13 May 2013

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CR IP TI ON BS SU

MONDAY, MAY 13, 2013

Sharif in talks to form Pakistan government

Vendor’s suicide reflects despair of Mideast youth

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NO: 15807

150 FILS

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www.kuwaittimes.net

RAJAB 3, 1434 AH

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Chris Brown’s scary curbside art irks LA neighbors

‘Killer’ Nadal wins Madrid title for fifth triumph of 2013

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MPs sharpen knives as grilling fever strikes Opposition launches national campaign for constitution

Max 41º Min 30º High Tide 02:44 & 12:53 Low Tide 07:44 & 20:38

By B Izzak

Israel opens Gulf mission JERUSALEM: Israel has opened a new diplomatic mission in the Gulf, the Israeli daily Haaretz reported yesterday, citing finance ministry costings for 2014 prepared for submission to the government this week. “The paper is an economic plan for the next year and does not name the location of the new mission,” Haaretz said. Questioned by AFP, a foreign ministry spokesman would say only that Israel “officially has no diplomatic representation in the Gulf”. In May 2010, then Israeli trade minister Binyamin Ben Eliezer attended an international economic conference in Qatar. The first Israeli minister to visit the Gulf state since Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni in Nov 2008. Qatar, increasingly influential in the region, broke off diplomatic ties with Israel and closed the Israeli trade mission in Doha in protest against the Israeli military offensive in Gaza in Dec 2008-Jan 2009. Besides Qatar, only Oman had established relations with Israel but they were broken in late 2000 after the beginning of the second Palestinian intifada. In Jan 2010, then national infrastructures minister Uzi Landau, attended a meeting of the International Agency for Renewable Energy in Abu Dhabi. But the United Arab Emirates stressed that his presence did not mean normalisation between the two countries. — AFP

KAC to buy 25 jets, lease 13 KUWAIT: Kuwait’s national carrier is due to sign a multibillion-dollar deal with Airbus to purchase 25 new aircraft valued at $3.0 billion with the first delivery expected in 2019, a local newspaper reported yesterday. The deal will be signed “very soon,” Al-Watan newspaper said quoting sources close to decision-makers. Last week Kuwait Airways Co (KAC) board of directors decided to choose an offer made by Airbus because it carried a price tag $280 million lower than one made by Boeing, the report said. The deal includes 10 Airbus A350-900 and 15 A-320 neo and the delivery of the planes will start after six years, Al-Watan said. KAC made no comment on the report but its new chairman Sami Al-Nasef told AFP in January, after parliament passed a bill to transform the airline into a commercial company, that they planned to buy around 21 new aircrafts within two years. In the meantime, KAC will lease 13 big and small Airbus planes with the first two A320 due to arrive in July, Al-Watan said. — AFP

MANCHESTER: Manchester United’s Scottish manager Alex Ferguson kisses the Premier League trophy at the end of an English Premier League football match between Manchester United and Swansea City at Old Trafford yesterday. Ferguson said farewell to Old Trafford with a typically passionate speech after his side’s 2-1 victory in his final home match in charge of the team. — AFP (See Page 20)

KUWAIT: In fast-paced developments yesterday, two lawmakers said they are filing to grill the ministers of oil and interior as Speaker Ali Al-Rashed said the grilling moratorium is over and called MPs for an emergency meeting. Also, a former opposition MP warned against dissolving the National Assembly now to hold fresh election on the basis of the controversial single-vote law. MP Nasser Al-Marri said he will file to grill Oil Minister Hani Hussein and MP Safa Al-Hashem said she will submit a grilling against Interior Minister Sheikh Ahmad Al-Humoud Al-Sabah today. The new development came as speaker Rashed said a moratorium on grillings has ended, opening the way to start debating grillings before the summer recess after MPs had earlier decided to postpone grillings until the next term starting late October. Rashed described the $2.2 billion penalty payment to US giant Dow Chemical as “highly suspicious” and said there must an investigation at a very high level. Marri said in a statement that he will file a request today to grill the oil minister over the Dow payment as several other MPs supported the surprising move. Hashem warned the interior minister that he has to face the grilling or quit, while MP Faisal Al-Duwaisan advised the minister to step down as he will have no supporters. Marri said in a statement that “we have sworn to safeguard public funds and we will not allow the Dow payment to pass off easily ”. “As a result, the Independents Bloc met and assigned me to file to grill the oil minister over the payment,” he said. The lawmaker said the grilling will tackle all the steps followed in signing the deal with Dow Chemical from the idea of the investment, to feasibility studies followed by reviewing it by concerned councils and government approvals before the parliamentary opposition to the deal and eventually the Cabinet cancellation. He said the payment of the huge penalty will not pass off easily as all those responsible will be held to account and there will be no forgiveness because the issue relates to public funds which must be protected. Marri said that MPs have pledged to HH the Amir to ensure a quiet period but “we cannot remain silent on this issue because the penalty payment was not debated with the National Assembly which did not know anything about it”. The lawmaker said he will submit the grilling request at noon. Several other MPs have strongly lashed out at the payment of the penalty to Dow, with some of them vowing to grill the oil minister and others calling for a debate in the Assembly and a more serious investigation to hold those responsible to account. It was not immediately known why members of the pro-government Assembly have become increasingly upset over the government, but it appears that the way the Continued on Page 13

Branson swaps suit for skirt New virus can pass between humans: WHO

MANAMA: A US Navy River Command Boat cruises off the coast of Bahrain’s Salman port, near the capital yesterday, one day before the start of the biggest exercise of mine countermeasure maneuvers in the Arabian Gulf. — AFP

Gulf navy drill not directed at Iran: US MANAMA: Vice Admiral John Miller, commander of the US Fifth Fleet, said yesterday that a massive naval minesweeping exercise involving 41 countries was not directed at Iran. “It is not about Iran,” Miller said at a news conference in the Bahraini capital Manama, the fleet’s headquarters, saying the manoeuvres were “purely defensive”. Iran on Tuesday warned against any “provocations” in the Gulf as the US-led international naval force began preparing for the exercise. “Our message does not get to one country... it is about a secure maritime environment,” Miller said. “It is purely defensive, not provocative, and takes place in international waters.” The Islamic republic has warned that if it was attacked by the US or Israel over its

nuclear activities, it would block the strategic Strait of Hormuz, a major oil conduit. Miller said that “critical to the global economy... is a maritime environment that has free-flowing commerce, ships can safely sail.” “If some nation puts mines into the waters then the global community has to get them from the waters as quickly as possible,” he said, adding that the “newest technologies” will be used in the manoeuvres. Thirty-five ships, 18 Unmanned Underwater Vehicles and more than 100 explosive ordinance disposal divers will participate in the anti-mine manoeuvres running until the end of May. Commodore Simon Ancona of the British Royal Navy said that more than 40 countries and 6,500 service members were taking part. — AFP

RIYADH: World Health Organisation (WHO) officials said yesterday it seemed likely a new coronavirus that has killed at least 18 people in the Middle East and Europe could be passed between humans, but only after prolonged contact. A virus from the same family triggered the outbreak of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) that swept the world after emerging in Asia and killed 775 people in 2003. Yesterday, French authorities announced that a second man had been diagnosed with the disease after sharing a hospital room with France’s only other sufferer. WHO Assistant Director-General Keiji Fukuda told reporters in Saudi Arabia, the site of the largest cluster of infections, there was no evidence so far the virus was able to sustain “generalised transmission in communities” - a scenario that would raise the spectre of a pandemic. But he added: “Of most concern ... is the fact that the different clusters seen in multiple countries ... increasingly support the hypothesis that when there is close contact, this novel coronavirus can transmit from person to person. “There is a need for countries to ... increase levels of awareness,” he said. A public health expert who declined to be identified, said “close contact” meant being in the same small, enclosed space with an infected person for a prolonged period. The virus first emerged in the Gulf last year, but cases have also been recorded in Britain and France among people who had recently been in the Middle East. A total of 34 cases worldwide have been confirmed by blood tests so far. Continued on Page 13

SEPANG, Malaysia: British business magnate Richard Branson has lost his latest job because of orange juice. The Virgin Group founder had his legs shaved, put on lipstick and squeezed into a red skirt to honor a bet by serving as a flight attendant yesterday on an AirAsia trip from Perth, Australia, to Malaysia. But he earned a reprimand from AirAsia chief Tony Fernandes after he deliberately dumped a tray of orange juice on Fernandes’ lap. Branson lost a bet to Fernandes in 2010 after they wagered that their Formula One racing teams would finish ahead of each other. Fernandes’ team landed two spots above Branson’s. But his stint as a stewardess was post-

poned in early 2011 after he injured himself while skiing. There was no escape yesterday however, when Branson was recruited to serve coffee, tea and meals on the five -and-a-half-hour flight. Though he kept his trademark beard, he shaved his legs to show them off in black fishnets beneath his red AirAsia uniform. He topped off the outfit with bright red lipstick, heavy eye make-up and his blonde hair pulled back in a quiff. Photos from the flight showed him chatting with passengers and serving food to Fernandes, who used to work for Branson in the music industry. Fernandes gleefully declared after yesterday’s flight on his budget airline Continued on Page 13

AirAsia group chief Tony Fernandes is served by British billionaire Richard Branson, who is dressed as a female flight attendant, while flying from Perth to Kuala Lumpur. — AFP


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