ALERT LEBANON IN CRISIS

danielboon

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Protests spread across Lebanon over proposed new taxes
Some of the protesters said they would stay in the streets until the government resigns.
18 October 2019 | 10:10
Source: Associated Press



BEIRUT: Lebanese security forces fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of protesters in Beirut early Friday after they tried to push through security barriers around the government headquarters amid some of the largest demonstrations the country has seen in years. The riots left two people dead and dozens wounded.

The protests erupted over the government’s plan to impose new taxes during a severe economic crisis, with people taking their anger out on politicians they accuse of corruption and decades of mismanagement.

The protests started with a few dozen people gathering in central Beirut over the imposition of a 20-cent daily fee on messaging applications, including WhatsApp. They quickly escalated into some of the biggest demonstrations since an uprising over a garbage crisis in 2015, with thousands of people taking part.

People gathered near the government headquarters and parliament building where riot police were deployed, chanting: “Revolution!” and “Thieves!” — the latter a reference to widespread corruption in a country that has one of the highest debt loads in the world.

Some protesters threw stones, shoes and water bottles at security forces and scuffled with police. Security forces said at least 60 of its members were injured in the clashes. Protesters were also injured.

State-run National News Agency said two foreign workers choked to death when fire was set in a building where they were sleeping in downtown Beirut. George Kittaneh, the head of the Lebanese Red Cross, said 22 people fainted and were taken to a hospital while 70 were treated on the spot.

Police showed restraint as they were pelted with stones for several hours, firing volleys of tear gas only after protesters broke through the first security barrier near the government house. Police chased protesters through the streets of Beirut’s commercial district through the night.

The protests could plunge Lebanon into a political crisis with unpredictable repercussions for the economy which has been in steady decline. Some of the protesters said they would stay in the streets until the government resigns.

“The government is trying to help Lebanese citizens avoid a collapse,” Interior Minister Raya al-Hassan, who ruled out the possibility of a Cabinet resignation, told the Lebanon-based Al-Mayadeen TV. “If another government is formed it will take the same measures.”

Protesters closed major intersections with burning tires and garbage containers, causing traffic jams. As the protests escalated, the minister of education declared that public and private schools and universities would close Friday.

Years of regional turmoil — worsened by an influx of 1.5 million Syrian refugees since 2011 — are catching up with the small Arab country. Lebanon has the third-highest debt level in the world, currently standing at about $86 billion, or 150% of its gross domestic product.

“We refuse what’s happening in Lebanon... The failure of our government to do at least the minimum ... has given us no other choice than to take the streets,” said writer and director Lucien Bourjeily.

“They are putting more and more taxes on us even though we can’t take any more taxes,” he said.

When the motorcade of Education Minister Akram Chehayeb padded through downtown Beirut, protesters punched and kicked the cars. One bodyguard jumped out of an SUV and fired an automatic rifle into the air. Chehayeb rushed out of his car and pushed the guard away and prevented him from shooting again. No one was hurt in the incident.

Protesters also closed roads in other parts of Lebanon, including the northern city of Tripoli, Tyre in the south and Baalbek in the northeast.

The government is discussing the 2020 budget, and new taxes have been proposed, including on tobacco, gasoline and some social media telecommunication software such as WhatsApp.

Telecommunications Minister Mohamed Choucair appeared on TV after the protests began and said Prime Minister Saad Hariri has asked him to drop the proposed tax on WhatsApp.

As protests continued, demonstrators clashed briefly with riot police outside the government headquarters, an Ottoman-era compound known as the Grand Serial.

“We have no jobs, we have money and we have no future,” one protester screamed.

International donors have been demanding that Lebanon implement economic changes in order to get loans and grants pledged at the CEDRE economic conference in Paris in April 2018. International donors pledged $11 billion for Lebanon but they sought to ensure the money is well spent in the corruption-plagued country.

Despite tens of billions of dollars spent since the 15-year civil war ended in 1990, Lebanon still has crumbling infrastructure including daily electricity cuts, trash piles in the streets and often sporadic, limited water supplies from the state-owned water company.

There are concerns over the country’s financial stability as well. Earlier this month, the local currency reached 1,650 Lebanese pounds to the dollar at exchange shops after it had been stable at 1,500 since 1997.

https://t.co/O13rbTWakr?amp=1
 

danielboon

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Lebanon's Prime Minister Saad Hariri: If our political partners do not settle their decision regarding the economic reforms within 72 hours, I will take a different stance
 

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Sources for Sky News Arabia: 2 killed and 6 injured in shooting in al-Nour Square in the Lebanese city of Tripoli
 

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Lebanon: The Minister of Education announces the closure of public and private schools and universities tomorrow due to the current situation in the country
 

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Clashes between the security forces and demonstrators take place in Riad El Solh Square in central Beirut
 

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Beirut: Intensive clashes between demonstrators and security forces in Riad El Solh Square #Lebanon
Via @lummideast
 

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Demonstrations in Lebanon .. Raise slogans calling on President Aoun to leave
 

Ragnarok

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Good Lord, danielboon...

I didn't think anyone could touch me as far as the ability to overload the board with information and then you came along...

Mexico, Turkey/Syria, now Lebanon...

*tips hat*

Great job! But pace yourself or you are gonna burn out...
 

danielboon

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Good Lord, danielboon...

I didn't think anyone could touch me as far as the ability to overload the board with information and then you came along...

Mexico, Turkey/Syria, now Lebanon...

*tips hat*

Great job! But pace yourself or you are gonna burn out...

yes and thanks this is really getting nuts Israel must be a little nervous
 

danielboon

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.@ALJADEEDNEWS: Lebanese security forces using rubber bullets, tear gas, and water hoses to disperse protesters in central Beirut
 

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Tensions escalate again between Lebanese protesters and security forces along Baabda Presidential Palace roadELINT News Retweeted

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Lebanese security forces call for reinforcements in area of Baabda Presidential Palace
 

amarilla

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https://www.mnnonline.org/news/lebanon-a-new-horror-in-syrian-refugee-camps/

"Lebanon (MNN) – Syrian refugee camps in Lebanon are no picnic. Sanitation is dicey, illness lurks in every corner, and food and space are seriously lacking. The terms often associated with the camps are ‘squalid’, ‘overcrowded’ and ‘neglected’.
There’s a strong push from the Lebanese government to force the refugees back into Syria, the destruction of several camps, and crackdowns on the refugees, and they’re unwanted. Looking into Syria, it’s not safe enough to return home yet, so almost a third of Lebanon’s population is essentially ‘stateless.’
The government doesn’t recognize them, and to the populace, they’re faceless masses. In short, they’re ‘nobodies.’ No one will miss them if they disappear because no one will notice. That means they’re doubly vulnerable prey to traffickers. Triumphant Mercy’s Lebanon director, Nuna, says she was stunned to learn that for some of the refugees they’re helping, this is an issue."


Please note that 1/3 of the population is Syrian. That needs to be mentioned.

A
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...n-as-fury-at-ruling-elite-grows-idUSKBN1WX0Q8

NEWSOCTOBER 18, 2019 / 3:36 AM / UPDATED 29 MINUTES AGO
Protests sweep Lebanon as fury at ruling elite grows
Ellen Francis, Alaa Kanaan
5 MIN READ

BEIRUT (Reuters) - Tens of thousands of angry Lebanese took to the streets on Friday, blocking roads and burning tyres in a second day of nationwide protest to demand the removal of a political elite they accuse of looting the economy to the point of collapse.

Addressing protesters, Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri blamed his rivals in government for obstructing reforms that could have resolved the economic crisis and gave them a 72-hour deadline to stop blocking him, otherwise hinting he may resign.

He said Lebanon was going through an “unprecedented, difficult time”.

Lebanon’s biggest protests in a decade recall the 2011 Arab revolts that toppled four presidents. Lebanese from all sects and walks of life have come out on to the streets, waving banners and chanting slogans urging Hariri’s government to go.

“There are those who placed obstacles in front of me since the government was formed, and in the face of all the efforts that I have proposed for reform,” Hariri said, without naming names.

“Whatever the solution, we no longer have time and I am personally giving myself only a little time. Either our partners in government and in the nation give a frank response to the solution, or I will have another say.

The deadline left is very short, it’s 72 hours,” he said.

Protesters poured through the villages and towns across Lebanon as well as the capital Beirut. No political leader, Muslim or Christian, was spared their wrath.

Their chants called for leaders including President Michel Aoun, Hariri and parliament speaker Nabih Berri to step down.

The mood was a mixture of rage, defiance and hope.

As night fell, crowds waving Lebanese flags marched and drove through the streets with patriotic music blaring from loudspeakers while shouting: “Our demands are one, our objective is one: the people want the downfall of the regime.”

Security forces fired tear gas, choking many demonstrators. Some protesters, including men in black hoods, used iron bars to smash store fronts in the posh downtown district of Beirut.

Fires burned in the streets. Pavements were littered with broken glass and torn billboards. Demonstrators crowded around Aoun’s palace in Baabda.

The United Nations urged all sides to refrain from activities that could lead to increased tensions and violence.

Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates warned their citizens to against traveling to Lebanon.

Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, Aoun’s son-in-law, also blamed other parties for blocking reforms, saying the government must work to stop corruption and avoid imposing new taxes.

The latest unrest was prompted by anger over inflation, new tax proposals including a fee on WhatsApp voice calls, and the rising cost of living.

In an unprecedented move, Shi’ite protesters also attacked the offices of their deputies from Lebanon’s influential Hezbollah group and the Amal movement in southern Lebanon.

We came to the streets because we can no longer bear this situation. This regime is totally corrupt,” said Fadi Issa, 51, who marched with his son. “They are all thieves, they come to the government to fill their pockets, not to serve the country.”

The demonstrations follow warnings by economists and investors that indebted Lebanon’s economy and graft-riddled financial system are closer to the brink than at any time since the war-torn 1980s.

Foreign allies have pressured Hariri to enact reforms long promised but never delivered because of vested interests.

DOWNFALL OF THE REGIME”
Fatima, a dentist, said: “We are protesting against the politicians to force them to give back the money they stole and put it back at the service of the people. If it wasn’t for their corruption there would be no economic crisis.”

In a country fractured along sectarian lines, the unusually wide geographic reach of the protests highlights the deepening anger of all Lebanese. The government, which includes nearly all Lebanon’s main parties, has repeatedly failed to implement the reforms needed to resolve the crisis.

Christian politician Samir Geagea and Druze leader Walid Jumblatt, whose parties have ministers in the coalition cabinet, have called on the government to resign.

Seeking ways to boost revenues, a government minister on Thursday announced a new fee for WhatsApp calls, fuelling outrage. But as the protests spread, Telecoms Minister Mohamed Choucair revoked the proposed levy.

Shattered by war between 1975 and 1990, Lebanon has proportionally one of the world’s highest debt burdens. Economic growth has been hit by regional conflict, while unemployment among the under-35s runs at 37%.

The steps needed to fix the national finances have long proven elusive. Sectarian politicians, many of them civil war militia leaders, have used state resources for their own benefit and are reluctant to give that up.

Reporting by Samia Nakhoul, Ellen Francis, Imad Creidi, Yara Abi Nader, Tom Perry, Suleiman al-Khalidi; Writing by Samia Nakhoul, William Maclean; Editing by Giles Elgood

Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
 

danielboon

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Kuwait, Egypt, US, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain issue warnings to citizens in Lebanon - Al Arabiya English
Kuwait, Egypt issue warnings to citizens over Lebanon protests
english.alarabiya.net
4:28 PM · Oct 18, 2019· https://t.co/M28eU7lipq?amp=1
 

danielboon

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Aleph ️ א
@no_itsmyturn
·
1h
Bahrain & Kuwait urged their citizens to leave Lebanon and avoid unnecessary trips to there.
#Lebanon
Aleph ️ א
@no_itsmyturn
·
48m
And #SaudiArabia
Quote Tweet

Shab
@Shabgraphy
· 52m
Replying to @no_itsmyturn
Aleph ️ א
@no_itsmyturn
So far,
#SaudiArabia
#UAE
#Bahrain
#Kuwait
Have asked their citizens to leave Lebanon.
Quote Tweet

Ahmad Alangari
@Ahmad_Alangari
· 45m
Replying to @no_itsmyturn
And UAE
6:53 PM · Oct 18, 2019·
 

danielboon

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WORLD
GCC MENA ASIA AFRICA EUROPE THE AMERICAS OCEANIA BREXIT

Abu Dhabi, UAESunday 20 October 2019


Protests around the world: violent clashes hit Chile, Hong Kong, Lebanon and Barcelona
Here's the latest in each of the country's affected by unrest

Riot police fire tear gas to disperse demonstrators during a protest targeting the government over an economic crisis, near the government palace in Beirut, Lebanon October 18, 2019. Reuters
The National
The National
October 19, 2019

Protests have broken out in several countries across the world, with citizens unhappy for different reasons. Some are protesting over economic conditions, others are protesting over tax hikes and elsewhere protests are breaking out over controversial laws or prison sentences imposed by governments.

Here's the latest in each of the country's affected by violent clashes and unrest.

Chile
Chile's president declared a state of emergency in Santiago on Friday night and gave the military responsibility for security after a day of violent protests over increases in the price of metro tickets.

"I have declared a state of emergency and, to that end, I have appointed Major General Javier Iturriaga del Campo as head of national defense, in accordance with the provisions of our state of emergency legislation," President Sebastian Pinera said.

Throughout Friday, protesters clashed with riot police in several parts of the city and the subway system was shut after attacks on several stations.

A woman shouts in front of a police truck near the Santa Lucia subway station during a protest against the rising cost of subway and bus fares, in Santiago, Friday, Oct. 18, 2019. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
A woman shouts in front of a police truck near the Santa Lucia subway station during a protest against the rising cost of subway and bus fares, in Santiago. AP Photo
Violent clashes escalated as night fell, and the ENEL power company building and a Banco Chile branch, both in the city center, were set on fire and several metro stations hit with Molotov cocktails.

The unrest started as a fare-dodging protest against the hike in metro ticket prices, which increased from 800 to 830 peso ($1.17) for peak hour travel, following a 20 peso rise in January.

Attacks on metro stations forced the closure of the entire subway system, which is the key form of public transport in the congested and polluted capital, carrying three million passengers a day.

"The entire network is closed due to riots and destruction that prevent the minimum security conditions for passengers and workers," the metro operator said on Twitter, after attacks against nearly all the 164 stations where many gates and turnstiles were destroyed.

The Santiago Metro, at 140 kilometres (90 miles) the largest and most modern in South America, is expected to remain closed this weekend and could reopen gradually next week.

Hong Kong
Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam took to the airwaves on Saturday to back the use of force by police ahead of a major anti-government march planned this weekend in the Chinese-ruled city, which has been battered by months of violent protests.

Following a week of relative calm, Sunday's march will test the strength of the pro-democracy movement. Campaigners vowed it would go ahead despite police ruling the rally illegal.

In the past, thousands of people have defied police and staged mass rallies without permission, often peaceful at the start but becoming violent at night.

The trigger for unrest in Hong Kong had been a now-withdrawn proposal to allow extradition to mainland China, as well as Taiwan and Macau. The case of a Hong Kong man accused of murdering his girlfriend in Taiwan before fleeing back to the city was held up as an example of why it was needed.

Late on Friday the man, Chan Tong-kai, who is jailed in Hong Kong for money laundering, wrote to Lam saying he would "surrender himself to Taiwan" over his alleged involvement in the case upon his release, which could be as soon as next week.

Ms Lam said in an interview on Saturday with broadcaster RTHK that it was a relief as it could bring an end to the case.

She also said that police had used appropriate force in handling the protests, and were responding to protesters' violence, amid criticism of heavy-handed tactics.

More than 2,600 people have been arrested since the protests escalated in June.

Protesters' demands have, since then, swelled far beyond opposing the extradition bill, to take in broader concerns that Beijing is eroding freedoms granted when Britain handed the city back to China in 1997.

China denies the accusation and has blamed foreign nations such as the United States and Britain for inciting the unrest.

The crisis in the Chinese-ruled city is the worst since the handover and poses the biggest popular challenge to China's President Xi Jinping since he took power.

READ MORE
Barcelona v Real Madrid under threat as protests escalate in Catalonia

Catalan independence leaders had ‘totalitarian attitude’, says Spain’s FM

Lebanon
Security forces fired tear gas and chased down protesters in Beirut on Friday after tens of thousands of people across Lebanon marched to demand the demise of a political elite they accuse of looting the economy to the point of collapse.

Riot police in vehicles and on foot rounded up protesters, according to Reuters witnesses. They fired rubber bullets and tear gas canisters, dispersing demonstrators in Beirut's commercial district. Dozens of people were wounded and detained.

Prime Minister Saad Al Hariri blamed his partners in government for obstructing reforms that could ward off economic crisis and gave them a 72-hour deadline to stop blocking him, otherwise hinting he may resign.


Mr Hariri, addressing protesters, said Lebanon was going through an "unprecedented, difficult time".

Lebanese from all sects and walks of life have come out on to the streets, waving banners and chanting slogans urging Mr Hariri's government to go.

The rallies follow warnings by economists and investors that Lebanon's economy and graft-riddled financial system are closer to the brink than at any time since the war-torn 1980s.

"There are those who have placed obstacles in front of me ... and in the face of all the efforts that I have proposed for reform," Mr Hariri said, without naming names.

"Whatever the solution, we no longer have time and I am personally giving myself only a little time. Either our partners in government and in the nation give a frank response to the solution, or I will have another say," he said.

"The deadline left is very short. It's 72 hours."

Protesters poured through villages and towns as well as the capital Beirut for a second day. No political leader, Muslim or Christian, was spared their wrath.

Their chants called for leaders including Mr Hariri, President Michel Aoun, and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri to step down.

Barcelona
BARCELONA, SPAIN - OCTOBER 18: Fires burn following an evening of rioting as a general strike is called after a week of protests over the jail sentences given to separatist politicians by Spains Supreme Court, on October 18, 2019 in Barcelona, Spain. Nine Catalan pro-independence leaders were sentenced earlier this week to varying jail terms for sedition, in relation to the 2017 independence referendum. (Photo by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images) ***BESTPIX***
Fires burn following an evening of rioting as a general strike is called after a week of protests over the jail sentences given to separatist politicians by Spain's Supreme Court. Getty Images
Violent clashes escalated in Barcelona late on Friday, as radical Catalan separatists hurled rocks and fireworks at police, who responded with teargas and rubber bullets, turning the city centre into a chaotic battleground.

The deterioration came on the fifth consecutive day of protests in the Catalan capital and elsewhere over a Spanish court's jailing of nine separatist leaders on sedition charges over a failed independence bid two years ago.

Around half a million people rallied in Barcelona earlier on Friday, police said, in the biggest gathering since Monday's court ruling as separatists also called a general strike in the major tourist destination.

But while most marchers appeared peaceful, hordes of young protesters went on the rampage near the police headquarters, igniting a huge blaze that sent plumes of black smoke into the air, as police fired teargas to disperse them, an AFP correspondent said.

Other fires raged near Plaza de Catalunya at the top of the tourist hotspot Las Ramblas, where hundreds of demonstrators rallied in defiance of the police, who tried to disperse them with water cannon.

"Anti-fascist Catalonia!" they roared. "The streets will always be ours!"

Scores of police vans could be seen fanning out around the streets, their sirens screaming as the regional police warned people in a message in English on Twitter "not to approach" the city centre.

The situation later appeared calmer, according to a police spokesman.

Earlier, many thousands of "freedom marchers", who had set out to walk from five regional towns on Wednesday, arrived in Barcelona wearing walking boots and carrying hiking poles.

The rally coincided with the general strike, prompting the cancellation of 57 flights, the closure of shops, business and several top tourist attractions, and slowing public transport to a trickle in a region that accounts for about a fifth of Spain's economic output.

Activists also cut off Catalonia's main cross-border highway with France.

Updated: October 19, 2019 12:53 https://www.thenational.ae/world/th...hile-hong-kong-lebanon-and-barcelona-1.925415
 

danielboon

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The world is on fire

Shark NewsWires
@SharkNewsWires
News Alert : Santiago, Chile - The ENEL building is on fire in the Capital of Chile.
#Santiago #Chile
0:06
From
Boris van der Spek
11:58 PM · Oct 18, 2019·
248
Retweets
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Shark NewsWires
@SharkNewsWires
·
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News Alert : Santiago, Chile - Another video of the fire at The ENEL ((electricity company) building in the Capital of Chile.
#Santiago #Chile
0:29
From
Cecilia Heyder
Shark NewsWires
@SharkNewsWires
·
11m
#BREAKING : Santiago, Chile - Metro train on fire at Elisa Correa station as protests continue in the Capital.
#Santiago #Chile
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Need a few more places to erupt and a big war in the middle east. Then when a peace agreement is proffered, the real sudden destruction occurs
 

danielboon

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Al Arabiya English
@AlArabiya_Eng
·
3h
Lebanon’s cabinet will meet at 10:30 a.m. in the Baabda presidential palace, state news agency NNA reports.

https://english.alarabiya.net/en/Ne...eet-in-Baabda-presidential-palace-Report.html
Al Arabiya English
@AlArabiya_Eng
·
1h
Lebanon’s cabinet session begins at the Baabda presidential palace.

https://english.alarabiya.net/en/Ne...eet-in-Baabda-presidential-palace-Report.html
Al Arabiya English
@AlArabiya_Eng
The Lebanese Forces ministers who had resigned are not present at the cabinet meeting headed by President Michel Aoun.

https://english.alarabiya.net/en/Ne...eet-in-Baabda-presidential-palace-Report.html
4:29 AM · Oct 21, 2019·
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“What is happening in the street reflects the pain of the people, but accusing everyone of corruption is very unfair,” the official Twitter account of the Lebanese Presidency cites Aoun as saying.

https://english.alarabiya.net/en/Ne...eet-in-Baabda-presidential-palace-Report.html
Al Arabiya English
@AlArabiya_Eng
·
39m
“We must begin by lifting banking secrecy from current and future ministers,“ the official Twitter account of the Lebanese Presidency cites Aoun as saying.

https://english.alarabiya.net/en/Ne...eet-in-Baabda-presidential-palace-Report.html
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
From post 26:

"39m
“We must begin by lifting banking secrecy from current and future ministers,“ the official Twitter account of the Lebanese Presidency cites Aoun as saying.

https://english.alarabiya.net/en/New...ce-Report.html"

If this is their version of "audit the FED", the I am with them 100%. This issue is lurking in the background of Catalonia, Ecuador, Chile, Argentina, ....... everywhere!

Let's have a world wide auditing party!
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
I read the Irish national news broadcaster RTE yesterday and the top stories were protests and strife in Lebanon , Chile , Spain , Britain, Hong Kong, Syria, Turkey.

Its like the beginning of a doomer flick.

Surely the the End Times are drawing closer
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
BREAKING:PM Hariri: Lebanon cabinet approves reforms and 2020 budget :
PM Hariri: I will support early elections if protesters want them
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
I read the Irish national news broadcaster RTE yesterday and the top stories were protests and strife in Lebanon , Chile , Spain , Britain, Hong Kong, Syria, Turkey.

Its like the beginning of a doomer flick.

Surely the the End Times are drawing closer

no doubt For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom: and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers places.
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
with the protests going on A PERFECT TIME FOR HEZBOLLAH TO STRIKE

IDF chief warns ‘precarious’ security situation could lead to conflict in north IDF Chief of Staff Aviv Kohavi on Thursday warned that Israel is facing a threat of conflict in both the north and the south, forcing the military to rapidly prepare for war.

“In the northern and southern arenas the situation is tense and precarious and poised to deteriorate into a conflict despite the fact that our enemies are not interested in war. In light of this, the IDF has been in an accelerated process of preparation,” Kohavi said.
The army chief made his remarks at the unveiling of a plan known as Momentum, or Tenufa in Hebrew, which will guide the military’s actions for the next five years.


In a briefing to reporters, the IDF chief said the primary threat facing Israel comes from Iran and its proxies in Lebanon, Syria and Iraq.
“The main strategic threat to the State of Israel lies in the northern arena: with the entrenchment of Iranian and other forces in Syria, and with [the Hezbollah terror group’s] precision missile project,” Kohavi said, referring to an effort by the Iran-backed Lebanese militia to develop highly accurate long-range projectiles.

Israel sees precision-guided missiles as a far greater threat than that posed by Hezbollah’s existing arsenal of more than 100,000 rockets and missiles as the improved projectiles could easily overpower the IDF’s air defense systems and destroy the country’s critical infrastructure, something the terror group would struggle to do with its current arsenal.
Last month, a senior Israeli official said the country’s security services saw the project as the second most significant threat facing the Jewish state after Iran’s nuclear program.

In recent years, during the Syrian civil war, Iran has stepped up its efforts to establish a foothold in the country with which Tehran and its proxies could threaten Israel.

Israel has declared such efforts a red line that it would take action to prevent, and to that end has conducted hundreds of strikes in Syria against Iranian and Iranian-allied forces, according to Israeli officials.

“Both of these cases are efforts led by Iran, using the territory of countries with severely limited governance,” Kohavi said.

He specifically referred to the case of Lebanon, where Iran’s ally Hezbollah is widely seen as being in control of the government despite technically having a small parliamentary presence.

“For years Hezbollah has taken the state of Lebanon hostage. It built an army of its own and it is the one that dictates the security policy,” the army chief said.

Israel fought Hezbollah in the 2006 Second Lebanon War. Though Israel has waged a quiet campaign against the group in the intervening 13 years, the border with Lebanon has largely remained calm save for a handful of outbreaks of violence.

Such an incident occurred last month, on September 1, when the Shiite terror group fired three anti-tank missiles into Israel in response to a drone strike allegedly carried out by Israel, in which a small explosives-laden aircraft detonated in a Hezbollah stronghold in Beirut, destroying a critical piece of equipment needed for the group’s precision missile project.

Two of the missiles fired by Hezbollah in retaliation were aimed at a military vehicle that was full of soldiers, but missed. The third struck an army base near the border. The IDF said it sustained no casualties. In response, the IDF fired artillery shells into southern Lebanon. No Lebanese injuries were reported. https://www.timesofisrael.com/idf-c...ty-situation-could-lead-to-conflict-in-north/
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
Protesters continue in Iraq as well

EndGameWW3
@EndGameWW3
Iraqis gather in Baghdad ahead of planned mass protests - Al Arabiya English
Iraqis gather in Baghdad ahead of planned mass protests
english.alarabiya.net
3:09 PM · Oct 24, 2019·https://t.co/KuY4SXv2IR?amp=1
 

danielboon

TB Fanatic
The Jerusalem Post

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2h2 hours ago
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.@IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kochavi says #Israel has multiple fragile borders and that the army is preparing for confrontation on any or all of them. #ICYMI
 

danielboon

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Protests rattle the postwar order in Lebanon and Iraq
By QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA, JOSEPH KRAUSS and ZEINA KARAM
October 25, 2019

BAGHDAD (AP) — Tens of thousands of people, many of them young and unemployed men, thronged public squares and blocked main streets Friday in the capitals of Iraq and Lebanon in unprecedented, spontaneous anti-government revolts in two countries scarred by long conflicts.

Demonstrators in Iraq were beaten back by police firing live ammunition and tear gas, and officials said 30 people were killed in a fresh wave of unrest that has left 179 civilians dead this month. In Lebanon, scuffles between rival political groups broke out at a protest camp, threatening to undermine an otherwise united civil disobedience campaign now in its ninth day.


The protests are directed at a postwar political system and a class of elite leaders that have kept both countries from relapsing into civil war but achieved little else. The most common rallying cry from the protesters in Iraq and Lebanon is “Thieves! Thieves!” — a reference to officials they accuse of stealing their money and amassing wealth for decades.

The leaderless uprisings are unprecedented in uniting people against political leaders from their own religious communities. But the revolutionary change they are calling for would dismantle power-sharing governments that have largely contained sectarian animosities and force out leaders who are close to Iran and its heavily armed local allies.

Their grievances are not new.

Three decades after the end of Lebanon’s civil war and 16 years after the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, the streets of their capitals echo with the roar of private generators that keep the lights on. Tap water is undrinkable and trash goes uncollected. High unemployment forces the young to put off marriage and children.

Every few years there are elections, and every time it seems like the same people win.

The sectarian power-sharing arrangement that ended Lebanon’s 1975-1990 civil war distributed power and high offices among Christians, Shiites and Sunnis. It has mostly kept the peace, but has turned former warlords into a permanent political class that trades favors for votes. A planned tax on WhatsApp amid a financial crisis was the last straw.

In Iraq, a similar arrangement among Shiites and minority Sunnis and Kurds has led to the same corrupt stasis, with parties haggling over ministries so they can give jobs and aid to supporters while lining their own pockets. The devastating war against the Islamic State group only exacerbated decades-old economic problems in the oil-rich country.

“They (leaders) have eaten away at the country like cancer,” said Abu Ali al-Majidi, 55, pointing toward the Green Zone, home to government offices and Western embassies.


“They are all corrupt thieves,” he added, surrounded by his four sons who had come along for the protest.

In Iraq, a ferocious crackdown on protests that began Oct. 1 resulted in the deaths of 149 civilians in less than a week, most of them shot in the head and chest, along with eight security forces killed. After a three-week hiatus, the protests resumed Friday, with 30 people killed, according to the semi-official Iraq High Commission for Human Rights.

In both countries, which share a history of civil strife, the potential for sustained turmoil is real.

Iraq and Lebanon are considered to be firmly in Iran’s orbit, and Tehran is loath to see protracted political turbulence that threatens the status quo, fearing it may lose influence at a time when it is under heavy pressure from the U.S.

The Iran-backed Hezbollah in Beirut and the Popular Mobilization Forces in Baghdad have said they want the governments in both countries to stay in power.

The protests against Iraq’s Shiite-led government have spread to several, mainly Shiite-populated southern provinces. In Lebanon, demonstrations have erupted in Shiite communities, including in south Lebanon for the first time.

Signs of a backlash against Tehran’s tight grip on both countries can already be seen.

Among the protesters’ chants in Baghdad, one said: “Iran out, out! Baghdad free, free!”

Protesters trying to reach the heavily fortified Green Zone were met with tear gas and live ammunition. Men in black plainclothes and masks stood in front of Iraqi soldiers, facing off with protesters and firing the tear gas. Residents said they did not know who they were, with some speculating they were Iranians.

In the south, headquarters of Iran-backed militias were set on fire.

In central Beirut, Hezbollah supporters clashed with anti-government protesters. Supporters of the powerful group rejected the protesters equating its leader with other corrupt politicians. A popular refrain in the rallies, now in their ninth day, has been: “All means all.”

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah warned in a televised speech that the protests — although largely peaceful until now — could lead to chaos and civil war. He said they were being hijacked by political rivals opposing the group.

“We are closing the roads, calling for toppling the system that has been ruling us for the past 30 years with oppression, suppression and terror, said Abed Doughan, a protester blocking a street in southern Beirut.

After Friday’s deadly violence in Iraq, a curfew was announced in several areas of the south. Hundreds of people were taken to hospitals, many with shortness of breath from the tear gas.

The current round of protests has been endorsed by nationalist Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who has a popular base of support and holds the largest number of seats in parliament. He has called on the government to resign and suspended his bloc’s participation in the government until it comes up with a reform program.

However, powerful Shiite militias backed by Iran have stood by the government and suggested the demonstrations were an outside “conspiracy.”

Iraq’s most senior Shiite spiritual leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, appealed for protesters and security forces to avoid violence. In his Friday sermon, he also criticized the government-appointed committee investigating the crackdown in the previous protests, saying it did not achieve its goals or uncover who was behind the violence.

As in the protests earlier this month, the protesters, organized on social media, started from the central Tahrir Square. The demonstrators carried Iraqi flags and chanted anti-government slogans, demanding jobs and better public services like water and electricity.

“I want my country back, I want Iraq back,” said Ban Soumaydai, 50, an Education Ministry employee who wore black jeans, a white T-shirt and carried an Iraqi flag with the hashtag #We want a country printed on it.

Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi has struggled to deal with the protests. In an address to the nation early Friday, he promised a government reshuffle next week and pledged reforms. He told protesters they have a right to peaceful demonstrations and called on security forces to protect the protesters.

Similarly, Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri issued an emergency reform package few days after the protests began on Oct. 17 — a document that has been dismissed by protesters as “empty promises.”

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https://apnews.com/94c22bdbdf674792b7a412b8ad751b28
 

danielboon

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Joseph Haboush
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