10 Apr 2013

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CR IP TI ON BS SU

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 2013

Oil workers on strike, demand their rights

Egyptian pope blasts Islamist president

Real in last four despite defeat

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NO: 15774

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Uhuru Kenyatta sworn in as Kenya president

Opposition groups resume protests, call for freedom

40 PAGES

150 FILS

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www.kuwaittimes.net

JAMADA ALAWWAL 29, 1434 AH

Interior Minister under fire over ‘deal’ with Israeli firm

Max 33º Min 20º High Tide 12:01 Low Tide 06:10 & 18:07

By B Izzak conspiracy theories

Invading a security zone!

By Badrya Darwish

badrya_d@kuwaittimes.net

A

ren’t we a happy nation? We have funny, strange and sometimes even dangerous events happening nearly every day. Here is the latest: there was a bizarre discovery of a theft, mind you not from the mall, the souq or from the gold shop. It was not a gunpoint bank robbery with masked men. It was not petty theft of the cash from a gas station on a road side. It was a theft that happened in the heart of the Ministry of Interior and in the heart of Kuwait’s military base. The theft took place in Sheikh Saad Al-Abdullah Academy for Security Sciences. The name of the academy is enough to protect it. Who would dare, for God’s sake, drive into the security academy to steal? Even if he had a military tank and decided to break into the warehouse to steal only 20,000 of M16 rifles and another 15,000 bullets for a 9 millimeter pistol. May we know why there is no security in such high-security zone in Kuwait? Or were they away for dinner and left the post unsecured? Could you buy the theory that a total stranger who is a thief would dare enter that zone? Even if he was an experienced thief, how would he know the location of the warehouse and what was the right time to walk in when nobody was around. The thief took out such a large quantity - which I am sure does not fit in a small box. Military equipment which weighs 660 kilos was definitely not a one-man job. Even two men cannot disappear with 660 kilos in 10 minutes. Excuse my conspiracy theories but whoever did that calculated it nicely - and surely is part of a group who has an insider. Or is it possible that all the perpetrators were insiders? Only time will tell. When the Ministry of Interior completes its investigation, we will find out who needed so many bullets and for what? Where did the thief plan to take the bullets? That many bullets, by the way, are enough to start a war. Whoever took the bullets, the truth of the matter is that now he is heavily-armed. Since the region is in turmoil there are many places, I am sure you can guess, where these ammunitions can be put into use. Sadly, there is tension all around Kuwait and in Kuwait itself. It could be used in Syria, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, Egypt, Lebanon, Bahrain or in Kuwait itself, God forbid. But the last thing I would imagine is that these ammunitions could be used to hunt pigeons in the farm area in Wafra. Have a safe evening!

KUWAIT: Kuwait’s Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah (right) and Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmed Al-Sabah attend the opening of the 19th Arab Inter-Parliamentary Union (AIPU) conference in Kuwait City yesterday. — Photo by Yasser Al-Zayyat (See Page 2)

Quake, aftershock rock GCC; 32 killed

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KUWAIT: The Opposition Coalition, an umbrella of several opposition groups and activists, is due to resume protests today with a public rally to press for the freedom of activist tweeters serving jail terms for tweets deemed offensive to the Amir. Titled “the elected government in combating suppressing freedoms”, the rally will be held just outside the Palace of Justice in Kuwait City. It will be the first rally following a lull for several weeks. A number of activists and former MPs have been sentenced to several years in jail and some of them are currently serving the terms while others are waiting for the appeals. Many others are still on trial. All opposition groups will jointly hold another rally on Saturday night at the Square of Will outside the National Assembly building to protest the clampdown on opposition activists. It will be the first rally at the Square in a few months. After a series of huge protests and demonstrations, the opposition has remained quiet for the past several weeks due to differences within the ranks of the various groups over their program and protest movement. In a related development, the liberal National Democratic Alliance (NDA) said yesterday it rejected demands by certain opposition groups to amend the second article of the constitution to make Islamic law as the sole source of legislation, insisting that this will transform Kuwait into a religious state. NDA called for strengthening democracy in Kuwait to transform it into a true civil nation. The leftist Progressive Movement meanwhile said that a series of problems facing Kuwait are the direct result of taking the decision-making process hostage into the hands of the regime and the clampdown on freedoms. The Movement said in a statement that the trial of opposition leader and former MP Mussallam AlBarrak lacked the basic guarantees for a fair trial. The statement strongly lashed out at the new draft media law which stipulates stiff penalties against violators, adding that the bill imposes additional restrictions on electronic publications, tweeters and bloggers. In another development, the public prosecution has referred Interior Minister Sheikh Ahmad Al-Humoud AlSabah to the special tribunal for trying ministers over allegations that the Interior Ministry has struck a deal with a Canadian company owned by an Israeli firm. The allegation was made in a request to grill the Interior Minister filed last month by MP Faisal Al-Duwaisan but the debate of the grilling was postponed by the National Assembly. A private lawyer however filed a lawsuit in the matter to the public prosecution. The special tribunal will investigate the case in order to find out whether there is sufficient evidence to press charges against the minister in a special court.

North urges foreigners in S Korea to evacuate

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Saudi registers first female lawyer RIYADH: Saudi Arabia has registered its first female trainee advocate, paving the way for women to practice as lawyers in the kingdom where strict Islamic sharia law applies, an activist said yesterday. “The road is open now to women to receive permits to practice as lawyers, after the registration of Arwa AlHujaili as the first trainee lawyer,” rights activist Walid Abulkhair said. Abulkhair posted on his Twitter

account a copy of the justice ministry’s certificate of Hujaili’s registration. “The (trainee) lawyer should be contracted by a lawyer who has been in service for more than five years... and should train for no less than three years,” he said. A trainee lawyer is allowed to practice, he said. The ministry’s move would boost the status of women in the ultra-conservative kingdom, where

females need the consent of their male guardians in most legal procedures. Women are also banned from driving and have to cover from head to toe when in public. In October, the ministry said women lawyers would be allowed to plead cases in court starting November 2012. But the promise did not materialize. Women law graduates launched a campaign in 2011 demanding that they be allowed to plead in court.— AFP

600,000 ‘tricked and trapped’ in Mideast

PURI: Indians pay tribute beside a sand sculpture of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher, made by sand artist Sudersan Pattnaik, at the Golden Sea beach in Puri, about 65 kilometers from the eastern Indian city of Bhubaneswar yesterday. — AFP (See Page 7)

AMMAN: An estimated 600,000 people are “tricked and trapped” into both forced employment and sexual exploitation in the Middle East, the UN’s labor agency said yesterday. The International Labor Organization, issuing the findings of a two-year study based on 650 interviews, called for an overhaul of employment practices in the region, notably an end to the “kafala” system of sponsorships. “Labor migration in this part of the world is unique in terms of its sheer scale and its exponential growth in recent years,” said Beate Andrees, head of an ILO program to combat forced labor. “The challenge is how to put in place safeguards in both origin and destination countries to prevent the exploitation and abuse of these workers,” she said at the opening of a two-day conference on the issue in Amman, Jordan. The 150-page report entitled “Tricked and Trapped: Human Trafficking in the Middle East” was based on research carried out in Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon and the United Arab Emirates. “Although data is scarce, the ILO estimates that there are 600,000 forced labor victims in the Middle East,” it said. The study singled out the kafala system, saying it was “inherently problematic” because it created an unequal power

dynamic between employers and workers. The system “governs the lives of most migrant workers in the Mashreq and Gulf Cooperation Councils countries”. “Reforming the kafala system would significantly improve labor migration governance in this regard,” it said. The study criticized as insufficient laws that “reinforce underlying vulnerabilities of migrant workers” and restrict their ability to terminate employment contracts and to change employers. A lack of inspections kept domestic workers isolated and heightened their “vulnerability to exploitation,” said the study, warning against “the real risks of detention and deportation for workers who are coerced into sex work”. In male-dominated economic sectors such as construction, manufacturing, seafaring and agriculture, “workers are routinely deceived with respect to living and working conditions, the type of work to be performed, or even the existence of a job at all,” it said. “Human trafficking can only be effectively tackled by addressing the systemic gaps in labor migration governance across the region,” said Frank Hagemann, ILO deputy regional director for Arab states. — AFP


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10 Apr 2013 by Kuwait Times - Issuu