Khazen

Lebanese school empowers children with hearing impairment

By: Lisa Abou Khaled and Matthew Saltmarsh

HAZMIEH, Lebanon – Born deaf and living as a Syrian refugee in
Lebanon, eight-year-old Mohammed has faced more hurdles than most during
his short lifetime. But thanks to the support of a remarkable
institution he has found his voice and the promise of a brighter future.

For three years now, Mohammed has been attending the Father Andeweg Institute for the Deaf (FAID) in Hazmieh, a leafy suburb on the Damascus Road in the hills above Beirut.

Originally from Idlib, Syria, he did not attend schools at home as
they were not accessible to children with hearing impairments. He still
needs surgery and a proper hearing aid, which his parents cannot afford
as they struggle to make ends meet in Lebanon.

In many cases, before finding the school, parents had given up hope
of their children having the same opportunities as other children. But
Mohammed’s mother, Salima, told officials from UNHCR, the UN Refugee
Agency, during a recent tour of the school that she was delighted that
her son had been given a chance.

“I can clearly see how much he has progressed since coming here. He
can finally speak,” she said. “Mohammed has made friends, he’s very
happy there.”

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Barricades on the beach: Beirut residents fight for their waterfront

A general view shows Ramlet al Bayda,
Beirut’s last remaining public beach, Lebanon November 20, 2016. Sally
Hayde/Thomson Reuters Foundation via

REUTERS

Children play on Beirut’s last remaining
public beach Ramlet al Bayda, Lebanon, November 20, 2016. Sally
Hayde/Thomson Reuters Foundation via

REUTERS

Vehicles work on the construction of the
Eden Rock Resort on the south end of Ramlet al Bayda beach, in Beirut,
Lebanon, November 20, 2016. Sally Hayde/Thomson Reuters Foundation via

REUTERS

Security forces stand guard at the Eden
Rock Resort construction site at the south end of Ramlet al Bayda beach,
Beirut, Lebanon, November 26, 2016. Sally Hayde/Thomson Reuters
Foundation via

REUTERS

BEIRUT
(Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Construction of a new luxury resort on
Beirut’s waterfront could enclose the city’s last free public beach,
leaving only wealthy residents who can afford lofty daily fees to enjoy
the Mediterranean shore.

The
battle for Ramlet al-Baida beach on the Lebanese capital’s highly
developed shoreline is at the center of the latest conflict between
residents and municipal authorities.

It
follows tensions last year over the closure of urban landfills and the
continuing accumulation of garbage on the city’s peripheries.

Locals say Beirut could become the
first Mediterranean city without a beach open to the public after
developer, Achour Development, began building its Eden Bay resort,
scheduled to open in 2018.

During the most recent protest at the building site last weekend, protesters were met with a heavy police presence.

“People
have become numb,” said Bana Kadi, a demonstrator from Beirut. “It’s
terrible. The beach belongs to the public and belongs to the people,
which is the way it should be legally.”

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Lebanese campaign urges abolishment of law that protects rapists

Joseph A. Kechichian, Senior Writer – Gulf news

Beirut: Article 522 of the Lebanese Penal Code shields rapists from
prosecution on the condition that they marry their victim, a phenomenon
that is still practised in the country, especially among conservative
families whose chief aim is to preserve the family’s so-called “honour.” Activists
say that such ‘protection’ is, more often than not, a second trauma for
victims — something that parliament’s Administration and Justice
Committee met to discuss a few days ago.

Deputy Élie Keyrouz, a
Lebanese Forces MP, proposed to abolish the article entirely, but
parliament moved to postpone the debate on the proposal until next
Wednesday. The Lebanese Forces’ Department of Women’s Affairs not
only called to abolish the article but also to prosecute the rapists —
insisting that 522 stands as an insult to “women and violates their
dignity and the safety of the family and stability.”

The hashtag #Undress522 has also been launched to trigger online discussion and awareness on the matter. It
teamed up with local NGO, ABAAD, which made visual inroads as it
displayed in front of parliament building at Nijmeh Square a woman
dressed in a white wedding dress made with bandages, to say that this
was not acceptable.

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Chief Lebanese Industrialist: Gulf Markets Represent 30% of Lebanon’s Exports, Our Economy is Suffering

President of the Association of Lebanese Industrialists Fadi Gemayel. ALI

Beirut- President of the Association of Lebanese Industrialists Fadi
Gemayel has said that Lebanon is passing through difficult circumstances
as its growth rate has ranged between 1 and 1.5%. “Although this rate is being reached in some European countries too,
yet it is still so far away from what the Lebanese economy has achieved
in the past.”

Gemayel stressed that Lebanese industry isn’t in its best situation
and is not consistent with Lebanese people’s capabilities and
potentials. In an interview with Asharq Al-Awsat, Gemayel noted that the World
Bank praised the diversity of Lebanese products that include traditional
products as well as sophisticated goods in several sectors.

Gemayel said that Lebanon’s industry has faced many challenges in the
past and has developed without any support or industrial policy, except
for the interest subsidy in the industrial, agricultural and tourism
investments. He said that Lebanese products have reached countries with most demanding markets such as the United States, Canada and Europe.

We always praise the capabilities of Lebanon’s industry, he said, despite the challenges Lebanon has been facing for many years.

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TRUMP TREASURY SECRETARY: ‘There were a lot of people in California and New York who wanted to stop being friends’

Steven Mnuchin

By Bob Bryan

Steven Mnuchin, President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for
Treasury secretary, says the top priority of the new Trump
administration will be to cut taxes. Mnuchin, a longtime Goldman Sachs employee and Hollywood
producer, said his support of Trump cost him a few friends along
the way. “There were a lot of people in California and New York who wanted
to stop being friends,” Mnuchin said. Both states were won by
Trump’s Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton.

“Our first priority is to cut taxes,” Mnuchin said in an
interview with CNBC’s Squawk Box. “We want to cut the corporate
taxes, which will bring back growth.” During the interview, which also included Trump’s choice for
commerce secretary, Wilbur Ross, Mnuchin described a plan to cut
the corporate tax rate to 15% from its current 35% level.

On personal taxes, Mnuchin said the planned tax cut from the
Trump administration would not favor the upper class because any
cut for the wealthy would be offset by “closing various
exceptions” in the tax code. He did not specify what these would
be but did say the “absolute level” of upper-class taxes would
not go down.

Mnuchin said the changes in the tax codes would be the largest
changes since those under President Ronald Reagan in the 1980s.

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