Brazilians demand rejection of Israel's pick for ambassador
Brazilian organizations and lawmakers have signed a petition, condemning Israel's designation of a former head of the regime’s main settler organization as its next ambassador to the South American country.
Forty leading organizations and a few members of the parliament have sent the petition to Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff,asking the administration to reject the appointment of Dani Dayan, the former head of the Yesha Council,Israeli news website Ynet reported on Tuesday.
The petition slams the appointment as a "violation of the international legitimacy and sovereignty of Brazil," and an "attack on Brazilian diplomacy."
Like the UN and most countries across the globe, Brazil regards the Israeli settlements as illegal because the territories were captured by Tel Aviv in a war in 1967 and are hence subject to the Geneva Conventions, which forbid construction on occupied lands.
More than half a million Israelis live in over 120 illegal settlements built since Israel’s occupation of the Palestinian territories of the West Bank including East al-Quds (Jerusalem) in 1967.
Based on diplomatic protocols, once Dayan's appointment is officially confirmed by Israel, the Brazilian government will be sent a request to endorse the decision as well.
Brasilia reserves the right to reject the ambassador although it is an unusual move.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced Dayan's appointment three weeks ago. The 59-year-old politician served as the chairperson of the Yesha Council from 2007 to 2013.
Clashes broke out on Tuesday between police and hundreds of demonstrators rallying in Beirut. The violence follows large rallies held over the last three days, where hundreds of protestors have been injured.
Unrest broke out at a migrant reception center in Hungary on Wednesday as police struggled to deal with an influx of refugees arriving from Serbia. Local television showed tear gas being fired.
Police rounded up 300-400 migrants at the border area of Roszke and addressed them through megaphones, according to a Reuters reporter at the scene.
Dozens of migrants crossed over to Hungary on Wednesday, underneath a border fence set up by authorities to keep them out of the country, AP reported.
"We raised the fence and crossed it now. We were here from yesterday. We are now without, we are very hungry, there's no food, there's no medicine for children, there's nothing. We are so tired, frankly," said Odei, a Syrian refugee from Daraa.
A total of 1,300 migrants were detained on Wednesday, according to Reuters. Meanwhile, a record 2,533 migrants were caught entering Hungary from Serbia on Tuesday.
Hungary has requested more European Union funds as it struggles to deal with the surge of migrants pouring into the country. The prime minister's chief of staff told Magyar Hirlap newspaper on Tuesday hat more cash is needed – and claiming that what has already been doled out was done in a humiliating way.
Tipping Lebanon’s ‘delicate balance’ of power may lead to civil war
While rubbish collections might seem a legitimate issue to protest, Beirut rallies could easily spin out of control into a civil war or be exploited by outside forces, given the social and political division in Lebanon, Abayomi Azikiwe, editor of the Pan-African News Wire told RT.
Water cannon, rubber bullets and tear gas were deployed by police in the Lebanese capital, Beirut, on Saturday as crowds gathered to protest against the government’s inability to deal with rubbish collection problems in the city. Around 30 people, including a police officer, were injured in clashes, while dozens of demonstrators have been reportedly detained.
RT:Lebanon managed to survive the Arab Spring four years ago... How much pressure is the government under now?
Abayomi Azikiwe: Well as you have pointed out there is a political vacuum inside the country. The presidency has been vacant now for more than a year. They had the same government since 2009. There was supposed to be an election last year in 2014. However, because of the political division inside the country, the elections have been postponed for another two years to 2017.
This is all related to the ongoing war of regime change in neighboring Syria. You have political parties in Lebanon who support the opposition in Syria. You have other parties in Lebanon who support the Syrian government in Damascus.
So this internal conflict over the problems associated with public services has to be viewed within a broader regional context.
RT: If the government were to fall – what could happen to the country?
AA: It would lead to an even deeper political vacuum. Now we do not know what is really behind this current movement around garbage collections. We’ve seen in other countries where there have been legitimate grievances related to many regional, local and provincial issues.
However at the same time there could be other agendas involved in this whole process that are driving these demonstrations. And the fact that they are calling for immediate elections inside the country, when the country may not be prepared to hold these elections from a political standpoint, could prove to be problematic.
Lebanon is a very divided and sectarian state. The power is distributed among the top officials along religious lines and it is a very delicate balance that has prevailed in the country now for many years.
We can recall of course what happened in Lebanon in the 1970s and the 1980s and I do not think anyone internationally, or domestically or regionally would want to see anything even approaching the division that existed during the 1970s and the 1980s.
RT:Lebanon has been deeply affected by the war in Syria – taking in more than a million refugees. Is the economy able to cope with this?
AA: It is going to be very difficult and that is why they are having problems associated with garbage collections and other issues. Also we have to keep in mind that Hezbollah, the resistance movement there, is Shia, based in southern Lebanon, and they have generally supported the government of President Bashar Assad in Damascus. Nonetheless there are other parties there who do not support the Bashar Assad government. So this complicates the situation.
And in order for the country to remain stable it is very important that the war in Syria does not become a determining factor in the outcome of the current political crisis that is taking place right now in Lebanon. It may appear to be a domestic situation there, but it may easily deteriorate into a clash which may not necessarily be controllable by the existing government and the existing security forces inside the country.
RT:Islamic State terrorists are just over the border in Syria – will they be looking at the instability in Lebanon and hoping to gain a foothold in the country?
AA: I’m sure they will. They are not in political agreement with a number of the social and political forces inside Lebanon, particularly with Hezbollah. Hezbollah has taken an active role over the last four years in a struggle to defend the Syrian government. The Al-Nusra Front, ISIS, and Al-Qaeda and other elements like the Free Syrian Army which are backed by Saudi Arabia and by other countries in the Gulf, along with Turkey of course, are working very hard to bring down the Syrian government in Damascus.
So people really have to keep a close eye on what is going on. And these organizations, Sunni armed rebel organizations that have been operating in both Syria and Iraq, of course can, in a situation of instability, also intervene in Lebanon as well.
The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.
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