Sunday, 12 October 2014

Lebanon's Arabic press digest – Oct. 13, 2014


The following are a selection of stories from Lebanese newspapers that may be of interest to Daily Star readers. The Daily Star cannot vouch for the accuracy of these reports.


Al-Akhbar


Iranian ambassador: Lebanon interests better served if Iranian grant accepted


Iran’s Ambassador to Lebanon Mohammad Fathali said Tehran was ready to provide “unconditional” donation to the Lebanese Army as part of Phase One of the cooperation between the two countries.


“The donation ... is dedicated to support the Army in its fight against terrorism,” Fathali told Al-Akhbar.


“Anyone who rejects the grant does not serve Lebanon’s interests,” he stressed.


Al-Joumhouria


Mosque evacuated from militants to avoid military raid


A military source told Al-Joumhouria that the Bab al-Tabbaneh mosque had been evacuated after everyone in Tripoli realized that the Lebanese Army insists on implementing a security plan crafted for the northern city.


The source said the Army’s non-interference depends upon the credibility of Tripoli’s officials who gave the militants 48 hours to evacuate the mosque.


If the militants do not evacuate the area and halt their attacks against the Army, the Army would resort to military action to uproot terrorists.


Al-Liwaa


Mansour still in Bab al-Tabbaneh


Information made available to Al-Liwaa said [Islamist militant] Osama Mansour did not evacuate Bab al-Tabbaneh and was still in the Ahram neighborhood.


While other reports said Shadi Mawlawi [Mansour’s partner] had left Bab al-Tabbaneh as part of the ultimatum to evacuate the Abdullah bin Masoud mosque.


More to follow ...



Soldier defections do not pose strategic risk: analysts


BEIRUT: The announcements of the defection of Lebanese Army soldiers over the weekend to Syrian jihadist groups do not pose a grievous strategic risk to the military, analysts said, but the root causes must be addressed seriously to preserve unity.


“I don’t see a trend, I see individual behaviors, and we shouldn’t over-exaggerate their significance,” said Imad Salamey, a political science professor at the Lebanese American University and author of a book on the Lebanese system of government. “Nevertheless, it isn’t to be taken lightly.”


ISIS released a video Saturday night showing a soldier named Abdul Qader Akoumi, who supposedly defected to the group, saying that the Army’s treatment of the residents of Sunni-majority Tripoli and its mass detention of Sunnis prompted him to leave its ranks and join the militant group.


His was the third case over the weekend of a reported defection. A video also posted Saturday claimed that Mohammad Antar, a soldier from Fnaydeq, had joined the Nusra Front, a day after another soldier, Abdallah Shehadeh from Tripoli, also reportedly joined the group.


Though the defections appear to be individual actions, Salamey said they ought to be a wake-up call that helps identify whether there is unease within the ranks of the Army, which should take seriously and investigate the incidents to determine if the defections were a result of personal issues or if they had an ideological or sectarian component.


But while the defections may fuel the narrative of some Sunni circles of deliberate oppression by the Army, Salamey insisted that most of the community remains firmly with the Army, and that the situation is not at a crucial inflection point.


“Given the large number of Sunni officers in the Army and considering the major support the Army is receiving from Saudi Arabia and Arab Sunni states, it hasn’t reached that point,” he said. “Until this moment I don’t see the Sunni community at odds with the Lebanese Army.”


Militants have often pointed to the Army’s alleged mistreatment of Sunnis to fuel tensions, arguing that it targets Sunnis while giving Hezbollah free rein in its cross-border fighting in Syria. Some Sunnis also decry the long detention without trial of Islamists held in Lebanese prisons.


ISIS and Nusra militants who overran Arsal in August and are holding security personnel captive have demanded the release of Islamist prisoners in exchange for the hostages. Saudi Arabia, which has taken part in airstrikes against ISIS as part of the global coalition to combat the group, has pledged a total of $4 billion to modernize the Lebanese military.


Still, the militants will need achievements on the ground in order to entice more recruits from Lebanon in addition to the portrayal of themselves as protectors of the Sunni community.


“I think the ability to entice defections depends on Nusra and ISIS’ successes on the battlefield in the Qalamoun-Arsal area, and how far these groups can cultivate an image in those areas as a supposed protector of Sunnis against sectarian Shiite forces,” said Aymenn Jawad al-Tamimi, a fellow in the Middle East Forum who extensively studies the militant groups operating in Syria. Tamimi said the defection videos serve as a useful propaganda tool by appealing to communities where there is some sympathy for the ISIS cause.


Sami Nader, the director of the Levant Institute for Strategic Affairs, said the defection threat is more symbolic than immediate, since the number of soldiers who fled the Army is not large. But he said it must be handled seriously since it threatens the integrity of one of the last nonsectarian institutions in Lebanon.


“It’s not a mass defection, but three cases in one week is alarming I would say, it’s a serious wake-up call, and it’s worrying that nothing is being done to contain the threat,” Nader said.


The defection threat is also particularly sensitive because of the large number of Sunni soldiers in the Army, which Nader estimates to be about 50 percent of the soldiers.


Many Sunnis from northern Lebanon join the Army due to a dearth of job opportunities and the slow economy in the area.


But he said the issue is alarming because nothing is being done to isolate Lebanon from the Syrian conflict. There is no political rapprochement between Lebanon’s rival political blocs and no semblance of neutrality toward the conflict, he said.


Nader said the solution to combat the effect of the defections is to show its own neutrality.


“You have to prove that the Army is at equal distance from all parties and very cautious not to slide into anything that can stir sectarian tension,” he said.


But he argued that, amid the political impasse in Lebanon, the Army has adopted a security-oriented approach to a problem that requires political initiative by speaking of the need to fight sleeper cells in the north and talk of ISIS’ designs for Lebanon, like opening a pathway through the country to the Mediterranean sea.


“They are dealing with the problem by trying to squash it,” he said. “This is the problem, when you have a hammer in your hand you can see everything as a nail.”


Nader said the solution is for the Army to be cautious due to the sensitivity of the defection issue, for politicians to support the Army and to secure equipment and resources for its operations, and to position the campaign against the militants as part of the broader strategy to confront ISIS that is orchestrated by the U.S.-led coalition.


“The alliance can offer you a legitimacy cover when it comes to fighting ISIS because you have among the allies important Sunni countries that have their own clout in Lebanese society,” he said, adding that countries like Saudi Arabia offering their backing to the Army in its fight against ISIS will ensure the military is not seen as biased toward Hezbollah when it carries out its campaign.


The letter sent by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry over the weekend to Lebanon expressing support for its fight against ISIS is an opportunity for the country to be part of the coalition, Nader suggested.


“I think this is an important message, that we are aiming to help, and we want to help, but you have to start by asking for help,” he said.



Tripoli radical militants given deadline to quit mosque base


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: Notorious Islamist militants Shadi Mawlawi and Osama Mansour have been given 48 hours to evacuate the Abdullah bin Masoud Mosque in Bab al-Tabbaneh, a Tripoli sheikh confirmed Sunday, amid a consensus among officials in the northern city to punish those sabotaging the area’s security.


Although no official statement has been released, Tripoli Sheikh Khaled al-Sayyed told The Daily Star that negotiations were underway with factions belonging to Mawlawi and Mansour to leave the mosque over the next 48 hours.


Recently the two men have made the mosque in the Abdul Hamid alley a base for their operations, including various attacks in Tripoli. Believed to be affiliated with the Nusra Front, the men and their supporters have even installed surveillance cameras near the mosque and have been seen questioning passersby at night.


An initial agreement was reached Sunday between the militants and Tripoli’s prominent sheikhs following a series of meetings at the mosque, Sayyed said, adding that he headed the sessions.


The development came in the wake of a warning by Lebanese Army commander Gen. Jean Kahwagi that the military may use force to address the security threat in Bab al-Tabbaneh, a predominantly Sunni neighborhood in Tripoli whose residents have been locked in a cycle of fighting with Alawites from nearby Jabal Mohsen for several years.


The young men, who champion a radical branch of Salafism, were given the death penalty earlier this month by Military Investigative Judge Nabil Wehbe for their involvement in a bombing near an Army checkpoint in August that killed one and left several wounded. No soldiers were harmed.


Mawlawi and Mansour took control of the Abdullah bin Masoud Mosque after a security plan for Tripoli was implemented by Lebanese security forces in April to restore calm in the restive city.


The resulting crackdown in Bab al-Tabbeneh led to many of the major militia leaders being imprisoned, which some believe gave space for Mawlawi and Mansour, who escaped to Syria during this period, to fill the gap and gain influence.


Last month, Faisal Aswad and Fawwaz Bazzi, both Shiites and longtime residents off Bab al-Tabbaneh, were killed. Both deaths were linked to Mawlawi and Mansour.


According to unofficial information, Mawlawi and Mansour have agreed to hand over control of the mosque to the sheikhs during the next 48 hours and will also remove the surveillance cameras.


They have also agreed to refrain from deploying gunmen at night.


There is no clear information about what would happen to Mawlawi and Mansour, however, with some saying they will stay in Bab al-Tabbaneh and others saying they will be moved elsewhere.


Regardless, there is a consensus that Tripoli must be kept calm, and the importance of maintaining security in the city was stressed in a meeting held Sunday at the local residence of MP Samir Jisr.


Attending the meeting were Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi, Future bloc MPs Mohammad Kabarah and Badr Wanous, Future Movement Coordinator in the North Mustapha Aloush, and Future Movement leader Saad Hariri’s adviser on north Lebanon, Abdul-Ghani Kabbara.


A statement released after the meeting said: “The participants demand the prosecution of the suspects that assaulted the Army checkpoints. They are now known and they’re unrelated to Tripoli.”


It also emphasized the need to keep working on the security plan implemented by the government.


In a bid to maintain security in the north, the Army continued a series of raids in numerous neighborhoods in Tripoli and several areas in north Lebanon over the weekend.


During one raid of a gathering of Syrian refugees Sunday afternoon in the Akkari village of Aydamoun, Syrian national Fouad al-Arour, who is wanted by the authorities, reportedly threw a hand grenade at soldiers, prompting the Army to open fire on him and kill him.


The Army was able to arrest Mustapha Abed al-Karim and Ibrahim Hussein al-Abbas, both Syrians, who were with Arour at the time. Two hand grenades were seized from the men.


In the nearby town of Minyara, 19 Syrians were detained by the Army. According to an Army statement they were arrested for “wandering on Lebanese territory illegally.”



Hezbollah reportedly fears Bassil influence over Aoun


While many have given up hope of a breakthrough on the presidential election, Hezbollah’s support for Aoun may be weakened by its fear of the influence his son-in-law, Foreign Ministry Gebran Bassil, wields over the octogenarian former general.


“We are with General Aoun, but we don’t want Gebran Bassil to be the president of the republic,” a politician close to the party quoted a Hezbollah official as saying.


According to the source, Hezbollah fears Bassil will be the real power in Baabda if Aoun is elected, citing certain “practices” and current trends in the Free Patriotic Movement. Hezbollah trusts Aoun and Aoun alone, the source said.


Hezbollah’s greatest concern regarding a new president will be his stance on the resistance. The party continues to insist on a government statement enshrining the “people, the Army, and the resistance,” to legitimize its war against Israel but also against takfiri groups in Syria, a source of controversy. It would be unlikely, therefore, that the party could back a candidate supported by the United States and Saudi Arabia, for instance.


The fortunes of MP Sleiman Franjieh, on the other hand, have improved beyond those of any other candidate, especially since he is much more likely to win the support of Arab allies than Aoun.


Frangieh’s support for Aoun also would oblige Aoun to support him in return, removing a hitherto immovable obstacle: Aoun’s obstinacy.


But not everyone was convinced that change was in the air.


March 8 Christian parliamentarians saw nothing to indicate the election was imminent.


Other sources close to Hezbollah said that the party still considers Aoun the only eligible presidential candidate who enjoys the popular support needed to assume the presidency.


They said that Hezbollah no longer trusts any commitment from any party whatsoever, whether individuals or nations, following what is considers the failure of rival factions and regional backers to honor the Doha Accord, which led to the election of former President Michel Sleiman.


The same sources said that recent security incidents in the region and Lebanon targeting Hezbollah means the party cannot afford to compromise on its security, and will not support any candidate for the presidency unless it is sure that the next president will not “stab the party in the back, as Michel Sleiman did.”


The sources believe that Hezbollah would prefer that Lebanon remains without a president, if his election would case internal strife.


The sources ruled out any interference by Tehran, because U.N. Special Envoy Derek Plumbly recently went to Iran and was assured that it would not interfere in the elections, and that Hezbollah’s position was entirely up to its leader, Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah.


Other observers doubt any of thenames put forward in the presidential negotiations were intended as serious candidates, claiming that they were in fact intended to sabotage the election.


A source with knowledge of the issue said the atmosphere was not promising, “but this does not stop political circles from assuming that November will see a shift and that the presidential election will take place before parliamentary elections.” The source did not give details as to the reasons for this optimism.



Lebanon mourns Arab nationalist Solh


BEIRUT: Leaving a legacy that spans half a century, Lebanese intellectual Mounah al-Solh died Saturday, prompting many to speak out on the importance of his work.


Solh was a respected educator, a political activist who never pursued power or wealth, and a bold journalist known for his honesty in criticizing friends and enemies alike.


Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri described him as a “lighthouse” in a statement released Sunday. “Mounah al-Solh is a loss to anyone who knew him, followed him, and learned from him the arts of intellect, writing and politics, and a big loss to those who never knew him,” Hariri said.


As described by his fellow scholars and activists, and by the numerous mourning statements released following his passing, Solh was known for his commitment to telling the truth.


A firm believer in Arab nationalism, he was nevertheless unfaltering in his criticism of its leaders where he saw error or despotism. He was also a firm believer in the right of Palestinians to return to their occupied lands, and a friend to late Fatah leader Yasser Arafat, but he did not think twice before warning the party against interfering in neighboring countries’ affairs.


In 1987, Solh co-founded Dar al-Nadwa, a dialogue center meant to create a space for the exchange of ideas during the harsh years of the 1975-1990 Lebanese Civil War.


He also co-founded the Arab Nationalist Conference in 1990, the Arab Nationalist Forum in 1992, and the Islamic Nationalist Conference in 1994.


Solh died at the age of 87 after months of illness. He will be laid to rest Monday evening, and condolences will be received Tuesday and Wednesday at the Worldwide Alumni Association of the American University of Beirut.


“With the departure of Mounah al-Solh, the Arab world has lost a great intellectual and one of the knights of nationalist work, who considered the Palestinian cause a sacred one and believed in our Arab nation,” Prime Minister Tammam Salam said in a statement.


Lebanese MP Mohammad Qabbani also paid tribute to Solh Sunday at the 131st interparliamentary assembly in Switzerland, calling him “a brother, dear friend, and a great Lebanese Arab struggler.


Grand Mufti Abdel-Latif Derian recalled Solh as an example of moderation. “Lebanon has lost one of its pillars of culture and enlightened thought,” Derian said in a statement, describing Solh as “a national figure and a unique personality, who was eager to preserve national unity and coexistence between the Lebanese.”


Head of the Journalists Union Elias Aoun also offered condolences over Solh’s death, lamenting that he was neglected by the very country to which he had contributed so much.


“The Lebanese Mounah al-Solh passed away without getting what he deserved from his country and nation,” Aoun said in a statement.


“He deserved care in his old age ... but he lived alone, although he had led and advised many generations in Lebanon and the Arab world.


“We apologize that you have been born and you lived in a big country ruled by a small state, one that ignores the human values and ethics,” he said.



Lebanon mourns Arab nationalist Solh


BEIRUT: Leaving a legacy that spans half a century, Lebanese intellectual Mounah al-Solh died Saturday, prompting many to speak out on the importance of his work.


Solh was a respected educator, a political activist who never pursued power or wealth, and a bold journalist known for his honesty in criticizing friends and enemies alike.


Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri described him as a “lighthouse” in a statement released Sunday. “Mounah al-Solh is a loss to anyone who knew him, followed him, and learned from him the arts of intellect, writing and politics, and a big loss to those who never knew him,” Hariri said.


As described by his fellow scholars and activists, and by the numerous mourning statements released following his passing, Solh was known for his commitment to telling the truth.


A firm believer in Arab nationalism, he was nevertheless unfaltering in his criticism of its leaders where he saw error or despotism. He was also a firm believer in the right of Palestinians to return to their occupied lands, and a friend to late Fatah leader Yasser Arafat, but he did not think twice before warning the party against interfering in neighboring countries’ affairs.


In 1987, Solh co-founded Dar al-Nadwa, a dialogue center meant to create a space for the exchange of ideas during the harsh years of the 1975-1990 Lebanese Civil War.


He also co-founded the Arab Nationalist Conference in 1990, the Arab Nationalist Forum in 1992, and the Islamic Nationalist Conference in 1994.


Solh died at the age of 87 after months of illness. He will be laid to rest Monday evening, and condolences will be received Tuesday and Wednesday at the Worldwide Alumni Association of the American University of Beirut.


“With the departure of Mounah al-Solh, the Arab world has lost a great intellectual and one of the knights of nationalist work, who considered the Palestinian cause a sacred one and believed in our Arab nation,” Prime Minister Tammam Salam said in a statement.


Lebanese MP Mohammad Qabbani also paid tribute to Solh Sunday at the 131st interparliamentary assembly in Switzerland, calling him “a brother, dear friend, and a great Lebanese Arab struggler.


Grand Mufti Abdel-Latif Derian recalled Solh as an example of moderation. “Lebanon has lost one of its pillars of culture and enlightened thought,” Derian said in a statement, describing Solh as “a national figure and a unique personality, who was eager to preserve national unity and coexistence between the Lebanese.”


Head of the Journalists Union Elias Aoun also offered condolences over Solh’s death, lamenting that he was neglected by the very country to which he had contributed so much.


“The Lebanese Mounah al-Solh passed away without getting what he deserved from his country and nation,” Aoun said in a statement.


“He deserved care in his old age ... but he lived alone, although he had led and advised many generations in Lebanon and the Arab world.


“We apologize that you have been born and you lived in a big country ruled by a small state, one that ignores the human values and ethics,” he said.



Bassil: Arabs should confront ISIS and Israeli terrorism


Qatar pledges $1B at Gaza donor meet


Qatar promises $1 billion in reconstruction aid for Gaza at a donor conference in Cairo on Sunday, topping US and...



Rai denounces Lebanon lawmakers over failure to elect president


March 14 to seek names from Rai for president


As Parliament meets for a 13th time to attempt to elect a new president, March 14 parliamentary sources said intensive...



Hariri, Salam mourn death of Arab nationalist Mounah al-Solh


Hundreds march for Kobani in Beirut


Hundreds of Kurds take to the streets of Beirut in a large show of support to fighters staving off a relentless bid by...



Army raid sparks North Lebanon shoot out


Army raid sparks North Lebanon shoot out


A wanted Syrian national was critically wounded during an Army raid in the northern Lebanese province of Akkar Sunday.



Berri denounces terrorism at Geneva conference


Berri denounces terrorism at Geneva conference


Speaker Nabih Berri reiterates the need to support the Lebanese Army against a terrorist threat facing the country.



In Northern Virginia, Candidates See Opportunity In Asian Vote



In a campaign ad from John Foust, the candidate tries to appeal to Korean voters.i i



In a campaign ad from John Foust, the candidate tries to appeal to Korean voters. YouTube hide caption



itoggle caption YouTube

In a campaign ad from John Foust, the candidate tries to appeal to Korean voters.



In a campaign ad from John Foust, the candidate tries to appeal to Korean voters.


YouTube


Virginia congressional candidates Barbara Comstock, a Republican, and John Foust, a Democrat, are hitting the campaign trail with the usual issues like jobs, health care and immigration. But they're also going a step further to close the deal in a district where Asian Americans are a fast growing ethnic group.


Comstock, a state delegate, has touted her work with human trafficking legislation and attendance at a recent town hall meeting about a hate crime. Foust, a Fairfax County supervisor, says he can relate to immigrants because he too was born into a family where no one else had gone to college. At a recent event, Foust told an attendee that he recalled seeing her at Eden Center, a shopping mall in the Washington D.C. suburbs that is a frequent stop for politicians courting Asian American support.



YouTube

Candidate Barbara Comstock has Comstock, a state delegate, has touted her work with human trafficking legislation and attendance at a recent town hall meeting about a hate crime to appeal to Asian American voters.




The Asian population statewide in Virginia climbed by 68% from 2000 to 2010. Asians now make up 5% of the state's population.


The competitive race comes as Congressman Frank Wolf is retiring and leaving an open seat. Wolf's district – which he has represented in Congress since Ronald Reagan was first elected president – is one-third nonwhite. Asian American residents account for 11% of the population, as do Hispanics. Vietnamese,


In September, both candidates spoke at a forum put on by minority chambers of commerce held in Annandale, the nexus of Korean life in Virginia.


Each spoke for about five minutes to a crowd of about 100 people gathered in a nondescript multipurpose room at a Northern Virginia community college. The attendees, who were seated in conference room chairs and clustered around high-top tables cluttered with campaign literature, were mostly Asian. The candidates – including Foust and Comstock – were mostly white.


"For a lot of these folks who immigrated to the U.S., government was something that was not a part of their lives," says Grace Han Wolf, a Herndon Va. town council member. Wolf says she was the first Korean American elected in Virginia. "It's quite different here in America because government is the way you get things done. Without a vote, without a voice, you're not able to impact the changes that can impact your community. And finally, those communities are realizing that connection."


When Foust, the Democrat took the stage, a connection is what he was going for.


"I am very very proud of the fact that I have been endorsed by every elected [Asian American and Pacific Islander] official in Northern Virginia," he said, singling each out by name.


Later, after speaking with a slew of reporters, Foust posed outside the event room for a photo with the officials that had endorsed him.



YouTube

Campaign ad for John Foust




Democrats like Foust see Wolf's retirement in this Virginia district as an opportunity to seize a Republican House seat as they face a challenging electoral map. But moreso, it's a good test-case for how both parties are adapting to the changing demographics of a country that is rapidly becoming more diverse.


Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders have also been shifting dramatically toward the Democratic party for more than a decade. In 1992, President George H.W. Bush won 55 percent of the Asian vote. But in the two decades that followed, Republicans have loosened their hold. In 2008, President Obama won 62% of the Asian vote. Four years later, he won 73%.


But Republicans don't believe that's a foregone conclusion. In this Virginia district and in others across the country, Republican candidates are working to chip away at those numbers as they work to broaden their audience and appeal to minorities and younger voters.


Sang Yi, the president of Korean American Republican Party of Virginia, says Asians don't want to be pigeon-holed, or treated like candidates are stressing "Asian issues" to win their vote. He made an analogy to the way candidates court female voters.


"Women care about more than just reproductive health issues," he says. "They care about taxes, they care about the economy, they care about national security, they care about everything that everybody else cares about – and so does the Asian community."


When Comstock took the stage in Annandale, she hit on traditional Republican rallying points — repealing Obamacare, cutting taxes, a strong national defense.


But she was also looking to make a personal connection, telling the story of a Vietnamese family she met.


"They only had 45 cents in their pocket. They started washing dishes and they started going to night school and to community college and then getting degrees and then starting their own business," she explained. "You all here know somebody like that because that's the story of Northern Virginia and the 10th District."


The candidates wanted to make a connection – but it didn't work for everyone.


Genie Nguyen, the president of Voice of Vietnamese Americans sat through the speeches for each candidate – even the ones who weren't campaigning in her district. She works with voter outreach and advocacy in her community. And yet, she still hasn't decided who she'll vote for.


Like most voters, she cares about jobs, the economy and soaring student loan debt. But she says she thinks the outreach she's heard from candidates has just scratched the surface.


"They're making very surface appearance to the community events. They need to actually invest in the community," she says. "They need to pay for advertisements in printed media in Vietnamese, in Taiwanese, in Tagalog."


Nguyen says the candidates need to spend more time studying her issues. And she'll spend more time studying them.


"I'm going to wait and study more about each candidate," she says. "I do hope that in the next few weeks, more actions from the candidates will reach out to the community – especially the Asian-American community and the Vietnamese community – in a meaningful way. And more importantly, I hope whoever wins will keep their promise."


Candidates will also have to learn how to fine tune their message. What works for older Asians, like Nguyen, might not be as effective for younger Asians, Grace Han Wolf explains.


"They have one foot in both cultures. Both the ethnic culture as well as the American culture and they understand the importance of voting," she says. "It's something that you get in your AP U.S. History class in high school. So you see a lot of those kids who are old enough to be leaders in the community urging the elders and the new immigrants this is important, this is your job and your right and your duty as an American."


Nearly half of Asian American registered voters in a recent survey said they did not identify as Republicans or Democrats. And roughly one-third said they still don't know who they'll vote for next month.


For candidates in competitive districts around the country, that's what you call an opportunity.



Hundreds march for Kobani in Beirut


BEIRUT: Hundreds of Kurds took to the streets of Beirut Sunday in a large show of support to fighters staving off a relentless bid by jihadists to take over the northern Syrian-Kurdish town of Kobani.


Protesters accused the Turkish government and its President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of supporting ISIS and suppressing Kurds.


“Everything that is currently happening in Kobani is because of Turkey,” one of the protesters told TV stations covering the protest. “Erdogan is supporting ISIS and is happy to see Kurds dying.”


Ignoring calls for intervention to prevent ISIS from committing a bloody massacre against the town’s Kurds, Turkey, which borders Syria, has ordered the Army to shut the frontier near Kobani and prevent Kurdish fighters from crossing into Kobani to join the fight.


Mostly Syrian-Kurds, the protesters waved the flag of the Kurdish Workers Party, and called for their armament in order to fight ISIS.


Some of the protesters said they wanted to join the battle, but were afraid of being scooped up by Syrian authorities for dodging military service.


“Over 1,000 of us are wanted for compulsory military service in Syria, so we cannot move to Syria or else the government will find us,” one of the protesters, who said he was originally from Kobani, told television station.


The protesters began their march from the Cola roundabout and headed towards downtown Beirut.


The large size of the protest thre security forces off guard as they struggled to reroute traffic.


The main road connecting the two locations was completely shut, causing an unusually heavy traffic jam for a Sunday in Beirut.



In Northern Virginia, Candidates See Opportunity In Asian Vote



In a campaign ad from John Foust, the candidate tries to appeal to Korean voters.i i



In a campaign ad from John Foust, the candidate tries to appeal to Korean voters. YouTube hide caption



itoggle caption YouTube

In a campaign ad from John Foust, the candidate tries to appeal to Korean voters.



In a campaign ad from John Foust, the candidate tries to appeal to Korean voters.


YouTube


Virginia congressional candidates Barbara Comstock, a Republican, and John Foust, a Democrat, are hitting the campaign trail with the usual issues like jobs, health care and immigration. But they're also going a step further to close the deal in a district where Asian Americans are a fast growing ethnic group.


Comstock, a state delegate, has touted her work with human trafficking legislation and attendance at a recent town hall meeting about a hate crime. Foust, a Fairfax County supervisor, says he can relate to immigrants because he too was born into a family where no one else had gone to college. At a recent event, Foust told an attendee that he recalled seeing her at Eden Center, a shopping mall in the Washington D.C. suburbs that is a frequent stop for politicians courting Asian American support.



YouTube

Candidate Barbara Comstock has Comstock, a state delegate, has touted her work with human trafficking legislation and attendance at a recent town hall meeting about a hate crime to appeal to Asian American voters.




The Asian population statewide in Virginia climbed by 68% from 2000 to 2010. Asians now make up 5% of the state's population.


The competitive race comes as Congressman Frank Wolf is retiring and leaving an open seat. Wolf's district – which he has represented in Congress since Ronald Reagan was first elected president – is one-third nonwhite. Asian American residents account for 11% of the population, as do Hispanics. Vietnamese,


In September, both candidates spoke at a forum put on by minority chambers of commerce held in Annandale, the nexus of Korean life in Virginia.


Each spoke for about five minutes to a crowd of about 100 people gathered in a nondescript multipurpose room at a Northern Virginia community college. The attendees, who were seated in conference room chairs and clustered around high-top tables cluttered with campaign literature, were mostly Asian. The candidates – including Foust and Comstock – were mostly white.


"For a lot of these folks who immigrated to the U.S., government was something that was not a part of their lives," says Grace Han Wolf, a Herndon Va. town council member. Wolf says she was the first Korean American elected in Virginia. "It's quite different here in America because government is the way you get things done. Without a vote, without a voice, you're not able to impact the changes that can impact your community. And finally, those communities are realizing that connection."


When Foust, the Democrat took the stage, a connection is what he was going for.


"I am very very proud of the fact that I have been endorsed by every elected [Asian American and Pacific Islander] official in Northern Virginia," he said, singling each out by name.


Later, after speaking with a slew of reporters, Foust posed outside the event room for a photo with the officials that had endorsed him.



YouTube

Campaign ad for John Foust




Democrats like Foust see Wolf's retirement in this Virginia district as an opportunity to seize a Republican House seat as they face a challenging electoral map. But moreso, it's a good test-case for how both parties are adapting to the changing demographics of a country that is rapidly becoming more diverse.


Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders have also been shifting dramatically toward the Democratic party for more than a decade. In 1992, President George H.W. Bush won 55 percent of the Asian vote. But in the two decades that followed, Republicans have loosened their hold. In 2008, President Obama won 62% of the Asian vote. Four years later, he won 73%.


But Republicans don't believe that's a foregone conclusion. In this Virginia district and in others across the country, Republican candidates are working to chip away at those numbers as they work to broaden their audience and appeal to minorities and younger voters.


Sang Yi, the president of Korean American Republican Party of Virginia, says Asians don't want to be pigeon-holed, or treated like candidates are stressing "Asian issues" to win their vote. He made an analogy to the way candidates court female voters.


"Women care about more than just reproductive health issues," he says. "They care about taxes, they care about the economy, they care about national security, they care about everything that everybody else cares about – and so does the Asian community."


When Comstock took the stage in Annandale, she hit on traditional Republican rallying points — repealing Obamacare, cutting taxes, a strong national defense.


But she was also looking to make a personal connection, telling the story of a Vietnamese family she met.


"They only had 45 cents in their pocket. They started washing dishes and they started going to night school and to community college and then getting degrees and then starting their own business," she explained. "You all here know somebody like that because that's the story of Northern Virginia and the 10th District."


The candidates wanted to make a connection – but it didn't work for everyone.


Genie Nguyen, the president of Voice of Vietnamese Americans sat through the speeches for each candidate – even the ones who weren't campaigning in her district. She works with voter outreach and advocacy in her community. And yet, she still hasn't decided who she'll vote for.


Like most voters, she cares about jobs, the economy and soaring student loan debt. But she says she thinks the outreach she's heard from candidates has just scratched the surface.


"They're making very surface appearance to the community events. They need to actually invest in the community," she says. "They need to pay for advertisements in printed media in Vietnamese, in Taiwanese, in Tagalog."


Nguyen says the candidates need to spend more time studying her issues. And she'll spend more time studying them.


"I'm going to wait and study more about each candidate," she says. "I do hope that in the next few weeks, more actions from the candidates will reach out to the community – especially the Asian-American community and the Vietnamese community – in a meaningful way. And more importantly, I hope whoever wins will keep their promise."


Candidates will also have to learn how to fine tune their message. What works for older Asians, like Nguyen, might not be as effective for younger Asians, Grace Han Wolf explains.


"They have one foot in both cultures. Both the ethnic culture as well as the American culture and they understand the importance of voting," she says. "It's something that you get in your AP U.S. History class in high school. So you see a lot of those kids who are old enough to be leaders in the community urging the elders and the new immigrants this is important, this is your job and your right and your duty as an American."


Nearly half of Asian American registered voters in a recent survey said they did not identify as Republicans or Democrats. And roughly one-third said they still don't know who they'll vote for next month.


For candidates in competitive districts around the country, that's what you call an opportunity.



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BEIRUT: The Lebanese Army's "discriminatory" approach in hunting down militants is drawing negative attitudes towards it among the residents of Tripoli, Future MP Ahmad Fatfat said Sunday.


“There is a sense of aversion towards the Army in Tripoli, and the problem is related to how the Army implements its security measures across Lebanon,” Fatfat told radio station Voice of Lebanon 100.5 in a morning interview.


He implied that the Army is not consistent in how it treats residents from different backgrounds.


Speaking on the security situatio in the northern city, Fatfat wondered what caused the rise of extremist movements there.


“There are security issues in Tripoli but the question should be addressed to security officials: How were these [terrorist] groups allowed to appear in the first place?,” the MP added.


Expressing disappointment with the security plan implemented in the city earlier this year, Fatfat said areas that host extremist movements are always the ones suffering from poverty.


“Things should not be dealt with through security only, but also by development and education,” he said.


Fatfat dismissed accusations that the Future Movement backs Tripoli’s extremist fugitive Shadi Mawlawi, saying that the Cabinet who released him from prison last year was affiliated with March 8.


“The previous government is the one who released him, and former Prime Minister Najib Mikati brought him home in his personal car,” he said.


Further distancing the Future Movement from salafi movements, Fatfat said Akkar’s radical MP Khaled Daher does not belong to his party.


“He has his own party and is an ally to Future.”


Daher, known for his hardline speeches, recently accused Lebanese Army leader Gen. Jean Kahwagi of conspiring against Sunnis in Lebanon.



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