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Lebanon begins disarming Palestinian groups in refugee camps 

Lebanon has launched a plan to disarm Palestinian groups in its refugee camps, beginning with the handover of weapons from Burj al-Barajneh camp in Beirut.

The prime minister’s office announced on Thursday that the weapons transfer to the Lebanese army marks the start of a wider disarmament campaign. More handovers are expected in the coming weeks across Burj al-Barajneh and other camps nationwide.

A Fatah official told the Reuters news agency the arms handed over so far were only illegal weapons that had entered the camp within the previous day. Television footage showed military vehicles inside the camp, though Reuters could not verify what type of weapons were being surrendered.

The initiative follows Lebanon’s commitment under a US-backed truce between Israel and Hezbollah in November, which restricted weapons to six state security forces. Since the November 27, 2024, ceasefire agreement, Israel has continued attacking Lebanon, often on a weekly basis.

The government has tasked the army with producing a strategy by the end of the year to consolidate all arms under state authority.

According to the prime minister’s office, the decision to disarm Palestinian factions was reached in a May meeting between Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.

Both leaders affirmed Lebanon’s sovereignty and insisted that only the state should hold arms. Lebanese and Palestinian officials later agreed on a timeline and mechanism for the handovers.

For decades, Palestinian groups have maintained control inside Lebanon’s 12 refugee camps, which largely operate outside state jurisdiction. The latest initiative is seen as the most serious effort in years to curb the presence of weapons inside the camps.

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Palestinian resistance movements grew out of displacement and political exclusion after the creation of Israel in 1948, when some 750,000 Palestinians were forced from their homes.

Over the years, groups including Fatah, Hamas, and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) established a presence in Lebanon’s camps to continue armed struggle against Israel.

Palestinian refugees in Lebanon remain without key civil rights, such as access to certain jobs and property ownership. With limited opportunities, many have turned to armed factions for protection or representation.

The disarmament push also comes as Hezbollah faces what analysts describe as its greatest military challenge in decades, following Israeli strikes in 2024 that decimated much of its leadership.

 

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Nonprofit Charity Resurrecting Beloved West End Beach Bar

The Loops Foundation is rebuilding, from the ground up, the former Coconuts Restaurant and La Grange Beach Club on the West End beach, which was destroyed by the 2017 hurricanes.

“It’s going pretty fast, so I’m hoping they’ll open by the New Year,” Rudy Seikaly, the Loops founder, told the Source.

The Foundation was started in 2018 to commemorate Seikaly’s late son, Chris, a musician and artist known as “Loops,” who passed seven years ago. The foundation’s mission is “to empower communities through the arts, technology and education” following Chris’s values of love, creativity, integrity and perseverance.

“This is a legacy project for me in memory of my son, whom I lost at a young age. He went by the artist name Loops.”

The new building will be roughly the same size, with the kitchen and bar on the ground level and a rooftop deck to enjoy the sea view. The patio on the south side will be covered with tables and umbrellas.

Seikaly envisions the food as Mediterranean or a combination of Lebanese and Caribbean. He said he wants it to become the “top local spot where everybody wants to go hang out.”

The Loops Restaurant is on the beachfront across the street from the property Seikaly fenced recently to be used by Ruff Start Rescue for their monthly community dog care clinics.

The civil engineer also purchased more than 13 acres to construct a Loops Village.

The village will comprise several residences, a school, a robotics school, an amphitheater for music and lots of gardens. He said the village should employ 850 people or more to construct and can become a template for villages he would like to build elsewhere in the world.

“This is more a social justice project. While it will have for profit businesses so it is sustainable and provides employment, it will be mostly the social justice work that we want to do,” he said.

Seikaly, a civil engineer originally, came to Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands after the 2017 hurricanes to advise about rebuilding schools and hospitals. He ended up with a contract to rebuild the Arthur Richards School, the first reconstruction on St. Croix. Only local contractors are being used, so the money stays here.

In the past, Seikaly helped rebuild Beirut after the war in 2006. The organization has supported art and music therapy for children, internet and technology in underserved areas and education and mental health programs for at-risk children.

Some of the worldwide programs supported by the Loops Foundation included a hospital in Sinai, a digital library in El Salvador, tuition assistance for teachers and students in Lebanon, and traumatized youth in Washington, D.C.

“So there’s a lot of stuff that we do all over the world that we want to try to bring here. It’s mostly community support,” Seikaly said.

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Virgin Islands News

Gittens Files Bill to Expand Ethics Complaint Window

When a staffer filed a sexual harassment complaint in March against Sen. Angel Bolques Jr., the expectation was that the Legislature’s Ethical Conduct Committee would review the allegations and deliver a finding. Instead, the case laid bare a weakness in the Legislature’s own rule book: a 60-day filing deadline that stopped the committee from considering some of the most serious claims.
Senators have stated that to protect the employee, they were unable to release the full complaint, though in press releases, the Ethics Committee has said it included allegations of financial mismanagement and creating a hostile work environment, among other things. Rule 810(e) limits the Ethical Conduct Committee to complaints filed within two months of the alleged misconduct, and that restriction put some of the more serious claims out of reach, including at least one incident they said had occurred about six months prior to the filing.
With the scope narrowed, Bolques entered a no-contest plea on July 24 to a single charge — violation of his oath of office — sidestepping the broader accusations.
The full Senate took up the committee’s recommendation for a reprimand in mid-August, but added, on a 7–6 vote, a suspension without pay for 30 working days. Fifteen of those days take effect immediately; the other half are held in abeyance through the end of the year, provided Bolques complies with Senate rules. If he violates the rules again before Dec. 31, the remaining suspension — which Bolques is challenging — will be enforced.
The Legislature’s rules outline how the process is supposed to work. Any person may submit a sworn complaint, but it generally must be filed within 60 days of the alleged violation. If the complainant could not reasonably have known of the conduct within that time, the rules extend the window to 18 months.
Complaints filed within 30 days of an election are returned and may be refiled once the election passes. When probable cause is found, the committee issues a statement of alleged violations, and a disciplinary hearing must be held within 60 days. Afterward, the full Senate has 15 business days to act on the committee’s recommendation, which can range from dismissal to reprimand, suspension, censure, or expulsion. Interestingly, sexual-harassment complaints appear to be handled separately under the Legislature’s harassment policy rather than Rule 810’s deadlines.
Following the Bolques case, committee Chair Sen. Kenneth Gittens told the Source that the 60-day filing rule had “time-barred” the committee from investigating some of the most serious allegations.
“The CEC determined that we were unable to pursue the more serious allegations due to the time limitation outlined in Rule 810(f), which states that ‘a complaint may not be filed more than 60 days after the date of the alleged violation,’” he said Thursday. “After a thorough review, a majority of the CEC members agreed that this restriction unduly limits our oversight responsibilities. As chairman, I submitted an amendment on Aug. five to revise Rule 810(f), allowing the Committee to consider any complaint filed during the current legislative term and up to 60 days into the next term. This change is necessary to ensure that accountability is not obstructed by procedural technicalities.”
Senate President Milton Potter, in a call with the Source, further described the clause as a “loophole” that needed closing. Potter emphasized that the restriction undermines the Legislature’s own oversight function, and said senators were in agreement that reform was necessary. He also pointed out that, under the Senate’s rules, the Ethics Committee can only recommend sanctions; the final word rests with the full body. That balance, he said, should remain — but without technicalities preventing senators from considering the full weight of complaints brought before them.

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