Foreign workers trapped and terrified in Lebanon’s conflict

Foreign workers trapped and terrified in Lebanon’s conflict
The International Organization for Migration says Lebanon hosts more than 177,000 migrant workers, primarily from Africa and Asia. (Department of Migrant Workers File Photo)
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Updated 18 October 2024
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Foreign workers trapped and terrified in Lebanon’s conflict

Foreign workers trapped and terrified in Lebanon’s conflict
  • “I feel that the end is near for me — worse than when I had cancer,” said Brinces, 46,
  • Nazmul Shahin, who works at a supermarket in Beirut’s Achrafieh neighborhood, says explosions jolt him awake at night

MANILA/LAGOS/DHAKA: Cici Brinces came to Lebanon as a domestic worker 14 years ago, married a Palestinian, had a son, survived leukaemia and was building a new life. Then bombs began falling in Beirut and now she wants to go home to the Philippines.
“I feel that the end is near for me — worse than when I had cancer,” said Brinces, 46, who fled her home near the airport two weeks ago and lived on the streets for days before moving into a shelter with her 10-year-old son.
Nazmul Shahin, who works at a supermarket in Beirut’s Achrafieh neighborhood, says explosions jolt him awake at night.
“My heart begins pounding — and it feels like something is gnawing at my entrails,” the 30-year-old Bangladeshi citizen, who has been living in Lebanon for about a year, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a phone interview from Beirut.
Md Al Mamun loves the job he got at a Beirut bakery three months ago, but now he too wants to go home to Bangladesh.
“I really like it here — the pay and the environment are so much better — but since the bombing began, I have been badly missing home,” he said.
A nearly year-long conflict between Israel and the Hezbollah militant group has intensified in recent weeks, with Israel bombing southern Lebanon, Beirut’s southern suburbs and the Bekaa Valley, killing many of Hezbollah’s top leaders, and sending ground troops into southern Lebanon.
Iran-backed Hezbollah has fired rockets into Israel.
Lebanese authorities say at least 1.2 million Lebanese have been displaced and more than 2,300 people killed since last October, the majority in recent weeks.
Most of the country’s 900 shelters are full and people are now sleeping in the open or in Beirut’s parks.
Among them are many foreign workers.
The International Organization for Migration says Lebanon hosts more than 177,000 migrant workers, primarily from Africa and Asia. Human Rights Watch has quoted Lebanon’s Labour Ministry as saying the number is around 250,000.
They mostly comprise women who work in the domestic and hospitality sectors and are employed under the kafala system, a sponsorship model also common in Gulf nations where employers control the legal status of any migrants who work for them.
Uganda-based activist Safina Virani, who is fundraising online to get food and shelter to African migrants, said many women had been cut adrift by their employers, who fled when the Israeli attacks began.
“Many said their employers took their passports at the airport as soon as they arrived, and they didn’t give (them) to them again. They have no money, and their employers abandoned them as soon as the war broke, and they didn’t give them their documents,” Virani told the Thomson Reuters Foundation from Uganda’s capital Kampala.
“Most of them don’t have bank accounts or documents that can identify them officially,” Virani said, explaining that this made it difficult for relatives back home to send money.
Virani said stranded Africans also faced discrimination.
“African migrants are being treated as second-class citizens, and this has a lot to do with racism, and that is why governments need to take the protection of the citizens seriously,” she said.

’PLEASE SEND AIRPLANES’
There are more than 11,000 documented Filipino workers in Lebanon. President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. has ordered the government to prepare for a safe and timely repatriation of its citizens.
This is exactly what Brinces, whose husband is working in Nigeria, wants.
“President Marcos, please send airplanes here for us, like what other nationalities did for their countrymen,” she said.
Some 500 Filipinos have been repatriated since last year and by Oct. 8, the Philippines embassy in Beirut had received more than 1,700 applications for repatriation.
The embassy has set up temporary shelters for Filipino workers, but Brinces said many people were reluctant to use them as cellphones were at times restricted so they could lose contact with home.
Some Filipinos say the embassy has been slow to help.
“My sister only got repetitive replies from government chatbots, until they asked her to go to the embassy in Beirut which was impossible for her because her employer won’t allow her to and she did not have her passport,” said Mark Anthony Bunda, whose sister works in Lebanon as a domestic helper.
Brinces’ situation is different: she has her documents but her passport has expired and she needs exit clearance from the Lebanese authorities as a foreign worker.
When she first fled her home, she sent her son to live with her mother-in-law in the relative safety of the mountains outside Beirut. She wanted to stay close to the embassy in case there was news of repatriation.
“The embassy told me they can’t respond to our requests all at once. Especially since the government here has been slow to process our applications,” she said.
She has now been reunited with her son and is living in a shelter in the capital.

FRAUDSTERS AND DONATIONS
Among many African workers in Lebanon, there are some 26,000 Kenyans, according to foreign ministry data, many a direct result of an agreement between Kenya’s National Chamber of Commerce and Industry and Lebanese companies.
The Kenyan government told Kenyans to register with the embassy in Kuwait for free evacuation and has allocated 100 million Kenyan shillings ($778,210) for the evacuation.
Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi said almost 1,500 people had already registered.
The government has also warned people to be aware of fraudsters offering fake evacuations for exorbitant fees.
“We would like to alert all Kenyans currently in Lebanon about reports of fraudsters exploiting vulnerable individuals. These individuals are unlawfully charging fees for evacuation services,” the ministry of foreign and diaspora affairs said in a statement.
About 150,000 Bangladeshis are also in Lebanon, working in petrol stations, supermarkets, garages and as cleaners. Bangladeshis typically pay about 500,000 taka ($4,200) to migration brokers to get a job in Lebanon.
Officials at Bangladesh’s embassy in Beirut are providing medical care and advice and have started collecting information on those who want to return home.
Md Touhid Hossain, foreign adviser for the interim government in Dhaka, said Bangladesh had asked the IOM to arrange a chartered flight to evacuate Bangladeshis.
Siddikor Rahman, who has worked as a supervisor in a Lebanese factory for about 10 years, said many Bangladeshis have lost their jobs and homes since the airstrikes and are surviving in shelters provided by the community and the embassy.
“Those of us who can afford to lend a hand are supporting our compatriots — either giving them cash, buying food for them, or providing them shelter,” said Shahin.
“But my heart is sinking day by day and the only thing I hope for is to go home,” he said.

NO EASY DECISION
Virani has been working with Lebanese activist Dea Hage-Chahine to reach vulnerable female migrant workers.
Hage-Chahine told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone from Beirut that she had secured a private building for a few months to house 147 Sierra Leonean women and three babies who had been sleeping outside their embassy in Beirut.
Working with a team of just four, she has also rented five apartments for another group of 58 Africans, mostly Sierra Leoneans, and liaised with their government to obtain the paperwork they need to get home.
“Migrant communities in Lebanon are marginalized and ignored, and you can imagine what is happening while we are going through a war and a huge humanitarian crisis; we need support,” she said.
“We’re working on the paperwork for the women, but we’re worried that we won’t be able to secure flights. We’re hoping the government will send a plane,” she said.
Sierra Leone’s Foreign Minister Timothy Musa Kabba told local media that because the government doesn’t have a trade employment deal with Lebanon, it has been difficult for them to quickly evacuate the workers.
However, the administration is working with IOM and leaders of the Sierra Leonean community in Lebanon to congregate citizens in a safe place while they process their repatriation.
Leaving Lebanon is not an easy choice for everyone.
In South Lebanon, Filipino domestic helper Ritchel Bagsican said she could not sleep because of the airstrikes and drones.
But the 32-year-old, who has been in Lebanon for nine years and has applied for repatriation, is torn about going home.
“Despite the economic crisis and the war here in Lebanon, job opportunities here are still better than in the Philippines. Work is not guaranteed there, so we might have to work abroad again,” she said.


Moscow exhibits Aisha Qaddafi’s art, painted in the slain Libyan leader’s honor

Aisha Gaddafi, daughter of Libya's former leader Muammar Gaddafi. (REUTERS)
Aisha Gaddafi, daughter of Libya's former leader Muammar Gaddafi. (REUTERS)
Updated 6 sec ago
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Moscow exhibits Aisha Qaddafi’s art, painted in the slain Libyan leader’s honor

Aisha Gaddafi, daughter of Libya's former leader Muammar Gaddafi. (REUTERS)
  • "I can tell you that these pictures are painted not with my hand but with my heart"

MOSCOW: A Russian state museum is mounting an exhibit of artwork by the daughter of slain Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi, dedicated to her father’s memory.
Aisha Qaddafi, 47, is the fifth child and only biological daughter of the leader who ruled the country from 1969 until he was captured and killed in 2011 by rebels during the NATO-backed uprising that toppled him.
On Friday, the State Museum of Oriental Art in Moscow opened a six-week exhibit of dozens of her artworks, including a painting of a crowd hovering over the corpses of her father and her brother, who was killed alongside him.
The painting shows members of the crowd using smartphones to snap pictures of the bodies.
“Today, I show these works for the first time to honor my father and my brother on the anniversary of their deaths,” she said ahead of the opening.
“I can tell you that these pictures are painted not with my hand but with my heart.”
Aisha Qaddafi fled Libya during the uprising in 2011.
The family says her husband and two of her children were killed in NATO airstrikes and bombings of the Qaddafi compound in Tripoli.
She gave birth to her fourth child in Algeria and settled in Oman.
Igor Spivak, the chairman of the Russian Mideast Society, who organized the exhibit with support from Russia’s Foreign Ministry and other bodies, said he had proposed the exhibition to her in Oman, and she had quickly agreed.
“She knows that the people in Russia love her, love her father and want to see her art in Russia.”

 


Iraqi strikes kill senior Daesh leader

Iraqi strikes kill senior Daesh leader
Updated 6 min 37 sec ago
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Iraqi strikes kill senior Daesh leader

Iraqi strikes kill senior Daesh leader
  • Iraq’s Joint Operations Command had previously said in a statement that F-16 warplanes carried out strikes on Oct.14 in Kirkuk province that killed four militants, “one of them an important leader”

Iraqi airstrikes killed a senior Daesh leader and three other militants, the US military announced on Friday, saying the strikes were enabled by intelligence from the international anti-terror coalition.
“Iraqi security forces conducted precision airstrikes in northeastern Iraq on Oct. 14 that killed four members of the terrorist organization Daesh, including a senior leader,” US Central Command, or CENTCOM, said in a statement on social media.
“The Iraqi-led strikes were conducted to disrupt and degrade Daesh attack networks in Iraq and were enabled by technical support and intelligence from coalition forces,” CENTCOM said.
It said the deceased leader was the group’s most senior official in northern Iraq, identifying him as Shahadhah Allawi Salih Ulaywi Al-Bajjari and saying he was also known as Abu Issa.

BACKGROUND

The US has about 2,500 troops in Iraq and 900 in Syria as part of the coalition, which Washington and Baghdad announced last month will end its decade-long military mission in Iraq within a year.

Iraq’s Joint Operations Command had previously said in a statement that F-16 warplanes carried out strikes on Oct.14 in Kirkuk province that killed four militants, “one of them an important leader.”
The strikes came after US and Iraqi forces conducted a joint operation in late August that CENTCOM said killed 14 Daesh members, among them four leaders.
The US has about 2,500 troops in Iraq and 900 in Syria as part of the coalition, which Washington and Baghdad announced last month will end its decade-long military mission in Iraq within a year.
The announcement followed months of talks between the US and Iraq on the future of the coalition, which was established in 2014 to help local forces retake swathes of territory seized by the extremists there and in neighboring Syria.
The coalition will continue its military operation in Syria, with international troops permitted to support anti-jihadist operations there from Iraq until September 2026.
Daesh was defeated in Iraq in 2017 and in Syria in 2019, but terrorists continue to operate in remote desert areas although they no longer control territory.

 


Sinwar’s death brings no respite for Gazans

Displaced Palestinian children queue for food in a camp in Deir al-Balah, Gaza Strip, Friday, Oct. 18, 2024. (AP)
Displaced Palestinian children queue for food in a camp in Deir al-Balah, Gaza Strip, Friday, Oct. 18, 2024. (AP)
Updated 12 min 20 sec ago
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Sinwar’s death brings no respite for Gazans

Displaced Palestinian children queue for food in a camp in Deir al-Balah, Gaza Strip, Friday, Oct. 18, 2024. (AP)
  • Civilians remain trapped, hungry, and sick, often under heavy bombardment: UNRWA chief

GAZA CITY: The killing of Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar brought no respite for Palestinians in Gaza, as Israeli airstrikes and shelling continued unabated in the territory already devastated by more than a year of war.

Raids continued in the besieged enclave in the hours after Israel announced the death of the militant leader they have long accused of masterminding the Oct. 7 attack last year — a key war aim for Israel.
Following a strike at dawn, Gaza’s civil defense agency said rescuers recovered the bodies of three Palestinian children from the rubble of their home in the north of the territory.
“We always thought that when this moment arrived, the war would end and our lives would return to normal,” said Jemaa Abou Mendi, a 21-year-old Gaza resident.

NUMBER

42,500

Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s Gaza onslaught.

“But unfortunately, the reality on the ground is quite the opposite. The war has not stopped, and the killings continue unabated.”
Large swaths of northern Gaza remained under siege by Israeli forces, with road closures preventing the delivery of supplies to the area — despite warnings from the United States that failure to end the blockade could trigger a reduction in arms deliveries to Israel.
“While we hear that delivery of aid will increase, people in Gaza are not feeling any difference,” Philippe Lazzarini, the head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, wrote on X.
“They continue to be trapped, hungry, and sick, often under heavy bombardment.”
As news of the death of Sinwar sunk in, many in Gaza saw little reason for the Israeli army to press on with its war in the territory.
“If Sinwar’s assassination was one of the objectives of this war, well, today they have killed Yahya Sinwar,” said Mustafa Al-Zaeem, a 47-year-old resident from the Rimal neighborhood in western Gaza City.
“Enough death, enough hunger, enough siege. Enough thirst and starvation, enough bodies and blood.”
Israel’s campaign to crush Hamas and bring back the hostages has killed 42,500 people in Gaza, the majority civilians, according to data from the Health Ministry in the territory, which the UN considers reliable.
US President Joe Biden said on Friday he impressed upon Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a conversation to “also make this moment an opportunity to seek a path to peace, a better future in Gaza without Hamas.”
Pressure has also been mounting in Israel to leverage the killing of Sinwar into a tangible plan to secure the release of the remaining hostages held captive in Gaza.
Israeli President Isaac Herzog and Netanyahu met on Friday to discuss the aftermath of Sinwar’s death, including the hostages.
A statement released by the presidency said that “a significant window of opportunity opened — including the promotion of the return of the hostages and the elimination of Hamas.”
Late on Thursday, Netanyahu vowed that those who helped free the hostages in Gaza would be spared.
“Whoever lays down his weapon and returns our hostages — we will allow him to go on living,” he said.
But in Gaza, some remained skeptical over the fate of the hostages and what any deal would entail for their future.
“Today, Israel is lost and will be searching for the hostages,” said Zaeem.
Others saw little reason to trust Netanyahu and only feared more war.
“What we see is that Netanyahu’s focus is on Gaza — on killing, destruction, and eradication, as the bombings and massacres continue across Gaza,” said Mahmoud Obeid, 42, from northern Gaza.
“What we fear most is the continuation of this cursed war.”


PLO mourns death of Hamas chief Sinwar

PLO mourns death of Hamas chief Sinwar
Updated 11 min 7 sec ago
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PLO mourns death of Hamas chief Sinwar

PLO mourns death of Hamas chief Sinwar
  • “The Executive Committee of the PLO expresses its condolences to the Palestinian people and all national factions,” a statement said
  • The PLO accused Israel of committing “massacres and genocide” against Palestinians

RAMALLAH: The Palestine Liberation Organization, seen internationally as the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people, expressed its condolences on Friday on the “martyrdom” of Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar and called for unity among all Palestinian factions.
“The Executive Committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) expresses its condolences to the Palestinian people and all national factions on the martyrdom of the great national leader Yahya Sinwar, head of the political bureau of Hamas,” a statement by the committee said.
The PLO accused Israel of committing “massacres and genocide” against Palestinians and called for all Palestinian factions to stand united, especially after the death of Sinwar.
The PLO called for a united struggle against Israel for the “full reclaiming of our rights, including the right of return, the end of the occupation, and the establishment of our Palestinian state on all our occupied territories based on the 1967 borders, with Jerusalem as its eternal capital,” the statement said.
In a separate statement, Fatah, the party of Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas, said Israel’s policy of “killing and terrorism will not succeed in breaking the will of our people to achieve their legitimate national rights to freedom and independence.”


Tunisian MPs seek to limit the central bank’s power to set interest rates

Tunisian members of parliament attend a plenary session to discuss a draft electoral reform, on September 27, 2024 in Tunis.
Tunisian members of parliament attend a plenary session to discuss a draft electoral reform, on September 27, 2024 in Tunis.
Updated 21 min 43 sec ago
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Tunisian MPs seek to limit the central bank’s power to set interest rates

Tunisian members of parliament attend a plenary session to discuss a draft electoral reform, on September 27, 2024 in Tunis.
  • The bill proposes that the bank will not be allowed to sign agreements with foreign oversight authorities without the president’s approval

TUNIS: Tunisia’s central bank will no longer have the exclusive power to adjust interest rates or foreign exchange policy and must only take such action in consultation with the government, but it will be allowed to finance the treasury, a bill proposed by lawmakers showed on Friday.
The step is the latest move that will ultimately undermine the central bank’s independence after continuous criticism by President Kais Saied, who said the bank should not be a state within a state.
The potential significant change in the central bank law comes as public finances face a severe crisis.
The country has been unable to secure Western funding since Saied seized nearly all power in 2021, ruling by decree, in a move the opposition has called a coup.
Twenty-seven lawmakers warned that Tunisia would go bankrupt if the bank law were not changed.
They said that the current law, adopted in 2016, which does not allow the central bank to make loans to the public treasury or direct bond purchases, has led to enormous losses for the state estimated at $36.6 billion.
The bill also proposes that the bank will not be allowed to sign agreements with foreign oversight authorities without the president’s approval.
Saied last year rejected the independence of the central bank, saying it should lend directly to the state treasury to avoid costly loans through banks.
In January, the government asked the central bank to provide $2.25 billion of direct funding to the treasury to fill a budget deficit.
Former central bank governor Marouan Abassi has warned that buying treasury bonds had risks, including upward inflation pressure and a drop in the value of Tunisia’s currency.
Earlier this year, Saied replaced Abassi with Zouhair Nouri.
Since 2016, the central bank has had absolute power to control monetary policy, reserves, and gold.
However, the proposed bill showed that the central bank could adjust interest rates, gold-related operations, and exchanges in consultation with the government.
Under the bill, the central bank will be allowed to buy government bonds from banks and lend up to 3 percent of GDP directly to the treasury with maturities exceeding five years.
Financial sources said the move would likely pave the way for a new government request for the central bank to provide up to $2.6 billion in direct facilities and loans to the treasury.