Khazen

Lebanese decry unprecedented traffic chaos

by gulfnews 0 Joseph A. Kechichian, Senior Writer – Beirut: It takes Mansour Khalife a good two hours to reach the
Lebanese capital from the city of Jounieh given the unprecedented
traffic chaos prevailing in the country. “I promise to light a
candle to Mar Charbel [the country’s venerated Maronite patron saint]
the day I reach my shop in an hour,” Khalife, a salesman who works in
downtown Beirut, told Gulf News. Khalife’s car is among the 1.6 million registered vehicles taking to Lebanon’s roads every day. That
figure does not include cars not registered in Lebanon, which has
swelled due to the massive number of Syrians who have filtered into the
country due to the civil war in their land. Chronic congestion and
lack of parking have always plagued the country, but a growing
population coupled with the influx of Syrians has made the situation
particularly intolerable.

Syrians
now make up a quarter of the population, bringing the total population
to around 6 million, up from 4 million. This figure does not take into
account the country’s one million Palestinian refugees and 750,000
foreign workers who are not counted in national census figures. Hundreds
of thousands of commuters who drive to Beirut every day complain that
they waste precious hours of their life behind the wheel. To
alleviate the growing burden on the roads, governor Ziad Chebib promised
to reveal a new plan to revamp the city’s public transport system
within weeks. However the promise has not excited Lebanese due to
many past pledges that have not materialised — a plan for a metro and
light-rail system have been floated. The absence of an effective public transit system has only made Lebanese more dependent on cars.

In
2015, the last year for which statistics are available, 39,361 new
passenger cars were sold in Lebanon, up by an annual 4.1 per cent, which
brought the state over $500 million (Dh1.83 billion) in excise taxes,
cars registration fees, and cars control fees. Few Lebanese take
public buses due the danger associated with navigating the country’s
haphazard roads combined with the reckless drivers to whom they would
perforce have to entrust their safety. Lebanon records more than 6
million automobile passenger trips each day, up from 2.8 million in
2007 and 1.7 million in 1995, according to statistics from the Ministry
of Public Works and Transport.

A 2012 American University of
Beirut study confirmed the existence of a “deep-rooted need for an
effective public transportation system as a competitive alternative to
automobile dependency”. The Council for Development and Reconstruction —
the supra-national body in charge of everything after the civil war —
failed to heed calls for urgent action, which is the primary reason why
traffic jams are now the norm.

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Lebanese Government Launched New Website To Help People Reclaim Lebanese Nationality

Lebanese nationality

by the961–  The new Lebanese Nationality Program website
was launched by the Lebanese government to help Lebanese people abroad
(who don’t have their citizenship) reclaim their Lebanese nationality. This is an initiative launched by the Lebanese Ministry of Foreign
Affairs & Emigrants to initiate and facilitate the process for
people of Lebanese heritage. This service is completely free and the website is available in 4 languages: English, Spanish, French and Portuguese. There were several major waves of emigration from Lebanon to South
America starting in the late 1800’s due to the 1860 conflict in Lebanon. The ruling parties at the time intentionally passed laws to “punish”
these emigrants, denying them the automatic right of return to Lebanon –
making it near impossible to pass the nationality to their children.

Despite several generations in South America and the Lebanese
language not being passed on to the children, there still maintains a
strong Lebanese ethnic identity. Brazil alone is home to the most number of Lebanese people in the
world, including Lebanon. Estimates range from 7 million up to 12
million Lebanese. Hence why the website is available in Portuguese.

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Estonia president offers to help establish e-government

Aoun
said that Lebanon was keen to strengthen ties with Estonia in various
sectors, but especially in areas related to technology. He added
that Lebanon was seeking to establish a joint group for the two
countries to activate trade and increase Lebanon’s exports to Estonian
markets. Kaljulaid, at Baabda Palace, was thanked by Aoun for her country’s contribution to the U.N. Interim Force in Lebanon.

Following
her meeting with Aoun, Kaljulaid met with Hariri at his Downtown Beirut
residence where she reiterated that her country was prepared to offer
Lebanon assistance in the digital sector. Their discussion also covered
regional developments and bilateral relations between Lebanon and
Estonia. “We can cooperate in wider sectors in the future,” Hariri
told Kaljulaid, adding that Lebanon was seeking assistance from Estonia
to promote e-government projects. “We understand you have done a
lot in e-government and this is something we would like to implement in
our country, so hopefully we can work together to do that,” Hariri said
in a statement following the meeting.

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Palestinian killed in clashes in Burj al-Barajneh

BEIRUT (AP) — Lebanon’s state news agency says one Palestinian has been killed and others wounded during intense clashes that erupted in one of the capital’s crowded southern suburbs. The National News Agency says calm has been restored Friday to Burj al-Barajneh area in south Beirut after clashes that lasted hours. The agency says the […]

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Re-opening Qleiaat airport upright demand: Aoun

The Daily Star, BEIRUT: The re-opening of the Qleiaat airport in north Lebanon is a righteous demand, President Michel Aoun said Friday. “Reopening the Rene Mouawad airport in Qleiaat would achieve prosperity for north Lebanon and comes in line with the [plan] to rehabilitate [Lebanon’s] infrastructure,” Aoun told a delegation from the civil movement in […]

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Hariri Receives Estonian President

by naharnet – Prime Minister Saad Hariri received at the Center House on Friday the Estonian President, Kersti Kaljulaid, and the accompanying delegation, where the meeting focused on bilateral relations and the work of the Estonian contingent in the UNIFIL in south Lebanon, Hariri’s media office said. After the meeting, Kaljulaid said: “Estonia is the […]

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A fragile Arab consensus: Michel Aoun and the road to the Arab summit

by Makram Rabah

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of  khazen.org

Over the years the Lebanese have got used to the idea that many, if not
all, of their leaders’ political statements and actions can be easily
reversed or simply swept away without any form of accountability or
consequences. However, the hail of criticism generated by the recent remarks of Lebanese President Michel Aoun in support of Hezbollah might be the exception to the aforementioned rule.

The objections to Aoun’s unstatesmanlike remarks stem from the
ambassadors of the International Support Group for Lebanon (ISGL) – the
US, France, Britain, Germany, Italy and China, in addition to the EU
ambassador and representative of the UN secretary-general in Lebanon and
Arab League representative. This might perhaps serve as a warning of
what awaits Lebanon if Aoun stays his precarious course. The US ambassador to Lebanon, Elizabeth Richard, clearly warned the Lebanese state that its refusal to abide by international law and UN resolutions might lead to the withdrawal of the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL). As it stands, however, President Aoun’s skewed position in support of Hezbollah has virtually imploded UNSCR 1701,
which requires the disarmament of all armed groups in Lebanon, and has
placed Lebanon under the scrutiny of the international community,
something that might have dire repercussions for Lebanon and its fragile
economy.

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Lebanese woman climbs South America’s highest peak

BEIRUT:
A Lebanese woman has climbed South America’s highest peak, bringing her
closer to her goal of raising Lebanon’s flag at the world’s seven
highest summits and two poles. An accomplished mountaineer, Joyce
Azzam has scaled nearly two dozen prominent summits around the world.
However, her mission to Argentina’s Cerro Aconcagua was as much a
diplomatic endeavor as it was athletic. Lebanon’s Ambassador to
Argentina Antonio Andary organized a reception in her honor upon her
arrival in Buenos Aires.

At an elevation of 6,962 meters above sea
level, Cerro Aconcagua is the highest peak Azzam has climbed to date,
higher than California’s Mount Whitney (4,424 meters), France’s Mont
Blanc (4,813 meters) and Qornet Sawda, Lebanon’s highest peak (2,088
meters). Qornet Sawda is a day’s hike, Azzam explained. “For mountains above 3,000 meters, you need more than one day,” Azzam said. “As you go higher you need more days.”

Azzam
spent four days conditioning and acclimating for the ascent with
Guillermina Elias, an Argentinian climber of Lebanese descent. The
conditions she would face would test her mentally and physically. The
mountain wasn’t technically difficult, Azzam said. She didn’t need
ropes. However, the air gets thinner and weather gets worse as climbers
go higher. It took Azzam 16 days to reach the summit. She proceeded in
stages.

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American University in Beirut and Cairo top list of MENA’s best universities

AUB and AUC ranked higher than the University of Milan, the American University in Washington DC, Stellenbosch University, Brandeis, Wake Forest University, and Florida State. (AUB)

The American University in Beirut, which was ranked first in the Middle-East at  228th on the overall list. The American University in Cairo
has been ranked as the second best university in the Middle East and
North Africa region and 365th worldwide, according to an annual
ranking released by QS World University Rankings. The annual QS rankings
rate the world’s top universities using six different indicators:
academic reputation, employer reputation, student-to-faculty ratio,
citations per faculty, international faculty ratio and international
student ratio.

AUC’s rank directly followed the George
Washington University, Northeastern University and Virginia Tech, three
prestigious US universities.  It’s the only private institution in Egypt
included in the QS rankings. “There are a lot of
universities in the world; to be in the 300 band is extraordinary,” said
Ted Purinton, dean of the Graduate School of Education and an expert in
international education, in an AUC press release. According
to Purinton, AUC ranked higher than the University of Milan, the
American University in Washington DC, Stellenbosch University, Brandeis,
Wake Forest University, and Florida State.

“These
are all top universities, all of which are widely known and very
prestigious. Thus, I would say we should feel exceedingly proud of where
we are now,” Purinton added. While AUC’s ranking has dipped down
and back up again over the years, Purinton explained that there should
be little concern over slight changes in a university’s rankings.
“Universities float around within bands of rankings for very minor
issues,” he said.
He added that if a university
had a slight change in the number of international students or faculty
members, most of the university’s community will not feel the impact,
yet its ranking score will noticeably change.

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