Khazen

Censoring the play about censorship

Will it pass, or won’t it?, (or in Arabic Bebta3 aw ma bebta3) was the title of an interactive play written and directed by Lucien Bourjeily –“was” being the operative word. The title refers to the question writers (of plays and films) in Lebanon ask themselves when presenting their scripts to the Censorship Bureau at […]

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Al-Rahi Says Officials Responsible for Deadly Bombings over ‘Prolonged Conflict’

Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi held on Sunday officials responsible for the deadly bombings that have recently rocked Beirut’s southern suburbs and the northern city of Tripoli. “Political parties don’t value the heavy price payed by innocent citizens in the three bombings,” al-Rahi said in his sermon at his summer residence in Diman. Politicians “haven’t yet […]

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Military action in Syria would trigger further displacement of civilians, Red Cross warns

 

LOS ANGELES, CA (Catholic Online) – The International Committee of the Red Cross also warned of Syria’s rich cultural heritage being destroyed and archaeological sites looted. An independent humanitarian agency, the ICRC said it was horrified over the news of poison gas attack on August 21 that left hundreds dead. The U.S. says that attack was carried out by President Bashar al-Assad’s regime. The ICRC has urged warring parties in Syria’s two-year civil war to respect the absolute ban on chemical weapons use under international law.

The head of the ICRC’s delegation in Syria, Magne Barth says military action would "likely trigger more displacement and add to humanitarian needs, which are already immense."  Some two million people have already fled Syria. One million of these are children, many younger than five years of age. Human rights groups estimate that 100,000 people have been killed since the war began.

The countryside around Damascus, eastern Aleppo and Deir Ezzor province are the areas that have been the hardest hit in the ongoing civil war. These areas are also suffering from breakdowns of basic services such as water, electricity and garbage collection, the ICRC said in a statement.  "In large parts of rural Damascus for example, people are dying because they lack medical supplies and because there are not enough medical personnel to attend to them," Barth says. "They also go hungry because aid can’t get through to them on a regular basis."

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Cheikh Chafic el Khazen

Cheikh Chafic El Khazen (1905-1977) Cheikh Chafic El Khazen was the son of Barbar Beik El Khazen, (أمير آلاي الجند اللبناني), and Ms. Therese Ghandour Beik El Saad, sister of Habib Bacha el Saad. He was born in 1905 in Ghosta. He was taught the basics in education by a private tutor, and then he […]

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Call It Beyrouth: Beirut With a French Accent

 

By JAY CHESHES  NYTimes traveler – I was finishing an aperitif on the porch at Villa Clara while other guests tossed pétanque balls in the nearby yard. The hotel’s 4-year-old namesake cozied up to her papa, showing off her latest crayon creation. “Oh, c’est magnifique,” said Olivier Gougeon, a French chef and an owner of the property with his wife, Marie-Hélène, an editor of a French-language home décor magazine.

The tiny boutique hotel, its restaurant and guest rooms stocked with Parisian antiques, opened last year around the corner from an Asterix chicken shack and across the street from its neighborhood boucherie. But this was not Marseille or Lyon, it was the eastern edge of Beirut.

“A Frenchman can easily live in Beirut without feeling displaced,” said Mr. Gougeon, who moved to the Lebanese capital from Paris in 1999, as he sipped local wine in Villa Clara’s leafy backyard after cooking a dinner of crispy-skinned duck confit and old-fashioned île flottante.

For more than a century, through all manner of turmoil, including a 15-year civil war and, more recently, ongoing conflict in neighboring Syria, a distinctly French character has pervaded the city. Much of it is the legacy of the French colonial period — the mandate that lasted from 1920 to 1943 — but a cultural kinship goes back much further than that.

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Does Syria Have an Internet Kill Switch

The Internet is a decentralized global network, designed to be resilient and hard to take down. But it’s still possible to black out a certain area, or even an entire country, disconnecting it from the rest of the world.

That’s what happened in Egypt in 2011 and three times in Syria in just the last year.

Were these waves of blackouts the result of technical failures? Or does Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s regime have stronghold over the country’s Internet access? Most likely yes, according to experts.

"This is only possible if the government has complete control over the telecommunications infrastructure," said John Shier, of the security firm Sophos.

Even if Syria doesn’t have complete control, it has a stranglehold over the network’s single point of failure: the state-controlled Syrian Telecommunications Establishment (STE), which maintains "the primary flow of Internet traffic in and out of the country," according to David Belson, the editor of network security firm Akamai’s State of the Internet quarterly report.

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Assad’s 11-Year-Old-Son Suspected Of Daring The US To Attack Syria On Facebook

 

The 11-year-old son of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad is suspected of posting a diatribe on Facebook that calls American soldiers "cowards with new technology" and dared the U.S. to attack, Liam Stack of The New York Times reports.

Stack writes that if the post is a hoax, "it is either a highly elaborate one involving dozens of fake accounts purporting to belong to the children of other regime insiders, or a forgery so impressive that some of those children themselves — including the boy’s cousins — have been fooled."

 
Stack has pictures of the "likes" and comments by several people who appear to be the children and grandchildren of other senior members of Mr. Assad’s government —  including three children of a former deputy defense minister, Assef Shawkat, who was killed in Jule 2012 — before being deleted.

From  The Times:

The accounts said to belong to the children of Mr. Shawkat — one of his sons, Bassel, and two of his daughters, Anisseh and Boushra — appeared to be authentic, according to a Syrian journalist from Damascus who has extensive knowledge of the country’s ruling elite and spoke on condition of anonymity, citing safety concerns. Mr. Shawkat was married to the sister of Bashar al-Assad, making these three children cousins of Mr. Assad’s son Hafez, who is believed to be the author of the Facebook post.

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Suleiman wants cabinet to include Hezbollah

March 14 sources told NOW on Wednesday that President Michel Suleiman has proposed for the upcoming cabinet to include Hezbollah representatives without providing them with veto-power. According to the sources, Suleiman’s proposal would offer eight ministries to the March 14 alliance, eight to the March 8, including Hezbollah representatives, and eight to representatives of the […]

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U.K. Vote Complicates Obama Decision on Syria Military Move

U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron’s failure to win parliamentary approval for military strikes against Syria complicates a decision by U.S. President Barack Obama on how to hold the Syrian government accountable for an alleged chemical weapons attack on civilians. With the House of Commons rejection of a plan from Cameron for use of military force, […]

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ABC News Reopens Beirut Bureau

With all eyes on Syria, ABC News has announced plans to reopen a bureau in Beirut, Lebanon. The network’s first bureau there was opened in 1968 by Peter Jennings and closed in the 1990s. “Beirut was a city Peter Jennings made his own. So it’s fitting – and timely – that ABC News is returning […]

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