Sunday, 12 April 2015

Stranded Lebanese truckers to return home: minister


BEIRUT: Agriculture Minister Akram Chehayeb said eight of nine truck drivers stranded at a Syria-Jordan border will arrive home Monday.


“The drivers are fine and will arrive in Beirut [Monday] aboard a Middle East Airlines,”Chehayeb said in a statement.


He thanked all those who helped “transfer” the truckers to Jordan safely, adding that efforts continue to find the whereabouts of a ninth truck driver.


“We hope for the safe return of the other driver soon,” he said.


Chehayeb said that following extensive efforts over the last 72 hours, the eight Lebanese drivers “are now under the protection of the Jordanian authorities.”


His remarks came after Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk called on Amman Sunday to grant entry to the Lebanese truckers stuck on the Syria side of the Nasib border crossing with Jordan.


“Only the responsible Arabism of the Jordanian king is able to treat this urgent humanitarian crisis,” Machnouk said in a statement.


Nasib crossing was taken over by Syrian rebels on April 1, one day after Jordan had closed the road on its side of the border and evacuated all civilians from the area.


More than 30 Lebanese trucks were banned from entering Jordan and prevented from returning into Syria due to the ongoing clashes between the Syrian Army and rebels. At least 10 others were kidnapped by gunmen, who looted cargo from several trucks.


Chehayeb has said the eight truckers, who were successfully contacted, were being “hosted” by Syrian rebels.


Another 171 truckers have been also stranded in Saudi Arabia and could not cross into Jordan due the ongoing border closure, he said.


Chehayeb added that Lebanese nationals living in Saudi Arabia have pledged to help donate 400 riyal daily to help cover the cost of fellow countrymen while they remain stranded abroad.


Chehayeb has been tasked by the Cabinet with following up on the stranded truckers and find alternative routes to rescue the farm produce before it spoils.


The crossing was the principal export route to Gulf markets.



Clinton Announces Presidential Campaign, Hops In A Van To Iowa



A replica of "The Mystery Machine" van used in the Scooby Doo cartoon series parked at the L.A. Festival of Books in 2012. Hillary Clinton is traveling to Iowa in a van she calls her "Scooby" van.i



A replica of "The Mystery Machine" van used in the Scooby Doo cartoon series parked at the L.A. Festival of Books in 2012. Hillary Clinton is traveling to Iowa in a van she calls her "Scooby" van. Doug Kline/flickr Creative Commons hide caption



itoggle caption Doug Kline/flickr Creative Commons

A replica of "The Mystery Machine" van used in the Scooby Doo cartoon series parked at the L.A. Festival of Books in 2012. Hillary Clinton is traveling to Iowa in a van she calls her "Scooby" van.



A replica of "The Mystery Machine" van used in the Scooby Doo cartoon series parked at the L.A. Festival of Books in 2012. Hillary Clinton is traveling to Iowa in a van she calls her "Scooby" van.


Doug Kline/flickr Creative Commons


At around the same time as Hillary Clinton's campaign team in Brooklyn, N.Y., was hitting send on the emails and tweets that officially launched Clinton's presidential campaign, the former first lady was hitting the road — in a van.


Clinton was scheduled to be in Iowa Tuesday, but instead of flying, Clinton decided she wanted to pack up a van — that she refers to as the "Scooby" van because of a resemblance to the van from Scooby Doo cartoon — and chat with people along the way.


Along for the ride from New York to Iowa are a couple of aides and a slimmed-down Secret Service detail. The former secretary of state hasn't driven a car in almost 20 years, she admitted last year, and Secret Service is likely driving, per usual, on this trip.


The cat was out of the bag when she stopped at a gas station in Pennsylvania, talked with some people there and someone who spotted her called one of the TV networks, a campaign aide said.


Of course, any campaign would know that, at some point, someone as well known as Clinton would be recognized.


Clinton is slated to make two days of stops in Iowa before heading to New Hampshire. It's all part of a slow launch, "ramping up to a campaign kickoff in mid-May," according to a Sunday afternoon Clinton email announcing her candidacy.


NPR's Tamara Keith contributed to this report.



Presidential Announcements Offer Insight Into How Candidates Run



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





Hillary Clinton officially announced her candidacy for president Sunday in a video posted on her website. Where candidates choose to announce give voters a first glimpse at how they will run.



Hillary Clinton, Polarizing Or Misunderstood, Jumps Into Race For President



Hillary Clinton has described herself as the most famous person you don't really know. And as she launches into her second presidential campaign, she'll be re-introducing herself to voters who largely think they have her figured out.i



Hillary Clinton has described herself as the most famous person you don't really know. And as she launches into her second presidential campaign, she'll be re-introducing herself to voters who largely think they have her figured out. Mel Evans/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Mel Evans/AP

Hillary Clinton has described herself as the most famous person you don't really know. And as she launches into her second presidential campaign, she'll be re-introducing herself to voters who largely think they have her figured out.



Hillary Clinton has described herself as the most famous person you don't really know. And as she launches into her second presidential campaign, she'll be re-introducing herself to voters who largely think they have her figured out.


Mel Evans/AP


Hillary Clinton officially launched the campaign everyone has been expecting for months — years, really. She's running for president and to finally break open that glass ceiling she famously said her last campaign put "18 million cracks" in.


Clinton kicked off the announcement with an email to supporters shortly before releasing a video on YouTube and Facebook, as well as a revamped HillaryClinton.com website.


This will be Clinton's second run at the White House, though this time she enters the Democratic primary with an even clearer path than when she was the favorite in 2007. She's also the biggest target.


Clinton, 67, has described herself as the "most famous person you don't really know." And as she launches into her second presidential campaign, she'll be re-introducing herself to voters who largely think they have her figured out.


Almost since the moment Clinton burst on the national scene in 1992, she has been polarizing, and, she would argue, misunderstood. Take the off-hand comment she made while campaigning for her husband that set off a firestorm. back then.


"You know, I suppose I could have stayed home and baked cookies and had teas, but what I decided to do was to fulfill my profession, which I was in before my husband was in public life," she said, initially not realizing what a storm it would soon create.


When Hillary Rodham married Bill Clinton, she was arguably the more accomplished of the pair. She graduated at the top of her class at Yale Law, ahead of Bill. And the whole time he was governor of Arkansas, she made more money than he did as the first female partner at the leading law firm in Arkansas. And so, Hillary Clinton often struggled with the expectations of a first lady.


"I'm trying to find my way through it and trying to figure out how best to be true to myself and how to fulfill my responsibilities to my husband and my daughter and the country," she said in a 1994 press conference.


After the health care reform effort she headed up failed, Clinton receded into a less public role. She also spent much of her husband's presidency battling scandals, from Whitewater to "travelgate" and eventually the Monica Lewinsky affair.


Hillary Clinton chalked it all up to "the vast right-wing conspiracy."


Emerging As Her Own Woman


Of course, it's well known now that President Bill Clinton did have sexual relations with that woman. But Hillary Clinton's marriage and career didn't end there.


In some ways, that's where her time began.


Just as the Senate was acquitting her husband on impeachment charges, Clinton was making the first moves to run for a seat in that very chamber. There was a vacancy in New York.


It was considered completely audacious. No American first lady had ever run for national office before. And Clinton had never lived in New York.


"I'm going to be listening very hard, and I'm going to be learning a lot," she said at the start of a New York listening tour in 1999. "I'm going to be looking for ways to work together with people to help figure out how to meet those challenges."


She visited small towns, sat down with people, answered a lot of questions and, in the process, won New Yorkers over. It's a model not lost on her campaign team today.


Once in the Senate, Clinton was known as a work horse, rather than a show horse. She proved skilled at working across party lines to get things done.


When she ran for president the first time, Clinton entered the Democratic primary as the front-runner. But the insurgent candidacy of Barack Obama became a tidal wave. He ran on change. Clinton and her vote in favor of the Iraq war suddenly seemed like more of the past.


When it was all said and done, rather than return to the Senate, Clinton became President Obama's secretary of state, surprising some after their bitter and contentious battle for the nomination.


But the move helped mend fences with Obama's base and burnish her foreign-policy credentials. She traveled hundreds of thousands of miles, more than any other American secretary of state in history. She visited 112 countries and saw her approval ratings skyrocket. But Clinton's legacy at the State Department is less well defined, leaving after four years with a well of good will but no major diplomatic breakthroughs.


"I think we have set the table for a lot of the difficult issues to be dealt with," she said in a 2013 interview with NPR. "There's nothing fast or easy about diplomacy."


As she begins this run for president, Clinton's poll numbers have come down, and she remains dogged by two scandals from her time as secretary of state — the terrorist attack on the diplomatic outpost in Benghazi, Libya and her use of a private e-mail account for official business.


Clinton is as close as a candidate can come to being an incumbent, without actually being one. But she doesn't intend to act that way, taking nothing for granted with an early campaign strategy that will be short on soaring speeches and long on living rooms.


In this latest incarnation, Clinton is a grandmother. And despite an early campaign intent on taking it slow, Clinton wrote in the newly revised epilogue of her memoir that being a grandmother "has spurred me to speed up."


How she handles it all — and how she's perceived in the process — will prove whether she can punch her way through that ceiling and into the White House.



It's Official: Hillary Clinton Announces Presidential Run


Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced today that she is seeking the Democratic presidential nomination for the 2016 election.


"I'm running for president," she says in a video posted this afternoon on the website hillaryclinton.com. "Americans have fought their way back from tough economic times, but the deck is still stacked in favor of those at the top. Everyday Americans need a champion. I want to be that champion.



Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks at an event hosted by the Center for American Progress and the America Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees on March 23 in Washington. Clinton announced her presidential run today.i



Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks at an event hosted by the Center for American Progress and the America Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees on March 23 in Washington. Clinton announced her presidential run today. Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP hide caption



itoggle caption Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP

Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks at an event hosted by the Center for American Progress and the America Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees on March 23 in Washington. Clinton announced her presidential run today.



Former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton speaks at an event hosted by the Center for American Progress and the America Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees on March 23 in Washington. Clinton announced her presidential run today.


Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP


On Friday, NPR and other news organizations quoted sources familiar with Clinton's campaign as saying she would make her announcement official today.


The former U.S. senator from New York is the first Democrat to officially announce a presidential run — and she's by far the favorite to win the nomination. Likely Democratic candidates include Vice President Joe Biden, Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley and Jim Webb, a former U.S. senator from Virginia who previously served as President Reagan's secretary of the Navy.


As New York magazine wrote in an April 5 profile:




"A lot can happen between now and then, but barring something truly unprecedented and totally unforeseen — a meteorite, a Benghazi revelation, a health scare, or a Martin O'Malley groundswell — on July 28, 2016, Hillary Clinton will step onto a stage in Philadelphia. There, surrounded by red-white-and-blue bunting and balloons — as well as Bill, Chelsea, baby granddaughter Charlotte, and tens of thousands of screaming Democrats — she will officially become her party's presidential nominee."




Polls also show the former first lady leading all her possible Republican rivals in a 2016 matchup. But at a similar juncture in 2007, she was the favorite to win her party's presidential nomination for 2008 — a contest she lost to then-Sen. Barack Obama.


Clinton also faces questions about her use of a personal email account while secretary of state, about her role in the Benghazi controversy, and about funds raised by the Clinton Foundation from foreign governments during her tenure at the State Department.


You can follow more detailed coverage of this story on our It's All Politics blog here.



Clinton To Roll Out Her Campaign On The Small Stage



Audio for this story from Weekend Edition Sunday will be available at approximately 12:00 p.m. ET.





Hillary Clinton is expected to announce Sunday that she is formally a candidate for president. NPR's Rachel Martin talks to NPR's Tamara Keith, who will be covering Clinton's 2016 campaign.



Obama, Castro Meet In 'Spirit Of Openness'



Audio for this story from Weekend Edition Sunday will be available at approximately 12:00 p.m. ET.





President Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro shared a stage for the first time since the U.S. and Cuba began moving toward normalizing relations.



Machnouk reaches out to Jordan over Lebanese truckers


BEIRUT: Lebanon’s Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk called on Jordan Sunday to grant entry to the Lebanese truckers stuck at a Syrian-Jordanian border crossing.


“Only the responsible Arabism of the Jordanian king is able to treat this urgent humanitarian crisis,” Machnouk said in a statement published Sunday.


The minister said he was “optimistic” about reaching an end to the crisis soon, adding that he had contacted a number of Jordanian officials over the mater.


But the officials, who include the country’s Interior Minister Hussein Hazah al-Majali and the head of the Royal Court Fayez al-Tarawneh, are yet to respond.


Also Sunday, An-Nahar published comments by Agriculture Minister Akram Chehayeb revealing that eight Lebanese drivers remained stuck at the Nassib border crossing on the Syrian side, while two other drivers whereabouts are still unknown.


The crossing was taken over by Syrian rebels on April 1st, one day after Jordan had closed the road on its side of the border and evacuated all civilians from the area.


At least 30 Lebanese trucks were banned from entering Jordan and prevented from returning into Syria due to the ongoing clashes between the Syrian Army and rebels. At least 10 others were kidnapped by gunmen, who looted cargo from several trucks.


Chehayeb said he had discussed the matter with Lebanese Prime Minister Tammam Salam and also contacted the Jordanian Ambassador to Lebanon, who traveled to his home country in order to follow up on the matter.


Prime Minister Tammam Salam also reached out to his Jordanian counterpart for the same purpose, Chehayeb said.


“Lebanon is facing three difficult situations in the border crisis,” Chehayeb said. “The first and the most difficult is the issue of the ten drivers stuck at the borders.”


Chehayeb said the eight truckers who were successfully contacted were being hosted by Syrian rebels, while two others remained “in the ranks of the missing.”


The second main problem, according to the minister, was the presence of 60 Lebanese trucks stuck on the Jordanian side of border, known as the Jaber crossing.


171 truckers are also stranded in Saudi Arabia and were not entering Jordan as long as the closure of border continues, he explained.


Chehayeb revealed that Lebanese communities in Saudi Arabia pledged to help the Lebanese truckers stuck in the country with 400 Saudi riyals a day until their release.


The minister was tasked by the Cabinet with following up on the matter and find alternatives routes for Lebanese products to reach Gulf Countries.


The crossing was the principal route Lebanese exports into Jordan and the Arabian Gulf.



Berri to ask Hezbollah, Future to change rhetoric


BEIRUT: Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri announced that he will call on Hezbollah and the Future Movement to use a less antagonistic tone in addressing disagreements between the two parties.


“We will ask Hezbollah and the Future Movement to express their disagrements in a less tense and calmer way to avoid tensions,” Berri was quoted as saying by visitors, in comments published by Al-Hayat newspaper Sunday.


Berri said the dialogue between the two political rivals, which he sponsors, was launched with the purpose of diffusing the sectarian grudges between Sunni and Shiites communities in Lebanon.


“But the mutual campaigns are increasing this tension instead of reducing it,” he said, emphasizing that the language used in statements and speeches should be “less fierce.”


Despite the ongoing dialogue between the two parties, tensions surged last week after Hezbollah’s leader Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah launched a verbal attack against Saudi Arabia in an interview with official Syrian TV channel Al-Ikhbariya.


Future Movement leader Saad Hariri’s then issued a statement condemning Nasrallah’s speech and slamming Iran over its role in Lebanon and Yemen.


A rebuttal then came from MP Mohammad Raad, the head of Hezbollah’s Loyalty to Resistance bloc, who criticized Hariri in another aggressive statement.


The recent developments were seen as a possible end to the dialogue, but Berri assured Wednesday that the talks will go on despite the rhetoric.


“The two parties insist on maintaining the dialogue despite the media campaigns,” Berri said Saturday, adding that he will address his request for a softer rhetoric to the two parties in the anticipated dialogue session next Tuesday.


The Speaker also said that he did not discuss Nasrallah’s speech with Saudi Ambassador Ali Abdullah Asiri, who visited last week, and that the discussion was limited to the developments in Lebanon and Yemen.


“Berri bids on Egypt returning to its pioneer role on the Arab level,” the visitors also told Al-Hayat, noting that neither Iran nor Hezbollah had mentioned Egypt in their media campaigns.



2 Lebanese men killed in a car bomb in Syria


Car bomb kills six in Syria's Homs: NGO


Six people were killed and 20 wounded Monday by a car bomb in a Homs district that is home to members of Syrian...



Lebanese actor Issam Breidy killed in car crash


BEIRUT: Popular Lebanese actor Issam Breidy was killed overnight in a car crash when his vehicle overturned near the Dora area outside Beirut, media reports said Sunday.


The state-run National News Agency and several of Lebanon’s TV channels and news sites reported that the 35-year-old Breidy was the victim in a car crash on the Dora Bridge.


Breidy, who hailed from the town of Faitroun north of Beirut, was reportedly driving on the bridge toward the Nahr al-Mot area when his black Lexus hit the concrete barriers and overturned.


The Traffic Management Center reported that a citizen was killed in the accident without specifying his identity.


Pictures shared on social media showed the damaged car resting on its right side. According to the lighting, the accident most likely occurred around dawn.


The actor was popular in the drama and comedy scene in Lebanon and appeared in a number of movies, series and theater plays.


He also studied oriental music at the Lebanese National Higher Conservatory of Music and participated in 2001 edition of Studio al-Fan.


Before the accident, Breidy was reportedly preforming with his band in Compass Lounge in Beirut's Hamra area.


Issam was the brother of TV host Wissam Breidy.


The accident was one of several that occurred overnight in and around Beirut, as Lebanon witnessed winter-like weather over the weekend.


NNA also reported Sunday that a 21-year-old man identified as Charbel Z. was killed and his companion Carla Q. was injured in a traffic accident on the Zouk Mosbeh Highway overnight.


The man's car hit a black Range Rover driven by Rony Q., 34, who fled in an unknown direction after the crash, NNA said.


Police rushed to the scene and sent officers to pursue the Range Rover, the report added.