Tenants fear new rent law will drive them to the streets

BEIRUT: The crumbling facade of the once-elegant Hasbini Building in Zarif mirrors the eroding foothold of longtime tenants in the capital and across the country, following the passing of the new rent law.

The law, passed in April but under constitutional review after a challenge by former President Michel Sleiman, would affect thousands of families and individuals. It has pitted old tenants and activists against landlords, and, on a broader ideological level, social welfare advocates against free market liberals for the future of the city.

The landlord of the Hasbini Building, Samir Hasbini, blames its dilapidated state on the lack of income from longtime renters. If the new rent law goes into effect, he says he would be able to invest in the building, although he admits that he would prefer to sell the land.

Samir Hasbini’s father, Mohammad Hasbini, built the five-story building around 90 years ago as a newly married man with a young family. The Hasbini building boasts embellished columns, intricate balustrades and tall ceilings, but years of neglect have taken a toll.

At the time it was built, it was one of many fine buildings in the area that borders Zoqaq al-Blat, home to some of Beirut’s outstanding architectural gems. Today, many of the historical buildings have been torn down or are in such disrepair that residents consider it only a matter of time before they too become casualties of the construction boom.

Hasbani, 70, explains that he owns the building with eight of his sublings, “and each of us gets not more than LL200,000 ($132) a year. That apartment across the street was rented for $1,200 a month … [as an] investment.”

“If one of my apartments were emptied, I could get a minimum of $500,000 for it,” he says.

The law in its current form would raise rents gradually over six years to 5 percent of the unit’s market value, which would be decided by court-approved appraisers. However, after nine years, landlords could evict longtime tenants, even if they are paying the higher rent. Tenants who qualify as poor would have 12 years before they could be evicted, during which time the increase in their rent would be covered by a special fund.

Hasbini, who also lives in the building, says his support for the law has not affected his relationships with his neighbors and tenants, which he describe as “good.”

Reda Hamdan, a tenant who has lived in the building for 35 years, is fatalistic, declining to give an opinion on the new law.

“Whether it’s good or not good, it’s the state’s decision,” he says. “If they raise the rent, we will pay, if they don’t, we won’t.”

Around the corner at a nearby mechanic shop, Mohammad Jamal, 55, speaks bluntly of his opposition to the law.

“Three of my children are studying to be doctors and two more are also studying medicine, and I work night and day to educate them,” says Jamal, who pays LL1,000,000 ($662) a year for a home in Corniche al-Mazraa. “If they kick me out and I need to rent a new house, I won’t be able to.”

Jamal estimates that he has paid half the value of the apartment since he moved in, and called for the state to come up with more affordable housing options.

“How can I afford a house for $1,000 a month?” he says. “There is no housing, no nothing. Should I go live in the streets? … Of course I am against [the new law].”

Urban researcher and activist Nadine Bekdache sees the new law as a means of emptying old buildings over the next few years for the benefit of real estate investors, exacerbating the displacement of lower and middle-income families from Beirut.

“There was already a development boom before this rent control law that is replacing rent controlled buildings with new constructions, affecting the history and social context of each neighborhood,” she said.

Bekdache says small landlords will not be able to sell or renovate immediately, but that large developers, on the other hand, can afford to wait until the nine- or 12-year mark passes and then snap up the empty properties without having to compensate the tenants.

“Everything we know of Beirut is tied to the old rent law,” she says. “There should be a proper survey, and a proper debate. [The law is] a chance to talk about housing policy in the city, how it’s being emptied of low- and middle-income people.”

Joseph Zoghaib, president of the Landlords’ Association, insists the law has been misrepresented to the public by rich tenants and the Communist Party.

“We are in a free economic society and we value this very much,” says Zoghaib, who argues that freeing up old rent apartments will actually bring down the inflated rent prices in Beirut. “Who said the free market doesn’t respect the right to housing? … I would never like to see my compatriots living in the streets.”

Zoghaib says that when landlords are able to make a decent income off their properties, they will have less incentive to sell to large developers.

“Poor people have nothing to fear; they get compensation and they have the next 12 years [before they can be evicted],” he says. “If they are old, 12 years is more than enough, and if they are not old, let them come up with a plan and move their butts a little. Not everyone should throw themselves on the state.”

The rent law law was passed in early April and published in the Official Gazette on May 8. Sleiman, backed by 10 lawmakers, questioned its constitutionality and referred it to the Constitutional Council. Although it has been passed and published, the law cannot be implemented until the review is completed.


Source: The Daily Star

In rare Israel visit, Lebanese church head hears exiled Christians

(Reuters) – A Lebanese church leader who defied warnings from the powerful Shi’ite Muslim Hezbollah movement by accompanying the Pope on a Holy Land visit pledged on Wednesday to help dispossessed Christians in Israel.

Two Catholic communities in Israel are seeking Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rai’s intervention: Arabs expelled from their Galilee village by Israeli forces during the 1948 war of Israel’s founding and former members of a pro-Israeli Lebanese militia now living in the Jewish state.

Israel and Lebanon are in a formal state of war, and Hezbollah had warned Rai of “negative repercussions” if he went ahead with his planned trip. The patriarch remained in Israel after Pope Francis’s pilgrimage ended on Monday.

Having visiting Tel Aviv’s mainly Arab district of Jaffa on Monday, Rai continued on Wednesday to Birim, a northern village whose Maronite Christian residents were displaced 66 years ago.

Israel razed the village in 1953, sparing only its church and bell tower, and many of its former residents and their descendants now live in other communities in the Galilee.

Birim villagers, who numbered more than 800 in 1948, and their descendants have campaigned to be allowed to return and rebuild, winning an Israeli high court ruling that has yet to be implemented by the state. Rai said his church would lobby on their behalf through the Vatican.

“We are with you, and want to help you as much as possible,” he said in a speech to an audience of several hundred, adding that he could not appeal to Israel as it is “an enemy country”.

FEAR OF RETURN

Rai was also due later on Wednesday to meet other Maronites in northern Israel, including members of the South Lebanon Army, a militia that was allied with Israel during its 22-year occupation of southern Lebanon.

Former SLA troops, who make up about a fifth of the 10,000-strong Maronite community in Israel, fled south across the Lebanese border when Israeli forces withdrew unilaterally from Lebanon in 2000.

Branded as traitors in Lebanon, the ex-SLA men and their relatives fear to return and want Rai to intercede on their behalf in Beirut.

“This is the first time that a senior Lebanese figure has come (to Israel), and he wants to listen to us,” Julie Abu a-Raj, a spokeswoman for the ex-SLA community, told Israel Radio.

She commended Rai for “making good on his religious duty to visit his flock and not succumbing to threats” – a reference to the disapproval of Hezbollah, an Iranian- and Syrian-backed Muslim militia which fought Israel and the SLA.

“We are an exiled community that was a political, historical and geographic victim of the wars of others in our country,” Abu a-Raj said.

“We want to tell the Lebanese government…to stop the trials and investigations against us, the only ones who are loyal to our identities.”

Maronites follow an Eastern rite of the Roman Catholic church. They number about 900,000 in Lebanon, a quarter of the population.

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Harb lines up unlimited broadband in Lebanon

BEIRUT: Telecommunications Minister Boutros Harb Friday unveiled Lebanon’s first unlimited broadband plan, while cutting prices and increasing speeds on existing DSL services in addition to introducing new offers on landline, cellular and 3G services.

Harb said the monthly price of the new 2 megabits per second unlimited download plan would be LL75,000. Previously, for LL75,000, consumers could get a 2 Mbps plan with a 20 gigabyte data limit, paying LL6,000 per additional gigabyte.

“Around 330,000 subscribers will benefit from the new unlimited plan,” he said.

The entry-level DSL plan, still priced at L24,000, will be upgraded to 2 Mbps with a 40 GB cap, compared with the previous 1 Mbps and 4 GB of data.

The 4 Mbps plan will see its price drop to LL50,000, from LL75,000, and have its usage allowance increased from 25 GB to 50 GB.

The 6-8 Mbps plan will now cost LL65,000 and include 60 GB of data.

The new plans and prices have been passed in three new decrees by the council of ministers, and will go into effect on July 1, Harb said.

The minister also announced that the data limit for the 3G service would increase from 150 megabytes to 500 MB for $10, from 750 MB to 1,500 MB for $19 and from 1,500 MB to 5,000 MB for $29.

As for the cellular rates, they will be reduced from 36 cents per minute to 25 cents per minute for prepaid lines while the SMS price will drop from 9 cents to 5 cents.

Harb added that subscribers in the postpaid lines would be offered an additional free hour to make up for the $15 paid at the beginning of every month without benefitting from any additional services.

Harb has also canceled the installation fee for new landlines and reduced the fixed monthly fee paid on landlines from LL12,000 to LL9,000.

“The revenues of the Telecommunications Ministry will increase by LL23 billion annually due to the expected increase in subscribers to the landline service by 100,000 as a result of the drop in prices,” he said.

Harb said the ministry had conducted a study to assess the impact of these changes on the revenues of the Telecoms Ministry.

“We found out that the first few months following the reduction in prices of the Internet service will witness a monthly drop of only LL100 million, which could be offset by the revenues generated from the changes introduced on the landline service and which amount to LL23 billion annually,” he said.

Since becoming telecoms minister in February, Harb has promised to enact sweeping changes in the sector to attract new investment in Lebanon and secure lower prices for the country’s consumers.

“The economy cannot prosper and grow without modern, affordable and high quality telecom services,” he said.

Harb said there is a direct link between the modernization of a country’s telecoms sector and an increase in its GDP.

“These steps are necessary to create new job opportunities for young people in addition to putting an end to the brain drain and attracting new investments,” he added.

In his presentation, Harb criticized previous ministers for allegedly violating Law 431, which came into force in 2002 to provide a framework for governing the organization of the telecommunications sector and to set the rules for its privatization.

He claimed the new rates represented the ministry’s recommitment to Law 430.

Telecoms are the third largest source of income for the Treasury, with revenues reaching over $1.4 billion a year.

Source: The Daily Star

Presidential void affects security: Gemayel

BEIRUT: Kataeb Party leader Amine Gemayel said Wednesday that the presidential void could affect the security situation and the work of the state institutions, adding void should not prevail for long.

“The void in the presidency post could pose a threat to stability in the country,” Gemayel said after meeting a delegation from the Maronite League and the Maronite Council.

“Void in the presidency could also lead to void in the institutions, and we should respect the National Pact,” he said.

The National Pact is an unwritten agreement formed in 1943 that laid the foundation of Lebanon as a multi-confessional state and has governed the political dynamics of the country to this day.

Gemayel also said that the state of presidential void in the country should not linger and reiterated that Parliament could not legislate in light of a presidential void.

“We should not adapt to the current situation and the status of not having a president for the county,” he said.

“The Kataeb is holding on to its stance that Parliament becomes an electoral body and not a legislative one throughout the period of presidential void, as Article 75 of the Constitution stipulates.”

Source: The Daily Star

Al Saeh Book Drive

Lebanese-Americans from across the country have rallied together to restore the Al Saeh Library in Tripoli, Lebanon, which was tragically destroyed by extremists on January 3rd.

[youtube url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qlZpMowR_W0″ width=”500″ height=”300″]

 

Private Farewell Luncheon for May El-Khalil

(GROSSE POINTE, MI) — The Lebanese American Chamber of Commerce hosted a private farewell luncheon for Beirut Marathon Association founder May El-Khalil at the Grosse Pointe Yacht Club on Wednesday.

El-Khalil visited Detroit for four days during an official USA trip which included stops in Miami and New York.

Look for an exclusive interview with May El-Khalil in the coming weeks.

Click here for photos.

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The Lebanese American Chamber of Commerce hosted a private farewell luncheon for Beirut Marathon Association founder May El-Khalil at the Grosse Pointe Yacht Club on Wednesday.
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American Foundation for Auxilia hosts May El-Khalil

(TROY, MI) – The American Foundation for Auxilia hosted Beirut Marathon Association founder May El-Khalil for a brunch at the Marriott Troy on Sunday.

KEY QUOTES:
“We channeled our projects to help poor mothers and underprivileged kids in Nigeria. It made sense to give back to our community that is hosting our families and our husband’s businesses. With that being said, allow me to recognize the efforts you pull to help needy families in Lebanon through your efforts and through the efforts of Auxilia.” –May El Khalil, Beirut Marathon Association Founder

“As a successful Lebanese lady I was very interested in seeing how she thinks and how she became so successful. May El-Khalil works for peace without paying attention to religions or to political affiliations – it’s all for peace. Sometimes something happens for a reason. Even though May was hit by a bus, she was so determined to do something” –Samar Malouf, Michigan Coordinator of the American Foundation for Auxilia

“(El Khalil’s) message really corresponds with Auxilia’s message. We’re trying to give hope and spread a message of love by giving.” –Joe Defouni, American Foundation for Auxilia Board Member

“It was an incredible message, the message of “peace, love, and run.” It’s very catchy.” –Clemence Bouary, American Foundation for Auxilia Member

Click here for photos.

Listen to May El-Khalil’s inspiring story here: http://youtu.be/u1K6hnm09xs

Stay tuned for Lebanese Examiner’s exclusive interview with May El-Khalil later this week.

Copyright © 2014 – LebaneseExaminer.com

PHOTOS: American Foundation for Auxilia hosts May El-Khalil

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The American Foundation for Auxilia hosted Beirut Marathon Association founder May El-Khalil for a brunch at the Marriott Troy on Sunday.
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