Thursday, 26 June 2014

Lebanon's Arabic press digest – June 27, 2014



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


As-Safir


The journey of the Saudi bombers from Raqqa to Beirut


A leading chief of the Islamic State of Iraq and Greater Syria (ISIS) in the provincial city of Raqqa in eastern Syria, a Jordanian, gave the two Saudi bombers orders to fly to Lebanon via Turkey, where they were met by Monzer al-Hasan.


The Jordanian is the brother of Abdel-Malak Osman Abdel-Salam, who is a prisoner at Roumieh. General Security has released a photo of Hasan in connection with the bombers.


Al-Akhbar


Terrorist masterminds seeking to target World Cup fan gatherings


Al-Akhbar has learned that the masterminds behind terrorist attacks in Lebanon want to use the occasion of the World Cup to target gathering places at pubs and restaurants as well as iftar dinners that are usually held during Ramadan.


It has also learned that Hezbollah was considering canceling iftar dinners to avoid possible terrorist attacks.


Security sources told Al-Akhbar that the terrorist cell found at the Napoleon and the Duroy hotels were planning suicide attacks to flare-up the Lebanese arena.


An-Nahar


Salam stresses Gulf citizens should not be punished


An-Nahar has learned that Prime Minister Tammam Salam addressed ministers at the beginning of Thursday’s Cabinet session, telling them that Gulf nationals must not be “punished” due to terrorists.


Salam lamented requests by some officials to cancel the issuance of visas on arrival at the airport for Gulf citizens.



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EU deals could stoke growth, reform


On Friday, leaders from the 28-country European Union will sign broad trade and economic deals with non-member countries Ukraine, Moldova and Georgia.


The so-called "association agreements" have been a focal point in the region's turmoil. In Ukraine, deadly protests broke out this winter when the president decided not to sign the EU deal under pressure from Moscow. The protests drove pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych from office, but drew the ire of Russia and pro-Russian militants in the country's east.


Here is a look at the agreements and their likely impact.


PURPOSE: The EU uses them to increase trade and political cooperation with non-members. The document provides an extensive blueprint for adopting the same rules, standards and practices that apply in the EU.


TRADE: Most importantly, the agreements remove almost all tariffs on imports into the EU of goods and services. The aim is to increase trade, growth and jobs. The signing countries should benefit because the EU, with 506 million people, is a very large market to do business with, and because tariffs are being removed more quickly by the EU than by the signing countries.


REFORM: Beyond trade, the agreements set out a broad reform agenda to modernize the economies of all three countries and increase business investment. The countries fell behind economically while part of the Soviet Union and its state-run economy, and are still lagging amid corruption, poor business climates and civil strife. The signers agree to adopt EU rules on government contracts, fair competition and the intellectual property rights on ideas and inventions. They also agree to strengthen the rule of law and independent courts. Adopting EU standards on products and food safety will protect consumers and make trade easier.


RUSSIA: As an alternative, Russia is holding out membership in a customs union with itself, Belarus and Kazakhstan. It has warned that if Ukraine signs the trade deal, it could lose its current free trade arrangement with Russia and face new tariffs on its products. It's not clear how far Russia will go. Russian authorities have blocked some Ukrainian imports. Russia blocked wine imports from Moldova ahead of a summit in November, when the country was first expected to sign the deal with the EU but did not. Russia barred wine from Georgia from 2006 until 2013.


HOLD THE GARLIC: Although most trade is being opened up, the EU kept in place restrictions on some agricultural products to protect its farmers from low-cost competition. Chickens from Ukraine and garlic from Moldova face import limits.


Ukraine won a 15-year transition period during which it can use tariffs to support its domestic auto industry from competition. Moldova will gradually eliminate protections for its dairy, pork, poultry and wine producers over 10 years.


NAME GAME: The agreement gives Ukrainian producers 10 years in which they can still use protected EU product names for alcohol such as Champagne and Cognac. It's seven years for cheese names such as feta, Parmigiano Reggiano and Roquefort.


FOLLOW THROUGH: Further trade opening will depend on progress in actually implementing the new rules and standards, by passing them into law through parliament and then enforcing those laws. If countries fail to follow through, progress could stall — and that's not an unrealistic fear. Ukraine botched two aid deals with the International Monetary Fund in 2008 and 2010. Kiev pocketed the first payments of loan money and then did not follow through on reforms. The aid deals were cancelled and a third is just starting.


RATIFICATION: The EU has already lowered its tariffs on imports from Ukraine through Nov. 1 as a gesture of support. Since the agreement takes effect two months after ratification, Ukraine's parliament must ratify by late August and send the ratification documents to Brussels before the end of the month.


Otherwise, the tariffs will go up again Nov. 1 temporarily until Ukraine's lawmakers ratify the deal.



More countries adding graphic warnings to smokes


Indonesia became the newest country to mandate graphic photo warnings on cigarette packs on Tuesday, joining more than 40 other nations or territories that have adopted similar regulations in recent years. The warnings, which showcase gruesome close-up images ranging from rotting teeth and cancerous lungs to open tracheotomy holes and corpses, are an effort to highlight the risks of health problems related to smoking. Research suggests these images have prompted people to quit, but the World Health Organization estimates nearly 6 million people continue to die globally each year from smoking-related causes. The tobacco industry has fought government efforts to introduce or increase the size of graphic warnings in some countries. Here are a few places where pictorial health warnings have made headlines:


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INDONESIA:


THE LAW: 40 percent of pack covered by graphic photos.


TIMING: Deadline to be on shelves was June 24.


BACKGROUND: Many tobacco companies missed Tuesday's deadline to comply with the new law requiring all cigarette packs in stores to carry graphic warning photos. Indonesia, a country of around 240 million, has the world's highest rate of male smokers at 67 percent and the second-highest rate overall. Its government is among the few that has yet to sign a World Health Organization treaty on tobacco control.


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AUSTRALIA:


THE LAW: No cigarette brand logos permitted; graphic health warnings required on 75 percent of front and 90 percent of back.


TIMING: Plain packaging law went into effect in 2012.


BACKGROUND: Australia became the first country in the world to mandate plain cigarette packs with no brand logo or colors permitted. Instead, the packs are solid brown and covered in large graphic warnings. Tobacco companies fought the law, saying it violated intellectual property rights and devalued their trademarks, but the country's highest court upheld it. Figures released this month by the country's Bureau of Statistics found that cigarette consumption fell about 5 percent from March 2013 to the same period this year. The World Trade Organization has agreed to hear complaints filed by several tobacco-growing countries, but other governments have expressed interest in passing similar laws. Smokers make up 17 percent of Australia's population.


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UNITED STATES:


THE LAW: No graphic pictures on packs.


TIMING: The government stepped away from a legal battle with tobacco companies in March 2013.


BACKGROUND: There are currently no pictorial warnings on cigarette packs in the U.S. After the tobacco industry sued, a Food and Drug Administration order to include the graphic labels was blocked last year by an appeals court, which ruled that the photos violated First Amendment free speech protections. The government opted not to take the case to the U.S. Supreme Court, but will instead develop new warnings. About 18 percent of adult Americans smoke.


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PHILIPPINES:


THE LAW: Graphic warning legislation approved this month requires 50 percent of bottom of the pack to be covered by graphic warnings.


TIMING: Legislation awaits president's signature.


BACKGROUND: The Philippines is expected to join a handful of other countries that put graphic warnings at the bottom of their packs, meaning they are not visible when displayed on store shelves. Anti-smoking advocates say labels on the bottom of the packs are less effective, and have denounced tobacco industry involvement in the implementation process. Health officials said around 17 million people in the country of 96 million, or 18 percent, smoked in 2012.


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URUGUAY:


THE LAW: Graphic warnings cover 80 percent of packs.


TIMING: Regulations implemented in 2010.


BACKGROUND: Uruguay, a leader in strict tobacco controls, mandated the largest graphic warnings ever in 2010. Eighty percent of packs must be covered by the labels, including one depicting a person smoking a battery to show that cigarettes contain the toxic metal cadmium. Uruguay has backed Australia at the WTO, telling the trade body that smoking is "the most serious pandemic confronting humanity." Philip Morris International sued Uruguay over the law; the case is still pending.



Asia stocks slip as on poor US, China data


Asian stocks slumped Friday after a reports showed weak U.S. consumer spending and slowing Chinese industrial profit growth, casting doubts on whether the world's two biggest economies can rebound.


U.S. consumer spending, which accounts for 70 percent of economic activity, inched up in May at half the rate that economists had predicted. The poor reading disappointed investors who had been looking for stronger signs that the U.S. economy is bouncing back after shrinking 2.9 percent in the first quarter. Many had been predicting the contraction was a blip because of a harsh winter.


"The whole world is looking for a big (U.S.) GDP rebound in the second quarter. The whole world is likely to be disappointed," economists at Singaporean bank DBS said in a research report.


Adding to the pessimism, Chinese industrial profits grew 8.9 percent in May, the slowest rate this year, a sign that the No. 2 economy continues to struggle with an extended slowdown.


Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 tumbled 1.6 percent to 15,063.19 while South Korea's Kospi shed 0.3 percent to 1,987.99.


Hong Kong's Hang Seng slipped 0.2 percent to 23,155.86 while the Shanghai Composite Index in mainland China lost 0.4 percent to 2,031.62.


On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average dropped 0.1 percent to close at 16,846.13 and the Standard & Poor's 500 index sank 0.1 percent to close at 1,957.22. The Nasdaq was flat at 4,379.05.


In currencies, the dollar slipped to 101.32 Japanese yen from 101.66 yen in late trading Thursday. The euro rose to $1.3628 from $1.3615.


In energy trading, the price of U.S. benchmark crude for August delivery edged down 5 cents to $105.80 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell 47 cents on Thursday.



MP Michel Helou dies after protracted illness



BEIRIUT: Change and Refom bloc MP Michel Helou died early Friday after a long battle with illness.


A security source told The Daily Star Helou had been fightng cancer.


No other details were immediately available.



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Weapons seized in north Lebanon raid


BEIRUT: A quantity of mortar bombs and dynamite sticks have been discovered in a raid in north Lebanon associated with the ongoing crack down on terrorists.


In the northern Akkar village of Fnaidiq, a Lebanese Army raid on the home of Mohammad Kanaan resulted in 42 dynamite sticks, 34 mortar shells, 14 mortar propellant charges and 36 hand grenade detonators being seized, a military statement said.


It said Kanaan, who is wanted on multiple arrest warrants, was not home during the raid Thursday.




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Price of oil falls on some easing of Iraq worries


The price of oil fell Thursday as fears diminished somewhat over supply disruptions from Iraq.


Benchmark U.S. crude for August delivery slipped 66 cents per barrel to $105.85 on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude, used to price international oils, eased 79 cents to $113.21 a barrel in London.


While concerns linger about violence in Iraq affecting global crude supplies, oil production and exports from the giant fields clustered in the country's south remain unaffected. July exports are expected to average about 2.57 million barrels per day, Platts forecasts.


In other energy futures trading on the Nymex:


— Wholesale gasoline fell 1 cent to $3.09 a gallon.


— Natural gas fell 15 cents to $4.40 per 1,000 cubic feet.


— Heating oil fell 2 cents to $3.01 a gallon.