CR IP TI ON BS SU
THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 2012
100 dead, 250,000 stranded in B’desh floods
Queen shakes hands with ex-IRA commander
150 FILS
Federer in royal show, Wozniacki, Stosur out
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Khorafi awaits new Cabinet to convene 2009 Assembly
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Glencore delays $26bn Xstrata bid after Qatar move
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www.kuwaittimes.net
SHAABAN 8, 1433 AH
Liberals criticize rejection of court ruling By B Izzak
Inflation slows to 25-mth low DUBAI: Kuwait’s annual inflation rate eased to a 25month low of 2.8 percent in May and prices edged down slightly from the previous month, mainly because of cheaper food, state news agency KUNA reported yesterday. Inflation in the major oil exporter has been slowing gradually. It hit 3.3 percent in April, down from a peak of 5.4 percent in May 2011. Consumer prices fell 0.1 percent monthon-month in May, compared to a 0.6 percent drop in April, KUNA said, citing data from the Central Statistics Office. “The low inflation reading is testament to a weak demand climate and anaemic credit growth,” said Liz Martins, senior regional economist at HSBC in Dubai. “Even with the salary hikes we have seen in recent months, we don’t expect a major pick-up in the short- to medium term.” Around 3,000 Kuwaiti customs workers went on a week-long strike for higher pay in March, disrupting port traffic, while employees at national carrier Kuwait Airways grounded planes for three days during a walkout. The civil service commission eventually agreed to wage rises of 25 to 30 percent for public sector employees, and proposed increases of up to 330 dinars ($1,190) per month for Kuwaiti private sector workers. Paul Gamble, head of research at Jadwa Investment in Riyadh, said there was very little inflationary pressure coming from abroad, while Continued on Page 13
Max 45º Min 30º High Tide 06:00 & 18:15 Low Tide 12:22 & 23:40
DONETSK, Ukraine: Portuguese defender Pepe vies with Spanish midfielder Xabi Alonso during the Euro 2012 football championship semifinal match between Portugal and Spain at the Donbass Arena yesterday. Spain won on penalties after a goalless draw. — AFP (See Page 20)
KUWAIT: Speaker of the reinstated 2009 National Assembly Jassem Al-Khorafi said yesterday he is waiting for the formation of the new Cabinet to invite MPs to hold the first Assembly session after it was revived, but added that he has no guarantees that a majority will be secured for the meeting. Addressing a press conference during his first visit to the Assembly following the landmark constitutional court ruling last week, Khorafi said members of the new Cabinet must take the oath in the Assembly so as to avoid a repeat of a similar constitutional controversy in the future. But he insisted that he does not have guarantees that a majority of the 2009 MPs will attend the meeting and if no majority is secured, “I will refer the issue to HH the Amir to take Jassem Al-Khorafi whatever action is needed for such occasions”. In an unprecedented verdict last week, the constitutional court, whose rulings cannot be challenged, nullified the general elections held in February, which meant the scrapping of the opposition-dominated 2012 Assembly, and reinstated the 2009 Assembly. The ruling was strongly criticized by the opposition, which considered it “null and void” as thousands of its supporters Continued on Page 13
The quiet influence of Kuwait’s Salafis
Bahraini Shiites run for cover from tear gas and sound bombs fired by riot police in the village of Bori yesterday. (Inset) Bahraini human rights activist Nabeel Rajab is greeted by his mother as he returns to his home from jail in Bani Jamra yesterday. — AFP/AP
Bahrain releases leading activist DUBAI: Bahrain released from jail yesterdauy leading Shiite rights activist Nabil Rajab, his lawyer said, just hours after the government announced $2.6 million compensation for 17 people killed in last year’s bloody crackdown. Rajab was released three weeks after his arrest for tweeting insults deemed insulting to Sunnis, his lawyer told AFP on condition of anonymity, adding that the next hearing in his client’s case was set for July 9.
Rajab was detained on June 6 after he was accused of “public insults” made on tweets against the predominantly Sunni population of the province of Muharraq, according to prosecutors. In a statement earlier this month, prosecutors said they received complaints that Rajab “talked on social networks about the people of Muharraq in a way that questioned their patriotism and Continued on Page 13
KUWAIT: When Salafi Islamists objected to a youth forum on politics and religion in Kuwait earlier this year they took to Twitter and other media, but not to the streets. While the state’s Salafis follow an interpretation of Islam that is just as puritanical as that of counterparts elsewhere, the means they use to assert their influence are more sophisticated - lobbying Cabinet members, comments on social media and seminars. Allowed relative freedom within Kuwait’s circumscribed and turbulent political system, they see themselves as an example for Salafis taking part in politics for the first time in other countries after the Arab Spring uprisings. “The Salafi movement is known for its credibility and it takes a middle position between government and the opposition,” Kuwaiti Salafi MP Abdulatif Al-Ameeri told Reuters after a parliamentary session earlier this month. In the most recent election, four Salafis were elected to the 50-member parliament and six other men who share their line of thought also gained seats, he said. In Tunisia, by contrast, thousands of Salafis rioted in the capital last month over an art exhibition they said insulted Muslims. One of Kuwait’s most vocal Salafi MPs, Waleed AlTabtabaei, has more than 198,000 followers on Twitter. Some worry that the Salafis’ ties to neighbouring Saudi Arabia, strengthened during Iraq’s 1990-91 occupation, have made them into a fundamentalist force that will push Kuwait toward a more austere form of Islam and closer to the Saudi sphere of influence. But others and Salafis themselves - deny a direct political link. “The Salafis participate in the political system of Kuwait. They are elected and with time they will change and they have changed,” said Shafeeq Ghabra, professor of political science at Kuwait University. “This is a process that this region and Kuwait is going through.” A court on June 20 annulled the results of the February election on grounds the process was unconstitutional, reinstating the previous parliament and Continued on Page 13
Syrian rebels storm pro-Assad TV channel
DAMASCUS: A general view shows damage at the site of an attack on the progovernment Al-Ikhbariya satellite television channel’s offices yesterday. — AFP BEIRUT: Gunmen stormed a pro-gov- against rebel forces who are getting ernment Syrian TV channel headquar- stronger. The dawn attack on Ikhbariya ters yesterday, bombing buildings and television’s offices, 20 km south of the shooting dead seven staff, state media capital, as well as overnight fighting on said, in one of the boldest attacks yet the outskirts of Damascus showed the on a symbol of the authoritarian state. 16-month-old violence now rapidly President Bashar Al-Assad declared late encroaching on the city. Ikhbariya resumed broadcasting yesterday that his country was “at war”. US intelligence officials said the Syrian shortly after the attack, which killed government was “holding fairly firm” three journalists and four security Continued on Page 13 and digging in for a long struggle
in the
news
11 militants jailed over Kuwait plot
Saudi train derails, 34 passengers hurt
RIYADH: A Saudi court jailed 11 suspected Al-Qaeda members yesterday for plotting attacks on US forces in neighbouring Kuwait and on oil installations in the kingdom. Members of the group, who were charged with “belonging to a terrorist cell”, were sentenced to between two and 15 years, the official SPA news agency said. The prosecutor’s office had sought the death penalty for all 11, and a representative of the office said it would appeal the verdicts. “The verdicts ... include 15 years in prison for the first defendant for joining a terror cell which targeted American forces in Kuwait and important Aramco sites,” Alriyadh newspaper said. A spokesman from the Justice Ministry could not be reached for comment. Saudi courts last June began trying dozens of people accused of involvement in deadly attacks between 2003 and 2006 after authorities launched an all-out campaign to eradicate Al-Qaeda in the country. Human rights groups say peaceful political activists have also been imprisoned in the kingdom’s crackdown on militants.
RIYADH: At least 34 people were injured yesterday, two of them in critical condition, when a Saudi passenger train derailed east of the capital, a railway official and a medical source said. The accident occurred east of Riyadh as the train was heading to the capital from the eastern city of Dammam, they said. Hamad Abdel Qader, deputy chief of operations at the Saudi Railways Organisation, told AFP that the train derailed “100 km east of Riyadh”. A company statement put the location of the accident at 70 km away from Riyadh - in almost the same location where another passenger train derailed two years ago. The train was carrying 332 passengers and an investigation is underway to determine the cause of the accident. There were “no deaths in the accident ... but several” people were wounded, including one man who was evacuated to Riyadh for medical treatment, said Abdel Qader. In all 34 passengers were wounded, two of them in critical condition, according to Saad bin Misfer Al-Qahtani, a Riyadh health official.
Google unveils tablet computer SAN FRANCISCO: Google yesterday unveiled its own branded Nexus 7 tablet computer designed to challenge Apple’s iPad and be a window into its online shop for films, books, movies and more. The seven-inch tablet powered by the latest generation of Android software was made for Google by Taiwan-based Asus and weighs about as much as a paperback book, Android team head Hugo Barra said during a presentation opening the Internet titan’s annual developers conference in San Francisco. Nexus tablets were available for order in Australia, Canada, Britain, and the United States at the Google Play store at a price of $199 and would begin shipping in mid-July, Barra said. The tablets come with a $25 coupon for Google Play content. Google also Introduced an Android-powered Nexus Q device for wirelessly streaming films or music to televisions or speakers. Executives also showcased the new 4.1 “Jelly SAN FRANCISCO: Hugo Barra, Director of Google Bean” version of Android operating system at the event. Product Management, holds up the new Google The new software delivers faster performance, according to Nexus7 tablet yesterday. — AP the company, and new features such as “voice search”.