1 Mar 2010

Page 1

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

40 PAGES

MONDAY, MARCH 1, 2010

India seeks closer ties with Saudis to fuel recovery

RABI ALAWAL 15, 1431 AH

How nuke equipment managed to reach Iran

Djokovic channels anger to retain Dubai crown

PAGE 7

PAGE 16

PAGE 21

150 FILS

Owen and Rooney strike as United retain Cup PAGE 20

Violence flares at Aqsa mosque

in the news Kuwait inflation slows DUBAI: Kuwait’s inflation eased to 4.2 percent on an annual basis in June 2009, its lowest level in more than two years, helped by a drop in food prices, the latest available data showed yesterday. The global crisis slashed growth rates across the Gulf Arab oil producing region, reducing consumer price growth from 2008 record peaks, with some countries, such as the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, experiencing deflation in 2009. Inflation stood at 5.2 percent year-on-year in May 2009, Kuwait’s statistics office also said yesterday, well down from a record high of 11.6 percent in August 2008. The office delayed inflation data releases last year. On the month, consumer prices in the world’s fourth largest oil exporter remained flat in June, following a 0.2 percent rise in the previous month, data showed. Housing prices held steady month-on-month in June, while food prices fell 1.1 percent. Transport prices rose 0.8 percent in June.

Israeli police enter holy sanctuary

Drake wins Kuwait contracts DUBAI: Dubai’s Drake & Scull International (DSI) said yesterday it won two contracts in Kuwait worth over 90 million dirhams ($24.50 million), as it seeks opportunities abroad and weathers a downturn at home. The contracts, which are in the education sector, are the first for Drake & Scull International for Electrical Contracting Kuwait (DSK) since it was bought by DSI in December, DSI said in a statement. DSI bought 75 percent of DSK. “From every angle DSI sees an abundance of opportunities within Kuwait,” the company’s chief executive Khaldoun Tabari said. Earlier in February, Drake said it has $136 million to spend on acquisitions in 2010, which includes three firms.

NO: 14654

KUWAIT: Kuwaitis tour the 2nd International Defence and Police Equipment Exhibition yesterday. — Photo by Yasser Al-Zayyat

JERUSALEM: Israeli police entered the compound housing Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem yesterday after Palestinians threw stones at visitors to the holy site, and fired tear gas and rubber bullets to break up protests. The confrontation added to tension that is already running high after Israel’s announcement of a plan to restore Jewish religious sites in the West Bank in a heritage project. Witnesses said the violence began after Palestinians threw rocks at visitors touring the site. Palestinian officials said word had spread that religious Jews planned to enter the mosque compound, the third holiest site in Islam. Judaism’s Western Wall, a Jewish prayer site revered as the remains of a perimeter wall of the second biblical Temple, sits just below the compound. Israeli police arrested seven Palestinians and four policemen were Continued on Page 14

Mabhouh Chile races to find survivors Death toll surges to 708 • Looters roam streets drugged, CIA bomber calls for suffocated

JERUSALEM: Masked Palestinian youths prepare to throw stones and firecrackers at Israeli police as they are backdropped by the Dome of the Rock Mosque during clashes in the east Jerusalem neighborhood of Ras Al Amud yesterday. — AP

DUBAI: Dubai police said yesterday forensic tests show a Hamas operative who was killed in his hotel room by an alleged Israeli hit squad was drugged with a fast-acting muscle relaxant and then suffocated with a pillow. The drug, called succinylcholine, is frequently used by doctors to administer a breathing tube or anesthesia. Dubai police said tests discovered the drug in the bloodstream of Mahmoud Al-Mabhouh, the Hamas commander whose body was found in his room at a luxury Dubai hotel on Jan 20. Dubai authorities have accused Israel’s Mossad spy agency of being behind the killing. Continued on Page 14

CONCEPCION, Chile: Chile’s president sent the army to help police attack looting yesterday in the wake of an earthquake that shattered cities and killed at least 708 people. President Michelle Bachelet announced the sharply higher new death toll after a six-hour meeting with aides and emergency officials struggling to cope with Saturday’s magnitude-8.8 quake. They had earlier said about 300 were known dead, with 500,000 homes severely damaged, before state television quoted emergency officials as saying that 350 people were killed in the coastal Continued on Page 14

jihad against Jordan

CONCEPCION, Chile: Residents look at a collapsed building Saturday after an 8.8-magnitude struck central Chile. —AP

In polyglot Lebanon, Arabic falling behind

TEHRAN: (Left to right) Palestinian Islamic Jihad leader Ramadan Shallah, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Palestinian Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal and Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki raise their hands during a conference in support of Palestinians yesterday. — AFP

Ahmadinejad calls Israel ‘a microbe of corruption’ TEHRAN: Israel is “a microbe of corruption” and Islamic resistance will “send it to the bottom of hell,” Iran’s president said yesterday at a conference attended by top Palestinian militant leaders, Iranian media reported. “With God’s grace and thanks to the Palestinian resistance the occupying Zionist regime has

lost its raison d’Ítre,” Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said at a Tehran conference in support of the Palestinians. “Their presence (Israel’s) even in one inch of the region’s soil causes threat, crisis and war,” the state-run television’s website quoted him as saying. Continued on Page 14

we interviewed were BEIRUT: Lebanon, a not even able to recite tiny, vibrant the alphabet,” Mediterranean counTalhouk told AFP. try, prides itself on its Urban youths are polyglot society but often unable to hold a for the country’s conversation in one youths native Arabic is language, causing not very “cool”. “Hi, amusement but also kifak? Ca Va?” - or irking those around “Hi, how are you them with such homedoing? Okay?” - is a grown expressions as typical multi-linguistic the popular farewell: Lebanese greeting so “Yalla, bye.” “At my popular it now appears school it’s more cool on bumper stickers to speak French. and t-shirts sold Arabic is looked down around the world. upon,” said high English and French school student often replace the local Nathalie. dialect in conversaOn Thursday the tion, especially among JOUNIEH, Lebanon: the urban youth, and A Lebanese woman Tunis-based Arab for one organisation has carries Arabic books Organisation Education, Culture launched a campaign from a library in this and Science decided to preserve Arabic in town north of Beirut to set aside March 1 Lebanon. of each year to cele“Arabic is still very Feb 16, 2010. – AFP brate the Arabic lanmuch alive as a language, but young people are moving guage. A statement from the organisafarther and farther away from it,” said tion said the move was an attempt to Suzanne Talhouk, who heads the “preserve the heritage of the Arab organisation “Fael Ummer” nation in the face of globalisation”. (Imperative) which is running the The message was heard loud and clear campaign. “Some of our youngsters in Lebanon, which was once the are incapable of writing correctly in Francophone hub of the Arab world. Continued on Page 14 Arabic, and many university students

Afghanistan’s eastern CAIRO: An Al-Qaeda province of Khost double agent that killed where he’d been invitseven CIA operatives and ed to reveal informaa Jordanian spy called for tion on Al-Qaeda No. jihad in Jordan and 2, Ayman Al-Zawahiri. attacks on its intelligence Al-Balawi said he agency in a posthumous only expected to kill video message posted on his Jordanian handler, extremist websites yesAli bin Zaid, but the terday. Humam Khalil Abu Mulal Al-Balawi also Humam Al-Balawi is addition of the CIA described yesterday in seen in a posthumous members was a windthe 43-minute video his video message posted fall. “We planned for something but got a recruitment by Jordanian intelligence and how he on extremist websites bigger gift, a gift from Allah, who brought us, double crossed them yesterday. — AP through His accompaafter they sent him to Afghanistan to spy on Al-Qaeda. The niment, a valuable prey: Americans, and video was apparently filmed shortly from the CIA. That’s when I became cerbefore the 32-year-old Balawi blew him- tain that the best way to teach Jordanian Continued on Page 14 self up at a CIA facility on Dec. 30 in

LUXOR: A 3,000 year-old red granite head of King Amenhotep III that was discovered at the site of his funerary temple is seen. — AFP

Massive head of Tut granddad unearthed CAIRO: Egyptian archaeologists have unearthed a colossal statue head of the pharaoh whom DNA tests revealed last week was King Tutankhamun’s grandfather, the government said yesterday. The red granite head of King Amenhotep III, part of a larger 3,000 year-old statue, was discovered at the

site of the pharaoh’s funerary temple in Luxor, Egypt’s culture ministry said in a statement. “The newly discovered head is intact and measures 2.5 metres high,” antiquities chief Zahi Hawass was quoted as saying. “It is a masterpiece Continued on Page 14


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
1 Mar 2010 by Kuwait Times - Issuu