12 May

Page 1

ON IP TI SC R SU B

THURSDAY, MAY 12, 2011

Quakes hit Italy; None in Rome despite myth

Barcelona crowned Spanish champions

NO: 15086

150 FILS

10 40 PAGES

www.kuwaittimes.net

JAMADI ALTHANI 9, 1432 AH

20

MPs blast TV, clash over Arab uprising Shiite MP slams government over Bahrain

Max 40 Min 28 Low Tide 00:10 & 12:44 High Tide 07:22 & 18:08

By B Izzak

KUWAIT: Kuwait Prime Minister HH Sheikh Nasser Al-Mohammad Al-Sabah (right), Deputy Premier and Interior Minister Sheikh Ahmad Al-Hmoud Al-Sabah (center), new Oil and Parliament Affairs Minister Mohammad Al-Busairi (left), MP Saleh Ashour (back-right) and MP Salwa Al-Jassar (back-left) seen during a parliament session yesterday.— Photo by Yasser Al-Zayyat

Emirati youths question cost of political silence ‘I want my freedoms’ DUBAI: A young woman hunched in a dark university auditorium plastered with Emirati flags suddenly pipes up amid fellow students attending the first open political discussion in their lives. “Sometimes change doesn’t come from being polite and restrained,” the girl shouts to cautious applause. “Sometimes, you have to get your hands dirty.” The United Arab Emirates, largely insulated from political dissent by its vast oil wealth and rapid growth, has so far been spared the wave of protests that has swept through the Arab world, toppling the autocratic rulers of Egypt and Tunisia. Older Emiratis, who remember when their families lived in humble fishing villages, have long been content to remain politically silent as their rulers turned the coastal desert state into a business hub of gleaming skyscrapers. Yet for the first time, a younger generation is starting to question the cost of their parents’ genteel quiescence. “I’m well off. I don’t need a revolution because I’m hungry. I want my freedoms, my dignity,” said a 21-year old woman, wrapped in a gauzy black abaya. She gave her name as Alia, but said it was an alias for fear of pursuit by security forces. “The Alia after the Egyptian uprising is not the same person she was before. Now we know what young people are capable of.” She is not alone. A small but increasingly active number of Emirati Continued on Page 14

Syrian soldiers shell restive city; 18 dead BEIRUT: The Syrian army shelled residential areas and unleashed security forces yesterday in an intensified push to crush the uprising against authoritarian President Bashar Assad, killing an 8-year-old boy and at least 17 others, a human rights group said. The lethal shelling evoked bitter memories of the

Rights in Syria, said 13 people were killed yesterday in tank shelling on Al-Haraa village outside Daraa, the southern city where the uprising began in mid-March. Five others were killed in the central city of Homs - most of them in shelling, he said. Several were killed by gunfire. Continued on Page 14

MISRATA: An injured rebel fighter Mussa Mohammed Mussa seen at a public hospital in Benghazi. — AP

Facebook ‘may have leaked your secrets’ NEW YORK: Facebook users’ personal information could have been accidentally leaked to third parties, in particular advertisers, over the past few years, Symantec Corp said in its official blog. Third-parties would have had access to personal information such as profiles, photographs and chat, and could have had the ability to post messages, the security software maker said. “We estimate that as of April 2011, close to 100,000 applications were enabling this leakage,” the blog post said. “ ... Over the years, hundreds of thousands of applications may have inadvertently leaked millions of access tokens to third parties,” posing a security threat, the blog post said. The third-parties may not have realized their ability to access the information, it said. Facebook, the world’s largest social networking website, was notified of this issue and confirmed the leakage, the blog post said. It said

regime’s legacy of brutally suppressing dissent under Assad’s father, Hafez. In 1982, Hafez Assad crushed a Sunni uprising by shelling the town of Hama, killing 10,000 to 25,000 people, according to Amnesty International estimates. Ammar Qurabi, head of the National Organization for Human

Facebook has taken steps to resolve the issue. “Unfortunately, their (Symantec’s) resulting report has a few inaccuracies. Specifically, we have conducted a thorough investigation which revealed no evidence of this issue resulting in a user’s private information being shared with unauthorized third parties,” Facebook spokeswoman Malorie Lucich said in a statement. Lucich said the report also ignores the contractual obligations of advertisers and developers which prohibit them from obtaining or sharing user information in a way that “violates our policies.” She also confirmed that the company removed the outdated API (Application Programming Interface) referred to in Symantec’s report. Facebook has more than 500 million users and is challenging Google Inc and Yahoo Inc for users’ time online and for advertising dollars. — Reuters

Rebels reject ceasefire Libyan fighters seize Misrata airport TRIPOLI: Libyan rebels said they took control of Misrata airport in heavy fighting with forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi yesterday and rejected a United Nations call for a ceasefire. The rebels are fighting to end Gaddafi’s 41 years in power, but the war has reached stalemate with Gaddafi controlling the capital and almost all of western Libya while rebels control Benghazi and other towns in the oil-producing east. Misrata is the only major city the rebels hold in the west and for eight weeks Gaddafi’s forces have besieged it, leading to fierce fighting in which hundreds have been killed. “The airport, with the help from great God, has been freed. The rebels have seized many weapons including tanks and, thank God, they are still functioning,” said rebel spokesman Mohamad Jaber by telephone from Misrata, a port city about 190 km east of Tripoli. “Now what is left and what the rebels are working on is liberating the airbase,

which is close to the airport,” he said. There was no independent confirmation of his comments. UN Secretary-General Ban Kimoon called yesterday for an “immediate, verifiable ceasefire” but rebels fighting in western Libya dismissed the idea. “We don’t trust Gaddafi ... This is not the time for a ceasefire because he never respects it,” said a rebel spokesman called Abdulrahman, speaking by telephone from Zintan in the Western Mountains region. “He bombards civilians immediately after his regime speaks of willingness to observe a ceasefire,” the spokesman said, adding that Gaddafi’s forces fired 20-25 Grad missiles at rebels yesterday, killing one and wounding three others. Gaddafi’s government has made several ceasefire declarations but continued attacks on Misrata and other rebel-held areas including the Western Mountains near the Tunisian border. Continued on Page 14

KUWAIT: In a noisy session which was adjourned at least once for disorders, MPs tackled a large number of issues, blasted state-run Kuwait Television and clashed over Arab revolutions while discussing the reply to the Amiri address which was delivered by the prime minister at the start of the parliamentary term in October. At the start of the session, opposition MPs clashed with speaker Jassem Al-Khorafi who prevented them from commenting on a program aired on Tuesday by Kuwait Television and which reportedly criticized MPs. MPs submitted a proposal calling for a debate over the issue but the government used its constitutional right to delay the issue for two weeks and Khorafi stopped comments which caused MPs to protest. Khorafi then temporarily adjourned the session. During the brief debate, MP Mussallam Al-Barrak warned new Information and Communications Minister Sami Al-Nasef about using Kuwait TV to attack MPs, saying he will be grilled. Nasef said he had not yet found if the program was abusive to the National Assembly and stressed that TV programs should be neutral and should not attack any party. In this regard, opposition MP Ali Al-Deqbasi asked the information minister on reports that Kuwait TV plans to host a cleric with the aim to issue a religious fatwa, or edict, that grilling ministers is forbidden in Islam. He also asked the minister if the TV authorities have asked presenters not to wear the red-chequered headcover and to stick to the “national” white headcover. Kuwaiti bedouin tribes normally wear the red headcovers and the ban was seen as targeting them. MPs rejected a sentence in the reply draft which states that MPs have deviated from the right parliamentary path by giving priorities to grillings and head of the concerned committee MP Hassan Jowhar said the comment will be removed. During the debate, liberal MP Saleh Al-Mulla lashed out at deputy premier, state minister for housing and development Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah, saying that MPs cannot have any trust in a cabinet that has retained Sheikh Ahmad although he did not face a grilling. Mulla also claimed that Sheikh Ahmad had “seized” 18,000 square meters of state land in a prime location in Salmiya and has “formed documents” to pay a yearly lease of just KD22 for a property that is worth millions. The lawmaker criticized the government for failing to achieve any progress in implementing the development plan and in adopting the proper mechanism for funding projects under the plan. Opposition MP Khaled Al-Tahous wondered why would the government form a committee to preserve national unity while he charged that “it is the government which has been taking actions that undermine national unity”. Islamist MP Waleed Al-Tabtabai called for the reply to include that the government has breached the constitution by disrupting national assembly sessions for several months. Shiite MP Adnan Abdulsamad criticized the government policy toward the Shiite-led protests in Bahrain, saying that some protesters died because of torture in police custody. He also criticized MPs for not deploring crushing the protests in Bahrain. Salafi Islamist MP Mohammad Hayef called on Abdulsamad to present evidence that abuses have been committed by authorities in Bahrain against protesters, and criticized Shiites for not condemning the Syrian regime crackdown on peaceful protests. The assembly is due to meet today for a debate on non-governmental organizations.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
12 May by Kuwait Times - Issuu