CR IP TI ON BS SU
THERSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 2012
Pakistan polio campaign hit by fresh deadly attacks
Outrage over Delhi gang-rape swells across India
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UBS admits fraud in $1.5bn Libor rigging deal
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Controversy rages over waiving interest on debt ICM decries ‘oppression’ against bloggers, tweeters
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By B Izzak conspiracy theories
No rights, no dignity, no future By Badrya Darwish
badrya_d@kuwaittimes.net
T
he story of the Palestinians is never-ending. Unfortunately, it is a very sad story which nobody can help bring to a positive end. They were forced to leave their country in 1948 when the Jews invaded it. They were scattered in refugee camps in Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and many other places. Then Israel was established and populated by Jews who came from around the world, especially from Europe and Germany in particular. The Israelis who came to Israel and became Israelis have nationalities from where they came from - Russia, Germany, Poland and others. They are privileged and lucky because they had a choice to either stay in their country or leave a whole country of people “stateless”. I am sure you are all familiar with the saga of the Palestinian state and its history. This is how the story goes in short. Palestine was under British mandate and after the British authorities handed the country on a platter to the Jewish immigrants from all over the world and helped them settle down all over Palestine, Palestinians were kicked to the other half of Palestine - the West Bank. The Israelis were given the best plots - the seaside, Haifa, Jaffa and Yafa and all the important key cities. Then when the Israeli-Arab war started in 1967, Israel took over the rest of the country, or the main cities - Hebron, Bethlehem, Jerusalem etc. Now back to the Palestinians and refugee camps, especially in Syria, Jordan and Lebanon. Palestinians always become victims of the political situation in these countries. Though they live in camps under the title “refugees”, they get food subsidies by UNRWA and not by the host countries - still, politically they suffer and live in agony. Whatever happens in those countries in the end falls on their head. The latest misery is the Yarmouk refugee camp in Syria which has around a million Palestinian refugees. If they side with Assad, the opposition will kill them. If they side with the opposition, Assad’s army will kill them. They cannot stay neutral. Everyone tears them apart and uses them as a scapegoat. It is not enough that they live in deprivation in refugee camps, but they are also humiliated more by the political situation. Some of them are now trying to escape to Lebanon - a road that is not so easy. The most ironic part is that Netanyahu is building more settlements in their country now, which is called Israel, while they remain refugees scattered with no rights, no dignity and no future.
SEOUL: South Korea’s presidential candidate Park Geun-Hye of the ruling New Frontier Party waves after her arrival at the party headquarters yesterday. — AFP
S Korea elects first female prez SEOUL: South Korea elected its first female president yesterday, with voters handing a historic victory to conservative candidate Park Geun-Hye, daughter of the country’s former military ruler. As leader of Asia’s fourth-largest economy, Park, 60, will face numerous challenges, handling a belligerent North Korea, a slowing economy and soaring welfare costs in one of the world’s most rapidly ageing societies. The National Election Commission said early today that Park, from the ruling New Frontier Party, had secured the necessary votes to beat liberal rival Moon Jae-In of the main opposition party, according to Yonhap news agency. With more than 99.3 percent of the vote counted, Park
had secured 51.6 percent against Moon’s 48 percent, the report said. The election was largely fought on domestic economic issues, with both candidates offering similar policies as they went in search of centrist voters beyond their traditional bases. Park had pushed a message of “economic democratisation” - a campaign buzzword about reducing the social disparities thrown up by rapid economic development - and promised to create new jobs and increase welfare spending. However, she had been far more cautious than Moon about the need to rein in the power of the giant familyrun conglomerates, or “chaebol”, that dominate the
BP sells stake in China gas field to Kuwait
Boycott deepens rift between city, tribes KUWAIT: In a room scented with incense, twelve men in long traditional robes sip sweet tea and debate the political future of Kuwait’s tribes at one of many “diwaniya” across the country, a tradition of evening social gatherings older than Kuwait itself. The issue looms large in the tribal areas after changes to the voting system ahead of a parliamentary election on Dec 1 sparked a boycott by opposition politicians, including tribal leaders who said the changes would have worked to their disadvantage in particular. The dispute shows that the imbalance in power between those “inside and outside the wall” - referring to the series of walls that used to surround the capital area from the 18th to 20th
KUWAIT: Several MPs in the newly elected National Assembly yesterday strongly criticized Finance Minister Mustafa Al-Shamali for saying that the government will not accept proposals calling to write off interest on loans taken by Kuwaiti citizens. Some MPs threatened they will grill the minister and vowed that this time they will make sure he does not come back to the Cabinet. Meanwhile, a new draft law was submitted yesterday by two MPs calling on the government to purchase bank debts of Kuwaitis and then forgive interest on them and reschedule the repayment of the remaining principal loan in easy installments. The new bill, filed by MPs Mohammad Al-Jabri and Mohammad Al-Barrak, also calls for giving every citizens who will not benefit from the debt relief scheme KD 1,000. Earlier, three draft laws were filed by MPs in the new National Assembly elected barely three weeks ago, all calling for the government to purchase all bank loans of Kuwaiti citizens and then waive incurred interest. Shamali however said yesterday that the government will not accept such proposals because the government does not see any need or reason to purchase the loans or drop the interest. Shamali told Al-Jarida newspaper that the government has already resolved the problem by establishing a debtors’ fund about two years ago and that about 28,000 Kuwaiti defaulters have registered to benefit from the fund. Islamist MP Khaled Al-Shulaimi threatened he will grill the minister if he continues to oppose the debt relief proposes, adding that Shamali this time will never come back to the Cabinet. Shamali was forced to resign from the Cabinet in May after a grilling by three former opposition MPs over allegations of corruption and mismanagement and for opposing the debt relief laws. MP Khalil Al-Saleh said Shamali should know that the decision to write off the interest on debt is in the hands of the Assembly and not the government and there is no need for such statements. MP Faisal Al-Kandari said that it is not Shamali who decides to accept or reject such proposals, and accordingly there is no need for such provocative statements. MP Youssef Al-Zalzalah however said that the issue is purely technical and that he and a number of MPs have prepared a draft law to deal with interest on loans taken before Dec 2009 when the Central Bank’s supervision was not effective. He did not say when the bill will be submitted. In another parliamentary issue, MP Yaqoub Al-Sane yesterday warned that he will grill Interior Minister Sheikh Ahmad Al-Humoud Al-Sabah for failing to curb the protests of the opposition activists who, according Continued on Page 13
centuries - is alive and well, said Fawaz Al-Adei, a lawyer who was at the diwaniya. “Tribes make up only a small part of the financial system, there is no real representation in government,” he said, clacking his yellow prayer beads. “It is mostly people from the urban areas who control the media, who make the decisions.” The perceived divide is one of the sources of tensions in the major oil producer and could become more problematic as the tribal population grows, becomes more prosperous and demands more political power. In the Saber Al-Nasser area where the diwaniya took place some 20 km outside Kuwait City, police had to use tear Continued on Page 13
national economy. “This election was a victory for all of you, the people,” Park told cheering, flag-waving supporters at an open-air victory celebration in central Seoul. “It is a victory from the heart of the people hoping to revive the economy,” she added. On North Korea, Park has promised a dual policy of greater engagement and “robust deterrence”, and held out the prospect of a summit with the North’s young leader Kim Jong-Un, who came to power a year ago. She also signalled a willingness to resume the humanitarian aid to Pyongyang suspended by current President Lee Myung-Bak. Continued on Page 13
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Housing costly, hard to find for Riyadh expats
Obama is Time’s person of year for second time NEW YORK: Time magazine yesterday named the recently re -elected US President Barack Obama as its person of the year for 2012 - the second time it has accorded him this honor. Obama now not only has a reelection as America’s first black president and a Nobel peace prize under his belt, but he beat fancied runners-up, including brave Pakistani girls’ rights activist Malala Yousafzai, to be enshrined again as Time’s dominant personality of the year. The venerable American news magazine put Obama on its cover, striking a thoughtful, statuesque pose, and said he deserved the accolade as “the symbol and in some ways the architect of this new America”. The magazine lauded Obama’s campaigning prowess, noting he was the first
president since Franklin Delano Roosevelt to win more than 50 percent of the vote in two straight elections and the first president since 1940 to be re-elected despite a jobless rate above 7.5 percent. Obama beat Republican Mitt Romney soundly in November’s election to win a second four year term, despite presiding over a chronic economic slump. “In 2012, he found and forged a new majority, turned weakness into opportunity and sought, amid great adversity, to create a more perfect union,” said Time, which had named Obama person of the year back in 2008 when he became America’s first black president. The others considered for the weekly magazine’s traditional annual honor were Apple CEO Tim Cook, atomic scientist Continued on Page 13