Foreign Affairs, Government, Lebanon, Middle East, Politics, Syria

The assassination of Mohamad Chatah: Lebanon’s moderate voice has been silenced…

QUAGMIRE OF SYRIA

Mohamad Chatah, the former Finance Minister in the Lebanese government of Saad Hariri, was assassinated yesterday in a huge car bomb blast in Beirut. Lebanon has lost a courageous intellectual and a fervent interlocutor for moderation who has regularly spelled out the extreme peril his nation faces as the civil war in Syria continues to polarise the Lebanese people.

Mr Chatah was a prominent blogger and user of social networking sites. Just hours before his death, he used Twitter to express his grave premonition that Lebanon was heading back towards the abyss. He tweeted: ‘Hezbollah is pressing hard to be granted similar powers in security and foreign policy matters that Syria exercised in Lebanon for 15 years.’

As a leading Sunni, Mr Chatah had followed the hard anti-Assad line being pursued by Saudi Arabia and Qatar. It should not have been difficult, even if not agreeing with everything he positioned himself on, to recognise that he saw clearly the dire peril his nation was facing. Mr Chatah’s analysis was that the war in Syria, which has already claimed 120,000 lives, has gone on too long for the regime of Bashar al-Assad to be restored to its previous dominant position. Because of this, the preferred outcome for both Iran and Hezbollah, he said, was for the war to continue indefinitely.

Mr Chatah’s vision was of clarity and pragmatism. He also saw for Lebanon the implications of how great a disaster such a stalemate would be for his country, suggesting it could not hope to avoid being dragged in. As a consequence, he believed, along with other patriots, was that Lebanon would suffer another bout of destructive civil war, similar to the one that lasted from 1975 to 1990. His violent assassination is undoubtedly another fatal step in that direction.

Following months of frustration and numerous setbacks, a peace conference on Syria is set to open in the Swiss town of Montreux next month. Hopes for success at the talks may be slim as the intensification of the war continues. Whilst both sides are seeking to maximise their positions in advance of the summit, the outside world must owe it to Mr Chatah and his beleaguered people to do far more in bringing Syria’s civil war to an end.

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Britain, Business, Economic, Finance, Government, Society

The Revenue must call multinationals to account…

TAX AVOIDANCE

The relationship between the Government’ Revenue Service and how big corporations are being advised on how best to avoid paying tax is often uncomfortably close. Suspicions are such, that no sooner have civil servants finished writing a new addition to the corporate tax laws, is then quickly followed by a recruitment drive by top accountancy firms to provide ideas on how to get round it. Tax avoidance measures are costing the Exchequer billions in unpaid taxes.

The belief that HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) has too cosy a relationship with the big multinationals has gained new credence when, just last week, a Commons select committee suggested in its report that the tax authority seems to ‘lose its nerve’ when it comes to pursuing the biggest names in business.

The chairman of the House of Commons public accounts committee, Margaret Hodge MP, said:

…In pursuing unpaid tax, HMRC has not clearly demonstrated that it is on the side of the majority of taxpayers who pay their taxes in full.

Noticeably, one of the key findings of the committee’s report was that last year the department collected less tax in real terms than it managed to collect in 2011-12, despite its stated aim of cracking down on tax avoidance. For the average man and woman in the street, who are desperately struggling through the age of austerity, this is an extraordinary state of affairs. With public services being cut at a faster rate than ever before, most people will surely find it astonishing that the corporate world is getting an easier ride than before.

There is, however, an indifferent logic behind the tendency of HMRC to strike deals that seem advantageous to the big firms. Multinational corporations hire very expensive lawyers, who invariably find a way round most of the complex tax rules. At some point, the HMRC calculation seems to be that it would rather cut its losses and do a deal than prolong the agony for an uncertain gain at some indeterminate point in the future.

That is the logic, but it is morally indefensible – especially when the tax authorities show no such leniency when it comes to wringing every last penny from the minnows of British business. Little compunction from HMRC often forces small firms to the wall, even if they are struggling to pay their VAT on time.  These small and medium sized firms (SMEs) put up less of a fight, which is why they are pursued so ruthlessly.

Taxation has to be seen to be fair. For that to be the case, the UK system needs to meet two standards. First, it is imperative we introduce new laws that massively reduce the scope for avoidance. There is a strong argument that the tax code is now too complex, and that this complexity has produced a multiplicity of loopholes that are being exploited. And secondly, HMRC needs to have the resources (and the will) to pursue multinationals as relentlessly as it pursues the country’s smaller firms.

Fairness demands that multinationals know their obligations and are obliged in meeting them.

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Arts, Christianity, Photography, Religion

Christmas 2013: Manger Square, Bethlehem…

BETHLEHEM

Manger Square, outside the Church of the Nativity, traditionally believed by Christians to be the birthplace of Jesus Christ, in the West Bank town of Bethlehem (Photo Credit: AP)

Manger Square, outside the Church of the Nativity, traditionally believed by Christians to be the birthplace of Jesus Christ, in the West Bank town of Bethlehem (Photo Credit: AP)

Large crowds gathered in the biblical town of Bethlehem for Christmas Eve celebrations.

The nearby Church of the Nativity sits on the spot where Jesus is said to have been born.

Meanwhile, in St Peter’s Basilica in Rome, Pope Francis celebrated his first Christmas Eve Mass since becoming pontiff.

He earlier made a visit to Pope Emeritus Benedict, 86, and said he found his predecessor looking well.

The number of visitors to Bethlehem has been steadily rising in recent years as peace talks to resolve the Middle East conflict have resumed.

Despite the erection of Israel’s separation barrier with the West Bank – which appears as a high concrete wall around the town – three gates have been opened for Christmas to allow the Christmas procession led by the Latin Patriarch coming from Jerusalem to enter the city.

Latin Patriarch Archbishop Fouad Twal – the most senior Roman Catholic cleric in the Holy Land – as he arrived in town, said:

…The message of Christmas is a message of peace, love and brotherhood. We have to be brothers with each other.

His motorcade crawled through Bethlehem’s narrow streets as he stopped to greet visitors.

It took Archbishop Twal nearly 90 minutes to make the short trip to the Church of the Nativity, where thousands of people were gathered ahead of Midnight Mass.

In Vatican City, a life-sized nativity scene was unveiled in the centre of St Peter’s Square.

Thousands of worshippers from across Italy and around the world queued on a cold clear night before entering St Peter’s.

As soaring music filled the air, Pope Francis made his entrance and moved slowly up the central aisle, followed by a retinue of clerics.

In a short homily, Francis said that every Christian can choose between darkness and light, between love and hate:

…If we love God and our brothers and sisters, we walk in the light; but if our heart is closed, if we are dominated by pride, deceit, self-seeking, then darkness falls within us and around us.

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