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Hundreds of migrants moved from Crete to Greek mainland as island struggles with Libya arrivals

Hundreds of migrants moved from Crete to Greek mainland as island struggles with Libya arrivals
Migrants on an inflatable dinghy as it sails along the coastline near Gravelines, France. (Reuters)
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Updated 10 July 2025

Hundreds of migrants moved from Crete to Greek mainland as island struggles with Libya arrivals

Hundreds of migrants moved from Crete to Greek mainland as island struggles with Libya arrivals
  • EU officials earlier this week were turned away from eastern Libya following an apparent disagreement on the format of talks planned on curbing crossings

LAVRIO: More than 500 migrants arrived at the port of Lavrio near Athens Thursday after being intercepted south of the island of Crete, as Greece implements emergency measures to address a surge in Mediterranean crossings from Libya.
The migrants, consisting mostly of young men, were transferred overnight aboard a bulk carrier after their fishing trawler was intercepted by Greek authorities. Service vessels helped bring them ashore at the mainland port. They will be sent to detention facilities near the capital.
Their transfer to the mainland was ordered because makeshift reception centers on Crete have reached capacity, with roughly 500 news arrivals per day on the Mediterranean island since the weekend.
Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis announced Wednesday that Greece would suspend asylum processing for migrants arriving by sea from North Africa for three months. The measure targets arrivals on Crete and was taken during a diplomatic strain between the European Union and Libya over migration cooperation. EU officials earlier this week were turned away from eastern Libya following an apparent disagreement on the format of talks planned on curbing crossings.
Authorities on Crete are struggling to provide basic services, using temporary facilities to house migrants, primarily from Somalia, Sudan, Egypt and Morocco, according to island officials.


Lebanon bets on Gulf tourists to rescue its collapsing economy

Lebanon bets on Gulf tourists to rescue its collapsing economy
Updated 7 min 37 sec ago

Lebanon bets on Gulf tourists to rescue its collapsing economy

Lebanon bets on Gulf tourists to rescue its collapsing economy
  • With the UAE and Kuwait lifting travel bans, high-end venues pin their hopes on a luxury tourism resurgence

 

RIYADH: Lebanon’s tourism sector is placing its hopes on international and Gulf visitors to help steer the country through a financial crisis that has gripped the nation since 2019.

As Beirut’s clubs and restaurants increasingly operate in US dollars, the city’s tourism and nightlife have emerged as fragile yet essential pillars of the economy, largely propped up by private investment.

The ongoing financial collapse — now in its sixth year — has created an $80 billion gap in the banking sector, with debt restructuring stalled amid persistent political gridlock.

Since 2019, the Lebanese pound has lost more than 90 percent of its value, while the country’s gross domestic product has contracted by nearly 40 percent.

The 2024 Hezbollah-Israel conflict further devastated the economy, inflicting widespread damage on tourist regions. In response, the World Bank approved a $250 million loan in June as part of a broader $1 billion recovery program, estimating the total cost of the conflict at $7.2 billion, with reconstruction needs reaching $11 billion.

A defiant party amid the ruins

In early June, fireworks lit up the sky above Beirut’s iconic St. Georges Hotel during a retro-themed event hosted by the Tourism Ministry, reviving memories of Lebanon’s golden age in the 1970s — a time when Gulf tourists filled its beaches, mountain resorts, and vibrant nightlife.

Today, that nostalgia is being reimagined for a new generation of affluent travelers. With the UAE and Kuwait lifting travel bans — and º£½ÇÖ±²¥ possibly following — high-end venues are pinning their hopes on a luxury tourism resurgence.

But renewed tensions in the region have cast a shadow over those ambitions. 

Beirut’s tourism and nightlife have emerged as fragile yet essential pillars of the economy, largely propped up by private investment. (AFP)

Lebanon’s tourism sector has seen “some cancellations in hotels, (flight) tickets, and car rentals,†Laura Lahoud, Lebanon’s tourism minister, told Arab News in an interview, acknowledging the impact of regional tensions.

“We are surely affected by the current situation in the Middle East, same as all the region. But if Lebanon remains neutral and does not take sides — as the president and prime minister are insisting — we can save the season,†Lahoud added.

Her optimism hinges on a fragile ceasefire between Iran and Israel. “Hopefully, it will go back to normal,†she said, while emphasizing that festivals and events remain untouched, except for the Beiteddine Festival, where “performers are from the US.â€

The dollar hustle 

While Lebanon’s currency has collapsed, poverty has tripled, and the banking sector remains frozen, a parallel economy is flourishing in Beirut’s upscale neighborhoods like Gemmayzeh and Mar Mikhael.

Security is part of the appeal. Army patrols have become more visible in tourist areas, and Hezbollah banners along the airport road have quietly given way to billboards promoting “A New Era for Lebanon.â€

But the real driver is privatization. With the state largely incapacitated, private investors — mostly dealing in US dollars — are fueling a boom in luxury tourism, pouring money into beach clubs, rooftop lounges, and curated VIP experiences that operate outside the formal economy.

“The private sector has always been a main driver,†said Lahoud, defending the government’s role as a facilitator rather than a funder. “Our role is to guide, organize, and direct investment into new sectors, new regions, and new ideas.â€

Laura Lahoud, Lebanon's minister of tourism. (Supplied)

Yet, some argue this model is unsustainable.

“The dollarized tourism economy has a negative impact on domestic tourism,†warned Jassem Ajaka, an economist and professor at the Lebanese University. 

“Prices become high for residents, especially if pricing is applied equally to tourists and locals. This is unsustainable because the dollar is not the country’s official currency,†he explained in an interview with Arab News.

Geopolitical gambles

The stakes could not be higher. Lebanon’s agricultural and industrial sectors lie in ruins.

Once accounting for 20 percent of GDP, tourism has emerged as the fastest route toward restoring ties with Gulf countries and reviving the economy.

President Joseph Aoun has made outreach to the Gulf a top priority, traveling to º£½ÇÖ±²¥, Qatar, and the UAE to present Lebanon as “open for business.â€

Lahoud emphasized that rebuilding tourist confidence in Lebanon “is the main objective.†

She outlined plans to achieve this through comprehensive government reforms, coordinated airport improvements, streamlined visa processes for GCC families, shorter checkpoint delays, and the promotion of year-round tourism across all sectors.

“Before some Gulf countries removed the travel ban, Arab tourists were limited to Egyptians, Iraqis, and Jordanians,†said Jean Abboud, president of the Association of Travel and Tourist Agents in Lebanon.

“Demands from Gulf countries were growing steadily, especially from the Emirates, Kuwait, and Qatar. But due to the current conflict between Iran and Israel, everything has changed,†he told Arab News.

The fallout is immediate. “We, as tour operators nowadays, avoid including the south in our programs due to the unexpected problems,†Abboud added.

Lahoud stated that the ministry is collaborating closely with all industry groups to create unique visitor experiences in Lebanon. She added they plan to develop long-term policies and digital tools to support both city and countryside activities, and encourage vital small and medium investments across all regions.

Risky bet

“Over the past couple of years, I’ve noticed a shift toward a younger crowd — but interestingly, they’re spending more,†says Marco Khadra, ambassador at Factory People, a Beirut-based group organizing many of the country’s major music festivals.

“There’s a clear appetite for nightlife, even among younger demographics,†Khadra told Arab News.

But security concerns loom large. “Some people, including international acts, have felt Beirut isn’t safe, and that affects bookings and attendance,†Khadra admitted, adding: “Perception plays a big role in this industry.â€

German electronic music record label Keinmusik performing in one of the Factory People's clubs in Beirut in 2023. (Factory People photo)

For bartenders like Lynn Abi Ghanem, who left Beirut for the Gulf, the sustainability of this boom is questionable. “Not in the long run,†she said of the shift toward Gulf tourists. “Tourists come for a short time, but it’s the locals who keep bars running all year. Without them, things feel off and won’t hold up.â€

The staffing crisis is another weak link. “There are a lot of talented workers who aren’t paid what they deserve,†Abi Ghanem added. “If things don’t change, many will keep leaving.â€

A mirage of recovery? 

Hotels have reported occupancy rates of 80 percent ahead of the summer season, while flights are operating at near capacity with expatriates and Gulf tourists. Yet Lebanon’s recovery remains precarious.

“Even though tourism’s contribution to the gross domestic product increased after the crisis to about 30 percent, this was due to the economic contraction,†explained Ajaka.

“We cannot say the sector has recovered because recovery depends on political stability and investment inflows.â€

For now, the party continues, sustained by Gulf investment and the relentless drive of Beirut’s nightlife entrepreneurs.

But as Ajjaka conceded: “The biggest enemy of tourism is any security obstacle.†And in a country where crisis is the only constant, the stakes have never been higher.
 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Stoic Mindset’

Photo/Supplied
Photo/Supplied
Updated 20 min 32 sec ago

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Stoic Mindset’

Photo/Supplied
  • Tuitert’s narrative begins with his own crucible: the pressure-cooker world of elite athletics, where injuries and setbacks threatened his career

Author: Mark Tuitert

Olympic champion speed skater Mark Tuitert merges ancient philosophy with modern resilience in “The Stoic Mindset,†published in 2024.

The guide transcends typical self-help tropes, offering strategies to transform adversity into strength through the principles of Stoicism. 

This ancient philosophy provides a tool kit for staying calm, focused, and strong in the face of life’s chaos. Emerging in Ancient Greece and later popularized in Rome, it is less about dusty theories and more about how to live well.

Tuitert’s narrative begins with his own crucible: the pressure-cooker world of elite athletics, where injuries and setbacks threatened his career. His discovery of Stoicism became his mental armor. The book meticulously unpacks core tenets, focusing on actionable responses, reframing obstacles as opportunities, and cultivating “amor fati†(love of fate). 

What resonates most is Tuitert’s rejection of passive acceptance. Instead, he advocates active resilience, using journaling, mindfulness, and preemptive adversity training to fortify mental agility.

His chapter on failure dissects how embracing vulnerability fuels growth, illustrated by his comeback from a career-threatening injury to clinch gold at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics.

Tuitert’s prose is refreshingly pragmatic. He avoids academic jargon, grounding Seneca and Marcus Aurelius’ wisdom in relatable anecdotes — from navigating corporate burnout to parenting challenges. His emphasis on practice over theory stands out as well. 

Some may criticize the athletic parallels as niche, but Tuitert universalizes them deftly.

While examining Tuitert’s practical Stoicism, I happened to contrast his Olympic-forged resilience with Nietzsche’s fiery critique of Stoic detachment, revealing how one stabilizes storms while the other ignites revolutions.

I found that Tuitert seeks mastery through emotional discipline, whereas Nietzsche champions vitality through embracing chaos.

In an era of digital overload and anxiety, “The Stoic Mindset†is a tactical manifesto for clarity.

Tuitert’s genius lies in making a 2,000-year-old philosophy feel urgently contemporary, proving that true victory is not avoiding storms but learning to dance in the rain.

 


5 children playing soccer killed in Yemen explosion

5 children playing soccer killed in Yemen explosion
Updated 24 min 42 sec ago

5 children playing soccer killed in Yemen explosion

5 children playing soccer killed in Yemen explosion
  • Two local residents who were eyewitnesses, Ahmed Al-Sharee and Khaled Al-Areki, said that the children were playing soccer when the explosion happened

ADEN: Five children in southwestern Yemen died after an explosive device detonated in a residential area where they were playing soccer, rights groups and eyewitnesses said on Saturday.
The circumstances surrounding their deaths on Friday night in Al-Hashmah subdistrict of Taiz province remain unclear. 
A spokesperson for the United Nations children’s agency UNICEF said that they are aware of reports about the incident but can’t verify the facts at the moment.
Two local residents who were eyewitnesses, Ahmed Al-Sharee and Khaled Al-Areki, said that the children were playing soccer when the explosion happened.
At least three people with minor to moderate injuries were also taken to the hospital. 
Mahmoud Al-Mansi, another eyewitness, said the explosive was directed from an area where forces allied with the Islah party were present.
The Yemen Center for Human Rights condemned the incident in a report that included graphic photos of the children’s torn bodies.  Citing health care sources at Al-Rafai Hospital, where the victims arrived unresponsive, the group said they died from shrapnel injuries. 
Two of the children were 12 years old, while two others were 14 years old, according to the group. The age of the fifth child is unknown.

 


German backpacker drank from puddles in Australian bush ordeal

Carolina Wilga. (Supplied)
Carolina Wilga. (Supplied)
Updated 39 min 11 sec ago

German backpacker drank from puddles in Australian bush ordeal

Carolina Wilga. (Supplied)
  • Wilga was suffering from exhaustion, dehydration, sunburn, “extensive insect bites,†and an injured foot, police said

SYDNEY: German backpacker Carolina Wilga drank water from puddles and sheltered in a cave before escaping an 11-night ordeal in the Australian bush, police said Saturday.
The 26-year-old walked “confused and disorientated†24 kilometers away from her van after it got stuck in remote bushland in Western Australia. The backpacker had lost hope of being rescued, police said.
But on Friday, she managed to flag down a woman who drove her to police in the agricultural community of Beacon, northeast of Perth. Wilga was airlifted to a Perth hospital for treatment.
“She spent 11 nights exposed to the elements and survived by consuming the minimal food supplies she had in her possession, and drinking water from rain and puddles,†Western Australia police said in a statement.
“She sought shelter at night where possible, including in a cave.â€
Wilga was suffering from exhaustion, dehydration, sunburn, “extensive insect bites,†and an injured foot, police said.
The driver who spotted her, Tania Henley, told public broadcaster ABC that she saw Wilga waving her hands by the side of the road.
She appeared to be in a “fragile state,†bitten by midges and suffering from the cold.
“Everything in this bush is very prickly. I just can’t believe that she survived. She had no shoes on, she’d wrapped her foot up.â€
The rescue was down to “sheer luck,†Western Australia police acting inspector Jessica Securo told a news conference in Perth after speaking to Wilga.
“She is still in disbelief that she was able to survive. In her mind, she had convinced herself that she was not going to be located,†said Securo.
“She basically looked at the direction of the sun and tried to head west, thinking that that would be her best bet of coming across someone or a road.â€
Wilga told police she was “very confused and disorientated.â€
Until her rescue, she had been last seen on June 29 arriving in the van at a general store in Beacon.
A police search spotted the van on Thursday, abandoned in dense bushland north of Beacon with plastic orange traction tracks placed beneath the rear wheels.
“It appears that she has somewhat lost control of the vehicle, and then it’s become mechanically unsound, and bogged,†Securo said.
She stayed with the van for one day before leaving the vehicle through “panic,†hoping to find help.
Wilga was “overwhelmed†to have found someone to help her.
“She had minimal food and minimal water. From speaking to her, she has said she could have planned better.â€
The terrain can be “quite dangerous,†Securo added.
Wilga remained in hospital and was not expected to be released on Saturday, still needing “emotional support†and treatment for some injuries.
“She’s had a good night’s sleep. She’s had a shower. We’ve got her some food, which was a massive relief for her. So she’s just taking it one day at a time at the moment.â€
The backpacker is now in “frequent communication†with her family who are relieved and thankful the Western Australian community came together to “throw every resource at locating their daughter,†Securo said.
The family had no plans at this stage to travel to Australia.
Police say Wilga had spent two years backpacking around the country, and was working at mine sites in Western Australia while staying mostly at hostels.
“Carolina has told me that she loves Australia. She still has so much travel to do here. She hasn’t made it over to the east coast yet, so that’s still on her bucket list,†said Securo.

 


Emergency vaccines slash deaths by 60 percent

Emergency vaccines slash deaths by 60 percent
Updated 53 min 30 sec ago

Emergency vaccines slash deaths by 60 percent

Emergency vaccines slash deaths by 60 percent
  • ‘For the first time, we are able to comprehensively quantify the benefits of deploying vaccines against outbreaks,’ Gavi chief Sania Nishtar says

GENEVA: Emergency vaccination during outbreaks of diseases like cholera, Ebola and measles have over the past quarter-century reduced deaths from such illnesses by nearly 60 percent, according to a new study.

A similar number of infections are also believed to have been prevented, while billions of euros have been generated in estimated economic benefit.
The Gavi vaccine alliance, which backed the study, said it collaborated with researchers at Burnet Institute in Australia to provide the world’s first look at the historical impact of emergency immunization efforts on public health and global health security.

HIGHLIGHTS

• Vaccination was shown to decrease deaths during yellow fever outbreaks by a full 99 percent, and 76 percent for Ebola.

• At the same time, emergency vaccination significantly reduced the threat of outbreaks expanding.

• The study estimated that the immunization efforts carried out during the 210 outbreaks generated nearly $32 billion.

“For the first time, we are able to comprehensively quantify the benefit, in human and economic terms, of deploying vaccines against outbreaks of some of the deadliest infectious diseases,†Gavi chief Sania Nishtar said in a statement.
“This study demonstrates clearly the power of vaccines as a cost-effective countermeasure to the increasing risk the world faces from outbreaks.â€
The study, published this week in the British Medical Journal Global Health, examined 210 outbreaks of five infectious diseases — cholera, Ebola, measles, meningitis and yellow fever — in 49 lower-income countries between 2000 and 2023.
Vaccine roll-outs in these settings had a dramatic impact, with the study showing they reduced both the number of infections and deaths by almost 60 percent across the five diseases.
For some of the diseases the effect was far more dramatic.
Vaccination was shown to decrease deaths during yellow fever outbreaks by a full 99 percent, and 76 percent for Ebola.
At the same time, emergency vaccination significantly reduced the threat of outbreaks expanding.
It also estimated that the immunization efforts carried out during the 210 outbreaks generated nearly $32 billion in economic benefits just from averting deaths and years of life lost to disability.
That amount was however likely to be a significant underestimate of overall savings, it said, pointing out that it did not take into account outbreak response costs or the social and macro-economic impacts of disruptions created by large outbreaks.
The massive Ebola outbreak that hit West Africa in 2014, before the existence of approved vaccines, for instance saw cases pop up worldwide and is estimated to have cost the West African countries alone more than $53 billion.
The study comes after the WHO warned in April that outbreaks of vaccine-preventable diseases such as measles, meningitis, and yellow fever are on the rise globally amid misinformation and cuts to international aid.
Gavi, which helps vaccinate more than half the world’s children against infectious diseases, is itself currently trying to secure a fresh round of funding in the face of the global aid cuts and after Washington last month announced it would stop backing the group.