Lebanon Joins Middle East Green Initiative

 Prime Minister Najib Mikati sits between Agriculture Minister Abbas Hajj Hassan and Environment Minister Nasser Yassin during the announcement (Office of the Prime Minister)
 Prime Minister Najib Mikati sits between Agriculture Minister Abbas Hajj Hassan and Environment Minister Nasser Yassin during the announcement (Office of the Prime Minister)
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Lebanon Joins Middle East Green Initiative

 Prime Minister Najib Mikati sits between Agriculture Minister Abbas Hajj Hassan and Environment Minister Nasser Yassin during the announcement (Office of the Prime Minister)
 Prime Minister Najib Mikati sits between Agriculture Minister Abbas Hajj Hassan and Environment Minister Nasser Yassin during the announcement (Office of the Prime Minister)

Lebanon’s caretaker Prime Minister announced that the country has joined the Middle East Green Initiative, launched by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to mitigate the impact of climate change on the region.

“This is an essential step for Lebanon, especially since our southern villages and towns have been exposed to significant environmental and agricultural damage due to Israeli attacks, which requires cooperation with all of Lebanon's friends,” a statement released by the Lebanese Council of Ministers quoted Mikati as saying.

Agriculture Minister Abbas Hajj Hassan welcomed Lebanon’s participation in the initiative, confirming that a high committee has been established to ensure the project’s sustainability and facilitate relevant cooperation.

He noted that the timing of the announcement “comes in light of the continued Israeli attacks on Lebanon, and this matter must be drawn to attention, especially since Israel is destroying very large areas, whether agricultural lands, fruit trees or forests.”

Environment Minister Nasser Yassin said that the Middle East Green Initiative has very important goals to plant 40 billion trees across the region and protect the Gulf and the Middle East from climate change, stop land degradation and desertification and find the means to adapt to future challenges.

The Lebanese Ministry of Agriculture estimates that more than 2.8 million square meters of forest and agricultural land were completely burned, while about 6.7 million square meters of agricultural and forest land were partially damaged as a result of Israel’s attacks and its use of internationally-banned incendiary munitions.



US Imposes Visa Restrictions on 14 Syrian Officials Over Human Rights Abuses

Syrians take part in a demonstration against the Syrian regime. dpa file photo
Syrians take part in a demonstration against the Syrian regime. dpa file photo
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US Imposes Visa Restrictions on 14 Syrian Officials Over Human Rights Abuses

Syrians take part in a demonstration against the Syrian regime. dpa file photo
Syrians take part in a demonstration against the Syrian regime. dpa file photo

Washington on Friday said it is imposing visa restrictions on 14 Syrian regime officials for their involvement in repressing rights in Syria, including their connection to enforced disappearances.

The US administration has not released the names of the officials. But leaked reports said they were senior officials close to President Bashar Assad.

In a statement, the State Department said the actions of these individuals are part of a broader systemic pattern of abuses committed in Syria.

It noted that the Assad regime has used arbitrary detention and enforced disappearance as a tool of repression against its real and perceived critics.

“Over 96,000 men, women, and children remain forcibly disappeared by the regime to this day – leaving families desperate for answers about their fates – with the regime extorting and punishing those trying to learn more,” the statement said.

These restrictions come in addition to restrictions on 21 Syrian regime officials and their immediate family members that US Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced in March 2024 and December 2023. They targeted those involved in the repression of Syrians and others involved in the production and trafficking of drugs and Captagon.

State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said on Friday the actions of the 14 individuals are part of a broader systemic pattern of abuses committed in Syria.

“The US calls on the Assad regime and other actors in Syria to cease the reprehensible practice of disappearance and abduction, clarify the fate of those missing, humanely release all those still alive, return the remains of those who have perished in its custody, and engage in good faith with the newly established Independent Institution on Missing Persons in Syria,” he noted.

The spokesman then warned the Syrian regime from taking any retaliatory and exploitative actions against individuals seeking information on the status of missing persons.

“We reaffirm our unwavering support for the Syrian people, including in their ongoing peaceful demands for freedom and dignity, and we will continue to take action against actors responsible for the repression of Syrians,” Miller said.

He then noted that Washington continues to stand in solidarity with all US citizens who are missing or unjustly detained in Syria, and calls on the Assad regime to account for its actions.

Among the US missing persons in Syria is Austin Tice, a former US Marine and a freelance journalist, who was kidnapped in August 2012 while reporting in Damascus.

US President Joe Biden has repeatedly called for his release.

The decision to impose restrictions on the 14 Syrian officials comes as the UN marked on Friday the International Day of the Victims of Enforced Disappearances.

The State Department said on this day, it stands in solidarity with victims and survivors of enforced disappearance, as well as their families, and is taking action to promote accountability for this cruel abuse.

Also to mark the International Day of the Disappeared, the Syrian Network for Human Rights (SNHR) released on Friday its 13th annual report on enforced disappearance in Syria.

The group noted that at least 113,218 of the people arrested by the regime in Syria since March 2011, including 3,129 children and 6,71 women, are still forcibly disappeared.

The 22-page report says that the Syrian regime has used enforced disappearance as a strategic instrument to consolidate control and crush its opponents.

It adds that the judiciary itself has served as another instrument used by the regime to facilitate and cover up enforced disappearance crimes.