English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese, Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For May 17/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani

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Bible Quotations For today
While they were talking about this, Jesus himself stood among them and said to them, Peace be with you
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Luke 24/36-45: “While they were talking about this, Jesus himself stood among them and said to them, ‘Peace be with you.’They were startled and terrified, and thought that they were seeing a ghost. He said to them, ‘Why are you frightened, and why do doubts arise in your hearts? Look at my hands and my feet; see that it is I myself. Touch me and see; for a ghost does not have flesh and bones as you see that I have.’And when he had said this, he showed them his hands and his feet. While in their joy they were disbelieving and still wondering, he said to them, ‘Have you anything here to eat?’ They gave him a piece of broiled fish, and he took it and ate in their presence. Then he said to them, ‘These are my words that I spoke to you while I was still with you that everything written about me in the law of Moses, the prophets, and the psalms must be fulfilled.’
Then he opened their minds to understand the scriptures.”

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on May 16-17/2020
Lebanon records 11 new COVID-19 cases
Coronavirus: Lebanon cases spike as returning expats flout quarantine requirements
Lebanon ready to float currency once aid is secured: Minister
Lebanon army says arrests 16 over ‘illegal’ currency ring
Lebanon: Calls for Lifting ‘Political Cover’ in Smuggling Crisis
Lebanese Authorities to Crack down on Violators of Maritime Property
Lebanon Announces Flights Out for Foreign Workers
Nine MEA Flights Repatriating Expats to Land in Beirut Saturday
Abu Sleiman questions logic behind government’s decision to negotiate directly, hold consensual contracts in energy dossier
Bou Assi: To accord the army and its commander the political cover to control the borders
Choucair: To allow businesses to open their doors on the eve of Eid El Fitr
Khreiss calls for taking measures against those manipulating the dollar exchange rate
Hezbollah in response to what was published in Al-Liwaa: It does not concern us at all!
Derian visits the tomb of Martyr Mufti Hassan Khaled in Ouza’i
Hariri: Martyr Sheikh Khaled was victorious for Lebanon and coexistence
Interior Minister commemorating Martyr Mufti Khaled: A man of national, uniting stances
Al-Sayed: Central Bank collects around 20 to 30 million US dollars monthly from the Lebanese market
Swarms of Insects Invade Lebanese Regions
Foreign workers seek evacuation from Lebanon/Najia Houssari/Arab News/May 16/2020
Despite mounting isolation, Nasrallah still on the warpath/The Arab Weekly/May 16/2020
Israel's Druze can no longer be bought with a pat on the back/Shakib Ali|/Ynetnews/May 16/May/2020

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on May 16-17/2020
Iranian news agency warns of repercussions if US disrupts fuel shipment to Venezuela
Iran's Stock Index Drops, Falls Below 1 Million Mark
Iran Sentences French Academic to 5 Years in Prison
Syria's Daraa Turns to Russia to Halt Regime Offensive
Syria: Local Currency Devaluation Exacerbates Sufferings In Damascus
Representative of Iraq's Top Religious Authority Denies Offering Position of PMF Head to Amiri
Egypt's Army: 13 Terrorists Killed in Sinai Operation
Jordan Warns Israel of 'Massive Conflict' over Annexation, EU Steps up Diplomacy
Algerian Opposition Divided Over Draft Constitution
Intermittent Clashes in Libyan Capital, UN Slams Threat to People's Lives
Tunisia Says Terrorist Groups are Isolated in Mountains on Algeria Border
UN Reiterates Support for Riyadh Agreement on Yemen
Russia Records Highest Coronavirus Death Toll Yet
Italy to Reopen Borders for Tourists in Early June
Beaches and Football as Europe Relaxes Virus Restrictions


Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published
 on May 16-17/2020
Italy Learns a Hard Lesson on Face Masks/Ferdinando Giugliano/Bloomberg/May, 16/2020
"Victimhood Culture" UK: Rape Victims Need Not Apply/Judith Bergman/Gatestone Institute/May 16/2020
Why US-Iran relations could shift gears in the coming days/Raghida Dergham/The National/May 16/ 2020
The EU: Not fatally broken, but it needs fixing soon/Hafed Al-Ghwell/Arab News/May 16, 2020
The US and China: In a relationship, but it’s complicated/Cornelia Meyer/Arab News/May 16, 2020
Trump must do better in the battle for hearts and minds/Andrew Hammond/Arab News/May 16, 2020
Daesh: They haven’t gone away, you know/Peter Welby/Arab News/May 16, 2020

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on May 16-17/2020
Lebanon records 11 new COVID-19 cases
Annahar Staff /May 16/2020
BEIRUT: According to the daily report issued by the Ministry of Public Health, Lebanon recorded 11 new coronavirus cases Saturday. So far, 902 cases were officially recorded with no new deaths, rendering the total number of deaths at 26.
The Ministry of Public Health’s report further stated that around 28%, which is the highest percentage of the total infected individuals, are patients whose ages range between 20 and 29. Meanwhile, patients who exceeded the age of 80 constitute around 5% of the total recorded cases. There are no cases recorded for people whose ages range between 10 and 19. Also, 55% of the patients are males and 45% of them are females, and El Metn remains the most infected region with a number of patients totaling 156. The Ministry of Public Health also noted that around 62% of the infected individuals are in mild or moderate conditions, while around 7.3% remain in severe or critical conditions. The rest are asymptomatic.

Coronavirus: Lebanon cases spike as returning expats flout quarantine requirements
Abby Sewell, Al Arabiya English/Saturday 16 May 2020
Some of the newly detected coronavirus cases in Lebanon are of individuals who entered the country on the repatriation flights, and some returning expats have flouted the requirement to quarantine, raising fears that the returns could threaten progress made in controlling the virus.
Beirut’s airport remains closed to commercial flights until at least June 8 amid the coronavirus outbreak. But several repatriation flights have continued to arrive, bringing Lebanese expats home from locations around the world. Lebanon was in the process of gradually lifting its lockdown procedures before a spike in cases prompted a new four-day lockdown beginning Wednesday night. Coronavirus numbers have remained relatively low in the country – with a total of 902 cases and 26 deaths reported as of Saturday. On May 6, the Ministry of Public Health reported that 25 expats returning on a flight from Nigeria had tested positive for the virus, but smaller numbers of positive cases have surfaced among returning expats nearly every day. On Saturday, the health ministry reported 11 new positive tests, of which six were among expats. For all the latest headlines follow our Google News channel online or via the app. And in a notice issued earlier this week, Mount Lebanon Governor Judge Mohammad al-Makkawi announced that five recently returned expats – who had come from Warsaw, Frankfurt, Bucharest, Tehran, and Cameroon respectively – were wanted for arrest after they had allegedly given false contact information to authorities in an attempt to elude follow-up monitoring meant to ensure that they were quarantined at home. The government’s handling of the expat returns has drawn criticism, particularly after the new lockdown, with some asserting that mishandling of the repatriations was threatening to undo the progress made on controlling the spread of the virus. Former MP Ismail Sukkariyeh, a gastroenterologist, on Saturday issued a statement questioning the government’s handling of the repatriations, and particularly the failure to ensure that the returnees adhere to quarantine measures. “Why did the government not put its hand on vacant institutions, such as hotels and public buildings, to quarantine the arrivals in them?” Sukkariyeh asked. “Why aren’t government hospitals placed at the disposal of conducting the quarantine, and not only performing a laboratory test that is mistaken 30 percent of the time?”
About 11,300 Lebanese are expected to return on repatriation flights during the current phase, which began May 11 and ends May 24. Many of the returnees are university students who got stuck abroad when the Beirut airport closed on March 18.
For expats returning from countries where COVID-19 testing is available, authorities have been requiring expats to show a negative test result taken within three days before their departure before they can board a repatriation flight. Those with positive test results are not allowed to board.
However, those returning from countries that do not have reliable testing capacity are tested upon arrival. All returning expats are ordered to quarantine, but unlike in some other countries that have quarantined returning travelers in hotels, Lebanon has ordered the expats to self-quarantine at home.
A spokesman for the health ministry did not respond to requests for comment. In a statement Friday, the minister urged returnees to take seriously “the necessity of compulsory home quarantine and not to socialize even with their families or neighborhoods, as this poses a challenge to preserving the progress made in the face of the epidemic.”Firass Abiad, head of Rafik Hariri University Hospital, the government hospital that has been at the forefront of the coronavirus response in Lebanon, told Al Arabiya English that halting repatriation flights altogether “is not really an option for a lot of humanitarian social reasons, and at the end of the day, these are people coming back to their country, so you cannot just lock them out indefinitely.”
However, Abiad said he believes additional precautions could be taken.
Returning travelers who test positive, even if they are asymptomatic, “need to come into the hospital until we have a very clear assessment, which is both a medical assessment and a social assessment to make sure they can go back, that it’s safe for them and for the society at large to be at a quarantine in their homes,” he said. While other countries have been allowing asymptomatic patients to quarantine at home, Abiad said, “We have to take advantage that we do not have a lot of cases in Lebanon, and this allows us to exert more control. We don’t have to take shortcuts like some countries because they have so many positive cases they’re overwhelmed.”Abiad noted that some of the recent case clusters that had driven the new four-day lockdown did not appear to be related to returning expats, including a cluster of cases among soldiers at a military court. He added that citizens also need to take responsibility for preventing spread of the virus. “There are two sides to this conversation,” he said. “There is the conversation of the measures that the government is taking, but then there is the other side, which is the behavior and conduct of the population. I think that the more we conduct ourselves in a responsible manner, the easier it will become for the government to ease its measures.”

Lebanon ready to float currency once aid is secured: Minister
AFP, Beirut/May 16/2020
Lebanon, whose currency has been pegged to the dollar for 23 years, is ready to float the pound only after it secures billions in aid, Finance Minister Ghazi Wazni said Friday. Speaking to AFP after talks started Wednesday with the International Monetary Fund on a plan to rescue Lebanon’s free falling economy, he also said a restructuring of the banking sector would entail halving the number of banks in the country. A hard currency crunch in recent months has strained the official fixed rate of 1,507 to the dollar, with the pound losing more than half of its value to fetch well over 4,000 on the black market. “The IMF always asks for the freeing of the pound’s exchange rate,” Wazni said. But “we need to change the stabilization policy to one of a flexible exchange rate in a first stage and for the forseeable future,” he said, referring to an initial managed flotation. “When we receive financial support from abroad, we will transition to floatation” according to the market, he said. “The Lebanese government has asked for a transitional period to pass through a flexible exchange rate before we reach floatation,” he added.
Wazni said the first phase would involve “a gradual increase of the exchange rate to the dollar,” in coordination with the central bank. He said this was necessary because the government feared “huge deterioration of the pound exchange rate” otherwise. Lebanon, which was hit last autumn by unprecedented protests, asked the IMF for financial assistance on May 1 after laying out a much-awaited financial rescue plan. That plan aims to drum up billions of dollars in aid, reduce the deficit, restructure a colossal debt, and reorganise an oversized banking sector. Wazni said the restructuring would be done “step by step.” “Lebanon counts 49 commercial banks and it is normal for that number to decrease to around half of that in the next stage,” he said. Lebanon is in the grips of a severe liquidity crunch, with depositors unable to make transfers abroad or withdraw dollars. The Mediterranean nation is one of the most indebted countries worldwide with a debt equivalent to 170 percent of its gross domestic product. It defaulted on a repayment for the first time ever in March.

Lebanon army says arrests 16 over ‘illegal’ currency ring
AFP/May 16, 2020
The army said it had arrested 16 people who were carrying out “money transfers and illegal currency exchange transactions, using licensed companies and offices as a front.”
During the arrests, the army seized “significant sums” but also computers and laptops used in these operations
The network sent dollars with motorists across the border to Syria, specifically to the northwestern province of Idlib
BEIRUT: Sixteen people in Lebanon, mostly Syrians, have been arrested for money transfers and “illegal” currency exchange operations, the army said Saturday, amid a government crackdown on exchange rate manipulation.
The army said it had arrested 13 Syrians and three Lebanese, who were carrying out “money transfers and illegal currency exchange transactions, using licensed companies and offices as a front,” in a statement. The suspects used an “unlicensed online platform belonging to one of the financial companies,” to carry out the financial transactions, the statement said. The Lebanese pound has been pegged to the dollar at 1,507 since 1997 but the country’s worst economic crisis in decades has seen its value plunge to beyond 4,000 on the black market.
The government has sought to stem the fall by launching a nationwide crackdown on money changers it alleges are exchanging the pound for dollars at a rate weaker than the 3,200 per dollar permitted by the central bank. During the arrests, the army seized “significant sums” but also computers and laptops used in these operations, the statement added, specifying that the arrests took place in twelve regions across Lebanon. The network sent dollars with motorists across the border to Syria, specifically to the northwestern province of Idlib, a security official said, referring to a region controlled by Al-Qaeda-linked extremists and allied rebels. After land borders closed because of the coronavirus pandemic, the network started using an “illegal online platform” controlled by a Lebanese money changer, the official added.
Security forces this week arrested that suspect, and found “hundreds of thousands of dollars” stashed in his Beirut home, he said. Investigations later led to a Syrian residing in Lebanon who was also arrested for involvement in the plot along with several of his Lebanese and Syrian affiliates, according to the official.
Lebanon has long been a conduit for foreign currency entering war-torn Syria, a country heavily sanctioned by the US and Europe. The value of the Syrian currency has also fallen markedly.
Lebanon is in the thick of its worst economic crisis since its 1975-1990 civil war, compounded by the coronavirus epidemic. A liquidity crunch has seen banks in Lebanon halt dollar transfers and withdrawals.
Dozens of money exchange offices have been raided by security forces in recent weeks after their personnel allegedly purchased dollars at black market rates. The head of the money changers’ union, Mahmoud Mrad and the central bank’s director of monetary operations, Mazen Hamdan, are among the many arrested for alleged exchange rate manipulation. Commenting on charges against Hamdan, the central bank denied any “manipulation in currency exchange markets.”

Lebanon: Calls for Lifting ‘Political Cover’ in Smuggling Crisis
Beirut/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 16 May, 2020
The problem of fuel and flour smuggling from Lebanon to Syria requires bold political decisions, a Lebanese cabinet minister who participated in the meeting of the Higher Defense Council this week, has said. The minister, who refused to be identified, told Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper in remarks published Saturday that fighting smuggling to and from Syria is not only a security problem. “It’s up to the Lebanese army to control the border but the government’s attempts to stop smuggling would not succeed without coordination with Syria,” said the minister. The cabinet on Thursday ordered the seizure of all goods illegally entering or leaving Lebanon. Its decision came after a meeting for the Higher Defense Council was chaired by President Michel Aoun to discuss the closure of illegal crossings on the border with Syria. The security and economic control of the crossings will not take place if more than new legal crossings - having a presence for the General Security Agency and Customs agents - are not established, said the minister. But this should come along with a similar move by the Syrian regime on the other side of the Lebanese border.
According to the minister, Damascus has been pressing Beirut politically and economically for the normalization of relations between them. The border between the two countries has been closed in a bid to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus. But the mountainous region is difficult to control and Syria's war has seen a surge in smuggling activity. Asharq Al-Awsat learned from ministerial and parliamentary sources that Lebanese army units have so far established a presence at more than 200 sites along the border with Syria. It has also been carrying out patrols and erecting mobile checkpoints, the sources said.

Lebanese Authorities to Crack down on Violators of Maritime Property
Beirut – Paula Astih/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 16 May, 2020
Lebanon launched last week an operation to tackle violations of maritime properties, which are expected to bring millions of dollars to the state’s treasury. Security forces began summoning violators, while all illegal properties would be shut within a week after the end of the four-day total lockdown imposed over the coronavirus outbreak. The move came upon an order by State Prosecutor Ghassan Oueidat to stop all maritime properties, whose owners did not pay taxes arising from the settlement of their status, and all those who failed to meet the legal conditions for the settlement. Invested public maritime areas from the north to the south are estimated at around 5 million square meters, including more than 2.5 million unlicensed square meters. The General Directorate of Transport estimates that if licensed and unlicensed entities pay the required taxes and fees, the annual revenues would reach LBP28 billion (about $18 million based on the official exchange rate). The file of property violations began during the 1975-90 civil war. The period witnessed the largest systematic misappropriation that affected the maritime property in particular.
As a result of this chaos, the shore area receded with the end of the war from about 220 km to no more than 40 km. In the 1990s, the Directorate of Geographical Affairs at the Ministry of Works prepared the Marine Violations Project, which listed the names of violators, the types of violations and their uses. The list showed that those involved in the file included citizens, politicians, diplomats, ministries, mosques, churches and political parties.

Lebanon Announces Flights Out for Foreign Workers

Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 16 May, 2020
Some foreign workers wishing to be repatriated from Lebanon will be able to do so from next week, the General Security agency said Friday, after many saw their salaries slashed in recent months. With no more dollar withdrawals from banks and an exorbitant exchange rate on the black market, many workers toiling to send remittances home were already struggling before the coronavirus lockdown started in mid-March. General Security said it had started "organizing return trips to evacuate foreign workers wishing to return voluntarily to their country of origin in coordination with relevant departments and embassies." "From May 20, evacuations will start for Egyptians and Ethiopians via Rafik Hariri International Airport," starting with those who had already signed up for repatriation, it said. "Coordination is ongoing with those concerned to ensure additional flights for other nationalities," the agency added. The airport has been closed since March 19 as part of lockdown measures, but Lebanon has organized flights in to repatriate its own nationals. The security apparatus, which deals with immigration, called on employers and workers wishing to return home and who had not yet signed up to head to their embassy or consulate to do so. An estimated quarter of a million domestic workers live in Lebanon, the large majority Ethiopian. Thousands more foreign men work petrol pumps, clean the streets or labor in private businesses and restaurants. Due to the liquidity crisis, many are now paid in much devaluated Lebanese pounds and have seen their salaries drastically reduced as result. Stay-at-home orders and the closure of non-essential businesses over the COVID-19 pandemic has left some without work. In December, a few months into the economic downturn, the Philippines embassy offered a free ticket to those wishing to fly home. More than 1,000 Filipinos flocked to the diplomatic mission to sign up. Most were female domestic workers, some with children in tow.

Nine MEA Flights Repatriating Expats to Land in Beirut Saturday
Naharnet/May 16/2020
Nine more flights repatriating Lebanese expats are expected to arrive in Beirut amid the outbreak of the COVID-19 coronavirus. Based on a government-plan to fly expats wishing to return home, the first MEA flight Saturday arrives at 1:00 p.m. coming from Cairo. The following flights will arrive from Riyadh, Jeddah, Dammam, Paris, London, Brussels, Abu Dhabi and Dubai. The flights are part of the third phase of the government's repatriation plan. Lebanon recorded 891 coronavirus cases and 26 deaths since the first case was detected on February 21. Lebanon on Tuesday ordered a four-day-long lockdown to stem the spread of the coronavirus after recording an uptick in infections in recent days amid eased restrictions. The new virus cases include repatriated Lebanese nationals who have returned to the country en masse in recent weeks.

Abu Sleiman questions logic behind government’s decision to negotiate directly, hold consensual contracts in energy dossier
NNA/May 16/2020
"Is it reasonable, after what Lebanon has gone through and following the October 17 Revolution, that the government would decide on holding direct negotiations between the Minister of Energy and the manufacturing companies and arrange for mutual consent contracts to build production plants, instead of conducting transparent tenders?” questioned former Labor Minister, Attorney Kamil Abu Sleiman, via his Twitter account on Saturday. He added: “The excuse of time is not convincing, because the Water & Energy Ministry has all the necessary studies and consultants to conduct tenders in a speedy manner. These tenders can be limited to international manufacturers, such as GE & Siemens, and others…Implementing the current electricity plan, as stipulated by the cabinet’s decision, does not match the economic logic and the views of the relevant international organizations in wake of the crisis. The government must amend the plan!"

Bou Assi: To accord the army and its commander the political cover to control the borders
NNA/May 16/2020
Member of the "Strong Republic" Parliamentary Bloc, MP Pierre Bou Assi, called Saturday for giving the army and its chief, General Joseph Aoun, the political cover to control the Lebanese borders, expressing confidence in their capability to accomplish this task within 24 hours or a few days.
"The problem is now known, and Hezbollah's Secretary-General reiterates it every time. He calls for dialogue with Bashar al-Assad, although these matters do not need negotiations,” Bou Assi asserted. “Hezbollah must reassure the Lebanese and take responsibility for its actions, as it is one of the major problems in the country, along with other social, political and economic problems. Hezbollah's control of the borders is unacceptable, because this is the country's mission. Its illegal weapons are also rejected, since the weapons must be exclusively in the hands of the state,” the MP underlined. Speaking in an interview with “Voice of Lebanon” Radio Station earlier today, the MP affirmed that “the role of a political party is to monitor the work of the government, highlight the points of imbalance, and hold it accountable in politics.” However, he stressed herein that the actual side to carry out such accountability is the judiciary.“For this reason we handed over coherent and clear files to the judiciary, because reaching an outcome requires coordination between the legislative and judicial branches, which must remain separate, but cooperative, so the judiciary can play its role and allow the course of matters to get till the end,” Bou Assi corroborated.Touching on the fuel file, he called for "awaiting the results of the investigations, to realize whether opening the dossier has a political background or not."As for the Corona pandemic, Bou Assi said that the Minister of Health has done a good job in handling the crisis, while praising two main sides who contributed to preventing the virus outbreak, namely the medical teams and the Lebanese citizens who showed awareness, assumed responsibility and committed to home quarantine.Over the government’s economic plan, Bou Assi considered that it includes good points but lacks harmony.

Choucair: To allow businesses to open their doors on the eve of Eid El Fitr
NNA/May 16/2020
Head of the Economic Associations, former Minister Mohamed Choukair, called Saturday on the concerned authorities to take the appropriate decision to permit commercial establishments to open their doors as of Monday, to allow them to benefit from the Fitr season which falls at the end of the upcoming week.Choucair pointed to the many obstacles facing the economic sectors, especially the commercial sector since October 17, 2019, followed by the complete closure in wake of the Corona epidemic outbreak, and the serious economic repercussions witnessed in the country, stressing on the dire need of these institutions for a dose of oxygen to keep them away from total suffocation. He indicated that, through his interactions with trade associations in various regions, especially the Beirut Traders Association, they all affirmed their total and strict commitment to the requirements of preventive measures to maintain public safety.

Khreiss calls for taking measures against those manipulating the dollar exchange rate
NNA/May 16/2020
Member of the "Development and Liberation" Parliamentary Bloc, MP Ali Khreiss, stressed that "the government should take the necessary and legal measures against those who are manipulating the dollar exchange rate, regardless of their region, sect or affiliation, because this matter constitutes a real crisis for citizens and increases their suffering.”The MP’s words came in a statement issued by his press office in Tyre on Saturday. Khreiss pointed to “the importance of the preventive measures taken by the Ministry of Public Health to limit the spread of the Corona virus,” calling on citizens to “commit to implementing government decisions, since adhering to home quarantine eases the health crisis.”He also expressed his concern towards the social and humanitarian conditions prevailing in the country, saying: "We are still in the eye of the storm, from the ambitions of the usurping Zionist entity to the economic situation, far-reaching the Corona crisis…All this requires dialogue in service of the nation’s interests.”

Hezbollah in response to what was published in Al-Liwaa: It does not concern us at all!
NNA/May 16/2020
Hezbollah's Media Relations Department denied, in an issued statement on Saturday, any connection with the recent article published in Al-Liwaa Newspaper on Friday, May 15, 2020. The article had quoted sources close to Hezbollah as stating that the Party has eliminated “Bassil and Franjieh” from the presidential race early. Hezbollah categorically denied such news, affirming that it is not concerned with what was published in the aforementioned Newspaper and that it does not have any close or well-informed sources or any similar media formats.The Party, thus, reiterated its call to media outlets to maintain utmost accuracy when publishing news, and to avoid using such “formulas” in their issued comments, articles and reports.

Derian visits the tomb of Martyr Mufti Hassan Khaled in Ouza’i

NNA/May 16/2020
Grand Mufti of the Lebanese Republic, Sheikh Abdel-Latif Derian, visited Saturday the tomb of Martyr Mufti Sheikh Hassan Khaled in the area of Ouzai, on the occasion of the anniversary of his martyrdom, in the presence of Head of the Mufti Hassan Khaled Institutions, Saadedine Khaled, the family of the deceased and a number of religious scholars and figures. Prayers were raised in memory of the late Martyr Mufti Khaled, asking the Lord Almighty to rest his soul in peace.

Hariri: Martyr Sheikh Khaled was victorious for Lebanon and coexistence

NNA/May 16/2020
Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri commemorated Saturday Martyr Mufti Hassan Khaled, saying via Twitter: “Martyr Sheikh Hassan Khaled reaped victory for Lebanon and its Arabism, and for coexistence amongst its sons. We remember him on this day with all the Lebanese, who knew him as a national and spiritual stature, and who refused to submit to the Syrian regime and confronted injustice, domination and tools of repression in the most difficult stages.”

Interior Minister commemorating Martyr Mufti Khaled: A man of national, uniting stances
NNA/May 16/2020
Interior and Municipalities Minister, Mohamed Fahmy, marked Saturday the martyrdom commemoration of the late Mufti Hassan Khaled, saying via Twitter: “On the anniversary of the martyrdom of the Grand Mufti Sheikh Hassan Khaled, the man of national and uniting positions, we remember his determination to save and protect Lebanon and all Lebanese, and to keep Dar al-Fatwa as a place of unison for all Lebanese with their different sects and affiliations. The great do not leave, but are immortalized in the memory of the homeland…May God rest the soul of Martyr Mufti Hassan Khaled in peace.”

Al-Sayed: Central Bank collects around 20 to 30 million US dollars monthly from the Lebanese market
NNA/May 16/2020
MP Jamil Al-Sayed tweeted Saturday on the US dollar issue, saying: “The dollar! Yesterday, it was issued by Riad Salameh that the Central Bank of Lebanon bought from the market $11 milliShon only, and this is a lie! The Central Bank seizes monthly from the market around $20 to $30 million, being transfers from expatriates to their relatives in Lebanon that are obligatorily paid to them in Lebanese lira…For this reason, we are losing the dollar and its exchange rate has gone up…!”

Swarms of Insects Invade Lebanese Regions
Naharnet/May 16/2020
Swarms of different kinds of insects swept into several regions around Lebanon Friday, throwing panic among the people already frustrated by a lockdown imposed by the spread of coronavirus. nThe massive swarm of bugs hit the country amid a sudden increase in temperature hitting 30 degrees Celsius.
On social media, Lebanese posted pictures of tiny insects invading their homes. Some showed piles of bugs being swept with a broom. “Even when we shut our windows, these insects found some way inside,” one tweet said. “The last we need is a bug invasion,” another reaction complained. In some regions including in Beirut, Hermel and Bekaa and Mount Lebanon "clouds" of beetles and cockroaches were seen buzzing under the glow of the streetlights. Earlier on Friday morning, beetles and cockroaches invaded a number of Lebanese villages and camps for displaced Syrians in eastern Lebanon.
Lebanon is grappling with a crippling economic and monetary crisis that aggravated after the spread of coronavirus.Experts said the wave of bugs is a natural phenomenon, and was triggered by a sudden increase in temperature following rainfall.

Foreign workers seek evacuation from Lebanon
Najia Houssari/Arab News/May 16/2020
Many Lebanese people have ditched their foreign domestic help to avoid the cost of repatriating them to their home countries
There are more than 150,000 foreigners working legally in Lebanon, and 80,000 working illegally
BEIRUT: Foreign workers in Lebanon are seeking repatriation because the country’s dire economic situation has left employers unable to pay them. Many Lebanese people have ditched their foreign domestic help to avoid the cost of repatriating them to their home countries, or returned them to the employment agencies they were recruited from. Domestic workers have also run away after employers stopped paying their salaries, seeking refuge in the embassies of their home countries in their bid to be evacuated. There are more than 150,000 foreigners working legally in Lebanon, and 80,000 working illegally. “We received videotapes of the detention of some 26 Filipino female workers, including a pregnant woman, in a building adjacent to their country’s embassy in the Hadath area in the southern suburb of Beirut more than 35 days ago,” Bassam Kantar, a member of Lebanon’s National Human Rights Commission, which includes the Committee for the Prevention of Torture (LNHRC-CPT), told Arab News. “They were kept in a room in poor conditions. We visited the embassy and talked to the officials. There are more than 100 other workers inside the consulate awaiting repatriation.”
Kantar said that the LNHRC-CPT had been contacted by other foreigners requesting repatriation, especially those who were working illegally. “The LNHRC-CPT contacted Lebanese General Security and it decided to exempt the employees from paying the residency allowance and fines. But it is unable to return them to their countries because it is the responsibility of their embassies.”
He said that there was cooperation between the International Organization for Migration and Lebanese General Security to transfer such workers through planes belonging to airlines of other countries that were carrying workers of other nationalities.
Some airlines refused to send empty planes to Lebanon due to huge losses, he said, but explained the biggest problem related to workers from countries with which Lebanon had no diplomatic relations. Bangladeshi janitors at RAMCO are still waiting for the company’s promise to pay their salaries in dollars, not in Lebanese pounds, based on the official dollar exchange rate of LBP1,515.Dozens of these workers protested at the company’s premises last week, and Kantar described the firm’s behavior as “modern-day slavery.”
The General Directorate of General Security announced on Saturday that it had started organizing trips to evacuate foreign workers willing to return voluntarily to their countries in coordination with the relevant departments and embassies.
The directorate said that, starting May 20, the repatriation of Egyptian and Ethiopian nationals would begin through Rafic Hariri International Airport in Beirut, and that coordination was also taking place with those concerned to secure additional flights for other nationalities.
Separately, more than 1,000 Syrian workers and their families who tried to leave Lebanon because they could no longer afford to live there have been stuck at border points after Damascus refused to allow them in. They have been forced to sleep in the open, without food or drink.
“These people live in the open, and they are starving,” a security source at the Al-Masnaa border crossing told Arab News. “Lebanon cannot do anything for them except offer humanitarian assistance, while the Syrian regime does not want to open the borders for them yet. They are chasing freight cars that cross the borders between the two countries to request a loaf of bread or a drop of drinking water.”

Despite mounting isolation, Nasrallah still on the warpath
The Arab Weekly/May 16/2020
الإسبوع العربي: على الرغم من العزلة المتزايدة ، لا يزال نصرالله على مسار الحرب
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/86262/the-arab-weekly-despite-mounting-isolation-nasrallah-still-on-the-warpath-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%a5%d8%b3%d8%a8%d9%88%d8%b9-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%b9%d8%b1%d8%a8%d9%8a-%d8%b9%d9%84%d9%89-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%b1%d8%ba/
BEIRUT--Faced with mounting challenges at home and abroad, Lebanon’s pro-Iran Hezbollah is defending its involvement in Syria’s war and is calling for closer relations between Beirut and Damascus.
Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah said May 13 that Israel has been attacking “everything linked to missile-manufacturing” in Syria but Iranian and Hezbollah forces in that country were not being swayed by Israel’s actions there.
Israel has conducted many raids inside Syria since the start of Syria’s war in 2011, saying any presence of Hezbollah and Iran, which have played a vital role in supporting the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, was a strategic threat.
“Syria’s allies started to evacuate bases and positions two years ago, without any connection to Israeli attacks,” Nasrallah said, in rare comments on Israeli attacks in the war-torn country.
“Hezbollah forces and Iranian strategic advisers will remain in Syria in accordance with Syria’s interests, and Israeli attacks won’t change this,” he added.
Earlier in May, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres warned of the dangers of Hezbollah’s involvement in neighbouring Syria, saying the Lebanese government and army should ensure the disarmament of the paramilitary group.
“I continue to urge the government and the armed forces of Lebanon to take all measures necessary to prohibit Hezbollah and other armed groups from acquiring weapons and building paramilitary capacity outside the authority of the State,” Guterres wrote in a UN report.
“The continued involvement of Hezbollah in the conflict in the Syrian Arab Republic… carries the risk of entangling Lebanon in regional conflicts and undermining the stability of Lebanon and the region,” Guterres said.
In his report, dated April 30, Guterres said, Hezbollah’s self-acknowledged maintenance of arms and “the alleged increase by Hezbollah of its arsenal pose a serious challenge to the State’s ability to exercise full sovereignty and authority over its territory.” Hezbollah’s “renewed admission that it possesses missiles is also of great concern”, Guterres said.
Recent statements by Nasrallah seem to justify Guterres’ concern and highlight, once again, the scope of the movement’s involvement in the Syrian conflict, with the aim of serving the Iranian agenda in the region.
Israeli Defence Minister Naftali Bennett said in April that the Israeli military was working to drive Tehran out of Syria.
In recent months, Israel has significantly increased the scope of its attacks in Syria, many of which were aimed at Revolutionary Guards and Hezbollah locations. Earlier in May, Israeli defence officials even claimed that Iran had begun withdrawing its forces from Syria.
Nasrallah, however, denied that any Iranian troops were currently operating in Syria or that Israeli air attacks have pushed either Hezbollah or Iran to retreat from the country, calling Israel’s claims that they have done so “imaginary victories.”
The United States Special Representative for Syria Engagement and the Special Envoy for the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS James Jeffrey said May 12 US sanctions on Iran have forced it to reduce its military presence in Syria.
“We have seen the Iranians pulling in some of their outlying activities and such in Syria because of, frankly, financial problems…in terms of the huge success of the Trump administration’s sanctions policies against Iran. It’s having a real effect in Syria,” he said.
The Lebanese government, which took office in January with Hezbollah’s backing, is not only dealing with mass protests against the political elite but also a debt-ridden economy made worse by the country’s coronavirus outbreak.
Hezbollah is also facing unprecedented challenges of its own amid pressure from the international community and Western countries aimed at isolating the militant group. Last month, Germany designated the entirety of Iran-backed movement, including its political arm, a terrorist organisation.
The Hezbollah chief spoke on the four-year anniversary of the death of a top Hezbollah commander in Syria, who was killed in an explosion near Damascus International Airport.
The group has blamed Sunni fighters for killing Mustafa Badreddine, who was on a US sanctions blacklist and wanted by Israel.
He had been on trial in absentia before a special tribunal in The Hague accused him of masterminding the 2005 bombing that killed Lebanon’s former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.
In his speech, Hassan Nasrallah also stressed the need to repair Syrian-Lebanese relations, considering it to be the main solution for Lebanon’s economic crisis.
He described restoring ties with Damascus a key step to solving Lebanon’s problem including its economic woes. He also attacked those who are still wary of building an open relationship with Syria accusing them of living under “the illusion” of an impending fall of the Damascus regime.
Nasrallah admitted to the existence of smuggling routes between the two countries, which critics accuse Hezbollah of using to its military and economic advantage. The pro-Iran Shia party is however under immense pressure to end the chaos on the Syrian-Lebanese border and block the illegal routes across the border.
“No one can deny that there is cross-border smuggling between Lebanon and Syria, and I’m not talking about the fighters or arms of the resistance”, said Nasrallah
But he claimed closer cooperation between the Lebanese and Syrian governments is key to putting an end to the problem. “Cooperation between the two countries, governments and armies is necessary to halt the smuggling,” he said.
Nasrallah’s speech coincided with a meeting of the Supreme Defense Council supervised by President Michel Aoun, which highlighted the necessity of putting an end to smuggling operations and blocking illegal roads”.
Lebanese political experts say that this move would be line with the measures that need to be implemented to unlock international aid.
Lebanon is required by the international community, especially its positional donors, to present a set of economic, political, and security reforms that include disarming Hezbollah and blocking illegal trafficking operations that harm the country’s economy.
Lebanese political analysts explained Nasrallah’s calls for better relations with Syria as stemming from his wariness about being isolated at home and over the emergence of a joint Russian-Western drive to block the Tehran-Beirut land corridor which connects Tehran to cities in Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon.

Israel's Druze can no longer be bought with a pat on the back
Shakib Ali|/Ynetnews/May 16/May/2020
https://www.ynetnews.com/article/S18nJwK58
Opinion: The protests last week by community leaders were the first step of a new era in which the government of Israel will have to relate seriously to the sector - with budgets and social help and not mere ego stroking
The Druze community in Israel goes largely unnoticed until one of its sons dies in defense of the nation. Only then do the media, the public, IDF officers and government ministers embrace the bereaved families and share in their grief.
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The Druze families in turn will bow their heads, even though the funerals and ceremonies contradict their teachings that the body has no value after a person has died, since the soul has transmigrated and is already reincarnated in a newborn baby.
The community is one of the smallest minorities in Israel - comprising just 1.6% of the general population and 7.6% of Arab society.
Until just two years ago, after the Nation-State Law was passed, with its provision that the country is the state of the Jews, no one talked of the discriminatory action taken by the Israeli government against the Druze.
Tens of thousands marched in the streets in protest, demanding equal rights and treatment entitled to them by the life bond between themselves and the Jews of Israel.
Yet some of those responsible for the current situation are the so-called leaders of the community, or at least those who pretend to lead it.
They remained frozen in place and never took advantage of the democratic tools at their disposal to achieve those equal rights and privileges.
Instead of publicly fighting for what their people deserved, they shamelessly decided not to bite the hand that feeds them.
And in turn, the leaders of the country learned over the years that the so-called Druze leadership simply wants a pat on the back, prestige and to be honored.
For those community leaders, a visit by a minister to their home is as important as the budgets of a school, or a new soccer pitch or better roads.
These personal connections fattened the pockets of Druze businessmen, who made use of them to also promote their relatives and friends. But they completely disregard the real needs of the community.
From the perspective of Israel's decision-makers, this desire for recognition and lip service has saved the nation millions of shekels.
Troublingly, this is still the nature of the relationship between the community leaders and lawmakers, the latter wrongly believing that this is also what the community wants.
And if some do complain about the lack of equality, the country quickly promotes Druze members of the military, dedicates a roundabout to a fallen soldier or invite them to participate in the annual Independence Day torch-lighting ceremony.
The state could have answered the cries of the Druze by transferring adequate funding for their villages, thereby bridging social gaps 72 years in the making, but instead continue to choose the ego stroking of its so-called leaders.
But last week, the Druze community had finally had enough, and its leaders came out in protest over the lack of financial consideration.
They are frustrated that they cannot provide their residents with basic amenities like schools, roads, parking lots, community centers and public parks, while the government gives them none of the funding they were promised in an attempt to slightly rectify these issues.
Allocation of budgets is usually conditioned on the Druze community's ability to collect at least 80 percent of municipal taxes, without taking into consideration the fact that these are disadvantaged, low socio-economic communities, not to mention the lack of industrial zones that can provide a proper source of income for businesses.
Demonstrations of respect must be replaced by plans for to improve schools, cronyism must be replaced by development budgets and the torch-lighting ceremonies must be replaced by road construction.
Last week's protest was a shot across the bows, hinting at these battles to come.
No more will the Druze community leaders sit on the sidelines.

The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on May 16-17/2020
Iranian news agency warns of repercussions if US disrupts fuel shipment to Venezuela
Reuters, Dubai/Saturday 16 May 2020
An Iranian news agency close to the elite Revolutionary Guards said on Saturday there would be repercussions if the United States acted “just like pirates” against an Iranian fuel shipment to Venezuela. A senior official in President Donald Trump's administration told Reuters on Thursday the United States was considering measures it could take in response to Iran's shipment of fuel to crisis-stricken Venezuela. The oil sectors of Iran and Venezuela, members of OPEC, are both under US sanctions. The Trump administration official declined to specify the measures being weighed but said options would be presented to Trump. “If the United States, just like pirates, intends to create insecurity on international waterways, it would be taking a dangerous risk and that will certainly not go without repercussion,” Iran's Nour news agency said. At least one tanker carrying fuel loaded at an Iranian port has set sail for Venezuela, according to vessel tracking data from Refinitiv Eikon on Wednesday, which could help ease an acute scarcity of gasoline in the South American country. “Venezuela and Iran are both independent states that have had and will continue to have trade relations with each other,” Iranian government spokesman Ali Rabiei was quoted as saying by the YJC news website, linked to Iran's state broadcaster. “We sell goods and buy goods in return. This trade has nothing to do with anyone else,” Rabiei said, adding that he had no information about the Venezuela-bound vessel. The Iran-flagged medium tanker Clavel passed the Suez Canal on Wednesday after loading fuel at the end of March at Iran's Bandar Abbas port, according to the data. “News received from informed sources indicate that the U.S. Navy has sent four warships and a Boeing P-8 Poseidon from the VP-26 squadron to the Caribbean region,” Nour said. Venezuela is in desperate need of gasoline and other refined fuel products to keep the country functioning amid an economic collapse under socialist President Nicolas Maduro. Venezuela produces crude oil but its infrastructure has been crippled during the economic crisis. A Venezuelan official said last month that Venezuela had received refining materials via plane from Iran to help it start a unit at the 310,000 barrel-per-day Cardon refinery, which is necessary to produce gasoline.

Iran's Stock Index Drops, Falls Below 1 Million Mark
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 16 May, 2020
Iran's main stock index dropped below one million points Saturday, a week after topping that mark, state affiliated media reported. The Tehran Stock Exchange's benchmark TEDPIX index lost 30,000 points in early trading on Saturday, falling to 989,000 points.
The stock exchange rose above the 1 million mark for the first time last Saturday amid warnings that the market was overheating, Reuters reported. Analysts said the booming stock market was at odds with Iran's economic fundamentals. The economic situation in Tehran keeps on deteriorating under the weight of sanctions and the coronavirus outbreak, raising the risk of a stock market bubble.

Iran Sentences French Academic to 5 Years in Prison

Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 16 May, 2020
Iran sentenced a French-Iranian academic to five years in prison on national security charges on Saturday, her lawyer told Agence France Presse. Fariba Adelkhah was "sentenced to five years for gathering and conspiring against national security, and one year for propaganda against the Islamic republic," Said Dehghan said. He said his client would only be expected to serve the longer, five-year jail term and added that she intended to appeal. Adelkhah is a research director at Sciences Po university in Paris and is an expert on Iran. She was arrested in June 2019 along with fellow French academic Roland Marchal. Iranian authorities released Marchal in March, after a prisoner swap between Paris and Tehran. The country has arrested dozens of dual nationals in recent years on alleged espionage charges. Iranian authorities have not provided any solid evidence to back up their claims.

Syria's Daraa Turns to Russia to Halt Regime Offensive

Daraa - Riad al-Zein/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 16 May, 2020
Tensions have been high in Syria's southern Daraa region, known as the "cradle of the revolution", as the regime prepared to storm the region in wake of an uptick in attacks that have targeted its forces in recent months. Local committees and Russia are racing against time to prevent the regime, which has brought in military reinforcements in the shape of its Fourth Brigade, from attacking the area. Attacks are common in Daraa province, which was retaken by regime forces from the opposition in 2018, usually targeting loyalists and civilians working for the state. Residents of Daraa say disaffection has been growing as the regime's secret police once more tighten their control and a campaign of arrests has sowed widespread fear. People took to the streets of various towns Thursday to protest against a potential offensive. Residents of Daraa, Tafas, Tal Shehab and others held rallies to protest against Damascus' escalating rhetoric against them. They also called for the withdrawal of Iranian militias from southern Syria. Protests on Friday sought to exert pressure on Russia to dissuade the regime from going through with its offensive in line with settlement agreements on southern Syria reached between it and Damascus.
A member of the local central committee told Asharq Al-Awsat that the negotiations panel representing Daraa city and its western and eastern countrysides met on Wednesday to tackle the regime buildup. They stressed their support for all committees and factions that were part of the settlement agreement. A Russian delegation invited to the meeting failed to show up and no reason was given for its absence. Earlier this month, unknown gunmen killed nine Syrian policemen in Daraa's village of Muzayreeb near the border with Jordan. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition war monitor, reported that a group of unknown gunmen kidnapped the policemen before shooting them dead. The regime blamed the attack on "terrorists", a label it gives to opposition and extremist groups.

Syria: Local Currency Devaluation Exacerbates Sufferings In Damascus
Damascus - Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 16 May, 2020
The rise in the exchange rate of the US dollar against the Syrian pound has exacerbated the suffering of the people of Damascus. Recent tension erupted between Rami Makhlouf, who for decades had the country’s most prominent economic pillars, and the government who asked the businessman to pay about $180 million. As a result, the lira lost about 35 percent of its value, as the exchange rate fell against the dollar from 1200 to 1600 after it was 46 liras back in 2011. The Syrian regime has ordered a series of measures against Makhlouf’s companies, including the Association, and his shares in the state-owned Syrian Telecom Company (Syriatel), the country’s biggest mobile phone company. The government’s Telecommunications and Postal Regulatory Authority informed two of Makhlouf’s companies, “Syriatel” and “MTN” mobile phone to pay about 234 billion Syrian pounds to the state treasury as a penalty. Official media quoted a Syrian economic researcher as saying that the amendment of the contracts with the two mobile companies has caused the loss of more than 338 billion pounds (482 million dollars) to the treasury. Economists told Asharq Al-Awsat that the crisis between the government and Makhlouf had been silent for a year, but that the new conflict emerged in light of “the government’s urgent need for the dollar,” which was reflected in a terrible rise in food prices in the capital. The World Food Program estimated that food prices rose by 107% in one year. In parallel, the Ministry of Oil stopped, on Sunday, supplying vehicles with subsidized gasoline, in a new austerity measure that reflects the exacerbation of the economic and financial crisis. The decision sparked criticism on social media and on the street, while government officials blamed the fuel crisis on economic sanctions imposed by several Arab and Western countries, which prevented the arrival of oil tankers. The US sanctions against Tehran have aggravated the fuel crisis in Syria, which depends on a credit line that links it to Iran to secure its fuel. Meanwhile, the government and the central bank have demonstrated a great inability to find solutions to the economic crisis and to control the exchange rate. Instead, they stood idle at the fastest deterioration of the value of the lira without taking any proper action. “Our government does not have the needed dollars and is barely managing to bring in wheat, sugar and rice,” An economic expert told Asharq Al-Awsat. “Unless the government demonstrates great flexibility in the international conflict taking place over the Syrian file, the economic situation in the country is heading towards a further deterioration,” he added.

Representative of Iraq's Top Religious Authority Denies Offering Position of PMF Head to Amiri
Baghdad - Fadhel al-Nashmi/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 16 May, 2020
Representative of Iraq’s Supreme Religious Authority Sheikh Abdul Mahdi al-Karbalai denied that he had offered leader of the Fatah alliance, Hadi al-Amiri, the position of head of the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF). Karbalai also denied that he had requested a meeting with Amiri, saying the Supreme Religious Authority does not ask for a meeting with any official. Amiri himself had asked for a meeting, he clarified in a statement in wake of his talks with the official. Moreover, the statement stressed that the representative did not ask Amiri to head the PMF because it does not fall within his legal jurisdiction.
The meeting, it added, focused on the Religious Authority's vision on the need to implement the PMF's law and activating its structure in its entirety, while clarifying the foundations, such as religious fatwas, on which the group was initially formed.
Karbalai’s office stressed the need to "evaluate" some of the PMF's "incorrect paths". The PMF must also take its decision in consultation with the forces of the holy shrines. The PMF remains without a leader since its deputy head, Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, was killed in the same US drone strike that killed Iranian Quds Force commader Qassem Soleimani near Baghdad International Airport in January. Karbalai was responding to an earlier statement by Fatah MP Hamid al-Moussawi, who discussed Amiri’s visit. Moussawi told a local channel that the meeting came at Karbalai's request. He announced that the representative offered Amiri the position of PMF leader, but he refused. Amiri said that if the Authority wanted to dissolve the PMF, it will be done, according to Moussawi. In April, the PMF’s brigades of holy shrines broke away from the Forces’ command. They now fall under the “command and management” of prime minister in his capacity as commander-in-chief of the armed forces. Observers viewed this as the strongest sign of various loyalties within the PMF, with some loyal to Iraq's highest Religious Authority, Ali al-Sistani, and others aligned with Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Previous reports suggested that one of the PMF’s top officials, Abdel Aziz al-Mohammadi, dubbed Abu Fadak, will be named as leader. Some claimed that this prompted the holy shrines brigades to split from the PMF. A few days ago, reports said that new Prime Minister, Mustafa al-Kadhimi, wants to assign the PMF leadership to top officers of the Iraqi army, but he has yet to take any decision over the issue.

Egypt's Army: 13 Terrorists Killed in Sinai Operation
Cairo - Walid Abdulrahman/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 16 May, 2020
Egypt's Army Spokesman Tamer Rifai revealed on Friday that 13 terrorists were killed in north Sinai as part of a security operation. He said it came in continuation of the efforts of the armed forces to combat terrorism. Rifai noted that seven militants were killed during the raid and six were later killed after they tried to flee but were tracked to their hideout using cameras. The raid, carried out by the armed forces, took place after intelligence reports suggested that the terrorists were hiding out at a plantation in northern Sinai. "The armed forces seized a four-wheel drive vehicle, a motorbike, 10 explosive devices, four explosive belts, several rifles and ammunition as well as various mobile phones and walkie-talkies during the operation," he confirmed. Security forces have been battling a long-running extremist insurgency in the Sinai Peninsula since February 2018 to clear the area from ISIS elements.

Jordan Warns Israel of 'Massive Conflict' over Annexation, EU Steps up Diplomacy
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 16 May, 2020
Jordan's King Abdullah II warned Israel of a “massive conflict” if it proceeds with plans to annex large parts of the occupied West Bank, as European Union foreign ministers agreed on Friday to step up diplomatic efforts to try to head off such a move.
Israel has vowed to annex Jewish settlements and the Jordan Valley, which could spell the end of the long-stalled peace process by making it virtually impossible to establish a viable Palestinian state. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has moved a step closer by reaching an agreement to form a government after more than a year of political deadlock. President Donald Trump's Middle East plan, which overwhelmingly favors Israel and was rejected by the Palestinians, gave a green light to annexation, but most of the rest of the international community is strongly opposed.
“Leaders who advocate a one-state solution do not understand what that would mean,” King Abdullah said in an interview with the German magazine Der Spiegel published Friday. “What would happen if the Palestinian National Authority collapsed? There would be more chaos and extremism in the region. If Israel really annexed the West Bank in July, it would lead to a massive conflict with the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan,” he said. Jordan is one of only two Arab states to have signed a peace treaty with Israel. Abdullah declined to say whether annexation would threaten that agreement.
“I don’t want to make threats and create an atmosphere of loggerheads, but we are considering all options. We agree with many countries in Europe and the international community that the law of strength should not apply in the Middle East," he said.
At a video-conference, EU foreign ministers reaffirmed their support for a two-state solution and opposition to any annexation. The ministers, whose countries are deeply divided in their approach to Israel, agreed to ramp up diplomatic efforts in coming days with Israel, the Palestinians, the United States and Arab countries.“We reaffirm our position in support of a negotiated, two-state solution. For this to be possible, unilateral action from either side should be avoided and, for sure, international law should be upheld,” EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said after chairing the meeting.
“We must work to discourage any possible initiative toward annexation," Borrell told reporters in Brussels. “International law has to be upheld. Here, and there, and everywhere.”He made no mention of the use of sanctions, saying only that the EU will use "all our diplomatic capacities in order to prevent any kind of unilateral action.”The ministers had planned to welcome the formation of a new Israeli government and offer the bloc's cooperation, but Netanyahu and his rival-turned-partner, Benny Gantz, have postponed the swearing-in of their controversial new cabinet as the Israeli leader tries to quell infighting within his Likud party. The ceremony, originally scheduled for Thursday, is now planned for Sunday to give Netanyahu more time to hand out coveted cabinet appointments to members of his party. Their coalition agreement allows him to present an annexation proposal as soon as July 1.
The EU has long been committed to a two-state solution based on the 1967 lines, with the possibility of mutually agreed land-swaps. Israel seized east Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip in the 1967 war. The Palestinians want all three to form their future state.
The bloc has already rejected Trump’s Middle East plan, which would allow Israel to annex about a third of the West Bank, leaving the Palestinians with heavily conditioned statehood in scattered territorial enclaves surrounded by Israel.
“In our opinion, an annexation is not compatible with international law,” German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said Friday. “From our point of view, changes to borders must, if at all, be the result of negotiations and happen in agreement between both sides.”
Jordan has been lobbying the EU to take “practical steps” to make sure annexation doesn’t happen. In a statement, Jordan's Foreign Minister Ayman al-Safadi “stressed the need for the international community and the European Union in particular to take practical steps that reflect the rejection of any Israeli decision to annex.”

Algerian Opposition Divided Over Draft Constitution
Algiers - Boualem Goumrassa/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 16 May, 2020
A draft constitution presented by the Algerian presidency earlier this month caused a sharp division within the opposition blocs, including Islamists, secularists, and liberals. The presidency had vowed to consider all observations and notes presented by various parties before adopting the final version of the constitution, which will be presented to parliament for approval, and then for a popular referendum. The head of Jil Jadid party, Soufiane Gilali, indicated that the draft includes several positive components such as promoting freedom of the press by preventing any form of censorship.
Gilali was a known opponent of former President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, but since President Abdelmadjid Tebboune came to power, he showed support for the reforms he launched. However, Gilali was strongly criticized for not objecting to the imprisonment of activists of the popular movement. Meanwhile, Rally for Culture and Democracy rejected the new constitution and condemned the attempts of “settling scores” between the conflicting parties. The secular party rejected the provisions that restrict freedoms, especially measures taken against those protesting abusive practices, about the procedures authorities made before announcing the constitutional changes. Before announcing the new amendments, authorities tightened penalties in the criminal law against those whose social media posts are deemed offensive against political and social figures. Leader of Society for Peace Islamist Movement, Nasser Hamadouche, said that the constitution is falsifying the recent history founded by most of the Algerian people during the popular movement. He warned that the amendments reduce people's ambitions and demands to "mere profound social transformations, as if the popular movement was just a protest against social, factional, or professional demands."Hamadouche strongly criticized the president for retaining significant powers in the draft, the same issue that was refused under President Bouteflika's tenure. He referred to Tebboune’s electoral campaign when he promised to cede many of his powers to the parliament and the government. However, Elbinaa Islamist party welcomed the amendments saying it considers them as part of the major reforms the country is undergoing. The party asserted it had some preliminary remarks on the draft, especially on the articles relating to national security as well as the beliefs and values of the people. The party noted that Algerians are looking for a constitution that reflects the spirit of the popular movement which aims for a true and stable democracy. Last week, presidential spokesman Mohammed Al-Saeed confirmed that the draft includes proposals for amendments that can be changed or rejected.

Intermittent Clashes in Libyan Capital, UN Slams Threat to People's Lives
Cairo - Khaled Mahmoud/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 16 May, 2020
Clashes between the Libyan National Army (LNA), commanded by Khalifa Haftar, and forces loyal to the Government of National Accord (GNA), headed by Fayez al-Sarraj, eased on Friday after two days of intense fighting at the majority of the frontlines around the capital, Tripoli. Intermittent clashes was reported on Friday as the NATO said it is prepared to help the GNA in the area of "defense and security institution building", in response to a request by Sarraj to assist it to "strengthen its security institutions."
"Any NATO assistance to Libya would take account of political and security conditions, and would be provided in full complementarity and in close coordination with other international efforts, including those of the UN and the EU," said Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg during a telephone call with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a main backer of the GNA. The GNA on Friday showed footage of an attack against a grad rocket launcher it claimed the LNA had used in an attack on Tripoli hospital and the capital's Tariq al-Soor neighborhood. In a brief statement, the LNA said its artillery struck an ammunition depot in Ain Zara, south of Tripoli. The United Nations Support Mission in Libya said UN humanitarian agencies in Libya condemned all attacks that endangered the lives of civilians and prevented them from accessing life-saving services. Acting UNSMIL special representative Stephanie Williams briefed on Thursday the International Follow-up Committee on Libya, convened under Italy's co-chairmanship. In a brief statement, it called on its members to "uphold the Berlin commitments to ensure an immediate cessation of hostilities, a resumption of the political process and alleviate the suffering of the civilian population."It revealed that since the beginning of the year, 17 health facilities have been attacked in Libya. Spokesman for the UN Secretary-General, Stephane Dujarric, renewed on Thursday the organization's call for a ceasefire in Libya so that efforts can be focused on the fight against the novel coronavirus.

Tunisia Says Terrorist Groups are Isolated in Mountains on Algeria Border
Tunis - Mongi Saidani/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 16 May, 2020
Terrorist groups on Tunisia’s border with Algeria are now isolated and incapable of carrying out any attacks to destabilize the country, announced Interior Minister Hichem Mechichi. Speaking during a visit to the western central Kasserine province, the minister asserted that Tunisia’s victory over terrorism will start from Kasserine and this will pave the way for major development projects in the region. He pointed out that the ministry's counter-terrorism strategy has shifted its defensive approach to tracking down terrorists in their hideouts. Mechichi stressed that security forces are on full alert against any potential threats against the country, indicating that they are capable of confronting any terrorist attack. “The readiness shown by our security forces and the measures taken by the Interior Ministry are much more important than their [terrorists] own threats,” he was quoted by the official state agency (TAP).
Military units operating in the Kasserine highlands had announced that they had foiled a number of terrorist operations targeting military and security forces. The Defense Ministry showed pictures of a number of tools found with terrorists who were planning to manufacture explosives and bombs.
The Ministry also confirmed that the army detected suspicious movements in the region, and after a searhch, they found a cache of gas flasks, electric wires, ammonia and other accessories need for the manufacture mines and explosive devices.
Preliminary investigations revealed that a terrorist group affiliated with “Uqba ibn Nafi battalion”, which pledged allegiance to al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, was planning to target security and military patrols. The terrorist group was also monitoring the security and military patrols and their movement as part of its plan to execute a number of simultaneous terrorist operations. Dozens of soldiers were killed in a number of terrorist attacks in Kasserine between 2014 and 2015 during the holy month of Ramadan what is now referred to as the Hanchir Ettala attack.

UN Reiterates Support for Riyadh Agreement on Yemen
New York - Ali Barada/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 16 May, 2020
The United Nations Security Council agreed to support special envoy Martin Griffiths in his mission to achieve peace between the legitimate government and Iran-backed Houthi militias. Meeting on Thursday, it also underscored the need for the Southern Transitional Council to return to the Riyadh Agreement.
The council described the humanitarian situation in Yemen as terrible due to the spread of the novel coronavirus, saying it support Griffiths' efforts to revive the negotiations between the government and Houthis. It reiterated support for Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ call for a ceasefire in the country and expressed concern at fighting between the government and the Houthis and the slow pace of negotiations toward a ceasefire.
Members also called on the government and STC separatists “to deescalate military tensions” and engage in the Riyadh Agreement. They also called on the separatists “to reverse any actions challenging the legitimacy, sovereignty, unity or territorial integrity of Yemen.”Griffiths urged Yemen’s warring sides to quickly resolve their differences over humanitarian and economic measures needed to move peace efforts forward and help the country counter the virus.
Yemen has so far reported 106 cases of the virus, including 15 deaths. The government and WHO have criticized the Houthis for their lack of transparency, as just two cases, including one death, have been recorded in territory under their control.
US Ambassador to the UN, Kelly Craft, said that Washington "stands with the Yemeni people, who have suffered every imaginable hardship, and who are simply trying to survive in the midst of conflict, food insecurity, devastating floods, and now the spread of COVID-19."
"In light of these hardships, we welcome the Saudi-led Arab coalition’s extension of its unilateral ceasefire in support of the UN peace process and efforts to fight COVID-19," she added. "The US strongly urges the Houthis to join the Government of Yemen in halting offensive operations in support of this ceasefire. This is so that all parties may focus their efforts on countering COVID-19 and working towards a lasting political resolution of the conflict," she continued.
"The Houthis must re-commit to de-escalation followed by resumption of talks directed toward a political solution. We urge the parties to the conflict to continue to review and provide meaningful feedback on the Special Envoy’s draft proposals, which represent the spirit of consensus required to move toward a lasting political settlement," Craft stated. On the developments in southern Yemen, she expressed her concern over the STC's announcement of its so-called "self-administration." " Such actions from the STC will only distract from UN-led efforts to secure a nation-wide ceasefire and a political solution," she remarked. "We are also concerned by reports of increasing STC interference in Central Bank of Yemen operations. All parties must continue to respect the government institutions underpinning Yemen’s political and economic stability. We call on the STC and the Republic of Yemen Government to re-engage in the political process provided under the Riyadh Agreement," she demanded. Moreover, she expressed concern about the "limitations on humanitarian access in Houthi controlled areas. The Houthis’ deliberate interference with assistance operations – interference that is in flagrant defiance of humanitarian principles – continues to limit the ability of the UN and other humanitarian organizations to provide for the needs of the most vulnerable Yemenis.""We acknowledge some steps taken by the Houthis in certain areas. These include the decision to lift the two percent levy on aid projects, sign NGO agreements, and approve key independent needs assessments. But further progress is critical, especially on biometric registration and ensuring humanitarian staff can implement and monitor their programs," Craft said. "As we have said on previous occasions, the US again calls on the Houthis to allow UN inspection and maintenance of the Safer oil tanker. UN officials must have immediate access to the Safer in order to prevent an environmental catastrophe, which would have far-reaching effects in Yemen and around the Red Sea," she continued."We are grateful to Martin Griffiths for continuing to raise this issue in Sanaa. The Houthis must stop blocking a solution to this problem, and permit required assessments and repairs," she remarked.

Russia Records Highest Coronavirus Death Toll Yet

Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 16/2020
Russia on Saturday recorded its highest daily death toll yet from the coronavirus while new cases fell to the lowest level in two weeks. Russia is in second place in the world to the United States with 272,043 cases, with 9,200 new cases announced Saturday, the lowest number since May 2. But the number of deaths announced Saturday for the last 24 hours was the highest yet in Russia, at 119. Critics have cast doubt on Russia's low mortality rate, accusing authorities of under-reporting deaths in order to play down the scale of the crisis. The total number of officially confirmed deaths is now 2,537, lower than a number of other countries with fewer cases. Russian health officials say one of the reasons the count is lower is that only deaths directly caused by the virus are being included. Authorities also say that since the virus came later to Russia, the country had more time to prepare hospital beds and launch wide-scale testing to slow its spread.

Italy to Reopen Borders for Tourists in Early June
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 16/2020
Italy will reopen to tourists from early June and scrap a 14-day mandatory quarantine period, the government said on Saturday, as it quickened the exit from the coronavirus lockdown. Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte enforced an economically crippling shutdown in early March to counter a pandemic that has so far killed more than 31,500 people in Italy. The shutdown halted all holidaymaking in a country heavily dependent on the tourism industry. Although Italy never formally closed its borders and has allowed people to cross back and forth for work or health reasons, it banned movement for tourism and imposed a two-week isolation period for new arrivals. Beginning on June 3, all visitors will be allowed in with no obligation to self-isolate. Italians will also be able to move between regions, though local authorities can limit travel if infections spike. Movements to and from abroad can be limited by regional decree "in relation to specific states and territories, in accordance with the principles of adequacy and proportionality to the epidemiological risk", the government said. The latest decree is also a boon to Italy's agricultural sector, which relies on roughly 350,000 seasonal workers from abroad. Farming lobby group Coldiretti said farms were already preparing to organise some 150,000 workers from places including Romania, Poland and Bulgaria. The peak of Italy's contagion passed at the end of March but with experts warning a second wave cannot be ruled out, Conte had been reluctant to lift the lockdown quickly. His approach frustrated many of Italy's regions, with some already allowing businesses to reopen before the restrictions were lifted. Restaurants, bars and hairdressers are being allowed to reopen on Monday, two weeks earlier than initially planned. Shops will also open and Italians will finally be able to see friends, as long as they live within their same region. Church services will begin again but the faithful will have to follow social distancing rules and holy water fonts will be empty. Mosques will also reopen.Gatherings of large groups are still banned.

Beaches and Football as Europe Relaxes Virus Restrictions
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 16/2020
Beaches in France and Italy were open Saturday for the first weekend since the easing of coronavirus lockdowns while football fans awaited the return of major league action with Germany's Bundesliga set to kick off. As some countries start to reopen despite fears of a second wave of the pandemic, President Donald Trump voiced hope that a vaccine would be available by late 2020. "We are looking to get it by the end of the year if we can, maybe before," Trump told reporters at the White House Friday as he discussed America's "Operation Warp Speed" effort in the global race for a vaccine. The timeline -- deemed unrealistic by many experts -- is more aggressive than the one-year scenario put forward by European scientists. The hunt for a vaccine for a disease that the World Health Organization (WHO) says may never disappear has also threatened to become a source of tension between the globe's haves and have-nots, with trials underway in various countries. Many governments are not waiting, with borders and beaches reopening around Europe after two traumatic months in which life ground to a halt. Germany, which this month began its slow emergence from confinement, was ready to kick off its top-flight football league Saturday, although in front of empty stadiums and under draconian health measures. "The whole world will be looking at Germany, to see how we get it done," said Bayern Munich boss Hansi Flick. "If we manage to ensure that the season continues, it will send a signal to all leagues."Russia pushed ahead with plans to ease restrictions despite reporting more than 10,000 new cases, with its football league set to return next month and thousands of people being tested for antibodies to show whether they have had the virus or not.
Beaches reopening
Slovenia on Friday became the first European country to open its borders, despite new infections still being reported. In northeast Europe, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia were creating their own "Baltic bubble" allowing free movement among the three countries. France called for self-restraint as the country prepared for its first weekend since easing its lockdown, warning that police would break up any large gatherings. Several nations have eased restrictions to stem the economic damage from lockdowns, as much of the world learns to live as best it can under the shadow of the disease that has killed more than 306,000 people globally and infected 4.5 million. With the European summer fast approaching, the key tourism industry is trying to salvage something from the wreckage. Parasols and sunloungers are starting to appear on coastlines in Italy, one of the countries hardest hit by the pandemic. "It moves me to see these sunshades," said Simone Battistoni, whose family has been running the Bagno Milano beach concession in Cesenatico on Italy's east coast since 1927. Austria took an important symbolic step Friday by reopening its restaurants and traditional Viennese cafes. "We missed it and we're going to come back as much as possible," said Fanny and Sophie, 19-year-old students waiting for breakfast at a cafe in the Austrian capital. Ireland will begin to lift its lockdown in coming days while introducing a 14-day quarantine period for new arrivals. On the other side of the world, Sydney's bars and restaurants opened their doors to customers Friday as a weeks-long lockdown eased. "The desire to sit in a place that is not your house with your mates and have a drink is truly overwhelming," said Chrissy Flanagan, owner of The Sausage Factory, a bistro in Australia's biggest city.
US economic woes
The pressure to ease lockdowns has mounted as the catastrophic economic effects of the virus have become clearer. In the United States, the world's worst-affected country with more than 87,000 deaths and 1.4 million cases, industrial production plunged 11.2 percent in April, the largest drop in a century. Department store JCPenney, a retail institution which has not turned a profit since 2011, on Friday became the latest US business to file for bankruptcy. "May will not be a month of celebration. Nor will June. Nor July. Nor probably the rest of this year," warned Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail. With 36.5 million Americans -- more than 10 percent of the population -- now out of work, Trump has been keen to ease lockdown measures as he seeks re-election in November. Some areas are resisting. Lockdown measures in New York City have been extended until May 28. In the US House of Representatives, Democrats late Friday narrowly pushed through a $3 trillion rescue package to help American families and businesses stay afloat. But its fate appears uncertain as Republicans have vowed to block it in the Senate which they control. Europe's top economy Germany meanwhile tipped into recession, suffering its steepest quarterly contraction since the global financial crisis in 2009.
'Nightmare scenario'
The pandemic has also caused political ructions. Brazil lost its second health minister in a month when Nelson Teich resigned Friday over what an official said was "incompatibility" with right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro's approach to fighting the country's spiralling COVID-19 crisis. Meanwhile the virus continues its global march. The WHO said Africa could have 231 million people infected and up to 190,000 could die. There was also concern over the "nightmare scenario" of the discovery of infections in the world's biggest refugee camp, in Bangladesh, where upwards of a million Rohingya Muslims from neighbouring Myanmar live in squalor.

The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on May 16-17/2020
Italy Learns a Hard Lesson on Face Masks
Ferdinando Giugliano/Bloomberg/May, 16/2020
It takes economics students a couple of classes to understand why price caps are generally a bad idea. The Italian government has nonetheless chosen to set one for face masks — and it’s learning the lesson the hard way.
The problem with picking a price that’s artificially low is that it will cause shortages. Consumers will want to buy too many of the items, while suppliers will produce too few because of the lack of incentive. That is what’s happening in Italy after the government said surgical masks should cost 50 euro cents (54 cents), excluding VAT. Pharmacists say they are struggling to replenish their stocks, as foreign producers prefer to sell their goods elsewhere. Domestically, a number of Italian businesses that had reconverted their production lines to make masks now say the price is just too low to meet their costs. The government says it will compensate those pharmacists who’ve paid more for their masks than the sale price, but that won’t solve the scarcity problem.
Rome’s intentions are good. Scientists believe that face masks can help contain the spread of Covid-19, especially in places where social distancing is hard, such as on public transport. The Italian government is recommending their use, and some local authorities have made them compulsory in many settings. Letting citizens purchase face masks at a reasonable price isn’t just about being fair to the poorest citizens; it will also make the mask policy more effective, since it will boost compliance and help reduce the risk of contagion. Or at least that’s the theory.
As the Italian government has discovered, setting a maximum price must be part of a broader strategy. This is one of those occasions where the state can play a direct role. Above all, it needs to make sure there is sufficient supply from local and foreign producers. The government can then purchase these goods at their market value, and distribute them at whatever price it wishes. If it has to pay more than the price at which the masks are sold to the public, then so be it. This would also allow it to prioritize any parts of the population that it deems a priority, such as doctors, nurses or other essential workers.
Italy isn’t the only country to fix the price for face masks. South Korea and Taiwan have done it too. However, the first step for both of those governments was to increase local production or, at least, to heavily centralize distribution. Today, Taiwan can produce 17 million masks a day for a population of 24 million. On March 5, the South Korean government announced it would purchase 80 percent of its national production. Italy is taking steps in this direction, but the price-cap fiasco risks delaying its efforts. Malta has followed Italy and set a price at 0.95 euros, although pharmacists there initially complained that this level was too low. Italy’s face-mask struggles have broader economic implications in a time of pandemic. Many companies around the world are seeking state support as they struggle in a depressed economy, and politicians may be tempted to use their newfound powers to force artificially low prices. Before they do that, they’d better read the first couple of chapters of a basic economics textbook.

"Victimhood Culture" UK: Rape Victims Need Not Apply

Judith Bergman/Gatestone Institute/May 16/2020
"Almost 19,000 children have been sexually groomed in England in the past year, according to official figures that have prompted warnings of an 'epidemic'. Campaigners say the true figure is far higher...." — The Independent, December 2019.
"The government's repeated failure to acknowledge the role of racism and religious bigotry in grooming gang crime has led to inadequate investigation, protection and prosecution," one survivor, who wanted to remain anonymous, told The Independent in December 2019.
In the era of "victimhood culture", in which so many groups vie for the top spot of "most victimized", being an actual victim of sexual abuse apparently has little currency among the social justice elites. Where, for example, are the feminists in all this? Where is the "me too" movement?
As the government is too squeamish publicly to debate the findings of the review, it is bound to be even more terrified of being seen as specifically targeting ethnic rape gangs to stop their crimes -- yet that is what victims such as Ella are asking them to do. Not to mention that basic democratic principles of the public's right to information are being completely disregarded.
In July 2018, Britain's then Home Secretary Sajid Javid ordered a review into the characteristics of child sexual grooming gangs. "The scandal of child grooming gangs is one of the most shocking state failures that I can remember," he said. Now the UK government is too squeamish publicly to debate the findings of the review.
In July 2018, Britain's then Home Secretary Sajid Javid ordered a review into the characteristics of child sexual grooming gangs. "The scandal of child grooming gangs is one of the most shocking state failures that I can remember," he said.
"I will not let cultural or political sensitivities get in the way of understanding the problem and doing something about it. It is a statement of fact... that most of the men in recent high profile gang convictions have had Pakistani heritage... I've instructed my officials to look into this unflinchingly."
The review was long overdue, to say the least. In 2015, Prime Minister David Cameron told the BBC that the rape and sexual abuse of underage girls had been "on an industrial scale": "Young girls... being abused over and over again on an industrial scale, being raped, being passed from one bunch of perpetrators to another bunch of perpetrators". According to The Independent:
"The Rotherham child sexual exploitation scandal saw gangs undertake the organised sexual abuse of children from the late 1980s until the 2010s and the failure of local authorities to act. Rotherham Council finally commissioned an independent inquiry led by Professor Alexis Jay, which found in August 2014 that some 1,400 children, most of them white girls, were abused by predominantly British-Pakistani men".
Girls as young as 11 were raped by "large numbers of male perpetrators".
As the charity Parents Against Child Sexual Exploitation (Pace) told the BBC in 2014, the sexual abuse and rape of under-age girls and young women had been taking place for decades in nearly "every town" across the UK. In 2017, to mention one example, 17 older men and one woman were convicted of grooming, raping and sexually abusing under-age girls and young women from 2011-2014 in Newcastle. Those prosecuted, according to The Independent, "were from the Bangladeshi, Pakistani, Indian, Iraqi, Iranian and Turkish communities and mainly British-born..."
The review that Javid ordered was completed late last year and one would therefore expect a public debate about the issue as Javid, even before he ordered the review, insisted that there needed to be an "honest, open debate" about child abuse, "including racial motivation".
Prime Minister Boris Johnson's government, however, has nevertheless refused to publish the review, which it says will "only be used for internal policy-making".
"One of the main purposes of the exemption is to protect the 'safe space' necessary for ministers and officials to consider policy options in private without risk of premature disclosure," officials told The Independent in response to a freedom of information (FOI) request.
"Disclosure would risk pre-empting decisions still to be made by ministers. In addition, the information could be misleading if made public and used out of context.... We recognise that this topic in general and any insight and learning are matters of strong public interest, although it does not necessarily follow that it is in the public interest to disclose any specific information relating to it." [Emphasis added.]
The refusal to make the report public came even as The Independent reported in December 2019 that:
"Almost 19,000 children have been sexually groomed in England in the past year, according to official figures that have prompted warnings of an 'epidemic'. Campaigners say the true figure is far higher and accused the government of failing to tackle child sexual exploitation, despite promises made after high-profile cases in Rotherham and Rochdale. More than 18,700 suspected victims of child sexual exploitation were identified by local authorities in 2018-19, up from 3,300 five years before".
In 2018, police recorded crime showed that in the past five years there had been "a staggering twelve-fold (1,086%) increase in sexual grooming".
It is hardly believable that authorities are seriously proposing that publishing specific information pertaining to a crucial societal issue -- the heinous sexual exploitation of children and the need to protect them from gangs of male sexual predators -- is not in the public interest. This is the kind of semantic acrobatics that are apparently needed to obfuscate the fact that the UK government is terrified of having the "open debate" Sajid Javid insisted was necessary only a few years ago.
Instead, the government has said that it will soon publish a national strategy that will set out a "whole system response to all forms of child sexual abuse" [Emphasis added.]
A parliamentary petition demanding that the government release the review in full currently has more than 120,000 signatures, which means that parliament has to consider the petition for a debate. A debate -- and a different strategy -- is very much needed. Survivors have tried to explain that grooming gangs operate differently than pedophiles in general. Ella Hill, a survivor of the Rotherham grooming gang, wrote in March 2018:
"Grooming gangs are not like paedophile rings; instead, they operate almost exactly like terrorist networks, with all the same strategies...
"As a teenager, I was taken to various houses and flats above takeaways in the north of England, to be beaten, tortured and raped over 100 times. I was called a 'white slag' and 'white c***' as they beat me.
"They made it clear that because I was a non-Muslim, and not a virgin, and because I didn't dress 'modestly', that they believed I deserved to be 'punished'. They said I had to 'obey' or be beaten.
"Fear of being killed, and threats to my parents' lives, made it impossible for me to escape for about a year. The police didn't help me...
"Like terrorists, [groomers] firmly believe that the crimes they carry out are justified by their religious beliefs."
"The government's repeated failure to acknowledge the role of racism and religious bigotry in grooming gang crime has led to inadequate investigation, protection and prosecution," one survivor, who wanted to remain anonymous, told The Independent in December 2019.
In the era of "victimhood culture", in which so many groups vie for the top spot of "most victimized", being an actual victim of sexual abuse apparently has little currency among the social justice elites. Where, for example, are the feminists in all this? Where is the "me too" movement?
As the government is too squeamish publicly to debate the findings of the review, it is bound to be even more terrified of being seen as specifically targeting ethnic rape gangs to stop their crimes -- yet that is what victims such as Ella are asking them to do. Not to mention that basic democratic principles of the public's right to information are being completely disregarded. Ultimately, these kinds of politically correct theatrics can only lead to one thing: Bad policies. A refusal to talk openly and honestly about issues usually does. A generation of exploited children will pay the price, but that, apparently, is not something that bothers the authorities all that much.
*Judith Bergman, a columnist, lawyer and political analyst, is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
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Why US-Iran relations could shift gears in the coming days

Raghida Dergham/The National/May 16/ 2020
Those optimistic about a rapprochement need to calm down ahead of crucial meetings in both Washington and Tehran this week
Key developments across the Middle East in recent days have helped to renew a sense of optimism among some about a turnaround in US-Iran relations. But this could yet amount to wishful thinking on their part, as both Washington and Tehran prepare to host meetings over the coming week to decide how to more effectively deal with their adversary.
Decision-makers in Washington will discuss various options to contain the Iranian regime, including perhaps the launch of pre-emptive military strikes. Meanwhile, commanders of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps – Tehran's influential paramilitary volunteer militia – will focus on their existing strategies in Lebanon and Iraq, where the regime wields considerable influence and is determined to keep within its orbit at any cost and by any means.
In short, far from rapprochement, the coming days and weeks could well witness a further escalation in tensions between the two regional powers.
To be sure there are justifiable reasons for optimism, with Iraq emerging as the primary source of it: Mustafa Al Kadhimi was chosen by a parliamentary majority to become prime minister; he received the metaphorical thumbs-up from regional powers, as well as the Americans, Europeans and Russians.
In a phone call with Mr Al Kadhimi, US President Donald Trump said Iraq was important to regional and international stability, adding that America would continue to provide economic aid. In turn, Mr Kadhimi said Baghdad was keen to have the best possible relations with Washington.
Yet, none of this need necessarily translate to a radical shift in Iran’s policy of control in Iraq – or vis-a-vis American presence in the country – because the regime would simply not give up its influence in Iraq to the US. What's more, I have been told by those in the know that Tehran views Mr Al Kadhimi's government to be a transitional one – a “temporary solution”.
Iraq is therefore no less vulnerable to destabilisation. It remains fragile so long as the US-Iran conflict is not settled.
Mina Al-Oraibi: What lies ahead for the Prime Minister of Iraq?
Lebanon is a different matter. In the Iranian regime's calculus, that country is essentially a liquid asset so long as Hezbollah dominates its politics and society. Tehran is therefore not as willing to back down there, and is ready to carry out whatever measures possible to guarantee its continued hold.
Of course, this does not mean that Lebanon is more important to the regime than Iraq is. Lebanon is just less complicated for Iran, even though it shares a border with Israel – one of the regime's biggest adversaries. There is a known margin of agreements, red lines, security zones and buffer strips manned by the United Nations Interim Force on the border. There is also now a buffer zone in the Golan Heights guaranteed by Russia, created with the implicit consent of the Assad regime, in neighbouring Syria.
Washington's position regarding Beirut's fate is not entirely clear. In fact, the only bit of clarity we have is that Washington views its situation exclusively through the prism of fighting Hezbollah.
Hezbollah was recently deemed a terrorist entity by Germany, which according to the US is an effective approach to dealing with its growing influence in the region. Washington continues to crack down on its global operations and networks, even as it applies pressure on European countries to refrain from providing economic aid to Beirut as long as its government fails to adopt radical reforms – including the ending of Hezbollah’s domination over the airport, ports and border crossings with Syria.
Michael Young: Lebanon's two primary pillars are quivering
A demonstrator is seen next to a burning fire in front of a bank during a protest against growing economic hardship in Sidon, Lebanon. Reuters
The complacency of Lebanon’s leaders, political parties, and its financial and banking institutions, vis-a-vis corruption and nepotism even as Beirut appeals to the world for aid has prompted Alistair Burt, a former UK minister, to call for the Lebanese to reform their system.
“Sort out the corruption and get your economy sorted and stop running to other people," he said at a summit organised by the Beirut Institute last week. "The solutions have got to be in the hands of those who are governing in Lebanon. Ultimately the issue of Hezbollah can't be ducked and that's got to be tackled.”
In this context, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’s report to the Security Council on the implementation of Resolution 1559 – which supports free and fair presidential elections in Lebanon and calls upon remaining foreign forces to withdraw from the country – has interesting implications. Mr Guterres said: “I continue to urge the government and the armed forces of Lebanon to take all measures necessary to prohibit Hezbollah and other armed groups from acquiring weapons and building paramilitary capacity outside the authority of the state.”
Circling back to US-Iran relations, the whispers about pragmatism are seemingly coming out of some corridors in Washington, because of the desire to avert a confrontation, and from Tehran, as part of a process of reconfiguration ahead of the US presidential election but also as a result of the domestic difficulties in Iran.
Some have also noted that silence on the part of Tehran and Hezbollah about Israel's brazen determination to annex West Bank and the Jordan Valley could be a sign of their willingness to allow the so-called Deal of the Century concerning the fate of Palestine to pass. But the question is: what are they looking for in return? This is a deeper and more important question that may be at the heart of the choice between escalation and de-escalation in US-Iranian relations.
Reports suggesting that the US move to withdraw patriot missiles from Saudi Arabia could signal a new assessment that it does not consider Iran to be a major threat are inaccurate. They have also been dismissed by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.
Be that as it may, the meeting in Tehran will shed further light on the fate of Lebanon. Meanwhile, the one in Washington will give us an idea about whether the mood there is for confrontation, or for a pragmatic truce.
*Raghida Dergham is the founder and executive chairwoman of the Beirut Institute

The EU: Not fatally broken, but it needs fixing soon
Hafed Al-Ghwell/Arab News/May 16, 2020
Even in the middle of a global pandemic, the EU appears to be charging full ahead into deeper, murkier waters. The UK has left, casting dark clouds on notions of the bloc’s resilience and unity, and inspiring right-wing euroskeptic movements in other countries seeking the EU’s disintegration in favor of some form of insular nationalism. Of concern are the power grabs by ruling parties in Poland and Hungary, the latest iteration in a contentious relationship with Brussels on matters of judicial reform, climate change, refugees — and now, democracy and fairness. Elsewhere, Malta, Bulgaria, Greece and Croatia are under the spotlight for stalled reforms on existing laws to boost press freedom and prevent retaliation against journalists for exercising such rights.
As if that were not sufficient, the German Federal Constitutional Court delivered a stunning blow right at the heart of the EU, opening yet another assault on the bloc’s uniting principles of mutual trust, fairness and uniform application of the law. The court ruled against the European Central Bank’s 2015 bond purchasing scheme, judging that while the program itself was not improper, the ECB had failed to assess its impact on retirement schemes, pensions, government debt, real estate and state aid for economically unviable companies.
As a result, German public institutions such as the Bundesbank are barred from participating in asset purchases within 90 days until the ECB furnishes an assessment acceptable to the court.
The ruling raises a host of issues, not just for Brussels but for Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government — given that the EU treaty specifically forbids the ECB from seeking or taking instructions from member state governments or any other body. Should the Merkel government ignore the ruling and force the Bundesbank to cooperate with the ECB in order to shore up or enforce the EU treaty’s directives, it would widen existing rifts within Germany, entrenching euroskepticism by swelling the ranks of right-wing nationalist parties such as AfD.
Alternatively, obeying the court ruling risks an avalanche of similar challenges from courts in other member states, especially those under pressure from what they believe is an overbearing and overreaching Brussels. The Polish government, for example, was quick to praise the court’s decision in retaliation for the ECJ ruling against changes to the Polish judiciary that would have further eroded its independence, contravening EU laws.
In response, the EU has threatened to escalate the matter to the European Court of Justice, which already ruled in 2018 that asset purchases were legal — a ruling that the court in Berlin dismissed as “incomprehensible.” Merkel’s government, on the other hand, has opted for the less confrontational approach of complying with the court's demands. However, there is a good chance that the details of the proportionality assessments demanded by the court will lead to further headaches for the EU since the ECB has had to pump billions of euros into the bank reserves of 19 member states since 2014, in an effort to boost small-business lending. Thus, if the ECB’s asset purchase programs are found to have negatively impacted the areas outlined in the constitutional court’s ruling, it would hamper any planned coronavirus stimulus package for the bloc, which could see unsustainable debt levels and shrinking economies long after the pandemic.Unfortunately, the coronavirus pandemic has revealed a number of flaws in the EU. Domestic woes are eating away at European solidarity while heads of states have found an effective scapegoat — pointing the finger at Brussels for their own shortcomings.
The ruling by the constitutional court and its wide-ranging implications for the EU’s precepts are not the first crisis the eurozone has faced since its infancy as a coal and steel community in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War. With each challenge, be it nationalism, economic headwinds, geopolitics and even war, somehow the eurozone has hobbled along, resulting in the largest single market and beacon of liberalism and responsible capitalism we see today.
Unfortunately, the coronavirus pandemic has revealed a number of flaws in the union. Domestic woes are eating away at European solidarity while heads of states have found an effective scapegoat — pointing the finger at Brussels for their own shortcomings.
The EU itself has failed to rise to the occasion on a number of issues from the poorly coordinated response to the pandemic to impotent Article 7 procedures — designed to strip member states of voting rights for disobeying the EU’s foundational principles — aimed at Poland and Hungary for their ruling parties’ assaults on press, judiciaries, academic institutions and central banks. Despite the descent into authoritarianism, the two countries will remain part of the eurozone since member states cannot be officially expelled.
Doomsters are eager to point at the souring relations with Warsaw and Budapest, the bitter aftertaste of Brexit and an intractable north-south divide as telltale signs of a eurozone on the brink of disintegration. However, the reality is far from that. The spat between Brussels and Berlin is solvable in the interim but it would be unwise to ignore its ramifications, especially when Poland and Hungary are so keen on testing the limits and patience of other member states.
It necessitates a more radical approach beyond the patchwork of amendments and compromises. If the EU is to survive and thrive, it needs to shake off Brexit and adapt to the reality that the different member states want different things out of the eurozone; a uniform approach may look good on paper, but political systems with such consistently dismal outcomes during times of crisis inspire little faith in their continued existence.
The EU needs a new treaty that empowers its institutions, broadens their mandates and strengthens their enforcement powers. It must go hand-in-hand with the EU parliament assuming complete control of legislative and budgetary powers with an eye on shoring up members states’ capabilities in defense, security, crisis management and — exceedingly important — currency.
The euro is still not as resilient to crises as it should be given the large disparities between wealthier and poorer members. Without deeper financial integration, poorer member states are far more susceptible to downturns — which they may attempt to mitigate by cutting lending, but that only hampers any meaningful recovery efforts, with potential spillover effects to other members.
Furthermore, failure to reform the EU treaty risks burdening the ECJ and undermining the rule of law while economic collapse would severely cripple the euro, placing the bloc firmly on the path of disintegration. Hopefully, once the worst of the pandemic is over, the EU can get to the business of addressing a critical flaw in its structure that crafts idealistic political objectives but fails to muster the requisite capacity and willingness to act toward achieving them.
There is no excuse for holding off on talks for treaty reform despite rising levels of mutual distrust. It is a necessary, albeit painful, exercise to ensure the eurozone’s longevity, and the sooner it is done the better. After all, the bickering between Beijing and Washington has left a sizeable void for the EU to step in as a level-headed alternative to a global community wary of a return to a Cold War east-west duopoly. Hafed Al-Ghwell is a non-resident senior fellow with the Foreign Policy Institute at the John Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies. He is also senior adviser at the international economic consultancy Maxwell Stamp and at the geopolitical risk advisory firm Oxford Analytica, a member of the Strategic Advisory Solutions International Group in Washington DC and a former adviser to the board of the World Bank Group. Twitter: @HafedAlGhwell

The US and China: In a relationship, but it’s complicated
Cornelia Meyer/Arab News/May 16, 2020
Crises tend to bring out either the best or the worst in both people and countries. In the already fraught relationship between China and the US, the COVID-19 pandemic is definitely bringing out the worst.
Ties between the world’s two biggest economies, particularly in relation to trade, have been on a downward trajectory since Donald Trump took up residence in the White House. The president has demanded that China honor fair trading practices, respect intellectual property rights and open up its investment market — all areas in which Beijing has been less than straightforward. With the pandemic, the rhetoric has become even more belligerent. Trump accuses China of covering up the original outbreak and concealing information that could have curbed its spread, and he is not alone in that. However, he has infuriated Beijing by encouraging speculation, based on no apparent evidence, that the virus originated in a Wuhan laboratory.
Neverthless, despite this toxic atmosphere, there were green shoots. The Trump administration has been working on a new trade agreement with China for the better part of two years. Phase 1 of the agreement appeared to be coming to fruition, and both Chinese Vice Premier Liu He and US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin have spoken of encouraging progress in the most recent “virtual” negotiations.
Last week it all unravelled, in rather spectacular fashion. Trump declared that not only did he have no wish to talk to Chinese President Xi Jinping, he was also considering cutting off relations with China altogether. These were harsh words, and warrant a closer look at the US-China relationship.
The Biden and Trump presidential election campaigns are competing to condemn China, reflecting and reinforcing the public mood in the US, where the latest polls suggest that two thirds of the population view China critically.
And it is not just about trade. The US has banned the Chinese technology company Huawei from supplying equipment for its communications networks, and vice versa, and encouraged its allies to do the same. Prevented from using software such as Google’s Android mobile operating system in their phones, Huawei will simply build their own, making China’s position even stronger in the long run.
Crises tend to bring out either the best or the worst in both people and countries. In the already fraught relationship between China and the US, the COVID-19 pandemic is definitely bringing out the worst.
Then there is the defense angle, which is particularly important to America’s allies in Asia. China continues to assert its position in the South China Sea with increasing aggression. Beijing’s confidence may be partly explained by a report on Saturday in The Times of London, revealing that according to Pentagon “war games” the US would lose any naval confrontation with China, and would struggle to defend independent Taiwan from invasion. Since Xi wants Taiwan to be part of greater China by 2050, they must be worried in Taipei.
So this is a new cold war, many say — but by no means all. The security analyst, author and former diplomat Anja Manuel argues that we are dealing not with a new cold war, but with a bipolar world. The Soviet Union was economically inward looking, trading with few outside the Warsaw Pact and some other allies. China is economically one of the most outward looking countries, a trading nation with ambitious programs such as the Belt and Road Initiative and institutions such as the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.
Manuel views US policy toward China as too negative, and sees little merit in limiting Chinese companies’ access to the US market or denying students entry to US universities. She suggests a more positive outlook in which the US works with its allies on research and development in strategic sectors, even banning China from purchasing strategic proprietary technology where appropriate. COVID-19 is a global problem, and the world would benefit from a global response in which the two leading economies cooperated on that specific issue, as they did with Ebola and SARS. As for the overall economic and security relationship between the US and China, measured and well thought through policies and actions are important to maintaining economic stability and peace in the long run.
The US and China may be the poles in our new bipolar world, but they are not alone, and what they do affects the rest of us because of their sheer size and power. Power brings with its responsibility. Let us hope the two dominant players remember that.
Cornelia Meyer is a business consultant, macro-economist and energy expert. Twitter: @MeyerResources

Trump must do better in the battle for hearts and minds
Andrew Hammond/Arab News/May 16, 2020
US President Donald Trump has threatened to “cut off the whole relationship” with China, fueling concerns of a new Cold War, but that historical analogy is far from perfect to describe the growing tensions between the two superpowers.
One key difference between the US and the Soviet Union and today’s relationship between Washington and Beijing is the extent of people-to-people interaction. Students from China are the largest single national group in the US, and their numbers have quadrupled in four years. Tourism is healthy, with more than 2 million visits a year in each direction, and labor migration from China to the US is near a historic high.
Another difference is trade. In the late 1980s the US was importing about $200 million worth of goods from the Soviet Union, while US imports from China in 2018 were more than $500 billion.
Nevertheless, some elements of US-China competition are reminiscent of the Cold War, such as military competition, and the South China Sea is only one of a string of security issues. There is also the hardening of ideological competition. China is well aware that one of the key reasons the US won the Cold War was the strategy of international containment and cultural vigor, with successive administrations skilfully deploying soft power to encourage other countries into a system of alliances, such as NATO. Beijing and Washington are now in a similar battle for hearts and minds.
The most recent data, a Pew Research survey of 33 nations in 2019, suggests that people in 21 countries, mainly in Europe and Asia-Pacific, have a more favorable view of the US than of China. There are particularly stark gaps in Japan, where people are 54 percentage points more likely to have a positive view of Washington than of Beijing (68-14), while people in South Korea, the Philippines and India are also at least 37 points more likely to do so. There are also large pro-US differentials in Poland, Hungary, Lithuania and the Czech Republic.
China is well aware that one of the key reasons the US won the Cold War was the strategy of international containment and cultural vigor, with successive administrations skilfully deploying soft power to encourage other countries into a system of alliances, such as NATO. Beijing and Washington are now in a similar battle for hearts and minds.
Countries with more positive views of Beijing than of Washington include Russia (71-29), Mexico, Tunisia, Lebanon, Turkey and Nigeria.
Washington is therefore in pole position in the soft power battle, but Beijing is punching back hard. A goodexample is Asia-Pacific, where Trump last year unveiled a revamped Indo-Pacific strategy in the face of China’s growing strength. Critics assert that it will have less overall impact than the Obama team’s Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), which Trump abruptly abandoned on the first day of his presidency. In comparison,China’s monumental ambition is illustrated by the $1 trillion Belt and Road scheme, its alternative vision to TPP of a Free Trade Area of Asia Pacific, and the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership. From a historical perspective, current US strategy appears under ambitious. Since 1945, both Republican and Democratic administrations helped create and nurture key global and regional institutions such as the UN, the IMF and World Bank, which Trump holds in disdain. Later, the administrations of George H.W. Bush and especially Bill Clinton encouraged the creation of a range of new bodies, including Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC). The Obama team’s TPP was thus only the latest example of a global institution-building project to embed US influence.
It is in this context that Trump's plan for Asia-Pacific must be judged, and his administration needs to convince US allies that he is wholly committed — politically, economically and security-wise — to the region. This may be made more difficult by the fact that his ratings are considerably lower than those of his predecessor in significant Asia-Pacific countries such as Australia, Japan, South Korea, Indonesia and the Philippines.
There have also been significant declines in regional views of US global pre-eminence; compared with five years ago, fewer people in the Philippines, Indonesia and India believe the US is the world’s leading economic power.
Washington currently has an advantage in the battle for hearts and minds across the region, and indeed much of the world, but its lead is not unassailable. The Trump team would do well to relearn the lessons of the past, such as how Washington deployed soft power so skilfully during the Cold War to press its case against the Soviet Union.
*Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economic

Daesh: They haven’t gone away, you know

Peter Welby/Arab News/May 16, 2020
Amid the pandemic news, some analysts have been keen to highlight a “resurgence” of Daesh activity in Iraq and Syria. Some of the reporting on this has been overblown; a return to the territorial “caliphate” of 2014-19 is highly unlikely. But the group’s activities have been following a familiar pattern.
Much of the discussion about this supposed resurgence has 2014 as its starting point, when columns of black-clad fighters swept into Mosul, and the international community feared for Baghdad. But we should instead be looking back much farther. From 2007 the group was harried and its leaders were being killed, but it was still able to launch attacks. In 2007, ISI (one of Daesh’s predecessor groups) killed at least 219 people. By the beginning of 2008, the group had lost 75 per cent of its fighters killed or wounded, yet it managed to kill 225 people that year, 803 in 2009, and 434 in 2010.
The international community has a short memory, particularly when it comes to Daesh. The “surge” in Iraq in 2007 was meant to end the insurgency, but it failed; the insurgency was suppressed, but not destroyed.
When taking a course of antibiotics, you are required to finish the course, even if you are feeling better — because bacteria learn and evolve, and any that survive the original course can be much harder to defeat. But in the battle against ISI and the other insurgent groups in 2007, we didn’t finish the course of treatment. When they bounced back, they were stronger, and they took nearly five years to be defeated in their new territories after 2014. But again, although the coalition to defeat Daesh is still active, it is doing less than it was, and the coronavirus pandemic has diminished counter-Daesh activity.
In October, after the death of its leader Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, I wrote that Daesh was far from defeated so long as the idea that it represented continued to drive its members. It is apparent from continued attacks around the world in the group’s name that its appeal remains high. The loss of its territory has not diminished its power; instead, it has simply added to the jihadi narrative of a global plot against Muslims. And in any case, the group still more or less controls territory through affiliates in other, less noticed, parts of the world.
So attention on the “resurgence” of Daesh is to be welcomed, provided it does not fade as it becomes apparent that defeating the group comprehensively is a long slog, not a glorious short campaign. And the recent increase in attacks is a useful reminder that it is still at large.
The jihadi ideology that Daesh and others like them lean on is not “protected speech,” or the intellectual product of free thought. It undermines the very basis of the global order, and so must be stamped on.
In the meantime, simply training troops and supporting local authorities in Syria and Iraq is not going to address the true issue. This requires something more comprehensive — a total rejection of jihadi groups’ freedom to operate, anywhere. The international community has never been willing, despite much talk of the scale of the jihadi threat, to put up the resources required to bring stability. If the leading nations of the world had intervened to stabilise Syria in 2011, the opportunities that the civil war has provided as a training ground for terror would not have arisen.
Intervention is costly. If resources are insufficient, it fuels chaos, as we saw in Iraq. But we also see the cost of no intervention. One day, someone will do the sums to see how much the Syrian civil war cost the region and the world; those numbers will be high, in refugees, in terror, in regional disruption, and in the direct cost of combating Daesh and other groups. But if the international community were serious about global stability, and about defeating jihadi terrorism, then the necessary resources could be found.
As I have said before, though, it is the idea of Daesh that is persuasive to some. It is an idea that has drawn a diverse mixture of supporters from IT consultants in Mumbai to doctors in the UK. Too much of the world, particularly in the West, is squeamish about the idea of resourcing robust challenges to extremist ideologies. It smacks of censorship, or even suppression of religious freedom. We need to get over that squeamishness.
The jihadi ideology that Daesh and others like them lean on is not “protected speech,” or the intellectual product of free thought. It undermines the very basis of the global order, and so must be stamped on. Governments and religious leaders, at local, national and international levels, must be prepared to work together to defeat it. And where religious communities are skeptical of working with governments, their leaders need to challenge that skepticism.
But this need for encouragement and goodwill works both ways. Two decades after Al-Qaeda massacred its way into the global consciousness, there are those within governments in the West who are still hesitant about working effectively with Muslim communities and countries to defeat extremists. This is wrong on many levels, and loses sight of the fact that it is Muslims who suffer most from Daesh's violence, as we saw in Afghanistan last week. If the ideology Daesh espouses is finally to be defeated, it will be defeated by all of our communities working hand in hand.
*Peter Welby is a consultant on religion and global affairs, specializing in the Arab world. Previously he was the managing editor of a think tank on religious extremism, the Centre on Religion & Geopolitics, and worked in public affairs in the Arabian Gulf. He is based in London, and has lived in Egypt and Yemen. Twitter: @pdcwelby.