Khazen

Lonely? Get offline, experts say

By Saundra Latham, Editor at LinkedIn News — What’s a lonely person to do in modern times? Google how to find friends, of course. Loneliness-related searches including “where to meet people” spiked in the past week, according to the search giant. The trend underscores a Surgeon General report describing an “epidemic of loneliness” affecting half […]

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Musk names new Twitter CEO

By Saundra Latham, Editor at LinkedIn News –– It’s official: Twitter has a new CEO. Linda Yaccarino, head of global advertising and partnerships at NBCUniversal, will take over the top job from Elon Musk, who acquired Twitter in October for $44 billion. Musk confirmed Yaccarino’s hiring Friday, saying she will “focus primarily on business operations, […]

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Former minister Sejaan Azzi dies aged 71 – He was a Lebanese hero

khazen.org offers its condolences to a Hero, amazing patriot Minister Sejaan Azzi. He will be greatly missed. We would wait for his analysis every week.  by today.lorientlejour.com — BEIRUT — Former Lebanese Labor Minister Sejaan Azzi died on Thursday at the age of 71 after a long illness, people close to him told L’Orient-Le Jour. […]

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East nation is raising eyebrows

By Nadeen Ebrahim, CNN –— A massive new US embassy complex in Lebanon is causing controversy for its sheer size and opulence in a country where nearly 80% of the population is under the poverty line. Located some 13 kilometers (about 8 miles) from the center of Beirut, the US’ new embassy compound in Lebanon looks like a city of its own. Sprawling over a 43-acre site, the complex in the Beirut suburb of Awkar is almost two-and-a-half times the size of the land the White House sits on and more than 21 soccer fields. Many Lebanese on Twitter questioned why the US needs such a large embassy in their capital. Lebanon is smaller than Connecticut and has a population of just six million. Few American tourists go to the country as the State Department has placed it on the third highest travel advisory level, but it does have a sizeable population of Lebanese American residents. “Did the US move to Lebanon??” tweeted Sandy, a social media activist. “Maybe you’ll have enough room to work on all those pending visa applications,” tweeted Abed A. Ayoub, national executive director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, responding to the grandiosity of the new complex.

Lebanon’s soul has been eviscerated by its financial crisis. Not even the children want to play Computer-generated images published by the embassy show an ultra-modern compound, hosting multi-story buildings with high glass windows, recreational areas, and a swimming pool surrounded by greenery and views of the Lebanese capital. The compound includes a chancery, representational and staff housing, facilities for the community and associated support facilities, according to the project’s website. From the pandemic to the 2020 Beirut blast, Lebanon has been assailed by a number of crises that have left its economy in ruins. Many Lebanese are unable to afford basic commodities, including food, medicine and electricity. “Let them eat concrete,” another user tweeted. Plans for the embassy complex were announced in 2015 and it is reported to have cost $1 billion.

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US to ban pay-history queries

By Cate Chapman, Editor at LinkedIn News — The Biden administration proposed a rule Wednesday that would bar federal agencies from using salary history to set the pay of full-time workers. Experts argue that using this history to determine compensation has perpetuated inequity — effectively anchoring workers to lower-than-average pay throughout their careers. Because the […]

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Book a flight with Uber?

By Ruiqi Chen, Editor at LinkedIn News — Some Uber customers will soon be able to use the app to book flights. The ride-share giant announced a partnership with Canadian travel agency Hopper on Wednesday, offering national and international flights to all U.K. users in the next few weeks, The Verge writes. A general manager […]

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Total-led consortium to start drilling offshore Lebanon in September

By Maha El Dahan DUBAI, (Reuters) – A consortium led by TotalEnergies (TTEF.PA) will start drilling for oil and gas off the coast of Lebanon at the beginning of September, the country’s caretaker energy minister Walid Fayyad said on Tuesday. The consortium, which includes Italy’s partners ENI (ENI.MI) and QatarEnergy [RIC:RIC:QATPE.UL], has assigned a rig for the offshore southern bloc known as Bloc 9. “The rig will start working in Lebanon in September … before the end of the year we will know if there is a discovery,” Fayyad told reporters on the sidelines of the World Utilities Congress in Abu Dhabi. The minister said he was hopeful that if a discovery was made, it would unlock more investments in Lebanon’s offshore oil and gas sector.

Fayyad said a potential discovery could impact whether a deadline for applications to explore in eight additional offshore blocs is extended yet again, past June. “I have been hearing from players in the field that they are keen to see the result of the drilling in Bloc 9 before they make decisions as to further investments or commitments in Lebanon,” he told reporters. “In the end if we don’t have enough interest and players, we must adapt,” Fayyad said. The minister said a World Bank-funded deal to receive electricity from Jordan and gas from Egypt through Syria had yet to progress as the financing body had requested more reforms before committing. But he said Lebanon would aim to boost imports from Iraq by bumping up the volume of an existing swap deal and through new commercial agreements.

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Images of massive US embassy compound in Lebanon elicit jeers and questions

by middleeasteye.net — The embassy is expected to cost $1bn and will occupy 43 acres in a country facing financial collapse. Photographs of the new US embassy compound under construction in Lebanon shared on Twitter on Friday have sparked questions, conspiracies, and some jeers as a result of its massive size. As of Monday, the photographs, posted by the US embassy in Beirut with the caption, “things are progressing at our new compounds”, had gotten 2.1 million views by the time of publication. The US announced plans to build the new embassy in 2017 and the compound has been under construction ever since.

Many have questioned why the US needs to build what will be the world’s second-largest embassy in the world after the American embassy in Baghdad, given that the Mediterranean country is home to only six million people and is currently facing a financial crisis. “This is bigger than the Pentagon,” one Twitter user said. “ What’s planned for this compound other than issuing visas???” “Room for hundreds of spies and infiltrators? A weapon factory too? another Twitter user asked. “Any secret bio labs tucked away in that military complex-like building?” asked another. The embassy is expected to cost $1bn and will occupy 43 acres once completed. The price tag has also raised eyebrows because it comes as Lebanon is facing an economic implosion.

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Charging more for less

By Kaniya Rogers, Editor at LinkedIn News — Airlines, hotels, and automakers are pulling in record profits by selling less and charging more, reports Bloomberg, challenging U.S. efforts to calm inflation. Hotel prices are up by more than 10% in the first quarter compared to 2022, and “sticker shock” prices have also hit cars and […]

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Arab League move fails to allay Lebanese concerns over Syrian refugee ‘burden’

By Najia houssari — arabnews.com — BEIRUT: Lebanese people remain divided over Syria’s return to the Arab League following a 12-year suspension. Foreign ministers from Arab League member states on Sunday agreed to reinstate Syria’s membership and called for a resolution of issues resulting from the country’s civil war, including the flight of refugees to […]

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