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English

A farmer’s market in Ghalbun, Jbeil

13-6-2020

A new farmer’s market was opened at “Beit Baydar” garden in Ghalboun, Byblos Caza, in cooperation with “Byout Ghalboun” and under the auspices of the minister of agriculture to sell the produce of the town and neighboring villages directly to the consumer. On the occasion, the pastor of the Diocese of Byblos, Michel Aoun, said the event encourages agriculture and return to the roots. Similarly, the director general of the ministry, Louis Lahoud, who represented minister Mortada, hoped this initiative be streamlined in all areas across Lebanon, as it contributes to attaining food security. Lahoud underlined the importance of direct trading of good quality produce between farmers and consumers which reduces the cost on the Lebanese citizen. He finally announced that the agriculture ministry is open to all ideas, pointing to a strategy it developed to prop farmers’ markets and sell production. (Al Diyar, July 13, 2020)
 

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Migrant domestic workers in Lebanon aggravated 

12-6-2020

In its issue of today, Al Akhbar reported that the number of Ethiopian migrant domestic workers staging a sit-in at their country’s embassy is increasing. Ethiopian MWDWs, to recall, are protesting against the consulate’s decision forcing them to pay for the 14-day quarantine( https://bit.ly/2YqbZep). The rise in the number of protestors, Al Akhbar wrote, is not due to the growing number of supporters to those workers, but rather to the fact that many “sponsors” or employers have relinquished their MWDWs and left them to their fate. This came in the wake of the unprecedented surge in the exchange rate of the US dollar and the resulting incurred costs on the workers, and on employers who are now unable to pay their salaries in the dollar. On the subject, Al Akhbar spoke to the lawyer of Human Trafficking Section at Kafa organization, Mohanna Isaac, who stated that if “only 5% of a total of 250,000 MWDWs had to put up with unwanted residency or housing troubles, it will be a humanitarian disaster,” as she said. She warned of the dire consequences in this regard, noting that the calamitous situation is forcing a large number of the migrant domestic workers to choose between staying with their employers and forcibly renewing their contracts or ending up in the streets. This, Isaac maintained, will eventually cause tension between the two parties, leading sometimes to ill-treatment of the workers or to a rise in the incidence of suicide, violence, homelessness or emotional disturbance. (Al Akhbar, June 12, 2020)
 

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Samira Nasr, Editor-in-chief of US Harper’s Bazar magazine

12-6-2020

Hearst Magazines publishing company announced on June 9 the appointment of Lebanese journalist Samira Nasr as the new editor-in-chief of Harper’s Bazaar US to succeed Glenda Bailey, according to US-based Arab News. Nasr will be the first Lebanese to hold this post in the history of the 153-year old publication, and is expected to start her new job as of July 6 where she will manage digital and print publishing. Recalling, that Nasr has served as the executive fashion director at Vanity Fair magazine. On her new role, Nasr boasted: “As a proud daughter of a Lebanese father and Trinidad mother, I have an all-encompassing view of the world anchored in the conviction that representation counts.” “My lens is by nature colorful, hence it is crucial to begin a new chapter in the history of Bazaar by spotlighting all inspiring voices of our time,” Nasr added. In conclusion, she pledged to work to give all voices a platform to recount stories that were not told, as she put it. (Liban 24, June 10, 2020)
 

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Iranian photographer Gohar Dashti: Corona, an opportunity for world solidarity

11-6-2020

Iranian photographer, Gohar Dashti, said she believed the coronavirus pandemic presented an opportunity to inspire solidarity and an incentive to make human beings realize their mutual responsibility and understand that they are all on the same boat. Dashti voiced hope that people in wealthy countries, will acknowledge that they are not unaffected by the suffering of others around the globe. “We see war in the media and think it has nothing to do with us, and that it is Afghanistan’s or Yemen’s problem, but what’s happening now shows that it has to do with all of us (…). We cannot remain silent,” Dashti maintained. Speaking in an interview with AFP, Dashti pointed out that she created a collection of artworks tackling the relationship between nature and migrants living in exile and who endure war and social traumas. “It is good to understand the relationship between the world, economy and nature, and maybe this pandemic has given us the chance to think about all these issues again,” she expounded, adding that, for 15 years, she has used this relationship between nature in her collections exhibited worldwide, namely prestigious permanent collections. (An Nahar, June 9, 2020)

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Efforts to ease the evacuation of foreign workers

11-6-2020

The minister of labor, Lamia Yammine, yesterday met a delegation of the International Organization for Mirgration (IOM) led by Beirut Head Office Director, Fawzi Zayut, and discussed the precarious situation of migrant workers. Recalling, that due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the evacuation of foreign laborers, specifically that of migrant domestic workers, and mainly Ethiopian MWDWs, has been delayed so far in terms of travel and compulsory quarantine costs (https://bit.ly/3f84SxS). Zayut said after the meeting that discussions covered areas of cooperation between IOM and the ministry in relation to the foreign workforce and the mechanism of assistance on part of the international agency's efforts to mitigate the difficulties the ministry is facing in this respect. This, according to Zayut, includes provision of voluntary repatriation of foreign workers in coordination with the labor-sending countries and involved parties, as well as joint action with governmental agencies and NGOs in the post-Corona period within an institutional framework. Yamin, Zayut concluded, has been updated on OIM’s plans and programs in the area of combating trafficking in persons and border management. (Al Diyar, June 11, 2020)

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Premiership: Diab’s wife receives no salary for appointment in NCLW, education committee

10-6-2020

In a statement yesterday, the media office of the president of the council of minister categorically denied all that was circulated on social media that PM Diab’s wife Nuwwar Mawlawi is receiving a salary for her appointment as VP of NCLW and in the higher committee for education. Mawlawi, the statement clarified, has volunteered for the two tasks out of conviction in the positive impact these posts can have on the country. (Al Diyar, June 10, 2020)
 

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Novelist Isabel Allende: Corona will end patriarchy

10-6-2020

Renowned Chilean writer Isabel Allende said that the coronavirus pandemic has exposed blunt inequalities that are currently fueling protests in the US and around the world. She said it is up to the younger generations to build a post-Corona world based on gender and racial equality. “The pandemic is teaching us to look at our priorities and face our reality. It is teaching us that we are all one big family, and that what happens to one human being in Wuhan touches the entire planet and all of us (…). There are no walls that separate people,” Allende maintained. “The patriarchal system will come to an end. For these brutish men ruling the world will be drained and a new world will arise in which men and women equally share running the planet,” she added, concluding: “We should not let violence and greed rule the world, but solidarity, compassion and hope. This is the world that we crave for.”(An Nahar, June 10, 2020)
 

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Labor minister determined to reform Kafala system 

10-6-2020

The minister of labor, Lamia Yamin, disclosed on June 8 that she was keen on reforming the Kafala (sponsorship) system in Lebanon. Yamin, who was speaking after a meeting with the EU Ambassador to Lebanon, Ralph Tarraf, pointed out that her ministry has taken the necessary measures to start the said plan. These include the following: completion of a unified work contract; launch of a hotline to receive and address migrant workers’ complaints; preparedness to conclude agreements with labor-sending countries to regulate foreign labor force and combat trafficking in persons, and introducing amendments to the labor law to include the MWDWs’ work as part of the decent work strategy. Other steps will follow accordingly, Yamin confirmed. In turn, Tarraf stressed EU readiness to provide support needed to ensure the success of above measures. (NNA, June 8, 2020)
 

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Sustainable development model in Batlun, Shuf

9-6-2020

On June 8, Al Akhbar drew attention to a new agricultural model in the Shuf town of Batlun integrating organic farming, rational waste management and alternative tourism or ecotourism. According to mayor Marwan Kais, the idea came up in 2016 by the Lebanese House Establishment for the Environment (LHEE) and a group of town women who developed a strategy that included a comprehensive survey of Batlun. This, Kais explained, has coincided with Sukleen, the waste management company, ending its services in the Shuf area and another replacing it. The latter has provided some 100 public garbage sorting containers to encourage household waste sorting at the source. In turn, Baruk Cedar Forest or Reserve delivered around 500 chickens with 20 cages to help reduce the size of organic waste. To this effect, Kais said, Batlun successfully managed to cut its accumulative waste management bill from USD 165,000 in 2015 to LBP 110 million in 2018 as a result of waste sorting, the conversion of food residuals into organic fertilizers and the re-selling of cardboard and glass to recycling centers. On the agricultural front, Kais said he anticipated that before long there will be a market for farmers to sell their produce directly to the consumer away from dealers’ and wholesalers’ influence. On the other hand, the environment activist, Munzer Bou Wadi, boasted that Batlun has braced itself to become a station for alternative tourism, and a station has been launched to accommodate nature walks from the village to Maaser Shuf, Botmeh and Khreibeh along the woodlands. (Al Akhbar, June 8, 2020)

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Film on injustices against Arab women refused funding

9-6-2020

In its issue of today, Al Akhbar highlighted the film, “Paradise under my feet” by Palestinian director, Sandra Madi, featuring the injustices against women who, by virtue of existing laws, are denied the custody of their children. Produced by Abir Hashem, the film has been screened in many European capitals and will land in Beirut and tour Lebanese villages and towns to document and support the rights of women to this effect, as said Madi. According to Al Akhbar, the film begins by introducing the discriminatory personal status laws in the country and their hitches within the various sects. It focuses on the issue of custody within the Shiite community which lately has seen many outspoken women voices and developed into a public cause. Madi said she spotlighted the issue of children’s custody as practiced by the Shiite community exclusively, not to inspire compassion but to provide the film as a “document” that can be used to “raise the voice for justice”. It is an opportunity for advocacy and awareness aimed to pressure concerned parties in order to bring about the desired change, Madi expounded. Al Akhbar wrote, that the film which has been refused Arab funding for boldly dealing with a sensitive and disputed subject, eventually ventured into self-funding and production. (Al Akhbar, June 9, 2020)

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