CR IP TI ON BS SU
WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 2013
Rohingyas drown off Myanmar trying to flee storm
Bibi meets Putin in bid to sway Russia on Syria
Nokia unveils new metal-body Lumia smartphone
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Man City sack Mancini, Pellegrini may replace him
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Cabinet ministers resign amid standoff with MPs
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www.kuwaittimes.net
RAJAB 5, 1434 AH
Govt boycotts Assembly sessions amid talk of dissolution
Max 40º Min 28º High Tide 04:03 & 14:05 Low Tide 08:53 & 21:37
By B Izzak KUWAIT: In what appears to be the first confrontation with supposedly loyal MPs, the government boycotted the parliamentary session yesterday as all Cabinet ministers submitted their resignations to the prime minister a day after five MPs filed to grill the oil and interior ministers. National Assembly Speaker Ali Al-Rashed told reporters after a meeting with Justice Minister Shareeda Al-Maousherji that he has been informed that “Cabinet ministers submitted their resignation to the prime minister and accordingly they will not attend the Assembly session tomorrow (today)”. Rashed insisted that the step is not a Cabinet resignation as only ministers have submitted their resignations. Under Kuwaiti law, the Cabinet resigns when the prime minister submits his resignation and the resignations of Cabinet ministers to HH the Amir. It becomes effective only after the Amir accepts it. Rashed Ali Al-Rashed said that as the government has its measures, the Assembly also has its constitutional methods. Earlier in the day, Rashed could not open the Assembly session because of the absence of the government which boycotted the session in protest against the two grillings against the two ministers. Rashed told MPs present in the chamber that “due to the absence of Continued on Page15
KUWAIT: Arrested women are herded into a bus during a surprise raid in Shuwaikh Industrial area yesterday.
400 in police net amid crackdown By Hanan Al-Saadoun KUWAIT: Around 400 foreign workers were rounded up in flash raids in Shuwaikh Industrial area yesterday. The arrested people were found in violation of the residency law, including those without residency permits, those working for unauthorized employers, “free laborers” and domestic maids under Article 20. Acting Interior Ministry Undersecretary
Gen Sulaiman Al-Fahd said in a statement that the campaign covering Shuwaikh Industrial area was one of several such campaigns carried out in coordination with the citizenship and passport department. Fahd said the campaign owed its success to the security men and also to the fact that the instructions given to them were precise and they implemented these efficiently. He said the campaigns were being carried out in coordination
and cooperation with different sectors of the ministry that acted in a civilized way, guaranteeing everyone’s legal rights. He said the drive will continue. The campaigns are aimed at tracking down outlaws, residency law violators, those working for others and runaways. Fahd termed the campaign successful as several violators and wanted persons who were trying to escape the law were arrested. He said such suspects were
Jolie tells world about her double mastectomy LONDON: Hollywood star Angelina Jolie has had a double mastectomy to reduce her chances of getting breast cancer and says she hopes her story will inspire other women fighting the lifethreatening disease. Jolie wrote in the New York Times yesterday the operation had made it easier for her to reassure her six children that she will not die young from cancer, like her own mother did at 56. “We often speak of ‘Mommy’s mommy’, and I find myself trying to explain the illness that took her away from us. They have asked if the same could happen to me,” wrote Jolie, 37. “I have always told them not to worry, but the truth is I carry a ‘faulty’ gene.” The Oscar-winning actress said her doctors had estimated she had an 87 percent risk of breast cancer and 50 percent risk of ovarian cancer. “Once I knew this was my reality, I decided to be proactive and to minimize the risk as much as I could. I made a decision to have a preventive double mastectomy,” she said. Partner and fellow Hollywood star Brad Pitt was by Jolie’s side through three months of treatment that ended late in April, she said. The two became engaged last year. “Having witnessed this decision firsthand, I find Angie’s choice, as well as so many others like her, absolutely heroic,” Pitt told London’s Evening Standard newspaper. “All I want is for her to have a long and healthy life, with myself and our children. This is a happy day for our family.” Jolie said that even though she had kept silent about her treatment while it was going on, she hoped her story would now help other women. “I choose not to keep my story private because there are many women who do not know that they might be living under the shadow of cancer. It is my hope that they, too, will be able to get gene tested.” Breast cancer alone kills about 458,000 people each year, according to the World Health Organization. It is estimated that one in 300 to one in 500 women carry a BRCA 1 or BRCA
under the illusion that the security men are only looking into particular cases, adding the surprise campaign will continue to achieve the goals and targets set for it. Fahd also called upon all citizens and expats to ensure that they always carry their identification papers in order to be identified by security men and smart patrols equipped with computers can trace all details of anyone during an inspection.
Canada astronaut returns as a star
MoH issues guidelines on new virus 6 new Saudi cases KUWAIT: Kuwait’s Ministry of Health made an administrative decision announcing strict guidelines on how to handle acute respiratory cases, particularly the novel coronavirus (nCoV), which it described as “a dangerous communicable disease”. This came after Saudi Arabia detected six new cases of the deadly coronavirus, the health ministry said, raising the number of people infected from the SARS-like virus in the kingdom to 30, half of them fatalities. Continued on Page 15
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India unveils vaccine for diarrhoea virus
Russia arrests CIA ‘spy’ US diplomat tried to recruit local agent
Angelina Jolie 2 gene mutation, as Jolie does. CNN anchor Zoraida Sambolin announced yesterday that she had breast cancer and was also getting a double mastectomy. Sambolin, who anchors CNN’s “Early Start” morning show, discussed her condition on the show while talking about Jolie’s procedure. “I struggled for weeks trying to figure out how to tell you that I had been diagnosed with breast cancer and was leaving to have surgery,” Sambolin, 47, said on Facebook. “Then ... Angelina Jolie shares her story of a double mastectomy and gives me strength and an opening.” — Reuters (See Page 40)
MOSCOW: Russia yesterday ordered the expulsion of an alleged American CIA agent working undercover at the US embassy who was discovered with a large stash of money trying to recruit a Russian agent. Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB, ex-KGB) identified the man as Ryan C Fogle - third secretary of the political section of Washington’s embassy in Moscow and said he had been handed back to the embassy after his detention. The foreign ministr y said it was summoning US ambassador Michael McFaul today for an explanation and slammed Washington for what it described as “provocative acts in the spirit of the Cold War”. It declared Fogle to be persona non grata who had to return to the United States “as soon as possible” - a complete contrast to the joint pledges for intelligence cooperation after the Boston bombings. Photographs published by state English language television RT showed a baseball-capped Fogle being pinned face down to the ground and having his hands put behind his back for the arrest. He was then shown being questioned at the Federal Security Service while documents such as his passport and a stack of Ä500 notes along with some letters were displayed. The FSB footage also displayed supposed espionage equipment including two wigs as well as a Continued on Page 15
MOSCOW: Wigs and spying gadgets carried by a man claimed by the Russian FSB to be Ryan Fogle, a third secretary at the US Embassy in Moscow, when he was detained (inset), are shown at the FSB offices early yesterday. — AP