Sunday, 9 November 2014

Phil Crane, Former Illinois Congressman, Dies At 84


Philip Crane, a former Illinois congressman who spent 35 years in the House of Representatives, has died of lung cancer at the age of 84.


Crane, a conservative Republican and anti-tax crusader, was a history professor before he became a politician. He entered Congress in 1969, and he "was the longest-serving House Republican when he was defeated in 2004 by Democrat and then-political newcomer Melissa Bean," writes The Associated Press. The wire service continues:




Crane also made an unsuccessful run for the Republican presidential nomination in 1980, losing out to the eventual winner, Ronald Reagan, who would go on to become the politician most closely associated with the modern conservative movement.


But Crane had touted what he saw as the virtue of smaller government going back to the 1960s, spelling out his vision of a stripped down, low-tax federal government in his 1976 book, "The Sum of Good Government."


"Phil was conservative before it was cool to be conservative," said [former congressional aide Eric] Elk.





Obama Says He'll Use Executive Orders For Immigration Reform



In this Nov. 7 photo, President Barack Obama meets with Congressional leaders in the Old Family Dining Room of the White House in Washington. From left are House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, Obama, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky.i i



In this Nov. 7 photo, President Barack Obama meets with Congressional leaders in the Old Family Dining Room of the White House in Washington. From left are House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, Obama, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. Evan Vucci/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Evan Vucci/AP

In this Nov. 7 photo, President Barack Obama meets with Congressional leaders in the Old Family Dining Room of the White House in Washington. From left are House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, Obama, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky.



In this Nov. 7 photo, President Barack Obama meets with Congressional leaders in the Old Family Dining Room of the White House in Washington. From left are House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, Obama, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky.


Evan Vucci/AP


President Obama said once again that he won't wait on Congress to start making changes to America's immigration system. In an appearance Sunday on CBS' Face The Nation, Obama stood by his recent statements that he'll use executive action to enact changes before the end of the year, but told host Bob Schieffer that he still wants Congress to act on the issue, too.


"I prefer and still prefer to see it done through Congress, but every day that I wait we're misallocating resources," said Obama. "We're deporting people that shouldn't be deported. We're not deporting folks that are dangerous and need to be deported."


The president said both sides agree something has to be done on immigration. "We've been talking about it, for years now, in terms of fixing it," said Obama. "We need to be able to secure our border ... And we need to make sure that the millions of people who are here, many who've been here for a decade or more, and have American kids and for all practical purposes are part of our community, that they pay a fine, they pay any penalties, they learn English, they get to the back of the line, but they have a capacity to legalize themselves here."


Everyone agrees, Obama said, that the U.S. doesn't have the capacity to deport 11 million people.


Obama had said this summer that he planned to use executive action to change the immigration system. After pressure from Democrats running for re-election in heavily Republican states, as NPR's Mara Liasson reported, he later announced that he'd delay until after the midterm elections.


The delay didn't seem to do much to help Democrats, as Republican candidates went on to sweep those midterms. Now, Obama is returning to his previously-announced plans for executive action.


Republican congressional leaders aren't pleased with Obama's talk of executive action. Staff members in House Speaker John Boehner's office have warned the president against using executive orders to pursue immigration reform, calling it "executive amnesty."



March 14 seeks deal with March 8 rivals over consensus president


BEIRUT: The March 14 coalition will begin intensive consultations this week to revive its initiative aimed at reaching an agreement with the rival March 8 bloc on a consensus candidate for the presidency, March 14 sources said Sunday.


The consultations will be in line with former Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s pledge to Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai during their meeting in Rome last month to seek a solution to the presidential vacuum crisis following the extension of Parliament’s mandate, the sources said.


Hariri will personally contact Western states that have influence in Lebanon on the presidential deadlock, as well as Lebanese leaders, while his chief of staff Nader Hariri will handle details of the negotiations, political sources said.


The consultations on the presidential issue would take place while Lebanese officials await the outcome of the ongoing U.S.-Iranian nuclear negotiations, hoping that a deal between Washington and Tehran would eventually set the stage for the election of a president.


Lebanon has been without a president for more than five months after Parliament has since April failed over a lack of quorum to choose a successor to former President Michel Sleiman, whose six-year tenure ended on May 25.


Lawmakers last week extended Parliament’s mandate for two years and seven months, citing security concerns and arguing that the move was essential to avert a vacuum in the legislative branch of power.


Earlier Sunday, Hariri held talks with Jordan’s King Abdullah II at the Husseiniya Palace in Amman. The two leaders discussed recent developments in the region and bilateral ties between Jordan and Lebanon and means to bolster them, according to a statement released by Hariri’s office.


They also discussed “issues of common interest,” the statement added, without providing details.


Meanwhile, a Future lawmaker called on Hezbollah to take confidence-building measures if a long-awaited dialogue with the Future Movement is to begin soon.


The Future call cast doubts about an early thaw between the two influential parties whose strained ties have heightened sectarian tensions in the country.


Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah last week extended an olive branch to the Future Movement, offering to cooperate with his Sunni rivals to shield Lebanon from the repercussions of regional turmoil and the threat of militant groups which have fought the Lebanese Army near the border with Syria.


The Future Movement’s response to Nasrallah’s conciliatory gesture would determine if any dialogue could be launched between the two sides. “Dialogue between the Future Movement and Hezbollah has not started yet. The Future Movement is still studying Sayyed Nasrallah’s speech before taking a final stance on it,” Houri told The Daily Star Sunday. “Hezbollah is required to build an atmosphere of confidence and send positive signals in order for the dialogue to get off the ground.”


“A phase of confidence building must precede any dialogue with Hezbollah,” he added.


Houri recalled that previous experiments with Hezbollah in Dialogue sessions in Parliament and Baabda Palace were not encouraging, especially with “Hezbollah’s change of heart concerning the Special Tribunal for Lebanon.”


“There are three key divisive issues that need to be addressed in any dialogue with Hezbollah: Hezbollah’s arsenal, the party’s military intervention in Syria and the STL.”Hezbollah has dismissed the U.N.-backed STL, which is trying suspects in the 2005 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, as an “American-Israeli plot” designed to incite sectarian strife in Lebanon. The tribunal has indicted five Hezbollah members in Hariri’s killing and their trial is ongoing in absentia in The Hague where the STL is located.


The Future Movement and its March 14 allies have slammed Hezbollah’s intervention in Syria to help President Bashar Assad’s forces as a violation of the Baabda Declaration, which calls for distancing Lebanon from regional and international conflicts, particularly the war in Syria.


Houri noted that Nasrallah’s offer came more than three months after Hariri launched an initiative for dialogue with the Hezbollah-led March 8 alliance to break the presidential deadlock.


Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs Mohammad Fneish, one of two Hezbollah representatives in the Cabinet, said his party was waiting for the Future Movement’s response to Nasrallah’s speech last week to weigh the prospects of dialogue between the two sides.


“We have always been ready for dialogue with the Future Movement to deal with the security threats facing the country,” Fneish told The Daily Star.


Noting that Nasrallah’s speech has opened the door wide to dialogue with the Future Movement, he said: “We are ready to talk on all divisive issues, including the party’s arms and its intervention in Syria.”


Fneish pointed out that there was no break in ties between Hezbollah and the Future Movement as “ministers and lawmakers from both parties talk to each other in the Cabinet and in Parliament.”


Nasrallah’s dialogue offer came nearly two weeks after long-brewing tensions between Future and Hezbollah, caused mainly by the party’s intervention in Syria, reached a crescendo when Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk accused the party of undermining security plans in Lebanon.


Machnouk said the government security plan predominantly targeted the Sunni community and turned a blind eye to Hezbollah-dominated areas.


Responding to Machnouk, Fneish said Hezbollah had never barred security forces from pursuing any criminal or attacker in areas where the party enjoys wide support.


Hezbollah also came under fire by several prominent March 14 figures, including Justice Minister Ashraf Rifi last month, who claimed that the party was implicated in the attacks on Army positions in the northern city of Tripoli. Hezbollah has denied the charges.



Salam: Cabinet not in danger despite ministers’ diverging views


BEIRUT: Prime Minister Tammam Salam Sunday dismissed reports about a split within his government, saying political parties represented in it were still upholding it despite heated debates and divergent viewpoints that sometimes emerge during Cabinet sessions.


“Various viewpoints are normal, even if they sometimes reach deep differences. This does not mean that the Cabinet is divided or in the circle of danger and is threatened with collapse,” the prime minister told The Daily Star. “This matter happens with all governments. Otherwise, matters would not have been normal and democratic.”


Commenting on the security situation, the killing of people in some Druze villages in the Mount Hermon area near the border with Lebanon and the threat of the Syrian war spilling over Lebanese territory, Salam said: “Amid the current situation in Syria, such incidents are expected to happen. But for us, what matters is Lebanon’s stability and security. There are always fears. Hence, the significance of the Army’s role in maintaining the citizens’ security. The armed forces are doing more than what is required of them.”


Talking about the situation in Tripoli, which fell fully under the control of the Army last month after the military crushed Islamist militants in the city, he said: “The security situation in Tripoli is stable and we hope for more [stability]. We have decided in the Cabinet to give Tripoli priority in development and urgent aid. This will help achieve more stability.”


On the refugee crisis and a statement by Health Minister Wael Abu Faour in which he said the international community has failed to help Lebanon cope with this crisis and voiced fears about the collapse of the health system, he said: “It is clear that amid the Syrian refugee flow, the needs to meet the requirements of the refugees are increasing and Lebanon’s resources are insufficient.”


He added that the government was in contact with international organizations to secure promised aid to help Lebanon cope with the burdens of more than 1 million Syrian refugees on its territories.


Salam said an amount of $57 million, out of the $140 million allotted by the international community for Lebanon, would be sent to the government soon.


On the ordeal of 27 soldiers and policemen held hostage by ISIS and Nusra militants for more than three months and media leaks that put the hostages’ families in a state of confusion and anxiety, Salam said: “There is a ministerial crisis cell that is running this file. General Security chief Maj. Gen. Abbas Ibrahim has been charged with following up this file.”


He said what mattered were the ministerial cell’s efforts in coordination with Ibrahim.


Declaring that the negotiations with the kidnappers are “difficult, delicate and critical,” Salam said the government has avoided releasing any information on the case in order not to impede the Qatar-sponsored mediation efforts.


“We hope to see something [in the hostage crisis]. The Cabinet has not entered into details and left the matter to the [ministerial] cell. But we in this cell cannot release information that can hinder the negotiation efforts.” He stressed that secrecy was an essential part of the ongoing negotiations with the kidnappers.



Next STL trial phase focuses on Syria’s role in destabilizing Lebanon


BEIRUT: Syria’s role in destabilizing Lebanon ahead of the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri will likely be front and center in the next phase of trial at the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, new court documents show.


The second phase of the prosecution’s case is expected to begin in the latter half of November, when the first “political witness” is set to testify before the trial chamber.


While the first phase of the trial has focused on the day of the attack, analysis of the crime scene and testimony of Hariri’s bodyguards, the second phase will look at the months leading up to the assassination and the surveillance of Hariri’s movements by the suspects.


The STL’s prosecutor asked the trial chamber in a filing late last week to admit into evidence a tranche of documents detailing the relationship between Lebanon and Syria, including Resolution 1559 that called for the end of Syria’s occupation and the disarmament of all militias, the brotherhood treaty that governed relations between the two countries and media coverage and analysis of political tensions in the run-up to the assassination.


The request was swiftly denounced by defense lawyers, who argued that prosecutors were setting the stage to outline a political motive for Hariri’s assassination, one that they did not allude to in their indictments of five members of Hezbollah accused of complicity in the deadly 2005 bombing.


“As the prosecution has failed to demonstrate any connection between the evidence sought to be tendered and the allegations in the indictment, the evidence sought to be tendered is irrelevant,” lawyers for Hussein Oneissi, one of the suspects in the case, said in their response. “Its only possible contribution would be to color the trial with vague, unverified [and unverifiable] political inferences.”


In addition to Resolution 1559, prosecutors have asked the court to admit nearly 500 documents including the Taif Accord and the Syrian Accountability Act passed by the U.S. Congress in late 2003, arguing that they all provide useful background on Lebanese-Syrian relations, along with press reviews analyzing political events in the run-up to Hariri’s assassination.


They also asked the court to admit into evidence meetings of parliamentary committees, Hariri’s resignation decree, travel records, phone directories, visitor logbooks, U.N. and other documents.


The documents will also help establish Hariri’s movements before his assassination, prosecutors argued.


The STL is tasked with prosecuting those responsible for the attack that killed Hariri and 21 others, heralding an era of turmoil and ending Syria’s tutelage over Lebanon. The court has indicted five members of Hezbollah in connection with the attack, and their trial in absentia is ongoing in The Hague.


No Syrian official has ever been formally charged with involvement in Hariri’s killing, although U.N. investigators blamed Syria for creating an atmosphere of extreme tension and polarization. Investigators also claim the attack was such a complex operation and Syrian intelligence’s infiltration of Lebanese society so thorough that the assassination could not have occurred without the knowledge of senior Lebanese and Syrian officials.


Allegations of Syrian complicity have often focused on Syrian anger over the passage of Security Council resolution 1559 ordering Syrian troops out of Lebanon and Hariri’s possible role in its passage. They also focus on the breakdown of relations between Hariri and Syrian President Bashar Assad over the extension of the mandate of then-Lebanese President Emile Lahoud’s term.


Assad backed the extension, and witness testimony details a stormy meeting in the fall of 2004 between Hariri and Assad in which the Syrian president allegedly declared the extension a fait accompli and threatened Hariri.


But at the heart of this fresh controversy is the fact that the prosecution has never actually outlined a motive for why Hariri was killed.


Prosecutors argue that the surveillance of Hariri and the evidence they gathered about the suspects is sufficient to show criminal intent. Defense lawyers say surveillance and countersurveillance is common in Lebanon and is not enough to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the suspects were involved in a major assassination plot or in pulling the trigger.


But defense lawyers suggested that this request to include new evidence that deals with Lebanese-Syrian relations and internal Lebanese politics is a devious attempt at pinning a motive on the suspects – one that defense lawyers are not prepared to fight.


In a series of objections, the defense said the evidence is irrelevant and should not be accepted because the prosecution has never described a political motive for the attack. They said a discussion of Syrian-Lebanese relations is therefore unnecessary.


“The Prosecution is unable to link these documents to the indictment, as the indictment is characterized by an exclusive focus on the bare facts of the alleged crime,” defense lawyers for Oneissi said in a court filing. “It is silent on the specific issue of Lebanese/Syrian relations and, more broadly, the political background to the explosion.”


“Though allegations involving terrorist acts may appear inherently political, no political motive – or any motive – has been pleaded,” the lawyers said, adding that the only comments of a political nature made by the prosecution are that Hariri was a member of Parliament and that the suspects are supporters of Hezbollah.


The focus on Syria’s relationship with Lebanon is notable because the prosecution has so far avoided wading into the quagmire of Lebanese politics while arguing its case, pointedly avoiding mentioning Hezbollah in open court.


In fact, prosecutors have removed from the latest version of the indictment any allusion to Hezbollah’s alleged involvement in past terrorist attacks and a mention of Imad Mughniyeh, the party’s former military commander who was assassinated in Damascus in 2008 and who is related to a key suspect in the case, Hezbollah operative Mustafa Badreddine.


The amendment was a hint that Hezbollah as an organization would not be accused of complicity in Hariri’s killing.


“It is significant, in particular, that the prosecution withdrew from the initial indictment ... reference to Hezbollah as an organization being implicated in this matter,” defense lawyers for another suspect, Assad Sabra, said in a court filing.


“No mention of that organization was made in the prosecution’s pretrial brief nor in its opening statement,” the lawyers added. “A suggestion that Hezbollah played any part in this assassination therefore does not form a valid part of the prosecution case.”



Consensus president placed on front burner


The coming week will feature intense consultations by the March 14 bloc that will revive its initiative to find a consensus candidate for the presidency, sources in the coalition said.


The sources said the consultations follow former Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s meeting with Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai in Rome, in which he promised to pursue a resolution to the presidential vacuum following the renewal of Parliament’s mandate. They also follow Speaker Nabih Berri’s declaration that “it is now time for a presidential consensus” after the mandate had been extended.


Lebanon has been without a head of state since former President Michel Sleiman’s term ended on May 25. Parliament extended its own mandate for two years and seven months last week, citing security concerns and the political vacuum that would be left if its term ended with no consensus over a new electoral law.


The March 14 sources said the extension would not last for that long because movement would begin on the presidential front this week, with Berri and Druze leader Walid Jumblatt’s backing.


The contacts will focus on identifying consensus candidates with the March 8 bloc. The discussions will begin with the return of Jumblatt from his tour in Moscow, where he is expected to have discussed with Russian officials the various negotiations surrounding regional issues, including Lebanon.


The sources said Hezbollah would no longer have to back Free Patriotic Movement leader Michel Aoun as a consensus candidate, since the party declared him their candidate in a speech by its Secretary-General Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah last week. The endorsement will dampen any American or Saudi backing for Aoun’s candidacy due to the ongoing regional confrontation between the latter and Iran, the sources said.


Hariri will personally contact Western capitals that have a stake in Lebanon on the presidential issue, as well as Lebanese leaders, while his chief of staff Nader Hariri will handle the details of the negotiations, The Daily Star has learnt.


Meanwhile, Western ambassadors have urged Lebanese political leaders to reach consensus on the election of a president soon, and to avoid seeking outside involvement in the issue because foreign powers are not likely to interfere in the issue.


An influential Lebanese diplomatic source said the consultations on the presidency will, if they are unsuccessful, fill time while officials await the outcome of regional and international negotiations.


The negotiations in question are the U.S.-Iranian nuclear talks with a deadline to reach an agreement of Nov. 21, and the upcoming meeting in China between U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. Kerry and Lavrov are expected to discuss the possibility of resolving the Syrian crisis through the parameters of the Geneva I meeting that called for a transitional government.


In addition, officials are following the outcome of a meeting between Kerry, EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif that could touch upon a broader regional compromise, as countries begin to grasp the enormity of the sectarian crisis.


The diplomatic source said that Lebanese factions are likely to begin seriously negotiating over a consensus president based on the outcomes of these meetings.



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Shebaa residents back Syrian rebel ban


SHEBAA, Lebanon: Despite the ongoing battles between Syrian rebels and the regime just over the mountain, residents are keen to stress that things in the town of Shebaa are fine. “Some media outlets are blowing things out of proportion,” Samia Hamdan said as she diligently sorted lentils. “Was the world ruined because the Army prevented those wounded soldiers from entering?”


The Lebanese Army barred 11 wounded Syrian rebels from entering Lebanese territory through the southern Mount Hermon border region Friday, demanding first the release of 27 servicemen held hostage by the Nusra Front and ISIS militants in Arsal.


The rebels were wounded during heavy clashes that erupted Thursday between Syrian government troops and opposition groups in the Mount Hermon area.


The wounded attempted to enter Lebanese territory after at least 40 people were killed in clashes between government forces and rebels, including the Nusra Front. Fighting in Beit Tima, a majority-Druze region, left 26 pro-government forces and 14 rebels and jihadist fighters dead.


The wounded seeking refuge included seven members of the rebel Free Syrian Army.


The rebels were stopped 700 meters from the Army checkpoint on the Rashaya crossing between the Syrian town of Beit Jin and Lebanon’s Arqoub in the Shebaa region.


“We stand with the Lebanese Army,” Hamdan added. “Each house here has a green uniform [a soldier in the Army].”


Those who spoke to The Daily Star were unanimous in their support for the Army and its decision to prevent the rebels from entering the town. Even children playing under the sun sang the Lebanese anthem, dedicating it to the Army’s soldiers.


Townspeople said most cross-border activity had come to a standstill, in anticipation of fallout from the Syrian war. Lebanese charities based in the town can no longer provide relief to Syrians west of Rif Damascus like they once did. Even mules transporting items face difficulty entering the country, one resident said.


In Shebaa’s town square, where portraits of Future Movement leader Saad Hariri were raised along the main thoroughfares, Hajj Ali Daher waited for customers at his grocery store. “We are safe and nothing will disturb our village,” he said firmly.


“We salute the Lebanese Army for preventing wounded and armed Syrian rebels from entering Shebaa, since we don’t know on what side they belong,” said resident Mohammad Hamdan.


Another resident, Mohammad Abdul-Latif Qadaan, echoed Daher’s staunch support for the military. “There is no way the Nusra Front or ISIS can enter this town,” he said. “The incidents going on around Shebaa will not change this.


“Every Syrian refugee in the town is known by name, and we know where they live. Strangers who enter are identified and questioned, there is no way cells or militants can infiltrate [the town] because there is constant follow-up and monitoring [of Syrian refugees].


“We’re not in Arsal, and we will not allow anyone to enter our town. We are not responsible for anyone and we will never abandon our support for the Lebanese Army.


“We won’t sympathize with anyone except the Lebanese Army.”


Touching on the fears of Shebaa’s residents over the ongoing battles just beyond Mount Hermon in Syria, Qadaan said: “As for the environment inside the town, we [Sunnis, Christians and Druze] all stand in solidarity.”


Shebaa’s muktar, Abdu Hashem, was quick to say that the town had no connection to the militants fighting in Syria, “There are no strangers in the town, we are with the Army.”


“We welcome Syrian refugees and we provide them with everything they need,” he said.


He added that the municipality had set up surveillance cameras to monitor the movements of the town’s refugees, at the behest of the military.


Shebaa’s Mayor Mohammad Saab said the security situation in Shebaa was excellent. “There are no extremists among us, and we have one choice and one choice only: to never abandon the Lebanese Army,” he said, adding that a decision had been taken by officials to prevent the entry of more Syrians into the town.


“There are no more places for them,” he said.


The mayor expressed hope that the government would provide the Arqoub area, which includes Shebaa, Kfar Shuba, Kfar Hammam, Hebbarieh and Hasbaya with aid, since the municipalities in these zones were in dire need of more funding.


Saab said fears harbored by Shebaa’s residents that Syrian refugees in the town would one day stage terrorist attacks were baseless. “There are no weapons in the town, surveillance cameras monitor refugees and there are police patrols ongoing, as well as a curfew on Syrians from 9 p.m. until 6 a.m.”


The Progressive Socialist Party held a meeting in Hasbaya over the weekend. Present were members of the Hasbani-Arqoub Union of Municipalities and representatives of civil society.


“Amid rumors broadcast by some media outlets about Hasbaya, especially Arqoub ... we would like to give assurances that citizens of Hasbaya and Arqoub are historically tied to the government and its institutions,” read a statement issued after the meeting.


A follow-up committee was created by the end of the meeting.


“[I hope] that media outlets and politicians maintain accuracy and the truth in their news about what’s going on in the Shebaa area, Arqoub and the villages of Hasbaya and their relationship with the Syrian villages in Mount Hermon,” Amal Movement MP Qassem Hashem said in a statement.


“We hope those keen to keep Shebaa, Arqoub and Hasbaya secure do their best to keep away from using the language of incitement.”



Lebanon Army arrests Syrian rebel leader near Arsal


ARSAL, Lebanon: The Lebanese Army Sunday arrested a Syrian rebel commander near the northeastern border town of Arsal, a security source told The Daily Star.


The source said Abdallah Rifai, a commander with a Free Syrian Army battalion fighting in Syria's Qalamoun region, was stopped at an Army checkpoint in Wadi Hmeid, on the outskirts of Arsal.


He was disguised as a woman while riding on board of a Jeep Cherokee, the source said.


The Army's has had a heavy presence around Arsal since jihadist rebels briefly overran the town in early August.


The Army drove the militants into the outskirts after a five-day battle that left 19 soldiers and dozens of jihadists.


More than 30 soldiers and policemen were abducted during the battle, and 27 remain in custody after three were killed and seven released.




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Army arrests two Syrians in south Lebanon


Army arrests two Syrians in south Lebanon


The Lebanese Army arrested Sunday two Syrians in the southern town of Tyre, but released one of them later in the day,...



Hariri discusses bilateral ties with Jordan king


Jumblatt meets Russian foreign minister in Moscow


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Daher denounces state's 'deprivation' of Akkar


BEIRUT: Controversial north Lebanon MP Khaled Daher decried the state for what he alleged to be a policy of deprivation targeting the district of Akkar.


“The policy of deprivation being practiced is a part of the suffering of the people of the area,” Daher told reporters at a book signing Sunday in Halba, north Lebanon, adding that this has been a long-standing policy practiced “by a number of governments."


According to Daher, area residents remain loyal to the state despite facing injustices.


The policy of deprivation, Daher added, ensued during the Syrian occupation of Lebanon during the 1975-1990 Lebanese civil war. The policy then continued in the 1990s and 2000s under late Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. He claimed that Hariri was “banned from visiting Akkar and was banned from cooperating with many of its leaders,” without elaborating.


But despite that, the region remained loyal to the late premier, and in turn, remains committed to supporting his son, Future Movement leader Saad Hariri.


“We are with Hariri’s political rhetoric and we support nation building,” Daher said.


With regards to the extension of parliament’s mandate which was secured by a 95-2 vote last week, Daher said that he had initially opposed extension. However, the MP voted in favor of extension, saying that he would not run the risk of driving the country towards a constitutional conference that would alter Lebanon’s power sharing formulas as a result of an institutional void.


Daher also called on religious and political figures to be wary of the fact that hundreds of individuals detained during raids in north Lebanon actually have nothing to do with clashes that rocked the area late last month. This is a very dangerous issue and if left unresolved it would lead to a replication of the clashes, he added.



Lebanon's Druze community fearful as Syria's war moves closer


RASHAYA, Lebanon: On mountains close to the Syrian border, members of Lebanon's minority Druze sect say they are ready to defend their towns and villages with arms if the civil war next raging door gets much nearer.


"Here in the east, the danger has become very close to us, it is right in our faces and in our lives," said Ali Fayik, a regional official speaking in the predominantly Druze town of Rashaya, set in steep mountains with a panorama over the region.


The town is in a sensitive area close to the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights and home to various religious communities which fought one another in Lebanon's own 1975-90 civil war.


On the other side of the mountain range, Sunni Islamist fighters linked to al Qaeda and hostile to groups including the Druze, are battling Syria's army as well as other insurgents.


Fresh battles over the border late last week killed at least 31 members of pro-government forces and around 14 insurgents, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said on Saturday.


The Lebanese army, its resources stretched, has struggled to secure the border with Syria, in some places giving rise to security patrols by local volunteers.


Militants from Syria crossed into the Lebanese Sunni border town of Arsal in August further north, killing and capturing dozens of soldiers and demanding the release of their fellow fighters held in Lebanon. Since then the army has said it has captured people it suspects of wanting to carry out more attacks


Also in August, Druze villagers opened fire on a bus carrying Syrians after it failed to stop at an army checkpoint at Ein Atta outside Rashaya, according to local officials, who said one Syrian was killed and two were wounded.


The villagers thought the bus was transporting Sunni Islamist militants but they turned out to be Syrian refugees.


War weariness in Lebanon makes a return to all-out civil conflict a remote prospect, but the onset of winter is heightening fears of more clashes if insurgents seek to create supply routes across the frontier ahead of winter snowfall.


With most Druze and Christian parts of Lebanon spared violence from Syria's three-and-a-half-year conflict that has hit other areas, Druze leaders on a national level have urged communities to avoid acting independently from the army.


"The Ein Atta incident was unfortunate, and it means there needs to be more involvement by the army," in safeguarding security, said cleric Jamal Eddine in Rashaya, dressed in the distinctive black shirt, trousers and white cap of the Druze community.


A member of the local Druze religious council, he said events in Syria and the wider Middle East had made local people worry about their future and said it would be natural for the community to protect itself.


People in Rashaya said they still saw the army as the first line of defence but they were ready to back it up if there was an incursion. The army draws its members from all of Lebanon's communities.


The Druze, whose faith draws its roots from Islam but is influenced by ancient Greek and Indian philosophy, are spread across the region. They have survived waves of persecution throughout history.


Although one of Lebanon's smaller sects, they formed a powerful fighting force in the country's own civil war where they also suffered heavy losses. The group remains influential in national politics.


Like other minority groups, their kinsmen in Syria largely support President Bashar al-Assad, seeing him as a bulwark against extremists. Syrian Druze have occasionally clashed with insurgents in areas close to the border with Lebanon.


Their involvment has been nowhere near the scale of Lebanese Shi'ite group Hezbollah, which has sent thousands of fighters to back up government forces in Syria. Hezbollah has also fought with al Qaeda's Nusra Front on Lebanese soil when the group attacked its bases in a large assault early last month.


GUNS IN EVERY HOME


Some suspected Syrian fighters have also appeared in the Rashaya area, according to the Lebanese army.


In a statement late last month, it said intelligence and security services had arrested 12 Syrians on suspicion of belonging to groups fighting the army further north in Arsal. It said they had entered Lebanon illegally, without giving details.


Some in Rashaya worry that the nearby town of Shebaa, which sits on a well-trodden smuggling route near Israel, could become a refuge for Nusra Front, like other Sunni towns in northern Lebanon that are hosting refugees that have fled the violence.


Keen to prevent strife, Druze leader Walid Jumblatt, the head of the Progressive Socialist Party (PSP), has urged the community to leave security to the state. In a visit to Ein Atta after the bus shooting, he condemned any attack on Syrian refugees, local media said.


Despite support among the Druze for Assad, Jumblatt has said the Syrian president should step down. However, he has drawn closer to Assad's ally Hezbollah in recent months.


To bulk up security, the PSP has proposed strengthening municipal police to monitor villages to report any suspicious activity to the army, said party spokesman Rami al-Rayess.


"We are against any security measures that would be taken independently from the state apparatus," he said.


But preventing an armed response may prove difficult in areas where residents say there is a gun in nearly every home, like in many other parts of Lebanon.


"We do not commit aggression against one who would assault us, but we will stand up to him - the response is in the mouth of the gun," said registrar Riaf Ferhat, speaking in Rashaya's old market where vendors displayed goods in wood-fronted shops.


"We have dug a big trap here and we shall bury anyone who attacks us," he said, speaking about defences metaphorically.


Fayik, the other local official, agreed. He said it was a natural response now the fight had been brought to their door.


"We will not leave from here and when somebody threatens me...and I mean my life is threatened, it would make no sense for me to avoid using all means to hold ground and preserve the nation," he said.


Officials in Rashaya are quick to point out that the Druze have no organised militia like other Lebanese communities and say they have discouraged such movements.


Though the PSP says it has no militia, as recently as 2008 its supporters displayed significant firepower during fierce battles with Iranian-backed Hezbollah.


"Of course, it is a natural phenomenon in Lebanon that people have private arms, but we do not have a dedicated, organised force," said Asaad Serhal, a Druze council cleric.


"There are arms found in each house to defend ourselves and our dignity, but they are not visible in the streets."


He was less worried about the risk of a spillover than other local people, saying militants would struggle to make their way over the border in large numbers because of the rugged landscape, which has so far acted as a natural barrier.


Rashaya lies just below a mountain known by locals as Jebel al-Sheikh and also referred to as Mount Hermon. Some residents said militants could make their way over the mountain passes if they have 4X4 cars and seize higher ground.


"There is concern and fear," PSP's Rayess said. "But it is not restricted to the citizens in this area, but in all the villages in Lebanon."



Bassil denounces sectarianism, lauds resistance



BEIRUT: Lebanese must focus on abolishing sectarianism in their country to allow for peaceful, secular existence, Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil said during a tour of the Western Bekaa Sunday.


He also lauded the resistance movement for its successes against Israel, and called for all Lebanese to apply the principle of resistance to domestic matters, like injustice and corruption.


“We have to surpass coexistence so that existence becomes unified,” he said during a visit to the village of Khirbet Qanafar, expressing hopes that the country would move towards becoming an equal and civil state bare of any form of sectarianism.


“Despite our defense of Christians, we are secularists and we defend against injustice whether it is practiced against Muslims or Christians,” he added.


Bassil and a delegation of Free Patriotic Movement bloc members launched a tour of the western Bekaa Valley Sunday.


During a visit to the village of Mashgara, where he was welcomed by Hezbollah official Sheikh Mohammad Hamadi, the foreign minister expressed hopes that everyone would resist Israel, and resist injustice and corruption for the sake of Lebanon.


“The resistance doesn’t take permission from anyone and when it does take permission then it’s no longer a resistance,” he said.


“Lebanon has the capacity to continue with the versatility that the village of Mashgara embodies,” he added, in reference to the village’s several religious groups that include Melkites, Orthodox Christians, and Shiites.



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Syrian jets bomb towns near Lebanon border


Syrian jets bombed two villages near the border with east Lebanon Saturday, a security source told The Daily Star.



Citizens, not politicians, must lead Lebanon: Rai


Citizens, not politicians, must lead Lebanon: Rai


Politicians are responsible for many of the divisions in Lebanese society, but it is the responsibility of the citizen...