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'No fear': Pilgrims in Saudi  defy coronavirus risks

By - Feb 29,2020 - Last updated at Feb 29,2020

Muslim pilgrims walk around the Kaaba (Tawaf Al Wadaa), Islam's holiest shrine, at the Grand Mosque in Saudi Arabia's holy city of Mecca on Thursday (AFP photo)

MECCA, Saudi Arabia — Cleaners scrub and sterilise the floors of the holy city of Mecca's Grand Mosque after fears of coronavirus led Saudi Arabia to suspend pilgrim visas, but worshippers appear unfazed — confident of God's protection.

Saudi Arabia, home to Islam's holiest sites, on Thursday suspended entry by foreigners for the year-round umrah  (the lesser Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca), an unprecedented move that has left tens of thousands in limbo.

It has also sparked uncertainty over the annual Hajj (the greater Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca) scheduled for July.

But Nadia Bettam, a 50-year-old Algerian donning a veil to perform umrah for the first time, counted herself fortunate as she arrived in Mecca five days before Riyadh's abrupt decision.

"I have no fear. We are in the hands of God," said Bettam, wearing a face mask and accompanied by her sister Fatima.

"What matters for us is worship, but we are taking precautions."

Saudi Arabia has so far reported no coronavirus cases but there are mounting concerns over a spike in infections across the Middle East.

On Friday it specifically barred citizens from the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) from entering Mecca and Medina amid fears over the new coronavirus, the foreign ministry said.

The GCC states are comprised of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman and Qatar.

GCC citizens can normally enter the kingdom with their national identity document, whereas citizens of other countries require a visa.

 

The rest is in God’s hands 

 

The Grand Mosque was packed with worshippers like Bettam on Friday, underscoring how faith often trumps health concerns and the challenge of disease control.

Floors of the Grand Mosque are washed four times a day and 13,500 carpets in areas designated for prayer are regularly cleaned, according to the official Saudi Press Agency (SPA).

Grand Mosque official Jaber Wadani said the “best cleaning and sterilisation methods” were in use, with all carpets scrubbed and perfumed daily.

AFP saw cleaning crews wearing green face masks sterilising doors with disinfectants including chlorine.

Face masks are useful in guarding against infections, said Robina Mahmoud, leading a group of 105 pilgrims from The Netherlands. Her group was also taking precautions such as regularly washing their hands.

“This will definitely protect us, but the rest is in God’s hands,” she said.

 

‘Counting losses’ 

 

Inside the mosque, the area surrounding the Kaaba — a cube structure that is the focal point of Islam — was packed with tens of thousands of worshippers, most of them wearing masks.

Muslims around the world pray in the direction of the Kaaba, which is draped in a gold-embroidered black cloth.

Three pharmacies around the Grand Mosque said they had run out of masks.

“The demand for masks in the last two days is unprecedented,” a Syrian doctor told AFP.

“I have sold 200 boxes in three days, which used to be our monthly stock.”

But other traders reported losses following the decision to suspend umrah visas.

“Whole groups [of pilgrims] have cancelled their [hotel] reservations,” said Mahfouz, an Egyptian who works as an independent travel agent.

“I am still counting my losses.”

The pilgrimage forms a crucial source of revenue for the government, which hopes to welcome 30 million religious visitors annually to the kingdom by 2030.

Alongside Thursday’s pilgrimage curb, it has also temporarily suspended electronic tourist visas for people arriving from seven countries, including China, Italy, Japan, South Korea and Kazakhstan, according to the SPA.

It added that tourist visa holders will not be allowed to visit Mecca and Medina, another holy city.

Authorities insist the suspensions are temporary, but it was unclear when they will be lifted.

“We receive hundreds of thousands of pilgrims every month from different countries around the world,” a Saudi official told AFP.

“If [coronavirus] arrives here and spreads, it will be a global epidemic. The safety of people is more important than performing umrah.”

But many pilgrims appeared defiant.

“How can we be afraid if we are in the house of God?” said 21-year-old Turkish student Hossam Aldin.

“Even if I got the infection, it would be good to die as a martyr here.”

By Haitham El-Tabei

Iraq parliament postpones confidence vote as deadline looms

By - Feb 29,2020 - Last updated at Feb 29,2020

An Iraqi woman wearing a protective mask holds her cat as she poses for a picture during a protest against corruption in the Iraqi government in the southern city of Basra on Thursday (AFP photo)

BAGHDAD — Iraq's bitterly divided parliament postponed a vote of confidence in prime minister-designate Mohammad Allawi's government for a second time Saturday, as political wrangling continued ahead of a looming deadline.

Parliament speaker Mohammed Halbusi said that the crunch vote, which had already been delayed last week for lack of a quorum, would now be held on Sunday.

Midnight (2100 GMT) Sunday is the deadline for lawmakers to end a protracted political vacuum and agree on a new government or see President Barham Saleh designate a premier unilaterally.

Failure to go ahead with the vote could also trigger a call for mass protests from populist cleric Moqtada Sadr, whose supporters form the largest bloc in parliament and who has demanded that lawmakers approve Allawi's government.

Iraq's current parliament is the most divided in its recent history and Allawi is struggling to secure support from the country's Sunni Arab and Kurdish minorities.

Kurds and Sunnis are also opposed to a non-binding vote passed by parties representing the Shiite majority for the immediate departure of the 5,200 US troops stationed in Iraq.

Iraq has been without a government since Allawi's predecessor Adel Abdel Mahdi quit under pressure from the street two months ago.

Protests have gripped Baghdad and the mainly Shiite south since October, demanding a government of technocrats not beholden to party political or foreign interests to tackle rampant corruption and a failing economy.

Demonstrators have already rejected the choice of Allawi for premier, saying he is too close to the confessional political system they have rallied against for months.

 

The rampant corruption spurring Lebanon protests

By - Feb 29,2020 - Last updated at Feb 29,2020

BEIRUT — The Lebanese government had frozen recruitment but then, around the time of a key election, thousands of people suddenly landed civil servant jobs.

The alleged corruption case is just one of many stirring public anger in Lebanon, where protesters are calling out rampant graft they say has brought the economy to its knees.

Cronyism in the public sector, bribes, conflicts of interest and dodgy procurement deals — Lebanese have been angrily detailing their complaints in waves of mass protests since October, crying out that enough is enough.

The authorities have said they are determined to root out corruption, and state prosecutors frequently say they have launched a probe or questioned a official.

But experts and protesters are sceptical. How, they ask, are they expected to believe in change from leaders who benefit from the system and whose interest is to preserve it?

In August 2017, Lebanon passed a law to halt all recruitment in the public sector.

But after that decision and through 2018, more than 5,000 people were taken on in murky circumstances, a source at the oversight body for public administrations said.

That period coincided with the country’s first parliamentary election in nine years.

“It’s buying votes,” says Assaad Thebian, who heads the anti-graft non-governmental organisation Gherbal Initiative.

“When you give someone a job, you’re buying their loyalty and that of their relatives,” he said.

Lebanese media have also accused key political parties of arranging hundreds of illegal hirings at state-owned telecommunications firm Ogero in 2017 and 2018.

Anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International said in December that almost one in two Lebanese had been offered a bribe for a vote.

 

‘No political will’ 

 

Parliament’s finance committee investigated 5,000 hirings, and the file has been transmitted to the Court of Audit.

Committee chairman Ibrahim Kenaan said it was not his place to analyse what had happened.

“But logically, it’s a political issue,” he said.

“It was a period of elections. Maybe it was easy to just provide someone with a job.

“Maybe it’s to do with... people being used to no one being held accountable.”

But the lawmaker, who represents the Free Patriotic Movement of President Michel Aoun, now under fire for its record in power, said things would change.

“Now there’s accountability — at least we’re trying,” he said.

Laws are being drafted to prevent illicit enrichme nt and retrieve stolen public funds, Kenaan said.

But anti-graft activist Thebian warns political will is lacking.

“It’s strange that a state that wants to battle corruption has not yet fired a single civil servant, tried a single minister or official,” he said.

Protesters say they are fed up with a political class dominated for decades by the same powerful families who also pull strings in business.

As they are hit by an acute liquidity crisis and price hikes, they ask how they can trust a political elite with ties to the banking sector.

Lebanon is weighed down by a huge public debt, most owed to local banks benefiting from high interest rates.

“The major problem is conflict of interest — perceived or actual,” said Jad Chaaban, an economics professor at the American University of Beirut.

“There is no way that you, as a minister or prime minister or member of parliament, can act against the interest of the institution that you have shareholding in.”

Critics say corruption extends to public procurement.

Another source at the oversight commission claims the government “meddles” by drawing up invitations to tender with “conditions only met by a single company”.

Similar complaints have been made about the Council for Development and Reconstruction and the Southern Council.

Engineers’ syndicate head Jad Tabet said the political class was “sharing the cake” through opaque construction deals.

It is done “through attributing big construction projects to entrepreneurs linked to these political forces”, he said.

In its Corruption Perceptions Index for 2019, Transparency International ranks Lebanon 137 out of 180 countries. 

Even in the private sector, activists say businessmen use their political connections to skirt legislation for their benefit.

On a beach in Beirut, for example, the Eden Bay resort has drawn crowds in recent months to protest against illegal encroachment on the public waterfront.

Tabet says he filed a report denouncing eight infractions by the developers, Achour Holding, at the request of the president in 2017.

They included building on the public shoreline, and falsifying a topographic study to maximise buildable area when requesting a building permit, he said.

But Achour Holding’s lawyer, Bahij Abou Mjahed, insists construction was legal.

“There isn’t a single executive, judicial, oversight or security body that hasn’t examined the Eden Bay case,” he said.

“If we have committed a violation, take us to court.”

Environmental activists complained to the State Council, who briefly suspended construction in 2017. But then it backed down, and the resort opened the following year.

“Despite the pressure, this man was able to get away with it,” Tabet says, referring to the businessman behind Ashour Holding.

“He seems to have connections almost everywhere.”

Saudi Arabia suspends entry for pilgrims over coronavirus

Riyadh says suspensions are temporary

By - Feb 28,2020 - Last updated at Feb 28,2020

Muslim pilgrims wear masks at the Grand Mosque in the holy city of Mecca on Thursday (AFP photo)

RIYADH — Saudi Arabia on Thursday suspended visas for visits to Islam's holiest sites for umrah (the lesser Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca), an unprecedented move triggered by coronavirus fears that raises questions over the annual Hajj (the greater Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca).

The kingdom, which hosts millions of pilgrims every year in the holy cities of Mecca and Medina, also suspended visas for tourists from countries affected by the virus as fears of a pandemic deepen.

Saudi Arabia, which so far has reported no cases of the virus but has expressed alarm over its spread in neighbouring countries, said the suspensions were temporary.

But it provided no timeframe for when they will be lifted, and the decision left tens of thousands of pilgrims preparing to visit the kingdom from around the world in limbo.

 “The kingdom’s government has decided to take the following precautions: Suspending entry to the kingdom for the purpose of umrah and visit to the Prophet’s mosque temporarily,” the foreign ministry said in a statement.

“Suspending entry into the kingdom with tourist visas for those coming from countries where the spread of the new coronavirus [COVID-19] is a danger,” it added without naming them.

The measures come amid a spike in coronavirus infections across the Middle East even as the number of new cases has declined in China, where the disease originated.

Since its outbreak, the United Arab Emirates has reported 13 coronavirus cases, Kuwait has recorded 43, Bahrain has 33 and Oman is at four cases.

Iran has emerged as a major hotspot in the region, with 26 fatalities — the highest death toll outside China.

To curb the spread of the disease from people returning from pilgrimages to Iran, Gulf countries have implemented a raft of measures including flight suspensions and school closures.

“It’s a great concern,” said Ann Marie, a South African expatriate in Bahrain, where many people on the streets are wearing masks.

In Kuwait, government institutions suspended the use of fingerprint recognition to clock in and out, while Qatar — which has no reported cases — advised its citizens to avoid the traditional greeting of rubbing noses.

While no cases have been reported in Saudi Arabia, one citizen is reported to be infected in Kuwait along with four Saudi women in Bahrain — all of whom had returned from Iran.

‘Unprecedented’ move 

The umrah, the Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca that can be undertaken at any time of year, attracts millions of devout Muslims from all over the globe each year.

A hajj travel association in Bangladesh said over 1,000 pilgrims, many with non-refundable tickets to Saudi Arabia, were “stranded at Dhaka airport” after being denied permission to board following Riyadh’s abrupt announcement.

Uncertainty loomed as some 10,000 visas have been issued for umrah and 137,000 people in Bangladesh have signed up for the annual Hajj, due to start in late July, it added.

In Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation, the decision to suspend visas could affect up to 200,000 pilgrims, the local association for Hajj and umrah said.

“I am against stopping all Muslims from doing umrah,” one pilgrim in Mecca told AFP.

“Perhaps it is better to stop only those from countries... where the disease has spread.”

There is still no clarity over how the coronavirus will affect the Hajj.

Some 2.5 million Muslims travelled to Saudi Arabia from across the world to take part in last year’s Hajj — one of the five pillars of Islam.

The event is a key rite of passage for Muslims and a massive logistical challenge for Saudi authorities, with colossal crowds cramming into relatively small holy sites.

“This move by Saudi Arabia is unprecedented,” Ghanem Nuseibeh, founder of London-based risk consultancy Cornerstone Global Associates, told AFP.

“The concern for Saudi authorities would be Ramadan, which starts at the end of April, and Hajj afterwards, should the coronavirus become a pandemic.”

The holy fasting month of Ramadan is considered a favourable period by Muslim pilgrims to perform the umrah.

Syrian army makes more gains but rebels fight back

Feb 28,2020 - Last updated at Feb 28,2020

A child wears a mask as a preventive measure against the coronavirus upon her arrival by bus in Syria's Kurdish area from Iraqi Kurdistan via the Semalka border crossing in northeastern Syria on Wednesday (AFP photo)

SARAQEB, Syria — Syrian rebels on Thursday reentered a key northwestern town they had lost earlier this month, reversing one of the main gains of the government's devastating offensive in the region.

The counteroffensive could be short-lived however and Syrian troops continued to chip away at other parts of the rebel bastion.

The UN Security Council was due to meet again on Thursday amid growing concern Idlib was witnessing the nine-year-old war's worst humanitarian emergency yet.

On Thursday, extremists and Turkish-backed rebels managed to reenter Saraqeb, a key crossroads town in Idlib province they had lost earlier in February.

State news agency SANA acknowledged that there were "fierce clashes" between the army and "terrorist groups on the Saraqeb front".

An AFP correspondent accompanied the rebels into Saraqeb, where he found a ghost town of bombed out buildings deserted by its inhabitants.

The counterattack by the rebels temporarily reverses one of the key gains notched up by the government since the launch of its offensive against the country's last rebel enclave in December.

Turkish casualties 

The cash-strapped government had been keen to fully secure the M5, a highway which connects Syria's four main cities and passes through Saraqeb.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that the air strikes were carried out by government ally Russia, which has come under heavy Western criticism for the high civilian death toll from its bombing campaign.

 State media accused the “terrorists” of launching car bombings and other suicide attacks against government forces attempting to retake the town.

It said that the army had inflicted heavy losses on the attackers, despite the military support it said they had received from neighbouring Turkey.

Some 950,0000 civilians have fled the government offensive, raising fears in Ankara of a new mass influx of refugees.

Turkey already hosts the world’s largest number of Syrian refugees with around 3.6 million people, placing an increasingly unpopular burden on public services.

The Turkish defence ministry said on Thursday that two of its soldiers had been killed by government fire in Idlib, taking its losses this month alone to 19.

Turkey, which supports several rebel groups in the Idlib region, immediately responded to the attack by hitting Syrian “regime targets”, the ministry said.

UN powerlessness 

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan vowed on Wednesday that Ankara would not take the “smallest step back” in the stand-off with Damascus and Moscow over Idlib.

He warned the Syrian government to “stop its attacks as soon as possible” and to pull back by the end of the month.

Under a deal with Russia intended to bring calm to Idlib, Turkey has 12 observation posts in the region but several have come under fire from the Syrian army.

The United Nations has warned repeatedly that the fighting in Idlib has the potential to create the most serious humanitarian crisis since the start of the war in 2011.

“As the UN Security Council meets today, it is urgent for Council members to adopt a resolution calling for a ceasefire in Idlib,” David Miliband, the chairman of the International Rescue Committee, said.

More than half-a-million of those displaced since December are children, tens of thousands of whom are sleeping rough in the harsh winter of northern Syria.

On Tuesday, several schools were hit by government artillery fire, prompting the jihadist-dominated administration in Idlib to temporarily close schools the following day.

Nine out of 15 members of the Security Council on Wednesday urged Secretary General Antonio Guterres to step up his involvement in efforts to restore peace in Idlib.

New Tunisia gov't sworn in after winning confidence vote

By - Feb 28,2020 - Last updated at Feb 28,2020

TUNIS — Tunisia's new government was sworn in Thursday after winning a parliamentary confidence vote that broke four months of post-election deadlock.

Prime Minister Elyes Fakhfakh, thirty ministers and two secretaries of state were sworn-in during a ceremony at the presidential palace, over a month after Fakhfakh was designated premier by President Kais Saied.

A previous Cabinet list put forward by Fakhfakh was rejected earlier in February by the Islamist-inspired party Ennahdha, which won the most seats in October's legislative election, but fell far short of a majority in the 217-seat assembly.

But Fakhfakh's revised lineup won the vote 129 to 77 — with one out of 207 lawmakers present abstaining — after a debate that started on Wednesday and lasted more than 14 hours.

The new Cabinet swore to "work loyally for the good of Tunisia, to respect the constitution and its legislation [and] to scrupulously guard its interests".

The confidence vote follows a power struggle between the president and Ennahdha, with the party earlier threatening to pull out of Fakhfakh's proposed administration.

Ennahdha gave its support to the new cabinet after being handed six portfolios. The leftist Democratic Current and the People’s Movement were also given ministries, alongside some 17 ostensibly non-partisan appointments.

Opening the confidence session on Wednesday, Fakhfakh identified his priorities as fighting criminality and “terrorism”, as well as boosting the economy.

Combating high prices, poverty and corruption would be key tasks, alongside creating jobs, he said.

Fakhfakh last week said the political negotiations had taken place “in a completely democratic manner”, despite difficulties.

A Cabinet put forward by another premier-designate, Habib Jemli, was rejected by parliament in January.

Political analyst Slaheddine Jourchi said the task ahead for the new government “will be very difficult and complex”.

“Fakhfakh’s cabinet is very heterogenous, composed of members who hold different visions and ideologies,” he contended.

Fakhfakh is Tunisia’s eighth prime minister since the 2011 revolution that ousted president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.

The new government will be tasked with relaunching discussions with the International Monetary Fund, which in 2016 approved a four-year, $3 billion loan for Tunisia in return for major reforms, some of which are disputed.

Due to delays, the country has only received about $1.6 billion so far, while the facility ends in April and the first repayments are due in November.

Uncertainty looms ahead of US-Taliban deal signing

By - Feb 28,2020 - Last updated at Feb 28,2020

In this handout photo taken and released by Afghanistan's Ministry of Defence office on Wednesday, men take selfie with their smartphones with Commander of US and NATO forces in Afghanistan General Austin Scott Miller and with Afghanistan's Acting Defence Minister Asadullah Khalid (2nd right), in the city of Kabul (AFP photo)

DOHA — Washington and the Taliban are set to sign a deal Saturday to secure America's exit from its longest war through gradually withdrawing troops and starting talks between Kabul and the insurgents.

The agreement will likely be heralded as marking the start of a hopeful new era for Afghanistan, which has seen 40 years of conflict.

But what happens next is anyone's guess, with questions swirling around the Taliban's intentions and Afghanistan once more in the grip of a political crisis threatening to plunge the impoverished country further into the abyss.

The accord, to be signed in Doha, comes after more than a year of talks between the Taliban and the US that faltered repeatedly as violence raged.

While the deal’s contents have not been publicly disclosed, it is expected to see the Pentagon begin pulling troops from Afghanistan, where between 12,000-13,000 are currently based.

The US has said an initial drawdown over the coming months would be to about 8,600 — similar to the troop level President Donald Trump inherited after his 2016 election win.

Further reductions depend on how well the Taliban honour pledges to start talks with the government of President Ashraf Ghani — who until now they have dismissed as a US-backed puppet — and seek a comprehensive “intra-Afghan” ceasefire and peace deal.

The insurgents are also supposed to guarantee Afghanistan is never again used by jihadist groups such as Al Qaeda and Daesh to plot foreign attacks — a concept even some of Trump’s closest advisors remain deeply sceptical of.

Saturday’s signing comes after a week-long, partial truce that has mostly held across Afghanistan aimed at building confidence between the warring parties and showing the Taliban can control their forces.

While isolated attacks have continued in rural areas, US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said Tuesday that the truce period was “working”.

“We’re on the cusp of an enormous, enormous political opportunity,” he said.

More than 100,000 Afghan civilians have been killed or injured over the past decade, according to the United Nations, and the conflict has cost the US taxpayer more than $1 trillion in military and rebuilding costs since the US-led invasion of 2001.

Uncertainty 

As many as 30 nations are expected to be represented at Saturday’s signing in the Qatari capital, although notably, the Afghanistan government will not send a delegate, an Afghan official told AFP.

“We are not part of these negotiations. We don’t trust the Taliban,” the official told AFP.

The continued hatred may not bode well for future talks.

Compounding tensions, Afghanistan is in the midst of a full-blown political crisis, with the US refusing to unequivocally endorse Ghani’s re-election months after a poll that was marred by fraud allegations.

Trump has repeatedly vowed to bring US troops home and end America’s “stupid” wars while bemoaning Washington’s global “policeman” role.

But analysts warn any rush to leave Afghanistan could create an unmanageable situation.

Washington “will shoe-horn this through and they’re going to declare victory and then whatever happens after that they’ll say ‘that’s on the Afghans’”, Colin Clarke, a researcher at the Soufan Centre think tank, told AFP.

“What incentive do the Taliban have to stick to the agreement, particularly once they have what they want, which is US withdrawal?”

Mediated by Qatari diplomats, the talks were often marathon affairs — sometimes tense, sometimes respectful — that stretched long into the night.

Both sides had appeared to be on the verge of agreeing a deal after a gruelling ninth round of talks ended in September.

But Trump torpedoed the process following the death of a US serviceman in a Kabul attack blamed on the Taliban.

He then astonished many by announcing he had invited the Taliban to the US presidential retreat at Camp David before scrapping the encounter.

His famed unpredictability could yet see the Doha plans up-ended, although Trump vowed to “put his name” on a deal if the partial truce endures.

Deputy Taliban leader Sirajuddin Haqqani wrote in an editorial last week that “everyone has lost somebody they loved. Everyone is tired of war”.

“I am convinced that the killing and the maiming must stop,” he wrote in The New York Times.

But Clarke, the analyst, warned that Haqqani notably “didn’t denounce Al Qaeda” in the article, calling into question the Taliban’s intention to go after extremists.

The Taliban’s welcoming of Al Qaeda on Afghan soil was the key reason for the US invasion following the 9/11 attacks.

UN sanctions regime for Yemen renewed

Feb 26,2020 - Last updated at Feb 26,2020

UNITED NATIONS, United States — The UN Security Council on Tuesday renewed its sanctions regime on Yemen for another year.

Thirteen countries eventually adopted the London-drafted resolution on the sanctions, which now are in effect through February 2021. Russia and China abstained.

The sanctions plan, which would have expired on Wednesday, includes the extension of the mandate of UN experts who monitor the arms embargo imposed in 2015.

The resolution also extends the measures that provide for the freezing of assets and travel bans on targeted officials.

A recent report from the UN experts who monitor the arms embargo said the Houthis had been in possession since 2019 of new weapons — drones and cruise missiles — with "technical characteristics similar to arms" produced in Iran.

The report did not say whether the weapons were delivered to the Houthis directly by the government in Tehran, which has repeatedly denied sending them arms.

Non-governmental organisations say the conflict in Yemen has claimed tens of thousands of lives, most of them civilians. The UN says the war has provoked the worst humanitarian crisis in the world.

EU ministers urge end to fighting in Syria's Idlib

By - Feb 26,2020 - Last updated at Feb 26,2020

A Syrian boy sits in front of a tombstone at a cemetery where displaced families took refuge in its prayer hall, in the town of Sarmada in Syria's northwestern Idlib province, on February 23 (AFP photo)

PARIS — Fourteen EU ministers called Wednesday for a ceasefire in Syria's Idlib, where hundreds of thousands have been displaced by ongoing violence in the northern province. 

The violence in Syria's last rebel-held enclave has caused a humanitarian crisis.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, his German counterpart Heiko Maas and the foreign ministers of 12 other EU countries warned that what Moscow has presented as a fight against terrorism did not justify "massive violations of international humanitarian law".

In an open letter published in French daily Le Monde, the ministers urged an "immediate" end to hostilities to achieve a de-escalation.

Russia and Turkey in 2018 agreed to create a demilitarised zone in Idlib but the accord has fallen apart due to ongoing violence.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday vowed he would not take the "smallest step back" in the stand-off with Damascus and Russia.

A day earlier, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov rejected calls for a halt to the Russian-backed incentive, saying it would be tantamount to "capitulating before terrorists".

The 14 ministers said they were "perfectly lucid about the presence of radical groups in Idlib" but said this did not justify "incessant airstrikes and the dropping of barrel bombs".

French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have called for summit with Erdogan and Russian President Vladimir Putin to seek an end to the crisis.

Erdogan on Saturday announced a four-way summit on March 5 but later said there was "no full agreement" on the meeting.

 

Israel settler units plan 'dangerous' — Al Maliki

By - Feb 26,2020 - Last updated at Feb 26,2020

This photo taken from the E1 corridor, a super-sensitive area of the occupied West Bank, shows Israeli settlement of Maale Adumin in the background on Tuesday (AFP photo)

GENEVA — Israel's plan to build new settler units in a particularly sensitive area of the occupied West Bank would destroy the prospect of a two-state solution, Palestinian Foreign Minister Riyad Al Maliki said Wednesday.

The plan to build 3,500 new units in an area known as E1 "is so dangerous, more dangerous than any other settlement plans in the West Bank", Maliki told reporters on the sidelines of the Human Rights Council in Geneva.

Maliki said the plan "intends to destroy the two-state solution" and would "kill any possibility" for a peace plan proposed by US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last month.

Netanyahu made the pledge to build new settler units on Tuesday in the latest in a string of promises to expand settlements as the right-wing premier faces both a tight general election and a corruption trial.

The international community has warned repeatedly that construction in the E1 corridor, which passes from Jerusalem to Jericho, would slice the West Bank in two and compromise the contiguity of a future Palestinian state.

In 2013, Netanyahu vetoed construction in the E1 corridor in the face of pressure from the United Nations, the European Union and the United States.

Israel seized the West Bank and East Jerusalem in the June War of 1967 in moves never recognised by the international community.

Israeli settlements in the Palestinian territories are considered illegal by the United Nations and most foreign governments.

In his comments on Wednesday, Maliki also welcomed a database drawn up by the United Nations of 112 companies with activities in Israeli settlements.

But he said the list was “just the beginning” and Palestinian authorities were looking at possible “legal measures” to force the companies to pay compensation.

He said they had been “exploiting such resources without the permission of the rightful owners of the land”.

Maliki also said the companies would have to leave.

“We are ready to receive them if they want to operate legally in the Palestinian territory,” he said.

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