Khazen

Abbas calls for Lebanese army to raid Palestinian refugee camps

by Middle East Monitor The President of the Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas, has suggested to his Lebanese counterpart that the Lebanese army should raid Palestinian refugee camps in the country and collect arms in return for ending the isolation of Ein Al-Hilwa Camp, Safa news agency reported on Monday. Abbas made the suggestion to President […]

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Lebanon’s electoral carve-up

This is an opinion article – It represents author opinion

By Peter Speetjens – middleeasteye.net/

With Lebanese elections set to take place in May, the customary
tug-of-war has started over exactly how those elections are to take
place. Democracy in Lebanon is all about foreplay. For months on end, the country’s political elite engages in courtesy
visits and tete-a-tetes behind closed doors to determine the rules of
the electoral game. Once agreed, the “moment supreme” at the ballot box
is but a formality, as 90 percent of the outcome can be predicted. A
Tom and Jerry cartoon doing the rounds on social media illustrates the
current hustle and bustle in Lebanon’s political circles. It shows the
famous cat and mouse accompanied by their bulky bulldog neighbor
sitting around a juicy steak. Taking turns, the characters suggest how to best divide it.
Naturally, each one wants the biggest chunk for himself and what was
supposed to be a cosy dinner ends up in a massive brawl. Whoever
posted the cartoon replaced the heads of Tom, Jerry and the dog with the
faces of Gebran Bassil, Mohamed Raad and Saad Hariri.  For those not familiar with Lebanese political theatre, Bassil is
Christian, minister of foreign affairs and son-in-law of President
Michel Aoun; Raad is Shia and has been a Hezbollah MP since 1992; Hariri
is Sunni, current prime minister and son of the slain former prime
minister Rafik Hariri.

The “steak” on the table is the electoral law proposed by President
Aoun and his Free Patriotic Party. It suggests dividing Lebanon into
some 15 electoral districts that will be decided by proportional
representation rather than winner takes all Proportional
representation has its benefits. In many of Lebanon’s electoral
districts, it is a thin line between winning and losing. Sometimes, a
few hundred votes make the difference between all or nothing, which
swings the door wide open for vote buying.

Being awarded the
number of seats relative to the proportion of the vote would lead to
fairer representation and a greater variety in parliament. In addition,
it would be much harder to influence the elections through vote buying. All
of Lebanon’s Christian factions support the proposal, which in itself
is no small feat. It is almost a matter of principle for Lebanese
Christians to not agree on anything. The proposal, furthermore, has the
backing of Amal and Hezbollah, the country’s main Shia parties.

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Lebanese designers at the Oscar

By Ross Mcdonagh For Dailymail.com – Meryl Streep arrived at the Oscars… and she was not wearing Chanel. The 67-year-old screen legend turned up in a gorgeous deep blue gown by Elie Saab. All eyes were on the record 20-time nominee’s choice of wardrobe, after her bust up with Chanel and its head, Karl Lagerfeld. […]

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The Oscars blow it — announce ‘La La Land’ as best picture when ‘Moonlight’ actually won

by – “Moonlight” took home the award for best picture at the 89th
Academy Awards on Sunday evening — but not before the award was
mistakenly given to the cast and crew of “La La Land.” The producers of “La La Land,” which entered the night with 14
nominations, were already delivering their acceptance speeches
when those onstage began to realize an error had been made. The accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers, which is in charge of
tallying the votes, is investigating how the error occurred. Only two people at the firm knew the results before they were
announced.

So how did a mistake of this magnitude happen?



faye dunaway warren beatty oscars mess up

Kevin Winter /
Getty



  • Instead of the best-picture card, presenters Warren Beatty
    and Faye Dunaway were mistakenly given the card for “actress in a
    leading role,” which named “La La Land” actress Emma Stone as the
    winner.
  • Two cards are created for each winner.
    PricewaterhouseCoopers, the firm that counts the votes and
    safeguards the winners, gives one set each to its partners,
    Martha Ruiz and Brian Cullinan.
  • One of the two sets that should have been discarded after
    Emma Stone received her best-actress award was instead given to
    Beatty by mistake.
  • Beatty hesitated after opening the envelope, which the
    audience took to be part of a joke.
  • Dunaway took the paper from him and announced the winner as
    “La La Land.” Beatty later said the card actually read “Emma
    Stone, ‘La La Land.'”


oscars best picture mess up

Kevin Winter /
Getty


  • The cast and crew celebrated and made their way to the stage.
    Producer Jordan Horowitz kicked off the acceptance speeches with
    emotional thank-yous.
  • As the speeches were handed over to other crew members,
    Horowitz looked confused.
  • A man wearing a headset approached the crew holding another
    envelope, which was shown to Horowitz and the cast and crew.
  • The speeches were interrupted by Horowitz, who said, “There’s
    been a mistake. Moonlight, you won best picture.”


best picture oscars messup

Kevin Winter /
Getty


  • He showed the real best-picture card, which listed
    “Moonlight” as the winner for the camera to see.
  • Beatty, who had also reappeared, confirmed this was the case.
  • The shocked “Moonlight” cast began to celebrate, as the
    stunned cast and crew of “La La Land” started to leave the stage.
  • Jimmy Kimmel approached the microphone, saying, “This is very
    unfortunate what happened.”
  • Before leaving the stage, Horowitz said: “I’m going to be
    really proud to hand this to my friends from ‘Moonlight.'”
  • Beatty approached again, to which Kimmel joked, “Warren, what
    did you do?”


oscars best picture

Kevin Winter /
Getty


  • “I want to tell you what happened,” Beatty said. “I opened
    the envelope and it said, ‘Emma Stone, La La Land.’ That’s why I
    took such a long look at Faye and at you. I wasn’t trying to be
    funny.”
  • He told Deadline that he was
    given the best-picture envelope by a stagehand.
  • The audience cheered as the “Moonlight” cast and crew took
    the stage and began their speeches.


moonlight cast and crew oscars best picture

Kevin Winter /
Getty


  • Afterwards, Kimmel said, “Let’s remember: It’s just an award
    show.”
  • While speaking to the press backstage, Stone said: “I also
    was holding my best actress in a leading role card that entire
    time. So whatever the story … I don’t mean to start stuff, but
    whatever story that was, I had that card. So I’m not sure what
    happened.”
  • PricewaterhouseCoopers released a statement saying: “We
    sincerely apologize to Moonlight, La La Land, Warren Beatty, Faye
    Dunaway, and Oscar viewers for the error that was made during the
    award announcement for Best Picture.”
  • PwC went on: “The presenters had mistakenly been given the
    wrong category envelope and when discovered, was immediately
    corrected. We are currently investigating how this could have
    happened, and deeply regret that this occurred. We appreciate the
    grace with which the nominees, the Academy, ABC, and Jimmy Kimmel
    handled the situation.”


oscars best picture

Kevin Winter /
Getty


  • PwC partners Martha Ruiz and Brian Cullinan are the only two
    people in the world who knew the result before it was announced,
    according to Forbes.
  • According to the BBC, two
    sets of envelopes are created, one for each of the partners. It
    appears one of the duplicates made its way into the hands of
    Beatty and Dunaway.

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Hundreds of Egyptian Christians flee city after attacks by Islamists

By AP

Hundreds of Christians have fled the city of el-Arish in Egypt after a spate of attacks by suspected Islamic militants. A priest told the Associated Press that he and some 1,000 other
Christians had fled for fear of being targeted next. He blamed lax
security, saying: “You feel like this is all meant to force us to leave
our homes. We became like refugees.” It was earlier reported
that militants had shot dead a Coptic Christian man, Kamel Youssef, in
front of his wife and daughter. The account had been given by two
officials speaking on condition of anonymity.

A priest in the city said militants then kidnapped and stabbed his
daughter before dumping her body near a police station. It wasn’t
immediately possible to confirm his account. No militant group has claimed responsibility for the attack but
earlier this week Egypt’s Islamic State group affiliate, which is based
in the Sinai Peninsula, vowed in a video to step up attacks
against the embattled Christian minority. A spate of killings by
suspected militants have spread fears among the Coptic community in
el-Arish as families left their homes after reportedly receiving threats
on their mobile phones.

A day before Youssef’s killings, militants killed a Coptic Christian
man and burned his son alive, then dumped their bodies on a roadside in
el-Arish. Three others Christians in Sinai were killed earlier, either
in drive-by shooting or with militants storming their homes and shops. The Coptic Church has made no official comment on the spate of murders.

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The power of a snowflake

by

Someone must have been smiling down at
Lebanon this past December. For the first time in at least five years,
it snowed early enough in the year that the Cedars Ski Resort
  home
to Lebanon’s highest accessible peak at an altitude of 2,870m – began
welcoming skiers on December 4 with the country’s remaining ski resorts
following suit a few days after (all ski resorts were open by December
19). The slopes were in full swing over the winter break and
therefore able to benefit from the increased activity brought on by
locals, expats, Lebanese on holiday and some tourists, launching the
2016-2017 ski season on the right foot.

The snow economy

If the weather continues to bring in
snow, this could be one of Lebanon’s best ski seasons in a while. This
means that not only will resort operators reap in the profits of a full
season, but so will the various businesses surrounding the resorts that
range from the small grocery store owner to the five star hotel
operator.
During the winter season, the economy of the resort towns is snow-centric. As a spokesperson for  Kfardebian’s
renowned French restaurant Le Montagnou puts it: “It’s very simple:
when there is snow, we all – the village and all the restaurants – work
extremely well and are busy. When there’s no snow, we suffer.” But with
the ski season lasting two months at best in recent years, resort owners
have realized that for them to remain in business, they have to promote
themselves as a summer destination as well.
With these dynamics in mind, Executive
took a closer look at some of Lebanon’s leading ski resorts to discuss
their achievements to date and their expectations for the rest of the
season and the summer.

Skiing among the Cedars

The Cedars Ski Resort is Lebanon’s oldest ski destination.
As the owner of Cedars’ Alpine hotel Joseph Rahme recalls, wealthy
Palestinians used to visit Lebanon in the 1920s and enjoy winter
activities such as snowshoeing in the Cedars even before a proper ski
resort was set up. The first téléskis – or T-bar ski lift – was installed in
1959 by Les Teleskis Des Cedres (Cedars Ski Resort), a company formed by
four friends (from the families Fakhry, Keyrouz, Rahme and Sukkar) who
rented the land where the resort currently stands from the municipality
under a long-term contract. Today, their children have taken over
management of the company. In 2004, the company invested $20 million
into a complete modernization of the ski resort, including installing
three new chairlifts and other modern equipment. A five star hotel, a
few restaurants and a baby ski area were part of the second phase of
renovation plans, but this all came to a halt with the onset of the 2006
July War.

Ever since the war, the low level of activity in the
resort along with the internal instabilities and regional insecurities
that surround Lebanon have discouraged the company from further
investment or completing their plans. “As partners, we work in the
resort and somehow make ends meet, but we have not returned our 2004
initial investment and are now investing only in the basic operational
needs,” explains Elie Fakhry, one of the current owners, adding that it
is all the more difficult to consider spending more on such a project
when it is only seasonal.

Yet, Fakhry sees hope for the resort and
the area for several reasons. To begin with, he believes there is
renewed interest in the Cedars and speaks of the increased activity in
the area during the summer due to the Cedar Music Festival, which was
brought back by Strida Geagea in July 2016 after a long absence. Indeed,
Alpine’s Rahme says his hotel was fully booked during the nights of the
festival.
Also, a 150,000 square meter chalet resort project –
rumored to be a joint venture between Saradar Group and Carlos Ghosn –
already broke ground and has Fakhry hoping it will help attract other
investors to the area once complete, thereby increasing the land value. Finally, the election of a president and the stability
that Lebanon seems to have been enjoying since could encourage tourists
to return, many of whom frequented the Cedars given its nearby
attractions such as the Cedars of God forest or the Gibran Khalil Gibran
museum.

However, should these tourists flock to the resort to ski
it would require a major upgrade in infrastructure. The roads leading to
the resort are narrow, so the company has already worked with the
municipality on rerouting them to allow for better traffic flow. While
the resort can accommodate 8,000 skiers, the parking lot can only fit a
few hundred cars and would need expanding.

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In Beirut, Lebanon’s opinionated fashion star sticks to message

Lara Khoury in Beirut

by Victor Argo – yourmiddleeast.com

It’s not only creative talent that makes a
successful designer. (Of that, Lara Khoury has plenty to offer.) It is
also about meeting deadlines and applying a determined work ethic. Lara
Khoury has understood this lesson well at this point of her career, as
she acknowledged when recently talking to the Lebanese website “Secrets
of Beirut”.
  So I was hardly surprised when Khoury showed up
right on time for our Skype interview. Here she was, an immaculate
olive-skinned beauty with eyes as big as an ocean, radiant and somewhat
mysterious, sporting her trademark super short hair – we will come to
that later.
 

The class of Lebanese fashion design came to the
attention of a wider international audience when Halle Berry wore an
Elie Saab dress for the Oscar ceremony in 2002. Today, Jennifer Lopez
walks the red carpets wearing Zuhair Murad or Reem Acra designs, while
actress Kerry Washington has joined the ranks of Elie Saab’s followers.  
In Beirut Lara Khoury
is the undeclared star of a very diverse scene of young Lebanese
fashion designers. Many of them are women. Lara Khoury caters to a
local, a regional and a growing worldwide customer base. Unlike Elie
Saab and other ‘Hollywood designers’ who have a penchant for Haute
Couture, Lara Khoury specializes in ready-to-wear fashion.

Ready-to-wear but not mainstream. In her
collections Lara is constantly experimenting with volumes and forms and
seeks to distort the feminine silhouette by constructing new curves and
shapes, while at the same time keeping a hint of femininity.  
“Who do you have in mind when you design?” was my
first question to Lara Khoury. “Do you create for Lebanese or
international customers?”
  “I don’t design for a particular customer,” Lara
said. “With today’s globalization, a designer can craft a collection and
create for whoever they want. I rather think of the message that I want
to give in the collection. And then clients from Lebanon can find my
work in my studio in Beirut and other clients can find it online.”
“My decisions are based on creativity – and not on
targeting a specific market,” Lara continued. “It’s not the best thing
to do business-wise, I know, but I do what I do because I love it, so I
don’t want to compromise on anything because of a certain client.”
 

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Israel military fire tear gas to disperse Lebanese protest

Zionist Post

Israel’s military fired tear gas across the border into
Lebanon on Saturday, breaking up a small Lebanese protest against
cameras installed there, Lebanon’s National News agency reported. Israel’s
military said the protesters crossed the international border,
prompting the dispersal. The U.N. peacekeeping force, known by the
acronym UNIFIL, said it is investigating the various claims and that the
situation later calmed. UNIFIL is closely coordinating
with the Lebanese army and troops are still on the ground to ensure
there is “no violation” of the U.N. demarcated borders, said spokesman
Andrea Tenenti.

Tenenti said there are no Israeli cameras that violate the
U.N. demarcated borders. He said the UNIFIL is in touch with both
parties to ensure calm. The protest by residents of Meiss
el-Jabal, near the border with Israel, was led by a Lebanese lawmaker.
The protesters were objecting to Israel’s installation of security
cameras and a solar panel along the U.N. demarcated border which they
call “contested.” Lawmaker Qassim Hashim told reporters at the borders
that U.N. demarcated borders are a “withdrawal line,” and not Israeli
territories. Another protester said in remarks carried by al-Manar TV
that the cameras are used to spy on Lebanon.

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Pentagon: Stop using ISIL

by Paul Szoldra The Pentagon is kicking former President Barack Obama’s preferred nomenclature for the so-called Islamic State to the curb. While the Obama administration often used ISIL, or the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, to describe the terror group, a new memo from the Pentagon’s executive secretary says the department needs to start using […]

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‘The intellectuals don’t have the answers’: Lebanese documentary wins at Berlinale

By Rowan El Shimi

“What can the ghosts of protests past tell us?” asks an
intertitle in Mary Jirmanus
Saba
‘s Shuour Akbar Min al-Hob (A Feeling Greater Than
Love), which won the FIPRESCI
(the international film critics’ association) jury award in
Berlinale’s edgy Forum
section this week. The 99-minute film — which took the Lebanese writer-director
almost seven years to make and was edited by Egyptian editor Louly
Seif — mixes interviews, archival footage and clips from Lebanese
militant films to tell the story of two strikes, in a southern
Lebanon tobacco company and at Beirut’s Gandour biscuit factory, in
the early 1970s. Due to their failure and that of the larger
revolutionary movement surrounding them, as well as the start of the
Lebanese civil war in 1975, they are largely absent from the
country’s collective memory.

The 33-year-old filmmaker, who studied social studies and
geography in the US before spending several years in Latin America as
an organizer of agricultural laborers and as a community television
producer, decided to make the film after discovering more about
Lebanon’s 1972 uprising and the revolution it almost launched. In
relation to the region’s 2011 uprisings, it prompted her to ask:
Are we repeating the same gestures, do they bring us closer to
justice and equality, and what can we do with a desire for
change and unity now?

Placing itself in Lebanon’s strong tradition of militant
filmmaking, Saba’s film opens avenues for contemplation on the
collective failure of the left in Lebanon by juxtaposing footage from
works by 1970s activist-filmmakers, such Christian Ghazi and Maroun
Baghdadi, with present-day footage of workers who took part in the
strikes leading quiet lives in places where not much has changed 40
years later. Farmers pick leaves to sell them to the tobacco company,
which still has a monopoly, and when she takes us to the Gandour
factory through an old militant film, we realize through a cut to the
same location that it is where the Mall of Beirut now stands.

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