Tag: Lebanon

  • Leave immediately! – Govt to Ghanaians in Lebanon as country’s conflict with Israel heightens

    Leave immediately! – Govt to Ghanaians in Lebanon as country’s conflict with Israel heightens

    The Ghanaian government has voiced serious concerns regarding the worsening crisis in Lebanon, where more than one million individuals have been forced to flee their homes due to continuous Israeli airstrikes, including a recent attack in central Beirut.

    This situation has intensified fears about the possibility of a large-scale invasion.

    In light of the escalating violence, the government released a statement on Friday, October 4, 2024, urging Ghanaians currently in Lebanon to make immediate arrangements to return home using available flights.

    To assist in this process, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration recommended that Ghanaian nationals lacking complete documentation reach out to the Embassy of Ghana in Cairo, Egypt, or the Honorary Consulate in Beirut for support.

    These initiatives are designed to prioritize the safety and welfare of Ghanaian citizens amid the increasing instability in Lebanon.

    Meanwhile, the international community, including the United Nations, is actively monitoring developments and striving to provide humanitarian assistance to those affected by the crisis.

    “Considering the deteriorating situation, the government of Ghana encourages all Ghanaian nationals in Lebanon to take advantage of the available flights in Lebanon to immediately leave the country.

    “The government entreats all Ghanaians in Lebanon to act promptly on this advice to avoid any emergencies.”

    Background

    On Monday, September 23, Israel launched a relentless series of airstrikes across Lebanon, marking the deadliest day in the region since the 2006 conflict with Hezbollah, the influential Iran-backed militant group.

    The intense bombardment instilled widespread fear and anguish among the Lebanese population, resulting in the deaths of over 500 individuals, including women and children, while injuring more than 1,800, as reported by local authorities.

    As families desperately fled their homes in search of safety, clashes between Israeli forces and Hezbollah continued in southern Lebanon on Wednesday.

    Reports from the Israeli military, Hezbollah, and the Lebanese army confirmed active fighting in at least two border regions, particularly around closed military zones where Israeli troops and equipment had been concentrated.

  • 2 minors suffer injuries after 75 rockets detected originating from Lebanon – Israel’s military

    2 minors suffer injuries after 75 rockets detected originating from Lebanon – Israel’s military

    During the ongoing war in Gaza, Israel’s military said about 75 rockets were fired from Lebanon into Israel on Friday, and many of them were stopped.

    Israeli emergency services said two men got hurt a little in the Galilee area. They were taken to the hospital.

    The Israeli army said that on Friday, soldiers saw a Hezbollah launcher in Yaroun that was ready to launch rockets at Israel.

    A little while later, an IDF fighter jet attacked and destroyed the launcher, stopping many launches,” the military said.

    However, an Israeli airstrikes killed two boys in the town of Al-Najariya in southern Lebanon on Friday, according to Lebanon’s official National News Agency (NNA). 

    The two Syrian siblings, Ossama and Hani Al-Khalid, succumbed to their injuries from the air raid, NNA said.

    Meanwhile, the Israeli military says the airstrikes targeted Hezbollah infrastructure in Al-Najariya that “posed a threat to Israeli aircraft,” accusing the group of operating in civilian areas and endangering lives.

    Around the same time, Hezbollah announced the death of one of its members, 62-year-old Hussein Khidr Mahdi, in the same area on Friday.

    It is unclear if he was killed in the same airstrikes.

  • Canada to give $65 million to Lebanon for economic growth and humanitarian aid

    Canada to give $65 million to Lebanon for economic growth and humanitarian aid

    Canada will give Lebanon $65 million to help with development and humanitarian aid, said Minister Ahmed Hussen.

    The money package includes $38 million for making things better and another $27 million to help people in need.

    “This $27 million will really help the people who need it,” he said in an interview.

    Lebanon has had more and more money problems in the last few years, Hussen said. This is because of the explosion in the port of Beirut in 2020 and millions of refugees leaving nearby countries because of war.

    “We must help Lebanese people who are in need and also the refugees. ”

    The help will be used to give people food, water, and medical care.

    Funding for economic development will go to groups like UN Women, which are part of the United Nations. Global Affairs Canada wants to give money to help local farmers, businesses run by women, and women involved in politics.

    Hussen said that women around the world do not have enough money to start or expand their businesses.

    “Helping women to be more powerful is the best way to fight poverty and make sure the economy grows for everyone. ”

    Canada is giving money to help Lebanon’s economy as part of the government’s plan for the Middle East. According to Hussen, Canada has given over $500 million to Lebanon since 2016.

  • EU gives Lebanon 1billion euros in aid amid surge in unlawful immigration

    EU gives Lebanon 1billion euros in aid amid surge in unlawful immigration

    The European Union said on Thursday that they will give 1 billion euros (about US$1. 06 billion) to Lebanon. Some of the money will be used to strengthen border control to stop people from Lebanon coming to Cyprus and Italy.

    The agreement is like other EU aid deals for countries like Egypt, Tunisia, and Mauritania to make their borders stronger. This is happening as more people in Lebanon are not being nice to Syrian refugees, and there are a lot more Syrian refugees leaving Lebanon and going to Cyprus without following the rules.

    Ursula von der Leyen, the head of the European Union, said in Beirut with Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides that the help will begin this year and continue until 2027.

    The majority of the help, which is 736 million euros, will help Syrian refugees and other vulnerable people in Lebanon. Another 200 million euros will go to support Lebanese security services in controlling the borders and migration. These numbers were given by the Cypriot government.

    Some money would be given to fishermen in Lebanon so they don’t sell their boats to smugglers.

    Von der Leyen said the EU will also work on a “better plan to help Syrian refugees go back home” in cooperation with the UN refugee agency. The group will keep providing legal ways for refugees to settle in Europe, she said.

    Lebanon’s temporary Prime Minister Najib Mikati liked the plan and said that if Lebanon is safe, then Europe is safe too. He also said that if the problem gets worse, it won’t just affect Lebanon, but it will also affect Europe.

    Lebanon has been having a really bad financial crisis since 2019. There are almost 780,000 Syrian refugees who are officially registered in Lebanon, and many more who are not officially registered. Lebanon has the most refugees per person in the world.

    Lebanese leaders have been asking other countries for a long time to help the refugees either move to a new country or go back to Syria, even if they don’t want to. Lebanon’s security forces have increased sending Syrians back to their country in the last year.

    More problems started after a leader of the Lebanese Forces party, Pascal Suleiman, was killed last month in what military officials said was a failed car robbery by a group from Syria. The event caused some people to attack Syrians.

    At the same time, officials in Cyprus say too many Syrian people are coming to their country without permission, especially by boat from Lebanon.

    The UNHCR in Lebanon said that they confirmed 59 boats leaving with 3,191 passengers between January and mid-April, compared to only 3 boats with 54 passengers last year. Normally, only a small number of boats try to cross the much more dangerous water in the winter. In 2023, UNHCR saw 65 boats leave with 3,927 people on board.

    Cyprus has a new plan to stop the arrival of migrants. Last month, Cyprus stopped accepting Syrian asylum requests. Human rights groups say the Cypriot coast guard sent back five boats with around 500 asylum seekers from Lebanon. Cypriot officials said that it is not true.

    Bassel al-Shayoukh, a Syrian refugee from Idlib, has been living in Lebanon since 2014. He said his brother and some relatives were on a boat that was sent back. Now he wants to go on the journey by himself.

    “At first, I thought the war in Syria would end in a year or two,” he said. But it continued for a long time. In Lebanon, the same thing happened every year. Things started to get even more bad.

    Shayoukh said he is worried about getting hurt by people who are trying to enforce the law or being sent back to Syria after Lebanese authorities refused to extend his permit to stay in the country.

    His 17-year-old nephew, who didn’t want to say his name because he was afraid for his safety, said the Cypriot coast guard started moving their boat away by making waves. “I was really scared. ” “I can’t swim,” he said. “I believed we were going to be killed. ”

    The people on the boats didn’t have any food or water for three days. Then they went back to Lebanon. The teen said that.

    In Lebanon, the army arrested them; the ones with UNHCR were let go and the rest were sent out of the country.

    Mohammed Sablouh, a lawyer in Lebanon who helps refugees and migrants, says the Lebanese government is ignoring the increase in migration on purpose to put pressure on the rest of the world.

    The Lebanese army didn’t answer when asked about what they’re doing to stop smuggling.

    On Thursday, they announced aid before the yearly fundraising conference for the Syrian crisis in Brussels at the end of the month. After 13 years of fighting, people are tired of donating money while everyone is focused on helping people affected by wars in Ukraine and Gaza.

    The president of Cyprus said that Thursday was a very important day. He asked European officials to make some areas in Syria safe for people to go back to.

    The situation in Lebanon cannot continue like this. It’s not good for Cyprus, and it’s not good for the European Union, Christodoulides said.

    However, some Lebanese officials don’t think that the European aid will fix the problem.

    Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea told The Associated Press this week that European authorities are mainly worried about refugees not going to Europe.

    “We have a problem because we can’t have a lot of Syrian refugees coming to our country illegally,” Geagea said. He wants the Syrians to go back to areas in Syria that are controlled by either the government or opposition.

    But Shayoukh says he doesn’t have anywhere to go.

    The government in Damascus is after him because he is against the Syrian President Bashar Assad. He also said that the Islamist group in his hometown is acting like the government’s intelligence services in silencing people who disagree with them.

  • Terry Anderson, AP correspondent imprisoned in Lebanon passes away at age 76

    Terry Anderson, AP correspondent imprisoned in Lebanon passes away at age 76

    Terry Anderson, a reporter for the Associated Press, was taken as a hostage in Lebanon in 1985. He was held for almost seven years and has passed away at the age of 76.

    Anderson, who wrote about being kidnapped and imprisoned by Islamic militants in his popular book “Den of Lions” in 1993, passed away at his home in Greenwood Lake, New York, according to his daughter, Sulome Anderson.

    We don’t know why the person died. His daughter said Anderson had recently seen a doctor for heart problems.

    Sulome Anderson said he didn’t like being called a hero, but everyone kept calling him that. “I saw him last week and my partner asked him if there’s anything he wants to do in life. ” He said, “I have lived a lot and I have done a lot. ” I am happy.

    After coming back to the United States in 1991, Anderson lived a busy life, talking to people in public, teaching journalism at a few important schools, and sometimes running a blues bar, Cajun restaurant, horse ranch, and fancy restaurant.

    He had a hard time with post-traumatic stress disorder. He got a lot of money from Iran, but then lost most of it because of making bad investments. He declared bankruptcy in 2009.

    After leaving the University of Florida in 2015, Anderson moved to a small horse farm in a peaceful, rural part of northern Virginia that he found while camping with friends. Please rewrite this text in simple language.

    “I live in the countryside, and the weather is nice and quiet. It’s a lovely place, so I’m doing well,” he said with a laugh in a 2018 interview with The Associated Press.

    In 1985, a group of Shiite Muslims called Hezbollah kidnapped him along with other Westerners in Lebanon, which was in chaos due to war.

    After he was set free, he was welcomed as a hero at the AP’s office in New York.

    “As the main journalist in the Middle East for the AP, Anderson has been reporting for a few years on the increasing violence in Lebanon as the country fights a war with Israel. Iran is giving money to militant groups who are trying to overthrow the government. ”

    On March 16, 1985, he was playing tennis with a friend. He was giving his friend a ride home when some people with guns took him from his car.

    He thinks he was chosen as a target because there aren’t many Westerners left in Lebanon, and also because he is a journalist and that makes Hezbollah suspicious of him.

    “He said to the newspaper in Virginia in 2018 that in their opinion, people who ask questions in strange and unsafe places must be spies. ”

    For almost seven years, he was treated very badly. He was beaten, chained up, and threatened with death. Sometimes people pointed guns at him, and he was kept alone in a small room for a long time.

    Anderson was held captive by Hezbollah for the longest time compared to other Western hostages they kidnapped. Terry Waite, a former representative for the Archbishop of Canterbury, was also taken by Hezbollah while trying to negotiate for Anderson’s release.

    According to the hostages, he was the most difficult prisoner and always asking for better food and treatment. He would argue about religion and politics with his captors and taught other hostages sign language and how to hide messages so they could talk in private.

    He was able to keep a sharp mind and a sarcastic sense of humor throughout his difficult experience. On his final day in Beirut, he asked the person who had kidnapped him to come into his room. He wanted to tell him that he had heard a mistaken report on the radio saying he had been released and was in Syria.

    “I told Mahmound, ‘Listen, I’m not here. ‘” I’m leaving, sweethearts. I’m going to Damascus. We laughed together,” He told Giovanna Dell’Orto, who wrote a book about foreign reporters in World War II and today.

    He found out that his freedom was delayed because the people who kidnapped him were waiting for someone to come and take him, but that person left to meet with their lover, so they had to find someone else.

    Anderson used humor to cover up the PTSD that he suffered from for many years.

    “In 2018, he said that two British experts in helping people who have been held hostage and psychiatrists helped his wife and me, and their help was very good. ” One problem I had was that I didn’t realize how much damage had been done.

    “When people ask me if I’m over it, I really don’t know. ” No, not really. No, not really. In simpler words: No, not really. It is there. I don’t really think about it much anymore, it’s not important to me. “It is there. ”

    When Anderson was taken, he was planning to get married and his fiancée was six months pregnant with their daughter, Sulome.

    They got married soon after he got out of jail, but then they separated a few years later. Anderson and his daughter didn’t talk for many years, even though they were still friendly.

    “I really like my dad a lot. ” My dad always cared about me. I didn’t know because he couldn’t prove it to me, Sulome Anderson said in 2017.

    The dad and his daughter made up after her book, “The Hostage’s Daughter,” was praised in 2017. In the book, she wrote about going to Lebanon to talk to one of the people who kidnapped her dad and eventually forgiving him.

    Anderson said she did amazing things, went through a hard personal journey, and also did an important piece of journalism. “She is a better journalist than I was. ”

    Terry Alan Anderson was born in October. 27th of January, 1947. He grew up in a small town by Lake Erie called Vermilion, Ohio, where his dad was a police officer.

    After finishing high school, he said no to a free education at the University of Michigan and joined the Marines instead. He became a staff sergeant and fought in the Vietnam War.

    After he came back home, he went to Iowa State University. He studied journalism and political science and graduated with two degrees. Then he got a job at the AP. He worked in Kentucky, Japan, and South Africa before coming to Lebanon in 1982, when the country was in turmoil.

    “It was the most interesting job I’ve ever had,” he told The Review. “It was very strong. ” There is a war happening and it is very dangerous in Beirut. A very bad war happened, and it went on for about three years before I was taken by force.

    Anderson was married three times and got divorced. He is also survived by his daughter from his first marriage, Gabrielle Anderson.

    Memorial plans were not yet final, Sulome Anderson said.

  • Seven Lebanese and one Israeli killed in shootout at Israel-Lebanon border

    Seven Lebanese and one Israeli killed in shootout at Israel-Lebanon border

    The Israeli military has bombed a building where paramedics from a Sunni Muslim group in Lebanon were working. Seven people were killed in the bombing. In response, Lebanon fired rockets into northern Israel, killing one person.

    The village of Hebbariye was attacked after a day of fighting between Israel’s military and Lebanon’s Hezbollah group. This raised worries that the situation along the border might get even worse, as there has been ongoing conflict there for the past five months during the Israel-Hamas war.

    The bombing happened late on Tuesday and targeted an office of the Islamic Emergency and Relief Corps, as reported by the Lebanese Ambulance Association. It was one of the deadliest attacks in a conflict along the border.

    The paramedics group shared the names of seven people who volunteered and died in the attack. It said the strike was a clear violation of helping people in need.

    Ali Noureddine, a resident of Hebbariye, told The Associated Press that seven people were found dead in the rubble before sunrise on Wednesday.

    The Israeli military attacked a military building in Hebbariye and killed a member of Lebanon‘s Sunni Muslim al-Jamaa al-Islamiya, or the Islamic Group, and some other fighters. It said the man was part of attacks on Israel.

    Several hours later, Hezbollah said it struck back at the airstrike by shooting many rockets on Wednesday morning at the northern Israeli city of Kiryat Shmona and a military base there.

    Rescue workers in Israel reported that a 25-year-old man died when a fire broke out in an industrial park in Kiryat Shmona after it was hit directly. Video from the place showed a lot of black smoke coming out of a building.

    Another person got a small injury. The Israeli military said that about 30 rockets were fired from Lebanon towards the northern part of Israel.

    Nada Khleif was in her little bakery in Hebbariyeh when the strike caused a lot of damage to her business and a nearby apartment. Fortunately, two of her relatives in the apartment were not hurt.

    “The bakery was the only way I could make money to survive. ” “It’s not there anymore,” she said.

    Lebanon’s Hezbollah fighters started shooting rockets at Israel one day after Hamas-led fighters attacked southern Israel on Oct. The seventh text will be rewritten in simple words. There has been a lot of fighting lately along the border between Lebanon and Israel. International mediators are trying hard to stop a big war between Hezbollah and Israel.

    The fighting in Israel has caused the deaths of nine civilians and 11 soldiers. Around 240 Hezbollah fighters and 40 civilians have died in Lebanon.

  • At least one person killed and “several injured” as Israel attacks eastern Lebanon

    At least one person killed and “several injured” as Israel attacks eastern Lebanon

    Israel has bombed the city of Baalbek in Lebanon on Monday. One person died and many others were hurt. This information was given by two security sources and the governor of Baalbek.

    The strike hit the entrance to the city of Baalbek in the south. It was about 2 km (1. 2 miles) away from old Roman ruins, according to security sources.

    Three more strikes hit close to the city of Taraya, 20 km (12. 4 miles) west of Baalbek, they said.

    In late February, eastern Lebanon was bombed for the first time since the fighting started in Gaza.

    Israel had been attacking the southern part of Lebanon, but recently they have also started to target areas further north. This is a change in Israel’s strategy, according to a source in the Lebanese security.

    This news story is still being updated. Come back later for more information.

  • Israel attacks Lebanon with “extensive” strikes

    Israel attacks Lebanon with “extensive” strikes

    Israel attacked Lebanon a lot after a woman was killed and others were hurt in a rocket attack on northern Israel.

    Lebanese news said that villages were attacked and buildings were burning.

    Hezbollah hasn’t admitted to attacking Israel, even though they are believed to be responsible.

    Both sides have been shooting at each other across Israel’s northern border since the attacks by Hamas on 7 October.

    “Israel’s military planes started a lot of attacks in Lebanon,” said Daniel Hagari, spokesperson for the Israel Defense Forces, on Wednesday.

    Mr Hagari said that the IDF will share more information about its recent air strikes soon.

    Lebanon attacked northern Israel and hit the Safed area. The attack targeted the Israeli military’s base in the north, the IDF reported.

    A recording shows a rocket landing close to a hospital’s entrance.

    Hezbollah is a group of Shia Muslims that has a lot of weapons and is one of the strongest non-government military groups in the world.

    It started in the early 1980s by Iran to go against Israel.

  • Prayers chanted by mourners for deceased Hezbollah commander

    Prayers chanted by mourners for deceased Hezbollah commander

    Today, people in the village of Khirbet Selem in southern Lebanon came together for the funeral of Wissam Tawil. He was a high-ranking leader in the group Hezbollah and had been killed the day before in a likely attack by Israel.

    The coffin, covered with Hezbollah’s yellow flag, was carried in a parade through the streets, with people singing prayers.

    His death was a big event in the ongoing problem between Hezbollah, a strong Lebanese group supported by Iran, and Israel.

    Tawil, a high-ranking member of Hezbollah’s Radwan force, was killed in the recent fighting. This has made people worried that there will be a big war.

    Hezbollah keeps on attacking Israel from across the border. They hit positions in Israel. There are also reports that another important leader of the group was killed in southern Lebanon by Israel.

    So far, Hezbollah has planned its attacks carefully, and the fighting has mostly stayed near the borders.

    Israel sees the group as a strong enemy because it has many well-trained fighters and a lot of rockets, including missiles that can reach far into Israel.

    Israeli leaders say it’s very important to make the northern part of the country safe again – even if they have to use the army.

    Some people, like Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, have said that if the situation gets worse, there could be a very strong reaction. They are saying that the military could do to Beirut what it has already done to Gaza.

  • Four people slain in cross-border battle with Israel – Hezbollah

    Four people slain in cross-border battle with Israel – Hezbollah

    Hezbollah says four of its fighters were killed in Lebanon on Wednesday evening in a shooting from across the border with Israel.

    The Israeli army says it bombed places used by terrorists and said there were attacks from Lebanon into Israel.

    People are worried that there might be a big war in the area after a leader of Hamas was killed in Lebanon.

    The comments from Hezbollah and Israel on Wednesday made people less worried about a big war happening because of what’s happening in Gaza.

    The Palestinian Red Crescent says that an Israeli attack has hit its building in Khan Younis, Gaza.

    The US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is traveling to the Middle East tonight. This is his fourth trip to the region since October 7th.

    Hamas attacked Israel on 7 October and killed at least 1,200 people. Another 240 people were taken hostage.

    The health department in Gaza, controlled by Hamas, says that over 22,000 people have died in the area since Israel began its attack.

  • Assassination of Hamas commander increases concerns of war

    Assassination of Hamas commander increases concerns of war

    The situation in the Middle East has gotten worse since the Israel-Gaza war started. This got even worse when Saleh al-Arouri, a leader of Hamas, was killed in Lebanon.

    Arouri, a top leader of Hamas, was killed by a drone in southern Beirut. He was an important person in the Izzedine al-Qassam Brigades, which is the armed part of Hamas. He was also a good friend of Ismail Haniyeh, who is the leader of Hamas. He was in Lebanon to help his group communicate with Hezbollah.

    Even before the war started, the leader of Lebanese Hezbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, said that if there was an attack on Lebanon, they would fight back strongly.

    However, Hezbollah and its Iranian friends know that how they respond to the current conflict could greatly impact the outcome of the war and the success of Hezbollah.

    It was not a surprise that Hamas leaders outside Gaza were going to be targeted.

    Israel will hunt down and attack Hamas leaders no matter where they are. In November, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gave a warning.

    A few months ago, he clearly talked about Arouri. The second leader of Hamas was also on the US list of terrorists and there was a reward of $5 million on his head since 2018.

    Israel usually does not say if they killed someone on purpose, but in this ongoing conflict, there have been many planned killings. It’s also a story of payback and getting back at someone.

    Israel will now be prepared for counterattacks. Hamas leaders and their friends are asking for support from the West Bank and other places.

    Hezbollah and Hamas need to take action and show it to others.

    Hezbollah’s first message asked people to be patient.

    Up until now, this strong military and political group has been using words and small attacks at the border to avoid getting Lebanon involved in a big fight.

    The Hamas official who had ties to Hezbollah and Iran was killed in a neighbourhood in Beirut. This has affected their plans. However, it needs to consider quick, impressive actions now, compared to its overall strategy for the future.

    It has a lot of support along the dangerous southern border of Lebanon. However, in Beirut and other places, people still have strong memories of the destructive 2006 war between Israel and Lebanon. This country is currently facing many of its own problems.

    Many Israeli leaders have wanted to use this chance to get rid of Hezbollah and its threats to the northern towns for a long time.

    There has been fighting on this front, but it has been limited. Israeli forces are spread thin in Gaza and the West Bank.

    The US, Israel’s biggest supporter, has also warned many times against starting a war with Hezbollah, because it could have serious consequences.

    The recent crisis started with the killing of Arouri and six others, including two Hamas military leaders. This happened during a time of growing tension in other areas, such as the Red Sea shipping lanes. The Iran-backed Houthis have been attacking ships they believe are connected to Israel.

    Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said that Israel is under attack from seven different areas, such as Yemen, Lebanon, Syria, and Iraq.

    Many people are asking for everyone to calm down and not make the situation worse, including leaders from the West, politicians in Lebanon, and UN peacekeepers. They are all very worried that the fighting could spread and become a bigger war.
    But Israel has been very clear from the beginning.

    Its goal is to “eliminate Hamas”. This means attacking its buildings, military and government leaders, and money.

    After almost three months, it says there is still a lot more to do.

    Many people in Israel and around the world are wondering if Hamas can be defeated by using military force and causing a lot of civilian deaths. This has led to a humanitarian crisis and a lot of suffering and anger.

    The people who planned the attacks in southern Israel in October are thought to be hiding in Gaza, even though Israel is searching very hard for them.

    Arouri’s death in Lebanon will make Turkey and Qatar, where Hamas leaders are also located, think hard about their safety.

    This is also making Israeli families very worried about their loved ones who are still being held captive in Gaza.

    The assassination has stopped the talks in Cairo about swapping hostages for Palestinians in Israeli jails.

    Prime Minister Netanyahu keeps saying that only pressure will be effective.

    Israel has made things even stricter.

  • Deputy leader of Hamas Saleh al-Arouri dies in bomb attack in Beirut

    Deputy leader of Hamas Saleh al-Arouri dies in bomb attack in Beirut

    Israel said that the killing of a Hamas leader in Beirut was not meant to harm Lebanon, despite warnings from its enemies that there would be consequences for his death.

    Israel has not said if they killed Saleh al-Arouri or not, but a spokesperson said it was a precise attack on the leaders of the Hamas group.

    Hamas called it a “terrorist act” and Hezbollah said it was an attack on Lebanon’s independence.

    Lebanon’s Prime Minister said Israel is trying to make them join a big fight with other countries in the area.

    Lebanese news says that Arouri, a top leader of Hamas, was killed by a drone in southern Beirut on Tuesday along with six other people – two military leaders and four other members of Hamas.

    He played a big role in the Izzedine al-Qassam Brigades, the group that fights for Hamas, and was a good friend of Ismail Haniyeh, the leader of Hamas. He was in Lebanon to help his group communicate with Hezbollah.

    Hezbollah and Israeli forces have been shooting at each other almost every day since the war started between Israel and Hamas in Gaza. But, the fighting has mostly stayed around the border of Israel and Lebanon.

    Hezbollah is a big and strong group in Lebanon, and also has some people in the government. Some countries, like Israel and the UK, think Hezbollah is a terrorist group.

    The Israel Army didn’t say anything about killing Saleh al-Arouri, but they said they are ready for anything.

    “The IDF is fully prepared to defend and attack in all areas,” said spokesperson Rear Adm Daniel Hagari at a meeting.

    “The main thing to say tonight is that we are focused on fighting Hamas, and we will continue to do so,” he said.

    Israeli government adviser Mark Regev didn’t confirm that Israel did the attack, but he said on MSNBC that whoever did it, it wasn’t an attack on Lebanon.

    “It wasn’t an attack on Hezbollah, the terrorist group. ”

    “Someone made a precise and targeted attack on the leaders of Hamas. ” The person who did this is angry with Hamas. “That is very easy to understand. ”

    Arouri, who is 57 years old, is the highest-ranking member of Hamas to be killed since Israel started fighting with the group following its attack on 7 October.

    That day, a lot of Hamas fighters went into Israel and attacked towns near the border. They killed about 1,200 people, most of them were regular people, and they took about 240 as hostages to Gaza.

    Israel started a military attack to destroy Hamas.

    Since then, over 22,000 Palestinians, mostly women and children, have been killed by Israel in attacks on Gaza, according to Gaza’s health ministry run by Hamas.

    Lebanon’s official news agency said that Arouri was killed by an Israeli drone at a Hamas office in a southern suburb of Beirut called Dahiyeh.

    A person from Reuters news agency saw firefighters and paramedics at a tall building with a big hole on the third floor.

    Videos on social media showed a car on fire and a lot of damage to buildings in a crowded neighborhood.

    Dahiyeh is a place where Hezbollah is very strong.

    Mr Haniyeh, the head of Hamas’s political section, said the attack was cowardly. Violent attack, breaking Lebanon’s rules, and making the problem worse.

    Hezbollah said that they see Arouri’s death as a big attack on Lebanon, its people, its safety, freedom, and strength, and it sends important messages about politics and safety.

    The attack was a very bad thing in the war. “We, in Hezbollah, promise that we will not let this crime go without a punishment.

    “Its hand is on the trigger, and its resistors are ready and prepared at the highest levels,” it said.

    Iran, which strongly supports both groups, said that Arouri’s killing would definitely make the resistance stronger.

    The meeting to talk about what to do after the war in Gaza was cancelled.

    Lebanon’s Foreign Minister, Abdallah Bou Habib, said on BBC Radio 4 that his government is talking to Hezbollah to tell them not to take action. He also said that they are having a conversation with them about this.

    In the next day, we will find out if they will answer or not. We are worried that the people of Lebanon, including Hezbollah, do not want to get involved in a war with other countries.

    He asked the West to push Israel to stop all its violent actions in Lebanon, Beirut, and Gaza.

    The leader of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu, promised to get rid of the leaders of Hamas no matter where they are.

    Israeli media reports said that Arouri was seen as the unofficial leader of Hamas’s military group in the West Bank and was responsible for supervising attacks in that area.

    People think he helped take and kill three Israeli teenagers in the West Bank in 2014. They also say he was in prison in Israel for other violent acts.

    The Times of Israel reported that he was one of the top Hamas officials with strong ties to Iran and Hezbollah.

  • Israel fires across border into Lebanon

    Israel fires across border into Lebanon

    The Israeli military says its airplanes attacked some Hezbollah sites in Lebanon, after Hezbollah attacked from the border to the north.

    IDF spokesperson Daniel Hagari said that they attacked places where terrorists keep their weapons and military equipment.

    Ever since the war started in October, Hezbollah, a militia supported by Iran, has been attacking the northern border region of Israel. Hamas also claims it fired rockets from Lebanon towards Israel.

    Israel has moved many people out of the area, but the fighting has not turned into a big war yet.

    More update on this story soon…

  • UN expects combat pauses could extend to border between Israel and Lebanon

    UN expects combat pauses could extend to border between Israel and Lebanon

    It might be wishful thinking to hope that the break in fighting between Israel and Hamas in Gaza could also stop the conflict on Israel’s border with Lebanon.

    UNIFIL is a group from the United Nations that has been watching and helping to keep peace in the area called the “Blue Line” since the 2006 war between Israel and Hezbollah, a strong group in southern Lebanon.

    At the UNIFIL base in Lebanon, spokesperson Andrea Tenenti says he wants peace to come back, even for a short time. But he knows there’s no official way or direct talks between the fighting groups to make it happen.

    Since fights started here on 8 October, Tenenti says there has been a steady increase in rocket and missile attacks from both sides.

    However, he also said that there have already been attacks that go further into Lebanon and Israel, and he recognizes that these “mistakes” could cause a bigger war.

    The 2006 agreement said Hezbollah had to eventually give up its weapons. Many people, especially in Israel, believe that not being able to accomplish this has made tensions along the border worse and could lead to another big war.

    Tenenti says that everyone needs to do something about the resolution and make the regular Lebanese army stronger. He knows that many people in Lebanon support Hezbollah, not just in the south but in other parts of the country too.

    A return to how things were before the events in early October is the best outcome that the UN and the people in the villages on both sides of the border can expect.

  • Israel investigating reports on murder of journalists in Lebanon

    Israel investigating reports on murder of journalists in Lebanon

    Earlier today, a news outlet from Lebanon said that two of its reporters were killed by a bombing from Israel.

    The IDF said its soldiers were in the area of al-Jabin to stop an attack from Hezbollah.

    The Israeli army says they know about a report that says journalists were killed by Israeli soldiers.

    “This is a place where fighting is happening, and they are shooting at each other. ” Being in this area is not safe. The situation is being looked at.

  • Numerous Hamas sympathisers turn out for Lebanon rally

    Numerous Hamas sympathisers turn out for Lebanon rally

    About half a million Palestinians and their descendants live in Lebanon. They live in crowded refugee camps with limited resources. For the past month, they have been getting more and more angry as they watch the war between Israel and Hamas destroy a lot of Gaza.

    In Lebanon‘s third-biggest city, Sidon, many people who support Hamas came together today in Nejmeh Square. They were holding their green flags. Some people wore Palestinian scarves while others wore black face masks.

    Many people talked about how they disapproved of Israel’s military action in Gaza. They promised that Israel and its friends in the West would be blamed for the growing number of civilian deaths.

    Boys wearing soldier clothes and carrying toy guns sat on their dads’ shoulders or on top of cars. They watched as Hamas leaders in Lebanon blamed Israel for making the situation in Gaza worse on purpose. They also said Israel doesn’t want to have meaningful discussions to free around 240 hostages held by Hamas in Gaza.

  • IDF claims to have intercepted unmanned aircraft in Lebanon

    IDF claims to have intercepted unmanned aircraft in Lebanon

    The Israeli military stopped a flying machine without a pilot that was seen coming from Lebanon and heading towards Israel.

    It said the plane was shot down “far in Lebanon”.

    The military in Israel said that some missiles were shot from Lebanon towards Israel. In return, the Israeli forces fired back with their own weapons.

    More update on this story soon…

  • Israel destroys ‘suspicious target’ that penetrated into its territory from Lebanon

    Israel destroys ‘suspicious target’ that penetrated into its territory from Lebanon

    As we have reported, since fighting started earlier this month, Israel claims to have attacked 20 Hezbollah “terrorist cells” over the Lebanese border.

    According to the IDF, an interceptor missile was fired at a “suspicious target” that had infiltrated Israeli airspace from Lebanon.

    According to Israel, their attention has been on the unrest in Gaza and the south of Israel, but there is also unrest at the border with Lebanon.

    According to Daniel Hagari, a spokesman for the Israeli military, “eight terrorist cells” have been destroyed in Lebanon over the past 24 hours.

    He said that seven of them were destroyed before they could launch anti-tank missiles and rockets.

    Additionally, Hagari reported that since battle started on the border earlier this month, 20 Hezbollah cells had been destroyed.

    More update on this story soon…

  • Israel fires back at Lebanon after missile launch

    Israel fires back at Lebanon after missile launch

    Our page this morning has talked about the fighting in Gaza, but there is also violence happening in the other part of Israel.

    After Hamas attacked on October 7th, Israeli forces and Hezbollah fighters have been shooting at each other across the Lebanese border.

    Today, the Israeli army said it fired artillery at Lebanon in response to two missiles being shot at a Kibbutz called Manara in the north.

    The IDF has reported that no one was hurt in the recent missile attack. They also mentioned that they are using artillery shelling to attack the place from where the missiles were launched.

  • Israel evacuates residents along border with Lebanon over concern of escalation

    Israel evacuates residents along border with Lebanon over concern of escalation

    Israel’s military is moving 28 communities away from the northern border with Lebanon because the fighting with Hezbollah militants is getting worse.

    On Sunday, two people from Israel were killed. They were hit by missiles that came from Lebanon and targeted a village and a military post.

    The army said it attacked places where Hezbollah soldiers were located as a reaction.

    It also said that Iran, who supports the group, ordered attacks to take attention away from the Gaza war.

    Iran said to Israel that if it continues to attack the Palestinian territory, there is a chance of a big conflict happening in that region. This is in response to the militant group Hamas attacking Israel earlier this month.

    Hezbollah is a very strong army in Lebanon and has rockets that can reach far into Israel. It had a war with Israel that lasted for a whole month in 2006.

    Israeli government minister Benny Gantz visited a community co-ordination centre in the town of Shlomi. During this visit, the BBC asked him if he believed there would be another war with Hezbollah.

    “I don’t want it to happen, but we are getting ready for it,” he answered.
    The IDF said on Monday that it is helping people living within 2km (1. 2 miles) of the border with Lebanon to leave their homes and stay in paid accommodations provided by the government.

    A representative said that the evacuation was done to protect people and to give the military the ability to act if needed.

    However, many villages near the border are mostly empty, with only a quarter of the population remaining.

    People who live there told the BBC that families had not waited for the official order. Instead, they quickly gathered their belongings and took their children to a safer place in the south.

    In a lot of situations, the only people still in the villages are soldiers and local security team members who stayed to assist them.

    The towns are very near to the border, and you can see the strong fence made by Israel next to it. In a few of them, you can also notice the Hezbollah observation posts on the opposite side.
    On Sunday, there was a lot of fighting in different places along the border line. The IDF and Hezbollah were shooting at each other.

    Israel has announced that a civilian has died from an attack by Hezbollah in the ongoing violence. A person in their forties died in a missile attack on the village of Shtula near the border.

    Afterwards, an Israeli soldier named Lt Amitai Granot was killed in a missile attack on a military post, as mentioned by Israeli media.

    In another incident, a rocket struck the main building of the UN peacekeeping force in Lebanon, Unifil, located in the city of Naqoura. Nobody got hurt.

    The IDF said it attacked Hezbollah’s military buildings and equipment on Sunday and during the night.

    It was also said that nine rockets were shot from Lebanon into Israeli land. Five of them were stopped, and Israel reacted by attacking the places the rockets were launched from.
    On Monday, three Israeli soldiers died when they fought against militants from Palestinian Islamic Jihad. These militants came from Lebanon and crossed the border. Later that day, the Israeli army attacked places in Lebanon after mortar fire, and at least three fighters from Hezbollah were killed.

    On Friday, a cameraman from Reuters news agency named Issam Abdallah was killed by shellfire while he was reporting near a village called Alma al-Shaab in Lebanon. The IDF is checking if it’s true that Israeli soldiers shot the shell, as claimed by Lebanon.

    The Israeli army sent many more soldiers to the border recently. However, the defense minister said they don’t want a war in the north.

    If Hezbollah decides to go to war, it will face severe consequences. Very difficult or burdensome. “But if it controls itself, we will show respect and maintain the current situation,” he said.

    Iran’s Foreign Minister, Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, said that his country sent a message to Israel. The message basically said that if Israel does not stop its cruel actions in Gaza, Iran cannot just watch and do nothing.

    He also said that if the war got bigger, the United States would have a lot of problems and lose a lot.

    The US announced that they were sending another group of warships to the eastern Mediterranean Sea to prevent any harmful actions against Israel or any attempt to expand the conflict after Hamas attacked.

  • Israeli forces open fire on Lebanon after explosion close to border barrier

    Israeli forces open fire on Lebanon after explosion close to border barrier

    The Israel Defense Forces have reported that there was a small explosion that caused minor damage to a security fence on the border between Israel and Lebanon, close to the kibbutz of Hanita. The army is shooting artillery towards Lebanon, according to the IDF.

    Moreover, a warning was triggered about terrorists coming into the area. Right now, IDF soldiers are looking for something in the area.

    People are worried that a new part of the war might start if Hezbollah, a group in Lebanon, chooses to attack Israel in support of the Palestinians.

  • Deadly clash at Israel-Lebanon border

    Deadly clash at Israel-Lebanon border

    An important Israeli officer was killed in a fight with armed group on the border with Lebanon on Monday, according to Israel’s military.

    The military said that soldiers and planes killed two “terrorist infiltrators” who entered Israel’s land.

    Palestinian Islamic Jihad said that they were a part of it.

    Afterwards, the military attacked places in Lebanon because mortar fire was happening, resulting in the deaths of three militants from Hezbollah movement.

    On Tuesday, a group called Hezbollah claimed that their soldiers shot a special missile at an Israeli army vehicle in the Avivim area.

    The military said that no one got hurt and that a helicopter attacked one of the group’s lookout spots because of what they did.

    The Palestinian group Hamas said they launched rockets from Lebanon towards Israel’s western Galilee area.

    The Israeli military said that the rockets either got stopped or landed in empty places. In response, they attacked two more Hezbollah observation posts.

    For three days in a row, there have been attacks coming from Lebanon, while at the same time, Israel and Hamas were fighting in Gaza.

    The United States has told Hezbollah, a strong military group in Lebanon that fought against Israel in 2006, to stay out of a situation.

    On Monday, there was a lot of violence. Some armed men came into Lebanon near a town called Dhayra. Israeli soldiers, with help from helicopter gunships, killed these armed men.

    It said that two of the fighters died and one went back to Lebanon and got away.

    Palestinian Islamic Jihad said that the infiltration was a part of their plan called “Operation Al-Aqsa Flood”. This plan was carried out by the militant group Hamas and involved a large attack on southern Israeli communities from Gaza. It started on Saturday and there are reports that at least 900 Israelis have been killed.

    The Israeli military said their helicopters attacked Hezbollah spots in Lebanon, which included two observation posts. This was done in response to two mortar bombs that were fired into Israel, but luckily didn’t cause any injuries.

    Hezbollah said that three of their fighters were killed in attacks by Israel on towns and villages in Lebanon. The group fought back by shooting rockets and shells at two places where Israeli soldiers live.

    On Sunday, the group called Hezbollah launched several shells and rockets at the Israeli army’s locations in the Shebaa Farms/Mount Dov region, claiming it was showing support for the Palestinian fighters.

    The Iran-backed group, which has very strong rockets that can go far into Israel, has said they will get involved in the Israel-Gaza conflict if certain limits are crossed. They say that Israeli troops entered forcefully.

    On Monday, a high-ranking US defense official spoke to reporters. They said that they are really worried about Hezbollah making a bad choice and deciding to start another part of the fight.

  • Foreign Affairs Minister tours Lebanon

    Foreign Affairs Minister tours Lebanon

    The Minister of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration has embarked on a four-day official visit to Beirut, Lebanon, aimed at fostering collaboration and cooperation between the two nations.

    During her stay, Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey engaged in discussions with her Lebanese counterpart, Mr Abdallah Bou Habib, emphasizing the importance of extending cooperation beyond existing avenues.

    Furthermore, Ayorkor Botchwey met with Mr Nabih Berri, Speaker of the Lebanese Parliament, focusing on the recently established Ghana-Lebanon Parliamentary Friendship and advocating for enhanced exchanges between the countries.

    Additionally, meetings were held with Mr Bassam Mawlawi, Lebanon’s Minister of the Interior, and Mr Elias Baissari, Head of General Security.

    These discussions underscored the significance of Ghana-Lebanon relations, particularly acknowledging Ghana’s contribution to the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL).

    Ayorkor Botchwey expressed optimism for improved conditions for Ghanaian workers in Lebanon, while commemorating the establishment of diplomatic ties between the two nations, further strengthening their relations.

  • Israel signs an agreement to share a gas field with Lebanon

    Exploration in the Qana field is set to begin following the signing of a framework agreement with the contractor by Tel Aviv.Following a United States-mediated agreement that ended a decades-long maritime border dispute between Lebanon and Israel last month, French oil giant TotalEnergies has announced that it will soon begin gas exploration activities in the Mediterranean Sea off Lebanon’s coast.

    TotalEnergies and its partner, Italy’s Eni, signed a framework agreement with Israel on Tuesday, paving the way for exploration in the so-called Qana field.

    Israeli authorities provided no immediate confirmation.

    Under the terms of the deal signed by Lebanese and Israeli representatives on October 27, Israel retains full rights to develop the Karish field while Lebanon retains full rights in Qana – but with a caveat.

    As Qana extends southward of the agreed demarcation line – Line 23 – Israel is entitled to receive royalties under the terms of a separate deal negotiated with the operator of the so-called Block 9.

    Analysts have expressed their concern that the failure to reach a profit-sharing arrangement could potentially stall production on Lebanon’s side.

    Diana Kaissy, advisory board member at the Lebanese Oil and Gas Initiative (LOGI), told Al Jazeera the signature of the framework agreement was “a step forward”.

    “But we don’t want it to be a faulty step,” Kaissy added. “Lebanon should be privy to the agreement.”

    Cash-strapped Lebanon, which has been technically at war with Israel since its creation in 1948, is hoping that future gas discoveries will help pull itself out of the worst economic and financial crisis in the country’s modern history.

    Lebanese officials have said the maritime border agreement does not represent any form of normalisation of relations between the two countries and have avoided direct negotiations with Israeli officials.

    Kaissy argued that while Lebanon had contracted TotalEnergies, the state maintained a sovereign right to its resources and should therefore have a say in how Israel’s royalties over its gas field are calculated.

    It was not immediately clear whether Lebanese authorities had been informed of the terms of the framework agreement, which has not been made public.

    Further complicating the debate around Israel’s royalties is uncertainty around which companies have a stake in Block 9.

    TotalEnergies said in the statement that it would have 60 percent stake and Eni the rest.

    But Lebanon in 2017 had approved licences for an international consortium including TotalEnergies, Eni and Russia’s Novatek. Novatek recently withdrew, and Lebanese officials, including Energy Minister Walid Fayad, have said that Qatar is interested in filling that gap.

    “Qatar does not have any formal relation with Israel, which might explain why it was not part of the framework agreement,” Kaissy said.

    TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanné said the company was “proud to be associated with the peaceful definition of a maritime border between Israel and Lebanon”.

    “By bringing our expertise in offshore exploration, we will respond to the request of both countries to assess the materiality of hydrocarbon resources and production potential in this area,” Pouyanné said.

    The maritime border deal has been hailed as “historic” and mutually beneficial. It represents the first significant diplomatic breakthrough between the two countries in years.

    In September, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah called the extraction of gas from Karish by Israel a “red line”. In turn, Israel’s Defence Minister Benny Gantz said that if Hezbollah harmed its offshore rig, “the price will be Lebanon”.

    Alongside easing regional tensions, the deal could also be a boon for Europe as it attempts to disengage from Russian gas over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

     

  • Economic crisis: US to provide $80.5 million in aid to Lebanon

    The United States announced on Wednesday that it will provide $80.5 million in aid to Lebanon for food assistance and solar-powered water pumping stations.

    Samantha Power, USAID Administrator, made the announcement during a visit to Lebanon ahead of a trip to Egypt for the United Nations Climate Conference (COP27).

    During his visit, Power plans to meet with Lebanese political leaders to press for a resolution to the country’s political vacuum and for leaders to implement a series of political and economic reforms mandated by the International Monetary Fund in order to secure a $3 billion aid package.

    The visit comes at a time when Lebanon is experiencing its worst economic and financial crisis in modern history.

    Power declined to say, however, whether any U.S. assistance would be contingent on Lebanon taking these measures.

    “We are not focused on what happens if those reforms don’t happen. The reforms have to happen,” she told The Associated Press.

    The prospect of an IMF deal “should be enough to end the infighting and bickering and do what is needed for the sake of the country,” Power said.

    USAID has provided about $260 million to Lebanon in 2022 to date. On Wednesday, Power announced an additional $72 million for food assistance to some 650,000 people over five months as part of a $2 billion global food security initiative.

    Lebanon, which relies heavily on imported food and has historically imported the majority of its wheat from Ukraine and Russia, has faced increased food security anxieties in the wake of the Russian war in Ukraine.

    Power also announced $8.5 million to fund 22 new solar-powered pumping stations. Lebanon has been dealing with a crippling electricity crisis that has also led to water shortages due to lack of power at pumping stations.

    The shortages in public water supply are fueling a cholera outbreak, the first Lebanon has seen in three decades. Most Lebanese now rely on water trucked in by private suppliers, which is often not tested for safety.

  • Being in Lebanon feels like a prison, I earn GH¢600 monthly – Lebanon-based Ghanaian

    Ghanaian based in Lebanon, Ghanaian based in Lebanon, Samira Mohammed has shared her three-year-old experience as a house help in Lebanon, the struggles, and the meager salary she earns.

    In an interview on Daily Hustle Worldwide, Samira mentioned that she works 12 hours a day, all week but earns GHS600. Besides the meager salary, the 22-year-old revealed that living in Lebanon feels like a prison.

    “The monthly salary equivalent to Ghana cedes is GHS600. I send it all to my family because my father lost his cocoa farm, and my mom needs money for her health. The family I work with don’t maltreat me, but the workload is too much, and the salary isn’t enough,” she said.

    Samira implied that she regrets her decision to travel to Lebanon sometimes, but “I thank God because I get something small to send to my family. I want my younger siblings to get an education.”

    Speaking about the living atmosphere in the city she lives in, the young lady revealed that it isn’t as peaceful as Ghana.

    “It hasn’t been peaceful since the explosion. We often hear gunshots and bombs. So we only go out to buy groceries. Many people die here every day. It’s more than living in prison. Everybody is scared. You won’t even hear a car pass by,” Samira noted.

    Miss Mohammed travelled to Lebanon in 2019 and has worked with two families. She was convinced by travel agents who promised good-paying jobs in the Middle East.
    has shared her three-year-old experience as a house help in Lebanon, the struggles, and the meager salary she earns.

    In an interview on Daily Hustle Worldwide, Samira mentioned that she works 12 hours a day, all week but earns GHS600. Besides the meager salary, the 22-year-old revealed that living in Lebanon feels like a prison.

    “The monthly salary equivalent to Ghana cedes is GHS600. I send it all to my family because my father lost his cocoa farm, and my mom needs money for her health. The family I work with don’t maltreat me, but the workload is too much, and the salary isn’t enough,” she said.

    Samira implied that she regrets her decision to travel to Lebanon sometimes, but “I thank God because I get something small to send to my family. I want my younger siblings to get an education.”

    Speaking about the living atmosphere in the city she lives in, the young lady revealed that it isn’t as peaceful as Ghana.

    “It hasn’t been peaceful since the explosion. We often hear gunshots and bombs. So we only go out to buy groceries. Many people die here every day. It’s more than living in prison. Everybody is scared. You won’t even hear a car pass by,” Samira noted.

    Miss Mohammed travelled to Lebanon in 2019 and has worked with two families. She was convinced by travel agents who promised good-paying jobs in the Middle East.

  • Israel lauds US plan for Lebanon maritime border deal

    An agreement between two countries who are still formally at war gained more traction when Israel applauded a US plan to settle the country’s maritime border issue with Lebanon.

    The draft agreement floated by United States envoy Amos Hochstein aims to settle competing claims over offshore gas fields and was delivered to Lebanese and Israeli officials at the weekend.

    Lebanese authorities, who confirmed receipt of the terms, have pledged to deliver a reply “as quickly as possible”, following a flurry of recent announcements from Beirut that a deal with Israel was close.

    Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid told his cabinet on Sunday that the US proposal “strengthens Israel’s security and Israel’s economy”.

    His government was “discussing the final details, so it is not yet possible to praise a done deal”, Lapid said.

    “However, as we have demanded from the start, the proposal safeguards Israel’s full security-diplomatic interests, as well as our economic interests.”

    Lebanon and Israel have no diplomatic relations and their land border is patrolled by the United Nations.

    They reopened negotiations on their maritime border in 2020, but the process was stalled by Lebanon’s demand that the map used by the UN in the talks be modified.

    Progress resumed after Lebanon appeared to modify its position, specifically concerning the Karish natural gas field, which Israel claims as its territory and is not open to negotiation.

    The head of the powerful Lebanese Shia movement Hezbollah, Hasan Nasrallah, had threatened Israel with attacks if it began production from Karish.

    But Nasrallah on Saturday called the US proposal “a very important step”.

    ‘Irresponsible announcements’

    Lapid said Israel had been seeking an agreement with Lebanon “for over a decade”.

    He added that his government does “not oppose the development of an additional Lebanese gas field, from which we will of course receive the share we deserve” – an apparent reference to the Qana field, which could be subject to a revenue-sharing mechanism under the US proposal.

    “Such a field would weaken Lebanese dependency on Iran, restrain Hezbollah and bring regional stability,” said Lapid.

    The Hochstein proposal will be submitted for final approval following a legal review, he said.

    Progress towards the deal comes before Israel’s November 1 election, its fifth vote in less than four years.

    Former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, a staunch foreign policy hawk seeking a return to power, warned that the right-wing government he intends to form after the vote could undo any pact. “If this illegal ploy passes, it won’t oblige us,” he said.

    Netanyahu accused Lapid of “giving Hezbollah sovereign Israeli territory with a huge gas field that belongs” to the Jewish state, without specifying which Israeli waters he believes are being surrendered.

    Israel and Hezbollah fought a 34-day war in 2006. Netanyahu said Lapid had “shamefully capitulated to Nasrallah’s threats”.

    Lapid shot back, accusing Netanyahu of making “irresponsible announcements” that undermine Israel’s “security interests”.

    ‘Invest in our gas’

    Defence Minister Benny Gantz, who also aspires to be elected prime minister in less than a month, said Netanyahu’s criticism was uninformed and dangerous.

    “I’d suggest that Netanyahu … requests an orderly update on the topic before he adds fuel to Nasrallah’s propaganda, which has endangered and still endangers the agreement,” Gantz said in a statement.

    Gantz also said the agreement, were it finalised, would be presented to parliament and relayed to the Israeli public.

    It was not yet clear whether such an agreement would need the approval of parliament, where Lapid does not have a majority.

    The justice ministry said late Sunday it was still examining the agreement and legal issues accompanying it.

    With the Lebanese economy in deepening distress, Hezbollah has pledged to abide by whatever Beirut agrees to in the indirect talks.

    “We support the Lebanese position so that we safeguard our right to demarcate our maritime borders and invest in our gas,” Lebanon’s National News Agency quoted senior Hezbollah official Mohammad Raad as saying.

  • ‘Bodies everywhere’: Survivors recount Lebanon boat disaster

    Ninety-seven people have died – including 24 children – after a boat full of asylum seekers heading from Lebanon to Europe capsized in the Mediterranean.

    Speaking from a hospital bed, still in shock, Ibrahim Mansour, one of 20 people who survived one of the deadliest boat disasters in the Eastern Mediterranean, says he can’t forgive himself for not saving others.

    More than 150 people were on board the small boat that sailed from crisis-hit Lebanon on Wednesday morning, with the hope of reaching Italy for a better life.

    Those on board were mostly Lebanese, Syrians, and Palestinians, and included both children and the elderly, according to the United Nations.

    Four hours after the boat set sail, the engine stopped. Mansour, 29, recounted to Al Jazeera that those on board called the smuggler on shore, but he said: “If you come back, we will shoot you.

    “We also called 112 to seek help from Lebanese authorities, but no help came.”

    Due to the high waves, the boat lost control and capsized off the Syrian port of Tartous, some 50km (30 miles) north of Tripoli in Lebanon. In a matter of moments, 100 people died, Mansour said. He saw “bodies everywhere”.

    Those who survived were clinging onto the boat that overturned.

    “I cry all the time; I’m in shock. I saw bodies and horrible images. My heart hearts,” Mansour said. “I tried to help children and another man; I tried to keep their spirits alive, but I couldn’t. This is hurting me, especially because of the child who was holding onto me before I lost him. They told me he died.”

    Mansour eventually swam to the Syrian shore, reaching the coast on Thursday night.

    Syrian state media reported that 97 people have died, 20 people have been rescued and others are still missing.

    Among the dead are 24 children and 31 women, according to Lebanese Transport Minister Ali Hamie.

    In a statement on Sunday, the secretary-general of Lebanon’s Higher Relief Commission, Mohammad Khair, said that five Lebanese and eight Palestinians, who were on the boat, are still being treated at the al-Basel Hospital in Syria’s Tartous city and will return soon to Lebanon.

    The Lebanese army said it arrested a man it believes was behind the suspected “smuggling operation” to Italy.

    Another young man, who survived what he calls “a nightmare”, told Al Jazeera his story from an ambulance as he made his way back from Syria to Lebanon: “It’s impossible to forget what has happened and the scenes I’ve been through.

    When the boat capsized, “people onboard were pushed by waves to all directions, left and right, under and above the water. No one came to rescue us,” he said.

    “I stayed almost 24 hours near the boat, which was overturned, floating; it hadn’t sunk. I managed to keep myself over the boat, and then I swam for 13 hours until I reached the Syrian Tartous coast. I’ve been told that some survivors were saved and rescued by Russian and Syrian boats, but I saw nothing until I reached the shore,” he said.

    ‘Situation is reaching a desperate level’

    The disaster highlights the crippling poverty and mounting despair that has been forcing many people in Lebanon, including Mansour, to attempt the perilous crossing across the Mediterranean, in hopes of reaching Europe.

    Lebanon, a country that hosts more than a million refugees from Syria’s war, has since 2019 been mired in a financial crisis branded by the World Bank as one of the worst in modern times.

    Since 2020, Lebanon has seen a spike in the number of Lebanese citizens, who have joined Palestinian and Syrian refugees in attempting dangerous boat journeys in search of a better life.

    Al Jazeera’s Zeina Khodr, reporting from Tripoli, said that “according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), approximately 3,500 individuals attempted to make the journey this year alone, but security sources tell us that is a conservative figure”.

    Many on the boat were Palestinian refugees, who, since the Nakba in 1948 (when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were ethnically cleansed from their homes by Zionist militias), have been living across Lebanon in overcrowded, makeshift camps that lack basic infrastructure. Palestinian refugees living in Lebanon do not have basic rights; they are denied citizenship and have no access to healthcare or education.

    Tamara Alrifai, the spokesperson for the UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), told Al Jazeera that there were an estimated 25-30 Palestinian refugees on the capsized boat. Most of them were from the Nahr al-Bared refugee camp, “a camp that was very much destroyed around 15 years ago in one of the rounds of violence in Lebanon.”

    “The situation of Palestine refugees in Lebanon is reaching such a desperate level, that they are willing to risk their lives along these perilous routes if there is hope on the other side,” Alrifai said. “The other side always looks better than what many of them describe as hell.”

    “[Palestinian refugees in Lebanon [are] marginalized, disenfranchised, barred from owning property, barred from professions. The economic and financial collapse of Lebanon, particularly this last year, has hit the most vulnerable first [including Palestinian refugees].”

    Alrifai said among the Palestinian group of migrants, two of them were UNRWA schoolchildren.

    “These are people we know, these are young people who go to school, who have an education, who wanted to go to the other side, and search for a better life for themselves and for their kids. This is truly tragic and my colleagues at UNRWA are horrified at the news.

    “No one wants to be a refugee. No one wants to live such a humiliating life as Palestinian refugees live in many of these camps,” Alrifai said.

    Khodr, the Al Jazeera correspondent reporting from northern Lebanon, said many families are still waiting to receive the bodies of their relatives.

    “Some have been identified and brought back for burial,” she said. “Others are still in Syria awaiting the results of DNA tests. Until they’re received, it won’t be known how many or who remains missing at sea.”

    “Lebanese and Palestinian refugees [survivors] are arriving home, but Syrian refugees have not returned. Neither have their bodies. Their families who escaped the rule of President Bashar al-Assad will be afraid to cross the border to identify their loved ones.”

    DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author’s, and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana

    Source: Aljazeera

  • Boat sinks off the coast of Syria, killing dozens of people

    The health minister reported that 71 migrants’ bodies had been discovered when the boat they were on capsized off the coast of Syria.

    Twenty survivors are receiving medical care in a hospital in Tartus, Syria.

    Officials said Lebanese, Syrian and Palestinian nationals – including women and children – were believed to be among the 120-150 people who were on board when the boat sank on Thursday.

    It is not clear what caused the accident. A rescue attempt is ongoing.

    Officials added that the vessel had departed from Minyeh, a city near the Lebanese port city of Tripoli.

    The boat is believed to have been heading to Europe when it sank.

    Tartus, where survivors have been transported, is about 30 miles (50 km) north of Tripoli.

    Victims’ families mourn in Tripoli

    In a small dark room in a poor neighborhood in Tripoli, northern Lebanon, a family mourns.

    Mustafa Mesto, 35, died with his two daughters and son, while his wife and her father are still in critical condition in a hospital in Syria.

    Mustafa, was a Lebanese taxi driver, married to a Syrian Kurd who fled the war the country’s vicious civil war. One family fleeing devastation in two countries. They had hoped to reach Italy, dreaming of a better life.

    But now their families, like those of others who lost their lives on this boat, are in shock.

    Mustafa’s mother, Adla, sits in the middle of a big room filled with grieving relatives. She wails out loud, blaming the Lebanese government for her son’s fate.

    “He ran away from poverty and the terrible conditions they left us in. These politicians could not care less about our lives. Nothing will bring him back to me, nothing will bring his little children back to me.”

    Lebanon hosts an estimated 1.5 million Syrian refugees, and almost 14,000 from other countries, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). It hosts the largest number of refugees per capita in the world.

    However, the country is facing a severe economic crisis, fuelled by Covid-19 and the 2020 Beirut port explosion, with more than 80% of the population struggling to afford food and medicine.

    The situation is having a severe impact on the country’s migrant population, many of whom are choosing to flee elsewhere, including to Europe.

    Earlier this month, six people, including children, were killed when a boat carrying migrants from Lebanon to Europe sank off the coast of Turkey. The country’s coast guard said 73 migrants from four boats had been rescued.

  • Ghanaian forward Stephen Sarfo rejoins Lebanese outfit Bourj FC

    Ghanaian forward Stephen Sarfo has returned to Lebanon to sign for Bourj FC.

    The 30-year-old rejoins the Towers after his first spell was ended pre-maturely due to COVID-19.

    He will be with the club for the 2022/23 campaign.

    Bourj FC announced the arrival of the striker on their social media pages.

    “Ghanaian striker Stephen Sarfo has signed a new contract with Bourj Sporting Club, to be the third of the team,” wrote the club.

    Stephen Sarfo previously played for Berekum Chelsea in the Ghana Premier League.

    He was top scorer as the Black Galaxies won the 2017 WAFU Championship hosted by Ghana.

    Sarfo before leaving Bourj in his first stint was top scorer in the Challenge Cup which was ended abruptly due to COVID-19.

    Source: Ghanasoccernet.com

  • Explosion at fuel depot on Lebanon-Syria border injures 10

    An explosion inside a fuel warehouse on the Lebanese-Syrian border injured at least 10 people on Sunday, the Lebanese Red Cross said.

    Three were treated at the site in the border town of al-Qasr, while the seven others were transferred to local hospitals, George Kettneh, the secretary-general of the Lebanese Red Cross, told dpa.

    Footage online purportedly showed flames of fire rising from the warehouse amid successive blasts reportedly caused by exploding gas cylinders.
    The initial explosion was powerful and triggered a massive fire, local residents said.

    The blaze was later brought under control, Bilal Rad, a civil defence official, said. “The search is ongoing for any injured,” he told the online edition of the Lebanese newspaper Annahar.

    Local media reported the explosion had been caused by a short electrical failure.
    The Lebanese army said the warehouse was located on the Syrian side of the border and that the privately owned facility was used to store fuel and gas.

    “The warehouse is far from the army checkpoint in the area,” the army said in a brief statement, adding there were no casualties among military personnel.
    The area is controlled by the Iran-allied Lebanese Hezbollah movement and is a hub for smuggling activities into neighbouring Syria.

    In August, a cataclysmic explosion hit the Beirut port, killing more than 190 people, injuring 6,000 others and leaving some 300,000 more homeless. That blast was caused by tons of ammonium nitrate, which had been inadequately stored at the port.

    Source: GNA

  • At least six prisoners killed in Mogadishu prison shoot-out

    Lebanon’s government has stepped down as Prime Minister Hassan Diab blamed endemic corruption for a devastating explosion last week that tore through the capital.

    President Michel Aoun accepted Diab’s resignation on Monday and asked the government to stay on in a caretaker capacity until a new cabinet was formed.

    Tensions have been boiling over in the country following the massive explosion at Beirut’s port that killed some 200 people and wounded 6,000 others, according to the latest tally.

    “This crime” was a result of corruption that is “bigger than the state”, Diab said in a televised statement, adding that he was taking “a step back” so he could stand with the people “and fight the battle for change alongside them”.

    “I declare today the resignation of this government. May God protect Lebanon,” Diab said, repeating the last phrase three times.

    The developments follow a weekend of angry, violent anti-establishment protests in which 728 people were wounded and one police officer killed amid a heavy crackdown by security forces.

    Through analysis of videos and images of the security response by the army and men in plain-clothes on the day, and examination of medical documents and interviews with doctors who treated the wounded, Al Jazeera established that security forces violated international standards on the use of force.

    Political and economic reforms

    The August 4 disaster, which was caused by highly explosive ammonium nitrate that was stored at Beirut’s port for more than six years, has fuelled popular anger and upended politics in a country already struggling with a major economic crisis.

    Most Lebanese blame their leadership’s corruption and neglect for the explosion, which has caused damage to the extent of an estimated $15bn and left nearly 300,000 people homeless.

    Since October, there have been mass demonstrations demanding the departure of the entire sectarian-based leadership over entrenched corruption, incompetence and mismanagement.

    But the ruling oligarchy has held onto power for so long – since the end of the civil war in 1990 – that it is difficult to find a credible political figure not tainted by connections to them.

    Although Diab’s resignation had appeared inevitable after the catastrophe, he seemed unwilling to leave and only two days ago made a televised speech in which he offered to stay on for two months to allow for various factions to agree on a road map for reforms. But the pressure from within his cabinet proved to be too much.‘Historic turning point’

    Diab’s government was formed after his predecessor, Saad Hariri, stepped down under pressure from the protest movement. It took months of bickering among the leadership factions before they settled on Diab.

    His government, which was supported by Hezbollah and its allies and seen as one-sided, failed to implement the sweeping political and economic reforms that it had promised.

    Now the process must start again, with Diab’s government in a caretaker role as the same factions debate a new one.

    Al Jazeera’s Bernard Smith, reporting from Beirut, said the change is going to be challenging because Lebanon’s electoral system is set up “to protect the political elite in the country”.

    “To change that system, those political elites have to agree to it,” Smith said.

    “Even an explosion as catastrophic as Tuesday’s might not be enough to get those elites easily give up their grip on power … That’s why international pressure, people believe, is necessary.”

    On Sunday, world leaders and international organisations pledged nearly $300m in emergency humanitarian aid to Beirut, but warned no funds would be made available until Lebanese authorities committed themselves to the political and economic reforms demanded by the people.

    Rami Khouri, a professor at the American University of Beirut, described the developments of the past week as “a historic turning point in the modern political governance of Lebanon” that is “just at the beginning”.

    Khouri said there were essentially two main forces currently in Lebanon: “One is Hezbollah and its close allies, and the other one is the protest movement, or the revolution as they call themselves – these are all kinds of people but they do represent the majority of the population.”

    “The question is, will there be a serious negotiation now,” he said, noting that the formation of “a hybrid government” tasked to address Lebanon’s critical issues was likely.

    “They will have to agree on whether the transitional government that comes in is a serious reformist government, with ‘clean’ and efficient people that can get the support of the international community and do a quick deal with the IMF.”

    Meanwhile, Habib Battah, a Lebanon-based journalist, questioned how long the caretaker government would remain in place since it is “very difficult” to form a government in Lebanon.

    “The Diab government was many months in the making,” Battah said.

    He said while the resignation could be seen as a victory for the protesters who view the government as a “corrupt system”, it is important to note that others benefit from it.

    Political parties control schools and hospitals, among other things across the country.

    “These parties are really tough to compete against in elections,” Battah said, adding that it was up to the international community to stop supporting these parties if it were serious about helping Lebanon.

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • Ghana mourns with Lebanon

    Ghana has conveyed its condolences to Lebanon on the disaster that befell the nation on Tuesday, 4 August 2020.

    An explosion at the Port of Beirut in Lebanon led to the loss of 154 persons.

    About 5,000 persons were also left wounded while 300,000 were displaced.

    Signing the book of Condolence at the Embassy of Lebanon on Monday, 10 August 2020, Ghana’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Shirley Ayorkor Botchway, noted that: “The government of Ghana received with shock and sad news of the massive explosion” leading to the deaths.

    She continued: “This disaster, happening at a time that the whole world is battling with the COVID-19 pandemic, is most unfortunate and, regrettably poses an even greater challenge for the Lebanese Government and people.”

    Ms Botchwey, on behalf of President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo and the people of Ghana, conveyed the “deep condolences to the government and people Lebanon” on the tragedy.

    She added: “Our thoughts and prayers are with the bereaved families, the wounded and the displaced. May Allah be their comfort, and may the souls of the departed rest in peace. Lebanon shall overcome this tragedy!”

    Source: Class FM

  • Beirut explosion: World leaders to hold aid summit

    International leaders will hold talks on Sunday to raise aid for Beirut, five days after the massive explosion which devastated the Lebanese capital.

    The virtual conference – set up by France and the United Nations – starts at 14:00 Lebanon time (11:00 GMT).

    US President Donald Trump has said he plans to join the call.

    Officials estimate the blast at the warehouse, which stored 2,000 tonnes of ammonium nitrate, caused up to $15 billion (£11.5bn) in damage.

    The explosion left at least 158 people dead, 5,000 injured and 300,000 homeless.

    On Saturday several thousand people took to the streets, with police firing tear gas at stone-throwing protesters and some demonstrators storming government ministries.

    In a televised address, Lebanese PM Hassan Diab said he would ask for early elections as a way out of the crisis. The issue will be discussed in cabinet on Monday.

    Lebanon was already mired in a deep economic crisis and struggling to tackle the coronavirus pandemic before the explosion tore through Beirut.

    An anti-government protest movement erupted last October, fuelled by the financial situation and a collapsing currency.

    What’s happening on Sunday?

    French President Emmanuel Macron visited Beirut on Thursday, and announced he wanted to co-ordinate international aid for the country.

    A statement from France’s presidential palace says Sunday’s conference “will aim to mobilize Lebanon’s main international partners and to organize and co-ordinate emergency support from the international community”.

    Representatives from European Union member states, China, Russia, Egypt, Jordan and the UK will all take part, with many others invited to attend.

    In a series of tweets, President Trump said he had discussed the “catastrophic event” in Beirut with Mr Macron and would himself join the call.

    “Everyone wants to help!” he wrote.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Beirut Explosion throws BBC journalist across room during live interview

    A BBC interview caught the moment a huge explosion rocked Lebanon’s capital city Beirut throwing a journalist across a room as she screams in terror.

    More than 100 people have been killed and a further 4,000 injured in the deadly blast, thought to be caused by stored chemicals in a warehouse on Tuesday.

    In the clip from the interview, BBC News Arabic journalist Maryam Toumi is speaking to her interviewee, Faisal Al-Aseel, project manager at the Moroccan Agency for Sustainable Energy, when there is a loud thud.

    She pauses speaking for a second and looks around, when suddenly a deafening shockwave tears through her building and knocks her to the ground.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Beirut blast: Lebanon in mourning after massive explosion

    Lebanon is in mourning after a huge explosion in the capital Beirut killed at least 78 people and injured more than 4,000 others on Tuesday.

    The whole city was shaken by the blast, which began with a fire at the port which exploded into a mushroom cloud.

    President Michel Aoun said 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate had been stored unsafely in a warehouse for six years.

    He scheduled an urgent cabinet meeting for Wednesday, and said a two-week state of emergency should be declared.

    The country will observe an official period of mourning for three days from Wednesday.

    President Aoun also announced that the government would release 100 billion lira (£50.5m; $66m) of emergency funds.

    “What we are witnessing is a huge catastrophe,” the head of Lebanon’s Red Cross George Kettani told local media. “There are victims and casualties everywhere.”

    Officials said on Tuesday that an investigation was under way to find the exact trigger for the explosion. Lebanon’s Supreme Defence Council said those responsible would face the “maximum punishment” possible.

    The ammonium nitrate had reportedly been unloaded from a ship impounded at the port in 2013, and then stored in a warehouse there.

    The explosion comes at a sensitive time for Lebanon, with an economic crisis reigniting old divisions as the country struggles with the coronavirus crisis. Tensions are also high ahead of Friday’s verdict in a trial over the killing of ex-Prime Minister Rafik Hariri in 2005.

    What happened?

    The explosion occurred just after 18:00 (15:00 GMT) on Tuesday. A BBC journalist at the scene reported dead bodies and severe damage, enough to put the port of Beirut out of action.

    Local media showed people trapped beneath rubble. A witness described the explosion as deafening, and video footage showed wrecked cars and blast-damaged buildings.

    “All the buildings around here have collapsed. I’m walking through glass and debris everywhere, in the dark,” one witness near the port told AFP news agency.

    Hospitals were said to be overwhelmed and many buildings were destroyed.

    The blast was also felt 240km (150 miles) away on the island of Cyprus in the eastern Mediterranean, with people there saying they thought it was an earthquake.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Life at the top Lebanon mountain club dodges economic crisis

    Panama hats and designer sunglasses, champagne buckets and luxury cars: in the mountain resort town of Faqra, Lebanon’s economic crisis is not immediately obvious. Digging into a crunchy salad at an exclusive country club in the Lebanese mountains, Zeina el-Khalil said she was glad to have escaped here for the summer.

    “The atmosphere in Beirut has become heavy and depressing. Reality is everywhere. But here we feel like we’re in another country,” she said.

    Lebanon is mired in its worst economic crisis in decades, with the downturn sparking soaring inflation and plunging almost half the country’s population into poverty.

    For the better-off, any plans of holidays abroad have been dashed this year after banks prevented dollar withdrawals or transfers and the coronavirus pandemic further complicated international travel.

    But around 200 of the country’s most wealthy families have found an escape in Faqra Club, a private club perched 1,600 meters (5,250 feet) above the Mediterranean.

    “Usually we spend our holidays abroad, but this year we can’t travel for financial reasons and COVID-19,” said the woman in her fifties with a golden tan.

    Nestled in a mountain resort town famous for its ski slopes, the Faqra Club is an oasis of luxury in an otherwise collapsing country.

    It’s motto, according to the official website, is: “Life at the top.”

    Expensive cars packed the parking lot outside, while club members shuffled between its many facilities, which include a horse stable, a tennis court and a 9D movie theatre.

    Around a long swimming pool, bronzed bodies sprawled on sofas and sun loungers, some sipping cocktails, as music blasted in the background.

    “Life must go on,” said Sara, a 26-year-old lawyer, a smile on her face.

    “We won’t stay trapped in the house,” she told AFP from in the pool.

    ‘Bank accounts abroad’ Sealed off from the many woes plaguing the rest of the country, the Faqra Club has become a magnet for those looking to make brisk business.

    Many restaurants and stores have opened Faqra chains, with the hopes of softening the blow of an economic crisis that has seen the value of the Lebanese pound plummet against the dollar on the black market.

    Along a bustling alley, around 40 kiosks dotted the side of the street, some displaying luxury swimsuits and silk Abayas.

    Selim Heleiwa, who owns a high-end liquor store in Faqra, said that people here can afford luxury, unlike the rest of their compatriots.

    “The customers here suffer less from the crisis. They are often people who work or have bank accounts abroad,” he told AFP.

    Thousands of businesses across the country have closed, but for Heleiwa it is a “satisfactory” season, and he is not alone.

    The Auberge de Faqra, the main hotel in Faqra Club, is fully booked every weekend, while landmark hotels across the country have shut down because of bankruptcy.

    Its rate stands at 795,000 Lebanese pounds per night, equivalent to $530 at the official rate of 1,500 Lebanese pounds to the dollar.

    But at the black market exchange rate, the stay costs only around $100.

    For those who have access to the greenback, the price is a bargain, even though the club has almost doubled its rate since last summer.

    “Many of our customers have dollars. For them, the stay has actually become cheaper,” said a hotel employee, who asked not to be named.

    ‘Escape’ The relative prosperity on display in Faqra has not gone unnoticed.

    In early July, a video showing a teenager flaunting a dollar banknote to a TV reporter caused a storm of social media criticism against an out of touch elite sheltered from the country’s crisis.

    But for Khalil, the criticism is unfounded.

    “Getting the economy moving and making life better is not a bad thing,” said the woman, who is a director of a Lebanese NGO that teaches underprivileged children.

    “All the people here are trying to help the poor. If they are trying to live (at the same time)… that should not be seen in a negative light.”

    Leaving a nearby restaurant with his family, Sharif Zakka, a 38-year-old expatriate, echoed a similar sentiment.

    “Being physically here doesn’t make you disconnected from people,” said the man who has rented a chalet for $2,500 a month.

    “It’s (only) an escape.”

    Faqra Club owner Liliane Rahme said the club does not just benefit the rich.

    It is also an economic lifeline for more than 200 employees, mostly young students, she told AFP. For its members, it also serves an important purpose.

    “We don’t want to die,” she said.

    “The Lebanese love life. It is our way of resisting.”

    Source: AFP

  • 211 Ghanaians return from Lebanon, one reportedly dead

    Some 211 stranded Ghanaians have returned home from Lebanon. However, one arrived dead.

    These people were stranded in Lebanon due to the outbreak of the coronavirus.

    They arrived on Friday at the Kotoka International Airport.

    The victim is said to have passed on in Lebanon.

    The evacuees are going through routine checks and will later be transported to an isolation centre to be quarantined for two weeks.

    So far 1,080 Ghanaians have been assisted by the Ghanaian Government to return.

    About 224 returned from UK on Wednesday, June 17.

    Source: Daily Guide Network

  • Lebanon to shelter abandoned Ethiopian workers

    The ministry of labour in Lebanon says it will give shelter to Ethiopian domestic workers abandoned without pay by their employers.

    An initial group of 35 Ethiopian women camping outside their consulate in Beirut has been housed in a hotel by the Lebanese authorities after a public outcry over their plight.

    But more are continuing to arrive outside the consulate as the Lebanese economic crisis intensifies.

    The authorities have promised to take action against their employers.

    Last month, dozens of Ethiopian women were repatriated. A majority of the quarter of a million domestic workers in Lebanon are from Ethiopia.

    Source: bbc.com

  • 50 trafficked Nigerian women rescued from Lebanon

    Fifty trafficked Nigerian women have been rescued from Lebanon and returned to their home country.

    They have been placed in quarantine as a precaution against coronavirus and will be interviewed about their experiences.

    The Nigerian Foreign Ministry said the Lebanese authorities had assisted in securing the women’s release.

    Last year, a Nigerian woman was freed from forced labour in Lebanon.

    A further 15 Nigerians, stranded in Lebanon due to lockdowns, have also been repatriated.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Nigerian woman put up for sale in Lebanon rescued

    A Nigerian woman put up for sale on Facebook in Lebanon has been rescued – days after a man suspected of involvement in the advert was arrested.

    The advert caused an outcry in Nigeria.

    Chairperson of the Commission for Nigerians in the Diaspora, Abike Dabiri-Erewa told the BBC that the 30-year-old woman is now safe at the Nigerian embassy in Beirut after she was rescued by the Lebanese authorities.

    Mrs Dabiri-Erewa did not give details of how the woman was rescued but said the lockdown imposed by the Lebanese authorities to fight the coronavirus pandemic helped in tracing her.

    The man was arrested last week for allegedly putting the Nigerian domestic worker for sale for $1,000 on Facebook.

    A passport photo of the woman was included in the advert which caused widespread social media condemnation.

    The UN says thousands of women and girls from Nigeria and other African countries are being trafficked every year – often lured with false job promises in Europe and Asia – but usually end up being exploited as domestic maids or forced into prostitution.

    Source: bbc.com

  • First virus case in Lebanon Palestinian refugee camp – UN

    A Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon has been put on lockdown after the UN announced the first confirmed case of coronavirus in one of the country’s numerous and crowded camps.

    The patient, a Palestinian refugee from Syria, has been taken to the state-run Rafic Hariri hospital in Beirut, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, said in a statement late Tuesday.

    Medical experts were due to visit the Wavel camp in the eastern Bekaa Valley later on Wednesday to carry out tests, the agency added.

    The testing will focus on the woman’s relatives and people she has interacted with, as well as 50 others chosen arbitrarily “inside the camp and its surroundings,” said Lebanon’s official National News Agency.

    In coordination with Lebanese security forces, Palestinian factions in charge of security have imposed a lockdown on the camp, preventing anyone from entering or leaving, the NNA report said.

    The United Nations and aid groups have repeatedly warned that refugees and migrants in crowded camps worldwide are at special risk of the new coronavirus.

    More than 70 million people globally been forced by conflict, persecution, violence and abuses to flee their homes, including more than 20 million people living as refugees, according to UN data.

    Weak sanitation, cramped conditions

    More than 2,000 people live in Wavel, according to statistics released by Lebanon’s government after a 2017 census, but the UN agency says the population of those registered in the camp are much higher.

    Aid groups have warned that hundreds of thousands of Palestinian and Syrian refugees living in Lebanon’s overcrowded camps are the most vulnerable and that self-isolating patients in the camps where sanitation is weak would be one of the top challenges.

    “The main concern remains… the spread of coronavirus in the overcrowded Palestine refugee camps where there are very limited possibilities for home isolation,” an UNRWA spokeswoman said earlier this month.

    More than 174,000 Palestinians live in Lebanon, according to official figures, with most residing in camps ruled by Palestinian factions beyond the reach of Lebanese security forces.

    But unofficial estimates say the Palestinians, whose forefathers fled the creation of the state of Israel in 1948, could number as many as 500,000.

    And out of the 1.5 million Syrians Lebanon says it hosts since the civil war broke out in the neighbouring country nine years ago, nearly one million are registered with the UN as refugees.

    So far just one Palestinian, who lives outside a camp, and three Syrians have tested positive in Lebanon for COVID-19 compared to 677 infections and 21 deaths across the country, according to officials.

    Source: France24

  • Lebanon to investigate Ghanaian domestic worker’s death

    Lebanon’s labour ministry is investigating the death of a Ghanaian domestic worker after an Al Jazeera investigation revealed she feared for her life because of alleged abuse by her employers.

    Faustina Tay was found dead in the early hours of March 14 in a car park under her employer’s fourth-floor home in Beirut’s southern suburbs.

    In the week leading up to her death, the 23-year-old sent dozens of desperate text messages and more than 40 minutes of voice notes to activists and her brother in Ghana.

    She said she had been beaten on at least four occasions by her employer, Hussein Dia, and Ali Kamal, the owner of domestic workers recruitment agency Al Kamal Trading and Services which brought her to Lebanon.

    Tay said Kamal assaulted her alongside an employee named Hussein. All three denied the allegations when contacted by Al Jazeera.

    “I’m scared. I’m scared they might kill me,” Tay had said in a voice note sent to Canada-based activist group This Is Lebanon two days before she was found dead.

    Faustina Tay’s body was discovered in a car park under her employers’ fourth-storey home in Beirut.

    Al Jazeera provided Lebanon’s labour ministry and Internal Security Forces with Tay’s text messages and voice notes on March 20. Labour Minister Lamia Yammine told Al Jazeera on Wednesday the ministry had launched an investigation concurrent to a criminal investigation by Lebanon’s judiciary.

    “It’s our duty to look into these cases and investigate with the employer and agent, even as the public prosecutor investigates at the same time,” Yammine said.

    She added that the investigation could lead to the employer and the agency being placed on a blacklist, meaning Dia would no longer be able to hire domestic workers, and Kamal’s agency would lose its license.

    Kamal previously told Al Jazeera he brought roughly 1,000 foreign domestic workers to Lebanon each year.

    Joumana Haymour, the head of the labour ministry’s inspection department, told Al Jazeera Kamal’s testimony had been recorded, and Dia had agreed to come in for questioning on April 6.

    In the series of messages that began on March 7, Tay said she had been repeatedly beaten by Dia and Kamal between January and March after she asked to return to Ghana due to harsh working conditions, which included no days off, an average of six hours sleep at night and little privacy.

    She said she was not given a room but slept on a sofa in the kitchen. Tay also said she was beaten by Dia on March 10 and by Kamal on March 11 before being returned to Dia’s house.

    Less than three days later, she was dead.

    Tay’s brother Joshua Demyana told Al Jazeera his sister would likely be buried in Lebanon because of the difficulty of getting her body repatriated to Ghana given that the country’s airports are closed due to the coronavirus pandemic.

    Her father sent a letter to Ghana’s foreign ministry on March 26, pressing for an investigation into his daughter’s death.

    Kafala system

    Human rights groups have long called on Lebanon to abolish the Kafala system under which Tay was employed.

    Instead of being covered by the country’s labour law, some 250,000 foreign domestic workers in Lebanon are employed under the system that binds the legal residence of domestic workers to their employers.

    Domestic workers can only terminate their contract with the consent of the employer. Otherwise, they become illegal residents and can be jailed and deported.

    The system has facilitated widespread abuse, ranging from late or non-payment of wages to assault and sexual harassment.

    Yammine said the labour ministry was working with the International Labor Organization and groups like Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International towards strengthening the contracts between employers and domestic workers, including a provision that would allow the latter to terminate the contract without the consent of the employer.

    The process, she added, is currently in the consultation phase.

     

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • The chilling final words of a Ghanaian maid killed in Lebanon

    Beirut, Lebanon – On the morning of March 13, Faustina Tay sent a final desperate message to an activist group she had contacted about the abuse she was suffering at the hands of her Lebanese employers.

    “God please help me,” the 23-year-old Ghanaian domestic worker wrote.

    About 18 hours later, she was found dead.

    Tay’s body was discovered in a car park under her employers’ fourth-storey home in Beirut’s southern suburbs, between 3 and 4am on March 14.

    A forensic doctor who examined her body found that her death was caused by a head injury “as a result of falling from a high place and crashing into a solid body”.

    The doctor found “no marks of physical assault”. A search of Tay’s employers’ home found no signs of a struggle, and the death was being investigated as a suicide, according to a police report.

    Hussein Dia, whose home Tay had lived and worked in for 10 months at the time of her death, told Al Jazeera he and his family had been sleeping when she died.

    Dia said he did not know what had driven the 23-year-old to take her own life, and denied he ever physically assaulted her – “I never laid a hand on her.”

    Listen to her final words below;

    But in the week before her death, Tay sent dozens of texts and more than 40 minutes of voice messages to Canada-based activist group, This Is Lebanon, and her brother in Ghana, providing detailed accounts of recurrent physical abuse.

    This Is Lebanon names and shames employers accused of maid abuse online in an attempt to resolve issues facing domestic workers on a case-by-case basis.

    Human Rights Watch found in a 2010 report that Lebanon’s judiciary fails to hold employers accountable for abuses, while security agencies often do not “adequately investigate claims of violence or abuse”.

    Tay told the group that Dia and Ali Kamal, the owner of the domestic worker’s agency that had brought her to Lebanon, had each beaten her twice between January 16 and March 6.

    Kamal had beaten her along with one of his employees, Hussein, she said.

    In the messages, Tay repeatedly expressed concerns that speaking about her ordeal could lead to more abuse, and the confiscation of her phone, which she said had taken place once before.

    She also feared much worse.

    “I’m scared. I’m scared; they might kill me,” she said, in a chilling voice note to activists.

    Faustina Tay, pictured here on her way to Lebanon, was found dead on March 14 in southern Beirut [Courtesy of Demanya family]

    ‘Modern-day slavery’

    The manner of Tay’s death is not uncommon in Lebanon, a country with about 250,000 domestic workers. Two die each week, according to the country’s General Security intelligence agency, with many falling from high buildings during botched escape attempts, or in cases that are ruled suicides.

    Domestic workers like Tay are employed under the country’s notorious kafala system, which ties their legal residence to their employer, making it very difficult for them to end their contracts.

    This sponsorship system, which is in place in several Middle Eastern countries, has facilitated a range of abuse, such as non-payment of wages, a lack of rest time and days off, and physical and sexual assault.

    Lebanon’s former Labour Minister Camille Abousleiman likened the system to “modern-day slavery,” and began a process of reform that is still in its early stages.

    Women who come to Lebanon for domestic work from a host of Southeast Asian and African countries such as the Philippines, Nepal and Ethiopia are usually looking to support their families back home and eventually return.

    Tay’s case sheds light on the type of abuse that ends with many returning to their families in coffins.

    From Accra to Beirut

    A little more than 10 months before her death, Tay had been running a small noodle business in Ghana’s capital Accra, with financial help from her brother Joshua Demanya, who works as a driver.

    Demanya told Al Jazeera that he had advised his sister against going to Lebanon “because there have been stories of people who go there and suffer so much they run away”.

    Tay ignored her brother’s advice and arrived in Beirut on May 5 to begin working at Dia’s apartment, where he lives with his wife, Mona, and their three children.

    There, she did not have her own room, instead, she slept on a sofa in the kitchen. She complained that she was overworked, had no days off and was usually only able to get to sleep at 2 am and was woken up at 8 am.

    Faustina sent several photos to her family in Ghana [Courtesy of Demanya family]

    ‘I should have stayed’

    She quickly regretted her decision to leave Ghana. In November 2019, she texted her brother: “I should have stayed [and] continued with my business.”

    In January, she told her employers that she could not work for them any more, and asked to be sent back home. They refused – “I paid $2,000, and I said, ‘Take it easy on us, we’ll let you travel after Ramadan,’” Dia recalled telling her.

    That was when Tay said Dia beat her for the first time, on January 16, before taking her to Kamal’s agency, where she said Kamal and Hussein beat her.

    Both denied the claims when contacted by Al Jazeera. Kamal said his agency, established in 1992, brings roughly 1,000 domestic workers into Lebanon every year. “The state would have closed us a long time ago,” if they mistreated domestic workers, he said.

    Kamal informed Tay that the only way she would get back home was if she worked two more months with the Dia family, to pay for her ticket back to Ghana.

    She agreed.

    But when the agreement came due in March, she contacted This Is Lebanon and said Dia was refusing to let her leave. A few days later, on March 10, she said Dia, Kamal and Hussein beat her again.

    “My boss beat me mercilessly yesterday [and] dis (sic) morning he took me to the office [and] I was beaten again, this is the second time they beat me up in the office.”

    Dia said he had taken Tay to the agency with the intent of letting her travel, but received a call two hours later from the agency: “We’ve worked it out, she’ll travel in July.”

    Demanya said his sister had agreed “out of fear”.

    ‘I don’t want to die here’

    Al Jazeera informed Lebanon’s Labour Ministry of Tay’s case. An adviser to Labour Minister Lamia Yammine said that the names of Tay’s employers had been noted and the ministry would be informed if they applied to be allowed to employ another domestic worker.

    She said they would be permanently blacklisted “if it is proven later on that the suicide was caused by abuse”.

    On March 12, Tay sent a series of pictures to her brother, appearing to show an inflamed hand, a bruise on her forearm and a scratch underneath her eye that she said were caused by the beatings.

    She also shared a picture of a bloody tissue that she said was the result of a nosebleed.

    Despite the abuse, she described, Tay expressed a strong will to live.

    “I’m very, very weak,” she said in a voice message, describing pain in her wrist, legs and neck.

    “Please, help me. Help me to go back to my country for treatment. Please, I don’t want to die here.”

    Source: aljazeera.com

  • 23-year-old Ghanaian maid killed in Lebanon

    On the morning of March 13, Faustina Tay sent a final desperate message to an activist group she had contacted about the abuse she was suffering at the hands of her Lebanese employers.

    “God please help me,” the 23-year-old Ghanaian domestic worker wrote.

    About 18 hours later, she was found dead.

    Tay’s body was discovered in a car park under her employers’ fourth-storey home in Beirut’s southern suburbs, between 3 and 4am on March 14.

    A forensic doctor who examined her body found that her death was caused by a head injury “as a result of falling from a high place and crashing into a solid body”.

    The doctor found “no marks of physical assault”. A search of Tay’s employers’ home found no signs of a struggle, and the death was being investigated as a suicide, according to a police report.

    Hussein Dia, whose home Tay had lived and worked in for 10 months at the time of her death, told Al Jazeera he and his family had been sleeping when she died.

    Dia said he did not know what had driven the 23-year-old to take her own life, and denied he ever physically assaulted her – “I never laid a hand on her.”

    But in the week before her death, Tay sent dozens of texts and more than 40 minutes of voice messages to Canada-based activist group, This Is Lebanon, and her brother in Ghana, providing detailed accounts of recurrent physical abuse.

    This Is Lebanon names and shames employers accused of maid abuse online in an attempt to resolve issues facing domestic workers on a case-by-case basis.

    Human Rights Watch found in a 2010 report that Lebanon’s judiciary fails to hold employers accountable for abuses, while security agencies often do not “adequately investigate claims of violence or abuse”.

    Tay told the group that Dia and Ali Kamal, the owner of the domestic worker’s agency that had brought her to Lebanon, had each beaten her twice between January 16 and March 6.

    Kamal had beaten her along with one of his employees, Hussein, she said.

    In the messages, Tay repeatedly expressed concerns that speaking about her ordeal could lead to more abuse, and the confiscation of her phone, which she said had taken place once before.

    She also feared much worse.

    “I’m scared. I’m scared; they might kill me,” she said, in a chilling voice note to activists.

    ‘Modern-day slavery’

    The manner of Tay’s death is not uncommon in Lebanon, a country with about 250,000 domestic workers. Two die each week, according to the country’s General Security intelligence agency, with many falling from high buildings during botched escape attempts, or in cases that are ruled suicides.

    Domestic workers like Tay are employed under the country’s notorious kafala system, which ties their legal residence to their employer, making it very difficult for them to end their contracts.

    This sponsorship system, which is in place in several Middle Eastern countries, has facilitated a range of abuse, such as non-payment of wages, a lack of rest time and days off, and physical and sexual assault.

    Lebanon’s former Labour Minister Camille Abousleiman likened the system to “modern-day slavery,” and began a process of reform that is still in its early stages.

    Women who come to Lebanon for domestic work from a host of Southeast Asian and African countries such as the Philippines, Nepal and Ethiopia are usually looking to support their families back home and eventually return.

    Tay’s case sheds light on the type of abuse that ends with many returning to their families in coffins.

    From Accra to Beirut

    A little more than 10 months before her death, Tay had been running a small noodle business in Ghana’s capital Accra, with financial help from her brother Joshua Demanya, who works as a driver.

    Demanya told Al Jazeera that he had advised his sister against going to Lebanon “because there have been stories of people who go there and suffer so much they run away”.

    Tay ignored her brother’s advice and arrived in Beirut on May 5 to begin working at Dia’s apartment, where he lives with his wife, Mona, and their three children.

    There, she did not have her own room, instead, she slept on a sofa in the kitchen. She complained that she was overworked, had no days off and was usually only able to get to sleep at 2am and was woken up at 8am.

    ‘I should have stayed’

    She quickly regretted her decision to leave Ghana. In November 2019, she texted her brother: “I should have stayed [and] continued with my business.”

    In January, she told her employers that she could not work for them any more, and asked to be sent back home. They refused – “I paid $2,000, and I said, ‘Take it easy on us, we’ll let you travel after Ramadan,’” Dia recalled telling her.

    That was when Tay said Dia beat her for the first time, on January 16, before taking her to Kamal’s agency, where she said Kamal and Hussein beat her.

    Both denied the claims when contacted by Al Jazeera. Kamal said his agency, established in 1992, brings roughly 1,000 domestic workers into Lebanon every year. “The state would have closed us a long time ago,” if they mistreated domestic workers, he said.

    Kamal informed Tay that the only way she would get back home was if she worked two more months with the Dia family, to pay for her ticket back to Ghana.

    She agreed.

    But when the agreement came due in March, she contacted This Is Lebanon and said Dia was refusing to let her leave. A few days later, on March 10, she said Dia, Kamal and Hussein beat her again.

    “My boss beat me mercilessly yesterday [and] dis (sic) morning he took me to the office [and] I was beaten again, this is the second time they beat me up in the office.”

    Dia said he had taken Tay to the agency with the intent of letting her travel, but received a call two hours later from the agency: “We’ve worked it out, she’ll travel in July.”

    Demanya said his sister had agreed “out of fear”.

    ‘I don’t want to die here’

    Al Jazeera informed Lebanon’s Labour Ministry of Tay’s case. An adviser to Labour Minister Lamia Yammine said that the names of Tay’s employers had been noted and the ministry would be informed if they applied to be allowed to employ another domestic worker.

    She said they would be permanently blacklisted “if it is proven later on that the suicide was caused by abuse”.

    On March 12, Tay sent a series of pictures to her brother, appearing to show an inflamed hand, a bruise on her forearm and a scratch underneath her eye that she said were caused by the beatings.

    She also shared a picture of a bloody tissue that she said was the result of a nosebleed.

    Despite the abuse, she described, Tay expressed a strong will to live.

    “I’m very, very weak,” she said in a voice message, describing pain in her wrist, legs and neck.

    “Please, help me. Help me to go back to my country for treatment. Please, I don’t want to die here.”

    Source: aljazeera.com