19th Aug

Page 1

CR IP TI ON BS SU 40 PAGES

NO: 15544

150 FILS

SUNDAY, AUGUST 19, 2012

www.kuwaittimes.net

SHAWWAL 1, 1433 AH

‘Shiites army reserve unit’ stockpiling arms Al-Tabtabaei: Shiite army waiting for zero hour By A Saleh

Kuwait Times Editor-in-Chief Abd Al-Rahman AlAlyan wishes HH the Amir Sheikh Sabah AlAhmad Al-Sabah, HH the Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, HH the Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Al-Mubarak Al-Sabah, Cabinet members, Heads of States around the world, Kuwaitis, expatriates and our valued readers Eid Mubarak. Kuwait Times will not be published on Monday and Tuesday. Next issue will be published on Wednesday.

GCC, Muslims celebrate Eid KUWAIT: The moon-sighting committees of at least 12 Arab countries: Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) announced yesterday evening that today will be the first day of the Eid Al-Fitr holiday. In Cairo, Dar Al-Iftaa AlMasriya (the Egyptian house of legal opinion giving) said its moon-sighting panels countrywide did not observe the crescent of Shawwal month of the Arabic lunar Hijri calendar this year; making yesterday the last day of the holy month of Ramadan, and today the first Eid holiday. In Doha, the Qatari moon-sighting committee said that yesterday completed the month of fasting and today will be the first of the holiday. In Manama, the Bahraini Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs announced that today will be the first of the holiday. In Beirut, the Mufti of Lebanon Sheikh Mohammad Rashid Qabbani said in a statement that the crescent of Shawwal wasn’t seen yesterday night in the country so yesterday marked the end of Ramadan. Similar statements were issued by the moon-sighting committees of Libya’s Dar Al-Iftaa, Sudan’s Islamic Fiqh Academy, Palestine, Jordan, Oman, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Yesterday, Moon-Sighting Committee of Kuwait Ministry of Justice announced that today will be the first day of the holiday. — KUNA

Max 47º Min 30º High Tide 01:02 & 12:27 Low Tide 06:19 & 18:57

SANAA: A Yemeni woman applies traditional henna designs to the arm of a girl ahead of the Muslim festivities of Eid Al-Fitr yesterday. Muslims around the world are preparing to celebrate the Eid Al-Fitr holiday, which marks the end of the fasting month of Ramadan. — AFP

KUWAIT: MP Al-Tabtabaei yesterday received flak over accusations he made recently in which he claimed that “an army reserve unit of Shiites is currently buying weapons from Jleeb Al-Shuyoukh and waiting for the zero hour.” “While I am confident in Al-Tabtabaei’s good intentions, his statement is unfortunate because it would serve as an alarm to the claimed troublemakers if it was true, and is an unjustified instigation if it was not,” said a member of the annulled 2012 parliament Dr Obaid Al-Wasmi. Meanwhile, former parliamentary elections candidate Safaa Al-Hashim criticized Al-Tabtabaei’s “unexpected accusations against Kuwait’s Shiites without any evidence to support his claims.” “What is stopping him from reporting this allegedly serious information to police?” AlHashim questioned in a statement released yesterday. Also, a member of the annulled 2012 parliament Nabeel Al-Fadhl mockingly stated that Al-Tabtabaei failed to report the case “because he knows that he will end up being charged with false reports.” Dr Waleed Al-Tabtabaei has acknowledged that he indeed provided the Interior Ministry with information and pictures of arms sales in Kuwait - particularly to the Undersecretary Lt General Ghazi Al-Omar. Al-Tabtabaei said the wrong interpretation by the authority of the Iranian danger and its gulf extensions is what keeps security authorities from doing their job. “The government’s over-appeasement of the Iranian regime and its extensions here led to the escalation of the intelligence penetration and the rise of provocative language by Tehran agents,” Al-Tabtabaei said. He added that during the eighties the Kuwaiti security apparatus succeeded in halting the Iranian intelligence penetrations and contained them due to good political decisions. AlTabtabaei said earlier that he has dangerous information that parties linked to the sectarianism are buying arms from a black market in Kabd, Jleeb and Bneid Al-Qar.

Teen killed as Bahrain’s police, protesters clash

CALIFORNIA: This undated photo shows a specimen of a new family of spiders, which scientists are calling Cave Robber for its fearsome claws. — AP

New spider family found in US caves GRANTS PASS: Amateur cave explorers have found a new family of spiders in the Siskiyou Mountains of Southern Oregon, and scientists have dubbed it Trogloraptor - Latin for cave robber for their fearsome front claws. The spelunkers sent specimens to the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, which has the West Coast’s largest collection of spiders. Entomologists there say the spider reddish brown and the size of a half dollar - evolved so distinctly that it requires its own taxonomic family - the first new spider family found in North America since the 1870s. “It took us a long time to figure out what it wasn’t,” said Charles Griswold, curator of arachnids at the academy. “Even longer to figure out what it is. We used anatomy. We used DNA to understand its evolutionary place. Then we consulted other experts all over the world about what this was. They all concurred with our opinion that this was something completely new to science.” “It’s a good example of how sci-

ence works - professional and citizen scientists share information,” he added. The discovery is described in the Friday online edition of the journal ZooKeys. Jonathan Coddington, curator of arachnids at the Smithsonian Institution and associate director for science at the National Museum of Natural History, agreed that the spiders represent a family never seen before. “This is really a distinct event,” he said. “To walk out in the woods and find an example of an ancient lineage that no one has ever seen before is special.” Norman I Platnick, curator emeritus of spiders at the American Museum of Natural History, said the discovery was as exciting to spider scientists as the discovery of a new dinosaur to paleontologists. “Because it belongs to one of the more primitive groups of true spiders, it has the potential to change many of our current ideas about the early evolution of spiders,” he said. “But it is better than a fossil, because we can study the entire organism, along with Continued on Page 13

DUBAI: A 16-year-old protester was killed after what opposition activists in Bahrain said was a “brutal attack” by security forces, but which the Bahrain government described as a defensive response to a petrol bomb attack on police. The opposition says more than 45 people have been killed in protests since June 2011, when the government lifted martial law it had imposed to help quash pro-democracy demonstrations by its Shiite Muslim majority inspired by revolts against repressive dynasties across the Arab world. However, the Interior Ministry says protesters have injured more than 700 police officers in clashes and that the police, who do not use live fire, have been exercising restraint. The protester’s death - after a demonstration on Friday night - came as the United States, an ally of Manama, expressed concern over Bahrain’s jailing of a prominent opposition activist, Nabeel Rajab, for three years. The government identified the dead youth as 16-year-old Hussam AlHaddad, and said he had been among protesters throwing petrol bombs at police and had died after being taken to hospital. The opposition Bahrain Centre for Human Rights said witnesses had seen

the security forces fire birdshot at Haddad before men in plainclothes kicked him repeatedly as he lay on the ground while police stood by. The main opposition Wefaq movement said in a statement in Arabic that Haddad had been “martyred after being brutally attacked” and activists posted what they said were pictures of his body, apparently severely bruised and marked by dozens of birdshot wounds. Reuters was unable to verify the pictures independently. The government said police were acting in self defense. “Terrorists launched petrol bombs at close range, forcing the police to take the necessary actions to defend themselves and innocent bystanders from the potentially lethal attack,” the Information Affairs Authority said in an emailed statement in English. “Despite warning shots by the police the attack continued; so security personnel dealt with the case according to its legal authority,” it added, citing the police chief of the Muharraq district where the incident took place. Hundreds of people marched peacefully through the Muharraq district for Haddad’s funeral yesterday, witnesses said. Rights groups have accused the government of firing teargas canisters at Continued on Page 13

KARZAKAN: A Bahraini youth holds a chunk of concrete as word spreads in Karzakan, Bahrain, that riot police are approaching to disperse a protest. — AP

130 die in Syria Damascus denies VP tried to defect

ORDOS: Miss World 2012 winner Yu Wenxia (center) of China, second place contestant Miss Wales Sophie Moulds (left) and third place Miss Australia Jessica Kahawaty pose for photos following the pageant’s final ceremony at the Ordos Stadium Arena in the inner Mongolian city of Ordos yesterday. — AFP (Page 40)

BEIRUT: Syria denied reports yesterday that President Bashar Al-Assad’s deputy had defected and its forces pursued an offensive against rebels, bombarding parts of Aleppo in the north and attacking an insurgent-held town in the oil-producing east. Vice-President Farouq Al-Shara “never thought for a moment about leaving the country,” said a statement from his office broadcast on state television in response to reports that the veteran Baath Party loyalist had tried to defect to Jordan. Assad, battling a 17-month-old rebellion led by Syria’s Sunni Muslim majority that has escalated into civil war, has suffered a string of defections including by Continued on Page 13


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