Khazen

Snoop Dogg, Paris Hilton … Beirut’s back!

 By Ben Gilbert   BEIRUT — “The bombs are dropping on Beirut with Snoop Doggy Dogg!” said rap music fan Nick Haddad as he walked out of the Snoop Dogg show in the Lebanese capital this past weekend.

The 18-year-old Lebanese Canadian was of course referring to the “bombs” in the lyrics of Snoop Dogg’s raps, not the other bombs that some people may associate with Beirut.

At 1 a.m., Haddad and his 16-year-old British friend of Lebanese descent were looking to find the Snoop Dogg after-party, by no means the first A-List gathering seen in Beirut this summer. The American rapper has followed in the footsteps of Paris Hilton and Charles Aznavour as the latest international "name" on everyone’s lips in this newly calm city. He entertained several thousand people at a convention center near downtown Beirut on Thursday night.

The visits, coming after three years of war and security problems, is just one sign of Lebanon quickly regaining its title as the party and cultural headquarters of the Middle East.

From visits by glitzy heiress (and perennial photo-opportunist) Paris Hilton in early July to film festivals, gallery openings and rock bands old and new — Keane and Deep Purple recently performed here — Lebanon’s summer season is being called the most successful since the assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri in February 2005.

Snoop Dogg’s show reminded many in Lebanon of the last visit by a major American rap artist in June 2006. That’s when 50 Cent performed to a similarly enthusiastic audience of teenagers and rap aficionados. 

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Going downhill fast — and loving it – Faraya – Mzaar

By Ben Gilbert – GlobalPost –

KFARDEBIAN, Lebanon — The music thumped and the tall, slim models wore barely anything, despite the snow covering the hill above them. The wind blew, the sun shone and 2,000 people in ski boots and designer sunglasses gawked and snapped pictures as girls in skimpy nightgowns paraded on the catwalk.

This was the scene at Lebanon’s Mzaar ski resort during the annual weekend lingerie show in early March.

A table full of British, South African and Australian expats on a weekend skiing vacation from Dubai looked on. They drank Lebanese beer from green bottles and enjoyed the view of the mountains. And the models.

“We came to ski but this seems like a better option today,” said Matthew Trehy, a designer originally from London. “This is an added bonus.”

“It kind of doesn’t fit with the moral and cultural values that you always get told about in the Middle East,” said Dubai-based architect Katherine Chambers, with an iced bottle of white wine sitting on her table. “But hey, everyone seems to be enjoying it. But the models must be so cold.”

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The politics behind Lebanon’s biggest hash bust

By Ben Gilbert – GlobalPost,

YAMOUNI, Lebanon — Lebanese hashish farmers and dealers have had an easy go of it the past three years, growing the crop freely and in large quantity due to the Lebanese Army’s preoccupation with a war, sectarian violence and assassinations.

However, Lebanon’s security situation has calmed in the past year. As a result, the army has been available to help the lightly armed national police wipe out about six square miles, or an estimated 95 percent, of the Bekaa’s hashish crop. The bust and clear-out operation began in September, according to Gen. Michel Shakkour, the Lebanese Internal Security Forces (ISF) officer in charge of the eradication.

In the fields between two hills on the backside of Yamouni, a town that sits at an altitude of 5,000 feet on the edge of what was once one of the breadbaskets of the Roman Empire, Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley, only the barren fields remain, with a few scrawny hashish plants poking through the dry soil. It seems almost an affront to the history of this place, steeped as it is in hedonistic mythology. Yamouni is, after all, only a few miles from where the Romans chose to erect their temple to Bacchus, the god of wine, on the dry and arid flat land perfectly suited to growing grapes.

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President Sleiman: Judiciary key to our democracy

President urges judges to ensure institution’s independence
By Elias Sakr
Daily Star staff
 

BEIRUT: President Michel Sleiman stressed on Thursday that the judiciary was the backbone of Lebanon’s independence and the cornerstone of any democratic regime. During the opening of the 2010 judicial year at the

The deadlock ended with the 2008 Doha Accord, which led to the election of Sleiman and the formation of a national-unity cabinet. 

 

Addressing the need to implement future reforms, Najjar said judicial verdicts should be issued in a timely fashion, adding that authorization must be issued to hold suspects in temporary custody. 

 

“We should also address the issue of holding exceptional trials and verdicts that cannot be appealed, as well as shorten judicial staff members’ holidays to properly implement judicial work,” Najjar said. 

 

Najjar also called for decreasing the period of sentences and transfering the administration of prisons to the Justice Ministry in 2012. 

 

“Lebanon will be facing challenges,” said Najjar, adding that the country’s constitutional institutions must restore balance and effectiveness. 

 

Najjar also praised Sleiman’s stances, adding that his presence along with several state officials at the event “is an act of belief in the Lebanese institutions and their role.”

Justice Palace in Beirut, Sleiman urged judicial authorities to promote accountability and justice in order to protect the society from corruption. 

 

The opening was attended by Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, caretaker Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, Justice Minister Ibrahim Najjar, Interior Minister Ziad Baroud and several other ministers and judges. 
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Lebanon to Bring Moderate Arab Voice to UN Council

By Bill Varner

Oct. 15 (Bloomberg) — Lebanon’s election today to the United Nations Security Council for the first time in 57 years stems from its progress toward political stability and brings a moderate Arab voice to the panel, diplomats said.

“It is a symbol that Lebanon has overcome the civil war and is rebuilding its institutions and its presence abroad,” French Ambassador Gerard Araud said. “Lebanon has always been a bridge between the West and East, and I think that will be its role in the Security Council.”

Lebanon will replace Libya, whose leader last month urged that the Security Council be abolished and power shifted to the General Assembly as the representative of Arab nations in the body’s debates. Lebanon was last elected to the 15-nation body, the UN’s principle policy-making body, in 1952.

Issues likely to come before the council include how to curb Iran’s nuclear ambitions, allegations of war crimes by both sides during Israel’s military offensive against the Islamic group Hamas in the Gaza Strip, and concern that weapons are being smuggled to Hezbollah in southern Lebanon in violation of Security Council resolutions.

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A Recipe for Riches

by Duncan Greenberg, Want to become a tech titan or hedge fund tycoon? Up your chances by dropping out of college or going to Harvard and working at Goldman Sachs.

Are billionaires born or made? What are the common attributes among the uber-wealthy? Are there any true secrets of the self-made?

We get these questions a lot, and decided it was time to go beyond the broad answers of smarts, ambition and luck by sorting through our database of wealthy individuals in search of bona fide trends. We analyzed everything from entrepreneurs’ parents’ professions to where they went to school, their track records in the early stages of their careers and other experiences that may have set them on the path to extreme wealth.

Our admittedly unscientific study of the self-made members of the Forbes 400 yielded some interesting results.

First, a significant percentage of them had parents with a high aptitude for math. The ability to crunch numbers is crucial to becoming a billionaire, and mathematical prowess is hereditary. Some of the most common professions among the parents of Forbes 400 members (for whom we could find the information) were engineer, accountant and small-business owner.

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Jumblatt and Nasrallah urge Lebanon unity govt

BEIRUT — Hassan Nasrallah, head of Lebanon’s opposition movement Hezbollah, and Walid Jumblatt from the Western-backed majority on Saturday urged the formation of a unity government "as soon as possible."

"Both sides agreed on the need to overcome as soon as possible the obstacles hindering the formation of a new government," they said in a joint statement after a rare meeting on Friday night.

The two leaders last met on June 19, their first encounter for three years.

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Lebanon politicians welcome Saudi-Syria rapprochement

BEIRUT AFP — Lebanese politicians from across the spectrum on Friday welcomed the rapprochement between Damascus and Riyadh but warned it was insufficient to guarantee the formation of a government in Lebanon.

"The Syrian-Saudi summit is not enough," acting Social Affairs Minister Mario Aoun told local radio on Friday.

"What we see around us does not lead to the hope that we will have a government in the near future as the United States still has not given the green light," said Aoun, a member of the opposition.

Prime minister-designate Saad Hariri has tried without success to form a national unity government since June, when his US- and Saudi-backed coalition clinched victory in a general election over a Hezbollah-led alliance backed by Syria and Iran.

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On the Plane by Soha Kerbage

 

وانا في الطائرة……..
 
ولكم من ساعة امضيت فيها وقتي في تلك الالة الطائرة الا وهي الطائرة….لا كطائرة الورق التي تطير بها هائما في عالم الافق والاحدود لا بل" كماكينة" تطير بك من افق الى اخر لا بل الى عالم مرتفع ارتفاع الارتفاع……تسلمها حياتك و جسمك حيث العلو الشاهق والضغط الضاغط…..ضغط المقصورة ….ضغط جسمك….ضغط اذنيك…..انت بين ايديها…لا حول لك ولا قوة….بين السماء والارض…"مع هيدا وكلو "تلك الالة لا زالت مجهولة لدى بعض الناس"بحلم بمشوار بالطيارة…….واو شو حلوي"نعم ليس لدينا ادنى شك ومع الوقت سيتاح لاي كان بارتيادها ….فهي أشبه بباص طائر …

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