by scmp.com – An Australian media outlet on Thursday
launched an internal investigation into its involvement in a bungled
attempt to take an Australian woman’s children from their Lebanese
father, shortly after the woman and the Australian TV crew were released
on bail from a Beirut jail in a dramatic climax to the international
child custody battle.
Hugh Marks, CEO of Australia’s Channel Nine,
said the company would conduct a review to determine what went wrong and
why the channel failed in its duty to protect its four-person 60 Minutes team, which was in Lebanon to cover Australian mother Sally Faulkner’s bid to get her two young children back.

by
– Mystery surrounds the death of a Briton in Lebanon after he was found
dead under suspicious circumstances in a town near the Syrian border. Lee Harrison, 35, was discovered hanged at a house in Deir al-Ahmar in the eastern Bekaa region.
Police had initially treated it as a suicide, but doctors examining
his body said they believed he had “not commit suicide or died of
natural causes”, suggesting a murder could have been covered up. He was said to have visited a friend on Wednesday in the nearby town of Iaat before travelling on to Deir al-Ahmar. Reports suggested he had been in Lebanon for 10 days before his death.
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English Wednesday, 20 April 2016 Lebanese singer Haifa Wehbe has angered several of her fans after she posted a picture of herself wearing what appears to be headscarf and revealing dress. The singer’s studio-shot picture, that was posted on her Facebook page, shows the singer posing with her hair covered in […]

BEIRUT
(AP) — An Australian mother and TV crew detained in Beirut amid a
botched attempt to take the woman’s two children from their Lebanese
father were released on bail Wednesday, in a dramatic climax to a
high-profile child custody battle that has spanned two continents.
Ali
al-Amin, the father of the two children, aged 3 and 5, announced he has
dropped attempted kidnapping charges against his estranged Australian
wife Sally Faulkner and the Channel 9 TV crew, because he “didn’t want
the kids to think I was keeping their mother in jail.” Lawyers and the judge involved in the case would not comment about whether any compensation was involved. Faulkner
and the four-person TV crew, led by prominent Australian TV journalist
Tara Brown, left a jail in Baabda, a Beirut suburb, in a white van,
escorted by an Australian Embassy car. Once inside the vehicle they
embraced one another.