3 Sep

Page 1

IPT IO N SC R SU B

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2011

First Ring Road inaugural phase complete

No: 15198

SHAWWAL 5, 1432 AH

Japan PM Noda unveils youthful cabinet

Germany claim first Euro 2012 berth

150 Fils

3Syria forces 14 kill4714

as protests spread EU slaps oil embargo on Damascus

Ten Kuwaiti lawyers to defend Mubarak CAIRO: Ten Kuwaiti lawyers will join the defense team for Egypt’s ousted president Hosni Mubarak in his trial on charges of corruption and authorizing the killing of protesters, the state news agency MENA said yesterday. The Kuwaitis will be coming on board for the third session of his trial scheduled for Monday, MENA said without giving reasons for the move. Analysts said close ties between Kuwait and the Mubarak family and respect for Egypt’s support of Kuwait after it was invaded by Iraq in 1990 prompted the lawyers’ decision. “The Kuwaiti lawyers justified their participation as a gesture of gratitude to Mubarak’s support in liberating Kuwait ... during the war with Iraq,” said Sami Al-Faraj, head of the Kuwait Center for Strategic Studies. Other countries in the Arab Gulf region also view the Mubarak trial with dismay, since was not only viewed as a friend of rulers there but a mainstay of the Arab political architecture during his three decades in power. “All the Gulf countries like and respect Mubarak and are sad to see this trial, but in Kuwait people really appreciate how he led the talks to liberate the country and that’s something they will never forget,” Al-Faraj added. — Reuters

in the

DAMASCUS: Syrian forces killed 14 people yesterday, activists said as protesters piled pressure on the regime to quit while the EU tightened the noose on Damascus by slapping it with an oil embargo. Activists reported “huge demonstrations” after weekly Muslim prayers in response to calls from an Internet group that urged rallies against President Bashar Al-Assad’s regime under the banner “death rather than humiliation”. France also announced plans to further isolate Assad, saying it would boost contacts with the opposition, echoing calls from Spain for international support for the opponents of the embattled president. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said eight people were killed when security forces intervened to disperse protests in several suburbs of Damascus including Douma and Erbeen. And as ministers from the 27-member European Union gathered in Poland to discuss the Syrian turmoil, the EU yesterday adopted a ban on crude oil imports from

Syria to punish Assad’s regime for its brutal repression. The European Union expanded its list of about 50 — people-including Assad himself — targeted by an assets freeze and travel ban, adding four Syrian businessmen accused of bankrolling the regime and three firms, diplomats said. The sanctions “will go straight to the heart of the regime,” Dutch Foreign Minister Uri Rosenthal said in Poland while EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said there would be no let-up to press Assad to end the repression. The oil embargo, to take effect from today, will deprive Assad’s regime of a vital source of cash, as the EU buys 95 percent of Syria’s crude oil although it accounts for a mere 1.5 percent of the bloc’s imports. An EU statement said the oil ban “concerns purchase, import and transport of oil and other petroleum products from Syria. No financial or insurance services may be provided for such transactions.” Three other people died in rebellious Homs province and three in the eastern city

Max 47º Min 30º

of Deir Ezzor, said the Britain-based Observatory which earlier reported that a 16-year-old girl was killed in Erbeen and a civilian in Talbisseh, in the province of Homs. Several people were also reportedly wounded, some in critical condition, when security forces opened fire on the protesters, activists said. Syrian state television reported, meanwhile, that security forces killed two armed men after coming under attack in Talbisseh. Demonstrators also rallied in the southern province of Daraa, where the antiregime protests first erupted in mid-March, and in the northern province of Aleppo, activists said. Women took to the streets in the Daraa town of Jassem, the LCC said, while the Observatory said security forces blocked worshippers from leaving a mosque to take part in protests in nearby Nawa. Meanwhile several European leaders called for more action to isolate the Syrian president, after US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Thursday again insisted Assad “needs to step aside.”— AFP

news

12 Iraqi fishermen ‘detained’ BAGHDAD: Iraqi officials say Kuwaiti forces have detained 12 Iraqi fishermen. Kuwait has often complained that Iraqi fishermen go into Kuwaiti waters, and relations between the Gulf neighbors have been tense over a host of issues. Waleed Al-Sharefi, the mayor of Faw, said Kuwaiti authorities detained the men yesterday morning. The deputy head of the Basra provincial council, Ahmed Al-Sulaiti, confirmed the 12 men had been picked up by Kuwaiti authorities. Both men claimed the fishermen were in Iraqi waters, but that could not be confirmed with Kuwait. The most recent point of tension between the countries centers on Kuwaiti plans to build a port on an island in the Arabian Gulf. Iraq claims the port will interfere with ships passing through Iraq’s only access to the Gulf. Bahrain denies teen shot by police DUBAI: Bahrain’s interior ministry yesterday denied reports that police shot dead a Shiite teenager taking part in a protest two days ago and offered a $26,500 reward for information about his killers. “The ministry expresses regret over various statements issued by certain political and human rights organizations” claiming that Ali Jawad Ahmed Al-Sheikh’s death “resulted from a police tear gas projectile shot at his face.” “Ali died as a result of a serious blow to the back of the neck (blunt trauma) that culminated in a blood clot around his brain, which took his life,” said the ministry statement. “Although this is the subject of confirmation... the contusion on Ali’s neck is not consistent with being hit with a tear gas canister or rubber bullet,” it said, adding it has declared a reward of $26,500 for information about his killers.

AL AIN: UAE’s Hamdan Al-Kamali (right) vies with Kuwait’s Yussef Nasser (left) during their 2014 World Cup Asian zone qualifying football match in the Gulf emirate of Al-Ain yesterday. Kuwait won 3-2. — AFP (See Page 48)


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.