CR IP TI ON BS SU
THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 2012
Iraq urges Iran to keep oil flowing from Gulf
Wikipedia, Google protest US antipiracy proposals
www.kuwaittimes.net
SAFAR 25, 1433 AH
Foreigners in India for ‘mommy makeover’
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NO: 15333
amount to KD 160m: Barrak
40 PAGES
150 FILS
21Illegal27deposits, 28transfers 20 Tribes forming alliances • Court reinstates more candidates
Max 18º Min 03º High Tide 08:25 & 19:35 Low Tide 01:54 & 12:36
By B Izzak
‘Freezing cold’ in coming days KUWAIT: The weather today will continue to be sunny with light to moderate northwesterly to northerly wind, said Mohammad Karam, Director of Kuwaiti Meteorological Center at The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA). Karam said that the “Siberian front” will begin tomorrow, and will pick up towards the region accompanied by very cold winds in the upper atmosphere followed by the northwesterly winds. By day, he said, it will be of moderate speed, later developing into a storm of a speed exceeding 70 kmph. Karam also forecast a sharp decrease in visibility due to horizontal dust from the northwest of the country (from central and southern Iraq), which is expected to be a source of a dust storm heading towards Kuwait and until Saturday, he added. He noted that the temperature will drop sharply - the lowest since the beginning of the winter season this year - to below zero Celsius in many areas on Saturday night. “It will be freezing cold on Sunday,” Karam said. He expected exposed agricultural crops to frost over in this period. As for sea conditions, he advised seafarers to be careful and cautious due to high waves starting from noon tomorrow. — KUNA
RABAT: Morocco’s King Mohammed VI (right) welcomes Kuwait’s Amir HH Sheikh Sabah AlAhmad Al-Sabah at the king’s palace yesterday. — AP
KUWAIT: Prominent opposition figure and former MP Mussallam AlBarrak has charged that the value of illegal deposits into the bank accounts of some former MPs and transfers made by the former prime minister amounted to KD 160 million. He also said that he has documents proving that more than KD 60 million was transferred into the private bank accounts held by the former prime minister in foreign countries through the foreign ministry and the Central Bank. The previous government had denied any wrongdoing and insisted that all the funds had been paid back to the state. Barrak said the funds of both deposits and transfers are sufficient to send more than 5,000 Kuwaiti students for university studies in the United States for five years. At the opening of his election headquarters, Barrak showed pictures of luxurious cars he claimed were bought with public funds and vowed that he and other opposition figures will push for a judicial probe into the foreign transfers. Continued on Page 13
Ahmad Al-Saadoun
Mussallam Al-Barrak
Protesters defy ban on Manama protest Bahrain pins hopes on air show ADDIS ABABA: An unidentified member of the tourist group who was attacked is assisted as she arrives back at the airport yesterday. — AP
5 Europeans killed in Ethiopia attack ADDIS ABABA: Gunmen killed five Europeans trekking near Ethiopia’s famed Erta Ale volcano and kidnapped two others, officials said yesterday, in the region’s worst attack on tourists in years. The volcano is one of Africa’s most spectacular and lies in the Afar depression reputedly one of the least hospitable places on the planet - where local rebels have claimed attacks and kidnappings in the past. Ethiopia blamed Eritrea but Asmara denied involvement in the attack, which occurred before dawn on
Tuesday and dealt another blow to regional tourism after recent kidnappings in Kenyan resorts and attacks on yachts by Somali pirates. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s spokesman Peter Szijjarto, in an emailed statement, provided the nationalities of all the tourists involved in Monday’s incident, citing information he said was obtained from Interpol. “Two Hungarians were killed in Ethiopia and another lightly wounded... In total, five Continued on Page 13
DUBAI: Bahraini police fired rubber bullets and tear gas yesterday to disperse protesters who were attempting to hold a banned demonstration in Manama, the key Shiite opposition group Al-Wefaq reported. There were no immediate reports of injuries or arrests. Security forces prevented the small groups of people, who were chanting anti-regime slogans and demanding democracy, from reaching the Ras Rumman diplomatic quarter in the capital’s business district, the source said. The authorities said on Tuesday that they were prohibiting the demonstration, called by the Shiite-led opposition, for security reasons. Al-Wefaq’s website also called for another demonstration to be held in a suburb of the capital tomorrow, the same day an air show is to begin in the tiny Gulf kingdom. Bahrain, keen to show its recovery after violent unrest, will not get much mileage from the air show, the first major international event since the protests, as the West remains wary of unpopular defence deals and commercial orders fizzle. Yesterday’s incident comes just days after King Hamad introduced constitutional reforms that give more power to the elected parliament, but fall far short of the demands set down by the opposition. A brutal crackdown on protests in mid-March led to the death of 35 people, including five security personnel and five Continued on Page 13
Gulf economies can brave Iran tensions
Tiny Qatar wields powerful punch DOHA: From its startling winning bid to host the 2022 football World Cup and mediating roles in Middle East and African conflicts to its role leading Arab efforts to isolate Syria, tiny Qatar is aspiring to an ambitious role: global powerbroker. Led by a ruling family that does not shy away from taking controversial positions on world affairs, the Gulf Arab state was a major supporter of Libya’s NATO-backed rebels, providing arms and troops and ensuring the lasting gratitude of Libyans. In 2008 Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani helped cajole Lebanese leaders to a political agreement, succeeding where the Arab League, the United Nations, France and others had failed. And in Sudan, Qatar mediated the ceasefire agreement signed in Doha between Khartoum and Darfur rebels in 2010. The impetus behind the country’s
pursuit of the limelight in the past decade is a wish to differentiate itself from regional neighbours - specifically Saudi Arabia, with whom Qatar has had sporadically acrimonious relations for decades. “One of the key goals of Qatari foreign policy is to insert itself into key conflicts whereby Qatar becomes the crucial interlocutor between Western states and a range of ‘problematic’ Muslim actors,” said David Roberts, deputy director of the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), based in Doha. A close ally of Washington and home to the largest US airbase in the Middle East, Qatar has often launched political initiatives that corresponded with Western interests, and it had formal ties with Israel until the Jewish state’s 2009 war with the Palestinian Hamas rulers of the Gaza Strip. Continued on Page 13
MANAMA: Bahraini anti-government protesters kneel in the street and gesture towards riot police yesterday. — AP
KUWAIT: Former MP Mussallam Al-Barrak speaks during a protest outside the Palace of Justice yesterday demanding more severe penalties for those convicted in the torture and killing of 35year-old Kuwaiti Mohammad Al-Maimouni last year. — Photo by Fouad Al-Shaikh
DUBAI: Tensions over Iran’s nuclear program may prompt Gulf Arab states to spend more on defence and infrastructure projects this year, but higher oil prices would probably cushion the impact on their economies of any escalation of the crisis. The risk of conflict over Iran’s nuclear ambitions has existed for several years with little effect on the Arab world’s wealthy oil exporters, most of which have minimal trade and investment ties with their rival on the other side of the Gulf. In the last few months, however, threats of international military intervention in Iran, and Tehran’s threats to close the Strait of Hormuz, have raised tensions to the point where they could have a major influence on investment in the Gulf states and their fiscal policies, some analysts believe. A recent rise of prices of Gulf states’ credit default swaps, used to insure against the risk of a sovereign debt default, may reflect increased con-
cern about Iran. Five-year Saudi Arabian CDS prices have climbed by 22 basis points since the start of this year to 149 bps, their highest level since July 2009, although they remain far below prices for debt-ridden European states, some of which are above 1,000 bps. “Government spending in the Gulf, which on average increased by 20 percent last year compared to under 15 percent a year over the preceding decade, will probably have to rise more,” Said Hirsh, Middle East economist at consultancy Capital Economics, wrote in a report. “First, military spending is set to rise across the Gulf. Second, the Gulf’s governments will need to boost capital expenditure if political tensions lead to a fall in private investment.” Foreign direct investment into Gulf Arab states totalled nearly $40 billion in 2010, according to the latest data from the United Nations Conference on Trade Continued on Page 13