|   | Sabah el kheirâpour the coffee strong toâ day, because Lebanon's political debates are running hotter than a Ramadan kitchen. The foreign minister is under fire for turning the state into a partisan megaphone, parliament is quietly preparing to declare a housing emergency, and the quincennial question is back: will Lebanon actually hold elections, or will 'the outside' decide otherwise? Let's get into it. |
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 | Lebanon's Foreign Minister Is Waging Someone Else's War From the Wrong Office
- Foreign Minister Youssef Raggi, affiliated with the Lebanese Forces party, has sparked a sharp debate over whether Lebanon's top diplomat is serving the national interest or scoring domestic political points against Hezbollah from inside the state apparatus.
- Raggi recently warned publicly that Lebanon had received alerts indicating any Hezbollah intervention could prompt Israeli strikes on infrastructureâa claim Israeli officials quickly denied, raising questions about whether the statement was strategic deterrence or an appeal for external pressure.
- Critics from Daraj note that weeks earlier Raggi had effectively granted moral legitimacy to continued Israeli bombardment so long as Hezbollah retained its weaponsâa position that directly contradicts the government's own stated stances and UN reports on ceasefire violations.
- The analogy being drawn is a damning one: just as pro-Hezbollah ministers once hijacked the Foreign Ministry to serve the resistance axis, Raggi now appears to be doing the mirror imageâweaponizing diplomacy against Hezbollah rather than protecting Lebanon from all external threats.
The backstory: Lebanon's Foreign Ministry has long been a battleground between competing political factionsâpro-Hezbollah ministers historically used it to advance the "axis of resistance," while sovereignty-focused politicians now hold key posts. The tension between state-level diplomacy and factional interest is structural, not new.
Why it matters: When a foreign minister's statements contradict government policy, undermine UN findings, and arguably invite foreign military action, Lebanon's diplomatic credibilityâalready fragileâtakes another hit it can't afford. Crumbling Walls: Lebanon Declares a Housing Emergency
- Parliament's Public Works Committee convened Wednesâ day under MP Sagee Attieh and declared it will issue an official state of emergency over Lebanon's deteriorating building stock, citing decades of neglect, war damage, informal construction, and administrative corruption.
- The numbers are staggering: 2,400 buildings in Beirut require urgent rehabilitation, while Tripoli alone has roughly 400 structures deemed on the verge of collapseâwith Tripoli singled out as the most acute case due to higher rates of structural damage.
- A technical subcommittee was formed, pulling in the Engineers' Syndicate, relevant municipalities, and relief organizations, with a mandate to conduct field surveys, technical assessments, and push for legislative solutionsâthough the majority of ministers invited to the session were absent.
The bigger picture: Lebanon's crumbling housing stock isn't just an infrastructure storyâit's a socioeconomic time bomb concentrated in poor, densely packed urban neighborhoods where rent laws and poverty have trapped residents inside buildings that should have been condemned years ago. Will Lebanon's Elections HappenâOr Will "The Outside" Decide Again?
- A senior political figure with ties to the Quintet Committee ambassadors told Al-Joumhouria that most influential foreign capitals view adherence to constitutional deadlines as irrelevantâtheir only real priority is protecting their own interests, constitutional timelines be damned.
- The Quintet Committeeâcomprising Saudi Arabia, the US, France, Egypt, and Qatarâis reportedly increasing pressure to postpone the parliamentary elections scheduled for Mayâ , reversing its longstanding insistence that Lebanon honor democratic timelines as a condition for international support.
- The article draws a sharp parallel to Lebanon's recent presidential election, which only happened after foreign actors intervened decisively to provide the political coverâraising the uncomfortable question of whether Lebanon can hold any major vote on its own terms.
What to watch: Whether Lebanon's political classâwhich has historically deferred to external signalsâfinds the spine to push back on postponement pressure, or quietly acquiesces and hands the Mayâ election date to the same powers that dictated the last one. |
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 | - Airport threat, denied: Presidential sources called Foreign Minister Raggi's warnings about Israel targeting Beirut's airport "fearmongering," saying he never notified the president or parliament before going publicâthe PSP called the "stark contrast" between his claims and Israel's denial surprising.
- Your wallet, 5â7% lighter: A researcher at Duwali lil-Ma'lumat estimates Lebanon's new fuel surcharge and VAT hike will raise consumer prices by 5â7%, eroding purchasing power accordinglyâwith a new $46 per-container port scanner fee kicking in starting Febâ ruary 26.
- âŹ100M for the army: The EU plans to contribute $100 million toward the Marâ ch 5 Paris conference supporting the Lebanese Army, primarily for logistical equipmentâwith Saudi Arabia's participation in Cairo's preparatory meeting read by Western diplomats as a strongly positive signal.
- Pay up, ministers: Lebanon's Court of Audit has moved to enforce collection orders against four former telecom ministers totaling roughly $35.6 million in damagesâFinance Minister Jaber confirmed that refusal to pay could trigger asset seizures under the Public Accounting Law.
- ICC or bust: Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and three other organizations urged Lebanon's government to accept ICC jurisdiction over crimes committed on Lebanese territory since Octâ ober 2023, noting that Israeli attacks have killed over 380 peopleâincluding at least 127 civiliansâsince the ceasefire took effect.
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 | â | Parallel Rate | 89,700 LBP | 0.00% | | â | Official Rate | 89,500 LBP | 0.00% | | Ⲡ| Gold | $5,214.1 | +0.15% | | Ⲡ| Bitcoin | $68,449 | +5.35% | | Ⲡ| S&P 500 | 6,946.13 | +1.59% |
as of 6:â 16 Aâ M GMT ¡ Source: Yahoo Finance, CoinGecko |
 | The Epstein Files Reveal a Secret Qatar-Israel Back Channel
- Newly released US Justice Department documentsâpart of over 3 million pages from Jeffrey Epstein's filesâreveal that Epstein helped arrange a secret Decâ ember 2018 meeting in London between former Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak and former Qatari Prime Minister Hamad bin Jassem, at a time when Qatar was diplomatically isolated by Gulf neighbors.
- Barak's name appears over 9,000 times in the released documents, while Qatari royal family member Jabr bin Yousef Al Thani's name appears 4,695 timesâthe files show Epstein describing bin Jassem as his "Arab uncle" and "the only sane person in Qatar."
- Post-meeting emails show Barak sent a presentation for his security company "Karbyne" expressing interest in participating in security efforts for the 2022 FIFA World Cup, with Barak suggesting any deal be routed through a European company to avoid Israel's name appearing publicly.
- Barak's office confirmed the communications were an "initial idea" to explore Karbyne's involvement in the World Cup, stating "the idea was never developed"âit remains unclear whether any deal was ultimately concluded.
The bigger picture: The files offer a rare documented glimpse into the informal back-channel networks that have long underpinned Gulf-Israel commercial and intelligence relationships, well before any formal normalization agreements. Ukraine War Enters Year Five With No Peace in Sight
- Four years after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine on Febâ ruary 24, 2022, the war has cost both sides nearly 2 million casualtiesâ1.2 million on the Russian side including 325,000 killed, and 600,000 on Ukraine's side including 140,000 killed, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
- Geneva talks on Febâ ruary 17â18, attended by US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, collapsed without resultâRussia insists on keeping all territories seized since 2022, representing 20% of Ukraine's land, while Zelensky has signaled willingness to cede occupied territory in exchange for ceasefire guarantees and European troops on the border.
- Russia's economy, which grew at 4% in 2023â2024 driven by war spending, slowed sharply to 0.6% growth lastâ yearâwith 40% of Russia's budget now directed toward war costs, and further decline expected in 2026 as energy export revenues shrink.
What to watch: Whether Trump's envoy Witkoff can lay the groundwork for a possible Zelensky-Putin summit within three weeks, as Washington claimsâgiven that both sides remain fundamentally at odds over territorial terms. Albania's AI Minister Was a Real Person. She's Now Suing.
- Albanian actor Anila Bisha has filed suit against Prime Minister Edi Rama's government after her face and voice were usedâwithout her knowledgeâfor "Diella," presented in Sepâ tember 2025 as the world's first virtual AI government minister, after she had only consented to her likeness being used for a chatbot on a public services portal.
- Bisha is seeking âŹ1 million in moral damages, naming the Council of Ministers, the National Agency for Information Society, the private production company, and Rama himself as defendantsâa court hearing on a temporary suspension of her image's use was scheduled for Febâ ruary 23.
- The case took a deeper turn when Albania's Special Anti-Corruption Court ordered precautionary measures, including house arrest, against senior officials at the very agency managing "Diella," over suspected irregularities in public procurement contracts for digital infrastructure in Decâ ember 2025.
Zooming out: As governments worldwide race to deploy AI in public administration, Albania's courtroom drama illustrates how the legal and ethical frameworks governing consent, identity, and data protection are nowhere near ready for the technology being layered on top of them. |
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 | - Venice, twice over: Lebanese-born Australian artist Khaled Sabsabiâwhose appointment to represent Australia was controversially cancelled then reinstatedâwill make history as the first Australian artist to appear in both the Australia Pavilion and the Venice Biennale's main exhibition, running Mayâ 9 to Novâ ember 22, with works rooted in Sufi philosophy.
- Rita's muse, forever: The woman who inspired Mahmoud Darwish's iconic poem "Rita and the Rifle"âlater set to music by Marcel Khalife in 1976 and sung across the Arab worldâhas passed at 79. Tamar Ben Ami, dancer and choreographer, shared a secret love with Darwish for nearly five years before the 1967 war ended everything between them.
- Gorilla masks, 40 years on: The Getty Center in Los Angeles is hosting "How to Be a Guerrilla Girl" through Aprâ il 12âa landmark exhibition drawn from 96 boxes of archival material, celebrating four decades of the anonymous feminist art collective that took on misogyny with wit, posters, and fake fur.
- Art from the ashes: A year after Los Angeles's devastating wildfires, artist Kelly Akashiâwho lost both her home and studioâwill exhibit at the Whitney Biennial in New York nextâ month, presenting a glass and mortar re-creation of her chimney, turning destruction into something quietly extraordinary.
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Go make it a good oneâsee you toâ morrow. |
 Ghurbeh is living abroad. |
 Lebanon news for the diaspora â delivered every weekday morning. Free, sharp, ~5 minutes. |
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