Khazen

Decades after civil war, Lebanese still pine for peace

On Wednesday, the Lebanese people
marked the anniversary of the start of the civil war that plunged their
country into violence and chaos for 15 years. More than 25 years since the conflict ended, however, the Lebanese people have yet to enjoy domestic tranquility.

The older generations who remember the war hope to never see such dark
days again, urging the nation’s youth to put their sectarian and
ideological differences aside. In Beirut, many buildings still bear the scars of the gunfire and
shelling that once ravaged the city known as the “Paris of the Middle
East”. Saeed Shams al-Din, a 58-year-old engineer who remembers the war, described the conflict as “one of the worst in history”.

The Lebanese people had borne the brunt of the civil war, Shams al-Din
told Anadolu Agency, going on to urge the nation’s youth to remain in
the country and strive to maintain peace.

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The Lebanese know all about passport loopholes

by Michael Karam

I was having dinner in Beirut with a young Lebanese couple.
He had Canadian citizenship from his father, who had studied in Montreal
in the ‘70s. She was able to claim the Portuguese nationality from her
maternal grandmother. Their kids would be Portuguese, being ineligible
for Canadian citizenship, as successive generations cannot be born
outside Canada to a foreign mother.

The Lebanese know their way
around nationality rules and any loopholes. Just ask those West African
expats with British Protected Persons status and their dependents who
pounced on full UK citizenship after the Nationality, Immigration and
Asylum Act was passed in 2002, without having set foot in Great Britain
or in many cases were unable to speak a word of English.

The
Lebanese love, or should I say, need, a foreign passport. The Lebanese
one has been ranked by Henley & Partners Visa Restrictions Index “a
global ranking of countries based on the freedom of travel for their
citizens,” among the top 10 worst passports to own because of visa
restriction issues.

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Egypt committed to boosting economic cooperation with Lebanon

The Egyptian president Abd Al Fattah Al-Sisi held a meeting with the Lebanese parliament speaker Nabih berry
Presidency handout

By Ahmed Abbas, Egypt is
committed to enforcing economic cooperation with Lebanon, President
Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi said during his meeting with Lebanese parliamentary
speaker Nabih Berri. Al-Sisi praised the activities of the Lebanese workers abroad, especially in West Africa.

Berri said the next few years should see more investments between
Egypt and Lebanon, pointing out that Lebanese investors are eager to
benefit from investment opportunities in Egypt, especially as Lebanese
investors are active in Africa. Regarding Lebanon’s internal position, Berri emphasised the
importance of ending the conflict between opposing Lebanese parties and
electing a president as soon as possible.

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Lebanese police shut down three brothels, continue sex trafficking investigation

Some nightclubs in Lebanon are hiding terrible secrets behind closed doors. (AFP/File)

Police have shut down 3 night clubs in Lebanon’s red-light district,
allegedly used as brothels, at the request of Mount Lebanon’s general
prosecutor, a security source told The Daily Star Tuesday. The
venues are among the 13 nightclubs and cabarets under inspection in
Maameltein in the city of Jounieh. Authorities will later decide whether
to shut down the remaining 10 after inspections are over.

The
decision to close the venues came after inspections showed an alarming
spread of different sexually transmitted diseases – such as HIV/AIDS –
due to the lack of check-ups for the women working there, the security
source said. LBCI reported Monday that authorities have recently
discovered that 50 girls were being used as sex slaves at the 13
nightlife venues. The report said the cabarets will be forced to close,
and girls transferred to different NGO’s.

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Assad has taken Russia ‘hostage,’ and what comes next could be ‘the worst this war has seen’

Aleppo

By

Syrian President Bashar Assad is growing only more defiant as
negotiators prepare to descend on Geneva once again in an attempt
to broker the terms of a political transition and end the five-year
civil war. The opposition’s central demand heading into the negotiations is that
the embattled Assad relinquish his hold on power and cease bombing
rebel-held territory. On the contrary, the regime will hold parliamentary elections on Wednesday and is evidently preparing a major new offensive to retake Syria’s largest city, Aleppo, from opposition forces.

As such, it appears that Russia’s attempt last month to force Assad into a corner — by announcing a partial withdrawal
of advisers and warplanes — has backfired. Assad appears to have
realized that Russia’s reputation as a leader in the Middle East
depends, at least for now, on maintaining the status quo and keeping the
regime intact.

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Lebanon media: seven to be charged over kidnap attempt allegedly filmed by 60 Minutes

Ali Al-Amin

CCTV

  •   Authorities say they have evidence Channel Nine paid for the abduction
  •     Say they have a signed statement from a member of the ‘recovery team’
  •     Nine reportedly paid $115,000 for the operation, but this is unconfirmed  
  •     CCTV footage shows two children being snatched off the street in Beirut
  •     The mother, Sally Faulkner, has been arrested in Lebanon after the incident
  •     Australian journalist Tara Brown and her crew also detained in Lebanon
  •     They were filming a story about the recovery of two Australian children
  •     Brown, producer Stephen Rice and sound operator are being held by police
  •     The children’s father, Ali el-Amien, slammed the alleged kidnapping
  •     Mr el-Amien said it endangered the lives of Noah, 4, and Lahela, 5

The guardian- The partner of an Australian mother arrested in Lebanon over a bungled attempt to allegedly snatch back her two children says she is being “treated right” by authorities. Sally Faulkner is in custody in Lebanon along with a Nine Network TV crew
and members of an international child recovery agency after an attempt
to snatch back her children Noah, four, and Lahela, six, from her
ex-husband, Ali el-Amien. Her current partner, Brendan Pierce, says he and the Brisbane woman’s
family are coping with the ordeal and that Sally is being treated well.

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Syrian software developers find work in thriving Lebanese tech sector

By

BEIRUT: About 80 per cent of Syria’s technology workers
and software developers have fled the country’s civil war, drying up the
nascent but flourishing local industry. 

Many have found
their way to a new tech powerhouse in the Middle East – the neighbouring
Lebanon – where their skills are being put to good use.

As the
tech sector expands, startups across the region are coming to Lebanon
where the British government is donating millions of dollars, as are
other venture capital firms. 

One initiative to encourage more
startups is ‘Circular 331’, which is sponsored by the Lebanon Central
Bank. It promises to put as much as US$400 million into the local start
up economy.

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Australian TV crew wanted to show kidnapping as ‘a good thing’: Beirut police

Tara Brown

Tara Brown, a reporter for 60 Minutes, has been detained in Beirut along with her Channel Nine crew.
Photograph: Channel Nine. The Guardian

An Australian woman who allegedly orchestrated the abduction of her
children from their Lebanese father, and an Australian TV crew who
police believe were there to film the incident, have been arrested in
Beirut.

A British man who was also detained by the Lebanese police is
believed to be the captain of a yacht that was moored near Beirut’s
Movenpick hotel, preparing to sail away with the children, police
sources said. The detained film crew, including Tara Brown of Nine Network’s 60
Minutes program, were in custody on Thursday and being interrogated by
internal security forces investigators.

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Lebanese expats fearful as Gulf expels dozens accused of Hezbollah links

The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) logo is seen during a meeting in Manama, Bahrain April 7, 2016. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Reuters, DUBAI
|

Ahmed, a Lebanese
worker living in the United Arab Emirates, closed down his Facebook
page and started to shun some of his compatriots.

His
intention was to sever all links to people associated with Lebanon’s
Hezbollah after Gulf Arab states classified the Shi’ite Muslim
organization as a terrorist group.

Ahmed, a medical worker in his early 50s who declined to give his full name, is not alone.

Anxiety
and apprehension are unsettling many of the up to 400,000 Lebanese
workers living in the Gulf after last month’s announcement by the Gulf
Cooperation Council – Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain,
Kuwait, Oman and Qatar.

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Lebanese Ex-Minister Gets 10 Years for Smuggling Explosives and Planning Attacks

By Reuters News Agency

A Lebanese military court on Friday increased to nearly 10 years the
jail term for a former minister convicted last year of smuggling
explosives and planning attacks, in a case that has underscored the
country’s sharp political divisions.

Former Information Minister
Michel Samaha, who has close ties to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad,
was detained in August 2012 and confessed to involvement in a plot for
which Damascus’ security chief Ali Mamluk was also indicted.

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