June 24, 2012

Page 1

SUNDAY, JUNE 24, 2012

@alwatandaily

Issue No. 1469

12 PAGES

www.alwatandaily.com

150 Fils with IHT

Government to ‘carefully’ handle court verdict

We will not be hasty in dealing with court ruling: Al-Abdullah Mohammed Al-Salman, Mohammed Al-Khaldi, Osama Al-Qatari and Ahmed Al-Shemmari Staff Writers

KUWAIT: The government has decided to carefully go about instituting the procedures pertaining to the reinstatement of the 2009 Parliament to avoid the country from plunging into another political crisis, an informed government source reported. Reportedly, the executive authority intends to take its time in handling this issue even if this might be a protracted process so that a solid constitutional basis is put in place. The source indicated that the main problem lies in the convening of the dissolved 2009 Parliament amid the resignation of certain MPs and the refusal of others including the former Speaker of Parliament Jassem Al-Kharafi to call a session to offer the government a constitutional cover. While the Majority Bloc is closely monitoring the political situation in the country, a source within the Mi-

nority Bloc affirmed that members of the bloc will meet at MP Ali Al-Rashed’s diwaniya to examine the situation in the political arena and listen to some of the MPs who served the 2009 Parliament. An informed source within the Minority Bloc pointed out that the bloc wants to ascertain the mechanism that would be employed by the government to address the situation and the manner by which it will enforce the Constitutional Court’s verdict. The said MPs would try to establish whether those procedures would involve any concessions for the Majority from the government at the expense of the State’s constitutional and legal principles. Meanwhile, Al-Kharafi is expected to return home today and to meet with His Highness the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah to discuss the recent political developments and the stance toward the enforcement of the court’s ruling. It has been reported that they will also discuss what is required of the 2009 MPs in order to break the stalemate. A parliamentary source informed that the Minority

Egypt to announce next president today

Parts of Mars interior as wet as Earth’s

Egyptian protesters sleep under a tent in Tahrir Square during continuing protests as the country awaits the outcome of a presidential runoff vote in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, June 23, 2012. (AFP)

vowed to stay there until the election result is published. “Mursi, Mursi, God is the Greatest,” the protesters chanted in anticipation of a victory for their candidate, who says he won according to tallies provided by electoral officials. Both Mursi and Shafiq have claimed victory in the election for a successor to Hosni Mubarak, sparking tensions between the rival camps that have deepened after the electoral commission delayed announcing the official outcome. The delay in the announcement of the result of the June 16-17 run-off, initially scheduled for Thursday, has raised suspicions that the outcome of the election is being negotiated rather than More on 3 counted.

Engineers build smallest, fastest digital gigapixel camera China to conduct first manual space docking today

PARIS: China, which sent three astronauts into orbit a week ago, said they would conduct the nation’s first manual space docking on Sunday – a key step to building a space station. In a brief dispatch, the official Xinhua news agency Saturday quoted an unnamed spokesman for China’s manned space program as saying that the highly complex maneuver would take place at noon (0400GMT) the following day. The technique is hard to master as it involves two vessels – placed in the same orbit and revolving around Earth at thousands of kilometers per hour – coming together very gently without destroying each other. China’s current space mission kicked off last Saturday when the Shenzhou-9 spacecraft took off carrying China’s first female astronaut. Two days later, it came together with the Tiangong-1 module already in orbit around Earth. China has carried out automatic dockings three times already, but the main goal of the current manned mission – China’s fourth – is to complete the first manual ‘kiss in space’, which requires great accuracy from astronauts. China aims to complete construction of a space station by 2020, a goal that requires it to perfect docking technology – a delicate maneuver that the Russians and Americans successfully completed in the 1960s. China sees its space program as a symbol of its global stature, growing technical expertise, and the Communist Party’s success in turning around the fortunes of the once poverty-stricken nation. -AFP

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Hamas threatens to escalate attacks on Israel

Tensions soar ahead of Egypt poll result

CAIRO: Tensions soared in Egypt on Saturday a day before the result of a divisive presidential election and as the Muslim Brotherhood sparred with the ruling generals over what it sees as a military power grab. The electoral commission overseeing the divisive contest between Brotherhood candidate Mohamed Mursi and former Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq said it will announce the official winner on Sunday. “Faruk Sultan, the head of the presidential election commission, will announce the results of the presidential election run-off on Sunday at 3:00pm (1300 GMT),” the commission’s secretary general, Hatem Bagato, said in a statement. Hundreds of Brotherhood supporters spent the night in Cairo’s iconic Tahrir Square, having

Bloc will relay to the speaker the outcome of their meeting to pass it on to the Amir. For his part, the Minister of Information Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah Al-Mubarak Al-Sabah asserted that the committee formed by the government to explore a proper mechanism for enforcing the court’s order will not be hasty in issuing its report before having a clear insight into all the relevant constitutional and legal aspects. Speaking to Al Watan in an exclusive interview, AlAbdullah stated that the committee seeks not to preoccupy the entire Cabinet with the issue throughout the week and reduce its meetings so that proper solutions are put forth in regards to the application of the law. He explained that the committee has not been given a deadline to offer its vision; rather it has been asked to take its time until desired results are reached. In another twist, a constitutional expert affirmed that the government has no right to dissolve the 2009 Parliament until its takes oath before it, warning that the upcoming assembly will meet the same fate as the 2012’s unless proper measures are followed.

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JERUSALEM: Gaza’s militant Hamas rulers threatened to escalate fighting with Israel on Saturday after airstrikes killed several gunmen in the coastal territory, and Palestinian rocket attacks on Israel wounded one person and damaged an elementary school in the country’s south. There are periodic exchanges of strikes between Gaza and Israel but this flare-up is the most serious in months. It started with an attack by a little known alQaida-inspired Palestinian militant group but has extended to drag in Hamas. Hamas has largely stayed out of direct confrontation with Israel since a war more than three years ago although other factions have launched cross-border attacks. Gaza militants fired over 30 rockets and mortar shells on Saturday alone, bringing the week’s rocket tally to more than 150, according to the Israeli military. Over a million people in southern Israel live in range of the rockets and the Israeli military has advised the residents to make sure they can get to a bomb shelter quickly. An Egyptian official in Ramallah said that he is trying to broker a cease-fire between the Palestinian militant groups and Israel. He said he hoped calm would be restored by late Saturday. Egypt traditionally plays a mediatin g role between the sides. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because negotiations were ongoing. There was no comment from either the Palestinian See also 3 or Israeli side on the Egyptian efforts. -AP

Kuwaiti crude continues downwards trend hitting $87.75 pb KUWAIT: Price of Kuwaiti crude oil went down by 1.01 US dollars on Friday reaching $87.75 per barrel (pb), compared with $88.76 pb the day before, said Kuwait Petroleum Corporation (KPC) on Saturday. Persistent fall of the Kuwaiti crude price that put it at its lowest level this year coincided with drastic decline of the oil prices on international markets, as a result of tension and apprehension resulting from the European economic and financial crises. However, prices of the forward deals of the Brent crude rose, on Friday, by two dollars, posting $91.01 pb for the August deliveries. Likewise, the prices of the forward deals rose two percent, after a drop of four percent on Thursday. Stormy weather in Mexico bay prompted some oil companies to evacuate non-necessary workers from operations’ sites. Price of the American light crude for the August delivery stood More on 6 at $79.76 pb.

Spain 2

France 0

VS MORE ON 12

Today’s Match: England vs Italy

Syria forms new government, keeps top ministers

BEIRUT: Syrian President Bashar AlAssad issued a decree to form a new government on Saturday, shaking up many cabinet posts but keeping the heads of the interior, defense and foreign ministries, state television reported. The reappointment of Defense Minister Daoud Rajha will quash widespread rumors, previously denied by the government, that he had been assassinated by rebels who are struggling to bring down President Bashar Al-Assad’s rule. The 16-month uprising, which has faced a brutal government crackdown, is increasingly being termed a civil war by foreign observers. Assad argues he is pursuing reforms even as he fights a revolt he says is led by foreign-backed militants. But critics say Assad’s appointment of Riyad Hijab as prime minister earlier in June was a sign the president was turning

to hard-line loyalists. Hijab formed the new government given Assad’s approval, Syria TV said on Saturday. Hijab, a former agriculture minister, is a committed member of Assad’s Baath Party, which has ruled Syria for nearly four decades since his father Hafez al-Assad took power in 1970. Most of the top government posts were given to Baathist loyalists. Critics consider the cabinet to be largely symbolic and say power in Syria remains in the hands of Assad and his close inner circle of family and security force elites. The new cabinet follows a May 7 parliamentary election which Assad said was part of the path to reform but the opposition boycotted as a sham, insisting the president must step down. Other than Rajha, the ministers to retain their post were Interior Minister Mohammed Ibrahim Al-Shaar and Foreign Minister Walid Al-Mouallem. More on 3

Turkish, Syrian forces seek downed Turkish jet ANKARA/BEIRUT: The Turkish and Syrian navies conducted a joint search on Saturday for Turkish airmen shot down by Syria over the Mediterranean, only a short distance from a Turkish province hosting thousands of rebels fighting President Bashar al-Assad. Signals from both sides suggested neither wanted a military confrontation over Friday’s shooting down of the jet near their borders. However, the joint operation will clearly sit uneasily with both forces, given the bitter hostility between the two former allies over Assad’s 16-month-old crackdown on opponents. Iraq, which borders both countries, said the incident marked a serious escalation of the Syrian conflict and demonstrated its potential to infect other countries in the region. “No country is immune from this spillover because of the composition of the societies, the extensions, the connections, the sectarian, ethnic dimensions,” Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshiyar Zebari said in Baghdad. “This is not an excuse to do nothing about Syria, no. But there will be an impact.” Turkey has See also 5 declared it will respond decisively. -Reuters

Primitive eye, tiny liver grown in the lab

NEW YORK: Japanese scientists claim to have coaxed stem cells to develop into a rudimentary human liver, replete with working blood vessels and the ability to metabolize. At the same time, another group in Japan reports the growth from stem cells of a precursor of a human eyeball according to LiveScience. Both feats were presented at the annual meeting of the International Society for Stem Cell Research in Yokohama, Japan, last week.

Although further progress is needed before fully functional lab-grown livers and eyes will be ready to implant into a human, outside experts say the new results constitute genuine advances in that direction - and they have other medical uses in the meantime. Takanori Takebe, a stem-cell biologist at Yokohama City University in Japan, and his team grew a small, rudimentary liver using a recipe of just three types of cells. More on 8

Afghanistan flash floods kill more than 30

PARIS: Flash floods in Afghanistan triggered by days of torrential rain have killed more than 30 people, officials said Saturday, with dozens reported missing. Waters swept through villages and parts of the city of Cheghcheran in central Ghor province early on Saturday, engulfing dozens of homes, provincial spokesman Abdulhai Khatibi told AFP. “So for I can confirm that 24 people have been killed in these floods, but some are also missing,” Khatibi said. The floodwaters also destroyed hundreds

of hectares of farmland and displaced hundreds of people in the impoverished province, he said. In the northeast of the country, two days of torrential rains and hail triggered flooding in the remote province of Badakhshan, killing at least eight and destroying up to 100 houses, the provincial head of the national disaster management authority told AFP. Hundreds of villagers in high-risk areas have been evacuated as a precaution against further flooding, he said. -AFP

Protesters from the Climate Siren group hang a banner from the gates of Buckingham Palace, London Saturday June 23, 2012. Police say four climate change activists scaled the gates of Queen Elizabeth II’s Buckingham Palace home and locked themselves to railings. The group, from the Climate Siren group, wore T-shirts with the slogan “Climate emergency. 10% annual emission cuts.” The protesters unfurled a banner quoting a 2008 speech by Prince Charles, the queen’s son and heir, warning over a lack of progress on tacking climate change. It read: “’The doomsday clock of climate change is ticking ever faster towards midnight.” In a letter to the queen posted to the group’s website, the activists said they were carrying out their protest in the hope of drawing attention to stalled progress on environmental issues. “It is time that you and all public figures with influence followed the example of your son by speaking up loudly ... about the escalating threat of catastrophic climate change,” the group said. About 100 people stood at the scene, watching the protest. (AP)


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