Khazen

2 superpowers were responsible for a big chunk of last year’s increase in military spending

Armin Rosen

The 2016 edition of The Military Balance, the Institute for International and Strategic Studies’ (IISS) definitive annual report on the state of the world’s various armed forces, has some encouraging and not-so-encouraging news about global-defense spending.

On the one hand, growth in military spending is slowing down in the volatile Middle East and is even contracting in Latin America thanks to plunging oil prices.

But at the same time, two countries that often take an adversarial stance toward the US and its allies were responsible for over one-third of last year’s increases: Russia and China.

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Emergency conservation for Mediterranean Monk Seal in Lebanon
By Shaun Hurrell

Once thought locally extinct in Lebanon, immediate action was taken by the Society for the Protection of Nature in Lebanon for the conservation of this Endangered species when a pregnant female was found dead.

In March 2015, a seal was found dead trapped in fishing nets on the coast of Beirut, Lebanon. When post-mortem confirmed that seal was pregnant, this was a saddening event on its own. But a group of conservationists were further compelled to action when they realised this was a Mediterranean Monk Seal – believed to be the world’s rarest species of pinniped (seals, sealions and walruses).

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Les maronites, une communauté fidèle à son attachement pour la France

Bachir El Khoury slate.fr

Ce mouvement chrétien venu d’Orient qui bénéficie désormais d’une Église indépendante reconnue par le Saint-Siège veut faire fructifier son nouveau statut sur le sol français.

Les maronites célèbrent chaque 9 février à travers le monde la fête de leur St. Patron, Maroun, un moine chrétien syriaque ayant vécu à Brad, en Syrie, au début du Ve siècle. Cette fête, inscrite au calendrier des jours fériés officiels au Liban, rassemble chaque année à Beyrouth l’ensemble des représentants des courants politiques et religieux du pays ainsi que les ambassadeurs des principales puissances. Une tradition qui découle de la place historique qu’occupe cette communauté au sein du pays du Cèdre et à son poids politique sur l’échiquier local.

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The Syrian Civil War is at a turning point — and it could get even more violent

Armin Rosen

The Syrian Civil War is reaching a turning point. Over the past two weeks, the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad seized several villages north of Aleppo, the country’s largest city and one of the last remaining strongholds of Syria’s non-jihadist rebels.

The advance cut off Aleppo’s anti-regime groups from their last remaining supply lines into Turkey, and put Assad in a position to retake a fiercely contested city that had a pre-war population of over 2 million.

Assad’s gains have come on the backs of foreign militaries that are themselves showing signs of strain. Iran has been forced to send Afghan refugees to fight in Syria while Hezbollah, Iran’s Lebanese proxy, has seen as much as one-third of its fighters killed or injured in the country’s war. And the Aleppo offensive would have stalled without Russian air support — Damascus failed to retake substantial territory when it first launched its Aleppo offensive six months ago.

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Lebanese TV expresses disgust at Australian sitcom Here come the Habibs – video

Lebanese TV channel OTV Lebanon expresses its dismay at the airing of Channel Nine’s sitcom Here Come the Habibs, saying: ‘Despite the achievements of the Lebanese at home and abroad, the west only sees our country as an uncivilised land of wars.’ People stopped on the street in Lebanon express varying degrees of disgust with the Australian comedy show, which follows a Lebanese family that moves from Sydney’s western suburbs to Vaucluse. One Lebanese man says: ‘Unfortunately, if a civilisation like Australia is showing the Lebanese in this way, it is the end of civilisation as we know it’

Info about the show

They mangle the Arabic and say “falafel” like an Aussie. Nobody, his mother included, can pronounce “Elias”. And what kind of name is Fou Fou?

The Habibs are Lebanese like Crocodile Dundee is Australian, but they aren’t offensive. With Channel Nine’s Here Come the Habibs, which premiered last night, the worst fears of petitioners have not come to pass.

The family at the heart of the series, whose lottery win catapults them from western Sydney into its east, is warmly drawn, pretty funny – if exaggerated – and written to be the good guys.

The first original comedy commissioned by Nine in over a decade, Here Come the Habibs was devised by the veteran comics behind Fat Pizza and Housos, but written by what co-creator Tahir Bilgic called a “vanilla milkshake writing team”.

It shows. The gags are strongest when tackling what the writers know: the white Australian fear (and fixation) with immigrant Lebanese culture; resentment at Sydney’s glittering harbourside suburbs; the anguish many feel trying to address race without mentioning the war (in this case, the Cronulla riots). Albeit well-meaning, it’s inescapably a show about race from a white perspective.

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Lebanon: US has pledged over $100M in assistance

daily star.com.lb

The United States has pledged over $100 million in humanitarian and development assistance to Lebanon, the U.S. envoy said Monday, reaffirming American support to the country in various fields.

“At the donor’s conference, the United States pledged an additional $133 million in humanitarian assistance which will be used in Lebanon, as well as more than $290 million in development assistance which will be used for education in Lebanon and in Jordan,” U.S. Charge d’Affaires and interim Ambassador Richard Jones said after meeting Prime Minister Tammam Salam at the Grand Serail.

“The United States is among the largest donors to Lebanon, having given over a billion dollars in humanitarian assistance through the Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration and USAID’s Food for Peace Program since 2012,” Jones added.

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See a Luxe Beirut Tower That Borrows Design Elements From Jenga

A highly intricate residential tower, dubbed The Cube, was recently completed in Beirut, Lebanon. Commissioned by Lebanese developers Masharii, the Dutch design firm Orange Architects is responsible for the 164 foot building, which bares a striking resemblance to a block-stacking, gravity-challenging, high-stakes game of Jenga. It even sounds like the structural design of the building was inspired by an age-old Jenga axiom: If the core is solid, you’re golden.

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15 great books: How civil war (re)-shaped the Lebanese novel

Marcia Lynx Qualey

Literature The civil war — although it officially ended in 1990 — continues to preoccupy novelists, with new books set during war-time coming out every year. The renowned blogger ‘ArabLit’ looks back at how civil war shaped the Lebanese novel, and recommend 15 great books set just before, during, and after the war.

The 1960s brought changes to Lebanon and countries around the world, among these a mini-renaissance in Lebanese literary writing. “There was some kind of revival,” Lebanese novelist Rawi Hage said in a 2013 interview, “and a very progressive community…formed in Lebanon, mostly around the AUB area around Ras Beirut.”

It was an era of openness to world literature and formal experimentalism, with important work being done by authors Elias al-Diri and Youssef Habchi El-Achkar, among others. Publishing houses flourished. Books that couldn’t be printed in neighboring countries, for one reason or another, found their way to Lebanon.

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Transgender ruling in Lebanon an ’empowering’ moment

by Anealla Safdar

Al Jazeera

A landmark ruling in Lebanon in favour of a transgender man is being celebrated as a leap towards equality, with hopes that discrimination towards the transgender community will ease given the subsequent positive media attention the case received.

In the mid-January ruling at the Court of Appeals in Beirut, Judge Janet Hanna confirmed the right of a transgender man to change his official papers, granting him access to necessary treatment and, importantly, privacy.

The decision marked the first time a Lebanese appeals court ruled specifically in support of transgender rights to treatment.

"The operation was a medical necessity to relieve him [the appellant] from his suffering that had been present throughout his life," the court said in its ruling.

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The one line the West keeps repeating about Syria that is helping Assad win the war

In a Washington press conference shortly after peace talks over Syria’s future fell apart earlier this week, US Secretary of State John Kerry again called on Syria’s government and its supporters to end its military campaign and pursue a political solution to the conflict instead.

Days earlier, Gareth Bayley, the UK’s special representative for Syria, told reporters in Geneva that "there is no military solution" to the conflict.

As the diplomats called for a peaceful resolution to the crisis, however, pro-regime forces were encircling Aleppo — Syria’s largest city — aided by heavy Russian airstrikes that are estimated to have killed scores of civilians

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