1

JaFaJ

‘Lebanese on the left, Syrians on the right’: rising tensions and breadline segregation

Army intelligence try to keep the peace outside bakeries short on subsidised loaves as food crisis fuels anti-Syrian rhetoric

People queue outside a closed bakery, waiting for it to open, in Chiyah, Lebanon. Reuters

Nada Homsi

Beirut
Jul 29, 2022 – MENA

The entrance to the Keyrouz bakery in the Beirut suburb of Hazmeyeh was guarded by members of Lebanon’s army intelligence ― an apparent attempt to prevent violence as long bread lines formed outside on Thursday.
In the morning heat, army intelligence created two long queues for Arabic bread, a staple that is increasingly hard to acquire: Lebanese nationals waited on the left, while Syrians and other foreigners waited on the right.
The queue for Lebanese citizens was moving faster.
Waddah al Dimashqi, a Syrian labourer in his mid 30s, said he did not mind the segregated queue.
“It’s fine. People from this area should get the priority,” he told The National. “It’s better this way, it avoids problems.”

But not everyone agreed. An older Lebanese man queuing for bread, who did not want to be identified, said the segregated lines were shameful.
“Now they’re checking people’s ID cards, aren’t people ashamed of themselves? Lebanese here and Syrians there, what kind of thinking is this? What era are we in?” he asked incredulously. “What will foreigners standing in line think of us?”

Lebanese family turns to farming to survive crises

While the segregated lines outside the Keyrouz bakery are not unique, others The National spoke to around the greater Beirut area said bakeries are still operating on a first-come-first-served basis.
“We don’t segregate our line,” a clerk at Wooden Bakery said. “Whoever wants bread gets bread, as long as it’s in stock.”
Lebanon’s caretaker Economy Minister Amin Salam announced the formation of a security committee last week that will be responsible for ensuring an equitable distribution of wheat and flour to bakeries and mills, while cracking down on black market trade.
But he said the line segregation at the Keyrouz bakery was not organised by this committee.
“Security forces are trying to keep people from causing problems,” he said.

Long queues outside a bakery in north Lebanon’s port city of Tripoli where people sometimes have to wait for hours for a bag of subsidised Arabic bread. AFP

Lebanon is suffering from a wheat shortage. Long lines for bread in front of bakeries and supermarkets have become a routine feature in the early mornings and evenings.
In some parts of the country, hundreds jostle outside bakeries as they try to buy a bundle of the subsidised but rationed bread before the stock runs out.
In the summer heat, tensions can flare in queues that could last for hours. Scuffles and fist-fights are not uncommon. In mid-July, a gunfight sparked by an argument over who was next in a queue at a bakery left two people wounded in Tripoli, north Lebanon.
The bread shortage stems from Lebanon’s protracted financial crisis, now in its fourth year.
As the crisis drags on, the cash-strapped nation’s treasury has been steadily depleted. A steep plunge in the local currency has unpegged it from the dollar, leaving the state struggling to subsidise wheat imports paid in dollars.
It is not just wheat ― as resources have run dry, the state has gradually rolled back subsidies on medicine, fuel and other necessities and prices have rocketed out of reach of many.
About 80 per cent of Lebanon’s population has slipped below the poverty line and the United Nations World Food Programme says half the population is now food insecure.
While assistance has been cut, the state is trying to keep subsidies on the wheat for Arabic bread in an effort to keep the essential product affordable to an increasingly impoverished population.

As bread supplies dwindle, tensions flare

November 1, 2019: Banks implement capital controls after shutting for two weeks. Reuters

Politicians in recent weeks have resorted to blaming the at least one million Syrian refugees hosted by Lebanon for the bread crisis.
Last month at a press conference, Mr Salam said that Lebanese were being left without bread because Syrians bought nearly 400,000 bundles of the subsidised loaves a day.
Mr Salam claimed that some Syrians were smuggling subsidised bread over the border to sell it for higher prices.
He also said that “some bakeries and merchants personally benefit from the subsidised wheat”, by selling bread on the black market at inflated prices.
Syrian refugees buying bread for themselves is not the problem, according to socio-economic researcher Cynthia Saghir, who works at The Policy Initiative, a Lebanese think tank.

“It’s not like subsidised bread is being handed out free,” she said. “Syrian refugees purchase bread just like anyone else in Lebanon.”
The underlying issue, she said, is that “subsidies are not enough ― they’re supposed to complement a social protection system which is meant to be in place for the economically vulnerable. In Lebanon, subsidies and fragmented poverty-targeting programmes are used instead of developing a coherent national social protection strategy”.
Ms Saghir said that the exploitation of subsidies on the black market is a natural consequence of rising poverty because there are no social protections in place to help those most in need.
On Tuesday, Lebanon’s parliament finally approved a long-awaited $150 million World Bank loan to finance wheat imports for the next six to nine months.
“We still have to fine tune the details of the loan before execution, and study the market to see how to execute,” Mr Salam said.

“In one month the programme should be ready.”
He maintained that subsidies would remain in place for the time being. But, he warned, prices may have to change in the near future.

But the news that stocks may soon improve has done little for people like Ghinwa Hamou, a housewife who lives in the Beirut suburb of Choueifat.
“We haven’t had any bread in the house for days,” she told The National. “Yesterday, honestly, we ate macaroni with tomato sauce because that one doesn’t require bread,” she said.
“But today I managed to snag a couple of loaves from my mom.”
Arabic bread is the most fundamental element in an array of Levantine dishes.
Eggs, hummus, labneh, cheese, olives ― all are eaten with Arabic bread. Roasted chicken ― Arabic bread. Sandwiches ― rolled with Arabic bread. A fattoush salad is garnished with fried Arabic bread.
Ms Hamou said buying the unsubsidised french loaves or Saj ― for example ― was not sustainable “[but] we should not have to wait in line for hours, risking our lives for bread”.

... continue reading.

‘Lebanese on the left, Syrians on the right’: rising tensions and breadline segregation Read More »

Lebanon more optimistic than ever over deal on Israel maritime border

US official leading negotiations is arriving in Beirut at the weekend

A UN peacekeeper wears a mask as he stands near UN vehicles in south Lebanon’s Naqoura city near the Lebanese-Israeli border. Reuters

The National

Jul 29, 2022

Lebanon is highly optimistic about reaching a deal with Israel to delineate the two countries’ shared maritime border under US mediation, Lebanese Foreign Minister Abdallah Bou Habib said on Friday.
“There has never been optimism to the extent that there is today,” Mr Bou Habib said.
US energy envoy Amos Hochstein, who has been mediating the indirect negotiations between Israel and Lebanon, will arrive in Beirut this weekend to continue talks with Lebanese officials.
Mr Hochstein last visited Lebanon in June, after tension over the maritime boundary escalated when Israel moved a vessel, operated by London-listed drilling company Energean, into the disputed Karish gasfield.
Israel says the gasfield in the Eastern Mediterranean, discovered a decade ago about 80 kilometres off the coast of Haifa, is part of its exclusive economic zone. Lebanon, however, says the field lies within disputed waters.
In the negotiations, Lebanon had initially demanded 860 square kilometres of territory in the disputed area. But the talks entered a stalemate last year when Beirut expanded its claim in the zone by about 1,400 square km to include part of Karish.
The negotiations had been on hold until Mr Hochstein returned last month. Lebanon is awaiting a response from Israel after relaying its position to the US official.
Further complicating the situation is Hezbollah, the Iran-backed political party and armed group, which has threatened to attack Israel if it continues with its plan to extract gas from Karish.
This month, Israel shot down three unarmed drones flown by Hezbollah that were heading towards Karish.
Lebanon is in dire need of more energy. An economic crisis that began in 2019 has plunged much of the country into poverty, with widespread shortages of bread, electricity, water, medicines and other essentials.

... continue reading.

Lebanon more optimistic than ever over deal on Israel maritime border Read More »

Coordination Framework calls on Kurds to reach an agreement over position of president

Rudaw

July 29, 2022

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – The Coordination Framework, the largest parliamentary bloc, on Friday called on the Kurdish main political parties to hold “more serious” talks in order to reach an agreement over the position of Iraqi president.

Iraq held parliamentary elections in October but the political parties have failed to elect a president and a prime minister for the country due to disagreements. The position of president has been held by Kurds for nearly two decades. Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK), which gained most votes of Kurds in the latest Iraqi elections, are racing over the largely-ceremonial position.
“The Coordination Framework is keen to complete the understandings between all political forces and renews the call for the Kurdish forces to hold more serious dialogues in order to reach an agreement on a candidate for the presidency,” read a statement from the pro-Iran Shiite coalition on Friday.
The PUK has fielded the incumbent president of Iraq, Barham Salih, to remain in his position while the KDP has nominated Kurdistan Regional Government’s (KRG) Interior Minister Reber Ahmed for the position. Despite a number of fresh talks between both ruling Kurdish parties, there does not seem to be any progress.
Shiite cleric and head of Iraq’s National Wisdom Movement Ammar al-Hakim too earlier this month called on the KDP and PUK to accelerate the process of agreeing on a presidential candidate.
The PUK has been allied with the Coordination Framework, which was the Sadrist Movement’s most formidable opponent, since the election results were announced.  However, the KDP allied with Sadrists and Sunnis but their alliance unofficially ended when Sadrist parliamentarians resigned recently following a call from their leader, Muqtada al-Sadr.

... continue reading.

Coordination Framework calls on Kurds to reach an agreement over position of president Read More »

Egyptian parliament approves law to protect sexual harassment victims

A general view of Egypt’s parliament in Cairo, Egypt. (Reuters/File)

CAIRO: A draft law to protect sexual harassment victims has been approved by Egypt’s parliament.
The draft law aims to protect them by not revealing their identities in crimes related to indecent assault, corruption of morals, exposure to others, and harassment.
Egyptian women can be reluctant to share their experience of sexual harassment for fear that they will be attacked if their statements are revealed.
The country has in recent months witnessed several celebrities complain on social media about verbal abuse.
Egyptian actress Rania Youssef shared photos of messages that she had received, threatening to prosecute those responsible for the messages. Last month actress Hana Zahid revealed that she had been harassed, and a writer accused the owner of a famous publishing house of harassing her.
The National Council for Women publishes statistics about women’s exposure to harassment. It received 283 complaints about harassment that took place during the Eid al-Adha holidays. Amal Abdel Moneim, director of the Complaints Office at the council, said the complaints were mostly about sexual harassment, blackmail and threats. The office received 149 complaints from girls who had been subjected to these acts and wished to submit reports.
Monemim said that social and legal support was provided to women making the complaints, that they were made aware of the legal measures to be taken, and that there was also the possibility of providing a volunteer lawyer free of charge to file the case according to the case.
Nihad Abu Al-Qumsan, head of the Egyptian Center for Women’s Rights, said the draft law was a positive step in the face of harassment.
“The law will be an encouraging and motivating factor for girls who are subjected to harassment and are too afraid of having their private information leaked to file reports against harassers,” Abu Al-Qumsan said in a press statement.
The draft law authorized the investigating judge not to provide the victim’s information, stressing there was a need for a sub-file with the victim’s complete data to be presented to the court, the accused and the defence upon request. But this aspect was rejected by the parliament speaker as it had a touch of unconstitutionality.
Ali Abdel-Aal, house of representative speaker, suggested amending the text to read: “It is not permissible for the arrest warrant or investigating authorities to disclose the victim’s information in the crimes of indecent assault, corruption of morals, exposure to others and harassment contained in the Penal Code and Child Law, except to those concerned.”
According to Abdel-Aal’s proposal, the concerned parties are the accused, the victim, and their lawyers.
“We do not need a sub-file,” he said.

... continue reading.

Egyptian parliament approves law to protect sexual harassment victims Read More »

Armenian official: No student should be denied, due to tuition fees, opportunity to receive higher education

14:48, 29.07.2022
Region:Armenia

It is very important for the government of Armenia that no student who demonstrates high progress and proper behavior is deprived of the opportunity to receive professional and higher education because of tuition fees. Deputy Prime Minister Hambardzum Matevosyan wrote this on Facebook, noting that this is one of the cornerstone approaches of the State Program for Development of Education until 2030, approved at Thursday’s Cabinet session of the government—but which still needs to be debated on and adopted by the National Assembly.
“On the other hand, pursuing balanced territorial development, we aim to make educational services affordable to every citizen of Armenia—in his own place of residence.
“Also, I underscore that in the context of international trends in education transformation, the Program sets a task that Armenia will have an internationally competitive education system in 2030,” Matevosyan added, in particular.

... continue reading.

Armenian official: No student should be denied, due to tuition fees, opportunity to receive higher education Read More »

Khamenei’s Latest Antisemitic Twitter Rant Prompts US Special Envoy to Call for Ban

JULY 29, 2022

IRANWIRE

On Thursday, 28 July, the US Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemitism, Deborah Lipstadt, protested against an antisemitic tweet published on the Twitter account of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s Supreme Leader, and demanded that such messages stop.
Khamenei had called the “Western powers” a “mafia” with “Zionist merchants” at the top who give orders to elected politicians. The United States is their “showcase,” he added.
 

Calls for Khamenei’s Twitter account to be shut down followed his statement. But in response, later on Thursday, his website said that Khamenei’s statement was part of a letter to be published called “The Truth of the West.”
“We denounce this continued, egregious antisemitism,” Lipstadt said. “This rhetoric is unacceptable – not to mention dangerous – especially from a head of state. It must cease.”
 

Repeating the myth that the wealth of the world is in the hands of Jewish people and that, through this wealth, they control the political and economic affairs of the world, is an example of antisemitism. Khamenei’s tweet sparked a fresh debate of antisemitism among Iran’s ruling establishment – which has considerable precedent.
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, when he was Iran’s president from 2005 to 2013, cast doubts on the reality of the Holocaust and the killing of millions of Jews by the Nazis during the Second World War. He and commanders of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corp also called for Israel to be erased from the map. Khamenei himself has has repeatedly talked about “the non-existence of Israel in the next 25 years.”
Khamenei’s use of Twitter to spread antisemitic messages occurs even as ordinary Iranians are blocked from using the social media network. Users inside Iran are forced to circumvent the block to gain access.
Kylie Moore-Gilbert, the Australian-British university professor who was jailed in Iran between 2018-2020 on trumped-up espionage charges, called on Twitter to block Khamenei’s account.
 

In February 2018, four Republican senators wrote in a letter to Twitter’s Chief Executive Officer that, based on US sanctions against Iran, the user accounts of Ali Khamenei and Mohammad Javad Zarif, Iran’s foreign minister at the time, should be closed.

... continue reading.

Khamenei’s Latest Antisemitic Twitter Rant Prompts US Special Envoy to Call for Ban Read More »

New law “On political parties” being prepared in Azerbaijan: Opinions of politicians

29.07.2022

JAMnews

Baku

New law “On political parties” in Azerbaijan
The Parliament of Azerbaijan has begun preparing the draft of a new law on political parties. The current law was adopted in 1992. According to MP Erkin Gadirli, the old law would be fine if it were merely enacted. The leader of the Musavat opposition party, Arif Hajili, believes the passing of new laws in the country to be reactionary.
 
Representatives of all political parties in the Azerbaijani parliament have applied to the chairman regarding a new draft law on political parties. This message was conveyed by the press service of the Milli Majlis (parliament of Azerbaijan).

Venice Commission:
Azerbaijan’s new Media law is “unacceptable” for Council of Europe member state
“Such a law cannot be applied in a member state of the Council of Europe” – Venice Commission says Azerbaijani new law on media is ‘unacceptable’
 


 

Given the social significance of this law, political parties registered in the country have been invited to submit their proposals on a new bill to parliament.
Opinions of politicians
“There’s the a ruling party, the main opposition party, and there should be other political parties. A system should be formed that will create broader opportunities for the activities of all parties. These opportunities have been created by our state, and their expansion is a primary task,” Elman Nasirli, MP from the ruling Yeni Azerbaijan (New Azerbaijan) Party, said in an interview with Turan News Agency.
In his opinion, a new political culture has been formed in Azerbaijan, an environment open to political dialogue has emerged. “It is very important to take this into account in the law on political parties,” he added.
Erkin Gadirli, a member of the Republican Alternative opposition party, believes it is possible to live with the old law. “The current law is from 1992. If this law were applied correctly, it would be possible to live with it. But there are outdated provisions. Since 1992 the electoral system and several legislative acts have changed, but the Law on Political Parties has remained the same,” he said.
 

‘Denial of justice’ Azerbaijani MP comments on Russian aggression during PACE meeting
During his address, Azerbaijani MP Erkin Gadirli in PACE discussed the issue of impunity for the aggressive calls and speeches of Russian politicians
 

“Our expectation as a party is liberalization, for which a regulatory and legal framework should be drawn up. The political arena needs substantive renovation and openness,” Gadirli cautioned.
High time to change the law
Tural Abbasly, chairman of the opposition party Ag Party (White Party), is certain that it is high time to change the old law on political parties.
“Currently, political parties in Azerbaijan have no influence, legally they do not have any privileges, they do not have any mechanism to influence elections, the political life of the state. Because of such hopelessness, people are not drawn to parties.
“Naturally, if the law is changed, but elections are held again according to the majoritarian system, then there’s no need for a new law, because the parties are structured in a proportional election system.
“I regret to say that it is not yet known what the bill will be. So far there has been no public discussion. We would love to have such discussion. The draft law was available.
“We hope that the new law will be the first step towards a healthy rivalry between political parties. If today there are 58 parties in the country, then 5-10 parties will remain, and they will work not as interest groups but as real political parties,” Abbasli said in an interview with cebheinfo.
The head of the Musavat opposition party, Arif Hajili, does not expect positive results from any change to the law:
“Unfortunately, changes to the Constitution or laws in Azerbaijan are usually reactionary. Any changes in referendums, democratic institutions and freedoms have always been aimed at limiting the activities of real opposition parties and civil society.

“But in any case, we will discuss this issue and the Musavat party will take a position. If a common decision is made, we will develop additions and amendments to the law or a new law.”

... continue reading.

New law “On political parties” being prepared in Azerbaijan: Opinions of politicians Read More »

In a rare session in Aden, Yemen’s parliament approves new leadership council, government

The president of Yemen’s Presidential Leadership Council on Tuesday takes the oath of office before a session of the parliament in Aden. (SABA)

AL-MUKALLA: The president and other members of Yemen’s Presidential Leadership Council on Tuesday took the oath of office before a rare session of the parliament in the southern port city of Aden.
Led by veteran Yemeni politician and security official Rashad Al-Alimi, the eight-man council was formed on April 7 after Yemen’s former President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi passed his powers to the council that would run the country and lead peace and war efforts with the Iran-backed Houthis.
The council is made up of leaders of powerful military units such as the Giants Brigades and the National Resistance, as well as the Southern Transitional Council and the governors of various provinces. It is expected to bring together fragmented political and military forces under its umbrella and would also be responsible for addressing the country’s thorny issues, including crumbling services and falling currency.
The swearing-in ceremony was held at an undisclosed location in Aden, the interim capital of Yemen, amid tightened security measures and was attended by the UN and US envoys to Yemen, EU and Gulf Cooperation Council ambassadors to Yemen and senior Yemeni officials.
During the same session, the parliament also reposed its trust in the government of Prime Minister Maeen Abdul Malik Saeed and its plan to revive the economy and boost revenues.
Abdul Baset Al-Qaedi, undersecretary at Yemen’s Information Ministry, told Arab News from Aden that the gathering was “historic” as all the country’s major bodies, including parliament, the Shoura Council, the government and the president of the country were in Aden for the first time since the beginning of the war.
“This is truly a historic and long-delayed session that will show results,” Al-Qaedi said.
Western envoys who attended the ceremony expressed hopes that the new council would help achieve a comprehensive peace deal to end the war in Yemen.
“A moment of hope for many Yemeni citizens. We trust the council will work toward a just and inclusive peace in Yemen,” Peter-Derrek Hof, the Dutch ambassador to Yemen, said on Twitter.

... continue reading.

In a rare session in Aden, Yemen’s parliament approves new leadership council, government Read More »

How Turkey Is Embracing the New World Order

July 28, 2022
Nominally a member of NATO, Turkey no longer sees itself under the aegis of the United States and is forming new alliances.
by Robert Ellis

In 1964, Turkish prime minister Ismet Inönü had hoped the United States would intervene in the conflict between Turkish and Greek Cypriots in Cyprus. If it failed to do so, he warned the Western alliance would break up and a new world would be established under new conditions. Turkey would also find its place in this world.
Although this was almost sixty years ago, something similar is occurring against the backdrop of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Nominally a member of NATO, Turkey no longer sees itself under the aegis of the United States and is forming new alliances.

Ahead of his visit with Chinese foreign minister Wang Yi, Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov stated that both Russia, China, and their “sympathizers” would together move towards a “multipolar, just, and democratic world order.”
In a July speech for the Ditchley Foundation, former British premier Tony Blair observed that the West had reached a new inflection point. He concluded that the biggest geopolitical change of this century will come from China, not Russia. According to Blair, it is the first time in modern history that the East can be on equal terms with the West in contrast to 1945 or 1980 (the collapse of the Soviet Union), when Western democracy was essentially ascendant.
Blair believes we are coming to the end of Western political and economic dominance, and that the world is going to be at least bipolar and possibly multipolar. So where does this leave Turkey?

During the Cold War period, Turkey was a staunch member of NATO, which went hand-in-glove with its Western-oriented foreign policy. But as Turkish philosopher “Bearded” Celal noted: “Turkey is a ship heading for the East. Those aboard think they are heading for the West. In fact, they are just running westwards in a ship sailing eastwards.”
Turkey’s official Kemalist ideology was countered, for example, by the hard-line Islamist Necmettin Erbakan, whose Refah (“Welfare”) Party was banned in 1998. In the 1970s Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was also the head of the Istanbul youth branch of Erbakan’s earlier National Salvation Party.
Learning from his mentor’s mistakes, in 2001 Erdogan founded the Justice and Development Party (AKP), which came to power the following year as a reformist party. However, despite international acclaim, it gradually became apparent that Erdogan and the AKP had another agenda. As British parliamentarian Andrew Duff, a former supporter, concluded, the AKP had simply replaced Kemalism with Islamism.
This worldview has shaped both Turkey’s domestic and foreign policy. In 2001, Ahmet Davutoglu, Erdogan’s future chief advisor, foreign minister, and prime minister, advocated for “Strategic Depth”—that Turkey’s foreign policy should be built on engagement with countries with which it shared a common past and geography.
As Davutoglu explained in a speech in Sarajevo in 2009, “Like in the 16th century, when the Ottoman Balkans were rising, we will once again make the Balkans, the Caucasus and the Middle East, together with Turkey, the centre of world politics in the future.”
There were no limits to his ambition. As he explained to an AKP congress in Konya three years later, “On the march of our holy nation the AK Party signals the birth of a global power and the mission for a new world order.”
The world order (nizam-i âlem) was an Ottoman concept, according to which the world order in all its aspects—political, social and economic—was ruled by religion (Islam).
A fortnight later, Davutoglu proclaimed his vision for the Middle East in the Turkish parliament: “A new Middle East is about to be born. We will be the owner, pioneer and servant of this new Middle East.”
Unfortunately, his policy of “zero problems with neighbours” collided with reality and Davutoglu, who had been hailed as “a true grandson of the Ottomans,” resigned in 2016.
In October 2012, Islamic scholar Ibrahim Kalin, who later became Erdogan’s chief advisor and spokesman, posited a new geopolitical framework at the Istanbul Forum which rejected the European model of secular democracy, politics, and pluralism. Instead, he called for a value-based and principled foreign policy, without explaining which values and principles he had in mind.
Six years later, Erdogan’s head of international relations, Ayse Sözen Usluer, made it clear that Turkey felt no need to choose between the West and the East, or between the United States and Russia. She explained that Turkey had long preferred to diversify its foreign policy choices: Turkey no longer saw its foreign policy within the framework of the Cold War or East vs. West alliances. A trilateral summit between the Russian, Iranian, and Turkish leaders and a meeting between Erdogan and Russian president Vladimir Putin in Ankara underlined Turkey’s strategic importance and not a shift of axis.
On the one hand, in St. Petersburg in 2013, Erdogan called on Putin to let Turkey into the Shanghai Cooperation Organization “and save us from this trouble” (the European Union’s demands for genuine reform). Yet in January, Erdogan declared that EU membership still remains a strategic priority, which indicates how hard-pressed he is by the collapse of Turkey’s economy.
In March at the Doha Forum in Qatar, Ibrahim Kalin reiterated his call for a new security architecture in the world, which again begs the question of what role Turkey will play.
With regard to Turkey’s professed neutrality in the conflict between Ukraine and Russia, Ankara is trying to have its cake and eat it too. It has not only condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine but at the same time called on Russian oligarchs to invest in Turkey.
At the same time, the photo op of Ebrahim Raisi, Erdogan, and Putin with linked hands at the recent summit in Tehran has an ominous ring. It brings to mind George W. Bush’s “axis of evil” speech and is a far cry from Kemal Atatürk’s maxim of “peace at home, peace in the world.”
Robert Ellis is an international advisor at RIEAS (Research Institute for European and Amerian Studies) in Athens.

... continue reading.

How Turkey Is Embracing the New World Order Read More »

Gantz: Hamas commits crimes against humanity

August 1, 2022 —  Tags: 

Israel’s top defense official made the charge following a tour of the nation’s southern border with Gaza.
By Jonathan Hessen and Erin Viner
Hamas launches attacks from within (Palestinian) population centers towards (Israeli) population centers,” stated Defense Minister Benny Gantz, insisting that “The whole world must see this crime against humanity.”
He stressed that the IDF has provided documentation to reveal how the Islamist rulers of Gaza endangers the lives of Palestinian civilians. Last week, the Israeli military released footage showing Hamas military infrastructure placed in close proximity to civilian sites including schools, universities, mosques and commercial factories.
The statements were issued during the Israeli Defense Minister’s inspection of the IDF Gaza Division, together with Deputy Defense Minister Alon Shuster, IDF Southern Command Head Maj. Gen. Eliezer Toledano, Head of the Operations Directorate Maj. Gen. Oded Basiuk and Head of the Gaza Division Brig. Gen. Nimrod Aloni.
Saying that the security establishment works tirelessly “to ensure security and stability for our citizens, by operating against the Hamas terrorist organization,” Minister Gantz vowed, “Israel will operate with precision and force against terror targets, and defend the citizens of the State of Israel.”
Following the inspection, Gantz visited a kindergarten complex in the Kfar Aza area. The protective infrastructure of 30 children’s nurseries along the Gaza border have been refurbished this year “as part of a wider program led by the defense establishment and the IDF,” said an Israeli Ministry of Defense (IMoD) statement, accompanied by the building of an additional 25 protected kindergartens in the area.
Israel’s latest exposure of Hamas military infrastructure within civilian neighborhoods is nothing new – nor is the resounding silence over the matter emanating from the international community.

... continue reading.

Gantz: Hamas commits crimes against humanity Read More »