Subscribe to newsletter

Custom Search 1

You are here

News

Error message

  • Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in include() (line 51 of /var/www/weeportal-lb.org/new/sites/all/themes/crtda/node--ressource_center.tpl.php).
  • Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in include() (line 51 of /var/www/weeportal-lb.org/new/sites/all/themes/crtda/node--ressource_center.tpl.php).
  • Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in include() (line 51 of /var/www/weeportal-lb.org/new/sites/all/themes/crtda/node--ressource_center.tpl.php).
  • Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in include() (line 51 of /var/www/weeportal-lb.org/new/sites/all/themes/crtda/node--ressource_center.tpl.php).
  • Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in include() (line 51 of /var/www/weeportal-lb.org/new/sites/all/themes/crtda/node--ressource_center.tpl.php).
  • Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in include() (line 51 of /var/www/weeportal-lb.org/new/sites/all/themes/crtda/node--ressource_center.tpl.php).
  • Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in include() (line 51 of /var/www/weeportal-lb.org/new/sites/all/themes/crtda/node--ressource_center.tpl.php).
  • Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in include() (line 51 of /var/www/weeportal-lb.org/new/sites/all/themes/crtda/node--ressource_center.tpl.php).
  • Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in include() (line 51 of /var/www/weeportal-lb.org/new/sites/all/themes/crtda/node--ressource_center.tpl.php).
  • Warning: Invalid argument supplied for foreach() in include() (line 51 of /var/www/weeportal-lb.org/new/sites/all/themes/crtda/node--ressource_center.tpl.php).
English

Qartaba tourism carnival, government to settle 2018 entitlements of festivals

5-8-2019

In a ceremony held at the ministry on July 31, the minister of tourism, Avedis Guidanian, launched the Qartaba Carnival for Tourism and Heritage. Guidanian revealed that the State Shura Council said it has sent to cabinet the decree related to 2018 financial contributions to local festivals. The Minister hoped it will be endorsed in the first cabinet session, expected to be held in the next few days, to kick off the compensation for the year 2018. Guidanian stressed that organizing festivals today requires determination and courage especially with the shrinking contributions to this end, combined with the gloomy atmosphere in the country. The minister boasted that he may be the only optimistic official to stimulate positivity through declaring the constant improvement in the number of incomers to Lebanon, despite the never-ending crises. For his part, the head of the Federation of Jbeil Municipalities, mayor of Qartaba, Fadi Martinos, stressed the persistence of the successes of the festival year after year, notwithstanding the financial and economic drawbacks. Similarly, the president of the Qartaba Festivals Committee, Michel Darazi, announced the dates of the musical evenings and names of performing singers. (An Nahar, August 5, 2019)

Share on

Yezidi women survivors and abductees by ISIS

2-8-2019

Al Diyar cited today a feature published by Sputnik on the fifth anniversary of the enslavement and rape of Yezidis women and girls by ISIS who were abducted, August 2014, after slaughtering their families in Sinjar in front of their eyes. Sputnik released figures it obtained from the Yezidis Rescue Office about the number of kidnapped men and women, including the total number of survivors. The fate of surviving men, women and children, is reportedly still unknown, in the grip of violence and among Daesh families in the Iraqi refugee camps and inside Syria. According to the director of the Ezidis Rescue Office in Kurdistan, Hussein Qaidi, the number of kidnapped men and women rescued from the extremist abductors reached 3487 in total, including 1186 women. The number of liberated men stood at 337 in all. Speaking to Sputnik’s reporter in Iraq, Qaidi said the number of rescued children within the above total number, was 1024 girls and 940 boys. The total number of kidnapped men and women who are still detained by the terrorist organization or are missing, is 2930 persons, including 1338 women and 1592 men. For more on the article, kindly visit the link below:  (https://bit.ly/2SZzgkg). (Al Diyar 2 August 2019)
 

Previous related news:
Yazidi girls decapitated at last ISIS stronghold
USD 1,600 to each Yazidi woman survivor from ISIS

 

Share on

Face cover ban comes into effect in the Netherlands

2-8-2019

After a 14-year debate on limited or complete ban of the veil, the law barring burka or niqab came into effect as of the first of August, 2019. Covering the face is no longer allowed in public spaces, like schools, hospitals, public departments and public transport, including trains and buses. This also applies to all face covering clothes, helmets or masks. The Dutch interior ministry advised local institutions and concerned bodies to comply with the new law, noting that its enforcement is now up to the police to ask women wearing a niqab to remove it. Should they refuse, they can be disallowed from entering public buildings or be fined with up to 150 euros (USD 167). There are around 150 women who wear niqab regularly in the Netherlands. France was the first European country to ban the veil in 2011 and several countries followed suit. (Al Diyar, August 2, 2019)


Previous related news:
France bans ‘muhajabat’ from the workplace to "protect secularism"
UN criticizes French ban of niqab
Algeria bans veil at work

 

Share on

Traditional incrust craft survives despite blend of modernity

2-8-2019

In its issue of July 29, An Nahar daily brought to light the old craft of wood incrusting, which it said was influenced by functional modernity for a faster, easier and inexpensive production. Despite this, the traditional craft making has lingered and survived, still boasting a satisfactory demand from stubborn customers, albeit at a slower pace than before. The old method uses wood husks generated from wood panels. The latter are passed on specialized thin saws to produce sheets of fine wood layers that are more like cardboard or paper. The source of this traditional technique is Arabic, which explains the application of the geometric patterns known as the Arabesque, An Nahar said. While pointing to a decline in the number of artisans in Tripoli, the newspaper showcased the Ahmad brothers as well as Adel Qodsi who keep the craft alive and have opened a niche store to this end in Al Mina. The craft, they maintained, is alive and well and not at risk. Manual incrusting is still in demand by many aficionados who admire the old woodcraft, notwithstanding the competition of modern industry. (An Nahar, July 29, 2019)

Share on

Reforms in the Jafari courts: positive but inadequate step

1-8-2019

In its issue of today, Al Akhbar newspaper brought up the issue of custody and divorce in Jaafari courts, mentioning a seminar held Saturday in Tyre on the subject. The head of the Jaafari Courts in Lebanon, Sheikh Mohamad Kanaan, referred to a number of ‘reforms’ that will see light in the next two weeks, and are related to divorce and custody rulings that often are unfair to women, as he said. Al Akhbar wrote, that this ‘reform initiative’ remains an ‘idea’ far from being implemented in the near future, knowing that it has not reached the Supreme Islamic Shiite Council yet. According to Al Akhbar, Sheikh Kanaan spoke about a book of terms that will be adopted to inform the spouses when they register their marriage contract in court. Among the conditions listed, is granting the wife the option to divorce if the husband refrained from remitting or if he imprisoned her for more than a year, was away for more than two years or ill-treated her. She will have the right to have custody over her children until the age of puberty or the legal age. The above initiative, Al Akhbar went on to say, proposed setting up a committee within six months at the Sharia courts, that will include psychologists, social specialists, educators and doctors, and these will have their semi-mandatory say when considering divorce and child custody cases. In its analysis, Al Akhbar said the book of terms did not stipulate a specific age of custody, but referred sometime to the age of puberty and sometime to the age of seven as the desired age. The newspaper spoke to Jaafar Fadlallah who said that the initiative did not bring any novelty, in the absence of a mandatory nature for the set conditions, reminding that the option of stipulation in contracts exists in the Islamic law. And while he stated a difficulty in implementing the mandate due to its conflict with the two parties who refuse to sign, Fadlallah said it is crucial that the terms included in the initiative be general in order to become socially acceptable later on. For her part, the head of the National Campaign to Raise the Age of Custody within the Shiite Community, Zeina Ibrahim, clarified that the initiative is only a deviation from the basic demand which is to raise the age of custody. Again, the chairperson of the parliamentary committee on women and children, MP Inaya Ezzedine, said reforms require an integrated process of legislation in the parliament with a broader vision when discussing civil laws that guarantee the rights of women. (Al Akhbar, August 1, 201)

Share on

A national campaign to promote the Lebanese industry

1-8-2019

The prime minister Saad Hariri launched yesterday the ‘nationwide campaign to support the Lebanese industry’ organized by the industry ministry in cooperation with the Lebanese Industrialists Association (LIA). The campaign embraced a 50-second promotional film highlighting the importance of the Lebanese industry and the interaction of the Lebanese youth with it. The campaign also includes, organizing educational dialogues and media campaign promoting national production and industry, specialized exhibitions that will visit a number of regions in the country, and endorsing Lebanese industrial producers participating in international shows. During the event, Hariri said the next stage in the campaign will focus on stimulating productive sectors. “We have more than 5 thousand factories in Lebanon, and we could increase the number, produce, manufacture and secure our domestic needs as well as export the surplus,” Hairiri stated. We can also create over 50,000 new jobs in the industry in the next five years. For his part, industry minister, Wael Abu Faour, said that according to McKinsey report, some 195,000 Lebanese are employed in the sector, meaning that 195,000 households depend in their living on industry. He pointed out that 1% growth in industry generates around 1500 jobs, according to UNIDO. (An Nahar, Al Diyar, August 1, 2019)

Share on

Women protest the injustice of religious courts

1-8-2019

The Lebanese Democratic Women’s Gathering (RDFL) organized a demonstration yesterday at the Martyrs’ Square in Beirut under the slogan, “beware women’s anger” in protest against the discriminatory laws governing personal status. Scores of women raised their voices demanding an end to intervention of sects and the enactment of a unified personal status law that guarantees equality and protection for women from the violence of all religious courts. Women of various sects, participating in the sit-in, shared a history of suffering from the oppressive rule of their respective religious courts and of relentless pressure by their husbands and spiritual judges in matters of custody, alimony, inheritance, procrastination in divorce verdicts, and visitation rights among others. Demonstrators carried banners which read, ‘Our religious courts, Discriminatory laws’, ‘Feminist revolution against religious courts’, ‘For a civil law that protects me, not rulings that discard me’. The head of RDFL, Leila Mrouweh, said on the occasion: “As women, and just as being women, we are equally handled under the gavel of macho violence and patriarchal discrimination. As if we are destined to remain under the influence of clerics in a complete abandonment by the state and slackness to protect us or ensure our rights and the rights of our children. There are many example of this slack attitude, seen in the incidences of child marriage justified under the name of religion, and the discarded draft bills on harassment in the workplace and the right of women in full citizenship or in conferring nationality to their children, etc. (Al Akhbar, August 1, 2019)

Share on

Women’s quota enhances women’s political participation in Lebanon

1-8-2019

The National Commission for Lebanese Women (NCLW) and the Arab Center for the Development of the Rule of Law and Integrity (ACRLI) held a consultative meeting yesterday entitled, ‘Women’s quota: Towards enhancing women’s political participation in Lebanon’. The event comes in the framework of ‘Encouraging marginalized voices in the Lebanese political process’ program implemented by ACRLI with the support of the US State Department and in cooperation with Plan International. On the occasion, NCLW head, Claudine Aoun Rukuz, underlined the importance of adopting measures that support women’s access to the legislature. For her part, the president of the Arab Women Organization, Fadia Kiwan, stressed the need to enact the quota as a transitional procedure to push forward the participation of women in politics. Likewise, former minister, Ziad Baroud, said the predicament is not in the availability of female capacities, but rather in the prevalent patriarchal mindset still predominant among the majority of Lebanese lawmakers. MP Inaya Ezzedine, who was also present at the event, stated that women’s representation quota should be present in every proposed electoral law, while MP Bahiya Hariri, pledged to submit a draft bill that requires an equal share between men and women in municipal councils. (NNA, August 1, 2019)

Share on

Prime minister Hariri to alleviate fears over granting women nationality to their children

31-7-2019

The minister of state for the empowerment of women and youth, Violette Safadi, said now is the time to bring about real change allowing women to contribute to decision making. Safadi, who was speaking at a press conference yesterday from the Grand Serail under the theme, ‘Let’s talk law’, announced that House Speaker Nabih Berri has agreed to call for a special session to exclusively discuss women-related proposals during the International Women’s Week 2020. The event, she stated, will be the first ever in Lebanon and the Middle East. Hariri, in turn, stressed his support to Lebanese women, demanding the enactment of bills that secure a larger participation of women in the political and public life. It is no longer acceptable from some parties to waste time in opposition. Hariri also praised the role of female ministers in the current cabinet, wishing that a woman becomes head of the government. To close, Hariri hoped there will be an end to the surfacing fears and illusions related to the issue of nationality, which, he stressed, should not be over-exaggerated. “We cannot leave the Lebanese woman who is married to a non-Lebanese without rights or without a possibility to confer nationality to her children. This is no longer acceptable in our time,” Hariri maintained. (Al Diyar, July 31, 2019)

Share on

Final verdict jails killer husband of Sarah Amin for 25 years

31-7-2019

The Criminal Court of Mount Lebanon closed the case of wife killer Ali Zein yesterday with a final verdict sentencing the culprit to 25 years of hard labor and requiring him to pay LBP 150 million for the victim’s heirs. Noting, the Mount Lebanon Grand Jury has indicted Zein on January 20, 2018, of the deliberate killing of his wife, Sarah Amin, but the Criminal Court of Mount Lebanon adjourned the trial to February 14 which coincided with an official holiday. The case dates back to May 2015 when the perpetrator killed his wife in their home in Aramoun (https://goo.gl/b4kXdY). In the details of the ruling, Zein was indicted by virtue of the second paragraph of Article 547 of the Penal Code which states that, “anyone who deliberately kills a person is sentenced to 15-20 years of hard labor” which was modified after the enactment of the Protection of Women and Other Family Members from Domestic Violence Law No. 293. Accordingly, the penalty increased to 25 years in the event of the killing of one of the spouses by the other. On the development, the victim’s family attorney, Ashraf Mousawi, dubbed the verdict as a victory for Sarah and a lesson to be learned by whoever intends to harm a woman. The decision is satisfactory, Mousawi said, and is almost equivalent to life imprisonment, given the age of the culprit (60 years). The appeal in this case is very hard to get, he added. For her part, Kafa director, Zoya Ruhana, expressed satisfaction over the Court’s final decision, but repeated the demand to set up special family tribunals to step up the trial of slayers of women. Many similar cases have been in the court for years, while the perpetrators carry on with their lives, Ruhana maintained. (Al Akhbar, An Nahar, July 31, 2019)


Previous related news:
Violence against women in the north, trial of wife killer rescheduled
Judge demands death penalty for Sarah El Amin’s husband
Sara El Amin’s protection of her husband is rewarded by murder

Share on

Pages


Subscribe to RSS - News