Tunisia rejects foreign criticism, interference in internal affairs

July 30, 2022 at 1:40 pm | Published in: AfricaNewsTunisia

Tunisian President Kais Saied casts his vote at Victory Primary School for referendum on a new Constitution in Tunis, Tunisia on July 25, 2022 [Tunisian Presidency/Anadolu Agency]

July 30, 2022 at 1:40 pm

Tunisian President Kais Saied announced on Friday his rejection of what he considers external interference in Tunisia’s affairs and an infringement on its sovereignty. This came due to statements made by its partners abroad following the referendum on a new Constitution.
In a statement by the presidency, President Saied expressed his: “Rejection of any form of interference in national affairs.”

Tunisia’s president Kais Saied is bleeding the country – Cartoon [Sabaaneh/Middle East Monitor]
 

“No voice in our country is louder than the voice of the people. The Tunisian state is equal in sovereignty with all other countries, as stipulated by the principles of international law. Sovereignty within the state is owned by the Tunisian people, who sacrificed thousands of martyrs for independence and national dignity,” Saied expressed.
The US State Department issued a statement on Thursday in which it communicated its concern about the course adopted in drafting the new Constitution, which won the approval of more than 94 per cent of Tunisian voters, with a participation rate of 30.5 per cent. The US also shared its concerns that the Constitution could threaten human rights and fundamental freedoms.
The US State Department called for issuing a comprehensive electoral law allowing wide participation in the parliamentary elections scheduled for December.
Prior to that, the European Union (EU) also demanded an inclusive dialogue in Tunisia and a consensus on an electoral law before elections.
In Tunisia, criticism against the US position was issued by organisations and parties, including the Tunisian Order of Lawyers, the Tunisian Human Rights League and political bodies that support President Saied.
READ: Tunisia’s new constitution weakens democracy
“Tunisia is a free, independent and sovereign state, and our sovereignty and independence are above all considerations. Among the principles on which international law is based is the principle of the right of peoples to self-determination, and non-interference in the internal affairs of states,” President Saied expressed.
Opposition parties criticise the individual policy adopted by President Kais Saied in determining the country’s future. Most of them boycotted the referendum on the Constitution. The parties claim that Saied establishes an authoritarian autocracy, which the president denies.

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US: Tunisia’s new constitution weakens democracy

July 29, 2022 at 10:06 am | Published in: AfricaAsia & AmericasNewsTunisiaUS

 
US Secretary State Antony Blinken on April 06, 2022 [Dursun Aydemir/Anadolu Agency]

July 29, 2022 at 10:06 am

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken yesterday expressed his country’s concern that the new constitution in Tunisia could weaken democracy, considering that the country has recently witnessed an “alarming erosion” of democratic norms.
“We share the concerns expressed by many Tunisians that the process of drafting the new constitution limited the scope for genuine debate and also that the new constitution could weaken Tunisia’s democracy and erode respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms,” he said in a press statement issued yesterday.
Blinken considered that “an inclusive and transparent reform process is crucial going forward to begin to restore the confidence of the millions of Tunisians who either did not participate in the referendum or opposed the new constitution.”
He urged the swift adoption of an inclusive electoral law that facilitates the broadest possible participation in legislative elections planned for December.
The US Secretary described the situation in the country during the last period by saying that Tunisia has experienced an “alarming erosion of democratic norms” over the past year and reversed many of the Tunisian people’s hard-won gains since 2011.
The suspension of the constitution, and consolidation of executive power since 25 July 2021, have raised deep questions about Tunisia’s democratic path both in the country and internationally.
Blinken pledged that the United States will continue to use all possible tools to support the Tunisian people in forging a democratic and accountable government that preserves the space for free debate and dissent, safeguards human rights, respects judicial independence and separates powers for democracy.
Blinken concluded his statement by saying: “The US-Tunisia partnership is strongest when there is a shared commitment to democracy and human rights.”
On Monday, Tunisians voted on a new draft constitution that grants broad powers to President Kais Saied and could return the country to a dictatorial regime similar to the one that existed before the 2011 revolution.

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Berri: There Will Be No Session To Elect A New President Before The Approval Of IMF Reforms

 Last Updated Jul 31, 2022

Nabih Berri, Speaker of the Lebanese Parliament (Reuters)

Saturday – 2 Muharram 1444 AH – 30 July 2022 AD

Lebanon’s Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri said on Saturday he will not call a session to elect a new president until the parliament approves reforms that are preconditions for an International Monetary Fund bailout program, according to Reuters news agency.
A deal with the International Monetary Fund is the only way for Lebanon to recover from a financial meltdown that plunged the country into its most destabilizing crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war.
President Michel Aoun’s six-year term ends on October 31, and senior politicians have expressed concern about not finding a successor, warning of a larger institutional stalemate in light of the absence of a government.
Fully operational since May.
Berri said during a meeting with journalists at his residence in Beirut in statements confirmed by his office to Reuters that he will not ask for a session to elect a president until after the approval of the reform laws required by the International Monetary Fund.
He added that Parliament should work to pass the reform laws in August, pointing to the urgent need for these measures.
Berri, who has been in office for nearly 30 years, said on Friday that forming a government any time soon would be a “miracle”. He did not give details.
Under the constitution, the president issues a decree appointing a new prime minister based on binding consultations with members of parliament and must co-sign any new government.
Lebanon reached a staff-level agreement with the International Monetary Fund in April on a $3 billion rescue program, but the full agreement is conditional on passing laws including capital controls, the banking restructuring law and the 2022 budget.
The Lebanese Constitution stipulates that the Speaker of the Parliament must be called to the parliament session “at least one month and two months at most before the end of the President’s term of office.”
According to the constitution, in the event that this does not happen, the Council meets automatically on the tenth day preceding the expiry of the term.Aoun came to power after a presidential vacuum that lasted for 29 months, during which Parliament was unable to agree on the election of a president. Aoun is restricted to one term in office, and the major political parties have not announced that any agreement has been reached on the person who will replace him.

Lebanon
Lebanon news

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U.S. State Department Presented Pros and Cons of Armenia’s 2022 Investment Climate

 

 

From: MassisPost – July 29, 2022  – https://massispost.com/2022/07/u-s-state-department-presented-pros-and-cons-of-armenias-2022-investment-climate/

WASHINGTON, DC — Over the past several years, Armenia has received consistently respectable rankings in international indices that review country business environments and investment climates, the U.S. Department of State says in a 2022 Investment Climate Statement on Armenia.
It says projects representing significant U.S. investment are present in Armenia, most notably ContourGlobal’s Vorotan Hydroelectric Cascade and Lydian’s efforts to develop a major gold mine.
U.S. investors in the banking, energy, pharmaceutical, information technology, and mining sectors, among others, have entered or acquired assets in Armenia.
Armenia presents a variety of opportunities for investors, and the country’s legal framework and government policy aim to attract investment, but the investment climate is not without challenges.
Obstacles include Armenia’s small market size, relative geographic isolation due to closed borders with Turkey and Azerbaijan, weaknesses in the rule of law and judiciary, and a legacy of corruption. Net foreign direct investment inflows are low.
Armenia had commenced a robust recovery from a deep 2020 recession prior to the introduction of new sanctions against Russia. GDP growth reached five percent in 2021 and had been expected to continue to grow in 2022 by at least five percent. As a result of the war and sanctions imposed on Russia, Armenia’s 2022 GDP growth forecast is now just above one percent.
In May 2015, Armenia signed a Trade and Investment Framework Agreement with the United States. This agreement established a United States-Armenia Council on Trade and Investment to discuss bilateral trade and investment and related issues. Since 2015, Armenia has been a member of the Eurasian Economic Union, a customs union that brings Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Russia into a single integrated market. In November 2017, Armenia signed a Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement with the European Union, which aimed in part to improve Armenia’s investment climate and business environment.
Armenia imposes few restrictions on foreign control and rights to private ownership and establishment. There are no restrictions on the rights of foreign nationals to acquire, establish, or dispose of business interests in Armenia. Business registration procedures are generally straightforward. According to foreign companies, otherwise sound regulations, policies, and laws are sometimes undermined by problems such as the lack of independence, capacity, or professionalism in key institutions, most critically the judiciary. Armenia does not limit the conversion and transfer of money or the repatriation of capital and earnings. The banking system in Armenia is sound and well-regulated, but investors note that the financial sector is not highly developed. The U.S.-Armenia Bilateral Investment Treaty provides U.S. investors with a variety of protections. Although Armenian legislation offers protection for intellectual property rights, enforcement efforts and recourse through the courts are in need of improvement.
Armenia experienced a dramatic change of government in 2018, when a democratically elected leader came to power on an anti-corruption platform after street protests toppled the old regime. Following the 2020 NK hostilities, in June 2021, the incumbent retained power in snap parliamentary election that met most international democracy standards.
The government continues to push forth with economic and anti-corruption reforms that have improved the business climate. Overall, the competitive environment in Armenia is improving, but several businesses have reported that broader reforms across judicial, tax, customs, health, education, military, and law enforcement institutions will be necessary to shore up these gains.
Despite improvements in some areas that raise Armenia’s attractiveness as an investment destination, investors claim that numerous issues remain and must be addressed to ensure a transparent, fair, and predictable business climate.
A number of investors have raised concerns about the quality of dialogue between the private sector and government. Investors have also flagged issues regarding government officials’ ability to resolve problems they face in an expeditious manner. An investment dispute in the country’s mining sector has attracted significant international attention and remains outstanding after several years.

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MP: AEOI submits nuclear technology document draft to Parliament

News Iran Daily  : 323238
Published: 0256 GMT July 31, 2022

 
MOHAMMAD BABAEI/IRNA

National Desk

The Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) submitted to the Parliament the initial draft of the country’s comprehensive document for development of nuclear technology, said an MP.
Malek Shariati Niasar, the spokesman of the Iranian Parliament’s Energy Committee, made the remark on Sunday commenting on a meeting between AEOI President Mohammad Eslami’s and the committee members on the same day, Fars News Agency reported.
He added based on a law passed by the Parliament in the national budget bill for the current Iranian calendar year (which started on March 21), the preparation of the comprehensive document is a must.
The lawmaker said in Sunday’s meeting, the committee members highlighted the necessity of paying due attention to the development of the domestic nuclear industry, which was agreed by the AEOI chief.
He stressed that thus, the country’s future needs are required to be incorporated and addressed in the document through fully viable methods, so that different domestic industries can grow in parallel with the nuclear industry and use its benefits.
The MP said in the meeting, it was stressed that the document’s draft should be discussed and reviewed in cooperation with the legislative body’s other committees, as the development of the country’s nuclear technology is a completely industrial issue.
In remarks in April, the AEOI chief said the organization had prepared the nuclear technology’s document in cooperation with a number of working groups comprising the related and highly motivated experts and individuals.
He said the document addresses all dimensions and aspects of the nuclear technology, the industrialization process of the domestic nuclear sector and neglected issues.
Eslami gave assurance that the AEOI will be among the forerunners and flagbearers of expanding knowledge-based activities in the country.
The AEOI chief noted that based on the comprehensive strategic document and the processes pertaining to the country’s fuel cycle, targets have been set to improve and increase the quality and quantity of Iran’s nuclear activities, adding the organization plans to increase the country’s nuclear electricity generation capacity by 10,000 megawatts.

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Amnesty denounces sexism at Lebanese Parliament

Female Parliamentarians harassed by colleagues and Berry
28 JULY, 18:18 – ANSAMed –

BEIRUT – Amnesty International has strongly criticized the sexist attitude of a number of Lebanese Parliamentarians and of the speaker of the lower chamber, Nabih Berri, against the few elected female colleagues. “It is shameful that female elected members of the Parliament, particularly those who are critical of the government, are harassed by their male colleagues and the President of the chamber himself”, is written in an Amnesty press release.
The international organization refers to a series of actions that culminated in yesterday’s Parliamentary session in Beirut, when Halime Kaakour was abruptly silenced (‘Sit down and be quiet!) By Nabih Berri, while her colleague Cynthia Zarazir was insulted by FMP party member, Kabalan Kabalan. Zarazir had denounced a defamation campaign carried out against her, stating that unknown persons had placed copies of Playboy magazine and used condoms in her office di lei. The Presidency of the Parliament denied any responsibility in the incident. According to Amnesty International “Parliament elected officials and, in particular Nabih Berri, must take responsibility and put an end to these abuses against women and stopping the encouragement of an environment hostile toward women”.
After legislative elections last May, eight women were elected to the Parliament, marking a record in the country’s history. However, the Parliament, with its 128 members, remains a male-dominated institution.

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Amnesty slams Lebanon’s parliament over sickening sexual harassment of MP Cynthia Zararir

MENA
The New Arab Staff

28 July, 2022

Amnesty International slammed Lebanon’s parliament for allowing the sexual harassment of woman MP Cynthia Zarazir, who reported finding pornography and used condoms in her office

Amnesty International has lambasted the Lebanese parliament over the sexual harassment and bullying of newly elected female MP Cynthia Zarazir.
Zarazir says she was left pornographic magazines, used and new condoms and rotten food in her parliamentary office and has been a victim of catcalling by male MPs.
She said colleagues have also made fun of her name by referring to her to as “sarsour” – Arabic for cockroach – and was refused a proper parking spot.
She spoke out on her social media on Tuesday about the abuse she has faced in parliament.
“I’m being catcalled by men whose misogyny overshadows any healthy masculinity within them, being given a filthy office that had Playboy magazines, unused and dirty condoms in the drawers and on the floor, being bullied because of my name, and not given a parking spot.”
“If this is how they treat an elected fellow MP, how will they deal with those who are voiceless?” she tweeted.

The General Secretariat of the Lebanese parliament on Wednesday released a statement which denied Zarazir’s account.
“MP Zarazir knows that she and her colleagues, since the first day of her entry into the parliament, were granted everything from a parking lot for her car and a private office,” the statement said.
Adding, “Every word from her, otherwise, is a slander and a denial of the truth.”
Amnesty on Wednesday hit back at the parliament’s way of dealing with the abuse Zarazir has received and urged for the end of misogynistic abuse.
“Lawmakers, especially Speaker Nabih Berri, must shoulder the responsibility of ending this abuse of women and stop encouraging a hostile environment for women,” Amnesty said in an Arabic-language tweet.

Zarazir on Thursday told An-Nahar newspaper she will carry a gun with her to parliament after consulting the army commander, in what was initially thought to be in response to the sexual harassment and bullying.
She later clarified on her Facebook that the gun was for security purposes since she has not been provided with a bodyguard or adequate protection.
“My question to the Commander of the Army on carrying a personal weapon was for the purpose of personal protection during my daily movements and not in any way related to harassment inside the Parliament. I am moving without any escort or security compliance”, she said.

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‘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”.

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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.

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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.

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