Tag: Lebanon

  • Qatar calls for conflict to settle migration issues

    Qatar calls for conflict to settle migration issues

    Qatar says the best way to resolve the issues of refugees and migration is to eliminate the major causes that forced those to leave their home countries, Qatar news agency( QNA ) reported on Friday.

    Qatar’s Ambassador to Lebanon, Ali Al-Marri, stated this in Doha in his speech at the opening session of the regional consultative meeting on international migration.

    Al-Marri said that factors responsible for migration are conflicts, marginalisation, economic and social weaknesses as well as instability.

    He said that Qatar would continue to support the efforts made by the UN Economic and Social Commission for West Asia ( ESCWA ) and others to reach global consensus on the issue of refugees for the benefit of the international community.

    Others are the Arab League and International Organisation for Migration ( IOM ).

    Eighteen Arab countries make up ESCWA and it is aimed at promoting economic and social development in western Asia through regional and sub-regional cooperation and integration.

    NAN

  • UN: Netanyahu bows hot as secretary-general makes first regional trip

    UN: Netanyahu bows hot as secretary-general makes first regional trip

    Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, issued a scathing criticism of the UN on Monday as the Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, began his first visit to the country.

    At the opening remarks of Netanyahu’s meeting with the UN chief, the prime minister accused the UN of failing to prevent arms shipments to the Shiite militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon.

    He added, that Iran is seeking to open a front against Israel on the Lebanese and Syrian borders.

    “[Iran] is also building sites to produce precision-guided missiles towards that end in both Syria and in Lebanon.

    “This is something Israel cannot accept. This is something the UN should not accept,” Netanyahu said, without offering specifics.

    Iran and Hezbollah are fighting alongside Syrian President ‘s government in the Syrian civil war, which has killed hundreds of thousands.

    The prime minister added that he believes the UN has an “absurd obsession” with his country.

  • Al-Qaeda frees 16 Lebanese soldiers in swap deal

    Al-Qaeda frees 16 Lebanese soldiers in swap deal

    The al-Qaeda branch in Syria has freed 16 Lebanese soldiers who were abducted in August 2014, in a swap deal, a Lebanese security source close to the negotiations said.

    “The soldiers have been set free in a swap deal during which the Lebanese government handed over 13 prisoners, including five women, who have links with al-Nusra in return for the release of the 16 soldiers,” the source said.

    The soldiers were taken captive last year during fighting between militants from al-Qaeda affiliate al-Nusra Front and Islamic State in the eastern Lebanese town of Arsal, located on the border with Syria.

    The servicemen were released near the Lebanese-Syrian border.

    A Qatari negotiator was involved in securing the swap deal-the Lebanese source said that nine soldiers believed to be held by Islamic State were not included in the exchange.

    Some 15 trucks loaded with food supplies entered the outskirts of Arsal, where al-Nusra has bases, as part of the agreement.

    Negotiations to free the Lebanese soldiers suffered a setback on Sunday when al-Nusra escalated its demands.

    Before the exchange took place, the body of Lebanese soldier Mohammed Hammiyeh had been handed over marking the first phase of the deal.

    Hammiyeh, a Shiite Muslim, was among four soldiers executed in captivity

     

  • CoolFM, Heritage Bank sponsor students to film festival in Lebanon

    CoolFM, Heritage Bank sponsor students to film festival in Lebanon

    CoolFM and CoolTV in collaboration with Heritage Bank have concluded plans to sponsor students to the 8th edition of the Notre Dame University International Student Film Festival, holding at Notre Dame University, in Lebanon from November 15-22, 2015.

    At a press conference to unveil the lucky winners, the Group Managing Director of AIM Group, Amin Mousali, said the sponsorship is one among the company’s corporate social responsibility platform to expose students to innovations in filmmaking worldwide.

    Waxing philosophical, he said a country cannot advance unless it develops its human resources, hence the company’s commitment towards grooming new talents in the film industry for the next generation.

    Mousali who recalled that the company began sponsoring students to the film festival since 2012, said the lucky winners to this year’s event have the opportunity of visiting historical sites, like Canaanland in Lebanon, where Jesus Christ preached the gospel.

    Besides, he said the participants stand a chance to learn about the culture and mores of the host country amongst others.

    On the set criteria for selection of winners, Mousali said the competition is open to every student across all disciplines as long as they can write scripts.

    The competition, he said, is a talent hunt of some sorts aimed at tasking the creative ingenuity of the students.

    While justifying the sponsorship of the programme by Heritage Bank, Tobe Nnadozie, Divisional Head, Innovation and Products, said the company has a strong affinity with the arts, hence it is always willing to support activities around the sector.

    “Heritage Bank is a story itself which we’re writing. It’s a very fantastic story,” he began.

    Expatiating, Nnadozie said:”Our lead-in as a bank is about helping people to create, to preserve and to transfer wealth across generations. And one thing that has transcended across various generations is art. Most other things time out or burn out. But art has remained there and when I talk about art, it’s the whole embodiment of arts such as culture, language, songs, drama and many other things.”

    Speaking earlier, past winners, including Damilola Kolajolu, Seun Adebanjo and Nneka Chile recalled with nostalgia their experiences at the previous editions of the festival, which they described as a life transforming experience and one they would hold dear for life.

    This year’s winners who were selected out of over 600 entries, namely Chima Martins Agara of Imo State University, Senator Ewah George of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria and Ayodeji Donaldlove Ogunleye of National Films Institute, Jos, were upbeat about their trip to Lebanon.

    Agara’s entry titled: ‘Honey Money Pot’  ‘Dead Alive’ by Ogunleye and ‘My name is Amina’ by George have been produced into a film by Emem Isong and Aim Groups’ Production Company, World Entertainment Television Limited (WETV).

    Speaking separately, Ogunleye and Agara expressed thanks to the CoolFM management as well as the Heritage Bank for giving them the opportunity to explore the world of filmmaking, stressing that they would make both companies and the nation proud.

  • CoolFM, Heritage Bank sponsor students to film festival in Lebanon

    CoolFM and CoolTV in collaboration with Heritage Bank have concluded plans to sponsor students to the 8th edition of the Notre Dame University International Student Film Festival, holding at Notre Dame University, in Lebanon from November 15-22, 2015.

    At a press conference to unveil the lucky winners, the Group Managing Director of AIM Group, Amin Mousali, said the sponsorship is one among the company’s corporate social responsibility platform to expose students to innovations in filmmaking worldwide.

    Waxing philosophical, he said a country cannot advance unless it develops its human resources, hence the company’s commitment towards grooming new talents in the film industry for the next generation.

    Mousali who recalled that the company began sponsoring students to the film festival since 2012, said the lucky winners to this year’s event have the opportunity of visiting historical sites, like Canaanland in Lebanon, where Jesus Christ preached the gospel.

    Besides, he said the participants stand a chance to learn about the culture and mores of the host country amongst others.

    On the set criteria for selection of winners, Mousali said the competition is open to every student across all disciplines as long as they can write scripts.

    The competition, he said, is a talent hunt of some sorts aimed at tasking the creative ingenuity of the students.

    While justifying the sponsorship of the programme by Heritage Bank, Tobe Nnadozie, Divisional Head, Innovation and Products, said the company has a strong affinity with the arts, hence it is always willing to support activities around the sector.

    “Heritage Bank is a story itself which we’re writing. It’s a very fantastic story,” he began.

    Expatiating, Nnadozie said:”Our lead-in as a bank is about helping people to create, to preserve and to transfer wealth across generations. And one thing that has transcended across various generations is art. Most other things time out or burn out. But art has remained there and when I talk about art, it’s the whole embodiment of arts such as culture, language, songs, drama and many other things.”

    Speaking earlier, past winners, including Damilola Kolajolu, Seun Adebanjo and Nneka Chile recalled with nostalgia their experiences at the previous editions of the festival, which they described as a life transforming experience and one they would hold dear for life.

    This year’s winners who were selected out of over 600 entries, namely Chima Martins Agara of Imo State University, Senator Ewah George of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria and Ayodeji Donaldlove Ogunleye of National Films Institute, Jos, were upbeat about their trip to Lebanon.

    Agara’s entry titled: ‘Honey Money Pot’  ‘Dead Alive’ by Ogunleye and ‘My name is Amina’ by George have been produced into a film by Emem Isong and Aim Groups’ Production Company, World Entertainment Television Limited (WETV).

    Speaking separately, Ogunleye and Agara expressed thanks to the CoolFM management as well as the Heritage Bank for giving them the opportunity to explore the world of filmmaking, stressing that they would make both companies and the nation proud.

  • Syria Rebels free kidnapped nuns

    A GROUP of Greek Orthodox nuns held for three months by rebels in Syria after being taken from their convent in Maaloula have arrived back in Damascus.

    The nuns were brought to the Lebanese border town of Arsal early yesterday where they were handed over to Lebanese officials and then driven to Syria.

    They said they were tired, but that they had been mostly well treated.

    They were freed as part of a prisoner exchange involving some 150 women and children held by the Syrian government.

    The deal was negotiated by officials from Qatar and Lebanon.

    The release of the nuns took several hours more than expected, and at one point the deal appeared on the verge of collapse.

    General Abbas Ibrahim, the director of Lebanon’s General Security agency who played a key role in mediating the deal, said the kidnappers tried to secure better terms at the last minute.

    He said he ordered the officers in charge of receiving the nuns to walk away when the captors demanded more prisoners than the agreed 150 be set free.

    “I knew they’d call back,” he told journalists gathered in Jdeidet Yaboos.

    The nuns and their attendants, exhausted but apparently well after their ordeal, were brought through a rebel border crossing to Arsal, a town the north-eastern Bekaa Valley, early yesterday.

     

    They were then quickly taken to the nearby official border point and handed over to the Syrian authorities.

     

    Damascus Governor Hafez Makhlouf was among the officials who greeted the nuns before they were driven to the Greek Orthodox patriarchate.

     

    It is believed they were held by the al-Nusra Front, a jihadist rebel group affiliated to al-Qaeda.

     

    Mother Pelagia Sayyaf, head of the Mar Takla monastery in Maaloula, said the nuns had been treated well.

     

    “God did not leave us,” she told reporters. “The [al-Nusra] Front was good to us… but we took off our crosses because we were in the wrong place to wear them.”

     

    After their capture in Maaloula in December, they were reported to have been moved to Yabroud, a rebel-held town near Lebanon’s border that is currently the focus of a major campaign by the Syrian army and fighters from the Lebanese Shia Islamist movement, Hezbollah.

  • Israeli jets bomb Lebanon target

    Israeli jets have bombed a target south of Beirut a day after rockets were fired from Lebanon into Israel, BBC reports.

    They targeted a “terror site” near the coastal town of Naameh, between Beirut and Sidon, the Israeli military said.

    The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command (PFLP-GC) said one of its bases had been hit.

    But the group denied any involvement in Thursday’s rocket attack into Israel. Neither incident caused casualties or much damage.

    The Israeli military, in a statement, said its air force “targeted a terror site located between Beirut and Sidon in response to a barrage of four rockets launched at northern Israel yesterday.”

     

     

  • EU to discuss Hezbollah militant ban

    European Union foreign ministers are due to meet to discuss calls to list the military wing of Lebanese militant group Hezbollah as a terrorist organisation.

    The move requires the agreement of all the EU’s 28 member states.

    If they agree, it will become illegal for Hezbollah sympathisers in Europe to send the group money or for European diplomats to meet its militant staff.

    The BBC says the EU is moving closer to a decision, but some members are unenthusiastic.

    They argue that it would be difficult to distinguish fully between the group’s military and political wings, and that it could further destabilise the situation in Lebanon.

    Hezbollah has a powerful political organisation. It has been part of Lebanese governments.

    EU officials are reportedly proposing a compromise to satisfy more sceptical members – a statement that the bloc “should continue dialogue with all political parties in Lebanon.”

    Meanwhile the Lebanese government on Friday urged Brussels not to move against Hezbollah, describing the militant group as an “essential component of Lebanese society.”

     

  • New clashes break out in Lebanon

    New clashes break out in Lebanon

    Clashes have broken out overnight in several areas of Lebanon following the funeral of the senior intelligence official, Wissam al-Hassan.

    The most serious confrontations were in the northern city of Tripoli, where at least three people were killed, BBC reports.

    In Beirut, gunmen exchanged fire and police used tear gas to disperse crowds outside the prime minister’s office.

    Gen. Hassan and at least two other people were killed in a car bomb attack in the capital on Friday.

    The head of the intelligence branch of the Internal Security Forces had been an outspoken critic of the government of Bashar al-Assad in neighbouring Syria and its allies in Lebanon, and Lebanese opposition figures have blamed Damascus for the attack.

    They have called on Prime Minister Najib Mikati to resign.

    He offered to do so on Saturday but President Michel Suleiman asked him to stay on in the national interest.

    Thousands of people attended Gen. Hassan’s state funeral in Beirut on Sunday, which rapidly became a political rally against both Mr. Mikati and Syria.

    Addressing the funeral, former Prime Minister Fouad al-Siniora, a prominent member of the Western-backed 14 March opposition alliance, blamed the government for his death, and said it must stand down, insisting: “No dialogue over the blood of our martyrs.”