Monday, 10 November 2014

Army raids refugee sites in Akkar, arrests Syrians



TRIPOLI, Lebanon: The Lebanese Army raided Syrian refugee centers in the northern province of Akkar Tuesday, arresting a number of individuals on suspicion of links to terrorist organizations.


Security sources told The Daily Star the 6 a.m. raids took place in the Akkar town of Tal Abbas.


They did not say how many suspects were arrested.


The Lebanese Army has detained more than 300 suspects across the country since its crackdown on Islamist militants in recent weeks.


Last month, the Army launched a four-day military operation in the northern city of Tripoli after several soldiers had been killed and wounded as a result of repeated attacks by extremist-linked gunmen. The offensive left 42 people dead.


The Tripoli clampdown followed a five-day gunbattle in August between the Lebanese Army and Islamist militants in the northeastern town of Arsal.


As the jihadists retreated, they took with them dozens of Lebanese soldiers and policemen hostage. They have so far released seven captives and killed three.



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Derbas: Syrian refugees’ number drops 4,000



BEIRUT: The number of Syrian refugees registering with the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees in Lebanon went down 4,000 in October, Social Affairs Minister Rashid Derbas has said.


But Derbas said the drop was not tied to a recent government ban on refugees fleeing the war next-door.


"UNHCR reports indicate that the number of refugees began to decrease in Lebanon, even though the decision regarding their entry was not being ultimately implemented,” Derbas said in remarks published Tuesday by the local daily An-Nahar.


He said a ministerial committee tasked with the Syrian refugee crisis will follow up on the decisions taken during the Berlin conference, in terms of the $2.2 billion grant to help Lebanon cope with the 2.2 million refugee burden.


Last month, Derbas announced that Lebanon would no longer accept refugees, but said the borders would remain open to urgent humanitarian cases and others crossing for transit purposes.


UNHCR representative in Lebanon Ninette Kelley has said the decline in the number of refugees had resulted from restrictive border measures.



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Syria sets terms for helping free hostages: report



BEIRUT: The Syrian government has set conditions for helping secure the release of Lebanese servicemen held hostage by Islamist militants along the northeastern border, Al-Liwaa said Tuesday.


The local newspaper, citing diplomatic sources, said Syria has conditioned its participation in the hostage release process on including an official request from the Lebanese government, asking the Syrian government to help facilitate the release of those listed in ISIS’s and Nusra Front’s name lists.


Another condition calls for rejecting pressure from either side to release Free Syrian Army commander Col. Abdallah AL-Rifai, according to the sources.


The Syrian government has also conditioned that Lebanon retracts its decision relating to coordination between the Lebanese Army and the Syrian army to combat terrorism and prevent ISIS and Nusra from spreading further to the north or the east.


A ministerial source, however, was doubtful that the Lebanese government would respond to the Syrian terms.


“Those conditions are not easy for the Lebanese government to deal with, due to their sensitivity and because they push the Lebanese government to ‘normalize’ relations with the regime, away from any Arab or international support,” the source told Al-Liwaa.


A Qatari mediator has been negotiating the release of the at least 27 Lebanese soldiers and policemen held captive since early August after Islamist militants briefly took over the northeastern border town of Arsal.



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President Obama Heads to Beijing, Kicking Off Trip to Asia and Australia


President Barack Obama steps off Air Force One to a red carpet welcome on arrival at Capital International Airport in Beijing

President Barack Obama steps off Air Force One to a red carpet welcome on arrival at Capital International Airport in Beijing, China, Nov. 10, 2014. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)




Over the weekend, President Obama headed to Beijing to kick off his sixth trip to Asia as President -- and his second trip to Asia this year.


The trip -- which will also include stops in Burma and Australia -- will underscore the President's deep commitment to his Asia rebalancing strategy, and will reiterate his firm belief that America's trade and investment ties to Asia are critical to our future economic growth and the creation of American jobs.


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Reddit 'Ask Me Anything' on Net Neutrality

This afternoon, Senior Advisor for Technology and Economic Policy David Edelman took to Reddit to answer questions about President Obama's plan to keep the Internet open and free.


The "Ask Me Anything" session followed today's statement by President Obama urging the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to take up stronger rules protecting net neutrality. During the Q&A session, David answered a range of questions on this important issue. You can see all of the responses on Reddit, or check out the full Q&A below.


And for more about President Obama's plan, check out http://1.usa.gov/1u3psoC.


David Edelman answers questions for a Reddit AMA


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Aoun burns all bridges with Future


BEIRUT: A war of words flared up Monday between MP Michel Aoun’s Free Patriotic Movement and the Future Movement over the presidential deadlock, threatening to raise political tension in the volatile country and further complicate already stalled attempts to elect a new president.


Coupled with mounting security threats linked to the war in Syria, the political escalation, a norm in Lebanon’s turbulent history, reflected the state of disarray and divisions in the country following the rival parties’ failure to elect a president or hold parliamentary elections on time.


A number of Future lawmakers lashed out at Aoun, accusing him of losing his temper after the FPM leader charged that the Future Movement took orders from Riyadh and accused Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal of vetoing his candidacy for the presidency.


In remarks published by As-Safir newspaper Monday, Aoun said presidential election talks with the Future Movement came to a halt after Riyadh ruled him out as a candidate.


“Dialogue with [former] Prime Minister Saad Hariri on the presidency has stopped because Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal put a veto on my name,” Aoun said.


In a clear allusion to Hariri, who has been living abroad for more than three years for security reasons, Aoun said: “In the face of imminent dangers, we notice that some are living outside Lebanon and others can take a plane and leave whenever they feel they are threatened. But we are deep rooted in this land and are staying here. We have no choice but to defend our existence. This is what unites us with Hezbollah.”


Future MP Ahmad Fatfat hit back at Aoun, reminding him of when he fled Baabda Palace to the French Embassy in 1990, leaving behind his wife and three daughters.


Syrian warplanes bombed Baabda Palace on Oct. 13, 1990, to evict Aoun, the then-Army commander, who opposed the 1989 Taif Accord.


“If Aoun meant the one who is living abroad is [former] Prime Minister Saad Hariri, Hariri is living in the country. But the one who ran away is Michel Aoun when he left his wife and daughters behind and left the Army [soldiers] to get killed in Araya on Oct. 13 [1990] and ran away,” Fatfat said in an interview with MTV station. “Aoun won the marathon race between the French Embassy and Baabda.”


Future MP Atif Majdalani said Aoun’s remarks reflected “tension and fears” that Hezbollah’s nomination of the FPM leader for the presidency might be a maneuver.


“We were not surprised by Gen. Aoun’s statement in which he put the blame on others. It’s very clear that Gen. Aoun is in a state of confusion and has lost his merit to be a consensus candidate for the presidency,” Majdalani told The Daily Star.


“As soon as Hezbollah Secretary-General [Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah] named Gen. Aoun [last week] as the March 8 candidate for the presidency, Aoun was no longer a consensus candidate but a provocative one.”During several rounds of talks held between senior Future and FPM officials in the past months, including meetings with Hariri in France, Aoun sought to promote himself as a consensus or compromise candidate for the country’s top Christian post, arguing that he heads the largest Christian bloc in Parliament.


“From the very beginning, Hariri told Aoun: ‘If you are presenting yourself as a consensus candidate for the presidency, you have to get approval for this from the Christian side in the March 14 coalition in order for us to support you,’” Majdalani said.


The March 14 coalition, which opposes Aoun’s candidacy, has backed Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea as its candidate for the presidency, while MP Walid Jumblatt has nominated Aley MP Henri Helou as a candidate of his parliamentary bloc.


In another interview, Fatfat said Aoun was too irritable to serve as a president.“Aoun attacked the Future Movement because he cannot attack his ally Hezbollah, which has let him down on two major occasions,” Fatfat told the Central News Agency.


“The first occasion was concerning Parliament’s mandate extension, and the second was when Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah embraced him as the March 8 candidate and thus stripped the ‘consensus candidate’ label from him,” he said.


Fatfat said Aoun had clearly “lost his nerve,” and thus began to throw random accusations. “Most importantly, it has become clear that whoever opposed Aoun’s election was right, because someone who [becomes agitated] so quickly cannot be a president,” he said.


MP Ibrahim Kanaan from Aoun’s parliamentary Change and Reform bloc refused to comment on the Future MPs’ verbal attacks on Aoun. “We will respond after the bloc’s meeting Tuesday,” he told The Daily Star.


Meanwhile, Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai kept up his harsh rhetoric against Lebanese lawmakers for failing to elect a president and accused them of deliberately seeking vacuums in state institutions to serve personal interests.


“The political leadership loses its raison d’etre if it fails its commitments to the people, and in Lebanon the ruling class is disabled,” Rai said in Bkirki at the opening of the eighth conference of the Council of Catholic Patriarchs and Bishops in Lebanon.


Rai, who had recently returned from a two-week pastoral visit to Australia, said Lebanese expatriates were distressed by the state of decadence and dissolution that Lebanon has reached as a result of the politicians’ lousy performance. “They [expatriates] condemned politicians, particularly Lebanese parliamentarians, who betray their national responsibilities by fomenting a vacuum in the presidency post in Lebanon by failing to elect a president to serve personal objectives,” he said.


“They also condemned the Lebanese parliamentarians who fomented a vacuum in the legislative authority by extending their mandate, again violating the Constitution in cold blood,” Rai added.



Obama Backs Net Neutrality, Asks FCC To Regulate Internet



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





President Obama called on the Federal Communications Commission to craft the "strongest possible rules" to protect the principle of "net neutrality".



Newly Released Tape Captures Reagan Apology To Margaret Thatcher



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





Robert Siegel talks with presidential historian James Mann about the recently released tape of President Reagan apologizing to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.



What Makes Valerie Jarrett Different Than Other Presidential Advisors?



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





Audie Cornish talks to The New Republic's Senior Editor Noam Scheiber about his profile of Valerie Jarrett and her impact on the Obama White House.



How 'Double Bucks' For Food Stamps Conquered Capitol Hill



These wooden tokens are handed out to shoppers who use SNAP benefits to purchase fresh produce at the Crossroads Farmers Market near Takoma Park, Md. Customers receive tokens worth twice the amount of money withdrawn from their SNAP benefits card — in other words, they get "double bucks."i i



These wooden tokens are handed out to shoppers who use SNAP benefits to purchase fresh produce at the Crossroads Farmers Market near Takoma Park, Md. Customers receive tokens worth twice the amount of money withdrawn from their SNAP benefits card — in other words, they get "double bucks." Dan Charles/NPR hide caption



itoggle caption Dan Charles/NPR

These wooden tokens are handed out to shoppers who use SNAP benefits to purchase fresh produce at the Crossroads Farmers Market near Takoma Park, Md. Customers receive tokens worth twice the amount of money withdrawn from their SNAP benefits card — in other words, they get "double bucks."



These wooden tokens are handed out to shoppers who use SNAP benefits to purchase fresh produce at the Crossroads Farmers Market near Takoma Park, Md. Customers receive tokens worth twice the amount of money withdrawn from their SNAP benefits card — in other words, they get "double bucks."


Dan Charles/NPR


The federal government is about to put $100 million behind a simple idea: doubling the value of SNAP benefits — what used to be called food stamps — when people use them to buy local fruits and vegetables.


This idea did not start on Capitol Hill. It began as a local innovation at a few farmers' markets. But it proved remarkably popular and spread across the country.


"It's so simple, but it has such profound effects both for SNAP recipients and for local farmers," says Mike Appell, a vegetable farmer who sells his produce at a market in Tulsa, Okla.


The idea first surfaced in 2005 among workers at the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. They were starting a campaign to get people to eat more fresh produce.


"I think we were trying to confront the idea that healthy foods, [like] fresh fruits and vegetables, are not affordable," says Candace Young, who was director of the department's nutrition programming at the time. (Young now works for The Food Trust in Philadelphia.)


Young recalls that one of their workers pointed out that some SNAP recipients live near farmers markets "and we thought, how about we incentivize them to use their SNAP benefits at these farmers markets?"



Crossroads Farmers Market is located in a heavily immigrant neighborhood on the boundary between Langley Park and Takoma Park, Md.i i



Crossroads Farmers Market is located in a heavily immigrant neighborhood on the boundary between Langley Park and Takoma Park, Md. Dan Charles/NPR hide caption



itoggle caption Dan Charles/NPR

Crossroads Farmers Market is located in a heavily immigrant neighborhood on the boundary between Langley Park and Takoma Park, Md.



Crossroads Farmers Market is located in a heavily immigrant neighborhood on the boundary between Langley Park and Takoma Park, Md.


Dan Charles/NPR


The city made a few thousand dollars available for the program. So at a few markets in the South Bronx and Harlem, when someone spent $10 of SNAP benefits, they then received an additional $4 in the form of coupons called HealthBucks, which they could use to buy more local produce.


This desire to make farmers markets more food-stamp friendly seems to have been floating in the air at that time. A farmers market in Lynn, Mass., used a $500 donation to do something similar the very next year.


Then, in 2007, the idea mutated into a form that really caught on.


It happened with the birth of the Crossroads Farmers Market, on the boundary that divides the towns of Langley Park and Takoma Park, Md. The area, near Washington, D.C., is home to many immigrants.



"A lot of Latinos come to this market," says Michelle Dudley, the market manager. "I would say that 70 percent of our customers are Spanish-speaking, but we also see people from the Caribbean. Folks from West Africa."


Back in 2007, a man named John Hyde organized the Crossroads market with this immigrant community in mind "and then realized — these people did not have a lot of money," says Gus Schumacher, Hyde's friend and collaborator at the time. (Hyde can't tell the story himself, unfortunately. He died in 2009.)


Schumacher says he and Hyde got to talking about this money problem and had a brainstorm: If they could raise some money, they could use it to double the value of food stamps, as well as vouchers from the WIC (Women, Infants, and Children) program and food benefits for seniors.


Schumacher, a former top officials at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, used his connections to raise the money. "I asked the National Watermelon Association if they would provide a small stipend, and they were very generous. they provided $5,000," he says.


They set up a system that has remained almost unchanged ever since. On a recent visit, I see SNAP recipients lining up to speak with a market volunteer named Rosie Sanchez. They tell her how much money they want to spend from their SNAP benefits. Sanchez swipes their SNAP card and gives them wooden tokens that they can spend at the market. But she actually gives them tokens worth twice the amount that she took from their SNAP benefits; up to $15 more.



Rosie Sanchez handles SNAP transactions at Crossroads market. She also doubles the value of vouchers from the WIC (Women, Infants, and Children) program.i i



Rosie Sanchez handles SNAP transactions at Crossroads market. She also doubles the value of vouchers from the WIC (Women, Infants, and Children) program. Dan Charles/NPR hide caption



itoggle caption Dan Charles/NPR

Rosie Sanchez handles SNAP transactions at Crossroads market. She also doubles the value of vouchers from the WIC (Women, Infants, and Children) program.



Rosie Sanchez handles SNAP transactions at Crossroads market. She also doubles the value of vouchers from the WIC (Women, Infants, and Children) program.


Dan Charles/NPR


Rosie Sanchez is a SNAP recipient herself. This program "is very important," she says. "You know why? Because I get up to $15 for free. So I have $30 dollars every week. With my $30, I'm able to buy fresh, local — it's not expensive. It's the best!"


Gus Schumacher loved it, too. The same year this market started, he co-founded, together with chef Michel Nischan, an organization called Wholesome Wave, which has brought this idea of doubling SNAP benefits to farmers markets from Connecticut to California.


Private foundations were happy to contribute, because they realized that their dollars could do several things at once: ease poverty, promote better health and boost the local farm economy.



In Michigan, a food activist named Oran Hesterman set up the Fair Food Network, which called this idea Double Up Food Bucks and got it working in more than a hundred places across the state.


"We wanted to take it from the seed of an idea to a demonstration that this is something that you could do at scale," Hesterman says.


Hesterman was thinking big. He wanted to sell this idea to the government.


He invited one of Michigan's senators — Democrat Debbie Stabenow — to see Double Up Food Bucks for herself. And last year, Stabenow, who chairs the Senate's Agriculture Committee, proposed including it in the so-called Farm Bill.


On the other side of Capitol Hill, the chairman of the House agriculture committee, Republican Frank Lucas, from Oklahoma, was hearing about this idea, too.


Farmer Mike Appell had brought Double Up Food Bucks to the Cherry Street Farmers Market in Tulsa and talked about it to a member of Lucas' staff.


"It didn't seem like it required much of a sell," Appell recalls. "They seemed to be on board with it." If the program was supporting farmers, the congressman wanted to support it.



Earlier this year, the Farm Bill passed, and included $100 million, over the next five years, to boost SNAP dollars when they're spent on fresh fruits and vegetables. Those taxpayer dollars have to be matched by private funding, so the program could add up to $200 million in total.


That's a huge increase. According to some estimates, it may be 10 times what these programs spend right now.


As a result, small programs like the Cherry Street Farmers Market and the Crossroads market are now applying for funding to expand. And Michigan's Fair Food Network, one of the biggest programs, is even moving beyond farmers markets. It's now working with supermarket chains to see whether SNAP recipients shopping there can double their dollars for fresh produce every day and all year round.



Abu Hamzeh indicted over Jumblatt embezzlement case



BEIRUT: Prominent businessman Bahij Abu Hamzeh, once a close aide of MP Walid Jumblatt, was indicted over a lawsuit filed by the Progressive Socialist Party leader accusing him of embezzlement and breach of trust, a judicial source said.


According to the source, Investigative Judge Ghassan Oueidat issued the indictment against Abu Hamzeh. If found guilty, his sentence would likely range between three months and three years.


But another lawsuit filed by the Safa football team against the prominent Druze businessman was dropped Monday, judicial sources said.


Abu Hamzah remains in custody over Jumblatt's lawsuit, in which he accuses Abu Hamzeh and Hussein Bdeir of selling him a piece of land that did not actually exist.


The PSP leader had earlier said he was the victim of an “organized fraud,” and accused Abu Hamzeh and Bdeir of taking advantage of the fact that he was busy with politics and social obligations in order to dupe him.


Abu Hamzeh was arrested last April after he being charged with breach of trust and embezzling funds of the Safa football team which is sponsored by the PSP chief.


The lawsuit is the culmination of a dramatic deterioration of relations between Jumblatt and Abu Hamzeh, who used to run Jumlatt's real estate endeavors and managed his private properties for more than two decades. Abu Hamzeh’s family has consistently worked for the Jumblatt family over the past century.


A chemical engineer and a Middle East agent for the U.S. pharmaceutical company Upjohn, Abu Hamzeh lived in Paris before moving to Lebanon in 1987 at the request of Jumblatt in order to manage the PSP chief’s companies.


He is also the former head of the Association of Oil Importing Companies and served as the head of Safa’s board of trustees.



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Moqbel predicts Cabinet will reject Iran military aid



BEIRUT: The Cabinet will most likely reject the Iranian aid pledged to the Lebanese Army, Defense Minister Samir Moqbel said in a televised interview Monday.


According to Moqbel, the aid would be rejected if only one minister opposes the donation. Moqbel also said that even though a number of ministers oppose the move, the Lebanese Army still requires the aid.


The Cabinet will delay issuing a decision concerning Iranian aid pledged to the Lebanese Army to next week, Moqbel said, highlighting that the abundance of files the government has to deal with will prevent ministers from discussing the issue.


If the Cabinet approves the aid then Lebanon will discuss the issue with the Security Council, he said.



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Army discovers rigged van in Arsal



BEIRUT: The Lebanese Army dismantled Monday a 3 kilogram bomb placed under a passenger van in Arsal, sources said.


According to security sources in Arsal, the bomb which was planted below a white van was set to kill the driver.


The driver is from the Ezzedine family. The motive behind the plan remains unkown.



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No coordination between Lebanese, Syrian armies: report



BEIRUT: There is no coordination between the Lebanese and Syrian armies, a Lebanese Army source was cited as saying Monday by Turkey's Anadolu news agency.


The report did not elaborate, but it contradicts statements made by Syrian Ambassador to Lebanon Ali Abdul-Karim Ali, and General Security chief Maj. Gen. Abbas Ibrahim.


Ibrahim on Saturday was quoted by Al-Akhbar newspaper as saying that "historic" coordination between the two armies had never stopped despite the war in Syria and Lebanon's policy of neutrality.


“The Syrian and Lebanese armies are tied through historic links and the Syrian army is a brotherly and friendly army regardless of politics. Add to that, the coordination between the two has never stopped a day,” Ibrahim said.


Ali has also said that limited coordination exists, while urging more collaboration.


On Sunday, Syrian President Bashar Assad said he felt it was the right time for military cooperation between the countries, according to Lebanon's former General Security chief Jamil al-Sayyed who met with him.


But the Lebanese Army has repeatedly denied any form of cooperation with the Syrian military after Syrian officials.



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Berri, Siniora secure release of kidnapped Hujeiri



BEIRUT: Abducted Lebanese citizen Khaled al-Hujeiri was freed Monday after Speaker Nabih Berri and Former Prime Minister Fouad Siniora intervened to secure his release, according to MP Jamal al-Jarah.


“Hujeiri was not freed in return for a ransom fee but was released because of the intervention of Berri and Sinioria,” Jarah said.


Jarah told The Daily Star that he received the captive from the kidnappers, who had abducted Hujeiri from the Bekaa Valley over two weeks ago.


The MP refused to disclose the identities of the kidnappers but said that the abduction was linked to the case of 27 Lebanese servicemen held hostage by ISIS and the Nusra Front.


Jarah said that the captive is currently with his family in the Bekaa Valley.


Hujeiri is a prominent family in Arsal, where fundamentalist groups ISIS and Nusra Front clashed with Army troops for five days in August. Some accuse the Hujeiris of collaborating with jihadists, a charge they deny.



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Lebanon man caught smuggling pot to jailed grandson



BEIRUT: Police busted a 78-year-old man who tried to smuggle a bag of marijuana hidden inside the underlay of a jacket, an Internal Security Forces said in a statement Monday.


Guards at Zahle Prison arrested S.B. after he tried to smuggle drugs to his 25-year-old jailed grandson, H.B.


The grandfather is being interrogated, the statement added.


Zahleh Prison guards have previously busted a series of creative attempts to smuggle drugs. In late August, a man was caught smuggling hash inside a box of Halawa sweets.


Before that, people tried to smuggle drugs in cucumbers, pizzas, yogurt, labneh and pistachios.



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Aoun too 'irritable' to be president: Fatfat



BEIRUT: Presidential candidate Michel Aoun is too irritable to lead the country, Future MP Ahmad Fatfat said Monday, after the Free Patriotic Movement leader accused Future of taking orders from Riyadh.


“Aoun attacked the Future Movement because he cannot attack his ally Hezbollah, which has let him down on two major occasions,” Fatfat told Al-Markazia news aganecy.


“The first occasion was concerning the Parliament mandate extension, and the second was when Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasralllah embraced him as March 8’s candidate and thus stripped the ‘consensus candidate’ label from him.”


Fatfat’s comments came after As-Safir newspaper Monday carried remarks by Aoun saying talks had ended with Future after Saudi Arabia vetoed his candidacy.


“Our dialogue with Gen. Aoun has stopped rather than [permanently] ended,” Fatfat added. “But if this attack is meant to pave the way to closing the door to dialogue, then let him take responsibility for that.”


Fatfat said Aoun had clearly “lost his nerves,” and thus begun to throw random accusations.


He said that Aoun “is very aware” that there was a wide opposition against supporting his candidacy inside the Future bloc.


“Most importantly, it has become clear that whoever opposed Aoun’s election was right, because someone who [becomes nervous] so quickly cannot be a president,” Fatfat said.



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Lebanese foreign ministry defends expat vote despite extension



BEIRUT: The foreign ministry defended Monday holding elections in Lebanese embassies abroad by stating that Parliament's extension had yet to become official.


“The foreign ministry organized the voting in its diplomatic missions and consuls at a time when the extension law was not yet published in the Official Gazette,” according to a statement published by the foreign ministry.


Earlier this week, Lebanese expats residing in the Australian Melbourne, Sydney and Kuwait were able to cast their vote for parliamentary elections, in a move that marks the first Lebanese elections to be held abroad, despite the fact that lawmakers had already voted in favor of extending their mandate for a second time.


Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil told reporters Monday that expat elections prompt an amendment to Lebanese election law in order to allow more expats to elect their representatives in Parliament. An amendment should also serve to facilitate the procedure by making way for votes to be cast online or by mail.


Parliamentary elections for Lebanese expats proved to be a flop Sunday, after only three people cast ballots across three centers in Australia, and only one voter showed up at the Lebanese embassy in Kuwait on Friday.


The elections were the first to be held abroad since Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk approved expat voting last September.



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ISF arrests 2 sex criminals in south Lebanon



BEIRUT: Internal Security Forces arrested Monday a man caught molesting a girl, and detained a mother accused of prostituting her daughter in southern Lebanon, a statement said.


The ISF in Shebaa was notified of an individual accused of sexually assaulting a female minor in the city of Tyre.


After close monitoring, a police unit near Tyre’s natural reserve arrested the suspect, 27, who was identified by his initials H.Y.


The perpetrator, who appeared to be of Palestinian nationality, was caught by police molesting the girl, the statement said.


He attempted to flee but was shot in his right leg.


The ISF also arrested a Palestinian woman, 44, and her 13 year-old daughter on the charge of prostitution.


According to the ISF, the mother prostituted her daughter on several occasions.



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MEA to establish aviation academy



BEIRUT: Lebanon’s flag carrier, the Middle East Airlines, announced the establishment of an aviation academy for initiating and training pilots at their headquarters in Beirut’s Rafik Hariri International Airport, an MEA statement said Monday.


MEA’s CEO, Mohammad al-Hout was quoted as saying that the academy would start operating partially in April 2015, offering specialized pilot training in a first phase, to be fully completed by early 2016.


The academy consists of a built area of 14,000 square meters above ground and 23,000 square meters underground, comprising of a conference center which would be placed at the disposal of universities and companies for free in the first year, Hout said.


Hout was speaking at the opening of the annual meeting of CIO Lebanon, a local expert association on IT support.


The meeting, held under the slogan “Trends and Innovations in Technology," was hosted by MEA at its headquarters.



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Berri optimistic about presidential impasse: visitor



BEIRUT: Speaker Nabih Berri is optimistic about a regional and local climate that would eventually result in the election of a president, head of the Central Maronite Council Wadih Khazen said Monday.


Quoting Berri after their meeting, Khazen told reporters that the speaker considered that “local and regional conditions predicted a positive indicator that may serve to motivate local factions to agree on a new president.”


According to the council president, Parliament’s extension will eventually lead to consensus of the presidential vote.


With regards to negotiations over the release of 27 Lebanese service men held hostage by ISIS and the Nusra Front, Khazen assured that the speaker was giving the case his full attention, saying that Berri is in constant contact with a ministerial crisis cell tasked with overseeing negotiations.



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President Obama Urges FCC to Implement Stronger Net Neutrality Rules

President Obama today asked the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to take up the strongest possible rules to protect net neutrality, the principle that says Internet service providers (ISPs) should treat all internet traffic equally.


The President has been a strong and consistent advocate of net neutrality since his first presidential campaign.


President Obama’s plan would reclassify consumer broadband services under what’s known as Title II of the Telecommunications Act. It would serve as a “basic acknowledgement of the services ISPs provide to American homes and businesses, and the straightforward obligations necessary to ensure the network works for everyone - not just one or two companies.”


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ISF releases sketch of wanted woman



BEIRUT: Police released Monday the sketch of a wanted woman accused of committing fraud and forgery, and called on those who recognize her to come forward.


According to an Internal Security Forces statement, the woman has been carrying a forged ID card with the name Elissa Adnan Bayoun, and conducting scams, frauds and forgery of official documents.


Citizens who recognize the suspect were called to head to the Financial Crimes and Money laundering department at the Martyr Col. Joseph Daher at the Kamil Chamoun Boulevard.


The police called on those who need more information on the subject and others who cannot reach the location to call the telephone number 01/290881 or 01289000, extension 113 or 114.


The statement stressed that the identity of those who give information about the suspect will remain confidential, according to Lebanon’s law.



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Lebanon to sign Mercosur trade pact next month



BEIRUT: An economic trade agreement between Lebanon and Mercosur, also known as the common market of South America, is set to be signed next month in Argentina, Ambassador Ricardo Larriera told reporters Monday.


He said the agreement would give Lebanon access to wide markets that enjoy strong client bases.


“We are glad to have this opportunity for economic trade with Lebanon,” Larriera said after his meeting with Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil.


The ambassador announced that the agreement would be officially signed in Argentina on Dec. 17 by Bassil and representatives from Mercosur.


Formed in 1991, Mercosur is a South American trade bloc comprising Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay and Venezuela. Its associate countries are Chile, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru. It says its purpose is to promote free trade and the fluid movement of goods, people, and currency.



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Maid survives 4-story suicide leap in Beirut



BEIRUT: A foreign domestic worker threw herself Monday from a fourth floor Beirut apartment and survived what appeared to be a suicide attempt.


Videos uploaded online show the woman leaping from a window as spectators let out screams. The incident occurred in capital's Moseitbeh neighborhood near Lebanese International University.


The woman slammed into a car, shattering its windshield and smashing its roof, which may have saved her life, according to television footage from the scene of the incident.


Media reports said the woman's condition was not life threatening.


The nationality of the woman was not given.


The incident comes less than a week after a maid leapt to her death in south Lebanon.


About 200,000 foreign domestic workers work in Lebanon under the much-criticized sponsorship system, which bounds the maid to the employer.


Human Rights Watch and other organizations have called on Lebanese authorities to address the "high levels of abuse and deaths" of maids in the country.


HRW in 2008 recorded an average of one maid death a week in Lebanon by unnatural causes, including suicides.



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Lebanon aims to plant 40 million trees: Chehayeb


BEIRUT: A reforestation project will be launched next month with a goal of planting 40 million trees across Lebanon, Agriculture Minister Akram Chehayeb announced Monday.


“A 40 million tree-project will be launched next month in the governmental palace during the national conference to celebrate Tree Day,” Chehayeb said after meeting with the administrative committee of the project, called "Forestation and Reforestation of Lebanon."


The committee was appointed by the Cabinet, and is headed by Chehayeb. It includes representatives of the government, the private sector and non-governmental organizations.


They met to set out a road map for the project before its December 10 launch.


Chehayeb underlined the decline in Lebanon’s green cover from 13 to 11 percent in recent years, “despite the forestation projects that haven’t stopped.”


The minister explained that this regression is due to the aggressive tree-cutting targeting Lebanon’s forests.


“Despite referring numerous people who we can call ‘forest criminals’ to the Lebanese judiciary, the same crimes are being repeated after certain time has passed,” Chehayeb said.


Chehayeb stressed that the project is the biggest in Lebanon, but said it had not yet received the necessary financial support.


“The major part of the funds is not available yet, but the international organizations and donor states are ready to add funds to the Lebanese state’s budget and that of the Agriculture minister to ensure the necessary funding for this project,” he added.


Chehayeb explained that the ministry has had a yearly tradition of distributing plants and seeds to municipalities, schools and universities, but a large part of them are wasted.


“Unfortunately, there wasn’t any annual follow up on what has been planted, and so we are losing a huge quantity of what we plant and what we distribute,” he said, highlighting that only 20 percent of the seeds or plants grow to be part of the forests.



FSA urges Lebanon to free rebel commander



BEIRUT: The Free Syrian Army Monday called on the Lebanese government to free a rebel commander arrested at a Lebanese Army checkpoint near Arsal Sunday.


“The Lebanese Army is not our enemy,” the FSA said in a statement carried by Elnashra website.


It urged the Lebanese government to free Abdullah Rifai, which the group identified as a colonel who heads the FSA Military Council.


The Lebanese Army said in a statement Sunday it arrested Rifai who was being smuggled into the country by Khaled Hujeiri, a local Arsal resident. He was caught with a forged Lebanese I.D.


A security source told The Daily Star that he was disguised in woman's clothing.



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Iran arms offer to Lebanon would deter Israel: Musawi



BEIRUT: Hezbollah MP Nawwaf Musawi Monday called for diversifying the sources of arms for the Lebanese Army by accepting an Iranian offer to provide Lebanon with advanced weapons to deter Israel and confront jihadists.


“We welcome any weapons aimed at boosting the army’s capacities in confronting the dangers eyeing Lebanon, including takfiri terrorism, and call for keeping the Iranian donation on the table and under consideration,” Musawi said at a ceremony in commemoration of the party’s fallen fighters.


He argued that the United States and European countries will refrain from supplying Lebanon with effective arms that might pose a threat to their ally Israel, or lead to a balance of power between the neighbors.


“The Army should be (properly) equipped to be able to carry out its national mission,” Musawi said, calling on the government to agree on accepting the Iranian arms donation.


“At least two reasons dictate accepting the donations. One is the need to diversify the sources of weapons and avoid being stuck with one international (supply) party. And second, because no other country aside from Iran is willing to offer (Lebanon) quality and effective weapons capable of defeating Israel,” Musawi added.


The Hezbollah lawmaker assured that the party’s armed resistance wing is stronger than ever, rebuffing insinuations that it was being undermined by the fighting on the regime side in Syria’s more than 3-year-long war.


“Those who are betting to see the resistance being weakened and undermined with time, should have a look at its history since 1982. After all these years, the resistance is today stronger and more determined than it was before,” Musawi said.


Hezbollah has been fighting alongside Syrian government forces for almost two years, citing the danger of rampant jihadist extremism on Lebanon. There is no official count of Hezbollah casualties in the Syrian war, but estimates put the number at several hundred between dead and wounded.



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Iran has a duty to stand by Lebanon: Fathali



BEIRUT: It is Iran's duty to stand behind Lebanon amid its security crisis, Ambassador Mohammad Fathali said Monday, urging the government to accept Tehran's offer of military aid.


“We believe that if the military aid saw light and was approved, it will pave the way for more constructive and brotherly cooperation with the Lebanese government and the valiant Lebanese Army in the future,” Fathali said after meeting with former Prime Minister Salim Hoss.


The ambassador described Hoss as a respectful statesman, and praised him for his anti-imperialist stances.


“We truly and highly appreciate the national stands [Hoss has taken] in recent times, especially concerning the adoption of the resistance paradigm," he said.


Hoss served as prime minister from 1976 - 1980, 1987 - 1990, and 1998–2000.



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Jumblatt to Syria's Druze: Join the 'revolution'



BEIRUT: Syria’s Druze must relinquish all links with Bashar Assad’s regime and join the "revolution," Lebanon's Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt said.


“It is time to make the bold decision of moving from under the umbrella of this regime, which is destined to fall sooner or later,” Jumblatt said in his weekly comments published in Anbaa Magazine Monday.


Although he had made a similar call last week to Syrian Druze, Jumblatt went further this time by calling on them to join the opposition.


“[It is time to] join the revolution, which has from the beginning raised the slogans of freedom, dignity and change, which are rightful and legitimate slogans for the Syrian people,” he said.


The comments came after fierce clashes broke out last week in Druze villages on the Syrian side of Mount Hermon between rebels and pro-government forces.


The battles killed at least 31 members of pro-government forces and around 14 insurgents, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group.


Jumblatt said the recent “tragic events” have once again revealed Assad’s plan to create war between different religious groups.


“The purpose is to sustain the flaming crisis and keep the regime in power, even at the cost of dead Syrians, and at the expense of the millions of Syrians who were displaced,” Jumblatt said.


Jumblatt slammed Assad’s assumption that his regime would protect minorities, accusing the president of exploiting minorities for the sake of empowering his own "tyranny."



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Beirut police arrests 10 for various crimes



BEIRUT: Security forces arrested 10 people across Beirut on suspicion of committing different crimes, including drug dealing and illegal possession of firearms, a police statement said Monday.


The statement said the suspects, including eight Lebanese, a Syrian and a Palestinian, were apprehended in different parts of the capital, and referred to the concerned judicial authorities.


Police confiscated 13 motorcycles and 14 cars and charged their owners for committing different violations, including operating them without legal papers, the statement added.



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France on track to deliver arms to Lebanon: Paoli



BEIRUT: French Ambassador to Lebanon Patrice Paoli briefed Monday Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil on the progress to deliver French arms to the Lebanese Army, assuring him that the Saudi-funded $3 billion deal is proceeding smoothly.


“Matters are moving well with regard to the Saudi donation for (purchasing) French weapons,” Paoli told reporters after a meeting with Bassil.


“We discussed ways of extending France’s biggest support to Lebanon in view of the current situation,” Paoli said, stressing his country’s commitment to help Lebanon in international platforms, including the U.N. Security Council and the European Union.


Saudi Arabia and France last weel signed an agreement under which French arms worth $3 billion would be delivered to the Lebanese Army to beef up its capacity in combating terrorism.


AFP last week cited a French defense official as saying that the country will start delivering the badly-needed military equipment to the Army in the first quarter of 2015.



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Rai slams lawmakers over mandate extension



BEIRUT: Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai lashed out at Lebanese politicians Monday, accusing them of deliberately seeking vacuums in state institutions and violating the Constitution to serve personal interests.


Speaking at the opening of the eighth conference of the Council of Catholic Patriarchs and Bishops in Lebanon, Rai said: “The political leadership loses its raison d’etre if it fails its commitments to the people, and in Lebanon the ruling class is disabled.”


Rai, who had recently returned from a pastoral visit to Australia, said Lebanese expatriates were distressed by the state of decadence and dissolution that Lebanon has reached as a result of the politicians’ lousy performance.


“They (expatriates) condemned Lebanese parliamentarians who are provoking vacuum in the legislative authorities and have extended their own terms, violating the constitution cold-bloodedly,” Rai said.


Rai cautioned that the unity and dignity of the family in Lebanon is threatened, calling on the authorities to initiate economic and social development programs aimed at preserving the family’s integrity.


“The church will double its efforts to meet the needs of the families, and we urge the civil society to work closely and with solidarity in order to preserve the family (in the absence of state),” Rai added.


Lebanon has been without a president for more than five months due to divisions among lawmakers to elect a successor to President Michel Sleiman whose term expired on May 25.


Parliament also extended its mandate last week by more than two and a half years, after failing to hold general elections which were supposed to be held more than a year ago. It was the second time that lawmakers prolonged their tenure, citing presidential vacuum, security and lack of agreement on a new election law.



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Aoun: Talks with Hariri ended after Saudi veto


BEIRUT: Free Patriotic Movement leader Michel Aoun said presidential election talks with the Future Movement came to a halt after Riyadh ruled him out as a candidate.


“This dialogue has stopped after Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faysal put a veto on me,” Aoun said in remarks published Monday by the local daily As-Safir.


He was responding to a question on the progress of talks between him and Future Movement head Saad Hariri.


Lebanon has been without a president since Michel Sleiman's term ended in May with lawmakers botching several attempts to elect a successor over lack of consensus.


Commenting on Parliament’s extension, Aoun said the real purpose behind the move was to “prevent changing the current [parliamentary] majority, thus keeping control of the presidential election.”


Aoun stressed “strategic” ties between the FPM and Hezbollah despite their opposing views on the parliamentary extension.


Hezbollah MPs voted in favor of the extension of Parliament’s mandate until 2017, while the FPM boycotted the vote and have vowed to raise an appeal against it.




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