Khazen

An Egyptian oil billionaire in talks to buy two private Greek islands for refugees

Egyptian billionaire Naguib Sawiris, who had offered his own solution to help solve the growing migrant crisis by buying Mediterranean island to allow refugees a temporary shelter until a long-term solution can be found, is currently in talks to buy two private islands in Greece.

He has been approached by the UN’s refugee agency UNHCR to cooperate on the project, which he estimates would cost $100m (£65m, €90m) to start.

A statement from Sawiris’s company, Orascom Telecom Media and Technology, on 14 September confirmed he had "identified two privately owned Greek islands that constitute a good opportunity for the project. It said: "We have corresponded with the owners and expressed our interest to go into negotiation with them."

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Lebanon police clash with protesters again over trash crisis

By ZEINA KARAM, AP

— Lebanese police beat back protesters with clubs and sticks and arrested dozens of people in downtown Beirut Wednesday as a second session of dialogue between politicians got underway, the latest confrontations this city has seen over the country’s summer trash crisis.

The small group of activists had gathered near the parliament building, where the meeting was taking place. Some of the protesters had brought eggs to pelt politicians’ convoys with while others tried to block the street.

Baton-wielding riot police soon clashed with the protesters, at one point dragging two protesters on the ground while violently beating them both. Ambulances rushed to the scene and took the wounded away. The main group behind the protests, "You Stink," said 40 people were arrested.

A crisis over uncollected trash in the capital has ignited the largest Lebanese protests in years and has emerged as a festering symbol of the government’s paralysis and failure to provide basic services.

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Anti-corruption protesters rally outside Lebanon ministry

Lebanese anti-government protesters sit on the sidewalk in front of a finance ministry building as Lebanese policemen stand guard in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2015. AP Photo/Hassan Ammar

 

AP Photo/Hassan Ammar

A Lebanese anti-government protester with a tattoo on her back that reads in Arabic, "Revolution is a woman" attends a protest in front of a Finance Ministry building in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2015 – AP Photo/Hassan Ammar

 

Lebanese anti-government protesters sit on the sidewalk in front of a finance ministry building as Lebanese policemen stand guard in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2015. AP Photo/Hassan Ammar

BEIRUT (AP) — Dozens of Lebanese activists held a protest on Tuesday outside a Finance Ministry building in the country’s capital, after failing to storm it — part of a recent series of anti-government rallies stemming from a trash collection crisis The protesters attempted to enter the building earlier in the day, as employees were arriving. But security forces quickly prevented them, closing the doors to the protesters and other arriving staffers.

The protesters chanted against corruption in state institutions. They said they are taking their protests to the Finance Ministry, asking that it stop paying salaries for lawmakers who have been unable to convene. The protesters complain the parliament, elected in 2009, is illegitimate.

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The people who fled Syria for Lebanon – in pictures

The Guardian: Lebanon is 400 times smaller than the European Union and has 1.2 million Syrian refugees, who have lived through bomb blasts and chemical attacks and are now in illegal tent cities or packed into small apartments. They share their extraordinary stories with photographer Marieke van der Velden and her film-maker husband, Philip Brink […]

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Pope Francis warns of danger of ISIS infiltration amid refugee crisis

catholicherald.co.uk:

Francis raised his concerns about the terrorist threat during an interview with a Portuguese radio stationAs thousands of refugees attempt to reach Europe, Pope Francis has acknowledged the danger of infiltration by ISIS terrorists.

“It’s true, I recognise that, nowadays, border safety conditions are not what they once were. The truth is that just 400 kilometres from Sicily there is an incredibly cruel terrorist group. So there is a danger of infiltration, this is true,” the Pope said during an interview with Portuguese radio station Radio Renascença. He added that “nobody said Rome would be immune to this threat”.

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Scientists just found another potential benefit to eating like you live on the Mediterranean

Just when you thought you’d run out of excuses to add olive oil to pretty much everything, science has given us yet another great reason.

In a study of older women published Monday in the medical journal JAMA, Spanish scientists found that a Mediterranean diet supplemented with extra olive oil appeared to help reduce the participants’ risk of breast cancer when compared against two other groups of women on either a low-fat diet or a Mediterranean diet supplemented with nuts. 

The Mediterranean diet is modeled off of foods commonly eaten in countries on the Mediterranean sea. It’s typically high in fruits and vegetables, fish, and whole grains like whole wheat and brown rice.

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Lebanon village hosts more Syrian refugees than the entire U.S.

Richard Hall, GlobalPost

KETERMAYA, Lebanon — There is a small village in the mountains of Lebanon that is hosting more Syrian refugees than all 50 U.S. states combined.

Situated at the southern end of the Mount Lebanon range, Ketermaya is a quiet little place surrounded by patches of farmland. Much of the traffic in the area goes to and from a nearby cement factory.

It isn’t a particularly wealthy town, but the residents here have taken in thousands of refugees fleeing the war in Syria.

"We have a history of welcoming refugees," says Ali Tafesh, a local business owner. "In 2006 we did the same," he adds, referring to the displacement of people caused by Israel’s invasion of southern Lebanon that year.

Tafesh has done more than most. When Syrian families started to arrive in the town in the early days of the civil war, he arranged housing for them. When there were no more places left to stay he offered up his own land.

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Lebanese protesters united against garbage… and sectarianism

Bassel F. Salloukh

Protests initiated by “You Stink” activists against Lebanon’s garbage crisis and the government’s infamous corruption and dysfunction continue to grow. What insight can this garbage crisis and mounting public frustration provide us about not only the country’s sectarian political system but also broader regional trends?

Political scientists have long debated how best to engineer durable peace and democracy in post-conflict, plural societies. Lebanon is an example of a consociational political system in which the political elites of the various sectarian groups govern based on a predefined but static power-sharing agreement. Recent scholarship on post-conflict power-sharing agreements has highlighted the institutional variations between corporate consociation, which considers sectarian identities unchanging and constitute the main markers of political identity and, alternatively, liberal consociation, which regards political identity as malleable and shaped by institutional design, namely electoral law and federal structure. Consequently, these different power-sharing systems affect the incentive structures driving political identification and mobilization in post-conflict societies in different ways.

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British PM David Cameron Visits Lebanese Refugee Camp

 

 

Daily Star lebanon, In a news conference with his Lebanese counterpart Tammam Salam at the Grand Serail, the British prime minister said the humanitarian crisis in neighboring Syria increases the burden on Lebanon, emphasizing that the UK will also offer further support to Lebanese security forces to confront extremists along its northeastern border.

 

By Jack Moore, Newsweek

British Prime Minister David Cameron has visited a Lebanese refugee camp just a mile from the Syrian border, as Europe continues to face the increasing refugee crisis, largely caused by the four-year Syrian civil war.

Cameron traveled by Chinook helicopter to a camp run by the U.N.’s refugee agency in the Bekaa Valley, according to The Guardian newspaper, which lies close to the Syrian border and an area where the Al-Qaeda-linked Nusra Front and ISIS are present.

While at the camp, the British leader called for the European Union to focus on helping the refugees in the countries surrounding Syria, such as Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey, who have taken in millions of Syrians fleeing the war between Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and Islamist rebels.

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The Twin Cities have an ISIS problem

The US Department of Justice on Wednesday announced that a young man from Minneapolis, Minnesota, pleaded guilty to charges related to the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL

But the man, who prosecutors identified as 19-year-old Hanad Musse, was hardly the only Twin Cities resident to face charges in recent months for allegedly supporting the extremist group.

There have been a string of Islamic State-related arrests over roughly the last year.

Why Minneapolis? Authorities say it’s linked to Minneapolis-St. Paul’s large Somali community.

According to The New York Times, estimates peg the local Somali population, which Minneapolis touts as the largest in the US, at roughly 30,000 people.

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