Author: Afazi

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threatened that any possible escalation by Lebanese Iran-backed militia Hezbollah on the Israel-Lebanon border may result in the “destruction” of Lebanon. Netanyahu said the Israeli army was being proactive in fighting the Iran-backed terror group and had adopted a policy of “strong deterrence in the north” against Hezbollah, according to the Times of Israel. “We are acting in the north all the time against all efforts by Hezbollah to operate against us. We are eliminating terror cells, pushing them away from the border, destroying munitions. We will continue with strong deterrence in the north, and total victory in…

Read More

Major hospitals in north Gaza remained cut off by Israel’s onslaught against Hamas on Sunday, while at the largest a Palestinian official said five premature babies had died and dozens more were at risk from lack of power. Al-Shifa and other hospitals in north Gaza, the focus of Israel’s month-old war to wipe out the militants and free hostages, were barely able to care for patients, medical staff said. More people are killed and wounded daily by Israeli bombardment but there are fewer and fewer places for the injured to go. A girl wounded in Israeli strikes rests at Al…

Read More

Lebanon has seized more than half a tonne of drugs destined for Kuwait, authorities said Sunday, as Beirut seeks to combat narcotics trafficking, particularly to Gulf countries. Authorities “seized around 800 kilogrammes (1,760 pounds) of drugs” bound for Kuwait via the Netherlands, the office of Interior Minister Bassam Mawlawi said in a statement carried by Lebanon’s official National News Agency (NNA). The drugs were “professionally” concealed in wooden figures inside a bulletproof box, the statement said, without specifying the type of narcotics seized. An individual allegedly involved in the trafficking operation was arrested, it added. The move came as part…

Read More

Human Rights Watch on Tuesday said an Israeli strike that killed a Lebanese reporter’s sister and her three young granddaughters should be investigated as an “apparent war crime.” The border area between the two countries has seen daily exchanges of fire, in particular between Iran-backed group Hezbollah and Israel, since the start of the Israel-Hamas war last month. On November 5, an Israeli strike on a car in south Lebanon killed the sister of radio correspondent Samir Ayoub and her three granddaughters, aged 10, 12 and 14, Lebanese state media said. “This attack by Israeli military forces that struck a car carrying…

Read More

The French daily Liberation recently published a rare and comprehensive interview with Quentin Tarantino, where the director discussed his life in Israel. The conversation took place at the Cannes Film Festival, where the filmmaker was the guest of honor. The French Riviera has a large Jewish population, with the newspaper noting that passers-by who spotted him  asked him about life in Israel. His response: “I like being American.” Afterwards, interviewer Guillaume Gendron asked him to clarify. Just like us: Quentin Tarantino lives in Israel but doesn’t know Hebrew Reportedly, Tarantino explained that since he doesn’t speak Hebrew, he lives in his own bubble, cut…

Read More

Ramzi Choueiri, a Lebanese chef who became a culinary ambassador across the Arab world with top-selling cookbooks and an innovative television cooking show that had viewers calling in for advice or to dish out critiques on his recipes, died June 18 at his home in Beirut. He was 52. His sister, Myriam Shwayri, confirmed the death but gave no specific cause. Lebanese media reported that Mr. Choueiri had a heart attack. With a big personality and sly humor that included references to his expanding belly, Mr. Choueiri was the Middle East’s preeminent media-star chef for decades with a show that…

Read More

The recently concluded China-Central Asia Summit—the first of its kind—reflects China’s Middle-Kingdom aspirations—aiming to restore China’s historical position of prominence and influence in world affairs. What helps China support its Middle-Kingdom aspirations—strategic, economic, and connectivity—in Central Asia is the veil of reviving the ancient ‘Silk Route’. As Beijing clears its intent in Central Asia amidst Russia’s critical strategic dependency on China due to sanctions from the West, Moscow’s position in the region may be altering. At the first China-Central Asia Summit, Chinese President Xi Jinping presented a “vision of a China-central Asia community with a shared future” based on a…

Read More

Twelve EU member states protest against financial aid worth tens of millions of euros to member states that have blocked the import of grain from Ukraine. The group believes that money given to Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia to convince them to lift bans on imports of Ukrainian grain could threaten the EU’s single market and motivate member states to ask for different treatment in the future. The countries include Denmark, France, Germany, Belgium, Estonia, Greece, the Netherlands, Croatia, Ireland, Luxembourg, Slovenia and Austria, which on May 10 sent a letter to the European Commission, reports AFP. They stated in this…

Read More

The Maronite Patriarch, Cardinal Mar Bechara Boutros Al-Rai, received the Deputy Speaker of the Parliament, Elias Bou Saab, who confirmed after the meeting that his visit is “exploratory.” He expressed his regret “because the officials who deal with the presidential file are not interested in the time factor.” He said, “We have not yet reached the stage of names because the parties, based on the Patriarch’s initiative, did not reach a common name to propose for the presidency,” stressing that “things must begin with dialogue.” He pointed out that “our crisis is greater and deeper than the name of a…

Read More

Lebanon has operated in two time zones as some businesses and institutions followed the order and others refused. Lebanon’s cabinet has reversed a decision by caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati to delay the start of daylight saving time after it triggered widespread anger and the country’s largest church refused to abide by it. Clocks will now move forward an hour on Wednesday night, rather than at the end of the holy month of Ramadan in April. “The new daylight saving time will start at midnight Wednesday,” Mikati said after a cabinet meeting. Lebanon had been scheduled to roll its clocks…

Read More