Thursday, 9 October 2014

Supreme Court Halts Wisconsin Voter ID Law; Texas Law Overturned



Ballots are stacked and ready as voters wait in line during the 2012 primaries in Milwaukee. An appeals court ruled Monday that a Wisconsin voter ID law, on hold since 2011, could go into effect, but the Supreme Court stepped in on Thursday night to halt the law again as it decides whether to take the case.i i



Ballots are stacked and ready as voters wait in line during the 2012 primaries in Milwaukee. An appeals court ruled Monday that a Wisconsin voter ID law, on hold since 2011, could go into effect, but the Supreme Court stepped in on Thursday night to halt the law again as it decides whether to take the case. Jeffrey Phelps/The Associated Press hide caption



itoggle caption Jeffrey Phelps/The Associated Press

Ballots are stacked and ready as voters wait in line during the 2012 primaries in Milwaukee. An appeals court ruled Monday that a Wisconsin voter ID law, on hold since 2011, could go into effect, but the Supreme Court stepped in on Thursday night to halt the law again as it decides whether to take the case.



Ballots are stacked and ready as voters wait in line during the 2012 primaries in Milwaukee. An appeals court ruled Monday that a Wisconsin voter ID law, on hold since 2011, could go into effect, but the Supreme Court stepped in on Thursday night to halt the law again as it decides whether to take the case.


Jeffrey Phelps/The Associated Press




After an appeals court put Wisconsin's law back into effect, the Supreme Court's liberal wing, plus Justices Kennedy and Roberts, decided to take up the case.


Erin Toner of Milwaukee's WUWM reports:




"This comes after a federal appeals court on Monday upheld the law as constitutional. But tonight's Supreme Court ruling blocks voter ID while it considers whether to accept the case.


"Gov. Walker and Republicans approved the law in 2011, and it's been held up in the courts ever since...


"It's been estimated that as many as 300,000 Wisconsin residents do not have the required IDs for voting. Supporters of the law claim the intent is to prevent voter fraud, but there is no evidence of any fraud in Wisconsin."





Meanwhile, a federal judge in Texas overturned that state's new voter ID law, a ruling the state's attorney general says will be appealed immediately, The Associated Press reports. The Justice Department had argued that the law would have left 600,000 Texans, mostly blacks and Hispanics, without sufficient identification to vote in November, the AP reports.



Millennials Are Blue Now, But Party Allegiance Could Be Up For Grabs



Audio for this story from All Things Considered will be available at approximately 7:00 p.m. ET.






Millennial focus group, from left to right: Arturo Chang, Shaza Loutfi, Alexa Graziolli, Stephen Crouch, Jessica Ramser. Not pictured: Ginger Gibson.i i



Millennial focus group, from left to right: Arturo Chang, Shaza Loutfi, Alexa Graziolli, Stephen Crouch, Jessica Ramser. Not pictured: Ginger Gibson. Rachel Lushinsky/NPR hide caption



itoggle caption Rachel Lushinsky/NPR

Millennial focus group, from left to right: Arturo Chang, Shaza Loutfi, Alexa Graziolli, Stephen Crouch, Jessica Ramser. Not pictured: Ginger Gibson.



Millennial focus group, from left to right: Arturo Chang, Shaza Loutfi, Alexa Graziolli, Stephen Crouch, Jessica Ramser. Not pictured: Ginger Gibson.


Rachel Lushinsky/NPR


This story is part of the New Boom series on millennials in America.


President Obama is holding a town hall meeting Thursday in California with group he wants to mobilize for the midterm elections: millennial entrepreneurs. Millennials — young people age 18-34 — are a key part of the Democratic coalition.


In just a few years, millennials will become the biggest demographic bulge in the electorate. For a very long time, young people's partisan preferences looked pretty much like everyone else's — they divided their votes between the two parties. After 2004 that changed, and they swung very heavily to the Democrats. But they're not the Obama-adoring college students of 2008 anymore. They're the generation hard-hit by the economy.


"Democrats have an advantage with them at this moment, but the one presidential candidate they really have voted for overwhelmingly is Barack Obama," says Peter Levine, who studies young people's civic participation at Tufts University. "And he's not gonna be available anymore. ...I think the Democrats have a job to shift the allegiance to the party. Quite a tough job...Republicans should make an active play for them."



Join The Conversation


Use the hashtag #newboom to join the conversation on social media.



So projections that millennials are once and forever enthusiastic Democrats will be put to the test of the next few cycles. To find out more about their views, we asked six millenials to join us at La Colombe cafe in the Shaw neighborhood in Washington D.C. to talk politics. The discussed political gridlock, economic issues and social issues like gay marriage and reproductive rights. Listen to their full conversation, and view excerpts below:



Listen to the Full Conversation



Arturo Chang



Arturo Changi i

Arturo Chang


Rachel Lushinsky/NPR





I have issues mostly with the two party system...I wouldn't blame the Republicans for the gridlock we see, I blame that more as a systematic issue as a result of our type of government, you know the way it's structured its prone to create gridlock, but I think the issue I see is that [the Republican party is] not even willing to touch the social issues that we are all talking about here. ... I expect gridlock. The problem for me is partisanship in Washington, which when you have an extremely partisan Washington and working within a system that is prone to gridlock you're going to have a government that doesn't get anything done....The problem is that Washington just does not reflect the true American, the way America feels. You know research shows America is not as partisan as we say they are.




Shaza Loutfi




Shaza Loutfii i

Shaza Loutfi


Rachel Lushinsky/NPR





I would say that it's very difficult to find something that really aligns with what you believe. In a perfect world, I would say I am a independent but in the system that we have currently where the two parties dominate, we have to choose a side. And in that case I would definitely say Democrat. I think there is this association with the Republicans of it being dominated by white males and the business scene whereas the Democrats seem more inclusive and that speaks to me.


As an Arab-American, when you talk about privacy and when we look at what's happened in recent years right after 9/11 we've seen the wiretapping of Arabs all of their information being taken and used in different ways, it's an abuse of power. And so when I think about that and I think about Republicans trying to use the privacy issue to get more voters, it's is interesting to me. Because, as you know, Arabs used to vote Republican and they used to be very conservative and they would mesh with them on that. And so now it's interesting to see that maybe they're going to get the Arab vote back. Although I don't really agree with the Republican party, it is an issue that I support and it is something I do think they're on the right track with.




Alexa Graziolli




Alexa Graziollii i

Alexa Graziolli


Rachel Lushinsky/NPR





Most of us here probably have college loans, and I think social security, I think its good to have a safety net, you work towards it, and I think it's about helping your elders and things like that. I want to pay in for it for my mom I want my kids to pay in for it. So I do think that government is a helpful thing.


I think these [social] issues are so important to us too because growing up we were exposed to them more. So as far as like gay rights, when my mom was growing up that may have been the secret in the family you didn't really talk about it. But growing up, you know, I knew my uncle was gay and that didn't matter to me because I'm 5, I don't know the difference so I think that's why it's so important. As you get older you realize that there are people that are against it and you're kind of like 'why? It hasn't caused me any harm, it doesn't cause you any harm.' So I think that's why we're so focused on issues like that.




Stephen Crouch




Stephen Crouchi i

Stephen Crouch


Rachel Lushinsky/NPR





Obviously the government is a tool that we have to have in our society, it gives us laws, it gives us rules, but I would also like to point out, there's a lot of bureaucracy involved. There's a lot of government bailouts that are happening, and this is money that we're paying into the kitty that we'll probably never see in our generation. We have politicians that make you know, exorbitant amounts of money and you know these are taxes that we're we're buying their Lexuses we're buying their McMansions, and obviously I feel like that's a system that's just not working for working class people.


I kind of feel like politicians at this point of time, they rely on being very beige. They don't have any kind of stance either way, and that's how these guys are getting kind of pushed into politics. I mean, you look at Obama — he had no vote either way until he went into the presidency. It's like, politicians are almost negatively impacted for having an opinion. You know like Rand Paul probably doesn't have much a chance at you know being the president because he voices an opinion which, you know, in all honestly is a breath of fresh air.




Jessica Ramser




Jessica Ramseri i

Jessica Ramser


Rachel Lushinsky/NPR





My dad is a labor worker and I saw unemployment help us so much growing up. And, yeah, I do fear that. Especially, you know, thankful for the loans that the government is giving me, but where is that going to take me in the next two years? You know, am I guaranteed a job anymore? No, and I am scared for my economic future.


[My dad] has gone through just periods of unemployment. The labor union is tough, sometimes there's jobs sometimes there's not. It depends on the weather, there's so many union workers out there. Currently he is working now but has gone through periods of unemployment, which you know there's a couple months you're fine and a couple months you're not. So definitely living that paycheck-to-paycheck I have felt first hand with my family.


I think that as millennials we have a voice, and a strong voice. And within the next couple years, especially as we get into our careers and prominent roles, you'll see that throughout the United States and in policy.




Ginger Gibson




I came out of college and like the economy crashed...I walked into my office every day not knowing if they were gonna close the doors and turn us away, I mean they were hemorrhaging employees, and I watched people who would have not gotten by had it not been for unemployment....I think that's going to, probably forever, change my perspective on government assistance like that, just because I saw how bad it was and how desperately people needed it.


I think we pay attention way more than we get credit for. I think that there's this misperception of millennials as being selfish, as being unengaged, as not working hard, as being difficult. I think that's wrong. I think anybody who's grown up in my years and years after me that has to deal with this economy knows that's wrong, we've worked really hard. And we pay attention. Sometimes we pay more attention than older generations. And we're going to keep paying attention. And I think that our view points are not locked in, we're not going to be monolithic from the start, but I think that we are going to pay a lot more attention moving forward.





Army under fire as Cabinet grapples with hostage crisis


BEIRUT: The Lebanese Army came under fire in northern Lebanon once again Thursday as the government struggled to reach a comprehensive plan to secure the release of soldiers held by jihadists near the outskirts of the embattled town of Arsal. Information Minister Ramzi Joreige said the release of the soldiers was a top priority for the Cabinet after a six-hour session in which ministers endorsed “all means of negotiations” to free the men held by the Nusra Front and ISIS, but offered scant details on the progress of the effort.


Joreige spoke shortly after the military said in a statement that two Army vehicles came under fire from the Misyada Syrian refugee camp in Arsal, prompting the soldiers to respond to fire. A third vehicle was targeted in the Akkar village of Qashlaq by gunfire from the Syrian side of the border, it said.


An Army post in Arsal came under attack by gunfire earlier from a Syrian refugee camp as troops repelled an infiltration attempt by jihadists in nearby Wadi Hmeid, the military said in another statement.


The statement said troops deployed at the northeastern border foiled a midnight attempt by “an armed terrorist group” to infiltrate an Army base in the rugged region on the outermost edge of Arsal.


It said the Army engaged in a brief armed clash with the infiltrators, forcing the “terrorists to withdraw and flee toward the highlands.”


In a separate incident, a soldier was shot dead and another wounded in an attack by gunmen in Akkar, the Army said.


Milad Mohammad Issa was instantly killed in the northern town of Rihaniyeh and a second soldier, Mohammad Haidar, was taken to a local hospital in critical condition.


The Army said it arrested 16 Syrians in raids in Akkar after the attack.


An Army source said that the attacks in the north and Arsal were part of attempts to target the military, fueled by incitement against the Army carried out by terrorist groups.


“We are up to the challenge,” the source stressed.


The Army fought a deadly five-day battle with ISIS and Nusra Front extremists in early August. The jihadists are holding 21 security personnel captive.


With little progress in the negotiations, Lebanon’s new Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdel-Latif Derian appealed to the captors to return the servicemen to their families unharmed.


“I tell the parties holding the servicemen: You are entrusted with their lives and you should safeguard them,” Derian said, speaking after his first official meeting with Prime Minister Tammam Salam since taking his post last month.


“I expect from you the great gesture of releasing them and letting them return to their families and their country.”


Health Minister Wael Abu Faour endorsed a prisoner swap with the militants, saying it was the only solution to the crisis.


“The Lebanese state wants to hold serious negotiations in that regard,” he said as he met the captives’ relatives, who shifted their protest campsite to Riad al-Solh, in front of the Grand Serail in Downtown Beirut.


Families of the hostages said the captors had warned them in phone calls that they would execute captives within 24 to 72 hours if there is no progress in the negotiations. Family members will meet General Security chief Abbas Ibrahim Friday.


Abu Faour cautioned that executing the hostages would “lead to a total destruction of negotiations and all efforts to resolve the issue.”


Meanwhile MPs botched a 13th attempt to elect a new president for Lebanon due to lack of quorum. Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri postponed the voting session to Oct. 29.


Visitors of Berri quoted him as saying that the election of a president has an internal as well as an international component that depends on a rapprochement between the United States and Saudi Arabia and Iran.



Why more and more Lebanese are joining extremist groups?


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: It was early August when the two brazen young men set sail from Tripoli’s port for Turkey, leaving behind their homes in rural Fnaydeq, heading for the Islamic State.


Of the two, the youngest, 16-year-old Mahmoud, was hesitant about the decision they had made when their boat arrived in the Turkish city of Mersin, 400 kilometers from the crossing into Ain al-Arab in Syria. It was this uncertainty that allowed Fnaydeq’s Sheikh Samih Abou Haye to later convince the impressionable youth, over the phone, to forgo the mission and return to Lebanon.


“I told him, ‘You don’t have to do this,’” Abou Haye, a school principal who had once taught the boy, told The Daily Star.


His 22-year-old companion, Abed al-Rahman al-Sayyed, wasn’t moved. He crossed into Syria alone, where he died two months later in Raqqa, a soldier of ISIS under fire from U.S.-led airstrikes.


The number of Lebanese flocking to join the ranks of the extremist group is on the rise, according to accounts from local authorities, experts and residents in north Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley. Of those known to be fighting under the banner of ISIS, most hail from Sunni areas with endemic unemployment, where anti-Assad sentiment has historically run high.


Abou Haye, too, blames disorganization within Dar al-Fatwa, Lebanon’s highest Sunni authority, for allowing misinformation about Islamic teaching to proliferate.


“There have been Lebanese recruits to ISIS, and the Nusra Front, well before the Arsal clashes,” said Basel Idriss, an FSA commander in Arsal acquainted with militants belonging to both groups. But according to the Carnegie Middle East Center’s Mario Abou Zeid, the number of recruits increased “massively,” after the clashes.


“This is part of [ISIS’] military strategy, to open up several fronts and expand,” Abou Zeid said, adding that about 100 men had been recruited since August, from Arsal, Tripoli and southern Sunni districts.


“It’s a huge operation,” he said, with new recruits instructed to form sleeper cells in Lebanon. “They are getting paid; without money they would not be able to mobilize and ensure loyalty.”


Family members of Lebanese who died fighting told The Daily Star that they had simply disappeared one day.


Many parents only learned about the fate of their sons after receiving a phone call informing them that they had been martyred.


Those who knew Sayyed, including the town’s mayor, described him as intelligent and austerely religious. He died two credits short of earning an engineering degree. “The last time I saw him, he was praying at the mosque,” said Khaldoun Taleb, the town’s mayor.


Sayyed came from an Army family. His father is still a serviceman. The soldier Ali al-Sayyed, who was beheaded by his ISIS captors in Arsal, was his cousin. But the mayor brushed off contrarieties. “If the government doesn’t do something [to create opportunities for youth] then more will be lining up to fight for ISIS,” he said.


The Fnaydeq boys were primed by online recruiters, who engaged them in forums, according to the sheikh. In the northeastern border town of Arsal, by contrast, with militants positioned on the outskirts, youths are approached directly. Ghaith Ahmad Nouh, 18, an Arsal native, was recruited some months ago and killed in a mosque Sept. 30 in Syria’s Hassakeh governorate during airstrikes in the region.


“He is a victim, of course, of terrible economic conditions and the government’s foot-dragging,” a relative of Nouh’s said. “The people here are very poor, and young men need money, which ISIS is willing to give.”


According to the relative, who requested anonymity for fear of reprisal from the militants, Nouh made several trips to Syria, crossing from established supply routes in Arsal, before his death last month. “ISIS has people in the town, and they recruit people,” he said. “They obviously tricked him into going there.


“They are trying to change our mentality and our identity. And if I don’t dare say these things publicly, because they would threaten me or kidnap me the very next day.”


He estimates that nearly 100 men had joined the group in recent months, ensnared by certain sheikhs in the town, who expound on the group’s exalted purpose, and lured with the promise of a $500 starting monthly salary, in an area where spillover from Syria has cut off access to industry, namely fruit farming and stone-quarrying. Local authorities said unemployment stood at an overwhelming 85 percent.


Nouh’s father worked in a sawmill and struggled to make ends meet, but the boy found respite with a local sheikh, whom the relative claimed spouts radical sermons to embolden potential recruits. “His parents thought that their kid was going to the mosque to pray, but instead he was being taught how everyone is an infidel.”


According to local accounts, the group has a handful of recruiters in Arsal, young men between the ages of 16 and 30, who promote ISIS membership as a religious cause, and offer promises of financial stability and, as Nouh once told a relative, women.


At one point, he convinced his teen cousin to go to the mosque with him. “I noticed a change in my son, and when he told me about the sheikh’s teachings I forbade him to go,” the boy’s father said.


Hardly anyone came to the young man’s memorial, after his parents, distraught by the news of his death Tuesday, announced that they were accepting condolences.


In Tripoli’s Qibbeh neighborhood, by contrast, spirits were high at the memorial for Khaled Ahmad Ahdab, a Lebanese ISIS fighter who died in Iraq this week. Two ISIS flags fluttered by the Hamza Mosque roundabout, as dozens of men streamed inside to pay their respects, laughing and hugging one another by the entrance. Women held a private reception at the family home.


“He used to call me his big brother,” Abu Khaled said, standing by the mosque door. “No one except his father knew where he went. He didn’t like to publicize himself.”


A call to “congratulate” the Ahdab family was plastered at every corner of the neighborhood. Typed in a bold black-and-white, it began with a verse from the Koran: “Do not consider those who died in the name of God as dead,” with a picture of the deceased jihadist, also known by his nom du guerre Abu Hamza, wearing a skullcap and pointing to the heavens with a raised index finger.


“The Islamic State is here to stay,” cried a young man, leaving the mosque.


Ahdab’s death was extolled, a reaction deemed “normal” by a prominent local sheikh, who is also a relative of the young man.


“The community has welcomed the news because the man [Ahdab] did his lawful duty,” Sheikh Zakaria Abed Razzak al-Masri, an uncle of the young man, said. “He was able to carry out this duty, while other people cannot. So they consider him a martyr.”


According to the sheikh, Ahdab’s body will be buried in Iraq where he died. “Before he left, he spoke about how everyone needs to go, then one day he did,” he said.


Despite widespread poverty in Qibbeh, where some 30 percent live on less than $4 a day, Masri ruled out a financial motive spurring Ahdab’s decision to go to Iraq.


The sheikh recalled how often Ahdab would criticize the complacency of other Arab countries toward the Syria crisis, and the plight of Sunnis in northern Iraq. “Religion demands us to stand with the oppressed against the oppressor. His commitment to faith, morality and humanity pushed him to go.”


Ahdab’s memorial in Tripoli took place on the same day as Sayyed’s memorial in Fnaydeq.


“Men excited to leave, who hear that someone like them has died in Syria, are not affected by the news. They go well aware that death is highly likely,” the mayor of Fnaydeq said.


“Sayyed’s death, for instance, will not stop others from going.” – With additional reporting by Edy Semaan, Hashem Osseiran



Why more and more Lebanese are joining extremist groups?


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: It was early August when the two brazen young men set sail from Tripoli’s port for Turkey, leaving behind their homes in rural Fnaydeq, heading for the Islamic State.


Of the two, the youngest, 16-year-old Mahmoud, was hesitant about the decision they had made when their boat arrived in the Turkish city of Mersin, 400 kilometers from the crossing into Ain al-Arab in Syria. It was this uncertainty that allowed Fnaydeq’s Sheikh Samih Abou Haye to later convince the impressionable youth, over the phone, to forgo the mission and return to Lebanon.


“I told him, ‘You don’t have to do this,’” Abou Haye, a school principal who had once taught the boy, told The Daily Star.


His 22-year-old companion, Abed al-Rahman al-Sayyed, wasn’t moved. He crossed into Syria alone, where he died two months later in Raqqa, a soldier of ISIS under fire from U.S.-led airstrikes.


The number of Lebanese flocking to join the ranks of the extremist group is on the rise, according to accounts from local authorities, experts and residents in north Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley. Of those known to be fighting under the banner of ISIS, most hail from Sunni areas with endemic unemployment, where anti-Assad sentiment has historically run high.


Abou Haye, too, blames disorganization within Dar al-Fatwa, Lebanon’s highest Sunni authority, for allowing misinformation about Islamic teaching to proliferate.


“There have been Lebanese recruits to ISIS, and the Nusra Front, well before the Arsal clashes,” said Basel Idriss, an FSA commander in Arsal acquainted with militants belonging to both groups. But according to the Carnegie Middle East Center’s Mario Abou Zeid, the number of recruits increased “massively,” after the clashes.


“This is part of [ISIS’] military strategy, to open up several fronts and expand,” Abou Zeid said, adding that about 100 men had been recruited since August, from Arsal, Tripoli and southern Sunni districts.


“It’s a huge operation,” he said, with new recruits instructed to form sleeper cells in Lebanon. “They are getting paid; without money they would not be able to mobilize and ensure loyalty.”


Family members of Lebanese who died fighting told The Daily Star that they had simply disappeared one day.


Many parents only learned about the fate of their sons after receiving a phone call informing them that they had been martyred.


Those who knew Sayyed, including the town’s mayor, described him as intelligent and austerely religious. He died two credits short of earning an engineering degree. “The last time I saw him, he was praying at the mosque,” said Khaldoun Taleb, the town’s mayor.


Sayyed came from an Army family. His father is still a serviceman. The soldier Ali al-Sayyed, who was beheaded by his ISIS captors in Arsal, was his cousin. But the mayor brushed off contrarieties. “If the government doesn’t do something [to create opportunities for youth] then more will be lining up to fight for ISIS,” he said.


The Fnaydeq boys were primed by online recruiters, who engaged them in forums, according to the sheikh. In the northeastern border town of Arsal, by contrast, with militants positioned on the outskirts, youths are approached directly. Ghaith Ahmad Nouh, 18, an Arsal native, was recruited some months ago and killed in a mosque Sept. 30 in Syria’s Hassakeh governorate during airstrikes in the region.


“He is a victim, of course, of terrible economic conditions and the government’s foot-dragging,” a relative of Nouh’s said. “The people here are very poor, and young men need money, which ISIS is willing to give.”


According to the relative, who requested anonymity for fear of reprisal from the militants, Nouh made several trips to Syria, crossing from established supply routes in Arsal, before his death last month. “ISIS has people in the town, and they recruit people,” he said. “They obviously tricked him into going there.


“They are trying to change our mentality and our identity. And if I don’t dare say these things publicly, because they would threaten me or kidnap me the very next day.”


He estimates that nearly 100 men had joined the group in recent months, ensnared by certain sheikhs in the town, who expound on the group’s exalted purpose, and lured with the promise of a $500 starting monthly salary, in an area where spillover from Syria has cut off access to industry, namely fruit farming and stone-quarrying. Local authorities said unemployment stood at an overwhelming 85 percent.


Nouh’s father worked in a sawmill and struggled to make ends meet, but the boy found respite with a local sheikh, whom the relative claimed spouts radical sermons to embolden potential recruits. “His parents thought that their kid was going to the mosque to pray, but instead he was being taught how everyone is an infidel.”


According to local accounts, the group has a handful of recruiters in Arsal, young men between the ages of 16 and 30, who promote ISIS membership as a religious cause, and offer promises of financial stability and, as Nouh once told a relative, women.


At one point, he convinced his teen cousin to go to the mosque with him. “I noticed a change in my son, and when he told me about the sheikh’s teachings I forbade him to go,” the boy’s father said.


Hardly anyone came to the young man’s memorial, after his parents, distraught by the news of his death Tuesday, announced that they were accepting condolences.


In Tripoli’s Qibbeh neighborhood, by contrast, spirits were high at the memorial for Khaled Ahmad Ahdab, a Lebanese ISIS fighter who died in Iraq this week. Two ISIS flags fluttered by the Hamza Mosque roundabout, as dozens of men streamed inside to pay their respects, laughing and hugging one another by the entrance. Women held a private reception at the family home.


“He used to call me his big brother,” Abu Khaled said, standing by the mosque door. “No one except his father knew where he went. He didn’t like to publicize himself.”


A call to “congratulate” the Ahdab family was plastered at every corner of the neighborhood. Typed in a bold black-and-white, it began with a verse from the Koran: “Do not consider those who died in the name of God as dead,” with a picture of the deceased jihadist, also known by his nom du guerre Abu Hamza, wearing a skullcap and pointing to the heavens with a raised index finger.


“The Islamic State is here to stay,” cried a young man, leaving the mosque.


Ahdab’s death was extolled, a reaction deemed “normal” by a prominent local sheikh, who is also a relative of the young man.


“The community has welcomed the news because the man [Ahdab] did his lawful duty,” Sheikh Zakaria Abed Razzak al-Masri, an uncle of the young man, said. “He was able to carry out this duty, while other people cannot. So they consider him a martyr.”


According to the sheikh, Ahdab’s body will be buried in Iraq where he died. “Before he left, he spoke about how everyone needs to go, then one day he did,” he said.


Despite widespread poverty in Qibbeh, where some 30 percent live on less than $4 a day, Masri ruled out a financial motive spurring Ahdab’s decision to go to Iraq.


The sheikh recalled how often Ahdab would criticize the complacency of other Arab countries toward the Syria crisis, and the plight of Sunnis in northern Iraq. “Religion demands us to stand with the oppressed against the oppressor. His commitment to faith, morality and humanity pushed him to go.”


Ahdab’s memorial in Tripoli took place on the same day as Sayyed’s memorial in Fnaydeq.


“Men excited to leave, who hear that someone like them has died in Syria, are not affected by the news. They go well aware that death is highly likely,” the mayor of Fnaydeq said.


“Sayyed’s death, for instance, will not stop others from going.” – With additional reporting by Edy Semaan, Hashem Osseiran



Politicians spar over Hezbollah Shebaa attack


BEIRUT: Hezbollah’s military operation against an Israeli patrol in the occupied Shebaa Farms earlier this week sparked further controversy Thursday, with March 14 officials saying that the state should have the exclusive decision of war and peace.


Responding to comments by Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil in which he backed the operation, Future Movement MP Ahmad Fatfat said it was the obligation of the state only to defend Lebanese territories.


“The foreign minister made dangerous remarks to Al-Akhbar newspaper, saying that the Hezbollah operation in the Shebaa Farms is in line with the policy statement, as if the entire government supports this operation,” Fatfat told a news conference in Parliament.


“I ask the prime minister and the government that will meet today to seriously and carefully address the issue: Does the violation of U.N. Security Council Resolution 1701 serve Lebanon’s interest and through what means does Lebanon respond to Israeli aggressions?” Fatfat said.


In remarks to Al-Akhbar published Thursday, Bassil said that Hezbollah’s attack on the Israeli patrol Tuesday, which wounded two soldiers, was justified under the government’s policy statement. Bassil said the attack came in response to an Israeli violation in which a Lebanese soldier was wounded days earlier by Israeli fire from the same area where Hezbollah planted the bomb in the Shebaa Farms.


The brigade responsible for setting off the explosive device was named after 25-year-old Ali Hasan Haidar, a Hezbollah explosives expert who was killed while trying to dismantle four Israeli devices planted on Hezbollah’s telecommunications network in Adloun, south Lebanon, last month.


But Fatfat said it was not the duty of any political party in Lebanon to respond to Israeli violations.


“It is not the responsibility of any political group to counter these aggressions. No political party has the right to determine the zero hour [to respond to Israel’s attacks] or to have the decision of war and peace with any enemy,” Fatfat said. “This is the responsibility of the government and the Army.”


Commenting on Hezbollah’s operation, Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi said: “Lebanon cannot endure adventures and Hezbollah’s involvement in Syria was a historical mistake.” He made his remarks on his way to join a Cabinet session at the Grand Serail.


“Shebaa is occupied and it is our right to resist occupation,” hit back Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs Mohammad Fneish, also a Hezbollah official.


“Does the country endure deaths and wounded people and the targeting of the Army?” Fneish said.


Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea slammed Hezbollah over Tuesday’s bomb attack, calling it “national treason.”


“The Shebaa bombing amounts to full-fledged national treason. Hezbollah has no right to juggle with the fate of the Lebanese people,” Geagea said, fearing that such operations could prompt Israel to launch a new war on Lebanon.


“What is the point of igniting a new front when the Army is busy at the border from Akkar to Arsal,” Geagea asked, adding that “it is not Hezbollah’s job to fight against the enemy, which is the responsibility of the state uniquely.”



ISIS, Nusra not taking negotiations seriously


Lebanese officials and security sources are deeply concerned for the fate of the captive soldiers as winter approaches and the battles between Hezbollah and the Nusra Front continue to rage into the border region where the hostages are thought to be held. Moreover, the sources told The Daily Star that ISIS and the Nusra Front are not taking the negotiations seriously, as their one true goal is to be given a free hand to use Arsal as a base and supply route.Meanwhile, developments on the ground in Syria, including the international campaign against ISIS, as well as Hezbollah’s explosive surprise earlier this week, which wounded two Israeli soldiers, are factors that could alter the security situation and so need to be taken into account. The government is unsure how to proceed, given the sensitivity of the captives issue, especially as ISIS and the Nusra Front have succeeded in inciting division among the Lebanese public, which affects the negotiations.


Maj. Gen. Abbas Ibrahim, who has been charged with overseeing the issue, remains silent, due to the sensitive nature of the case, as he tries to enlist the help of regional parties capable of mediating, namely Turkey and Qatar. He has had little luck, however.


Qatar has influence with the Nusra Front, as a result of its previous contributions to the Syrian opposition, but it does not wish at this sensitive moment to stir the pot seeing as it has largely retreated, leaving the arena to Saudi Arabia. Turkey, for its part, is considering its options as Kurds battle ISIS for control of Ain al-Arab, also known as Kobani, near its southern border. Ankara is not eager to interfere in the negotiations for the Lebanese soldiers because this might give the appearance to the world that Turkey is a patron and protector of the terrorist organization ISIS and capable of dealing directly with it.


A source close to the negotiations revealed that state officials were dissatisfied with the path the negotiations were taking, saying that the hostage-takers had succeeded in pitting the families of the soldiers against their government, as if it were the government that had kidnapped their loved ones.


“We cannot give the Qatari delegation a message for the kidnappers, for the reply comes after a quarter of an hour from the families of the captives, who mobilize to block roads after the kidnappers call the families with a knife to the throat [of the hostages] and encourage them to move,” the source said.


The Lebanese reading is that ISIS only seeks to incite fighting in Lebanon in order to extend its influence. The source strongly denied that the government had received clear demands from the kidnappers through the Qataris or local intermediaries, despite leaks to the media that they were demanding the release of Islamist prisoners from Roumieh and better treatment of Syrian refugee.


The source said these demands were merely “smoke bombs” intended to disguise the real goal, which was for the state to leave these groups an open tract between Arsal and its outskirts and the border, allowing fighters to move from Qalamoun into Lebanon, which is clearly impossible for the Lebanese government to agree to.


“Arsal is a matter of life or death to the kidnappers,” the source said, adding that the security agencies had reports of approximately 4,000 to 5,000 fighters passing through the remote mountains there attempting to secure safe passage into Lebanon. The town is of vital strategic importance for the militants to secure all means of logistical support, not merely weapons. One Lebanese cellular company sold $200,000 of calling cards within just one month in Arsal.


Security sources have expressed real fear for the lives of the captive soldiers. They said the greatest danger was not the threat of beheading per se, but the possibility of battles erupting between the Nusra Front and Hezbollah close to where they were being held.


According to security agencies, the soldiers are being held close to battlefields. In a few weeks, the winter weather is likely to push the kidnappers to either liquidate the hostages or attempt to move them elsewhere, which opens other dangerous possibilities.


As Hezbollah pushes deeper in to the Syrian interior, the rebels are amassing a huge number of fighters in an effort to take Damascus and its surrounding areas.


According to sources close to Hezbollah, the opposition’s loss of vast areas in the battle of Qusair in 2013 and the battle of Qalamoun in 2014 has caused the rebels to fear defeat, and this will push them to take revenge on areas and populations they associate with the resistance they have encountered. They will continue their attacks until they achieve their goal of establishing a foothold in Lebanon in order to drag all the border areas, from Kfar Shuba to the Bekaa to Wadi Khaled, into the scope of their power and destruction along with Iraq and Syria.



Ain al-Hilweh on edge after assassination


SIDON, Lebanon: “We’re waiting for my brother to come to Lebanon so that we can bury Walid,” Hayel Yassin said, referring to his brother, 41-year-old Fatah Movement official Walid Yassin, who died after sustaining serious injuries following a shootout in Ain al-Hilweh Wednesday night. “He was killed unfairly next to his bird shop, his source of living,” Yassin said.


The shooting on Fawqani Street marks yet another deadly security breach in the southern Palestinian refugee camp – Lebanon’s largest – and put residents and Palestinian security forces deployed in the camp to tackle the ongoing deterioration on high alert for acts of revenge.


With the crowded camp’s population swollen by 10,000 mostly Palestinian refugees from Syria, putting the total number of residents at around 90,000, the security situation in the camp has been fragile for several months.


After assassinations – particularly of officials and members of the Fatah party – and gunfights became more and more frequent, a 150-member elite force composed of members of the camp’s various factions was deployed in July, leading to an easing of tensions.


But Wednesday’s incident has put the camp on edge again, and parents refrained from sending their children to the camp’s schools Thursday out of fear of retaliatory acts.


“I refused to send my children [to school],” said Ibrahim Khattab. “If they die, who’s going to bring them back? Who’s to be blamed? It’s better for them to sit at home.”


From evidence collected at the scene, eyewitness accounts and footage from surveillance cameras in the camp, the elite security force has been able to build up a picture of what happened.


According to Palestinian sources close to the investigations, the crime was carried out by two masked armed men who have been identified but whose names will not be released until the investigation is finished. The armed groups the perpetrators are believed to be close to have said they will not protect them.


One of the men shot Yassin at close range, while the other opened fire from a distance, sources said.


Four others were wounded in the attack: Mohammed Yousef al-Yousef, 32; Suheir Said Salameh, 43; Mohammed Musa Haleel, 18 and Hasan Mohammed Radi Abu Daoud al-Shaheer, also 18.


As news of the incident and allegations of responsibility spread on social media, all eyes were on the camp’s Islamist factions, who many believe to be behind the attack.


Al-Shabab al-Muslim, which includes members of Jund al-Sham and Fatah al-Islam, promptly issued a statement directly denouncing the attack, adding that the murder had been conducted by “sinful hired hands” who wanted to create tensions in the camp.


According to Palestinian sources, the camp’s Islamist factions – particularly Osbat al-Ansar and the Islamic Jihad Movement – are fully collaborating with the ongoing investigations into the crime.


Security forces officials have insisted that the camp’s security and stability is the top priority.


“The situation in the camp is stable, and all the factions present inside the camp have agreed to remain calm,” said Maj. Gen. Sobhi Abu Arab, Fatah’s head of national security.


He told The Daily Star that the attack against Yassin had been conducted by infiltrators who wanted to sabotage the camp, and vowed that they would be punished.


He met Thursday with Samir Shehadeh, the head of the Internal Security Forces’ Information Branch in the south, in order to strengthen cooperation between the Lebanese government and Palestinian factions and emphasize their keenness to keep the Palestinian refugee camps out of domestic conflicts.


“We know that the residents of the camp don’t want another Nahr al-Bared,” he said, referring to the northern camp that was flattened during clashes between Fatah al-Islam militants and the Army in 2007.


“They want security and everyone wants the security forces.”


Abu Arab’s comments were echoed by the head of the new elite force, Gen. Khaled Shayeb, a senior Fatah official.


“We are working on collecting evidence and information against the two armed men who opened fire on Yassin,” Shayeb said, revealing that Yassin had already survived a previous assassination attempt.


“There’s no place for failure and we are deploying patrols in the camp. Calm has been restored.”


The elite security force’s deployment in the camp, which was delayed for several months, has proven to be a vital step for the camp, because now when incidents such as Yassin’s murder occur, there is a single force that can step in.


A Fatah official revealed that the success of the force meant that there were plans to expand it and replicate it in other Palestinian camps in collaboration with the Lebanese authorities in the upcoming weeks.


The official explained that the first deployment of the elite security forces outside of Ain al-Hilweh were to take place in the Rashidieh refugee camp near Tyre, and would involve 175 members from various factions in the Palestinian Liberation Organization.


Some of these new recruits will be added to the Ain al-Hilweh group, while the others will go toward two new forces in the Burj al-Barajneh and Shatila camps in Beirut. Another force is also due to be established in the Mieh Mieh camp near Sidon.



Fucking Bees


In Douglas, Arizona, a terrible thing happened: Bees. Eight-hundred thousand (800,000) of them. Many of whom stung four landscapers who, according to The Washington Post's aggregation, had accidentally stirred a large nest while lawnmowing and weeding for a 90-year-old. This sent the bees into a defensive rage. One of the men is in critical condition; one is dead.


Fucking bees.


Happy Thursday.



Identity Politics Center Stage In California's Central Valley Campaign



Campaign photo from Amanda Renteria. On the campaign trail, she talks often about her parents who were migrant farm workers in the Central Valley.i i



Campaign photo from Amanda Renteria. On the campaign trail, she talks often about her parents who were migrant farm workers in the Central Valley. Courtesy Amanda Renteria for Congress hide caption



itoggle caption Courtesy Amanda Renteria for Congress

Campaign photo from Amanda Renteria. On the campaign trail, she talks often about her parents who were migrant farm workers in the Central Valley.



Campaign photo from Amanda Renteria. On the campaign trail, she talks often about her parents who were migrant farm workers in the Central Valley.


Courtesy Amanda Renteria for Congress


In California's rural Central Valley, a candidate's identity means everything in politics. Just take the race for the state's 21st Congressional seat between first-term Republican Congressman David Valadao and Democrat Amanda Renteria, which is attracting some unusual attention this fall.


In a midterm election year where immigration remains a thorny subject, both Valadao and Renteria talk openly about the need for Congress to pass the stalled comprehensive reform bill.


At a debate in Bakersfield this week, Valadao pointed out that he was one of only three Republicans to sign on to the House immigration overhaul bill – H.R. 15 – backed by Democrats.


"I've gotten beat up from my own side for it, I think it's very important to get it done," Valadao said. "My parents are immigrants, I learned so much about why it's important to have real opportunities and I think that's what made this country great."



Republican Rep. David Valadao talks openly about the need for Congress to pass the stalled immigration reform bill, as does his opponent Amanda Renteria.i i



Republican Rep. David Valadao talks openly about the need for Congress to pass the stalled immigration reform bill, as does his opponent Amanda Renteria. Rich Pedroncelli/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Rich Pedroncelli/AP

Republican Rep. David Valadao talks openly about the need for Congress to pass the stalled immigration reform bill, as does his opponent Amanda Renteria.



Republican Rep. David Valadao talks openly about the need for Congress to pass the stalled immigration reform bill, as does his opponent Amanda Renteria.


Rich Pedroncelli/AP


Valadao, 37, is a dairy farmer of Portuguese descent, but speaks Spanish regularly – the two candidates are also debating in Spanish.


On the campaign trail, Amanda Renteria, 39, talks often about her parents who were migrant farm workers in the Central Valley. She was the first in her high school to go to Stanford, and she later became the first Latina chief of staff in Congress (for Michigan Sen. Debbie Stabenow).


"They know where I come from, they know my dad was from Zacatecas, Mexico and himself came with no papers at the beginning," Renteria says. "I think anyone that hears me talk about immigration reform knows my deep passion for it, and this isn't just about election time."


At times, both candidates seem to be trying to one-up the other on whose ties are stronger to the Central Valley and farming. The newly redrawn district is more than 70% Hispanic and this being farm country, the contest highlights how the politics of immigration aren't as simple as they may seem.


Many farmers and big agricultural companies here that tend to lean Republican are in a full-court press lobbying Congress to pass the stalled immigration bill. It's one of the reasons why Valadao is seen as a clear front-runner even in a district where Democrats outnumber Republicans.


California State, Bakersfield political scientist Stanley Clark says Valadao is likely "ethnic enough" for many voters here, in particular Hispanic men who may typically lean Democrat. Most Hispanic families in this rural valley work in farming, he says. And with the drought, fields are being fallowed and jobs are being cut. Clark says voters are looking for someone who seems like one of them.


"The clearer your association is with ag, the more you are advantaged with them by comparison to somebody who's association with agriculture is more remote and vague," Clark says.


Renteria is quick to deflect criticism from the Valadao campaign that she's a carpetbagger who just moved back to the Valley a year ago with the expressed purpose of running for this new seat.


"When it comes to the Latino community here, they're really gotten to know me over this election," she says. "No one wonders whether or not I'm going to keep my promises."


Now that the national party has begun pulling its money from the race though, some Democrats say 2014 may be more about the underdog Renteria reintroducing herself to Latino voters here, so she can run again in 2016.



FEC Greenlights More Convention Cash For Political Parties



President Obama, is watched by Mark Miller, back second from left, Ellyn Miller, and their son Jake Miller, left, as he signs the Gabriella Miller Kids First Research Act, into law in the Oval Office this spring. The Democratic and Republican parties complained to the Federal Election Commission that the law took away public funding for their political conventions.i i



President Obama, is watched by Mark Miller, back second from left, Ellyn Miller, and their son Jake Miller, left, as he signs the Gabriella Miller Kids First Research Act, into law in the Oval Office this spring. The Democratic and Republican parties complained to the Federal Election Commission that the law took away public funding for their political conventions. Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

President Obama, is watched by Mark Miller, back second from left, Ellyn Miller, and their son Jake Miller, left, as he signs the Gabriella Miller Kids First Research Act, into law in the Oval Office this spring. The Democratic and Republican parties complained to the Federal Election Commission that the law took away public funding for their political conventions.



President Obama, is watched by Mark Miller, back second from left, Ellyn Miller, and their son Jake Miller, left, as he signs the Gabriella Miller Kids First Research Act, into law in the Oval Office this spring. The Democratic and Republican parties complained to the Federal Election Commission that the law took away public funding for their political conventions.


Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP


Anyone concerned about how the two parties would pay for their national conventions after a new law took away their public funding can stop worrying.


The Federal Election Commission approved a joint request Thursday by the Democratic and Republican parties to let them accept as much as $32,400 per donor per year – for conventions alone. That's even in the three years of each presidential election cycle in which there is no actual convention, and on top of the $32,400 per year individuals can already give each party.



From an October 8 letter to the Federal Election Commission from the Democratic and Republican parties.




From an October 8 letter to the Federal Election Commission from the Democratic and Republican parties. Federal Election Commission hide caption



itoggle caption Federal Election Commission


In a letter to the commissioners Wednesday, the parties blamed "Congress's sudden and unexpected termination of the National Party Committees' entitlement to receive public funds to pay for convention expenses, at a time when planning for the national nominating conventions was well underway."


That "sudden and unexpected termination" came in the form of the Gabriella Miller Kids First Research Act, which was passed with bipartisan support and signed by President Obama this spring. It ended public financing for the conventions and promised to shift the money saved — $18 million for each convention in 2012 – for children's cancer research.


Advocates of campaign finance limits opposed the change. Public Citizen noted that Congress so far has failed to actually provide any new cancer research funding. "Today, the commission is being asked by the same parties to create another loophole in federal election law," the group wrote in a Tuesday letter.


The commission has been blocked from acting in recent years because of a three-three split between the three Democratic and three Republicans members. It approved the change today on a 4-2 vote when Democratic vice-chairwoman Ann Ravel voted with the three Republicans.