Kamis, 19 September 2019

US supports Saudi 'right to defend itself': Pompeo - Al Jazeera English

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has backed Saudi Arabia's "right to defend itself" and said that Iran's behaviour would "not be tolerated", in a meeting with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS), according to a statement on his official Twitter account on Thursday.

Pompeo again condemned the weekend attack on Saudi oil fields that knocked out half of the country's oil production. The US top envoy has also supported the Saudi call for international experts to travel to the country to investigate, the Saudi news agency SPA said in a separate statement.

In the meeting, MBS told Pompeo the attacks on state oil company Saudi Aramco were aimed at destabilising security in the region and damaging the global supply of energy.

Speaking to reporters on his way to Jeddah, Pompeo had described the raids on key oil installations as an "act of war" and reiterated that it was an "Iranian attack". 

Iran has repeatedly denied it was behind the attacks that have heightened tensions in the region.

Yemen's Houthi rebels, who have been locked in a war with a Saudi-UAE-led coalition since 2015, has claimed responsibility for the attacks, warning Riyadh that their targets "will keep expanding".

But Saudi and US officials have said that evidence shows Iranian involvement.

Just before Pompeo's comments, Saudi military officials held a news conference and showed debris from the alleged weapons used during the attacks, saying there was "undeniable" evidence of Iranian aggression.

A defence ministry spokesman said there was no way the attacks could have been launched from Yemen. 

"The attack was launched from the north and unquestionably sponsored by Iran," Saudi Colonel Turki al-Malki said. "We are working to know the exact launch point." 

Al-Malki did not directly blame Iran for the attack when asked by journalists. He said once "the culprits" were identified they would "be held accountable".

Saudi oil attacks

Saudi defence ministry spokesman Colonel Turki Al-Malik displays on a screen drones which the Saudi government says attacked an Aramco oil facility [Hamad I Mohammed/Reuters] 

Trump and Saudi officials have stressed the need for caution in their response to the attacks. The US president has said he does not want war and is coordinating with the Gulf and European states.

Hillary Mann Leverett, chief executive of political risk consultancy Stratega and a former US diplomat, told Al Jazeera the Saudis use of the word "sponsorship" indicated a certain level of caution amid its current diplomatic isolation.

"They have no guarantee the US will back them up to retaliate against Iran or anyone else," she said. "They are in a really tough position with very few options. They are trying to lay out what evidence they can but there is a lot of doubt here in Washington, and I think around the world, about what the Saudis have to say given their record with Yemen, the Khashoggi killing and other issues."

Earlier on Wednesday, Trump said he ordered a major increase in sanctions on Iran, but gave no details. 

It is not clear yet what Pompeo's comments mean for the US response to the attacks.

US media, citing unnamed US officials, reported on Tuesday that evidence showed Saturday's attacks originated in southwestern Iran.

Three officials said they involved cruise missiles and drones, indicating a higher degree of complexity and sophistication than initially thought. The US has not made its evidence public.

The officials also did not provide evidence or explain what US intelligence they were using for evaluating the attack, which cut five percent of the world's oil production.

The new violence has led to fears that further action on any side could rapidly escalate a confrontation that has been raging just below the surface in the wider region in recent months. 

In June, Trump called off a military attack on Iran at the last minute after Tehran shot down an unmanned US military drone. Iran maintains the drone was in Iranian airspace. The US says it was in international territory.

Those tensions have been boiling since Trump pulled the US out of the 2015 nuclear agreement that curtailed Tehran's nuclear activities, and reimposed sanctions that sent Iran's economy into a tailspin.

SOURCE: Al Jazeera and news agencies

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/09/supports-saudi-defend-pompeo-190919014947414.html

2019-09-19 06:42:00Z
52780382632806

Rabu, 18 September 2019

Israel election: Netanyahu and rival Gantz headed for deadlock - BBC News

No clear winner has emerged from Israel's election, leaving a question mark over who will be prime minister, partial official results confirm.

With about 60% of votes counted, the party of incumbent Benjamin Netanyahu is neck and neck with that of his centre-left main challenger.

The results indicate that each will struggle to form a majority coalition with smaller parties.

Mr Netanyahu is vying to stay in power for a record fifth term.

The latest results from Tuesday's vote suggest his Likud party won 31 seats, while his opponent Benny Gantz's Blue and White party garnered 32 seats, the Kan public broadcaster says.

A prime minister needs to command a 61-seat majority in the Knesset (parliament).

Mr Netanyahu, Israel's longest-serving prime minister, has been in office for 10 years.

The 69 year old has pledged to annex Jewish settlements and a swathe of other territory in the occupied West Bank if he is returned to power.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Palestinians, who seek a state in the West Bank and Gaza, with its capital in occupied East Jerusalem, have warned such a move will kill any hopes for peace.

Mr Gantz has not advocated any form of annexation, though his position on the creation of a Palestinian state is unclear. Like Mr Netanyahu, he has ruled out ever dividing Jerusalem.

What are the latest results?

Official results have been slow to be released, with only 60% of votes counted by 12:53 (09:53 GMT).

They put Blue and White slightly ahead of Likud, with an alliance of Arab parties third, the ultra-Orthodox Shas party fourth and Yisrael Beiteinu, a nationalist party, in fifth place. The tally does not say how this translates into seats in the Knesset.

Based on these reported results, neither leader can form a majority coalition without support from Yisrael Beiteinu.

That party's leader, Avigdor Lieberman, reiterated that he would only support a government comprising both Likud and Blue and White. However, Blue and White has ruled out sitting with Mr Netanyahu in a coalition.

Exit polls earlier presented a similar picture.

Netanyahu weakened

Analysis by Tom Bateman, BBC Middle East correspondent, Jerusalem

The prime minister is well short of being able to form a governing bloc of right-wing and religious parties that are prepared to sit with him. In fact the result leaves him in an even weaker position than he was after April's vote.

It's almost impossible to predict the outcome, with frenetic horse trading on the way and even the chance of parties fragmenting or politicians shifting allegiances. But as it stands, three broad themes seem among the possibilities:

  • A dominant new governing bloc of the two big rival parties: Likud with Blue and White. This only seems possible without Mr Netanyahu as Likud leader. Needless to say that's a deal breaker for him and, so far at least, for his party
  • Mr Netanyahu's political rival Avigdor Lieberman miraculously changes his mind and agrees to join a right-wing and religious Netanyahu government - something his voters understood would never happen
  • A third election - which nobody here has an appetite for.

In the meantime, Mr Netanyahu stays on, but watch this space. For a few weeks.

There was a muted response at Likud's election night headquarters in Tel Aviv.

Hundreds of chairs for party supporters remained empty as activists were kept outside the hall and leaders digested the numbers.

"There is no point starting to work out a coalition based on these numbers as they will change," Likud foreign affairs director Eli Hazan said.

But Blue and White was "cautiously optimistic" that Israel would get new leadership, spokeswoman Melody Sucharewicz told the Times of Israel.

Mr Lieberman prevented Mr Netanyahu from forming a coalition after the previous vote because he refused to back down over a longstanding dispute with religious parties over exempting ultra-Orthodox young men from military service.

However Mr Gantz could have an even more complex job to form a government, because of differences between left-wing parties.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-49740981

2019-09-18 12:13:55Z
52780386271566

Israel election deadlock, Lewandowski's testimony, and a 'Princess Bride' remake? Inconceivable!: The Morning Rundown - NBCNews.com

Good morning, NBC News readers.

The Israeli elections appear too close to call, the Trump administration is considering action against Iran, and Democrats are fuming over former Trump aide Corey Lewandowski stonewalling Congress.

Here's what we're watching today.


Israeli election deadlock leaves Netanyahu's fate uncertain

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu appeared to fall short of a governing majority in Israel's election Wednesday, raising doubts over whether he can maintain his decadelong grip on power.

Partial results suggested Netanyahu's right-wing Likud party and its main rival, the centrist Blue and White party, were expected to win 32 seats each, according to Israel's election committee.

Final results are expected Wednesday and could swing either way — setting up a period of uncertainty in Israeli politics at a time of renewed tension between the United States' Mideast allies and Iran.

The results could also result in dire consequences for Netanyahu, who is facing possible indictments in three corruption cases.

If he remains prime minister Netanyahu may be able to pass legislation that would grant him immunity, but if he loses he may face jail time.


Trump admin weighing retaliatory action against Iran after Saudi oil attack

In a national security meeting on Monday, U.S. military leaders provided President Donald Trump with a menu of possible actions against Iran in response to the attack on Saudi Arabian oil facilities.

The options included a cyberattack or physical strike on Iranian oil facilities or Revolutionary Guard assets, U.S. officials and others briefed on the deliberations told NBC News.

There were no indications that any U.S. military action was imminent, and officials said that no decision has been made.

Trump's call for options comes amid growing confidence by the U.S. intelligence community that Iran was behind Sunday's unprecedented attack on Saudi oil facilities.

But any U.S. military action to retaliate for a strike against Saudi Arabia could face resistance in Congress.

"We don't have a defense treaty with Saudi Arabia," said Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn. "We are under no obligation to defend Saudi Arabia and we have no interest in getting involved in an escalating regional conflict between those two countries."

Sept. 18, 201901:58

'You're not going to stonewall me!': Dems press Lewandowski at fiery hearing

Democrats pressed Corey Lewandowski at a contentious House hearing on Tuesday, with Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., threatening contempt against Trump's former campaign manager for following a White House directive to limit the scope of his testimony.

While the congressional testimony may have felt a bit circus-like at times for House Democrats, NBC News' Jonathan Allen writes in an analysis that Lewandowski put flesh on the bones of special counsel Robert Mueller's report.

Sept. 18, 201901:49

Draining Arizona: Residents say corporate mega-farms are drying up their wells

A battle for water in Arizona is pitting some longtime residents and family farmers against big corporations.

Those who can afford to drill the deepest wells are the ones who get the water, while those who can’t are forced to abandon their property.

“They’ve just taken the water,” one displaced resident said of the big farms, “and when they use up the water, they’ll be gone.”

Sept. 17, 201915:31

Want to receive the Morning Rundown in your inbox? Sign up here.


Plus


THINK about it

Trump finally deserves credit for something: Making the Middle East worse, Brett Bruen, former director of global engagement in the Obama White House, writes in an opinion piece.


Science + Tech = MACH

NBC News reporter Denise Chow planned a day trip to one of Greenland's fast-melting glaciers with scientists who are studying climate change in Greenland.

But then the weather turned, and she got stuck. Here's the story of her unexpected adventure.

The sun sets over Helheim Glacier in Greenland. Not a bad place to spend the night.Denise Chow / NBC News

Live BETTER

Almost every successful person has failed. Here's why it matters. (Video)


One fun thing

A remake of the "The Princess Bride"?

"Inconceivable!"

The rumor, started after Sony Pictures CEO floated the idea in an interview, set the Twitterverse and loyal fans of the 1987 cult classic into pits of despair.

Cary Elwes, who played Westley in Rob Reiner's famously quotable film, succinctly dismissed the notion.

"There’s a shortage of perfect movies in this world," Elwes tweeted. "It would be a pity to damage this one."

Cary Elwes and Robin Wright in The Princess Bride.MGM

Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.

If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — drop me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com

If you'd like to receive this newsletter in your inbox Monday to Friday, please sign up here.

Thanks, Petra Cahill

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.nbcnews.com/news/morning-briefing/israel-election-deadlock-lewandowski-s-testimony-princess-bride-remake-inconceivable-n1055741

2019-09-18 11:57:00Z
CBMiiwFodHRwczovL3d3dy5uYmNuZXdzLmNvbS9uZXdzL21vcm5pbmctYnJpZWZpbmcvaXNyYWVsLWVsZWN0aW9uLWRlYWRsb2NrLWxld2FuZG93c2tpLXMtdGVzdGltb255LXByaW5jZXNzLWJyaWRlLXJlbWFrZS1pbmNvbmNlaXZhYmxlLW4xMDU1NzQx0gEsaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubmJjbmV3cy5jb20vbmV3cy9hbXAvbmNuYTEwNTU3NDE

Culture - The rise of Palestinian pop - BBC News

Growing up in East Jerusalem, Bashar Murad turned to music for comfort in a life blighted by fractious political realities and the emotional pressures of being a gay man battling the conservative elements of his society. It also became a way of transcending the borders imposed on his life by the Israeli occupation; a medium to connect with the world outside. He started with covers of western pop before releasing his own songs, some in Arabic and some in English – invariably with catchy hooks, bold, self-produced videos, and satirical lyrics addressing freedom of expression.

More like this

-       What is history’s most enduring tune?

-       How pop embraced sexuality without labels

-       The rock ‘n’ roll rebel of Afghanistan

In 2009, Bashar began sharing his music on Facebook and uploading it to YouTube and Soundcloud. Soon after, he added it to Spotify but struggled to find a local audience because the platform was only accessible to Palestinians registered in foreign markets using a virtual private network (VPN). The absence of a Middle Eastern ‘hub’ – one of Spotify’s online spaces highlighting music communities through curated playlists and editorial – also meant that Bashar’s music was not being discovered overseas.

As a westerner, you hear the phrase ‘Arab music’ and you think of something you heard 40 years ago, but that’s not accurate anymore – Larry LeBlanc

Yet a decade on, Murad’s work now has global traction. In April, he performed at Palestine Music Expo (PMX) in Ramallah, in the West Bank, the larger of the two Palestinian territories that includes East Jerusalem. He then flew to Toronto for Canadian Music Week, where he represented the Palestinian territories for the first time in the annual event’s 36-year history, alongside Kallemi, a Swiss-Palestinian all-female hip-hop outfit. More recently, Murad collaborated with Icelandic techno group Hatari, and their video has been viewed over 1 million times online. He’s in talks with several labels about his debut album. 

Murad’s success is part of a much bigger jigsaw. If you look carefully at festival line-ups, label release schedules, and agency rosters, Palestinian artists from various genres are appearing more regularly, which is remarkable given the singular challenges they face.

While Murad, a pop act in the traditional sense, performed in Canada, TootArd, a psych-rock sensation in the Middle East, were preparing to play at Glastonbury. Late last year, Oud masters Le Trio Joubran released their latest album through UK label Cooking Vinyl, and followed it with a performance at The Barbican in London. Sama, the first Palestinian DJ to emerge internationally, recently released a BBC Radio 1 Essential Mix.

I’d always imagined doing the things I am doing now, but I didn’t think it was possible because there were no resources – Bashar Murad

The landscape for Palestinian music, and, indeed, Arabic music as a whole, is richer than it’s ever been. Larry LeBlanc, a leading Canadian music journalist and international consultant to PMX, tells BBC Culture: “As a westerner, you hear [the phrase] ‘Arab music’ and you think of something you heard 40 years ago, but that’s not accurate any more. This is commercial music, and it’s extremely exportable.” This would seem to have been behind Spotify’s decision to become the first major streaming service to launch in the region last year. 

“I’d always imagined doing the things I am doing now, but I didn’t think it was possible because there were no resources,” Murad says. “But I think Palestinian musicians are figuring out how to get our voices out to the international world.”  

The challenge to be heard

There have always been Palestinian musicians, of course, but their extreme circumstances have made it unlikely for their work to be heard. At the heart of the issue is a lack of local infrastructure. The only three music venues in the Palestinian territories are in the West Bank, but their large size makes them unsuitable for emerging pop acts. Because of this, concerts must be held in restaurants or make-shift halls, and it’s not always possible to convert these into a space fit for music. The few companies that rent the required gear out are not affordable for the majority of the Palestinian population. Throwing events comes with risk given the size of the initial financial outlay.

The only other venue that is a key hub for Palestinian musicians is Kabareet in the Israeli city of Haifa, run by locals and Jazar Crew, a Palestinian underground DJ collective. Since its launch four years ago, the spot has become a second home for Palestinians with an Israeli passport or those with documents allowing them to travel through Israel.

Culture is a kind of peaceful resistance, and a way of preserving our cultural identity and heritage – Rania Elias, Director of Yabous Cultural Center

What’s more, any concerts risk being shut down. The Palestinian Authority (PA) is forbidden from conducting any activities in East Jerusalem under the Oslo Accords, and Israel often prohibits cultural or political activities by Palestinian organisations on the grounds that they’re connected to the PA and erode Israeli sovereignty in the city. Earlier this year, Israeli forces were reported to have shut down a Palestinian football tournament, and, in August, they prevented a memorial service for the Palestinian writer Subhi Ghosheh from taking place at the Yabous Cultural Center.

Rania Elias, director of Yabous, tells BBC Culture: “Several times we’ve announced readings, concerts, and exhibitions, and they’ve been stopped by Israeli forces,” she explains. “They come one hour before the event with soldiers and an order saying that, according to the information they have, we are organising an event that is against the security of Israel.” She has then been required to attend an interrogation and shut down the centre temporarily. “Culture is a kind of peaceful resistance, and a way of preserving our cultural identity and heritage,” she explains. “It gives people hope, and so they [the Israeli forces] don’t want these events to happen.” 

BBC Culture contacted Gilad Erdan, Israel’s Minister of Public Security, for comment. His office explained: “Residents of East Jerusalem are free to hold any cultural and sporting event and we welcome the cultural richness of our capital Jerusalem, which is a city of peace and a hub of tourism worldwide. The only limitation in the law on holding cultural events in the city is on events in the organization or sponsored by the Palestinian Authority, which is a hostile political factor for Israel and a terrorist supporter, which works in every way to undermine Israeli sovereignty in our capital.”

Erdan’s office confirmed the closure of the memorial service, but added: “The event presented is just one example of the PA's activity in Jerusalem, which is involved in organising events of this kind, in order to violate Israeli sovereignty and strengthen its status among East Jerusalem residents. This activity is also an intentional breach of the law for the implementation of the Oslo Accords. Minister Erdan prohibits holding such events in accordance to the law, and every order he signs on it is backed by intelligence that proves the PA's involvement and has been examined by a legal adviser.”

Elias insists that the PA had no involvement in the event: We, as Yabous Cultural Center, were approached by the family of the deceased, who set up the memorial and they arranged for the ceremony. The event was organised by the family of the deceased. According to my knowledge, there is no involvement for the PA.” The Burj al-Luqluq Society, which organizes the soccer tournament, also denies any connection to the PA, and insists that it does not receive any funding from it.

Events across the rest of the West Bank, except Area C, which is under Israeli control, are monitored by Palestinian Authorities who require no licence. Permission must, however, be sought from security officials, which is normally granted provided there are no obvious reasons for them to object. In any case, a strictly enforced 2am curfew is enforced.

Recording and releasing music is also challenging. There are studios in Ramallah and East Jerusalem, one of which Murad uses, but recording gear is not affordable for those less fortunate. High import taxes rule out delivery by post, meaning that equipment must be brought in by those who are able to travel abroad, and it can be hard to carry it across international borders.

There is one well known music label, Samer Jaradat Entertainment, in the Palestinian territories, but very few, if any, others that are fully operating, partly because there are so few people trained in copyright law. This requires that artists self-release, uploading onto online platforms such as Spotify, Deezer, YouTube, and Soundcloud themselves in the faint hope that their music will find an audience.  

It’s hard to focus on music because we don’t have the basics to live – MC Gaza, rapper

In cash-stripped Gaza, the smaller Palestinian territory, there are even fewer opportunities. Recording studios are scarce, and any equipment must be sourced from Egypt or Israel at an extraordinary premium. Hamada Nasrallah, vocalist for Sol, a seven-piece folk outfit from Gaza, explains that he had to sell off his possessions just to afford a guitar, only for it to be destroyed in the August 2018 Israeli bomb attacks on the Said al-Mishal Centre.

The electricity shortages and lack of drinking water make it “hard to focus on music” because “we don’t have the basics to live”, MC Gaza, a local rapper, says. Hamas, the Islamist organization that governs the territory, shuts down events because alternative music undermines Muslim traditions. 

 

Exacerbating the problem are the restrictions on movement that Palestinians face, which means that many cannot travel abroad for gigs, or, significantly, meet with industry professionals. Special permits are required to enter Israel, which are rarely granted, especially not quickly. Palestinians have long had no access to airports in the Palestinian territories: those in Jerusalem and Gaza ceased operations around the turn of the millennium, so most Palestinians must travel to Jordan in order to fly anywhere, which costs around US$500 (£400) one-way.

A world with borders

Those in Gaza have great difficulty in travelling at all. There are only two crossings out: Rafah and Erez, controlled by Egyptian and Israeli authorities respectively. Passing through Rafah requires registration on one of two lists, one co-ordinated by the Hamas-affiliated Ministry of Interior, the other by Egyptian authorities. These lists are long, and waiting times are unpredictable because the crossing is not always open; before May 2018, it was open for only a few days a year – although the situation has improved since then. Egyptian officers have also been alleged to accept bribes, ranging from US$2,000 (£1,600) to US$10,000 (£8,000) and paid via Palestinian brokers, to expedite an application. This is unaffordable to the vast majority, and leaves those without money with little hope.

Erez, meanwhile, is also tricky, and, for reasons of security, only Israeli-defined categories of people, mainly those requiring urgent medical attention, are eligible for a permit. Permits are also granted to businessmen, students, and artists, but they are far from guaranteed: PMX has applied on behalf of Sol each year, only to be denied each time. This year, they got lucky, but only for Nasrallah, allowing him to exit Gaza for the first time in 24 years. He was notified by telephone just hours before his performance.

“Palestine is such a small piece of land and there are borders all around you,” local artist Rasha Nahas, a member of Kallemi, tells me. “It’s frustrating because there’s a lot of badass artists, musicians, and thinkers working hard on what they believe in.”

Nahas is privileged in that she was born in Haifa, Israel, and so is permitted to travel outside of the West Bank – but this precludes her from travelling through the Middle East because few countries in the region recognise Israel as a state. She now bases herself in Berlin, where she’s signed with her first management agency, and is pursuing a career as a solo artist. Her first album, an intimate take on rock ‘n’ roll with dirty electric guitar tones and poetic lyricism, will be released next year. 

The position of those born in Jerusalem is uniquely complicated. After occupying and annexing East Jerusalem following the 1967 Six-Day War, Israel offered Palestinian residents Israeli citizenship but many refused, and instead took permanent residency, allowing them to live, work, and receive benefits in Israel. They have what’s called a ‘laissez-passer’, a travel document that allows them to pass through Israel, but they cannot pass into another country without a visa, which is hard to obtain because they don’t have any citizenship.

It’s a business and they cannot make much money from us – Suleiman Harb

Take rock band El Container, for example. All six members grew up in East Jerusalem, and so have permanent residency in Israel, but their official nationality is ‘undefined’, and they have no passport. Suleiman Harb, a band member, explains that to travel they must apply to festivals online in the hope of endorsement for an entry visa, which rarely comes. “If we just do it on our own then it’s likely we won’t get a visa,” Harb says, “but we couldn’t do normal tours anyway because this would require a lot of money and there’s no guarantee of return.”

This also scuppers their chances of releasing their music because labels are reluctant to sign a band unable to tour across the primary Arabic markets, namely Lebanon, Syria, and Dubai. “It’s a business and they cannot make much money from us,” Suliman says. “We have these tough circumstantial issues because of where we live on top of the same problems as any other band.”

Despite these difficulties, the band has performed in Turkey, Italy, Morocco, Jordan, and Egypt. They’ve declined other invitations because they’re sent with the wrong intentions. “They try to connect Israeli and Palestinian bands on the same stage to show that they can exist in the same space, so the music is never the focus,” Harb says.

Musicians in the Golan Heights face similar difficulties for the same reasons: Israel annexed the land, seized from Syria, after the Six-Day War. Although Syrian, the local musicians are considered part of the Palestinian scene because they’re subject to similar restrictions: they are not even allowed to travel to Syria, so they can pass through Israel and the West Bank only. 

All four members of TootArd, whom promoters regularly label as Palestinian, grew up in the village of Majdal Shams in the Golan area, and have permanent residency in Israel, but their official nationality is also ‘undefined’, and they have no passport. Visa issues have forced them to decline offers from Beirut, Dubai, Kuwait, and Algeria, which have particularly strict visa requirements.

Across the Palestinian territories, many artists face similar challenges with gaining a world platform. Some of these – like Murad, TootArd, El Container, and Rasha Nahas – are beginning to develop an international audience, but others are still coming to terms with the boundaries they face. What unites them is an optimism for change.

There is now a diversity to the [Palestinian music] scene, and it’s starting to come out – Mahmood Jrere, DAM

Mahmood Jrere has been monitoring this evolution. Alongside brothers Tamer and Suhel Nafar, Jrere is part of DAM, the Palestinian Territories’ first hip-hop group and one of their most celebrated breakout acts. In 1999, when the band formed, the Palestinian landscape for alternative music was barren except for Sabreen, formed in Jerusalem in the 1980s, in part because musicians had no hope of success. Their music connected with Palestinians because it spoke about reality and violence in contrast to the love and romance of Arabic classical and pop music. “That’s why DAM decided to write hip-hop, and I think we broke out because people felt the same way,” Jrere says.

Taking advantage of the internet, which now allowed artists to distribute their work across borders, they connected with London label RCM – Red Circle Music, who signed them up in 2006. DAM’s success inspired an era of Palestinian hip-hop, but it’s only more recently that the region’s musical tapestry has developed. “Hip-hop broke out, but what’s different now is the other genres,” Jrere explains. “There is now a diversity to the [Palestinian music] scene, and it’s starting to come out.”

A new network

At the centre of this evolution is PMX, a meeting point geared towards providing Palestinian artists with opportunities to showcase their music, learn new skills, and connect with the global music industry. Each year, the organisers invite delegates from around the world to meet local musicians and watch them perform. If the Palestinian territories can’t go to the world, then the world will come to them. Behind the event is Martin Goldschmidt, co-founder of Cooking Vinyl Records, who set it up as a means of contributing to Palestinian culture, only to be “blown away” by the depth of musical talent.

“It [PMX] gives artists opportunities,” Jrere says, “and encourages them to take a step forward, to continue perfecting their sound, and to develop their brand.” It also creates a healthy bit of competition, and connects the various musical scenes that for so long had been fragmented. Rasha Nahas adds: “It made Palestinian musicians realise that things are possible. You have a different drive when you know you might play to Sony in half a year’s time.” 

Spotify’s launch in the Middle East is either reflective or anticipatory of a large global interest in Middle Eastern music – and while they declined to speak to BBC Culture for this piece, it’s certain that the service’s territorial expansion in November 2018 was founded on data. The streaming giant’s new presence there is helping Palestinian musicians in two important ways: providing those who live in the Palestinian territories with a platform on which to listen to them; and, through the ‘Arab hub’, presenting them to global audiences by adding their music to playlists, an important means of music discovery.

“Since the launch of Spotify in the Middle East, I have seen an intense rise in the number of new people following my music,” Murad says. “Iceland, Japan, etc: It would have been impossible for me to reach these people otherwise.”

Within three years, everybody is going to be talking about music in the Middle Eastern region, including Palestine – Martin Goldschmidt

It remains to be seen how big Palestinian music can become. Goldschmidt believes this is the start of something bigger. “World music has always been dominated by English-speaking music, but now you’ve seen K-Pop and South American music, and also Indian and Chinese music; within three years, I feel everybody is going to be talking about the Middle Eastern region, including Palestine.”

Hussain Yoosuf, senior vice-president of creative and A&R at Reservoir, an independent music publisher based in New York, believes it’s only a matter of time before we see Palestinian musicians in the global charts. 

“What you find is that repression leads to expression, and markets like Palestine are hotbeds of creative talent because of the political situation they’re in,” he says. He believes it’s now about connecting the “raw talent” with those able to harness it – “then we’ll have a global and not just a Palestinian hit,” he says.

If this is to happen, there’s work to be done. Being able to present their music to industry professionals is a major step, but local infrastructure is needed for Palestinian musicians to flourish. Acknowledging this, the team behind PMX is providing equipment and running workshops in copyright law to facilitate the launch of labels, distributors, and collection societies. There are plans to open a permanent office in Ramallah to connect artists with foreign promoters and assist with travel arrangements. 

But one big obstacle that all Middle-Eastern pop artists still face is the way they tend to be pigeonholed in the West. Rasha Nahas tells BBC Culture that her Arabic heritage sees her categorised as ‘world music’ and booked at special Arabic events, where her work doesn’t really fit. “As a Palestinian artist, you always have people impose on you your genre; people always think we are going to play traditional Palestinian music, but we’re like every other place in the world with lots of artists doing different things.”

LeBlanc, who has attended PMX each year, feels that only those able to sing in English will cross over into the mainstream charts, while others will depend on sales in Arabic-speaking countries. “As soon as they sing in their own language, they’re thrown into the worldbeat category, even though they’re not really worldbeat groups.” 

But, above and beyond commercial success, the hope is that the world will recognise the artistic talent within the Palestinian territories. For so long, the focus has been on conflict at the expense of culture, and only now are we taking a real look inside.

If you would like to comment on this story or anything else you have seen on BBC Culture, head over to our Facebook page or message us on Twitter.

And if you liked this story, sign up for the weekly bbc.com features newsletter, called The Essential List. A handpicked selection of stories from BBC Future, Culture, Capital and Travel, delivered to your inbox every Friday.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


http://www.bbc.com/culture/story/20190917-the-rise-of-palestinian-pop

2019-09-18 09:07:20Z
52780386433126

Saudi Arabia promises 'material evidence' linking Iran to oil attack - Reuters

JEDDAH/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia said it would show evidence on Wednesday linking regional rival Tehran to an unprecedented attack on its oil industry that Washington believes originated from Iran in a dangerous escalation of Middle East frictions.

FILE PHOTO: Smoke is seen following a fire at Aramco facility in the eastern city of Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia, September 14, 2019. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo/File Photo

Tehran has denied involvement in the Sept. 14 attacks on oil plants, including the world’s biggest crude processing facility, that initially knocked out half of Saudi Arabia’s production.

“We don’t want conflict in the region ... Who started the conflict?” Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani said on Wednesday, blaming Washington and Riyadh for war in Yemen.

Yemen’s Houthi group, an ally of Iran, has claimed responsibility and said they used drones to assault state oil company Aramco’s sites.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and other U.S. officials were headed to Saudi Arabia. United Nations experts monitoring sanctions on Iran and Yemen also left for the kingdom, Saudi’s U.N. envoy told Reuters.

Concrete evidence showing Iranian responsibility, if made public, could pressure Riyadh and Washington into a response, though U.S. President Donald Trump said he does not want war.

The Saudi Defense Ministry said it will hold a news conference on Wednesday at 1430 GMT to present “material evidence and Iranian weapons proving the Iranian regime’s involvement in the terrorist attack”. Riyadh has already said preliminary results showed the attack did not come from Yemen.

A U.S. official told Reuters the strikes originated in southwestern Iran. Three officials said they involved cruise missiles and drones, indicating a higher degree of complexity and sophistication than initially thought.

The officials did not provide evidence or explain what U.S. intelligence they were using for the evaluations.

Some U.S. allies, as well as those of Iran, have asked for proof behind accusations Tehran was responsible for the attack that cut 5% of global production. Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter, said on Tuesday the 5.7 million barrels per day of output would be fully restored by the end of the month.

Oil prices fell after the Saudi reassurances, having surged more than 20% at one point on Monday - the biggest intra-day jump since the 1990-91 Gulf War. [O/R]

Illustrating international caution on such an inflammatory issue, Japan’s new defense chief said Tokyo has not seen any intelligence that shows Iran was involved.

“COMPELLING” EVIDENCE

A senior U.S. official called for a U.N. Security Council response to the attacks, although success is unlikely because diplomats say Russia and China - who have veto powers - are likely to shield Iran.

One of the three U.S. officials voiced confidence the Saudi probe would yield “compelling forensic evidence” determining the origins of the attack that has exposed serious gaps in Saudi air defenses despite billions of dollars spent on Western military hardware.

Saudi U.N. Ambassador Abdallah Al-Mouallimi told Reuters the experts monitoring sanctions on Iran and Yemen were heading to Saudi Arabia along with those from a separate independent panel who also report to the Security Council.

France is also to send experts in response to a request from Saudi Arabia’s crown prince.

The situation could harm French diplomacy meant to avert a feared U.S.-Iranian conflict, diplomats told Reuters after Macron’s top envoy held talks in Saudi Arabia.

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei ruled out talks with the United States unless it returns to the nuclear accord between Iran and the West that Washington quit last year.

Trump said on Monday there was “no rush” to retaliate and Washington was coordinating with Gulf Arab and European states.

Already frayed U.S.-Iran ties deteriorated further when Trump quit the nuclear pact and reimposed sanctions, severely hurting the Iranian economy.

Washington and its Gulf Arab allies also want Iran to stop supporting regional proxies, including the Houthis who have been battling a Saudi-led military coalition in Yemen for four years.

Despite years of air strikes against them, the Houthi movement boasts drones and missiles able to reach deep into Saudi Arabia, the result of an arms race since the Western-backed, Sunni Muslim coalition intervened in Yemen against the group in March 2015.

Iran’s clerical rulers support the Houthis, but Tehran denies it actively supports them with military and financial support. In Wednesday’s video carried by Iran’s media, Rouhani said the oil attack was a “warning” by Yemenis.

(This story was corrected to change Tehran to Riyadh in paragraph 3, and fix a typo in paragraph 6)

Reporting by Stephen Kalin and Michelle Nichols; Additional reporting by Rania El Gamal in Riyadh, Phil Stewart and Steve Holland in Washington, Alaa Swilam in Cairo, Tim Kelly in Tokyo, John Irish in Paris; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.reuters.com/article/us-saudi-aramco/saudi-arabia-promises-material-evidence-linking-iran-to-oil-attack-idUSKBN1W30TS

2019-09-18 07:53:00Z
52780382632806

Indonesia 'doing everything' to put out forest fires: President - Al Jazeera English

Indonesia is battling forest fires causing toxic haze across Southeast Asia with aircraft, artificial rain and even prayer, President Joko Widodo said during a visit to one of the worst-affected areas.

Forest fires are raging on the islands of Borneo and Sumatra, sending a choking smog across the region -including towards neighbours Malaysia and Singapore.

During a visit to Riau province in central Sumatra on Tuesday, Widodo said nearly 6,000 troops had been sent to hotspots to help put out fires.

"We have made every effort," he said.

As well as firefighters on the ground, dozens of aircraft were being used for cloud-seeding to stimulate rain and for water-bombing the flames, he said.

"We have also prayed," he added, after a visit to Amrulloh Mosque in Pekanbaru.

The toxic smoke caused by deliberate burning to clear land for plantations is an annual problem for Indonesia and its neighbours but has been worsened this year by particularly dry weather.

Authorities on Monday said they had arrested nearly 200 people suspected of being involved in activities that led to the out-of-control fires.

Indonesia forest firesA firefighter works to extinguish raging fires near Palembang, southern Sumatra, Indonesia [Wahdi Septiawan/Antara Foto via Reuters] 

Four corporations were also being investigated, authorities said.

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) meteorological agency said on Tuesday the number of hotspots had stabilised but a thick haze continued to envelop the region.

On Borneo island, which Indonesia shares with Malaysia and Brunei, pollution levels were "hazardous", according to environment ministry data. Hundreds of schools across Indonesia were shut.

Schools were closed too in parts of Sarawak, Malaysia, where readings in Sri Aman near the Indonesian border rose close to 400 on Tuesday night, making air quality "unhealthy" or "very unhealthy" there and in other parts of the country, according to official figures.

In peninsular Malaysia, the meteorological office and air force were working together to seed clouds with chemicals in the hope that rainfall would clear the haze.

But hundreds of schools were closed Tuesday, affecting more than 350,000 students.

In Singapore, the National Environment Agency forecast air quality for the 24 hours from Tuesday evening to range between the "high end of the moderate range and low end of the unhealthy range". It added that the situation could worsen depending on wind conditions.

SOURCE: Al Jazeera and news agencies

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/09/indonesia-put-forest-fires-president-190918022903792.html

2019-09-18 03:00:00Z
CAIiENKFosVZlsSCSDiJ2iW67o0qFAgEKgwIACoFCAowhgIwkDgw0O8B

Israel's 2 main political parties deadlocked after election - Fox News

Israel's two main political parties were deadlocked Wednesday after an unprecedented repeat election, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu facing an uphill battle to hold on to his job.

The election's seeming political kingmaker, Avigdor Lieberman, said he'll insist upon a secular unity government between Netanyahu's Likud and Benny Gantz's Blue and White parties, who based on partial results are currently tied at 32 seats each out of 120 in parliament.

DOUG SCHOEN: NETANYAHU AND GANTZ IN TIGHT RACE TO LEAD ISRAEL – WINNER MUST MASTER THE ART OF THE DEAL

Lieberman said that was the "one and only option" on the table. That could spell serious trouble for Netanyahu's lengthy rule.

Without Lieberman's endorsement, both parties appear to have fallen well short of securing a parliamentary majority with ideological allies.

Gantz, a former military chief, has ruled out sitting with a Netanyahu-led Likud at a time when the prime minister is expected to be indicted on corruption charges in the coming weeks.

Netanyahu desperately sought an outright majority with his hard-line and ultra-Orthodox allies in hopes of passing legislation to give him immunity from his expected indictment.

Israel's attorney general has recommended charging Netanyahu with bribery, fraud and breach of trust in three scandals, pending a hearing scheduled next month. A formal indictment would increase the pressure on Netanyahu to step aside if he does not have immunity.

The partial results released Wednesday by the Central Election Commission were based on 35 percent of the vote counted. The three Israeli TV channels reported the same outcome, based on more than 90 percent of the vote counted, but did not explain the discrepancy with the commission's percentage.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP 

According to the partial results, Likud with its natural allies of religious and ultra-nationalist parties mustered 56 seats — or five short of the needed majority.

Final results are expected later Wednesday and could still swing in Netanyahu's favor.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.foxnews.com/world/israels-2-main-political-parties-deadlocked-after-election-netanyahu

2019-09-18 07:28:00Z
52780386271566