Selfie sparks debate over Lebanese-Israeli engagement rules

(MIAMI, FL) — Miss Lebanon Sally Greige came under fire after Miss Israel Doron Matalon posted a selfie of herself, Miss Lebanon, Miss Japan, and Miss Slovenia at the Miss Universe competition in Miami.

Greige says she was ‘photo-bombed’ by Miss Israel at the competition and tried to distance herself from her. She issued the following statement on Facebook.

“To all my supporters and Lebanese citizens, I would like to thank you indeed for your continuous support of Miss Lebanon at the Miss Universe contest …The truth behind the photo: Since the first day of my arrival to participate to Miss Universe, I was very cautious to avoid being in any photo or communication with Miss Israel (that tried several times to have a photo with me) … I was having a photo with Miss Japan, Miss Slovenia and myself; suddenly Miss Israel jumped in, took a selfie, and put it on her social media…this is what happened and I hope to have your full support in the Miss Universe contest,” she wrote.

Miss Israel Doron Matalon responded with the following statement:

“It doesn’t surprise me, but it still makes me sad. Too bad you can not put the hostility out of the game, only for three weeks of an experience of a lifetime that we can meet girls from around the world and also from the neighboring country.”

Some are calling for Greige to lose the title over the selfie, especially because any contact with the Jewish state is illegal in Lebanon.

The following list explains the rules of Lebanese-Israeli engagement, courtesy of Beirut-based media outlet, NOW News:

Rules-of Lebanese-Israeli-engagement

The 63rd Miss Universe pageant finale is scheduled to take place on January 25 at the US Century Bank Arena at Florida International University.

What do you think? Submit your comments on our Facebook page.

RELATED: VIDEO: Jon Stewart responds to Miss Universe selfie debate. Watch here.

Jumblatt renews call for legalizing weed in Lebanon

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — MP Walid Jumblatt renewed calls for legalizing the cultivation of cannabis in Lebanon’s eastern Bekaa Valley, saying its economic impact could be substantial for the region.

In a statement published Wednesday in As-Safir Newspaper, Jumblatt applauded the crackdown on inmates in Roumieh Prison as a bold security move, but called it the first step to improving security strifes in the country.

“The treatment cannot be a security one only, but it should be backed by development, and thus I still believe that the cultivation of hashish should be legalized because the theory of alternative crops has failed,” Jumblatt said.

Jumblatt believes the “page has turned” in the Roumieh issue, and efforts should now focus on security and economic stability in the Bekaa. He says regulating security and cannabis growers should go hand-in-hand.

“Never in my life have I smoked marijuana, but I support growing cannabis for medical use and to improve the living conditions of farmers in north Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley,” Jumblatt previously told Al-Jadeed television.

“Let’s legalize cannabis and regulate its cultivation.”

Lebanon remains one of the top five global producers of hashish, accounting for around 5-6% of total world supply since 2002.

Global demand for cannabis and hashish is ever-increasing, and the incentive for impoverished Lebanese farmers to return to their traditional livelihood is great.

A hectare of cannabis may produce anything from 40-100 kg of hashish, worth between $20,000 and $40,000 USD.

WATCH: Inside a Lebanese marijuana factory:

Kuwaiti delegation announce development projects in Lebanon

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — A delegation from the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development (KFAED) signed two agreements to benefit Tripoli residents and Syrian refugees, according to the delegation director Abdul Wahab Al-Bader.

“The first is a loan to fund a project for the city of Tripoli, which is worth 5.5 million Kuwaiti Dinars,” al-Bader said. “The second agreement is a donation by the fund as part of Kuwait’s commitment to support Syrian refugees.”

The 18.7 million dollar loan will be used to finance a slaughterhouse project in Tripoli, according to the Kuwaiti News Agency. 19 million dollars will go to Syrian refugees.

The delegation met for a private meeting with Speaker Nabih Berri at his home in Ain al-Tineh before announcing the two agreements.

They also met with Prime Minister Tammam Salam at the Grand Serail where they discussed the progress of several Kuwaiti-funded development projects, including the training of governmental employees.

KFAED is also expected to finance a number of projects in southern Beirut, including an emergency center in Ghobeiry, the historical Beaufort Castle in Nabatieh and the project of Litani River in Bekaa Valley.

The delegation previously supported the Litani River Project in 2012, which is a $330 million first phase project that aims to channel channel from the Qaroun Reservoir to 340,000 residents in South Lebanon.

The second phase is expected to provide agricultural land with irrigation networks, facilities, and land rehabilitation.

Upon arriving, the delegation, headed by Director General Abdul Wahab Al-Bader, and including regional manager for the Arab Countries Marwan Al-Ghanim, was received by at the airport by Third Secretary in Kuwait Embassy Mohammad Al-Wogayan, representative of KFAED resident in Lebanon Nawaf Al-Dabous, and Chairman of Lebanon’s Council for Development and Reconstruction Nabil Al-Jesr.

Abu Faour to close 8 labs, 3 plastic surgery clinics

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanese Health Minister Wael Abu Faour announced the closure of eight health labs and three plastic clinics on Thursday for a failure to abide by health and legal obligations.

Abu Faour said the health labs were primarily “blood sample collection centers” and the registered physicians were not present during patient visits.

Lebanon requires centers to have valid licenses and full-time specialized doctors working in the establishment at all times.

The absent physicians were identified as Dr. Hassan Haidar in Saksakiye, Bassam Shoeib in Choueifat, George al-Baino in Taalbaya, and Qassem Salim in Sarafand.

The other four registered “doctors” were actually pharmacists, according to Abu Faour.

The lab owners were identified as Hussein Khalifeh, Joseph Najjar, Ricardo Sarraf, and Imad al-Afash.

Abu Faour also contacted south Lebanon’s governor with a request to shut down three plastic surgery clinics, for several “health-related” violations.

The clinics, which were all in Sidon, include Janin Nassar’s Center, Silkor Laser Medical Center, and Seif Beauty Clinic.

The minister said the clinics would be shut down for a renewable two week period, until the center could report proper health conditions.

Japan donates $7M to Lebanon’s education, health ministries

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Japan donated $6.8 million to Lebanon’s education and health ministries on Wednesday, according to a release by Education Minister Elias Bou Saab.

“I am pleased to announce the signing of a coordination agreement between Lebanese and Japanese government representative in Crown Agents for a 800 million yen ($6.8 million) contract, divided between the health and education ministries,” Bou Saab said.

The money will be split between both ministries, including $4 million that will go to the Health Ministry, and $2 million to the Education Ministry.

Bou Saab said the funds will be used to equip 160 public schools with generators, bathrooms, and desks and chairs for both Lebanese and Syrian students.

He says the donation will also provide enough fuel for an entire year, which will be used for public school generators.

The Japanese-Lebanese bilateral relationship was established in 1954 after an Embassy of Japan was established in Beirut.

“(Lebanon) was placed as the strategic country for the Japanese foreign trade and commercial activities in the Middle East,” said Japan’s Ambassador to Lebanon Seiichi Otsuka.

The donation was announced during a signing ceremony attended by the education minister, representatives from the Ministry of Health, and Ambassador Otsuka.

The Health Ministry has yet to announce how it will use the donation funds.

Security forces sweep Roumieh prison after Tripoli attack

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanese security forces raided the largest and most notorious prison in Beirut after intercepting calls between inmates and members of the cell responsible for the recent fatal bombing in Tripoli.

Lebanese police reportedly entered and established a security perimeter around Block B of the prison at 7am, where many high-profile Islamist militant prisoners were held. Lebanese Army helicopters also monitored the scene from low altitudes above the complex.

The police conducted a nine-hour operation to transfer prisoners from Block B to Block D, according to the Lebanese Ministry of Interior.

“What was happening in Block B could not continue,” said Nouhad Machnouk, Minister of Interior. “Confronting terrorism will continue. We will continue with the security plan.”

Machnouk added that the Roumieh Prison was originally built to hold about 3,500 inmates, but it is now overflowed with 8,000 prisoners.

Block B holds 900 prisoners and 300 of them are labeled as “terrorists” by security forces.

In protest of the transfers, some prisoners burned their mattresses, which required the assistance of the Lebanese Army to extinguish fires and control the inmates.

“The situation is under control and there are no casualties and the plan being implemented complements the overall security plan for Lebanon,” a statement by the Internal Security Forces said.

“Roumieh Prison is part of that plan, especially after the discovery of ties between a number of prisoners and the terrorist blast in the Jabal Mohsen area.”

The prisoners were moved to “well-monitored cells” and were no longer given access to mobile phones and the Internet.

“Security forces have seized all phones,” Machnouk said, adding that the move served to “stop a process of communication that was facilitating terrorism.”

At least nine people were killed and more than 37 others were injured in the bomb attack in the northern city of Tripoli on January 10. The al-Nusra Front has claimed responsibility for the deadly attack.

Over the past months, Lebanon’s second largest city, Tripoli, has been rocked by turmoil due to the conflict between supporters and opponents of the government of Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad.

RELATED: Suicide bombing inside Tripoli coffee shop kills 9. Read more.

Ambassador Fletcher: “10 ideas” to keep ISIS out of Lebanon

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — British Ambassador to Lebanon Tom Fletcher revealed what he called “10 ideas” to keep the ‘Islamic State’ out of Lebanon, and Lebanon out of the ‘Islamic State’ in an opinion editorial piece published in The Daily Star.

“Neither Islamic nor a state, ISIS is a threat to real Islam,” Fletcher said. “Across the globe, Muslim leaders have condemned their actions. The coalition of over 60 countries, including from the Middle East, is showing that the world will not tolerate ISIS’ brutality.”

Fletcher said the vast majority in Lebanon will need to show that they care about protecting their country from extremism, “as the extremists care about imposing it.”

VIEW Fletcher’s 10 ideas below:

1. Back the security forces. More than ever, they are on the front lines. On the checkpoints, in the positions facing ISIS fighters, some are even held as hostages. The U.K. and others are getting kits and training to those confronting extremism. But many will feel exposed. They need to hear the full solidarity of the Lebanese people. Tell them why they matter so much.

2. Do something anti-sectarian. ISIS and extremism succeed if they provoke enmity and conflict between confessions. Every time connections are made that defy their hope, we strike back. Lebanon knows all too well what happens when “the other” side is stereotyped or ostracized. The vast majority do not want to go back to the destructive conflicts of the past. Those who understand that Lebanon’s diversity is its survival have to shout louder than those that don’t.

3. Keep calm and carry on. ISIS wants panic and fear. As with terrorists anywhere, the best response is to continue as usual. Don’t let it intimidate us. The people getting on with their lives and jobs in the face of intimidation are everyday heroes. Fatalism is a gift to the extremists.

4. Elect a president. It has been over 200 days since Lebanon has been without one. The president should be planning, troubleshooting, rallying, anchoring, leading. He or she would be a vocal presence in the international debates about the future of the region. Every day without a president is a missed opportunity, a day when the forces looking to destabilize the country become stronger, a day without a presidential voice arguing for the international community to help.

5. Fly the Lebanese flag. It is surely better to focus on what unites than divides. This country is not part of the “Islamic State,” it is the Lebanese state. That is something worth marching for.

6. Create jobs. There is a battle ahead for the hearts and minds of the poorest, those at most risk of radicalization. Government and businesses have to break that cycle, and create hope. We have to show that there is a better option than the nihilism offered by ISIS. Young entrepreneurs from Tripoli recently told me that they need security, decent Internet, hope. They’ll do the rest.

7. Don’t try to exploit the ISIS threat to make money. As the international effort develops, it is going to become even more risky to have any dealings with those behind this terror. So think twice if that includes you.

8. Establish sovereignty on the border. I think that this is an idea whose time has come. If the Lebanese state moves to fully secure its own border at last, at a time of such a threat from Syria, can any faction disagree?

9. Junk the stale narratives. I’m struck by how many people on one side of the debate claim that Israel, Saudi Arabia or Turkey created ISIS. And by how many on the other side tell me that, no, it was actually Iran. I’m sure that North Korea blames South Korea, and vice versa. We can have a legitimate debate about who, including the Assad regime, created the conditions in which ISIS flourished. But we need to go beyond simply using ISIS as just one more piece of evidence for our pre-existing worldview or pet conspiracy. This baggage gets in the way of dealing with the problem, together.

10. Don’t blame a refugee. Seventy-eight percent of Syrian refugees in Lebanon are women and children. Most are vulnerable, their lives already shattered by a brutal war. Winter is hitting them hard – try spending a night in a tent in the Bekaa if you think they have chosen to be there. The Lebanese people have already shown extraordinary generosity. Making refugees the scapegoats for what ISIS is doing creates an even bigger problem. Don’t push them into ISIS hands.

Suicide bombing inside Tripoli coffee shop kills 9

(TRIPOLI, LEBANON) — At least nine people were killed in an explosion on Saturday that rocked a cafe in Tripoli’s Jabal Mohsen neighborhood in north Lebanon, the Lebanese National News Agency reported.

George Kitane, the head of paramedics at the Lebanese Red Cross, told al-Jadeed that the attack killed nine people and wounded 36.

A Lebanese army statement said a single suicide bomber attacked a coffee shop at around 7:30 p.m. (1730 GMT, 12:30 p.m. EST). It said military police would investigate the bombing.

Security officials, speaking on condition of anonymity as they weren’t authorized to talk to journalists, earlier said the attack began with a grenade tossed inside the cafe, followed by a single suicide bomber.

Tripoli has been relatively quiet recently after years of tension between its majority Sunni population and its Alawite minority. Embattled President Bashar Assad in neighboring Syria is an Alawite and support for him in Tripoli has sparked violence there before. Most of the Sunnis in Tripoli support the predominantly Sunni Syrian rebels trying to overthrow Assad.

Lebanon has seen a series of attacks and suicide bombings since the conflict in Syria, which has killed more than 200,000 people, began nearly four years ago. Saturday’s attack was among the deadliest to hit the country in the past year.

Health Minister Wael Abu Faour called for unity in Lebanon, telling al-Jadeed: “This is the moment for consensus among Lebanese to protect Lebanon.”

Former Lebanese president Michel Sleiman also condemned the attack and said “terrorism will fail in dragging Tripoli into a civil strife.”

Security sources said the bombers were both Lebanese, from the mainly Sunni Mankubeen district, which lies just 500 meters from Jabal Mohsen.

“According to the military experts’ initial investigations at the scene of the explosion that hit Jabal Mohsen, the two suicide attackers’ names are Taha Samir al-Khayal and Bilal Mohammad al-Maraiyan,” an army statement said.

RELATED: Security forces sweep Roumieh prison after Tripoli attack. Read more.

Ministers Abu Faour and Chehayeb get stuck in elevator

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanon’s Health Minister Wael Abu Faour and Agricultural Minister Akram Shehayeb were trapped on Tuesday in the elevator of a wheat silos building at Beirut’s port.

The two ministers, who were visiting to inspect “major health violations” of the wheat silos, remained stuck in the elevator for about 15 minutes.

Following the inspection Abu Faour stressed that some enhancements were made but not enough, revealing that the file will be referred to the judiciary.

“Those who are responsible will be held accountable,” Abu Faour said during a joint press conference with Shehayeb and Economy Minister Alain Hakim. “The improvements made since the Health Ministry’s inspection teams first visit on December 10 are not enough.”

Abu Faour’s campaign, which started in October, aims to inform the public of health violations at major restaurants, factories, and agriculture companies.

“A large number of birds is found, which facilitates the transfer of germs. The trucks moving the wheat are not in a good condition,” he said. “The Lebanese are sharing their food with pigeons and rats,” the minister concluded.

Shehayeb called the situation “disastrous” and said it should be “swiftly” treated.

Hakim says that improvements will take at least a month to to be completed, vowing to rectify all the required food safety violations “until we reach a safe harboring environment at the port.”

UAE airlifts emergency aid to Syrian refugees in Lebanon

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(BEKAA, LEBANON) — UAE President Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nahyan ordered an emergency airlift of blankets, winter clothes, medicine, food and heaters to refugee camps in Jordan, Lebanon and Iraq, Gaza and other parts of Palestine, as a fierce storm batters part of the middle east , according to a report published by The National newspaper.

The first flight was due to take off in the early hours of Wednesday morning, according to the report.

Education Minister Elias Bou Saab appealed on Wednesday to the international community to follow the example of the United Arab Emirates.

“All other states that could help in these conditions should endeavor to assist,” Bou Saab said after meeting with Lebanon’s Grand Mufti Abdul-Latif Derian.

According to Bou Saab, as long as Syrian refugees are present in Lebanon then the country is obliged to fulfill its humanitarian duty toward them.

A snow storm sweeping the Levant region has already taken its toll on Syrian refugees in Lebanon, who are facing freezing temperatures, heavy snow, hail, rain and thunderstorms.

Snow caused several tents to collapse, as refugees tried to keep warm inside their unheated shelters by burning wood and waste paper.

Several refugee families had their tents blown down by strong winds that battered Lebanon overnight and had to seek shelter with other refugees.

In east Lebanon, three Syrians, including an 8-year-old boy, died in the storm in the outskirts of Shebaa in Mount Hermon on the Syrian border.

More than three million Syrians have fled their country during nearly four years of war — with more than 1.2 million seeking refuge in Lebanon alone — creating an enduring humanitarian, economic and political crisis that has put extraordinary pressure on Syria’s neighbors, especially Lebanon, Turkey and Jordan.

Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid al Maktoum, ruler of Dubai and UAE VP called upon the global and Arab media to draw the world’s attention to the refugees suffering in the cold in the Levant. “I invite all my brothers and friends in the Arab and global media to focus on this tragedy and by doing so help the aiding of these refugees, especially women and children,” he said.

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