U.S. denies making deal to end presidential void

BEIRUT: The U.S. Embassy in Lebanon Saturday denied that ambassador David Hale tried to strike a deal with Free Patriotic Movement MP Michel Aoun to end the presidential stalemate, saying it was up for the Lebanese to choose their own president.

“Rumors that … [Ambassador Hale] made proposals or deals for the #Lebanese presidency are false,” the embassy said on its Twitter feed.

“The #US has not and will not propose candidates for the #Lebanese presidency,” it added.

Political sources told The Daily Star Friday that Hale proposed a deal to Aoun in which MP Robert Ghanem or Telecoms Minister Boutros Harb would run for the presidency instead of Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea.

As part of the deal, Aoun’s son-in-law, Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, would be given the Batroun parliamentary seat uncontested and Brig. Shamel Roukoz, his other son-in-law, would be made Army commander.

Aoun’s share of seats in the Cabinet would also be increased, the sources said, adding that the former Army general rejected the proposal.

The U.S. Embassy said that it was for the Lebanese to choose their own president, urging they do so “as soon as possible.”

Lebanon plunged into a presidential vacuum on May 25 after former President Michel Sleiman’s term ended without a successor, with no candidate able to garner needed majority to win the election.

 

Source: The Daily Star

Original Article

Lebanon asks refugees to refrain from entering Syria

SYRIA-CONFLICT

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s Interior Ministry Saturday asked Syrian refugees to refrain from entering Syria starting June 1 or risk losing their refugee status. The new decision comes as part of the government’s measures to organize the overwhelming presence of refugees in the country.

“In the framework of organizing the entry and exit of Syrians in Lebanon, all Syrian refugees registered with the UNHCR are asked to refrain from entering Syria starting June 1, 2014, or else they might be stripped of their refugee status,” the ministry said in a statement.

“The Interior Ministry hopes municipalities commit to this policy for the safety of refugees in Lebanon,” it added.

It also said that this new measure was aimed at preserving security in Lebanon as well as the relationship between “Syrian refugees and Lebanese citizens in host communities in order to avoid tensions.”

The ministry asked U.N. agencies and other international refugee organizations to take this matter seriously and inform Syrians of the new policy.

Lebanon has been working on a mechanism to govern the presence of Syrian refugees in Lebanon particularly that many enter under a refugee status in order to benefit from international aid.

The number of Syrian refugees fleeing into Lebanon has skyrocketed in the past year with more than one million registered refugees. Thousands of Palestinian refugees from Syria have also sought refuge in Lebanon as the war rages over the border.

 

Source: The Daily Star

Original Article

Aoun wants either Hariri’s support or Parliament elections

Free Patriotic Movement leader MP Michel Aoun will press for holding parliamentary elections on schedule if former Prime Minister Saad Hariri does not support his candidacy for the presidency, or if a new president is not elected before September, FPM parliamentary sources told The Daily Star.

“If a new president is not elected before September, Gen. Aoun will not accept under any circumstances the extension of Parliament’s mandate,” the sources said.

They added that Aoun, the March 8 alliance’s undeclared candidate for the presidency, insisted that the government of Prime Minister Tammam Salam under the laws in force should call for holding parliamentary elections scheduled in November either on the basis of a new electoral law or under the modified 1960 rules that were agreed as part of the 2008 Doha Accord.

Lawmakers last year extended Parliament’s mandate by 17 months after failing to endorse a new electoral law.

Aoun, the head of the parliamentary Change and Reform bloc, will not wait for a response from Hariri regarding the Future Movement’s support for him as a consensus candidate for the presidency longer than the legal deadline under which the government would be obliged to call for parliamentary elections in September, the sources said.

Aoun has been in contact with Hariri through his son-in-law Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil over the Future Movement’s possible support for the FPM leader as a consensus presidential candidate, the sources said. Aoun had debated the possibility of parliamentary elections with his allies but it was not clear whether it was also discussed with Hariri by way of the ongoing negotiations between the two sides, the sources added.

Aoun, according to the sources, would seek to convince all influential political parties in the country of the need to conduct elections on time. The MP feels a fresh extension of Parliament’s mandate would be difficult to pass, especially as some parliamentary blocs, such as the Kataeb Party, which had endorsed the previous extension, now insist that the forthcoming parliamentary polls be held as scheduled in November.

It was noteworthy that Aoun’s suggestion that new parliamentary elections be held if a new president is not elected before September has been ignored by all political parties. Neither Aoun’s March 8 allies, nor the March 14 parties have commented on this proposal.

Political sources said the rival parties’ indifference toward Aoun’s proposal meant that the idea of holding parliamentary elections and thus for a newly elected Parliament to pick a successor to former President Michel Sleiman was not yet ripe.

In order for Aoun’s proposal to see the light of day, it must be supported in the first place by the Future Movement and the March 14 parties, in addition to the FPM leader’s March 8 allies, but this does not seem to be within reach at present, the sources said.

They added that if Aoun succeeded in persuading all Christian parties of the need to hold parliamentary elections – which is deemed impossible for now – it would be difficult for the government and other parliamentary blocs to disregard the unanimity of Christians who have complained of a vacancy in the country’s top Christian post.

A number of FPM lawmakers see Aoun as fighting his last political battle and believe he will not hesitate to use all legal and constitutional political weapons possible in order to win the struggle that he thinks is his last chance to reach the presidency.

By insisting that he does not have a plan B if Hariri does not endorse him as a consensus candidate for the presidency, Aoun’s proposal for holding parliamentary elections might further complicate matters at all levels, especially if other parliamentary blocs reach a consensus on the renewal of Parliament’s mandate and allowing Baabda Palace to remain unoccupied, FPM lawmakers said.

Source: The Daily Star

Original Article

Report: Too many fat boys in Lebanon

(BEIRUT, LEBANON) — After ranking highly on a string of top 10 lists, Lebanon can now add being one of the fattest countries for young boys to its list of achievements.

The percentage of boys under twenty who are obese in Lebanon range between 13 to 19.1 percent, placing the Mediterranean nation at fifth in the world, tied with the Caribbean nation The Bahamas. The findings are according to a recently released global analysis on country-by-country obesity funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

“This is largely due to low physical activity,” said Stephanie Nehme, a dietitian at the So7i W Sari3 clinic in Ashrafieh.

Nehme said that the changing of lifestyle and exchanging homemade food for fastfood was among several factors that led to an increase to obesity in youngsters.

“They really depend on their parents or their maid at home and they are lazy.”

Young adults should drink and smoke less, Nehme recommended. “There also needs to be a healthy environment at home.”

Lebanon also ranked second in the region with obese boys under the age of twenty, only beaten by the oil-rich nation of Qatar and is tied for 8th in the world, with Slovenia, for the most “overweight and obese” boys under the age of twenty.

Global obesity has been described as a global pandemic, according to the analysis, with 30 percent of the world, or 2 billion people, now overweight. The levels of obesity are alarming considering the health effects caused by obesity.

“It’s pretty grim,” Christopher Murray of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington, who led the study, told AP. More than 1,700 studies covering 188 countries were monitored by Murray and his colleagues from 1980 to 2013. “When we realized that not a single country has had a significant decline in obesity, that tells you how hard a challenge this is.”

Murray said scientists have found a correlation between obesity and diabetes and that weight-linked cancers, like pancreatic cancer, are also on the rise.

The analysis’ introduction reads: “In 2010, overweight and obesity were estimated to cause 3.4 million deaths, 4% of years of life lost, and 4% of disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) worldwide.”

Murray said increase in income was strongly linked to obesity and that as the standard of living around the world improves, the numbers on weight-scales have gotten larger.

An average of 71.1 percent of Lebanese men over 20 are “overweight or obese” while 26.3 are just obese, according to the analysis.

Lebanese girls, for their part look to be doing slightly better. According to the study, 29.8 percent of Lebanese girls under 20 are “overweight or obese” while 12.5 are just obese and 62.3 percent of Lebanese women over 20 are “overweight or obese” with just 29.3 percent being obese.

According to dietician Nehme, Lebanon has a lot of “temptations” and needs to focus more on physical education. She was also adamant that school canteens should change their menus and offer “not diet but healthier choices.”

“When in school kids should put a priority on sports not only studies,” Nehme said. “Nutrition classes should also be incorporated into the [school] curriculum.”


Source: The Daily Star

Original Story

Kerry urges speedy presidential election in Lebanon

John Kerry FNL

BEIRUT: U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry Thursday stressed the importance of rapidly electing a new Lebanese president, while praising former President Michel Sleiman for his work throughout his six-year term.

According to Sleiman’s office, Kerry phoned the former president and congratulated him on his efforts to protect Lebanon’s sovereignty and stability and preserve national unity despite neighboring turmoil ad violence.

Kerry reiterated his country’s support for Lebanon and the Baabda Declaration, which the U.S. official said represented a cornerstone for future stability.

The declaration, Sleiman’s most renowned accomplishment, was signed by political leaders in 2012 to distance Lebanon from regional conflicts particularly the war in Syria.

Kerry also emphasized the importance of a speedy election and said his country would continue cooperation with Lebanese officials and constitutional institutions.

Sleiman thanked the secretary of state for the phone call, and took the opportunity to draw his attention to the burden of the Syrian refugees on Lebanon and the difficulty of tackling the crisis with minimal aid.

Sleiman left Baabda Palace last week without a successor as Lebanese politicians remain at deadlocked over who to elect as a new head of state.

With no candidate currently capable of winning the needed majority and a continuing lack of a consensus on a nominee, Lebanon’s presidential vacuum is expected to linger for a while.

 

Source: The Daily Star

US to step up efforts to support Lebanon

WEST POINT: President Barack Obama said Wednesday his country would step up efforts to support Syria’s neighbors including Lebanon.

During a speech at West Point, Obama defended his decision to keep the U.S. military out of the Syrian conflict but said he would seek to increase support for the Syrian opposition, as well as neighboring countries including Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey and Iraq that have faced an influx of refugees and fear the spread of terrorism.


Source: The Daily Star

Geagea challenges Aoun: Run for president

Strida Geagea, Samir Geagea

BEIRUT: Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea challenged Wednesday his Christian rival MP Michel Aoun to run against him in the next presidential election session as he criticized recent comments on the poll from Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah.

“Aoun does not have 65 votes among lawmakers, if he really has such number, let him go to the next session and get elected president,” Geagea said during a press conference.

“And if I am a candidate that contradicts the National Pact, this would show in the president election session,” Geagea said. “If I am really a candidate who contradicts the National Pact as Aoun claims, he should be happy because he would be elected president naturally.”

Dating back to 1943, the National Pact is an unwritten agreement that laid the foundation of Lebanon as a multi-confessional state, and has governed the political dynamics of the country to this day.

Geagea said that Aoun should not use the alibi of waiting for the Future Movement’s support to join the presidential race.

“[Former Prime Minister] Saad Hariri declared many times that there is no veto on any of the candidates and that he would congratulate whoever wins,” he said.

The LF leader also criticized Nasrallah’s recent comments that the March 14 coalition was seeking the extension of former President Michel Sleiman’s mandate.

“On what basis is Nasrallah claiming we did not want the election and that we wanted to extend Sleiman’s term? Our group proposed a presidential candidate and attended all Parliament sessions to vote for a new head of state, how can we be seeking the extension in this way?” he asked.

Geagea said “it is the March 8 forces that obstructed the election by boycotting the parliamentary session to vote for a president.”

Lebanon plunged into a presidential vacuum Sunday with the end of President Michel Sleiman’s six-year term and no candidate capable of garnering the required majority to win.

The LF leader also said that he did not run as a “provocative” presidential candidate.

“I am a Maronite Lebanese and I have the political and legal right to run for president; my program is clear and it is true that my opinions do not match the views of Hezbollah but this does not mean I am running for the election to provoke or challenge anyone,” he said.

Geagea also slammed the Syrian presidential vote for expats being held Wednesday in Lebanon as a “farce” and said the country lacked the required conditions for an election.

“The Syrian election does not have the needed conditions and requirements to be considered as an election, and the majority of the Arab and international community do not recognize this election,” he said.

“The presence of a million Syrian refugees in Lebanon is the biggest evidence that the election lacks the right conditions,” he said. “What is happening today is not an election, but a demonstration in support for the Syrian regime.”

Thousands of Syrian expats in Lebanon rallied to their country’s embassy in Yarze to cast their ballots for the election in which President Bashar Assad is expected to win.

Source: The Daily Star

Berri takes a break, flies to Italy

BEIRUT: Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri left Lebanon Wednesday on a private visit to Italy, the Amal Movement’s NBN TV station said.

NBN gave no other details, and Berri’s office said it was unaware of his trip.

Berri apparently has no major commitments after a voting session last week failed to elect a new Lebanon president and after lawmakers botched another attempt Tuesday to vote on a controversial pay hike draft law.

Lebanon is experiencing a void in the presidency, after former President Michel Sleiman’s term expired Sunday, with all attempts to elect a successor failing.

Berri adjourned the election session to June 9 and has rescheduled the meeting to discuss the modified salary scale for June 10.

Source: The Daily Star

In rare Israel visit, Lebanese church head hears exiled Christians

(Reuters) – A Lebanese church leader who defied warnings from the powerful Shi’ite Muslim Hezbollah movement by accompanying the Pope on a Holy Land visit pledged on Wednesday to help dispossessed Christians in Israel.

Two Catholic communities in Israel are seeking Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rai’s intervention: Arabs expelled from their Galilee village by Israeli forces during the 1948 war of Israel’s founding and former members of a pro-Israeli Lebanese militia now living in the Jewish state.

Israel and Lebanon are in a formal state of war, and Hezbollah had warned Rai of “negative repercussions” if he went ahead with his planned trip. The patriarch remained in Israel after Pope Francis’s pilgrimage ended on Monday.

Having visiting Tel Aviv’s mainly Arab district of Jaffa on Monday, Rai continued on Wednesday to Birim, a northern village whose Maronite Christian residents were displaced 66 years ago.

Israel razed the village in 1953, sparing only its church and bell tower, and many of its former residents and their descendants now live in other communities in the Galilee.

Birim villagers, who numbered more than 800 in 1948, and their descendants have campaigned to be allowed to return and rebuild, winning an Israeli high court ruling that has yet to be implemented by the state. Rai said his church would lobby on their behalf through the Vatican.

“We are with you, and want to help you as much as possible,” he said in a speech to an audience of several hundred, adding that he could not appeal to Israel as it is “an enemy country”.

FEAR OF RETURN

Rai was also due later on Wednesday to meet other Maronites in northern Israel, including members of the South Lebanon Army, a militia that was allied with Israel during its 22-year occupation of southern Lebanon.

Former SLA troops, who make up about a fifth of the 10,000-strong Maronite community in Israel, fled south across the Lebanese border when Israeli forces withdrew unilaterally from Lebanon in 2000.

Branded as traitors in Lebanon, the ex-SLA men and their relatives fear to return and want Rai to intercede on their behalf in Beirut.

“This is the first time that a senior Lebanese figure has come (to Israel), and he wants to listen to us,” Julie Abu a-Raj, a spokeswoman for the ex-SLA community, told Israel Radio.

She commended Rai for “making good on his religious duty to visit his flock and not succumbing to threats” – a reference to the disapproval of Hezbollah, an Iranian- and Syrian-backed Muslim militia which fought Israel and the SLA.

“We are an exiled community that was a political, historical and geographic victim of the wars of others in our country,” Abu a-Raj said.

“We want to tell the Lebanese government…to stop the trials and investigations against us, the only ones who are loyal to our identities.”

Maronites follow an Eastern rite of the Roman Catholic church. They number about 900,000 in Lebanon, a quarter of the population.

Presidential void affects security: Gemayel

BEIRUT: Kataeb Party leader Amine Gemayel said Wednesday that the presidential void could affect the security situation and the work of the state institutions, adding void should not prevail for long.

“The void in the presidency post could pose a threat to stability in the country,” Gemayel said after meeting a delegation from the Maronite League and the Maronite Council.

“Void in the presidency could also lead to void in the institutions, and we should respect the National Pact,” he said.

The National Pact is an unwritten agreement formed in 1943 that laid the foundation of Lebanon as a multi-confessional state and has governed the political dynamics of the country to this day.

Gemayel also said that the state of presidential void in the country should not linger and reiterated that Parliament could not legislate in light of a presidential void.

“We should not adapt to the current situation and the status of not having a president for the county,” he said.

“The Kataeb is holding on to its stance that Parliament becomes an electoral body and not a legislative one throughout the period of presidential void, as Article 75 of the Constitution stipulates.”

Source: The Daily Star

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