RI PT IO N BS C SU THE LEADING INDEPENDENT DAILY IN THE ARABIAN GULF
40 PAGES
THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 2010
JAMADA ALAWAL 8, 1431 AH
Qatar to pour millions in Cyprus property
European skies open but airline schedules scrambled
Saudis won’t behead Lebanese psychic PAGE 14
NO: 14706
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150 FILS
Robben strike gives Bayern slim advantage over Lyon
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MPs, workers propose amendments to privatization bill By B Izzak KUWAIT: A number of MPs and the oil workers’ union have submitted key amendments to the privatization law which was passed in the first reading last week amid opposition from a large number of lawmakers. The main amendments submitted so far focus on three main issues: no privatization in the oil sector; the government must have a “golden share” in the privatized services and that additional protection must
Hayef demands probe over American school trip be provided for the national workforce. Deputy head of the union Jassem AlNasser said yesterday that the union has also proposed amendments, mainly that the oil sector must be completely excluded from privatization. The oil sector has not been mentioned in the privatization bill because article 152 of the constitution, which is higher than any law, bans the pri-
vatization of production in the gas and oil sector. But that does not include oil and gas downstream sectors like refineries and other facilities. The workers’ union and a number of MPs want the oil sector to be completely protected against privatization and that Kuwaiti workers in the vital sector must be protected. MP Saleh Ashour also submit-
ted similar amendments yesterday, and the Islamist Reform and Development Bloc last week submitted almost identical amendments. The Popular Action Bloc is also reported to be preparing to submit more rigid amendments to ensure that the privatization process does not backfire. The National Assembly’s financial and economic affairs committee is set to study the
Iran to stage war games in Hormuz
Kuwait set to deport scores of foreigners
Tehran slams US ‘nuke threats’ TEHRAN: Iran’s supreme leader denounced yesterday US “nuclear threats” against the Islamic Republic, and its elite military force said it would stage war games in a waterway crucial for global oil supplies. The Revolutionary Guards’ exercises in the Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz this week take place at a time of rising tension between Iran and the West, which fears Tehran’s nuclear program is aimed at developing bombs. Iran denies the charge. Iran has also reacted angrily to what it sees as US President Barack Obama’s threat to attack it with nuclear arms. Obama made clear this
month that Iran and North Korea were excluded from new limits on the use of US atomic weapons - something Tehran interpreted as a threat from a long-standing adversary. “The international community should not let Obama get away with nuclear threats,” Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said yesterday. “We will not allow America to renew its hellish dominance over Iran by using such threats,” he told a gathering of Iranian nurses, the semi-official Fars News Agency reported. Iran was a close US ally before its 1979 Islamic revolution. Continued on Page 14
Pillay sees rights ‘advances’ in Gulf By A Saleh and agencies
Former IOC president Samaranch dead at 89 events, seeking global BARCELONA: sponsors instead of Spain’s Juan Antonio national federations Samaranch, one of making their own local the longest-serving arrangements. presidents of the “Thanks to his International extraordinary vision Olympic Committee and talent, Samaranch who was credited was the architect of a with commercialising strong and unified the Games, died yesterday. He was 89. Samaranch Olympic Movement,” IOC President Jacques Samaranch, who headed the Olympic move- Rogge said in a statement. “I ment from 1980-2001, passed am personally deeply saddened away from a cardio-respiratory by the death of the man who arrest at the Quiron Hospital built up the Olympic Games of where he was admitted on the modern era, a man who Sunday suffering from acute inspired me, and whose knowlcoronary insufficiency, it said edge of sport was truly exceptional.” in a statement. His term at the helm of the An honorary president for life of the IOC, he helped to IOC - only Pierre de revolutionise sponsorship and Coubertin, the “father” of the Continued on Page 14 broadcasting deals for major
WASHINGTON: The new design of the $100 bill is shown after it was unveiled at the Treasury Department yesterday. — AP
$100 bill goes hi-tech WASHINGTON: The folks who print America’s money have designed a high-tech makeover of the $100 bill. It’s part of an effort to stay ahead of counterfeiters as technology becomes more sophisticated and more dollars flow overseas, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke says. The makeover, unveiled yesterday, may leave people wondering if there is magic involved. Benjamin Franklin is still on the $100 bill, also known as C-note, but he has been joined by a disappearing Liberty Bell in an inkwell and a bright blue security ribbon composed of thousands of tiny lenses that magnify objects in mysterious ways.
Move the bill and the objects move in a different direction. The government hopes the new bills will make it harder for high-tech counterfeiters to replicate. The new currency will not go into circulation until Feb 10 of next year, giving the government time to educate the public in the United States and around the world about all the changes. “We estimate that as many as two-thirds of all $100 notes circulate outside the United States,” said Bernanke, who stressed that the 6.5 billion in $100 bills now in circulation will remain legal tender. Continued on Page 14
France to ban niqab from public spaces
DAMASCUS: Syrians smoke water-pipes outside a cafe after a law banning smoking in most public places went into effect yesterday. — AP
Syria bans public smoking DAMASCUS: A smoking ban that few are expected to abide by went into effect in Syria yesterday, a country where people light up even in hospitals. The ban targets most public places such as restaurants, cafes, schools, universities, hospitals, parks, movie theaters, museums and public transport. The law, which also forbids the sale of cigarettes to minors, was approved six months ago by President Bashar Assad, a British-trained eye doctor. The Middle East’s favorite pastime - smoking water pipes - is also
amendments before submitting its final report to the Assembly, which is due to take the second and final round of voting on the law. Meanwhile, Islamist MP Mohammad Hayef called on Education Minister Modhi Al-Humoud to launch an urgent probe into a mixed trip organized by an American school in Kuwait to Cairo yesterday. Hayef
said the mixed trip “defies Islamic values and true Kuwaiti traditions”, adding that this is part of a plot to Westernize the Muslim Kuwaiti society. The hardline lawmaker, who is against co-education at schools and universities, asked if the trip was sanctioned by the ministry, adding that “we will not remain silent on such things”. Hayef warned the minister against failure to take the necessary action towards the organizers of the trip and also called on the prime minister to intervene in the matter.
prohibited in public under the new law except in well-ventilated and designated areas. Also outlawed are tobacco advertising and the sale and import of sweets and toys modeled after tobacco products. Offenders will face fines ranging between $45 and $870 and a possible three to 12 months in jail. “The ban is good, but I doubt I will stop smoking,” said businessman Bassam Shanna, 47. The ban’s effects are already being felt in Damascus’ famous cafes. Continued on Page 14
MARSEILLE, France: Two women, one wearing the niqab, walk side by side in the Belsunce district of downtown Marseille in this June 19, 2009 file photo. — AP
PARIS: The French government will ban Muslim women from wearing a full-face veil in public, despite a warning from experts that such a law could be unconstitutional, it announced yesterday. The spokesman for President Nicolas Sarkozy’s government said a bill would be presented to ministers in May and would seek to ban the niqab and the burqa from streets, shops and markets and not just from public buildings. “We’re legislating for the future. Wearing a full veil is a sign of a community closing in on itself and of a rejection of our values,” Luc Chatel told reporters, on leaving a cabinet meeting chaired by Sarkozy. “It’s a transgression, an aggression even, on the level of personal liberty,” said Abdellatif Lemsibak, a member of the National Federation of Muslims of France. “The Muslims have the right to an orthodox expression of their religion ... it shocks me.” Last month, the State Council - France’s top administrative authority - warned Continued on Page 14
KUWAIT: Kuwait will in the next ten days deport thousands of foreigners, mainly Egyptians, after the authorities discovered that they were registered with bogus companies. “These expatriates have no legal status and their stay here is illegal since their companies do not exist,” informed sources said. “The ministries of labor and interior are now coordinating their efforts to tackle the issue and deport the expatriates.” Employees from both ministries who helped with the processing of the forged documents will be disciplined and legal action will be taken against the owners of the bogus companies, the unnamed sources said. Thousands of foreigners, mainly unskilled laborers, are abused by visa traffickers who bring them for a fee into the country and let them loose without offering them work, food or shelter. The marginal “workers” do not have a legal status and take up menial jobs to survive while avoiding police checks that would end Continued on Page 14
KUWAIT: HH the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad AlJaber Al-Sabah receives visiting UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay at Bayan Palace yesterday. — KUNA
Ash cloud hits Gulf luxury food supply DUBAI: A Gulf Arab airline ditched a massive cargo of fresh fish and the desert region’s supermarkets are fretting over fruit and vegetable imports trapped in a backlog of flights created by Europe’s ash cloud. As European air space reopens to
flights that were closed by the cloud of volcanic ash which drif ted over from Iceland, retailers and consumers in Gulf Arab countries are literally taking stock as airlines scramble to shift a backlog of cargo and passengers that Continued on Page 14