RI PT IO N BS C SU THE LEADING INDEPENDENT DAILY IN THE ARABIAN GULF
40 PAGES
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2010
RABI ALAWAL 7, 1431 AH
Niger opposition urges junta to hold elections
Dutch govt falls over Afghan troop mission
United title bid dented by Everton, Drogba double fires Chelsea
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Venus beats Azarenka, retains Dubai title PAGE 17
Meknes minaret collapse kills 41 Tragedy stirs anger among residents
KUWAIT: Kuwaiti special forces climb down a helicopter near the Kuwait Towers as they show their skills during celebrations marking the state’s National and Liberation days yesterday. — Photo by Yasser Al-Zayyat (See Page 2)
Local radio offers diverse programs KUWAIT: Local Kuwaiti radio has been providing expatriates here an opportunity to listen to broadcasts in their native tongues, and to remain in touch with their religions and cultures. Local stations broadcasting in foreign languages first aired back in June 1964. Today, broadcasts cover a variety of languages such as English, Persian, Urdu and Tagalog for foreigners to tune in to. FM 93.3 is a local station run by expatriates and serves as a mediator to help expatriates get a sense of what is going on in the country through covering events and stories in their lan-
guages, explained Director of Radio Kuwait’s Foreign Programs Department Sheikha Shojoun Al-Jaber Al-Sabah to KUNA. Although the programs are translated in foreign languages, the Kuwaiti identity is maintained through programs that narrate the country’s history alongside entertainment and talk shows, she said. English programs are aired on FM 93.3 from 8:00 am to 11:00 am, followed by Persian from 11:00 am to 1:00 pm, Tagalog from 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm, Urdu from 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm and finally an English broadcast Continued on Page 14
US mosques debate on English sermons Meals on Wheels offers halal menu VILLA PARK, Illinois: Sana Rahim was born in the cowboy country of southeastern Wyoming, to Pakistani parents who had emigrated so her father could earn a doctorate. She speaks Urdu with her family, but can’t read or write the language. She recites prayers in Arabic, but doesn’t know exactly what each word means. Now a 20-year-old junior at Northwestern University, she, like many other American-born Muslims, is most comfortable with sermons and lectures in English, although they can’t always find US mosques that offer them. “I don’t really get the time to study Arabic,” Rahim said. “With all the different groups in America, English is a unifying thing that ties us together.” Like Jewish immigrants who fought over English-language prayer and Roman Catholics who resisted the new Mass in English, US Muslims are waging their own debate about how much English they can use inside mosques without violating Islamic law and abandoning their culture. Imam Hassan Al-
VILLA PARK, Illinois: Sana Rahim, a student at Northwestern University, is seen at the Islamic Foundation in this Feb 5, 2010 photo. — AP Qazwini leads the Islamic Center of America in Dearborn, a community with a mix of recent immigrants and families who have been in the US for generations. Continued on Page 14
MEKNES, Morocco: Moroccan King Mohammed VI yesterday ordered experts to check the safety of the country’s historic mosques as the death toll from the collapse of a centuries-old minaret rose to 41 people, the official news agency said. The minaret fell onto a crowded mosque during prayers Friday in the city of Meknes, a UNESCO heritage site and a walled city that is a maze of winding narrow streets. Some 75 people were injured, 17 of whom are still hospitalized, the North African nation’s official MAP news agency said. A day after the accident, a police officer with a sniffer dog patrolled the site, but the main search operations appeared to have wrapped up. The falling tower toppled onto about three-quarters of the mosque, leaving behinds piles of rubble and sand. Family members carried victims’ bodies through the streets en route to burials yesterday. Thousands of people, many sobbing, marched to a local cemetery. Officials blamed the accident on heavy rain that weakened the minaret at the Bab Berdieyinne Mosque, according to an official Interior Ministry release. But a senior official at the state weather service dismissed that theory. “The weather was not especially bad in Meknes. It would be fair to look for another factor than the weather,” he said. “The authorities wrapped up the rescue operation and they had cleared the rubble. The last body was pulled out early on Saturday,” parliamentarian Abdallah Bouanou told Reuters from the scene. Angry residents accused authorities of ignoring earlier warnings about the dilapidated state of the mosque and also complained about the slowness of the rescue operation. Soldiers were eventually Continued on Page 14
Group prefers gold as dollar loses shine JAKARTA: Guided by a Scottish-born convert to Islam, a group of devout Indonesian Muslims is shunning “worthless” paper money in favour of gold and silver coins for their daily transactions. The followers of Sheikh Abdalqadir As-Sufi - born Ian Dallas trade goods such as food, medicine, clothes and phone cards with gold dinars and silver dirhams in line with a strict interpretation of Islamic law. Their anti-modern views sit uneasily with the naked capitalism of
JAKARTA: Sabeni, an Indonesian pharmacy shop owner, displays a gold dinar coin used in daily transaction at the Cilincing district in north Jakarta Jan 27, 2010. —AFP
Indonesia’s teeming capital, the financial and political centre of one of the fastest growing economies in the world. “History has proven that, since the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), the value of one gold dinar for thousands of years has always been equal to the value of one goat,” said 33-year-old Kurniawati, who runs a shop in southern Jakarta. Hoping to follow the example of Muhammad (PBUH) and the first generations of Muslims, the sheikh’s followers do their shopping with dirhams worth around 30,000 rupiah ($3.20) and dinars worth 1.43 million ($153). And they want the government - or preferably a worldwide Islamic caliphate - to replace paper currencies with the dinar that was used, in the words of the sheikh, “until the incursions of the kafir financiers in the Muslim lands”. Wakala Induk Nusantara (WIN) is the body responsible for regulating the issuance and distribution of the dinar in the world’s most populous Muslimmajority country. Coins minted in Indonesia are also in circulation in Australia, Malaysia and Singapore, WIN official Riki Rokhman Azis said. The number of dinars on the local market more than doubled in 2009 to 25,000 pieces, reflecting the movement’s growing popularity, he said. “We decided to mint silver and gold coins in Indonesia following a fatwa Continued on Page 14
MEKNES, Morocco: People vent their anger in front of a collapsed historic minaret in Meknes’ old quarter yesterday. — AFP
Biggest US medical team to visit Kuwait KUWAIT: The biggest US medical team from various specialities is to visit Kuwait soon, director of the Retirees Service and Overseas Medical Treatment at the Kuwait Ministry of Defense Sheikh Sabah Al-Abdullah Al-Sabah said yesterday. Sheikh Sabah Al-Abdullah said in a press statement to Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) that this team is made up of 25 medical consultants from Memorial Hermann hospital in Texas
who will carry out some unique surgical operations at Jaber Al-Ahmad Armed Forces Hospital, besides providing prescriptions to patients and training the Kuwaiti doctors. Sheikh Sabah said that the team consists of doctors from various specialities including cancer, osteology, cosmetology, cardiovascular, gynecology, obstetrics, internal medicine and sterility Continued on Page 14
Shortage of gas raises Egyptians’ ire at govt
BERLIN: Turkish film director Semih Kaplanoglu receives his Golden Bear award for Best Film for the film “Bal” (Honey) during the awards ceremony of the 60th Berlinale Film Festival yesterday. — AFP
Turkish film wins Golden Bear Polanski named best director at Berlin fest BERLIN: A Turkish movie starring a seven-year-old boy as a struggling pupil who loses his father in a freak accident won the Golden Bear top prize at the Berlin Film Festival yesterday, jury president Werner Herzog said. “Honey” is the third in a trilogy by director Semih Kaplanoglu tracing the life of Yusuf and his development as an artist and a person in rural Turkey, played here by
Bora Altas. The runner-up prize was awarded to Romanian entry “If I Want to Whistle, I Whistle”, a tough prison drama about a teenager who escapes jail in order to stop his mother taking his brother away to Italy. Roman Polanski, under house arrest in Switzerland and fighting extradition to the United States where he is wanted for an underage sex case dat-
ing back 33 years, won a best director silver bear for political thriller “The Ghost Writer”. Russia’s “How I Ended This Summer” was a multiple winner, with Grigori Dobrygin and Sergei Puskepalis sharing the best actor award and director Alexei Popogrebsky picking up an outstanding artistic contribution prize. Continued on Page 14
CAIRO: It’s something Egyptians rely on daily: the “ambooba”, the steel canister of government-subsidized cooking and heating gas, hooked to the stove or water heater in the cramped homes of nearly everyone in this country’s large population of poor. So in recent weeks, when the amboobas stopped coming, the angry outcry spread fast. A winter shortage has sent authorities scrambling to find a solution and has once again fueled criticism that the government of this key Mideast US ally is unable to deal with the problems of its people. For many, it raises memories of acute shortages of cheap subsidized bread in 2008 that raised similar frustration and anger. “Every year this butane crisis gets a little worse, so why doesn’t the government take a stand and provide for its people,” said Mahmoud AlAskalani, a spokesman with the consumer group Citizens Against the High Cost of Living. In Cairo’s lowincome neighborhood of Bashteel this week, women helped each other balance the empty 12-litre cylinders on their heads as young boys pushed bicycles laden with cylinders to a government distribution center, where they are supposed to get them refilled or exchange them for new ones at a subsidized price. Hundreds of men and women lined up for hours into the night waiting for fuel tanks and trucks carrying cylinders to arrive. “All the women here
have walked here to sit for hours hoping that a truck of butane will show up today,” said one woman, Um Ahmad, sitting on her empty ambooba as she waited in line for two hours at Bashteel. When the trucks did arrive, people swarmed over them, elbowing their way to grab a cylinder before they all disappeared. Continued on Page 14
CAIRO: Egyptian women sit on their empty steel canisters of government-subsidized cooking and heating gas while waiting for gas supplies Feb 16, 2010. — AP