Lebanese politician, engineer and academic
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Vendredi 3 octobre 1980, la synagogue de l'Union libérale israélite de France, située au 24 de la rue Copernic dans le 16e arrondissement de Paris est pleine. Soudain une explosion retentit. L'attentat à la bombe a causé 4 morts, 46 blessés, et des dégâts matériels pour 250 personnes. L'unique accusé, Hassan Diab, a été condamné par contumace à la réclusion criminelle à perpétuité, 43 ans après les faits. Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Hassan Diab, a Lebanese-Canadian professor, has spent nearly 20 years defending himself against accusations of involvement in a 1980 bombing of the Copernic Street synagogue in Paris. The twists and turns of his case raise serious questions about justice, accountability, and the possibility of a wrongful accusation. In this episode: Dana Ballout, documentary producer Alex Atack, journalist and audio producer Episode credits: This episode was produced by Marcos Bartolomé with Phillip Lanos, Spencer Cline, Hanah Shokeir, Melanie Marich, Noor Wazwaz and our guest host Manuel Rápalo. It was edited by Alexandra Locke. Our sound designer is Alex Roldan. Our video editors are Hisham Abu Salah and Mohannad Al-Melhemm. Alexandra Locke is The Take’s executive producer. Ney Alvarez is Al Jazeera’s head of audio. Connect with us: @AJEPodcasts on Instagram, X, Facebook, Threads and YouTube
On Oct. 3, 1980, a bomb exploded outside the Rue Copernic synagogue in Paris, killing four people and injuring 46.The attack sparked outrage and protests against anti-semitic violence. But as weeks turned to years, the investigation went nowhere.Finally, French investigators named Hassan Diab, a Lebanese-Canadian professor, as its main suspect. 28 years years after the attack, Diab was charged and extradited from Canada to France. But did the police arrest the right person?Alex Atack and Dana Ballout from the podcast, The Copernic Affair, join Crime Story.To hear next week's episode of Crime Story right now, ad-free, subscribe to CBC True Crime Premium on Apple Podcasts.
For the last two months, listeners around the world have been hearing a deeply reported true-crime podcast investigation – the first of its kind – into the notorious Canadian case of a mild-mannered Ottawa sociology professor, Hassan Diab, who France recently convicted of being the terrorist who blew up Paris' historic Copernic Street synagogue in 1980. Although Diab has no intention of serving out that life sentence in a French prison for the murders of four victims, and the wounding of many others: the professor from Carleton University claims he is innocent, was nowhere near Paris, was never mixed up in terrorism and is the wrong man. And, despite already spending nearly 27 years under suspicion, including some locked behind bars or on tight bail conditions, Diab's fight to prove he's a scapegoat has now received some renewed support. The Canadaland _news platform has published a six-part series called “The Copernic Affair”. It raises serious questions into how French officials prosecuted the case, using incomplete or inadmissible evidence, a weak Canadian extradition system, and by France's historic need to bring someone, anyone, to justice for a terrorist attack that's deeply etched into their national memory. Diab's many supporters, including some Jewish Canadian leaders, regret how the man's life has been ruined, facing calls for him to be fired at work, and ongoing death threats to his family in Ottawa. On today's episode of _The CJN Daily, Ellin is joined by the two journalists behind the unique investigative series: Alex Atack is a senior audio producer, often for The Guardian, and Dana Ballout, an Emmy-award winning documentary producer, with bylines on This American Life, National Geographic/ Disney+, The Wall Street Journal and Al-Jazeera. To read a transcript of the episode, go to our website: https://thecjn.ca/podcasts/hassan-diab/ What we talked about: Read some of The CJN's coverage of the Hassan Diab saga, and hear The CJN Daily's interview on the Copernic bombing with Israel's Ambassador to Canada, Iddo Moed . Hear the Canadaland investigation podcast series The Copernic Affair. Read the Canadian government's own scathing report on Canada's extradition of Diab to France in 2018. Credits Host and writer: Ellin Bessner (@ebessner) Production team: Zachary Kauffman (senior producer), Joseph Fish (chase producer), Michael Fraiman (executive producer) Music: Dov Beck-Levine Support our show Subscribe to The CJN newsletter Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt) Subscribe to The CJN Daily (Not sure how? Click here)
In October 1980, a motorcycle packed with explosives went off outside a Paris synagogue, killing four and wounding nearly four dozen others. French investigators gathered evidence the attack was planned by a Palestinian militant group, but the trail for the bomber went cold for years. Twenty-eight years after the attack on Rue Copernic, French authorities accused a Canadian sociology professor of Lebanese descent of planting the bomb. Hassan Diab proclaimed his innocence, saying their evidence was flawed and circumstantial. It spawned a diplomatic crisis, as Canadian judicial authorities also questioned whether Diab should be turned over to France for trial.“The Copernic Affair” from Canadaland and House of Many Windows re-examines the controversial terrorism probe. Hosts Dana Ballout and Alex Atack talk to victims, investigators, and Diab himself to make sense of how an unassuming academic with a common name was accused of a horrific crime four decades ago. Is Hassan Diab guilty of an unspeakable act of political violence? Or is he a scapegoat for a failed investigation?OUR SPOILER-FREE REVIEWS OF "THE COPERNIC AFFAIR" BEGIN IN THE FINAL NINE MINUTES OF THE EPISODE. For exclusive podcasts and more, sign up at Patreon.Sign up for our newsletter at crimewriterson.com.
Back in Canada, Hassan Diab's life is hanging in limbo. He may be arrested at any moment, and Canada's government won't ensure his safety. What does justice mean for the victims of the Copernic attack, and what does it mean for Diab and his supporters?This show is only possible because people like you believe in it and support it. By becoming a Canadaland supporter, you will be supporting rigorous independent journalism and journalists and making sure many more investigations like this one get published. Just go to canadaland.com/join (Canadian listeners)canadaland.com/investigates (everywhere else)You can listen ad-free on Amazon Music—included with Prime. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hassan Diab faces a new reality in Europe's largest maximum security prison. But when Marc Trévidic is replaced by new investigative judges, the case is thrown into uncertainty - and Hassan's fortunes begin to shift.If you want to listen to the entire series right now without ads, become a Canadaland Supporter. Shows like ours cannot get made without your support. Go to canadaland.com/join. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hassan Diab, a sociology professor living in Ottawa, is finishing up his classes for the day when he learns that he is the primary suspect in France's investigation into the Copernic synagogue bombing. At first, he doesn't believe this. But he begins to sense that he's being surveilled. Then early one morning, he hears an unexpected knock on his door. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The Copernic Affair is available now, wherever you get your podcasts.The life of an unassuming sociology professor in Canada gets turned upside down when he is accused of carrying out a 1980 bomb attack on a synagogue in Paris. Hassan Diab says heʼs innocent, but French investigators are determined to prove otherwise.Journalists Dana Ballout and Alex Atack take listeners through the twists and turns of this extraordinary story, all the while asking…Is Hassan Diab guilty, or is he a scapegoat? And what if one person's justice means committing an injustice to another?You can become a Canadaland supporter to listen to the whole series early and ad-free. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The Copernic Affair is available now, wherever you get your podcasts.The life of an unassuming sociology professor in Canada gets turned upside down when he is accused of carrying out a 1980 bomb attack on a synagogue in Paris. Hassan Diab says heʼs innocent, but French investigators are determined to prove otherwise.Journalists Dana Ballout and Alex Atack take listeners through the twists and turns of this extraordinary story, all the while asking…Is Hassan Diab guilty, or is he a scapegoat? And what if one person's justice means committing an injustice to another?You can become a Canadaland supporter to listen to the whole series early and ad-free. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The Copernic Affair is available now, wherever you get your podcasts.The life of an unassuming sociology professor in Canada gets turned upside down when he is accused of carrying out a 1980 bomb attack on a synagogue in Paris. Hassan Diab says heʼs innocent, but French investigators are determined to prove otherwise.Journalists Dana Ballout and Alex Atack take listeners through the twists and turns of this extraordinary story, all the while asking…Is Hassan Diab guilty, or is he a scapegoat? And what if one person's justice means committing an injustice to another?You can become a Canadaland supporter to listen to the whole series early and ad-free. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In 1980 someone detonated a bomb outside a synagogue in Paris. Four people were killed. Suspicion immediately fell on French neo-nazi groups. But soon investigators turned their attention to groups from the Middle East. Then the case went cold. For decades.Then, in 2008, the RCMP arrested an Ottawa-based sociology professor. What follows is a twisting tale of extradition, years of interrogation, and ultimately a trial and conviction in absentia. But today the person at the heart of the story, Hassan Diab, is free and living in Canada despite being convicted of the bombing in France.The case is back in the headlines with Elon Musk and Pierre Poilievre, among others, asking why a convicted terrorist is a free man walking the streets of Canada. Canadaland has spent a year and a half digging into the story of Hassan Diab. Today we bring you a preview of our new series: The Copernic Affair.Host: Jesse BrownCredits: Tristan Capacchione (Audio Editor and Technical Producer), Bruce Thorson (Senior Producer), Sam Konnert (Fact Checker),` max collins (Director of Audio), Jesse Brown (Editor and Publisher)Guests: Dana Ballout, Alex AtackAdditional music by Audio NetworkSponsors: Squarespace: Check out https://squarespace.com/canadaland for a free trial, and when you're ready to launch use code canadaland to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain.Article: Article is offering our listeners $50 off your first purchase of $100 or more. To claim this offer, visit https://article.com/canadaland and the discount will be automatically applied at checkout.BetterHelp: Visit https://betterhelp.com/canadaland today to get 10% off your first month.If you value this podcast, support us! You'll get premium access to all our shows ad free, including early releases and bonus content. You'll also get our exclusive newsletter, discounts on merch at our store, tickets to our live and virtual events, and more than anything, you'll be a part of the solution to Canada's journalism crisis, you'll be keeping our work free and accessible to everybody.You can listen ad-free on Amazon Music—included with Prime. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Israel's Ambassador to Canada, Iddo Moed, is actively monitoring the hourly reports coming out of the Middle East and Washington about negotiations for a deal that would usher in a new ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, paving the way for a gradual release of dozens of Israeli hostages (in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli custody). According to U.S. and Israeli news sources, Hamas prepared a list of about 33 hostages they are prepared to release. They would start with civilians before handing over female soldiers and others. Moed fervently hopes that the Bibas children, Kfir and Ariel, and their parents will be among the first to be freed after a captivity that's lasted 465 days. But while the negotiations are still happening, Moed calls the process “excruciating” and “painful” for the hostages families, as the release may be joyful—but also possibly heartbreaking. In this special evening edition of The CJN Daily, Moed joins to discuss the possible outcomes of this rapidly evolving story—as well as separate issues that have kept him busy while waiting. His office has been closely monitoring the case of Hassan Diab, a professor in Ottawa who was convicted of terrorism for bombing a synagogue in Paris that resulted in the deaths of four people (including the mother of Moed's personal friend); and the controversial Islamist conference organized by Hizb ut-Tahrir Canada, slated for this weekend until its recent cancellation. What we talked about: Read more about the Israeli Ambassador's views on Canada's blocking arms sales to Israel, funding UNRWA, and his trip to Israel in March 2024 with Melanie Joey and Ya'ara Saks, in The CJN. Iddo Moed's first interview with The CJN Daily on Oct. 8, 2023 just hours after the deadly Hamas attack and just a few days since arriving to take the diplomatic post Judih Weinstein Haggai confirmed dead, in The CJN. Credits Host and writer: Ellin Bessner (@ebessner) Production team: Zachary Kauffman (producer), Michael Fraiman (executive producer) Music: Dov Beck-Levine Support our show Subscribe to The CJN newsletter Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt) Subscribe to The CJN Daily (Not sure how? Click here)
A sociology professor's quiet life in Canada gets turned upside down when he is accused of carrying out a 1980 bomb attack on a synagogue in Paris. Hassan Diab says he is innocent — but French investigators are determined to prove otherwise.The Copernic Affair is coming January 22nd. Become a Canadaland supporter and listen to the whole series early and ad-free. https://canadaland.com/join/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Introducing our latest long-form investigative series. From Thunder Bay to The White Saviors to Cool Mules, Canadaland has a record of reporting and publishing complicated, difficult and nuanced stories that other media can't or won't. The Copernic Affair is no different.Acclaimed journalists Dana Ballout and Alex Atack have been working for years on our latest investigative series The Copernic Affair. It is a big, decades spanning investigation about how Hassan Diab, an unassuming sociology professor in Ottawa, ended up the prime suspect in a terrorism investigation that French authorities have been trying to solve since the 1980s.Is he a terrorist? Or a scapegoat?The Copernic Affair launches in late-January, but we are bringing you the first episode today.Canadaland supporters can listen to the first two episodes right now and the rest of it, each week. Canadaland is offering early access to supporters. If you aren't a supporter yet, it's easy to become one. Just go to https://canadaland.com/join/ You'll be enabling great journalism and ensuring it remains accessible and free for everybody.Sponsors: oxio: Head over to https://canadaland.oxio.ca and use code CANADALAND for your first month free!PolicyMe: Head over to https://policyme.com and secure your Health and Dental coverage in just 5 minutes – no medical questions needed! You can listen ad-free on Amazon Music—included with Prime. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In 1980, the synagogue in Paris was bombed, killing four and injuring 40 others. Over four decades later, French authorities settled on one suspect, despite the fact that the perpetrators could have been a neo-Nazi group, which had bombed a Jewish site on that same date years earlier. Canadian academic Dr. Hassan Diab was extradited to France to stand trial. He spent 38 months in near solitary confinement in Fleury-Merogis, Europe's biggest maximum security prison, while the French magistrates investigated his case. The two French judges–experts in cases of terrorism–dismissed the case in 2018. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau declared that Dr, Hassan should never have had to suffer.Nevertheless, French prosecutors appealed the case, and in 2023 Hassan Diab was convicted in absentia for this unsolved crime. Former Secretary General of Amnesty International Canada, Alex Neva, described the prosecution of Hassan Diab as, “surreal and disgraceful.” Diab was sentenced to life, despite all of the evidence indicating that he could not possibly have committed it. He is currently facing re-extradition from Canada to France.In this episode on Speaking Out of Place podcast Professor David Palumbo-Liu and Azeezah Kanji talk with Dr. Hassan Diab, as well as Michelle Weinroth, a long-term member of the Hassan Diab Support Committee, and Bernie Farber, former head of Canadian Jewish Congress who previously advocated for the extradition of Dr. Diab, but now has become one of his supporters.www.palumbo-liu.comhttps://speakingoutofplace.comhttps://twitter.com/palumboliu?s=20www.instagram.com/speaking_out_of_place
In 1980, a synagogue in Paris was bombed, killing four and injuring 40 others. Thirty-four years later, French authorities settled on one suspect--Hassan Diab. This, despite the fact that it is likely that the bombing was undertaken by a neo-Nazi group, commemorating the anniversary of another one of its anti-semitic attacks. After being extradited from Canada to France in 2014, Diab was arrested and held in detention. In 2018, two of the top anti-terrorist judges in France dismissed the case, and Canadian premier Justin Trudeau publicly decried this miscarriage of justice.Nevertheless, the French prosecutors appealed the decision, and in 2023 Canadian academic Dr. Hassan Diab was convicted in absentia for this unsolved crime. The two judges who had exonerated him in 2018 testified on Diab's behalf. Former Secretary General of Amnesty International Canada, Alex Neva, has described the prosecution of Hassan Diab as, “surreal and disgraceful.”Diab has been sentenced to life despite all of the evidence indicating that he could not possibly have committed it. He is currently facing re- extradition from Canada to France. Today we have with us Dr. Hassan Diab, as well as Michelle Weinroth, a long-term member of the Hassan Diab Support Committee, and Bernie Farber, former head of Canadian Jewish Congress who previously advocated for the extradition of Dr. Diab, but now has become one of his supporters. Dr. Hassan Diab is a Canadian citizen and sociology professor who lives in Ottawa. Up until October, 2007, Hassan enjoyed an engaged and productive public life, including teaching, publishing research, and traveling internationally.Bernie Farber is the Founding Chair of the Canadian AntiHate Network. His career spans more than three decades focusing on human rights, diversity, countering antisemitism and extremism. His expertise has been recognized by Canadian Courts, media and law enforcement. His efforts have been documented in numerous Canadian human rights publications, books, films, newspapers and magazines. He is widely respected as a CEO in the not-for-profit world best known internationally as the former CEO of Canadian Jewish Congress. He is a published author and a newspaper columnist. He is a a recipient of numerous medals and awards for his human rights work. In his retirement he is a consultant on antisemitism and extremism to Canadian School Boards and police services, he sits as an advisor to Human Rights Watch Canada and the Mosaic Institute and Chairs the Rights and Ethics Committee of Community Living Toronto.Michelle Weinroth is a writer and teacher living in Ottawa. She taught English literature at the University of Ottawa and at Carleton University for a decade. Her area of specialization is the workings of propaganda in 19th- and 20th-century fiction and non-fiction. Over the past seven years, she has taken a special interest in the Hassan Diab Affair.
More than 130 members of the legal community in Canada are asking the Prime Minister to deny an extradition request from France. It centres around a 69-year old Lebanese Canadian university professor. Dr. Hassan Diab was convicted in absentia in a trial held in France earlier this year where he was sentenced to life in prison. It was for the 1980 bombing of a synagogue in Paris that killed four and wounded 46 people. Dalhousie Law Professor Robert Currie is among those people calling on the government to end fifteen years of manifest injustice in the case. And he explains why the evidence presented in the case would never have stood in Canada and why our government needs to review its extradition laws. Because, what happened to Dr. Diab, could happen to other Canadians.
We'll probably never know if Hassan Diab, a Lebanese Canadian sociology professor, had any role in the 1980 bombing of a Paris synagogue that killed four people and injured dozens more. But he's been found guilty, in absentia, by a French court, anyway.This is the second time France has attempted to punish Diab for his alleged role in the attack, and the evidence has been described as flimsy. The first time, he was extradited and jailed in France before charges were dropped, prompting Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to criticize the case and the extradition.But now that a court has convicted, will France ask Canada for Diab a second time? If they do, will Canada comply? This is a case that could test the relationship between the two countries, and Canada's policy on extraditions in general.GUEST: Leyland Cecco, reporting for The Guardian
Hassan Diab has been entangled in a 15-year legal battle against claims he is a terrorist. Last week, the Assize Court in Paris found Dr. Diab guilty of perpetrating a 1980 bomb attack outside a synagogue in Paris. In a new trial, the French court sentenced the Ottawa academic to life in prison, despite the fact that both the Canadian and French justice systems have already found a lack of credible evidence. We speak with Alex Neve, senior fellow in the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Ottawa.
Novák Katalin nem írja alá a törvényt 24.hu 2023-04-21 23:13:31 Belföld Novák Katalin Kövér László Az államfő levélben üzente meg Kövér Lászlónak, hogy pontosan mi baja van a jogszabály szövegével. Egy 1980-as, négy halálos áldozattal járó párizsi robbantás miatt ítéltek el egy kanadai professzort Telex 2023-04-21 22:55:50 Külföld Párizs Kanada Robbantás Zsinagóga Egy zsinagóga ellen követtek el bombatámadást, de sokáig nem volt gyanúsított. A már Kanadában élő Hassan Diab professzor 2008-ban került gyanúba. 3 vasban gazdag hús, a gyorsabb anyagcsere érdekében 40 éves kor felett Magyar Mezőgazdaság 2023-04-22 04:08:00 Életmód Élelmiszer A vas egy létfontosságú ásványi anyag, amelyre a szervezetnek szüksége van a növekedéshez és a fejlődéshez. Valamint a hemoglobin előállításához is szükség van rá, amely a vörösvértestek fehérjéje, és amely az oxigént szállítja az egész szervezetben. A vasat esszenciális tápanyagnak minősítik, ami azt jelenti, hogy az elfogyasztott élelmiszerekből Munkajogász: Ha egy pedagógus léphet, ne fontolgassa tovább Forbes 2023-04-22 05:48:07 Belföld Oktatás Azok a közalkalmazottak, aki a következő hetekben hagyják ott a pályát, még két hónapos lemondási idővel tehetik meg. Ennek tervez keresztbe tenni a kormány júniustól. Egy rogyadozó, beteg elefánt kavar vihart Pakisztánban Infostart 2023-04-22 03:54:00 Külföld Állatkert Pakisztán Egy felállással küszködő, sánta, beteg elefánt jövője, a neki otthont adó állatkert sorsa, illetve az e körüli vita tartja lázban Pakisztán üzleti fővárosának, Karacsinak a lakosait - adta hírül a török Anadolu hírügynökség beszámolójában. Medence mustra – Csodatevő gyógyfürdőt is találtunk napi.hu 2023-04-22 06:23:00 Belföld háború Válság Termálfürdő Magyarországon összesen 106 gyógyfürdő és 136 termálfürdő található: a szektort folyamatos válságok sújtják, 2020-ban a pandémia miatt zártak be a fürdők, tavaly pedig a háború okozott zavart az erőben. A fürdők negyede a bezárás mellett döntött, de azért jócskán maradtak még talpon. Körbenéztünk, hogy mennyiért lehet most a gyógyfürdőkbe jegyet vá Hova utazzunk tavasszal? Porto laza hangulata magával ragad Privátbankár 2023-04-22 05:48:05 Utazás Tavasz Portugália Talán épp az elhagyatott, omladozó épületektől lesz a város bohém és vidám, a sikátorok, meredek utcácskák, kézműves boltok és a helyi tapasok tömegét kínáló éttermek pedig csak fokozzák ezt az érzést. A Világjáró tavaszi célpontokat ajánló sorozatának második állomása: Porto. Közel az áttörés a bitcoin és társai számára Európában Fintech 2023-04-22 05:35:00 Modern Gazdaság Európai Parlament Kriptovaluta Virtuális pénz Bitcoin Az Európai Parlament jóváhagyta a világ egyik első átfogó, kriptopiacokról szóló törvénycsomagját (Markets in Crypto Act - MiCA). Föld napja: 9 tipp és eszköz otthonra a zöldebb jövőért Startlap Vásárlás 2023-04-22 06:33:17 Otthon Föld napja Rengeteg környezetkárosító szokás és tárgy vesz minket körül. A Föld napja alkalmából ideje összegzést tartani, hisz néhány eszközzel sokkal zöldebbek lehetünk. Ötmilliós négyzetméteráron, összesen 816 millióért újítják fel a Parlament egyik termét hvg.hu 2023-04-22 06:00:00 Ingatlan Olcsó A Parlament műemlék, így bármilyen felújítás nem olcsó benne, de elég soknak hangzik az egyik nagyobb tárgyaló megújítása 816 millióért, ami 5,1 millió négyzetméterenként. És ez még nem is az átfogó belső rekonstrukció, amit a pénzhiány miatt egyelőre csak terveznek, de nem kezdenek el. Javulnak Nagy-Britannia kilátásai az S&P szerint Portfolio 2023-04-22 06:34:00 Gazdaság Hitel Hitelminősítés Stabilra javította a leminősítés lehetőségére utaló eddigi negatívról Nagy-Britannia "AA/A-1 plusz" szintű államadós-osztályzatának kilátását az S&P Global Ratings. A nemzetközi hitelminősítő ezzel egy időben megerősítette a brit besorolásokat. Még csak sakkot se lehet adni, mégis egy pillanat alatt matt lesz Telex 2023-04-22 05:56:53 Sport Sakk A sötét király fedezéke csak látszólag masszív, valójában ingatag. Újra kikapott a lengyelektől a magyar hokiválogatott Sportal 2023-04-21 23:12:15 Foci Lengyelország Jégkorong A májusi elitvilágbajnokságra hangoló magyar jégkorong-válogatott a csütörtöki 4–2-es vereség után pénteken 3–2-re kapott ki a házigazda lengyel csapattól felkészülési mérkőzésen Bytomban – írta az MTI. A hétvége döntő részén még kitart a kellemes idő Kiderül 2023-04-21 13:25:06 Időjárás Hétvége A sok gomolyfelhő mellett nem lesz hiány napsütésből a hétvégén, szép idő kíséri a pihenést. Vasárnap délutántól, jellemzően a Dunántúlon már eleredhet azonban az eső.
Novák Katalin nem írja alá a törvényt 24.hu 2023-04-21 23:13:31 Belföld Novák Katalin Kövér László Az államfő levélben üzente meg Kövér Lászlónak, hogy pontosan mi baja van a jogszabály szövegével. Egy 1980-as, négy halálos áldozattal járó párizsi robbantás miatt ítéltek el egy kanadai professzort Telex 2023-04-21 22:55:50 Külföld Párizs Kanada Robbantás Zsinagóga Egy zsinagóga ellen követtek el bombatámadást, de sokáig nem volt gyanúsított. A már Kanadában élő Hassan Diab professzor 2008-ban került gyanúba. 3 vasban gazdag hús, a gyorsabb anyagcsere érdekében 40 éves kor felett Magyar Mezőgazdaság 2023-04-22 04:08:00 Életmód Élelmiszer A vas egy létfontosságú ásványi anyag, amelyre a szervezetnek szüksége van a növekedéshez és a fejlődéshez. Valamint a hemoglobin előállításához is szükség van rá, amely a vörösvértestek fehérjéje, és amely az oxigént szállítja az egész szervezetben. A vasat esszenciális tápanyagnak minősítik, ami azt jelenti, hogy az elfogyasztott élelmiszerekből Munkajogász: Ha egy pedagógus léphet, ne fontolgassa tovább Forbes 2023-04-22 05:48:07 Belföld Oktatás Azok a közalkalmazottak, aki a következő hetekben hagyják ott a pályát, még két hónapos lemondási idővel tehetik meg. Ennek tervez keresztbe tenni a kormány júniustól. Egy rogyadozó, beteg elefánt kavar vihart Pakisztánban Infostart 2023-04-22 03:54:00 Külföld Állatkert Pakisztán Egy felállással küszködő, sánta, beteg elefánt jövője, a neki otthont adó állatkert sorsa, illetve az e körüli vita tartja lázban Pakisztán üzleti fővárosának, Karacsinak a lakosait - adta hírül a török Anadolu hírügynökség beszámolójában. Medence mustra – Csodatevő gyógyfürdőt is találtunk napi.hu 2023-04-22 06:23:00 Belföld háború Válság Termálfürdő Magyarországon összesen 106 gyógyfürdő és 136 termálfürdő található: a szektort folyamatos válságok sújtják, 2020-ban a pandémia miatt zártak be a fürdők, tavaly pedig a háború okozott zavart az erőben. A fürdők negyede a bezárás mellett döntött, de azért jócskán maradtak még talpon. Körbenéztünk, hogy mennyiért lehet most a gyógyfürdőkbe jegyet vá Hova utazzunk tavasszal? Porto laza hangulata magával ragad Privátbankár 2023-04-22 05:48:05 Utazás Tavasz Portugália Talán épp az elhagyatott, omladozó épületektől lesz a város bohém és vidám, a sikátorok, meredek utcácskák, kézműves boltok és a helyi tapasok tömegét kínáló éttermek pedig csak fokozzák ezt az érzést. A Világjáró tavaszi célpontokat ajánló sorozatának második állomása: Porto. Közel az áttörés a bitcoin és társai számára Európában Fintech 2023-04-22 05:35:00 Modern Gazdaság Európai Parlament Kriptovaluta Virtuális pénz Bitcoin Az Európai Parlament jóváhagyta a világ egyik első átfogó, kriptopiacokról szóló törvénycsomagját (Markets in Crypto Act - MiCA). Föld napja: 9 tipp és eszköz otthonra a zöldebb jövőért Startlap Vásárlás 2023-04-22 06:33:17 Otthon Föld napja Rengeteg környezetkárosító szokás és tárgy vesz minket körül. A Föld napja alkalmából ideje összegzést tartani, hisz néhány eszközzel sokkal zöldebbek lehetünk. Ötmilliós négyzetméteráron, összesen 816 millióért újítják fel a Parlament egyik termét hvg.hu 2023-04-22 06:00:00 Ingatlan Olcsó A Parlament műemlék, így bármilyen felújítás nem olcsó benne, de elég soknak hangzik az egyik nagyobb tárgyaló megújítása 816 millióért, ami 5,1 millió négyzetméterenként. És ez még nem is az átfogó belső rekonstrukció, amit a pénzhiány miatt egyelőre csak terveznek, de nem kezdenek el. Javulnak Nagy-Britannia kilátásai az S&P szerint Portfolio 2023-04-22 06:34:00 Gazdaság Hitel Hitelminősítés Stabilra javította a leminősítés lehetőségére utaló eddigi negatívról Nagy-Britannia "AA/A-1 plusz" szintű államadós-osztályzatának kilátását az S&P Global Ratings. A nemzetközi hitelminősítő ezzel egy időben megerősítette a brit besorolásokat. Még csak sakkot se lehet adni, mégis egy pillanat alatt matt lesz Telex 2023-04-22 05:56:53 Sport Sakk A sötét király fedezéke csak látszólag masszív, valójában ingatag. Újra kikapott a lengyelektől a magyar hokiválogatott Sportal 2023-04-21 23:12:15 Foci Lengyelország Jégkorong A májusi elitvilágbajnokságra hangoló magyar jégkorong-válogatott a csütörtöki 4–2-es vereség után pénteken 3–2-re kapott ki a házigazda lengyel csapattól felkészülési mérkőzésen Bytomban – írta az MTI. A hétvége döntő részén még kitart a kellemes idő Kiderül 2023-04-21 13:25:06 Időjárás Hétvége A sok gomolyfelhő mellett nem lesz hiány napsütésből a hétvégén, szép idő kíséri a pihenést. Vasárnap délutántól, jellemzően a Dunántúlon már eleredhet azonban az eső.
durée : 00:20:44 - Journal de 18h - Le libano-canadien Hassan Diab a été condamné à perpétuité pour l'attentat de la rue Copernic qui avait fait 4 morts et plusieurs dizaines de blessés en 1980.
durée : 00:04:52 - Journal de 22h - L'unique accusé du procès, 43 ans après l'attentat à la bombe qui avait fait quatre morts et des dizaines de blessés, a été condamné à la peine maximale. Si le jugement est un soulagement pour les parties civiles, l'avocat d'Hassan Diab déplore cette décision. - invités : Anthony Cortes Journaliste
François-Philippe Champagne, Innovation Minister; Judy Trinh, CTV News; ; Glen McGregor, CTV News; ; Greg MacEachern, Liberal Strategist; Fred DeLorey, 2021 Conservative National Campaign Manager; Anne McGrath, NDP National Director; Rachel Aiello, CTV News; Susan Delacourt, the Toronto Star; and Greg Weston, Searchlight Strategy Group.
Clément Weill-Raynal, journaliste, est l'invité de ce RCJ Midi au micro de Laurence Goldmann, pour parler de son livre « Rue Copernic, l'enquête sabotée 1980-2023 », aux éditions L'Artilleur, suite à la réouverture des procès Copernic. À propos du livre : « Rue Copernic, l'enquête sabotée 1980-2023 » paru aux éditions L'Artilleur Au cinéma et dans les séries télé, on appelle ça un cold case : il s'agit d'une enquête qui n'est ni résolue, ni définitivement classée. Le 3 octobre 1980, une bombe d'une très forte puissance explosait devant la synagogue de la rue Copernic à Paris. Quatre personnes furent tuées, des dizaines d'autres blessées. Cet attentat antisémite a suscité une émotion considérable. Pour la première fois en France depuis la fin de la seconde guerre mondiale, des personnes étaient tuées dans un attentat visant la communauté juive. Dans toutes les villes de France, des manifestations de solidarités furent organisées, jurant que la « bête immonde » du néo-nazisme n'aurait pas le dernier mot. Après quarante ans d'enquêtes, les juges français et en particulier le juge Trévidic sont parvenus à identifier le très probable commanditaire et acteur principal. Il se nomme Hassan Diab et militait à l'époque dans un mouvement palestinien radical, le FPLP -OS. Pourquoi, plus de quarante ans après l'attentat, l'affaire n'est toujours pas jugée alors que le nom d'Hassan Diab est apparu dans la procédure dès les années 2000 ? Comment expliquer un tel manque d'empressement et de tels errements dans l'une des plus graves affaires de terrorisme que la France a connue ? C'est l'ambition de ce livre. Clément Weill-Raynal est journaliste, spécialiste des affaires judiciaires. Il est l'auteur d'un document remarqué, "Le fusillé du mur des cons".
C'était le 3 octobre 1980, l'attentat de la rue Copernic. Quatre morts en plein Paris. Une synagogue visée dans une France tranquille qui se croyait à l'abri de toute action terroriste. L'enquête qui va suivre va s'avérer comme l'une des plus incroyable chasse à l'homme de l'histoire policière. Une traque de près de cinquante ans dans le monde entier. Retrouvez tous les jours en podcast le décryptage d'un faits divers, d'un crime ou d'une énigme judiciaire par Jean-Alphonse Richard, entouré de spécialistes, et de témoins d'affaires criminelles. Ecoutez L'heure du Crime du 24 mars 2023 avec Jean-Alphonse Richard.
C'était le 3 octobre 1980, l'attentat de la rue Copernic. Quatre morts en plein Paris. Une synagogue visée dans une France tranquille qui se croyait à l'abri de toute action terroriste. L'enquête qui va suivre va s'avérer comme l'une des plus incroyable chasse à l'homme de l'histoire policière. Une traque de près de cinquante ans dans le monde entier. Retrouvez tous les jours en podcast le décryptage d'un faits divers, d'un crime ou d'une énigme judiciaire par Jean-Alphonse Richard, entouré de spécialistes, et de témoins d'affaires criminelles. Ecoutez L'heure du Crime du 24 mars 2023 avec Jean-Alphonse Richard.
Elias Tarabay remembers Aug. 4, 2020, clearly. He arrived home after having a late lunch with a friend. He was living in Beirut, the capital city of Lebanon. His house had a balcony that looked out at the city's ports. Just as he settled in, he heard a loud explosion. Tarabay was working as an editor for a local newspaper at the time and he thought he would take the video to send back to his office. Then a second large explosion rocked the Beirut port. The explosion killed at least 214 people, according to official records. Thousands were injured. It was one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in history — the result of hundreds of tons of ammonium nitrate igniting after a fire broke out. The explosion tore through the city with such force that it caused a tremor across the entire country that was heard and felt as far away as the Mediterranean island of Cyprus, more than 200 kilometres away. It would soon emerge in documents that the highly combustible nitrates had been haphazardly stored at a port warehouse alongside other flammable material since 2014 — and that multiple high-level officials over the years knew of its presence and did nothing. The event galvanized people to demonstrate in the streets, asking for government accountability and in the days following the explosion, several cabinet members announced their resignation. On Aug. 10, 2020, Beirut's prime minister, Hassan Diab, announced he would be stepping down from his position. On this episode of What happened to …? Erica Vella revisits the days that followed the deadly blast and finds out if anyone has been held accountable. She also learns how Lebanon's economic crisis has made it difficult for the country to rebuild. Contact: Email: erica.vella@globalnews.ca See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Elias Tarabay remembers Aug. 4, 2020, clearly. He arrived home after having a late lunch with a friend. He was living in Beirut, the capital city of Lebanon. His house had a balcony that looked out at the city's ports. Just as he settled in, he heard a loud explosion. Tarabay was working as an editor for a local newspaper at the time and he thought he would take the video to send back to his office. Then a second large explosion rocked the Beirut port. The explosion killed at least 214 people, according to official records. Thousands were injured. It was one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in history — the result of hundreds of tons of ammonium nitrate igniting after a fire broke out. The explosion tore through the city with such force that it caused a tremor across the entire country that was heard and felt as far away as the Mediterranean island of Cyprus, more than 200 kilometres away. It would soon emerge in documents that the highly combustible nitrates had been haphazardly stored at a port warehouse alongside other flammable material since 2014 — and that multiple high-level officials over the years knew of its presence and did nothing. The event galvanized people to demonstrate in the streets, asking for government accountability and in the days following the explosion, several cabinet members announced their resignation. On Aug. 10, 2020, Beirut's prime minister, Hassan Diab, announced he would be stepping down from his position. On this episode of What happened to …? Erica Vella revisits the days that followed the deadly blast and finds out if anyone has been held accountable. She also learns how Lebanon's economic crisis has made it difficult for the country to rebuild. Contact: Email: erica.vella@globalnews.ca See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ottawa academic Hassan Diab was extradited to France 8 years ago to face terrorism charges. He spent 3 years in solitary confinement before French magistrates ruled that there wasn't enough evidence for a trial and released him. Last year, France's court of appeal overturned that decision. Now the French court has set a trial date for next year. We hear reaction from Tim McSorley of the International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group; Jo Wood of the Hassan Diab Support Committee; Alex Neve, formerly of Amnesty Canada, and Rob Currie of Dalhousie University.
Canada's extradition act is under scrutiny. The Meng Wanzhou case raised questions about extradition proceedings that have foreign policy implications. Concerns have also been raised about the wrongful extradition of Dr. Hassan Diab to France in 2014. Two years ago, a group of academics, defence counsel and human rights organizations met at Dalhousie University to discuss Canada's extradition law. Professor Robert Currie joins us to talk about the law reform proposals that came out of that meeting.
In 2008, Hassan Diab was a sociology professor at Carleton University in Ottawa when he was arrested and accused of involvement in the 1980 bombing of a Paris synagogue. After a lengthy extradition hearing, in 2014, Diab was handed over to France where he was imprisoned, largely in solitary confinement, for over 3 years. In 2018, the charges were dismissed and Diab returned to Canada. But his nightmare didn't end there. In January 2021, the French appeals court reversed the dismissal of charges and ordered a new trial. Colin Stuart is with the Hassan Diab Support Committee.
ANN/Groong Week in Review - August 15, 2021Topics:Lebanon in CrisisTaliban Takes Over Afghanistan8th Convocation of the ParliamentDevelopments around ArtsakhGuests:Asbed Kotchikian - twitter.com/AsbedKKatia Peltekian - twitter.com/KatiaPeltekianBenyamin Poghosyan - twitter.com/BeniaminPoghosyanAsbed Kotchikian is an Associate Professor of political science and international relations at the American University of Armenia.Benyamin Poghosyan is the chairman of the Center For Political and Economic Strategic Studies, a Yerevan based think tank. He was deputy director of the Institute for National Strategic Studies at the Ministry of Defense in 2010-2016 and the Vice President for Research, at the National Defense Research University from 2016 to 2019. Katia Peltekian has been teaching at the American University of Beirut since 1988. She has published two books which compile newspaper articles and reports from the Genocide years published in the Canadian and British press. Katia has been compiling news for the Armenian News Network Groong since 1999.Hosts:Hovik Manucharyan - twitter.com/HovikYerevanEpisode 85 | Recorded: August 16, 2021
LIBAN : CRISE INFERNALE, FRANCE IMPUISSANTE - 03/08/21 Invités : HALA KODMANI Journaliste - « Libération » ZIAD MAJED Politologue, spécialiste du Moyen-Orient Professeur à l'Université américaine de Paris ANTHONY BELLANGER Journaliste, spécialiste des questions internationales – « France Inter » CÉCILE HENNION Journaliste - « Le Monde » Spécialiste du Proche-Orient Une déflagration. Ou plutôt deux. C'était il y a tout juste un an, le 4 août 2020, deux terribles explosions dans le port de Beyrouth tuaient plus de 200 personnes et dévastaient la ville. En cause, une réserve de centaines de tonnes de nitrate d'ammonium, stockée depuis des années dans un entrepôt "sans mesures de précaution"avait indiqué le Premier ministre libanais Hassan Diab. Depuis l'enquête s'embourbe, et ni la vérité ni la justice n'ont été rendues. Le traumatisme aujourd'hui ne s'estompe pas au pays du Cèdre, qui vit à présent sa pire crise socio-économique de son histoire et n'a plus de gouvernement depuis des mois. Circonstances du drame floues et aucun responsable mis en cause mais les hypothèses vont pourtant bon train, notamment une d'entre elles qui soupçonne une cargaison destinée au régime syrien. Aucune preuve cependant n'est avancée, ce qui laisse le pays dans le mystère le plus complet. Emmanuel Macron, quant à lui, avait été le premier chef d'état à se rendre sur place après la catastrophe, 48h seulement après les explosions. Et pour le triste anniversaire du drame, il présidera ce mercredi 4 août une conférence internationale avec pour objectif, celui de réunir une aide humanitaire d'au moins 300 millions d'euros. Organisée en visioconférence depuis le fort de Brégançon, avec le secrétaire général des Nation Unies, Antonio Guterres, cette levée de fonds réunissant une quarantaine de dirigeants de pays et d'organisations internationales sera la troisième en douze mois, 257 et 280 millions d'euros avaient été récoltés précédemment. Mais cette nouvelle aide ne sera quoi qu'il en soit toujours pas suffisante. Car les dégâts de l'explosion sont colossaux, estimés à quatre milliards de dollars. Aujourd'hui ce sont aussi les conditions de vie qui s'aggravent de jour en jour dans tout le pays. Car avec l'effondrement de la monnaie - la livre libanaise – de nombreux libanais sont au bord de la famine. Côté sanitaire, une pénurie de médicaments touche aussi le territoire. La banque mondiale parle ainsi d'une des pires crises, économique, sociale et politique, qu'un pays ait connu depuis la fin du XIXè siècle. Alors, que savons-nous de ce qui s'est passé ce 4 août 2020 ? Quel rôle joue Emmanuel Macron dans cette crise ? Quelle issue peut-on y entrevoir ? DIFFUSION : du lundi au samedi à 17h45 FORMAT : 65 minutes PRÉSENTATION : Caroline Roux - Axel de Tarlé REDIFFUSION : du lundi au vendredi vers 23h40 RÉALISATION : Nicolas Ferraro - Pascal Hendrick - Benoît Lemoine - Jean-François Verzele - Jacques Wehrlin PRODUCTION : France Télévisions / Maximal Productions Retrouvez C DANS L'AIR sur internet & les réseaux : - INTERNET : francetv.fr - FACEBOOK : https://www.facebook.com/Cdanslairf5 - TWITTER : https://twitter.com/cdanslair - INSTAGRAM : https://www.instagram.com/cdanslair/
Roger Clark of the Hassan Diab Support Committee and author and human rights academic Monia Mazigh say officials based their case against Diab on problematic evidence. They update TRNN host Eddie Conway about the latest information out of this long-winding case, and why they believe Diab should be freed. Help us continue producing radically independent news and in-depth analysis by following us and making a small donation: Donate: https://therealnews.com/donate-ytSign up for our newsletter: https://therealnews.com/nl-ytLike us on Facebook: https://facebook.com/therealnewsFollow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/therealnews
The French government has renewed its attempts to extradite professor and exonerated terrorism suspect Hassan Diab. In this extended interview, we talk with Roger Clark of the Hassan Diab Support Committee and Monia Mazigh on the latest developments in Diab's case and why it's important to have all eyes on it.Help us continue producing radically independent news and in-depth analysis by following us and making a small donation: Donate: https://therealnews.com/donate-ytSign up for our newsletter: https://therealnews.com/nl-ytLike us on Facebook: https://facebook.com/therealnewsFollow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/therealnews
Hassan Diab’s ordeal began over 12 years ago when France requested his extradition in relation to the bombing of a Paris synagogue in 1980. Hassan was extradited to France in 2014 where he spent 3 years in solitary confinement. Finally French authorities dropped all charges against Hassan Diab, citing lack of evidence, and Diab returned to Canada. Now a French court has said it wants to proceed to trial in his case. Tim McSorley of the International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group says the Canadian government must intervene to prevent a further miscarriage of justice.
Hassan Diab court: Lawyer, England Flooded Home, Jasper Bachelorette Booked, Atwood Gibson Prize and more
Martine Biron, Daniel Thibeault et Raphaël Bouvier-Auclair analysent les événements des scènes politiques provinciale, fédérale et américaine; Pierre Benazet relate comment l’Europe menace l’approvisionnement des vaccins contre la COVID-19 au Canada; Andréanne St-Arnaud présente les nouvelles économiques du jour; le professeur Jacques Roy aborde les effets des restrictions des déplacements sur la chaîne d’approvisionnement; l’intervenante Annie Savage réagit à l’exemption du couvre-feu pour les personnes itinérantes; Lise Bissonnette et Yves Boisvert posent leur regard sur les grands enjeux d’actualité; le journaliste Nafi Alibert explique les détails d’un nouveau rebondissement dans l’affaire Hassan Diab; Sébastien Farcis fait un compte rendu des importantes manifestations d’agriculteurs en Inde; et Robert Frosi fait le point sur l’annulation possible des Jeux olympiques de Tokyo.
De nouveaux vaccins attendus; opération de vaccination pour les 80ans et plus; vaccination des adultes dans le Nord-du-Québec; protocole de priorisation des soins intensifs; flou autour des produits essentiels et non essentiels; procès de la torture en Syrie, à Coblence; demande de procès pour Hassan Diab; itinérants exemptés du couvre-feu; des médecins inquiets au Nouveau-Brunswick; plan de vaccination aux États-Unis; et sondage mondial sur le climat.
"Embora tenha sido dito muitas vezes, de muitas maneiras: Feliz Natal para você"
Mentre il primo ministro libanese uscente, Hassan Diab, e altri ex ministri vengono incriminati per negligenza nell’ambito dell’inchiesta sull’esplosione al porto di Beirut del 4 agosto scorso, il Libano cerca di rialzarsi con enormi difficoltà dovute anche alla pandemia in corso. Ne abbiamo parlato con Nayla Tabbara, cofondatrice e Vice Presidente della Fondazione Adyan in Libano, è stata una delle voci di MED dialogues 2020 organizzati da Ispi e Farnesina. Il Marocco è il quarto stato arabo, in quattro mesi, ad avviare la normalizzazione delle relazioni con Israele, dopo Emirati, Bahrein e Sudan. Nel frattempo Trump ha dichiarato il riconoscimento da parte degli Stati Uniti, della sovranità del Marocco sul Sahara Occidentale. Il Fronte Polisario, in lotta con Rabat nella regione contesa, si fa sentire. Ne abbiamo parlato con Hesham Shawish, giornalista della BBC, esperto di Nord Africa e Medio Oriente, Giuliana Laschi, professoressa di Storia delle Relazioni internazionali alla Facoltà di Scienze Politiche dell'Università di Bologna e Fatima Mahfud, rappresentante del Fronte Polisario in Italia.
Radio interview with Reine Rahhal from MBS radio, about my life, work and politics. the interview took place one month after the demonstrations of the 17th of November took place and 1 day after the nomination of Hassan Diab to form a government.
O novo primeiro-ministro do Líbano é Saad Hariri, o mesmo que renunciou ao cargo um ano atrás, em meio às enormes manifestações populares do país. Desde então, o país já teve Hassan Diab e Mustafa Adib como primeiros-ministros, sem sucesso na estabilização do país, que passa por grandes convulsões econômicas e políticas. A coluna de Tanguy Baghdadi traça os últimos passos do país e mostra as consequências da volta de Saad Hariri ao governo do país. Quer ajudar nosso podcast a se manter cotidianamente? Acesse o nosso site e clique na aba "apoie o Petit": www.petitjournal.com.br
Israël et le Liban ont officiellement entamé la semaine dernière des négociations sur la délimitation de leur frontière maritime. Officiellement, les deux pays sont pourtant toujours en guerre. Mais les enjeux économiques sont importants. Ces eaux frontalières, et actuellement disputées, pourraient être riches en gaz naturel. Dans les locaux de l’ONU à Naqoura sur la frontière entre les deux pays, les négociations entamées mercredi dernier entre Israël et le Liban n’ont qu’« un seul but précis et limité » assure une source au sein du gouvernement israélien : il n’y est pas question d’une normalisation des relations entre les deux pays mais de « résoudre une dispute maritime » sur leur zone économique exclusive. Forages d’exploration L’enjeu est en fait gazier. Les deux pays se disputent depuis dix ans une zone de 860 kilomètres carrés potentiellement riche en hydrocarbures. Le Liban et Israël veulent tous deux lancer des forages d’exploration de leur côté de la frontière. Mais faute de tracé reconnu, toute initiative suscite des tensions. Lorsqu’en juin dernier, Israël a lancé un appel d’offres pour des forages dans le nord, le Premier ministre libanais de l’époque, Hassan Diab, a rapidement rappelé « les droits légitimes (du Liban) dans ses eaux territoriales internationalement reconnues ». Côté israélien, le gouvernement voudrait lancer des explorations dans une zone appelée le bloc 72. Côté libanais, un contrat d’exploration a déjà été donné à un consortium international emmené par Total pour rechercher du gaz dans le « bloc 9 ». Les deux zones sont adjacentes. Facture énergétique Le Liban a entamé fin février ses explorations gazières au large de ses côtes. La première a eu lieu dans le bloc 4, dans le centre de la zone économique exclusive du pays. Mais si la campagne a permis de relever des traces d’hydrocarbures, elle n’a pas mis à jour de gisement. Les espoirs du pays à l’égard de la zone 9 sont donc d’autant plus grands. L’aboutissement de ces négociations serait « une avancée pour les deux peuples » souligne un cadre du ministère israélien de l’Energie, menant les négociations pour la partie israélienne. Mais il affirme que l’intérêt de parvenir à un accord est plus grand encore pour les Libanais. « Si le Liban découvrait un gisement de taille moyenne, cela lui permettrait d’économiser 5 à 6 milliards de dollars par an et de réduire sa facture énergétique » juge cette source. « Ce serait important pour nous aussi » reconnaît-elle, mais souligne qu’Israël fait déjà partie des pays exportateurs de gaz.
Pela segunda vez em menos de um mês, Emmanuel Macron está em Beirute e prometeu uma conferência internacional de ajuda para o Líbano. Toda a ajuda é necessária mas o que é fundamental é um “Estado de Direito”, considera a bissau-guineense, portuguesa e libanesa Rita Dieb que vive em Beirute. Pela segunda vez em menos de um mês, o Presidente de França, Emmanuel Macron, está em Beirute, a cidade que foi devastada a 4 de Agosto por explosões que deixaram, pelo menos, 188 mortos, 6500 feridos e mais de 300 mil desalojados. Emmanuel Macron escolheu uma data simbólica: esta terça-feira é o centenário do Líbano, cujas fronteiras actuais foram proclamadas a 1 de Setembro de 1920 pelo general francês Henri Gouraud. Emmanuel Macron aproveitou o dia para anunciar a realização em Outubro, em Paris, de uma conferência internacional de angariação de fundos para o Líbano. Toda a ajuda é necessária mas o que é fundamental é um “Estado de Direito”,considera a bissau-guineense, portuguesa e libanesa Rita Dieb, que vive em Beirute. "Eu penso que toda a logística é necessária para que possamos fazer face às necessidades que estamos a atravessar a nível material hoje em dia. Mas é óbvio que o mais importante é termos um Estado de Direito porque infelizmente - e aqui tenho de recordar as palavras do nosso ex-primeiro-ministro Hassan Diab que disse que temos um sistema mais forte do que o Estado - e nisso eu concordo. O nosso sistema é muito mais forte que o Estado. O que nós precisamos mesmo é de um Estado, um Estado de Direito, e precisamos de governantes que se preocupem com o seu país, com o seu povo, que cumpram as suas obrigações e que preservem a dignidade do país e do povo", comenta Rita Dieb. Como se sentem os libaneses um mês depois das explosões que destruiram Beirute? "Como estavam antes" mas "com a agravante que o tempo passa" e se continua "sem respostas". "O que é que estava a fazer este material todo no porto, quem são os responsáveis, o que é que aconteceu no dia 4 de Agosto que despoletou estas duas explosões? Estamos todos à espera de respostas e essas respostas ainda não foram obtidas. Com o passar do tempo, se calhar os ânimos estão um bocadinho mais calmos, mas os sentimentos continuam a ser exactamente os mesmos que são os de revolta, luto, perda, dor", descreve. A segunda visita de Emmanuel Macron ao país aconteceu horas depois de Moustapha Adib ter sido nomeado novo primeiro-ministro. Coincidência ou não? "Eu vou abster-me de comentar. Não sei. Pode ter sido coincidência, pode ter sido algo que já estava agendado... Seja lá qual tenha sido o motivo, pelo menos é um passo em frente. Já não estamos naquela inércia em que estávamos há um mês", continua a luso-guineense. Moustapha Adib foi nomeado pelas forças políticas tradicionais, algo que o descredibiliza junto de grande parte da população que aponta a classe política como a responsável pelo estado do país, nomeadamente pelas explosões de 4 de Agosto. Rita Dieb sublinha que, de facto, "o que se pretendia era que fosse um primeiro-ministro que tivesse o voto de confiança também do povo ou, pelo menos, da maior parte do povo". "Mas vamos aguardar e ver e fica a esperança de que seja diferente." Sobre a visita do Presidente francês ao Líbano, Rita Dieb remata: "O senhor Presidente [francês] tinha-nos dito que voltaria mais ou menos por esta altura e cumpriu a sua promessa. Cá está ele e, segundo o que disse, vinha supervisionar o destino dos donativos que tinham sido feitos ao povo libanês, se tinham chegado, se estavam a chegar a quem de direito e que vinha também como apoio. Portanto, olhe, já que não temos tido o apoio por parte dos nossos governantes, agradecemos imenso ao senhor Presidente que assim tenha agido e que continue a cumprir as suas promessas. Pode ser que isso contagie os nossos governantes também."
Nicht ganz zwei Wochen ist es her, seit im Hafen von Beirut 2750 Tonnen Ammoniumnitrat explodierten und Teile von Beirut verwüsteten. Mehr als 6000 Menschen wurden verletzt, über 220 fanden den Tod. Seit der Explosion ist einiges passiert. Tausende protestierten auf der Strasse gegen die Regierung und das libanesische System. Mit Erfolg: Die Regierung unter Hassan Diab trat letzten Montag in corpore zurück. Ist die Regierung Schuld an der Explosion im Hafen? "Ja", meint die Autorin und Politologin Elham Manea. Die Explosion sei eine Verkörperung des Versagens der libanesischen Politik. Weshalb versagt die libanesische Politik? Was wären mögliche Lösungen? Und wie realistisch sind Reformen? Das erfährst du im Podcast. Bildquelle: Freimut Bahlo CC BY-SA 4.0
Bom momento, CACDista! No resumo de notícias desta semana, falaremos sobre: - Meio ambiente: A aprovação do Protocolo de Nagoya pelo Senado brasileiro; - Kamala Harris: Definida a vice de Joe Biden na disputa eleitoral norte-americana; - Cisjordândia: Israel suspende planos de anexação, em histórico acordo com Emirados Árabes Unidos; - Líbano: a renúncia do primeiro-ministro Hassan Diab e a missão brasileira, após a explosão em Beirute; - Afeganistão: libertação de últimos presos do Taliban traz esperanças de avanços no processo de paz; - China X Taiwan: Em resposta a visita oficial norte-americana, Pequim realiza exercícios militares no estreito de Taiwan; - Sputnik V: A primeira vacina contra a Covid-19 registrada no mundo é russa.
A massive explosion ripped through central Beirut on Tuesday, killing dozens of people, injuring thousands and blowing out windows in buildings across the city. The blast near Beirut's port sent up a huge mushroom cloud-shaped shockwave, flipping cars and damaging distant buildings. It was felt as far as Cyprus, hundreds of miles away, and registered as a 3.3 magnitude earthquake in the Lebanese capital. Lebanon's Prime Minister, Hassan Diab, said that 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate, a highly explosive material used in fertilizers and bombs, had been stored for six years at a port warehouse without safety measures, "endangering the safety of citizens," according to a statement. That’s NOT Christian is a podcast by five urban believers who discuss current events and push the envelope on traditional religious subjects with a touch of humor. ►SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/TNC-YT ►Listen to That's NOT Christian Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3tGrB3G... Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... ► Music by Ryan Little INSTAGRAM: http://www.instagram.com/iamryanlittle/ TWITTER: http://twitter.com/iamryanlittle FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/iamryanlittle/ SPOTIFY: https://spoti.fi/2MmjRru ►Follow the Squad ANT: https://www.instagram.com/aptop25/ JAY: https://www.instagram.com/jayacosta/ JIMMY: https://www.instagram.com/jaeisla/ SWITCH: https://www.instagram.com/switch_in_hd/ DISCLAIMER: This video and description may contain affiliate links which allow us to receive a small commission when you click on a product links. This helps support the podcast and allows us to continue to make videos like this. Thank you for the support! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thatsnotchristian/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thatsnotchristian/support
Ouça as principais notícias internacionais desta quarta-feira (12/08/20) no EstadãoSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Maandag werd duidelijk dat de Libanese premier Hassan Diab samen met zijn kabinet terugtreedt. Dit was ook een van de eisen van demonstranten die sinds de hevige explosie van vorige week in de hoofdstad Beiroet roepen om hervorming.Wat betekent deze eerste stap in een land dat doordrenkt wordt door corruptie? Daarover hoor je schrijver van meerdere boeken over Libanon, Martijn van der Kooij.
This week, Nassib Ghobril, head of economic research at Lebanon’s Byblos Bank, and Massoud Derhally, The National's business editor, join host Kelsey Warner to discuss Lebanon's precarious economic future. In this episode: Hassan Diab's resignation (0m 5s) Nassib Ghobril on Lebanon's economic status (1m 13s) Lebanon since the civil war (4m 17s) IMF bailout for Lebanon (6m 39s) The new government and the financial system (12m 31s) What can we expect this year for Lebanon? (16m 09s) Read more on our website: • Beirut explosion to deepen Lebanon's economic contraction to 24%, IIF says (https://www.thenational.ae/business/economy/beirut-explosion-to-deepen-lebanon-s-economic-contraction-to-24-iif-says-1.1061929) • Lebanon's Solidere stocks fluctuate as Beirut bourse resumes trading after explosion (https://www.thenational.ae/business/markets/lebanon-s-solidere-stocks-fluctuate-as-beirut-bourse-resumes-trading-after-explosion-1.1061818) • UN food chief: Beirut could run out of bread in under three weeks (https://www.thenational.ae/world/mena/un-food-chief-beirut-could-run-out-of-bread-in-under-three-weeks-1.1062053)
Este martes 11 de agosto se cumple una semana de la devastadora explosión en Beirut. El pasado 04 de agosto el mundo se estremecía al ver las impresionantes imágenes de una masiva explosión en pleno puerto de la capital del Líbano La confusión se hizo presente, se pensaba en algún tipo de ataque o atentado, pero la realidad da cuenta de un fatal accidente: una explosión de un depósito con 2.750 toneladas de nitrato de amonio almacenadas en forma insegura en la zona del puerto de Beirut, por más de 6 años. Después de varios días de violentas concentraciones callejeras, donde el pueblo exigía la renuncia de las autoridades, este lunes 10 de agosto, Hassan Diab, primer ministro del Líbano, no tuvo más remedio que presentar su dimisión y la de su Gobierno. ¿Qué sucede hoy en Líbano? ¿Qué podrá pasar? César Miguel Rondón aborda el tema junto a Gabriel Ben-Tasgal, @gbentasgal ,periodista especializado en el Medio Oriente y Mohamed Badine El Yattioui, Profesor de Relaciones Internacionales en la Universidad de las América Puebla (UDLAP) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sincodigo/message
Las explosiones que sacudieron a Beirut el martes pasado impactaron al mundo por su potencia y por los numerosos e impresionantes videos que se comenzaron a conocer minutos después de la tragedia. El Líbano vivía su propio estallido social desde octubre del año pasado, que ya había provocado la caída de un gobierno. Ayer, todo el gabinete del primer ministro Hassan Diab, él incluido, presentaron su renuncia. A ellos se unió un grupo de parlamentarios.
Ouça os destaques internacionais desta terça-feira (11/08/20) no EstadãoSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Libanon - ein Land im Aufruhr, nicht erst seit den gewaltigen Explosionen, die den Hafen der Hauptstadt Beirut in Schutt und Asche gelegt haben. Über einhundert Menschen starben, tausende sind verletzt, ein ganzer Stadtteil ist zerstört, hundertausende sind ohne Dach über dem Kopf. Eine Katastrophe mit Ansage, klagen Demonstrierende an. Für sie ist sie ein weiterer Beweis dafür, wie unfähig und korrupt der Libanon seit Jahren regiert wird. Schon vor der Explosion befand sich das Land in einer tiefen Krise. Seit Herbst ist praktisch die ganze Mittelschicht verarmt. Einst wohlhabende Menschen müssen plötzlich Hunger fürchten, es gibt kaum mehr Medikamente und kleine Kinder sterben, weil kein Krankenhaus sie behandelt - und das schon vor Corona. Durch die Explosion spitzt sich die Lage dramatisch zu - in jeder Hinsicht. Gegen Zerstörung, Hunger und menschliches Leid kann internationale Hilfe wirken, 253 Millionen Euro stellt die Weltgemeinschaft bereit und schickt Rettungskräfte. Und was hilft gegen die politische Krise und die Unruhen auf den Straßen? Die Regierung unter Präsident Diab ist zurückgetreten, bleibt aber übergangsweise im Amt - könnten Neuwahlen das Land retten, das früher Hoffnungsträger der Region war?
On today's update, we have the latest coronavirus figures, the UAE is giving those with expired visas one month to leave and news of a fire in a Dubai Duty Free warehouse. We also have the UAE Embassy in Abuja denying Nigerians are being rejected for visas, and we have the latest from Beirut as Hassan Diab resigns plus a report says the government was warned about explosives at the port. Cody Combs joins us for what's trending, including the US secret service, homeschooling and Dubai International Airport.
Asian markets rally, following U.S. stocks into the green with the Hang Seng and Nikkei leading the pack. Investors opt out of the tech sector and move towards cyclical stocks. U.S. lawmakers remain divided over the virus relief package, but Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin tells CNBC that President Trump’s strategy will yield results in reviving the economy. In Lebanon, the government resigns following last week’s massive port explosion and ongoing protests. Outgoing Prime Minister Hassan Diab blames endemic corruption for the tragedy. And German drug developer Curevac hopes to raise $245m to fund a potential Covid-19 vaccine by listing on the Nasdaq.
Neste programa a gente comenta a repercussão da explosão causada por nitrato de amônio na região portuária de Beirute, capital do Líbano, que resultou em pessoas mortas, desaparecidas e desabrigadas. Além da renúncia de todo o gabinete ministerial e do próprio primeiro-ministro, Hassan Diab. O Líbano já enfrentava uma grave crise econômica devido a escândalos de corrução descobertos em 2019, que gerou a crise política e que agravou todos esses fatores após a explosão na região portuária. Pessoas estão indo às ruas contra a corrupção e pedindo mudanças em seu sistema político. Do outro lado do mundo, diversos países se mobilizaram para ajudar o Líbano com dinheiro e mantimentos. Aqui no Brasil, o presidente Jair Bolsonaro, que pouco está preocupado com os 100 mil mortos e a recessão econômica inevitável, se prontificou em ajudar o país, enviando suprimentos médicos e uma equipe técnica capitaneada pelo ex-presidente Michel Temer. Decidimos explicar porque a decisão é controvérsia, o que está em jogo no Líbano e como Bolsonaro usa Temer para melhorar sua imagem diante da classe política. EUA anuncia envio imediato ao Líbano de alimentos e medicamentos: https://www.em.com.br/app/noticia/internacional/2020/08/07/interna_internacional,1174038/eua-anuncia-envio-imediato-ao-libano-de-alimentos-e-medicamentos.shtml Governo oficializa ex-presidente Michel Temer e mais 12 em missão de ajuda ao Líbano: https://g1.globo.com/politica/noticia/2020/08/10/governo-oficializa-ex-presidente-michel-temer-e-mais-12-em-missao-oficial-ao-libano.ghtml Crise no Líbano: após explosão e renúncia do premiê, como fica o país?: https://g1.globo.com/mundo/noticia/2020/08/10/crise-no-libano-apos-explosao-e-renuncia-do-premie-como-fica-o-pais.ghtml Primeiro-ministro libanês Saad Hariri renuncia ao cargo: https://g1.globo.com/mundo/noticia/primeiro-ministro-libanes-saad-hariri-renuncia-ao-cargo.ghtml Apagões, fome e suicídios: o dramático colapso econômico do Líbano: https://veja.abril.com.br/mundo/apagoes-fome-e-suicidios-o-dramatico-colapso-economico-do-libano/ ==================================================================================================================================== Produção: Ponto MP3 (@pontomp3podcast) Roteiro: Lucas Monteiro (@lu_monteir) Locução: Kally Momesso (@v_de_vedete) e Lucas Monteiro Edição: Lucas Monteiro Arte de capa: Thatiane Silva (@thatianexsilva)
Las explosiones que sacudieron a Beirut el martes pasado impactaron al mundo por su potencia y por los numerosos e impresionantes videos que se comenzaron a conocer minutos después de la tragedia. El Líbano vivía su propio estallido social desde octubre del año pasado, que ya había provocado la caída de un gobierno. Ayer, todo el gabinete del primer ministro Hassan Diab, él incluido, presentaron su renuncia. A ellos se unió un grupo de parlamentarios.
Hassan Diab renunciou ao cargo menos de uma semana depois da megaexplosão que matou pelo menos 163 pessoas mortas na capital do país, Beirute.
durée : 00:14:58 - Journal de 18h - Hassan Diab, le Premier ministre , s’apprête à annoncer la démission de l'équipe en place, mais cela ne suffira pas effacer la colère populaire , 6 jours après l’explosion dans le port de Beyrouth;
La periodista libanesa Marcelle Irany habló en Mañanas BLU sobre la ola de sucesos desencadenados en ese país de Medio Oriente tras la grave explosión que dejó por lo menos 160 muertos y 6.000 heridos. La tragedia le dio un golpe de muerte al gobierno del primer ministro, Hassan Diab, quien este lunes dará a conocer la disolución de su gabinete. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
President Trump signs executive orders to extend unemployment assistance after virus stimulus plans collapse between Republican and Democrat lawmakers. Twitter has reportedly made a move for Chinese video app TikTok, which is seeking to sue the Trump administration over the U.S. ban. In Lebanon, Prime Minister Hassan Diab says he will request an early election in a bid to quell ongoing protests following last week’s port explosion in Beirut. And in energy news, Saudi Aramco sees Q2 profits nosedive by 73 per cent, but CEO Amin Nasser says the worst is over, sending shares higher in early trade today.
durée : 00:14:58 - Journal de 18h - Hassan Diab, le Premier ministre , s’apprête à annoncer la démission de l'équipe en place, mais cela ne suffira pas effacer la colère populaire , 6 jours après l’explosion dans le port de Beyrouth;
Nesta edição, Augusto Nunes, José Maria Trindade, Vitor Brown e Guilherme Fiuza mostram como boa parte da mídia usou a marca das 100 mil mortes relacionadas ao coronavírus para atacar o presidente Bolsonaro. O quarteto também comenta uma denúncia do senador Kajuru contra o ministro do STF, Gilmar Mendes. Por fim, o programa debate a situação do Líbano após a renúncia do premiê Hassan Diab. See omnystudio.com/policies/listener for privacy information.
Shugaban majalisar Turai Charles Michel ya kai ziyarar aiki a yau asabar a kasar Lebanon domin jajanta wa al’ummar da ke alhinin mutuwar sama da mutane 150 sanadiyyar wannan fashewa da ta faru a ranar talatar da gabata. A lokacin wannan ziyara, shugaban na majalisar turai ya gana da shugaba Michel Aoun, da shugaban majalisar dokoki Nabih Berri sannan da firaminista Hassan Diab. A cikin shirin mu zagaya Duniya zaku ji halin da ake ciki a wasu kasashen Duniya tareda Garba Aliyu Zaria.
Edificios en ruinas, escombros esparcidos por decenas de kilómetros, unos 140 muertos y miles de heridos es parte del balance que dejaron las explosiones de un cargamento de nitrato de amonio almacenado desde años en uno de los hangares del puerto de Beirut, prácticamente desaparecido. RFI conversó con Manale Isa, activista de la ONG de desarrollo social en el Líbano, PRODES, que vivió en carne propia la tragedia. “Estamos viviendo en una zona muy cercana a la explosión, tenemos la impresión de que estamos en guerra. Yo no viví la guerra civil, pero la gente que la vivió dice que ni siquiera estaba así durante la guerra.” Solidaridad Así empieza el testimonio de Manale Isa, activista de la ONG PRODES en el Líbano, que quedó en estado de shock: “Aquí en la casa podría habernos pasado mucho, porque se destruyó todo, todas las ventanas, con la fuerza de la explosión todo se arrancó de su sitio y saltó volando con fuerza. Tenemos la casa llena de cristales. Yo pienso que la gente en principio necesitará arreglar su casa para poder estar adentro, para tener seguridad”. Con la moral baja arrastrada desde hace meses por la desconfianza política que se vive en el país, los habitantes de Beirut ahora sólo piensan en sobrevivir amparándose en la solidaridad de sus ciudadanos. Muchos jóvenes se movilizan para retirar los escombros o distribuir comidas. En las redes sociales, cientos de individuos ofrecen alojamiento. “La gente no tiene asegurado el futuro” Para Manale Isa, los problemas se multiplican en el Líbano: “Primero la Covid, luego la crisis económica y la devaluación de la lira… La vida está bastante difícil, estamos un poco preocupados por lo que va a venir. La gente no tiene asegurado el futuro, sobre todo los más jóvenes”. “Con la devaluación de la moneda, todo se ha vuelto súper caro. Antes de que pase esto, estábamos buscando cómo sobrevivir en el día a día, entonces con todos estos destrozos, no sé cuánto nos va a costar. La gente, con todo lo que está pasando, y no sé si el Gobierno va a poder hacer algo, está muy enfadada y ha perdido confianza. No sé si esperar mucho de este gobierno o de los políticos actuales”, recalca. Mientras la solidaridad se organiza a nivel interno, la ayuda internacional empieza a llegar. El presidente francés Emmanuel Macron llega a Beirut este jueves, para reunirse con su homólogo libanés Michel Aoun y el primer ministro Hassan Diab.
TRAGEDIA EN LÍBANO. En la tarde de este martes se sucedieron dos explosiones de magnitudes gigantes que devastaron Beirut, capital del Líbano. La segunda explosión fue la que formó una onda expansiva de al menos 10 km. Fue en una zona portuaria donde según el director general de seguridad, Abbas Ibrahim, se almacenaron 2700 toneladas de nitrato de amonio que fueron incautados y que permanecían almacenados en ese lugar. El presidente del país Michel Aoun solicitó ayuda internacional, declaró el estado de emergencia por 2 semanas. El Consejo Superior de Defensa declaró Beirut "zona de desastre". El primer ministro de Líbano, Hassan Diab, dijo que los responsables 'pagarían un precio' por el desastre. Al momento de cerrar la producción del Francoinformador las autoridades siguen investigando las causas al tiempo que reportan más de 70 muertos y miles de heridos. ALERTA NEWS 24 | THE GUARDIAN NARCO DETENIDO Y EXPULSADO DE PARAGUAY. El jefe narco brasileño Fabricio Santos da Silva, alias “Guri” o “Nené”, fue expulsado de Paraguay y entregado a la Policía Federal de Brasil antes del mediodía de este martes. Policías de la Secretaría Nacional Antidrogas (Senad) montaron un operativo para dar con el presunto jefe de la organización criminal Os Manos, de Río Grande do Sul. El apresamiento se realizó en su departamento ubicado en un condominio de Hernandarias, Alto Paraná, a las 6:30 de la mañana. “Guri” cuenta con más de 70 años de condena por diversos crímenes de los que se le acusó en Brasil y tendría el apoyo de la organización criminal del Primer Comando Capital (PCC). UHORA ÁLVARO URIBE CON PRISIÓN DOMICILIARIA. La Corte Suprema de Justicia de Colombia ordenó este martes el arresto domiciliario del expresidente y senador Álvaro Uribe. Uribe está acusado de manipular testigos en un caso que se remonta a una discusión parlamentaria de 2014 en la que el senador izquierdista Iván Cepeda acusó al hermano del expresidente, Santiago Uribe, de ser partícipe de la creación de movimientos antisubversivos en los años 90. En un país donde todos los expresidentes han sido investigados por la justicia, la detención de Uribe marca un hito histórico, y promete un terremoto político, al ser la primera vez que un exmandatario es privado de la libertad. ALVARO URIBE VUELVEN LOS ENTRENAMIENTOS EN ARGENTINA. El Gobierno Argentino acordó este martes con AFA la vuelta a los entrenamientos de fútbol de los clubes de primera a partir del 10 de agosto próximo. "El Gobierno ha autorizado la vuelta a los entrenamientos de los clubes de primera a partir del día 10. Las demás categorías van a ir paulatinamente. Es sólo de los entrenamientos", enfatizó el presidente de la AFA, Claudio "Chiqui" Tapia, al retirarse de Casa Rosada. OLE NO DEFIENDE SU TÍTULO. Rafael Nadal informó en sus redes sociales la decisión de no participar del US Open. De esta manera no defenderá el título que obtuvo el año pasado. Su decisión está relacionada a la crisis sanitaria que atraviesa el planeta debido a la pandemia del coronavirus. El Abierto está programado para disputarse entre el 31 de agosto y el 13 de septiembre a puerta cerrada en el National Tennis Center de Nueva York. Este martes, también se anunció que el Masters 1000 de Madrid previsto entre el 12 y 20 de septiembre no se disputará este año, en concordancia con las recomendaciones del gobierno regional madrileño, que había desaconsejado su celebración por los rebrotes de coronavirus. “ RAFA NADAL HOME OFFICE. Uber anunció que los empleados corporativos tendrán su política de trabajo voluntario desde el hogar extendida hasta junio de 2021. Los empleados corporativos también recibirán un estipendio de $ 500 para organizar su oficina en casa. Uber se une así a una creciente lista de compañías que han extendido sus políticas de trabajo desde el hogar hasta 2021. BUSINESS INSIDER LA CASA DEL JOVEN MANOS DE TIJERA. Los cinéfilos, especialmente los admiradores del director Tim Burton, tienen ahora la oportunidad de ser los propietarios de la casa donde hace 30 años se rodó la famosa película El joven manos de tijera (1990), situada en Lutz (Florida, EU). La casa, que fue pintada para el filme en colores pastel pero hoy luce un color neutro, fue construida en 1989, cuenta con unos mil 434 pies cuadrados de superficie construida (134 metros cuadrados) y se vende por 224 mil dólares, según la lista de la inmobiliaria Zillow. EMOL DISNEY+ ADELANTA SU ARRIBO A LATAM. Noviembre será el mes en el que los consumidores de México y el resto de Latinoamérica podrán tener acceso a Disney+. El canal se lanzó el pasado 12 de noviembre, en un inicio fue para Estados Unidos, Canadá y Holanda, se había anticipado que su despliegue en más mercados sería gradual y se anticipó que México y Latinoamérica estarían en planes, pero hasta 2021. Sin embargo, dado el acelerado crecimiento de la plataforma y el incremento en el consumo de contenidos a través de servicios de streaming a nivel global, deben ser los factores que impulsan a la casa de Mickey Mouse a hacer un ajuste en su estrategia. MILENIO MTV MUSIC AWARDS. La organización de los MTV Video Music Awards que se llevará a cabo el próximo 30 de agosto, ha anunciado los primeros artistas y bandas que se presentarán con su música en la ceremonia de la premiación. Entre los nombres a a resaltar, se encuentra BTS, J Balvin y Doja Cat. Según informó el portal Pitchfork, BTS aprovechará su presentación en vivo para estrenar su próximo tema en inglés Dynamit. En esta nueva edición de los premios, Ariana Grande y Lady Gaga lideran con nueve nominaciones cada una, sin embargo, ninguna de las dos se encuentran entre las nominadas a artistas del año. UNO TV
This show compiled by the Alternative News team and presented by Zachary Doney, CICD member.LOOSE TRANSCRIPT:[presenter signs on]This show will consist of some general news, both domestic and international and then a closer look at a current hot-button topic, that of the South China Sea.General NewsDomestic:An anti-China rally supposedly took place at Martin Place, Sydney with many people waving the Australian flag, holding signs that say “CHINA LIED”. This happened around the same time Black Lives Matter protesters were arrested in Sydney.The Council of Attorneys-General decided there was not enough evidence to raise the age of juvenile detention from 10 years old to 14 years old and has postponed the issue until at least 2021. International:Pyongyang has reported their first suspected coronavirus case and have put their city into lockdown to stop the virus from spreading.Australia has sent a letter to the United Nations declaring that China’s claims on islands in South China Sea are ‘illegal’. Australian politicians have cited the security of South China Sea as one of our interests under ‘Operation Gateway’.Australia has consolidated our alliance with the US at the Australia-US Ministerial talks, but resisted going all the way with the US in their aggression towards China by conducting “freedom-of-navigation exercises” in the South China SeaAustralia promised to continue joint military exercises with the US to pursue their shared national interests in the South China Sea and the Indian Ocean to apparently “deter bad behaviour”. We ask that the militaries of both China and the US stay home.At the talks, Australia and the US also spoke of expanding the US military presence in Darwin and of installing a US-funded military fuel reserve for the American military in the Northern Territory.Mike Pompeo complimented Australia on our new $270 billion defence strategy that makes us what he called an “extremely capable partner of the US” in defending international law.Thousands of workers, peasants, and students mobilised across India in late July against the Modi administration’s neoliberal policies to privatise India’s railways. Many protestors were arrested including Council of Indian Trade Unions cadres and members of the Dakshin Railway Employees’ Union.Vietnam evacuated 80,000 people from the city of Danang after three people tested positive for coronavirus. Most of the people evacuated were local tourists from around Vietnam. Vietnam has been a role model in containing the virus with a total of 446 confirmed cases and 0 deaths.After elections were postponed in Bolivia last week for the third time since the 2019 coup, the Bolivian Workers’ Union, Central Obrera Boliviana, and the organised coca farmers of Cochabama mobilised the people to demand democracy from the interim government. The Bolivian workers’ union told the government that if the decision to postpone elections is not retracted, then the workers will enact a general strike and road blockade nationwide on Monday the 3rd of August.The Census Bureau of America found that almost half the population of the US are facing evictions for not being able to pay rent because of the financial strain coronavirus has put on the country. Millions of people could be forced out of their homes.Early this week, the Israel Defence Force fired into Lebanon to stop an evidence-free “Hezbollah infiltration” attempt along the Blue Line. The IDF fired into a civilian house in Lebanon. Hezbollah claimed that the Israeli army were pre-emptively firing at Lebanon in fear of a Hezbollah retaliation attack after one of their members died in an Israeli air strike in Syria. Hassan Diab, the Lebanese Prime Minister said the incident was a “dangerous military escalation by Israel” and that if escalation continues, it will be an excuse for a push to alter the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon which ends next month. The United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon are conducting research into the incident. South China SeaWe've been hearing a lot about the South China Sea lately. history of area, competing claimsrom the beginning of last century until now the South China Sea has been under dispute by several regional players - China, Vietnam (who call it the East Sea), the Phillippines (who have called it the West Philippine Sea since 2011)Malaysia, Brunei, Indonesia and Taiwan. $3.37tn of trade passes through this region including 40% of the world's LNG. Presumably for this Imperialist think tanks like the Council on Foreign Relations rate the impact of the conflict in the South China Sea on US interests as "critical". Ostensibly to keep this trade moving, though it is not really clear if this is the whole reason, the US prefers to be able to sail weapons platforms around the region and would like to continue to do so. To achieve this aim it relies on the United Nations Convention of the Law Of the Sea. This is a Convention which the United States of America has not ratified.[ title only: explanation of 1982 UNCLOS]After 3 decades of negotiations the United Nations Convention on the Law Of the Sea was signed in 1982 and came into effect in 1994. It establishes various zones around nations and decrees what activities can lawfully occur in those zones in terms of fishing and resource extraction.Under the Convention area of the sea the area of the sea floor which belongs to "everyone" has shrunk from 70% to 43% thanks to claims by countries.UNCLOS does not address sovereignty issues related to the South and East China Seas, and its vague wording has prevented it from serving as a credible body of law in resolving territorial disputes.current situation[who is in disputeevery regional player has some kind of claim to the South China Sea. ]what are they disputing?access to resources, fossil fuels and fisheries. Although it is only estimates there seems to be a huge amount of oil and gas under the seabed. Each claimant to the area is trying to push its sovereignty out into the region to the detriment of other claimants.why is the issue being raised again?this ongoing and complicated dispute is being used to further the domestic political interests of the ruling political class of the United States.We shall return to this point briefly later but as far as this is the case Australia has no business getting involved.[Thankfully an Australian delegation which flew to the coronavirus capital of the world during a global coronavirus pandemic did not commit to participating in so called freedom of navigation operations with the US.]Australia did issue a statement calling China's activities in the South China Sea illegal. As discussed earlier, this illegality is based on a Convention which was written in such a way that it could not be used to solve the dispute in question.There is a huge mess of details in the issue of the South China sea and the US is not interested in solving any of them.The US seems to limit itself to countering Chinese aggression in the region.So what constitutes Chinese aggression?China sees itself as having a valid claim to the South China Sea. The South China Sea is a coastal water of China. Does that then mean that everyone should obey the nine-dash line and Vietnam can't fish in the East Sea anymore? Well… I don't think so but I have some doubts about this Chinese aggression.According to American exceptionalism, the US is the only country that can have interests close to its own borders.It's easy to forget this because the border of the US seems to be everywhere in the entire world. For instance, how did their freedoms get in Syria? China has militarised some reefs -this project seems to have concluded in 2016. Possibly this constitutes aggression. There have been collisions at sea over the years - and also some recent near-misses. These are very serious incidents. Oil spills should not be tolerated.Regional players have been involved in a series of maritime collisions and violations of each others' sovereignty. Disputes over moving oil rigs into Vietnamese waters and disputes over fishing activities in the wrong places and so on.As far as militaries go essentially there is a tit-for-tat series of activities in the sea - China develops the Spratly islands, the US sails warships near the islands, China puts a missile on the islands. What the US views this as escalation, China views this as exercising sovereignty, and so on.what constitutes US/imperialist aggression?Here's a quote from a US news magazine called The Nation: "On July 4, it deployed two nuclear-powered aircraft carriers— the USS Nimitz and the USS Ronald Reagan—along with their accompanying squadrons of cruisers, destroyers, and submarines; joining them was a nuclear-capable B-52 Stratofortress, flown in all the way from Barksdale Air Force Base, La. On July 15, the guided missile destroyer USS Ralph Johnson sailed within 12 nautical miles of Cuarteron Reef and Fiery Cross Reef, two tiny islands converted by the Chinese into military bases. And on July 21, two B-1B supersonic bombers, originally designed to carry nuclear weapons, flew over the South China Sea in yet another demonstration of America’s military prowess."In 2014 the US and Philippines sign a military pact which gives the US higher troop presence in the country and greater access to bases, ports and airfields in the region. For their part in this the Philippines gain a more prolonged taste of the military-industrial jackboot. A taste that we know all too well in Australia.Blaming China for everything going wrong with the world. From the US economy to coronavirus everywhere you turn the demonic apparition of the Chinese Communist Party lurks! OK, what should Australia do?should pursue a genuinely independent foreign policy position on this issueit is correct that we want peace in the SE asian region.we also want the respect of the parties involved if we're speaking out on peace in the regionFor a possible example of how Australia could behave: ‘Vietnam does not pursue a military buildup, but Vietnam pursues protecting our sovereignty, firstly with peaceful measures, diplomatic mea"sures, and even justice measures." VIETNAMESE PRIME MINISTER NGUYEN XUAN PHUCwe should urge against aggression in the region particularly on the part of the US whose neighbourhood it is not.we should call for the demilitarisation of the islands in the south china sea.we should call for the united states to remove its military from the regionwe should call for the US to ratify the UNCLOS. Are we strategically independent, as M Payne insists?We are heading for a big crash, in Australia - in the developed world. JobKeeper and JobSeeker are being reduced as of September and JobKeeper has already been cut to our Early Childhood Educators. Australia’s interests are much more local than those of the US, and US exceptionalism provides a poor model for Australia to emulate. Secretary Pompeo’s chest-beating on China may play well to the US Republican base, but it does nothing to assist Australia in navigating a changing and difficult relationship.Although we aren't participating in the next round of sailing close to the Spratly Islands, we have a long way to go in the battle for our independence. Currently we're being positioned as being able to guide the US in the Asia-Pacific:From a recent Australian Foreign Affaris article: 'Canberra is now in an unusual position – it can make demands of Washington and try to set the terms of the alliance. “Australia has got quite a lot of bargaining leverage with the United States, which we’re not using at the moment,” [Michael] Wesley says. “The United States needs us as it hasn’t needed us for a long time, possibly since the Second World War, and that should be giving us the ability to help shape US strategic thinking in the region.” 'Ashley Townshend from the United States Studies Centre said in a recent ABC article: '"Put simply: the US can no longer uphold a favourable balance of power on its own, which means that likeminded partners such as Australia, Japan and key South-East Asian countries must contribute more purposefully to a multilateral regional military strategy," [Ashley Townshend from the United States Studies Centre] said.'to the extent that this is about more than US domestic policy it is about this.this shows that the US wants to have multi-lateralism in Asia on American terms. This is the role of the minor-imperialists in the region, Japan, South Korea and good old, true blue, fair dinkum Australia. Let's hope we can avoid an absolute catastrophe. The Morrison government wants to invest in a bilateral conversation that will not make any difference to the problems now facing humanity - economic collapse, pandemic and climate change. These problems demand sustained international effort and in that every nation, including China, has a role to play. [presenter signs off]
Cette semaine, Le Monde en question s’intéresse à l’aggravation de la crise politique et économique au Liban. Comment expliquer une telle dégradation et surtout la difficulté à trouver des solutions de sortie de crise ? Le rebond de la crise libanaise s’explique par les effets du confinement, qui a accentué la dégradation de la situation économique et sociale d’un pays qui était déjà au bord de la faillite. Situation qui avait conduit aux grandes manifestations de l’automne dernier, quand des dizaines de milliers de Libanais étaient descendus dans les rues pour dénoncer, non seulement l’incurie de dirigeants incapables de régler la crise financière et économique du Liban, mais aussi un système politique à bout de souffle, rongé par la corruption et par un jeu d’équilibre devenu inopérant entre les différentes confessions du pays, musulmans chiites, musulmans sunnites et chrétiens. Entamée en octobre dernier, ce que les protestataires appellent la « thawra » - la révolution -, a entraîné le départ du Premier ministre sunnite Saad Hariri, fin décembre, et l’arrivée aux affaires d’une personnalité plus neutre, plus technicienne, Hassan Diab. Ce dernier s’est engagé à mettre en œuvre les réformes économiques, sociales et politiques dont le Liban a cruellement besoin. Mais voilà : six mois après sa nomination, les réformes tardent, et les manifestations ont repris dès la fin du confinement. Pour sa défense, Hassan Diab explique qu’il a du mal à concrétiser ses réformes, faute d’un soutien suffisant et sincère de l’ensemble des partis politiques. Et de fait, on sent bien que les calculs partisans sont en train de reprendre le dessus, et avec eux les antagonismes confessionnels qui ont mené le Liban à la guerre civile entre 1975 et 1990. Pour schématiser, on peut dire que les partisans de Saad Hariri, le clan sunnite pour aller vite, estiment qu’ils ont été un peu les dindons de la farce à l’automne dernier. Et que Hassan Diab, qui se dit apolitique, est en fait un homme de paille qui œuvre pour les clans chiite et chrétien. De fait, il est vrai que monsieur Diab est soutenu par deux formations chiites : le très puissant Hezbollah et le parti Amal, et par la droite chrétienne dont est issu le président libanais Michel Aoun. Et l’ambiance politique devient délétère. Les reproches mutuels se multiplient entre les partisans de Hassan Diab. Ils accusent la famille Hariri de tout faire pour saboter les réformes en cours. De leur côté, les pro-Hariri estiment que le Hezbollah profite de la crise actuelle pour accroître son emprise sur le pays et le replacer sous l’influence du régime syrien. Et pendant ce temps, la crise sociale devient explosive avec un taux de pauvreté qui concerne désormais un Libanais sur deux, la livre libanaise qui s’effondre, et la dette publique qui atteint 170% du PIB.
On today's update we have the latest coronavirus figures, clarification of the quarantine period for those returning to Dubai and Umm Al Quwain closes its beaches. Abraaj's former CEO alleged to have taken $385 million from the firm and Hassan Diab alleges his opponents are fuelling the unrest in Lebanon. Jason Von Berg joins us for what's trending.
Crise politique au liban "Malheureusement, l’État est aujourd’hui dans un état de faiblesse aux limites du handicap, et le pays traverse une étape très difficile. Les Libanais sont préoccupés par leur présent et leur avenir, et la peur s’étend face à la situation financière, aux conditions économiques, à la réalité sociale et aux conditions de vie, pour atteindre les préoccupations sanitaires urgentes." C'est en ces termes que le premier ministre libanais Hassan Diab décrivait la situation du Liban au corps diplomatique en ce 1er mars [Source : Libnanews, le 02/03/2020]. La contestation des Libanais Une situation des plus préoccupantes qui perdure depuis des mois. La constitution d'un nouveau gouvernement multiconfessionnel, le 21 janvier dernier, n'a pas rassuré la société libanaise qui continue de manifester. Des manifestations parfois réprimées violemment par un gouvernement de sauvetage à la tête d'un pays exsangue. La contestation des Libanais secoue le pays depuis octobre 2019. Ils dénoncent une classe politique corrompue responsable de la faillite du pays. Dimanche dernier, la cible de ces manifestations était les établissements bancaires. La tentative de réconciliation du gouvernement avec son peuple a t-elle des chances d'aboutir alors que le pays sombre dans la pauvreté et la crise financière et économique ?
An einen politischen Neuanfang im Libanon glaubt kaum ein Demonstrant. Auch die Regierung von Hassan Diab wird von der alten Elite gestützt. Doch könnten Leid und Wut der Menschen in dem gespaltenen Land ein neues Wir-Gefühl entstehen lassen. Von Julia Neumann www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Weltzeit Hören bis: 19.01.2038 04:14 Direkter Link zur Audiodatei
Black range rovers and luxury vehicles slowly navigated through Beirut’s protest filled streets. Angry mobs hurled rocks and other debris at the occupants and Lebanon’s political leaders trying to block them from entering the now heavily fortified parliament. On February 11, twelve weeks after Hassan Diab was tasked with forming a new government, MPs gave his administration the vote of confidence. For nearly five months, mass protests have paralysed the country as people demand a new type of government that can work to fix the worst economic crisis in Lebanon’s history. Host Willy Lowry talks to The National’s Beirut correspondent Sunniva Rose and Ghassan Moukhaiber, a lawyer and former Member of Parliament about the protests and how the newly formed government can move forward. We also hear from Imad Salamey, a professor of Political Science and International Affairs at the Lebanese American University and Sami Nadr, director of the Levant Institute for Strategic Affairs.
durée : 00:03:13 - Les Histoires du monde - par : Anthony BELLANGER - Le nouveau Premier ministre libanais s'installe au Grand Sérail, sa résidence officielle. Un palais somptueux mais "bunkerisé" alors que la rue gronde toujours.
durée : 00:11:10 - Les Enjeux internationaux - par : Julie Gacon - Le nouveau gouvernement de Hassan Diab s’est réuni en Conseil des ministres la semaine dernière. Après la démission de Saad Hariri sur la pression de la rue, la tâche qui incombe en premier lieu à ce nouveau cabinet est d’éviter la faillite. Entretien avec l'économiste Samir Aïta. - réalisation : Mydia Portis-Guérin - invités : Samir Aïta économiste, rédacteur en chef et directeur général de l’édition arabe du Monde Diplomatique, président du Cercle des économistes arabes, directeur général de A Concept/Mafhoum, une société de conseil en économie et technologies de
Desta preoccupazioni il caso del virus cinese, il Coronavirus che ha fatto salire la tensione anche in Europa dopo qualche caso sospetto mentre il nostro paese ha assistito alle dimissioni dalla carica di capo politico del Movimento 5 stelle del giovane leader Luigi Di Maio, la Corte di Cassazione ha ammesso la proposta di referendum confermativo depositata lo scorso 10 gennaio contro il taglio del numero dei parlamentari italiani, prima donna presidente della Repubblica per la Grecia con l'elezione Katerina Sakellaropoulou, uno sguardo alla protesta in Libano in atto ormai da mesi anche dopo la formazione del nuovo governo guidato da Hassan Diab e infine per chiudere una panoramica sul mondo del calcio con la nostra rubrica sportiva, con gli aggiornamenti sulla serie A e non solo... in studio Antonio Arceri, Simone Gorlero, Vincenzo Muscia e Gaia Bordoli. Seguiteci su Facebook, Instagram e Twitter.
After more than three months of protests, Lebanon's politicians agreed on a new government. But this has done little to ease anger on the streets after three months of mass uprisings. Hassan Diab announced the formation of his 20-member government on Tuesday and vowed to get to work on fixing the country's mounting problems. Lebanon faces a huge economic crisis – debt has topped $85 billion, growth is flat, unemployment is rising and the currency has lost nearly 40 per cent of its value in the past three months. On this week's Beyond the Headlines, The National's Willy Lowry reported from the tear gas-filled streets of Beirut. He spoke to young people angry at what they've called Mr Diab's "one-colour" government. We also spoke to Nasser Saidi, a former Lebanese economy minister and former vice governor of the central bank of Lebanon. He laid out plainly the scale of the crisis and his recommendations of what the new government should do. Previous coverage of the Lebanon protests: https://www.thenational.ae/podcasts/beyond-the-headlines/beyond-the-headlines-politics-protests-and-partying-on-the-streets-of-lebanon-1.927718 Bonus Episode: https://www.thenational.ae/podcasts/beyond-the-headlines/beyond-the-headlines-the-musicians-contributing-to-the-lebanese-protests-1.928328
durée : 00:04:59 - Déjà debout - par : Mathilde MUNOS - Paul Jacquet Vous vit au Liban depuis un an, où il travaille dans une ONG gouvernementale. Il participe au mouvement de contestation libanais. Le nouveau Premier ministre Hassan Diab a enfin annoncé hier soir la composition de son gouvernement. Est-ce que les manifestants attendaient ?
Ben and Nizar are back for season three! Episode 68 kicks off 2020 with analysis on the appointment of PM-designate Hassan Diab and the reasons behind the delay in forming a government, the assassination of Soleimani from a Lebanese perspective, and how Hezbollah used the situation to their advantage, the return of not so prodigal son Carlos Ghosn, the deteriorating financial situation, and renewed protests in Lebanon taking aim at the banks. NB: Recorded prior to the violence at the weekend. Music track: Zuhal by Elepheel, check out his other work @elepheel
*)At least 3 killed in India protests At least three people were killed in protests against a controversial citizenship law in India. Demonstrations are taking place in at least 15 cities, despite a ban. The law gives migrants fleeing persecution from neighbouring Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh an easier path to citizenship, but Muslims are excluded. *)Unclarity over next move in Trump impeachment It's still unclear what will come next in President Donald Trump's political future. He's the third president in US history to be impeached and has been charged with abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. The Republican-controlled Senate has been asked to call more witnesses, but it’s likely that Trump will be acquitted. *)Russian FSB agent killed in Moscow A Russian FSB officer was shot and killed at the intelligence agency's headquarters in Moscow. FSB says the attacker was also killed. The motive for the attack is being investigated. *)Protests continue despite new PM in Lebanon Anti-government protests in Lebanon continue despite the announcement of a new prime minister. Former education minister Hassan Diab was nominated by a majority of lawmakers. He takes over as the country is going through its worst economic crisis since its civil war. And finally, *)Final Star Wars movie hits theatres The final installment of the Star Wars saga hits theatres this weekend. Hardcore fans have been camping out days ahead of its release in Hollywood. The global phenomenon has delighted generations of moviegoers for more than 40 years.
Canadian academic Hassan Diab was extradited to France five years ago on the basis of unreliable, unsourced intelligence. He spent three years in a French jail before he was finally released and returned home to Canada. Hassan Diab and his supporters are calling for a full public inquiry to find out what went wrong in his case. They also want to see significant changes to Canada’s Extradition Act to make sure that this doesn’t happen to another Canadian. We speak with Bessa Whitmore from the Hassan Diab Support Committee.
Canadian academic Hassan Diab was extradited to France five years ago on the basis of unreliable, unsourced intelligence. He spent three years in a French jail before he was finally released and returned home to Canada. Hassan Diab and his supporters are calling for a full public inquiry to find out what went wrong in his case. They also want to see significant changes to Canada’s Extradition Act to make sure that this doesn’t happen to another Canadian. We speak with Bessa Whitmore from the Hassan Diab Support Committee.
In 2007, Hassan Diab was an unassuming sociology lecturer at Carleton University, when he was suddenly told French authorities were investigating him for committing a terrorist act in Paris in 1980. Diab has always claimed innocence — but the revelation was just the beginning of an 12-year ordeal, including a lengthy court case, extradition to France and three years spent in prison. An external review was ordered into his case, but Diab and his legal team are less than satisfied with its findings. On Front Burner, CBC senior reporter David Cochrane breaks down one of the most intensely fought extradition cases in Canadian history.
In the course of practicing for over 40 years, Donald Bayne has entrenched himself as one of the best criminal defence lawyers Canada has ever known. Despite this, his humility, compassion for human suffering, and pursuit of justice is as vibrant as it was when he first became a lawyer. Don's remarkable journey in his [...]
Hassan Diab is an Ottawa academic who was extradited to France to face terrorism charges in the 1980 bombing of a Paris synagogue. He was never brought to trial, spending more than three years in detention in a French jail. French investigative judges repeatedly ordered his release only to be overturned by French prosecutors. When Diab was finally released in January this year, French prosecutors appealed his release. On October 26, the French Court of Appeal delayed a decision on the case and ordered a fresh review of evidence. We speak with Hassan Diab from his home in Ottawa.
Hassan Diab is an Ottawa academic who was extradited to France to face terrorism charges in the 1980 bombing of a Paris synagogue. He was never brought to trial, spending more than three years in detention in a French jail. French investigative judges repeatedly ordered his release only to be overturned by French prosecutors. When Diab was finally released in January this year, French prosecutors appealed his release. On October 26, the French Court of Appeal delayed a decision on the case and ordered a fresh review of evidence. We speak with Hassan Diab from his home in Ottawa.
Hassan Diab no está de acuerdo con la propuesta del Gobierno canadiense. Según la carta de su abogado Bayne, él cuestiona el hecho de que Segal no evaluará las leyes de extradición de Canadá y será la única persona autorizada a interrogar a testigos o ver documentos relacionados con el caso.
Special Note: Emile Taman and Michael Spratt have both been nominated for Canada's top 25 most influential lawyers: vote for them here!Is it a criminal offence to lick an opponent during a hockey game? After Boston Bruins forward Brad Marchand licked Tampa Bay Lightning's Ryan Callahan during a play off game this is a burning issue. So, Emilie and I dive into the law around consent fights and look at fighting in sport. Why can someone consent to bodily harm on the ice but not off it? What is the legal standard for proving an assault? And when is a lick a sexual assault?But we lead off the episode on a much more important topic - the tragic case of Hassan Diab who was order extradited to France for his alleged role in the bombing of a Paris synagogue. The evidence was weak and a secret government memo uncovered by the CBC reveals that Canada helped France patch up its case and actively withheld evidence that could have shown Diab's innocence.Diab never did face trial in France. After 38 months of solitary confinement in a French dungeon, after missing the birth of his daughter, after losing years of his life, Diab was released and all charges were dropped by a French judge.Emile and I discuss why Diab should never had been extradited in the first place and why the Canadian judge did not have the power to throw out a shockingly weak case.And we end with a short conversation about the Toronto van attack and why there have been no terrorism charges.
Considering the lack of reporting by corporate media on the state of Civil Liberties in Canada, you could assume things are just fine. But that is all it would be - an assumption. A carefully crafted one that has been molded since Day One of the Trudeau government. Remember how the Liberals would "fix the problematic elements" of Harper's C-51? As we near three years of the mandate, C-59 is crawling its way through Parliament doing pretty much what C-51 did. Ignoring evidence, voting down amendments, not listening to testimony or case study from around the world where such laws have failed before. But fear not, Minister of Public Safety Ralph Goodale says All Is Well. LOL it most certainly is not. Hassan Diab is a Canadian citizen, professor, husband and father. He has spent the last decade being the subject of a wild goose chase by France for a terror attack decades ago. He spent 38 months of near solitary confinement in a French prison, without being charged with anything. This year, a French judge finally threw the case out and ordered Diab returned to his family in Canada. But how could this happen? Where would such falsely incriminating evidence come from? Why would it waste a decade of his life? Well...ask the Canadian Department of Justice. They were the ones who lied, obstructed and denied his rights as he was extradited to France. RightsCon is coming to Toronto in a week. Over 2000 participants from more than 140 countries, delivering nearly 300 sessions with participation from over 700 governments, NGOs and corporations. Everything about what is coming for rights, technology, connectivity and the risks involved. The ICLMG will be part of it, and National Co-ordinator Tim McSorley returns to The View Up Here to discuss RightsCon, the Diab travesty and his recent days of live-tweeting C-59 in Committee. Know the State of your Rights, Canada.
Medici e abitanti di Douma: “E’ stato una messinscena dei Caschi Bianchi” Giovedi' 26 aprile, L'Aja, quartier generale dell'OPAC. 17 testimoni siriani danno la loro versione dei fatti in una conferenza stampa sul presunto attacco chimico del 7 aprile a Douma. Tutti concordano nel dire che non c'e' stato alcun attacco e che il video trasmesso dai Caschi Bianchi, usato come pretesto per il bombardamento a guida USA del 14 aprile, era una messinscena. Presenti anche Hassan Diab, il bambino di 11 anni che si vede nel video e il padre. "Mio figlio ha sentito le grida di qualcuno che incitava ad andare in ospedale. C'era fuoco e fumo nelle strade. I bambini sono stati portati in ospedale senza chiedere il consenso ai genitori. Degli sconosciuti hanno iniziato a gettare acqua fredda su di loro." Il resoconto e' stato confermato sia dai medici e paramedici del pronto soccorso di Douma che dai residenti accorsi. Le uniche cure offerte sono state per intossicazione da fumo e soffocamento, ma non per conseguenze da attacco chimico. A fine sessione, l'ambasciatore russo all’OPAC, Aleksandr Shulgin, ha dichiarato: "Gli USA e il Regno Unito hanno usato una logica assurda affidandosi a gente che non esiste e ai social networks. Oggi noi abbiamo portato persone reali a testimoniare presso la comunita' internazionale e abbiamo provato che il presunto attacco fu soltanto una provocazione dei Caschi Bianchi. Allo stesso tempo, non permetteremo altre operazioni false flag né ulteriori operazioni militari contro la Siria." USA, Francia e Regno Unito hanno boicottato la conferenza stampa, definendola "una finta, una mascherata oscena".Gli USA restano in Siria Ieri, giovedi' 26 aprile, dal Dipartimento della Difesa USA , James Mattis fa sapere che gli Stati Uniti non si ritireranno dalla Siria come annunciato da Trump, ma espanderanno la loro presenza. Tuttavia garantisce che "nessuna soluzione militare e' possibile per il conflitto siriano". Inoltre ha assicurato: "Verranno mantenute comunicazioni con le forze russe, per non creare confusione nella comune battaglia contro l'Isis". Nel frattempo, le autorita' siriane continuano le operazioni sul campo: sequestrate mercoledi' 25 aprile 90.000 pastiglie di Captagon, considerata "la droga dei jihadisti", sostanza psicotropa che abbassa la soglia di dolore e provoca euforia.Penisola coreana: Inizia l'era della pace? "Dichiariamo solennemente davanti a 80 milioni di persone di tutto il mondo che non ci sara' piu' guerra nella penisola coreana e che una nuova era di pace e' iniziata”. Questa la dichiarazione congiunta del presidente sudcoreano Moon Jae-in e del leader della Corea del Nord, Kim Jong-un. Un incontro storico. In un gesto altamente simbolico, Kim Jong-un ha preso per mano il presidente sudcoreano per varcare il confine insieme. Sul tavolo, la completa denuclearizzazione dell'isola, nonche' la graduale riduzione delle armi convenzionali e uno stop a tutte le ostilita', comprese azioni militari. A breve il coinvolgimento anche di Stati Uniti e Cina, finche' si passera' formalmente dall'armistizio in vigore dal 1953 a un vero e proprio trattato di pace. L'incontro fra Trump e Kim e' previsto fra maggio e giugno, mentre i colloqui fra alti gradi dell'esercito nord e sud coreani si terranno a fine maggio. I negoziati prevedono anche misure umanitarie, come la riunione delle famiglie divise fra le due Coree, per le quali i due leaders hanno promesso un grande evento il 15 di agosto, in occasione del giorno della Liberazione. Giordania: Misure restrittive ai profughi palestinesi Il regno di Giordania ha iniziato il processo di revoca della cittadinanza a 30 autorita' palestinesi e membri di Al Fatah, compreso il presidente dell'Autorita' Palestinese Mahmoud Abbas e i suoi due figli. Lo riporta il giornale londinese in lingua araba Raialyoum. Misure restrittive saranno prese per i funzionari palestinesi in entrata, a cui verranno assegnati dei visti temporanei. Secondo il quotidiano Al-Quds Al-Arabi, la cittadinanza non venne offerta dalla Giordania, ma bensi' richiesta dai leaders palestinesi piu' di dieci anni fa. Le autorita' giordane non rifiutarono per non creare imbarazzo diplomatico. Le motivazioni dell'attuale mossa sono al momento sconosciute, mossa che però arriva in un momento altamente critico per la Palestina. In Giordania vivono piu' di due milioni di profughi palestinesi su una popolazione totale di 9 milioni. Nel frattempo, a Gaza si sono celebrati i funerali del secondo giornalista morto in seguito ai proiettili dei soldati israeliani. Ahmed Abou Hussein aveva 25 anni. Ferito il 13 aprile all'addome, non ha ricevuto le cure ospedaliere adeguate a causa di rallentamenti provocati dalle autorita' israeliane ed e' deceduto mercoledi' 25 aprile.
Medici e abitanti di Douma: “E’ stato una messinscena dei Caschi Bianchi” Giovedi' 26 aprile, L'Aja, quartier generale dell'OPAC. 17 testimoni siriani danno la loro versione dei fatti in una conferenza stampa sul presunto attacco chimico del 7 aprile a Douma. Tutti concordano nel dire che non c'e' stato alcun attacco e che il video trasmesso dai Caschi Bianchi, usato come pretesto per il bombardamento a guida USA del 14 aprile, era una messinscena. Presenti anche Hassan Diab, il bambino di 11 anni che si vede nel video e il padre. "Mio figlio ha sentito le grida di qualcuno che incitava ad andare in ospedale. C'era fuoco e fumo nelle strade. I bambini sono stati portati in ospedale senza chiedere il consenso ai genitori. Degli sconosciuti hanno iniziato a gettare acqua fredda su di loro." Il resoconto e' stato confermato sia dai medici e paramedici del pronto soccorso di Douma che dai residenti accorsi. Le uniche cure offerte sono state per intossicazione da fumo e soffocamento, ma non per conseguenze da attacco chimico. A fine sessione, l'ambasciatore russo all’OPAC, Aleksandr Shulgin, ha dichiarato: "Gli USA e il Regno Unito hanno usato una logica assurda affidandosi a gente che non esiste e ai social networks. Oggi noi abbiamo portato persone reali a testimoniare presso la comunita' internazionale e abbiamo provato che il presunto attacco fu soltanto una provocazione dei Caschi Bianchi. Allo stesso tempo, non permetteremo altre operazioni false flag né ulteriori operazioni militari contro la Siria." USA, Francia e Regno Unito hanno boicottato la conferenza stampa, definendola "una finta, una mascherata oscena".Gli USA restano in Siria Ieri, giovedi' 26 aprile, dal Dipartimento della Difesa USA , James Mattis fa sapere che gli Stati Uniti non si ritireranno dalla Siria come annunciato da Trump, ma espanderanno la loro presenza. Tuttavia garantisce che "nessuna soluzione militare e' possibile per il conflitto siriano". Inoltre ha assicurato: "Verranno mantenute comunicazioni con le forze russe, per non creare confusione nella comune battaglia contro l'Isis". Nel frattempo, le autorita' siriane continuano le operazioni sul campo: sequestrate mercoledi' 25 aprile 90.000 pastiglie di Captagon, considerata "la droga dei jihadisti", sostanza psicotropa che abbassa la soglia di dolore e provoca euforia.Penisola coreana: Inizia l'era della pace? "Dichiariamo solennemente davanti a 80 milioni di persone di tutto il mondo che non ci sara' piu' guerra nella penisola coreana e che una nuova era di pace e' iniziata”. Questa la dichiarazione congiunta del presidente sudcoreano Moon Jae-in e del leader della Corea del Nord, Kim Jong-un. Un incontro storico. In un gesto altamente simbolico, Kim Jong-un ha preso per mano il presidente sudcoreano per varcare il confine insieme. Sul tavolo, la completa denuclearizzazione dell'isola, nonche' la graduale riduzione delle armi convenzionali e uno stop a tutte le ostilita', comprese azioni militari. A breve il coinvolgimento anche di Stati Uniti e Cina, finche' si passera' formalmente dall'armistizio in vigore dal 1953 a un vero e proprio trattato di pace. L'incontro fra Trump e Kim e' previsto fra maggio e giugno, mentre i colloqui fra alti gradi dell'esercito nord e sud coreani si terranno a fine maggio. I negoziati prevedono anche misure umanitarie, come la riunione delle famiglie divise fra le due Coree, per le quali i due leaders hanno promesso un grande evento il 15 di agosto, in occasione del giorno della Liberazione. Giordania: Misure restrittive ai profughi palestinesi Il regno di Giordania ha iniziato il processo di revoca della cittadinanza a 30 autorita' palestinesi e membri di Al Fatah, compreso il presidente dell'Autorita' Palestinese Mahmoud Abbas e i suoi due figli. Lo riporta il giornale londinese in lingua araba Raialyoum. Misure restrittive saranno prese per i funzionari palestinesi in entrata, a cui verranno assegnati dei visti temporanei. Secondo il quotidiano Al-Quds Al-Arabi, la cittadinanza non venne offerta dalla Giordania, ma bensi' richiesta dai leaders palestinesi piu' di dieci anni fa. Le autorita' giordane non rifiutarono per non creare imbarazzo diplomatico. Le motivazioni dell'attuale mossa sono al momento sconosciute, mossa che però arriva in un momento altamente critico per la Palestina. In Giordania vivono piu' di due milioni di profughi palestinesi su una popolazione totale di 9 milioni. Nel frattempo, a Gaza si sono celebrati i funerali del secondo giornalista morto in seguito ai proiettili dei soldati israeliani. Ahmed Abou Hussein aveva 25 anni. Ferito il 13 aprile all'addome, non ha ricevuto le cure ospedaliere adeguate a causa di rallentamenti provocati dalle autorita' israeliane ed e' deceduto mercoledi' 25 aprile.
Hassan Diab, a young boy from Douma, Syria didn't know he was being recruited for a "chemical attack" video that was made by some local rebels, and, that went viral. The US, UK and France used this type of evidence to justify a military strike on Syria. Evgeny Poddubny, a war correspondent from Russian broadcaster VGTRK, found the boy in the video. Hassan's "story differed from the one presented by the activists and later propagated by the mainstream media. He was in the basement with his mother, who said they ran out of food, when they heard some noise outside. 'Somebody was shouting that we had to go to the hospital, so we went there. When I came in, some people grabbed me and started pouring water over my head,' he told Evgeny Poddubny...Hassan confirmed that he was the boy in the video, and was very scared when the whole situation unfolded. He is now fine and shows no symptoms of having experienced a chemical attack two weeks ago." This 2 minute video should lead any honest observer to question the US government's policy of shooingt first and asking questions later. References: "Boy in Douma ‘Chem Attack’ Video Says He Was Lured With Cookies, Then Sprayed With Water,"The search for truth in the rubble of Douma – and one doctor’s doubts over the chemical attack" by Robert Fisk of the Independent, "Must See Report on Syria War by FOX Newsman, Tucker Carlson," "Former UK Ambassador Reveals Truth About Syria" interview by Ron Paul.
Hassan Diab’s ordeal began more than 9 years ago when the French government said it had evidence he was involved in the 1980 bombing of a Paris synagogue. He was extradited to France in 2014 and spent 3 years in solitary confinement. On January 15, he arrived back in Canada after French judges said there wasn’t enough evidence to proceed with a trial. Paul Tetrault is a retired lawyer and board member of the B.C. Civil Liberties Association.
Accusé pour l'attentat de la rue Copernic à Paris, en 1980, le Canado-libanais Hassan Diab est innocenté et libéré par la justice française : entrevue avec son avocat, Me William Bourdon ; Shithole : Les propos du président des États-Unis sèment l'émoi : on en discute avec le correspondant du Figaro à Washington, Philippe Gélie ; Qu'est-ce qui change sur votre fil Facebook? avec le chroniqueur Jeff Yates ; Joé Juneau revient sur une étude qui louange son défunt programme de hockey dans le Nunavik ; Première entrevue du nouveau Commissaire aux conflits d'intérêts et à l'éthique du Canada : Mario Dion change d'approche.
In episode #98 of Talking Radical Radio (January 14, 2015), I speak with Donald Pratt and Peter Gose. They are members of Justice for Hassan Diab, the support committee that has been working to defend a wrongfully accused Ottawa academic who has been struggling against a Kafkaesque legal nightmare since 2008. Diab was extradited to France in November, but he and his support committee continue to fight. For a more detailed description of this episode, go here: http://talkingradical.ca/2015/01/14/radio-unjustly-extradited-still-fighting-justice-for-hassan-diab/
This is a 3-part podcast series on the case of Hassan Diab, a Lebanese-Canadian sociology professor extradited from Canada and currently in a French jail, accused of a bombing that happened in Paris in 1980. Part 1 looks at the bombing of the synagogue at Rue Copernic in 1980 – the turn French investigators made … Continue reading "The Case of Hassan Diab: a 3-part podcast series"