Amine Gemayel visits Lebanese community in Detroit

(DETROIT, MI) — Former President of Lebanon Amine Gemayel visited the Lebanese community in Detroit on Saturday, after making stops in Washington, DC and Boston earlier this week.

Gemayel was a guest of local business owner Toufic Souaid, who hosted a luncheon for the former president attended by local Lebanese-American leaders and party representatives.

WATCH highlights of Gemayel’s visit to Detroit:

Gemayel spoke exclusively with Lebanese Examiner Managing Editor Charlie Kadado about the ongoing political climate in Lebanon, and the role of Lebanese expatriates in helping to mend security conflicts.

“(Members of the diaspora) should plead the cause of Lebanon through the governments, the media, and the various leadership where they are,” he said. “The diaspora is very important for Lebanon’s existence and pluralism.”

Gemayel’s remarks come three days after he spoke to Boston College and called 2014 “a year of existential crisis” for Middle East Christians. He adds that Lebanon’s pluralism provides a “unique” blueprint for other Middle Eastern countries.

“Lebanon is an example for a harmonious coexistence among the various religious communities,” said Gemayel. “That’s what we’re trying to protect.”

Report: Kuwaiti man tried to molest Najwa Karam

(KUWAIT CITY) — A report published by a Kuwaiti-based newspaper revealed that a Kuwaiti man was referred to police after “trying to molest” Lebanese singer Najwa Karam upon arriving at the Kuwait International Airport.

“A security source said several youths gathered around the renowned singer and one of them behaved indecently, so the bodyguard of the singer confronted him,” said Arab Times, the first English-language newspaper published in Kuwait.

The Kuwaiti was referred to Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh law enforcement after allegedly trying to molest the popular singer, according to Kuwaiti newspaper, Al Rai.

Media reports add that the Kuwaiti was released from custody after signing a “pledge.”

Karam, 49, is a Lebanese multi-platinum, best-selling recording artist in the Middle East, who has sold over 60 million records worldwide.

The report comes a few months after Karam lashed out at an audience member in Sydney, Australia after reportedly getting harassed halfway during her show.

“Money does not buy us nor does it buy you, and shame on you for what you are doing,” she told the unidentified man.

Karam has yet to comment on this latest incident.

Abu Faour shuts down over 100 unlicensed nurseries

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanese Minister of Health Wael Abu Faour called for the immediate closure of 120 nurseries in Lebanon for violating licensing laws in Lebanon, and operating their businesses illegally.

Abu Faour ordered the immediate closure of the nurseries during a recent press conference, amid ongoing controversy following the deaths of two babies in Lebanon.

According to the Lebanese National News Agency, Abu Faour said that “two thirds of nurseries in Lebanon are not licensed.”

“We are facing a crisis in the ethics, not just in law, in nurseries,” the health minister said. “It’s like we’re living in a jungle. This is considered an act of rebellion against the law and the government.”

Abu Faour said his staff conducted an investigation of 304 daycare centers in all regions of Lebanon. Initial inspection showed that 205 of the 304 centers were operating without licenses.

But Abu Faour announced that 85 of them have applied and obtained licenses since the investigation. The remainder will face immediate closure and legal ramifications.

“But after what happened at two nurseries in the past weeks, we have decided to shut down all 120 unlicensed nurseries until they meet the necessary health standards,” he said.

Abu Faour’s decision comes a few days after Clarinette et Zoe Nursery in Aajaltoun was shut down after a four-month-old died at the facility.

The minister urged parents to inquire about any nursery and check whether it responds to law conditions before enrolling their children.

Israeli cluster bomb injures 6 boys in south Lebanon

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — An Israeli cluster bomb has injured six boys in Lebanon’s southern village of Zibqine, according to Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency.

Local media reports say the children were taken to the Lebanese-Italian Hospital in Tyre after approaching a cluster bomb left behind from the the 2006 war.

The children were reportedly finishing their picnic in a valley between the villages of Zibqine and Ezziyeh, when the bomb detonated.

Security sources say the victims were between six and eight years old.

“We were having a picnic next to a river in Zebqin and on the way back, my friend stepped on a device that exploded, and we were all hit,” six-year-old Hussein Bazzi said, according to Agence France-Presse.

According to the United Nations mine center, more than 30 Lebanese civilians have died in cluster bomb blasts in Lebanon since the war ended. The UN adds that Israel dropped 4 million cluster bombs during the 34-day conflict.

Human Rights Watch described the Israeli use of cluster bombs as “unacceptably inaccurate and unreliable weapons when used around civilians” and that “they should never be used in populated areas.”

Experts say that up to 1 million of these devices failed to explode and continue to endanger civilians in the area. The United Nations and other international groups have been working to remove the deadly devices since 2006.

Israel refused to sign the 2010 Convention on Cluster Munitions, which bans the development and use of these bombs.

Gemayel speaks to Boston College on ‘religious pluralism’

UPDATE: Gemayel is currently in Washington, DC. and will visit Detroit, Michigan on Saturday, March 28 for a community luncheon.

(BOSTON, MA) — “I have never in my life witnessed Middle East Christians in such extreme danger,” Amine Gemayel warned on Wednesday. Speaking at a public lecture at Boston College, the former president of Lebanon called 2014 “a year of existential crisis” for Middle East Christians.

He raised “the specter of genocide,” in the context of atrocities suffered by Christians and other religious minorities in the region at the hands of the Islamic State and other extremists.

“If present negative trends continue to intensify,” Gemayel said, “we must start thinking about the unthinkable: the extinction of Christianity” in the region.

In addition to an enormous human toll, the former president claimed that the end of Middle East Christianity would “destabilize the region for generations.”

Compounding the crisis, Gemayel said, is the “inexplicable” lack of attention the issue receives from the international community. In particular, he said, “the response by the United States has been a resounding non-response.”

Gemayel noted Washington’s failure last summer to use airstrikes to halt the Islamic State’s mass religious cleansing of Iraqi Christians and Yezidis while using these means to defend other interests, such as oil installations.

While acknowledging that the U.S. is “constantly buffeted by demands” for proactive policies, Gemayel pointed out that the U.S. not only has “the military means to do more,” but is politically positioned to act due to lead its “strong relationships with regional governments.”

Specifically, Gemayel encouraged Washington to support the Vatican’s proposal for “a UN-backed military force, with Muslim participation, to stop religious cleansing in the Middle East,” and the establishment of internationally-guaranteed “in-country safe havens.”

He furthermore appealed to the United States to intensify its support for Lebanon in its fight against the Islamic State and in its care for Syrian refugees.

Ultimately, he asserted, an “Arab Marshall Plan” would be needed to reconstruct Arab countries and encourage Arab youth to “embrace democratic ideas as a prelude to the establishment of democratic systems.”

Gemayel also stressed the need for responsible Muslim leadership to turn their expressions of sympathy with persecuted Christians into “a comprehensive plan of action.”

Gemayel’s talk was cosponsored by Christian Solidarity International and Boston College’s School of Theology and Ministry, Department of Slavic and Eastern Languages and Literatures, Department of Political Science, and Boisi Center for Religion and American Public Life.

This Friday, March 27, the UN Security Council will be addressing the existential threat to Middle East minorities raised by President Gemayel.

AUB appoints Lebanese-American Dr. Fadlo Khuri as new president

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — The American University of Beirut (AUB) has voted to elect Fadlo R. Khuri, MD, as the 16th president of the university.

Dr. Khuri, who has been an AUB trustee since 2014, is presently Chairman of the Department of Hematology and Medical Oncology at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, GA.

He will be installed as the successor to Dr. Peter Dorman, who has served AUB since his appointment in March 2008.

The announcement followed an intensive international search commissioned by the AUB Board of Trustees that included direct input from AUB faculty, staff, and global alumni communities.

AUB Board Chairman Dr. Philip S. Khoury, who co-chaired the search committee with Trustee Dr. Huda Zoghbi, said they were searching for a candidate that had international recognition and proven ability.

“The committee was particularly attentive to the needs of the university as defined by its own constituents,” Khoury said. “We found great consistency in the attributes AUB students, faculty, alumni, and other stakeholders identified as critical for the university’s leadership and we are completely confident that Dr. Khuri embodies those attributes.”

Dr. Khuri was born in Boston, Massachusetts and brought up in Beirut, where he attended AUB from 1981-82. He moved to the US in 1982, and earned his bachelor’s degree from Yale University, in New Haven, CT, and his MD from Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, in New York, NY.

He completed his residency in Internal Medicine at the Boston City Hospital, Boston, MA, and his fellowship in Hematology and Medical Oncology at the Tufts-New England Medical Center.

“President-elect Khuri is a highly accomplished educator and researcher and an articulate voice on the imperative of liberal arts education in the Arab world,” said Khoury. “Equally important, he is a person of profound personal integrity.”

Dr. Khuri has led the recruitment of over 90 faculty including 60 clinical investigators to Emory University, helping oversee an increase in adult cancer patients from 143 in 2002 to over 650 in 2014.

“It is a genuine honor and a privilege to have been selected to lead AUB into its 150th year,” said Dr. Khuri. “The legacy of this remarkable, world class institution is evident in the breadth and depth of contributions its faculty, students and alumni have made to every aspect of life in Lebanon, the region and the world.”

Incumbent President Peter Dorman, who announced his intention to resign in June of last year, will take a sabbatical with the intention to return to the AUB faculty in 2016.

Lebanese-American launches bid to replace resigned Illinois congressman

(PEORIA, IL) — Lebanese-American State Sen. Darin LaHood announced he would run for Congress in a seat vacated by embattled Republican Congressman Aaron Schock.

LaHood, 47, is the son of former Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood, who represented the central and western Illinois district for 14 years.

“This is going to be a competitive race. I’m going to work really hard, and I’m going to leave no stone unturned,” Darin LaHood told WMBD-AM.

Schock announced on Tuesday he would resign at the end of this month, amid mounting allegations that he spent thousands of dollars in lavish office decorations and inappropriate travel reimbursements.

LaHood, a Republican, said he’s disappointed and surprised at Schock’s announcement.

“No one wants to see someone’s career end like that,” LaHood said.

LaHood spent nine years as a state and federal prosecutor before becoming a state senator in Peoria, Illinois.

Political strategists view LaHood as an early frontrunner in a congressional district considered “solid Republican.” He also has name recognition due to his father’s established political record in the area.

Ray LaHood served in Illinois’ 18th Congressional District from 1995 to 2009 before President Obama appointed him as Secretary of Transportation.

Darin LaHood, a Maronite Catholic, is married and has three children. He earned his law degree from John Marshall Law School in Chicago.

Shot sportscaster credits Lebanese-American trauma surgeon with recovery

(SAN DIEGO, CA) — A San Diego sports anchor who was shot outside of his home said he credits Lebanese-American trauma surgeon Dr. Fady Nasrallah with his miraculous recovery.

Kyle Kraska was shot on Feb. 10 by house painter Mike Montana over a financial disagreement over paint work on Kraska’s home. Montana is now charged with premeditated attempted murder and could face nearly 38 years to life in prison if convicted.

Kraska, an Emmy-award winning broadcaster with San Diego CBS affiliate KFMB-TV, spent over a month recovering from the shooting.

Prosecutors say the sportscaster was shot six times from several feet away, including twice in the upper body.

Kraska miraculously survived after undergoing several rounds of surgery under the leadership of Dr. Fady Nasrallah at Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla, Calif.

Kraska returned to work this week and recognized Dr. Nasrallah for his “work ethic.”

“I just want you to know how much I love you, how much I loved your care, your thoughtfulness, your patience, your work ethic,” said Kraska in an on-air address to Dr. Nasrallah. “I love the fact that you stayed with me through the night, operating on me many times, and you refused to let me die.”

Dr. Nasrallah graduated from American University of Beirut Faculty of Medicine in 2001, then completed a residency in General Surgery at Waterbury Hospital in Waterbury, CT from 2003 to 2008.

Kraska adds that he’s thankful for Dr. Nasrallah’s dedication to his recovery.

“I’ll never be able to repay you and I’ll never be able to thank you enough times,” he said. “But I want you to know that you’re right here in my heart.”

WATCH Kraska’s thank you to Dr. Nasrallah:
CBS News 8 – San Diego, CA News Station – KFMB Channel 8

U.S. removes Hezbollah, Iran from terror threat list

(WASHINGTON, DC) — Hezbollah and Iran are no longer on the list of U.S. terror threats, according to an annual security assessment issued by James Clapper, director of the U.S. National Intelligence.

In a previous report from January 2014, the list included Iran and Hezbollah in the “Terrorism” section, citing “direct threats” to the interests of U.S. allies.

But this year, the assessment praised Iran and Hezbollah for its attempts to “dampen sectarianism” and “deescalate tensions with Saudi Arabia.”

The report adds that Hezbollah faces threats from ISIS and the al-Nusra Front along Lebanon’s borders.

In recent months, the U.S. sent military aid to the Lebanese Army to assist the country’s fight against ISIS in border towns. Hezbollah and the U.S. have since become de-facto allies with a common target to combat ISIS.

“Sunni extremists are trying to establish networks in Lebanon and have increased attacks against Lebanese army and Hezbollah positions along the Lebanese-Syrian border,” the report said.

The report, under the title the Worldwide Threat Assessment of the U.S. Intelligence Communities, was released on February 26, 2015 to the U.S. Senate and was recently declassified by Times of Israel newspaper.

The U.S. policy change comes as the United States, Britain, China, France, Russia and Germany aim to outline a deal that would prevent Tehran from making a nuclear bomb.

The parties hope to reach a full accord by July 1.

Lebanese business offers “special offer” on Kenyan, Ethopian maids for Mother’s Day

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — An advertisement by a maid provider in Lebanon sparked outrage on Monday, after the business sent out a mass message offering “special offers” on Kenyan and Ethiopian “nationalities”.

The SMS advertisement was sent to thousands of phone users in Lebanon through mobile providers Alfa and MTC Touch, which allow businesses to purchase advertising that reach mobile users in the country.

READ the advertisement:

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The advertisement was shared by Lebanese NGO, “KAFA”, which advocates against “gender-based” discrimination and violence.

Several Facebook users commented in anger, calling the message “racist” and comparing the sale of maids to the sale of “potatoes.”

“I’ve heard an officer at the airport call on a domestic worker by her country name in a very disrespectful and demeaning manner,” wrote one user on Facebook. “She should have answered back saying at least we have electricity in my country!”

Despite the outrage, one blogger says it’s unlikely any action against the company will be taken.

“Today, the fair citizens of Lebanon are in shock,” wrote Beirut-based blogger Claude El Khal. “Tomorrow they’ll forget all about it. Until the next SMS or the next suicide.”

But Labor Minister Sejaan Azzi said the maid agency would be shut down, if it turns out to be a registered company.

The listed phone number in the advertisement traces to Alice Chalhoub, who owns a Beirut-based agency in Ain El Remmaneh that places domestic workers in Lebanese homes, according to MaidXchange.com.

According to the International Labour Organisation (ILO), Lebanon hosts dozens of other maid agencies that connect more than 250,000 migrant domestic workers with potential employers.

Human Rights Watch reports that, on average, more than one migrant domestic worker dies in Lebanon per week.

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