both stepped down in the months after the hack.


"I would think if you're a member of the board of directors, somebody has to be the sacrificial lamb for this," Kindervag, the Forrester analyst, said about Home Depot's breach.


Home Depot already has had some fallout. Its shares fell 41 cents to $90.41 in premarket trading Tuesday.


Before the potential breach was announced, Home Depot said in August that Blake would step down as CEO on Nov. 1. He will be replaced by Craig Menear, president of the company's U.S. retail operations.



Police arrest suspected robbers, call on victims to come forward


Police arrest suspected robbers, call on victims to come forward


Police are calling for victims to come forward after arresting two alleged robbers in Beirut’s Raouche area, and...



Hezbollah downplays ISIS threat, says Army and Resistance will prevail


BEIRUT: Hezbollah officials downplayed threats posed by ISIS on Lebanon’s security Tuesday, arguing that the Lebanese Army and the party's armed resistance were capable of crushing the militants.


MP Mohammad Raad, who heads Hezbollah’s Loyalty to the Resistance Bloc in Parliament, said that ISIS was seeking to ignite sectarian strife in Lebanon by manipulating the issue of the captive security personnel.


“There is no need for fear at all. The Lebanese Army and the Resistance are very well capable of using the appropriate antidote with the monsters,” Raad said at a memorial ceremony for a Hezbollah member in south Lebanon’s village of Harouf.


Raad scorned any possible swap of Islamist prisoners for the Army and Internal Security Forces personnel held by ISIS and Nusra Front militants, arguing that “there should be no exchange involving detainees who have committed crimes, and detonated car bombs in our areas and neighborhoods, killing innocent women and children.”


"If ISIS is conspiring to sow strife and chaos between the components of the country, we should prevent it from achieving its goals by rejecting sedition," Raad said, stressing that Lebanon should be allowed to live safe and proud "without humiliation or making concessions to others."


At least 29 personnel went missing during last month’s clashes in Arsal between the Army and militants from ISIS and Nusra Front who have demanded that the government release Islamist detainees held in Roumieh Prison in exchange. The militants are believed to be still holding 22 captives after five were freed and two were decapitated at the hands of ISIS militants.


Speaking on ISIS, Hezbollah’s deputy leader Sheikh Naim Qassem said that the militant group has reached its maximum and was already beginning to recede.


“Takfiri militants are a danger for humanity and Islam. The important thing is that we unite against them. All parties, regardless of their affiliations or interests, will have to confront this danger,” Qassem said at the conference of Muslim scholars in support of the Palestinian resistance, which convened in Tehran Tuesday.


Hezbollah’s number two blasted parties which seek to justify the action of takfiri militants, accusing them of complicity. “Those who find justification for the takfiri activists are their partners in a losing venture and enemies of Islam,” Qassem said in obvious allusion to Hezbollah’s political opponents, notably the Future Movement.



Complaint sparks probe of minivan stalling issue


A man's complaint that his Chrysler minivan stalled unexpectedly after refueling has brought an inquiry from U.S. safety regulators.


The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says it will look into the problem that could affect 160,000 Dodge Grand Caravan minivans from 2007 and other model years.


The agency says it will study how often the problem happens and whether it occurs in other similarly equipped minivans. The inquiry will determine if a formal investigation should be started.


In his complaint, the man told the agency the van stalled on his wife while she was driving with children on a freeway. The man cited eight complaints of similar problems from other drivers. The agency doesn't identify people who file complaints.



BGC Partners makes $675M cash offer for GFI Group


BGC Partners Inc. is offering $675 million in cash for the derivatives and currency broker GFI Group Inc., trying to derail a competing bid from CME Group.


BGC said Tuesday that it will pay $5.25 per share in cash for each share of GFI it doesn't already own, a price that represents a premium of more than 15 percent to CME's all-stock offer of $4.55 per share. BGC Partners, a financial and real estate brokerage, already owns a 13.5 percent stake in GFI.


New York-based BGC said it is taking its tender offer directly to GFI shareholders after GFI refused to discuss a deal. BGC Partners President Shaun D. Lynn said in a letter to GFI directors that his company's proposal was "clearly superior."


"We believe that GFI's customers and brokers would benefit from GFI being part of a larger, better capitalized and more diversified company," Lynn wrote.


A GFI Group representative declined to comment on the latest offer.


GFI and CME Group, a derivatives marketplace, announced their deal on July 30 and said the combined company would sell GFI's wholesale brokerage and clearing business for $165 million in cash.


BGC said that deal deprives GFI shareholders of "the appropriate value of their investment" because the brokerage business would be sold to a consortium of GFI Group management at a discount.


GFI Group shares closed at $5.03 on Monday and have climbed nearly 29 percent so far this year.



AIG plans to add 300 jobs in Olathe


State officials were on hand to celebrate a ribbon cutting at a new contact center for American International Group in Olathe.


The insurance company plans to add 300 new employees at the center, which will offer claims and policy servicing operations. The Kansas City Star reports (http://bit.ly/1uhLGCg ) AIG received state and city incentives to locate in a 55-acre business park that is under development.


AIG president Peter Hancock says the company will add the 300 jobs by end of 2015. The company already employs more than 600 workers in Olathe.


The center also will provide business and management training and career opportunities for students and alumni of the University of Kansas School of Business.



Chesapeake Energy racketeering case heads to trial


The Michigan attorney general's office says Chesapeake Energy has been ordered to stand trial in a racketeering case that accuses it of leasing land to thwart competitors and then canceling the deals when the competition ended.


A probable cause hearing in the criminal case against the Oklahoma City-based company took place in August in Cheboygan District Court. Attorney General Bill Schuette (SHOO'-tee) on Tuesday announced the judge's decision, which had been expected in a written opinion.


The Associated Press sent a message seeking comment from a Chesapeake spokesman.


Schuette filed charges including racketeering and false pretenses over land deals in the northern Lower Peninsula.


A Dec. 2 trial is scheduled in a separate antitrust case that accuses Chesapeake of rigging bids at a 2010 state oil and gas lease auction.



Protest in solidarity with female victims of terror


BEIRUT: Over 50 protesters gathered outside of ESCWA Tuesday to show solidarity with women affected by terrorism.


“We have organized this gathering today in solidarity with women in the region,” Manar Zaiter, a lawyer with the Lebanese Women Democratic Gathering (RDFL), told The Daily Star. “The idea is to bring attention to the situation that is happening across the region and that the worst things are happening to women.”


RDFL organized the protest that was attended by several Iraqi and Syrian women, at the Gibran Khalil Gibran Garden, in front of the ESCWA building in Downtown Beirut.


In recent months, ISIS - an Al-Qaeda offshoot - has created a self-proclaimed "Islamic Caliphate" covering swaths of territory in Iraq and northeastern Syria. The group's notoriety was launched after their shock seizure of Iraq's second city Mosul and subsequent lightning strikes saw it gain more Iraqi territory while consolidating its hold in Syria.


There have been several reports alleging that ISIS fighters were raping women and forcing them into labor in the areas which they control, as well as setting up marriage bureaus, where virgins and widows were married off to fighters.


While news headlines have been dominated by the sectarian issues sparked by ISIS - such as the groups desecration of churches and Shiite shrines, and its call to conversion or death - there has been minimal coverage of the extent to which women are suffering in ISIS's new "caliphate."


The protestors Tuesday raised a large banner with pictures of niqab adorned women in chains walking in single file with the slogan “Women Facing Terrorism” - the word terrorism emphasized in blood red. A teenager at the front of the group also held a sign that read: “Yazidi and Christian women are being sold on the market.”


Father Mazin al-Tokum, a Syriac Catholic from Mosul who moved to Lebanon recently, was present at the protest.


“[We want to stand up for the] Iraqi women that suffered the Iraq-Iran war in the 80's, who survived and were patient. They held on in the face of economic siege,” Al Tokum said. “It’s unfair that it’s always the people that loose, not the government.”


The priest went on to say that, despite the media attention on attacks on marginalized groups, all Iraqi people were suffering under the terrorists’ oppression.


“We praise God, who is merciful, the way we want to, not the way they tell us too,” Al-Tokum said.


There were also several women from Syria and Iraq present at the protest.


Nijad came to Lebanon from Mosul two years ago but several of her family members remain in Iraq. Her two sisters are currently homeless in Irbil.


“[My sisters] are sleeping on the streets ... they took our houses and everything we had. They came into all of our houses and took them away. What are we supposed to do?”



Lebanese pharmacies set to provide cheaper generic medicine


BEIRUT: Certain medications will now be replaced with less expensive generic substitutes, Health Minister Wael Abu Faour said Tuesday, citing an agreement made with the Order of Physicians.


The syndicate approved a unified medical prescription, which allowed pharmacies to replace some medication with cheaper yet equally effective generic alternative, Faour said, during a press conference following his meeting with head of the syndicate, Anoine al-Boustani.


On Monday, Abu Faour had said that implementation would be “a positive step" by both opening the door to cheaper medication and tackling corruption.


“It would also put an end to illegal prescriptions by some doctors and some pharmaceutical companies that are a big part of the rampant corruption in the health sector.”


Former Health Minister Ali Hasan Khalil was behind the idea of unified prescriptions, which are aimed at properly monitoring medication and the dosage being prescribed by being exclusively printed by the Order of Physicians.


Under the proposal, the patient, the pharmacist and the doctor would have copies of the same prescription that would also include doctor's name, number and their registration number with the Order of Physicians.


The prescription would also serve as a legal document for consent between the doctor and the patient when they agreed to switch to generic medications, which would allow better control in the market of generic medications and put an end to possible corruption.


Speaking on another agreement, the health minister said Tuesday that he “asked the union head to speed the operation of organ donations.”


Currently, the donation mechanism requires the procedure to pass through the union before donations could be made, clarified Abu Faour.


The health minister also said that the union issued decisions over about 120 files that have been sent by both the Ministry of Health and the judiciary.



Four Things To Know About Obama's Islamic State Strategy


President Obama is set to meet congressional leaders this afternoon to outline his strategy for confronting the Islamic State insurgency in Iraq and Syria. He is scheduled to address the nation on Wednesday to make that strategy public.


Here's a look at several commentators on what the strategy might entail:


It Will Be Cautious


The Washington Post's David Ignatius writes: "Yes, Obama does seem to have a strategy, and it gets pretty good marks from allies abroad. But many components aren't ready yet, and some aren't fully conceptualized.


"Obama's decision-making on Iraq and Syria has been the policy equivalent of the wariness that Abraham Lincoln famously characterized, in referring to Gen. George McClellan, as 'the slows,'" Ignatius writes. "Obama still worries about the potential costs of getting it wrong; he needs to focus more on getting it right, including building political support at home."


It Will Be Different


The Wall Street Journal's Gerald F. Seib says that Obama will stress how his this time, it will be different — regional players will need to have 'skin in the game':


"[He] will say this fight will be different from the ones his predecessor launched in Iraq and Afghanistan," Seib writes. "The soldiers on the front line this time, he will say, will have to be the very Sunni Arabs threatened by Islamic State's rise, not American troops sent to save them from it. That, he will imply, is the smart, not the stupid, way to take on the challenge."


It Will Be Complex


Doyle McManus, writing for The Los Angeles Times:


"Recognizing the threat is easier than addressing it, though. The strategy, which Obama aides admit they are still 'building out,' has a daunting list of moving parts.


"It depends on Iraq's balky politicians to form a new government that can attract support from aggrieved Sunni Muslims.


"Then it requires organizing an international coalition against the Sunni-led Islamic State that includes Arab governments in Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Iraq, whose leaders mostly loathe one another."


And, It Will Take A Long Time


The New York Times says:


"The first phase, an air campaign with nearly 145 airstrikes in the past month, is already underway to protect ethnic and religious minorities and American diplomatic, intelligence and military personnel, and their facilities, as well as to begin rolling back ISIS gains in northern and western Iraq.


The next phase ... is expected to involve an intensified effort to train, advise or equip the Iraqi military, Kurdish fighters and possibly members of Sunni tribes.


The final, toughest and most politically controversial phase of the operation — destroying the terrorist army in its sanctuary inside Syria — might not be completed until the next administration. Indeed, some Pentagon planners envision a military campaign lasting at least 36 months."



Coach names Gebhard Rainer as president, COO


Coach has brought in the chief financial officer at Hyatt to fill the same position at the luxury handbag and accessories company.


Also assuming the title of president, Gebhard Rainer is filling a position that has been vacant for the past year.


Before taking over as CFO at Hyatt Hotels Corp., Gebhard was managing director for Hyatt International Europe, Africa and Middle East.


Coach is trying to refashion itself from a luxury brand selling mostly handbags into something more. That includes new lines of clothing and shoes.


Last month, Coach posted a sharp decline in fourth-quarter profit, partly due to a rash of store closings. Revenue also fell and earnings and revenue for the year declined significantly.


"His experience in driving transformation and brand building for a high touch experiential consumer business make him uniquely qualified to build upon the foundation that we've created at Coach," said CEO Victor Luis. "We expect that Gebhard's operational stewardship will be invaluable as we execute our long- term strategic plan to reinvigorate the Coach brand and return to best-in-class profitability."


The appointment at Coach is effective on Sept. 29, the company said Tuesday.



Dayton racino sees strong opening


The numbers show that the state's newest racino had a big opening weekend.


Hollywood Gaming at Dayton Raceway, which opened Aug. 28, recorded nearly $1.9 million in net winnings during the four days it was open in August.


The racetrack and gaming palace also reported it took in an average of $466 million per slot machine per day, the highest total among the state six racinos — but that's expected to level off.


The statewide average in August was $215.


The racino opened with 1,010 slot machines in play, but it has room to expand if they produce big numbers.


The Dayton Daily News (http://bit.ly/YsPMMl) reports that the racino employs about 500 and currently has more than three dozen job openings. Harness racing starts there Oct. 3.



Audit: La Medicaid overpaid $3.1M to 13 hospitals


Louisiana's Medicaid program overpaid $3.1 million in incentives to 13 hospitals in 2011 and underpaid several others, a recently released federal audit shows.


The Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health Record Incentives program began in 2011 to encourage hospitals and other health care professionals to use electronic health records during the course of caring for Medicaid patients. But, NOLA.com/The Times-Picayune reports (http://bit.ly/WBexEr), the state Department of Health and Hospitals made a number of errors as it awarded $93 million in incentives, according to the Office of the Inspector General at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Resources.


The audit shows the state paid 25 hospitals a total of $53 million in 2011, with the rest being paid directly to eligible professionals such as physicians, dentists, certified nurse-midwives, nurse practitioners and physician assistants. When the Office of the Inspector General reviewed those payments, it found:


— Louisiana overpaid 13 hospitals by a total of nearly $3.1 million and underpaid six hospitals by $1.3 million, for a net overpayment of $1.75 million. One additional hospital was incorrectly paid, but the error was fixed before the audit was complete.


— The state overpaid 13 professionals an additional $3,250.


— DHH failed to notify the U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services of $276,250 in incentive payments made to 13 professionals, as is required.


— The state gave hospitals incorrect instructions on how to calculate patient volume for purposes of determining eligibility for incentives. The volume is supposed to be based on numbers of patient discharges, but the state instructed providers to base it on inpatient bed days.


Though the audit dings the state for failing to provide providers with clarity about program eligibility, it also suggests many of the problems may not be solely the fault of the state agency's implementation.


Louisiana was one of the first states to begin paying incentives through the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, which was enacted as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.


In March, the Government Accountability Office characterized the incentive program as being so complex and new as to increase the likelihood money will be awarded to providers who do not meet the requirements.


In a July 17 letter to the OIG, state Medicaid Director Ruth Kennedy wrote that she agrees with the findings of the audit. The state has agreed to refund the federal government the $1.75 million in overpayments issued to hospitals under the program, as well as the $3,250 sent to professionals.


"Louisiana Medicaid has made significant changes in its administration of the EHR Incentive Program since the audit began," Kennedy's letter states. Among other changes, the state hired an independent audit firm to study all incentive payments that the federal auditors did not already review.


In the meantime, Kennedy wrote, the state has implemented more controls, including "rigorous pre-payment review procedures" designed to ensure incentives are made only to those who qualify.



U-M gets $2.6M for use of stadium for soccer


The University of Michigan netted more than $2.6 million from its rental of Michigan Stadium for August's preseason exhibition game between world soccer powerhouses Manchester United and Real Madrid.


The Ann Arbor News reports (http://bit.ly/1oniZOE ) the school and Relevent Sports entered into a contract July 20 with a base price of $2 million. Relevent Sports paid the school $550,000 to access the stadium for a two-hour practice session for each team the day before the match.


Relevent Sports also paid Michigan at least $63,000 for additional expenses, including box office personnel, security, and staff in Ann Arbor.


The newspaper obtained the contract through a Freedom of Information Act request.


United beat Madrid 3-1 on Aug. 2 in the International Champions Cup game.



Man shot in Lebanon's Tripoli, Army searches for suspects


Hariri: Sunnis, Shiites can ward off strife


Lebanon’s Sunnis and Shiites can ward off sectarian strife, Hariri says, a day after tit-for-tat kidnappings swept the...



Kidnapped Lebanese soldier's family allowed visit


BEIRUT: After more than a month in captivity, one of the at least 22 Lebanese soldiers and policemen held by Islamist militants on the outskirts of the northeastern border town of Arsal was allowed to receive a visit from his family, while another was permitted to make a telephone call to his loved ones.


Local mediator Sheikh Mustafa Hujeiri said the visit happened late Monday as a result of efforts on his part with the Nusra Front.


Nusra Front and ISIS militants fought five days of deadly gunbattles with the Lebanese Army in Arsal last month. While retreating from the town, they took more than two dozen security personnel hostage in a bid to swap them with Islamist detainees held at Lebanon’s Roumieh Prison.


Lebanese soldier George Khoury saw family members who were allowed to visit him at his place of detention.


“I escorted Khoury’s mother, brother and sister to the outskirts of Arsal last night to visit George,” Hujeiri told The Daily Star by telephone.


The husband of Khoury’s sister also spoke to The Daily Star by telephone, and said that his “wife, Marie, was very happy to see George.” He said Marie was not speaking to the media, but added that she had assured him that her brother was doing fine.


Hujeiri said they came under fire from a Lebanese Army checkpoint at Arsal’s edge on their way back home.


Khoury's son-in-law confirmed the shooting, saying soldiers must have mistaken the family for militants because they were driving two pickup trucks.


But the Arsal mediator claimed that Nusra Front had decided to “freeze” negotiations following the shooting incident.


Hujeiri said his efforts also allowed the family of kidnapped Lebanese police officer, Abbas Msheik, to receive a telephone call from their son, who assured them that he and fellow captive servicemen were in good health.



Senate Moves Forward In Bid To Limit Campaign Funds


Americans generally agree that too much money is spent running for office. On Monday, the Senate took up a proposed constitutional amendment that could change that, but it's not likely to pass.



Jindal: New jobs coming to Plaquemine


NFR BioEnergy plans a $312 million capital investment to install biorefineries at more than 10 sugar refining hubs in South Louisiana — subject to completing lease and biomass agreements with sugar mills — resulting in 450 new jobs.


Gov. Bobby Jindal and Frank Randazzo, the company's chief operating officer, said Monday that NFR BioEnergy will convert sugar cane waste, known as bagasse, into hardened energy pellets for use as fuel at global power plants.


NFR BioEnergy has begun development of the first biorefinery in White Castle, Louisiana, where it is co-locating the facility with Cora Texas Sugar Mill.


Pending the sugar mill agreements, NFR BioEnergy will build a series of biorefineries across South Louisiana's sugar cane-growing region and create 450 new direct jobs, averaging $54,000 a year.



Hattiesburg airport closed during repaving project


Hattiesburg-Laurel Regional Airport will be closed through at least Thursday for resurfacing the facility's runways and taxiways.


Executive Director Thomas Heanue tells The Hattiesburg American (http://hatne.ws/1qAbbOp ) closing the runway reduces greatly the risk of aircraft and paving equipment getting in an accident.


Dunn Roadbuilders LLC of Laurel started preparatory work on the $3.14 million project on Sept. 2, and the airport shut down Saturday for the milling and overlay of the runway.


Heanue says the airport's runway was last repaved in 1992, and had started showing wear and tear the past few years.


The major paving should be finished by Friday, and the airport reopened. The final work on taxiways and other areas will continue into mid-October.



Red Wings want local contractors to work on arena


The owners of the Detroit Red Wings want local contractors to build the hockey team's new arena.


To that end, Olympia Development of Michigan is inviting state-based construction firms and suppliers to attend a meeting it's hosting in Detroit.


The Michigan Made, Detroit Built summit is planned for Tuesday at the MotorCity Casino Hotel.


According to a statement from Olympia Development, the event is "intended to ensure that the new arena is built primarily with materials made in Michigan, financially benefiting companies from all parts of the state."


Wings owner Mike Ilitch has said the arena will open in 2017.


It's to be part of a sports and entertainment district that will integrate existing venues such as Comerica Park, home of the Ilitch-owned Detroit Tigers.


---


Online:


http://bit.ly/1tH0hZg



2 health groups getting $558K to help consumers


Two health groups in New Hampshire are getting federal grants totaling nearly $558,000 to help consumers navigate their coverage options under the health care overhaul law.


Greater Derry Community Health Services, Inc., and Bi-State Primary Care Association, Inc., based in Bow are receiving the grants. Bi-State Primary Care, which represents a dozen community health centers, also received money last year.


Besides helping people enroll in coverage, navigators help consumers compare their health coverage options, including helping them determine whether they are eligible for public programs such as Medicaid and CHIP.


The organizations are among 90 across the country receiving $60 million in grants.



Family of Bekaa hostage: Free our son


BAALBEK, Lebanon: The Sawan family from Saadnayel called on the Lebanese state and Army to free their son Tuesday, after he was kidnapped by gunmen during the chaos that dominated the Bekaa valley Monday.


“All the news about the people of Saadnayel kidnapping anyone is fabricated,” said the village’s mayor in a press conference Tuesday noon. “We will not harm or kidnap anyone, but we will have a peaceful protest and block the road with our bodies to demand the quick release of our son Ayman.”


Sawan’s brother also spoke in the conference, and stressed that the Army is making good efforts toward freeing his kidnapped brother.


“Ayman was abducted by a gang,” he said, “and the kidnapping was not related to any debt or dues that my brother was engaged in.”


After the joint conference, in which a religious figure from Saadnayel also spoke, relatives and residents from the village blocked the road linking it to Taalabaya.


Sawan was kidnapped when four gunmen in a black Jeep Cherokee intercepted him and his brother near the village of Brital Monday afternoon, as they were driving to the eastern city of Baalbek.


As an instant reaction to the kidnapping, some men from Saadnayel kidnapped seven bus drivers passing through the road linking the village to Taalabaya. However, they were all released and the road was reopened late Monday in a goodwill gesture by the villagers, sources in the area said.


In parallel to Sawan’s abduction, three people from Arsal were still in the hands of kidnappers, who security sources said belonged to families of Army soldiers kidnapped by ISIS.


Hussein al-Fliti and Abdullah al-Breidy were reported kidnapped Sunday by armed members of the Masri family, whose member Ali Zayd al-Masri has been held by ISIS since the eruption of the Arsal clashes last month.


The Masri gunmen are using the two Arsal hostages as a bargaining chip against ISIS, announcing that their fate would reflect that of their relative.


Army Intelligence detained two men from the Masri family Monday over suspicion of participating in the abduction. However, the Masri family condemned the detention, saying it has nothing to do with the actions of gunmen.


Marwan Hujeiri another resident of Arsal, was also kidnapped over the weekend, but the party responsible for his kidnap has yet to be determined. Sources in the area told The Daily Star that armed members belonging to, or close to, the Medlej family was behind the action.


Sgt. Abbas Medlej was the second Lebanese soldier to be slaughtered by ISIS militants in less than two weeks after the killing of 1st Sgt. Ali al-Sayyed. ISIS announced that he was beheaded after trying to escape the capture. Since Medlej’s slaughter, sectarian tensions have erupted in Lebanon.


The tit-for-tat kidnappings have led to warnings against possible civil strife erupting in east Lebanon, with the country already on edge since the kidnapping of the 29 soldiers and policemen by militants during the Arsal clashes, of whom 22 are still held hostage.


However, security sources in the Bekaa said the families of the captured soldiers had nothing to do with the spate of kidnappings. “Rogue kidnapping gangs have taken advantage of the rising sectarian tensions and the prevailing chaos in the Bekaa to carry out kidnap-for-ransom operations,” the sources told The Daily Star.


Baalbek was calm Tuesday, after a turbulent Monday night where anonymous armed groups had closed off the highway near Baalbek’s southern entrance with vans and large vehicle, inspecting vehicles and requesting the passengers’ identification cards. Reminiscent of the civil-war days, the actions caused panic among the residents of the area, however the gunmen later evacuated and the road was cleared.


Media reports also cited an influx of armed groups in the nearby Al-Ain village. Lebanese authorities, working to cool rising tempers, arrested two suspects in the kidnappings as the Lebanese Army raided a number of houses in search for hostages.



Hariri: Sunnis, Shiites can ward off strife


Hariri: Sunnis, Shiites can ward off strife


Lebanon’s Sunnis and Shiites can ward off sectarian strife, Hariri says, a day after tit-for-tat kidnappings swept the...



Sleiman: Hand internal security to Army reservists


BEIRUT: Army reservists could be tasked with implementing internal law and order, freeing up professional soldiers to man the borders with Syria and Israel, an initiative launched Tuesday by former President Michel Sleiman suggests.


Sleiman, also a former Army commander, announced the initiative aimed at “preventing people from taking security into their hands,” after a meeting with Defense Minister Samir Moqbel.


“We ask the minister of defense and the Army command to take quick necessary measures under government supervision to summon needed Army reservists of all ranks - volunteers and those who have completed mandatory military service - and entrust them with the task of maintaining calm and security inside the cities and towns,” Sleiman said.


The move would enable overstretched professional Army units to concentrate their efforts on combating terrorism and tightening control on Lebanon’s borders with Syria and Israel he said.


Sleiman reiterated his call on all political factions to abide by the “Baabda Declaration” which he had initiated while still in office, and which called for disassociating Lebanon from the raging conflict in Syria.


“We call on the various factions to take the courageous decision to implement the Baabda Declaration, especially with regard to neutralizing Lebanon and distancing it from regional conflicts,” Sleiman said.


He said safeguarding Lebanon from the upheavals next door entailed tightening control of the Syrian-Lebanese border to curb the smuggling of arms and gunmen, and prevent the use of border areas as launching grounds for militant attacks.


Sleiman urged the international community to provide unimpeded and quick support for the government and the military institution in their bid to fight terrorism, and facilitate procedures for delivery of arms and ammunition.


No successor to the former president has been elected so far. Persisting political divisions over a consensus candidate have kept the highest post in the state vacant, following the expiry of Sleiman’s six-year-term on May 25.



Obama Wants Congress To Buy-In On His Plan Against ISIS



Audio for this story from Morning Edition will be available at approximately 9:00 a.m. ET.





The top 4 congressional leaders will be at the White House Tuesday to talk about the president's strategy against the group known as the Islamic State, or ISIS. Obama addresses the nation Wednesday.



Japan Rakuten to buy cash-back site Ebates for $1B


Japanese e-commerce giant Rakuten Inc. says it plans to buy the U.S. based cash-back purchasing site Ebates for $1 billion.


The company said Tuesday that it aims to build the world's largest product line-up, ranging from niche to luxury products.


Rakuten, which competes with Amazon.com, is the top Internet retailer in Japan. It has made numerous overseas acquisitions, including Cyprus-based Internet phone application Viber Media and led a $100 million investment in online scrapbook site Pinterest.


Rakuten and San Francisco, California-based Ebates both have membership-based online shopping platforms. Retailers pay Ebates to advertise their products and Ebates then gives rebates to eligible online purchases.


Rakuten plans to buy all of Ebates' 32.852 million shares, financing the deal through cash, bank loans, bonds and commercial paper.