LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
March 26/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani

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Bible Quotations For today
Nathanael To Jesus: ‘Rabbi, you are the Son of God!
John 01/47-51: “When Jesus saw Nathanael coming towards him, he said of him, ‘Here is truly an Israelite in whom there is no deceit!’ Nathanael asked him, ‘Where did you come to know me?’ Jesus answered, ‘I saw you under the fig tree before Philip called you. ’Nathanael replied, ‘Rabbi, you are the Son of God! You are the King of Israel!’Jesus answered, ‘Do you believe because I told you that I saw you under the fig tree? You will see greater things than these.’And he said to him, ‘Very truly, I tell you, you will see heaven opened and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man.’”

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on March 25-26/2020
Picture Enclosed with this news bulletin: Our Lady of Lebanon Statue at Harissa Shrine lit with the colors of the Lebanese flag
Our Lady of Lebanon: Pray & Interced For Lebanon & The Lebanese
Lebanon's Ministry of Health confirms new Coronavirus cases in Lebanon
Hasan: Rise in Coronavirus Cases Not Catastrophic, Quarantine is Inevitable
Lebanon's Health Ministry holds quick tender to purchase 70 ventilators for government hospitals
UNIFIL spokesperson Andrea Tenenti: Our measures are strict, and time is not right for speculations or increasing concerns
Aoun on Annunciation Day: Stay Home and Pray
Berri, Diab Discuss Repatriation of Lebanese from Europe, Africa
Diab Marks Annunciation Day, Prays for Lebanon's Salvation
Lebanon's Higher Defense Council to Convene Thursday
Spanish Minister to Hitti: We asked for a European aid program for the southern Mediterranean countries, specifically Lebanon
Hitti: We dedicated a hotline to our embassies abroad to help the stranded Lebanese, We did not reject any Iranian assistance
Report: Lebanon's Parliament to Hold Online Legislative Meetings
Two Guards of MP Sami Gemayel's House Have Coronavirus
Fahmi greets the Lebanese on Annunciation Day
Moucharafieh meets with Health Committee: We seek to provide sustainable aids
Geagea, Fahmy discuss assassination of Antoine al-Hayek
Calls to Declare State of Emergency in Lebanon Spark Political Disputes/Khalil Fleihan and Asharq Al-Awsat/March 25/ 2020
Anger in Lebanon as insolvent banks donate $6 million for coronavirus/
Jacob Boswall, Al Arabiya English/March 25/2020
Lebanese taxi driver burns car after being fined in coronavirus lockdown/Emily Lewis, Al Arabiya English/March 25/2020
Jumblatt: Chloroquine challenges the monopoly of drug groups and their profits
Survivors of Lebanon, World Conflicts Offer Perspective amid Pandemic/Associated Press/Naharnet/March 25/2020
Lebanon: coronavirus is showing corrupt elites the scale of the damage they have caused/Michael Young/The National/March 25/2020
Hezbollah and Its Friends/Hazem Saghieh/Asharq Al Awsat/March 25/2020

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on March 25-26/2020
Pope Francis calls Christians to prayer for end to coronavirus pandemic/Catholic Herald/March 25, 2020
Canadian FM, Minister Champagne participates in G7 Foreign Ministers’ Meeting
Family of ex-FBI agent who disappeared in Iran say they believe he is dead
Britain’s Prince Charles tests positive for coronavirus
France withdraws its troops from Iraq due to the coronavirus pandemic
Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulchre closed due to coronavirus outbreak
U.N. Calls for Rolling Back Sanctions to Battle Pandemic/Colum Lynch/FP/March 25/2020
Former Italian FM slams gov’t for permitting Iran Air flights to land/Benjamin Weinthal/FDD/March 25/2020
UN Council Holds First Video Conference During Virus Crisis
Denmark Charges Norwegian with Working with Iran in Assassination Plot
Fire at Iran's Abadan Petrochemicals Plant
US Plans in Iraq Heighten Shiite Fears over Approval of Zurfi Govt.
PLO Official: Israel Controls 95% of Jordan Valley
Israel Takes New Measures Against Virus as Cases Rise
Netanyahu Ally Resigns as Knesset Speaker
Researchers to Study Psychological Toll of Lockdown
Fear of Coronavirus Stalks Camps in Syria’s Idlib
Iraq's Poor Continue to Work Despite Curfew, Health Risks
Coronavirus Deaths Top 20,000 Worldwide, Mostly in Europe
U.S. Coronavirus Cases Cross 60,000, 827 Dead
New York Governor Says Social Distancing Slowing Coronavirus
Italy's Slowing Infections Boost Case for Lockdowns

Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on March 25-26/2020
America’s free market ideals fade fast/John Defterios/Arab News/March 25/2020
Is Turkey planning a new invasion of eastern Syria? – analysis/Seth Frantzman/Jerusalem Post/March 25/2020
Turkey and Coronavirus: Devout Muslims Will Defeat the “Jewish Plot”/Burak Bekdil/BESA/March 24, 2020
Muslim Extremists Exploit Coronavirus to Promote Terrorism, Hate; and Other Muslims that Need the World's Help/Bassam Tawil/Gatestone Institute/March 25, 2020
Don't lift Iran sanctions, not even for the coronavirus/Michael Rubin/Washington Examinar/March 25/2020
Iran refuses to release Christian prisoners amid coronavirus outbreak while EU sends millions in aid/Benjamin Weinthal/FDD/March 25/2020
North Korea Conducts Third Projectile Launch in 2020/David Maxwell/Mathew Ha/FDD/March 25/2020

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on March 25-26/2020
Picture Enclosed: Our Lady of Lebanon Statue at Harissa Shrine lit with the colors of the Lebanese flag
Our Lady of Lebanon: Pray & Interced For Lebanon & The Lebanese
LCCC/March 25/2020
On the occasion of the Annunciation Day, the statue of Virgin Mary in the shrine of Our Lady of Lebanon - Harissa was lit, with the colors of the Lebanese flag, on the intentions of Lebanon and the healing of all those sick with the Corona virus. Father Fadi delivered a homely of repenting in which he asked The Virgin Mary, who rises like a cedar on this hill, to intercede and supplicate with her son Jesus, as she did in the wedding of Cana of Galilee to save your children in Lebanon, for today we are in a feast of your gospel. He added, we are living a painful event and the danger of a pandemic rampant in the world and in Lebanon, we are waiting for you to ask your son Jesus to save us. We put our country and people in your heart Our Mother Virgin Mary, and we pray with you to your son Jesus to heal our sick people who have been afflicted by the epidemic, and to touch our country and its people. "

Lebanon's Ministry of Health confirms new Coronavirus cases in Lebanon
NNA/March 25/2020
The Ministry of Public Health announced, in a statement on Wednesday, that "twenty-nine new laboratory-confirmed cases infected with the novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) have been registered, including the cases diagnosed at the Rafic Hariri Governmental Hospital, and those reported from other university hospitals accredited by the Ministry." "The total number of confirmed Corona patients until today, March 25, has reached 333 cases," the Ministry's statement added. “These figures indicate the start of the outbreak phase of the disease, and accordingly the Ministry emphasizes the crucial need to implement of all preventive measures,” the statement underlined. The Health Ministry, thus, reminded all citizens to strictly remain at home, stressing that "this has become a moral individual and social responsibility and the duty of each and every citizen, for any negligence in this regards will expose citizens to legal liability."

Lebanese Coronavirus Patient Dies as Four Recover
Naharnet/March 25/2020
A Lebanese coronavirus patient died on Wednesday as four others recovered, the state-run Rafik Hariri University Hospital announced.
The fatality raises the country’s death toll from the pandemic to six. Twenty patients have recovered until the moment according to a statement issued by RHUH. All the other patients at the hospital are in stable condition except for three who are critical, the hospital added.
MTV meanwhile identified the sixth fatality as a 46-year-old man who owns a shop in Bourj Hammoud, saying he had several health problems prior to his infection with coronavirus. A statement issued at noon by the Health Ministry said the country’s virus cases had surged to 333 after the confirmation of 29 cases over a period of 24 hours.

Hasan: Rise in Coronavirus Cases Not Catastrophic, Quarantine is Inevitable
Naharnet/March 25/2020
Health Minister Hamad Hasan noted on Wednesday that home quarantine is inevitable in order to stop the spread of coronavirus, adding that the government could consider a lockdown extension. In a statement he made after the introduction of coronavirus PCR examination device to the Baalbek Governmental Hospital, he assured that an increase in the number of people detected with coronavirus is normal until the quarantine ends. “The rise in the number of coronavirus cases is normal, it is not catastrophic. We will receive cases according to the available capabilities and our plan is set with a very realistic level,” he assured. However, the Minister stressed that “home quarantine is inevitable. It is the first line of defense and without it all other things will fall apart.”The two-week general mobilization state announced by the government to confront the spread of the virus ends on March 29th, “the government collectively takes a decision to extend it based on field data and based on the report of the Ministry of Health after calculating the number of cases,” concluded Hasan. President Michel Aoun marked Annunciation Day on Wednesday calling on the Lebanese people to stay safe at home and raise prayers so that Lebanon is able to overcome the spread of the novel coronavirus. “Make the Annunciation Day an occasion for prayer with the aim of consolidating our national unity after it was proven to all that our national unity is our shield in distress and hardship,” said Aoun. He pointed out that "this initiative is a global Muslim-Christian message that we are raising from Lebanon, in order to ward off the threat of the deadly coronavirus (COVID-19) epidemic, so that the life cycle will return to normal soon.”The President also urged the Lebanese to abide by home quarantine and not to leave home to contain its outbreak.
Lebanon has so far confirmed 304 coronavirus cases among them four deaths and eight recoveries. It has declared a so-called state of general mobilization in bid to limit the spread of the virus.

Lebanon's Health Ministry holds quick tender to purchase 70 ventilators for government hospitals
NNA/March 25/2020
The Ministry of Public Health announced, on Wednesday, that it is inviting tender quotations for the first phase (short term) of the process of securing the necessary medical equipment to combat the emerging corona virus. In this context, the Ministry asked all those interested to submit immediate bid offers for seventy artificial respiration apparatuses [ventilators] by next Tuesday afternoon, March 31, 2020 at the latest. For more information, the Ministry asked bidding sides to visit its website, www.moph.gov.lb, or to send their inquiries to the following e-mail address: LHR.PROC@moph.gov.lb. Offers are to be sent to the email: LHR.COVID19@gmail.com.

UNIFIL spokesperson Andrea Tenenti: Our measures are strict, and time is not right for speculations or increasing concerns
NNA/March 25/2020
UNIFIL spokesperson Andrea Tenenti told National News Agency correspondent in Tyre, on Wednesday, that “UNIFIL is implementing strict measures in dealing with the emerging Corona virus disease,” highlighting the need “to act responsibly so we can fight against the virus together.”This came in response to a question over contradictory reports in the Lebanese media regarding UNIFIL's actions in dealing with the Corona virus. Tenenti said: “Since the Corona virus outbreak began in Lebanon, UNIFIL has directed its efforts to prevent any spread of the highly contagious disease among its military and civilian personnel, as well as host communities. We have taken all necessary precautions. All these measures were taken in close coordination with the relevant Lebanese authorities and following strict, and sometimes stricter, policies and guidelines issued by the Lebanese authorities and the World Health Organization.”He added: "With regard to the United Nations peacekeeper whose results were positive, the mission was transparent from the beginning, and carried out all the needed medical procedures,” noting that the test results of all peacekeepers who were in contact with the patient came out negative. Tenenti stressed that "the recent exchanges taking place were not the result of a new decision, but rather are continuous exchange operations that started prior to the emerging circumstances that we are now facing.”“The precautionary measures that we have taken apply to all incoming individuals, both military and civilian,” he added. “All UNIFIL personnel returning from vacation or from abroad are placed in a two-week preventive quarantine,” Tenenti asserted.
He also affirmed that "despite the new situation, UNIFIL continues to carry out all its activities in its area of operations and along the Blue Line and at sea, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. These activities are coordinated with the Lebanese Armed Forces." "UNIFIL also reviewed the roles of all its civilian staff and implemented alternative measures, including home-based work. Additionally, and as a precaution, we measure the temperature of everyone entering our bases, including UNIFIL personnel, whether military or civilian," the UNIFIL spokesperson reassured. Tenenti concluded by emphasizing that “we all have very important responsibilities in terms of transmitting information in a realistic and transparent manner. The time is not appropriate for speculations or for increasing concerns, but to act responsibly so we can fight against the Corona virus together.”

Aoun on Annunciation Day: Stay Home and Pray
Naharnet/March 25/2020
President Michel Aoun marked Annunciation Day on Wednesday calling on the Lebanese people to stay safe at home and raise prayers so that Lebanon is able to overcome the spread of the novel coronavirus. “Make the Annunciation Day an occasion for prayer with the aim of consolidating our national unity after it was proven to all that our national unity is our shield in distress and hardship,” said Aoun. He pointed out that "this initiative is a global Muslim-Christian message that we are raising from Lebanon, in order to ward off the threat of the deadly coronavirus (COVID-19) epidemic, so that the life cycle will return to normal soon.” The President also urged the Lebanese to abide by home quarantine and not to leave home to contain its outbreak. Lebanon has so far confirmed 304 coronavirus cases among them four deaths and eight recoveries.
It has declared a so-called state of general mobilization in bid to limit the spread of the virus.

Berri, Diab Discuss Repatriation of Lebanese from Europe, Africa

Naharnet/March 25/2020
Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri and Prime Minister Hassan Diab held talks Wednesday in Ain el-Tineh that focused on the issue of repatriating some Lebanese citizens from Europe and Africa over the coronavirus crisis. In this regard, Berri stressed that “the government must ensure all the requirements of care and protection for Lebanese expats as well as residents in terms of everything related to their health, social and financial security, wherever they may be.”The government “must exert utmost effort to return them to their country as soon as possible,” the Speaker urged. Diab for his part expressed willingness for cooperation, according to Berri’s press office, noting that he will seek technical advice from the country’s national anti-coronavirus committee on the issue of the stranded expats. “The meeting was also an opportunity to evaluate the measures that have been taken by the government and means to activate them and be stricter in implementing them at the national level in order to limit the threats of the pandemic,” the press office added. The two leaders also discussed the general situations, especially the financial and economic ones.

Diab Marks Annunciation Day, Prays for Lebanon's Salvation

Naharnet/March 25/2020
Prime Minister Hassan Diab marked Annunciation Day on Wednesday praying that Lebanon overcomes its crises as the country confronts the coronavirus pandemic. In a tweet, Diab said : “All hope is that the Feast of Annunciation will be a near rescue for Lebanon from its crises, and the nightmare of coronavirus pandemic be lifted with the help of the Lebanese themselves…We pray to the Lord Almighty to grant us a message of goodness.”Lebanon has so far confirmed 304 coronavirus cases among them four deaths and eight recoveries. It has declared a so-called state of general mobilization in bid to limit the spread of the virus.

Lebanon's Higher Defense Council to Convene Thursday
Naharnet/March 25/2020
The Higher Defense Council will convene Thursday at 10:00 am at the Baabda Palace, the National News Agency said. The meeting will be presided by President Michel Aoun, at his invitation, and attended by Prime Minister Hassan Diab, the permanent members and other officials. The Council had recommended the declaration of general mobilization over the coronavirus crisis, a recommendation that was endorsed by the government in the fight against the pandemic. The government has also ordered a lockdown until March 29 that includes the closure of all non-essential public and private institutions and the country’s ports of entry.

Spanish Minister to Hitti: We asked for a European aid program for the southern Mediterranean countries, specifically Lebanon
NNA/March 25/2020
Minister of Foreign Affairs and Emigrants, Nassif Hitti, was informed during a call on Wednesday with the Spanish Minister for Foreign Affairs, European Union and Cooperation, Arancha González Laya, that the government of Spain has asked the European Union Commissioner for Neighborhood Policy, Olivér Várhelyi, who is concerned with the countries of the southern Mediterranean, to develop a program that includes various aids to neighboring countries, specifically Lebanon. The Spanish Minister expressed the importance of supporting Lebanon at this stage, while Minister Hitti thanked Spain for this initiative.
The phone call was also a chance to explore ways to confront the threat of the spread of the Corona epidemic and what countries are doing, as well as the current prevailing situation in Europe. In the same connection, Hitti also contacted today Commissioner Várhelyi to thank him and discuss the material and qualitative assistance that the European Union can provide to Lebanon in this delicate circumstance. Both men agreed that Minister Hitti would provide Várhelyi tomorrow with a list of priorities that Lebanon needs, so that the EU Commissioner can, in turn, prepare a list of what the European Union can extend to Lebanon within the framework of the neighborhood policy and the bilateral cooperation between Lebanon and the European Union.

Hitti: We dedicated a hotline to our embassies abroad to help the stranded Lebanese, We did not reject any Iranian assistance
NNA/March 25/2020
Foreign Affairs and Emigrants Minister, Nassif Hitti, confirmed in an interview with "Lebanon TV" on Wednesday, that he is conducting ongoing contacts to ensure the necessary and urgent economic and social assistance for all Lebanese citizens.
In this context, Hitti disclosed that a hotline has been established with Lebanon’s embassies aboard to help all stranded Lebanese, adding that information is also available on the website of the embassies that are in contact with associations, clubs and communities to assist the Lebanese abroad. “The work of our embassies with friendly countries is not incompatible with the work of the World Health Organization,” he explained. “We have contacted governments and communities in all countries to help the Lebanese abroad and provide them with all possible assistance," added Hitti.
“I understand the feelings of every Lebanese citizen outside Lebanon who wants to return and is unable to do so, because the airports are closed due to the risk of movement during this health crisis,” the Foreign Minister went on. “We appeal to our people in Lebanon and abroad to stay home and not to go out unless absolutely necessary,” he reiterated.
“We are working with the Ministry of Information to provide all reassurance to the Lebanese, whether inside or outside Lebanon, and to ensure their protection in light of the Corona virus outbreak,” the Minister continued to emphasize. “We want the Lebanese who are currently abroad to return under safe health circumstances and according to objective conditions, most prominently the availability of the PCR test, so that we would be able to subject them to it and confirm that they do not have the virus, and hence, ensure their safe entry into Lebanon and their home quarantine,” Hitti said.
“Ever since the beginning of the crisis, I have met and contacted all ambassadors and representatives of international organizations accredited in Lebanon to urge them to provide assistance to Lebanon,” the Minister disclosed. “Several countries have responded to our calls, including France, which responded to my request when I visited it before the crisis erupted, and Britain and China, which will send second aids soon. We count on friendly countries, international organizations and the United Nations in particular. We spare no effort to hold contacts, and we thank in advance the countries that want to help," Hitti maintained. In response to a question about the Iranian Embassy’s willingness to assist Lebanon and the claims that the Foreign Ministry has refused this help, Hitti said: “Every embassy whose country wishes to contribute is welcome, and we do not politicize this matter. Yet, there are countries that need help, and those who claim that the Foreign Ministry has turned down help from Iran have to prove their allegations with evidence.” Commending the Ministry of Health for all its efforts, Hitti said: "We work in the government as a team of solidarity and integration on more than one front, and many ambassadors have praised our approach….We were the first to deal with the emerging corona virus and we are working to present a project with a different economic vision to get us out of the crisis.” He also stressed the need for the Foreign Ministry to move forward in the interest of the nation, noting that there are aids from countries that will accompany the government’s economic plan. “During the storm of corona and in the face of the economic challenges, we must be join together hand-in-hand,” concluded Hitti.

Report: Lebanon's Parliament to Hold Online Legislative Meetings
Naharnet/March 25/2020
Speaker Nabih Berri has said that the Parliament will be holding online legislative and supervisory meetings as the nation witnesses a two week lockdown over coronavirus fears, al-Joumhouria daily reported on Wednesday. The daily quoted the Speaker as saying that “the meetings will be held through video conferencing technology and through specialized institutions, which saves time and cost.”The Information Technology team of the official Parliament website communicated with MP Nadim Gemayel, in his capacity as Chairman of the Information and Technology Committee, initiating work on organizing an electronic application program for the purpose, added the daily.

Two Guards of MP Sami Gemayel's House Have Coronavirus
Naharnet/March 25/2020
Two guards of the house of Kataeb Party chief MP Sami Gemayel have been infected with the COVID-19 coronavirus, the party said on Wednesday. Noting that the two guards belong to the Internal Security Forces, Kataeb said one of them contracted the virus from his sister, who is a nurse at the Notre Dame des Secours hospital in Jbeil, before infecting his colleague. “They are both being quarantined at the Rafik Hariri University Hospital,” the party added. “Consequently, all the necessary measures to prevent infections among the security detail were taken,” Kataeb went on to say, noting that everyone tested negative for coronavirus.“Gemayel and all his family members are in good health and he is staying home where he is working in line with the requirements of the current situation,” the party added.

Fahmi greets the Lebanese on Annunciation Day
NNA/March 25/2020
"Our Lady has her place in the Bible and the Holy Qur’an, and has made the rapprochement between Christianity and Islam in more than one event in history," Interior Minister Mohammed Fahmi, said Wednesday via his Twitter account. He added: "On this blessed day, we pray that Lebanon and the whole world will overcome this ordeal.

Moucharafieh meets with Health Committee: We seek to provide sustainable aids
NNA/March 25/2020
Minister of Social Affairs, Ramzi Moucharifieh, met today at his Ministry office with the members of the Public Health, Labor and Social Affairs Committee, headed by MP Assem Araji, with social and health developments topping their discussions. After the meeting, Araji said: "We visited the Minister of Social Affairs today to discuss developments. We learned about the Social Ministry's assistance plan in coordination with other ministries, in light of the difficult circumstances we are going through, especially since there are many workers who have become jobless and part of them are receiving half their salaries, in addition to the daily-workers who are now without income. The living conditions have become hard for a large number of Lebanese, and the poverty rate has increased significantly."Araji indicated that Minister Moucharaieh has put a quick response plan into effect in wake of the emerging Coronavirus disease, which includes parcels of food items and sterilizers, compiled in cooperation with the Industrialists Association and the Food Bank, to be distributed to 100 thousand families, costing the state 18 billion Lebanese pounds. He also revealed that there will be a set plan to extend monetary deadlines, due to the inability of citizens to pay their taxes or loans. As for the displaced Syrians, Araji reported that Minister Moucharafieh has agreed with the UNHCR to set up tents for isolation, adding that work is underway to contract with private hospitals to receive Corona patients when needed, in addition to arranging with UNRWA to take care of Palestinian refugee affairs. The MP reiterated his appreciation to the Minister of Social Affairs, "who is exerting all efforts with the various ministries concerned, to pass this stage."Minister Moucharafieh, in turn, hoped that "the crisis will not be for long," stressing that "the government seeks to provide sustainable aid to citizens, not only for a short period of time, in cooperation with the Parliament Council to alleviate the burdens off all citizens."

Geagea, Fahmy discuss assassination of Antoine al-Hayek
NNA/March 25/2020
The Press Office of Lebanese Forces Party Head, Samir Geagea, announced in a statement on Wednesday, that “Geagea contacted this morning Interior and Municipalities Minister, Brigadier General Mohamad Fahmy, with whom he discussed the assassination of Antoine Al-Hayek last Sunday, whereby Fahmy assured Geagea that he has accorded this crime the utmost attention and follow-up from the start, in order to unveil its circumstances.”In turn, Geagea appealed to the Interior Minister to personally follow-up on this issue due to its sensitivity and its impact on coexistence between the Lebanese in general, and in the South in particular.

Calls to Declare State of Emergency in Lebanon Spark Political Disputes
Khalil Fleihan and Asharq Al-Awsat/March 25/ 2020
Political tensions emerged in Lebanon amid criticism by some party leaders over how the government has responded to the coronavirus outbreak, driving many officials to call on authorities to declare a state of emergency.
Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri advocates the need to impose a state of emergency and had pressed Prime Minister Hassan Diab to announce it. However, Diab refused. Instead, his cabinet declared a general mobilization, including the increase of army patrols, as part of its containment measures.
Contacted by Asharq Al-Awsat, sources from the government refused to comment in what was interpreted as Diab’s refusal to become embroiled in an open dispute with Berri. They instead implied that the constitution does not necessitate declaring a state of emergency to confront health crises, no matter how severe they are. Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblatt and member of the parliamentary health committee MP Qassem Araji had also called for a state of emergency.
Constitutional experts explained that major differences exist between a state of emergency and general mobilization. They said that the national defense law stipulates that the government may declare general mobilization when a threat is endangering the population.
“A state of emergency is completely different from a general mobilization mainly because it has a military nature,” former Interior Minister Ziad Baroud told Asharq Al-Awsat. A state of emergency ultimately means that control of the country would be transferred to the army.
On Monday, demands to declare a state of emergency increased amid President Michel Aoun’s continued refusal. He denied claims that his rejection is driven by political reasons, after some media said he does not want to hand over control of the country to the army.
A statement from the presidency said such allegations were aimed at driving a wedge between the president and military. The government’s decision to announce general mobilization was based on the Higher Defense Council recommendations and an objective assessment of the situation in Lebanon amid the virus outbreak. Opposition sources said that the Army Command has never proposed, directly or indirectly, the issue of the state of emergency. “The army is not part of the political dispute in the country,” they said.
The sources warned that the general mobilization contributed to the return of the phenomenon of regions adopting their own security measures whereby some municipalities set up checkpoints to control the movement of citizens, prompting the army to interfere and remove them.
Jumblatt wrote Tuesday on his twitter account: “Some municipalities have been blocking roads and setting up barriers, which is a form of self-security; however, this may cause many problems. The best solution is for the security forces and Lebanese army to take over these roads and implement the necessary measures against those who violate the curfew.”He also reiterated calls for declaring a state of emergency and ensuring the basic needs of citizens.

Anger in Lebanon as insolvent banks donate $6 million for coronavirus
Jacob Boswall, Al Arabiya English/March 25/2020
The Association of Banks in Lebanon’s decision to donate $6 million to government hospitals battling coronavirus has drawn criticism from angry depositors. “[ABL Chairman] Salim Sfeir is donating to the government – but from where?” one Twitter user demanded in Arabic.“One minute he is donating our money and the next he has used Corona as an advert for his poisoned [banking] sector,” another observed. Another Arabic user likened the ABL’s gesture to “giving an HIV patient a cup of camomile tea.”The money from the ABL will purchase 120 respirators for use exclusively on corona patients across Lebanon, according to a statement from Sfeir’s office. “Our initiative is a national obligation. It is only the beginning and will be followed by many more in the upcoming days,” Sfeir said in a press conference announcing the donation. He added that the banking sector will continue to be on the front line of the fight against coronavirus.
Dr Naji Aoun, an Infectious Control Physician at Clemenceau Medical Centre, believes that the ABL’s donation would only make a difference if cheap treatment and testing becomes available soon. “We don’t need money in private hospitals. What we need is the support of our government to open airspace and shipping routes to import medication and rapid testing kits.”Rapid testing kits, which are cheap and quick to deploy, are not currently approved by Lebanon’s Health Ministry. This has left many importers unable to bring much-needed supplies such as testing kits into the country, Dr Aoun explained.
Healthcare struggling but capital controls unpopular. The ABL’s donation is desperately needed. Coronavirus cases in Lebanon have almost doubled in the last four days, bringing the total to just over 300. Human Rights Watch warned Tuesday that the country’s financial and economic crisis has led to a shortage of medical supplies, pointing out that the government owes private hospitals around $1.3 billion in unpaid bills. But the angry public response was hardly surprising at a time when public trust in the Lebanese banking sector couldn’t be lower. The ABL fell foul of Lebanese citizens last year after banks imposed informal capital controls on depositors in response to Lebanon’s ongoing economic crisis. Many depositors feel that the capital controls were imposed unfairly, allowing those with influence to send their money abroad when banks were supposedly closed. Estimates of the illegal capital flight range from $800 million to $11 billion. Many prominent Lebanese politicians have also made donations in recent days including Druze leader Walid Joumblatt. Last weekend, Joumblatt pledged $500,000 to Rafiq Hariri Hospital - the largest public hospital in Lebanon and the only one to offer free testing for coronavirus – and $100,000 to the Lebanese Red Cross. “With the outbreak of the epidemic, new measures must be taken, including a national fund to look after hundreds of thousands who have lost their jobs,” Joumblatt added during an appearance on a local TV show.

Lebanese taxi driver burns car after being fined in coronavirus lockdown
Emily Lewis, Al Arabiya English/March 25/2020
A Lebanese taxi driver set his car alight on the main road leading to Beirut’s airport Tuesday after being fined by police for not complying with measures to combat the spread of the novel coronavirus.
Videos that circulated on social media showed a white Renault vehicle engulfed in flames while Lebanese Army soldiers tried to hold back the driver, who was shouting in clear distress. Over the weekend, Lebanon’s military and security forces stepped up their crackdown on members of the public violating orders to remain at home except in cases of “extreme necessity” to curb the COVID-19 coronavirus. The total number of coronavirus cases in Lebanon rose to 304 Tuesday, according to the Health Ministry. Four people have died from the disease so far. The ramped-up measures included setting up checkpoints on key roads, army patrols touring the streets and Internal Security Forces handing out hundreds of tickets every day.
Taxi drivers condemn government fines
Taxis travelling with more than two passengers are subject to fines of upwards of 50,000 Lebanese lira. A local committee for public transport drivers, including taxi drivers, issued a statement Tuesday condemning the fines, as they are being imposed on people who take key workers such as nurses and bakers to and from their jobs. “The committee calls on the government to find rapid alternative solutions to ensure drivers have a minimum decent standard of living in these difficult circumstances,” the statement added. Taxi drivers are among the thousands of workers in Lebanon who rely on day-to-day earnings and do not have a social safety net to fall back on. According to a 2019 International Labour Organization survey, these informal workers make up around 55 percent of Lebanon’s workforce. Despite the government-imposed lockdown and the significant risk of contracting the coronavirus, many of these people continue to go out to work simply to earn enough money to provide for their families. A GoFundMe page was set up just hours after the incident to raise $10,000 to enable the taxi driver to buy another car and “get back the source of his income.”

Jumblatt: Chloroquine challenges the monopoly of drug groups and their profits
NNA/March 25/2020
Progressive Socialist Party Chief, Walid Jumblatt, wrote a French tweet today on the Coronavirus treatment, which was circulated by the Party, translated as follows: "One of the reasons for the controversy triggered by Professor Didier Raoul over the use of Chloroquine to combat the Corona virus, is that it challenges the monopoly of large drug groups and their enormous profits."PSP indicated that Raoul is a French physician who runs the University Hospital Institute in Marseille, and who has revealed that Chloroquine treatment proved to be effective in reducing the proliferation of four types of the emerging Coronavirus epidemic in the patient's cells.

Survivors of Lebanon, World Conflicts Offer Perspective amid Pandemic
Associated Press/Naharnet/March 25/2020
As Western countries reeling from the coronavirus pandemic awaken to a new reality of economic collapse, overwhelmed hospitals, grounded flights and home confinement, it's tempting to think the end of days is at hand.
But for millions across the Middle East and in conflict zones farther afield, much of this is grimly familiar. The survivors of recent wars, too often dismissed as the pitiable victims of failed states, can offer hard-earned wisdom in times like these.
The comparisons with wartime lockdowns only go so far, as those who have lived through both readily acknowledge.
Hanaa al-Yemen, a 55-year-old mother of three in Lebanon's port city of Sidon, lived through her country's 1975-1990 civil war and various other bouts of violence, including the 2006 war between Israel and the Hizbullah group.
But she said the coronavirus pandemic, and the countrywide lockdown imposed to contain it, is like nothing she's ever experienced.
“We used to be so scared of the warplanes and the random shelling, but we could still go out at times and work,” she said. “Today there is an enemy and a danger that we don’t know, we can’t see or touch it, and it can strike us or a member of our family at any time.”
Few have more experience with lockdowns and closures than the Palestinians. During the uprising known as the Second Intifada in the early 2000s, Israel shut down parts of the occupied West Bank and Gaza for weeks on end, using checkpoints and curfews to try to quash it.
In 2002, Israel imposed an around-the-clock curfew in Bethlehem for weeks as troops battled Palestinian militants holed up in the Church of the Nativity, built on the site revered by Christians as Jesus' birthplace.
Jamal Shihadeh remembers being stuck in his home for 25 days before he slipped out and fled to a nearby Jewish settlement in order to work. He ended up sleeping in the factory until the closures were lifted.
Now he is stuck at home again. Israel and the Palestinian Authority sealed off Bethlehem and severely restricted movement after several residents and tourists tested positive for the coronavirus.
The virus causes only mild symptoms in most patients, who recover in a matter of weeks. But it is highly contagious and can cause severe illness, including pneumonia, particularly in older patients or those with underlying health problems. “A virus outbreak is much more serious than an Israeli invasion," Shihadeh said. "You can stay away from the soldiers, but I’m not sure you can stay away from a virus.” Now he and his wife and sons, who have been stuck at home since March 5, live much the same way he did in 2002. They watch the news and Arab soap operas on TV, they play cards and socialize, and they wait for the situation to improve.
‘OTHER THINGS WERE NOT IMPORTANT’
The Gaza Strip has been under an Israeli and Egyptian blockade since the Islamic militant group Hamas seized power in 2007. Travel in or out is heavily restricted, and many Palestinians were trapped in their homes for days or weeks at a time during the three wars Hamas has fought with Israel.
During the 2008-2009 war, Mohammed al-Attar awoke one morning to the sound of tanks, aircraft and gunfire. By then, much of his extended family had gathered on the ground floor, with about 80 people sleeping in the living room, kitchen and other areas away from outer walls or windows. The family had stocked up on mattresses and basic goods, but after five days they raised white flags and were evacuated to a school that had been turned into a shelter.
“We were just praying for it to stop and that we would stay alive," he said. "Other things were not important.”
Gaza has only reported two coronavirus cases, but there are fears that even a small outbreak could overwhelm its health care system. There are only about 60 ventilators in the territory of 2 million, and most of the breathing machines are already in use by patients with other ailments.
Long before the pandemic, Gazans were forced to adapt to daily hardships. Most only have a few hours of electricity a day, the tap water is undrinkable, and the unemployment rate is about 50%. It's almost always been difficult to leave, even for those who can afford it, and now the borders with Israel and Egypt are sealed.
‘WE EXPECT IT TO HAPPEN TO US’
In Sarajevo, the lockdowns have revived painful memories of when the city was besieged for 46 months during the Balkan wars in the 1990s.
Bosnian Serb fighters were deployed on the surrounding hillsides and pounded the city with artillery fire. There were severe shortages of food, water and electricity, and snipers gunned down those who ventured out.
It was the kind of thing you hear about on the news, the kind of thing that happens in faraway countries. That's what the people of Sarajevo thought.
And then it happened to them.
Aida Begic, a filmmaker who was a teenager at the time, recalls how even after fighting began in other parts of the country, no one in Sarajevo thought it would reach them.
“Then it happened, and it lasted for three and a half years,” she said. "When something like this (pandemic) is happening, we do not doubt that it will happen to us. We expect it to happen to us. We are certain that it will.”Now, many are drawing on lessons from the war. Some are buying wood-burning stoves, seed potatoes and onions. Begic knows people who have bought up to 40 kilograms (90 pounds) of flour.
“Someone who hasn’t had our experience may not remember that they must buy extra face cream and other similar everyday products,” she said. “We remember the things we missed during the war.”
In Cuba, which is under a 30-day lockdown, many have become masters of self-sufficiency through decades of U.S. sanctions and several periods of severe stagnation in the centrally planned economy.
“We’re always storing things,’’ said Taimy Martinez, a 41-year-old administrator in a state-run business. “If we have chicken, we use it little by little. If we have money to buy canned food, we do. Sugar, a bit of bread to make toast, we make it last."
“I can endure a three-week quarantine if we start today," she said.
In the disputed Himalayan region of Kashmir, lockdowns have been a fact of life for decades. Pakistan and India have split the region in two, each claiming it in its entirety, while residents have long demanded independence or union with Pakistan.
Last August, India stripped the region of its semi-autonomy. Fearing mass protests or a full-blown uprising, it ordered the region's 7 million people to stay indoors for months and imposed an information blackout, cutting off internet and even phone service. Indian troops arrested thousands in anticipation of protests.
It's happened before, and Kashmiris have learned to make the best of it.
“I can enumerate at least half a dozen things which curfews and security lockdowns have taught us,” said Sajjad Ahmed, a schoolteacher.
He says volunteers have mobilized to help the elderly and infirm. Parents have learned to home-school their children, and nearly everyone has mastered basic first aid, often by treating those wounded in clashes with security forces.
When extended families are stuck inside for weeks or months at a time, they share stories, imparting a sense of history that can provide strength in times of turmoil.“It helped us to rediscover the family and social talk,” Ahmed said.

Lebanon: coronavirus is showing corrupt elites the scale of the damage they have caused
Michael Young/The National/March 25/2020
As the Lebanese lock down, Beirut is being forced to realise how unsustainable its political and economic choices have been
Lebanon is a country that has received little attention during the Covid-19 crisis. As of Monday, the country officially had over 250 coronavirus cases, with four confirmed fatalities. People in Beirut estimate the real number of infections to be four to five times that number, and the government’s decision to deploy the army to prevent people from violating quarantine rules reinforces that view.
For now, the disease still appears to be under control. However, the fear is that if things were to get out of hand, the public health system would be overwhelmed. What makes Lebanon more vulnerable than many other places is that the country is going through a major economic crisis. The state is bankrupt and its ability to withstand a long lockdown, or to import material to address the health emergency, is limited.
The shutdown, which began in mid-March and involves people remaining at home while most commerce is suspended, will also have severe consequences for a county that cannot afford to be idle. In the past five months, Lebanon’s economy has been in free fall, with banks reacting by severely limiting withdrawals or transfers abroad. This has forced many businesses to close, leaving tens of thousands unemployed.
The downward slide began last October, when demonstrations took place against the corruption of the political class and increasingly stringent economic measures. As protests continued, banks introduced de facto capital controls in the realisation that the angry mood had undermined the system the state had set up to finance its ballooning public debt. Many refer to it as a Ponzi scheme that has come to an end. Banks had offered interest rates on deposits that were much higher than the global average, paying these off by attracting new deposits into the system. With confidence gone, the banks feared account holders would rush to withdraw money, leading to the banking system’s collapse.
oreign assistance to Lebanon has been conditional upon the introduction of reforms. Yet the country’s political class has resisted this, as it would reduce their share of the rents they are extracting from the state. Indeed, Hezbollah was one of the parties initially opposed to a bailout from the International Monetary Fund. The party feared that this would cut into its own revenues, while also weakening the political class it has propped up to solidify its position in the country.
In recent weeks, however, Hezbollah had walked back its resistance to IMF funding, understanding that Lebanon has no other source of hard currency available to help it out of its predicament. For a country whose foreign currency reserves have reached alarmingly low levels, and that imports most of its food and medicine as well as all of its fuel, refusing an IMF bailout would be suicidal.
The Covid-19 pandemic makes recourse to the IMF even more probable, limiting the latitude of politicians to sideline economic reform. Because of the freezing of economic activity since October, and particularly since the coronavirus outbreak, the state’s revenues have fallen precipitously. This will ensure a larger budget deficit than the government had anticipated, requiring drastic spending cuts the politicians would have preferred to avoid, or delay.
These cuts will impose painful trade-offs on the state. More importantly, they will place the politicians in a dilemma. On the one hand, spending cuts will mean that more people suffer, making resistance to the IMF and its menu of austerity easier. On the other hand, it would make a recourse to the organisation to help Lebanon manage its debt even more urgent, with politicians less able to prevent it.
The reality is that many Lebanese are of two minds about the IMF. While they do not want the burden of reform to be placed upon their shoulder, many would welcome the international organisation providing liquidity to help revive the economy and reduce unemployment. They would also welcome seeing the political class cornered by an outside actor into introducing necessary reforms, such as in the highly corrupt, expensive, and inefficient electricity sector for instance.
In addition, the increased expenses from treating the coronavirus outbreak – which may include importing medicine, equipment and other necessities from the international market – could run down foreign reserves more rapidly than expected. This would also increase pressure on the state to go to the IMF.
Yet the international economic environment is something of which the Lebanese should be wary. Most countries will suffer from the aftershocks of Covid-19. This means that international interest in Lebanon’s well-being – never high in the first place – may disappear. In other words, the country will have to show seriousness if it wants to compete for IMF assistance against a rapidly expanding field of countries in distress. To be blunt, today Lebanon is a priority to no one but the Lebanese.
It may be dawning on Lebanon’s politicians that the system they plundered so recklessly for decades is falling victim to Covid-19. The unsustainable nature of that system was evident months ago, but the virus may have just made the efforts of the political class to keep it alive all but impossible. When a system is rotten to the core, a complete rebirth is often the only remedy to resolve things.
*Michael Young is editor of Diwan, the blog of the Carnegie Middle East programme, in Beirut

Hezbollah and Its Friends
Hazem Saghieh/Asharq Al Awsat/March 25/2020
The most noteworthy aspect of Hezbollah’s general-secretary's last speech was the shift from denial to affirmation.
Denial reflected an image of the party as one that is fighting for justice and truth, a battle that disregards the balance of power in its path to fulfill its “honest promise”.
This allowed the party to speak in the name of the Lebanese people and threaten its enemies, whom it would frame as the enemies of the Lebanese. It also allowed it to attract countless remains of parties, ideologies, and defeated dreams which count on the party to bring them back from oblivion.
Affirmation refers to admitting to the Lebanese, though with circumlocution, that the party is subject to certain balances of power and that there are things it can and cannot do. This affirmation, by extension, confirms the following: The balance of power has shifted slightly against it after the US sanctions hit the party and Iran and Lebanon as well because of it. It also shifted because the economic difficulties facing Hassan Diab's government became clear. In addition, the revolution showed that the overwhelming majority of the Lebanese do not favor the same choices as those of Hezbollah.
Even before their position was recently weakened, there had been many instances throughout the party’s history in which it demonstrated that it succumbs to the balance of power: From the "April Understanding" in 1996 to the Security Council Resolution 1701 after the 2006 war, and in between, "the understanding" with those who had been denounced as "agents of America and Israel" by the media of the axis of resistance. This "understanding" with the Aounists was reached to break the political blockade of Hezbollah that had sprung up after the assassination of Rafik Hariri.
This “understanding” did not cheat anyone: its sixth clause states: “Based on both sides' conviction that the presence of Lebanese citizens in their homeland is better than their presence on enemy territory, the resolution of the question of the Lebanese residing in Israel requires swift action to ensure their return to their country, taking all the political, security and livelihood circumstances surrounding the matter into consideration. Thus we call on them to promptly return to their country in compliance with the call issued by Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah following the Israeli withdrawal from south Lebanon and the speech delivered by General Michel Aoun in the first parliamentary session.”
Retired Brigadier General Fayez Karam was one of the beneficiaries of this clause. It was agreed that sentences for collusion with the enemy would be suspended.
Of course, contrary to what was claimed in the speech, Hassan Nasrallah knew that Amer Fakhoury would be smuggled out. However, Hezbollah cannot bear making that kind of affirmation, for it would not just contradict its narrative about itself and its cause; it would shock its followers who grew up on this narrative, on denial. Nasrallah, though, cannot name any political faction that facilitated Fakhoury’s escape, since losing allies who make his missions in Syria and abroad easier would shift the balance of power further against the party.
What is happening cannot be unlinked from Iran’s simultaneous release of Michel White over “humanitarian and health reasons.” White is a US citizen who had been detained since 2018. Iran also asked for an emergency loan of 5 billion dollars from the International Monetary Fund and has perhaps reached new understandings with the Americans concerning Iraq.
In other words, Hezbollah acted in “Lebanized” fashion. Its secretary-general, aware of the balance of power in the country and the region, almost repeated the phrase of the Kataeb Party founder Pierre Gemayel: Lebanon’s strength is in its weakness.
Naturally, it was a painful blow that Nasrallah could not evade. This is why we saw him directing his speech at friends rather than enemies whom he normally threatens. Instead of the customary screaming, he seemed noticeably dejected by the “kin” and those who are kept close, a dejection that was accompanied by two firm warnings: We do not allow you to call us traitors nor do we allow you to insult us.
He addressed his friends as political leaders and pragmatists address their purist ideological comrades whose tongues precede their minds, while their responsibility is limited to declaring a rhetorical position. He addressed them to explain what they had not been aware of, what cannot be spoken of publicly to them or others. If we put various intentions and personal calculations aside, it seemed that these friends had not known much: They are ignorant of the balance of power in the country and the region and don't know that the times are changing, that we are not in the era of Gamal Abdel Nasser, the Palestinian resistance or the Socialist camp. Most critically, they are unaware that Hezbollah, which does not exist to serve their ends, does not present itself with any of the apocalyptic liberation scenarios that failed at the time, and have kept on failing since.
So, neither their reality nor their notion of time are real; Hezbollah itself is not what they imagine it to be. Given all of this, Nasrallah might have repeated to himself the old aphorism: With friends like mine, who needs enemies.

The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on March 24-25/2020
Pope Francis calls Christians to prayer for end to coronavirus pandemic
Catholic Herald/NNA/March 25, 2020 
Pope Francis has asked leaders of all the world’s Christian confessions to join with all the faithful in reciting the Lord’s Prayer today — Thursday, March 25th, the Feast of the Annunciation — at noon, Rome time. That’s 11am London and 7am Eastern Daylight Time.
“I invite all the Heads of the Churches and the leaders of every Christian community,” Pope Francis said Sunday after the Angelus prayer, “together with all Christians of the various confessions, to invoke the Most High, Almighty God, reciting at the same time the prayer that Jesus, our Lord, taught us,” the Our Father, on Wednesday at noon Rome time.
“May the Lord hear the united prayer of all of His disciples who are preparing themselves to celebrate the victory of the Risen Christ,” Pope Francis prayed. “Let us remain united,” he said. “Let us make our closeness felt toward those persons who are the most lonely and sorely tried,” Pope Francis prayed, calling on Christians throughout the world, together with the leaders of their communities, to respond to the coronavirus pandemic, “with the universality of prayer, of compassion, of tenderness.”The faithful around the world, who wish to take up Pope Francis’s invitation, can follow on the Vatican Media live stream (also available on the Vatican News portal). The press office of the holy See on Wednesday morning sent a communiqué confirming the Vatican Media stream from the library of the Apostolic Palace, where Pope Francis will recite the prayer, and saying that the Angelus and Holy Rosary will follow from St Peter’s Basilica, led by the basilica’s archpriest, Cardinal Angelo Comastri.
On Friday, March 27th, Pope Francis will offer an extraordinary benediction urbi et orbi — a solemn blessing to the city and the world — from the steps of an empty St Peter’s Square.
Readings from scripture, supplications, and Eucharistic adoration will precede Friday’s blessing, which Vatican Media will broadcast live from 6 pm Rome time. The plenary indulgence attached to the urbi et orbi blessing is available to all the faithful who follow the event live.
The recent decree of the Apostolic Penitentiary has more on the conditions under which the faithful may obtain the indulgence:
[G]ranted to the faithful suffering from Coronavirus, who are subject to quarantine by order of the health authority in hospitals or in their own homes if, with a spirit detached from any sin, they unite spiritually through the media to the celebration of Holy Mass, the recitation of the Holy Rosary, to the pious practice of the Way of the Cross or other forms of devotion, or if at least they will recite the Creed, the Lord’s Prayer and a pious invocation to the Blessed Virgin Mary, offering this trial in a spirit of faith in God and charity towards their brothers and sisters, with the will to fulfil the usual conditions (sacramental confession, Eucharistic communion and prayer according to the Holy Father’s intentions), as soon as possible.
The indulgence is also granted to medical professionals, first responders, and other caregivers, whose occupations put them at elevated risk of exposure to the novel coronavirus. In addition, the indulgence is available during the emergency to the faithful who pray especially for relief from the pandemic and the repose of the souls of the victims of the disease. The decree specifically names several traditional acts of devotion: visiting the Blessed Sacrament; Eucharistic adoration; a half hour’s reading in Sacred Scripture; recitation of the Rosary; the Via Crucis; and, the Divine Mercy chaplet.

Canadian FM, Minister Champagne participates in G7 Foreign Ministers’ Meeting
March 25, 2020 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
The Honourable François-Philippe Champagne, Minister of Foreign Affairs, participated in a G7 Foreign Ministers’ Meeting by videoconference today. United States Secretary of State Mike Pompeo hosted counterparts from Canada, Germany, France, Italy, Japan, the U.K. as well as the EU’s High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy. They discussed the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on supply chains and the global economy; developing countries; and the broader geopolitical context. They also stressed the importance of reinforcing their commitment to strengthening the United Nations’ and the World Health Organization’s response to the ongoing COVID-19 crisis. Minister Champagne led the discussion on Myanmar, where he reiterated the importance of G7 unity and the need for continued commitment to the Rohingya people. Broader discussions also focused on Afghanistan, China, Iran, Libya, North Korea, Russia, the Sahel and Syria.

Family of ex-FBI agent who disappeared in Iran say they believe he is dead
CNN/March 25/2020
The family of Robert Levinson, a former FBI agent who disappeared in Iran more than a decade ago, announced Wednesday that they believe he is dead. "We recently received information from U.S. officials that has led both them and us to conclude that our wonderful husband and father died while in Iranian custody. We don't know when or how he died, only that it was prior to the COVID-19 pandemic," they said in a statement.

Britain’s Prince Charles tests positive for coronavirus
Arab News/March 25, 2020
LONDON: Prince Charles, the eldest son of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II and heir to the throne, has tested positive for coronavirus and is self-isolating in Scotland with mild symptoms. The Prince of Wales, 71, is in “good health and has been working from home throughout the last few days as usual,” said a statement obtained by Arab News from Clarence House, a royal residence. His wife, the Duchess of Cornwall, was also tested but does not have the virus. Both are self-isolating at their Birkhall residence in Scotland in accordance with government advice.  “It is not possible to ascertain from whom the Prince caught the virus owing to the high number of engagements he carried out in his public role during recent weeks,” the statement said. Queen Elizabeth II, who has been staying at Windsor Castle since March 19, is in “good health,” Buckingham Palace told Arab News. “The Queen last saw the Prince of Wales briefly after the investiture on the morning of March 12 and is following all the appropriate advice with regard to her welfare,” the palace said.

France withdraws its troops from Iraq due to the coronavirus pandemic
AFP, Paris/Thursday 26 March 2020
France will withdraw its contingent of troops from Iraq, mostly trainers to local armed forces, because of the coronavirus pandemic, the chief of staff said on Wednesday. France has around 200 military personnel working in Iraq either as trainers or in the headquarters of coalition forces in Baghdad. "In coordination with the Iraqi government, the coalition has decided to adjust its deployments in Iraq and provisionally suspend training activities," it said in a statement. The UK defense ministry had already announced some of its troops would come home, citing a "reduced requirement for training" Iraqi security forces. Iraq's military had halted all training in early March to minimize the risk of the illness spreading among its forces, including from the US-led coalition helping fight remnants of ISIS.

Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulchre closed due to coronavirus outbreak

Reuters/Wednesday 25 March 2020
Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulchre, revered in Christian tradition as the site of Jesus’s crucifixion and burial, was ordered closed on Wednesday for a week, as a precaution against the coronavirus, church officials said. “The Church of the Holy Sepulchre will be closed from 5p.m. on Wednesday,” Wadie Abu Nassar, media spokesperson of the Assembly of Catholic Ordinaries of the Holy Land, told Reuters. He said the decision followed a meeting between Israeli police and senior church leaders on Wednesday. “Of course the church leaders expressed understanding. The initial understanding is that this order is valid for one week, although nobody knows how long this crisis will take,” he said.

U.N. Calls for Rolling Back Sanctions to Battle Pandemic
Colum Lynch/FP/March 25/2020
Secretary-General Guterres says it’s time for “solidarity not exclusion.”
United Nations leadership called for rolling back international sanctions regimes around the world, saying they are heightening the health risks for millions of people and weakening the global effort to contain the spread of the new coronavirus.
The appeal reflects mounting concerns that sanctions regimes may be impeding efforts in Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Venezuela, and Zimbabwe to battle the coronavirus, and enhancing the prospects of the pathogen’s spread to other countries. It comes as China and Russia, which is subject to U.S. and European sanctions for its invasion of Crimea, have also stepped up calls for an easing of sanctions. “I am encouraging the waiving of sanctions imposed on countries to ensure access to food, essential health supplies, and COVID-19 medical support. This is the time for solidarity not exclusion,” U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres wrote in a letter to the G-20 economic powers. “Let us remember that we are only as strong as the weakest health system in our interconnected world.” But the appeals are unlikely, however, to gain traction in the U.N. Security Council, where diplomats say there has been little serious thought given to the prospect of easing sanctions. Asked if there was growing opposition to the sanctions, one senior diplomat said, “No, not at all. The Russians and the Chinese are being cynically political and opportunistic.” “I would say there is no serious, coordinated response being considered in the U.N. about sanctions,” said one Security Council diplomat. [Mapping the Coronavirus Outbreak: Get daily updates on the pandemic and learn how it’s affecting countries around the world.] Michelle Bachelet, the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, also said on Tuesday that “in a context of global pandemic, impeding medical efforts in one country heightens the risk for all of us.” “At this crucial time, both for global public health reasons, and to support the rights and lives of millions of people in these countries, sectoral sanctions should be eased or suspended,” she said in a statement.
The statement noted that more than 1,800 Iranians, including 50 medics, have died since the first cases appeared there five weeks ago, and that human rights reports have indicated that sanctions have impeded the access to “essential medicines and medical equipment—including respirators and protective equipment for health-care workers.” “The epidemic in Iran is also spreading to neighbouring countries which will strain health services in countries such as Afghanistan and Pakistan,” the statement reads.

Former Italian FM slams gov’t for permitting Iran Air flights to land
Benjamin Weinthal/FDD/March 25/2020
Former Italian foreign minister Giulio Terzi on Monday criticized his country’s authorities for allowing Iran Air flights to land in Italy.
“Instead of keeping away from an increasing risk of contagion from Iran, as well as from China, the Italian authorities authorize the stopover of flights of Iran Air from Tehran in our airports,” he wrote in an opinion article titled: “A Message to the Italian authorities: Is it fine to allow Iran Air flights?”
The translated article was posted on the Global Committee for the Rule of Law website. Terzi tweeted it on Monday. “In addition, Iran Air, under Executive Order 13599, is subject to sanctions from the US Treasury Department because of its involvement in financial and logistical activities supporting international terrorism,” he wrote. “Several proxies of the Iranian regime in the Middle East and Latin America use this air company as a regular carrier for their militias, armaments and illicit trades.” “The application of US sanctions on Iran Air should actually worry companies and executives who provide services at airports, because the legislation in question also relates to them,” Terzi wrote. “Substantially, this case is identical to that of another Iranian company, namely Mahan Air, which was suspended by the Italian Civil Aviation Authority (ENAC) last October.”
The US State Department said on Monday: “Instead of taking appropriate precautions against the spread of COVID-19, Iran’s terrorist airline, Mahan Air, operated at least 55 flights between Tehran and China in February, according to public reports.”
German airports and authorities defied an announcement from Transportation Minister Andreas Scheuer to bar flights from the coronavirus-infected hotspots of Iran and China, The Jerusalem Post reported last week. Germany and Italy are two of Iran’s most important European trade partners.
*Benjamin Weinthal is a European correspondent at The Jerusalem Post and a fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

UN Council Holds First Video Conference During Virus Crisis
Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 25 March, 2020
The UN Security Council held its first video conference briefings of the coronavirus era Tuesday on the UN peacekeeping mission in Congo, and recognized the improving political and security situation in most parts of the country except the volatile mineral-rich east.
Tuesday's videoconference talks lasted more than four hours -- and included a discussion after the session on DRCongo about how the Council can keep working. The meeting was interrupted several times when internet connections went down, or when some participants lost power.
While the Security Council often hears from officials in the field or other witnesses via videoconference, its 15 member states had never convened that way, an expert on UN history said. The meeting was held in English, as technical difficulties made it impossible to provide simultaneous translation into the world body's other official languages. Russia, a veto-wielding council member, has so far refused to entertain the idea of virtual votes, and has demanded that the council meet physically if a vote is needed. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has not shuttered the organization's headquarters in New York, but the city itself is under a stay-at-home order issued by the state's governor. As for the substance of Tuesday's talks, the council issued a unanimous statement after the meeting. Members "expressed concern at the continued instability" in eastern DR Congo and "at the current humanitarian situation, especially the current measles epidemic." There has been growing pressure to reduce the size of the more than 18,000-strong UN peacekeeping mission in Congo, known as MONUSCO. Guterres said "MONUSCO has begun consultations with the Government on a strategic dialogue to ensure that the drawdown and exit are carefully sequenced" to sustain gains of the past two decades. The council encouraged the government to work with its members and the UN Secretariat on "a joint strategy and benchmarks for drawdown."

Denmark Charges Norwegian with Working with Iran in Assassination Plot
Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 25 March, 2020
Denmark's state prosecutor said on Wednesday it had charged a Norwegian citizen with assisting an Iranian intelligence service plan an assassination on Danish soil. The Norwegian, who has Iranian heritage, was arrested in October 2018 over a suspected plot to kill an Iranian Arab opposition figure in Denmark. In a statement, the state prosecutor said the man had now been charged with collecting and passing on information to an Iranian intelligence service for use in carrying out an assassination in Denmark. It said the suspect was also charged with attempted manslaughter.
The 40-year old Norwegian citizen has pleaded not guilty to all charges, his lawyer told Reuters. The trial is scheduled to begin in a Roskilde court on May 1. The alleged attempt to eliminate a leading member of the opposition Arab Struggle Movement for the Liberation of Ahvaz (ASMLA) was prevented after a major police operation in Denmark in September 2018 during which borders were temporarily closed.

Fire at Iran's Abadan Petrochemicals Plant
Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 25 March, 2020
A fire which broke out at a unit of Iran's Abadan Petrochemicals Company on Wednesday has been brought under control, state media reported. State broadcaster IRIB said the blaze was caused by a pipe that burst at a unit of the plant, located near the major Abadan refinery in southwestern Iran. It said no one was hurt. The state news agency IRNA said the fire was minor and was brought under control after one hour. It quoted unnamed sources as saying two workers were hurt.

US Plans in Iraq Heighten Shiite Fears over Approval of Zurfi Govt.
Baghdad – Hamza Mustafa/Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 25 March, 2020
Shiite blocs in Iraq, who have been rejecting the designation of Adnan al-Zurfi as the country’s prime minister, are aware that they can no longer bide their time over this issue even as they still cannot make up their mind on endorsing him. Zurfi’s determination to launch official consultations to form the new government, including his formation of a negotiating team that includes yet undisclosed deputies and political figures, is doubling the concerns of his opponents. Meanwhile, a new factor has heightened those fears. The Shiite blocs are concerned about what they perceive as US maneuvers on whether to withdraw or redeploy their forces. Meeting between Shiite blocs opposed to Zurfi are ongoing, but they have yet to reach an agreement on backing his designation in exchange for guarantees on his part. They are also discussing seemingly difficult options, such as nominating the university presidents, and the nearly impossible option of searching for means to overthrow President Barham Salih, whom they hold responsible for the current situation. These developments took place as US forces began withdrawing from some military bases in Iraq before it later turned out that their actions were part of redeployments and efforts to protect troops from the new coronavirus. The Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS has announced it was making adjustments to its troops in Iraq. “One year ago, the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS, in conjunction with our local partners, liberated ISIS’s last remaining stronghold in Baghouz (in Syria) and crushed its territorial ambitions,” it said in a statement on Tuesday. It stressed that nearly eight million people have now been freed from ISIS’s control in Iraq and Syria. “Many have returned home to rebuild their lives thanks to various forms of Coalition assistance and stabilization support.” “Progress in our campaign allows for the restructuring of our footprint, without prejudice to our ability to carry out our mission,” the statement read. “In the meantime, the unprecedented challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic to the Iraqi and Syrian people, and to our mission, led to temporary adjustments to protect the force during this period, in full coordination with Iraqi authorities.” It pointed out that work of the Global Coalition is far from complete as ISIS remains a significant threat. According to the statement, the Global Coalition will continue its comprehensive efforts in Iraq and Syria, and globally, to deny ISIS’s ambitions and the activities of its branches and networks, until the job is done.

PLO Official: Israel Controls 95% of Jordan Valley

Ramallah - Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 25 March, 2020
Secretary General of the Palestine Liberation Organization's (PLO) executive committee Saeb Erekat said Israeli settlements' expansion in the Jordan Valley and the dead sea areas is part of the implementation of the annexation, theft and settlements plan, in what he described as "the theft of the century." Citing numbers released by PLO's Negotiations Affairs Department, Erekat said 95% of areas in the Jordan Valley were seized by the Israeli occupation forces benefiting up to 12,700 settlers. Meanwhile, some 55,000 Palestinians live on around only 5% of the area. "The Israeli authorities built four settlements in 2019 in addition to 110 units," he added, noting that Israel also controls 94% of Palestinian water in the Jordan Valley region. Earlier, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has promised to annex the Jordan Valley in the occupied West Bank if he wins elections. Israel plans to annex 800 kilometers of the Jordan Valley, completely dismissing the Palestinians’ say in the matter. Netanyahu stressed that the annexation will take place in agreement with the US administration. The annexation plan announced by Netanyahu in September 2019 includes a blueprint for annexing 22.3% of the West Bank with 30 illegal settlements and 18 illegal settlement outposts.

Israel Takes New Measures Against Virus as Cases Rise

Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 25 March, 2020
The Israeli government on Wednesday approved new sweeping restrictions over the new coronavirus pandemic, including ordering the closing of all synagogues and lessened public transport. Israel has confirmed more than 2,000 cases and five fatalities so far. Places of worship largely had been kept open so long as gatherings have not had more than 10 people at a time who maintained a 2-meter (yard) distance from each other. Many in Israel's insular ultra-Orthodox communities, however, have defied restrictions and gathered as usual for prayer and study, despite the pleas of rabbis and local authorities. That has led to tension with authorities and in at least one case, scuffles with police. Municipal workers also have been urging the ultra-Orthodox to go home, with little effect. The order to close the synagogues, which goes into effect later Wednesday, reportedly came over the objection of Israel's health minister, himself an ultra-Orthodox Jew. Furthermore, Israelis hoping for a stroll or jog were instructed to stay within 100 meters (110 yards) of their homes for a week under tightened restrictions to curb the coronavirus. The new restrictions further reduced public transport, required employers to check workers for fever and set sanctions for people who defy rules. Israelis have been instructed to stay home where possible, schools have been shut and many businesses have closed, prompting more than 500,000 layoffs so far. The specter of people, out for fresh air, jogging and congregating on city streets has alarmed health authorities. The new 100- meter limit is meant to end such activity. The private sector has had to limit employees at the workplace to 10 people or 30% of the company's workforce, and most of the public sector has been put on leave. Public transportation, already operating on reduced schedules, was restricted further to journeys to and from "essential" businesses and taxis were limited to one passenger. Israelis, though, could still drive themselves to work or to shops for essentials, and food delivery services were operating. Penalties ranging from fines to a six-month jail term were set for anyone defying the orders. Israel's central bank on Tuesday projected an economic contraction of 2.5% in 2020 as long as the partial lockdown eases by the end of April.

Netanyahu Ally Resigns as Knesset Speaker
Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 25 March, 2020
Speaker of Israel's parliament Yuli Edelstein, who is a close ally of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, resigned on Wednesday, clearing the way for a vote that could see him replaced by a rival of the embattled PM. Edelstein had refused to schedule a speakership vote until a new government was formed, but stood down after the Supreme Court set a Wednesday deadline for the vote to take place. "I hereby resign from my position as speaker of the Knesset,” Edelstein said, in a move that could see a member of the Centrist Blue and White party, led by ex-military chief Benny Gantz, become speaker in the coming days. Edelstein belongs to Netanyahu's right-wing Likud party. He had suspended parliamentary activities last week, citing procedural issues and restrictions on large gatherings due to the spread of the coronavirus. But opponents accused him of blocking a vote after his bloc failed to win a majority in the March 2 elections. He has dismissed the Supreme Court’s call to explain his delay in convening the Israeli Knesset, sparking an unprecedented judicial rebuttal, with the Supreme Court chief justice ordering him to hold a vote. With other top Likud members urging him to defy the order, he responded that he would “not agree to an ultimatum” and resigned instead. “The Supreme Court decision destroys the work of the Knesset” and “marks a harsh and arrogant intervention of the judicial branch in the affairs of the elected legislative branch," Edelstein charged in his last appearance as speaker.
He said he would step down so as not to allow Israel to “descend to anarchy.” The showdown marked the height of an ever-deepening standoff Netanyahu's opponents and supporters in the wake of the country's third inconclusive election in less than a year and against the backdrop of a series of emergency executive measures enacted to quell the spread of the new virus. The Likud emerged as the largest party in the election earlier this month, but along with his smaller religious and nationalist allies, won only the support of 58 lawmakers — leaving his right-wing bloc three seats short of the required majority in parliament. Gantz’s majority bloc is deeply divided along ideological lines and unlikely to band together to form an alternative government. But it is determined to oppose Netanyahu and seems willing to cooperate in parliament.
The bloc is expected to win a vote to nominate Meir Cohen as Edelstein's replacement.

Researchers to Study Psychological Toll of Lockdown
Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 25 March, 2020
A renowned Belgian university is launching a cross-border study in three European countries to assess the nefarious psychological effects of lockdown measures on individuals. Researchers from the Louvain university say they want to find out to what extent the quarantine measures imposed to fight the novel coronavirus epidemics have changed people´s way of life, and to analyze their impact on mental health. Fearing a rise in the number of suicides, health sociologist Vincent Louvain said that governments are often overlooking the side effects of the quarantine measures as they try to stop the spreading of the deadly virus. "Governments are currently putting their energy on managing the epidemic. As a result, other risks are forgotten," he said, insisting that a large part of the population is psychologically fragile and in need of health care. "The situation could deteriorate in terms of mental health". The survey will analyze data collected in Belgium, France, and the Netherlands. It will be piloted by the Louvain university in collaboration with a French institute specialized in health economy and the Antwerp university.

Fear of Coronavirus Stalks Camps in Syria’s Idlib
Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 25 March, 2020
In a camp in northwestern Syria, Abdallah Yassin listens to a doctor explain how to avoid coronavirus infection, desperately hoping it will never reach his tent of 14 people. "If the epidemic spreads in the camps, it will be a disaster," the 57-year-old grandfather says.
Three million people live in Syria's last major opposition bastion of Idlib, many of them families who fled homes elsewhere in Syria and are now reduced to living in camps without basic amenities. Almost one million more have been thrown onto the roads since December, after the government launched a deadly offensive that has battered the region's already dilapidated healthcare system. The government on Sunday announced Syria's first officially confirmed coronavirus case, sparking fears of the implications for the war-torn country, where many still live outside the control of the government.
As part of the effort to prevent the worst in the Idlib region, a doctor is visiting Yassin's camp in Kafr Lusin to raise awareness. Always shield your sneezes, he tells a dozen people gathered around him, either listening carefully or reading flyers. Before he hands out surgical masks, the doctor from Turkish aid group the Humanitarian Relief Foundation (IHH) reminds them that an infected person can show no outward symptoms for up to two weeks. But Yassin is unconvinced that this advice will be enough to help. "Instead of coming here and lecturing us, why don't they set up a clinic for all these people," he says. "There are thousands of people here. We sleep 14 in the same tent," he says, trying to convey his alarm. The virus is the latest threat to the three million people who live in Idlib, where a fragile truce has largely halted the regime's bombardment since the start of the month. The IHH doctor, Ibrahim Tlass, agrees that the prospect of an outbreak in the camps is worrying. "They would be the areas most at risk if the virus did start spreading," he says. "That's where the population density is highest and where there's the least awareness about the issue," he tells AFP. Across the region, aid workers are bracing for a possible wave of the illness. For a start, a laboratory in Idlib received 300 diagnosis kits on Tuesday and has started using them, a doctor said. "But these kits are still very few in view of the population density we have here," said doctor Mohammad Shaham Mekki. The World Health Organization has said it hopes to send in 2,000 more tests soon. In case there are positive cases, three hospitals with intensive care units have been modified as isolation units equipped with ventilators, it said.

Iraq's Poor Continue to Work Despite Curfew, Health R
isks
Baghdad- Fadhel al-Nashmi/Asharq Al-Awsat/Wednesday, 25 March, 2020
Large segments of Iraqis have been living under difficult conditions for years as a result of unemployment and lack of job opportunities. These factors have pushed many of them to participate in the demonstrations that took place in Iraq, especially the last one that erupted in October of last year and was suspended a few days ago due to the coronavirus. Despite the potential health risks and the curfew that was imposed by the Iraqi authorities to confront the risk of the virus spreading, the majority of popular markets, especially in poor neighborhoods in Baghdad and other governorates, have witnessed regular traffic. Most merchants and shoppers have ignored the medical advice as to how to avoid the risks of the deadly virus. Many witnesses confirm to Asharq Al-Awsat that the majority of popular markets in poor East Baghdad neighborhoods are still full of people and authorities have been unable to shut them down and impose a curfew on them. While the Iraqi government finds itself incapable of providing support to those segments of society in overcoming the current crisis, the Director of the Middle East and Central Asia Department at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Jihad Azour, warmed against the effects of the virus on the economy of many countries in the Middle East. Azour told Reuters that the challenge will be terrifying, especially for fragile and fragmented countries such as Iraq, Sudan, and Yemen. A spokesperson for the Ministry of Planning, Abdul-Zahra al-Hindawi, admitted that the conditions facing these impoverished segments in Iraq are dire. He told Asharq Al-Awsat that the “percentage of poverty in Iraq has reached 20% of the entire population, around 7 million people, and the majority of them are in southern governorates”. Hindawi agrees that the cases of extreme poverty have pushed some to defy the curfew. The difficult conditions under which these segments live have pushed social, civil, and religious actors to launch a comprehensive food aid campaign in the last few days for poor families. There have also been popular calls and demands that parties and political blocs make an initiative in providing aid fighting the virus in Iraq. In this respect, Leader of the National Wisdom Movement in Iraq, Ammar al-Hakim, indicated that his party is willing to support the Ministry of Health in fighting the coronavirus. In his letter to Iraq's Minister of Health Jaafar Allawi, Hakim said: “To contribute to the efforts of the loyal and selfless people in your ministry and other ministries that are working to deter the risk of this pandemic that is creeping in on our homeland and our people, we would like to put all of our capacities and halls at your disposal in all Iraqi governorates”.

Coronavirus Deaths Top 20,000 Worldwide, Mostly in Europe
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 25/2020
The coronavirus pandemic has killed at least 20,599 people worldwide since it first appeared in China in December, according to an AFP tally at 1900 GMT Wednesday using official figures. More than 447,030 cases of infection have been officially diagnosed in 182 countries and territories since the start of the pandemic. The tallies, using data collected by AFP offices from national authorities and information from the World Health Organization (WHO), are likely to reflect only a fraction of the actual number of infections. Many countries are now only testing cases that require hospitalization.
Since the tally carried out Tuesday at 1900 GMT, 2,341 new deaths and 43,010 new cases have been recorded worldwide.  The countries that recorded the most new deaths in 24 hours were Spain with 738, Italy with 683 and France with 231. Italy, which recorded its first death linked to the coronavirus at the end of February, now has 7,503 deaths with 74,386 cases. After Italy, the most affected countries are Spain with 3,434 deaths for 47,610 cases, mainland China with 3,281 deaths (81,218 cases), Iran with 2,077 deaths (27,017 cases), and France with 1,331 deaths (25,233 cases). Since Tuesday at 1900 GMT, Jamaica, Cameroon, Estonia and Niger have announced their first deaths linked to the virus. Guinea-Bissau, Laos, Mali, Libya, Belize, Grenada and Dominica, have announced their first cases. At 1900 GMT Wednesday, Europe had 239,912 cases and 13,824 deaths, Asia 99,927 cases with 3,596 deaths, the United States and Canada 62,194 cases with 854 deaths, the Middle East 32,182 cases and 2,123 deaths, Latin America and the Caribbean 7,529 cases with 124 deaths, Oceania 2,656 cases and nine deaths and Africa 2,631 cases and 69 deaths.

U.S. Coronavirus Cases Cross 60,000, 827 Dead

Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 25/2020
The number of confirmed cases of the new coronavirus in the United States reached 60,115 on Wednesday while 827 people had died, a tracker run by Johns Hopkins University showed.The tracker showed 600 deaths around 24 hours earlier. The US has the third highest number of confirmed cases behind China and Italy, and the US death rate is now 1.38 percent, based on reported cases. The true number of infected is believed to be far higher, meaning the real death rate would be lower. The virus has killed more than 20,000 people around the world after it was first identified in central China in late December. A projection shared with Congress earlier this month said that between 70 to 150 million people could eventually be infected in the US. If the real mortality rate is one percent, this would result in 700,000 to 1.5 million deaths. Heart disease was the leading cause of death for Americans in 2018, the latest year for which official figures are available, with just over 650,000 deaths. The flu and pneumonia caused around 60,000 deaths.

New York Governor Says Social Distancing Slowing Coronavirus
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 25/2020
Social distancing appears to be slowing the spread of the coronavirus in New York, the epicenter of America's pandemic, Governor Andrew Cuomo said Wednesday. In his daily update on efforts to contain the deadly pandemic, Cuomo said projection rates suggested hospitalizations were increasing at a slower rate than before. "The arrows are headed in the right direction," he told reporters. Cuomo said New York was still "on the way up the mountain" and wouldn't meet the peak of declared cases for another three weeks. But he added that projections showed that hospitalizations were now doubling every 4.7 days as opposed to every two days as was the case on Sunday. The state's almost 20 million residents have been confined to their homes since Cuomo ordered all non-essential businesses closed on Sunday. He said that the number of confirmed infections in Westchester County, the origin of New York's outbreak, had "dramatically slowed" following a two-week containment. New York has 30,811 declared cases, up by 5,146, Cuomo said Wednesday. Almost 18,000 of those are in New York City, which reported almost 3,000 new cases, he added. Some 192 people have died in the city, according to a running tally by Johns Hopkins University. After New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said the Big Apple would run out of medical supplies by the end of the week, Cuomo assured residents there were enough to last more than a fortnight. "Today, no hospital, no nurse, no doctor can say, legitimately 'I don't have protective equipment,'" he said. "Right now, and for the foreseeable future, we have a supply. We have not yet secured supply for three weeks from now, four weeks from, now five weeks from now. But we are still shopping." He repeated that New York's cases are projected to reach their peak in 21 days and that the state needs 30,000 ventilators by then. He called on President Trump to introduce a "rolling deployment" whereby New York, as the worst hit, receives most of the country's equipment, before passing it to other states. "Send us the equipment that we need. Send us the personnel. As soon as we get past our critical moment we will redeploy that equipment and personnel to the next hotspot. I will personally guarantee it," Cuomo said.

Italy's Slowing Infections Boost Case for Lockdowns

Agence France Presse/Naharnet/March 25/2020
Italy's coronavirus infections rate slowed for a fourth successive day Wednesday as fresh evidence emerged that long and painful lockdowns against pandemics will work. The latest data from the epicenter of the once-in-a-century outbreak comes with more and more nations weighing whether to shutter their own stores and factories -- and for how long. Analysts at one of the big U.S. investment banks said evidence from Italy this week could determine whether much of the United States "will diverge or follow the Italian trajectory." Almost everything across the Mediterranean country has been closed for over two weeks. Public gatherings have been banned and much of the economy is set to remain in a state of suspended animation for an indefinite time to come. Analysts think Italy is sliding into its deepest recession in generations as a result. But it is the price Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte has decided to pay to slow the spread of a disease that has now killed 7,503 in Italy and infected almost 75,000. "History will judge us," the increasingly popular Italian leader told parliament on Wednesday. "We must all contribute to the common good," Conte said. "The government has acted with the utmost determination and speed."
'Extremely positive'
Wednesday's figures showed deaths staying within the high but relative narrow range they had reached at the end of last week. Health officials reported 683 new fatalities and 5,210 infections. The overall rise in daily deaths among confirmed COVID-19 cases slowed to 10 percent. It had been as high as 57 percent when the illness was still spreading exponentially on March 8. The daily infections growth rate fell to a record low of 7.5 percent. The World Health Organization's deputy director Ranieri Guerra sounded pleased. "The slowdown in the (infections) growth rate is extremely positive," Guerra told Italy's Capitale radio. "I think the measures taken (by Italy) are absolutely correct -- perhaps with a certain delay at the start, but that is understandable." The government-run National Research Council said 57 out of Italy's 107 provinces have already hit their peak of the virus spread. The numbers are improving "and the containment measures are delivering the desired effect, even if we are in the initial phase of the slowdown," the research council said.
'Italian trajectory'
Italy's data are being watched by global policymaker as they weigh the potential health benefits of imposing national lockdowns against their damaging economic side effects. "The next 3-5 days are key to seeing if Italy's lockdown measures are having an impact and if the US will diverge or follow the Italian trajectory," the Morgan Stanley investment bank wrote on Tuesday. "We do note, however, that the number of mortalities has slowed from an exponential increase since the lock down began," the bank said. There were still worrying signs in Italian regions such as Campania around Naples and Rome's Lazio. Deaths in the Naples region rose from 49 on Monday to 74 on Wednesday. Those in and around Rome went up from 63 to 95 over the same span. And deaths in the northern Piemonte region around the industrial city of Turin rose from 315 on Monday to 449 on Wednesday. The figures for all three regions represent jumps of around 50 percent in two days.

The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on March 24-25/2020
America’s free market ideals fade fast
John Defterios/Arab News/March 25/2020
Since Col. Edwin Drake discovered crude on Oil Creek in Titusville, Pennsylvania back in 1859, America’s oil and gas industry has lived by the “can do” spirit of exploration, capitalism and cut-throat competition.
After a month of losses and the steepest weekly drop since the Gulf War in 1991, the narrative emerging from America’s energy belt and on Capitol Hill is changing rapidly. In the face of potential recession and the coronavirus undermining oil demand by up to 10 million barrels a day, US lawmakers are pursuing what many can call a protectionist agenda.
In a span of a week, senators and congressmen have presented ideas ranging from an outright ban on oil imports from Saudi Arabia, Russia and OPEC countries to US producers accusing those same players of dumping crude on the American market.
The tone is strident and it begs the question, does the US energy sector want to live by free-market principles or does it prefer market intervention by the OPEC+ agreement? OPEC’s secretary general told me in November 2018 that since the so-called “Declaration of Cooperation” by Saudi Arabia, Russia and 22 other countries, US producers, especially those in the shale industry, have benefited the most.
“If you look at the job creation in the basins, you will appreciate what OPEC and non-OPEC have jointly done to benefit the United States,” Mohammed Barkindo said.
There are one and half million jobs in oil and gas production with an estimated ten times that amount indirectly linked to a full range of services supporting the industry, from auto dealers to restaurants. During a visit to Odessa, Texas last October in the heart of the Permian Basin, I witnessed first-hand the boom town atmosphere, with oil workers voicing complaints about housing shortages due to rapid growth and new pick-up trucks rolling off sales lots in record numbers.
America had moved to the top of global rankings with nearly 13 million barrels a day of production, topping Russia at about 11 and a half million and once-constrained Saudi Arabia keeping output below 10 million.
Today all bets are off after a nasty spat at the OPEC meeting in Vienna led to full blown price war. The two largest exporters, Saudi Arabia and Russia, are vying for market share and US producers are caught in the crossfire.
Saudi Arabia has pledged to produce at least 12.3 million barrels over the “coming months”, while discounting prices and Russia said from April 1 all producers will decide for themselves what the market can handle.
US Energy Secretary Dan Brouillette called those actions “intentional disruption to world oil markets by foreign actors.”
Thirteen US senators from oil producing states are crying foul and wrote directly to Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman asking him to rethink his strategy. Many of the same lawmakers called on US President Donald Trump to get off the sidelines and act.
“We have a lot of power over the situation, and we’re trying to find some kind of medium ground,” Trump told journalists last week. The verbal intervention helped lift prices for a day but the benchmark US crude tumbled 29 percent on the week.
This puts the US president in a difficult bind.
If he supports a move toward market management by Saudi Arabia and others, he could be seen to be endorsing what Americans have defined as a cartel, which is illegal under federal law. Doing nothing risks alienating his voter base in the country’s energy states.
Trump’s initial gambits include dispatching an energy envoy to the Kingdom for several months and to purchase up to $3 billion of crude to fill the US strategic petroleum reserve and in turn support local producers.
It certainly appears then that Saudi Arabia’s new strategy may be having the desired effect. The US is reaching out to Riyadh (not the other way around) and the energy regulator in Texas opened talks with OPEC’s secretary general, suggesting that individual states need to be part of the solution. In North Dakota, regulators are weighing plans to deactivate wells, encouraging producers to keep oil offline.
It was William Shakespeare who said, “desperate times breed desperate measures.” There is more than a hint of that after what has been historic plunge in prices and the coronavirus that is eating away at demand.
• John Defterios is CNN Business Emerging Markets Editor and host of The Global Energy Challenge on CNN International.

Is Turkey planning a new invasion of eastern Syria? – analysis
Seth Frantzman/Jerusalem Post/March 25/2020
Turkey’s leadership thrives on crises. For the last several years the government in Ankara has invented a new crisis every month, sometimes with the US. In October 2019 it invaded part of eastern Syria, causing 200,000 people to flee. In November Turkey created a crises in Libya with an energy deal in the Mediterranean and in January and February it fumbled another crises in Idlib, only to hen encourages migrants to go to Europe in March. Now Ankara may be setting its sights on a new crises in Syria to distract from the coronavirus pandemic at home.
Hints of Turkey’s new plan to push the US out of the remaining parts of Syria, where Americans are guarding oil fields and continuing to support the Syrian Democratic Forces against ISIS, came in early March. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan spoke to his ally in Russia, President Vladimir Putin, and said that with Russian support Turkey could construct infrastructure using oil revenues from eastern Syria. “We can help destroyed Syria get on its feet.” Erdogan’s plan came in the context of the Russian-backed Syrian regime offensive in Idlib that had forced some 900,000 people from their homes in January and February. Erdogan wanted a deal with Moscow. The Syrian regime shelling, likely with the knowledge of Moscow, killed more than 40 Turkish soldiers in Syria’s Idlib in February where Turkish soldiers were monitoring the crises. Turkey’s response was to run to Moscow to secure a deal.
Turkey has a long history of working with Russia to partition parts of Syria. Beginning in 2017 Turkey, Russia and Iran joined the Astana Syrian peace talks. Turkey nominally backs the Syrian opposition rebels. It has turned them into the Syrian National Army and used them to fight Kurdish groups that Turkey claims are linked to the PKK. Then Turkey sent the Syrian rebels to bolster its war in Libya after Turkey sought gas and energy deals off Libya in December 2019. This is Turkey’s goal: Use the rebels to fight Kurds and as tools of Ankara foreign policy, while working with Russia on the rest of Syria.
Turkey signed a deal with Russia in September 2018 for Idlib province. Russia wants extremist groups linked to Al Qaeda to leave Idlib. Turkey doesn’t know what to do with the groups, including ISIS members like ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi who was found by the Americans living a few kilometers from the Turkish border. One way to deal with the groups that are still independent of the Turkish-backed SNA is to let the Syrian regime destroy them until they run into Turkey’s arms. That was the plan in December and January as the Syrian regime advanced, but it advanced too fast and Turkey sent troops to Idlib to slow it down. Russia stepped in through discussions with Turkey in Munich and then in Moscow and finally came up with the deal. In the lead-up to the March 5 deal between Ankara and Moscow, Turkey sought to encourage Syrian refugees to go to Europe. Stoking the crises with Europe, Turkey turned its eyes to eastern Syria.
In October after Turkish threats the US had withdrawn from parts of eastern Syria. Turkey bombed the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces and invaded part of eastern Syria. Then Turkey signed a deal with Moscow in mid-October, partitioning parts of eastern Syria, similar to Idlib. But the deal may not be done. Moscow and Turkey both want the US removed from eastern Syria.
To get the US out of eastern Syria, Turkey has hinted to Washington that it opposes Iran’s role in Syria. US Secretary of State Mike Pompe and anti-ISIS envoy James Jeffrey are both pro-Turkey and hope that if they give Turkey enough support then Turkey will finally turn on Iran. IN the past Turkey worked with Iran, letting Iran set up businesses in Turkey and encouraging Washington to have warmer relations with Tehran. But the US administration wants more sanctions. The US is angry at Turkey for buying Russia’s S-400 systems and has begged Ankara to take its Patriot system instead. But Turkey sees Moscow as a more reliable ally than Washington, mocking Jeffrey as not serious in February.
Turkey’s Erdogan said on March 9 that Syrian oil in Qamishli, a mostly Kurdish town, should be used to rebuild other parts of Syria. Oil from Deir Ezzor could also be used to help the Syrian regime. Erdogan said that he had spoken to US President Donald Trump in early March and that the US had again said it would withdraw troops from Syria. It comes down to cash. Trump is wary to waste money in Syria and only kept a small number of US forces in Syria after the October withdrawal to secure oil fields. Trump is in the middle of withdrawing troops from Afghanistan, repositioning them in Iraq and may be amenable to withdraw more of them from Syria if there was a good proposal that he sees as a win. The Erdogan comment about a new US withdrawal raised eyebrows with former anti-ISIS envoy Brett McGurk. McGurk was replaced by Jeffrey in January of 2019.
Turkey says it wants to use the oil somehow. Putin has a plan, Turkey says. “I made a proposal to Putin,” Erdogan said on March 9. “We can build with the aid of the oil.” Turkey now wants to “revive Syria,” apparently to help keep Russian-backed Assad regime in power, despite Turkey’s past statements critiquing Assad. In Turkey’s view the Kurdish, Arab and Christian fighters in the US-backed SDF who liberated eastern Syria from ISIS are “terrorists.” Turkey claims that the “terrorists are benefiting” from the oil. “This will also show who’s after protecting Syria’s unit and who’s after seizing it,” Turkey says, indicating it wants a unified Syria under the Russian-backed Assad regime.
The US has no real interest in the oil in Syria but protecting the oil can help bolster the limited resources of the SDF to continue guarding ISIS prisoners. The US and western powers demand the SDF act as jailors for the ISIS prisoners, including thousands of foreigners, who were captured when the SDF defeated ISIS last year. European governments refuse to take back their ISIS citizens, and they have told the SDF that it cannot hand them over to the Syrian regime, or release them or send them to Iraq. The SDF today is needed as a contractor to house them, including several thousand ISIS men and tens of thousands of their family members. These detainees are all now at risk of the coronavirus and the US has made sure that no help from the UN or WHO will arrive in eastern Syria to test people there. Isolated from both Damascus and Washington, and viewed as terrorists by Ankara, the SDF has few options. “Turkey officially wants us removed from these areas, including Deir al-Zor,” a member of the SDF told VOA earlier this month.
Turkey is now turning to this oil policy during the coronavirus crisis as a possible new way to distract local media and create a new nationalist cause. On March 10, as Turkey was planning new ways to seize the oil and partition eastern Syria with Russia, the pro-government media was told to claim that Turkey was “virus-free.” Daily Sabah reported on March 10 that Turkey was a leading example of the fight against coronavirus, because it was virus-free. Pro-Turkish commentators praised the Health minister. Turkey had in fact been one of the first to warn of the coronavirus pandemic reaching Iran in mid-February when Turkey estimated up to 750 were already infected in Iran. But it is impossible to completely control the virus and Turkey now says it has 1,500 cases and 37 deaths. Curfews and closures are taking place in Turkey.
Even as the pandemic spreads, Turkey’s media wants to remind viewers that it is fighting “terrorists” in Eastern Syria. There have been no attacks on Turkey from the SDF or Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) which is affiliated with it. Yet Turkey’s Anadolu claimed that Turkish commandos “neutralized two YPG/PKK terrorists in northwestern Syria,” on March 21.
As part of Turkey’s plans for eastern Syria it appears some US diplomatic officials have begun to stop mentioning their local SDF partners in eastern Syria. A US briefing with Jeffrey and US Ambassador to Turkey David Satterfield on March 10 did not mention the SDF but said it was working on finding a way for the US or NATO to support Turkey in Idlib. A statement by the US State Department on the one year anniversary of the SDF’s defeat of ISIS in Baghouz, a four year campaign that cost the SDF 10,000 casualties, didn’t even mention the SDF. Instead it said that eight million people had been freed from ISIS control in Syria and Iraq and mentioned a “stabilization” plan that the US claimed had which had helped people “return home” and helped them rebuild their lives. The coalition, it said, would work to protect itself from the coronavirus pandemic with the “Iraqi authorities,” but the statement did not mention Syrian partners. The stabilization plan that was mentioned was actually discontinued in 2019 in Syria and most people have not returned home.
Pompeo tweeted on Tuesday about the one year anniversary of defeating ISIS in Idlib and the challenges of the coronavirus. He did not mention the SDF which played the key role in defeating ISIS or of any support for eastern Syria amid the pandemic. Signaling that the US seemingly left out mention or any thanks to the SDF, US Senator Lindsey Graham wrote that he had a phone call with SDF General Mazloum about the continued fight against ISIS and the need to protect the oil. Graham wrote that he spoke about a “future political settlement favorable to the Syrian people” and that they discussed concern about “Russian aggression along the Turkey-Syria border and potential efforts by Russia to grab oil.”
Graham’s comments reflect the concern that Russia has decided to provoke some kind of crises in eastern Syria to take control of the oil. This is linked to Turkey’s demand for the oil revenues. It appears that Turkey continues to press for what it calls a “safe zone” to take over Kurdish areas along the border and cause the people to flee as was done in Afrin and Tel Abyad after Turkey’s offensives. Russia may see an opportunity to press the US to leave more of eastern Syria, and Russia may think it can come to some kind of deal of trading Idlib to the Syrian regime in return for oil revenues to Turkey.
The goal of Turkey is not the minor oil revenues but to remove the US. Russia also agrees with this assessment, but Russia and Turkey are entangled in joint patrols now in Idlib and other areas of Syria so they must work together rather than clash. Russia and Turkey had their second joint patrol in Idlib this week. Working together to reduce US influence is in both their interests. Turkey needs a new crises. However the pandemic may be one real crises that is difficult for Ankara to surmount while also trying to create a new struggle with Washington and Russia over Syria’s oil.

Turkey and Coronavirus: Devout Muslims Will Defeat the “Jewish Plot”

Burak Bekdil/BESA/March 24, 2020
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: Turkey appears to be handling the coronavirus crisis relatively well, although its low case numbers reflect the low number of tests being administered. Pious Turkish Muslims are blaming dark anti-Turkish forces and, of course, the Jews for unleashing the virus on the world.
Turkey’s fight against coronavirus (COVID-19) is generally accepted to be rational, well-timed, not too badly planned, and fairly effective. At the time when the German case toll was 7,000 (and the Dutch and UK case tolls were at around 2,000 each), Turkey’s was just 98. And when, on March 19, the Italian death toll surpassed China’s at 4,400, the Turkish mortality figure was just three. The government sealed borders—most significantly with Iran—just in time; cancelled all public gatherings and events, including football games; ordered most businesses to be shuttered; and launched an effective awareness campaign to keep Turks at home. About 3,000 Turkish pilgrims on their way home from Mecca were quarantined. The Turkish awareness rate of coronavirus was 100% by mid-March, according to one poll.
But several questions remain unanswered. Why did the Turkish religious authorities allow 21,500 people to travel to Mecca in the first place? Would it not have been safer for them to wait to fulfill their pilgrimage until after the world goes back to normal? And why were only 3,000 pilgrims quarantined? The other 18,500 returnees from Mecca are walking free in Turkey.
The question also arises: was the number of Turkish cases low because of government censorship? No, the “Turkish success” can be much more easily explained. The number of reported Turkish cases was low because the number of tests Turkey conducted was low. As of March 16, Turkey had performed just 2,800 tests (two tested positive out of a population of 83 million). Compare that to South Korea, which has performed 250,000 tests (8,100 tested positive out of a population of 51 million). It’s simple: if you don’t test people, you don’t put cases on the books.
Coronavirus in Turkey, like most things in that country, highlights the black humor in tragedy. As ever, Turkey is fun unless you have to live there.
Professor Ali Erbaş, president of Diyanet, Turkey’s highest religious authority, gave a Friday sermon in which he warned Muslims not to attend crowded events. He delivered this sermon at a mosque containing 5,000 people. A few days later, Diyanet issued a fatwa indefinitely suspending Friday prayers.
Turks are a brave people, and pious Turks are apparently the bravest of all. Large groups of Muslims protested Diyanet for the suspension of Friday prayers on the logic that prayers would surely protect the pious from any evil, up to and including a silly little virus. Reading the news of the protests, a friend of the author said, “It’s a view we should respect. It’s also a theory worth testing. How about injecting the coronavirus into all these pious folks?”
But the way “better-educated” Turks, including journalists and columnists, interpret the coronavirus crisis is even more entertaining.
One Islamist writer suggested that “now that all bars and alcohol-licensed enterprises are (temporarily) shut maybe we should consider keeping them shut forever due to the risk of coronavirus.”
Another suggested that the “CHP virus”—CHP is the acronym for Turkey’s secular main opposition party—is far more dangerous than coronavirus.
Pro-government media claimed they had found the real conspiracy: the virus was first detected in Turkey on the day a new opposition party, DEVA, was officially inaugurated, which cannot be a coincidence. Any opposition party challenging President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is tantamount to a deadly virus threatening Turkey.
Other Islamists had a more intellectual, global response to the virus: they threw down a gauntlet before science. Tell us, positivists, secularists: where is your cure? Where is the “science” you always put before religion?
Turkish social media is of course a rich source of “scientific” interpretations of the coronavirus crisis, many of them larded with predictable self-aggrandizement, paranoia, and antisemitism:
“Thanks to the power we inherited from our (Ottoman) ancestors we will kill all viruses and infidels.”
“We will defeat the virus as we will defeat the entire world.”
“Jews manufactured and spread the virus to end western civilization.”
“We will annihilate the global masters behind the virus.”
“The virus is only a minor part of a bigger game that targets Turkey.”
“The virus was created to overthrow Erdoğan, leader of the umma.”
“The Islamic army will defeat the infidel virus.”
Viruses change, but Islamist rhetoric does not. Yeniden Refah, a small Islamist party, said: “Though we do not have certain evidence, this virus serves Zionism’s goals of decreasing the number of people and preventing it from increasing, and important research expresses this. Zionism is a five-thousand-year-old bacteria that has caused the suffering of people.”
One collective response that neatly illustrates the Turkish approach to a crisis was a television interview with ordinary citizens in the marketplace in Elaziğ, a province in eastern Turkey. A local broadcaster sent a team to interview the locals after reporters noticed with shock that the streets and main marketplace of Elaziğ were full of people, so much so that the province was even more crowded than it had been before coronavirus. The crew asked passersby, “What about coronavirus? Aren’t you afraid to be in crowded public places?”
Three interviewees expressed confidence that the power of prayer will defeat all viruses. A few claimed that coronavirus does not exist—it is a lie swallowed by a credulous world. Another said, “Allah always protects the believer.” Another contributed this theory: “The entire world is at war with Turkey. This virus is Allah’s curse on them.”
*Burak Bekdil is an Ankara-based columnist. He regularly writes for the Gatestone Institute and Defense News and is a fellow at the Middle East Forum. He is also a founder of the Ankara-based think tank Sigma.

Muslim Extremists Exploit Coronavirus to Promote Terrorism, Hate; and Other Muslims that Need the World's Help
Bassam Tawil/Gatestone Institute/March 25, 2020
According to the report, the Muslim Brotherhood and ISIS have, through a number of fatwas, called on Muslims to produce "human biological weapons" to attack the enemies of Islam.
In addition, 35% of the fatwas judged that the outbreak of the virus underscored the need for women to wear the niqab.
The report noted that Islamist cleric Osama Hijazi recently claimed that wearing the niqab is an "effective treatment" for the coronavirus.
The bad news is that extremist Muslims and their allies are again exposing their contempt for human life, including the life of Muslims who oppose their ideology, terrorism and jihad. These are the Muslims that urgently need the world's help.
According to Dr. M. Zuhdi Jasser, President and Founder of the American Islamic Forum for Democracy, "The Muslim Brotherhood has never condemned theologically or ideologically the use of terrorism. And if they have it's been a cover, since they've reverted to that repeatedly." Pictured: Jasser testifies before the House Homeland Security Committee on March 10, 2011 in Washington, DC.
As countries across the world are turning themselves inside out to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, Muslim extremists and terrorists have been expending their energy on promoting terror attacks against other Muslims as well as "infidels."
These terrorists and extremists are probably praying for the "infidels" to discover a vaccine for the virus -- thus enabling them to return to their mosques and resume their calls for killing the "infidels." Many Arab and Islamic countries have banned prayers in mosques to help prevent contagion during the war on the coronavirus.
As scientists and other "infidels" around the world, including Israel, are working around the clock to find a vaccine for the virus, the Muslim Brotherhood organization and some of its allies are issuing fatwas (Islamic religious opinions) that expose dangerous goals, a dangerous ideology, and a disregard for human life.
Sheikh Aid al-Qarni, for instance, long affiliated with the Sahwah ("Awakening") branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, said -- before his detention, death sentence and public recantation in Saudi Arabia:
"I pray to Allah that He will make the enemies fall into their own trap and that He will destroy the Jews and their helpers from among the Christians and the Communists, and that He will turn them into the Muslims' spoils. I praise the Jihad, the sacrifice, and the resistance against the occupiers in Iraq. We curse them all of them every night and pray that Allah will annihilate them, tear them apart, and grant us victory over them... "
In another video, al-Qarni remarked, "Throats must be slit and skulls must be shattered...This is the path to victory, to shahada, and to sacrifice."
An Egyptian writer, Amr Hosny, published an article in the Egyptian daily Al-Tahrir, accusing Arab and Muslim society of being oversensitive regarding the honor of Islam, and leading to them being violent and murderous towards others:
"Every time an extremist Muslims commits a horrifying crime against humanity, some people come out and shriek that he has nothing to do with Islam, while ignoring the fact that views and ideologies do not exist as abstract entities, but rather take shape in the minds and behavior of those who believe in them in accordance with the surrounding culture that defines the nature of their relations with the other. The culture of our Islamic societies in this generation, particularly Arab societies, produces a violent Islam whose believers simply murder anyone who disagrees with them under the pretext of being offended. This, while they [the Muslims] never consider anyone else's feelings but their own...
"Omar Mateen, the young American Muslim of Afghan origin who massacred 50 homosexuals, was offended because he saw two men kissing, but was not [offended] by [the act of] murdering 50 people. After all these crimes, members of other cultures more readily accept extremism on behalf of their governments and people against Muslims [in general] and Arabs in particular, since [in their eyes] they are [all] potential terrorists who must be uprooted from their societies.
"We must recognize the existence of a flaw in the Islamic culture - particularly the Arab [Islamic culture] - that beats in the heart of the Muslim... and causes him to become convinced that the other deserves to be killed if he offends [the Muslims'] religious sensibilities..." [Tahrirnews.com, June 14, 2016].
Dr. M. Zuhdi Jasser, in a hearing before the US House of Representatives, noted the words on the logo of the Muslim Brotherhood:
"The next slide looks at the logo.... They have not changed their logo. And at the bottom, under those swords, which are not peaceful, that are not violent symbol, it says wei du (pu) [peace be unto Him] ...from chapter 8, verse 16 [60, ed. The recorder evidently misheard] of the Koran, and it says "make ready." And it's not the Boy Scouts' "be prepared, make ready." (p. 41)
For the record, Chapter 8, verse 60 of the Quran states:
"And make ready against them all you can of power, including steeds of war (tanks, planes, missiles, artillery, etc.) to threaten the enemy of Allah and your enemy, and others besides whom, you may not know but whom Allah does know...." - Mohsin Khan translation.
Dr. Jasser continued:
"And if you look at the motto it says, as has been pointed out, that death for the sake of God is their highest aspiration....
"The Muslim Brotherhood has never condemned theologically or ideologically the use of terrorism. And if they have it's been a cover, since they've reverted to that repeatedly.
"Recep Erdogan, the head of the Muslim Brotherhood group in Turkey, also known as the AKP, said: Democracy is like a train; we ride it until we get where we want to go and then we get off." (p.41)
The Global Fatwa Index (GFI) organization, affiliated with Egypt's Dar al-Ifta and General Secretariat for Fatwa Authorities Worldwide, disclosed on March 16 that it had been monitoring and analyzing numerous fatwas on the coronavirus.
The group found that a large number of the fatwas related to the disease came from "unofficial" bodies and individuals.
The GFI Index concluded that "extremist organizations and terrorist groups are exploiting the outbreak of the virus to implement their ideology, spread chaos, terror and panic, and call into question the nation's institutions and leaders."
According to the report, the Muslim Brotherhood and ISIS have, through a number of fatwas, called on Muslims to produce "human biological weapons" to attack the enemies of Islam. They have also ruled that Muslims who die of the coronavirus are considered "martyrs."
The report went in to say that the Muslim Brotherhood and Salafism, a revivalist movement within Sunni Islam which had roots in the 18th-century Wahhabi movement that originated in modern-day Saudi Arabia, have ruled that the virus is a "divine punishment for those who banned the niqab," a garment of clothing that covers the face, worn by some Muslim women as a part of an interpretation of hijab (modest dress).
The two groups, the Muslim Brotherhood and Salafism, have also ruled that the outbreak of the coronavirus was a divine punishment for the persecution of Uighur Muslims by China.
In August 2018, a UN committee heard that up to one million Uighur Muslims and other Muslim groups could have been detained in China's western Xinjiang region, where they are said to be undergoing grisly "re-education" programs.
According to the GFI report, the Muslim Brotherhood and some Salafists "continue to use the [virus] to implement some of their literature, as they have linked the outbreak of the epidemic to the banning of the niqab inside Egyptian universities and institutions."
The report pointed out that 55% of the "unofficial" fatwas of the Muslim Brotherhood and Salafists focused on the issue of divine punishment, with some asserting that the coronavirus was God's "revenge" against China for its persecution of Muslims.
In addition, 35% of the fatwas judged that the outbreak of the virus underscored the need for women to wear the niqab.
The report noted that Islamist cleric Osama Hijazi recently claimed that wearing the niqab is an "effective treatment" for the coronavirus. In his opinion, "the World Health Organization should order the countries of the world to compel men and women to wear the niqab."
Some Muslim extremists and terrorists, on the other hand, are trying to make financial profit out of the coronavirus, the report added.
"Coronavirus is treated by Prophet Mohammed's beloved ones," a Mauritanian sheikh, Yahthia Ould Dahi, recently said, "and there's no need to be worried. They are prepared to travel to China to treat it, God willing. The cost of treating this epidemic varies according to the patients, their circumstances and their (financial) capabilities."
An Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood fugitive, Bahjat Saber, has been using the outbreak of the virus to call for carrying out terrorist attacks against the Egyptian authorities. Saber urged Muslims who have the flu, or who are suspected of being infected with the coronavirus, to enter police stations and other government institutions in order to spread the disease.
The report noted that an intelligence document leaked by the Iraqi Ministry of Interior revealed that ISIS was seeking to recruit its coronavirus-infected members to act as "human biological bombs" in various parts of Iraq. So, ISIS wants to use its members to spread the virus among Iraqis.
The good news is that the rulings of the terrorists and extremists do not represent the views of the leading Islamic religious authorities in most Arab and Islamic countries. The bad news is that extremist Muslims and their allies are again exposing their contempt for human life, including the life of Muslims who oppose their ideology, terrorism and jihad. These are the Muslims (apart from Sheikh al-Qarni) that urgently need the world's help.
**Bassam Tawil is a Muslim Arab Based in the Middle East
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Don't lift Iran sanctions, not even for the coronavirus
Michael Rubin/Washington Examinar/March 25/2020
Like clockwork, two dozen left-wing activist groups demanded last week the United States lift sanctions on Iran to help the Islamic Republic fight the coronavirus. “With hospitals overrun and Iranian doctors struggling to procure necessary equipment, the U.S. must be part of the solution rather than part of the problem,” the president of the National Iranian American Council, Tehran’s de facto lobby in the U.S., explained.
They could not be more wrong. Put aside that the same groups consistently demand the same action regardless of the news. When the U.S. Treasury Department sanctioned the Islamic Republic for money laundering for terrorist groups, NIAC complained on humanitarian grounds. When the Trump administration imposed sanctions targeted not on the Iranian people but rather its leadership, NIAC objected. When the Trump administration sought to sanction the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, NIAC opposed. NIAC letters, most often co-signed by the likes of Code Pink, the American Friends Service Committee, and the Ploughshares Fund, are like Mad Libs: “[Day’s event] is reason to lift sanctions immediately.”
If the goal of the signatories is to help Iranians defeat the ongoing pandemic, however, lifting sanctions is wrongheaded. First, there is already a mechanism in place for Iranian leaders to purchase medical and humanitarian goods. Second, no amount of money will help when Iranian shrines allow pilgrims to lick tombs, or clerics tell the population that COVID-19 can be cured by spreading essential oils on one’s anus. Third, there is the disconnect about what sanctions target. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps controls perhaps 40% of Iran’s economy, including most imports and exports. This is why the Obama administration’s $1.4 billion hostage ransom payment was so counterproductive. To lift sanctions would empower Iran’s military, not help those most in need. Case in point are the revelations that senior Iranian leaders embezzled perhaps $1 billion worth of aid Europe sent to help fight the virus.
Simply put, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei is replicating late Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein’s propaganda campaign: Promote humanitarian tragedy and profit off it. The Iraqi regime said sanctions killed children while exporting baby formula. Just as Khamenei today is worth billions, the Iraqi dictator also used sanctions relief to build palaces. Code Pink amplified Saddam’s false propaganda saying sanctions killed 500,000 Iraqi children; today, Khamenei counts on NIAC to be his propaganda bullhorn in America.
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And just as North Korea diverted humanitarian aid in the wake of the 1994 Agreed Framework (the Clinton administration’s much-ballyhooed nuclear deal) in order to feed its army and build its nuclear program, so too would the authorities in Tehran divert any money passing through Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps fronts or personnel to Iran’s nuclear, missile, or terrorism programs.
If Iran needs money to provide relief to its people, it has plenty. It could cease supporting Hezbollah, Iraqi militias, or the Houthis in Yemen, for example, together freeing up billions of dollars in cash. It could also cease building ballistic missiles, a program in which it invests hundreds of millions more dollars. Then, there is Iran’s nuclear program which, from a civilian energy perspective, never made much sense given that Iran floats on a sea of gas and oil and could upgrade its refineries and pipelines for a fraction of the cost of its nuclear investment.
If the Iranian regime’s apologists in NIAC and among other supposedly progressive groups want to absolve Iran of that responsibility and still help the Iranian people fight the Wuhan coronavirus, then they could demand the U.S. provide direct medical assistance to Iran. Then, of course, that is what the Trump administration already did. Khamenei rejected that offer outright.
The sad reality is that the financial benefit for Khamenei and the ruling clerics of Iran’s suffering is simply too great to risk. The coronavirus, and Khamenei’s desire for cash rather than substantive help, reveals his true self.
*Michael Rubin (@Mrubin1971) is a contributor to the Washington Examiner's Beltway Confidential blog. He is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and a former Pentagon official.

Iran refuses to release Christian prisoners amid coronavirus outbreak while EU sends millions in aid

Benjamin Weinthal/FDD/March 25/2020
Iran’s theocratic rulers have temporarily released some 85,000 prisoners, including political prisoners, in an effort to prevent the spread of the Middle East’s worst coronavirus outbreak, but have refused to free many Iranian Christians jailed for practicing their faith.
Article18, an organization that promotes religious freedom in Iran, told Fox News on Monday that four Iranian Christians serving 10-year sentences in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison are among the prisons denied temporary release “even though their requests for retrials have been accepted.”
“We at Article18 ask for the immediate and unconditional release of all Christians detained on spurious charges related to their faith or religious activities,” Mansour Borji, the research and advocacy director for the London-based organization, said. “This is even more urgent given the current health crisis that threatens these detained Christians and their families back home.”
Borji continued: “The international community should also demand that Iran upholds its obligations to guarantee the right to freedom of religion or belief for every citizen, regardless of their ethnic or linguistic background, including converts from other religions.”
According to Article18, the four Iranian Christians being held are Yousef Nadarkhani, 42, Mohammad Reza (Yohan) Omidi, 46, and Zaman (Saheb) Fadaei, 36, and Nasser Navard Gol-Tapeh, who is 58 years old and suffers from several health issues.
Iran, which has been considered the epicenter for the virus’ spread in the Middle East, has seen more than 24,811 cases and at least 1,934 deaths from COVID-19, as of Tuesday morning. International observers believe the real figures are much higher than reported by Iranian health officials.
In an unprecedented move last week, Iranian authorities released some 85,000 inmates, including from Evin prison. The move comes as officials have placed unconfirmed blame that the United States is behind the global pandemic.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Monday lashed out at Iran for the unfounded accusations, saying: “The [Iranian] regime continues to lie to the Iranian people and the world about the number of cases and deaths, which are unfortunately far higher than the regime admits.”
Article18 said the persecuted Christians “have made several requests for release on bail since their retrials were accepted in October [except for Gol-Tapeh, whose request for a retrial was accepted in February], and their families are increasingly anxious about them in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak.”
Alireza Miryousefi, the spokesman for Iran’s mission to the United Nations, told Fox News that decreasing the number of prisons has been a “general policy” by Tehran’s new head of justice since last year.
“All Iranians imprisoned for various crimes are judged by the judiciary on an individual basis as to whether they should be released or furloughed on medical grounds or other consideration,” he said. “Tens of thousands have already been released from prisons. There has been no discrimination on the basis of religion or race.”
However, experts on human rights violations by the Islamic Republic against Iranian Christians told Fox News authorities have refused to show clemency toward imprisoned Christian converts.
“While Iran’s regime has released thousands of short-sentence prisoners to prevent the spread of coronavirus in its jails and prisons, it has refused to show clemency toward Christian converts,” Lisa Daftari, the founder and managing editor at The Foreign Desk multi-media news platform, told Fox News. “According to Islamic law, it is a crime to convert to Christianity, or more specifically, it is a crime to turn from Islam.”
She noted, “The regime has always made an example of its Christian convert detainees to serve as a warning to others. Paradoxically, the harsher the regime has been in recent years, the more the people of Iran have been attracted and found a haven in the Christian religion. We have seen a surge in underground churches and conversion programs.
“The international community and the media need to keep these stories in the spotlight. For years, we have had success in getting Christians released or their sentences commuted just by continuing to report their cases,” Daftari said.
Marjan Greenblatt, the founder and director of Alliance for Rights of All Minorities, told Fox News that while the Islamic Republic recognizes Christians as an official religious minority with second-class rights on paper, “converts out of Islam have no rights.”
“Not only Christian converts are denied the second-class rights given to Christian-born Iranians, they actually risk their lives for their religious beliefs,” Greenblatt added. “So many converts out of Shi’a Islam, have ended behind bars for declaring their own religious choices.”
Meanwhile, the European Union has decided to send humanitarian assistance to alleviate the COVID-19 crisis in the Islamic Republic. On Monday, the EU’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell announced that “there is some €20 million ($21.6 million) in the pipeline… that we expect to be delivered over the next weeks” to Tehran.
The EU aid is not linked to a promise from Iran’s regime to release persecuted Iranians who were incarcerated on bogus charges.
“For years, the Iranian regime has prioritized its proxies over the Iranian people and stolen the money the Iranian people deserve and expect to go for their healthcare,” the U.S. State Department said Monday. “In July 2019, one billion euros intended for medical supplies ‘disappeared’ and another $170 million allocated for medical goods were instead spent on tobacco.”
Javaid Rehman, the UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Islamic Republic of Iran, urged the mullahs who rule in Tehran to release of all prisoners of conscience to reduce the spread of the virus. Iran’s vast penitentiary system is widely viewed as a fertile incubator for the deadly coronavirus.
Many of the Iranians currently imprisoned by the Shi’ite Islamist regime are converts to Christianity.
“In Iran apostasy is punishable by death, yet the number of evangelical Christian converts continues to grow. Like all religious minorities who suffer under Iran’s theocratic dictatorship, Christians need support from the West, especially the European Union, which has considerable leverage over Tehran,” Peter Kohanloo, the president of the U.S.-based Iranian American Majority organization, told Fox News. “Assistance from the EU could, for example, be linked to the release of religious dissidents.”
British-Iranian journalist, Potkin Azarmehr, invoked the Universal Declaration of Human Rights when discussing the practices by Iran’s judicial officials. He said one of the most fundamental human values as enshrined in the declaration is “liberty rights that protect freedoms in areas such as belief and religion, association, assembling and movement.”
“Why are the nation members of UN not pursuing this fundamental declaration in Iran?” he told Fox News.
*Benjamin Weinthal reports on human rights in the Middle East and is a fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Follow him on Twitter @BenWeinthal

North Korea Conducts Third Projectile Launch in 2020
David Maxwell/Mathew Ha/FDD/March 25/2020
North Korea launched two short-range projectiles and conducted a live-fire artillery competition late last week as the rest of the world, and likely North Korea itself, confronts the coronavirus pandemic. The purpose of these latest provocations may be to advertise the gradual advancement of North Korea’s rocket artillery and ballistic missile capabilities, but they may also be an effort to divert attention from signs that the regime is incapable of addressing the coronavirus epidemic.
This is North Korea’s third weapons firing in 2020. South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff reported that the North Korean People’s Army (NKPA) launched the two short-range projectiles from North Pyongan Province. The projectiles flew to a range of approximately 410 kilometers, with a maximum in-flight altitude of 50 kilometers. Based on analysis of the projectiles’ movement and of images of the projectiles, open source assessments thus far suggest they were KN-24 short-range missiles, which bear similarities in appearance to the U.S. Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS).
The NKPA likely launched the KN-24 missiles from a 600mm multiple rocket launcher (MRL) system. North Korea already tested this MRL system last year. This test likely was a scheduled component of the NKPA’s Winter Training Cycle, which is slated to end in March. Additionally, re-testing the KN-24 missile could signify that the NKPA is now preparing to field these weapons. According to the Missile Defense Advocacy Alliance, there is a “limited deployment” of a 300mm MRL (KN-09) along the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
If this is the case, both Washington and Seoul should be concerned, considering these systems could reach U.S. military bases at Camp Humphreys, Osan Air Base, and Cheongju Airbase if fielded along the DMZ. North Korean propaganda cryptically alluded to these U.S. and ROK bases as a “fat target.”
Another explanation for the latest weapons tests is they are a smokescreen for North Korea’s inability to effectively confront the coronavirus pandemic. Weapons provocations therefore could be Pyongyang’s warning to the United States and South Korea not to interfere in North Korea’s present internal crisis. Although the regime publicly stated there have been zero infections, it may be covering up an outbreak as reports emerge that as many as 200 North Korean soldiers have already died from the virus.
Experts have noted that any kind of pandemic could have catastrophic consequences for North Korea due to its lack of a robust public health infrastructure. If Pyongyang indeed is covering up an outbreak within the military, the loss of military leaders’ support and loyalty represents a potential pathway to a full regime collapse. Yet there is still a dearth of concrete information, making it premature to conclude this is happening.
Furthermore, Pyongyang’s latest weapons test should remind Washington and Seoul’s respective leaderships that the North Korean threat persists and grows. Although both governments currently confront domestic challenges due to the coronavirus pandemic, the United States and South Korea should continue to the best of their ability to manage, strengthen, and ultimately restore their alliance as the critical lynchpin deterring North Korean aggression.
*David Maxwell, a 30-year veteran of the U.S. Army and a retired Special Forces colonel, is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD),
*where Mathew Ha is a research analyst. Both contribute to FDD’s Center on Military and Political Power (CMPP). For more analysis from David, Mathew, and CMPP, please subscribe HERE. Follow David and Mathew on Twitter @davidmaxwell161 and @matjunsuk. Follow FDD on Twitter @FDD and @FDD_CMPP. FDD is a Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and foreign policy.