4th Jul

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CR IP TI ON BS SU

WEDNESDAY, JULY 4, 2012

Gitmo Kuwaiti’s lawyer slams Kuwait envoy to Washington

Voice of Mumbai attacks points finger at Pakistan

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Diamond quits in Barclays boardroom bloodbath

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SHAABAN 14, 1433 AH

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Rock-solid Serena downs champion Kvitova

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Iran, US flexing muscles in rising war of nerves

Iran test-fires missiles • US moves new forces to Gulf

TEHRAN: Iran and the United States yesterday underlined their military readiness for conflict should faltering diplomacy over Tehran’s atomic activities fail, as tensions rose over tougher Western sanctions. Iran said it successfully fired several dozen missiles - including a medium-range Shahab-3 ballistic weapon with a range capable of striking Israel in war games in its central desert region designed to show its capacity for counterattack. US officials, meanwhile, detailed a quiet US military build-up in the Gulf region that includes the deployment of warships and F-22 stealth fighter jets. The belligerent posturing came on the day technical experts from Iran and from world powers, including the United States, met in Istanbul in the latest round of talks. The negotiations have been downgraded from a senior political level after three previous rounds this year that failed to bridge vast differences held by each side. Iran refuses to bow to Western demands that it curb its sensitive uranium enrichment under the pressure of punishing economic sanctions that were ramped up last week to their most severe level so far. “The sanctions imposed against our country are the harshest and strongest ever imposed. If the enemies think they can weaken Iran with these sanctions, they are wrong,” Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was quoted as saying by the official IRNA news agency. Tehran is demanding its “right” to enrichment be recognised and the “hostile” sanctions be eased for the talks to progress. It rejects Western suspicions that it is seeking a nuclear weapons “break-out” capability. Iranian foreign ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast accused the Western nations in the Continued on Page 15

conspiracy theories

Morsi, I love you!

By Badrya Darwish

badrya_d@kuwaittimes.net

I

liked the first thing President Morsi did since he took office. He asked his photos to be removed from all administrative offices and buildings in Egypt. Hooray! At last! A wise leader who thought that hanging his picture will not make him loved or hated more by the nation. This issue of leaders’ pictures posted everywhere has been boiling inside me for years and years. Since I was a young child, I used to see the photos of our leaders everywhere. Their faces are in schools, on buses, on trains and in ministries. When you wake up in the morning, the first thing you see is the image of the country’s leader. If you happen to be travelling and wake up in a hotel in an Arab country, of course the portrait of the leader of that country will be somewhere in the room or in the corridor. The first thing that hits your eye in any administrative building in the Arab world is the leader or even his assistant smiling from the walls. Enter any official office in the Arab world I bet you the wall will be decorated with a portrait of the leader. Sometimes they even exaggerate and put the family members of the leader next to each other to please us. You can see first ladies and their children on the wall too. It has become like a piece of decoration. It has become normal that the pictures will be everywhere, not just in offices but on the streets and on electricity poles. The idea of hanging photos also extend beyond government buildings to private sector companies, grocery stores, baqalas and coffee shops. Of course, the private sector will do it because they are afraid from the hypocrisy of secret police to chase them or to avoid harassment from pro-government officers. That is why they hang the leader’s picture. Sometimes people get so afraid that they even hang it in their own cars. Don’t tell me that the whole nation is in love with that leader. That leader is not so naive to think that people are putting his picture everywhere out of passion. Sometimes it is so funny that baqalas and small shops hang the leader’s picture peeking between rice and macaroni. Educational institutes also are not saved from this culture. The first thing for students to learn when they start their ABCs are the faces of the country’s leaders and of course songs of praise not for the country but for the leader himself. Since kindergarten till graduation, our kids recite poetry and songs about the leaders. Their pictures are everywhere starting from the gate of the school to any classroom. I don’t mind all this, but please, for God’s sake, a leader’s picture inside a restaurant is beyond my tolerance. I don’t mind if he is going to pay for my dinner, lunch or coffee, but I don’t need to see his face while I am eating my steak and he is peeking over my meal. It is like the Mona Lisa, wherever your table is in the eatery, the leader will accelerate your digestion with a smile. The only places where you cannot see leaders’ pictures are the mosques or churches. Thank God, their pictures are not there. Excuse me, guys! I am not being hilarious but this is true. Just travel around the Arab world and you will agree with me. Don’t get me wrong. I do not hate our leaders. Wallah (I swear by God) the pictures of leaders everywhere does not make us love them more. If we love them, we love them. If we don’t like them, we don’t like them, even if they put up a million pictures. Thank you very much Morsi, I love you!

Max 49º Min 32º High Tide 00:34 & 11:02 Low Tide 04:57 & 18:19

IRAN: Members of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard celebrate after launching a missile during a maneuver in an undisclosed location in Iran’s Kavir Desert. (Inset) An Iranian long-range Shahab-3 missile is launched during the exercises. — AP/AFP

MPs warn on voting system changes By B Izzak KUWAIT: The majority bloc is due to hold a meeting today to discuss its reform program for the forthcoming general elections and to review reports about plans to change the voting system during the expected elections, opposition Islamist MP Jamaan Al-Harbash said. Harbash said the meeting will take place at the diwaniya of former MP Hamad Al-Matar and will focus on reports that aim at changing the voting system to influence the outcome of the general elections to make it easier to control the next National Assembly. Reports have surfaced that the government intends to reduce the number of candidates voters can elect from the current four to only two, with opposition lawmakers warning this would undermine the opposition’s chances of maintaining a majority in the coming Assembly. Another leading opposition MP Musallam AlBarrak meanwhile warned that the Kuwaiti people will face such a change with peaceful street protests. Opposition MPs and activists have been pressing for swiftly dissolving the Assembly of 2009 that had been reinstated by a historical verdict by the constitutional court on June 20. Barrak called on the next prime minister that the Kuwaiti people, who brought down the 2009 Assembly, are awaiting a swift decision to “bury Continued on Page 15

KUWAIT: Kuwaiti men check their mobile phones during a power outage at a political gathering at the diwaniya of liberal MP Mohammad Al-Saqer yesterday. (Inset) Kuwaiti writer Reem Al-Maei is seen among the attendees. — Photos by Yasser Al-Zayyat

Assad regrets downing jet BEIRUT: Syrian President Bashar Assad said he regrets the shooting down of a Turkish jet by his forces, and that he will not allow tensions between the two neighbors to deteriorate into an “armed conflict,” a Turkish newspaper reported yesterday. Syria downed the RF-4E warplane on June 22. Syria says it hit the aircraft after it flew very low inside its airspace, while Turkey says the jet was hit in international airspace after it briefly strayed into Syria. In an inter view with the Cumhuriyet daily, Assad offered no apology, insisting that the plane was shot down over Syria and that his forces acted in self-defense. He said that the plane was flying in a corridor inside Syrian airspace that had been used by Israeli planes in 2007, when they bombed a building under construction in northern Syria. The UN nuclear agency has said that the building was a nearly finished reactor meant to produce plutonium, which can be used to arm nuclear warheads. “The plane was using the same corridor used by Israeli planes three times in the past,” Assad told Cumhuriyet. “Soldiers shot it down because we

did not see it on our radars and we were not informed about it.” Assad said: “I say 100 percent, I wish we did not shoot it down.” Commenting for the first time on a UN-brokered plan for a political

DAMASCUS: Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad is seen during an interview with Turkish newspaper Cumhuriyet yesterday. — AFP transition in Syria that was adopted by world powers at a conference in Geneva on Saturday, Assad said he was “pleased” that the decision about Syria’s future was left to its

people. The plan calls for the creation of a transitional government with full executive powers in Syria. But at Russia’s insistence, the compromise left the door open to Assad being part of the interim administration and left its composition entirely up to the “mutual consent” of the Assad administration and its opponents. Assad told Cumhuriyet he was not bent on staying in office come what may but gave no hint he was ready to quit. “If my staying or going saved my people and country, why would I hold on? I wouldn’t even stay one day,” he said. “If the opposite is true, that is, if the people don’t want me, then there are in any case elections. If the people wanted, they would send me away,” Assad was quoted as saying. “The Syrian people will decide on everything.” The conflict in Syria has killed more than 14,000 people since the revolt began in March 2011, according to opposition estimates. The fighting has grown increasingly militarized in recent months, with rebel forces launching attacks and ambushes on regime targets. Even Continued on Page 15

Kuwaiti minors can’t stay alone in Dubai hotels Gazette goes online DUBAI: Kuwaitis under-18 years of age are required to be accompanied by adults when staying in Dubai hotels, the Kuwaiti consulate announced yesterday. The consulate told KUNA that Kuwaiti citizens visiting Dubai should keep hold of their civil identity cards, and keep them in a safe place. Separately, the website of the Kuwaiti government’s official gazette Al-Kuwait Al-Yawm was launched in a ceremony at the Information Ministry yesterday. Speaking at its inauguration ceremony, Minister of Information Sheikh Mohammad Abdallah Al-Mubarak Al-Sabah said that “AlKuwait Al-Yawm has been held in high regard by decisionmakers, state and private bodies and the Kuwaiti society for around 60 years. I am honoured to see it today in its first electronic edition during the reign of HH the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah”. HH the Amir had aided the gazette’s launch back in 1954. Heading a committee tasked with executive decisions in the country, he proposed its launch to fulfill the public’s need of official information on government decisions, circulars and announcements. “Despite its officially-themed content and basic appearance, it reflects the scale of transparency state and lawmaking institutions in the country assume their role. “Offering news on government and private business transactions, this information will now be much more easily accessible to people on the Internet,” emphasized the minister. The move is the first phase by the gazette in its attempt to embrace e-information sharing, with phase two to focus on adding past editions to the site. — KUNA


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