Examiner Staff

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Nick Hawatmeh announces candidacy for State Representative

Close to 300 supporters attended Nick Hawatmeh’s kickoff campaign fundraiser on Tuesday at Penna’s Banquet Hall in Sterling Heights.

Hawatmeh, who lives in Warren, is running for Macomb County’s 25th House District currently held by Rep. Henry Yanez. The district includes parts of Sterling Heights and Warren.

“I’m running because Michigan deserves a state representative that is accountable and that listens to their constituents. I go over partisanship and listen to both parties,” Hawatmeh told Lebanese Examiner. “This turnout tells me that people believe in our message and believe in our cause and want to see someone who will actually represent their interests in Lansing.”

Hawatmeh’s parents, who were born in Jordan, say he has been politically active since he was 11 years old.

“We are very, very proud of Nick’s achievements. This is in his blood. Nick is very honest, educated, and very knowledgeable. He’s approachable to both parties and I think he’ll make a great leader,” said Nabil Hawatmeh.

Several dignitaries attended the kick-off fundraiser including Lebanese-American Supreme Court Justice David F. Viviano, State Representative Ken Goike, and State Representative Jeff Farrington. Judges, candidates, and Republican officials also showed their support.

“We have a full house, but this is just the beginning!” Hawatmeh’s father exclaimed.

Pope, Jordan’s king have tea ahead of Mideast trip

VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis and King Abdullah II of Jordan held talks over tea at the Vatican with an eye to the pontiff’s upcoming visit.

Francis leaves May 24 for Jordan, the first stop on a three-day pilgrimage that will also take him to the West Bank and Israel.

The Vatican said Francis and the king chatted Monday in a “cordial and informal atmosphere” for 40 minutes. Instead of the traditional venue of the formal papal studio in the Apostolic Palace, they met in the modest Vatican hotel where Francis lives.

The Holy See said the king, accompanied by his religious affairs adviser, reaffirmed his “most open willingness to work together in the commitment for peace and interreligious dialogue” in the Middle East.

Source: The Associated Press

Sana Ayoub charms at debut fashion show

BEIRUT: Like sachets of potpourri, pockets of tulle filled with silk flowers bubbled from the skirt of Sana Ayoub’s last evening gown “Exit 15,” a dress the designer described as the signature piece in her first fashion show.

“It’s a combination of lots of colors,” Ayoub told The Daily Star after her show. “It’s fun, it’s joyful, it’s very sensual.”

A skin-baring sweetheart bodice in fuchsia paired with this unusual, three-dimensional skirt sums up Ayoub’s style, one that starts with simple dress forms and spices them up with whimsical detail.

The debut designer hosted a show of demi couture last week at Centrale Restaurant in Gemmayzeh. It was her first show since returning to Beirut with a master’s in fashion design from London’s Instituto Marangoni. For two years, Ayoub has focused on made-to-order gowns, and Thursday’s collection launched her fashion house into the seasonal collection cycle.

The show comprised a small runway with lighthearted theatrics. Models came down from an industrial lift and took a pit stop mid-catwalk to pose with various girly props.

The collection was inspired by a recent trip to India, where Ayoub experienced India’s festival of lights, called Diwali, a joyful holiday that celebrates the victory of light over darkness. In 15 looks, the collection featured the full spectrum of bright hues, mainly pinks, yellows and blues. Despite the embellishments, bouquets of delicate flowers, sequins, lace and ruffles, she showed a restraint uncustomary in the local fashion scene.

“They tend to overdo it with a lot of beads and a lot of embroidery,” said Ayoub, who has spent time studying the local market.

Ayoub said it took a while to find her personal voice, especially having started fashion design as a teenager at Lebanon’s Notre Dame University. “Now if I want to define my style it’s something simple, it will give this elegant feeling. But there is also something special in it because you have this artistic twist. It can be a small detail on the shoulder or on the hip.”

She’s also toned down the sex appeal in what she describes as “sexy chic.” That came through in her use of ankle-length skirts, quarter-length sleeves and deliberate cutouts to reveal what she understood to be a sexy, but sophisticated amount of flesh.

Ayoub has an aptitude for marketing her fledgling brand. She has one of the most sophisticated websites of any rising Lebanese designer, with updated sections on style news and attractive pages on styling advice.

As she talked about her brand, Ayoub called herself a rookie and that humility gives the young designer her charm.

Source: The Daily Star

Clashes in Sidon refugee camp kill eight

SIDON, Lebanon: Clashes in the Palestinian refugee camp of Mieh Mieh in the coastal city of Sidon killed eight people, including the commander of an armed group, and wounded 10 others Monday, security sources said.

Fighting erupted around noon between supporters of former Fatah commander, Ahmad Rashid Adwan, and members of the armed group Ansar Allah, headed by Jamal Suleiman.

During the clashes, members of Ansar Allah stormed Adwan’s headquarters, killing him and his bodyguard, Ahmad Souri, the sources told The Daily Star.

Adwan’s two brothers, Rashid and Khaled, were also among the fatalities, the National News Agency reported.

Gunmen exchanged gunfire and rocket-propelled grenades for over two hours, the sources said, adding that the clashes subsided around 3 p.m.

The Lebanese Army deployed heavily around Mieh Mieh in a bid to contain the clashes as military units worked to seal off all entrances to the camp.

Palestinian Popular Committees delegation arrived to the camp and held several meetings with Ansar Allah to put an end to the violence and agree on a ceasefire.

Members of the Palestinian group, founded in the 1990s with Iran’s backing, evacuated Adwan’s headquarters as residents in the camp pulled several bodies out of the offices.

A Palestinian official said Monday’s fighting was the result of a personal dispute between members of the two groups.

“There was a personal dispute ten days ago and several factions tried to resolve it but they failed,” head of Aqssa Brigades Munir al-Maqdah told the state-run agency.

Source: The Daily Star

Bishop Zaidan visits with Lebanese Forces Detroit

The Lebanese Forces Detroit Chapter welcomed Bishop A. Elias Zaidan today during a private dinner at Alexander’s Lebanese Cuisine in Sterling Heights.

Lebanese Forces USA Coordinator Maurice Daaboul and  Detroit Chapter President Tony Malouf presented Bishop Zaidan with an honorary plaque, recognizing his achievements as a religious leader.

Bishop Zaidan took time to pose for photographs with the close to 100 invited guests.

Check out the gallery of photos below. Photos courtesy of Mr. John Feghali.

Army moves to restore law and order in Bekaa Valley

HERMEL, Lebanon: The Lebanese Army has sent reinforcements to the Bekaa Valley on the eve of the implementation of a security plan designed to restore law and order in the turbulent region plagued by spillover from the Syrian conflict, a military official said Sunday.

“The Army’s logistical preparations are in their final phase. Reinforcements, including military vehicles, have been sent to the region in preparation for the implementation of a security plan to restore law and order in the northern Bekaa Valley,” the official told The Daily Star.

Asked as to when the security plan would be put into effect, he said: “It could be either Monday afternoon or the next day.”

The security plan for the northern Bekaa Valley comes a week after a similar government plan was successfully enforced by the Lebanese Army to end sectarian fighting in the northern city of Tripoli.

Tripoli has been plagued with fighting between supporters of Syrian President Bashar Assad in the predominantly Alawite Jabal Mohsen neighborhood and those of the opposition in the Sunni majority Bab al-Tabbaneh district. Over 100 people have been killed in the fighting since the uprising against Assad’s regime began in March 2011.

Ahead of the security plan’s implementation in the northern Bekaa Valley, Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk said illegitimate checkpoints in the region had been removed.

“There are no longer unofficial checkpoints along the Arsal road, and unofficial armed forces are no longer present in the Baalbek-Hermel region,” Machnouk said in a statement, referring to Hezbollah checkpoints set up to curb the rise of car bombings targeting Shiite towns in the Bekaa Valley.

Hezbollah has taken measures in Hermel, Baalbek and other Bekaa Valley towns following a series of bombings targeting these predominantly Shiite areas. The attacks were mostly claimed by radical groups fighting in Syria, citing Hezbollah’s role in the war-torn country. Hezbollah’s measures have angered nearby Sunni towns, particularly residents in the northeastern town of Arsal, who largely support the Syrian opposition, which has fueled tensions in the border region.

In an interview to be published by As-Safir newspaper Monday, Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah said the danger posed by car bombs targeting Shiite areas had greatly decreased.

The Lebanese Army has taken full control of a vital highway linking Arsal to Baalbek and Hermel in preparation for the security plan, the National News Agency reported.

Lebanese soldiers arrested four armed Syrians in Wadi Hanin in Arsal who opened fire on an Army patrol, the NNA said.

Speaking after meeting Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai in Bkirki late Saturday, Machnouk hailed the plan’s success in Tripoli, saying Beirut would soon see similar measures.

“We confirm that the security plan is going as planned with the support of the president, the prime minister and the courage of the Army,” Machnouk said. “We are all fully responsible for the failure or success of the plan, which has so far proven to be a success.”

“Implementation of the plan in the northern Bekaa Valley will soon begin, and it will end in Beirut. We will end violations against the Lebanese, their security and their livelihood, particularly in light of repeated abductions.”

Residents in the Baalbek- Hermel region are anxiously waiting for the implementation of the security plan, hoping the security forces will crack down on gangs blamed for car thefts and drug trafficking in the area.

Meanwhile in Tripoli, some 130 men demonstrated in Bab al-Tabbaneh, demanding a general amnesty for all militia leaders wanted on arrest warrants for their alleged involvement in the fighting.

Also, about 150 men demonstrated in the Jabal Mohsen neighborhood in support of Rifaat Eid, the Arab Democratic Party’s politburo chief. The demonstration came a day after Military Prosecutor Saqr Saqr charged 12 people, including Eid, for belonging to an armed terror organization and carrying out terrorist acts in Tripoli.

Security forces arrested a man identified only by his initials as B.B., one of the key suspects wanted in Bab al-Tabbaneh.

Source: The Daily Star

No Haifa “Catwoman” Wehbe to be seen in Samo Zain’s new music video as promised?

Syrian singer Samo Zain held a press conference at the luxurious Four Seasons hotel in Beirut to launch his latest album “Zay Ay Tinain” (Like any Two).

During the conference, Samo said that he had previously hoped to have Lebanese diva Haifa Wehbe star in his music video for the single “Al Qittah” (The Cat), but the project was never implemented and the song was never filmed as a music video to begin with. He cheekily said that Haifa will always symbolize a beautiful cat in his eyes. Whatever rocks your boat Samo!

According to Sayidaty.net, Samo arrived to the conference fashionably late – 20 minutes to be precise – where members of the press were waiting for his arrival. The overall atmosphere was very friendly and he answered the majority of questions thrown by journalists at him.

Samo had specifically wanted his comeback to the music scene, and the launch of his new album, to happen in Lebanon.

“I know I have been absent from the music scene for some time now. Many have asked where I’d gone to and where my albums that I had released were at, but my albums are still in stores and are witnessing a great success. The real issue lies within the production company ‘Mazzika,’ but I’m now very optimistic with my new album and expect great things to come out of it.”

As for the rumored arguments between him and Egyptian superstar Tamer Hosny, Samo expressed his awe at such claims and stressed that he and Tamer are the closest of buds and all that has been said is untrue.

He said: “I think of my fans and the millions of members on my Facebook page, and I think of Tamer and his important place in the entertainment scene. So when him and I read about those rumors we did not care to give them much thought at all.”

 

Source: Albawaba

Unofficial checkpoints removed ahead of plan: minister

BEIRUT: Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk said over the weekend that unauthorized checkpoints in the Bekaa Valley were removed ahead of the expansion of the government’s new security plan to the area this week.

“There are no longer unofficial checkpoints along the road to Arsal and all unofficial armed forces are no longer present in the Baalbek-Hermel areas,” Machnouk said in a statement, referring to Hezbollah checkpoints set up to curb the rise of car bombings in Bekaa Valley towns.

Hezbollah has taken measures in Hermel, Baalbek and other Bekaa Valley towns following a series of bombings targeting predominantly Shiite areas. The attacks were mostly claimed by radical groups fighting in Syria, citing the group’s role in the war-torn country.

Hezbollah’s security measures have angered nearby Sunni towns, particularly residents in Arsal who largely support the Syrian opposition, fueling tensions in the border region.

The National News Agency reported that the Lebanese Army took full control of a vital highway connecting Arsal to Baalbek- Hermel in the northern Bekaa Valley in preparation of the security plan and took over checkpoints set up by armed groups.

Machnouk said he contacted several local and official figures from Arsal and the Bekaa Valley town of Labweh as part of ongoing preparations ahead of the plan.

The Cabinet recently approved a plan drafted by the Higher Defense Council to restore stability to Tripoli, which has been plagued by several rounds of clashes between opponents and supporters of President Bashar Assad, as well as Akkar and the Bekaa Valley.

The measures include heavy deployment in conflicts zones and pursuing wanted individuals. The security plan was first implemented in Tripoli starting April 1, and the Army, along with the Internal Security Forces, has so far arrested over 100 suspects.

Speaking after meeting with Patriarch Beshara Rai in Bkirki late Saturday, Machnouk spoke of the plan’s success in Tripoli, saying the capital would also witness similar measures.

“We affirm that the security plan is going as planned with the support of the president, the prime minister and the courage of the Army,” Machnouk told reporters.

“We are all fully responsible for the failure or success of the plan which has so far proven to be a success,” he added.

“Implementation of the plan in the northern Bekaa will soon begin and they will end in Beirut. We will end violations against the Lebanese, their security and livelihood particularly in light of repeated abductions [in the Bekaa],” he said.

Source: The Daily Star

Kasab vs. #Kessab, and propaganda on Syria’s coast

BEIRUT: A social media campaign to prevent a “genocide of Armenians!” in the scenic Syrian mountain resort town of Kasab exploded recently, in the latest example of how 21st century communications technology can spread as much disinformation as it does information.

The Armenian diaspora community was shaken late last month when the town of Kasab and surrounding areas fell quickly out of the regime’s control, as part of the “Al-Anfal” coastal campaign launched by rebels and jihadists.

The cast of characters in the campaign is a long one – on one side are Syrian regular army troops and several paramilitary groups and militias, believed to include the National Defense Forces, Lebanon’s Hezbollah, and the Liberation of Iskanderon group, headed by a Turkish-born Alawite from the neighboring province across the border, called Hatay by Turkey.

On the other side is a loose coalition of groups: the Al-Qaeda affiliate the Nusra Front, several conservative Islamist militias, and in a supporting role, the mainstream Free Syrian Army.

For the Armenians of Kasab and Armenians elsewhere, all these distinctions are largely insignificant. The regime and its supporters, besides labeling every insurgent a “terrorist,” have emphasized that Turkey is actively aiding the rebels’ military efforts, in order to stir up old fears and endemic hostility to Syria’s neighbor, whose Ottoman Empire predecessor massacred 1.5 millions beginning in 1915.

American-Armenian organizations and activists raised the alarm about a new genocide being imminent in Kasab as the town quickly fell to the rebels.

Celebrities such as Kim Kardashian joined in, guaranteeing the #SaveKessab campaign instant global reach, thanks to the Armenian-American from southern California who commands 20 million Twitter followers.

The message of “Kasab being targeted” was also relayed by the U.S. government and Congress, people with Armenian-American constituents, although the mayor of Kasab, along with an MP from the Republic of Armenia who visited Syria, have both said that no Armenians were killed when the town fell.

Much of the wider social media campaign’s visual content – and particularly a selection of still photographs – highlight how tenuous Internet-driven claims can be.

Horrific to look at, the photos suffer from the fact that not a single one is connected to events in Kasab in late March 2014.

Ironically, most of the victims pictured in the gruesome beheadings, executions and atrocities are Muslims, being killed by ultraextremist Muslims, in Syria and elsewhere.

But the public, facing the wave of such photos and other accusations being circulated, might come away with various impressions – “Kasab residents butchered,” “destruction of churches,” and “ethnic cleansing.”

The #saveKessab and other propaganda campaigns generated a quick pushback, on various fronts.

A fighter from Ansar al-Sham, the most moderate of the Islamist militias in the coast offensive, released a video statement denying that any harm had come to the Armenians of Kasab.

He cited the behavior of the seventh century Caliph Omar, who did not harm the Christians of Jerusalem when he seized the city.

Multiple items of video footage from Kasab also emerged, produced both by media activists and pro-opposition television stations, at churches where the fighters had posted guards, to make sure nothing was looted.

Two of the four large groups leading the campaign are Ansar al-Sham and Ahrar al-Sham, both members in the Islamic Front, an alliance of seven large, conservative Islamist militias.

The Front put out its own statement on the coast offensive, criticizing the disinformation campaign swirling around the insurgents’ behavior toward civilians.

Much of this Arabic-language material, however, doesn’t reach the audience that is hearing about a “new genocide.”

But a string of counterclaims in English-language websites, thoroughly debunking the claims of atrocities, has also emerged.

An anti-regime media activist who covered some of the battles raging in northern Latakia, including Kasab, told The Daily Star he knew of only one “violation,” when an overzealous rebel fighter removed a cross from one of the churches in Kasab.

He described the fighter as part of a minority of non-Syrians from the Nusra Front who took advantage of the chaos in Kasab during the first few days of the takeover. Since then, the rebel groups have sought to enforce order, by organizing patrols and issuing directives that the town’s shops and other establishments should not be touched.

“The fighting groups have made it clear that the person who took down the cross should be punished for his act,” he said.

Meanwhile, a small number of mainly elderly Armenians remain in Kasab, the activist said.

“They are basically people who didn’t want to leave, or felt they had nowhere safe to go, so they stayed,” the activist said. “They were afraid at first, but the fighters told them that they would be safe. But they don’t want to be photographed, and are remaining out of the spotlight.”

The activist said they and other civilians in the Kasab region ran the risk of injury or death by remaining in the area.

He said there were individual cases of local families, among them Alawites, asking the rebels to transport them to safe areas.

The activist said that while the overwhelming majority of Kasab residents took refuge in Latakia, a small number who delayed their exit were finally escorted by the rebels to Turkey, with their consent.

The biggest irony is perhaps that as the commotion over Kasab and Armenians has raged, another community – the Turkmen – are the ones actually experiencing violence because of their identity, amid palpable anti- Turkey and anti-Turkish hysteria.

Residents of a string of villages near Kasab have also experienced displacement, and many of their residents are Turkmens, and the community has already been experienced two gruesome murders. Shortly after Kasab fell to the rebels, the bodies of a teenager and a young man were found dumped in a public park in the Turkmen-majority neighborhood of Ali Jamal in Latakia.

And no global Internet campaign has arisen to cry out against ethnic violence against Turkmen in northwestern Syria.

Kasab is a victim of geography, not ethnicity – it’s the closest town to a border crossing, it’s the central town in an area with dozens of surrounding small villages, it’s near a militarily important observation post, and it’s close to the village of Samra, where the dramatic end to Syrian territory comes – a steep drop onto a cove, hemmed in to the south by a jutting cliff, while on the right to the north is Turkish territory. Before the war, if one walked or swam a few hundred meters in that direction, Turkish border guards would politely fire warning shots to encourage a retreat.

Kasab’s Armenians have recently been subjected to media interviews more than oppression, but the effect of the old-fashioned rumor mill is being multiplied by sensationalist Internet campaigns, stoking the tension. How many people also hear and believe the debunking efforts is another matter, and difficult to measure.

One of the worst photos in the “save Kasab” bunch was of the bloody corpse of a young woman stretched out on a bed, with a cross shoved down her throat.

It was also used last year in a misinformation blip about a Christian girl supposedly murdered in Aleppo, and quickly debunked back then, by people who gleefully pointed out it that it was actually a publicity still from a 2005 Canadian horror flick.

About the only certainty is that the Armenians of Kasab are now experiencing the war directly, just like their fellow community members in various cities – Aleppo, Damascus, Homs, Hassakeh, Qamishli and elsewhere – and like millions of other displaced Syrians.

Source: The Daily Star

Domestic worker commits suicide in South Lebanon

SIDON, Lebanon: An Ethiopian domestic worker died over the weekend in an apparent suicide in the southern city of Tyre, security sources told The Daily Star Sunday.

The woman allegedly threw herself off a balcony of the apartment building where she worked, the sources said.

Media reports said the woman had fled last week from her employer’s home. Security forces later detained the Ethiopian and returned her to her employer.

Reports of suicides among Lebanon’s approximately 200,000 domestic workers have become increasingly frequent, with many citing maltreatment and abuse.

Source: The Daily Star

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