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النـــــور AN-NOUR INTERNATIONAL NEWS January 2015 issue 157 اإلنكليزية الرائدة في الواليات المتحدة األميركية-الجريدة العربية www.an-nournews.com info@an-nournews.com 157 العدد2015 يناير- كانون الثاني القصة الكاملة من داخل بوكا..”* هكذا تمت صناعة “داعش * البابا يدعو قادة العالم االسالمي الى ادانة صريحة لإلرهاب !* الخليج متخ ّوف من إتفاق غير معلن بين أميركا وإيران * معاهدة دولية تمنع وصول االسلحة لمنتهكي حقوق اإلنسان لكن المعركة ما زالت مستمرة،* حرب أفغانستان انتهت * ما الذي اكتسبه “حزب هللا” من الحرب في سوريا؟ Key Oil Producers Face Uncertain Outlook in 2015 Analysts Say Plunging Oil Prices will Spark More Global Geopolitical Tensions in 2015. Why 2015 Will Be ‘The Year of Never Again’ By: Caroline VARIN - LONDON Gloomy outlook The oil market faces an uncertain outlook in 2015 as tumbling prices resulting from global oversupply stoke geopolitical tensions in key producers of crude, analysts say. Oil prices have lost around half their value since June, punished by abundant supplies, a stronger dollar and weak demand in the faltering world economy. Losses accelerated in late November when the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) -- which pumps out onethird of the world's oil -- decided against cutting its output despite the supply glut. Prices subsequently hit a series of five-year lows in London and New York, rocked also by 2015 oil demand forecast downgrades from both OPEC and the International Energy Agency watchdog. At the OPEC meeting on November 27, kingpin Saudi Arabia and other Gulf monarchies opposed a cut to the cartel's daily output ceiling of 30 million barrels. Analysts say they want lower prices, even if it slashes incomes, to counter the rise of US shale oil -- which is more expensive to produce and eats into OPEC's market share. However at the other end of the scale, oil producers Venezuela, Nigeria, Iran, Iraq and Russia are desperate for prices to rise so they can balance their books and salvage their teetering economies. Social, political turmoil - In Venezuela, plunging crude oil prices have already sparked social unrest and political uncertainty. Following the OPEC meeting, Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro ordered his government to slash the budget of his oildependent and economically weak nation. In Russia, the tumbling oil market -- combined with Western sanctions linked to the Ukraine crisis -- has sparked a collapse in the ruble. The plunge in crude prices since June has hit Russia particularly hard, as half of the country's revenues stem from energy exports. Russia's central bank hiked its interest rate for the second time in a week on Monday in an attempt to halt the ruble's plunge, which has sparked huge rises for consumer goods. Norway, on the other hand, unexpectedly cut interest rates on Thursday in an effort to counteract the impact of plunging oil prices and stimulate the Nordic nation's oil-dependent economy. In the Middle East, Iraq -- which is battling Islamic State (IS) militants -- will take a major hit from the plunging cost of crude, according to expert Richard Mallinson at consultancy Energy Aspects. "For now the Iraqi prime minister (Haider al-Abadi) is managing to hold together his political coalition and has halted IS advances with various international support," Mallinson said. Continued on page 9 U.N. asks Israel to Pay Lebanon $856 Million in Compensation In Nigeria and Pakistan, unforgivable attacks on schoolchildren have made the world rise up in anger. Unfortunately that's all it did. By Leela Jacinto It’s that time of year when we journalists push out our year-in-reviews and annual top 10, 50, or 100 lists. Alas 2014, for me, is the year we watched terrorists attack thousands of kids in schools, made a huge stink about it, allowed ourselves to dream that this time things will change –and then nothing was done about it. And nothing will be. Months before the remarkable Malala Yousafzai and Indian child rights activist Kailash Satyarthi won the Nobel Peace Prize, Boko Haram militants swept down on a school in Chibok in the remote northeastern corner of Nigeria. More than 200 schoolgirls AN-NOUR LLC HABIB OSTA GHADA OSTA HASSAN ELKHALIL MOUNIR KHALIL Continued on page 4 Drive the Arab middle class forward and allow the poor and vulnerable to become the middle class of tomorrow Page 5 Page 9 Publisher General Manager Managing Editor Chief Legal Counselor Public Relations were abducted, triggering howls of condemnation, a star-studded #BringBackOurGirls campaign, and international summits where regional and global leaders pledged their help. All of which achieved … nothing. The girls and their families have been left to rot and nobody seems to have any idea where they are; meanwhile there was speculation this summer that some had been used as human bombs, though the government dismissed such claims. Meanwhile, heaven knows what all those foreign military advisors from the United States, Britain , France, China, and Israel in Nigeria have managed to achieve. At last update, Nigeria had told the United States to take your military aid and shove it. Abuja is throwing a fit because Washington has refused –because of the Nigerian military’s abysmal human rights and cor- An-Nour PO Box 7694 Atlanta, GA 30357 PRST STD US Postage PAID Atlanta, GA P.2 An-Nour January 2015 (770) 608-3343 Info@An-NourNews.com www.An-Nournews.com Come Join the Cedar Club of Atlanta for some Fun, Dance, and a Little Valentine's Romance Southern Federation of Syrian Lebanese American Clubs 2015 Midwinter Conference February 13-15, 2015 Westin Buckhead 3391 Peachtree Rd. 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Come Join the Cedar Club of Atlanta for some Fun, Dance, and a Little Valentine's Romance Southern Federation of Syrian Lebanese American Clubs 2015 Midwinter Conference with no U.S. or NATO forces present in Ukraine (and rarely in the Black Sea), the flights particularly the Baltic fly-bys represent one of the few situations where NATO and Russian forces could come into direct contact and potentially conflict. The integrated flights of bombers and fighter aircraft in the Baltic are visibly more aggressive than the long patrols by larger aircraft. The flights also intend to embarrass and intimidate. The Baltic states Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia are the primary targets, but the traditionally neutral and patient Swedes and Finns have also been imposed upon by Russian intrusions. Indeed, Swedish politicians have been provoked to such an extent that they are considering joining NATO. Indeed, Swedish politicians have been provoked to such an extent that they are considering joining NATO. And yet with all of these provocations, the military balance in Europe has not appreciably changed since the Kosovo War. The Russian flights show increased confidence in the capabilities of Russia’s air force and its slowly modernizing tactical aircraft inventory. The new Sukhoi Su-34 “Fullback” only appeared in these flights beginning in late October and represents Russia’s latest generation of tactical strike aircraft. But Russia still has relatively few of these planes and — along with the improved accuracies of other air-delivered munitions that can be carried by the older aircraft — they are only a small down payment on the improved precision capabilities envisioned in the new Russian military doctrine. Meanwhile, the United States and its NATO allies have improved their capabilities to use precision conventional weapons and penetrate defenses against conventionally organized ground forces. And despite all of Moscow’s improvements, including reorganized brigades built around contract rather than conscript soldiers and explorations of “hybrid warfare” involving special forces in Crimea and eastern Ukraine, the core of the Russian military remains conventionally For more details or to register: February 13-15, 2015 • Westin Buckhead www.ccstjudegala.com 3391 Peachtree Rd. NE, Atlanta, Georgia • 404-365-0065 Featuring Music by AMIN SULTAN & his band Friday and Saturday night Hafli tickets available For more information, go to www.sfslac.org or www.cedarclubatl.com E TE V A DA The WestinSBuckhead ERoad 3391 Peachtree H The 3rd Atlanta, GAT30326 February 15,2015 Annual The The CedarCedar Club of Atlanta Foundation is proud to present MagicCarpetRideGala A CELEBRATION BENEFITING ST. JUDE CHILDREN'S RESEARCH HOSPITAL organized. From 1960 to 2000, the NATO supreme commander was always an American Army general, reflecting the centrality of the ground war in a possible NATOWarsaw Pact confrontation. In the time since the Kosovo War, the supreme command has included American Air Force generals as well as American admirals reflecting a change in the way NATO would use military power in a confrontation with Russia. The current supreme commander, U.S. Air Force Gen. Philip Breedlove, personifies the important role air power in any new NATO-Russian conflict. Still, there are military dangers to the Russian flights and the incursions. Russian fighters routinely fly armed with air-to-air missiles, as do the aircraft that intercept them. It’s not difficult to imagine pilot with an itchy trigger finger or an intimidating fly-by that gets too close — at which point many things could go wrong. Perhaps more concerning is the casual, almost careless, display of power in Putin’s Russia. The Russian practice of flying military aircraft in the Baltic without filing flight plans or using transponders — making the aircraft both unexpected by and invisible to civilian air traffic control — shows a reckless disregard for human life. Indeed, these alarming events, such as the incidents with civilian airliners in March 2014 and December 2014, are not simply due to faulty procedures or the actions of rogue or inadequately trained aviators. These kinds of near-misses will continue as long as President Putin wants them to. Russia’s own economic miseries put the next round of potential U.S.-led sanctions in a different light. By signing the sanctions bill on his desk, Obama can further signal his intention to ratchet up diplomatic pressure on Russia, said Elizabeth Rosenberg, a former Treasury official now at the Center for a New American Security. But Russia’s economic chaos could give pause to European leaders more dependent on bilateral trade with Russia who have been worried all along about the economic fallout from a tottering Moscow. P.3 An-Nour January 2015 www.An-Nournews.com (770) 608-3343 Info@An-NourNews.com ECONOMY Can Israel Solve Europe’s Energy Woes? New natural gas finds in the eastern Mediterranean are fueling dreams that Israel can provide Brussels an energy alternative to Russia. Good luck with that. By Keith JohnsonKeith Johnson Israel has grand plans to ride to Europe’s rescue by offering a ready supply of natural gas to help the continent shake off its reliance on Russian energy. On paper, getting gas from the eastern Mediterranean holds plenty of appeal for the world’s most energyimport-dependent region, which was on the prowl for alternative suppliers even before Moscow’s incursion into Ukraine. But building a pipeline from Israel to Greece, where the gas would then be shipped overland to other European countries, would be a hugely complicated and expensive way to get relatively small volumes of natural gas into Europe. The proposed pipeline would carry about 8 billion to 12 billion cubic meters of gas a year — a drop compared with the European Union’s own gas consumption in excess of 450 billion cubic meters a year and the 160 billion cubic meters annually supplied by Russia. Instead, Israel’s growing energy reserves would probably be better used fueling its own domestic market and its next-door neighbors like Jordan, if wary Arab politicians don’t torpedo the idea of doing deals with Israel. Israel had long been one of the few Middle Eastern countries without abundant reserves of energy. But in recent years — and even recent days — big discoveries of offshore natural gas fields have given Israel not just a shot at energy independence, but the chance to turn into a regional energy powerhouse. This year, energy firms working the gas fields announced plans to export gas to Jordan and Egypt. Israel’s main offshore fields hold an estimated 33 trillion cubic feet of natural gas; the latest find could add another 3 trillion cubic feet. Russia, the holder of the world’s largest gas reserves, has 1,688 trillion cubic feet of gas. In recent weeks, Israeli officials and some Mediterranean neighbors such as Cyprus and Greece have upped their ambitions. They’ve been pressing Brussels to consider backing a pipeline from Israel, through Cyprus, into Greece, and finally into the rest of Europe that would be explicitly designed to help neuter the Russian energy bear. Getting EU financial backing for the project, which Israelis figure could cost about $6 billion and which outside analysts estimate at nearly twice that, is crucial to making the economics work. That would likely require some sort of European willingness to cough up the cash to pay for the massive infrastructure investments needed to diversify Europe’s own energy supplies. But EU officials aren’t ready to dive in with both feet quite yet. Maros Sefcovic, the EU vice president for energy union — a new position in Brussels meant to unify European energy policies — proposed carrying out a feasibility study next year on the pipeline’s proposed route; he cited in particular the project’s technical challenges. And they are considerable. Running a pipeline 750 miles across the floor of the Mediterranean from Israel to Cyprus — which is itself roiled in a dispute with Turkey and its own Cypriot neighbors over offshore gas deposits — and then to Crete and the Greek mainland would be daunting. Unlike the shallow water pipes that run from Russia to Germany across the Baltic, depths in some parts of the Mediterranean can reach more than 6,000 feet. And the relatively modest size of the Mediterranean gas fields also makes huge upfront investments less appealing. Despite what Israeli officials say, it’s hard to see how a new pipeline with smallish amounts of natural gas could be competitive against long-established pipelines carrying large volumes of Russian gas. And price matters, because even if parts of Europe are desperately worried about relying too much on Moscow for their energy supplies, paying to ensure an alternative is a different matter entirely. Europe won’t actually need that much additional gas over the next 15 years or so. Modest growth in natural gas consumption between now and 2030 will likely return Europe to the consumption levels it had before the 2008-2009 global financial meltdown. That lack of explosive demand growth depresses the price that gas can fetch in Europe. So just as the prospect of seaborne, liquefied natural gas exports from the United States would do little to address the most pressing energy-security challenges in Europe, an Israeli pipeline would be a tough sell. “The markets that have security-ofsupply problems are mostly landlocked, and most of them — even if you could get additional gas supplies there — can’t afford alternative sources of gas,” said Brenda Shaffer, an expert on energy security at Georgetown University. Europe actually already has ready-made alternatives to Russian gas — but doesn’t fully use them. Europe’s coast has plenty of capacity to import liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the Middle East, North Africa, and soon the United States. But Europe currently uses less than one-quarter of its LNG import capacity for a simple reason: because liquefied gas shipped halfway around the world costs more, as a rule, than gas shipped through a pipeline. What’s more, customers in Asia have been willing to pay even more for LNG than those in Europe, which means that most LNG tankers head for the booming markets of Japan, South Korea, and China rather than the stagnant European market. Shaffer says that Israeli politicians are confusing geostrategic goals with the way that the market actually works, much like the politicians in the United States who have pitched U.S. LNG as a way to rescue Europe. Israeli and American firms working the gas fields — not the Israeli government — make decisions about where and how to export the gas. “Shalom is selling a horse he doesn’t own,” she said, referring to the Israeli energy minister. But if shipping the gas to Europe isn’t the answer for Israel, what is? Perhaps staying closer to home. Israel’s strong economy and growing wealth have helped create a robust domestic market. Egypt, once a big gas producer and exporter but now roiled by financial woes, flat gas production, and rising domestic demand, is looking to use imports of Israeli gas to feed its own LNG export terminals (which are aimed at Europe, anyway.) And Jordan could use Israeli gas to help boost energy access and improve the local economy, helping cement political stability at the same time. That isn’t to say that energy bonds create geopolitical harmony among acrimonious neighbors: Just ask Ukraine and Russia, or the United States and Venezuela, or Cyprus and Turkey. The prospect of natural gas deals with Israel has been politically controversial in Egypt and Jordan, even though they are the only two Arab countries with which Israel has a peace treaty. But a place like Jordan has long been starved of reliable sources of energy. Current Jordanian demand is terribly modest, certainly compared with European demand. And Amman could find plenty of uses for a relatively cheap, relatively clean fuel to power everything from new factories to desalination plants. China Zombie Factories Kept Open to Give Illusion of Prosperity “If you cut down the big tree, all the small trees around it will die,” says 69-year-old Wang Peiqing, referring to the collapse of Highsee Iron and Steel Group, which operated the foundries before its recent closure devastated the economy of a once-prosperous corner of Shanxi province in central China. “The entire region relied on the steel mill; now the young people have to go and look for work across China.” Highsee stopped paying its 10,000 employees six months ago. Local officials estimate the plant supported indirectly the livelihood of about a quarter of Wenxi county’s population of 400,000. Highsee was the biggest privately owned steel mill in Shanxi, accounting for 60 per cent of Wenxi’s tax revenues. For those reasons, the local government was reluctant to allow the company to go out of business, even though it had been in serious financial difficulties for several years. “By 2011 Highsee was already like a dead centipede that hadn’t yet frozen stiff with rigor mortis,” says one official who asks not to be named because he was not authorised to speak to foreign reporters. “More than half the plant shut down, but it was still producing steel even though its suppliers wouldn’t deliver anything without cash up front and it was drowning in debt.” Across the vast expanses of China, similar experiences are playing out, with thousands of companies in heavy industrial sectors plagued by chronic overcapacity that should be going bust instead being propped up by local g overnments. With enormous power over courts, stateowned banks and local administrative departments, Communist party officials across China are prepared to go to great lengths to support the biggest failing employers in their jurisdictions. It was only last month, four years after Highsee began to flounder, that the company was finally allowed by the government to initiate bankruptcy proceedings. In the past month alone Chinese media have reported on at least nine large steel mills that appeared to be suspended in limbo after halting production but which are forbidden from going formally bankrupt. November 2014: China’s economy grew last quarter at its slowest pace since the depths of the global financial crisis, raising concerns over global growth prospects “There are large numbers of companies across China that should go bankrupt but haven’t done so,” says Han Chuanhua, a bankruptcy lawyer at Zhongzi Law Office, a Beijing legal practice. “The government doesn’t want to see bankruptcy because as soon as companies go bust, unemployment spikes and tax revenues disappear. By stopping companies from going bankrupt, officials are able to maintain the illusion of local prosperity, economic growth and stable taxes.” The outstanding volume of non-performing loans in the Chinese banking sector has increased 50 per cent since the beginning of 2013, according to estimates from ANZ, the Australian bank, but the sector-wide NPL ratio remains extremely low, at just over 1.2 per cent. In private, however, senior Chinese financial officials admit the real ratio is almost certainly much higher, obscured by local governments trying to prop up companies. China is on track for its slowest annual growth this year since 1990, when it was still under international sanctions in the wake of the Tiananmen Square massacre. After years of frenetic growth and construction, the slump in China’s real estate sector has created severe problems for upstream industries such as steel, glass and cement that are already suffering from chronic overcapacity. In the case of steel, Chinese production trebled between 2006 and 2013. The country produced about a third of the world’s steel output in 2006; by 2012 it had risen to about 50 per cent. Such overproduction, combined with slower Chinese demand, meant the price of iron ore, the crucial ingredient to making steel, slumped 46 per cent between July 2011 and July 2014, according to the World Bank. On current trends, China is likely this year to experience its first full-year outright contraction in steel consumption since 1995. While overcapacity and competition hit Highsee hard, a local official also blamed the company’s owner, Li Zhaohui. Mr Li was just 22 when he took over the running of the company in 2003 after his father was killed by a gun fired by an enraged business associate. Mr Li has gone missing in recent months and could not be contacted by the Financial Times. “The government’s plan is to sell off the plant quickly and restart production just like before, even though the steel market is in such bad shape,” says an official who asks not to be named. “The problem is that it owes at least Rmb10bn [$1.6bn] and probably much more than that. We don’t know where we’ll find someone who can pay all that off.” To Advertise: e-mail us info@An-NourNews.com or call us 770-608-3343 P.4 An-Nour January2015 2015 January www.An-Nournews.com (770)(770) 608-3343 608-3343 Info@An-NourNews.com Info@An-NourNews.com Wo r l d N e w s World In Brief Palestinians will outnumber Israeli Jews in 2016. Report published by Palestinian Bureau of Statistics says even as the average Palestinian family decreases in size, number of Palestinians living in both Israel and territories will exceed that of Jews beginning in 2016. A Bad Business Model Is Taking Over the World Razor blades and iPhones are like addictive drugs. Here's why that's bad for your wallet and the economy. New Book: Terror Tunnels, Alan Dershowitz states that the 2014 War in Gaza required Israeli ground forces to gain access to the tunnels and shut them down. Israel was unable to determine their routes and exit ramps because they were too deep underground and not detectable from the air. Is Saudi Arabia Trying to Cripple American Fracking? Well, it’s said as much, but the real reason for the flood of new Saudi oil is more complicated. A court in Egypt has reduced to one year the three-year jail sentences given to eight men for appearing in a video alleged to show a gay marriage. China to step up free trade talks with Middle East - China and members of the Gulf Cooperation Council - Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates - started free trade talks in 2004, and a deal will help China cut costs on energy imports from the region. Japan and South Korea are teaming up against North Korea. For the first time, Japan and South Korea will share intelligence on North Korean weapons programs. Intel will be shared via the United States. German worries about the Islamic State outweigh privacy concerns. Germans have long been the most vocal critics of National Security Agency spying, despite using intelligence collected by the agency and spying on Turkey, a NATO ally. Continued from page 1 Why 2015 Will Be ‘The Year of Never Again’ ruption track records — to supply it with the Cobra attack helicopters and other sophisticated military hardware the generals want. Now, with barely two months to go until Nigeria’s critical 2015 general elections, politicians are playing an old campaign stunt, telling voters they have failed to deal with Boko Haram because a fickle superpower is denying the country the necessary military equipment. Then, just as the year was slouching to a close, Peshawar happened. As six Pakistani Taliban militants tore through the Peshawar army school, mowing down 132 students and more than 10 staffers, one question kept playing in a loop in my mind — as I’m sure it did for many others: How many schoolchildren must be killed, kidnapped, or intimidated for us to make this world a safe enough place for kids to just get an education? There’s little doubt the Tehreek-e-Taliban (the official name of the Pakistani Taliban) made a strategic error with this one. Their bloodlust has put off the likes of the Afghan Taliban and Lashkar-e-Taiba — even al Qaeda. Jihadist groups squirming over the brutality of their jihadist brothers always strikes me as rather rich: Abu Musab al-Zarqawi hurt Osama bin Laden’s sensitivities, the Islamic State is too bad for al Qaeda, and now, the Afghan Taliban’s Zabihullah Mujahid and Lashkar’s Hafiz Saeed are distraught about the havoc Brother Umar Khorasani of the Tehreek-e-Taliban has wrought. Save it for some security wonk who gets fired up tracking splinter groups and tribes and factions. Too many precious months and years have been wasted chasing the vain “talking to the Taliban” dream, plugged and pushed so effectively by the talking to the Taliban industry of politicians, middle men, and negotiators. Still, many analysts rushed around proclaiming, among other things, that Pakistan had just had its “9/11” moment and that much-awaited change is around the corner. I wish I could have what these pundits are having. But I fear Pakistan, like Nigeria, will do precious little to address the groundwork that has enabled groups like Boko Haram and the Tehreek-e-Taliban to attack school kids on a mass scale. While the Nigerian political and military elites centered in the oil-rich south lack the will to address the Boko Haram menace plaguing the remote northeast, in Pakistan, the favored jihadists are too entrenched, powerful, and vocal to be silenced. The problem with this official talk of “no such thing as a good or bad Taliban” is that it omits any mention of the ever-mutating, multiheaded hydra of jihadist groups that concentrate on Indian-controlled Kashmir or on Pakistan’s “Shiite problem.” They splinter and split, their members swim from one group to another, but the ideology remains. These are the groups that were bred in the ISI petri-dish and fed on the spy agency’s payrolls as “strategic assets” to further Pakistan’s “strategic depth.” There’s so much strategic goodwill between these jihadist groups and the country’s intelligence agency, you have to be a fool to think fundamental change is coming to Pakistan anytime soon. In the old days, the United States, the CIA, India, and the Indian intelligence services got the rap. Now, there’s a new bogeyman: Afghanistan and the Afghan intelligence service. Pakistanis today accuse Afghanistan of providing sanctuary to the Tehreek-e-Taliban. The cruel twist to all this, of course, is that the Afghan Taliban was supported and sustained under former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto’s reign to destabilize Afghanistan. Now if the Pakistanis are to be believed, the Afghans are playing a game conceived and honed by their Pakistani brethren. Some might say it’s comeuppance at last, which would have been sweet if only it was not so damn stupid and dangerous –for Pakistan, Afghanistan, and all the school children. Eight months after we took to Twitter, demanding the authorities #BringBackOurGirls, we now know the girls are never coming back home. They have been sold, married, or dispersed. The Nigerian authorities lost precious time in the days and weeks after the kidnappings as the Goodluck Jonathan administration hemmed and hawed, underestimated the figures, lied and denied until ordinary Nigerians got so fed up, they organized an international campaign that succeeded in drawing attention to the tragedy but failed to retrieve the girls. At some point this year, we got trapped in confusing narratives of the Nigerian government’s own version of the “talking to the Taliban” drama, with the military announcing it had signed a truce deal with Boko Haram, a claim that many Nigerians immediately — and rightly — dismissed. “Negotiating” with jihadist groups like Boko Haram and the Taliban is not the same as dealing with the likes of the IRA or FARC, but try telling that to the select circle of international mediators who think they can replicate Northern Ireland in the Pashtun badlands or northeastern Nigeria. And so, Boko Haram — which means “Western education is forbidden” — won the round this year. And with the much-promised 2014 U.S. troop drawdown in Afghanistan finally upon us and the Taliban waiting until the snow melts in the high mountain passes to begin the spring 2015 offensive, the schoolchildren will be no safer next year than they were in 2014. Imagine if you could only fill up your car with one brand of gasoline. Once you bought the car, you were trapped — try any other brand, and your car wouldn’t even start. It sounds crazy, but this same business model is proliferating across industries from coffee machines to cleaning brushes. Changes in the global economy are only helping it to spread, almost always to the detriment of consumers. The razor-and-blades model has costs for society, too. Instead of buying one razor that lasts for years, people discard countless blades with their plastic housing and rubber bumpers every week. Printer makers offer ink in tiny refills to ensure that consumers never face a high up-front cost, but they lose any economies of scale in the raw materials used to manufacture the containers. They pile up the waste just to keep consumers buying. And in some industries, the razor-andblades model may even replace public goods. Consider those home water filters. In the United States, their manufacturers rack up hundreds of millions of dollars in sales every year. Since laws require drinking water to be safe, these filters may be catering most to consumers’ tastes and peace of mind. But in other countries, where drinking water often isn’t safe, those pitchers and filters are a distributed solution to a problem that ought to be solved centrally. Instead of building the infrastructure to supply clean drinking water to millions of people, those who can afford them throw away millions of used plastic filters ever year. Innovation may also be a victim of the razorand-blades model. Companies that use the model have little incentive to make their products more efficient or durable, since waste is an explicit part of their strategy. Nor do they have much to gain from offering selfcontained, more costly products that permanently fulfill consumers’ needs — a printer that never needs ink, a water purifier with no filters to replace, or a razor that stays sharp forever. Unfortunately, changes in the global economy are only making the razor-and-blades model more attractive. Lower oil prices will lead to cheaper plastics, giving companies a chance to drop prices or claim higher margins on disposable items. Tax cuts and austerity measures around the world will reduce funding for public goods. And as consumers’ attention spans shorten, their tendency to seek instant gratification from products will low up-front prices may increase. From Bikini to Jihad in Ceuta, Melilla Arrests of Suspected Islamists Recruiting for Syria and Iraq Fuel Jihad Fears in Spain's African Lands. Aisha has lived all her life in one neighbourhood in Spain's African territory of Ceuta, but now she is willing to move -even to the war zone of Syria. Her home district of El Principe in this European enclave of 87,000 people on the tip of Morocco has a reputation for hardship -- and a new, growing one for Islamic radicalism. Police raided a gang they suspect recruited 12 women online and sent them to join the violent extremist group calling itself Islamic State, which controls parts of Syria and Iraq. Ten years after Al-Qaeda-inspired bombings killed 191 people in Madrid, police and security analysts say homegrown jihadism, already familiar in Britain and France, has started to hatch in Spain. Security sources say up to 100 radicals are thought to have been recruited in Spain and send to Iraq and Syria. - 'Bikini to hijab' - Police detained two females -- a 19-yearold from Melilla and a girl of 14 from Ceuta -- who were caught trying to cross from Melilla into Morocco, suspected of heading for Syria. "My pupils have told me that many times Syrian and Saudi elders have come to give conferences here," said Veronica Ribera, a teacher in El Principe's high school. "We see young girls switching in a fort- night from the headscarf to the niqab," an Islamic veil covering all but the eyes, she said. "We know there is someone behind it, radicalising them." - 'No man's land' - "There is no work. The younger generation has no future. This is no man's land," said Isma Mohamed, a neighbourhood leader. "People here are fed up of being stigmatised. There are closed pockets, but not all the district is radical, far from it." Authorities fear that Ceuta and Melilla, with their vulnerable populations and volatile border crossings to Morocco, could offer extremists a strategic base for attacks in Europe."What we fear is not so much what is happening in the mosques," said one security source. "It is the lone wolf who could grab a car and drive it into a crowd." Gulf Stock Markets Tumble Dubai Financial Market Lead Gulf Bourses in Free Fall, Shedding more than 7.0 percent Just After Start as Oil Prices Resume Fall. Dubai Financial Market led the way in a free fall, shedding more than 7.0 percent just after the start and appeared headed towards the key 3,000-point psychological barrier. Since OPEC decided to maintain its production unchanged and oil prices dived, the DFM Index has shed more than 30 percent of its value and was currently trading at a 12-month low. Dubai bourse has been the most volatile among the seven Gulf exchanges, possibly because it is the most exposed to international markets and investors, traders said. Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange dropped 4.0 percent Qatar Exchange, the second largest in the Gulf after Saudi Arabia, dipped 4.0 percent below the 11,000-point level before recovering slightly. Kuwait Stock Exchange dropped 1.5 percent below the 6,200-point level while the small Oil prices sank further to new multi-year lows in Asia, with analysts weighing the possible political and economic fallout in oilproducing countries with little respite in the selling. P.5 An-Nour January 2015 (770) 608-3343 Info@An-NourNews.com www.An-Nournews.com What is COPD? Health / Social Science & Technology Symptoms of COPD 2014 Year of Space Technology Benchmarks, Setbacks COPD, or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, is a lung disorder that makes it hard to breathe. The first symptoms can be so mild that people mistakenly chalk them up to “getting old.” People with COPD may develop chronic bronchitis, emphysema, or both. COPD tends to get worse over time, but catching it early, along with good care, can help many people stay active and Inside the lungs. COPD can clog the airways and damage the tiny, balloon-like sacs (alveoli) that absorb oxygen. These changes can cause the following symptoms: •Shortness of breath in everyday activities •Wheezing •Chest tightness •Constant coughing •Producing a lot of mucus (sputum) •Feeling tired •Frequent colds or flu Severe COPD can make it difficult to walk, cook, clean house, or even bathe. Coughing up excess mucus and feeling short of breath may worsen. Advanced illness can also cause: •Swollen legs or feet from fluid buildup •Weight loss •Less muscle strength and endurance Arab Middle Class Measurement and Role in Driving Change Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia Economic and Social Commission Report Sets out Measures that can Drive the Arab Middle Class Forward and Allow the Poor and Vulnerable to become the Middle Class of Tomorrow. This report argues that, although the Arab region is suffering from instability, development and economic justice policies must be discussed. The following economic policy agenda is suggested for a regionally integrated Arab developmental State: a. Developmentfriendly macroeconomic management aimed at structural 142 transformation towards higher valueadded goods and services sectors, which provides quality employment opportunities for the existing middle class; b. Emphasis on social protection floors to ensure equal opportunities and expand the middle class base from vulnerable and poor segments; c. A proactive and expanding fiscal policy mix that identifies resources to finance economic justice policies; d. An improved overreaching governance fabric, laying the foundation for a developmental State. The choice of policies should not be ideological but pragmatic, aimed at increasing the pace of structural transformation and quality employment, and at allowing companies to become more competitive. While trade protection is increasingly becoming an unviable policy for most Arab countries, there are other instruments that can be utilized to provide support for domestic productive sectors, such as indirect and in-kind subsidies; financial instruments; land allocation; government procurement practices; publicprivate joint ventures; State funded and managed quality control, research and development, and technological support; and a more business friendly environment. Part Five of this report shows that it is also necessary to explore regional measures to support national efforts aimed at enhancing productivity and competitiveness; and ways and means to turn Arab regional integration into an effective mechanism for the development of industries. State economic leadership in this respect is indispensible and its political role is salient. The crucial ingredient for development-friendly growth, therefore, is “a capable and largely developmentally oriented State”.248 This, in turn, requires a mix of market and State solutions and a better understanding of the Arab region within the global production hierarchy. Policies should be implemented to assist the upward social mobility of the poor and vulnerable. This report suggests that this can be achieved through economic justice, including the introduction of a social protection floor, that provides basic health and social services. Fortunately, in many Arab economies, resources can be made available through taxation, military expenditure and energy subsidy reform. Their effectiveness, however, will depend on building a political coalition with the will to implement development policies outside the variants of conventional economic wisdom. Lastly, a socially conscious developmental State is not possible without radical reforms to existing governance practices, so as to guarantee security, the rule of law, a meritbased public sector and a competitive rulebased private sector. Such a system would be a far cry from the old authoritarian bargain, because it would be democratic, developmental, just and free. However, it would be strongly resisted by ruling elites and would also have external enemies, given that a successful merit-based open system would lead to a new social contract of mutual accountability, impeding the ability of rulers to listen to foreign demands as opposed to those of their citizens. Nevertheless, the success of such socially conscious developmental States hinges upon the direct and indirect support of the middle class. For the Arab region to move forward on this bright path, the middle class should not only be up for the ride, but must also be behind the wheel. UN, Europe Aiding Execution of Drug Offenders in Iran One year after the Iranian presidential election of June 2013, and despite improvements in relations with the West, the use of the death penalty in Iran is higher now than in two decades. Iran executes more prisoners than any other country except China, with 500 to 625 executed last year according to United Nations An-Nour Newspaper We Give You The News You Give Us Your Views estimates. At least half of the condemned were convicted of drug trafficking. Under international law, Iran and other countries with the death penalty are required to impose it only for the “most serious crimes,” which do not include drug offenses. In Iran 70-80% of executions are for drug offences. National law stipulates that the punishment can be handed down for possession of as little as 30g of narcotics. Four Iranians hang limply from the nooses during public execution in the southern city of Shiraz, on 05 September 2007 For many years European nations have seen Iran and Pakistan as important partners in the “war on drugs”, as both countries represent critical supply routes for traffickers looking to transport heroin. The report, European aid for executions, found that millions of dollars worth of funding – used to train and equip Iran’s anti-narcotics police with body-scanners, sniffer dogs, night-vision goggles, and all-terrain vehicles – routinely comes with targets encouraging arrests likely to result in death sentences, despite commitments from the UN and many donor nations to encourage global abolition of the death penalty. Space technology last year reached some important goals, culminating with the spectacular landing of a space probe on a comet, millions of kilometers from Earth. In August, after a decade-long flight, the European Space Agency’s Rosetta spacecraft became the first man-made object to enter into orbit around a comet, more than 400 million kilometers away. In November, Rosetta launched a probe, named Philae, that made the first soft landing on the comet. Orbiting Mars In September, the U.S. scientific satellite MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution Mission) entered an orbit around Mars, with the mission of learning what happened to the Red Planet's atmosphere and water. MAVEN principal investigator Bruce Jakosky says scientists now know that Mars once had a much denser atmosphere and that it has changed significantly over the last few billion years. What they still don’t know is how and why that happened. A few days later, MAVEN was joined by India’s spacecraft Mangalyaan, making India the first nation to reach Mars' orbit successfully in the first attempt. Its mission was to develop technologies and experience for future explorations. NASA's Orion capsule In December, using its largest rocket, the Delta IV Heavy, NASA conducted a nearly perfect first launch and retrieval of its new space capsule Orion, designed for manned deep space explorations. Orion program manager Mark Geyer said it was hard to have a better day. In the future, the Orion capsule will fly on top of a more powerful rocket, the Space Launch System. NASA plans to send it to circumnavigate the moon in 2018, while the first flight with astronauts is planned for 2021. Setbacks for private space industry The budding private space industry in the U.S. suffered two setbacks this year. In October, Orbital Sciences Corporation’s cargo rocket Antares, bound for the International Space Station, exploded soon after liftoff. Later that month, Virgin Galactic’s experimental space vehicle SpaceShip Two broke up in the middle of a test flight, killing one of the two pilots. Both companies said the mishaps will not deter them from trying to develop reliable spacecraft for near orbit flights. Young People are ‘lost Generation’ who can no Longer Fix Gadgets, Warns professor Young people in Britain have become a lost generation who can no longer mend gadgets and appliances because they have grown up in a disposable world, the professor giving this year’s Royal Institution Christmas lectures has warned. Danielle George, Professor of Radio Frequency Engineering, at the University of Manchester, claims that the under 40s expect everything to ‘just work’ and have no idea what to do when things go wrong. Unlike previous generations who would ‘make do and mend’ now young people will just chuck out their faulty appliances and buy new ones. But Prof George claims that many broken or outdated gadgets could be fixed or repurposed with only a brief knowledge of engineering and electronics. This year’s Royal Institution Christmas Lectures are entitled ‘Sparks will fly: How to hack your home’ she is hoping it will inspire people to think what else they can do with common household objects. War Takes its Toll on Syria Heritage: Nearly 300 Sites Destroyed, Damaged and Looted BEIRUT - Nearly 300 cultural heritage sites have been destroyed, damaged and looted in Syria since its conflict broke out in 2011 according to the UN. Among the areas exposed to major damage were UNESCO world heritage sites such as Aleppo, where settlements have been in place for 7,000 years, and the fabled desert Greco-Roman oasis of Palmyra. "Looting, destruction from aerial bombardment and other explosions, as well as infrastructure construction at cultural sites significantly threatens the heritage to future generations of these historic structures and objects," the UN said in a statement. The report focused on 18 areas, of which six are UNESCO-listed: the Old City of Aleppo; Bosra; Damascus, the Dead Cities of northern Syria; Crac des Chevaliers and Palmyra. Detailed analysis of satellite imagery of 290 locations at these sites showed 24 of them had been destroyed, 104 severely damaged, 85 moderately damaged and 77 possibly damaged. The United Nations said the report was "alarming testimony of the ongoing damage that is happening to Syria's vast cultural heritage" and called for efforts to scale up their protection. P.6 January 2015 An-Nour www.An-Nournews.com U.S. Fears New Iraqi Prime Minister Isn’t Serious About Sunni Outreach Abadi not only pressed Hagel to supply more American weapons and increase the tempo of U.S.-led airstrikes on the Islamic State taking the Pentagon chief by surprise, but also expressed doubts about normalizing relations in the long term with Iraq’s Sunnis, according to two senior American officials. Leaders of the Sunni tribal groups in Anbar province that the United States wants to organize and equip into national guard brigades to take on the Islamic State are not trustworthy, Abadi, a Shiite, told Hagel in a Dec. 9 meeting in Baghdad, according to the two U.S. officials and a European official whose country is involved in the coalition against the Islamic State. Abadi and the Iraqi government understand and “have made clear that Sunni tribal forces are going to have to be a part of the effort to defeat ISIL and for the security of their provinces,” Alistair Baskey, a spokesman for the White House National Security Council, said in an email, using another acronym for the Islamic State. During the Dec. 3 Counter-ISIL Coalition Ministerial in Brussels, Abadi “once again acknowledged that military action alone will not defeat ISIL and that positive steps toward governmental reform, national reconciliation, and economic and social reconstruction will be needed in this fight. This process will take time but it is now underway. The new government is working to integrate tribal fighters into the Iraqi Security Forces.” The Pentagon remains “committed to our advisory mission in Iraq, to include the deployment of up to an additional 1,500 troops that will not only advise Iraqi commanders, but also help build partner capacity through a training regimen,” Pentagon spokesman Rear Adm. John Kirby said. The U.S. military advisors already in Iraq are helping to train and reorganize the highly fractured Iraqi army, which had dwindled to nearly half its size from the 50 brigades it had when the U.S. forces left in 2011, in preparation for a coming ground offensive against the Islamic State. The fight to retake Mosul could start as early as the spring of 2015. The militants captured large parts of the country’s west and northern provinces after Sunni residents threw their support to the group after the Maliki government stopped paying the Sunni tribal fighters who had earlier helped battled the Islamic State’s precursor, al Qaeda in Iraq. In 2011, Maliki also arrested several prominent Sunni lawmakers and tried to arrest the country’s Sunni vice president, Tariq al-Hashimi, after accusing him of running an anti-government death squad. Hashimi later fled to Iraqi Kurdistan. The U.S.-led coalition strategy rests on training and equipping the Iraqi Army so it can mount a counteroffensive against the Islamic State. U.S. officials have been clear that the fight against the militant group will be Iraq’s to wage, even though Army Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has said he may recommend American troops taking a more active role in the fight. So slowing down the departure of additional American trainers would mean a delay in getting Iraqi troops ready and consequently the planned offensive to retake Mosul. The United States also wants to create as many as three brigades of Iraqi national guard units drawn from members of Sunni tribes in the Anbar province to fight the militants. Those tribal militias were a vital part of the so-called Sunni awakening that began in August 2006, during which Sunni fighters turned against al Qaeda in Iraq and helped American troops kill large numbers of militants, pushing the group out of Anbar province, which had been its longtime stronghold. The Islamic State’s current offensive began in Anbar, and the militants have been steadily consolidating their control over the province. The $1.6 billion request was part of the Obama administration’s supplemental war request added to the Pentagon’s 2015 budget proposal and was just approved by Congress on Saturday. The Obama administration also is asking Congress for a new Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF) to counter the Islamic State, even though officials have said U.S. troops will not engage in direct combat against the group on the ground. A small contingent of the American military advisors already have set up camp in Iraq’s Anbar province to train Sunni tribes. But the larger question of creating a standing national guard has met with opposition from among the country’s politicians, who fear that in the long run such an armed force of Sunni tribes could threaten the government in Baghdad. The Abadi government is still in its nascent stages and the United States and its coalition members must “resist making major assumptions about the trajectory of the situation in Iraq based on anecdotal information or a few data points.” The U.S.-led coalition includes major Western nations such as the U.K., France, Germany, Australia, Italy, and Canada, as well as several Middle Eastern countries such as Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Egypt, and Turkey. Arab partners in the coalition are keen to see that Abadi doesn’t end up being another Maliki who alienates Iraq’s Sunni population, which led to the rise of the Islamic State. And for that reason the Arab coalition members many of whom fear the spread of the Islamic State’s power and reach could undermine their own governments are weighing and watching their support for Iraq’s government. If the United States waits to deploy additional forces “or if we look like we are starting to wobble in our commitment to Iraq we’ll pay for that inside the coalition and we’ll pay for that with our Arab partners,” the U.S. official said. ISIS Executed 100 Foreign Fighters Who Tried to Quit Some fighters have grown disillusioned with the realities of fighting in Syria, according to reports The Islamic State group has executed 100 of its own foreign fighters who tried to flee their headquarters in the Syrian city of Raqqa. An activist opposed to both IS and the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad told the daily that he had "verified 100 executions" of foreign IS fighters trying to leave the group's de-facto capital. IS fighters in Raqqa said the group has created a military police to clamp down on foreign fighters who do not report for duty. Dozens of homes have been raided and many fighters have been arrested. Some fighters have become disillusioned with the realities of fighting in Syria, reports have said. According to the British press in October, five Britons, three French, two Germans and two Belgians wanted to return home after complaining that they ended up fighting against other rebel groups rather than the Syrian army. They were being held prisoner by IS. In total, between 30 and 50 Britons want to return but fear they face jail, according to researchers at the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation at King's College London, which had been contacted by one of the fighters speaking on their behalf. Reports emerged earlier this month of an Indian fighter who returned home to Mumbai after IS fighters made him clean toilets and do other menial jobs As many as 100 people may have been arrested after police shut down the protest in favour of secular education Police moved in on the protest, reportedly organised by teacher's union Egitim-Is, in the Kizilay district of Ankara with protesters forced to take cover from the jets of water and pepper spray. Some reports said as many as 100 people may have been arrested, including the head of the Egitim-Is education union Veli Demir. like fetching water. Engineering student Areeb Majeed, 23, who travelled to Iraq with his three friends to join IS in May, was arrested and charged by India's National Investigation Agency with terror-related offences when he returned, according to the Press Trust of India news agency. Since a US-led coalition began a campaign of air strikes against IS in August, the group has lost ground to local forces and seen the number of its fighters killed rise significantly. In recent weeks, there have been a string of apparent setbacks for IS. Iraqi Kurds claimed Thursday to have broken a siege on a mountain where Yazidi civilians and fighters have long been trapped. The Kurdish advances came during a twoday blitz in the Sinjar region involving 8,000 Peshmerga fighters and some of the heaviest air strikes since a US-led coalition started an air campaign four months ago. Meanwhile, the Pentagon said several IS leaders had been killed in US air strikes. Iran Flexes Muscles with Massive Gulf Military Drills Iran kicks off extensive military drills in show of strength stretching several hundred kilometres from Strait of Hormuz to Gulf of Aden. TEHRAN - Iran launched extensive military drills, local media reported, in a show of strength stretching several hundred kilometres from the Strait of Hormuz to the Gulf of Aden. The exercises are set to last six days and involve ballistic missile and drone testing, according to military officials. to 13,000 personnel will take part in the drills, which will be the first time Iran has organised military manuevers so far from its coastline. Senior Iranian Officer Killed in Iraq while Advising Fight Against ISIS Dozens Arrested as Police Disperse Ankara Education Protest Many activists have been angered by the interventions of the Islamic-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) in the Turkish education system which they allege have undermined the country's secularity. Mehmet Balik, head of Egitim-Is' Antalya branch who was reportedly being held in police custody, told Hurriyet Daily News that the police turned water cannons on the demonstration without warning "They soaked down the group, which also included children and the elderly," Balik said. “We stood up for the rights of our teachers and civil servants, but we were the victims of a police attack without any warning,” he added. The government lifted a ban on female students wearing the Islamic headscarf in high schools and has encouraged the opening of Imam Hatip schools which mix religious education with a modern curriculum. (770) 608-3343 Info@An-NourNews.com Brigadier General Hamid Taghavi was advising Iraqi troops, Cleric says Iran has sent more than 1,000 military advisers to Iraq. A senior Iranian military officer has been killed in Iraq, the Revolutionary Guard said in a statement, according to French news agency AFP. Brigadier General Hamid Taghavi was advising Iraqi troops fighting the Islamic State in the city of Samarra, north of Baghdad, the statement said. Iranian military involvement in fighting Islamic State militants in Iraq has increased dramatically over the past year, the Washington Post reported. A senior Iranian cleric told the Post that Iran has sent more than 1,000 military advisers to Iraq since the Islamist group captured large parts of northern Iraq in June. The cleric said Iran has also conducted airstrikes and spent more than $1 billion on military aid in the fight against Islamic State. “The areas that have been liberated from Daesh have been thanks to Iran’s advice, command, leaders and support,” the cleric told the Washington Post, using the Arabic acronym for the group. The United States is not coordinating the battle against the Islamic State with Iran, but "the two nations’ arms-length alliance against the Islamic State is an uncomfortable reality," the Post reports. The Obama administration plans to deploy up to 3,000 troops to retrain Iraqi forces, the paper reported, adding that as yet there has not been hostility between Americans and Iranians in Iraq. The views expressed in all the articles are those of the authors’ and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of AN-NOUR Newspaper P.7 An-Nour January 2015 www.An-Nournews.com Outrage in Algeria Over Islamist Call for Algerian Author's Death Salafist activist has called on his Facebook page for authorities to impose death penalty against Daoud for criticising relationship between Muslims and their religion. Daoud has filed a lawsuit in Oran against what he termed a death threat (770) 608-3343 Info@An-NourNews.com ALGIERS - An Islamist call for author Kamel Daoud to be condemned to death for alleged apostasy has stirred outrage in Algeria, reviving dark memories of the country's brutal civil war. Salafist activist Abdelfatah Hamadache Ziraoui has called on his Facebook page for authorities to impose the death penalty against the author and to execute him in public. The call came after Daoud, in an appearance on French television, criticised the relationship between Muslims and their religion. Ziraoui, who campaigns for bans on alcohol and bathing costumes on the beach, accused the author of apostasy for "waging war on Allah, his prophet, the Koran and the values sacred to Islam". The case has stirred outrage on social media, with a petition calling for Algerian authorities to take action against "such murder calls which bring back the worst days" of the country's Islamist insurgency of the 1990s when dozens of intellectuals were assassinated. Buddhist Militancy Triggers International Concern Sri Lankan police extended a curfew in a popular tourist region after at least 80 people were injured and dozens of Muslim-owned shops and homes torched when a Buddhist mob went on the rampage. Authorities said the curfew would stay in place in the neighbouring resorts of Alutgama and Beruwala as community leaders accused police of doing little to contain the violence. "At least 80 people have been wounded and among them are some police officers too. Shahabadeen Sahira had a traumatic firsthand view of a new wave of militant Buddhist nationalist groups, whose rise across parts of Asia has triggered growing international alarm. Wearing a black headscarf, the elderly Muslim former schoolteacher recalls her ordeal in June, when a gang burst into her home near the southern Sri Lankan coastal town of Aluthgama, during the worst religiously-inspired violence to hit the tropical island nation in three decades. those who view themselves as guardians of the Theravada doctrine of Buddhism, which claims at least 100m followers and dominates the faith in Cambodia, Thailand and Laos, as well as Myanmar and Sri Lanka. Matt Schissler, a community activist in Myanmar, says these new links reflect fears of an “existential threat” among some Buddhist thinkers. “It is a very long arc of history that people are looking at, and they are looking at it globally,” he says. “There is an affinity between Buddhist communities in Myanmar and Sri Lanka, so they would be natural allies in defending against this perceived global threat.” Many of the grievances expressed by these groups stem from purely domestic factors. Radical monks in Myanmar tap into local anxieties over poverty, for instance, or perceived anti-Buddhist discrimination. In Sri Lanka, many link the rise to the end of the bloody civil war against Tamil separatists in 2009. Yet their increasing prominence has an inter- 15,000 March Against Country’s ‘Islamisation’ in Eastern Germany Growing Far-Right Populist Movement PEGIDA Leads Protest Against Asylum Cheats", Country's "Islamisation" in Dresden. By Frank ZELLER - DRESDEN 'Escalation of agitation against immigrants and refugees' A record 15,000 people marched Monday in eastern Germany against "asylum cheats" and the country's "Islamisation" in the latest show of strength of a growing far-right populist movement. Chancellor Angela Merkel earlier cautioned Germans against falling prey to xenophobic "rabble-rousing", reacting to the nascent movement called "Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the Occident" or PEGIDA. "The people are with us!," the group's founder Lutz Bachmann shouted at the crowd, celebrating a 50-percent rise in attendance since their last "Monday demonstration" in a series of rallies that started only in October. "Everywhere now, in every news rag, on every senseless talkshow, they are debating, and the most important thing is: the politicians can no longer ignore us!" Bachmann told the mass of people, many waving the black-red-gold national flag. "We have shown by taking another 'little stroll', and by growing in numbers, that we're on the right path, and that slowly, very slowly, something is beginning to change in this country," Bachmann bellowed to loud cheers. - 'We are the people' - Since the protests have rapidly grown in size and spawned smaller clones in half a dozen cities, a debate about immigration and refugees has gripped Germany, a country whose Nazi past makes expressions of xenophobia especially troubling. Politicians have been stunned by the emergence in the city of Dresden of the nationalists who march against what they consider a broken immigration and asylum system and who vent deep anger at the political class and mainstream media. The demonstrations have flared at a time when Germany, Europe's biggest economy, has become the continent's top destination for asylum seekers, and the world's number two destination for migrants after the United States. The influx of refugees from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and several African and Balkan countries has strained local governments, which have scrambled to house the newcomers in old schools, office blocks and army barracks. One demonstrator, Michael Stuerzenberger, said he does not oppose asylum for refugees but asserted that "70 percent of people claiming political asylum here are economic refugees. We don't want to stay silent about this anymore." "We don't want a flood of asylum seekers, we don't want Islamisation. We want to keep our country with our values. Is that so terrible? Does that make us Nazis? Is it a crime to be A Sri Lankan resident rides a bicycle along a road as Special Task Force (STF) a patriot?" soldiers patrol following clashes between Muslims and an extremist Buddhist While several known neo-Nazis have been spotted in the PEGIDA crowds, the rallies group in the town of Alutgama have been dominated not by jackbooted men with shorn heads but by disenchanted citizens “They came and took everything I had,” she national dimensions too, notably the sense that recalls of the men from the country’s largely Buddhists around the region – including those who voice a string of grievances. "We are the people," they chanted, co-opting Buddhist Sinhalese majority, who burning in Thailand, and minorities in countries such the phrase famously shouted a quarter-century dozens of homes in two day of clashes with as Bangladesh – are under threat from sinister ago by East German pro-democracy protest- local Muslims, resulting in three deaths. outside forces. ers here in the lead-up to the fall of the Berlin “My house was ruined, all my money, all September’s BBS/969 deal warned of “incurmy jewellery, was gone,” she says. “If I sions taking place under the guise of secular, Wall. could meet those responsible, I would ask: multicultural and other liberal notions, that are - 'Repugnant and abhorrent' ‘Sir, does your Lord Buddha teach this?’” directly impacting on the Buddhist ethos and Justice Minister Heiko Maas said the marches The bloodshed was sparked by a street-cor- space”. The perceived threat from Islam looms "bring shame" on the country, and that Gerner disagreement between a Buddhist monk large in both groups’ rhetoric as well, despite many is experiencing an "escalation of agiand a young Muslim. But Alan Keenan, ana- little evidence that Jihadist groups have made tation against immigrants and refugees", a lyst at the International Crisis Group think- inroads in either country. trend he labelled "repugnant and abhorrent". tank, says it is part of a wider trend: the rise Asia’s changing geopolitics has also played a The leader of the Central Council of Musof a new generation of militant anti-Muslim role, with analysts noting a sense of civilisalims in Germany, Aiman Mazyek, warned Buddhist organisations, the most promi- tional encirclement among the smaller nations that PEGIDA could split German society and nent in Sri Lanka being the Bodu Bala Sena where Theravada Buddhism dominates, all of that their use of the chant "we are the people" (BBS), or Buddhist Power Force. which are located close to one or both of the sought to divide "you, the bad Muslims, and In addition to its increasingly high-profile region’s great powers: Hindu-dominated India us, the good Germans". role in Sri Lankan politics, the BBS has and China, with its officially communist ideolHe also blamed politicians and the media also forged ties with other extreme Buddhist ogy. for mainly speaking groups in Asia – notably in Myanmar. Such links are not entirely new: missionaries about Islam and MusThere the so-called 969 nationalist movement have for centuries flowed between Sri Lanka, lims "in the context – the three digits denote nine special quali- Myanmar and their Buddhist-majority neighof security, threats ties of Buddha, six of his teachings and nine bours. But, aided by vibrant and often incenand danger" in recent of the monkhood – has also been accused of diary discussions on social media, these newer years. inciting anti-Muslim sentiment. ties between Asia’s extreme Buddhist organisaMore than 1,200 If I could meet those responsible, I would tions have already had an effect, says Matthew police kept a close ask: ‘Sir, does your Lord Buddha teach this?’ Walton, a Myanmar expert at the University of watch on the nonAshin Wirathu, a prominent 969 leader, trav- Oxford. violent crowd and on elled to Sri Lanka in September to sign a pact Religion is playing an increasingly prominent about 6,000 counterwith the BBS, ostensibly aimed at protecting role in Myanmar’s social and legal systems, protesters nearby global Buddhism, while Galagoda Gnana- with draft laws floated to outlaw interfaith marmarching under sara, a BBS co-founder, also visited Myan- riage, as well as a sharp growth in “Sunday the banners "Dresmar. schools” promoting a Buddhist-based curricuden Nazi-free" and The exchanges helped deepen ties between lum. "Dresden for All", organised by civic, political and church groups. Most protesters claimed they are not neoNazis, just patriots. "To call these people sick with fear, Islamophobic, is outrageous," said an Austrian protester, Lana Gabriel, in her 40s. "They are not far-right. They just love the country and its traditions." Several conservative politicians have argued the government must "listen" to the people's concerns about immigration, while the small anti-euro AfD party has openly sympathised with PEGIDA, saying its message has struck a chord. Polls suggest the eurosceptic party has found a new campaign issue. A survey for news website Zeit Online showed that nearly half of all Germans -49 percent -- sympathised with PEGIDA's stated concerns and 30 percent indicated they "fully" backed the protests' aims. Almost three in four -- 73 percent -- said they worried that "radical Islam" was gaining ground and 59 percent said Germany accepted too many asylum seekers. Turkish Actress Insulted for Translating for Pope ISTANBUL - A leading Turkish actress said she has been subjected to a welter of insults on social media since she acted as a translator for Pope Francis during his visit to Turkey in November. Serra Yilmaz said she was "accused of being a Christian" by Islamist trolls, who were angry at the renowned actress agreeing to interpret for Francis. "I was accused of being a Christian just because I acted as the translator of Pope Francis," Yilmaz told university students in the western port city of Izmir, Milliyet newspaper reported."It is ridiculous to judge people by their beliefs. The 60-year-old stage and screen star, who is fluent in Italian, said she had been hired by Turkish foreign ministry to work as a translator during the pope's three-day visit to Ankara and Istanbul in late November. Yilmaz, best known overseas for her roles in Italy-based Turkish filmmaker Ferzan Ozpetek's films, regularly works as a translator for Italian-speaking dignitaries and politicians visiting Turkey. She had also worked as a translator for Pope Benedict XVI, Francis' predecessor, when he visited Turkey in 2006. Yilmaz had drawn the ire of conservatives in Turkey -- run by an Islamist-rooted government for more than a decade -- when she famously said in 2012 that girls with headscarves scare her and they look like "monsters". While Turkey is run on strictly secular lines, the vast majority of its 76-million inhabitants are Muslim. Turkey's Christian community is no more than 120,000-strong, most of them Greek Orthodox or Armenian. P.8 An-Nour January 2015 Jokes www.An-Nournews.com The purpose of placing jokes in this section is to put a smile on your face. Jokes are NOT intended to humiliate anyone. Certain groups of people located in a particular geographical area are distinguished due to their trait and reputation. BEAUTIFUL? Next A lawyer was just waking up from anesthesia after surgery, and his wife was sitting by his side. His eyes fluttered open and he said, "You're beautiful!" and then he fell asleep again. His wife had never heard him say that so she stayed by his side. A couple of minutes later, his eyes fluttered open and he said, "You're cute!" Well, the wife was dissapointed because instead of "beautiful," it was "cute." She asked, "What happened to 'beautiful'?" His reply was "The drugs are wearing off!" *************** Doctor: I have good news and bad news. Patient: Go with the good news first. Doctor: You have 24 hours to live. Patient: What!?! How about the bad news? Doctor: Um... I forgot to tell you yesterday. ************** There was a lady, who had a dog that she loved, and he followed her everywhere. One morning she woke up, went to the bathroom, came out, and realized that her dog wasn't at her feet. She found him in his bed ''sleeping''. So she took him to the vet. So he looked at her dog and said, ''Your dog is dead''. She asked the doctor to perform another test to be sure. The doctor went into another room, and came back with a cage. In it there was a cat. He let the cat out, and she walked arund the dog, sniffed, and went back in her cage. “'Your dog is dead''. She was like ''Ok, how much do I owe you?'' The doctor said ''$300'' She said, ''What!?!? How could it cost that much??'' He said ''$15 for me to say he was dead. Then $285 for the cat scan'' One day Bill complained to his friend that his elbow really hurt. His friend suggested that he go to a computer at the drug store that can diagnose anything quicker and cheaper than a doctor. ''Simply put in a sample of your urine and the computer will diagnose your problem and tell you what you can do about it. It only costs $10." Bill figured he had nothing to lose, so he filled a jar with a urine sample and went to the drug store. Finding the computer, The computer started making some noise and various lights started flashing. After a brief pause out popped a small slip of paper on which was printed: "You have tennis elbow. Soak your arm in warm water. Avoid heavy lifting. It will be better in two weeks." Later that evening while thinking how amazing this new technology was and how it would change medical science forever, he began to wonder if this machine could be fooled. He mixed together some tap water, a stool sample from his dog and urine samples from his wife and daughter. He went back to the drug store, located the machine, poured in the sample and deposited the $10. The computer again made the usual noise and printed out the following message: "Your tap water is too hard. Get a water softener. Your dog has worms. Get him vitamins. Your daughter is using cocaine. Put her in a rehabilitation clinic. Your wife is pregnant with twin girls. They aren't yours. Get a lawyer. ************** Two old men in a retirement village were sitting in the reading room and one said to the other, ''How do you really feel? I mean, you're 72 years old, how do you honestly feel?'' ''Honestly, I feel like a new born baby. I've got no hair, no teeth, and I just wet myself.'' ************** Wife: "How would you describe me?" Husband: "ABCDEFGHIJK." Wife: "What does that mean?" Husband: "Adorable, beautiful, cute, delightful, A man working with an electric saw elegant, fashionable, gorgeous, and hot." accidentally cuts off all of his fingers. Wife: "Aw, thank you, but what about At the emergency room, his doctor IJK?" Husband: "I'm just kidding!" says, "Give me the fingers, and I'll see what I can do." The injured man Teacher: "Kids,what does the chicken repies, "But I don't have the fingive you?" Student: "Meat!" Teacher: gers!" "Why didn't you bring them?" "Very good! Now what does the pig the doctor asks. The injured man give you?" Student: "Bacon!" Teacher: responds, "Doc, I couldn't pick them "Great! And what does the fat cow give up." you?" Student: "Homework!" *************** *************** 300 Poets from 29 Countries to be Interviewed for Prince of Poets The 6th season of the Prince of Poets competition comes to confirm the strong interest in eloquent poetry on the map of Arab creativity and on the agenda of the Cultural Programs and Heritage Festivals Committee – Abu Dhabi, as an organising body. The 6th season also illustrates the high quality of the presented production, the diversity of poetic experiences and the expansion of participation to ABU DHABI – The Emirati capital, Abu include poets from the Arab region and Dhabi, is preparing to host 300 poets from foreign countries. 29 countries for direct interviews with the members of the jury in January, 2015, as it was announced by the Director of the Poetry Academy at the Cultural Programs and Heritage Festivals Committee - Abu Dhabi, Sultan Al Amimi. The qualified candidates who were selected for direct interviews with members of the jury come from different Arab and foreign countries, namely: The United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Palestine, Jordan, Algeria, Sudan, Yemen, Morocco, Tunisia, Lebanon, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, Mauritania, Eritrea, Saudi Arabia, Canada, Iran, Libya, Mali, India, Senegal, Belgium, Guinea, Niger, Chad, and Kazakhstan. (770) 608-3343 Info@An-NourNews.com PRIZES: In addition to the Burda, the gown which represents the Arab historical heritage and the ring which stands for the title of the Emirate, the cash value of the top prize received by the winner of the Prince of Poets title is AED 1 million. The holder of the second position gets AED 500,000, the third AED 300,000, the fourth AED 200,000 and the fifth AED 100,000. The Organising Committee of the Competition also sponsors the publishing of printed and audio poetry collections authored by winning poets. KIDZ CORNER Hard Decision There was a Siberian husky, her name was Siberia. She had two friends. One was a Chihuahua, her name was Chichi. Her other friend was a Golden Retriever, her name was Goldie. She had fun with her friend One day Siberia and Goldie were going for a walk Chichi came by. She saw them walking together Chichi doesn’t like that. Chichi pushed Goldie in the bush. Siberia barked, “stop.” Goldie liked Chichi as a friend, but Chichi doesn’t. Goldie was injured in the bush. S i b e r i a asked, “Why did you push Goldie.” Chichi said, “I don’t like Goldie she is mean to me so I don’t want you to hang out with her.” Siberia said, “She is very kind to me.” They ran off to the arcade. Siberia wasn’t having much fun she was having a hard decision. Goldie was mad at Chichi for trying to take her friend. Siberia thought if she got them to be friends she wouldn’t have to choose. She had a plan. Siberia would invite them over to her house but they wouldn’t know that the other person is coming. The next day Siberia invited them over. One came in the back door and the other in the front. Siberia sat them down. Chichi said, “What is Goldie doing here.” “I invited you both over” said Siberia. They keep on fighting and fighting. 2 hours later Siberia was surprised that they got along with each other. So they went on lots of trips together and never fought again. They were friends forever. “Fine,” said Chichi and ran off. Goldie said, “You shouldn’t hang out with her.” “You have to pick her or me.” “Now,” replied Siberia. “No,” said Goldie. Arabic Proverbs (a'uul toor, yi'uul iHlibuuh.) I say it's a bull, he says milk it. (Used when you're talking at crosspurposes with someone who won't see reason.) يقول احلبوه،أقول تور. (il-3ein mate3laaš 3al-Haagib.) The eye doesn't go higher than the brow. (No one can go above their status in life.) العين ماتعالش عالحاجب. (il-mat3uus mat3uus walaw rakibu 3ala raasu fanuus.) The miserable person will be miserable even if you hang a lantern on his head. (You can't escape your luck.) المتعوس متعوس ولو ركبه على راسه فانوس. ّ لقيني وال اتغ ّديني. (la''iini wallitġaddini) Better a warm welcome than being invited to lunch. (Welcoming people warmly is important.) طبّاخ الس ّم بيدوقه. (Tabbaax is-simm biyduu'u.) One who cooks poison tastes it. (What goes around comes around.) (illi ylaa'i lli yuTbuxlu leih yiHra' Sawab3u?) Why should one who finds someone to cook for him burn his fingers? (Don't do your own dirty work if you can find someone to do it for you.) اللي يالقي اللي يطبخ له لية يحرق صوابعه؟ ّ يتعشى بيك اتغ ّدى بيه قبل ما. (itġadda biih 'abl ma yit3ašša biik.) Eat him for lunch before he eats you for dinner. (Kill him before he kills you; get your blow in first.) القط مايحبش اال خناقه. (il-'uTT mayHebbiš illa xannaa'u.) The cat only likes its strangler. (People only respond to harsh treatment.) (il-ġaawi yna''aT biTa'iytu.) The fan will donate his skullcap. (An enthusiast will give away everything he has for what he loves.) الغاوي ينقط بطاقيته. (il-Haraka baraka.) Movement is a blessing. (do something better than nothing.) الحركة بركة. ّ زن على خراب ّ دبّور. عشه (dabbuur zann 3ala xraab 3eššu.) A wasp that brought about the destruction of its own nest through its buzzing. (He asked for it, it was his own fault.) (tiDrab il'idra 3ala fummaha, tiTla3 il-bint liummaha.) Like mother, like daughter. تضرب القدرة على فمها تطلع البنت ألمها. هاك الشبل من ذاك األسد. (haak iš-šiblu min zaak il-asad.) Similar to the above, used to desribe someone's similarity to one of their parents. Lit. "this cub (is) from that lion." (xosaara qariiba aHsan min maksab ba3iid.) A loss soon is better than a victory much later. (It's better to cut your losses and admit defeat quickly rather than stick it out and eventually win a victory that cost you a lot.) خسارة قريبة أحسن من مكسب بعيد. "In The Late Hours of The Night" By Grace de Koekkoek In the late Late hours Of the night Your face Lingers In my mind Thoughts won't let you go Stay with me Tonight I'll love you Unconditionally Whisper to me It's just a dream you can say Anything In the late Hours Of the night P.9 An-Nour January 2015 www.An-Nournews.com (770) 608-3343 Info@An-NourNews.com Community Events Yasmine Hamdan’s Oscar Nomination Lebanese songwriter, composer and singer Yasmine Hamdan has been nominated for an Oscar for Best Original Song in a motion picture at the 87th Academy Awards, scheduled to take place on 22 February 2015 at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, Los Angeles. Her song "Hal," which featured in American filmmaker Jim Jarmusch’s vampire comedy "Only Lovers Left Alive," starring Tom Hiddleston and Tilda Swinton, appeared on the list of Oscar contenders released. Soon after, fans began sharing the news on social media outlets and congratulated Hamdan by posting comments on her official Facebook page. Hamdan, 38, is a Lebanese singer currently based in Paris, France. She is known for fusing classical Arabic music with modern electro-pop. She rose to promi- China is World’s Worst Jailer of the Press; Global tally Second Worst on Record In Iran, where President Hassan Rouhani has also failed to meet expectations for liberal reform, 30 journalists are in prison. The list of the top 10 worst jailers of journalists is rounded out by Eritrea, Ethiopia, Vietnam, Syria, Egypt, Burma, Azerbaijan, and Turkey. All told, CPJ identified 220 journalists in jail around the world in 2014, the second-highest number since CPJ began taking an annual census in 1990. In 2013, 211 were jailed, while 2012 saw the record high of 232. From China to Iran and from Egypt to Burma, hopes for reform have been dashed as authoritarian governments suppress critical speech at a terrible cost to journalists. Turkey, which was the world’s worst jailer in 2012 and 2013, released dozens of journalists in 2014, bringing to seven the number of journalists behind bars on the date of CPJ’s census. The number of journalists in Chinese jails is the largest CPJ has ever documented in that country. Almost half of those jailed are Tibetan or Uighur, including academic and blogger Ilham Tohti and seven students who worked on his website. The number jailed also more than doubled in Egypt to 12, including three journalists from the international network Al-Jazeera. Burma had 10 journalists in jail, the first on CPJ’s census since 2011. Worldwide, 132 journalists, or 60 percent, were jailed on anti-state charges such as subversion or terrorism. Online journalists accounted for more than half, or 119, of the total imprisoned, while roughly one-third were freelancers. nence in 1998 when she teamed up with Lebanese artist Zeid Hamdan to form the popular pop band Soap Kills. She has since released a number of successful collaborations as well as her first solo album in 2009, entitled “Arabology.” In 2012, she released a second, self-titled album, “Yasmine Hamdan.” Her second album, famous for echoing Arabic music from the 1950s and 1960s backed by underground electronic beats, drew international acclaim and she is currently being promoted as a “crossover star” in Britain, France and the United States. During a concert to promote the film, Jarmusch declared his admiration for the Lebanese singer, describing her as “a gift to [him] and the whole world.” The official nominations will be announced live on January 15. An-Nour Newspaper congratulate Sally Yates, the U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia on her forthcoming nomination as Deputy Attorney General, succeeding James M. Cole, in which she will most certainly excel. In the past, Ms. Yates, as a prosecutor, handled a wide range of complex and high profile criminal cases in Atlanta with remarkable skill and outstanding professionalism. “As Deputy Attorney General, Ms. Yates will play a critical role in serving justice for the nation. In Lebanon, Seaside Garden Blooms on Towering ‘Mountain' of Trash Deadly 2014 for International Journalists Committee to Protect Journalists Reports NEW YORK - The gruesome murders of foreign journalists by the Islamic State group contributed to 2014 being a particularly deadly year for international correspondents, an annual review by the Committee to Protect Journalists reported. The CPJ study found that an "unusually high proportion" of the 60 journalists who died reporting from the world's trouble-spots in 2014 were international journalists. Among the grim toll were American journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff, whose horrific beheadings by IS jihadists were published by the group in online videos in August and September. The CPJ cited the case of Syria, the deadliest country for journalists in 2014 for a third straight year with 17 deaths, as an example of the risks faced by local reporters. In total, some 79 reporters have been killed in Syria since the country's bloody civil war erupted in 2011. Syria has now passed the Philippines as the second deadliest place for reporters since the CPJ began keeping its tally of journalist killings in 1992. Iraq is the deadliest. The CPJ said around half of the journalists killed in 2014 died in the Middle East, with 39 percent of them losing their lives in combat or crossfire. Continued from page 1 Key Oil Producers Face Uncertain Outlook in 2015 programme, which could continue to weigh on the nation's own oil exports. Rebalancing? "Iraqi politicians will find it difficult to cut spending in the current context and so the country is potentially facing a serious economic crisis in the next year or two." Added to the picture, Iran -- the second biggest oil producer in the 12-nation OPEC cartel after kingpin Saudi Arabia -- is gaining increasing power within Iraq. "Iran is getting even more influential in Iraq, and those two countries together could start to challenge the level of Saudi crude oil exports in coming years," said Petromatrix analyst Olivier Jakob. At the same time however, US lawmakers could decide next year to impose fresh sanctions on Iran over its disputed nuclear energy PRESIDENT OBAMA’S INTENT TO NOMINATE US ATTORNEY SALLY YATES TO BE DEPUTY ATTORNEY GENERAL Some analysts, however, predict that low oil prices could stimulate demand and global economic growth, which would help soak up excess supplies. A 25 percent drop in world oil prices in the short term would help boost global demand for crude by 0.50 percent, or 460,000 barrels per day, according to IMF data cited by British bank Barclays. However, it could take quite some time for the benefits of low oil prices to boost world economic growth. OPEC faces tough new competition from cheaper oil from US shale fields -- but this involves a costly extraction process that needs high oil prices to make it worthwhile. Oil output is booming in the United States thanks to fracking, which involves blasting a high-pressure blend of water, sand and chemicals deep underground in order to release hydrocarbons trapped between layers of shale rock. New project is putting end to towering nightmare, transforming it into seaside park that local officials hope will inspire others. In 2015, 33,000 square metres of land will open as a public park Lebanon's southern city of Sidon is best known for its Crusader castle and ancient market, but a more modern landmark has marred its Mediterranean shoreline for decades -- a towering "mountain" of trash. In the summer, reeking fumes hung over the city, and fires broke out at the dump. Rubbish washed out to sea reaching Cyprus, 260 kilometres (160 miles) away in the Mediterranean, and was pushed across the city by winter storms. But now an ambitious project is putting an end to the towering nightmare, transforming it into a seaside park that local officials hope will inspire others dealing with Lebanon's many dumps. The project began with the installation of a seawall around the eyesore site and the coastline to the south, preventing waves from impeding work or taking rubbish out to sea. Then the site was closed to further deliveries, with the city's waste going to a new processing facility further south. The mountain started life as a dump for rubble about 10 years into the country's 1975-1990 civil war, and tests showed around 60 percent of the heap was material from destroyed buildings. This year, 33,000 square metres of that land will open as a public park, planted with hundred-year-old olive trees and featuring a small amphitheatre. The rest of the dump was ploughed into a sanitary landfill, lined and covered with protective plastic membranes. Pipes running through it will filter gas and remove effluent, and grass will be planted on top, but the landfill will be off limits to the public for eight years while the material underneath decomposes. "In eight years time, the landfill site will be joined with the green park that we are constructing now, and Sidon will enjoy 100,000 square metres of green park," he said. But not everyone is impressed. Mohamed Sarji, president of the Lebanese Union of Professional Divers and founder of the Bahr Lubnan (Sea of Lebanon) NGO, is angry that the land reclamation has covered over a long stretch of Sidon's sandy beach. The landfill and park occupy 96,000 square metres of the 550,000 square metres of reclaimed land, and Sarji questioned who would benefit from the rest of the newly created and potentially lucrative beachfront real estate. U.N. Asks Israel to Pay Lebanon $856 Million in Compensation BEIRUT: The U.N. General Assembly asked Israel to pay Lebanon $856.4 million as compensation for the oil slick the Jewish state caused during the July 2006 war. The U.N. has previously requested that Israel compensate Lebanon for the slick, but this was the first time that a monetary figure was set by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. Addressing the General Assembly, Lebanon’s ambassador to the U.N. Nawaf Salam said the decision was a victory for the concept of justice. “For the first time since Israel’s aggression on Lebanon in the summer of 2006, the United Nations General Assembly adopted today by majority of 170 out of 179, Resolution No. 69/212 acknowledging a compensation in the amount of $856.4 million up to date, which Israel has to pay for the damages inflicted on Lebanon in the immediate aftermath of the Jiyyeh attack,” Salam said in a statement. Israel has repeatedly refused to compensate Lebanon, despite the many calls by the General Assembly. Salam said Lebanon considered the resolution to be major progress, especially as a figure has been put forward as a basis for compensation using a clear and legal method of calculation that takes into account the value of direct and indirect damage. “The resolution also paves the way for further compensation into other areas of damages, such as health, ecosystem services as habitat, potential ground water examination and marine diversity,” the ambassador said. Salam pledged that Lebanon would continue to mobilize all resources and resort to all legal measures to see that the resolution is fully implemented, and that specific compensation is paid promptly. “Furthermore, its adoption asserts the will of the overwhelming majority of the international community to hold countries responsible for their wrongful international acts, a clear manifestation of which is Israel’s attacks on the Jiyyeh electric power plant in 2006,” he added. But there is doubt that Israel will comply with the U.N. resolution, especially since it is not binding. Only the Security Council resolutions are binding for all members of the U.N. P.10 An-Nour January 2015 (770) 608-3343 Info@An-NourNews.com www.An-Nournews.com ************************************ DIRECTORY *********************************** ATTORNEYS GROCERY MEDICAL Anthony D’aurio 5505 Roswell Rd, Suite 300 Atlanta, GA - 404-255-2929 Al-Hamrah Int ernat ional 895 Indian Trail, Lilburn, Georgia 770-381-2006 Ali Forrest Morad 404-266-0532 Al-Madina 5345 Jimmy Carter Blvd. Norcross, GA 30093 Ph: (770) 300-0772 Fax: 300-9864 Hassan H. Elkhalil, Ph:(770) 612-3499 Fax: (770) 612-3202 Auto Accident Law Office Joe A. Weeks 404-542-5926 Joseph Rosen, Immigration Attorney Ph: (678) 461-6046 International Tax & Immigration Tax Richard Rubin 404-247-5466 Immigration Law Office Zainab-Khan, LLC 678-659-9691 CPA-ACCOUNTANTS S W Accounting & Finance 770-485-1447 Ghassan Ghraizi 678-366-9232 Amjd Ibrahim 404-456-6052 Selem Tauhidul, Enrolled Agent RSL Accounting & Tax Service, LLC 770-457-1965- 770-403-2914 INSURANCE Lions Gate Insurance, LLC Sami Jaraysi Ph: (404) 217-2355 Fax: (770) 457-5120 Albert F. Johary, M.D.,Internal Medicine 1320 Center Drive, Suite 100 Dunwoody, Georgia 30338. 6335 Hospital Parkway, Suite 305 John’s Creek, GA 30097 Phone: 770.730.8908 Baheeg Shadeed, M.D., General Surgeon 770-438-9191 Bakkal Int’l Foods 5690 Roswell Rd., Sandy Springs, Ga30342 Cayce Foods, Inc. 1680 Roswell St., Smyrna, GA 30080 Commerce International Wholesale grocery 407-426-7098 Global International Food Market 1 11235 Alpharetta Hwy., Suite 110, Roswell, Georgia 770- 442-5117 Global International Food Market 2 11880 Douglas Rd, Suite 300, Johns Creek, GA 30005 770-663-8823 Global International Food Market 3 950 Cobb Parkway, Suite 110 Marietta, GA 30060 Phone: 770-428-2222 ~ 770-499-4444 Khaled Nass, M.D., Kidney Center 678-297-5014 Maan Jokhadar, M.D. Cardiovascular Disease 404-686-1000 Alex Mahyar, Chiropractic 2650 Holcomb Bridge Rd,Suite 750 Alpharetta, Ga 30022 678-381-1184 Georgetown Clinics Medical, Chiropractic, PT 236 Johnson Ferry Rd., Sandy Springs, GA 404-255-0666 REAL ESTATE Rana Tayara Solid Source Realty GA 678-294-3838 rana.tayara@yahoo.com RESTAURANTS Basilico 408 S. Atlanta St., Roswell, GA 30075 (770) 642-6500 Hashemite’s 3370 Venture Pkwy, Duluth, GA 30096 (770) 622-1866 1001 Nights Persian Cuisine 10305 Medlock Bridge Rd. Johns Creek, GA 30097 Istanblue 262 Pharr Rd. Atlanta, GA 30305 404-214-5404 Mediterranean Bakery & Sandwich 3362 Chamblee Tucker Road, Suite B Atlanta, Georgia 30341 770-220-0706 Shukri Makhlouf, M.D. Internal Medicine 770-831-3018 Mediterranean Grill 3 Locations Decatur- Midtown-Marietta Leon International 4000-A Pleasantdale Rd.Atlanta, GA Ph:(770) 416-6620 Alec Elchahal, Orthodontist Suwanee, Georgia 770-622-1177 Shish Kabob 962 Roswell St., Marietta, GA 30060 Mediterranean Bakery 3362 Chamblee Tucker Rd, Atlanta, GA 30341 Ph: 770-220-0706 Magdi Hanafi, M.D. Gyn & Fertility Specialists 5673 Peachtree Dunwoody, Suite 750 Atlanta, Ga 30342 404-851-9300 Nazareth Grocery 585 Franklin Road, Marietta, Ga 30067 770-262-4886 Nour International Market 875 Mansell Rd. Roswell, GA 30076 Ph: (770) 641-7193 Fax: (770) 641-7092 AE Financial & Risk Management Ali Elnajjar Investment Advisor Representative 678-338-4396 / www.aefinancial.biz Talar’s International Food 953 Montreal Rd. Clarkson, GA 30021 Ph: (404) 299-1551 Massie Hundal- Allstate 770- 394-8500 Zam Zam International Foods 5030 Memorial Dr. Stone Mtn, GA Ph: (404) 297-8976 Mohammad Wehbi, M.D. 404- 395-1160 Walid Nassif, MD. VA. Hospital 404-321-6111 Bassam Tomeh, M.D.,Family Medicine 770-934-6832 Tarek Nessouli M.D., Orthopaedic Surgeon Rockdale Orthopaedics 1301 Sigman Rd., Conyers, GA 30012 404- 216-4470 404-320-0101 770-499-7399 TRAVEL AGENCIES Alpha Travel Windy Hill, Marietta Ph: (770) 988-9982, 1-800-793-8424 Global Access Travel Miami : (305) 577-8880 New York : (212) 688-1455 Toll Free: 1-877-359-4562 List Your Business for $120 for the entire year ********************* EMBASSIES ********************* Republic of Algeria Ph:(202) 265-2800 Fax: (202) 667-0217 Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia Ph: (202) 337-4076 The Kingdom of Morocco Ph: (202)462-7979 Fax: (202) 265-0161 The Arab Republic of Egypt Ph: (202) 895-5400 Fax: (202) 244-4319 The Syrian Arab Republic Ph: (202) 323-6313 Fax: (202) 234-9548 The Sultanate of Oman Ph: (202) 378-1980 Fax: (202) 754-4933 The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan Ph: (202) 966-2664 Fax: (202) 966-3110 The United Arab Emirates Ph: (202) 243-2400 Fax: (202) 243-2432 The State of Qatar Ph: (202) 274-1600 Fax: (202) 237-0061 The Republic of Lebanon Ph: (202) 939-6300 Fax: (202) 939-6329 The United Kingdom of Bahrain Ph: (202) 342-1111 Fax: (202) 362-2192 The Republic of Sudan Ph: (202) 338-8565 Fax: (202) 667-2406 The Islamic Republic of Mauritania Ph: (202) 232-5700 Fax: (202) 139-2623 Iraq Republic Ph: (202) 483-7500 Fax: (202) 462-5066 The Republic of Tunisia Ph: (202) 862-1850 Fax: (202) 862-1858 PLO Mission In Washington Ph: (202) 974-6360 FAx: (202) 974-9278 The State of Kuwait Ph: (202) 966-0702 Fax: (202) 364-2868 The Republic of Yamen Ph: (202) 965-4760 Fax: (202) 337-2017 Teaching Private Lessons Arabic Language Beginners/ Intermediate and Advanced Flexible Hours and very affordable Rates Please call: 404-317-4903 ********* CLASSIFIED ADS********* AN- NOUR TEAM RENTAL HOUSE For Sale Professional Photographer Video Recorder Wedding - Birthday Parties - Graduation تخرج – حفالت – أعراس ّ 5 bedroom House Stone Mountain Leased for $1,000/ m (Tenants have been in the house for over 20 years) Reasonable Prices (404) 343-9282 OBAMA CARE FREE OR LOW COST HEALTH INSURANCE You Have Options We Can Help Free Consultation Certified Agent: Mohammed (MOE) Awad 770-876-1078 $125,000 770- 331-7099 مطعم إيطايل و يوناين ناجح للبيع Successful Restaurant FOR SALE Due to owner relocation Italian & Greek in northeast GA. Dine in, carry out, and delivery Very flexible. For serious inquiry only Call 706-246-5692 Classified Ads Reach Out to Thousands $5/line P.11 An-Nour January 2015 www.An-Nournews.com (770) 608-3343 Info@An-NourNews.com January is National Mentorship Month, a month in which people across the country celebrate and promote mentorship in their communities. We are celebrating this occasion by hosting our 2nd annual UBeyond Event“Empowering YOU to reach your full potential” on January 31st. The conference will be a great networking opportunity for everyone who is interested in advancing their future and careers. As part of the conference we are honored to have this year our Guest speaker will be Tony Charaf Tony will share with attendees his secrets on success and leadership. Tony is a dynamic speaker and you wouldn't want to miss his valuable insights. Tony Charaf, President, Delta TechOps leads the maintenance, engineering, and the MRO business for Delta Air Lines worldwide and has been in the aviation industry since 1977. As part of our 2nd Annual Conference, we are offering two workshop sessions: We all face defining moments that require courage to make decision. Henna Inam will conduct a workshop session on how we can rewire our brains to enable us to take prudent risk and courage in all obstacles that face us. Henna will preview her upcoming book that she is publishing on the subject for the 1st time in our conference. This is a session that will make you rethink your approach to risk taking and courage. You don’t want to miss Henna’s valuable advice and council. The other Session will be on the importance of networking in everyone’s success. This session will be presented by Bob Littell, Bob is highly recognized nationally and internationally as “Chief Netweaver”. His method and concept is based on the movie” Pay It Forward”. Details on the conference are as follows: Date: Saturday, January 31, 2015 Time: 10:30 AM to 3:30 PM Location: AT&T Lenox Campus 1025 Lenox Park Blvd, NE Atlanta, GA 30329 To purchase your tickets, go to the website below. http://ubeyond2ndannualevent.eventbrite.com P.12 January 2015 An-Nour www.An-Nournews.com (770) 608-3343 Info@An-NourNews.com