Examiner Staff

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Beirut airport: More travelers but fewer goods

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — The Directorate General for Civil Aviation said despite a 4 percent increase in passenger traffic at Beirut’s Rafic Hariri International Airport, air freight dropped 17 percent in the first three quarters of 2014.

According to a report released on Monday, slightly more than 5 million passengers went through Beirut airport in the first nine months of this year, compared to 4.82 million during the same period in 2013.

The numbers of passengers who used the airport in August and September were estimated at 814,297 and 640,546, recording an increase of 12 and 19 percent compared with August and September 2013.

The report added that the number of passengers transiting through Beirut had dropped by 46 percent from last year.

The total volume of goods airlifted in and out of Beirut airport until end of September was estimated at 7.5 million tons. The figure includes 4.31 million tons of imported goods and 3.19 million of exported merchandise, according to the directorate.

RECIPE: Amardeen Smoothie

Watch Joumana Accad of TasteofBeirut.com:

[youtube url=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sZtK0A2yiEg” width=”500″ height=”300″]

Amardeen is the name given to a large sheet of apricot paste. Amardeen has a tangy, sweet and intense apricot flavor. It is diluted in water, made into a drink or pudding or just eaten in chunks.

For a quart-sized pitcher:

Dilute 500 g (about 1 package or 1 pound) of amardeen in four cups of water overnight. The next day, pour one cup of water and 1/2 cup of sugar in a saucepan and bring to a boil, stirring to dissolve the water. Cool and set aside. Place 2 ounces of nuts (pistachios, pine nuts) in a bowl filled with water for at least one hour.

In a blender, pour the amardeen and water mixture and the syrup and process until smooth; taste for desired sweetness. Serve the drink in cups and garnish with a few pine nuts and peeled pistachios or almonds or walnuts, if desired.

NOTE: One can add a teaspoon of rose water to this drink if desired.

Samar Nader: UN Correspondent

Lebanese-American journalist Samar Nader has worked in many scopes of storytelling over the course of her career. As a broadcast reporter, newspaper publisher, and filmmaker, she has viewed and reported on national and global stories through multiple different lenses.

Born in Lebanon, the New York-based journalist has remained connected with her native Lebanese roots, often traveling to her home country for family visits and international assignments. She travels frequently, and has become fluent in Arabic, English, French, and Spanish.

Today, Nader serves as an official correspondent for United Nations Security Council Meetings and other high-profile UN events, a position she’s held since January 2007. Since 2008, she’s also worked as newspaper reporter for El-Nashra newspaper, and as a TV correspondent for New TV, Al-Jadeed, a 24-hour Pan-Arab station based in the Middle East. She previously worked as an international correspondent for Radio Canada International.

In 2013, Nader owned the copyrights to Al-Mohajer newspaper, an internationally recognized news outlet, and the oldest known newspaper for the Lebanese diaspora. Nader revived the publication more than 100 years after its distribution ended with assistance from the World Lebanese Cultural Union and her colleagues Walid and Frances Mourani. World-renowned philosopher Gibran Khalil Gibran wrote in the newspaper in the early 20th century. Nader admired Gibran’s work and reintroduced the newspaper in honor of her father, who was battling cancer at the time.

Nader highlighted diaspora successes, activities, and social dilemmas, quickly growing the publication as a source of research for the Lebanese Foreign Ministry and its Consulates and Embassies around the globe.

As a lifelong storyteller, Nader prefers to work behind the camera. Growing up in Lebanon, Nader dreamed of becoming a movie producer and director, but her family urged her to enter a profession outside of the arts. Her mother, a retired Arabic literature professor, influenced her career choice and storytelling talents. Nader also credits her grandfather, a city-wide school director, Lebanese poet, and famed English translator, for impacting her career.

Nonetheless, as she matured, Nader returned to her early passions, writing and producing her own film which chronicled historic stories of Lebanese-American emigration. Nader created a docudrama where she interviewed elderly figures, over 100 years old, who narrated their arrival to America and the challenges they faced. The film, called Olympia, is named after Nader’s grandmother, who immigrated to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1920.

In her free time, Nader is an avid volleyball player and swimmer. She also enjoys serving the Lebanese communities as an event organizer and emcee for special ceremonies. She previously hosted the annual Miss Lebanon competition for two years, and more than 20 pageants recognizing women in various Lebanese cities.

Nader is also the founder of three non-governmental organizations, including two in Lebanon, and one part of the United Nations. She launched the UN Arab Ladies Club along with fellow journalist Khawla Nazzal and Her Excellency Saja Majali, Permanent Representative of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan to the U.N. Geneva. Until now, the organization ahs honored more than 10 Lebanese and Arab poets and writers.

Today, Nader is working to document the stories of Syrian and Iraqi refugees. She has worked on a series of stories, which highlight the plight of refugees in the Lebanese public school system, and human rights violations against women and girls. She is also working with high-profile officials within the church to shed light on the dilemmas of Christians in the Middle East. Nader said these issues have made her emotionally drawn to participate in more advocacy work.

Lebanese-American journalist dies in ‘suspicious’ car accident

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — A Lebanese-American journalist covering the Syrian conflict for Iran’s Press TV was killed in a car accident in Turkey, which her family and employer says was deliberately planned by Turkish authorities, according to the news agency.

Press TV says Serena Shim was killed in a “suspicious” car accident near the Turkey-Syria border on October 19 as she was working to cover the ongoing war in the Syrian town of Kobani.

She was reportedly going back to her hotel from a report scene in the city of Suruç in Turkey’s Urfa Province when their car collided with a heavy vehicle. The identity and whereabouts of the truck driver remain unknown.

Shim, a Lebanese-American mother of two, covered reports for Press TV in Lebanon, Iraq, and Ukraine.

On October 19, she told Press TV that the Turkish intelligence agency had accused her of spying probably due to some of the stories she has covered about Turkey’s stance on the Islamic State group in Kobani and its surroundings, adding that she feared being arrested.

Kobani and its surroundings have been under attack since mid-September, with the IS militants capturing dozens of nearby Kurdish villages.

Press TV News Director Hamid Reza Emadi called on the Turkish government “to find out exactly what happened” to Serena, describing the accident as “suspicious,” the report said.

Lebanese MP reportedly punches female office worker

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — A Lebanese lawmaker reportedly punched an office employee in the neck after she refused to prioritize his court documents at the Baabda Judicial Palace on Monday.

MP Nicolas Fattoush visited the office of Manal Daou, an administrative assistant responsible for processing complaints by Lebanese attorneys. According to Beirut-based newspaper The Daily Star, Fattoush handed Daou his file and asked her to expedite it.

She reportedly informed Daou that she was already working on a previous file, and that he would have to wait a few minutes before she could help him.

Upset that he wasn’t given preferential treatment, the Zahle MP then notified Daou of his position in government and demanded she give his documents priority.

Witnesses say Fattoush explained he was a member of Parliament and used “insulting language” aimed at Daou. The situation allegedly escalated when Daou once again asked him to wait and responded, “Why are you talking to me like this, who are you?”

Witnesses told An-Nahar newspaper that Fattoush raised his voice and began to “punch her repeatedly in the throat.”

Daou’s coworkers and Fattoush’s bodyguard quickly intervened, according to sources.

Daou later filed a lawsuit against Fattoush through the office of the prosecutor. According to The Daily Star, Judge Claude Karam sat the two parties down to make up, after which Daou agreed to drop the lawsuit, sources said.

Is Lebanon at increased risk for Ebola?

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanon is imposing new measures to prevent the Ebola virus from reaching the Middle Eastern nation, the health minister said Monday.

Due to the large number of Lebanese expatriates in “infected countries,” Lebanon should be exceptionally cautious, Abu Faour told reporters at a news conference.

Wael Abu Faour said Lebanon is more vulnerable than some other Arab countries because of the large Lebanese diaspora in Africa. Thousands of Lebanese live in African nations including Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone — countries where the disease has killed more than 4,500 people combined.

People traveling to Lebanon from infected countries will have to fill out special forms and any incoming plane carrying someone displaying Ebola symptoms will have all passengers tested at the airport, Abu Faour said.

Travelers who come from ‘Ebola-infected’ countries or who have a layover in one of these countries will have to fill out a form asking whether they have been experiencing any early symptoms.

If the passenger reports symptoms, they would be tested at the airport, according to Abu Faour. Anyone with Ebola would be quarantined at the airport until being transferred to Rafik Hariri Hospital in Beirut.

The hospital has been now equipped with a quarantine facility for Ebola carriers, according to Abu Faour. The American University of Beirut’s Medial Center is preparing to announce a similar unit soon.

For other hospitals with more than 100 beds, Abu Faour is requiring them to install quarantine units within three weeks.

“It is not that we have a choice,” he said. “The safety of the Lebanese people is at stake.”

The medical teams at all hospitals will receive training on the symptoms of the virus and on how to deal with Ebola-infected individuals. Abu Faour said the medical teams of south Lebanon had already received training Sunday and those of Beirut and Mount Lebanon would attend a training session Tuesday.

In addition, anyone suspected of carrying the virus will not be granted a visa at Lebanese embassies in infected countries.

UN: Lebanon restricts Syrian refugee influx

Scenes of Syria & the Gift of the Givers Hospital

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — The Lebanese government has cut back sharply on the number of Syrian refugees it is allowing into the country, the United Nations representative in Lebanon said on Saturday.

Lebanon has the highest per capita concentration of refugees in the world, with one in four residents a refugee, many of them living in the poorest areas.

The government has said it cannot cope with the more than a million Syrians and has asked for funds to help look after them.

Ninette Kelley, representative of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Lebanon, said: “Many fewer people are being allowed in than would normally be coming in to get refugee status.”

Following a constant increase in refugees to Lebanon since the start of 2012, United Nations figures show a decrease of around 40,000 refugees since the end of September.

Humanitarian reasons

Social Affairs Minister Rashid Derbas said in comments published on Saturday in Lebanon’s Al-Akhbar newspaper that “Lebanon is no longer officially receiving any Syrian refugees,” except with those with pressing humanitarian reasons.

“Anyone who passes the Syrian-Lebanese border will be questioned and should have a humanitarian reason for their entry. This will be decided by the Interior and Social Affairs ministries,” he said without giving further details.

Reuters could not immediately reach the Social Affairs Ministry and Kelley said “there has been no publication of the criteria used” at the border.

Resentment against Syrians has grown in Lebanon with many complaining that refugees are taking jobs, driving down wages, overloading schools and hospitals, and even worsening an electricity shortage which pre-dates the war in Syria.

Syrians have long faced discrimination and abuse in Lebanon and beggars now walk the streets of Beirut.

Kelly has called for renewed investment in Lebanese infrastructure to help the country manage the influx and has said Lebanese host communities deserve support for coping with the refugee burden.

Sunni refugees

Politicians also fret about the mainly Sunni Muslim refugees’ impact on Lebanon’s fragile sectarian balance, in which power is carefully divided between Christians, Shi’ite Muslims, Sunnis, and other, smaller groups.

More than 60 years ago, it took in tens of thousands of Palestinian refugees from the war of Israel’s creation. They have now grown to hundreds of thousands, their camps turned into permanent, squalid slums.

The militarization of Palestinian camps is also widely seen as a catalyst of Lebanon’s own 15-year civil war, which only ended in 1990.

Syria’s 3.2 million refugees, many also in Turkey and Jordan, are fleeing a three-year civil war which has killed nearly 200,000 people, according to U.N. figures.

Both the Syrian government and insurgent groups are accused by rights groups of killing civilians and destroying homes.

Source: VOA News, via Creative Commons License

Original Article

Lebanese photographer featured on ABC News ‘This Week in Pictures’

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanese photographer Karim Bechara posted a beautiful photograph of lightning strokes above Lebanon on Facebook on Thursday. The lightning came as a result of heavy rainfall pounding various regions of the country this week.

Bechara used a long exposure to produce the image and captioned: “The reason lightning doesn’t strike twice in the same place is that the same place isn’t there the second time.”

Beshara’s photo was featured on ABC News as one of the week’s top photos from around the globe.

Beirut-based ABC correspondent Alexander Marquardt posted the photo on Twitter calling it an “amazing shot.”

See more photos by Karim Bechara below:

BECHARA 1 BECHARA 2 BECHARA 3

BECHARA 4 BECHARA 6 BECHARA 7

WEEKEND COMEDY: Lebanese Father-and-Son Driving

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Among the honking and prolonged lines of traffic on the streets of Beirut, you will often find new drivers learning the tricks of navigating Lebanon’s roads from their father.

Driving in Lebanon isn’t easy on it’s own, but clearly when your father is teaching you how to drive, things may get more difficult.

Watch below:

Rainy week adds hope to Lebanon’s drought fears

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanese meteorologists says this week’s heavy rainfall in Lebanon will make up for last year’s severe winter drought, according to Michel Frem, head of the Lebanese Agricultural Research Institute.

“The rainfall has minimized fire hazards that turn up during this time every year and it is also excellent for agriculture and the environment,” Frem told the National News Agency on Thursday.

Experts say 700 mm of rainfall in the Bekaa is needed to make up for last year’s drought.

“Climate change and discrepancies with regards to the amount of rainfall across the country make it difficult for meteorologists to predict the weather,” Frem said, adding that the meteorology department only forecasts weather conditions a week in advance.

Despite these difficulties, Frem expects rainfall to persist throughout the winter, but says the prediction “is difficult to confirm.”

Heavy rainfall caused river and street flooding on Tuesday night that continued well into Wednesday morning across Lebanon.

Frem says Kfar Shakhna, near Tripoli, witnessed the heaviest rainfall in the country so far with a 97 mm of rain in the past week. The village usually witnesses an average of 62 mm of rain annually.

Beirut is reported to have experienced 55 mm of rainfall over the past week. This is an 18 mm increase in comparison to rainfall in Beirut over the same period in 2013.

The rainy trend will continue over the weekend, with rainfall and lighting expected for Saturday and Sunday, Frem said. Friday, however, will face sporadic showers, he added.

Amazing photograph of Beirut’s storms by Karim Bechara:

Screen Shot 2014-10-16 at 11.59.31 AM

 

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