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Arabs fear for wheat supplies after Russia invades Ukraine

Region is heavily dependent on wheat supplies from Ukraine, Russia

Feb 27,2022 - Last updated at Feb 26,2022

In this file photo taken on July 1, 2020, freshly-baked bread moves along a production line out of an oven at an automated bakery in Lebanon's capital Beirut. Russia's invasion of Ukraine could mean less bread on the table in Egypt, Lebanon, Yemen and elsewhere in the Arab world where millions already struggle to survive (AFP photo)

CAIRO  — Russia's invasion of Ukraine could mean less bread on the table in Egypt, Lebanon, Yemen and elsewhere in the Arab world where millions already struggle to survive.

The region is heavily dependent on wheat supplies from the two countries which are now at war, and any shortages of the staple food have potential to bring unrest.

If those supplies are disrupted, "the Ukraine crisis could trigger renewed protests and instability" in several Middle East and North Africa countries, the Washington-based Middle East Institute said.

The generals now ruling in Khartoum after an October coup have not forgotten: In 2019 one of their own, Field Marshall Omar Al Bashir, Sudan's longtime autocrat, was toppled by his military under pressure from mass demonstrations triggered by a tripling of the bread price.

Sudan is already facing regular anti-coup protests but seems to have taken the initiative to avoid demonstrations over bread.

When Russia's invasion began on Thursday, the second-highest figure in Sudan's ruling Sovereign Council was in Moscow to discuss trade ties.

Bread is already a luxury for millions in Yemen, where a seven-year war has pushed the country to the 

brink of famine.

Russia is the world’s top wheat exporter and Ukraine the fourth, according to estimates by the US Department of Agriculture.

Moscow’s invasion pushed the wheat price far above its previous record high in European trading to 344 euros ($384) a tonne on Thursday.

David Beasley, the World Food Programme’s executive director, said the Ukraine-Russia area provides half the agency’s grains. The war, he said, “is going to have a dramatic impact”.

‘Supplies won’t last’ 

WFP says 12.4 million people in conflict-ravaged Syria are also struggling with food insecurity.

Before its civil war began in 2011, Syria produced enough wheat to feed its population but harvests then plunged and led to increased reliance on imports.

The Damascus regime is a staunch ally of Moscow which backed it militarily during the war.

“Syria imported some 1.5 million tonnes of wheat last year, largely from Russia,” The Syria Report, an economic publication, said this month.

Damascus says it is now working to distribute the stocks to use them over two months.

Supplies in neighbouring Lebanon won’t last that long.

The country is gripped by a financial crisis which has left more than 80 percent of the population in poverty, and a 2020 port explosion damaged large parts of Beirut including silos containing 45,000 tonnes of grain.

Lebanon’s current stock, in addition to five ships from Ukraine waiting to be offloaded, “can only last for one month and a half”, said Ahmad Hoteit, the representative of Lebanon’s wheat importers.

Ukraine was the source of 80 per cent of the 600,000 to 650,000 tonnes of wheat imported annually by Lebanon, which has only been able to store about a month’s worth of wheat since the port blast, he told AFP.

The United States can be an alternate supplier but shipments could take up to 25 days instead of seven, Hoteit said.

In the Maghreb, where wheat is the basis for couscous as well as bread, Morocco’s minister in charge of budget, Fouzi Lekjaa, told journalists the government would increase subsidies on flour to $400 million this year and stop charging import duties on wheat.

Nearby Tunisia, with heavy debts and limited currency reserves, doesn’t have that luxury. In December, local media reported that ships delivering wheat had refused to unload their cargo as they had not been paid.

Tunisia relies on Ukrainian and Russian imports for 60 per cent of its total wheat consumption, according to agriculture ministry expert Abdelhalim Gasmi. He said current stocks are sufficient until June.

‘Bread riots’ 

Neighbouring Algeria, which says it has a six-month supply, is Africa’s second-largest wheat consumer and the world’s fifth-largest cereals importer.

Egypt imports the most wheat in the world and is Russia’s second-largest customer. It bought 3.5 million tonnes in mid-January, according to S&P Global.

The Arab world’s most populous country has started to buy elsewhere, particularly Romania, but 80 per cent of its imports have come from Russia and Ukraine.

Egypt still has nine months of stock to feed its more than 100 million people, government spokesman Nader Saad said. But he added: “We will no longer be able to buy at the price before the crisis.”

That is an ominous sign for the 70 per cent of the population who receive five subsidised breads a day.

The weight of the subsidised round food was reduced in 2020 and now the government is considering raising the price — fixed at five piastres (0.3 cents) for the past three decades, to get closer to the production cost.

When then-president Anwar Sadat tried to drop the subsidy on bread in January 1977 “bread riots” erupted. They stopped when he cancelled the increase.

Mothers and fathers protest to support Sudan's anti-coup youth

By - Feb 26,2022 - Last updated at Feb 26,2022

Sudanese protesters rally against the October military coup which has led to scores of arrests, in the capital Khartoum, on Thursday (AFP photo)

KHARTOUM — A demonstration of "mothers and fathers" took to the streets of the Sudanese capital Khartoum Saturday to support the young anti-coup protesters who have for months rallied against the military.

"We are demonstrating today to tell our sons and daughters that they are not alone," Faiza Hussein, one of the protesters, told AFP.

She added that they are also calling on the authorities to "stop killing our children".

At least 83 people have been killed and thousands injured in unrest that has gripped the country since an October 25 military coup led by General Abdel Fattah Al Burhan, according to independent medics.

"We are here to support the youth in their revolution, and to demand an end to the killings," said Hassan Ali, 63.

A United Nations expert on Thursday urged Sudanese forces to stop firing live ammunition and tear gas canisters at protesters.

"Firing live ammunition on the people is a huge violation against human rights," said UN expert Adama Dieng during a visit to Khartoum.

Sudanese authorities have said they arrested several police and soldiers who fired at demonstrators with Kalashnikov rifles, disobeying orders.

The October coup derailed a power-sharing agreement between the army and civilians negotiated following the 2019 ouster of Omar Al Bashir.

Israeli strikes kill six near Damascus: monitor

By - Feb 24,2022 - Last updated at Feb 24,2022



DAMASCUS — At least six pro-government fighters, including Syrian troops, were killed in Israeli air strikes on Thursday targeting positions held by Iran-backed groups near the capital Damascus, a war monitor reported.

It is the fourth time this month that Israeli strikes have been reported inside Syria, keeping up a campaign against pro-Iranian forces supporting the Damascus government in the more than decade-old civil war.

"Israeli strikes killed six people, including two Syrian troops and four Iran-backed militia fighters whose nationalities remain unknown," the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The Britain-based monitor, which has an extensive network of sources across the country, said the raids "targeted positions and arm depots" operated by Iran-backed groups near Damascus airport, destroying several weapon caches.

The strikes also targeted air defences south of Damascus, said the observatory, which did not elaborate on any damage.

Syrian state media said the attack came at around 1:10 am (23:10 GMT Wednesday).

The official SANA news agency said air defences intercepted most of the missiles but three soldiers were killed.

The latest raids follow Israel's bombardment this week of a Syrian town near the armistice line on the Golan Heights, and strikes on a Syrian military post on February 17, and on anti-aircraft batteries at the start of the month.

The observatory said Israel has carried out raids in Syria at least six times since the start of the year.

Asked about the latest strikes, an Israeli forces spokesman said: "We don't comment on reports in foreign media".

Shadow war 

Since civil war broke out in Syria in 2011, Israel has carried out hundreds of air strikes inside the country, targeting government positions as well as allied Iran-backed forces and fighters of the Shiite militant movement Hezbollah.

While Israel rarely comments on individual strikes in Syria, it has acknowledged mounting hundreds since 2011.

According to the Israeli forces, it hit around 50 targets inside Syria in 2020.

Last year, Israel hit Syria roughly 30 times, killing 130 people -- five civilians and 125 loyalist fighters, according to Observatory figures.

In December, it carried out a strike targeting an Iranian arms shipment in Latakia -- in the heartland of President Bashar al-Assad's minority Alawite community -- its first on the port since the start of the civil war.


In a shadow war, Israel has targeted suspected Iranian military facilities in Syria and mounted a sabotage campaign against Iran's nuclear programme.

Iran has been a key supporter of the Syrian government in the decade-old conflict.

It finances, arms and commands a number of Syrian and foreign militia groups fighting alongside the regular armed forces, chief among them Hizbollah.

The conflict in Syria has killed nearly 500,000 people since it started in 2011 with the brutal repression of peaceful demonstrations.

Libya rival PM says Cabinet line-up ready

By - Feb 24,2022 - Last updated at Feb 24,2022


TRIPOLI — Libya's prospective prime minister, appointed by the war-torn country's parliament as it seeks to oust interim premier Abdulhamid Dbeibah, said on Thursday his Cabinet line-up was ready.

"Prime minister-designate Fathi Bashagha announces that his government is ready and will be presented to the House of Representatives" for a vote of confidence, Bashagha's office said in a statement.

Libya's parliament had picked Bashagha earlier this month in a move against Dbeibah, whose rivals argue his mandate ended after elections set for December 24 were indefinitely postponed.

Dbeibah has repeatedly said he will only hand power to an elected administration, and has called for polls by late June.

In its statement, Bashagha's office said he had held "wide-ranging consultations with all political actors" including the House of Representatives and the High State Council.

The House of Representatives, based in eastern Libya since a 2014 flare-up in Tripoli, had picked Bashagha on February 10 to head a new administration replacing that of Dbeibah who was appointed a year ago as part of UN-led peace efforts.

The parliament, led by Dbeibah rival Aguila Saleh, had also approved a new 14-month roadmap to presidential elections.

The December polls, meant to help turn the page on a decade of conflict since the 2011 toppling of Muammar Qadhafi in a NATO-backed uprising, were postponed amid bitter divisions over their legal basis and who could stand.

Bashagha's statement did not say when the confidence vote would take place, but the House of Representatives said it had scheduled a session for Monday, without saying what for.

Dbeibah on Monday launched a diatribe against the "hegemonic political class", in particular the eastern parliament, whose "reckless" decision to replace him "will inevitably lead to war".

The United Nations and world powers have urged all sides to maintain calm.

Iran says decisions needed from West to seal nuclear deal

By - Feb 24,2022 - Last updated at Feb 24,2022

Chief Iranian nuclear negotiator Ali Bagheri Kani arrives at the Coburg Palace, venue of the talks aimed at reviving the Iran nuclear deal, in Vienna, on February 8 (AFP photo)


TEHRAN — Iran's chief negotiator called on Western governments on Thursday to take the necessary decisions to seal a deal at talks in Vienna on reviving a landmark 2015 nuclear agreement.

"No matter how close we are to the finish line, there is not necessarily a guarantee to cross it," Ali Bagheri tweeted after flying back to Tehran for consultations on the talks, which Iran says have reached a "critical" stage.

"To finish the job, there are certain decisions that Western parties must make," Bagheri said, without spelling out what they were.

Bagheri's lightning visit home came as Russian forces attacked Ukraine, threatening to divert attention from the Iran nuclear talks and sap the momentum built up after 10 months of on-off negotiations.



As Bagheri left Vienna, Iranian media reported that Behrouz Kamalvandi, deputy head and spokesman of the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran, arrived in the Austrian capital for "technical consultations" with the International Atomic Energy Agency.



The talks to restore the 2015 agreement known formally as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action involve Iran as well as Britain, China, France, Germany and Russia directly, and the United States indirectly.

The deal gave Iran sanctions relief in exchange for curbs on its nuclear programme, but the US unilaterally withdrew from it in 2018 under then-president Donald Trump and reimposed heavy economic sanctions.

That prompted Iran to begin rolling back on its own commitments.

The Vienna talks seek to return the US to the agreement, notably through the lifting of sanctions, and to restore Iran's compliance with its own commitments.

In recent days, almost all sides have reported progress in the negotiations.

Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian said on Wednesday that the talks had reached "a critical and important stage".



He said he hoped the remaining "sensitive and important issues" would be resolved in the coming days "with realism from the Western side".

 

Lebanon says thwarts Daesh bomb plot targeting Hizbollah bastion

By - Feb 23,2022 - Last updated at Feb 23,2022

Lebanese Internal Security Forces show weapons the ministry of interior said were seized from Daesh, which was planning attacks on targets in Beirut's southern subrubs, during a press conference in the Lebanese capital on Wednesday (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Lebanon has thwarted a plan by the Daesh terror group to carry out three suicide bombings targeting Shiite religious compounds in Beirut's southern suburbs, the interior ministry said Wednesday.

"A terrorist group had recruited young Palestinian men in Lebanon to carry out major bombing attacks using explosive belts" and other munitions, Interior Minister Bassam Mawlawi told a press conference.

"Three separate targets were to be hit at the same time," the ministry said, in an operation Mawlawi said would have caused significant loss of life.

Lebanon's Internal Security Forces (ISF) said the instructions for the bomb plot came from a Daesh operative based in the Palestinian refugee camp of Ain Al Hilweh.

The instructions were passed to an undercover agent recruited by the ISF to infiltrate Daesh networks in Lebanon.

On February 7, the agent was instructed to prepare attacks on a Shiite religious compound in Al Laylaki neighbourhood, the Imam Al-Kazem compound in Haret Hreik and the Al-Nasser religious centre in Beirut's Ouzai suburb, the ISF said.

He was given three explosive vests and other weapons to conduct the attacks on February 16, the ISF added.

Security forces have since identified four suspected militants residing in the Ain Al-Hilweh camp who are believed to have been involved in the bomb plot.

Mawlawi said two suspects had been arrested, although he did not specify whether they were among the four identified in Ain Al Hilweh.

The camp outside the main southern city of Sidon is the largest Palestinian settlement in Lebanon.

It has gained notoriety as a refuge for extremists and other fugitives.

By longstanding convention, the Lebanese army does not enter the country’s camps, leaving security inside in the hands of Palestinian factions.

Daesh recruits 

Beirut’s southern suburbs, a stronghold of Shiite militant group Hizbollah, saw a wave of bombings between 2013 and 2015 carried out by Sunni extremists in retaliation for Hizbollah’s intervention in the civil war in neighbouring Syria on the side of the Damascus government.

In 2015, twin suicide bombings claimed by Daesh killed more than 40 people in the area.

The latest Daesh plot came after the group’s leader Ibrahim Al Hashimi Al Qurashi was killed in a US raid on his home in rebel-held northwestern Syria earlier this month.

Daesh operatives asked for a video to be recorded ahead of the planned attack, in which militants said they were carrying it out in Qurashi’s honour, the ISF said.

Daesh is believed to be exploiting an unprecedented financial crisis in Lebanon to lure recruits with the promise of hefty salaries.

A security source told AFP this month that around 48 Lebanese from the impoverished northern city of Tripoli have joined Daesh ranks in Iraq since August.

At least eight Tripoli men have been reported killed in Iraq since December.

At the start of February, Iraq’s National Security Adviser Qassem Al Araji said that Lebanese authorities had opened talks with Baghdad over the Daesh threat.

Mawlawi is expected to visit Baghdad soon to discuss Lebanese concerns, he added.

“We are following up on the case of Lebanese leaving Tripoli and joining Daesh in Iraq,” Mawlawi said Wednesday.

“We are monitoring their movements and the movement of their relatives,” he added.

UAE defence ministry says to buy Chinese aircraft

By - Feb 23,2022 - Last updated at Feb 23,2022

DUBAI — The United Arab Emirates said Wednesday it plans to buy a dozen Chinese L15 aircraft, as it seeks to bolster its defences after a series of attacks by Yemeni rebels.

In December, the UAE threatened to scrap its mega-purchase of US F-35 fighter jets, protesting stringent conditions amid Washington's concerns over China.

The UAE defence ministry said it intended to sign a contract with China National Aero-Technology Import & Export Corporation (CATIC) to purchase 12 of the L15 training and light combat aircraft, with the option for 36 additional jets of the same type, the official Emirati news agency WAM reported.

"We have reached the final stage in our talks with the Chinese side. The final contract will... be signed soon," Tareq Al-Hosani, CEO of Tawazun Economic Council, was quoted as saying.

The value of the deal was not disclosed.

Tawazun, the Emirates' defence and security acquisitions authority, was seeking to "develop the UAE's defence capabilities and to achieve its strategic priorities", said WAM.

The US and UAE have yet to finalise a $23 billion arms deal that includes F-35 fighter jets.

Lawmakers from US President Joe Biden’s Democratic Party unsuccessfully sought to stop the sale, pointing in part to the Gulf state’s role in the Yemen war.

US officials have also been increasingly concerned by China’s involvement with the US ally.

But the UAE continues to plough money into drones, robots and other unmanned weaponry as autonomous warfare becomes more and more widespread — including in attacks on the Gulf country by Yemen’s Iran-backed Houthi rebels.

The wealthy Gulf country is part of the Saudi-led coalition that has been fighting the Houthis since 2015.

Although it withdrew ground troops in 2019, it remains a key player in the grinding conflict.

On January 17, drone-and-missile assault by the Houthis killed three oil workers in Abu Dhabi, the first in a number of similar attacks on the UAE.

The US has deployed a warship and fighter planes to help protect the UAE.

Israel missiles hit Syria town on Golan truce line

By - Feb 23,2022 - Last updated at Feb 23,2022

Druze women residing in Israeli occupied Golan Heights look to other side of border in this recent photo (AFP file photo)

DAMASCUS — Israel bombarded a Syrian town near the armistice line on the Golan Heights with surface-to-surface missiles early Wednesday, state media reported, without any immediate mention of casualties.

It is the third time this month that Israel has hit targets inside Syria as it keeps up a bombing campaign against pro-Iranian forces supporting the Damascus government in Syria's more than decade-old civil war.

"The Israeli enemy carried out a strike with several ground-to-ground missiles" fired from the Israeli-occupied sector of the Golan Heights at around 12:30 am (2230 GMT Tuesday) against the town of Quneitra in the UN-monitored buffer zone, the official SANA news agency said, citing a military source.

It said the strike had caused material damage but gave no other details.

Britain-based war monitor the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said there had been several explosions in Quneitra "following Israeli strikes on military posts" near the armistice line.

Since civil war broke out in Syria in 2011, Israel has carried out hundreds of air strikes, targeting government positions as well as Iran-backed forces and fighters of the Shiite militant movement Hizbollah.

Israel rarely comments on individual strikes but it has vowed repeatedly to prevent its arch foe Iran from extending a footprint in Syria.

On February 17, Israeli artillery in the occupied Golan shelled the town of Zakiya, south of Damascus. On February 9, Israeli warplanes and artillery hit Syrian anti-aircraft batteries in response to a missile fired into Israel.

In Turkish-funded Syria camps, tents give way to homes

By - Feb 23,2022 - Last updated at Feb 23,2022

This photo shows an aerial view of internally-displaced Syrians arriving with their belongings in a convoy of trucks, at a new housing complex in the opposition-held area of Bizaah, east of the city of Al Bab in the northern Aleppo governorat (AFP photo)

BIZAAH, Syria — Syrian mother of four Maryam Al Hussein was relieved to have a roof over her head as she moved from a tent camp into a housing complex built with Turkish support.

"When I first heard that we were moving into a house, I couldn't believe it," the 28-year-old widow told AFP in opposition-held northern Syria.

"I was so happy that I couldn't think of anything other than the move," she said, sitting outside her new concrete home.

The housing complex built near the Turkish-held Syrian city of Al Bab is the latest in a series of residential projects sponsored by Ankara.

Turkey's goal is to create a so-called "safe zone" along its border to keep Syrians displaced by war from crossing into its territory, and to allow it to send back some of the millions who already did.

The housing units, branded by local officials and their Turkish sponsors as a humanitarian action to assist displaced families, could also serve as a model for initiatives to resettle Syrian refugees living in Turkey.

Turkey and its proxies have seized control of territory inside Syria during several military operations launched since 2016.

In these regions, the Turkish lira has become the main currency and Ankara has helped set up hospitals, post offices and schools that teach the Turkish language.

Turkish non-governmental group the Humanitarian Relief Foundation (IHH) said it has supported the construction of more than 18,000 residential units in Syria's north since 2019.

"More than 50,000 people have settled in the houses we have built so far," said IHH Secretary General Durmus Aydin.

Aydin said that twice as many will be sheltered in a total of 24,325 homes due to be completed by April.

'Temporary shelters' 

The latest housing complex was built near the opposition-held area of Bizaah with the support of Turkey's AFAD emergencies agency, local officials said.

It consists of 300 one-storey concrete units with large metal doors and small side windows.

Each unit is made up of two rooms, a kitchen and a bathroom, and is equipped with its own water tank and costs about $2,500 to build, Aydin said.

They will be home to residents of a nearby displacement camp who were transferred there this month.

The complex, which is one of many similar housing projects supported by AFAD, includes a mosque and a school.

A medical centre is currently under construction, local officials said.

For Maryam, the move marks a major upgrade from the dilapidated tent camps where she had lived with her father, brother and four children under harsh conditions.

Maryam, whose husband was killed in battles between rebels and Syrian regime forces, was displaced by war in 2019 and moved from one camp to another seeking refuge.

"In the winter, a house is better, because the rain does not seep in and in the summer it remains cool because stone deflects heat better than tents that turn into furnaces," she said.

Local official Hussein Al Issa, who oversees the resettlement of displaced families, said the Bizaah housing complex was built on land managed by an opposition-affiliated local council with "the full cooperation" of Turkey.

"These houses are temporary shelters for our displaced brothers," he said.

'Lying to ourselves' 

While many displaced families are grateful to Turkey for helping provide shelter, Mohammad Haj Moussa appeared dissatisfied.

"It's like we are lying to ourselves," the 38-year-old father of four told AFP.

"We want a [permanent] solution. We want to return to our homes," added Haj Moussa, who was displaced by war five year ago.

Since fleeing his home in the northwestern province of Idlib, Haj Moussa said he had moved from one displacement camp to another.

"This unit isn't too different" from the camps, he said. "It's a joke."

Nearby, Ahmed Mustafa Katouli said he was grateful to have a concrete roof over his head, but complained the units are too small.

"These houses do not make up for what we have lost," said the father of six, displaced from Aleppo with his wife nearly a decade ago.

"We have lost homes, land and martyrs," he said, adding that after years of surviving in tents, "I am forced to live here".

Israel court freezes eviction order of Palestinian family

By - Feb 23,2022 - Last updated at Feb 23,2022

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — An Israeli court on Tuesday froze the planned eviction of a Palestinian family in the flashpoint East Jerusalem neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah, pending an appeal.

The Salem family had been ordered to surrender the property to Jewish settlers who have claimed ownership of the plot.

Sheikh Jarrah has become a symbol of Palestinian resistance against Israeli control of Jerusalem, and the Salem family's imminent eviction made them a growing focus of the tensions there.

The land rights battle between Jewish settlers and Palestinians in the neighbourhood has sparked clashes and partly fuelled the 11-day war in May between Israel and armed groups in the Gaza Strip.

The Palestinian family received their eviction order in November, with a deadline to vacate by March 1.

A lawyer for the family, Medhat Diba, said the Jerusalem Magistrate's court agreed to suspend the eviction until it ruled on an appeal launched by the Palestinians.

The court also released a decision confirming the freeze.

Khalil Salem, a member of the family, told AFP the decision was “a positive step because we were on the verge of losing our house”.

Earlier this month clashes broke out when far-right Israeli lawmaker Itamar Ben Gvir opened a tent “office” near the family’s house after an alleged Palestinian arson of a settler’s home nearby.

The United Nations said its personnel visited the Salem family on February 18.

Israel occupied East Jerusalem, which Palestinians claim as their future capital, following the June War of 1967 in a move not recognised by most of the international community.

Jewish settlers groups have won legal victories claiming ownership of various plots where Palestinians live, using an Israeli law that allows Jews to reclaim land lost during the conflict that coincided with Israel’s creation in 1948.

But no equivalent land reclamation law exists for Palestinians who lost homes in West Jerusalem.

Seven Palestinian families in Sheikh Jarrah have challenged their planned evictions at Israel’s supreme court, with highly-anticipated decisions pending.

More than 200,000 settlers now live in occupied East Jerusalem, alongside about 300,000 Palestinians. The Jewish settlements in the city are considered illegal under international law.

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