Lebanon, Venezuela and South Sudan are in arrears on paying dues to the United Nations' operating budget and are among six nations that have lost their voting rights in the 193-member General Assembly, the U.N. chief said in a letter circulated Thursday.
According to the secretary-general's letter, the minimum payments needed to restore voting rights are $1,835,303 for Lebanon, $76,244,991 for Venezuela, $619,103 for Equatorial Guinea, $196,130 for South Sudan, $61,686 for Gabon, and $20,580 for Dominica.
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Hezbollah chief Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah on Thursday called for the election of “a brave president who is willing to sacrifice.”
Full StoryThe Belgian Parliament has voted unanimously in favor of a resolution calling on the European Union to impose sanctions on Lebanese politicians.
The bill had been submitted by Malik Ben Achour, a member of Belgium’s socialist party who introduced the bill more than two years ago.
Full StoryEstablished in 2013, EDUCITY, the leading fair organizer, has launched SchoolTec, the first national exhibition for Educational Supplies and Solutions, which is taking place for the first time in Lebanon.
The opening ceremony took place on Wednesday January 18, 2023 in the presence of hundreds of educators. And the fair will continue on Thursday January 19, and on Friday January 20 from 3:00 until 9:00 p.m. in Mövenpick Hotel Beirut – Lebanon.
Full StoryMP Melhem Khalaf and Najat Saliba of the Change parliamentary bloc on Thursday began an open-ended sit-in inside parliament to press for an end to the presidential deadlock.
In a statement, Khalaf said he will not leave parliament until MPs hold successive and open-ended sessions to elect a new president.
Full StoryThe value of the Lebanese pound hit an all-time low Thursday, trading at 50,000 to the U.S. dollar, as the country's deeply-divided parliament failed to elect a president for an 11th time.
The cash-strapped country's national currency, once valued at 1,500 to the dollar, has been tanking since late 2019 and has since lost over 90% of its value. The financial crisis has plunged three-quarters of the population into poverty, with millions struggling to cope with some of the world's sharpest inflation. Experts blame the country's entrenched ruling elites for decades of corruption and financial mismanagement.
Full StoryBeirut port blast investigator Judge Tarek Bitar has stressed that he “will not give up the port file under any pressure.”
“I will not step down from this case,” Bitar added, in remarks to the al-Modon news portal.
Full StoryParliament convened Thursday for the 11th time to elect a president, as activists and relatives of the Beirut port blast victims rallied in front of the parliament to protest the stalled probe into the blast.
Lawmaker Michel Mouawad won the support of 34 lawmakers while thirty-seven MPs cast blank votes.
Full StoryThe Lebanese Army on Thursday prohibited an Israeli bulldozer from breaching the U.N.-demarcated Blue Line on the border with Lebanon, al-Manar TV said.
The army had on Wednesday also stopped the work of an Israeli bulldozer by force after it tried to cross the Blue Line.
Full StoryActivists and relatives of the Beirut port blast victims rallied Thursday in front of the parliament ahead of another presidential election session.
They are protesting years of what they say is political interference in the probe.
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