CR IP TI ON BS SU
THURSDAY, APRIL 18, 2013
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JAMADA ALTHANI 8, 1434 AH
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Commandos raid Barrak’s home as standoff worsens Running battles in Andalus as police clash with protesters
Max 34º Min 20º High Tide 06:05 & 15:59 Low Tide 10:38 & 23:31
conspiracy theories
KWPD By Badrya Darwish
badrya_d@kuwaittimes.net
A
rrest or no arrest? Till I completed this article, the news going on all day revolved around the arrest of former MP Musallam Al-Barrak. One minute we receive the news that the police are surrounding his diwan. Few minutes later we are told that the police could not find him in his diwan. A few minutes later Musallam Al-Barrak himself addresses the Ministry of Interior telling them that he is available and ready to be arrested. This movie had been going on in front of the whole nation throughout the day. Twitter and all social media have been pretty busy giving updates on the Barrak affair. Honestly speaking, it has become an episode like the San Francisco police series. Pick the one you like. For the older generation I choose Miami Vice, Starsky and Hutch, Mad Max, or Colombo for the intelligent or CSI for the current audience. Take your pick. In our case instead of NYPD we can have KWPD. Why if the government is determined to arrest Musallam Al-Barrak, they haven’t done it for two days since the verdict came out? Mind you, guys, I am not pushing the government to arrest him or not to arrest him. I am not a judge or the police. I am merely a citizen watching. Right now there are many followers and fans around Musallam Al-Barrak who are vehemently supporting every step he makes. People are tweeting and retweeting and even making songs and video clips about him. I tell you his audience has impressed me. They seem to be very creative. This material has flooded the Internet and social media. Honestly, like I previously wrote, the man has become a hero. The question is: How many series of KWPD are we going to watch on the Musallam arrest? I think they should videotape them for the serial “On the chase of Barrak.” This can be very entrepreneurial. I am not sure what to say: Good luck Musallam or well done KWPD!
Boston ‘bomber’ spotted on video BOSTON: US investigators yesterday uncovered images of a suspect who may have planted the Boston marathon bombs that killed three people and maimed scores in a hail of shrapnel. The images could mark a breakthrough in the hunt for the perpetrators, two days after the explosions. President Barack Obama will visit the city today to show national solidarity. Boston remained on edge with the evacuation of the federal courthouse and part of a hospital and conflicting reports of an arrest that brought a stern rebuke by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). A law enforcement official told AFP “there’s an image of a person, of a potential suspect,” and officials are working “to locate and identify that individual”. The Boston Globe said a department store surveillance camera and private photographer may have caught a suspect planting one of the two bombs set off at the finish line of Monday’s marathon. Separate media reports indicated there were pictures of the suspect running away while other people slumped to the ground in the blast. With no claim of responsibility made for the attack, the FBI said it has launched a “worldwide” hunt. It released photographs of the mangled metal remnants of a pressure cooker believed to have been used for one of the bombs which sprayed nails, ball bearings and metal pellets into the huge crowds. The lid of one pressure cooker was found on the roof of a nearby hotel, the owner told AFP. Shreds of black nylon bags believed to have been used to carry the bombs have also been found. Doctors at hospitals where the critically injured were taken say ball bearings and nails taken from patients were being used in the investigation. George Velmahos, Massachusetts General Hospital’s chief of trauma surgery, said the metal was being handed over to police. He said 12 nails were taken from inside one patient. Peter Burke, chief trauma surgeon at Continued on Page 15
KUWAIT: (Top) Opposition demonstrators flee teargas and stun grenades fired by riot police in Andalus yesterday during a protest against a five-year jail term against opposition leader and former MP Musallam Al-Barrak. (Inset) An injured protester lies on the ground. (Above left) Elite forces raid Barrak’s house in another failed attempt to arrest him. (Above center) Barrak attends a demonstration near his house later. (Above right) Interior Minister Sheikh Ahmad Al-Humoud Al-Sabah leaves the hall during a session at the National Assembly following disputes with MPs over the arrest of Barrak. — Photos by Yasser Al-Zayyat By B Izzak KUWAIT: Elite special forces last night fired teargas and stun grenades against thousands of opposition demonstrators who marched on Andalus police station amid reports of several injuries. The clashes broke out hours after a raid by the special forces on the home of former opposition MP Musallam Al-Barrak, who has been sentenced to five years in jail on charges of insulting HH the Amir. It was like a battlefield with hundreds of grenades fired at the angry crowds, estimated at around 10,000 people, who marched from Barrak’s diwaniya to the nearby Andalus police station with the intention of storming it.
• MoI denies assaulting women, children • Information ministry website hacked • MPs slam beleaguered interior minister Police repulsed the attackers into the internal streets of Andalus, but fires broke out in the area’s co-operative society and in a municipality vehicle. Ambulances rushed to the scene with activists reporting on Twitter that several people were wounded. They posted a picture of at least one man with apparently serious wounds. The clashes are the first in more than two
months and come after Barrak was handed a harsh sentence on charges of insulting the Amir in a speech at a public rally in October. Earlier in the day, a group of special forces surprisingly raided Barrak’s diwaniya amid claims that they mistreated the occupants of the house, all of whom are Barrak’s relatives. The special forces came to arrest the opposition figure to serve his five-year jail term. Barrak was not at his home and the special forces left the place after searching it and beating up a number of relatives of Barrak, who described the action as “cowardly”. The former lawmaker later said that he was prepared to go to prison anytime but only after authorities produce the Continued on Page 15
Britain bids farewell to Thatcher Poisoned letter sent to Obama Senate rejects gun background checks WASHINGTON: A letter addressed to Wicker, and the blasts at the Boston US President Barack Obama tested posi- marathon which killed three people. tive for ricin in a drama over poisoned The letter contained “a granular submail spreading alarm in Washington, stance that preliminarily tested positive for ricin”, an FBI statement which was already on edge said. Further examinations yesterday after the Boston will be carried out over the bombings. Separately, the next 24 to 48 hours, the FBI US Senate yesterday rejectsaid. ed a bipartisan plan to The US Secret Service said expand background checks the letter to Obama had for gun buyers, dealing a been intercepted at a mail sharp blow to Obama’s camscreening facility outside the paign to curb gun violence White House on Tuesday, the after the Newtown school same day authorities said a massacre. The FBI said there Barack Obama letter was sent to Wicker that was no connection between the letter sent to Obama and detected also showed traces of ricin. Ricin - a at a remote mail facility, and another highly toxic protein found in castor Continued on Page 15 mailed to Republican Senator Roger
LONDON: Margaret Thatcher was laid to rest yesterday with military pageantry and pockets of protests, in a funeral that reflected the polarising impact of Britain’s longest-serving post-war prime minister. Queen Elizabeth II led mourners from the British establishment and 170 countries including Kuwait in bidding farewell to the Iron Lady, who trans-
formed Britain and is credited with helping end the Cold War. Tens of thousands of people gathered to watch the procession through London to St Paul’s Cathedral and many broke into spontaneous applause and threw flowers as the coffin passed by. But several hundred protesters turned their backs and booed Continued on Page 15
LONDON: Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II (left) watches the Bearer Party made up of personnel from the three branches of the military carry the coffin of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher during her ceremonial funeral in St Paul’s Cathedral yesterday. — AFP