7 Apr

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

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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 2010

Amir attends national operetta PAGE 2

conspiracy theories

Brutality that’s beyond belief By Badrya Darwish

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came to the Kuwait Times in the evening as usual to find my old colleague Islam sad and running up and down the editorial room showing a picture. When I approached him seeing him so panicky, he showed me pictures of dead cats. Islam is well-known in the newspaper as a cat-loving person. At one point he had some 20 cats under his supervision who were running up and down inside the offices. It took us long time to convince him to stop bringing them inside. It is either him or the cats on the premises. Don’t misunderstand me - I love animals - but the cats started running even inside the printing machines. This caused damage to both the machines and the cats. Yesterday, Islam was shocked by the piece of news which arrived in our offices that a guy in Rumaithiya had allegedly poisoned 30 cats. Why would someone poison cats? What kind of a personality does he have? Isn’t it enough that cats are killed on the road and we do not want to blame it on the drivers, so, we justify it as an accident? But when somebody on purpose gathers cats and poisons them, I don’t call it an accident. To me this is premeditated crime and a brutal action. A crime is a crime. If somebody can torture a cat, he is capable of torturing humans. It is beyond my tolerance. What does this guy have against cats? Doesn’t he have anything better to do than chase and poison cats? To my shock, I learnt from my colleague Maher that killing cats was not as surprising because many guys here apparently enjoy torturing dogs as a form of amusement. They spend evenings inventing different ways of torture for the poor dogs by sticking iron rods in the dogs and laughing. They go as far as using dogs as shooting targets. If a dog survives all these insane games, then the ceremony ends by hanging the dog. To add to our depressing evening another colleague Mustafa shared the news he heard on Marina FM about kids setting cats on fire just merely to enjoy the scene of a cat running around in flames. Imagine it! How creative can the human mind be when it comes to torture? What would you call such actions? Is this sadism, cruelty or both? Who is responsible for all this? Where are the parents of these kids and what kind of upbringing they have had? Even religion does not allow this. Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) was merciful towards animals and he advised all his companions to do so. The sad part of it is that there is no law that punishes people for animal abuse. I am not asking to have the same luxurious rules like in Switzerland where animals can have lawyers representing them. All I am asking for is the authorities to introduce rules against animal abuse.

At least 7 blasts rip through Baghdad, killing 49

RABI ALTHANI 22, 1431 AH

150 FILS

Egypt police violently disperse pro-reform protest

Barcelona qualify for Champions League semifinals

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Meeting to focus on discipline, priorities MP to reveal Rafale violations • Financial market tribunal set up By B Izzak

KUWAIT: A boy swims in an Olympic-sized swimming pool at the Kuwait Sea Sports Club after the club officially inaugurated its swimming pool complex late Monday. — Photo by Yasser Al-Zayyat (See Page 17)

25 killed in US mine blast MONTCOAL, West Virginia: Rescue crews battled to move heavy drills to reach four missing miners yesterday at a West Virginia coal mine where an explosion killed 25 others in the deadliest US mining disaster in decades. Initial search crews reported damage so severe at the Upper Big Branch Mine after Monday’s explosion that train rails in the mine “looked like they had been twisted like a pretzel,” said Governor Joe Manchin. “It

had to be a horrific explosion to cause that kind of damage,” Manchin told a news briefing. Crews planned to drill four holes into the mine in Montcoal, owned by Massey Energy, Manchin said. Drilling may not begin until today as the rigs are not yet in place and an access road must be plowed to the site. Efforts were hampered by the hazardous buildup of methane gas and smoke underground, posing a danger that

forced the earlier teams back from the search area 48 km south of the state capital Charleston. “It’s a slow process,” Manchin said. Three of the holes were for ventilation, and rescuers were targeting an area some 335 m below the surface, he said. Miners’ families remained hopeful, the governor said. “I don’t want to give anybody any false hope but ... we’re still seeing people clinging on to Continued on Page 14

KUWAIT: The informal meeting of MPs due to take place today at the speaker’s office is expected to focus mainly on discipline during sessions and to reschedule the list of priorities. Secretary of the Assembly MP Dulaihi Al-Hajeri said yesterday that a committee headed by deputy speaker Abdullah Al-Roumi has been assigned to draw the list of priorities for the remainder of the Assembly term expected to wind up late June. At the start of the term in late October, MPs had agreed on a host of issues to be debated and completed during the term, but because of political tension, grillings and new developments, the Assembly is way behind on the priority list. Speaker Jassem Al-Khorafi said that after approving the new list, it will be debated and approved by the Assembly during a session. He had also said that he will convey a message from the Amir to MPs without disclosing its contents. But it appears that discipline by MPs during sessions and finding a mechanism to stop fights and heated exchanges between MPs like what happened last week is likely to dominate the meeting. Ahead of the meeting, MP Youssef Al-Zalzalah said he will submit a proposal to amend the Assembly’s internal charter to give more powers to the speaker to punish MPs who do not abide by Continued on Page 14

Women judges stir old debate in Egypt

Brown calls UK polls for May 6 LONDON: British Prime Minister Gordon Brown fired the starting gun yesterday on a month-long election race, setting May 6 as the date for voting in what could be the closest poll for a generation. Announcing the widely-anticipated date after asking Queen Elizabeth II to dissolve parliament, a sternfaced Brown said Britain’s fragile economic recovery was at risk if the opposition Conservatives took power. “Britain is on the road to recovery and nothing we do should put that recovery at risk,” he told reporters. “Our economy is now moving forward, but to withdraw millions of Brown pounds from the economy would put recovery at risk.” Brown’s confirmation of a date triggers a month of campaigning in which his centre-left Labour will battle to claw back ground from David Cameron’s centre-right Conservatives, who are ahead in opinion polls. A Labour victory would secure the party’s fourth consecutive term in office and would be a first under Brown, who took over as leader from Tony Blair in 2007. The Tories are vying for their first win since a surprise 1992 victory. In a contest likely to be dominated by the economy, Brown, 59, is Continued on Page 14

NO: 14691

BAGHDAD: This frame grab image shot from a US army Apache helicopter shows a group of men, including two Reuters staff in a street on July 12, 2007, just before the group was fired upon by the helicopter. — AFP

Video posted of deadly US strike WASHINGTON: Whistleblower website WikiLeaks released graphic video Monday of a US military Apache helicopter strike in Baghdad three years ago which killed two Reuters employees and a number of other people. The gun camera footage includes audio conversations between Apache pilots and ground controllers in which they identify the men in a Baghdad street as armed insurgents and ask for permission to open fire. WikiLeaks said that it had obtained the

video “from a number of military whistleblowers” and decrypted it. It posted the video at collateralmurder.org. The July 2007 footage shows an aerial view of a number of men on a Baghdad street including two later identified as Reuters employees Namir Noor-Eldeen and Saeed Chmagh. At least two individuals in the video appear to be carrying weapons but most are unarmed. Continued on Page 14

CAIRO: When women tried to join the bench on Egypt’s top administrative court, the uproar from its judges was fierce. Women are too emotional, they insisted - and who will take care of the family if the mother is busy with the arduous tasks of the courtroom? In Internet chat rooms, the response from Egyptian men and women was even stronger. Women are too fragile, they’re not up for making life-changing rulings, and menstruation and pregnancy make them unfit to be judges. It took a street protest, government intervention and a Constitutional Court ruling over the past weeks to get women appointed to Egypt’s State Council court for the first time. The final result was a victory, but many women’s rights advocates are dismayed that after decades of struggle it took such a fight, and that such views still run so deep, even among the country’s elite. Especially given that women have already been judges for years on most Egyptian courts. “I was surprised and confused why are we going back to square one to discuss something that is our constitutional right?” said Tahany ElGebali, who in 2003 became Egypt’s first female judge when she was appointed to the Constitutional Court, the country’s highest judiciary body. Egypt has a century-old women’s movement, and women have long served as government ministers and business executives, doctors and other professionals - not to mention the large numbers working in factories, small businesses and household industries.

CAIRO: Egyptian women protest in front of Egypt’s state council court March 6, 2010, as they call to join the bench on Egypt’s top administrative court. — AP But the dispute illustrated how so far, progress for women in the workplace has not soaked down in the public consciousness to create a widespread change in attitudes - particularly at a time when many popular Islamic clerics on television and other media promote a message that women’s roles are inherently different from men’s, and more centered around family and the home. The judges dispute centered around the State Continued on Page 14

in the news Dozens of cats poisoned KUWAIT: Residents in Rumaithiya were stunned by the sight of dead cats on the streets yesterday. It was later determined that the felines were poisoned by insecticide. Kuwait Municipality inspectors later gathered the remains of nearly 30 cats from underneath vehicles parked on roadsides. Preliminary laboratory tests indicated that the cats were killed by a toxic insecticide. Investigation was still underway to identify the perpetrator.

NBK eyes Garanti stake KUWAIT: Kuwait’s largest lender, the National Bank of Kuwait (NBK) said yesterday it was considering buying a stake in Garanti Bank as Turkey was one of the emerging world’s most attractive banking sectors. “NBK wants to expand in Turkey, a country that has a lot of potential,” said NBK’s chief executive, Ibrahim Dabdoub, in an emailed statement. “We need to have a stronger presence there,” he said. “One of the options is a share in Garanti Bank.” General Electric said in February it would sell its 20.85 percent stake in the Turkish lender, currently valued at $4.3 billion. NBK is the first bank to come forward publically and declare its interest.

Only 11 B’deshis find work DHAKA: The number of Bangladeshis heading abroad for work hit a four-year low in the past three months as job opportunities in the Middle East and Asia were hit by the global slump. About 100,000 people left to work overseas in the JanMar period, the lowest quarterly number since 2006. In Kuwait, which the Bangladeshi prime minister visited earlier this year, only 11 workers have found jobs in 2010. Malaysia, hit hard by the recession, has accepted no new Bangladeshi workers for a year, while in 2007 and 2008, it took in total more than half a million. Saudi Arabia - which employs more than two million Bangladeshis - signed up only 2,255 in the first quarter of 2010. The UAE was the top recruiter of Bangladeshis despite the fact the country being hit by the downturn.

Per capita waste 1.4 kg KUWAIT: Kuwait Municipality is doing its utmost to dispose of waste as per capita waste generation in Kuwait is 1.4 kg per day, Minister of Public Works and Minister of State for Municipal Affairs Fadhel Al-Safar said yesterday. The remark was made by the minister in a keynote speech at an international conference and exhibition on waste management. Kuwait Society of Engineers Member Mansour Al-Murri said Kuwait has a high waste generation, having exceeded one million tons of waste in 2007, up 1.5 percent over 2006. He said Kuwait Municipality spends roughly KD 60 million to collect, treat and dispose off waste. (See Page 4)

Dubai nabs con surgeon DUBAI: Dubai police have arrested a man impersonating a US celebrity cosmetic surgeon and operating on women attracted by his rock-bottom fees, local newspapers reported yesterday. The 69-year-old general practitioner performed plastic surgery on women in his private villa, leaving his patients with serious complications, the Gulf News daily reported. He operated in the UAE under the name of Dr Steven Hopping, a renowned American surgeon who has been featured in newspapers and magazines in the US and who formerly headed the American Academy of Cosmetic Surgery in the US. The Arabic-language Emarat Al-Youm identified the fake surgeon as Steven Moose. Harvard-educated Hopping told Emarat Al-Youm from Washington that the fraudster is wanted for trading in uncertified medical supplies and sedatives, and that he has committed several violations in more than one country.

Maoist rebels kill 76 police PATNA, India: Maoist insurgents claiming to fight for India’s rural poor killed at least 76 soldiers yesterday in a series of carefully planned ambushes in the forests of eastern India, underscoring the rebels’ strength despite a government offensive. The attack by hundreds of Maoists in a rebel stronghold in Chhattisgarh state was the deadliest by the militants against government forces in their 43-year insurgency. The rebels launched the initial attack early in the morning, firing on a group of soldiers as they returned to base from a two-day patrol in Chhattisgarh’s Dantewada forests, S K Pillai, the federal home secretary, told reporters in New Delhi. Continued on Page 14


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