Interesting article in the NYT on the Lebanese Diaspora coming home for christmas and challenging the political, military and economic paralysis of Lebanon. The article ends with:

These migrants supply Lebanon with about $1,400 per capita every year, Mr. Ghobril said -- one of the highest rates of remittances in the world. Those transfers are one of the pillars sustaining the consumer economy, he added, though they do not make up for the country's soaring public debt, the lack of long-term investment here, or the slow bleeding of the country's main natural resource - its people.

But there is another way of looking at it.

"Perhaps instead of talking about brain drain we should talk about brain globalization," Mr. Ghobril said with a mischievous grin. "The globalization of Lebanon."

Through history Diaspora's have put political and economic pressure on existing systems. Hopefully the Lebanese Diaspora, of which there is a large contingent in Australia, place similar pressure on the poor state of affairs in Lebanon. (more)
Lebanon has a President that is elected by the Parliament. This is similar to one of the models proposed by Australian Republicans in 1999. Lebanon has a paralysed parliament and the Presidency's position has been vacant for two years now. The government recently nominated General Michel Suleiman, but this poses constitutional issues as he is not constitutionally eligible for the position. There will probably be more paralysis while the constitution is amended to allow a General to take the position. (more)

Indonesia is slowly becoming an active member of the international community in a more international liberalist manner after the expansionist and isolationist years of Sukarno and Suharto. Indonesia has contributed to United Nation deployments in Congo, Cambodia and Senegal amongst others. Yudhoyono earned much of his public profile by commanding Indonesia's forces in Bosnia. A deployment to Lebanon poses many messy political issues for Indonesia but which will probably not deter the new Indonesian internationalist outlook. (more)
Cam Riley: South Sea Republic. Freedom, liberty, equity and an Australian Republic.