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Economy Business Tech Markets Opinion Arts Life Real Estate Search 2210 319 Life Ideas The Saturday Essay The Roots of the Migration Crisis

 

The migration crisis enveloping Europe and much of the Middle East today is one of the worst humanitarian disasters since the 1940s. Millions of desperate people are on the march: Sunni refugees driven out by the barbarity of the Assad regime in Syria, Christians and Yazidis fleeing the pornographic violence of Islamic State, millions more of all faiths and no faith fleeing poverty and oppression without end. Parents are entrusting their lives and the lives of their young children to rickety boats and unscrupulous criminal syndicates along the Mediterranean coast, professionals and business people are giving up their livelihoods and investments, farmers are abandoning their land, and from North Africa to Syria, the sick and the old are on the road, carrying a few treasured belongings on a new trail of tears.

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Lebanon loses its beaches to privatisation

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BEIRUT: While going to the beach is something that most people in the world take for granted, in Lebanon, it has become a luxury.

As expensive hotels and resorts take over most of the country’s coastline, Beirut’s last fishermen’s port is now a symbol for the battle for public spaces as activists and local fishermen fight to save coastal spots from being privatised.

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Middle East investments in real estate surge 64 percent in H1

(MENAFN) The value of Middle East investments in real estate outside the region soared 64 percent to USD11.5 billion in the January-June period, based on a CBRE report, which is a US-American commercial real estate company. Sovereign wealth funds accounted for USD8.3 billion of the spending in the first six months of this year, almost […]

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Germany’s Plan For Migrants Will Reshape Its Future

As migrants and asylum-seekers have streamed into Europe, Germany has accepted vastly more asylum-seekers than any other country in the European Union. But unlike the United States, Germany doesn’t let those seeking asylum live anywhere they want: They are distributed to the country’s 16 states according to a strict formula.

That formula, known as the Königsteiner Key, is supposed to be an equitable way of preventing any state from being overburdened, based on population and tax revenues. But the large number of migrants now on their way may have a bigger demographic impact on some states than others, increasing ethnic and religious diversity in states with histories of being homogenous.

Germany estimates that it will receive about 800,000 asylum-seekers from Syria and other countries in the Middle East and Africa this year, equal to about 1 percent of its current population of about 81 million.

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Lebanon’s ‘You Stink’ campaigners trash crisis plan

 

By Dana Balloutt BEIRUT—Anti government activists in Lebanon were reviewing Thursday a plan by authorities to end a long-running trash-collection crisis that has galvanized public anger over the government’s chronic inability to deliver social services.

Under a plan endorsed by an emergency cabinet meeting late Wednesday, responsibility for trash pickup and disposal will be transferred from the central government to local municipalities, closed landfills will temporarily reopened and new landfills will be opened in rural Lebanon.

 Beirut (AFP) – Organisers of mass protests in Lebanon over trash festering in the streets said Thursday the government’s long-awaited plan to deal with the crisis is too vague and does not meet their demands. Thousands of people have taken to the streets of Beirut in recent weeks to demand an end to long-standing political divisions that have affected even basic public services.

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Mandarin Oriental announces new hotel and residences in Beirut

Vicky Karantzavelou

HONG KONG – Mandarin Oriental Hotel Group has announced that it will manage a new luxury hotel and branded residences currently under development in Beirut. Scheduled to open in 2018, the project provides the Group with a unique opportunity to further extend its reach in the important Middle East market.
The overall development comprises two adjacent buildings located in Beirut’s Central District at the heart of Lebanon’s capital. Mandarin Oriental, Beirut will be situated in the south tower, with 280 well-appointed rooms and suites and 25 serviced apartments. All will be designed in a contemporary style, with exacting attention to detail that is reflective of the Group’s oriental heritage. The north tower will house 103 Residences at Mandarin Oriental, that will provide the most luxurious and desirable living in central Beirut.

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Russian Troops Join Combat in Syria, Say Lebanese Sources

Reuters,

Russian forces have begun participating in military operations in Syria in support of government troops, three Lebanese sources familiar with the political and military situation there said on Wednesday.

The sources, speaking to Reuters on condition they not be identified, gave the most forthright account yet from the region of what the United States fears is a deepening Russian military role in Syria’s civil war, though one of the Lebanese sources said the number of Russians involved so far was small.

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Funding Hampers Lebanon’s Cluster Bomb Clearance Effort

John Owens

Nabir Bzeih’s memory was wiped clean of the moment a decade-old cluster bomb exploded next to him, but he is only too conscious of the consequences.

One of six children wounded in the blast this spring from the bomblet in South Lebanon, it left him with a shattered leg and a new, bleaker reality.

“I used to play and go on walks and play football and go to the beach, but now I cannot anymore,” said the 13-year-old, whose brother was also injured, and who has not been to school since the incident. “My friends and I used to walk around together, but we can’t anymore. Everyone can come and go, but my brother and I can’t.”

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Lebanese government agrees plan to resolve rubbish crisis amid public anger

Lebanon’s Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil (2nd L) stands near Head of Lebanon’s Hezbollah’s parliamentary bloc Mohamed Raad (3rdL) and leader of the Marada movement Suleiman Franjieh (2nd R)

Several thousand demonstrators returned to the streets of Beirut on Wednesday, September 9, for the latest “You Stink” protest against an ongoing trash crisis in the Lebanese capital as politicians assembled to discuss the situation. The protest movement was triggered by the government’s inaction in the face of a mounting garbage collection crisis, which demonstrators say is emblematic of endemic corruption and poor public services in the nation.

Lebanese women have their photograph taken in front barbed wire near the main Lebanese government building, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2015. Lebanon’s prime minister says he hopes that political talks between senior politicians will help end government paralysis that has sparked angry street protests. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

Lebanese political leaders, stand around a round table as they listen to the Lebanese national anthem, during the opening session of the National Dialogue, in the Parliament building, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2015. Lebanon’s prime minister Tammam Salam says he hopes that political talks between senior politicians will help end government paralysis that has sparked angry street protests. Salam also called for a Cabinet meeting later Wednesday to discuss the issue of garbage collection. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Lebanese Minister of the Environment Mohammad Machnouk speaks to the media upon his arrival at the government palace to attend an emergency cabinet session in downtown Beirut, Lebanon September 9, 2015. Lebanese security services locked down central Beirut on Wednesday as ministers and MPs met to discuss ways out of a political crisis that has paralysed government and fueled a wave of street protests. Ministers, but not a full cabinet, then headed for the government headquarters nearby, the state news agency said, for an emergency cabinet session Prime Minister Tammam Salam had called for earlier in the day. REUTERS/Mohamed Azaki

Lebanese anti-government protesters shout slogans as they hold their national flags, during a protest against the on-going trash crisis and government corruption, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2015. Lebanon’s prime minister says he hopes that political talks between senior politicians will help end government paralysis that has sparked angry street protests. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

By John Davison

BEIRUT (Reuters) – Lebanon‘s government agreed a plan to resolve a waste disposal crisis late on Wednesday, ending a dispute that has caused piles of rubbish to fester on Beirut’s streets and triggered a wave of popular protests.

The long-term plan, agreed on during an emergency cabinet meeting gives municipalities a main role in treating local wastewith expert help and supervision, and also assigns two landfills in Akkar and in Masnaa area near the border with Syria. "We see that this plan meets the conditions.. Tonight the cabinet agreed on an environmental solution path that is sustainable and safe," Agriculture Minister Akram Shehayeb, who led the team to draft the plan, told reporters after the cabinet meeting.

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