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US Welcomes News That Saudi Arabia Will Head UN Human Rights Panel

September 23, 2015 By administrator

1022831772While many expressed outrage over Saudi Arabia’s appointment as head of a United Nations’ Human Rights Council panel, one nation has given its seal of approval. Despite the Kingdom’s deplorable rights record, the US State Department “welcomes” the UN’s decision.

After it was revealed earlier this week that Saudi Arabia would chair the key UN Human Rights panel, many were shocked by the inherent hypocrisy behind the decision. Writing for the Daily Beast, Salil Tripathi pointed out that the “Saudi government is unelected and run by one large family, or clan,” which “executes prisoners with particular relish, turning their executions into a public spectacle.”

Director of the Human Rights Action Center Jack Healey also indicated his surprise.

“In essence, there has to be a human rights council,” he told Sputnik. “But the human rights protection will depend upon those who are interested in promoting human rights. And the government of Saudi Arabia has a long history of not allowing human rights activists to monitor in their own country.”

One entity not particularly shocked or surprised by Riyadh’s appointment is the US State Department. During a briefing on Tuesday afternoon, Deputy Spokesman Mark Toner revealed the US position during an exchange with Associated Press reporter Matt Lee.

“Again, I don’t have any comment, don’t have any reaction to it,” Toner said. “I mean, frankly, it’s – we would welcome it. We’re close allies.”

This is, perhaps, an unsurprising position for the United States to take. Washington has a history of overlooking Riyadh’s systemic abuse, precisely because the two countries are such close allies.

“The US loves human-rights-abusing regimes and always has, provided they ‘cooperate,'” Glenn Greenwald wrote for the Intercept. “The only time the US government pretends to care in the slightest about human rights abuses is when they’re carried out by ‘countries that don’t cooperate.'”

According to Amnesty International, 102 individuals were executed by the Saudi government within the first six months of 2015, most of those by beheading. The Kingdom is also prepared to crucify a 21-year-old for taking part in pro-democracy protests.

“It’s bad enough that Saudi Arabia is a member of the council, but for the UN to go and name the regime as chair of a key panel only pours salt in the wounds for dissidents languishing in Saudi prisons,” UN Watch Executive Director Hillel Neuer wrote for his organization’s website.

“I mean, we have an ongoing discussion with them about all these human rights issues, like we do with every country,” Toner said on Tuesday. “We make our concerns clear when we do have concerns, but that dialogue continues. But I don’t have anything to point to in terms of progress.”

Source:  sputniknews.com

Filed Under: News Tagged With: head, Human Right, Saudi Arabia

The Two Axis of Evil Turkey and Saudi Arabia To destroy secular ARAB countries Build Sharia law

April 13, 2015 By administrator

The Two Axis of Evil

The Two Axis of Evil

Yemen have further prove who is behind ISIS & Al-Qaida, 

Turkey and Saudi Arabia are in high-level talks with the goal of forming a military alliance to oust Syrian President Bashar Assad, according to sources speaking to the Huffington Post.

The April 13 report said the talks are being brokered by Qatar. As the partnership is currently envisioned, Turkey would provide ground troops, supported by Saudi Arabian airstrikes, to assist moderate Syrian opposition fighters against al-Assad’s regime, according to one of the sources.

President Barack Obama was made aware of the talks in February by the emir of Qatar, Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad al-Thani, during the emir’s visit to the White House, one source said.

A White House spokesperson declined to comment and Turkish officials were not immediately available for a comment.

Click here to read the rest of the story on the Huffington Post.

how the Turks infiltrated Islamic empire and hijack the Islam

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: of evil, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, two-axis

Proxy War in Yemen: Saudi Arabia and Iran Vie for Regional Supremacy

April 7, 2015 By administrator

By Dieter Bednarz, Christoph Reuter and Bernhard Zand

Followers of the Houthi group demonstrate against the Saudi-led air strikes on Yemen, in SanaaA Saudi Arabia-led coalition continues to bombard Yemen in an effort to stop the advance of an Iran-backed Shiite militia there. The conflict is becoming a proxy war for regional supremacy. The risks to the House of Saud are great.

On recent evenings, as Western foreign ministers negotiated fervently with the Iranian leadership in Lausanne, Switzerland, two young women in the Yemeni capital of Saana spent their time gazing fearfully into the darkening night sky. Nina Aqlan, a well-known civil rights activist, and her friend Ranim were on the lookout for Saudi Arabian fighter jets. Ranim was staying with Aqlan because her own apartment stands next to the headquarters of the Political Security Organization, Yemen’s domestic intelligence agency. The building is considered a potential target for the Saudis and their allies. Report spiegel

“In the beginning, we thought they might bomb us for one or two nights. But it keeps getting worse!” says Ranim. In the background, the thump of the anti-aircraft batteries can be heard, occasionally interrupted by the thundering explosions of bomb detonations. Sometimes, the attacks last from early evening to midnight, they say over a Skype connection that repeatedly crashes. At other times, the bombing begins later and only ends at dawn.

The nightly strikes come as a Saudi Arabia-led, largely Sunni coalition consisting of nine countries seeks to push back Iranian-backed rebels in Yemen. Coalition jets have struck military bases and intelligence agency headquarters, but also a cement factory, a dairy and a refugee camp. By Thursday, the death toll from the bombings, which began one week ago, had risen to over 90. “What kind of war is this?” Aqlan asks angrily. “Why is it being fought?”

There isn’t a direct connection between the hostilities and the surprisingly comprehensive deal reached between the West and Iran on the country’s nuclear program on Thursday night. But aside from Israel, no country views the pact with as much skepticism as Saudi Arabia. Indeed, following similar developments in Syria and Iraq, the conflict in Yemen is increasingly looking like a proxy war between Riyadh and Tehran. The two capitals are blatantly wrestling over supremacy in the region. Either Saudi Arabia, the traditional Western ally that is watching nervously as the United States slowly pulls back. Or Iran, which has been expanding its power in the region of late and which has just taken an historic step toward rapprochement with the US and its allies.

Thursday night saw Iran take another step forward. The Saudi monarchy, whose power is based on the country’s vast oil reserves, were forced to watch from the sidelines in recent weeks as its historic ally America passionately pushed for a solution to the nuclear conflict with Iran. The deal was announced late on Thursday by Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif and European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini — and means that Iran has now moved a bit closer to the West and, first and foremost, to the US.

Aiming at Its Ideological Rival

The Saudi military coalition began its intervention in Yemen in the name of security. But after just a week, it has become clear that the top priority of the alliance is not that of creating a balance of power between the two adversarial camps in the Yemen conflict — which pits Shiite Houthi rebels, who have joined together with former Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh (who was ousted in a 2011 “Arab Spring” uprising), against Saudi-backed government troops. Indeed, the conflict is more of a complicated domestic struggle than a purely sectarian fight. Still, the Saudi monarchy’s intervention is primarily aimed at its ideological rival: Iran.

At the same time, the military operation is a chance for Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud to demonstrate his independence from the US — as well as to perhaps prove his country’s military leadership in the region as a complement to its longstanding economic strength.

What is clear, however, is that the brewing Sunni-Shiite struggle in the Middle East has the potential for not just destroying Yemen, but also for turning into a disaster for Saudi Arabia.

It was only last fall that Riyadh badly miscalculated in Yemen by cutting off financial aid to Hadi, who has since fled his country for the Saudi capital. The Saudi monarchy believed that Hadi, a Sunni, was being far too lenient with the Shiite Houthis, which make up a third of the population of Yemen. But Hadi had only been striving for political survival between the various fronts — a task made all the more difficult by the return of his Shiite predecessor Saleh. Without support from Riyadh, Hadi didn’t have a chance.

Even if the Iranians are confessional brothers to the Houthis and have allegedly supplied them with weapons, it is ex-president Saleh who has been the primary reason for their triumphant march through the country. It is an ironic development, given that Saleh, while in power, waged a campaign of his own against Houthi insurgents. Now, however, he has placed his old elite troops — which he once equipped with the help of hundreds of millions of dollars from the US — at their disposal. The troops are akin to a private army, and Saleh has a fortune of billions he can use to finance them.

One of Saleh’s Dances

Saleh once compared governing in Yemen to “dancing on the heads of snakes.” What is now taking place is “one of Saleh’s dances,” says Abdulkader Alguneid, a leader of recent protests against the Houthis in the economically important city of Taiz, located in the highlands between Sanaa and Aden. “It wasn’t foreign powers from outside who took over Taiz,” he says. “It was Saleh’s followers, soldiers who had defected.” Nevertheless, the city is now under Houthi control and it has become the jumping off point for the Shiite militia’s forays to the south.

Taiz, too, has become a target for the Saudi coalition’s air strikes. “They aren’t just killing Houthis,” says parliamentarian Abdulkader Mughales, cursing the Saudis. “One-hundred years ago they already took three provinces away from us and still today they are afraid of a strong Yemen.” So far, he says, there are no Iranian fighters in the country. “But if the Saudis keep on like this, the Iranians will come and turn our homeland into a battlefield in their war.”

The military operation in Yemen is a significant departure from Saudi Arabia’s foreign policy tradition. Riyadh has always relied on three strategies to pursue its interests abroad. First, it used its wealth to support allied governments or groups. Second, it established a global network of clerics and Koran schools to spread the puritanical interpretation of the Koran known as Wahhabism. And third, it practiced classic diplomacy and mediation, such as leading the peace talks that ended the 15-year civil war in Lebanon in the late 1980s.

Indeed, even experts on Saudi Arabia have never quite understood why the monarchy has spent decades — and billions — arming itself to the extensive degree it has. But the operation in Yemen has now provided the international community with an answer to that question. It is to defend itself from instability in Yemen, a country fractured along confessional and tribal lines.

Cross-border clans in addition to a small army of migrant workers have long bound Saudi Arabia tightly with its southern neighbor. The bin Laden family, one of the most influential in Saudia Arabia, is originally from Yemen as are the mothers of some Saudi princes. For King Salman, it is a nightmare that Iran — Saudi Arabia’s long-time rival for dominance in the region — is now instigating its confessional brothers in Yemen and seeking to bring the country into its Shiite sphere of influence.

The Coming Generational Shift

Saudi Arabia’s rivalry with Iran stretches back to the time of the Shah. But Iran’s growing influence in the region is not the only explanation for Riyadh’s foreign policy departure. King Salman has only been in power since January, but he is old and frail. His sons and nephews are now seeking to use the conflict in Yemen to position themselves for the coming generational shift in the House of Saud. The ruling family has been further unsettled by the apparent reorientation of its once-reliable protective power, the US.

After several tense days and nights, Iranian Foreign Minister Zarif and his American counterpart John Kerry — together with the foreign ministers of Russia, China, France, Great Britain and Germany — finally reached a framework agreement on Thursday. If finalized, the deal will restrict the amount of uranium that can be enriched at Natanz as well as reducing the degree to which uranium may be purified there. Furthermore, the underground facility at Fordow near Qom may now only be used for research purposes. The heavy-water reactor at Arak, meanwhile, may continue operation, but only in close cooperation with the West.

In response to Western demands for oversight, Iran has furthermore agreed to sign and ratify the additional protocol of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, meaning that inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) will be granted more inspection rights. The Vienna-based IAEA has for years been demanding more information from Iran regarding the “potential military dimension” of its nuclear program.

In return, the West has agreed to a step-by-step rollback of economic sanctions, provided that Iran fulfills its end of the bargain. The details, which still harbor plenty of room for conflict and dissent, are to be hammered out by June 30.

As such, Lausanne may not have hosted a historic handshake between Kerry and Zarif, but the deal was surprisingly concrete. Indeed, after the self-imposed Wednesday night deadline for an agreement passed, it looked for a time as though Iran wasn’t even prepared to issue a declaration of intent — which would have driven US President Barack Obama into a corner.

But on Thursday, Obama stepped in front of reporters in the Rose Garden at the White House to speak of a “good deal” and an “historic” agreement. He also warned Congress against blocking it. The framework agreement with Iran is a success for Obama, on whom pressure had been mounting following a year of talks. Criticism from Republicans and from within his own party had been mounting as were demands for significant concessions from Tehran. In Iran, meanwhile, the populace has high hopes that a deal might free them of painful sanctions and lead to an economic turnaround. Iranian President Hassan Rohani even went so far as to speculate about the possible reopening of the US Embassy in Tehran.

Negotiating at Eye Level

For hardliners from the nationalist-religious wing, such a vision is akin to treason against the revolution, even if a substantial majority of Iranians see America as the land of endless opportunity and yearn for rapprochement. But it isn’t the cleric Rohani who has the final say in his country’s nuclear policy. Important issues — such as those dealing with war, peace and relations with the US — are decided by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei alone. And for the 75-year-old Khamenei, signing a far-reaching nuclear deal by the end of June would represent an unbelievable reversal. It would mark a retreat from a confrontation that provides him, as leader of the revolution, with his legitimacy.

Still, after a quarter-century in power, Khamenei has a more confident grip on power in Iran than he has in a long time. Domestically, he has managed to defeat all adversaries. And he has perhaps even, it is said in Tehran, defeated testicular or prostate cancer.

The Western viewpoint holds that the sanctions have strangled the Iranian economy, thus forcing the Tehran leadership to the negotiating table. But Iran sees things differently. There, Khamenei is viewed as a leader who has elevated Iran to a potential nuclear power against the will of the West and is now negotiating with the USA as an equal.

Khamenei has certainly fulfilled his mandate: that of expanding and exporting the revolution. In southern Lebanon, the Iran-armed militia Hezbollah represents a direct threat to Israel. In Syria, Shiite militias ensure the survival of the Iran-allied dictatorship of Bashar Assad. In Iraq, armed groups under Iranian leadership are engaged in battle against the Islamic State. And now, with the advance of the presumably Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen, Shiite influence stretches from the Mediterranean Sea to the Gulf of Aden.

Risks to the House of Saud

Khamenei’s adversaries on the Arabian Peninsula, by contrast, have been forced to reposition themselves following the death of King Abdullah in February. Thus far, it has been King Salman’s favorite son Mohammed, who is doing his best to position himself as the frontrunner to succeed Saudi Arabia’s aging monarch. Just 35-years-old, it was Mohammed, Saudi’s foreign minister, who received Yemen’s exiled President Hadi in Riyadh at the end of March. Two days earlier, he had been sitting next to his cousin, Interior Minister Mohammed bin Naif, 55, at the meeting of the newly created National Security Council during which the Yemen attacks were decided. It remains, unclear, however, which of the young princes might benefit most from the Yemen offensive. Neither seems to harbor any doubts that it is the correct step.

Still, the risks this war poses to the House of Saud are great. Thus far, the air raids have accelerated rather than slowed the advance of the Houthi militias. On Tuesday, the rebels even managed to take a military base directly on the Bab-el-Mandeb, the strait between Yemen and the Horn of Africa that is considered to be among the most strategically important waterways in the world.

The Saudis have dubbed their offensive “Operation Storm of Resolve.” But they won’t be able to win with air strikes alone; to avoid defeat, they must be prepared to fight on the ground as well. The country’s army is hardly in a position to do so, but eyewitnesses have nonetheless reported seeing kilometer-long tank columns along the Saudi border while on the other side thousands of Houthi rebels prepare to do battle with the invaders.

Once before, back in the 1960s, a large regional power sent tens of thousands of soldiers into Yemen. But the operation ended in disaster. It is remembered by history as Egypt’s Vietnam.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Iran, Regional-Supremacy, Saudi Arabia

How Saudi Arabia turned Sweden’s human rights criticisms into an attack on Islam

March 30, 2015 By administrator

By Adam Taylor,

Swedish Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom

Swedish Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom

Saudi Arabia blocked Swedish Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom from speaking at an Arab League event after she criticized the kingdom’s human rights record. (Claudio Bresciani/EPA)

After a rare public criticism of its human rights record by Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom, Saudi Arabia is at diplomatic war with Sweden. The kingdom blocked Wallstrom from speaking at an Arab League event, recalled its ambassador from Stockholm and stopped giving business visas to Swedish citizens. Sweden, for its part, has cancelled a major arms deal with the Saudis.

Saudi Arabia is a key U.S. ally, and official criticism of the kingdom is remarkably rare, despite Saudi Arabia’s poor treatment of women and minorities, lack of tolerance for political discourse, and harsh punishments for apostasy and blasphemy. Many people are glad that a Western nation would take a stand for human rights in Saudi Arabia. report Washington post

But Sweden is not celebrating. The feud has sparked an intense domestic debate, with Sweden’s king even stepping in. Part of this is because of the considerable economic pressure Saudi Arabia is able to put on Sweden (Sweden exported $1.3 billion to Saudi Arabia last year). But perhaps even more powerful has been the rhetorical pressure — Saudi Arabia has succeeded in making the argument not about human rights, but about Islam.

From the start of the disagreement with Sweden, Saudi officials have emphasized that the attack isn’t just on their sovereignty, but on the entire concept of sharia law, which forms the basis of the Saudi legal system. For example, the Council of Senior Scholars, Saudi Arabia’s highest religious authority, dismissed Wallstrom’s comments as criticism of the Islamic legal system. “The Kingdom is proud of its Islamic laws, which protects human rights, dignity and private property,” said Sheik Fahad bin Saad al-Majed, secretary general of the council, according to Arab News. He added that Saudi Arabia was “a beacon of light” for Muslims around the world.

This framing caught on internationally, as well. “The ministers have voiced their condemnation and astonishment at the issuance of such statements that are incompatible with the fact that the Constitution of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is based on sharia,” Arab League foreign ministers said in a joint statement. “Sharia has guaranteed human rights and preserved people’s lives, possessions, honor and dignity.” The Organization of Islamic Cooperation also released a statement, saying Sweden needed to “not claim moral authority to pass one-sided judgments and moral categorizations of others.”

Saudi Arabia’s interpretation of sharia law has been called “one of the strictest interpretations” of Islamic law in the modern age, but Fahad Nazer, a former political analyst at the Saudi Embassy in Washington, says the Saudi legal system has become a “red line” that the kingdom won’t allow criticism to cross. “Framing the argument in religious terms does make it more difficult for Western critics to push the Saudis hard on this,” Nazer explains. “It’s not a debate that Western countries want to be engaged in.”

Sweden clearly has no desire to anger every Muslim-majority nation, for a variety of reasons (not least economic). It certainly has no desire to anger the Muslims who live in Sweden, with whom the government has a not-always-comfortable relationship. And, ultimately, it may not really want to completely discredit the Saudi Sharia system — a system that Saudi Arabia has touted as an alternative to even more extreme forms of Islamic fundamentalism.

Even in Sweden, some see Wallstrom’s comments as critical of an entire religion. Thord Janson from the Department of Global Studies at the University of Gothenburg told Svenska Dagbladet that Wallstrom’s comments could be interpreted as criticism of Islam, no matter whether she meant them that way or not.

Wallstrom herself now seems to concede that she has lost the narrative. “We have the greatest respect for Islam as a world religion and for its contributions to our common civilization,” she told Sweden’s parliament last week. Later, when told that the idea that Sweden was criticizing Islam as a whole was spreading on social media, she told Swedish radio: “Yes, I am concerned about that.”

There’s now a debate in Sweden about whether Wallstrom should back down, and it seems unlikely that other Western countries will back up her criticism of Saudi Arabia’s human rights record. “The Saudis do realize the need to reform many of their institutions,” Nazer explains, “but they’ll do so on their own terms, not because of outside pressure.”

 

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Islam, Saudi Arabia, Sweden

Gulf coalition launches airstrikes against Houthi rebels in Yemen RT LIVE UPDATES

March 27, 2015 By administrator

Saudi Arabia and its allies have launched airstrikes in Yemen against rebel Shiite Houthi forces gaining more ground. The mainly Gulf coalition, which also includes the US, is trying to help embattled President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi.

Saturday, March 28
00:26 GMT:

US President Barack Obama spoke to Saudi King Salman, reasserting American support for Saudi Arabia’s actions in Yemen, as well as the steps taken by the rest of the coalition, the White House said in a statement.

During the conversation, both leaders agreed that stability in Yemen is the main goal and should be achieved through a negotiated political solution. Obama also stressed American commitment to Saudi Arabia’s security.

Friday, March 27

23:53 GMT:

Shiite Houthi forces shot down a Saudi Arabia-led coalition jet in the north of Yemen’s capital Sanaa, Al Mayadeen TV channel reported, adding that a Sudanese pilot was arrested.

Another report from NBC said the US military rescued two Saudi pilots after they ejected from a F-15 fighter jet over the Gulf of Aden during a mission in Yemen.

The aircraft allegedly suffered a “mechanical problem.” The rescue mission took around two hours.

20:39 GMT:

Saudi-led coalition air strikes continued to target Houthi positions in Sanaa, Friday, with gunfire ringing out through the Yemeni capital.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Houthi, Saudi Arabia, yeme

Saudi Arabia deploys 30,000 troops at border after alleged Iraqi withdrawal

July 3, 2014 By administrator

Saudi Arabia has deployed 30,000 troops to its 800km border with Iraq following an alleged withdrawal of Iraqi border guards amid the ongoing battles against Sunni Islamist militants. Baghdad denied pulling off the guards.rtr29j8w.si

Saudi state-owned news channel Al Arabiya released a video apparently showing Iraqi soldiers saying the government ordered them to retreat from their positions along borders with Syria in the west and Saudi Arabia in the south despite no evident danger.

“We didn’t know why,” an officer says in the video, which was obtained by Al Arabiya’s sister channel Al Hadath. The report didn’t clarify whether the alleged withdrawal includes Iraq’s borders with Jordan and Kuwait, both in the southern part of the country, or Turkey in the north.

The authenticity of the video could not be immediately verified, but the withdrawal report was denied by an Iraqi government spokesman.

“This is false news aimed at affecting the morale of our people and the morale of our heroic fighters,” the spokesman, Lieutenant General Qassim Atta, told reporters in Baghdad. He added that the frontier was “fully in the grip” of Iraqi border troops.

The Thursday deployment by Saudi King Abdullah is meant to protect the Sunni Islamic state against potential “terrorist threats” Saudi state news agency SPA commented.

Thousands of Indian Muslims volunteer to protect holy shrines in Iraq

Iraqi Shiite government is struggling to fend off the advancement of Sunni fundamental Islamists, who want to create an Islamic state on territories carved out of Iraq and Syria. Baghdad received only limited military assistance from the US, as Washington said it does not want to deploy ground troops in the country it once occupied.

The idea of such a deployment was also objected by Saudi Arabia, a fundamental Sunni monarchy and a long-time ally of the US.

So far the biggest military help Iraq has apparently received is from Shiite Iran.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: border, Iraq, Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia slams Maliki’s ‘irresponsible’ comments to FRANCE 24

May 10, 2014 By administrator

France 24

Speaking to FRANCE 24’s Marc Perelman over the weekend, Maliki accused Saudi Arabia and Qatar of “inciting and encouraging the terrorist movements”. REUTERS Photo

n_63453_1Saudi Arabia responded to a FRANCE 24 interview with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki on Monday, slamming the Iraqi leader’s accusations that the Gulf kingdom supported terrorism as “aggressive and irresponsible”.

“The Saudi response came two days after the exclusive interview with Maliki was aired on FRANCE 24.

Speaking to FRANCE 24’s Marc Perelman over the weekend, Maliki accused Saudi Arabia and Qatar of “inciting and encouraging the terrorist movements”.

Responding to the accusations on Monday, an unidentified Saudi official told the state SPA news agency that, “The kingdom condemns the aggressive and irresponsible statements made by the Iraqi prime minister”.

In his interview with FRANCE 24, Maliki said Saudi Arabia and Qatar were seeking to destabilise Iraq by supporting terrorist groups and providing them with financial support.
Maliki, an Iraqi Shiite politician, said the two Sunnimajority Gulf countries were also “supporting terrorism” in Syria and “around the world”.

http://www.france24.com/en/20140310-saudi-arabia-iraq-maliki-interview-response-terrorism/

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: FRANCE 24, Iraq, Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia bribes Lebanese politicians: Lahoud (Video)

May 3, 2014 By administrator

PressTV Lebanon’s former president, Emile Lahoud, says Saudi Arabia has been exerting its influence in Lebanon’s politics by bribing politicians over long years, Press TV reports.

Lahoud said in an interview with Press TV that many Lebanese politicians switch sides because they have pledged allegiance to foreign countries.

He said after he was appointed as Lebanon’s commander in chief, the then president of the republic and chief of intelligence approached him with “a suitcase full of USD 100” bills.

They “said this is half a million dollars that we give every month to the commander in chief who goes along our policy,” Lahoud added.

“I said why don’t you give it to the government and the government gives it to the army. He said no…. He said this has been done since 1982,” the veteran politician further noted.

“I said who is doing that. He said Sheikh Rafei and that he brings them from Saudi Arabia,” he added.

Lahoud stressed that Lebanon must have strong resistance backed by its national army to overcome problems.

The country needs to replace its sectarian-based electoral law with a national law to get rid of foreign-backed politicians, he added.

People in Lebanon have staged several demonstrations to slam what they called the divisive role of Saudi Arabia in the region.

Protesters accuse Riyadh of fueling unrest and sectarianism in Syria, Iraq and Lebanon. They say the Al Saud regime has been using its petrodollars to finance al-Qaeda-linked and Takfiri groups with the sole aim of destabilizing the region.

Filed Under: Articles, Videos Tagged With: bribe, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia

Syria: UN must condemn deadly twin bombings in Homs:

April 11, 2014 By administrator

Syria has called on the United Nations to condemn the recent terrorist bomb attacks which killed over 20 people, including women and children, in the country’s western city of Homs.

358085_Homs-BlastsIn letters to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and the Security Council, the Syrian Foreign Ministry criticized the world body’s “continued silence” on the crimes perpetrated by foreign-backed terrorist groups against Syrians, SANA reported on Thursday.

“The government of Syrian Arab Republic calls on the Security Council to condemn that terrorist crime which claimed the lives of scores of Syrian innocents [as well as] other terrorist crimes that shed the Syrians’ blood,” said the letters.

The letters also said the Security Council should “punish” Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey for supporting the Takfiri terrorists operating against Syria and turning a blind eye to the UN body’s resolutions on counterterrorism.

On April 9, at least 25 people were killed and more than 100 others injured when two car bomb attacks targeted a commercial street in the central part of Homs.

Later on the same day, foreign-backed militants reportedly shot and killed 14 people, including women and children, in the city’s Karm al-Zeitoun neighborhood.

Homs has been the scene of frequent attacks by foreign-sponsored extremist groups since the start of the deadly militancy in Syria some three years ago.

Reports say more than 150,000 people have so far been killed and millions of others displaced because of the ongoing violence plaguing the Arab state.

President Bashar al-Assad has vowed that his country would strike terror “with an iron fist.” He has also pledged that Syria will emerge “victorious” and “more powerful” from the foreign-backed crisis.

Source: PressTV

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: bombings in Homs, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkey

Syria UN envoy says militants kill civilians, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey are killing Syrian people

March 29, 2014 By administrator

Syrian Ambassador to the UN Bashar Ja’afari says militants backed by Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey are killing Syrian people.

JaferyJa’afari on Friday denied the use of bombs against people by government forces.

“No. What you see on TV is publicity. …We are not killing our own people.”

The Syrian envoy added that Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey are supporting the militants, who mainly come from Chechnya, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Tunisia, Libya and Saudi Arabia. They “are killing people” in Syria, he stated.

Ja’afari also denounced some members of the UN Security Council and its secretariat for refusing to hear the truth about the situation in Syria.

Those countries themselves are “deeply involved” in “spreading terrorism” across Syria, the Syrian ambassador said.

Syria has been gripped by deadly violence since 2011. Reports say some 140,000 people have so far been killed and millions of others displaced due to the crisis.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkey

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