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Al-Jazeera host faces slander charges over Lebanese Army comments

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — A lawsuit was filed against Al-Jazeera TV anchor Faisal al-Qassem on Monday by Lebanese lawyers over anti-Army remarks he made over the weekend.

Qassem is widely recognized as an anti-regime Syrian journalist and host of Al-Itijah al-Muakis on Al-Jazeera.

Qassem posted on his Twitter account that the only achievements of the Lebanese Army has been shooting video clips with Lebanese singers Wael Kfoury, Najwa Karam, Elissa, and Haifa Wehbe.

Outraged by the comments, a delegation of Lebanese lawyers filed a lawsuit against Qassem for violating Articles 295 and 157 of the Lebanese Penal Code.

According to a statement released by the lawyers Monday, the purpose behind the lawsuit was Qassem’s remarks amounted to a “provocation of Lebanese public opinion through indirect incitement against the Army.”

His tweets are a violation of Article 295 of the penal law, according to the statement.

In addition to voicing contempt against the Army via a publicized medium mentioned in Article 209, Qassem has also violated Article 157, which can result in imprisonment for up to three years.

A group of Lebanese activists held a protest at the offices of Al-Jazeera television station in Beirut Sunday expressing anger over comments made by a journalist against the Lebanese Army.

Lebanon’s state prosecution office called Qassem for a hearing on October 8.

Lebanese American Club of Michigan announces new scholarship opportunity

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(DETROIT, MI) – The Lebanese American Club of Michigan (LACOM) announced a new scholarship opportunity for students of Lebanese descent on Monday.

The $1,000 scholarship aims to financially assist one Lebanese-American student with tuition, books, and other educational expenses.

Students are required to have at least a 3.5 grade point average and write a 500-word essay about what their Lebanese heritage means to them.

The essay question asks, “What does your Lebanese-American heritage mean to you, and how will you help preserve its rich culture and history?”

To apply for the scholarship, see the information below. For more information, call Charlie Kadado at (248) 924-4854.

LACOM Scholarship Opportunity

Four Lebanese cities named in top 20 list of world’s “oldest cities”

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(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — A recent article published by The Telegraph named four Lebanese cities to the list of “the world’s 20 oldest cities.”

Tyre (#12), Beirut (#10), Sidon (#6), and Byblos (#2) were identified by the UK newspaper as the “20 oldest continually-inhabited places on earth.”

See the four cities featured in The Telegraph below:

12. Tyre, Lebanon

When did the earliest inhabitants settle? 2,750 BC

The legendary birthplace of Europa and Dido, Tyre was founded around 2,750 BC, according to Herodotus. It was conquered by Alexander the Great in 332 BC following a seven-month seige and became a Roman province in 64 BC. Today, tourism is a major industry: the city’s Roman Hippodrome is a Unesco World Heritage Site.

Bible: “Tyre, the crowning city, whose merchants are princes.”

 

10. Beirut, Lebanon

When did the earliest inhabitants settle? 3,000 BC

Lebanon’s capital, as well as its cultural, administrative and economic centre, Beirut’s history stretches back around 5,000 years. Excavations in the city have unearthed Phoenician, Hellenistic, Roman, Arab and Ottoman remains, while it is mentioned in letters to the pharaoh of Egypt as early as the 14th century BC. Since the end of the Lebanese civil war, it has become a lively, modern tourist attraction.

Jan Morris (Welsh historian and travel writer): “To the stern student of affairs, Beirut is a phenomenon, beguiling perhaps, but quite, quite impossible.”

 

6= Sidon, Lebanon

When did the earliest inhabitants settle? 4,000 BC

Around 25 miles south of Beirut lies Sidon, one of the most important – and perhaps the oldest – Phoenician cities. It was the base from which the Phoenician’s great Mediterranean empire grew. Both Jesus and St Paul are said to have visited Sidon, as did Alexander the Great, who captured the city in 333 BC.

Charles Méryon (French artist): “Few persons new to the climate escape a rash of some description.”

 

2. Byblos, Lebanon

When did the earliest inhabitants settle? 5,000 BC

Founded as Gebal by the Phoenicians, Byblos was given its name by the Greeks, who imported papyrus from the city. Hence the English word Bible is derived from Byblos. The city’s key tourist sites include ancient Phoenician temples, Byblos Castle and St John the Baptist Church – built by crusaders in the 12th century – and the old Medieval City Wall. The Byblos International Festival is a more modern attraction, and has featured bands such as Keane and Jethro Tull.

To see the full article, click here.

PHOTOS: Clooney, Alamuddin in Italy for wedding

George Clooney, Amal Alamuddin

(VENICE, ITALY) — George Clooney and Amal Alamuddin arrived in Venice on Friday with wedding guests trickling in around them as rumors that they would marry on Saturday appeared to be coming true.

See photos below:

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George Clooney’s fiancée Amal Alamuddin smiles in Venice, surrounded by family, the night before their wedding.

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Clooney raises a glass before the couple’s rehearsal dinner on Friday.

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Alamuddin wore a red dress on the eve of her wedding.

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Clooney, Alamuddin in Venice for wedding

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(VENICE, ITALY) — George Clooney and his Lebanon-born British fiancee Amal Alamuddin arrived in Venice Friday for a spectacular waterfront wedding billed as the party of the year.

Riding on a watertaxi dubbed “Amore,” the celebrity pair crossed Venice’s Grand Canal at around 3 p.m., gliding up to the Hotel Cipriani on the island of Giudecca, where they will be hosting A-list guests for a gala dinner.

The silver-haired actor, director and producer, was seen helping his father Nick Clooney onto a “vaporetto” boat, as they headed into the first night of the nuptials, set to draw out over the weekend.

Traveling with them was the ex-supermodel Cindy Crawford, one of dozens of stars to have flocked to Venice – paparazzi in tow – for the wedding of the world’s most sought-after catch and his human rights lawyer fiancee.

Brad Pitt, Angelina Jolie, Sandra Bullock and Matt Damon will also be checking in to the Cipriani before the gala meal rustled up by Italian chef Riccardo de Pra.

Damon was among the first guests spotted at Venice airport Friday, along with Clooney’s cousin Miguel Ferrer and the “Spin City” stars Ellen Barkin and Richard Kind.

“If I’d known there would be all of you here, I’d have put on some makeup and done my hair,” quipped Kind, one of Clooney’s oldest friends.

The 53-year-old actor and Alamuddin, 36, are expected to be officially married in a civil ceremony Monday, but the city of masks is preparing for a weekend of serious partying before then.

Sources said the actor would be celebrating with 136 guests at a reception Saturday at the fresco-adorned Aman hotel, an exclusive seven-star hotel in the 450-year-old Palazzo Papadopoli.

“Clooney’s on everyone’s lips here in Venice, the girls in particular are all in a tizzy, they’ll be lining the banks of the canal to see him,” watertaxi driver Bruno Bartolini said.

“The city has ground to a halt because they’re using the Grand Canal, but what does that matter: There’s nothing better than getting married in Venice,” Bartolini said.

Guests will be escorted by police boats to the exclusive seven-star Aman Saturday, to keep overexcited Clooney admirers and hundreds of photographers at a distance.

They’ll be met with lashings of fizz and canapes in the garden, an oasis sheltered from the bustle of the canal, before sitting down in the main library to a sumptuous five-course dinner, according to a source close to the hotel.

The Aman’s restaurant will be turned into a nightclub, where they’ll dance the night away, a source said, with Lana Del Rey reportedly preparing to serenade the couple.

Speed boats will be banned from stopping in front of the hotel to keep goggling to a minimum.

Rome’s former mayor Walter Veltroni, a longtime friend of Clooney’s, will be performing the civil ceremony, which is likely to be held in the town hall, the stunning Ca’ Farsetti 14th century palace opposite the Aman hotel.

The streets around the town hall will be off-limits to the public from 12 noon for two hours Monday, when the ceremony is expected to take place.

Though the world’s most famous waterway will not be closed entirely, there were grumbles in the northern Italian city over the disruption and such an ostentatious display of wealth in times of economic crisis.

“Clooney’s not bringing us bread for our tables,” said 16-year-old Viviana, “coming here with all his nice money while we can’t find jobs.”

Fellow local resident Silvana agreed: “It would have been better for all of us if he’d gone to get married in some secret countryside location.”

But nothing appears able to dampen the spirits of the crowds of tourists eagerly snapping photographs of the town hall and Aman from the water ferries, or the locals staking out the best viewing positions in houses along the canal.

Anything for a glimpse of the former bachelor in his Armani wedding suit and Alamuddin in an Alexander McQueen creation designed by Sarah Burton, the woman behind the gown worn by Britain’s Kate Middleton at her wedding to Prince William in 2011.

Alamuddin, who moved to Britain with her family as a 3-year-old, met the Hollywood star through his humanitarian work.

Source: Agence France Presse (AFP)

Lebanese schools to implement patriotism and human rights clubs

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — A collaboration between the Byblos International Center for Human Sciences and the Lebanese Education Ministry was organized on Friday to create clubs in public schools that advocate national patriotism and human rights.

Lebanese Education Minister Elias Bou Saab has agreed to collaborate on the project, which will offer these clubs for eight grade public school students. The program will only be offered to schools chosen by the Directorate General of Higher Education, which released a statement on behalf of the Education Ministry this week.

“This is a leading and one-of-a-kind step in Lebanon,” read the statement.

This project, explained the center’s Director Adonis Akra, is part of an agreement signed in June this year between the organization and the Arab Institute for Human Rights in Tunisia.

The clubs “aim at introducing and informing students about the principles of patriotism, human rights and public life essentials,” said Akra in the statement. The $120,000-a-year project is similar to initiatives launched in Tunisia in 2012.

Virgin Radio Lebanon is highest reaching Facebook page in the world

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(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — The Virgin Radio Lebanon Facebook page has garnered the highest engagement numbers of any other Facebook page worldwide, according to likealyzer.com statistics.

Likealyzer.com is an online tool for monitoring Facebook pages traffic and stats. Social media analysts said that Virgin Radio is now ranked number one in the PTAT, “People Talking About This”, which is the measure of engagement across all of Facebook worldwide, and across all categories.

“The ranking is considered a phenomenal achievement for a page, coming out of Lebanon, and that is only just over a year old,” said the General Manager of Virgin Radio Lebanon, Naji Cherabieh, in a statement.

“Thank you for your support since day one and for making Virgin Radio Lebanon not only the highest reaching social media in the world, but also the highest reaching radio station in Lebanon.

“Several market research have now shown that Virgin Radio is leading across ages 13 to 45, within both genders, across Greater Beirut & Mount Lebanon,” he added.

“Thanks again, and we promise the best is yet to come.”

LBC journalist’s brother kidnapped for ransom

(ZAHLE, LEBANON) — The brother of a Lebanese journalist based in Zahle, Lebanon has been kidnapped for ransom on Friday, according to LBCI TV reports.

“The abductors of the young man Khodr Farouq Darwish, whose car was found in Baalbek’s al-Taybeh, have called his family and asked for a $135,000 ransom,” the network said.

Earlier in the day, family members told the state-run National News Agency that Khodr, whose brother is LBC’s reporter Nayef Darwish, lost contact with the 30-year-old man on Thursday.

Darwish’s Jeep Grand Cherokee was found in the Baalbek town of al-Taybeh near the market, NNA said.

His father, Farouq, told the agency that his son was in contact with a woman and was heading to Baalbek on Thursday.

Darwish’s family members blocked the main road in Furzol, in the qada of Zahle, demanding that the state secure his release.

There has a been a rise in kidnappings in the Bekaa Valley over the last few years, with gangs increasingly taking advantage of the lack of stability due to the Syrian war to kidnap people and then demand a ransom.

Lebanon bans import, production of alcoholic energy drinks

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanon will ban the import, manufacture, and marketing of energy drinks containing alcohol in the country, after the health minister urged the economy minister to take immediate action.

Health Minister Wael Abu Faour sent a note to Economy Minister Alain Hakim asking him to commit to his predecessor’s decision regarding the beverages on Friday.

The ban on the alcoholic energy drinks was originally announced by former Economy Minister Nicholas Nahas and Health Minister Ali Hasan Khalil in February and was set to take effect in June.

After many traders filed petitions calling to extend the deadline by three months, the Economy Ministry forwarded the requests to the Health Ministry who did not reply, according to Friday’s statement.

However, the Economy Ministry has decided to go ahead and implement the ban, on the basis of research showing the mixture of alcohol and the stimulants in the energy drinks has serious side effects on the consumer’s health.

This decision does not affect the purchase or mixture of drinks at local bars or pubs. Consumers may also mix their own beverages at home without violating the law.

The ban includes, but is not limited to, alcoholic beverages containing the common stimulants caffeine and taurine. According to the decree, the decision was made based on a suggestion by a committee acting with the Consumer Protection Association.

Heavy rain expected in Lebanon on Sunday

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(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — After a long scorching summer and increased concerns over continued drought in the country, Lebanon is expected to witness heavy rainfall on Sunday.

Meteorologists say the rain is expected to begin falling Saturday around midnight and continue until Monday at dawn.

Meteorologists add that temperatures will drop to 70 degrees Fahrenheit on Sunday and 73 degrees Fahrenheit on Monday.

The anticipated precipitation will be the first heavy rainfall in months. The country began facing water problems this summer after witnessing an unusually dry winter.

Following a session in July, Lebanon’s Parliamentary Committee for Public Works, Transportation and Water called Lebanon’s drought crisis a “natural disaster” and demanded the government “announce a state of emergency concerning water.”

Experts from the American University of Beirut say the recent drought has taken a significant toll on Lebanon’s agricultural system, but it is unlikely to last and is only a part of a natural cycle that occurs every few decades.

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