Tuesday, 3 February 2015

Hariri urges world to adopt new strategies after pilot killing


BEIRUT: Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri Wednesday strongly condemned the killing of 26-year-old Jordanian pilot Lt. Muath Al-Kaseasbeh, who was set ablaze alive by ISIS militants, calling on Arab and Western countries to adopt new strategies to deal with terrorism.


“This criminal act, which is worthy of the eras of ignorance and obscurantism, goes against all religious, ethical and human values,” Hariri said in a statement.


“Denunciation and condemnation are no longer enough to respond to the terrible terrorist crimes that continuously mark the actions of these terrorist extremist organizations,” he added.


Hariri called for “concerted efforts” at the various local, Arab and international levels.


He said new strategies and mechanisms were also needed to “put an end to these acts and eliminate all those who support them.”


“We stress, regarding this heinous crime, that we stand by Jordan, its King, government and people, and express our heartfelt sympathy to the family of the pilot in their grief, asking God Almighty to have mercy on the martyr.”


ISIS militants executed the captured Jordanian fighter pilot by burning him alive in a cage, according to a video the group released Tuesday.



Hezbollah's role in Syria harmed Lebanon: Salam


Hezbollah's role in Syria harmed Lebanon: Salam


Hezbollah’s role in the Syria crisis has had a negative effect on Lebanon, Prime Minister Tammam Salam said Wednesday.



Science Of Vaccines Is Settled — But Politics Are More Complicated


Should kids get the measles vaccine or should parents be given a choice? Potential 2016 presidential candidates weigh in, and their views are all over the place.




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Future, Hezbollah take steps to defuse sectarian tensions


BEIRUT: The Future Movement and Hezbollah welcomed Tuesday practical measures to defuse sectarian tensions in the country by removing political slogans and posters belonging to them from the streets of Beirut and other areas.


The two rival influential parties also rejected the heavy celebratory gunfire that rattled parts of Beirut and the southern suburbs last week before, during and after Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah’s speech and also on all occasions.


They also followed up preparations to implement a government security plan in the northern Bekaa region to crack down on kidnappings for ransom, vendettas, drug smuggling and car thefts, according to a statement issued after a fifth round of talks between senior officials from the Future Movement and Hezbollah held at Speaker Nabih Berri’s residence in Ain al-Tineh.


“The participants continued discussion over a number of points in a frank and responsible manner. They welcomed executive steps to eliminate [political] pictures and posters in Beirut and other areas,” the statement said.


It added that the two sides followed up preparations relating to the completion of the security plan in the northern Bekaa region.


“On the other hand, the participants affirmed their rejection of gunfire on all occasions and on all Lebanese territories, whatever the justification might be,” the terse statement added.


Tuesday’s meeting was held against the backdrop of renewed tension between the two sides caused by the celebratory gunfire and Nasrallah’s fiery speech on new rules of engagement with Israel. The speech drew fire from Future and March 14 politicians who warned that Nasrallah’s remarks jeopardized U.N. Resolution 1701, which ended the 34-day Israel-Hezbollah war in 2006.


The parliamentary Future bloc Tuesday condemned Nasrallah’s speech in which he announced that his group from now on would not recognize the rules of engagement with Israel.


Nasrallah’s speech is “unilateral and hasty and it eliminates the will of the Lebanese people who are committed to Resolution 1701,” the bloc said in a statement issued after its weekly meeting chaired by former Prime Minister Fouad Siniora.


The bloc also denounced the salvos of celebratory gunfire by Hezbollah supporters that reverberated in parts of Beirut and the southern suburbs last week. “The gunfire and the firing of rocket-propelled grenades transformed the capital into a city of terror, fear and panic that intimidated citizens, students and pedestrians and caused material damage,” the statement said.


It added that the celebratory gunfire contradicted the goal of the ongoing dialogue between Hezbollah and the Future Movement to reduce sectarian tensions.


Following a security meeting chaired by Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk Monday, it was agreed to begin the campaign to remove political slogans, portraits, signage and banners for Hezbollah, the Future Movement and Berri’s Amal Movement from the streets of Beirut and along the coastal highway from the southern city of Sidon to Tripoli in the north starting Thursday.


Defusing Sunni-Shiite tensions is the main item on the dialogue agenda, which also includes finding a mechanism to allow the election of a president, boosting efforts to combat terrorism, promoting a new electoral law and energizing stagnant state institutions.


The dialogue between Hezbollah and the Future Movement has won support from rival politicians, as well as from Saudi Arabia, Iran, Egypt, the U.S. and the European Union.


Meanwhile, French presidential envoy Jean-Francois Girault held a new round of talks with Lebanese leaders on the 8-month-old presidential crisis.


Girault, head of the French Foreign Ministry’s Middle East and North Africa Department, did not speak to reporters after meeting separately with Prime Minister Tammam Salam at the Grand Serail, Berri at Ain al-Tineh, and Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil. He also met with former President Michel Sleiman and former Prime Minister Najib Mikati.


During the one-hour meeting with Salam, Girault briefed the premier on “efforts made by French diplomacy to help ensure holding the presidential election,” the state-run National News Agency reported. It said Girault reviewed with Salam the situation in Lebanon and the region.


Girault arrived here Monday night as part of a French initiative aimed at breaking the presidential deadlock. This is Girault’s second visit to Lebanon in less than two months as part of a regional tour. He had also visited Saudi Arabia and Iran and the Vatican for talks on the presidential deadlock.


Girault, according to a senior Lebanese official who met him, said that France and the West in general are giving utmost importance to internal efforts reflected in intra-Muslim dialogue and intra-Christian dialogue aimed at reaching a common ground to end the vacuum in the presidency.


The French envoy reiterated that his initiative is purely technical, meaning it seeks to gather the views of the Lebanese political parties and combine them, the official said.


He added that Girault would submit a detailed report on the outcome of his talks in Lebanon to his government which would then discuss it with regional and international powers concerned with the presidential vacuum as well as with the Lebanese parties on both sides of the political divide. – With additional reporting by Antoine Ghattas Saab



House Votes To Repeal Affordable Care Act



Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, pauses at a news conference before announcing that the House planned to vote Tuesday to repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, following a GOP strategy session at Republican National Committee headquarters on Capitol Hill in Washington. While the repeal passed 239-186, it's likely to fail in the Senate or be vetoed by the president.i



Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, pauses at a news conference before announcing that the House planned to vote Tuesday to repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, following a GOP strategy session at Republican National Committee headquarters on Capitol Hill in Washington. While the repeal passed 239-186, it's likely to fail in the Senate or be vetoed by the president. J. Scott Applewhite/AP hide caption



itoggle caption J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, pauses at a news conference before announcing that the House planned to vote Tuesday to repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, following a GOP strategy session at Republican National Committee headquarters on Capitol Hill in Washington. While the repeal passed 239-186, it's likely to fail in the Senate or be vetoed by the president.



Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-Ohio, pauses at a news conference before announcing that the House planned to vote Tuesday to repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, following a GOP strategy session at Republican National Committee headquarters on Capitol Hill in Washington. While the repeal passed 239-186, it's likely to fail in the Senate or be vetoed by the president.


J. Scott Applewhite/AP


The House voted 239-186 today to repeal the Affordable Care Act, the latest effort by the Republican-controlled chamber to scrap the law.


The measure also would direct panels to come up with a replacement for the healthcare law — though it doesn't provide a timeline on any new legislation or what provisions it may contain.


The House-approved measure likely will be defeated in the Senate, where the GOP has a smaller majority. President Obama has threatened to veto any legislation that rips up his signature achievement.


The Associated Press notes the House has voted more than 50 times in the past two years to repeal the law. What was different about today's vote? NPR's S.V. Date writes in our It's All Politics blog: "What makes today a milestone is that, for the first time, House Republicans plan to vote on whether to actually take health coverage away from millions of Americans who now have it."


Today's vote came after Obama met with 10 Americans that the White House said wrote the president letters about how they benefited from the law.


"It was maybe plausible to be opposed to the Affordable Care Act before it was implemented, but now it is being implemented and it is working," Obama said at the meeting.


But as NPR's Ron Elving notes, though no one expects today's vote to kill the law, "these issues are important to many who voted for Republican candidates in the 2014 election and expect campaign promises to be honored."



Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell Has A Ted Cruz Problem



Sen. Ted Cruz speaks during a confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee. He is insisting the Department of Homeland Security not get any money unless Republicans get to undo the president's immigration policies.i



Sen. Ted Cruz speaks during a confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee. He is insisting the Department of Homeland Security not get any money unless Republicans get to undo the president's immigration policies. Brendab Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images hide caption



itoggle caption Brendab Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

Sen. Ted Cruz speaks during a confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee. He is insisting the Department of Homeland Security not get any money unless Republicans get to undo the president's immigration policies.



Sen. Ted Cruz speaks during a confirmation hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee. He is insisting the Department of Homeland Security not get any money unless Republicans get to undo the president's immigration policies.


Brendab Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images


A bill funding the Department of Homeland Security failed in the Senate Tuesday because it would block the president's executive action on deportations. The question now is, what will Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell try next?


The department runs out of money on February 27. Texas senator and potential presidential candidate Ted Cruz insists DHS not get any money unless Republicans get to undo the president's immigration policies. That places McConnell in a dilemma — how does he placate Cruz and his allies while avoiding a shutdown of the agency?




"We should use the power of confirmations and we should use the power of the purse."





Republican Cruz has vowed he will stop at nothing to block the president's executive action on immigration. And when you ask the Texas senator exactly how he intends to do that, he says it's already in writing. Go look it up.


"I wrote a long op-ed two months ago, laying precisely what we should do. We should use the power of confirmations and we should use the power of the purse," Cruz said as he slipped into an elevator at the Capitol.


His op-ed argues those are the two ways to defeat the president's executive action. Block all nominations, except those vital to national security. And deny funding for Obama's plan to defer deportations for some five million immigrants living here illegally.


Problem for Cruz is, he can't actually make either proposal happen.


"If you're a coalition of one or five, you can gum up the works for a little bit of time, but it's very hard to grind the Senate to a halt," said Sarah Binder of the Brookings Institution.


Traditionally, the Senate does give individual senators some leverage. For example, Cruz could object to holding votes on nominations, or object to a bill that funds the Department of Homeland Security but doesn't undercut the president's immigration policies. However, it's ultimately up to the Senate majority leader to decide what actually reaches the floor.


"Mitch McConnell obviously has a whole range of incentives and a whole range of goals that he has as leader. He's not necessarily going to see eye-to-eye strictly with what Sen. Cruz wants to do," says Binder.



Former Rep. Michele Bachmann and Sen. Ted Cruz listen while Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell speaks at a press conference on Capitol Hill.i



Former Rep. Michele Bachmann and Sen. Ted Cruz listen while Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell speaks at a press conference on Capitol Hill. Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images hide caption



itoggle caption Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

Former Rep. Michele Bachmann and Sen. Ted Cruz listen while Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell speaks at a press conference on Capitol Hill.



Former Rep. Michele Bachmann and Sen. Ted Cruz listen while Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell speaks at a press conference on Capitol Hill.


Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images


So Cruz has thrown down the gauntlet, leaving it up to McConnell to make the next move on the president's executive action. Last December on the Senate floor, Cruz said he'd give his leader the benefit of the doubt for now — and added this warning.


"I would note that a whole lot of citizens across this country feel a little bit like Charlie Brown with Lucy and the football, where in fight after fight, leadership and Congress says, 'We'll fight next time. Not this time.'"


So what will that fight look like? The House bill defunding the president's executive action failed in the Senate Tuesday afternoon. After that, McConnell has exactly 24 days before the Department of Homeland Security runs out of cash.


Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid says he knows how this story's going to end.


"We should pass a Homeland Security bill with no strings attached to it. That's where we're going to wind up," said Reid, on the floor this week.


McConnell's already promised there won't be any government shutdowns under his watch. But he hasn't yet tipped his hand on whether he'll allow a vote on a DHS funding bill that doesn't have policy provisions attached. There are plenty of other things McConnell surely wants to move on to, such as trade, repealing parts of the health care law and rolling back the Dodd-Frank financial regulatory reforms.


But how do you solve a problem like Ted Cruz? Jeanne Zaino of Iona College says it's easy — just let Cruz, the potential 2016 candidate, show everyone he fought the fight. He doesn't actually have to win.


"His interest is in appeasing his constituents, appeasing the far right and appeasing his funders. And he's done a remarkably good job for a freshman senator at doing that," says Zaino.


The joke is, there's always somebody in the Senate running for president. And Democrat Tom Daschle, a former Senate majority leader, says those members are bound to be disruptive.


"They need to make statements. They need to be bold, and the Senate doesn't work on bold and declarative, stand-your-ground positions," says Daschle.


It's in fact the opposite, Daschle says. What McConnell's challenge is, is designing a counterstrike against President Obama that will actually garner enough votes in the Senate. Or wait to fight this fight another day.



Cabinet to discuss civil marriage


BEIRUT: The Cabinet is expected to examine a host of divisive topics outside its agenda, including the legality of civil marriages, during its weekly session set for Wednesday, ministerial sources said Tuesday.


The Cabinet, which usually meets every Thursday at the Grand Serail, will instead convene Wednesday due to Prime Minister Tammam Salam’s travel to Munich to attend an international conference on security.


There are some 50 items on the Cabinet agenda, including a proposal by Telecommunications Minister Boutros Harb to sign an agreement to establish a private company with the state’s participation to upgrade Internet services. This item stirred a row among ministers when it was brought up for discussion two weeks ago.


However, there are divisive issues not included on the agenda that will be raised by some ministers for discussion. These include the row over the filling of Beirut Port’s fourth basin, the controversial issue of civil marriage, and a review of the mechanism adopted by the Cabinet in making its decisions, the sources said.


The Cabinet, which in addition to its executive powers is also exercising the president’s prerogatives during the vacuum in the presidency, has agreed on a mechanism that requires the approval of all 24 of its members on any key decision or decree. This mechanism has largely hindered the government’s work in view of differences among the ministers.


Another permanent item on the Cabinet agenda is the plight of the 25 Lebanese soldiers and policemen still held hostage by ISIS and Nusra Front militants after being captured when the two groups briefly seized the northeastern town of Arsal in August, the sources said.


Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk said in a statement issued by his office Tuesday that he would raise the issue of civil marriage for discussion during the Cabinet session.


However, this does not mean Salam will be convinced of Machnouk’s proposal, especially as it is a thorny issue that requires the consent of religious authorities of all sects, the sources said.


Sources close to Machnouk said he hoped to find a legal formula to deal with civil marriages that would permit the Directorate General of Personal Status to issue certificates for people who have had civil marriages in Lebanon during the mandate of former Interior Minister Marwan Charbel, who had signed a number of such marriages.


Machnouk came under fire by secular activists for saying that Lebanon cannot legally recognize non-religious unions due to the absence of official laws recognizing them.


Reagrding the dispute over the filling of the Beirut Port’s fourth basin, Public Works Minister Ghazi Zeaiter said: “The issue is not included on the agenda. But if it was raised, I have answers, documented by minutes, to everything from the time I received this file until the end of my meetings with the port administration, unions and a technical committee.”


Truck drivers Tuesday suspended an open-ended strike that disrupted work at Beirut Port after Salam promised to find a solution to the row over the filling of the fourth basin in agreement with all the parties.


The decision by port authorities to resume work on the fourth basin prompted a syndicate of truck drivers to launch an open-ended strike Monday in a bid to pressure the government into permanently halting the controversial project that critics say could jeopardize 1,500 jobs.


The project is mostly opposed by Christian parties, including rivals the Lebanese Forces and the Free Patriotic Movement.


When the current mechanism of the Cabinet’s work is brought up for discussion, some ministers will propose a return to legal and constitutional regulations with the adoption of voting as a means to decide on key issues, the sources said.


However, sources close to Salam said the premier does not want to cause a new split within the Cabinet before sounding out the views of all ministers and obtaining their approval of the voting procedure.


But such approval is not attainable because some ministers, including the Kataeb Party ministers, oppose the voting procedure.


With regard to the kidnapped soldiers, the ministerial sources said the Cabinet did not have any new information about the case, but stressed that efforts were secretly underway to secure their release.


The absence of threats from the militants to kill the hostages probably pointed to the seriousness of the negotiations to secure the hostages’ release, the sources said.



STL lawyers grill Diab over ties to suspects linked to Syrian security


BEIRUT: Former MP Salim Diab was grilled by defense attorneys at the Special Tribunal for Lebanon Tuesday about his knowledge of a number of individuals with ties to the Syrian regime who were initially arrested for the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. Defense lawyers focused particularly on Diab’s relationship with Sheikh Ahmad Abdel-Al and his family. Abdel-Al, a prominent figure in the Association of Islamic Charitable Projects, better known as Al-Ahbash, was accused of steering the investigation into the 2005 Hariri assassination toward Sunni extremists and away from pro-Syrian elements.


It was Abdel-Al who initially offered information about Ahmad Abu Adass, the Palestinian man who appeared in a video claiming responsibility for the assassination of the former prime minister.


Al-Ahbash, Diab said, was known to have close links to members of the Syrian security forces in Lebanon, including intelligence chief Gen. Rustom Ghazali.


Diab testified Tuesday that he did not know Abdel-Al personally, but knew his father, who was a driver for a politician, and his brother, who was an officer in the Republican Guard, headed at the time by Mustapha Hamdan.


Abdel-Al and another brother, Mahmoud, were arrested in 2005 on charges related to Hariri’s assassination after it was revealed that the brothers made a series of calls to high-ranking Lebanese politicians immediately before and after the blast that killed Hariri and 21 others on Feb. 14, 2005, near the Saint George Hotel.


Diab insisted, however, that he had no ties to Ahmad Abdel-Al or the Al-Ahbash group.


Diab was also questioned about Hamdan who was arrested in August 2005 for suspected involvement in the conspiracy to assassinate Hariri.


Diab admitted that he knew Hamdan was involved with a security company based in Beirut. However, he said he did not recall whether the company provided services for the Saint-George marina where the assassination took place.


This is not the first time that the defense, representing five Hezbollah members formally charged with plotting the Hariri assassination, has sought to cast doubt on the character of Hamdan.


Last October, defense lawyer Guénaël Mettraux read excerpts of an interview that former Prime Minister Saad Hariri gave to investigators in 2007 in which he stated his belief that Hamdan was likely involved in his father’s assassination. After serving nearly four years in prison, Hamdan was released in April 2009.


Diab became defensive when questioned about previous testimony given to the United Nations International Independent Investigation Commission in which he appeared to suggest that Rafik Hariri had bribed politicians and journalists with payouts.


“Mr. Hariri was helping people for the sake of help, not for the sake of buying people out ... His help was for people to come out of their miseries,” Diab explained.


Diab’s memory was often the subject of discussion during testimony Tuesday. The former MP, who was responsible for running Hariri’s electoral campaigns, repeatedly said that he could not recall names and dates, visibly irritating defense lawyers.


Diab completed his testimony by saying that he did not know what was discussed at meetings between Hariri and Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah prior to the former’s assassination. He denied, however, that the meetings were somehow extraordinary.


“In Lebanon, especially in politics, nothing is out of the ordinary,” Diab said, concluding several days of testimony before the U.N.-backed tribunal.



Physicians order rebuts accusations


BEIRUT: The Beirut Order of Physicians is investigating every complaint it receives and taking disciplinary measures where appropriate, the order’s head said, rebutting Health Minister Wael Abu Faour after he accused the body of not holding doctors accountable for wrongdoing.


Speaking to The Daily Star in an interview at his office in Beirut Tuesday, Antoine Boustani said the order was investigating and responding to complaints within 10-15 days of receiving them. He pointed to its treatment of four recent complaints forwarded by Abu Faour, the most recent Monday.


“We swiftly investigated the first three and sent a response to two of them, and we will respond to the third very soon,” he said. “As for the fourth complaint, we summoned the doctor for investigation. So what’s the mistake we are making?”


Boustani’s remarks come days after Abu Faour said that the order had received many complaints over errors by medical practitioners but had not held anyone responsible for these mistakes. The Health Ministry cannot punish any physician before referring to the order.


The minister accused the order of showing no eagerness to preserve people’s health, instead choosing to protect physicians regardless of whether they made mistakes.


“I was able to gather around 1,200 complaints we received over the past few years. Out of these ... 400 complaints prompted disciplinary measures,” Boustani said.


Dozens of these 400 physicians were banned from practicing the profession, he said, and several others were expelled from the order.


Boustani added that the cases of some other physicians who made medical errors had been resolved by compensation being paid to the families of the patients at their request.


He complained that doctors were being blamed for the death of every patient, although often the death is the result of complications that have nothing to do with them.


“If something [wrong] happened, then this is because of either a medical error or because of complications,” he said.


“But in Lebanon, complications are not allowed. If a patient dies, then the doctor is to blame.”


Boustani said that if an investigation showed that complications and side effects caused the death, which he said could happen in the best medical centers in the world, then the order is accused of protecting the relevant doctor.


“Either the verdict is in line with the wishes of the patient’s family, or the order will be accused of covering up for the doctor’s mistake. We will not accept this.”


Separately, Boustani said that a solution to the delay in the adoption of the unified prescription form was on the way.


Under the law approved by Parliament in March 2010, the patient, pharmacist and health care provider should all have copies of the same prescription form, which would include the doctor’s name, number, and his or her registration number with the order.


Printed by the order, the new forms aim to better monitor medications and prevent their sale without a prescription from a doctor.


The prescription would also serve as a legal document for consent between the doctor and the patient when they agree to switch to generic medications, which are cheaper than original medications.


Medicine in Lebanon is among the most expensive in the region.


But Boustani said that under the bylaws of the National Social Security Fund, a pharmacist is not allowed to sell the patient a substitute for the medicine mentioned on the prescription, which effectively prevents the patient from switching to generic drugs.


The NSSF does not cover the cost of the substituted medicine.


“Yesterday, there was meeting between the labor minister, health minister, head of Parliament’s Public Health, Labor and Social Affairs Committee and the National Social Security Fund. They said that they will amend the relevant article.”


Boustani said he refused Abu Faour’s request that the order prints the forms before these obstacles were resolved, noting that the printing process costs around $1.5 million.


He complained that in response to the order’s stance over this issue, Abu Faour ordered the separate payment of doctors’ fees and hospital fees by health care providers to be stopped, “But how are these two issues related?”


In line with a law passed by Parliament in 1994, the system was introduced to make it easier and quicker for doctors to get their fees.


Before that, health care providers used to pay the fees of hospitals and doctors together, but physicians complained that they were then having a hard time receiving theirs from hospitals.


Boustani also said he would continue to oppose a proposal to grant permits for opening three new medical schools in Lebanon, citing the market’s saturation. “There are requests for another four medical schools that will be made once the first three are licensed.”


Boustani said that according to the World Health Organization, there should be a doctor for every 1,200 individuals. “In France there is one doctor for every 1,500 individuals, while in Lebanon, there is one doctor for every 350 individuals.”


Currently, there are seven medical schools in Lebanon and around 14,000 doctors registered with the Beirut and Tripoli orders of physicians. “According to studies by international institutions, over 50 percent of them are barely making LL1 million a month,” Boustani said.


“The priority for this doctor will be to earn a living rather than to read and update his medical knowledge. This is no longer medicine.”


Elected in May 2013 for a three-year term, Boustani was responsible for raising the monthly retirement salary for doctors from LL600,000 to LL1 million. He said he planned to raise it again to LL1.5 million.


He also said that a company began computerizing paperwork at the order three months ago, and is expected it to finalize its work within six months.



Judge recommendsdeath for four accused of bombings


BEIRUT: Military Investigative Judge Riad Abu Ghayda recommended death sentences Tuesday to four people accused of involvement in two suicide attacks last year against security checkpoints in Beirut and east Lebanon.


The indictments, seen by The Daily Star, were made against Lebanese Mahmoud Abu Abbas, Hussein Kamel Zahran, Ahmad Abdul-Karim Homayed and the emir of the Al-Qaeda-linked Abdullah Azzam Brigades, Sirajeddine Zureiqat.


They were indicted of plotting bombings that struck the Dahr al-Baidar police checkpoint in east Lebanon June 20 that killed one and wounded more than 30 people, and an Army checkpoint in the Beirut southern suburb of Tayyouneh three days later that killed one and wounded about 25.


Of the four indicted, only Abu Abbas is in custody.


According to the indictment, the charges brought against the suspects include having an affiliation to a terrorist organization and conspiring to carry out the June 2014 bombings.


The suspects are accused of rigging a Nissan Murano with explosives, smuggling the rigged car into Lebanon from Syria via the northeastern border town of Arsal, and handing the car over to Syrian national Ahmad Haidar, who carried out the Dahr al-Baidar attack.


The interrogation of Abu Abbas revealed that the Dahr al-Baidar bombing initially targeted Beirut’s southern suburbs. The suicide bomber, however, blew himself up in east Lebanon after security forces intercepted his vehicle.


Abu Abbas confessed to heading last year to the Syrian town of Rankous, where he was trained by the Abdullah Azzam Brigades and the Ahrar al-Sham rebel group.


During his training, Abu Abbas met the notorious Zureiqat, who convinced him to carry out a suicide bombing “in service of religion.”


The emir of the Brigades then sent Abu Abbas two explosive-rigged vehicles that he stored in his garage. Zureiqat also ordered Abu Abbas to survey Beirut’s southern suburbs, where he and Haidar were set to carry out the attacks.


One day later, Abu Abbas met with two Syrian suicide bombers, who he identified as Abu Ahmad and Abu Ali, in the Zahle town of Chtaura. Abu Ahmad is believed to be the nickname of Ahmad Haidar. The two suicide bombers then headed to Beirut’s southern suburbs, where they surveyed the Sayyed al-Shuhada complex, the Al-Qaem complex, and the Al-Raya stadium – the intended targets of the attacks.


According to the suspect’s confessions, the three were planning to carry out a twin suicide bombing in Beirut’s southern suburbs whereby the first suspect would blow up the Nissan Murano while the second would blow himself up in the middle of the crowd that would gather after the blast.


Abu Ahmad (Haidar), who was set to drive the Murano to Beirut’s southern suburbs, blew himself up in Dahr al-Baidar instead after security forces intercepted his vehicle June 20.


Three days later, Abu Ali blew himself up near an Army checkpoint in Tayyouneh, at one of the main entrances to the capital’s southern suburbs, killing one police officer and wounding 25.



One man missing as firefighters battle wood factory blaze


BEIRUT: Firefighters struggled until late Tuesday to contain a large fire that swept through a factory north of Beirut that specializes in fire-rated wood, leaving around 10 employees injured and one missing.


The fire erupted on the first floor of the factory owned by Khalil Matar in the industrial zone of Dikwaneh, in the Metn district.


It then spread to the second floor and hours later reached the factory’s roof, and two large containers of paint thinner stored there exploded.


The fire damaged the walls and ceiling of the building.


Lebanon’s Civil Defense said seven injured employees were taken to hospital and confirmed that one employee was still missing.


A security source said the injuries were mostly light and caused by asphyxiation, not burns.


The source added that efforts were underway to find the missing man, saying that there was a possibility that he had died.


The Red Cross said its medics moved three people to hospitals for treatment. A civil defense spokesperson told reporters that the missing man was a Palestinian.


“We don’t know whether he is inside the building. It’s too early to say what happened to him,” the spokesperson said.


The factory specializes “in the production of fire-rated wooden doors,” according to its website.


Around 10 firetrucks were deployed to battle the blaze. Firefighters tried to prevent it from spreading to an area where a clothing warehouse was located.


Black smoke emerged from the building’s second floor windows as firefighters used ladders to rescue trapped workers.


Matar said his factory was insured against fires, adding that it satisfied international safety standards.


The state prosecutor’s office tasked a civil defense technician to investigate the cause of the fire and file a special report to the office, a security sourcetold The Daily Star.


The prosecutor will then make a legally binding decision that determines whether the insurance firm would be required to compensate the owner. The preliminary information said the fire was sparked by an electric short.


By late night Tuesday, firefighters were still unable to enter the factory.



Restaurant syndicate hires food safety adviser


Fluoride addition to salt held off ... for now


Fluoride won’t have a place in Lebanon’s salt shakers, at least for now. In December, activists and health...



Marco Rubio Challenges Obama Administration's New Approach To Cuba



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





Florida Republican Marco Rubio is using his new role as chairman of a Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee to rail against what he sees as U.S. concessions to Cuba. He's particularly concerned about plans to reopen the U.S. embassy in Havana.




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House Votes To Repeal ACA, Though Bill Unlikely To Pass Senate



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The House has voted to repeal the Affordable Care Act, the first such full repeal vote in two nearly two years. Some 19 million Americans would lose health coverage under the legislation. The bill, though, is not likely to pass the Senate, where a half dozen Democrats would have to go along with it. President Obama has also promised to veto legislation that undoes his signature achievement.




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Life In The 'New' Washington: In Your Face! No, In YOUR Face!



President Obama delivers remarks during a meeting with people who wrote him letters explaining how they benefited from the Affordable Care Act in the White House on Tuesday.i



President Obama delivers remarks during a meeting with people who wrote him letters explaining how they benefited from the Affordable Care Act in the White House on Tuesday. Evan Vucci/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Evan Vucci/AP

President Obama delivers remarks during a meeting with people who wrote him letters explaining how they benefited from the Affordable Care Act in the White House on Tuesday.



President Obama delivers remarks during a meeting with people who wrote him letters explaining how they benefited from the Affordable Care Act in the White House on Tuesday.


Evan Vucci/AP


President Obama entertained a group of Americans Tuesday in the intimate Roosevelt Room in the White House, thanking them for their written testimonials to the benefits of his Affordable Care Act. Four hours later, the House of Representatives was to vote to repeal the ACA in its entirety.


Nothing will change as a result of either event. But this was no mere coincidence of timing. It was one more example of how much time Washington spends on "in your face!" demonstrations of political posturing. The expanded House Republican majority includes many new members who promised their voters they would repeal Obamacare. Today they get their chance to vote that way, and the president responds with a facial expression of his own.


It was another day of conflict much like the day before, when the president released his budget, making no notable concessions to Republican rule on Capitol Hill, and when GOP leaders promptly declared the document dead on delivery.


So if you were among those who found hope in the coming of a new year and a new line-up in Washington, our condolences.


The two power centers of the capital city and the two different parties that control them are as much at odds as ever — if not more so.


Was there ever a chance of the parties setting aside their weapons and war paint and working toward some sort of arrangement?


The 114th Congress in its first few weeks has instead displayed all the dominant traits it inherited from its parents – the 113th and 112th. And the president has responded in kind.


It's been all "in your face!" from the Congress to the president, and vice versa.


The main reason is that the campaign mode of 2014 has already begat the campaign mode of 2016. Every event and issue is weighed in the scales of electoral advantage.


Candidates for all levels of elected office are being recruited and money raised. It is as though the election settled nothing and the next campaign is underway.


So sitting down to lengthy negotiations over details and costs is simply not a compelling prospect. It makes more sense to keep the partisan blood up and the bricks and bottles flying.


The Republicans came out of the box pushing a pipeline project, a sanctions bill against Iran and a ban on abortion after 20 weeks. The president had promised to veto all three. If negotiations are underway to produce a compromise on any of these bills, they are a well-kept secret.


As for the White House, it has been firing off veto threats faster than at any time in recent memory — nine so far — after having vetoed only three in Obama's first six years. That is one measure of how broadly the battle lines have been drawn.


Moreover, the president is issuing these veto threats directly and personally, as he did in the State of the Union address. This leaves little room for later negotiation and compromise. The president seems less interested in driving a compromise via the veto than he is in the confrontation value itself.


One reason the president's budget has no future as a guide to Congress is that its tax changes are anathema to GOP legislators, including tax increases on wealth transfer, big investors and the Wall Street banks. Republicans bristle at his suggestion that these moves are meant to finance tax cuts for working families and savers. They say the president wants more money for wasteful Washington to spend.


Not only did the White House expect this reaction, it clearly relishes it. The president and his team are looking beyond their present predicaments, preparing the way for the Democratic campaign of 2016 to focus on "middle class economics."


Just as important, the president seems less concerned than ever with passing bills and dealing with the present Congress. At this point, and under these circumstances, presidents tend to think of how they and their administration will be remembered in a decade from now – or by future generations.


Here is the problem with expecting Congress to be better right now. It was always an illusion to think the new Republican majority would control the Senate and establish complete GOP hegemony on the Hill. No one truly controls the Senate unless they have 60 votes to shut off debate and another seven to override a presidential veto.


So the new 54-vote Republican majority in the Senate cannot steamroll the president. Then why doesn't it try to negotiate with him? To some extent, the GOP senators have and will try to do this on trade and some aspects of policy in the war against terrorism. But Senate Republicans remain beholden to the dictates of the House and the demands of the party's voting base.


That is to say, having the Senate in Republican hands only makes the Republican House more determined to pursue a partisan course and confront President Obama.


And the newly Republican Senate also means that president no longer worries about putting vulnerable Democratic senators at risk in red states. That dynamic, so powerful in the past three election cycles, has now run its course.


The president feels he has a freer hand to pursue his priorities, not the opposite. And he has seen his approval ratings rise nationally as well as within Democratic ranks, since he began doing so.


Therefore, given the Republicans' fresh confidence that they and not the president speak for the voters, the collision course is sure – from both directions.


Consider these examples from the opening weeks.


Exhibit A – approving the Keystone XL pipeline. This leftover from previous sessions will go to the president's desk early in February, having won approval in both House and Senate. But the Senate is at least five votes short of the override margin, and the House is nowhere near the two-thirds it would need.


Exhibit B - defying the president on immigration policy. House Republicans passed a version of the spending bill for homeland security that is not likely to clear the Senate. That is because it denies the president's power to defer deportation for up to 4 million people in the country unlawfully. If it somehow got the votes to close off debate in the Senate, it would still lack the votes to override a promised veto.


Exhibit C - enacting new sanctions on Iran. Here the president himself has conceded the chances of a deal with Iran to restrict that country's nuclear program are less than 50-50. But Congress wants to be on record as pressuring Teheran and taking a tougher stance than the president. This has led to an invitation to Netanyahu to speak just before his election, a species of endorsement in the eyes of many. The speech was arranged without input from the White House.


Exhibit D — grilling Loretta Lynch and entertaining her opponents despite the absence of any actual objection to her appointment as the new attorney general. Lynch is still not slated for a confirmation vote, although it is clear she will win committee approval. Her hearing was largely a two-day assault on the record of the current Attorney General Eric Holder. The furor over Holder seems to prompt the delay in Lynch's confirmation, even though every day Lynch waits is another day Holder remains in power.


Exhibit E — the House in the next week plans to repeal the Affordable Care Act in full and also return to a bill banning abortions after 20 weeks. Although no one expects either measure to become law or come close to it, these issues are important to many who voted for Republican candidates in the 2014 election and expect campaign promises to be honored. So the new Congress is less about a new atmosphere than it is about honoring past promises and settling old scores.



Jordan will execute female would-be bomber Sajida al-Rishawi Wednesday: security official


Jordan says killers of its pilot will face revenge


The Jordanian army said on Tuesday it would avenge the death of a Jordanian pilot killed by Islamic State militants.



Jordan vows 'earth-shattering' response to pilot murder


Jordan says killers of its pilot will face revenge


The Jordanian army said on Tuesday it would avenge the death of a Jordanian pilot killed by Islamic State militants.



Future bloc slams Hezbollah for celebratory gunfire


BEIRUT: The Future bloc’s condemnation of Hezbollah reached a peak Tuesday, as the bloc expressed its severe discontent with the party for continuing to allow celebratory gunfire that it says stokes sectarian tensions in Lebanon.


In a statement released after their weekly meeting, the bloc slammed shots fired into the air in Beirut during a highly anticipated speech by party chief Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah last week, saying that the capital was transformed into a “city of fear.”


The bloc noted that heavy gunfire was part of Hezbollah’s routine “display of force” that aims to intimidate and terrorize the Lebanese. “Hezbollah could stop [celebratory gunfire] if it wanted to,” the statement read.


“It contradicts the mission of ongoing dialogue between Hezbollah and the Future Movement with regard to reducing sectarian tensions."


Automatic weapons could be heard firing in many parts of Beirut both before and after the roughly 90-minute afternoon speech delivered by Nasrallah. Celebratory gunfire of some sort is a staple of Nasrallah speeches, but his supporters kicked it up a notch Friday, with the sounds of small blasts believed to be from rocket-propelled grenades echoing across the city.


The bloc also denounced Nasrallah’s speech as “unilateral and hasty,” saying it eliminates the will of the Lebanese people who are committed to U.N Resolution 1701 that ended the summer 2006 war.


Nasrallah spoke as part of a ceremony to honor six Hezbollah fighters killed during the Jan. 18, Israeli airstrike in Syria’s Qunaitra, taking the opportunity to announce that the rules of engagement between the resistance and Israel had ended.


The Future bloc also condemned a Damascus bus blast that killed six Shiite pilgrims Sunday, saying that this “dark and blind terrorism” urges all political parties to consider the reasons behind the continuous reoccurrence of these attacks. The bloc also said that the incident should prompt questions about the buildup of sectarian tensions and extremism in the country.


The bloc's remarks were a silent allusion to the fact that they believe Hezbollah’s role fighting alongside the regime in Syria has sparked this wave of terror attacks - a position the party has repeatedly adopted throughout the four-year conflict next door.


The bloc also said it rejected what it called Iran's ambition of “transforming Lebanon into an arena of confrontation with Israel,” adding that the move only benefitted the Islamic Republic and had no relation to Lebanese or Palestinian interests.



Jordan confirms pilot held by ISIS is dead, says was killed on Jan. 3: State TV


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Hezbollah, Army pound militant hideouts along Syria border


ARSAL/BAALBEK, Lebanon: Hezbollah and the Lebanese Army pounded militant hideouts along the Lebanese-Syrian border with new ferocity Tuesday, security sources said.


Hezbollah attacked militant hideouts on the outskirts of the eastern town of Nahleh, with the sound of artillery echoing across the Baalbek area, the sources said.


Residents heard the sounds of heavy rocket and gunfire as they became wary of a possible militant incursion.


According to security sources, militants have reinforced their positions on the outskirts of the Lebanese border town after they engaged in heavy clashes with Hezbollah in the area last week.


Last Oct., The Nusra Front attacked two posts on the border with Syria near the Lebanese villages of Brital and Nahleh. At least eight Hezbollah fighters and 14 militants were killed in the clashes that ensued.


Separately, the Lebanese Army opened fire at militant positions in the outskirts of Arsal, several kilometers north of Nahle. Troops were using rockets and heavy artillery to pound militant posts in Wadi al-Ayouni, Wadi al-Khayl, Khirbet Daoud, and Jabal al-Mkhayramiyeh, sources said.


The rebels have been caught in the no-man’s land between the two countries since the Syrian regime and Hezbollah regained the majority of Syria’s Qalamoun region earlier this year.


The porous border region had served as a major supply line for the Syrian rebels over the more than three and a half year old civil war, but the rebels increasingly came into conflict with the Lebanese Army after being pushed out of Qalamoun.


Hezbollah’s involvement in the Syrian civil war alongside President Bashar Assad’s forces has been cited by the rebels as their justification for their attacks on Lebanon, which have grown over the last year, culminating in the fierce August battles in Arsal that ended with 19 soldiers dead and more than 30 troops and policemen being taken hostage by the Nusra Front and ISIS.



The Faces of Health Care: Darlene W.


"Thank you again for the Affordable Care Act...I am truly grateful."


read more


Milestone House Vote Would Take Health Care Away From Millions



Florida Republican Rep. Carlos Curbelo takes the ceremonial oath of office with his family and House Speaker John Boehner, right. Curbelo represents a Miami-area district with substantial enrollment in the Affordable Care Act.i



Florida Republican Rep. Carlos Curbelo takes the ceremonial oath of office with his family and House Speaker John Boehner, right. Curbelo represents a Miami-area district with substantial enrollment in the Affordable Care Act. Jacquelyn Martin/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Jacquelyn Martin/AP

Florida Republican Rep. Carlos Curbelo takes the ceremonial oath of office with his family and House Speaker John Boehner, right. Curbelo represents a Miami-area district with substantial enrollment in the Affordable Care Act.



Florida Republican Rep. Carlos Curbelo takes the ceremonial oath of office with his family and House Speaker John Boehner, right. Curbelo represents a Miami-area district with substantial enrollment in the Affordable Care Act.


Jacquelyn Martin/AP


After dozens of votes attacking Obamacare in recent years, House Republicans' latest attempt Tuesday finally gets real.


Not in the sense that the full repeal bill will become law — it's not likely to pass the Senate and, in any event, faces a certain presidential veto even if it somehow did. What makes today a milestone is that, for the first time, House Republicans plan to vote on whether to actually take health coverage away from millions of Americans who now have it.


More precisely: 19 million of them by the end of the year, according to a recent estimate from the Congressional Budget Office. And with a new study showing that 60 percent of Affordable Care Act beneficiaries receiving subsidies from the federal exchange are from the South and 60 percent of them non-Hispanic whites, House Republicans would be casting votes to eliminate a program that to a large extent benefits their own constituents.


How this new reality will affect the vote count is unclear. Republicans have been solid in their opposition to the health care law. The last time the House voted to repeal the law in entirety — rather than tweak one or more small provisions — was May 16, 2013. Not a single Republican voted against it. But that was when the first enrollment period was still months away, and the vote could still largely be framed as a matter of political philosophy.


That was also before Republicans picked up 13 Democratic seats in the 2014 midterm elections, some of which are in swing districts that could swing right back to Democrats.


One of those new Republicans, in fact, could serve as the poster-child for the party's potential problems with the vote. Rep. Carlos Curbelo represents the western suburbs of Miami, some of Florida's poorest communities. The majority-Latino district also happens to contain one zip code with one of the highest Obamacare enrollments in the country, and is blocks away from two others.


This could be one reason why Curbelo's Spanish response to President Obama's State of the Union address last month avoided the Affordable Care Act altogether. Iowa Republican Sen. Joni Ernst, in the English response, described Obamacare as an example of "failed policies." Curbelo, though, spoke instead about education and the income gap — and chided Washington for not working "toward a health economy that offers opportunities to everyone who lives in this country, not just the most privileged," according to a comparison done by the Miami Herald.


Other Republicans have recognized for some time that taking away access to health care for the working poor was not necessarily good politics, and have advocated a "repeal and replace" strategy to show that the GOP also cares about the issue.


No Republican alternative to the ACA has yet emerged since they took control of the House in 2011, and none is in today's bill, either. However, the proposal does instruct three House committees to recommend ideas to replace Obamacare, including such things as limiting medical malpractice lawsuits and giving states more flexibility in administering Medicaid.