Walid Jumblatt meets with top models

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(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Walid Jumblatt was surrounded by some of the world’s most beautiful women on Sunday, when the head of the Progressive Socialist Party hosted contestants from the World Next Top Model 2014 competition.

Jumblatt received 40 competitors vying for the title of the world’s top model.

The event is scheduled to take place on Aug. 24, with 40 international models competing in Lebanon. The organizers have taken the participants sightseeing across the country, including a tour of the Chouf.

According to media reports, some of the models sipped on Turkish coffee and had brief conversations with a smiling Jumblatt, while the others played with his dog, Oscar.

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Casey Kasem to be buried in Norway, says publicist

(OSLO, NORWAY) — The wife of Casey Kasem plans to bury the late radio personality in Norway — contrary to Kasem’s desire to be interred in Los Angeles and against the wishes of his adult children, a publicist for Kasem’s daughter said Friday.

The children were working with a private investigator but have few legal options to prevent the overseas burial, publicist Danny Deraney told The Associated Press

Teruyuki Olsen, a lawyer for Jean Kasem, did not return an email seeking comment. As the spouse of the radio personality, she is conservator of his body, said Deraney, who works for Kerri Kasem.

It was unclear when the burial might occur and why Jean Kasem selected Norway.

Kasem, the host of “American Top 40,” died on June 15 at a hospital in Gig Harbor, Washington. He was 82 and suffering from dementia. His death followed a lengthy battle over his care between Jean Kasem and his three adult children from his first marriage.

Deraney said burial outside the United States would be contrary to what Casey Kasem had wanted.

“He publicly made it clear to his friends, his kids, that he wanted to be buried in Forest Lawn in Glendale, in Los Angeles,” the publicist said.

The Norwegian newspaper VG reported that Kasem will be buried in Oslo.

“It’s been arranged, he’s going to Oslo,” Wenche Madsen Eriksson, the head of the funeral service administration in Oslo, told the newspaper.

She declined to say why Oslo was chosen, explaining that the family wants to keep that information confidential.

Two Lebanese policemen freed by militants

(ARSAL, LEBANON) — Islamist militants who captured more than 30 members of Lebanese security forces handed over two policemen to Lebanese officials on Sunday, according to security sources.

Sunni clerics from the Committee of Muslim Scholars mediated a truce between militants and the Lebanese Army and handed the policemen to the Internal Security Forces, according to the source.

The released policemen, Medyan Hasan and Kamal Misilmani, were transferred to the Baalbek region before being transported to the Ablah army barracks near Zahle, according to an Army statement.

Meanwhile, The Lebanese Army arrested 12 Syrians who were allegedly trying to enter Arsal illegally through an eastern border crossing on the village’s outskirts.

A five-day battle with the army which started on August 2 was one of the worst spillovers of Syria’s civil war into Lebanon. Security sources say dozens of militants, many of them rebels from Syria, and 19 soldiers were killed.

The fighting ended when the insurgents accepted mediation by Lebanese Sunni clerics, after which they withdrew, taking captured police and soldiers with them. 19 soldiers and 14 police are still held by the militants.

Lebanese Examiner making a change in Lebanon

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — As many of you read on LebaneseExaminer.com, students at the Holy Spirit University of Kaslik (USEK) were facing a drastic tuition raise of more than 21 percent.

The new policy would increase the price of one credit by $60, which calculates to a 21% overall tuition increase. Students would be expected to pay an extra $2,000 per year.

In support of university students during the ongoing economic crisis in Lebanon, the team at Lebanese Examiner decided to create an online petition on Change.org to demand a reversal of the tuition increase.

“As a student, parent, or supporter of USEK Kaslik, you are signing this petition to encourage the administration of the Holy Spirit University of Kaslik (USEK), to reverse their decision to increase tuition rates this year,” the petition read.

Every time someone signs our petition, an email is automatically sent to University President Fr. Hady Mahfouz and Financial Administrator Fr. Georges Azzi demanding action.

To stand up with Lebanese students and demand a reversal of the tuition increase, click here to sign the petition.

Click here to read the original article.

Lebanese journalist found dead in Jordan

(AMMAN, JORDAN) — Jordanian police announced that it has discovered the body of Lebanese journalist Mazen Diab at his house in the capital Amman on Friday.

“Security forces found the body of Diab tied with ropes inside his apartment,” Jordanian news agency ZAD said, noting that his house is located on Mecca Street in Amman. “Security bodies have launched an investigation in this matter and are listening to the testimonies of the slain journalist’s neighbors.”

The neighbors confirmed that Diab was stabbed repeatedly, according to the same source.

“Investigation is ongoing to uncover all circumstances surrounding his death,” a security source told al-Ghad.

The body of Diab was referred to a forensic doctor to determine the causes of death, noted ZAD.

Jordanian authorities said Saturday that they had arrested four people who confessed to killing Diab.

In a statement, Jordan’s General Security said the coronary’s report indicated that the cause of Diab’s death was an internal bleeding after the victim was hit with a sharp object.

The Lebanese citizen’s death was discovered after a friend visited his house and repeatedly knocked on the door and called him, but failed to reach him.

“He then took off the door of the house with force and discovered Diab’s body,” the informed source told al-Ghad.

Diab, 31, presented a program on Jordan’s Sawt al-Ghad radio station before his death. He suffered from lung cancer and had underwent an operation to remove a part of his lungs a year ago.

He graduated from Studio al-Fan talent show in 2002 when he applied to become a TV journalist, and earned a graduate degree from the Beirut Arab University.

Nasrallah warns Islamic State posing existential threat

nasrallah(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah warned that Islamic State jihadists fighting in Syria and Iraq pose an existential threat to Lebanon and argued that his party’s military campaign in Syria was protecting the country.

“The [Islamic State] wants to destroy everything; they are a danger to everyone,” he said in a televised address delivered on the occasion of the eight anniversary of the end of the 2006 July War.

“I call on all Lebanese people to realize that your country and your society is facing an existential danger.”

However, the Hezbollah chief rejected calling on the international community for assistance as IS fighters continue to press their military campaign in Syria and Iraq, where they have routed government forces and taken over large swathes of the country.

“Christians of Lebanon: If any of you think that any of you mean anything to the US or the West, you are wrong. Are you really waiting for the US and the international community?”

Nasrallah warned that Western states don’t “care about Christians, Kurds, Yazidis or Arabs,” adding that the US started its airstrikes against the IS in Iraq only after the jihadist group’s fighters reached the outskirts of the Kurdish city of Arbil.

Instead, the Hezbollah chief called for the Lebanese people to support their country’s army, which fought a five-day campaign against Islamist jihadists in the border town of Arsal earlier in July.

“Put all political preferences aside, look for all elements of force and gather them. Those elements are the LAF and security forces.”

Nasrallah added that his party was not responsible for securing Lebanon from jihadist threats, saying the responsibility belongs to the state and the army and security forces.

However, he argued that his party’s military campaign on behalf of the Bashar al-Assad regime in Syria was serving to protect Lebanon.

“If Hezbollah withdraws from Syria, do you really think that IS will not want to come to Lebanon?”

Nasrallah questioned if a Hezbollah withdrawal from Syria border regions “would benefit Lebanon.”

Shiite-populated areas in Lebanon have been the target of a series of terror attacks since Nasrallah announced in May 2013 that his Shiite party was fighting on behalf of the regime of Bashar al-Assad in the Syrian civil war.

Lebanese Armed Forces and other security forces have since attempted to uncover terror networks in Lebanon, and have been able to dismantle a number of explosives-rigged cars coming from Syria.

USEK students protest over tuition hike

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Students at the Holy Spirit University of Kaslik (USEK) protested on the street facing their campus on Monday against a decision made by their university to increase tuition fees.

The new policy increases the price of one credit by $60, which calculates to a 21% overall tuition increase. Students will be expected to pay an extra $2,000 per year.

“We have been surprised, during the peak of the economic crisis in Lebanon, by this unjust decision by the university administration,” a statement released by

Protests continued through the night outside the USEK Kaslik campus.
Protests continued through the night outside the USEK Kaslik campus.

the students on Saturday said.

Students from all faculties organized and called for the 10 a.m. demonstration, demanding the immediate elimination of the “unfair” decision by the administration.

They held a sit-in closing the road, and refused to dissolve the protest until they received a promise by the USEK administration to reconsider its controversial decision, media reports said.

Students are upset because they are barely able to afford current tuition fees, even when they work two or three jobs in some cases, they say. They also complain of special privileges of relatives to Maronite Catholic priests, who receive discounted rates to attend USEK.

In an interview with LBCI, one student said that Christians are constantly encouraged to preserve their land, but this decision will “encourage us to do the opposite and sell land to pay for tuition.”

The Holy Spirit University of Kaslik (USEK) is a private Catholic higher education institution, which was established by the Lebanese Maronite Order (LMO) in 1961.

You can help USEK students get their message to University administrators by signing the petition at this link.

LBCI Report:

MTV Lebanon Report:

Lebanese architect becomes first female dean at Columbia University

(NEW YORK, NY) — Lebanese architect Amale Andraos was appointed as the new dean of the Graduate School of Architecture, Preservation, and Planning at Columbia University in New York City.

Andraos, who was born in Beirut and has practiced in Montrael, Paris, and Rotterdam, is the first woman to become a dean at the school, according to a statement released by the university on Tuesday.amale-andraos-dan-wood

Before joining Columbia University in 2011, Andraos, who is 41, taught at Princeton, Harvard, and the University of Pennsylvania in the United States, and at the American University of Beirut in Lebanon.

She also operates the New York design firm WorkAC with her husband, Dan Wood, who she met in Dutch City. They have designed the crystalline Diane von Furstenberg headquarters as well as the Children’s Museum of the Arts in New York and a new library in Kew Gardens, Queens.

“The university is very focused on global questions and global issues, and Amale’s background sort of bespeaks globalization,” Lee Bollinger, the university president, said in an interview. “It’s not a theory or buzz word, it’s who she is, and that’s very important.”

Andraos, who succeeds Mark Wigley, is said to be an accidental dean of sorts. She had been selected to the search committee for a new dean but was not on the short list of candidates.

After watching her work on the committee, Mr. Bollinger said, “we realized our next dean was sitting right in front of us.”

United States to deliver aid to Lebanese army

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — The United States will deliver aid to the Lebanese Army, said Ambassador David Hale on Thursday.

ambassador-david-hale“The United States has always stood in support of Lebanon’s security and stability. We agree with Lebanon’s leaders that the state, through the LAF, must be capable of safeguarding Lebanon from the potential acts of terror and violence these groups bring,” Hale said.

Hale said the coming deliveries would include weapons and ammunition.

“U.S. military assistance will begin arriving in the next few weeks and will continue in the months to follow. This assistance will enhance the Lebanese Army’s ability to secure Lebanon’s borders, protect Lebanon’s people and fight extremist groups.”

Hale said the U.S. had donated $1 billion to the Lebanese Army since 2006.

“We continue to stand with Lebanon and the Lebanese Army and Internal Security Forces as they protect Lebanon from the spillover of violence from Syria,” he said.

Hale’s pledge comes two days after United Kingdom Ambassador Tom Fletcher met with Salam and Army General Jean Kahwaji to make a similar commitment.

Lebanon has faced the worst spillover from the Syrian civil war yet, which killed at least 19 soldiers, 60 militants, and more than 15 civilians.

Berri, Hezbollah against Parliament extension

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — Lebanese speaker Nabih Berri expressed opposition against a second extension of Parliament’s term, according to MPs who visited him berri-lawmakersWednesday, saying his opposition is “firm.”

“I refuse to extend Parliament’s term again, and I am not maneuvering as some may think. The extended chamber proved to be ineffective,” Berri was quoted as saying. “What is the use of extending the life of a Parliament that does not legislate, does not assume its role fully?”

Berri stressed that electing a new president was his main priority, a matter which he said former Prime Minister Saad Hariri and him agreed on at their last encounter.

Hezbollah MPs who visited Berri at his residence in Ain al-Tineh said the party had not made a final decision regarding the parliament’s fate, saying, however, that there is a tendency to support Berri’s stance.

The Lebanese Constitution requires the general election to be held by November 16, 2014.

The elections, originally set for June 2013, were delayed by Parliament last May. MPs cited the security situation as the cause of the delay, but the inability of rival parties to agree on a new election law also made holding the election impossible.

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