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A Lebanese Blog

Category: Lebanon

  • Life expectancy in Lebanon

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    There’s some infographic on the design website fastcodesign.com listing the life expectance in almost every country of the world.

    Where we are born has a lot to do with how old we will be when we die. Pointing out that “life expectancy is a synthetic indicator of the living conditions, health, education, and other social dimensions of a country or territory,” Duhalde chose to organize his visualization geographically, stacking the average life expectancy of countries on each continent in descending order in clusters based on landmasses.

    According to that inforgraphic, if you are born in Lebanon in 2013, then your life expectancy is 75 years. That’s less than Jordan, Bahrain, Qatar, and Kuwait, and better than Oman, KSA, and Gaza Strip.

    On the other hand, the best continent to be born in is Europe where most of the countries have a life expectancy higher than 80 years, with Monaco also having the highest life expectancy of 90 years.

    You can check the complete infographic here.

  • Rima Najdi roams Beirut with a mock TNT bomb

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    Inspired by how our society is getting used to bombs going off and taking the lives of dozens of innocent people every now and then, a Lebanese performance artist called Rima Najdi decided to roam the streets of Beirut with a mock TNT bomb on her.

    It may sound silly to some, but if you think about it, suicide bombers and booby trapped cars have passed by the streets just like Rima did, and could have taken anyone’s life with them. It’s like we’re literally living by chance these days!

  • Video game for peace inspired by Lebanon

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    “Search for Common Ground”, a multinational NGO in Lebanon, has been developing a new video game called “Cedaria: Blackout” that aims to promote conflict among teenagers in order to hopefully achieve a sustainable peace someday (sounds more like an impossible mission).

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    The game is set on a fantasy island called Cedaria – a reference to Lebanon’s national symbol, the cedar – at the end of the 19th century. Players begin by returning to the island after an absence of some years, having heard tales of the country’s wealth and the power of the Phoenix, a unique machine capable of providing the entire island with wireless electricity.

    When they arrive, however, they learn that someone has sabotaged the Phoenix, scattering the pieces across the island’s 14 zones, and that the island has been without electricity for months.

    In the darkness, enmity begins to grow between the island’s four clans. Players must gather the pieces of the Phoenix and figure out who destroyed it and why. The choices they make along the way may help to reconcile Cedaria’s inhabitants or drive them further apart.

    Players can set out to solve five different mysteries, each requiring them to complete 10 missions. Each choice they make has unique consequences, encouraging them to play multiple times to find out how each decision affects the final outcome.

    “They can choose the wrong response,” Jacquard says, “but then they will face the consequences of their actions. They’ll realize that they may have saved time [by doing things] the wrong way, but if they had thought twice about it and tried negotiation as an alternative to violence then they would have gained more points and achieved their goal more easily.”

    The game aims to promote virtual collaboration while engendering real-life tolerance and teamwork. “Because it’s a multiplayer game [on] Facebook, players will have to build alliances with people they don’t know,” Jaquard says, “who might not come from the same sectarian or socioeconomic background. So they will have to overcome all those stereotypes and prejudices.

    While the game steers clear of physical combat – though characters are able to fight – players face challenges such as corruption, inequality, racism, crime, monopolization of resources and blackmail.

    “The game was inspired by situations like those we experience in Lebanon,” Jacquard says, “like loss of electricity and sectarian issues.”

    It can’t get any more Lebanese than this! Although the game plot sounds somehow interesting, the graphics don’t seem very appealing so far. But anyway, we will judge when it will be released in March this year.

    For more information about Cedaria: Blackout, you can check this Daily Star article about it, as well as the official website www.cedariagame.com.

  • The Wolf of Wall Street no longer censored in Lebanon

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    You probably already know that The Wolf of Wall Street has been censored in Lebanon since whoever imported it thought we will not have the attention span for a three hours movie, and therefore it was cut down to two hours and thirty minutes!

    However, it was announced on Radio One Lebanon this morning that the movie will no longer be censored and the full version will start showing as of today. I really hope this will be true because I was preferring to wait for the DVD release to watch the full movie!

    For more about The wolf of Wall Street, you can read Anis Tabet’s review about it here.

  • Bernard Khoury’s penthouse in Beirut

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    Bernard Khoury, the Lebanese famous architect who’s known for many projects like B018, Centrale, and many other places, had his penthouse featured in The Wall Street Journal last month.

    This spacious penthouse in Beirut is owned by 45-year-old Lebanese architect Bernard Khoury. He chose a home with its hodgepodge city view over the more sought-after romantic sea view. It happened by circumstance, when his friend, Marc Doumit, a developer, bought the land on Damascus Road at a low price in the late 1990s after it had been sitting deserted for nearly a decade following the end of the 15-year civil war. Mr. Khoury’s family moved in last year.

    The penthouse is 400 square meters with 5 bedrooms, 7 bathrooms, a swimming pool and an awesome view over Beirut and the mountains! You can check more photos of it here.

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    via @LaCeline

  • Virginia man arrested for trying to ship weapons to Lebanon

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    Juging by his name, Sam Rafic Ghanem, he seems to be of Lebanese origin, but how stupid can he be? I mean doesn’t he know about the arms trade with Syria through the uncontrolled borders? Even kids here are playing with Klashinkoves, so we definitely need nothing from Virginia!

    Sam Rafic Ghanem, owner of an international shipping company with offices in the Washington suburbs, was arrested Saturday after an FBI sting, ABC News said.

    The intended recipient of the weapons is not clear, but at one point Ghanem claimed he was recently asked to obtain two guns for an unnamed member of the Lebanese government, according to court documents filed in the case.

    Over the past few months, Ghanem and a former employee of his company, Washington Movers International, devised “a scheme to send weapons to Lebanon by hiding them inside automobile parts shipped by the company,” court documents allege.

    The former employee, though, was working as “an undercover source for the FBI,” ABC News noted.

    Last Saturday, the source picked up Ghanem from his Springfield, Virginia home and drove to Washington Movers International’s offices in Maryland, where Ghanem helped stuff 10 handguns, 10 semi-automatic rifles and 18 “optic devices” into doors and other parts of salvaged vehicles, an FBI agent alleged in charging documents.

    The car parts were then loaded into a shipping container, but the weapons hidden inside were “fake,” according to the charging documents. Ghanem was subsequently arrested.

    via Naharnet

  • Merry Christmas!

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    #Lebanese women wearing #santa outfit and weaving their national #flag #waterski during a show in the #bay of #Jounieh in the #mediterranean #sea off #lebanon’s coast. Merry #Christmas to all. #photojournalism

    Photo by @patrickbaz

  • Could these Lebanese 3D glasses really beat Google Glass?

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    Wamda has an interesting article today about Lebanese entrepreneur Soulaiman Itani who debuted a pair of wearable glasses that displays augmented reality in three dimensions as opposed to Google’s two.

    The glasses, Atheer One, were built in partnership with a computer vision researcher called Allen Yang and can allow the wearer to exercise with virtual targets, conduct conference calls while browsing online, and even play three dimensional games.

    They also have two major advantages over Google Glass since they offer a bigger field of vision and can allow all existing Android apps to work withing their platform. However, they always need to be physically attached to an Android device to work.

    Itani and his partner are currently raising funds on Indiegogo and offering Atheer One for an early bird special price of $350 for the first 100 backers.

    Make sure to check the whole article here on Wamda.

  • Alexa as viewed from space

    The Washington Post posted some photos that were taken yesterday by NASA of the snowstorm Alexa that hit the region last week.

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    The white areas on the land are all snow, another wider photo shows that even a northern area of Saudi Arabia got a little bit of snow.

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    On a side note, the author of the article might have to consider educating himself a bit more about the middle east as he thinks “it is quite something” to see snow around here and our neighbors!

     NASA’s Earth Observatory has posted a photo of the storm taken from space. It was taken Dec. 15, after the storm had passed and the skies had cleared; the white areas on the land are snow, not clouds. It’s quite something to see the snow across Lebanon, Syria and Israel.

  • VIP Prisoner in Roumieh

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    This guy made it to the news today for living like a king behind the bars in Roumieh prison! It seems like he has his own room inside the prison and manages to get really good food delivered to him almost everyday!

    His face and name were blurred in the report but it was really hard to still find him on Facebook. His name is Nahib Roufayel and you can check his account here. The photos he shares are all public and there’s enough of them to make your jaw drop!