26 Jan 2010

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

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TUESDAY, JANUARY 26, 2010

SAFAR 11, 1431 AH

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from the editor’s desk

Play it fair! By Abd Al-Rahman Alyan Editor-in-Chief

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hen President Obama moved into the White House, he came with the promise of change and open dialogue as an alternative to George Bush’s ‘you’re either with us or against us’ policy. Yesterday the editors-inchief of the Kuwaiti press got firsthand experience of that change. US Ambassador Deborah Jones invited the press to a lunch with Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs Jeffrey Feltman. The lunch opened the opportunity for the Kuwaiti press, Mr Feltman and Ambassador Jones to exchange opinions on various issues in the Middle East and America’s role in these issues. Of course the Palestinian issue could not be avoided whenever the Middle East is being discussed and our lunch with Mr Feltman was no different. The Deputy Assistant Secretary was genuine in conveying the message that the US is all for a two-state solution. He also explained that the US cannot dictate to either side what they can and can’t do but it is negotiating with both sides in the hope of finding a solution. I would like to say that dialogue on all levels is a good approach when trying to bring both sides together. However, there is also the issue of trust, meaning that when a relationship has been tense for many years, don’t expect both sides to suddenly trust each other and forget the past. Therefore, with dialogue there has to be patience as well and the dialogue has to be renewed several times until some sort of trust is gained between both sides. Then and only then would dialogue be successful. This has pretty much been the case with the Israeli and Palestinian issue where the international community is being very patient and has been carrying on with dialogues since 1967. This patience over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is raising doubts over the international community’s commitment to solving this crisis, looking at the fact that countries that have defied and that are defying UN resolutions, such as Iraq and Iran, have not enjoyed the patience that Israel is currently enjoying. President Obama’s administration has its work cut out when trying to prove that the US is fully committed to solving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and opening dialogues with old foes such as Iran, Syria and Hezbollah. Because it has to change old mentalities and show that it is treating its ally Israel on equal footing with its Arab allies. (See Page 4)

Iraq executes Chemical Ali Three blasts targeting Baghdad hotels kill 37

Yemen Houthis offer truce to Saudi Arabia hostilities in return, the rebels would wage an “open war” on the world’s top oil exporter. Yemen’s central government has been fighting the rebels on and off since 2004, but the conflict intensified last summer when Sanaa launched Operation Scorched Earth to quash the latest upsurge in violence. Saudi Arabia stepped into the fray in November when rebels seized some Saudi territory, prompting Riyadh to wage a major military offensive against them. The conflict raging in the north has displaced around 200,000 people, according to the United Nations. Continued on Page 13

PORT-AU-PRINCE: A street vendor tries to keep the crowd from stealing her goods on Sunday. — AFP

Bodies pile up as Haiti begs for aid PORT-AU-PRINCE: Haiti’s prime minister begged donors yesterday to back the rebuilding of his quake-hit country and boost international aid as hundreds of thousands of people fought for survival in the rubble. Nearly two weeks after the worst recorded disaster in the Americas killed at least 150,000 people, a conference of foreign creditors in Montreal

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SANAA: The leader of Yemen’s Shiite rebels yesterday offered a ceasefire to Saudi Arabia and said his fighters would withdraw from the kingdom’s territory to avoid more civilian casualties. The announcement by Abdul-Malik Al-Houthi followed three months of border fighting between Shiite rebels and Saudi forces who also used their air force to bomb rebel targets. “To avoid more bloodshed and to stop aggression on civilians ... we offer this initiative,” Houthi said in an audio recording posted on the Internet. He warned that if Saudi Arabia did not end its

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heard that it would take at least 10 years to rebuild the stricken Caribbean nation. As bulldozers cleared more corpse-filled buildings in the center of the flattened capital Port-au-Prince, Haitians expressed both hope and skepticism about the emergency meeting of donor countries in Montreal. Continued on Page 13

BAGHDAD: Faisal Hadi, 53, is assisted to a hospital after he was wounded in a car bomb attack yesterday. (Inset) An image grab shows a still photograph broadcast by the state-run Al-Iraqiya television channel showing Ali Hassan AlMajid before his execution yesterday. — AP/AFP

BAGHDAD: Saddam Hussein’s notorious cousin and henchman “Chemical Ali” was executed yesterday, Iraq’s government said, eight days after he was sentenced to death for the 1998 gassing of thousands of Kurds. Ali Hassan Al-Majid was better known by his macabre nickname and as the King of Spades in the pack of cards of “most wanted” Iraqis issued by the US military in 2003, and will forever be associated with mass killings. He was “executed by hanging until death,” government spokesman Ali AlDabbagh said. “The execution happened without any violations, shouting or cries of joy,” in sharp contrast to Saddam’s death on the gallows, he added. State television later aired two still photographs of Majid, in which he was wearing an orange-red jumpsuit and the first of which clearly displayed his face. The second picture showed him on a platform, with a black hood over his head and with two men wearing balaclavas standing on either side. The execution, which was welcomed by Kurdish victims, came as three massive car bombs targeting hotels rocked central Baghdad, killing at least 37 people and wounding more than 100 in an apparently coordinated but as yet unclaimed attack. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said extremists were trying to upend progress toward democracy. Continued on Page 13

Ethiopia jet crashes off Beirut All 90 on board feared dead • Plane caught fire after takeoff BEIRUT: An Ethiopian Airlines plane carrying 90 people caught fire and crashed into the sea minutes after taking off from Beirut early yesterday, setting off a frantic search as passenger seats, baby sandals and other debris washed ashore. No survivors had been found by nightfall, but emergency workers recovered at least 34 bodies including two toddlers. The cause of the crash was not immediately known. Lebanon has seen stormy weather since Sunday night, with crackling thunder, lightning and rain. “We saw fire falling down from the sky into the sea,” said Khaled Naser, a gas station attendant who saw the plane go down around 2:30 am, crashing into the frigid waters of the Mediterranean that had reached just 18 degrees Celsius by yesterday afternoon. The Lebanese army said in a statement the plane was on fire shortly after takeoff. Lebanese President Michel Suleiman said terrorism was not suspected in the crash of Flight 409, which was headed for the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa. “Sabotage is ruled out as of now,” he said. Weeping relatives streamed into Beirut’s airport to wait for news on their loved ones. One woman dropped to

BEIRUT: Ethiopian women, relatives of passengers of an Ethiopian Airlines plane that crashed in the sea, react upon their arrival at Beirut airport yesterday. — AP

her knees in tears; another cried out, “Where is my son?” Andree Qusayfi said his 35year-old brother, Ziad, was traveling to Ethiopia for his job at a computer company, but was planning to return to Lebanon for good soon. “We begged him to postpone his flight because of the storm,” Qusayfi said, his eyes red from crying. “But he insisted on going because he had work appointments.” Zeinab Seklawi said her 24-year-old son Yasser called her as he was boarding. “I told him, ‘God be with you,’ and I went to sleep,” Seklawi said. “Please find my son. I know he’s alive and wouldn’t leave me.” At the Government Hospital in Beirut, Red Cross workers brought in bodies on stretchers covered with wool blankets as relatives gathered nearby. Many people were giving DNA samples to help identify the remains of their loved ones. One man identified his 3-year-old nephew by the overalls the boy was wearing. The Boeing 737-800 took off around 2:30 am and went down 3.5 km off the coast, said Ghazi Aridi, the public works and transportation minister. “The weather undoubtedly was very bad,” Aridi told reporters at the airport. Continued on Page 13

KUWAIT: National Assembly Speaker Jassem AlKhorafi (right) meets his Iranian counterpart Ali Larijani (left) upon his arrival at the airport yesterday. — Photo by Yasser Al-Zayyat

Israel doesn’t dare strike Iran: Larijani By Ahmad Saeid KUWAIT: The speaker of the Iranian parliament said yesterday that Israeli threats to attack Iran’s nuclear facilities are “empty talk”. “If they dared to carry attacks against Iran, they would’ve done that already,” Ali L arijani said after his arrival to Kuwait on a two-day visit yesterday. “I recommend that you don’t pay attention to such comments,” he said. Larijani also downplayed French President Nicholas Sarkozy’s call to place more sanctions against Iran. “Instead of placing pressure on Israel for their abusive practices against people in Palestine, the West tries to divert attention to Iran,” he

said. Larijani was in Kuwait on an invitation from National Assembly Speaker Jassem AlKhorafi, who headed the diplomatic delegation at the airport. “Iran and Kuwait have enjoyed good ties for a long time, even during ‘sensitive periods’,” Larijani said. His Kuwaiti counterpart said that the importance of the visit is derived from the importance of Iran in the region. “Iran has a significant role and good connections in the region. We are always in touch about the events taking place in this region, and there are negotiations between the two parliaments too,” Khorafi said. Continued on Page 13

FM assures MPs on Iraq border houses By B Izzak KUWAIT: Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammad Al-Sabah moved yesterday to assure MPs on Kuwait’s offer to build houses for Iraqi farmers, saying that the number of these houses is not more than 80 for Iraqi farmers whose current houses and land interfere with Kuwaiti territory. The minister was apparently responding to criticism by several MPs over his remarks that Kuwait has offered to build the houses for the farmers. Sheikh Mohammad said that the Iraqi farmers’ presence on the border constitutes a security liability for both countries. The minister’s statements came following a meeting with

the Assembly’s foreign relations committee during which he briefed members about a number of issues including the outcome of the recent GCC summit, the fighting in Yemen and relations with Iran. Rapporteur of the committee MP Ali Al-Rashed told reporters that the members agreed to make a field visit to the Iraqi-Kuwaiti borders along with the foreign minister and specifically to the area where the Iraqi farmers are located. The minister said that Kuwait has asked Iraq that the border area should be vacant in order to maintain security , adding that Iraqi farmers are currently living on Iraqi territory and not Kuwaiti. Continued on Page 13

Karroubi recognizes Ahmadinejad as prez TEHRAN: Iran opposition leader Mehdi Karroubi, who had refused to accept Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s reelection, revealed yesterday in a major position shift that he now recognised the hardliner as president. Karroubi’s son, Hossein, told AFP about his father’s new stance, making him the first opposition leader to explicitly accept Ahmadinejad’s victory in the June 12 poll which returned him to office for a second term. “I am still of the same belief that the election was unhealthy and massively rigged. But since the (supreme) leader (Ayatollah Ali Khamenei) endorsed (Ahmadinejad’s victory), I believe that he is the head of the government, meaning he is the president,” Hossein quoted his father as saying. Hossein spoke to AFP when asked to confirm an earlier report by Fars news agency

Mehdi Karroubi quoting his father as acknowledging Ahmadinejad to be the president. Fars asked Karroubi whether he now recognises Ahmadinejad as president. The ex-speaker of parliament, who won the fewest number of votes in the June election, replied: “I still maintain that there were problems (in the poll), but with regard to your question, I should say that Continued on Page 13


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