24 Mar

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

40 PAGES

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 2010

NO: 14677

150 FILS

Heat beat Nets as Jazz turn tables on Celtics

Obama signs historic healthcare reform into law PAGE 9

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Unapologetic Barrak seeks Hammad’s help Panel delays domestics law By B Izaak KUWAIT: The number of MPs supporting a no-confidence motion against Information and Oil Minister Sheikh Ahmad Al-Abdullah Al-Sabah appears to have remained unchanged at 22 as MP Mussallam Al-Barrak yesterday appealed to MP Saadoun Hammad for help but refused to offer an apology. Two important meetings linked to tomorrow’s vote were held yesterday, the first by the eight members of the National Action Bloc and the second between MP Aseel Al-Awadhi and members of the Popular Action Bloc. No statement was issued after the National Bloc meeting which brought together eight liberal MPs, but sources familiar with the meeting said it was decided that members were free to vote in accordance with their convictions. Continued on Page 14

Domestic transfer window extended KUWAIT: Minister of Social Affairs and L abor Dr Mohammad Al-Afasi is expected to issue a decision in the coming few days to extend the period for domestic workers (article 20 work permits) to transfer their residencies to the private sector (article 18) until June. The move is aimed at organizing the expatriate manpower in the private sector, informed sources told local dailies. They added that the ministry’s decision be in line with

RABI ALTHANI 8, 1431 AH

the government’s bid to facilitate the movement of workers among the various sectors of the labor market in the country. Recent reports had earlier said that the number of expatriates in Kuwait has declined for the second consecutive year, attributing the decrease to restrictions on bringing expat manpower in the country in addition to layoffs at some firms as a result of the global economic meltdown. Continued on Page 14

Britain kicks out Israeli diplomat LONDON: Britain has ordered the expulsion of an Israeli diplomat over the use of fake British passports in the killing of a Hamas commander in Dubai, Foreign Secretary David Miliband said yesterday. “I have asked that a member of the embassy of Israel be withdrawn from the UK as a result of this affair, and this is taking place,” he told lawmakers. Miliband said there were “compelling reasons” to believe Israel was behind the misuse of British passports in the killing of Mahmoud Al-Mabhouh in January. “The government takes this matter extremely seriously. Such misuse of British passports is intolerable... It also represents a profound disregard for the sovereignty of the United Kingdom,” he said. Miliband said an investigation by Britain’s Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) had established that the 12 British passport holders identified by Dubai police were “wholly innocent Continued on Page 14

Poet attains stardom after bashing clerics DUBAI: A Saudi housewife’s bold poems which blast “evil” extremist fatwas by Muslim clerics have earned her death threats but could yet win her a $1.3-million poetry contest on Emirati television. Ahead of today’s finals of the “Million’s Poet” aired weekly on Abu Dhabi state television, the poems have put Hissa Hilal, who wears a traditional head-to-toe black “abaya” cloak and veils her face, in the spotlight. If on March 31 she is announced the winner, she will walk away with the grand prize Continued on Page 14

ABU DHABI: Saudi poet Hussa Hilal takes part in “Shaer AlMillion” on March 18, 2010. — AFP

Dubai puts alcoholic dishes back on menu NANPING, China: A Chinese woman whose child was killed in a stabbing incident gets help outside an elementary school in east China’s Fujian province yesterday. — AP

Medic hacks 8 kids to death BEIJING: A former medical worker stabbed to death eight young children and wounded five others yesterday in a bloody rampage outside an elementary school in eastern

China. The 41-year-old attacker struck in the morning as students arrived for classes, mingling with parents at the school gates before suddenly pulling out his knife and slash-

ing children, according to witnesses interviewed on local television. In the aftermath, doctors treated small children and bodies lay covered in Continued on Page 14

DUBAI: The Dubai municipality has retracted a decision to ban restaurants from using alcohol in the preparation of dishes, The National daily reported yesterday. The liberal Gulf emirate had announced on Sunday it would enforce a 2003 law banning alcohol in food preparation, based on complaints from Muslim clients who were not warned that dishes in some restaurants contained alcohol. But it

now appears Dubai has changed its mind. Khaled Sharif Al-Awadhi, director of Dubai municipality’s food control department, said food containing alcohol could be served on condition it was segregated from other food and clearly labelled, The National reported. “We have found violations where hotels are not clearly stating alcohol content in their food,” Continued on Page 14


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