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Lebanese police: Refrain from firing ‘World Cup’ gunshots

world-cup-lebanon(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — The Lebanese police asked citizens to once again refrain from firing celebratory gunshots during the World Cup final game this weekend.

In a statement, the Internal Security Forces urged Lebanese citizens “not to fire shots or fireworks, sit on top of vehicles, or stand inside them as they cheer for their football teams.”

The statement goes on to say, “Such incidents could lead to loss of lives, injuries, disturbance, fear and scuffles between residents in a neighborhood. These acts are also against the law.”

Despite repeated warnings by police last week, Lebanese fired celebratory gunfire and fireworks after Brazil’s defeat in the semifinal.

Day 5 of Gaza violence continues; 135 dead

gaza-medics(GAZA CITY, PALESTINE) — Israeli air strikes continued to rain down on Saturday, killing 30 people, including two severely handicapped women in a care facility.

The violence brought the toll on the fifth day of the conflict to 135, with nearly 950 people wounded, according to Gaza emergency services spokesman Ashraf al-Qudra.

Earlier, Qudra announced the deaths of eight other Palestinians in raids that hit targets including a bank, two mosques and the houses of Hamas officials.

Israel’s military said at least one of the mosques was being used to store weapons.

Israel began Operation Protective Edge Tuesday in an attempt to halt cross-border rocket fire by militant groups.

Gaza militants have fired approximately 525 mortar rounds and rockets that struck Israel, while another 138 rockets were intercepted by the Iron Dome missile defense system, the army said Saturday.

It is the deadliest violence since November 2012, with a growing number of rockets fired at Jerusalem and Tel Aviv and even as far north as Hadera, 116 kilometers away.

No Israelis have been killed. Israel has authorized the call-up of 40,000 reservist troops, and threatened to escalate to a ground operation.

UN Security Council calls for Israeli-Palestinian cease-fire

Gaza-12(UNITED NATIONS) — The U.N. Security Council called for a cease-fire in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict on Saturday. A council statement approved by all 15 members urges the de-escalation of violence and restoration of calm.

The statement calls for “the reinstitution of the November 2012 cease-fire” brokered by Egypt, but gives no time frame for when it should take effect.

Palestinian U.N. envoy, Riyad Mansour, said the Palestinians’ understanding was that the cease-fire should go into effect immediately.

The statement expresses “serious concern regarding the crisis related to Gaza and the protection and welfare of civilians on both sides” and calls for “respect for international humanitarian law, including the protection of civilians.”

The United States, Israel’s most important ally, has defended the Israeli attacks in response to the barrage of rockets fired into Israel from Gaza.

135 Palestinians have been killed with nearly 1,000 wounded. There have been no fatalities in Israel from the continued rocket fire.

ABC News issues apology after mistaking suffering Palestinians for Israelis

Diane-Sawyer-Israel-Palestinian-Family(NEW YORK, NY) — On July 8, ABC World News anchor Diane Sawyer gave viewers the latest on the violence in the Gaza Strip–by stressing the threat to Israel:

We take you overseas now to the rockets raining down on Israel…. And here an Israeli family trying to salvage what they can, one woman standing speechless among the ruins.

Sawyer’s narration accompanied these images:

abc-gaza
abc-speechless-gaza

One problem: Neither of those images is an “Israeli family.” Both photos are from the Gaza Strip, and capture the aftermath of Israeli attacks.

Many people caught the mistake, including Yousef Munayyer of the Palestine Center, which posted a video of ABC’s embarrassing mistake:

[youtube url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k-m4PlW-KgI” width=”500″ height=”300″]

Finally, ABC posted this statement (7/10/14) early this morning:

“On Tuesday night “World News” aired a report on the conflict between the Palestinians and Israelis, including attacks from both sides. In the introduction to the story, we mistakenly identified a family depicted in a still photo. They are Palestinian, not Israeli. We regret the error and will correct it.”

So an honest mistake, right? That’s one way of looking at it.

But there’s a pretty well-established pattern of corporate media trying to paint the conflict as between equals, a type of false balance that treats the threats to Israeli lives and Palestinians lives as similar. But at times it’s much more than that; this ABC report, and others like it, foreground the fear that Israelis are dealing with as sirens warn of incoming rockets from Gaza. “Running in terror as sirens wail” is how ABC correspondent Alex Marquardt began the segment right after Sawyer’s introduction. He conveyed Israel’s view of the conflict before shifting to life in Gaza.

At this point, the rockets targeting Israel have done very little damage. There are no reported Israeli deaths. But the fact that dozens of Palestinians had died, including several children, by the time ABC aired its report apparently did not cause them to consider this more newsworthy than Israeli fear.

The rocket attacks on Israel are treated as being more fundamentally important than the attacks being launched on Gaza. Sawyer’s introduction at the top of the broadcast was this: “On the brink: Rockets raining down on Israel. The Israelis trying to blast them out of the sky. And our reporter is there on the front lines.”

With that kind of set up, a newscast is bound to believe that the destruction they’re showing viewers must be in Israel–even though anyone who’s actually followed this story would know that the images show a level of destruction that is only happening in Gaza.

That’s why ABC’s error should be seen less as a simple mistake, and more as a reflection of a worldview.

Source: Peter Hart Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting

Original Article

Reposted via Creative Commons Attribution- Non-Commercial

Flint’s Mid-East Festival returns this weekend

mid-east-festival-flint-michigan(FLINT TOWNSHIP, MI) — The annual Mid-East Festival at Our Lady of Lebanon Maronite Catholic Church is happening this weekend from Friday, July 11, to Sunday, July 13. Authentic Lebanese food, dancing, and cultural festivities bring a Lebanese celebration to Flint Township each year.

“The support we get from the Flint community is amazing. The festival keeps growing and growing, and we couldn’t be happier,” said festival chairman Jason Klanseck. “The festival is an event that brings the church together; everyone works side by side for the same goal.”

The Mid-East Festival is at Our Lady of Lebanon Maronite Catholic Church, located at 4133 Calkins Road, Flint Township. The festival is open on Friday from 11:30 a.m. to midnight, from noon to midnight on Saturday, and from noon to 6 p.m. on Sunday.

There is no admission charge, but parking is $3.

For more information, visit MidEastFestival.com.

[youtube url=”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=feI7tALFxh4″ width=”500″ height=”300″]

Arrests made in south Lebanon rocket attacks

hasbaya (HASBAYA, LEBANON) — At least two rockets fired from south Lebanon were reportedly launched into the northern region of Upper Galilee in Israel on Friday. Only one projectile was reported to have hit Israel, however.

According to Lebanon’s state-owned National News Agency, the rocket was launched from the Hasbaya region at 6:00 am, a few hours after a failed attempt to fire a rocket from Mari, Lebanon. The first rocket was launched at 1:15 am, according to sources. The Israeli army says no injuries are reported.

One projectile hit an open space near Kfar Yuval, between (northern Israeli towns) Metula and Kiryat Shmona,” a military spokeswoman told AFP, adding the army did not yet know whether it was a mortar shell or a rocket.

A representative of Israel’s Defense Ministry says the rocket was fired by a small organization in southern Lebanon, not Hezbollah.

Hussein Izzat Atwe from Hebbarieh was arrested in the Al-Bire Hospital, where he was receiving treatment for burns. The ISF Information Branch also apprehended a Lebanese man, identified only as Abu Qais after they found blood stains in his car, which sparked a search of area hospitals for suspects.

The National News Agency says that Atwe confessed to belonging to extremist groups and that two Palestinian men were with him when he launched the rockets.

Mayor Qassem al-Qaderi says at least 15 rockets were fired, particularly targeting Dahr al-Shqif and Darb al-Sowwan. There are no immediate reports of casualties.

U.N. peacekeepers and the Lebanese army began a search for the rocket launch immediately after. They defused two 107mm Grad rockets in Mari, the same area where two others were fired from on northern Israel. It also found military gear in Ain Arab.

Israeli military spokesman Lt. Col. Peter Lerner told the Associated Press that it was unclear whether the new front was “symbolic or something more substantial.”

Prime Minister Tammam Salam telephoned Defense Minister Samir Moqbel to gather the latest developments into the Israeli attack on Lebanon and developments in the south.

[youtube url=”http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tUPyyGo1ApA” width=”500″ height=”300″]

Beirut street named after Said Akl

said-akl

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Marking his 103rd birthday, the Beirut Municipality named a street after famed Lebanese poet and writer Said Akl. The ceremony at the Sioufi Garden in Achrafieh unveiled the street and memorial plaque that read, “Said Akl Street, a century of giving, creativity, (and) honest nationalism.”109065381

Born in 1911 in the Bekaa town of Zahle, Akl was a staunch advocate of Lebanese nationalism and the Lebanese language.

Akl wrote plays, epics, lyrics, and poems starting in 1935, after his first theatrical work was published in Arabic.

“Said Akl paved roads for poetry, which he took to a whole new level,” Culture Minister Raymond Areiji said during the event. “He prides himself with Lebanon, he adored Damascus, he is the resistant fighter who taught us how to belong to Jerusalem. A hundred and three years of love, glory and worship of Lebanon. A hundred and three years, and he still produces poetry and writing.”

Akl was unable to attend the ceremony, but recorded an audio message saying he hopes to see Lebanon “return to its glory.”

Areiji also thanked Notre Dame University-Louaize and the Beirut Municipality for taking the initiative to honor the poet.

UN says there is ‘urgent need’ to fill presidential vacuum

08-23-2013lebanon

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — The United Nations envoy for Lebanon today stressed the urgent need for the country’s leaders to agree on the election of a new president as soon as possible in light of the situation on the ground, which is marked by renewed terrorist threats and the growing refugee population resulting from the conflict in neighboring Syria.

“It is important, given the threats, the challenges that Lebanon faces, that the institutions of Government are all working,” Derek Plumbly, the UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon, told reporters following a closed-door briefing to the Security Council.

There has been a presidential vacuum in Lebanon after the term of Michel Sleiman came to an end on 25 May. UN officials and the Security Council have repeatedly urged the Lebanese Parliament to elect a new leader without delay.

Mr. Plumbly emphasized that it is important that all of the institutions of government “function effectively” in Lebanon – the Presidency, the Government and the Parliament – if the country is to continue to address the various challenges it faces.

These include what he described as “very real” security threats, including the renewed threat of terrorist activities, as well as the growing number of refugees from Syria that have sought help in Lebanon.

As a result of the ongoing conflict in Syria, which is now in its fourth year, Lebanon has become the country with the highest per capita concentration of refugees worldwide. There are over 1 million Syrian refugees in Lebanon, and they are growing every day, putting more pressure on a host community that is already stretched to the breaking point.

Mr. Plumbly highlighted the need to ensure that Lebanon receives the support it needs from the international community to be able to continue to assist this growing population of vulnerable people.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, in his latest report on Lebanon, also highlighted the importance of this issue for the country.

“Hosting the largest number of refugees per capita in the world, Lebanon exhibits remarkable generosity under challenging circumstances. Additional funds are needed to meet the needs of the most vulnerable, including women and girl refugees at risk, and to mitigate the severe stresses on host communities and public services,” he wrote in the report, which Mr. Plumbly presented to the Council today.

Meanwhile, with regard to the situation across the Lebanese-Israeli border, the envoy noted that the past four months have witnessed a continued calm along the so-called Blue Line.

Clooney: Daily Mail “completely fabricated” story on Alamuddin’s mother

(LONDON, ENGLAND) — George Clooney scolded a British newspaper over a “completely fabricated” article claiming his fiancée’s mother disapproves of the impending marriage for religious reasons.

Baria_AlamuddinIn a statement, Clooney said Wednesday that the claims about his future mother-in-law, Baria Alamuddin, were untrue and irresponsible.

Beirut-born Alamuddin comes from a Druze family — adherents of a monotheistic religion based mainly in Lebanon, Syria, and Israel.

The Daily Mail cited unnamed “friends” as saying Amal Alamuddin risked being “cast out of the community” because she was not marrying a Druze man. The newspaper said “several women have been murdered” for not abiding by strict Druze rules.

Clooney said in a statement that “none of the story is true. Amal’s mother is not Druze. She has not been to Beirut since Amal and I have been dating, and she is in no way against the marriage.”

According to sources close to the family, Clooney’s future mother-in-law is elated about the upcoming nuptials between her daughter and the actor.

“Baria is very happy and in seventh heaven,” the source says.

Walid Jumblatt, political leader of the Druze sect in Lebanon, told the Associated Press recently that he hoped the couple would soon visit the Druze heartland.

Clooney will bring us “great publicity,” Jumblatt said. “He can make a movie about the Druse sect.”

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