Khazen

Lebanese Army detains 6 Syrians over suspected terror links

  BEIRUT: The Army Tuesday detained six Syrians over suspected terror links in east Lebanon, the military said in a statement. The statement said Syrian national Mohammad Ahmed Youssef was detained in the Bekaa Valley town of Labweh. He is wanted over alleged involvement in assaults against military posts in the northeastern border town of […]

Read more
Saqr Charges Five Guards for Roumieh Prison Abuse

  State Commissioner to the Military Court Judge Saqr Saqr charged on Tuesday five guards for abusing inmates in Roumieh Prison. He has since referred the case to the first military investigation judge. The suspects has been questioned by General Prosecutor Judge Samir Hammoud. Hammoud kept the five suspects in custody and ordered that the […]

Read more
Cabinet Ministers in Grace Period as Salam Set to Invite for Session Next Week

  Prime Minister Tammam Salam has given ministers a one-week grace period and will likely invite the cabinet to convene early next month to resolve the government deadlock. Ministerial sources told An Nahar daily published on Monday that Salam will “definitely” call for a cabinet session on July 2 to resolve several weeks of government […]

Read more
Roumieh torture won’t be repeated: Machnouk

  BEIRUT: Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk vowed Monday not to allow a repeat of torture inside Roumieh Prison, and promised "strict" punishment for the guards involved in beating inmates. "We are not saints," Machnouk conceded to reporters after a brief visit to the prison, where he met with inmates to follow up on the case […]

Read more
Ministers Hint Hostages File Nearing Completion

  Prime Minister Tammam Salam is set to preside a meeting of the ministerial committee tasked with following up the case of Lebanese hostages as a last step before their expected release. Ministerial sources told An Nahar daily published on Monday that the Lebanese authorities have completed the file of the prisoner exchange. They confirmed […]

Read more
Israel Threatens Lebanon Again

 

While the Israeli government does not tackle the Jewish, anti-Christian extremists in its own backyard, it frequently interferes with the territorial independence of Lebanon.

The Daily Star reports: "The Israeli army will show ‘no restraint’ in attacking civilian centers in south Lebanon and Beirut should another war break out with Hezbollah, [Israeli Air Force chief Major-General Amir Eshel] told the German Die Zeit newspaper."

This comes after similar comments by Israeli Brigadier General Moni Katz in April of this year.

Read more
An austere brand of Islam is on the rise in Europe

Its imams preach austere piety, its tenets demand strict separation of sexes — and some of its most radical adherents are heeding the call of jihad.Salafism, an Islamic movement based on a literal reading of the Quran, is on the rise in France, Germany, and Britain, security officials say, with Salafis sharply increasing their influence in mosques and on the streets.

The trend worries European authorities, who see Salafism as one of the inspirational forces for young Europeans heading to Syria or Iraq to do battle for the Islamic State group. Experts, however, point out that the vast majority of Salafis are peace-loving.

There are currently about 7,000 Salafis in Germany — nearly double the 3,800 estimated four years ago, the Interior Ministry said last month

Read more
Catholics in Holy Land aggrieved by arson attack on monastery in Israel

.- Catholic leaders have been joined by Israeli leaders in their concerned reaction to Thursday’s attack on a church located on the Sea of Galilee, which has hospitalized two persons and caused extensive damage. In the early hours of June 18, the attackers started a fire at the Church of the Multiplication in Tabgha, located 120 miles north of Jerusalem. The church is built on the site where Christ fed the 5,000 through the multiplication of loaves and fish, and is joined to a Benedictine monastery. As a result of the arson, a monk and a staff member were hospitalized and treated for smoke inhalation.

“There is a real escalation in anti-Christian violence: from a small fire which leaves little damage, to a bigger fire, and finally to an arson attack which is intended to produce major damage and even killing,” lamented Bishop William Shomali, Auxiliary Bishop of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, in an interview with the Catholic pastoral charity Aid to the Church in Need. “We are allowed to ask: what will come next?”The attackers left Hebrew graffiti on the walls, reading “all idols will be smashed”, which suggests they were Jewish extremists. According to The Times of Israel, the graffiti is a quote from the “Aleinu” prayer, which is prayed three times each day in Jewish services.

Read more
In Middle East martyrdoms, Pope Francis sees seeds of Christian unity

.- Meeting with Syriac Orthodox leaders on Friday, Pope Francis decried the continuing martyrdom of Middle East Christians, and gave special mention to two Christian bishops kidnapped in Syria two years ago.

“The blood of the martyrs is the seed of unity in the Church and the instrument of the building up of the kingdom of God, which is a kingdom of peace and of justice,” the Pope said June 19.“Let us ask the Lord, too, for the grace of always being ready to forgive and of being workers of reconciliation and peace. This is what animates the witness of the martyrs.”

The Roman Pontiff encouraged prayers for the victims of violence in the Middle East. He particularly mentioned Syriac Orthodox Metropolitan Gregorios Ibrahim and Greek Orthodox Metropolitan Paul Yazigi, two archbishops of Aleppo, Syria who were kidnapped together in 2013.

The Pope’s comments came during a meeting with Syriac Orthodox Patriarch Ignatius Aphrem II of Antioch, who was accompanied by a delegation of his Church.

Read more
In Lebanon, the band plays on … and so does the business world

Lebanon used to be a magnet for regional and global powers to fight out their proxy wars, reducing the country to rubble and scarring its people. Now the coastal capital of Beirut is a business hub. Its cafes and bars bustle while, politically, the city is a soap box for a war of words about battles that are fought elsewhere.

From conflicts in Yemen to Syria, major players make their positions known through their local Lebanese allies. Speeches by Hizbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah that blame Saudi Arabia for aggression in Yemen routinely face retorts by former prime minister Saad Hariri citing Iranian backing of the Houthis as the cause of the violence.

Yet the miracle of Lebanon is that despite the spillover from the Syrian civil war, it has continued to stay above the fray. There is mutual interest in the country’s capital being a place for back channel negotiations and for business from all sides to make a profit. The weak central government, unable to decide on a president for the past year, levels the playing field and the strong factional divides give a voice to competing powers.

Read more