by Joseph Haboush| The Daily Star
BEIRUT:
As lawmakers prepare to head to Parliament to try to elect a president
Wednesday, many Lebanese say they are not optimistic about the 45th
attempt to end the presidential vacuum, now in its third year. “Let them
first take the trash off the streets before electing a president,”
18-year-old Anaan Shab told The Daily Star from the center of Hamra.
Amira Shatila, Shab’s co-worker in Hamra, echoed his comments, telling
The Daily Star “nothing will change Wednesday and no president will be
elected.”
A Parliament session has been scheduled and the 128
members are called on to attend and vote for the candidate they deem
best to fill the vacant seat. At least 86 MPs are required to reach
quorum. By law, a two-thirds majority must vote for one candidate if the
first ballot at the session is to produce a president-elect. In a
second poll, 65 votes – half plus one majority – would secure the
election of the winning candidate.
Not all shared Shab’s
pessimism, however. “There is a possibility that we will have a
president Wednesday,” 62-year-old Ibrahim Ghaddar told The Daily Star as
he walked down Hamra’s main street. When asked if he had a particular
candidate in mind, Ghaddar said, “Michel Aoun will become the
president.”

By Daily Star Lebanon
BEIRUT:
Prime Minister Tammam Salam Thursday warned the international community
against looking to Lebanon as a place of “permanent asylum” for Syrian
refugees.
“We want to stress on the temporary nature of Syrian
presence in Lebanon. … [Lebanon] isn’t a country for permanent asylum,
and can only be perceived as a final country for settlement by the
Lebanese themselves,” Salam said, addressing the 71st session of the
United Nations General Assembly in New York.
“We will continue to
welcome Syrian refugees as long as their lives are still under threat
… We are doing what we can but we have very limited resources,” he
said.
Salam had stressed earlier in the day that priority should
go toward relocating Syrian refugees to their country instead of
“naturalizing” them.

By Middle East correspondent Matt Brown – ABC.net.au
People go about their business; shopping, visiting friends and
family, but the military has heavily fortified checkpoints at key
intersections. They are backed up by armoured personnel carriers
armed with machine guns, stationed down the backstreets, ready to quell
sectarian bloodletting, and suppress the jihadists and the stories they
tell.
In Bab al Tabane, a poor and dirty neighborhood known as a
centre of radical Sunni militancy, there are many young men who have
answered the call to arms in Syria.
One of them, Hassan Srour, a
young man in his mid-twenties, agreed to go on camera to detail his
brief but gruelling bid to join the fight.
It was the early days of the insurgency, 2012, and his brother, Hussein, had already gone over.
“My
brother … is the one who encouraged me. He would describe what was
going on, how they would bomb and kill children,” Hassan told 7.30.

| WASHINGTON/DUBAI
Iran
sentenced Nizar Zakka, a Lebanese citizen with permanent U.S. residency,
to 10 years in prison and a $4.2 million fine after he was found guilty
of collaborating against the state, his U.S.-based lawyer announced on
Tuesday.
Zakka, an
information technology expert, was invited to Iran by a government
official a year ago, but then disappeared after attending a conference
in Tehran.
State media announced
in November that he had been detained by Iran’s powerful Revolutionary
Guards, and reported that he had ties to U.S. military and intelligence
services.
Zakka’s supporters and his U.S. lawyer Jason Poblete have said that he is innocent of any wrongdoing.
“Nizar
doesn’t recognize this process,” Poblete said in a telephone interview.
“He was there at the invitation of the Iranian government, and he was
pulled over on the side of the road by a bunch of men. He’s been treated
as a hostage ever since.”
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Al Monitor – By Scott Preston a journalist based in Beirut, Lebanon writing about
social and political issues in the Middle East. On Twitter: @scottapreston
According to the World Bank, the restoration of Syria represents an industry estimated to be worth over $200 billion. The figure has some businessmen and policymakers hoping that the anticipated boost in multinational trade will save the Lebanese economy, which has stagnated in recent years.
Two free trade agreements, a common language and historic commercial
ties are expected to give Lebanon a competitive advantage over other
countries that share a border with Syria. “In the last 10 or 15 years
when we started liberalizing the economy, at the time when Syria was
pursuing a protective planning system, Lebanon was pursuing a free trade
economy,” Nabil Sukkar, the managing director of the Syrian Consulting Bureau for Development and Investment, a consultancy specializing in market and investment expertise, told Al-Monitor.
“Lebanon became sort of the Hong Kong of Syria. A lot of business was
done in Lebanon to serve Syria, and I expect that in the post-conflict
reconstruction period, Lebanon will again become the Hong Kong of
Syria,” he said.
SAN FRANCISCO — George and Amal Clooney
are launching an ambitious initiative to educate Syrian refugee
children in Lebanon — and they are getting started with a big injection
of cash and brain power from Google.
The Internet giant’s philanthropic arm Google.org is donating $1 million to the Clooney Foundation for Justice — one of 51 philanthropic efforts from companies around the world announced as President Obama convenes a meeting of world leaders at the United Nations on the refugee crisis. The White House
says corporate commitments for refugee relief total $650 million and
will provide employment opportunities for 220,000 refugees and education
for 80,000 refugees.
With Google’s help, the Clooneys want to
help the more than 250,000 children — about half of the school-age
children in Lebanon — who are not in school. Some have never seen the
inside of a classroom.
“That leads to a horrible outcome a decade from now, a generation from now,” George Clooney
told USA TODAY. “Let’s not lose an entire generation of people because
they happened to be born in the wrong place at the wrong time.”

By Daily Star Lebanon – Labor Minister Sejaan Azzi that, if adopted, would see Syrian refugees in Lebanon repatriated next year. The
plan, which consists of three phases and would commence in January
2017, heavily relies on the ability of international powers – namely
Russia and the United States – to secure sustainable cease-fires and
safe zones that Syrians can return to. “There are safe zones,” Azzi
insisted, “just no political decision or will to maintain the
cease-fire.”
Individuals who were not forcibly displaced will be identified
for the first phase of return. Monetary incentives would also be used
to lure Syrians back – payable upon arrival in Syria. In its first year,
the plan will focus on clearing out refugees residing in border areas
to mitigate terrorist infiltration into Lebanon. Syrians would have the
option to head to a safe zone or another area of their choice.
The
plan also proposes that nongovernmental organizations move to Syria to
facilitate the transition, while funds supplied by donor countries –
which must be committed before the end of this year – would sustain the
two-year plan. All relocation efforts would be overseen by a committee
consisting of government and UN representatives, with the possible
inclusion of other parties. With this plan, Azzi aims to transfer
1,235,000 Syrians back into Syria.
The plan omits Syrians who legally work in Lebanon
and have residency and work permits. A Human Rights Watch report
published in 2016, however, cites humanitarian agencies saying that
strict residency rules applied to Syrians have prevented two-thirds of
them from obtaining legal residency.
REUTERS — Lebanese Prime Minister Tammam Salam told the international community that his country is lacking capacity and funding to further take care of the 1.5 million Syrian refugees it has sheltered on Monday (September 19). Speaking at a sideline event of the 71st session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) on the global […]



