Iranians' Entry Into Lebanon Without Stamp Raises Controversy

Lebanon’s airport/NNA
Lebanon’s airport/NNA
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Iranians' Entry Into Lebanon Without Stamp Raises Controversy

Lebanon’s airport/NNA
Lebanon’s airport/NNA

The Lebanese Security General’s latest decision to issue Iranian travelers entering the country landing slips instead of stamping their passports has created controversy, especially amidst mounting US and Western pressures on Tehran.

The General Security asserted that such decisions are "entirely within its jurisdiction,” and do not mean that Iranians have entered the country illegally.

On Sunday, the Foreign Ministry issued a statement saying: “The General Security decided on stamping landing slips instead of passports,” adding that the role of the ministry is limited only to reporting such decision.

Experts said that such development could not be placed outside regional developments and had two objectives: to facilitate the transfer of Iranian money to Hezbollah away from any US sanctions, and the transfer of Iranians to Beirut and then to Syria, where they are fighting alongside the Assad regime.

Commentators on social media compared the Security General decision to a “military line” between Lebanon and Syria.

A source close to the matter told Asharq Al-Awsat on Sunday that the decision was new to the Iranians, but it has been applied for other countries in the past years.

“This procedure does not mean Iranians are illegally entering the country or that their names are not registered at the Security General,” the source said.

However, Lebanese Forces deputy Wehbi Katisha and head of the Levant Institute for Strategic Affairs Sami Nader both agreed that such procedures could not be separated from developments happening in the region, particularly in Syria.

“The decision is illegal and unconstitutional,” Katisha told Asharq Al-Awsat.

“Such measures hide ambiguous intentions.”

He said this decision would aim to transfer money to people sanctioned by the US and to allow members of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards entry into Lebanon before heading to Syria.

For his part, Nader told Asharq Al-Awsat that the decision would benefit Iranians in the transfer of experts and fighters to Syria via Beirut’s airport or the transfer of money to Lebanon and particularly to Hezbollah, in light of the current US sanctions against Iran.



Attempts to Cross the English Channel on Small Boats Leave 4 Migrants, Including a Child, Dead

Pas-de-Calais prefect Jacques Billant (L) holds a press conference in Boulogne-sur-Mer on October 5, 2024, following the death of four migrants who attempt to cross the English Channel. (AFP)
Pas-de-Calais prefect Jacques Billant (L) holds a press conference in Boulogne-sur-Mer on October 5, 2024, following the death of four migrants who attempt to cross the English Channel. (AFP)
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Attempts to Cross the English Channel on Small Boats Leave 4 Migrants, Including a Child, Dead

Pas-de-Calais prefect Jacques Billant (L) holds a press conference in Boulogne-sur-Mer on October 5, 2024, following the death of four migrants who attempt to cross the English Channel. (AFP)
Pas-de-Calais prefect Jacques Billant (L) holds a press conference in Boulogne-sur-Mer on October 5, 2024, following the death of four migrants who attempt to cross the English Channel. (AFP)

French authorities said four migrants, including a 2-year-old child, died Saturday in two separate incidents as they attempted to cross the English Channel toward Britain.

France's Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau deplored a “terrible tragedy" on X, saying that the child “was trampled to death in a boat."

“The smugglers have the blood of these people on their hands,” Retailleau added, saying his newly-appointed government is to “intensify the fight against these mafias who make money from these deadly crossings.”

Saturday’s deaths come as a series of shipwrecks made 2024 the deadliest in recent years on the English Channel. Last month, 12 people died after a boat carrying migrants ripped apart in the English Channel. About two weeks later, eight migrants died in a similar crossing attempt.

In a news conference, the prefect of the Pas-de-Calais, Jacques Billant, said rescuers found the 2-year-old child dead onboard a migrant boat that had called for assistance Saturday morning.

Fourteen other migrants picked up on board the rescue boat were brought back to France to be interviewed by the border police and a 17-year-old was brought to a hospital in the port city of Boulogne-sur-Mer as he suffered from burns to his legs, Billant said.

Other people on the migrant boat who refused to be rescued continued their journey toward Britain, he said.

“To make money and with no regard for human life, networks of smugglers put people at ever greater risk,” including families with children, “literally leading them to accident and death,” Billant said.

Boulogne-sur-Mer prosecutor Guirec Le Bras, said the child, who appears to have been crushed in a jostling on the boat, was born in Germany from a 24-year-old Somalian mother.

In a separate incident, Billant, the prefect, said rescuers found three migrants dead and saved several others as they fell off a small boat overloaded with 83 passengers amid “panic and stampede."

Those dead “were probably crushed" and “have choked ... and drowned in the 40 centimeters (16 inches) of water at the bottom of the inflatable boat,” he said.

They were two men and a woman, the three of them aged about 30, he said.

Migrants that rescuers took care of Saturday came from Eritrea, Vietnam, Afghanistan, Iran, Ethiopia, Libya, Syria, Egypt, Kuwait and Iraq, Billant listed.

The prosecutor said investigations have been open on both incidents.

Europe’s increasingly strict asylum rules, growing xenophobia and hostile treatment of migrants have been pushing them north.

Before Saturday's events, French authorities said at least 46 migrants had died while trying to cross to the UK this year.