Khazen

Lebanon, Egypt to sign 15 documents on economic cooperation soon

International Cooperation Minister Sahar Nasr talks during an interview with Reuters in Cairo, Egypt, December 8, 2015. To match Interview EGYPT-LOANS/   REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany

Egyptian Minister of International Cooperation Sahar Nasr

By Sayed Badr 

Egypt and Lebanon are set to sign soon
around 15 official documents, including agreements and memoranda of
understanding, aimed to enhance means of bilateral cooperation in all
economic fields. Egyptian Minister of International Cooperation Sahar Nasr met Friday with Fath Allah Fawzi,
Chairman of the Egyptian-Lebanese Businessmen Friendship Association
(ELBA). The two officials discussed current preparations for the
convention of the 8th session of the Egyptian-Lebanese Joint Higher
Committee (ELJHC) to be chaired by the prime ministers of both
countries.

Nasr, who chairs the ministerial preparatory committee, indicated
that both countries gave due regard to the convention of the ELJHC,
given that it has been 7 years since the committee was last held in
2010. The role of ELJHC is to eliminate obstacles hindering the
increase of bilateral trade and to identify causes which stand as
obstacles to the flow of trade, the Egyptian minister said, stressing
the necessity of the activation of the joint business council.

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The CEO of Nissan-Renault has figured out what Trump’s ‘America First’ doctrine means for the auto industry

carlos ghosn

By

Ghosn — born in Lebanon, raised in Lebanon and Brazil, educated in France —
became CEO of Renault-Nissan in 2001 and for a decade and a half
has been responsible for this French-Japanese hybrid, which not
incidentally sells a lot of cars and trucks in the US. At the Detroit auto show last month, Ghosn held a roundtable
discussion with the media and spent a fair amount of time, in the
days before Trump’s inauguration, visibly grappling with the
“America First” idea. 

 It isn’t complicated.
“If there is free trade, it should be good for me,” Ghosn said when asked to describe what American First means — with the “me” being the Trump’s USA. He added that part two of his understanding of American First is that it prioritizes “American jobs.”

Simple.  For the most part, Ghosn took a cautiously flexible attitude
toward what Renault-Nissan might be up against if Trump’s
policies favor domestic US manufacturing.

For starters, Nissan builds cars in both Tennessee and
Mississippi, but jobs in those reliable GOP states won’t help
Trump.  That’s because Trump needs the hiring to happen in
Michigan and Ohio, which are the states he sought out during the
2016 election and will need again to get re-elected in
2020.  So some new jobs might be better than others, and Ghosn might not
gain much by pointing out that there were exactly zero car
factories in Tennessee before Nissan landed in Smyrna back in
1983 (GM followed in the 1990s with its Spring Hill factory).

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Lebanon all at sea in face of trash crisis

Published in NYT – Beirut: There was once a nice sea view at the Al Jazira beach club,
and umbrellas of palm fronds sticking from the sand are reminders of
nicer days. Nowadays, the place is surrounded by an ever-growing garbage
dump. “It used to be a beach,” said Hassan, a Syrian man who
works as a caretaker at the club and insisted on being identified only
by his first name because of a lawsuit concerning the city. “There was
sea. There were rocks. I used to fish.”

Just up the shoreline,
Mohammad Jradi, who has been fishing the waters of the Mediterranean off
Beirut for 20 years, said the trash had driven even the fish away. “All over the world, they have solutions for this, but not here,” he said. There
is no end, it seems, to Lebanon’s trash crisis, a potent symbol of the
dysfunctional, sect-based politics that define this tiny country. When
trash piles built up across this city two years ago, enveloping Beirut
in a nasty stench, they spawned a protest movement, called ‘You Stink,’
against the political class. Now, the latest episode of the crisis has become a uniquely Lebanese
story, entwining bird migration, civil aviation, mysterious gunmen and
the long story of Lebanon’s struggle to become a functioning state that
can at least take care of its trash, more than 25 years after emerging
from a long civil war.

Last year, as a Band-Aid solution to the
garbage crisis, the municipality opened the Costa Brava landfill on the
shoreline, not far from Beirut’s Rafic Hariri International Airport. And
so for many visitors to Beirut, a city whose shabby-chic architecture,
great cuisine and French colonial influences are otherwise enchanting,
the first thing to greet them was a strong whiff of garbage.

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Lebanese president calls for safe zones in Syria for refugees

Lebanon's President Michel Aoun meets with United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi at the presidental palace in Baabda

BEIRUT
(Reuters) – Lebanese President Michel Aoun said on Friday world powers
must work with Damascus to create safe zones in Syria so refugees can
return to their country. It
was the first time the Beirut government had lent its support to such a
plan. At least a million people have fled the Syrian civil war since
2011 into Lebanon, which has an estimated total population of less than
six million. Lebanon
would not force unsafe return on any refugees, but the international
community must make their return possible, Aoun’s office quoted him as
saying in a meeting on Friday with U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees
Filippo Grandi.

He
said it was “important to achieve a political solution” to the
conflict. Aoun is an ally of Lebanon’s Hezbollah group which is fighting
in Syria in support of President Bashar al-Assad. U.S.
President Trump said last week he would “absolutely do safe zones in
Syria” for refugees fleeing violence and that Europe had made a mistake
by admitting millions of refugees.. According
to a document seen by Reuters, Trump is expected to order the Pentagon
and the State Department to craft such a plan, a move that could ratchet
up U.S. military involvement in Syria.

The
Syrian government said on Monday that any attempt to create so-called
safe zones for refugees without coordinating with Damascus would be
“unsafe” and violate Syria’s sovereignty.

Rebel
backers including Qatar have welcomed Trump’s support for safe zones,
and Turkey says it is waiting to see the outcome of the U.S. president’s
pledge.

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Trump reportedly warns Israel to stop announcing settlements that ‘undermine’ his efforts toward peace

Donald Trump aipac

By Pamela Engel – Business Insider

President Donald Trump reportedly issued a surprise warning to
Israel on Thursday to stop announcing settlements that
“undermine” his administration’s efforts to create peace in the
Middle East. A White House official
told The Jerusalem Post
 that Trump is committed to a
two-state solution to the Israel-Palestine conflict and that the
White House was surprised by Israel’s announcement
of thousands of new settlement housing units in the
West Bank.

“As President Trump has made clear, he is very interested in
reaching a deal that would end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
and is currently exploring the best means of making progress
toward that goal,” the official reportedly said. “With that in
mind, we urge all parties to refrain from taking unilateral
actions that could undermine our ability to make progress,
including settlement announcements. The administration needs
to have the chance to fully consult with all parties on the way
forward.” The official, according to the report, also elaborated on the
two-state solution Trump envisions. “The United States remains committed to advancing a comprehensive
final-status agreement between Israel and the Palestinians that
results in two states living side-by-side in peace and security,”
the official told the newspaper.

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Trump defends refugee policy as part of protecting religious freedom

Donald Trump. Credit: CJ Hanevy via www.shutterstock.com.

By Matt Hadro

.-
President Donald Trump on Thursday insisted that protecting religious
freedom is a U.S. priority, while defending his recent halt of refugee
admissions as a necessary step to protect that freedom. “Freedom of religion is a sacred right, but it is also a right under
threat all around us, and the world is under serious, serious threat in
so many different ways, and I’ve never seen it so much and so openly
since I took the position of President,” President Trump stated at the
National Prayer Breakfast on Thursday morning.

“There are those who would seek to enter our country for the purpose
of spreading violence or oppressing other people based upon their faith
or their lifestyle. Not right,” he said. “We will not allow a beachhead
of intolerance to spread in our nation.” Last week, Trump ordered a halt to refugee admissions for 120 days –
indefinitely for Syrian refugees – and a temporary ban on immigration
from seven countries in the Middle East and Africa. The order was met
with criticism from the U.S. bishops and humanitarian organizations.

On Thursday, the president spoke at the annual National Prayer
Breakfast at the Washington Hilton Hotel, a tradition that dates back to
1953. Each year on the first Thursday of February, religious and civic
leaders gather in prayer for the country. Vice President Mike Pence was in attendance as well as King Abdullah II of Jordan.

Michael Wear, former director of faith outreach for Obama 2012
campaign, said that according to a “trusted source,” at least half a
dozen people who were invited to the prayer breakfast were unable to
attend due to the new travel restrictions. President Trump emphasized the global threat of religious violence,
citing “acts of wanton slaughter against religious minorities,” and
noting that “terrorism is a fundamental threat to religious freedom.”

“We have seen peace-loving Muslims, brutalized, victimized, murdered,
and oppressed by ISIS killers. We have seen threats of extermination
against the Jewish people,” he said. “We have seen a campaign of ISIS
and genocide against Christians where they cut off heads.” He pledged to stop such violence and “to defend and protect religious
liberty in our land,” insisting that Americans must live in “a tolerant
society” where they “can feel safe and secure.” “In recent days, we have begun to take necessary action to achieve that goal,” he continued.

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Lebanon: Electoral Law Reform Dragging, Divergences Persist

W460

By Ja

During a meeting with a delegation of
the Lebanese Communist Party, President Michel Aoun has added his voice
to the tense debate over the reform of the electoral law ahead of the
parliamentary elections by stating that “verbal bickering does not lead
to an outcome.” He called for the continuation of “our
struggle until we attain truthful popular representation and rule clear
of personal interests in a bid to build the state and create a powerful
system.”

The Lebanese are divided over the system
to adopt in electing members of the parliament with many seeming to
back the adoption of a proportionality approach in order to have a
balance between majority and minority. Prime Minister Saad Hariri, in a cabinet
meeting on Wednesday, recalled that “when the government pledged in its
ministerial statement to grant priority to stage the elections, it did
not separate between this end and the efforts to find a new election
law.” He acknowledged that there are opposing views but that does “not
necessarily mean that we have reached a dead end.” Hariri called for
efforts to continue in order to have a law acceptable by each party and
sect.

MP Farid Khazen from the Change and Reform bloc claimed that some
political parties are blocking the reform by refusing all the proposals
made. He lamented that “it is impossible to reach an election law that
satisfies everybody.”

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Lebanon officially rule WABA Championship 2017 while Iran and Syria make it to FIBA Asia Cup

AMMAN (WABA Championship 2017) – Lebanon have locked up the title in the West Asia Basketball Association (WABA) Championship 2017 in Amman, Jordan after beating hosts Jordan on Day Four of competition. Iran and Syria also notched huge victories to book seats in the FIBA Asia Cup 2017.

 Lebanon defeated Jordan, 72-61, to move up to 4-0
and officially win the WABA Championship 2017 crown. The Cedars did not
waste any time in this one, building up a commanding 27-9 lead at the
end of the first period. Coach Joe Moujaes and his wards would not
relinquish the advantage the rest of the way despite Jordan staying
within striking distance.

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Ministers hold garbage cards close to chest

BEIRUT:
Ministers discussed alternative methods of waste disposal during a
Cabinet session Wednesday in an effort to pre-empt a potential trash
crisis, with incinerators at the forefront of suggested solutions to
Lebanon’s recurring garbage woes. “If incinerators are to be used then
of course environmental impact studies will be made, a lot of
technological developments have taken place since the 1990s and we will
be applying them,” Environment Minister Tarek Khatib told The Daily
Star. “We are looking into an overarching study that would include all
aspects of the solution. … The plan will be announced soon.”

As
he was entering the session at the Grand Serail, Minister for the
Displaced Talal Arslan said that the Cabinet was looking at importing
incinerators and establishing so-called advanced factories. Beirut Mayor
Jamal Itani had also said earlier that his administration would be
seeking to employ incinerators to safely dispose of the capital’s waste. Lebanon
is bound by the Stockholm Convention that aims to reduce and eliminate
the emission of persistent organic pollutants. The pollutants are
produced through thermal processes involving organic matter and
chlorine.

Years of inadequate waste management have made locals
distrustful of government plans around the issue, potentially rendering
any new plans subject to extra public scrutiny.

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Berri refuses to endorse any electoral law that ‘doesn’t enjoy consensus’

Berri - don't mess with me

By yalibnan.com- Article slightly edited

Lebanon Speaker Nabih Berri declared on  Wednesday that he will not endorse any electoral law that “does not enjoy consensus.” “Contacts and discussions are still ongoing in a bid to
agree on a new electoral law and new ideas are being discussed,” MPs
Berri  was quoted as saying  by MPs during his weekly meeting with
lawmakers in Ain el-Tineh. “We are still in the phase of mulling proposals and we have not yet reached a dead end,” Berri added.

“We reiterate the need to apply unified standards (in the electoral law format) and I will not endorse any law that does not enjoy consensus,” the speaker went on to say. Berri’s AMAL Movement, Hezbollah, Future  Movement and the Free Patriotic Movement are holding meetings aimed at reaching a deal  on a new electoral law.

Taef accord compliance 

Responding to claims that the hybrid electoral law does
not not comply with   the Taef accord Lebanese Forces chief Samir Geagea
stressed on Wednesday that no one is trying to manipulate the Taef
accord, assuring that efforts exerted are merely focusing on finding a
new electoral  law,  National News Agency reported on Wednesday. Geagea expressed astonishment at the “latest talk about the Taef Accord. We like to remind that we were the first to pay the price, and will not accept any tampering with Taef.

“But it is worth noting that no one has such an
intention. There are strenuous efforts to reach a new electoral law
which in turn would reinstate the Taef Accord further,” said Geagea
during a celebration in Maarab. He called upon all political parties to focus on
approving a new electoral law to regulate political work in Lebanon,
considering that the “hybrid law is the only one that would bring all
parties together midway.”

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