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Sexual harassment: Lebanese workers beaten in Kazakhstan; woman harassed in Tyre

1-7-2019

A number of Lebanese workers and engineers working at Consolidate Contractors company in Kazakhstan were beaten on Saturday by Kazakh colleagues over a picture showing a Lebanese worker with a local woman. The Kazakh ministry of interior clarified in a statement that the brawl broke out when the Lebanese worker, Elie Daoud, posted a picture on social media with a female Kazakh co-worker that was deemed to be insulting to local women and to the country. The governor of Atyrau province, Nurlan Nogayev, said the scuffle between the local and the Lebanese and Arab workers was due to disparities in job conditions, calling on investors to understand the need to observe the laws of the country they work in. He said ethical values need also to be respected and dignities safeguarded On the other hand, in Lebanon, the ISF General Directorate-PR Department, issued a statement on Friday saying that, on 25/6/2019, an electronic portal in Tyre posted a news headline ‘Mrs R.M sexually harassed by taxi driver in Tyre’. Upon surveillance and investigation carried out by the South Investigation Unit at the Regional Gendarmerie, it managed in less than 24 hours to identify and locate the place of the harasser, arresting him at the Qasmiyeh area, the statement added. (An Nahar, Al Mustaqbal, June 29, 2019)

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Sit-in in Forzol, Shtura highway closed to protest smuggling

1-7-2019

In protest against the continuous smuggling of foreign produce, a number of Beqaa farmers staged a sit in on June 29 at the vegetable market of Forzul-Central Beqaa where they tossed their produce on the road. Meanwhile, the general secretary of public relations at the General Union of Agricultural Unions, Ali Shuman, grieved the disastrous situation of agriculture demanding a political solution to the impasse. He said that the Lebanese Army’s decision to restrain smuggling activity is not enough, and gave the government a 24-hour ultimatum to resolve the issue before resorting to escalation. He mentioned an intention to burn trucks used in smuggling in the heart of the Forzul market and other marketplaces. Concurrently, a group of farmers blocked the Shtura highway at the town of Makseh and threw vegetables and fruits on the road which caused heavy congestion in the area. (Al Diyar, Al Mustaqbal, July 1, 2019)

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Assaulter of migrant domestic worker referred to prosecution

1-7-2019

The labor ministry summoned last week an employer who abuses a migrant domestic worker and referred her case to the Mount Lebanon Court of Appeal on charges of infringement on personal freedom, beating and mistreatment. The employer, a woman, was also added to the ministry’s blacklisted persons (https://bit.ly/2KDbIzG). In the details, a TV show aired a video on LBC on June 24, 2019 documenting a Lebanese woman assaulting a migrant female domestic worker working at her house, which prompted the labor minister to summon the employer and the worker to the ministry’s premises in Jounyeh, east of Beirut. Upon investigation, the case was referred to the Public Prosecution and the aggressor, and any family member living with her, was as a result banned from employing any MWDW. The latter was asked to choose between working at another employer or returning home to Ethiopia which she settled for after she received all her dues plus an air ticket. (An Nahar, Al Markaziya portal, June 27, 2019)

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One thousand Arab students partake in packaging contest

28-6-2019

The Lebanese Packaging Center (LibanPack) and UNIDO organized a ceremony yesterday to announce the names of 38 Arab student winners in the second edition of Arab StarPack competition for the best packaging design. The event, which supports packaging development, was held under the patronage of the minister of industry, Wael Abu Faour at the Beirut premises of the Union of Arab Chambers. The competition aims to promote creativity and innovation in this field and is divided into 3 categories: visual packaging design, structural design and food safety packaging category. The contest also presented the UNIPACK award, a division of INDEVCO Group, and the Banque du Liban award. Some 930 students participated in the Arab StarPack this year representing 11 Arab countries: Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, Tunisia, Palestine, Morocco, Oman, Yemen, Iraq, UAE and Saudi Arabia. LibanPack director, Suha Atallah, stressed that packaging is not just a design or a protective means for the product. It is an integral part of the inclusive marketing plan that should be developed before the manufacturing phase. To note, that winners in the top three are: Maria Sfeir (Lebanon), Iman Abu Shaer (Palestine) and Christie Bin Dahman (Tunisia). (An Nahar, Ad Dyar June 28, 2010)
 


Previous related news:
Arab StarPack Pro. launched in Beirut
 

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Hospitality and tourism lab at Haigazian 

28-6-2019

The Haigazian University inaugurated on June 26 the tourism management lab with the support of Vresso for industrial kitchen solutions. On the occasion, the dean of the faculty of business and economy at the university, Fadi Asrawi, underlined the importance of the fully-equipped lab as an applied center for students majoring in tourism studies. Likewise, the coordinator of the department of tourism studies at Haigazian, Joseph Mdabar, emphasized the academic goal of the above project which focuses on the applied tourism and hospitality. It also assists students of the continued education department to put their information into real practice hands on in the lab. (An Nahar, June 28, 2010)
 

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Draft bill to regulate food economy, fight wastage

28-6-2019

The Future Movement MP, Dima Jamali, submitted ‘Fighting food wastage’ proposal to House Speaker Nabih Berri to be studied by concerned parliamentary committees and ratified later. Jamali elucidated the draft bill in a press conference at the Legislature yesterday, saying it addresses the growing phenomenon of food squandering in the country and contributes to alleviating poverty and hunger, as well as, the rationalization of food products and the reduction and management of waste. This, in addition to its positive impact on the environment, health, trade, economy and development. Jamali outlined the explanatory statements of the above law, as follows: wasting food raises the risks of food insecurity and increases poverty, hence controlling food waste puts poverty under check; wasting food causes imbalance in economy locally and globally, hence fighting it can be used as a means to protect economy and rationalize food economy. (The full draft can be found on the following link: https://bit.ly/2xfjdoq).  Noting, that MP Ghassan Mkheiber has submitted a similar law proposal back in April 2018 (https://bit.ly/2FCBtwE). (Al Mustaqbal, June 28, 2019)
 


Previous related news:
Draft bill to reduce food wastage in commercial sector
 

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Children’s welfare: Sesobel shuts down short of government funding

27-6-2019

After hints to close its doors due to financial crisis, (https://lkdg.org/ar/node/18553), Sesobel NGO for the welfare of children with disabilities, and in an address yesterday to concerned families and parties, announced that as of the beginning of next week, the charity will shut down permanently. On the subject, Al Akhbar spoke to Sesobel’s administrative director, Carmel Khoury, who stressed that the policy of ‘subsistence’ is no longer adequate in the absence of the government’s support and its slackness in releasing funds. It is true, Khoury explained, that most associations received the contracted payments for the first trimester of 2018, estimated at LB 30 billion, yet this is not enough to survive. The funds barely cover one month, Khoury lamented. She pointed out that the failure to sign contracts this current year is the main dilemma that will drive the remaining determined institutions to take similar decisions. For his part, a representative of the National Union on Mental Disabilities, Mussa Sharafedine, said Sesobel’s move represents all institutions with similar fate. Likewise, the general director of Al Hadi Institute for the Deaf, Blind and Learning disabilities, Ismail Zein, warned that if the government does not commit to conducting the contracts on time and release funds regularly, the institutions will have to cancel the academic year as of forthcoming September. (Al Akhbar, June 27, 2019)

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Exemption of children of Lebanese mothers from work permit

27-6-2019

With the objection of MPs of the Lebanese Forces (LF) and the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), the Lebanese Legislature yesterday passed a law exempting the children of Lebanese mothers married to non-Lebanon holding complimentary residences, from getting a work permit. Commenting on the above law, the executive director of Women’s Learning Partnership, Lina Abu Habib, described the step as positive in a way, noting that the process was exhausting for families in the past. But on the other hand, she criticized the opposition the law faced, especially from a powerful party like the FPM, which is not promising as per its future stand with relation to the nationality draft bill that basically allows Lebanese mothers to confer citizenship to their children. Abu Habib questioned the timing of above law concurrent with escalating campaigns against Syrian workers in the country. It is important to know to what extent this law actually and eventually respects women’s rights, she asked. Similarly, the coordinator of My Nationality is A Right for Me and My Family Campaign, Karima Chebo, deplored the opposition to above law, saying that, FPM’s abstention from supporting the first step in lifting, albeit partially, the injustice against Lebanese women married to non-Lebanese, casts doubts on the true intention of the FPM party in approving the aforementioned right. She voiced surprise over the LF opposition of the law, despite the continuous appeals by Party members for change and full citizenship. FPM member, Alain Aoun, clarified that the party did not object to the text of the law, but did not see the urgency in its enactment either, which necessitates debate within the parliamentary committees. MP George Okeis, for his part, expressed caution over giving women their rights in chunks, demanding a thorough discussion of the issue. (Al Akhbar, L’Orient Le Jour, June 27, 2019)

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Rola Yacub’s case: Accused husband admits assault but not killing wife!

27-6-2019

After the Court of Cassation revoked the acquittal verdict of Karam Bazi killer of wife Roula Yacub (https://goo.gl/3yRbcg), the first hearing was held yesterday at the office of the president of the Court of Criminal Justice, Judge Suheir Harakeh, in the presence of the victim’s mother and the convict. During the session, Bazi denied beating his wife to death back in July 2013, claiming that he punched her twice but did not beat her. He maintained having what he termed as ‘good relationship’ with his wife, but that he hit her often. “We clashed once or twice only during our life together,” he alleged. Three or four days before the incident, he recounted, they had an argument which forced him to hit his wife lightly on her back and right arm using a mopping stick, which explains the bruises on the body of his ‘soft-skinned’ wife, as he put it. The wife, according to the husband, was breastfeeding their girl in the room when she fainted, and he had to carry her to hospital with the help of some people. He returned home to bring some stuff, and in the meantime, called his brothers and mother in law and told his children that their mother was in the hospital. He charged that the bruises on her body were the result of carrying her to the car to transfer her to hospital. The Court hearing was adjourned to November 13 to hear the testimonies of four witnesses. (Al Mustaqbal, June 27, 2019)

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Women represent 66% of USJ students, 25% of graduates emigrate

26-6-2019

An Nahar published today the findings of a survey by the USJ Observatory on the fate of the University’s graduates between 2009 and 2013. Results have shown that nearly 25% of USJ graduates are outside Lebanon for post graduate studies (34%), work (48%), family reasons (29%) or for permanent emigration (11%). According to the study, those wishing to return to their country are (31%) only, while (31%) are undecided and (30%) do not wish to return. What is interesting in the above figures, An Nahar wrote, is that women make up 66% of the USJ students, compared to the number of males, a large number of which leave the country after high school and return only for visits. This, the newspaper went on to say, adversely impacts the rate of marriages in the country. On the latter, the newspaper cited a not very recent study which estimated the rate of celibacy among females at 80.7% in the age group (20-24 years), 52.1% in the age group (25-29 year) and 33.5% in the age group (30-34 years), which is effectively big. The USJ Observatory survey results have shown that nearly 85% of graduate students work in the private sector, compared to 7% in the public sector only. The flight of university students from the public sector is not due to low salaries, but to the chaotic conditions combined with political favoritism. (An Nahar, June 26, 2019)

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