Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Submarine finds 10 bodies on Lebanon's sunken migrant ship |
2022-08-30 |
[AnNahar] A submarine has found the remains of at least 10 ![]() with about 30 people on board, the navy announced. The boat, carrying dozens of Lebanese, Syrians and Paleostinians trying to migrate by sea to Italia, went down more than 5 kilometers from the port of Tripoli ...a confusing city, one end of which is located in Lebanon and the other end of which is the capital of Libya. Its chief distinction is being mentioned in the Marine Hymn... , following a confrontation with the Lebanese navy. Ten bodies were recovered that night, including one of a child, while 48 survivors were pulled from the Mediterranean Sea. According to navy estimates, 30 people were believed to have gone down with the boat. Since Monday, the small, 3-person underwater craft -- a Pisces VI submarine -- has been searching for the remains. The wreck was located on Wednesday, at a depth of some 450 meters (about 1,470 feet). The circumstances of the vessel's sinking are disputed to this day. Survivors say their vessel was rammed by the Lebanese navy, while the military claims the Capt. Scott Waters, who operated the craft, told news hounds at a presser in Tripoli Friday that the first body they found was outside the wreck but much of it had decayed since the sinking, with mostly bits of clothing and some bones remaining intact. He said the second body was found coming up from the wreckage. Waters said the crew identified four more bodies inside the wreckage and a substantial amount of debris around the vessel. At least four other bodies were found away from the wreck. Some of the people who tried to escape the boat, he assumed, got "tangled in that debris." "One of the very last footage and images we took," he added, was of the remains of a person, an arm around another. "They died holding each other." Tom Zreika, a Lebanese-Australian and the chairman of Australian charity AusRelief that helped bring the submarine to Lebanon, said the boat was a "fair degree under silt," making it difficult to retrieve it. Zreika said what's next is for Lebanon to bring the sunken boat out but that remains a difficult task. Lebanon's navy chief, Col. Haitham Dinnawi, said all the video footage from Waters' crew will be handed over to the judiciary as it investigates the sinking. Tripoli politician Ashraf Rifi helped lease the submarine for cash-strapped Lebanon through Zreika and his own brother, Jamal Rifi, who lives in Sydney. Rifi and Zreika told The Sydney Morning Herald last month that an anonymous donor had given just over $295,000 to lease the submarine. The April sinking was the greatest migrant tragedy for Lebanon in recent years and put the government further on the defensive at a time when the country is in economic free fall and public trust in the state and its institutions is rapidly crumbling. With a population of about 6 million people, including 1 million Syrian refugees, Lebanon has been mired since 2019 in an economic meltdown that has plunged three quarters of the population into poverty. Once a country that received refugees, Lebanon has become a launching pad for dangerous migration by sea to Europe. As the crisis deepened, more Lebanese, as well as Syrian and Paleostinian refugees have set off to sea, with security agencies reporting foiled migration attempts almost weekly. |
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Sheik Hilaly says he's more Aussie than the PM |
2007-04-13 |
![]() The Australian Federal Police is investigating $70,000 raised by the Sydney-based Lebanese Muslim Association (LMA) and handed out in Lebanon by Sheik al Hilali. LMA president Tom Zreika has said allegations have been made in the Muslim community that Sheik al Hilali gave some of the money to Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah. "When I get back to Sydney, I will be asking how this money was accounted for," Sheik al Hilali told the newspaper. "I get accused in the media of spending the money, but at the end of the day I don't know how the money was spent. I was just writing down the names on a piece of paper." Sheik Al Hilali said his widely criticised remarks supporting the hardline Iranian regime were meant to encourage world peace. Both the government and opposition called for the sheik to be sacked and to leave the country after he called on Australian Muslims to back Iran's hardline regime. Sheik al Hilali told the newspaper he had spent 50 years promoting peace and accused the Prime Minister of running a dictatorship. "It's a disgrace for the leader of a democratic country to be picking on religious people, especially one who is practicing a form of dictatorship that could almost be Saddam Hussein-like," Sheik al Hilali said. "I respect Australian values more than he does. Australian people like peace and they like humanitarian welfare and they are attracted to just causes." |
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'Hezbollah' sheik denies al-Hilali funding | |||
2007-04-11 | |||
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The Australian Federal Police is investigating $70,000 raised by the Sydney-based Lebanese Muslim Association and handed out in Lebanon by Sheik Alhilali. LMA president Tom Zreika has said allegations have been made in the Muslim community that Sheik Hilali gave some of the money to Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah. But Sheik Shaaban told of how he accompanied the mufti to war-torn villages in southern Lebanon. (He was) giving them (villagers) cash payments of $200-$300 Australian dollars, Sheik Shaaban told the paper.
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Cops probe Hilaly al-Qaeda link |
2007-04-06 |
ISLAMIC community leaders at Lakemba mosque are being interviewed by the federal police about mufti Sheik Taj al-Dene Elhilaly's decision to hand charity funds to supporters of al-Qaeda and Hezbollah terrorist outfits in Lebanon. Officers have seized documents from the Lebanese Muslim Association, which backs Sheik Hilaly, and interviewed its president Tom Zreika. Islamic Friendship Association spokesman Keyser Trad, who is in Lebanon, has also been contacted by police. The LMA raised $70,000 in conjunction with other Islamic bodies following the Israel-Hezbollah war in Lebanon. The money was meant for The Weekend Australian reports Sheik Hilaly, who is overseas, and LMA employee Sheik Yihya Safi will be asked by the AFP to provide a detailed outline of how they distributed the Australian-raised funds in Lebanon. It has been claimed that Sheik Elhilaly met with the leader of Hezbollah's terrorist wing, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah. |
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Australian imams urged to become lifesavers, firemen |
2007-03-22 |
Really, we don't make this stuff up.![]() Picked right up on that, didn't you, Tom? What was your first clue? The president of Australias largest Islamic organisation, the Lebanese Muslim Association, made the call in a 16-page report to be considered by the nations clerics at a meeting this weekend. Tom Zreika suggests Muslims have become as unpopular as communists once were, and accuses some clerics of inciting hatred and violence on the preposterous justification that they are simply acting in self-defence in a time of war. I'm not too sure how hollering "Lookit me! I'm the extreme lower end of a digestive tract!" can be termed "self-defense." Sounds more like a plea for a kick to the scrotum. We are not at war, says Zreika, who confirmed that details of his report published in The Australian newspaper on Wednesday were accurate. We have become the new communism, particularly in the West, and some people in our community are so repulsed by our actions it is making life unbearable for us and our offspring, Zreika says. "So the problem we face is: How do we overcome being repulsive?" In a nation where beach culture is strong and public service volunteers are hailed as heroes, Zreika said fire fighting and lifesaving could help Australias 300,000 Muslims improve their image. It would be great to see a turbaned imam fighting fires alongside other bushfire service volunteers, Zreika, a lawyer, says in his submission to the Australian National Imams Council. Organisations like the Surf Lifesaving Association should be joined as a matter of course by the imam and his followers. "Mum! You'll never guess what happened! I wuz havin' a swim when I got caught up in the undertow and swept out to sea! I thought it was all over, but then some obnoxious arsehole in a turban rescued me!" "Gosh, Molly! I wonder if it was the same obnoxious arsehole who put out the fire at the Jones' house?" |
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Hilali gagged by Muslim leaders | |
2007-03-09 | |
![]() The Lebanese Muslim Association has gagged the imams from Lakemba Mosque in Sydney's southwest from media commentary - especially to Arabic news outlets - because of the "immeasurable damage" they have caused the community. A letter was yesterday sent by the Lebanese Muslim Association to its five imams, including Sheik Yahya Safi - the official Australian representative to the Mufti of Lebanon - Sheik Shady Suleiman, and Sheik Hilali. The letter, obtained by The Australian, demands the imams LMA president Tom Zreika yesterday told The Australian the letter was issued to end the "perceived un-Australian viewpoints given by some clerics". "One of the big issues is the double-speak by the various imams," Mr Zreika said. He added that the messages some clerics delivered in Arabic contradicted comments given in English while talking to the mainstream media.
"(While) most of our clerics are selected on the basis that they have Australian values and Australian characteristics ... some of them haven't (lived) up to that." The LMA's hardline approach towards silencing its clerics comes after the furore sparked by Sheik Hilali last year, following revelations in The Australian last month that the mufti was banned from delivering sermons at Lakemba Mosque. Sheik Hilali caused national and international uproar last October when The Australian uncovered a sermon in which he compared women to "uncovered meat" and joked about Sydney's infamous gang rapes. The cleric, who has been the nominal head of Australia's Muslim community for years, further compounded the controversy by subsequently appearing on Egyptian television to dismiss the furore over his insults to women and make disparaging remarks about Australia's convict beginnings. Sheik Shadi yesterday told The Australian that he supported the LMA's decision, saying it was in the best interests of the Muslim and wider community. | |
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Leaders plan to dump Hilali |
2007-02-07 |
![]() The future of the 66-year-old's spiritual position at Lakemba Mosque in western Sydney was thrashed out last week by more than 50 Sydney-based Muslim leaders during a secret meeting. The talks at the Lakemba Mosque last Thursday came after the Lebanese Muslim Association indefinitely banned Sheik Hilali - whose community support base continues to nosedive - from delivering sermons at the mosque following his return from Egypt last month. It is understood that Sheik Hilali, who came under fire from community leaders and politicians for comparing women to uncovered meat, initially resisted the ban before agreeing to abandon the pulpit on the basis of "mutual understanding" between him and the LMA executives. Lebanese Islamic leader Mustafa Hamed said the LMA, along with 10 Sydney-based Muslim community organisations present at the secret meeting, were negotiating a "long-service" package for the Sheik. Under the proposed package, the LMA would allow the cleric to continue living in a house next door to Lakemba mosque, which is owned by the organisation. It is also understood the golden handshake would include an indefinite weekly stipend of several hundred dollars. Mr Hamed, president of the Sydney-based community association Bhanin El Minieh, said yesterday that Sheik Hilali needed to accept that his position as Lakemba Mosque's spiritual head would be better served by someone less controversial. "If I didn't believe that it was in the best interest of the community, that the damage he's done is enough, I wouldn't say that he should leave," said Mr Hamed in an interview conducted in Arabic. "We are prepared to pay his long-service leave ... this is being currently negotiated in the community, among councils." Sheik Hilali, returning to his home mosque shortly before 7pm (AEDT) yesterday, at first refused to comment and then said there were no problems between him and the LMA. "Everything is all right," he said. "There is no news. Everything is all right. I am all right with the Lakemba ... everything is the same." Last October, The Australian exposed Sheik Hilali's inflammatory sermon, in which he suggested that rape victims who did not wear Islamic headdress were as much to blame as their attackers. And last month the cleric ridiculed Australia on Egyptian television while dismissing the furore over his insults to women. He said Westerners were "liars and oppressors" who had less right to live in Australia than Muslims. Mr Hamed said Sheik Hilali had both benefited and damaged the community since his arrival in Australia 25 years ago. "My opinion is that in his 25 years here, he has made mistakes and made good," Mr Hamed said. "But I think it's time for him to rest and leave a place for the new generation to work for the new generation." LMA president Tom Zreika yesterday said that Sheik Hilali needed to stop playing politics if the Muslim community was to recover from the damage his past remarks had caused. "He's a very useful and astute religious theologian, but we ask him to keep out of politics," Mr Zreika said. He said Sheik Hilali "unfairly implicated" the LMA every time the cleric strayed into the political arena because the organisation was in charge of Lakemba Mosque. "The community as a whole stands to lose more than they would gain by him pursuing this political dialogue," he said. The Australian National Imams Council is expected to meet by April to thrash out the nature of the mufti position. It is understood that council members have told Sheik Hilali, who has held the title since 1989, that they cannot guarantee his position. |
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'Freak-show' sheik told to keep politics out |
2007-01-26 |
![]() The cleric arrived home in Sydney this week after a two-month self-imposed exile in Mecca and Egypt following a sermon last year comparing sexily dressed women to "uncovered meat". He says his recent comments on Egyptian TV, saying Muslims were more entitled to live in Australia than Anglo-Saxons of convict origin, were misinterpreted. |
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Hilaly 'refuses to be silenced' | ||||
2006-11-02 | ||||
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The two men have had a major falling out since the reporting of the mufti's controversial comments even though Sheik Hilaly had sought Mr Rifi's opinion the night before the damaging remarks were made public. Dr Rifi said the Sheik had met at his home from 11pm (AEDT) seeking his opinion on how to handle any fall-out.
But Dr Rifi said their plan to "ride the wave" was blown after Islamic Friendship Association president Keysar Trad organised for a television crew to interview the mufti in his sick bed. He said the mufti then reneged on a promise not to make any more public statements by attending Lakemba Mosque last Friday and delivering a "fiery" speech. Sheik Hilaly's daughter Asma said yesterday the family was hopeful the 65-year-old would address worshippers and make a public statement tomorrow. "When he comes out, he'll probably be speaking to the media to put an end to all of this talk about him," Ms Hilaly told The Daily Telegraph. Despite taking
Supporters of the mufti yesterday accused worshippers from a rival mosque of trying to discredit him.That was yesterday denied by Bankstown mosque Imam Sheik Ibrahim El-Safie who said: "It's a stunt to deviate the attention away from the inflammatory remarks he's made." Sheik Safie said his group Darulfatwa - the Islamic Council of Australia - does not consider Sheik Hilaly to be the most-senior Muslim in the country. He said the title went to their mufti, Sheik Salim Alwan, chairman of Darulfatwa.
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Rally to support embattled Sydney cleric |
2006-11-01 |
The head of Sydney's Lebanese Muslim Association says he has no concerns that Saturday's rally in support of embattled Sheik Taj Aldin Alhilali will turn violent. Association president Tom Zreika has told the Nine Network that rally goers, who will meet at the Lakemba mosque, have been urged to think of India's peaceful campaigner, Mahatma Gandhi. "We've been out telling people to just relax, take it easy, it should be a calm day," Mr Zreika said. "Think of Gandhi when you're out there because the last thing that we want to do is stir up more emotions and more trouble. The point is, if you really want this message to come out, do it in the legal way, don't break the law, obviously and have fun." An SMS message is circulating, calling on Muslims to attend the "peaceful" rally. Mr Zreika said he also had sought the approval of police to stage the rally, and he said sufficient officers would be provided to assure public safety. Sheik Alhilali is recuperating in hospital after collapsing during a meeting that was to decide his future, following the public outcry over a sermon in which he likened immodest women to "uncovered meat" who invited assault. Mr Zreika said it was not up to him to remove the sheik from his position, and he called for a "fair go" for him. "It's not a matter for me, it is a matter for the Australian Muslim public. I resonate what they say," Mr Zreika said. "There are calls - I'm not going to say that there are no calls ... but he has apologised, he has given an explanation, he has asked for more time to recover. Now, it is up to us to give him a fair go according to Australian standards. |
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Muslims plan rally in support of Hilaly |
2006-10-31 |
MEMBERS of Sydney's Islamic community sent thousands of text messages urging a non-violent rally yesterday as former prime minister Malcolm Fraser accused the Government of using Muslims as an election issue. The text messages called for a show of support this Saturday for embattled cleric Sheik Taj al-Din al-Hilaly. One described the planned rally as "a critical day to show our solidarity and to silence the hypocrites!" The barrage of text and email messages came as the sheik's family confirmed he would not be stepping down as Mufti of Australia despite the outrage caused by his remarks about the victims of rape. Sheik Hilaly's daughter Asma Hilaly said her father had simply taken temporary sick leave from his duties at Lakemba mosque after collapsing on Monday. "He will not step down. He's always been strong. Strong, tall and defiant and none of this will shake him and bring him down," the 25-year-old said outside Canterbury Hospital. She said her father who is expected to remain in hospital for at least another two days still planned to travel to Mecca in the next few weeks. Former prime minister Malcolm Fraser accused the Howard Government of fuelling an "increase in fear and concern over the followers of Islam", The Age newspaper reported. "There are already suggestions that this next election will be a 'Muslim election', as a while ago it was the Tampa election," he said. "It would create a terrible and unnecessary divide between Islam and the rest of the community." Many Muslims, wary of public perception, said they wanted to ensure any rally in support of Sheik Hilaly was peaceful and did not turn into a "flag burning" by an angry mob. One message sender feared a repeat of the scenes at the Lakemba mosque on the night of the Cronulla riots, when fights broke out during a rally. "Last thing we need is another display like what was seen outside Lakemba mosque on the night of the riots," the message implored. Lebanese Muslim Association president Tom Zreika said last night the rally had not been officially organised by the association and "mixed messages" were being sent about what day the protest would take place. "We will get some protesters on Friday coming up to Lakemba mosque and chanting for him (Sheik Hilaly) to come back," Mr Zreika said. "Friday is our Sabbath so it's more likely to be then." Other messages called on Muslims to support their besieged cleric at a protest at Parry Park near Lakemba Mosque on Saturday at 1pm. Mr Zreika is urging that any show of support for Shiek Hilaly be in a peaceful manner. Messages Emails and text messages, referred to in a Muslim Village Australia website forum, calling on Muslims to support besieged Sheik Taj al-Din al-Hilaly at Saturday's protest: "THIS SMS has been spreading everywhere: Get Prepared! Peaceful protest in support of Mufti Al-Hilaly at Parry Park this Saturday at 1pm. This is a critical day to show our solidarity and to silence the hypocrites!" "I WOULD like it to be an organised rally not just a gathering of angry, hot-headed Muslims shouting slogans, burning flags or other symbols etc" "DEFINITELY keep it organised. Last thing we need is another display like what was seen outside Lakemba mosque on the night of the riots. A lot of the troublemakers weren't even Muslim, and were there just for the fights and trouble and then it becomes all about 'look at the trouble the Muslims are causing' instead of 'Muslims speak out in support of Shk Taj'" "(THE rally must be) a message of unwavering support to our Shaykh and a show of strength that our community will not be forced to please the wishes of our fascist government." Another member of the forum asked: "IS this being organised by someone? Or is this (SMS) just being circulated by individuals? I think it would be much better if any rally is done professionally and in an organised manner." The same forum member said it was important volunteer stewards were at the rally to: "ENSURE no one steps out of line (no flag-burning etc)... The event itself will send a message that the Muslim community is strong, organised and united and will not be intimidated by the media or the politicians." |
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Muslim group calls for 'natural justice' for Hilaly |
2006-10-31 |
![]() Association president Tom Zreika says the sheikh has been granted indefinite leave from his duties at the Lakemba mosque, in the wake of the furore over his comments about women. But he says rumours that Sheikh Al Hilaly has resigned are absurd, and no new appointment will be made until he either voluntarily steps down, or the community and the association's board decides to take action. "I reiterate that we will under no circumstance be rushed or pressured into making a decision," Mr Zreika said. "This concerted effort to remove him without a fair hearing will not be tolerated by me or my organisation. "He will in due course be heard by his peers and the community according to the principles of natural justice." |
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