13 Jan 2010

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RI PT IO N BS C SU THE LEADING INDEPENDENT DAILY IN THE ARABIAN GULF

40 PAGES

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, 2010

Hundreds of Houthis, four Saudi soldiers slain in clashes

Hamas TV takes aim at Palestinian rivals with cartoons

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MOHARRAM 27, 1431 AH

NO: 14608

UK moves to ban controversial Islamist group

150 FILS

Champions Egypt off to winning start PAGE 20

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Amir reiterates importance of national unity

KUWAIT: Deputy premier for economic affairs Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahd Al-Sabah gestures at the National Assembly yesterday. — Photo by Yasser Al-Zayyat

Govt blamed for aborted session Oil price ‘fantastic’ By B Izzak KUWAIT: The National Assembly failed to hold a special session yesterday to debate the government’s fiveyear development plan for lack of quorum and many MPs put the blame squarely on the government, which incidentally was the one that requested the session. Speaker Jassem Al-Khorafi first adjourned the session for half an hour and when he came back, there were only 32 MPs and no ministers, so he accordingly adjourned the session for another day. Khorafi later told reporters that when he first adjourned the session, there were three ministers in the chamber but when he came back there were none. Under Kuwaiti law, no Assembly session can be held without the presence of at least one Cabinet minister. Af ter the session was adjourned, the government submitted another request to hold a substitute special session tomorrow. A similar request was also filed by a number of lawmakers. Khorafi then decided to call for the new session tomorrow. The session was scheduled

to debate the government’s five-year plan which envisages spending at least KD 35 billion on a number of mega development projects until the fiscal year 2013/2014. Deputy premier for economic affairs, minister of housing and development Sheikh Ahmad Fahd Al-Sabah issued an apology to the Kuwaiti people for what happened and recalled that it was the government who requested the session. The three Cabinet ministers were at the Assembly but all of them were outside the chamber. Several MPs seized the opportunity to blast the government for the failure of the session. MP Abdulrahman AlAnjari said the “government disappointed everyone today because the development plan is one of the most vital issues and today should have been historical” in passing the plan. MP Rola Dashti strongly criticized the government and said that 12 lawmakers signed a request to hold a new session tomorrow. MP Maasouma Al-Mubarak said the failure to hold the session is an indication of the government’s incompetence, adding Continued on Page 14

KUWAIT: HH the Amir Sheikh Sabah AlAhmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah received at Bayan Palace yesterday a number of Kuwaiti personalities to exchange views with them on the rulerruled relationship and topics of concern to the public. The Amir highlighted the importance of preserving national unity and coexistence, members of the audience said in separate statements to KUNA and Kuwait TV after the meeting. “It is a long tradition for Kuwaiti rulers to meet representatives from across the social spectrum to mull ways of enhancing national unity,” former MP Fallah Mubarak Al-Hajraf said. “Today’s meeting has given a wonderful dimension to the relationships among Kuwaitis,” Al-Hajraf affirmed. Bader Abdulmohsen Al-Mukhaizim, a businessman, said: “It not unusual for HH the Amir to exchange visits or hold such friendly meetings with people from all walks of life because he acts as father or brother to everybody on various occasions. The Amir reaffirmed his keenness on exchanging views with representatives of the society on all issues of national concern,” he said.

On his part, Issa Abdullah Al-Othman, another businessman, said: “The friendly speech of the Amir gave all the audience a great momentum to pursue work for the prosperity and welfare of the homeland.” Bader Ahmad AlSharhan, also a businessman, said: “This is neither the first nor the last such meeting. HH the Amir urged for more efforts to strengthen national unity and nip in the bud the attempts of irresponsible elements to foment sedition,” he added. Saleh Abdullah Al-Erifan said the meeting fell in the framework of amity and mutual respect which gather all members of the greater Kuwaiti family under the visionary leadership of the ruling Al-Sabah family. “HH the Amir’s talk during the meeting sent a sincere message to all Kuwaiti people and government to cement ties among all sectors of the society,” Al-Erifan added. Meanwhile, Chairman of Kuwait Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KCCI) Ali Thanayan Al-Ghanim said the Amir promised to continue such meetings in order to further enhance national unity. Similarly, Issa Al-Mzeidi extolled Continued on Page 14

KUWAIT: HH the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah meets local businessmen and personalities at Bayan Palace yesterday. — KUNA

Iran nuke scientist killed in bombing Tehran blames US, Israel • Slain man was Mousavi supporter TEHRAN: A leading Iranian nuclear scientist was murdered in Tehran yesterday in a rare bomb attack that the government quickly blamed on “mercenaries” in the pay of archfoes the United States and Israel. The daylight killing came amid an increasingly bitter standoff between Iran and world powers over Tehran’s controversial nuclear drive, which the West suspects is masking an atomic weapons program. Massoud Ali Mohammadi, a particle physics professor at prestigious Tehran University, died when a bomb strapped to a motorcycle was triggered by remote control as he was getting into his car outside his home in northern Tehran, state media said and a senior official said. “One can see in preliminary investigations signs of evil by the triangle of the Zionist regime, America and their mercenaries in Iran in this terrorist Continued on Page 14

Israel ‘hazes’ Turkish envoy Turkey demands apology on eve of Barak visit ANKARA: Turkey summoned Israel’s ambassador to Ankara yesterday to demand an apology over the treatment of its own envoy to Tel Aviv as a row between the regional allies over a television drama series escalated. While Israel’s media commended what it called the “hazing” of the Turkish ambassador on Monday, the deterioration in ties threatened to overshadow an upcoming trip to Ankara by Defence Minister Ehud Barak. Israel’s ire had been sparked by last year’s

broadcast of an episode of the Turkish espionage drama, Valley of the Wolves, which the foreign ministry said depicted “Israel and Jews as baby-snatchers and war criminals”. In the episode, a Turkish secret agent storms an Israeli diplomatic mission to rescue a Turkish boy kidnapped by Mossad and then brushes off accusations of war crimes as hypocritical. Israeli media highlighted the fact that Israel’s Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Continued on Page 14

KUWAIT: The Interior Ministry said yesterday all foreigners seeking to apply for temporary residency must bring criminal records certified by the official authorities of their countries. Director of Hawally Governorate Immigration Col Talal Ibrahim Marafi, in a press statement, affirmed the refusal of granting residency to those who have entry visas, as stipulated by articles 24, 22, 20, 19 and 18, and added foreign residency applicants must bring their criminal records. Marafi said this decision will benefit homeland security, adding that the Security Media Department at the Ministry of Interior carried out campaigns through the print and audio-visual media to publicize the new terms for residency in the country. Criminal records must be issued after the date of issuance of the visit visa for expatriates who came to Kuwait from countries other than their own, and certificates from their homeland should be valid for three months. He noted that the decision excludes people under the age of 18 for visitors on visas issued on the basis of article 22, adding that the decision is also applicable on those with government contracts. — KUNA

Brits held in Dubai for extramarital sex

TEHRAN: A man closes the door of the house of Iranian nuclear physics professor Massoud Ali Mohammadi (inset), who was killed after a bomb blast in front of his house in northern Tehran’s Qeytariyeh neighborhood yesterday. — AP

2003 Iraq invasion illegitimate: Probe

JERUSALEM: Israel’s Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon (left) meets with Turkish ambassador to Israel Ahmet Oguz Celikkol (right) on Monday. Ayalon said the ambassador was pointedly seated on a sofa lower than his own chair. — AP

Criminal records a must for residency

THE HAGUE: The 2003 USled invasion of Iraq lacked legitimacy under international law, an independent commission probing Dutch political support for the still controversial war said yesterday. “There was insufficient legitimacy under international law for a military invasion of Iraq” for which the Netherlands gave political but no military support, commission chairman Willibrord Davids told journalists in The Hague. The commission’s report said the Dutch government decision “was based mainly on international political considerations”. And it said the Netherlands had wrongly interpreted UN Security Council resolution 1441, which gave Iraq a final chance to disarm, as authorising individual member states to use military force against that country. The 551-page report was presented to Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende, also head of government in 2003, who said he Continued on Page 14

DUBAI: Dubai police said yesterday they had found no evidence to support a British woman’s report that she was raped by a waiter in the Gulf Arab emirate, but have arrested her and her boyfriend for having sex outside marriage. The case is the second time in just over a year in which Britons have hit the headlines by falling foul of laws banning extra-marital sex in Dubai, a Muslim emirate popular with sun-seeking Western tourists and expatriates. The woman, 23, and her British boyfriend, 44, were in Dubai as tourists when they reported to police that she had been raped by a Syrian waiter in the bathroom of a hotel bar, Khamis Al-Muzinah, deputy commander of the Dubai police,

told Reuters. “The police didn’t find any proof that anything happened in the bathroom,” Muzinah said. The investigation found that the British woman had been very drunk and an Indian bartender had helped her find the toilets, where two female staff were present at the time, Muzinah said. She vomited several times and fell asleep on a chair before being escorted back to her boyfriend by one of the two female staff, he said. During questioning the following day, the woman told police that she had been sharing a hotel room with her boyfriend and that they had had sex, which led to the couple being arrested. Continued on Page 14

Saudi posing as pilot held at Manila airport

LONDON: An anti-war protestor burns a mask outside the Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre as Alastair Campbell, a former advisor to Tony Blair, gives evidence at the Iraq Inquiry yesterday. — AFP

MANILA: A 19-year-old Saudi Arabian man dressed as a pilot was arrested yesterday after he illegally entered a restricted area in the main airport in the Philippines, an airport official said. “He was able to elude our security by misrepresenting himself as a pilot of Saudia,” said airport general manager Alfonso Cusi, referring to the Saudi Arabian flag carrier. The incident at Manila airport comes af ter officials in the Philippines and around the world said they would boost security after the botched attempt to blow up a USbound airliner on Christmas Day. The detained Saudi, identified by the local authorities as Hani Abdulelah Bukhari, told Continued on Page 14

MANILA: Saudi Hany Abdulelah Bukhari, still wearing a pilot’s uniform, gestures as he is interviewed at Manila’s international airport yesterday. — AP


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13 Jan 2010 by Kuwait Times - Issuu