Beirut named as one of the world’s “7 wonders”

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Beirut was among seven cities selected as a “New7Wonders” city, beating out more than 1,000 competitors, the organization said on Sunday.

The New7Wonders Cities was created by Swiss-born filmmaker and explorer Bernard Weber, who has been on the hunt for the best new spots across the globe for years.

The campaign passed through several rounds of voting before reaching the election of the top seven cities.

“For the first time in human history, more than half of our planet’s population lives in cities and this election emphasizes the dramatically challenging character of our changing world,” said Weber.

28 cities were selected in the final round by a “panel of experts,” including architects and urban professors. to pass through three shortlisting votes before the seven were decided on.

Voting was then opened to the public on the “New7Wonders” website, mobile phone app, by calling in, or by sending an SMS.

The other wonder cities are: Doha in Qatar, Durban in South Africa, Havana in Cuba, Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia, Vigan in Philippines, and La Paz in Bolivia.

Weber announced the results from Dubai.

Watch the announcement here:

EU offers $180M euros for Syrian refugees in Lebanon, Jordan

Syrian refugees, who fled the violence in Syria, walk at a new refugee camp in Arbil in Iraq's Kurdistan region

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — The European Union offered $180 million euros on Thursday to help Lebanon and Jordan cope with the massive influx of Syrian refugees.

The European Commission said the aid package would help deal with the longer-term problems of the 1.1 million refugees in Lebanon and 630,000 in Jordan.

Some of the funds will also go to Syria itself where the conflict has displaced around half of the population, nearly 11 million people.

Lebanon, a country of just over four million inhabitants, is struggling to shelter 1.5 million Syrian refugees.

“They are sharing our water, electricity, schools and hospitals with us,” said Lebanese prime minister Tammam Salam. “The country was not programmed for this. It was barely programmed to handle its own needs.”

Salam was in the European Parliament on December 2 to discuss his country’s most pressing issues, including efforts to deal with the spill-over of the conflict in Syria.

Salam met European Parliament President Martin Schulz, who he described as “very supportive and enthusiastic about helping Lebanon.”

The $180 million package “addresses in particular the education of children and young adults… as well as measures to improve the resilience of the refugees as well as the communities hosting them through economic development activities,” a Commission statement said.

The EU is a major humanitarian aid donor in the region. It has provided about 1.5 billion euros since the conflict erupted in 2011 while the 28 member states have separately provided about 1.4 billion euros, according to Commission figures.

“We are ready and willing to bring a continued support to the people of Syria and to the neighboring countries hosting Syrian refugees,” EU foreign affairs head Federica Mogherini said. “We are determined to play our role to the full and bring a lasting political solution to this regional crisis.”

Thousands join hands in Lebanon to create human chain

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — A Lebanese NGO gathered 200,000 Lebanese natives to create a virtual human chain and join “hand in hand, united for Lebanon” on Sunday.

People joined hands from Lebanon’s northern city of Tripoli to the southern city of Tyre, passing through Beirut’s Raouche.

Tourism Minister Michel Pharaon joined the “United Hands” project, stressing that the state should believe in the civil society despite the ongoing paralysis at state institutions.

“The Lebanese should have faith in the civil society despite the deadlock in state institutions,” he said at the opening ceremony.

The event was held under the patronage of Pharaon and in cooperation with the Lebanese Army, the Municipality of Beirut, the Ministry of Interior, the Foreign Ministry, the Lebanese Red Cross and the Civil Defense.

“The aim is to break the boundaries between our divisions and show the world that we can unite, beyond religion, beyond politics and beyond the odds,” the project says on its website. “In creating this human chain, citizens will be able to stand side by side marking their place in history in a demonstration of pride that will potentially last forever.”

Sunday’s ceremony is the third in a series of initiatives organized by the “United Hands” project in commemoration with the 71st anniversary of Lebanon’s independence.

The first event, United Hands across the Web, took place in October, and used Google maps to join Lebanese from across the world.

In the second event, nearly 2,000 people gathered in Martyrs Square in Beirut on Nov. 22 to form a big letter “U” for united.

See photos below:

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Syrian man arrested in Metn for prostituting 14-year-old wife

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(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanon’s Internal Security Forces arrested a Syrian man and his 14-year-old wife over a prostitution ring in the Metn region of Lebanon on Monday.

Police say they received a tip about a man who prostituted his teenage wife and several other women in Jounieh and Tabarja.

Investigations into the case led to the arrest of a 36-year-old Syrian man, a 14-year-old Syrian girl, and two Iraqi sisters aged 19 and 31.

The group was arrested on Nov. 29, according to the Internal Security Forces.

The man reportedly confessed to prostituting his wife and the two Iraqi women. The Iraqis also confessed to prostitution even “without an agent,” according to a statement.

This most recent arrest comes one month after security forces arrested one Lebanese man and five Syrians accused of forming a prostitution ring and using it for human trafficking.

Watch France 24’s report on prostitution in Lebanon:

RELATED: Prostitution ring busted by security officials in Lebanon. Read more

RELATED: Lebanon police bust Kaslik prostitution ring. Read more.

VIDEO: Thousands bid farewell to Lebanese icon Sabah

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Thousands of mourners gathered in Beirut on Sunday to celebrate the life of Lebanese singer and actress Sabah who died this week at the age of 87.

A military brass band played in the street outside St. George Cathedral in downtown Beirut, where fans clapped and sang their favorite Sabah songs.

Earlier, a troupe of dancers in traditional dress performed to the diva’s music played from loudspeakers.

Her coffin, which was draped with a Lebanese flag, was brought to church where Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai presided over the religious ceremony.

“I will call it celebration, not a funeral,” said Lebanese actress Ward El-Khal. “We feel today that we came here to share her feelings and to remember her. We will miss her.”

Sabah was buried on Sunday in the village of Bdedoun, where she was born.

The iconic singer and actress was beloved throughout the Arab world, with her seven-decade career and her colorful love life keeping her in the headlines until the end.

Born Jeanette Gergis Feghali, she later took the screen name Sabah, but was affectionately known as Sabbuha, or the nickname Shahrura, or songbird.

She began performing in the 1940s, earning a reputation for her renditions of patriotic songs as well as folkloric ballads. She was also an icon of the big screen, appearing in more than 90 movies.

Watch Part 1 of Sabah’s funeral below, courtesy of MTV Lebanon:

Watch Part 2 of Sabah’s funeral below, courtesy of MTV Lebanon:

RELATED: Lebanese icon Sabah dies at 87. Read more.

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Ex-Jumblatt aide jailed 2 years, fined $3.45M

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Ex-Jumblatt aide and businessman Bahij Abou Hamze was sentenced to two years in jail and ordered to pay $3.45 million on Friday over charges of breach of trust and embezzlement from the Safa football team, sources told Beirut-based newspaper, The Daily Star.

The decision marks the first sentence against Abou Hamze, the former head of the board of trustees for the football team. Abu Hamze is also the husband of TV personality Mona Abou Hamze, most notable for “Talk of the Town” on MTV Lebanon.

Abu Hamzeh’s lawyers have been petitioning for charges against the defendant to be dropped. The case was filed by the chairman of the Safa football team Issam Sayegh, who is currently representing the team.

Abu Hamzeh was earlier charged with impersonating Sayegh by forging documents and using counterfeit papers, but that case was dismissed, a judicial source told The Daily Star.

Abu Hamzeh still faces several other charges filed by Jumblatt.

The lawsuits are the culmination of a dramatic deterioration of relations between Jumblatt and Abu Hamzeh, who used to run Jumlatt’s real estate endeavors and managed his private properties for more than two decades.

Abu Hamzeh’s family has consistently worked for the Jumblatt family over the past century.

In one of the lawsuits filed by Jumblatt, he accused Abu Hamzeh and business partner Hussein Bdeir of selling him a piece of land that did not actually exist.

Abu Hamzeh is a chemical engineer and a Middle East agent for the U.S. pharmaceutical company Upjohn, Abu Hamzeh lived in Paris before moving to Lebanon in 1987 at the request of Jumblatt in order to manage the PSP chief’s companies.

He is also the former head of the Association of Oil Importing Companies and served as the head of Safa’s board of trustees.

TRIBUTE: Iconic Lebanese poet Said Akl dies at 102

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Iconic Lebanese poet Said Akl died on Friday at the age of 102.

Akl was born in 1912 in the Bekaa town of Zahle, and quit school at age 15 to help his family after financial difficulties. He later pursued studies in literature in the 1930s after moving to Beirut.

Famous for his radical Lebanese nationalism, Akl, also known as the “Little Poet,” promoted the use of Lebanese dialect written in modified Roman script rather than the modern standard Arabic and alphabet.

He was defined by his Phoenician-centered nationalism, which made him popular among many Lebanese and controversial among others.1660679_757187717650139_1431484872538884524_n

After having left the Syrian Social Nationalist Party, Akl became one of the leaders of the Guardians of the Cedars, a radical nationalist political party created during the Lebanese Civil War which welcomed the 1982 Israeli invasion of Lebanon, seeing it as a golden opportunity for forcing Palestinians out of Lebanon.

Although mostly known for his poetry, the deceased writer was also a journalist and wrote for several newspapers such as Al-Jarida, Al-Sayyad, and had a column in Assafir in the 1990s.

Considered one of the most notable modern Lebanese poets, Akl wrote in Arabic and French. His poetical works include “The Jasmine Bells,” “Poems from Her Notebook,” “Like Pillars,” and “Carving in Light.”

Legendary Lebanese singer Fairouz sang more than a dozen of his poems such as “Roddani Ila Biladi” (Take Me Back to my Country), “Ghanaytu Mekka” (I sang to Mekka), “Ummi ya Malaki” (My Mother, My Angel), and “Kara’tu Majdaka” (I Read your Glory).

Akl wrote three plays in poetic form, “The Daughter of Jephthah,” “The Magdalena” and “Cadmus,” and also published prose that includes “Loubnan in Haka” (If Lebanon Were to Speak).

His funeral will take place on Tuesday, December 2 at the Saint Georges Cathedral in downtown Beirut at 11:30 am, according to Notre Dame University.

RELATED: Beirut street named after Said Akl. Read more.

Source: al-Akhbar English

United States, Australia renew Lebanon travel warnings

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — The United States and Australia renewed travel warnings for “all travel to Lebanon” this month, citing the “frequency of terrorist bombing attacks” and spillover violence from neighboring Syria.

“The Department of State urges U.S. citizens to avoid all travel to Lebanon because of ongoing safety and security concerns. U.S. citizens living and working in Lebanon should understand that they accept risks in remaining and should carefully consider those risks,” the department said in a travel advisory on its website.

The U.S. government also cited “wrong place, wrong time” harm to U.S. citizens.

The Australian government called the situation “unpredictable” and called on their citizens to halt all travel to the country.

“We continue to advise Australians to reconsider their need to travel to Lebanon overall because of the unpredictable security and political situation that could deteriorate without warning,” the Australian ministry said in a statement.

The U.S. Department of State cited new warnings in the renewed travel notice, calling all airplanes flying over Syria “at risk.”

“As we have seen in the recent past, commercial aircraft are at risk when flying over regions in conflict. We strongly recommend that U.S. citizens considering air travel overseas evaluate the route that their proposed commercial flight may take and avoid any that pass through Syrian airspace,” reads the warning.

“U.S. government personnel in Lebanon have been prohibited from taking flights that over-fly Syrian airspace.”

Some Syrian opposition groups have anti-aircraft capabilities, according to a previous warning issued by the U.S. government. American airlines have been forbidden from flying over Syria since August.

Former president Michel Sleiman awarded papal order

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(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Former Preisdent Michel Sleiman was honored with a Papal Order of Knighthood during a ceremony at the Vatican on Monday.

Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin presented Sleiman with the Order of Pius IX, which is the highest Order the Vatican currently grants, and among the third-highest of all papal Orders.

The ceremony was attended by high-rank Italian and Lebanese officials, including Maronite Patriarch Beshara Rai and Commander of the Italian Army Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Claudio Graziano, as well as many ambassadors and religious figures.

Sleiman spoke about Christian existence in Lebanon, and the challenges they currently face.

“I ask the permission to reiterate, that the future of Christians in the Arab world cannot be secured by foreign military protection,” Sleiman said.

Sleiman said that the existence of Christians can only be guaranteed under a pluralist system that allows for natural civil liberties.

“I have worked during my presidential term, with active conscience, to expel the ghost of extremism and division from my nation, which led to the Baabda Declaration that earned the support of all Lebanese components,” he said.

Sleiman also called on the Maronites of Lebanon to “put personal interests aside and quickly elect a new president.”

Bassil visits Cyprus; warns country could be jihadi transit

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(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanese Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil held a meeting with Cyprus’ president, Nicos Anastasiades, to discuss Lebanese-Cypriot relations on Wednesday during Bassil’s brief visit to the island.

Bassil says more attention should be paid to the possibility of Cyprus becoming a gateway for foreign jihadis to transit in and out of the Middle East.

A Cypriot security official said last week that Cyprus has already stepped up screening efforts across the island’s dividing line to prevent Europeans from passing through en route to Syria.

Cyprus’ president says he was glad to meet with Bassil and tackle the region’s issues, “especially the ones related to international terrorism.”

“Cyprus supports the Lebanese army as well as the efforts to support the Syrian refugees in Lebanon and its further actions to strengthen the relations between Lebanon and the EU,” said Anastasiades.

Bassil also met with his foreign ministry counterpart Ioannis Kasoulidis, where they reportedly discussed the discovery of hydrocarbon reserves in the Eastern Mediterranean.

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