Place Vendôme `to generate 5,000 jobs by 2018`
Transcription
Place Vendôme `to generate 5,000 jobs by 2018`
BUSINESS | Page 1 QP to hand over management of some areas at Mesaieed Industrial City to Manateq INDEX 2 – 10, 28 QATAR 26, 27 COMMENT 1 – 7, 11 – 16 REGION 11 BUSINESS ARAB WORLD 12 CLASSIFIED 8 – 11 SPORTS 1 – 12 INTERNATIONAL 13 – 25 SPORT | Page 1 Serena, Murray cruise at rain-lashed Wimbledon Prayer times Fajr....3.17 Zuhr....11.37 Asr....3.00 Maghrib.....6.31 Isha.....8.01 Ambulances and police setting up a perimeter, next to people lying on the ground, after two explosions hit Istanbul’s Ataturk airport yesterday. WEDNESDAY Vol. XXXVII No. 10134 June 29, 2016 Ramadan 24, 1437 AH www. gulf-times.com 2 Riyals The Place Vendôme project will feature a mall containing over 500 retail outlets, restaurants and a precinct that will showcase some of the world’s leading luxury brands 10 die as suicide bombers attack T Istanbul airport By Peter Alagos Business Reporter AFP Istanbul A t least 10 people were killed yesterday evening in a suicide attack at the international terminal of Istanbul’s Ataturk airport, Turkish Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag said. Two explosions hit the airport - Turkey’s biggest - followed by gunfire, local television channels reported, adding that all flights had been suspended. “Unfortunately 10 people have been killed according to a preliminary toll,” Bozdag told parliament in Ankara. Sixty people were wounded, six of them very seriously, state news agency Anadolu said. More than a dozen ambulances raced to Ataturk airport, CNN Turk said. The channel cited witnesses as saying two violent blasts shook the international terminal, sparking panic among passengers. “It was very strong, everyone panicked and started running in all directions,” one witness told CNN Turk. Police set up a perimeter around the site, television images showed. Turkey has been hit by a string of deadly attacks in the past year, blamed on both Kurdish rebels and the Islamic State (IS) group. The Turkish airport attack also follows co-ordinated suicide bombings at Brussels airport and a city metro station in March that left 32 people dead. Qatar condemns explosion Qatar has strongly condemned the explosion at Istanbul’s Ataturk airport. While condemning the “cowardly criminal attacks which run counter to all moral values and human principles as well as the teachings of the revealed religions”, the Foreign Ministry, in a statement, expressed Qatar’s “solidarity with the brotherly Republic of Turkey and support to all measures it takes to maintain its security and stability”. The statement said that “Qatar’s support to Turkey stems from its firm position of rejecting violence and terrorism in all its forms and manifestations”. It expressed Qatar’s sincere condolences to the victims’ families, the Turkish government and people, wishing the injured speedy recovery. Istanbul, a major tourism hub that is home to some 15mn people, has suffered several attacks in recent months, including a bombing in the heart of the tourist district that killed a dozen German visitors and was blamed on IS. Two months later, three Israelis and an Iranian were killed in a bombing on the city’s main Istiklal shopping street, an attack also blamed on IS. A blast on the tarmac at the other Istanbul airport, Sabiha Gokcen, killed a cleaner and wounded another in December, damaging several planes. Located just outside Turkey’s biggest city, Ataturk airport served more than 60mn passengers in 2015, making it one of the busiest in the world. he multi-billion Qatari riyal mixed-use development project, Place Vendôme, which combines the hospitality and retail sectors, will generate a minimum of 5,000 jobs once it starts operations in Lusail City by 2018, an official has said. Place Vendôme partner AbdulAziz al-Rabban described the project as “one-of-its-kind” in the country, and “will take Qatar to another level of shopping and tourism”. “You cannot see another project like this anywhere else in the country. In the region, there are around one or maybe two projects similar to Place Vendôme,” al-Rabban told Gulf Times. Place Vendôme is a project of United Developers, a group of four Qatari investors who partnered to align their expertise in retail, real estate, construction and contracting. United Developers envisions Place Vendôme as a “groundbreaking example” of the entrepreneurship, vision and energy of Qatari commitment to the nation’s development. The project, which broke ground on March 17, 2014, is scheduled to open in 2018, along with two hotels and a serviced apartments complex, which were unveiled to the media in the presence of other Place Vendôme AbdulAziz al-Rabban: Place Vendôme partner Sean Kelly: Place Vendôme project director partners, Ibrahim al-Asmakh and Sheikh Khaled bin Nasser al-Thani. Also present during the event were Place Vendôme project director Sean Kelly and Starwood Hotels & Resorts Africa and Middle East’s Acquisitions and Development senior vice president Neil George. Aside from the three mid-rise properties located inside Place Vendôme, the project will feature a mall containing over 500 retail outlets, restaurants, a central entertainment, and a unique luxury precinct that will showcase some of the world’s leading luxury brands. “The two hotels, Luxury Collection Hotel and Le Méridien Lusail, as well as the service apartments, will be located beside the mall, which means that we will always have tenants, plus visitors who either want to stay in Qatar or people who want to enjoy our other amenities. “To any standalone hotel, a mixed- used development plan is an advantage. The location of the Place Vendôme is also fantastic because it is in front the sea – you have a shopping mall, elegant hotels, and a magnificent view,” al-Rabban explained. Asked about the construction phase of Place Vendôme, al-Rabban said: “The physical structure of Place Vendôme is already 95% complete. From what I understand, the entire construction phase will be completed by mid-August this year. From then on, we will start applying the finishing touches to the facilities.” On employment generation, Kelly added: “We think at a minimum there would be 5,000 jobs available when the mall is fully-operational by 2018. It can vary a bit, depending on what the retailers would do but with 500 retailers and 650 hotel rooms, and by the time we have got all the maintenance and security staff, it could reach to that number.” Page 6 Petrol prices to go up in July P etrol prices in Qatar will go up next month while there will not be any change in the diesel price in July, shows an announcement by the Ministry of Energy & Industry. According to the Ministry of Energy & Industry the 91-octane Premium gasoline will cost QR1.3/litre and Super QR1.4 in July. The price fixed for this month is QR1.2/litre (Premium) and QR1.3/l (Super), which will be in effect until June 30. Diesel, however, will remain unchanged at QR1.4/l in July. Fuel prices in Qatar were allowed to fluctuate in response to changes in the global market from May 1, the Ministry of Energy and Industry said. Every month, a special committee comprising representatives from various government bodies, would review fuel prices (gasoline and diesel) and make recommendations on proposed prices for the local market accordingly. Cameron holds talks with EU peers following Brexit vote DPA Brussels Fasting times Iftar today ............................. 6.31pm Suhoor tomorrow.............. 3.17am +1.78 +3.84% in Our Lord! Give us in this world that which is good and in the Hereafter that which is good, and save us from the torment of the Fire! (Du’aa) 48.11 +51.19 +0.52% d RAMADAN THOUGHT 9,867.94 +269.48 +1.57% he R is bl TA 978 A 1 Q since Eid holidays for ministries An Abu Dhabi court has jailed the wife of a prominent Emirati for 10 years after convicting her of spying for Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah movement, local media reported yesterday. The Emirati woman of Lebanese origin was found guilty of “handing over classified information about top leaders, including how political and economic decisions are made at the highest authorities in the country, to two members of the intelligence wing of Hezbollah”, Gulf News reported. Page 11 17,409.72 pu QATAR | Announcement Woman jailed for spying NYMEX Place Vendôme ‘to generate 5,000 jobs by 2018’ In brief REGION | Conviction QE Latest Figures GULF TIMES The Emiri Diwan has announced the holiday dates of Eid al-Fitr for ministries and other government entities and public institutions as well as Qatar Central Bank (QCB), banks, financial institutions under QCB’s jurisdiction and Qatar Financial Markets Authority (QFMA). Holidays for ministries and other government entities and public institutions start on Sunday, July 3, and end on Monday, July 11. Employees are to resume work on Tuesday, July 12. As for QCB, banks, financial institutions under QCB’s jurisdiction and QFMA, the QCB governor shall specify the start and end dates of the vacation. DOW JONES B ritain’s outgoing Prime Minister David Cameron yesterday sought to appease his European Union (EU) counterparts at talks in Brussels after his country’s momentous decision to leave the bloc, but nerves remained raw amid disagreement over the steps ahead. Thursday’s referendum, paving the way for one of the EU’s top three economies to take the unprecedented path of exiting the bloc, has triggered political mayhem in Britain, caused global market panic and sent shock waves across the EU. “While we are leaving the EU, we mustn’t turn our backs on Europe. These countries are our neighbours, our friends, our allies, our partners,” Cameron, who announced his resignation in the wake of the referendum outcome, said as he arrived at the Brussels summit. Britain’s exit talks should be “as constructive as possible”, and the country should aim for “the closest possible relationship in terms of trade and cooperation and security,” Cameron added. Pages 17, 18, 26 HIA takes steps to handle passenger rush during Eid holidays H amad International Airport (HIA) has made elaborate arrangements to handle passenger rush during the peak travel season that begins on June 30. In a communique yesterday HIA advised passengers to check-in online, arrive three hours prior to their flight and use the E-gates (wherever applicable) to avoid queues. HIA reminded passengers that check-in will close 60 minutes prior to flight departure. Eid al-Fitr holidays for ministries, government entities and public institutions in Qatar will begin on July 3 and end on July 11. Effectively, the holidays will commence on July 1 due to the weekend. Hence, Hamad International Airport in Doha is expected to witness heavy rush of passengers from June 30. HIA advised general public who are dropping off or collecting passengers to use the short-term car park, which provides complimentary parking for the first 30 minutes and costs QR5 an hour thereafter. Passengers also have the option of parking their vehicles at the airport’s long-term car park, which provides A view of Hamad International Airport (HIA) , Doha. customers with a regular shuttle service to the main terminal every 1520 minutes. The east short-term car park is more convenient for passengers flying with Qatar Airways, while the west short-term car park (map) is better suited for passengers travelling with all other airlines. A lost ticket will cost QR35, HIA cautioned the users of parking facility. Long-term car park facility is located on the southern end of the passenger terminal. It offers covered and secured parking for up to 60 days with complementary shuttle service to the terminal every 15-20 minutes. For every completed day (24 hours), QR45 will be charged at the long-term car park facility. A lost ticket will cost QR35 in addition to the actual tariff for the duration of parking, HIA said. Meanwhile, Qatar Duty Free is offering passengers travelling by Qatar Airways 10% off shopping vouchers for online check-in. For assistance during travel and updates on deals and offers, passengers can download the ‘HIAQatar’ App available for both Android and iPhone. 2 Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 QATAR QC panel discusses recruitment of domestic workers T he recruitment committee at the Qatar Chamber (QC) held a meeting headed by QC honorary treasurer and head of the committee Ali Abdullatif al-Misnad. Various topics related to the recruitment of domestic workers, including maids and ways to ease the procedures of recruiting such category of workers, were discussed at the meeting. The members discussed the possibility of opening up the market to recruit workers from various countries to reduce the potential cost on families, de- lay in the arrival of the maids and the review of all the clauses of the employment contract to maintain the rights of both the employer and the worker. The committee also reviewed a suggestion by representatives of the recruitment agencies to hold a joint meeting with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) and representatives of the embassies of labour exporting countries to discuss the potential of expanding the list of countries from where maids could be recruited into Qatar. Al-Misnad pointed out QC has addressed MOFA Consular Affairs regarding the recommendations of its first meeting last week. He said that progress on related issues will be followed accordingly to arrive at practical solutions in such an important issue as the recruitment of domestic workers because it affects the lives of many families in the country. The Ministry of Administrative Development, Labour and Social Affairs will be also directly informed about any progress on the issues to take the necessary procedures accordingly. The next meeting of the committee is to be held after Eid al-Fitr. Rota brings cheer to Rumailah Hospital residents R each Out To Asia (Rota) volunteers recently visited Rumailah Hospital’s Residential Care Community and shared Iftar with disabled residents as part of their Ramadan 2016 outreach initiative. The joyful event, sponsored by Occidental Petroleum Corporation (OXY), highlighted the importance of community service in Qatar and brought together diverse members of the Qatari community to socialise and celebrate Ramadan together. “I really enjoyed the event and I’m extremely grateful to have been part of this activity. To see all the children enjoying themselves was such an amazing feeling and I would like to say thank you to Rota for organising this,” said Rota volunteer Anita Madhoo. Rota, a member of Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development (QF), has an established reputation for bridging the gap between differ- Rota’s Ramadan 2016 Project aims to strengthen relationships with community-based partners. ent communities in Qatar, while building a strong culture of dedicated community service. Mohammed al- Saleh, national programmes director, Rota, said: “Ramadan presents a great opportunity for Rota to further its community outreach initiatives. Our Ramadan 2016 Project gives Rota volunteers the chance to engage with members of the wider community. As part of Rota’s Ramadan 2016 Project, volunteers have shared Iftar Katara plans special programme for Eid T Dr al-Sulaiti with the winners of the contest. he Cultural Village Foundation, Katara, is set to conduct a special programme for Eid al-Fitr festivities, which will go on for four days. In an extension of its Ramadan festival ‘Qur’an and the creation of man,’ Katara will present a programme titled “A child’s dream” on Katara esplanade with three shows a day in Arabic and English. The first show in Arabic starts at 7.30pm, the second in English at 8.30pm and the third in Arabic will start at 9.30pm. Besides, Eid gifts will be distributed on children after the end of the first and second shows. Fireworks shows will start after the conclusion of the third show daily. Dr Khalid bin Ibrahim al- Sulaiti, Katara general manager, said that Katara concludes Ramadan festivals with Eid festivities, and is keen to make it a joyous for all its visitors. He pointed out that the aim of the Eid festival is to give Katara’s visitors, whether from inside or outside Qatar, a sense of the festive atmosphere of the good occasion and give them an opportunity to spend a good time in an outdoor family trip. He further affirmed that Katara has become a well-known tourist destination in Qatar and attracts a growing number of tourists from inside and outside the country, especially the GCC region. Accordingly, the shows will be in Arabic and English, taking into consideration the culture diversity of the visitors of the place. “We work hard to attract more visitors and let them enjoy the great variety of our activities and functions, as Katara has become an attractive destination inside and outside the country,” said Dr al-Sulaiti. The shows are presented by a group of performing troupes in acrobatics, circus, jugglers, dancers and other performers. A specially designed equipped with all the necessary sophisticated machines and lightening and sound systems will be erected for the Eid festival. In the meantime, Dr al-Sulaiti has honoured the children who won the first places at Katara Ramadan contest for the Holy Qur’an memorisation and presented them with prizes. with patients at the Rumailah Hospital Residential Care Community for the last six years. These initiatives serve as an ideal opportunity for new Rota volunteers to gain invaluable community service experience.” Ikea Patrull safety gates for children recalled The Ministry of Economy and Commerce, in collaboration with Hamad and Mohamed Al- Futtaim, has announced the recall of Ikea Patrull safety gates for children as the safety lock could open unexpectedly and pose a fall risk to children. Ikea has urged customers who have a Patrull safety gate for children to immediately remove it and return it to the store for a full refund. The ministry said the recall campaign comes within the framework of its ongoing efforts to protect consumers and ensure that suppliers follow up on product defects and recall defective items. The ministry said that it will co-ordinate with the supplier to ensure the recall of defective products and will communicate with customers to ensure that the necessary procedures have been taken. Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 5 QATAR Participants of the initiative. Jaidah Automotive is title sponsor of 7asanat Olympics M ore than 250 volunteers have taken part in a number of initiatives as part of the third 7asanat Olympics, the annual Ramadan volunteer programme. Together with Jaidah Automotive, the exclusive dealer of Chevrolet in Qatar, the initiative has been launched by The Youth Company (TYC), Qatar’s social youth enterprise. The 7asanat Olympics serve as a platform for volunteering and engaging with the community during the holy month. The volunteers have taken part in activities such as distributing 3,000 Iftar boxes at traffic signals before and after Iftar and teaming up with Qatar Charity for the #Yestahloon initiative to clothe low-income workers, collecting clothing and household good donations from many residential compounds in Qatar. Jaidah Automotive, title sponsor of this year’s 7asanat Olympics, has provided its Jaidah Square showroom as the #7asanat16 headquarters for the programme, allowing volunteers to prepare and launch all the activities from there. It has also provided several vehicles for use by the 7asanat team to transport and deliver charitable Iftar meals and donations. As part of the programme, the volunteers have visited children at nu- merous Hamad Medical Corporation facilities and elderly citizens in their homes to entertain them and join them for Iftar meals courtesy of the initiative’s sponsors. Khalid Samir, director of operations at Jaidah Automotive, said: “We are delighted to be the title sponsor of The Youth Company’s 7asanat Olympics this year, a fantastic initiative led by the youth in Qatar with the aim of giving back to our communities. As a leading organisation in Qatar, CSR is at the forefront of our goals and encouraging a culture of giving back to our community is core and reflects our company’s values.” Mannai Corporation hosts Iftar for staff M annai Corporation has hosted an Iftar for the employees of the group. The event, held at the group’s accommodation facility in the Salwa Industrial Area, was attended by 600 employees and management from various divisions of Mannai Group. Khalid Mannai, vice chairman, Executive Committee, Mannai Corporation, said: “The annual Iftar gathering is an expression of our gratitude to the commitments made by all the members of the group and provides an opportunity to foster and nurture relationship with our staff and colleagues.” 6 Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 QATAR Real estate transactions The total value of trading in real estate sales contracts registered with the Real Estate Registration Department at the Ministry of Justice from 19 to 23 June mounted to QR 210.6mn. According to the weekly bulletin issued by the department, the list of properties that were traded by sale includes open plots of land, houses and multi purpose buildings, which are located in the municipalities of Doha, Umm Salal, Al Khor, Al Dhakira, Al Rayyan, Al Daayen, Al Wakrah and Al Shamal. Cyprus FM meets Qatar’s envoy Minister of Foreign Affairs of Cyprus Ioannis Kasoulides has met Qatar’s outgoing ambassador to Cyprus Hussein bin Ahmed al-Humaid.The Cypriot Foreign Minister thanked the Qatari ambassador for his efforts in enhancing the relations between Qatar and Cyprus. Lusail to get two world-class hotels, serviced apartments By Peter Alagos Business Reporter T wo world-class hotels and a serviced apartments complex that will add a total of 650 rooms to the luxury development in Qatar are set to rise inside Place Vendôme, a multi-billion Qatari riyal mixed-use development project of United Developers in Lusail City, an official has announced. Ibrahim al-Asmakh made the announcement yesterday in the presence of fellow Place Vendôme partners – Sheikh Khaled bin Nasser al-Thani and AbdulAziz alRabban, project director Sean Kelly, and Neil George, senior vice-president, Acquisitions and Development, Starwood Hotels & Resorts Africa and Middle East. Al-Asmakh also said Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide will operate the three mid-rise properties, which are slated to open in 2018. “We’re pleased to be collaborating with Starwood Hotels & Resorts on the development of the Luxury Collection Hotel and Le Méridien Lusail. The two hotels and serviced apartments complex are a perfect match for our brand and will help make guests’ stay at Place Vendôme an unforgettable experience,” Kelly said. According to Kelly, the Luxury Collection Hotel and Le Méridien Lusail and serviced apartments complex will cater to travellers “looking for a lavish hospitality experience in the heart of Qatar’s newest Neil George, Ibrahim al-Asmakh, Sheikh Khaled bin Nasser al-Thani, AbdulAziz al-Rabban and Sean Kelly during the unveiling of the two hotels and serviced apartments complex inside Place Vendôme . PICTURE: Jayan Orma shopping and entertainment destination.” Luxury Collection Hotel, Kelly said, “will embody classical Parisian elegance,” and will feature 250 luxuriously-appointed guest rooms, including two presidential suites. He noted that the Luxury Collection Hotel will mark the entry of the brand into Qatar, offering global explorers “a unique gateway to this visionary destination.” Kelly said Le Méridien Lusail will offer a more contemporary style that reflects culture and design from across France. It will feature 250 guest rooms, including a presidential suite in one wing, while the other wing will offer 150 serviced apartments with a range of options from studios to four-bedroom suites designed to cater for individuals or large family groups. Le Méridien, he said, will offer signature features such The retail mix of Place Vendôme aims to cater to the widest possible audience while still maintaining a certain exclusivity. as Le Méridien Hub, an innovative reinterpretation of the traditional hotel lobby. Kelly added the hotels will serve as hospitality anchors for the project. The Luxury Collection Hotel will connect to the mall via the department store adjacent to the luxury court. Le Méridien Lusail and the serviced apartments will sit at the northern end of the development and will connect to the high street fashion section of the mall. Together, the hotels will contain up to 20 food and beverage outlets, including fine dining options overlooking the canal and a deli café, plus swimming pools, rooftop lounges, kids’ clubs, ballrooms and event space, a spa, and a business centre. “We are delighted to work with United Developers to introduce The Luxury Collection and Le Meridien in Lusail, allowing us to strengthen and diversify our brand portfolio across the country. These signings reinforce our commitment to Qatar, where we will double our current portfolio by 2020,” George said. Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 7 QATAR Changes to Civil Defence Traffic diversion on Lijmiliya Road certified buildings must T be approved again: official A ny change in the structure or purpose of a Civil Defence certified building should be approved again if the certification is to remain valid, an official has said. First Lieutenant Abdullah Essa al-Kaabi was giving a presentation at an introductory session on Monday about the New Civil Defence Law number 5 of 2015, organised by the Legal Affairs Section of the General Directorate of Civil Defence (GDCD)’s Prevention Department. The public session was attended by many business owners, landlords and consultant offices in the country. GDCD assistant director general Brigadier Aman Saad alSulaiti, Prevention Department director Brigadier Ibrahim Abdurrahman al-Muftah, and Le- gal Affairs Section head Captain Ahmad Saad al-Khulaifi were present. Throughout the session, all the articles of the law were explained. Legal expert at Legal Affairs Section Dr Mohamed Sulaiman presented all the related articles of the law with adequate explanation. He also answered the questions of the attendees. First Lieutenant al-Kaabi explained the mandatory safety measures and requirements for a building to be eligible for the Civil Defence clearance certificate. These include approval of architectural drawings of the building, alarm systems and firefighting equipment before starting the construction, approval of special engineering plans of ventilation systems according to requirements of the authority concerned, and approaching the authorities concerned to renew the certification in a maximum period of seven days before the licence expires. The participants were given the opportunity to voice their concerns and clarify doubts on the topics. Brigadier al-Muftah stressed that all officials are ready to co-operate with the parties concerned with the ultimate purpose of enhancing the safety of people and property. “I appreciate that the law is new and many of you are not fully aware of its requirements and stipulations, so our offices are open for you and you can approach and contact us anytime and we are ready to co-operate with you in all possible ways,” he concluded. Slight drop in temperature but no respite from heat A drop in temperature is expected in Doha and eastern coastal areas today due to the prevalence of easterly winds, the Qatar Met department has said. However, the mercury level will continue to be above the mid-40C level in the central and western parts of the country, according to information available on the weather office’s social media platforms. Yesterday, the highest temperature recorded in the country was 48C in Turayna, followed by 47C in Al Khor, Sheehaniya, Batna and Karana. In the capital, a highest temperature of 44C was recorded in the Doha airport area. The Met department had earlier forecast that the temperature was expected to reach 48C in the southern and central areas yesterday. The forecast for inshore areas today says it will be hazy in some places at first, followed by a hot day with slight dust and humid conditions. Hazy to misty conditions are also likely in some areas by night. Offshore areas, too, are expected to see hazy to misty conditions in some places at times along with some clouds. A maximum temperature of 41C has been forecast in Doha today. he Public Works Authority, Ashghal, has announced a six-month traffic diversion from tomorrow on Lijmiliya Road to allow for the demolition of the existing carriageway and the construction of a permanent dual carriageway. Road users travelling to and from the Lijmiliya area will be diverted to a 1km parallel diversion route, which will provide one lane in each direction, before rejoining Lijmiliya Road, as shown on the map. This traffic diversion is the last one planned for Lijmiliya Road which forms part of Ashghal’s Expressway Al SheehaniyaLeatooriya-Lijmiliya project. Ashghal will install road signs advising road users of the diversion. The authority has requested all road users to abide by the speed limit which will be 50kph in the traffic diversion area, and follow the road signs to ensure their safety. Sections of street in Old Slata area to be closed for six months T he Public Works Authority, Ashghal, will implement a closure for six months from Friday on two sections of Al Muthaf Street in the Old Slata area. Each is about 30m long and on one lane in each direction, near the Old Slata intersection. The closure until end of December this year is in co-ordination with the Traffic Police Department. During this period, the second lane of Al Muthaf Street will remain open to traffic in both directions, as shown in the map. This closure is required to facilitate the implementation of construction works of the deep shafts as well as microtunneling works for the sewer lines in the area. Ashghal will install road signs to advise motorists of the diversion. The authority requests all road users to abide by the speed limits, and follow the road signs to ensure their safety. 8 Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 QATAR QF Radio to go off air by October-end Q F Radio, an initiative of Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development (QF), will go off air from October this year. QF revealed yesterday that QF Radio will be entering a transitional phase over the next few months and will cease transmissions at the end of October 2016. Past and current successful programmes will be revisited and celebrated over the next few months. The Ramadan and summer schedules will be maintained and the general public will be able to enjoy some of the programmes until the end of October. “We are truly proud of the network’s accomplishments, both in Arabic and in English, over the past seven years” Since its inception in 2009, QF Radio has served an essential role in advancing the strong awareness that Qatar Foundation’s initiatives enjoy today. Through its quality programming and wide exposure, QF Radio helped communicate the QF message in the first phase of its development and was successful in accomplishing its mandate. QF has grown exponentially and achieved results that significantly impact across each of its core areas of focus in Education, Research and Community Development. As the organisation enters a new phase of sustainable development and builds on its foundation and past achievements to deliver more focused results, it must continue to be more efficient and beneficial to the public, and evolve the way it communicates with its audiences. Mohammed al-Beshri, man- QIC Group holds Suhoor for staff ager, QF Media Centre said: “We are truly proud of the network’s accomplishments, both in Arabic and in English, over the past seven years. QF Radio has been a key player in Qatar’s broadcast sector, and succeeded in connecting QF with the local community through its innovative and diversify youth and educational programming.” “Additionally, QF Radio has covered all of the foundation’s events and trained many of its universities’ students, who participated in presenting and producing an array of live and recorded programmes.” NHRC chief meets Syrian Coalition official Chairman of the National Human Rights Committee (NHRC) Dr Ali bin Smaikh al-Marri met the legal adviser of the Syrian National Coalition Haitham al-Maleh, in presence of the Syrian ambassador to Qatar Nizar al-Haraki. They discussed means of co-operation in issues of mutual concern, and the mechanisms of action for the establishment of a human rights culture. GU-Q professor’s book wins top award G Qatar Insurance Group has held a Suhoor gathering for its staff and family members in Doha. The Suhoor was attended by Khalifa Turki al-Subaey, QIC Group president and CEO; Ali al-Fadala, QIC Group senior deputy president and CEO (in picture); and Salem al-Mannai, deputy Group president and CEO of QIC – Mena region. Commenting on the occasion, al-Subaey said: “To celebrate the success of the Group and express our appreciation to our employees, we organised this special gathering to instil a sense of goodness and giving, which is at the core of the QIC family. Suhoor serves as a great platform for enhancing communication and socialisation among our employees. It also catalyses strengthening of bonds of friendship and helps develop a unified family spirit among the Group’s staff members.” eorgetown University in Qatar (GU-Q)’s professor Mohamed Zayani has been awarded the 2016 Global Communication and Social Change Best Book Award from the International Communication Association (ICA). Zayani’s book, Networked Publics and Digital Contention: The Politics of Everyday Life in Tunisia (Oxford University Press, 2015), is part of the Oxford Studies in Digital Politics Series. Zayani received his award at the 66th Annual ICA Conference, which was held earlier this month in Fukuoka, Japan, and convened under the theme “communicating with power”. The ICA, which is associated with the United Nations, has more than 4,500 members in 80 countries. Based on extensive fieldwork and in-depth interviews, the book looks at how the Internet has redefined politics within authoritarian contexts. Manuel Castells, Wallis Annenberg Chair of Communication Technology and Society at Zayani receives his award at the 66th Annual ICA Conference. the University of Southern California, described Zayani’s book as “one of the best analyses of the social movements that led to the transformation of the Arab world, and a major contri- bution to the understanding of social movements of the digital age”. Craig Calhoun, president of the London School of Economics and Political Science, noted: “The case of Tunisia is of global interest as well as crucial to understanding the Middle East, and Zayani’s Networked Publics and Digital Contention offers a superb analysis.” Zayani is professor of Critical Theory and director of the Media and Politics Programme at GU-Q. He is also an affiliate faculty with the Georgetown Communication, Culture and Technology Graduate Programme (CCT) and co-director of the CCT Summer Institute on Media, Technology and Digital Culture in the Middle East. Networked Publics and Digital Contention is the first of three book projects supported by the Georgetown University Centre for International and Regional Studies (CIRS). Zayani’s book Bullets and Bulletins: Media and Politics in the Wake of the Arab Uprisings (with CIRS manager and editor for publications Suzi Mirgani) will be published by Oxford University Press. He is currently completing a new collaborative book project titled The Digital Middle East. 10 Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 QATAR/RAMADAN Furniture showroom is When is the payment closed for misleading of Zakatul-Fitr due? consumers on prices I T An official from MEC pasting closure notices outside the furniture store on Salwa Road. he Ministry of Economy and Commerce (MEC) has announced a twoweek administrative closure of a furniture store, located on Salwa Road for charging prices contrary to what were advertised. The shop had been advertising through local newspapers the sale of furniture at wholesale prices whereas, in reality, it was misleading consumers as the advertised prices were higher than true prices registered on the store’s computer. The ministry has intensified its campaigns throughout the holy month of Ramadan in a bid to monitor markets and commercial activity to protect consumer rights. Inspectors from the ministry fined the store and compelled its closure for a two-week period in line with article (6) of law number (8) of 2008. The law prohibits the sale, display and promotion of counterfeit and fraudulent products. A product is considered fraudulent if it fails to meet standards or has expired. The administrative closure is published on the ministry’s website as well as two daily newspapers at the offending store’s own expense in line with article (3) of law no (8) on consumer protection. The ministry stated that it is determined to protect consumer rights and will intensify its inspection campaigns to crack down on all violations of the consumer protection law. The ministry said it will refer violators of laws and ministerial decrees to the competent authorities, who will take appropriate action against perpetrators in order to protect the rights of consumers. The Dena armchair is the epitome of dual fabric styling. Habitat sets benchmark in modern interior design Sourced from Britain, France, and Italy by a select design panel, Habitat, a part of AlMana Group, has created a niche in contemporary interior design by owning a collection of furniture, sofas, lighting, and kitchenware. All of the products featured in its showroom are functional, yet beautiful and well made. “The DNA of Habitat is that we choose products to appeal to young moderns with lively taste,” the store said in a statement. Combining optimism and cheerfulness, Habitat has set a benchmark in product creativity and embodies the essence of the art of living. The Dena armchair is the epitome of dual fabric styling. It elegantly combines premium quality, chic and hardwearing Italian leather with very soft and beautifully textured Italian fabric. The padded backrest is a mixture of foam and feathers to ensure maximum comfort for reading. Its contemporary design means it can be easily combined with a sofa in either leather or fabric. Habitat is located on Old Airport Road next to Crowne Plaza Hotel. maams Ash-Shaafi’ee and Ahmad state that the Zakatul-Fitr payment becomes obligatory after sunset on Eid’s eve, or the last day of fasting, because this is the end of Ramadan. Abu Haneefah (and also Ash-Shaafi’ee in an earlier opinion of his) held that the sum of Zakatul-Fitr becomes obligatory at the dawn of Eid day because it is reported that the Prophet, sallallaahu ‘alaihi wa sallam, commanded his Companions to pay Zakatul-Fitr before going out to perform the prayer of Eid [Al-Bukhari and Muslim]. (Therefore, if one has a newborn before the dawn of Eid, or one dies after the sunset of the final day of fasting, his or her Zakatul-Fitr must be paid, according to Abu Haneefah). Also, according to Abu Haneefah it is possible to pay Zakatul-Fitr in Ramadan in advance of Zakatul-Fitr, or even just prior to the commencement of Ramadan. Ash-Shaafi’ee however, holds that Zakatul-Fitr can be given on the first day of fasting Ramadan. Imaams Maalik and Ahmad state that its payment becomes obligatory after the sunset of the last day of Ramadan, but can be paid one or two days earlier. Where should Zakatul-Fitr be paid? In general, the best place for the collection and distribution of one’s Zakaah and charity -- and this includes Zakatul-Fitr -- is one’s locality or community, be it in one’s city, state, or country. This is strongly implied in the statement of the Prophet, sallallaahu ‘alaihi wa sallam, in sending the famed Companion Mu’aath Ibn Jabal to teach the people of Yemen. He said to him: “Inform them that Allah has made the paying of Zakaah obligatory on them. Take it from their rich and give it to their poor.” There are provisions for transferring Zakaah resources to other communities among Muslims; however, special guidelines for doing so have been established by Muslim scholars in accordance with Islamic legislation, to which the institutions responsible for the collection and distribution of Zakaah among Muslims are to adhere. Zakatul-Fitr: A favourable sign for our community The re-emergence of Muslim concern for the paying and collection of all Zakaah resources and charities -especially Zakatul-Fitr -- is an auspicious sign, indeed, for the Muslim community. Zakaah has increasingly taken a central place in contemporary Muslim discourse, as its dynamic (almost miraculous) possibilities are again being realised by Muslims. Several conferences on this topic have taken place in Kuwait, Pakistan, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt in recent decades. Their focuses have been diverse. A good summary of their scholarly recommendations concerning Zakatul-Fitr, however, is represented in the Sixth International Conference on Contemporary Zakaah Issues held in Kuwait in 1997. They are summed up herein. 1. Zakatul-Fitr is obligatory upon every Muslim who has the food or provision to sustain himself, and those whom he is obligated to support, on the eve and the day of Eid, provided that this exceeds his basic needs. 2. A man is obliged to pay ZakatulFitr for his wife and minor children who have no money of their own. In the case of one who has independent children, one is not obliged for their payment. 3. What is obligatory is the giving of a Saa’ (four handfuls) of dates, barley, raisins, or other such grain, equal to about 2.25kg of wheat. Originally, the giving of Zakatul-Fitr was limited to the kinds of food that had been stated in the relevant statement of the Prophet . However, jurists have established (through proper methods) that it may be given out of other commonly consumed foods, such as rice, meat, milk and so forth, but should be valued in accordance with the items specified by the Prophet, sallallaahu ‘alaihi wa sallam. 4. Zakatul-Fitr must be given before the prayer of Eid. It is forbidden to delay it until after the Eid day. If one, for any reason, is prevented from giving it at that particular time, one must pay it after that time passes. If there is a need, Zakatul-Fitr may be given at any time from the beginning of the month of Ramadan that is, its first day-- until the end of the specified time [of Eid day]. 5. It is permissible for one to delegate another to give Zakatul-Fitr on one’s behalf. 6. It is permissible for the institutions that collect Zakatul-Fitr to exchange it from goods to currency, and vice versa, based on the general interest of the community. 7. It is permissible, in special cases, to transfer Zakatul-Fitr collections from the people or locality in which it was collected to nearby communities in more need. And it is equally permissible to spend Zakatul-Fitr in another community, if the giving community has no one in need of it. 8. One must have a clear intention before giving one’s Zakatul-Fitr. If one delegates, or gives permission, to another to give Zakatul-Fitr on his behalf, it is considered an explicit intention. 9. If the community decides, after due process of consultation among its leadership and scholars, to delay the spending of what it has collected from Zakatul-Fitr payments until after the day of Eid, then this may be done, provided that it serves a clear benefit for the community. 10. The Zakatul-Fitr payment should be dedicated to the poor and the needy. In some cases, however, it can be given to eligible recipients of Zakat of wealth; namely those stated by Allah in the following verse (which means): “for the poor and the needy, and for those who work [to administer it], and for those whose hearts are to be reconciled, and for freeing captives (or slaves), and for those in debt, and for the cause of Allah, and for the wayfarer…” [Qur’an 9:60] Article source: http://www.islamweb.net/emainpage/ Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 11 REGION Flare-up in Yemen violence kills 80 AFP Aden A Yemeni tribesman from the Popular Resistance Committees, supporting forces loyal to Yemen’s Saudi-backed President, aims his weapon as he holds a position during fighting against Shia Houthi rebels and their allies in Hilan mountains, west of Marib city. Yemen counter-terror mission shows UAE military ambition Reuters Abu Dhabi/Washington T he United Arab Emirates is deploying its military against Al Qaeda in Yemen, and in the process providing what some see as a badly-needed new template for counter-terrorism in Arab lands. UAE special forces are orchestrating the hunt for Al Qaeda in remote deserts and mountains. Suicide attacks killing 38 in Mukalla on Monday show the challenge. While the UAE helped to eject Al Qaeda from the southern coastal city in April, militant threats persist – the latest attack was claimed by Islamic State, in Yemen a lesser force than Al Qaeda. The Emiratis deployed initially against a different foe – Yemen’s Houthi group, joining a Saudiled campaign last year to try to reverse a bid for national power by a group seen by many Gulf Arabs as a proxy for Iran. The war weakened the Houthis, but in the resulting turmoil Al Qaeda swept across the eastern side of the country, seizing more land than it had ever held and raising tens of millions of dollars from running Mukalla, the country’s third largest port. The UAE’s Al Qaeda push meets a demand made repeatedly by Washington that Gulf Arabs do more to ensure their own security. But a so-called “Obama Doctrine” of relying on local allies instead of big US military deployments abroad to fight militants has been seen as stumbling in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan, despite funding and training of local partners. Yemen may prove a happier example, its supporters hope. The UAE response is to use special forces to try to sharpen a long-running push against Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), seen as one of the militant network’s most capable. The Emiratis are working with the United States to train, manage and equip Yemeni fighters in that effort, signalling they have the stamina to stick with a campaign that could last long after the separate confrontation with the Houthis is resolved. The ability to run combined air, sea and land operations, deploy forces clandestinely and endure scores of troop losses has won acknowledgement from Western states long despairing of the fractured Yemeni army’s ability to tackle Al Qaeda. Retired General Anthony Zinni, former chief of US Central Command, said the UAE was “a top military” in the region and “exponentially more capable than its size might indicate”. “It has also shown the ability to hang in there despite casual- ties. (The UAE) has proven its willingness to fight alongside the US and coalitions.” After months of preparation the UAE orchestrated the ousting of Al Qaeda from Mukalla by Yemeni allies in a complex operation backed by US intelligence support and aerial refuelling. While Al Qaeda said it staged a tactical retreat without losses, it in fact took a beating, coalition sources said. Coalition forces estimate Al Qaeda lost 450 fighters, while the coalition lost 54 Yemeni fighters. Al Qaeda fled inland. “The focus is on not allowing Al Qaeda to recover. Our intent is to keep them on the back foot,” said a senior coalition military official, who declined to be named. “They are the most capable counter-terrorism force on the ground in Yemen,” said a US counter-terrorism official familiar with Yemen, who requested anonymity. Some in the US government initially doubted the UAE’s sincerity in attacking AQAP, he said, but the Mukalla operation showed that “that’s not the case”. The UAE’s counter-terrorism gambit comes with risks. By taking such a central role in Yemen the UAE places itself in the middle of its turbulent politics: In particular its presence mainly in the south risks entanglement in possible unrest arising from a re-energised separa- tist movement, whose demands for independence for the south are growing louder. Despite their cultural affinities, UAE officers must take care not to get on the wrong side of tribes for whom short-term alliances with militants are a survival tactic. Militants continue to assassinate coalition-backed military officers and stage suicide bombings of Yemeni army and police compounds. And while the UAE has poured in more than $400mn in humanitarian aid, Yemenis remain impatient for reconstruction. For now, Abu Dhabi is undaunted by the challenge and insists its campaign protects the whole region. It suggests it has the Gulf Arab heritage to help navigate complex tribal networks. “As non-Westerners we’re able to operate with Yemeni fighters and gain their trust,” the coalition official said. Washington is paying attention. US action against Al Qaeda was at first disrupted by the war with the Houthis, which forced the evacuation in early 2015 of the programme’s US personnel. But after the Mukalla operation, the Pentagon said a small number of military personnel were deployed to help UAE counter-terrorism efforts, in a possible sign of increasing US willingness to re-engage on the ground. A flare-up in violence across Yemen yesterday killed 80 people, nearly half of them civilians, officials said, as lengthy peace talks in Kuwait made no headway. The escalation came after a wave of suicide bombings targeting Yemeni troops killed at least 42 people on Monday in the southeastern city of Mukalla, in attacks claimed by the Islamic State group. It also comes as UN-brokered talks between Iranbacked Houthi rebels and the government of President AbdRabbu Mansour Hadi stuttered despite a visit by UN chief Ban Ki-moon to push the negotiations. In the deadliest violence, warplanes from the pro-government coalition killed 34 people, when they targeted the Shia rebels in the southwestern region of Taiz, a Yemeni military official said. The pre-dawn strike hit a lorry transporting weapons for the Houthis as it crossed a busy road, a provincial official said, adding four women were among the dead, as well as 15 rebels. In the flashpoint city of Taiz, 11 civilians and a soldier were killed when rebels bombed a residential area, a military official said. Hadi promises to uproot terror groups Yemeni President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi has promised to uproot the remnants of terrorist groups and those who support and fund them to undermine the security and stability of the country. Hadi said the war on terrorist groups will not stop whatever the sacrifices are, adding that there is no going back on uprooting terrorism whatever the price is, stressing that Emirati woman jailed for spying AFP Abu Dhabi A n Abu Dhabi court has jailed the wife of a prominent Emirati for 10 years after convicting her of spying for Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah movement, local media reported yesterday. The Emirati woman of Lebanese origin was found guilty of “handing over classified information about top leaders, including how political and economic decisions are made at the highest authorities in the country, to two members of the intelligence wing of Hezbollah,” Gulf News reported. She had also provided “sensitive information” on meetings of senior officials in the United Arab Emir- ates, exploiting her marriage to “a very important person and her relationships with men and women in political circles close to the decisionmaking authority in the country,” the daily added. Local media said the woman was a 48-year-old television presenter they identified by her initials R.M.A. They did not elaborate on her husband’s position but said he had been unaware of her activities. The state security court in Abu Dhabi convicted her of “putting the country’s interests and security at risk by delivering such classified information to the Iranian intelligence through agents of Hezbollah,” Gulf News said. The UAE and other Gulf Arab states have blacklisted Hezbollah as a “terrorist” group. Detained Bahraini activist hospitalised Bahraini human rights activist Nabeel Rajab was taken to hospital yesterday with heart problems, his Twitter account said. The activist, 51, has been repeatedly detained for organising protests and publishing tweets deemed insulting to the Gulf kingdom’s authorities. He was released last year after King Hamad issued a royal pardon “for health reasons”, but was rearrested two weeks ago. “#NabeelRajab Meanwhile, 12 rebels and three loyalist soldiers were killed in clashes in Nahm, northeast of Sanaa, while six other rebels and two soldiers died in fighting in Marib, east of the capital, the official said. In the same province, a coalition warplane hit a vehicle carrying pro-government forces “by mistake”, killing four soldiers and wounding four others, another military official said. Clashes have continued despite a UN-brokered ceasefire that entered into effect on April 11 and paved the way for the peace talks in Kuwait. In the Gulf emirate, Ban appealed on Sunday to warring parties to accept a roadmap for peace and quickly reach a comprehensive settlement to the 15-month-old conflict. The peace roadmap proposed by UN special envoy Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed calls for the formation of a unity government and the withdrawal and disarmament of the rebels. Meanwhile, at least seven civilians including two children were killed in air strikes “probably by drones” on militants which mistakenly hit a nearby house in Mahfed, between the provinces of Abyan and Shabwa in Yemen’s south, an official said. US strikes have taken out a number of senior Al Qaeda commanders in Yemen over the past year. transferred by ambulance to Coronary Care Unit after suffering from heart problems in solitary confinement,” his Twitter account said yesterday. Rajab was apprehended earlier this month at his home in the village of Bani Jamra, near the capital Manama.His lawyer Jalila al-Sayed said yesterday that Rajab will face trial on July 12 on charges “probably related to tweets” which he is said to have either posted or retweeted. Yemenis will overcome the forces of darkness sooner or later. He noted that there is no social incubator for Al Qaeda and Houthis in Yemeni provinces, adding that they and their bloody and destructive ideologies are foreign to Yemen and aim to implement foreign agendas with the use of domestic tools that hate peace, security and stability. Iran hopes embassy attack trial will restore confidence AFP Tehran I ranian President Hassan Rouhani said yesterday that he hopes the trial of protesters accused of ransacking the Saudi embassy in Tehran earlier this year will restore international confidence. “Every country is responsible for the security of its foreign embassies,” Rouhani said in a speech to mark a week of events on justice in Iran. “People want to know how a bunch of rogue individuals who attacked a foreign embassy in breach of the law and against the country’s public security will be dealt with by the judiciary,” he said. The trial of 48 people is due to open in Tehran on July 18. The Saudi embassy and its consulate in Iran’s second city Mashhad were stormed and burned on January 2 in protest against the execution of a prominent Shia cleric in Saudi Arabia. The Gulf kingdom and some of its allies the next day severed diplomatic relations with Iran. Rouhani said a “transparent” judiciary was needed to ensure “people’s trust as well as the world’s trust in our country”. “Today we need a growth in investment for economic prosperity and employment of our youth. We must give assurance to all entrepreneurs and investors that their capital is safe and encourage them to invest,” he added. Ahmadinejad to stand in 2017 elections Former Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has announced that he will stand in the presidential election in spring 2017, Shargh daily reported yesterday. The former speaker for Ahmadinejad’s government, GholamHossein Elham, has informed the board responsible for the election of the ex-president’s intention to stand, the report said. Ahmadinejad was now expected to launch his comeback campaign. He appeared for the first time in public this year on Monday when he gave a speech in Narmak mosque in Tehran, but he neither confirmed nor denied his comeback plan, despite enthusiastic calls from his supporters. 12 Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 ARAB WORLD EgyptAir black box flight recorder ‘has been repaired’ AFP Cairo O ne of the two black box flight recorders from the EgyptAir plane that plunged into the Mediterranean last month has been repaired, Egypt’s investigation commission said yesterday, prompting hopes it could provide clues on why the aircraft went down. The two black box recorders were found two weeks ago, but were too damaged to extract information on what caused the passenger jet to go down. They were sent to France’s BEA air safety agency — which also extracted data from the black boxes of the ill-fated Rio de Janeiro to Paris flight that crashed in 2009 — to be repaired, where they arrived on Monday. Investigators hope the recorders will reveal the cause of the May 19 crash of flight MS804 from Paris to Cairo, in which all 66 people on board were killed. A terror attack has not been ruled out. The black box recorder “has been successfully repaired by the French accident investigation agency laboratory”, the UN chief calls on Israel to lift Gaza Strip blockade well as two Iraqis, two Canadians and one each from Algeria, Belgium, Britain, Chad, Portugal, Saudi Arabia and Sudan. France’s aviation safety agency has said the aircraft transmitted automated messages indicating smoke in the cabin and a fault in the flight control unit minutes before it disappeared. Egyptian investigators confirmed the aircraft had made a 90-degree left turn followed by a 360-degree turn to the right before hitting the sea. The repaired black boxes will be returned to Cairo for analysis in Egypt’s aviation ministry laboratories, the committee previously said. French judges are also probing the May 19 crash. Prosecutors had previously opened a preliminary investigation — a normal procedure when French citizens are involved — and have handed their findings to judges for a “manslaughter” probe. The crash follows the bombing of a Russian passenger over Egypt’s restive Sinai Peninsula last October, killing all 224 passengers and crew. The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for that attack, but there has been no such claim linked to the EgyptAir crash. Lebanon fears more attacks after blasts Reuters Beirut/A-Qaa QNA Gaza City T U N Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon yesterday called for ending the Israeli blockade on the Gaza Strip and described it as “collective punishment”. The UN chief, who is on a daylong visit to Gaza, said in a press conference in a UN-run school that the “blockade on Gaza suffocates its residents, destroys its economy and impedes reconstruction operations”. “The blockade is a collective punishment which must be ended and be held accountable,” he said, adding that the UN is always with the people of Gaza and knows the difficult living conditions they are experiencing. He pointed to the electricity shortage in Gaza and the unemployment that hit 50% among the coastal enclave’s youths. “We must speak openly about the unacceptable hardships faced by the people of Gaza in light of the humiliation, occupation and siege, as well as the division between the Gaza Strip and the West Bank,” Ban said. He called for uniting the West Bank and Gaza under a democratically elected government based upon the political programme of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO). Ban also thanked donors for their efforts in the reconstruction of Gaza, pointing out that 90% of the schools and hospitals were reconstructed. He stressed that the international community “has a great responsibility to work continuously and seriously to achieve peace”, and that the UN will continue to work for a future without occupation and injustice. Ban’s visit to Gaza came at the end of a tour in the Middle East. Before leaving last night, Ban met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Jerusalem and Palestinian officials including Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah and President Mahmoud Abbas. The UN chief urged Netanyahu to take “courageous steps” toward peace as he met the Israeli premier on what is expected to be his farewell visit to Israel and the Palestinian territories. In a statement alongside Netanyahu at the prime minister’s office in Jerusalem, Ban called for efforts to keep the possibility of a two-state solution alive. commission said in a statement. “Tests have been carried out and we can be sure the flight parameters were properly recorded,” the investigators said. “Work to repair the second black box will commence tomorrow.” The Airbus A320 was en route from Paris to Cairo when it crashed in the Mediterranean, with 40 Egyptians and 15 French nationals on board as A masked Palestinian protester wearing pieces of cloth around his body keeps watch following clashes with Israeli police at Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa mosque compound for the third consecutive day yesterday in Jerusalem’s Old City. Aqsa site closed to non-Muslims after violence AFP/QNA Jerusalem I sraeli authorities announced yesterday they were closing Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa mosque compound to non-Muslim visitors after a series of clashes between worshippers and police. The decision will apply until the end of the holy month of Ramadan next week, a police spokeswoman said. Clashes between Muslims and Israeli police have been taking place every morning since Sunday over Jewish visits to the site, with youths throwing stones and security forces firing tear gas and spongetipped bullets. Prior to visiting hours yesterday, a stone hit an elderly Jewish woman in the head at the adjacent Western Wall plaza, police and medics said. She was taken to hospital with light injuries. Islamic officials accused Israeli authorities of breaking a tacit agreement on non-Muslim access to the site during the last 10 days of Ramadan. The period, which began on Sunday, is the most solemn for Muslims and attracts the highest number of worshippers. Non-Muslims, including Jews, are allowed to visit the site during set hours but are barred from praying to avoid provoking tensions. Meanwhile, a Palestinian was shot and injured and dozens others suffocated during clashes with Israeli forces in Ash-Shuyukh and Sa’ir towns, northeast of Hebron yesterday. Israeli forces raided the vicinity of a dispensary in AshShuyukh and the Sair locality of Ras al-Arud in the southern West Bank, triggering clashes with local Palestinians, state news agency (WAFA) reported. Soldiers opened live fire at local Palestinians who protested the raid, hitting and injuring a Palestinian young man with a live round in his foot. Dozens of local Palestinians suffocated as Israeli soldiers showered them with tear gas canisters. This came as forces raided the Hebron neighbourhoods of Ras al-Jora, Ein Sara, alRameh, al-Kassara, Jabal Johar and the main fruit market, interrogating many locals and inspecting their ID cards. he Lebanese government warned yesterday of a heightened terrorist threat after eight suicide bombers targeted a Christian village at the border with Syria, the latest spillover of that country’s conflict into Lebanon. The village of Al-Qaa was targeted on Monday in two waves of suicide attacks that killed five people. The first group of bombers attacked before dawn and the second later at night, two of them blowing themselves up near a church. Security officials believe Islamic State militants were behind the attack. There has been no claim of responsibility. In reference to the number of attackers, the Lebanese government said the attack and the “unfamiliar way” it was carried out represented a new phase of “confrontation between the Lebanese state and evil terrorism”. Prime Minister Tammam Salam “expressed his fear that what happened in Al-Qaa is the start of a new wave of terrorist operations in different areas of Lebanon”, Information Minister Ramzi Jreij said in televised comments after a cabinet meeting. Militants have repeatedly struck in Lebanon since the eruption of the war in neighbouring Syria, where the powerful Lebanese group Hezbollah is fighting in support of President Bashar al-Assad. Interior Minister Nohad Machnouk said the attackers had come from inside Syria, and not refugee camps hosting Syrian refugees who number more than 1mn in Lebanon, according to the UN refugee agency UNHCR. Army commander General Jean Kahwaji said militants had started a new phase “but it is not certain that they have a new plan”. Speaking in Beirut ahead of a meeting with Salam and other security chiefs, he said the bombers included a woman. Local authorities imposed curfews on Syrian refugees in the area following the attacks. The Lebanese army said it had mounted dawn raids on Syrian refugee camps, detaining 103 people for being illegally present in Lebanon. The majority of Syrian refugees have no legal status in Lebanon due to the complications and costs of obtaining or renewing residency rights under rules imposed by the Lebanese government, aid agencies say. In Al-Qaa, residents armed with assault rifles fanned out in the streets for several hours yesterday, citing the need to protect the area. They later dispersed when the army asked them to go home. The head of the Al-Qaa local council had on Monday night urged residents to shoot anyone suspicious. Security sources said Hezbollah deployed dozens of armed men in nearby villages to help secure the area. “We are not leaving for sure, we are staying here...we are not afraid. We are not leaving our land,” Maher Rizk, a cafe owner, said. The UNHCR said the northern region of Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley hosts a significant population of vulnerable people, both Lebanese and refugees. “Law enforcement authorities are conducting follow-up security operations in the area. At a time of heightened tensions, it is important that the communities stand together,” Matthew Saltmarsh, senior UNCHR communications officer, said. Tunisia flaunts security year after beach massacre By Mounir Souissi/AFP Hammamet, Tunisia P olicemen on horseback amble among the sunbathers and new metal detectors dot hotel entrances in Tunisia as the North African country seeks to bring back tourists a year after a seaside massacre. Authorities and hotel managers hope improved security will help to win back the trust of holidaymakers on the first anniversary of the militant attack that killed 38 tourists at a beach resort. “We used to sell sunshine and beaches. Today, we sell sunshine, beaches and security,” says Anis Souissi, who manages a seaside hotel south of Tunis. Before its 2011 revolution, Tunisia attracted almost 7mn visitors a year, with its tourism sector accounting for 7% of GDP. The beach bloodbath was the second of two deadly militant attacks that dealt heavy blows to the key industry last year, following four years of decline due to political instability. Tourists fled in horror on June 26, as a Tunisian gunman pulled a Kalashnikov rifle from inside a furled beach umbrella and went on a shooting spree outside a five-star hotel near the city of Sousse. It came just months after 21 tourists and a policeman were killed in another jihadist attack at the Bardo National Museum in Tunis. A year on, the country’s tourism sector is still reeling. Revenues for the first quarter of this year were down by 51.7% compared to last year, according to the central bank. European visitors to the country in 2015 had already dropped by 65.8 % compared to 2010. As high season kicks off in Tunisia, authorities and tourism firms are hoping to boost confidence and encourage bookings with increased security checks. The interior ministry has said that 70 mobile police posts have been set up on beaches, with around 1,500 more policemen deployed to protect tourists this year — on top of 1,000 additional security personnel deployed last year. In Yasmine-Hammamet, some 70km (45 miles) southeast of Tunis, policemen roam the beaches on foot, in quad bikes and on horses. On the sand by the water’s edge, two policemen in uniform chat under a red gazebo discreetly marked “police”. “If anyone looks suspicious — even if it’s a holidaymaker — we ask them for their ID,” a plainclothes policeman tells AFP. After all, the Sousse attacker had hidden his weapon inside a parasol, he says. Following the seaside killings, Prime Minister Habib Essid admitted that the police had been too slow to respond. Tunisia’s tourism minister said in late May that the government was making security a priority “because without security there can be no recovery” in the tourism sector. The authorities had directed airports and hotels “to conform to international security norms and standards”, Selma Elloumi Rekik said. But Anis Chemli, who manages a hotel in the island of Djerba in the country’s southeast, says adopting new security measures is “an added financial burden”. After last year’s beach attack, the Iberostar hotel in Djerba invested in eight extra security guards, four new sniffer dogs, 48 new surveillance cameras — each costing 2,000 dinars ($900) — and a metal detector that cost 9,000 dinars, he says. “We’re still waiting for a bag scanner to be delivered,” he says, adding that the machine was an investment of 26,600 euros. According to Chemli, hotels in the Djerba-Zarzis area have even banded together to buy the security forces eight quad bikes for them to better patrol their beaches. Souissi, who manages Le Royal in Yasmine-Hammamet, says a third of the hotel’s new investments last year went towards better security. Tunisian policemen stand guard at a beach in the coastal resort of Hammamet, some 60km south-east of Tunis. Tunisian authorities and hotel managers hope improved security will help to win back the trust of holidaymakers on the first anniversary of the militant attack that killed 38 tourists at a beach resort. Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 13 AFRICA Ex-president’s aide charged with graft AFP Abuja N igeria’s anti-graft agency yesterday charged former president Goodluck Jonathan’s campaign spokesman with corruption in yet another arrest of a topranking member of the previous administration. Femi Fani-Kayode, who was also a former aviation minister, was arraigned in an Abuja court on corruption charges linked to Jonathan’s re-election campaign last year. He was accused alongside former finance minister Nenadi Esther Usman, who was allegedly in charge of campaign funds for the 2015 polls. Both were alleged to have siphoned more than 1.5bn naira ($5.3mn) in state funds for “political and personal uses”. Fani-Kayode pleaded not guilty to the charges and was remanded in custody until a bail hearing on Friday. President Muhammadu Buhari, who defeated Jonathan in the 2015 vote, has launched a wide-ranging campaign against corruption targeting key members of the Jonathan’s regime. Former national security adviser Sambo Dasuki is currently facing a slew of charges over allegedly bogus arms deals in which money meant for military procurement was diverted for political purposes. The money was allegedly paid into accounts of senior figures to fund Jonathan’s re-election campaign. Former party spokesman Olisa Metuh, who allegedly received a share of the campaign cash, said he was only acting on Jonathan’s orders. A cousin of the former Nigerian leader, Robert Azibaola, is also standing trial for allegedly stealing $40 million from public funds. Despite the arrest of Jonathan’s key confidantes in connection with his re-election campaign, the former president has not been charged by Nigeria’s anti-graft body, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission. Reuters Lusaka Z Femi Fani-Kayode Zimbabwe leader diagnosed with cancer Reuters Harare Z imbabwe’s main opposition leader and President Robert Mugabe’s chief rival for the last 17 years said yesterday he has been diagnosed with cancer of the colon and is undergoing treatment in neighbouring South Africa. Morgan Tsvangirai, 64, who was Zimbabwe’s prime minister in an uneasy coalition government with the 92-year-old Mugabe from 2009 until 2013, said it was important for national leaders to disclose their health status. Morgan Tsvangirai Mugabe routinely denies local media reports that he is suffering from prostate cancer and says his frequent trips to Singapore are for routine medical checks. “As a leader and a public figure, I have taken a decision to make public my condition,” Ts- vangirai said, adding that he had an operation last month and is on chemotherapy treatment. “It is my firm belief that the health of national leaders, including politicians, should not be a subject of national speculation and uncertainty.” Tsvangirai, who lost the 2013 presidential vote against Mugabe, has since 1999 led the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) but the party has, however, been weakened by splits over how to confront Mugabe’s ZANU-PF. The MDC chief, a three time loser to Mugabe, said although his condition was unfortunate, he intended to confront “this development with the determination to overcome it.” The MDC, evicted from the unity government after its crushing defeat in the 2013 election, is split over whether to dump Tsvangirai before the next vote in 2018. Critics say he has often been outsmarted by Mugabe, Africa’s oldest leader. The turmoil within the MDC has been a boost for Mugabe, whose ZANU-PF party has ruled Zimbabwe since independence from Britain in 1980 amid charges of rigging recent elections. Mugabe, who intends to contest the 2018 vote at the age of 94, has denied rigging previous elections. Training exercise Liberia policemen standing as a UN convoy passed by on the Monrovia bridge during a training exercise as the UN Mission in Liberia forces (UNMIL) finally handed back security to Liberia’s military and police, in Monrovia, yesterday. After devastating back-to-back civil wars in Liberia, the UN launched a peacekeeping mission in September 2003 to ensure security, rebuild police and military forces from scratch, and disarm rebels. Major power line to remote northern Kenya will be ready by Dec Reuters Nairobi A major new power line that will connect the remote northern region of Kenya to the national grid, and will be used to transmit wind power, should be completed by the end of this year, a senior government official said yesterday. The East African nation is ramping up electricity production and investing in its grid to keep up with growing demand for power and to reduce frequent blackouts. It relies heavily on renewables such as geothermal and hydro power. Private company Lake Turkana Wind is building Kenya’s biggest wind power scheme at Lake Turkana which is expected to start producing some power in September and will be able to start sending power to the grid once the power line is ready in December. Construction on the 428km, 400-kilovolt power line, which will run from Loiyangalani in northern Kenya to Suswa in the centre of the country, started in November and had been due to be completed by October but has been delayed by demands for compensation from landowners along the route and other issues. Once the Lake Turkana Wind Power scheme starts operation it will initially supply up to 90 MW of electricity but will eventually have the capacity to supply 310 MW. “The transmission line is now being accelerated,” Fernandes Barasa, managing director of the state-run Kenya Electricity Transmission Company, said in an interview. “Earlier it was supposed to be completed by October, but because of some Zambia arrests newspaper editors in tax dispute delays - issues along the route - we have pushed it back by two months so that we complete it by December 2016,” Barasa said. He said some land values along the route had been inflated and the issue took longer than expected to resolve, requiring the help of the state-run National Land Commission and political leaders. Kenya plans to add 5,000km of power lines to its existing 3,800km network by 2017. Only a third of the country’s 44 million people are connected to the grid, according to its energy ministry. Barasa said another power line between Kenya and Ethiopia should be completed in early 2018. “The lines will be done by December 2017 and the substation by February 2018. So basically we expect the infrastructure to be operational by the end of February 2018,” he said. ambian police yesterday charged three people including two editors of a newspaper critical of the government that was shut down last week, as tensions rose in the run up to elections in August. The Zambia Revenue Authority (ZRA) shut down the Post newspaper last week, demanding $6mn in unpaid taxes but the newspaper accused the authorities of trying to silence it, and claimed the outstanding bill was part of a court dispute. Tax officials have not commented on the matter, but Zambian President Edgar Lungu on Monday defended the ZRA’s action, saying it did so to recoup unpaid taxes. “This was after the trio gained entry into the Post newspaper’s head office in Rhodespark following a stay granted by the court...” Yesterday, the Post’s managing editor Joan Chirwa said police arrested its editor-inchief Fred Mmembe, his wife Mutinta and deputy managing editor Joseph Mwenda late on Monday. “This was after the trio gained entry into the Post newspaper’s head office in Rhodespark following a stay granted by the court restraining ZRA from seizing the newspaper’s property,” Chirwa said. She said the Post – which has continued publishing from an unknown location – obtained a court order to resume operations but the police said it had not been signed by ZRA. Police spokesman Rae Hamoonga said the three had been charged and released on bond and will appear in court next week to face charges of, among others, breaking into a building. The opposition says the government was using repressive laws to restrict its campaigns and that there was a media clamp down. The presidency has denied the claims, saying the opposition was campaigning freely. Lungu has been in power for just over a year after winning a ballot triggered by the death of his predecessor, Michael Sata, in October 2014. He faces a strong challenge from opposition leader Hakainde Hichilema of the United Party for National Development at the polls. Man held for plane arson attempt AFP Freetown A man was charged with attempting to set fire to an Air France plane at Sierra Leone’s biggest airport after penetrating the secure zone without a passport or boarding card, court officials said yesterday. Airport officials promised security would be stepped up after Ibrahim Kanu attempted to board the flight armed with petrol, matches and a cigarette lighter on June 4 at Lungi International Airport, close to the capital of Freetown. The prosecution at a Monday hearing said Kanu had entered the restricted area reserved for staff and took a bus connecting to the plane, believed to have been an Airbus A330-200 headed for Paris. Air France confirmed that an individual had managed to penetrate a restricted area, but said he was stopped as he attempted to get on the bus heading for Flight AF770 and handed over to police. A British firm, Westminster Group, is contracted to provide security at the airport but has yet to comment publicly. Kanu’s bail application was rejected on the grounds there was a risk of him fleeing, and because he is accused of “a very serious criminal offence”. Airport Authority general manager Idrissa Fofanah told journalists security surveillance had been stepped up following the incident. 14 Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 AMERICAS Spare farm ‘ghosts’, says researcher Thomson Reuters Foundation London U Women protest in defence of rights to abortion. Court rejects two new abortion cases The court has reaffirmed the decision it made in the Texas case Reuters Washington T he US Supreme Court yesterday let stand lower court rulings that blocked restrictions on doctors who perform abortions in Mississippi and Wisconsin a day after the court struck down a similar measure in Texas. The laws in both states required doctors to have “admitting privileges”, a type of difficult-to-obtain formal affiliation, with a hospital within 48km of the abortion clinic. Both were put on hold by lower courts. The Mississippi law would have shut down the only clinic in the state if it had gone into effect. The laws in Texas, Mississippi and Wisconsin are among the numerous measures enacted in conservative US states that impose a variety of restrictions on abortion. With its ruling on Monday, the court gave its most stout endorsement of abortion rights since 1992. Conservative justice Anthony Kennedy joined the court’s four liberals in the 5-3 decision. The justices decided that the Texas law placed an undue burden on women exercising their right under the US constitution to end a pregnancy, established in the court’s landmark 1973 Roe v Wade decision. The ruling is likely to encourage abortion rights advocates to challenge similar restrictive laws in other states. In November 2015, the Chicago-based 7th US circuit court of appeals struck down the Wisconsin law. In the Mississippi case, a federal district court judge issued a temporary injunction in 2012 blocking the law because it would have forced women seeking abortions to go out of state. The same judge issued a second injunction in 2013, which was upheld by the New Orleans-based 5th US circuit court of appeals in 2014. In the major ruling on Monday, the high court issued a 5-3 ruling striking down the 2013 Texas law, which had a provision requiring clinics to have costly hospitalgrade facilities in addition to the “admitting privileges” provision. Some states have pursued a variety of restrictions on abortion, including banning certain types of procedures, prohibiting it after a certain number of weeks of gestation, requiring parental permission for girls until a certain age, imposing waiting periods or mandatory counselling, and others. In May, Oklahoma’s Republican-led legislature passed a bill calling for prison terms of up the three years for doctors who performed abortions, but the state’s Republican governor vetoed it. A divided US Supreme Court yesterday rejected an appeal filed by pharmacists in Washington state who objected on religious grounds to providing emergency contraceptives to women. The justices, with three conservatives dissenting, left in place a July ruling by the San Francisco-based 9th US circuit court of appeals that upheld a state regulation that requires pharmacies to deliver all prescribed medicines in a timely manner. Justice Samuel Alito, joined by chief justice John Roberts and justice Clarence Thomas, wrote a dissenting opinion saying the court’s decision not to hear the case is “an ominous sign”. In Washington, the state permits a religiously objecting individual pharmacist to deny medicine, as long as another pharmacist working at the location provides timely delivery. The rules require a pharmacy to deliver all medicine, even if the owner objects. The case is one of several around the United States in which people and businesses have sought to opt out of providing services that conflict with their religious faith. Alito said there is evidence the regulation was adopted because of “hostility to pharmacists whose religious beliefs regarding abortion and contraception are out of step with prevailing opinion in the state”. “If this is a sign of how religious liberty claims will be treated in the years ahead, those who value religious freedom have cause for great concern,” Alito added. Alito’s comments seemed to refer to the current vacancy on the court created by the death of conservative justice Antonin Scalia in February and the possibility of a successor appointed by a Democratic president. If Scalia’s replacement is a liberal, Alito appears to be warning, it would tilt the court to the left, and a majority may be less receptive to claims by conservative religious groups that government is infringing upon their rights. The Supreme Court in 2014 allowed certain businesses to object on religious grounds to the Obamacare law’s requirement that companies provide employees with insurance that pays for women’s birth control. The court in May sent a similar dispute brought by nonprofit Christian employers back to lower courts without resolving the main legal issue. The appeals court said the rules rationally further the state’s interest in patient safety. Speed is particularly important considering the time-sensitive nature of emergency contraception, that court said. The appeals court had overturned a lower court that had said the rules were unconstitutional. The regulation was challenged by family-owned Stormans Inc, which operates a pharmacy in a grocery store in Olympia. Two individual pharmacists who worked elsewhere also joined the lawsuit. The objectors are Christians who associate so-called “morning after” emergency contraceptives with abortion. The US Supreme Court yesterday agreed to decide whether Miami can pursue lawsuits accusing major banks of predatory mortgage lending to black and Hispanic homebuyers resulting in loan defaults that drove down city tax revenues and property values. The justices will hear appeals filed by Bank of America Corp and Wells Fargo & Co of a lower court’s decision to permit the lawsuits by the Florida city against the banks under the Fair Housing Act, a federal law outlawing discrimination in housing. Last September, the Atlanta-based 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a lower court’s decision to dismiss such lawsuits by the city against Bank of America, Wells Fargo and Citigroup Inc Citigroup decided not to appeal to the Supreme Court. The city accused the banks of a decade of lending discrimination in its residential housing market. Miami accused Wells Fargo, Bank of America and Citigroup of steering nonwhite borrowers into higher-cost loans they often could not afford, even if they had good credit. The city said the banks’ conduct caused Miami to lose property tax revenues, drove down property values and required the city to pay the costs of repairing and maintaining properties that went into foreclosure due to discriminatory lending. The court will hear oral arguments and issue a ruling in its next term, which starts in October and ends in June 2017. Ikea to recall chests of drawers AFP Washington F urniture giant Ikea said yesterday it would recall its hugely popular Malm model of chest of drawers after six children were crushed to death when the dressers tipped over. The recall affects 29mn chests of drawers sold in the United States, said Elliot Kaye, head of the US Consumer Product Safety Commission. “If you have, or think you have, one of these drawers... please act immediately,” said Kaye, speaking in Washington. “We’re imploring you.” The recalled models are unstable if not properly attached to the wall, “posing a serious tip-over and entrapment hazard that can result in death or serious injuries to children”, the CPSC said. Customers can get a full refund or have Ikea personnel come to attach wall anchors at no charge. The recall affects some 8mn Malm chests and dressers, and 21mn additional children’s and adult chests and drawers, all manufactured between 2002 and June 2016, Kaye said. A further 6.6mn of the units were sold in Canada, the CPSC added. Kaye said he commended Ikea for taking “this leading step for furniture safety”. A spokeswoman for the Ikea group, Kajsa Johansson, told AFP in Stockholm that the drawers “meet all mandatory stability requirements on all markets where sold”, and said the bureaus were “safe when anchored to the wall” as instructed. The Swedish group said six deaths had been reported in the past 13 years involving Ikea chests of drawers, all in the United States, including three since 2014. None of the chests had been anchored to the wall. In 2015, Ikea launched a campaign in the United States and Canada to encourage owners of the Malm chests of drawers to anchor them to the wall. The units include Malm three, four, and five-drawer units, as well as various other models. A full list of the affected furniture can be found on the IkeaUSA.com website. S courts should remain open minded about migrants found working with false identity papers in the agricultural sector as employers were often to blame, a researcher who spent 10 years studying migrant farm work said yesterday. Sarah Horton, an anthropologist at the University of Colorado, found undocumented or underage farm workers in California were being given stolen, borrowed or forged identity documents by employers in what is termed “identity masking”. Published in the Anthropology of Work Review, the study found that farm workers described themselves as “working as ghosts” with employers disguising their employment from state and federal governments and hiding the use of child labour. The study follows a federal appeals court ruling in May that undocumented immigrants could be prosecuted for working under forged, loaned or stolen documents. Horton said this did not take into account employers exploiting the largely foreign workers. “Even as undocumented migrants may continue to be arrested for ‘identity theft’ in states like Arizona, my research illustrates the role of employers in providing work- Challenge to Canada’s assisted dying rules AFP Ottawa A 25-year-old woman with a progressive neurodegenerative disease on Monday challenged Canada’s new rules on doctorassisted dying, saying they should not be restricted to terminally ill patients. The legislation, which is barely 10 days old, is much less comprehensive than what was originally proposed by a parliamentary special committee that studied the hugely controversial issue. The plaintiff, Julia Lamb, said the law is unconstitutional because it excludes Canadians “who are suffering with no immediate end in sight”, according to a statement. Lamb, who is backed by the British Columbia Liberties Association, filed her lawsuit with the province’s supreme court. She suffers from spi- nal muscular atrophy, which causes weakness and wasting of muscles. As the disease progresses, she could lose the use of her hands or arms, need a ventilator to help her breathe, and no longer be able to speak, write or use her computer, as well as require constant care while being in constant pain. “My biggest fear (is that) if my condition gets much worse I will become trapped,” she told a nationally televised press conference. “If my suffering becomes intolerable, I would like to be able to make a final choice about how much suffering to endure,” she said. Canadians with diseases such as spinal muscular atrophy, multiple sclerosis, spinal stenosis, locked in syndrome, traumatic spinal injury, Parkinson’s disease and Huntingdon’s disease are not eligible for doctor-assisted dying under the new law. Fire at gas plant halts Gulf Coast platforms Reuters New York/Houston A Elliot Kaye, chair of the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), and CPSC employees watch as a 13kg dummy falls under Ikea’s Malm model chest of drawers. ers with invented and loaned documents,” Horton said in a statement. “It suggests that judges must carefully scrutinise any charges levied against undocumented migrants for working (on) loaned documents, as employers may have more to gain from this practice than workers do.” Every year up to 3mn farm workers, mostly migrants and almost half undocumented, travel from farm to farm, state to state, to harvest crops, according to the Department of Labor and research group Student Action with Farmworkers. Data shows that 75% of farm workers in the United States are from Mexico and they are some of the lowest paid, least protected, workers in the country. Student Action with Farmworkers said the states of California, Texas, Washington, Florida, Oregon and North Carolina have the largest numbers of farm workers. Horton said 10 years of fieldwork workers in California’s Central Valley found not only was there widespread identity masking among adult workers but also among children in violation of child labour laws. She said her research also uncovered that the process of lending documents had become financially lucrative. “In exchange for loaning their documents to workers, the friends and family members of labor supervisors often give them a kick-back,” she said. t least two offshore oil platforms halted operations yesterday in the US Gulf of Mexico after a fire at a natural gas processing plant in Mississippi shut a crucial pipeline that brings output onshore, several companies said. The fire at Enterprise Products Partners plant in Pascagoula was brought under control, but officials were still forced to close the 225-mile Destin gas pipeline system that can carry 1.2bn cubic feet per day from offshore fields to Pascagoula. Destin, majority-owned by BP with Enbridge Inc a minority partner, said it was declaring force majeure, a legal clause that allows it to scrap commitments, as a result of the fire. Offshore company LLOG said it was in the process of shutting its Delta House floating production system in the Gulf of Mexico yesterday, a spokesman said. Murphy Oil Corp said its Thunder Hawk platform was shut in after the fire. Murphy added it plans to flow natural gas to an alternate processing facility and expects minimal disruptions to its operations. Several social media messages from Pascagoula residents had said the blaze erupted shortly before midnight at Chevron Corp’s 330,000 barrels per day refinery in Pascagoula. The Pascagoula Police Department said the fire was not at the Chevron refinery. There were no injuries from the blaze, Enterprise said.The cause was under investigation. Enterprise took ownership of the plant from BP Plc on June 1. Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 15 ASEAN New born Monk who lead revolt faces more charges Reuters Yangon A The Singapore Night Safari’s first baby elephant calf to be born in six years, is seen as she plays at the zoo, yesterday. S’pore website owner jailed for ‘hate’ content The website featured several cooked up stories AFP Singapore A Singaporean man behind a defunct website that published made-up articles stirring hatred against foreigners in the city-state was jailed for eight months yesterday for sedition. State prosecutors had pushed for a strong deterrent sentence on Yang Kaiheng, owner of The Real Singapore (TRS) website, saying the articles on which the charges were based were “designed to provoke hatred against foreigners in Singapore”. Yang, 27, had earlier claimed trial but later pleaded guilty to six charges of sowing discord between locals and foreigners in a series of articles, three of which state prosecutors said contained “blatant falsehoods designed to insert prominent xenophobic” references. One article falsely said that a Filipino family instigated a fracas at a Hindu festival in 2015. Another fabricated article alleged that a Chinese woman made her grandson urinate into a bottle inside a metro train. Yang Kaiheng pleaded guilty to six counts of sedition. The articles were mostly designed to inflame hatred against Filipino, mainland Chinese and Indian nationals working in labour-starved Singapore, the prosecutors said. Prosecutors described Yang as a “calculating opportunist, who realised that by generating a groundswell of resentment towards foreigners, he could attract readers to the TRS website and thereby generate vast sums of advertising revenue”. Yang’s Australian wife, Ai Takagi, who wrote or edited the articles, was sentenced in March to 10 months in jail also for sedition. The popular website, which earned the duo hundreds of thousands in advertising revenue, was shut down after Takagi and Yang were arrested while visiting the island last year. Both were based in Australia. Takagi’s sentence is the stiffest so far ever imposed for sedition in the strict city-state, which clamps down hard on any activity seen as promoting racial and class hatred. State prosecutors described Yang as the “proprietor” and “distributor” of TRS and said a tough sentence on him “must reflect the fact that this is the most serious case of sedition to date in Singapore”. District court Judge Chay Yuen Fatt noted that Yang had pleaded guilty on Friday, the day results showed that Britain had voted to bolt out of the European Union. “To put it bluntly, nationalism can degenerate very rapidly into xenophobia, racism, intolerance and violence,” the judge said. “Brexit is an example and a reminder of how strong, uncertain and unpredictable these emotions can be and the ramifications that these feelings can and have caused.” Sedition laws in Singapore make it an offence to promote hostility between different races or classes in the multiracial society, which is mainly ethnic Chinese with large Malay and Indian minorities. Critics, however, say sedition laws, dating back to British colonial rule, can be used to restrict free speech. About 40% of the city-state’s 5.5mn people are foreigners, many of them from China, India and the Philippines. Indonesian MPs approve higher arms spending with eye on China Myanmar court laid additional charges against a former monk and leader of the 2007 “Saffron Revolution” anti-junta uprising yesterday, accusing him of trespass and “mischief” committed four years ago. Nyi Nyi Lwin, better known as Gambira, was arrested in January for illegally entering Myanmar from neighbouring Thailand. The new charges relate to the reopening of monasteries that were sealed off after the monk-led protests. The alleged violations took place in 2012, after Gambira’s release from prison where he had served time for his involvement in the demonstrations. “Gambira force-opened the gates of three monasteries in Yangon, which were sealed off by the military in the crackdown on the protests, since the activist monks couldn’t find anywhere to live after their release in the amnesty in 2012,” said Gambira’s lawyer, Robert San Aung. The charges were laid days before he was about to be released from prison, where he has been serving time for allegedly crossing the Thai-Burma border without an official visa. He has now been moved to Yangon’s notorious Insein prison from Mandalay to face the new charges. The fact that a high-profile political prisoner is moved around the country and charged for seemingly minor offences committed years ago shows democratic reforms in Myanmar under Aung San Suu Kyi’s leadership are still in their early stages, as many junta-era institutions, mechanisms and laws remain unchanged. “He was due to be freed on July 1, but the authorities seem afraid of him and don’t want to let him out,” said Robert San Aung. The government cracked down harshly on the 2007 demonstrations, opening fire on protesters and sweeping up those who took part. At least 31 people were killed by security forces and thousands arrested, according to the United Nations. Gambira was freed from prison during a 2012 general amnesty, a year after the junta handed power to a semi-civilian government, following 49 years of direct rule of the Southeast Asian nation. Cambodia PM warns detractors Reuters Phnom Penh I nternational powers should keep out of Cambodian domestic politics, Prime Minister Hun Sen warned yesterday as he posed for selfies with supporters and played down tension between his ruling party and the opposition. An opposition win in an election due in 2018 could tip the country back into civil war, the quixotic Cambodian strong man has warned. Foreign governments have accused him of intimidating his political opponents ahead of the vote. Those who portrayed the country as experiencing a political crisis were guilty of a “dishonest trick to deceive public opinion”, Hun Sen said in the capital, Phnom Penh. “They must not misconstrue individual mistakes as political issues and put pressure on the courts,” he added, in a reference to foreign governments and international institutions. That is an insult to people, state institutions and a dangerous adventure for the nation.” Last month, the European parliament threatened to review nearly half a billion dollars of aid to Cambodia if Hun Sen’s government continued to harass political opponents. The United Nations and the United States have called for dialogue between the two sides. Tension has risen in Cambodia as opposition leaders Sam Rainsy and Kem Sokha face legal charges they say have been trumped up by a judiciary in thrall to Hun Sen. The Cambodian prime minister says if they have committed crimes, they must face the legal consequences. The opposition says the prime minister has started a campaign against it early, to weaken its campaigning ahead of the election. At the last vote in 2013, a strong performance by the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) nearly cost Hun Sen the premiership. Sokha has spent one month in hiding inside the CNRP headquarters as he seeks to evade arrest, while Rainsy is in self-imposed exile to avoid arrest on charges for which he had previously received a royal pardon. Reuters Jakarta Aid pullout hits Aids patients in Vietnam I ndonesian lawmakers yesterday approved higher defence spending this year to fund, among other things, major upgrades to military facilities in the Natuna Islands, whose nearby waters Beijing says are subject to “over-lapping claims”. Parliament’s approval came just days after President Joko Widodo visited the remote island chain to assert sovereignty over the area, in what Indonesian officials described as the strongest message that has been given to China. China’s increasingly assertive actions in the South China Sea, which are worrying Southeast Asian countries, are fuelling an increase in security spending in the region. “(Natuna) needs to be guarded and to do that the military needs to have proper facilities, they need additional funds,” said Johnny Plate, a member of parliament’s budget committee. Parliament approved an increase to the defence ministry’s budget this year to 108.7tn rupiah ($8.25bn), up nearly 10% from the initial 2016 budget. Some of the new funds will be used to upgrade the airbase and build a new port in the Natuna Islands to allow for more warships and fighter jets to be based there, DPA Hanoi T Indonesian President Joko Widodo on the deck of the Indonesian Navy ship KRI Imam Bonjol. defence minister Ryamizard Ryacudu told reporters. Indonesia’s navy has stepped up patrols around the islands after a series of faceoffs between Indonesian naval vessels and Chinese fishing boats in the area. Jakarta objects to Beijing’s inclusion of waters around the Natuna Islands within China’s “nine-dash line”, a demarcation line used by Beijing to show its claims. Beijing last week said that those waters were subject to overlapping claims on “maritime rights and interests” between China and Indonesia. Jakarta has rejected China’s stance, saying the waters are in Indonesia’s territory. Despite the objections, Indonesia is not part of a broader regional dispute over China’s reclamation activities in the South China Sea. China claims almost the entire waters, where about $5tn worth of trade passes every year. Brunei, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam also have claims. housands of HIV/Aids patients in Vietnam could face a shortage of medication as foreign donors pull out, an advocate for patients said yesterday. Most treatment of Vietnam’s 260,000 HIV patients comes from or through US government agency Pepfar, which has said it aims to stop providing most services and support by 2018 as Vietnam becomes wealthier. To meet the shortfall, people living with HIV/Aids will have to buy government health insurance policies to cover their treatment. The number of patients dependent on insurance is expected to rise from a projected 17,000 in 2017 to 51,000 in 2018, said patients advocate Do Dang Dong, chairman of the Vietnam Network of People Living with HIV/Aids. “We aren’t in crisis mode, but we are a middle-income country already, so most of our international funding will stop,” he told DPA yesterday. Few of the country’s HIV patients can afford health insurance, according to Tranh Thi Le Tram, director of the Centre for Law, Healthcare and HIV/Aids, in comments to a government-hosted panel in Hanoi on June 27 reported by Vietnam News. 16 Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 AUSTRALASIA/EAST ASIA South China Sea reefs ‘decimated’ in latest giant clam harvest By Farah Master, Reuters Tanmen, China O rnaments made from the shells of endangered giant clams, renowned in China for having auspicious powers and the lustre of ivory, have become coveted luxuries, a trend which has wreaked havoc on the ecosystem of the South China Sea. China banned harvesting of giant clams last year but in the tiny seaside town Tanmen on the southern island of Hainan, most stores still sell products made from the over four-footwide shells. The once sleepy fishing village has transformed over the past three years to harvest clams on an industrial scale. There are around 460 handicraft retailers, compared to 15 in 2012, with the industry now supporting around 100,000 people. The price of giant clams has risen 40-fold over the past five years, while the plundering of the seabed has led to severe degradation of the reefs, scientists and academics said. “With rising tensions in the South China Sea, Tanmen fishermen’s im- portant role in strengthening China’s claims in the disputed waters and supporting the People’s Liberation Army navy are recognised by the Chinese government,” said Zhang Hongzhou, an associate research fellow at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. “As a result, authorities have turned a blind eye.” China claims almost the whole South China Sea, setting it at odds with rival claims from its Southeast Asian neighbours, including the Philippines. The region accounts for more than a tenth of global fisheries production. The Qionghai government, which looks after Tanmen, announced in March 2015 that it would strictly enforce the ban on digging, carrying and selling of endangered marine species including the giant clams. “The government is enforcing the ban,” said Zhang Hongying, an official at the Qionghai government foreign affairs office. Another official called Zhao said the authorities were not doing anything to support the industry. “If the business is legal, our government won’t stop people doing it,” he said. “But there’s no government file say- ing that we are going to do something to promote the shell industry.” To harvest the clams, the entire reef has to be dug up, said Neo Mei Lin, a marine biologist at the National University of Singapore. “What used to be really good coral reefs in there have definitely been decimated over the last two to three years,” Lin said. “I think the Hainanese have essentially taken out all the giant clam shells from the South China Sea, dead or alive,” said Ed Gomez, a senior adviser at the University of the Philippines Marine Science Institute. But during a recent visit to Tanmen, stores lining the harbour promenade were mostly empty. Many retailers said business had dropped since April due to China’s tough economic climate and soaring temperatures. “There are no tourists at the moment. We have to wait until September,” said Yu Guo, owner of Xianyu Xuan craft store. Yu, from Beijing, came to Tanmen to buy property four years ago and set up the store with a local partner as the economy boomed. “In the good times, we could earn 10mn yuan ($1.52mn) per month,” he said. China court orders writer to apologise for challenging propaganda A Chinese court has ordered the former chief editor of an influential magazine to apologise for challenging an official account of history, as Beijing further tightens limits on freedom of speech. Hong Zhenkuai cast doubt on the story of the Five Warriors of Mount Langyashan, who allegedly jumped off a cliff while fighting the Japanese during World War II rather than surrender. They are touted as patriotic heroes in schoolbooks and propaganda by China’s ruling Communist Party as part of its nationalistic narrative. But Hong pointed out discrepan- cies in the story in two 2013 articles for his progressive magazine Yanhuang Chunqiu, questioning whether two of the five had jumped at all. The Beijing Xicheng District People’s Court ruled Monday that he had “tarnished their reputation and honour”, and hurt the feelings of their two sons, plaintiffs Ge Changsheng and Song Fubao, along with those of the Chinese people as a whole. The court gave Hong three days to issue a public apology, it said in a statement on its website. It was unclear what penalty he would face should he fail to do so. The Langyashan soldiers were “a key component of the spirit of the Chinese nation”, the court said. As a Chinese citizen, it added, Hong should have known better than to “diminish their heroic image and spiritual value”. “The defendant had the ability to control the potential damaging consequences that arose out of the articles but did not do so,” it said. “His judgement is clearly faulty and he should bear legal responsibility. “The freedom of speech that he advocates is clearly insufficient as a defence against his legal wrongs.” Waterworld! Posters of candidates on display ahead of a general election in Mongolia’s capital Ulan Bator. Young Mongolians look for change after election Reuters Ulan Bator I n a stretch of open grassland surrounded by yurts, some of the thousands of Mongolians headbanging to the likes of heavy metal band “Purgatory Destroyers” at the country’s biggest music festival were thinking about politics as much as partying. Many young Mongolians, not much older than the wind-swept, land-locked democracy squeezed between autocratic China and Russia, are disillusioned with the slow economy and established political parties, and could play a decisive role in parliamentary elections today. More than half Mongolia’s 3mn people are under 30 and grew up during a time of rapid change following a peaceful political revolution in 1990 that saw the Soviet system replaced by democracy and the influx of influences from Holly- Sporting a beard and tattoos, Unenkhuu, 36, said he had taken time off from organising heavy metal concerts and playing in a band to pursue elected office. “You know some of those members of parliament, they’ve been in office for at least like the last four terms, right? And I mean what has changed? Nothing,” the rocker-turned-candidate said. “I think they should all step down and give way for the new generation.” Unenkhuu acknowledges he will be in a tough race as he faces off against the two largest parties — the Democratic Party and the main opposition Mongolian People’s Party (MPP). Polls suggest that voters, fed up from four straight years of slowing growth under the Democratic Party, are likely to award more seats to the MPP, which ruled Mongolia when it was a socialist one-party state and has held power most often since democratic reforms in 1990. Australia jails poaching Vietnam fishermen AFP Sydney T hirty Vietnamese found illegally fishing in Australian waters were yesterday handed suspended jail sentences and had their boats destroyed in what authorities said was a strong deterrent message. The crew were from two boats caught illegally fishing in a Coral Sea marine reserve off Australia’s north coast on June 2, with diving gear and six tonnes of sea cucumber — a delicacy in countries such as China — found on board. The fishermen all pleaded guilty in a Darwin court to breaking Australian fisheries and environmental laws. Their penalties included suspended jail sentences ranging from two months for the crew to five and seven months for the masters of the vessels. They were also issued good behaviour bonds ranging from two to three years, with up to A$2,000 (US$1,477) to pay if they are breached. “Illegal fishing threatens the economic viability and sustainability of Australia’s well managed marine resources,” said Australian Fisheries Management Authority general manager Peter Venslovas. “The convictions and destruction of the vessels are a good result and will send a very strong message to all those considering illegally fishing in Australian waters.” The case came on the same day a Papua New Guinean boat was apprehended for suspected illegal fishing in Australian waters, allegedly carrying sea cucumber and two shark fins. According to a United Nations Development Program report this month, up to 26mn tonnes of fish is caught illegally each year. Stepped up surveillance by Australia has seen the amount of illegal fishing fall from highs of 367 boats caught a decade ago to just 17 so far in the 2015-2016 financial year, government data shows. Last word: Language of China’s emperors in peril By Tom Hancock, AFP Sanjiazi, China I A man pushes a tub carrying children as he gets them back home after school at a flooded area in Duchang, Jiangxi Province, China. wood, hip hop and heavy metal. “The quality of politicians is, I think, very bad,” said Khishigdelger, a festivalgoer at the Playtime Music Festival. “So Mongolians need to do something different.” Turnout at the polls is expected to be at an all-time low, amid widespread perceptions that the older generation has hung on to power to further its own interest at a cost to the rest of the country. Economic growth has fallen from 17.5% in 2011, the year before the Democratic Party took power, to the IMF’s projected 0.4% for this year. The resource-rich country has struggled to adapt as the market for coal and copper slumped on weaker demand from China, and some blame officials for creating mining disputes. “Maybe that older generation should just die off,” says Umbanyamba Unenkhuu, who is running for office as a member of the National Labour Party. t was the language of China’s last imperial dynasty which ruled a vast kingdom for nearly three centuries. But 71-year-old Ji Jinlu is among only a handful of native Manchu speakers left. Traders and farmers from what are now the borders of China and Korea, the Manchus took advantage of a crumbling Ming state and swept south in the 1600s to establish their own Qing Dynasty. Manchu became the court language, its angular, alphabetic script used in millions of documents produced by one of the world’s preeminent powers. Now after centuries of decline followed by decades of repression, septuagenarian Ji is the youngest of some nine mothertongue speakers left in Sanjiazi village, one of only two places in China where they can be found. “We mostly speak Chinese these days — otherwise young people don’t understand,” he said, in his sparsely-furnished hut beside cornfields, before launching into a self-composed Manchu lullaby. Manchu is classed as “critically endangered” by the United Nations’ cultural organisation Unesco, which says that half of the more than 6,000 languages spoken worldwide are threatened with extinction, a major loss of knowledge and diversity for humanity. But schemes to save Manchu are spreading as ethnic conciousness grows among the 10mn strong minority. The sign for the village primary school in Sanjiazi, in the northeastern province of Heilongjiang, is in Manchu’s vertical script, with posters in the language written by pupils lining its corridors. Staring intently at an electronic display, a class shouted the Manchu alphabet, followed by words for “umbrella” and “cow”. But instruction was in Chinese, the everyday language of school life, as were the bellowed lyrics of a song titled: “We are the good Manchu children”. Teacher Shi Junguang, who painstakingly learnt Manchu from older residents and records native speakers before they pass away, wore a red and turquoise robe with gold sleeves reminiscent of the group’s traditional apparel. But, now, he said, the Manchu “don’t really have any special ethnic characteristics in food or dress.” “The main thing we have here is the language.” Under the Qing — or “pure” — dynasty, China saw massive territorial expansion before it weakened in the 19th century, assailed by corruption and pressure from European and other foreign powers. Discrimination against nonManchu Chinese remained rife and helped fuel a series of rebellions which finally saw the dynasty overthrown in 1911. Republican leader Sun Yat-sen declared: “To restore the Chi- nese nation, we must drive the barbarian Manchus back to the Changbai Mountains,” their ancestral homeland. Many remaining Manchus hid their language, a trend which intensified under Communist leader Mao Zedong, who launched campaigns to eradicate foreign and traditional culture. At the height of Maoism, “No one spoke the language,” recalled Ji. “It was a time of destroying old culture. Who would dare?” Political controls relaxed in the 1980s following Mao’s death, and Yang Yuan, an ethnic Manchu historian in Beijing, said: “Manchu consciousness has started re-emerging, and now it’s getting stronger and stronger.” Several universities currently offer Manchu courses, and enthusiasts in major cities have formed clubs to study it. China has launched a massive project to translate Qing documents into modern Chinese, an effort aimed at promoting a view of the dynasty as essentially Chinese. But the language is also studied by academics abroad, including many in Japan and the US. Last year overseas historians were branded “splittists” whose work “endangers Chinese unity” in the official journal of the staterun Chinese Academy for Social Sciences, in a sign of official fears over Qing history. But Harvard University professor Mark Elliott said that teaching Manchu was considered less of a threat by the ruling party than Tibetan or the language of the mainly Muslim Uighur mi- nority, as China’s northeastern provinces were now “so firmly welded” into the country that accusations of separatism were implausible. “That makes Manchu a little bit safer,” he added. Sanjiazi is “more of symbolic value as the last bastion of Manchu speakers,” Elliot said. “If the effort is to revive Manchu in a way that it would be used in everyday life, I don’t see much chance of success.” Teacher Shi admitted that his charges only have “some understanding” of the language. Internet savvy young people have little use for it and dream of leaving the remote settlement. Outside school, a group of blue-uniformed children struggled to remember the Manchu word for “goodbye”, one adding in Chinese: “To be honest, our English is better.” One of the few mother-tongue speakers, Meng Xianren, 85, recalled a poverty-stricken youth punctuated by traditional Manchu pursuits, such as rabbit hunting using trained eagles. He repeated a Manchu phrase meaning “where are you from?” to 14-year-old Li Kechao, who hovered in his doorway. She did her best to parrot the question back to the village elder, before admitting: “I don’t understand.” Spitting on a stone floor, Meng declared: “Manchus once ruled over the Han people. But that time is over”. “We’ve become like them,” he added with resignation. “There’s no difference.” Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 17 BRITAIN/IRELAND AVIATION EVENT ART ROYALTY Clear Heathrow plan, government urged Banksy spray painted van to be auctioned Johnny Depp’s Basquiat art collection on sale ‘I’m still alive’, jokes Queen on N Ireland visit Britain is set to fall down the European league table for hub airports, the boss of Heathrow said as he urged the government to back a third runway. The government said on Monday it would announce in weeks whether it backed the expansion of Heathrow or Gatwick, but fears are growing that the long-awaited investment decision could become a victim of the political chaos that has been thrown up by the vote to leave the European Union. “Now more than ever, Britain needs to underpin its globally recognised economic strength by delivering privately funded infrastructure projects like a third runway,” Heathrow CEO John Holland-Kaye said. A SWAT van spray painted by elusive street artist Banksy will go under the hammer at a London auction today with an estimated sale price of around $400,000. ‘SWAT Van’ shows a group of armed agents hoodwinked by a boy on one side while the character Dorothy from ‘The Wizard of Oz’ is depicted on the other. The van was exhibited for the first and only time in Los Angeles 10 years ago. Auction house Bonhams has an estimated sale price for the work in between £200,000 to £300,000. Banksy, who has kept his identity secret, is known for works on buildings displaying ironic as well as provocative social commentary. Eight works by American artist Jean-Michel Basquiat collected by actor Johnny Depp over 25 years go under the hammer this month at auction house Christie’s in London. Almost all the paintings and drawings, which go on sale on June 29 and 30, date from 1981 and illustrate the post-punk New York scene of the time. The auction comes after the sale of the artist’s Untitled piece from 1982 that fetched $57.3mn — a Basquiat record — in May. “The Basquiat market is really high. He just thought it was the right moment to take advantage of the world record we broke...last month,” Edmond Francey, head of Post War and Contemporary Art at Christie’s in London, said. “I’m still alive,” quipped the British monarch Queen Elizabeth when asked about her health, in her first round of public engagements since Britain voted to leave the European Union. The dry remark came during the queen’s two-day trip to Northern Ireland, where she met with leaders including Martin McGuinness, a former Irish Republican Army paramilitary who now serves as deputy first minister of the British-ruled province. “Hello, are you well?” McGuinness asked as he extended his hand in greeting to the monarch in a televised meeting. “I’m still alive anyway. Ha,” Queen Elizabeth laughed, shaking his hand. Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip arrive for their visit to the Giant’s Causeway in Northern Ireland yesterday. London must have more autonomy, says mayor Reuters London L ondon should swiftly be granted more autonomy to help it ride out the economic uncertainty unleashed by Britain’s vote to leave the European Union, Mayor Sadiq Khan said yesterday. While the United Kingdom voted 52% to 48% to leave the bloc, London voted to remain, unlike most of the rest of England. Since then, more than 175,000 people have signed an online petition calling for London to become an independent city-state. “On behalf of all Londoners, I am demanding more autonomy for the capital — right now,” Khan, who last month became the first Muslim mayor of a major Western capital, said in a speech to business leaders. “London has to take back control too. Londoners, who voted for a different path to the rest of England, need more self-determination,” he said. “We need to control our own destiny.” Khan, who campaigned for Britain to remain a member of the EU, said he was not talking about making London independent, but that the city needed to be able to determine its own future after the vote triggered turmoil on global markets. “You will be pleased to know I am not planning to blockade the M25,” he quipped, referring to London’s orbital motorway. “Greater devolution is the best path towards reuniting our country.” Thursday’s Brexit vote has sent shockwaves through the EU, wiped more than $3tn off global stock markets and increased the risk that the United Kingdom will divide after Scotland said it was highly likely to hold a new referendum on independence. Khan, a former opposition Labour lawmaker, is seeking devolution of tax-raising powers, as well as more control over areas including business, transport, housing and planning, health and policing, his office said. “More autonomy in order to protect London’s economy from the uncertainty ahead,” said Khan, 45, who grew up in public housing in inner-city London. Khan said there was no way to reverse the result of the referendum and that Britain would leave the EU, though he expressed concern about the uncertainty that the vote had created for businesses in the capital. “The speed of our exit from the EU looks likely to be decided in Brussels, Paris and Berlin rather than in London,” Khan said. He added that London, which is ranked as the EU’s largest and richest city, must have a seat in the negotiations with the EU over Britain’s future relationship with the bloc. “Britain must remain part of the European single market,” he said. “Remaining in the single market needs to be priority one, two and three of our negotiation with the EU.” London, which offers by far the deepest pool of capital in the time zone between Asia and the US, accounts for 41% of global foreign exchange turnover. That is more than double the nearest competitor, New York, and well above the 3% of its closest EU competitors, France and Switzerland. Banks based in London rely on a so-called EU “passporting” system which allows them to operate across the 28-country bloc’s capital market unhindered. Some banks have said they would shift operations to the euro zone if Britain left the EU. Khan, who succeeded Conservative lawmaker and leading Brexit campaigner Boris Johnson as mayor, said he had the support of local authorities and the City of London financial centre and called on business leaders to back his plan to get more control. Demonstrators hold up placards with slogans against the split with the EU at an anti-Brexit protest in Trafalgar Square in central London yesterday. Corbyn defiant after losing no-trust vote AFP London L abour Party lawmakers voted massively against their leader yesterday amid political turmoil in Britain after a vote to leave the European Union as candidates to succeed Prime Minister David Cameron vied for power behind the scenes. Labour’s Jeremy Corbyn lost a non-binding confidence motion, with 172 Labour MPs voting against him and only 40 in favour out of a total of 229 Labour lawmakers in the House of Commons. But the veteran socialist insisted he would not stand down. “I was democratically elected leader of our party for a new kind of politics by 60% of Labour members and supporters, and I will not betray them by resigning. This vote by MPs has no constitutional legitimacy,” he said in a statement. Five days after the shock referendum vote, the two parties that have dominated Westminster for nearly a century were in almost complete disarray. Pro-EU Finance Minister George Osborne, long tipped to succeed Cameron, ruled himself out yesterday while the media reported that Work and Pensions Minister Stephen Crabb, a virtual unknown to the public, would put his name forward. Former London mayor and ‘Leave’ figurehead Boris Johnson — now a bogeyman for many in the “Remain” camp — is tipped as one of the favourites. The other is Interior Minister Theresa May who is reportedly seeking support for a rival bid that the media tipped as the “Stop Boris” campaign. The Conservatives have set a Thursday deadline for nominations and the party said the winner would be announced on September 9. Cameron has said he would leave it to his successor to invoke Article 50 — the formal procedure for exiting the European Union. On the opposition side, over half of Corbyn’s shadow cabinet — the leadership of his party — have now resigned since Sunday in a co-ordinated series of resignations against the 67-year- F irst Minister Nicola Sturgeon will meet European Parliament chiefs in Brussels today to seek a way for Scotland to remain in the European Union, she said yesterday. Scotland, a nation of 5mn people, voted to stay in the EU by 62% to 38% in last week’s referendum, putting it at odds with the United Kingdom as a whole, which voted 52% to 48% in favour of Brexit. Sturgeon has called the prospect of Scotland being taken out of the EU “democratically unacceptable” and said she would take all necessary steps to prevent it, including revisiting the issue of independence from the United Kingdom. She said that in an initial visit to Brussels today she would set out Scotland’s position to European Parliament President Martin Schulz and to representatives of the major groups of European lawmakers. She also said that after this week’s European Council, she intended to discuss the Scottish issue directly with the European Commission, the EU’s executive body. “Our early priority has been to ensure that there is a widespread awareness across Europe of Scotland’s different choice in the referendum and of our aspiration to stay in the EU,” Sturgeon told the Scottish parliament. She said she had already discussed the fallout from the Brexit vote with the president and prime minister of Ireland, and that the Scottish government was directly in touch with the governments of other EU member states. Sturgeon’s Scottish National Party (SNP) campaigns for Scotland to break away from the UK, and Sturgeon said after the results of the EU referendum were announced that a second independence referendum was now “highly likely”. Scots rejected independence by 55% to 45% in a 2014 referendum in which EU membership was presented as one of the key advantages of remaining part of the UK. Sturgeon argues that the Brexit vote has changed the context so profoundly that Scots should be able to vote again on the issue, should independence turn out to be the best way for Scotland to remain an EU member. The Scottish arm of Conservative Party, which is the main opposition to the SNP in the Scottish parliament, attacked Sturgeon for linking the EU issue to the possibility of a second independence referendum. “You do not dampen the shockwaves caused by one referendum by lighting the fuse for another,” Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson told the parliament in Edinburgh. “(The Brexit vote) does not break the continuing logic of our sharing power with the United Kingdom, not splitting from it.” The Labour Party, once the dominant force in Scottish politics but now a shadow of its former self following a string of SNP electoral victories, said millions of Scots wanted to be part of both the United Kingdom and the EU. The Conservatives are meanwhile scrambling to choose a successor to Cameron, who announced his resignation within hours of the Brexit result last Friday. A new poll yesterday put May in the lead with 31%, against 24% for Johnson. Nominations for the party leadership open today, and close tomorrow. If more than two candidates stand, Tory MPs will vote next week to whittle down the field to two nominees, before the new leader is chosen by a postal ballot of party members, who currently number around 150,000. The new Tory leader is expected to be announced on September 9, the party announced yesterday. Pages 18, 26 You’re not laughing now: Farage tells MEPs Sturgeon plans EU talks to keep Scotland in bloc Reuters Edinburgh old, who only became leader in September. Corbyn, a veteran socialist and eurosceptic who voted against EU membership in a 1975 referendum, has come under heavy criticism from proEU lawmakers for his lukewarm campaigning in favour of Britain staying in. Many experts have blamed the strong anti-EU vote in Labour heartlands in northern England on Corbyn. But Corbyn himself has blamed Conservative austerity measures for creating disenchantment in many workingclass areas and said the media had not covered Labour’s referendum campaign, focussing instead on rifts within the ruling Conservatives. AFP Brussels N Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon listens in the debating chamber of the Scottish Parliament at Holyrood in Edinburgh, Scotland, yesterday. igel Farage, leader of the anti-EU UK Independence Party, told a jeering European Parliament he had had the last laugh after Britain defied their warnings and voted to quit the EU. “Isn’t it funny. When I came here 17 years ago and I said I wanted to lead a campaign to get Britain to leave the EU, you all laughed at me but you are not laughing now,” Farage told MEPs. Farage said the European Union was “in denial” about its failing and wrong-headed ambitions for a united Europe from which voters were turning away in droves. “You have imposed on them a political union and when the people in 2005 in the Netherlands and in France voted against you, you simply ignored them and brought the Lisbon Treaty in by the back door!” he told MEPs in an emergency debate on Britain’s Brexit vote. There needs to be a “grown-up and sensible” approach to negoti- ating a new relationship between Britain and the European Union based on tariff-free access to the bloc’s single market, Farage said. “If you were to decide to cut off your noses to spite faces and to reject any idea of a sensible trade deal, the consequences would be far worse for you than it would be for us,” the EU lawmaker told his counterparts in the European Parliament. “Let’s cut between us a sensible tariff-free deal and thereafter recognise that the UK will be your friend, that we will trade with you, we will co-operate with you, we will be your best friends in the world,” Farage added. Meanwhile, EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker accused Farage of deliberately misleading the public with a claim that Britain pays 350mn euros a week to the EU, telling him: “You lied. You did not tell the truth.” Farage said Britain should leave as soon as possible, but that the process should be amicable, adding that the size of the British economy and its close links with the rest of the EU meant that it should be given a preferential deal. 18 Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 EUROPE EU tells UK to leave ‘quickly’ Valls says it’s time to ‘lance the boil’ Reuters Brussels E uropean leaders yesterday told Britain to act quickly to resolve the political and economic chaos unleashed by its vote to leave the European Union, a move the IMF said could put pressure on global growth. Financial markets recovered slightly after the result of last Thursday’s referendum wiped a record $3tn off global shares and sterling fell to its lowest level in 31 years, but trading was volatile and policymakers said they would take all necessary measures to protect their economies. European countries are concerned about the impact of the uncertainty created by Britain’s vote to leave on the 27 other EU member states. There is little idea of when, or even if, the country will formally declare it is quitting. “The process for the United Kingdom to leave the European Union must start as soon as possible,” French President Francois Hollande said. “I can’t imagine any British government would not respect the choice of its own people.” European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker sent a similar message as he prepared for talks with British Prime Minister David Cameron before an EU summit in Brussels, although he did not anticipate an immediate move. “We cannot be embroiled in lasting Europe needs to “lance the boil” after Britain decided to leave the European Union and reinvent itself, France’s Prime Minister Manuel Valls said yesterday, warning that timid steps would only leave the door open to populist, eurosceptic parties. Even if Britain was a country that had always had “one foot in, one foot out” of the bloc, Europe must not turn a blind eye to a wider popular malaise, the Socialist premier said. “Now is not the time for diplomatic prudence. We have to lance the boil,” Valls told lawmakers at the opening of a parliamentary debate on the consequences of Britain’s referendum vote on June 23 to quit the EU. The Brexit vote highlighted a deepseated unease among voters, Valls said. Failure to make Europe more relevant to voters — increasingly disgruntled over immigration and the erosion of national uncertainty,” Juncker said in a speech to the European Parliament, which he interrupted to ask British members of the assembly who campaigned to leave the EU why they were there. Cameron, who called the referendum and tendered his resignation when it became clear he had failed to persuade Britain to stay in the EU, says he will leave it to his successor to formally declare the country’s exit. sovereignty in a drive for EU integration — would leave the doors open to populist eurosceptic parties. Valls said President Francois Hollande, who is in Brussels for a European Council summit, had a firm message for Britain that there would be no Brexit negotiations before London triggers a two-year countdown for completion of the divorce. “We don’t want to punish them. That would be absurd,” Valls said. “But Europe needs clarity. Either they leave or they stay in the union.” Britain’s referendum outcome echoed euroscepticism growing across much of the continent, including in France where the far-right National Front cheered the Brexit and renewed its call for a popular vote on France’s EU membership. Valls, though, rejected the idea of a French referendum. “Of course we have to let people have their say. But let’s be clear: a referendum is not the way to sort out a problem.” Arriving for the EU summit, he said: “I’ll be explaining that Britain will be leaving the European Union but I want that process to be as constructive as possible, and I hope the outcome can be as constructive as possible. Holding out hope of maintaining good relations with other European countries, he said Britain wanted “the closest possible relationship in terms of trade and co-operation and security. British Prime Minister David Cameron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel take places for the traditional family photo at he EU summit in Brussels yesterday. Because that is good for us and that is good for them.” His party says it aims to choose a new leader by early September. But those who campaigned for Britain’s leave vote have made clear they hope to negotiate a new deal for the country with the EU before triggering the formal exit process. European leaders have said that is not an option. “No notification, no negotiation,” Juncker said. After Cameron addressed EU leaders yesterday evening, they meet today to discuss Brexit without him. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Britain would not be able to “cherry-pick” parts of the EU, such as access to the single market, without accepting principles such as freedom of movement when it negotiates its exit from the bloc. “I can only advise our British friends not to fool themselves...in terms of the necessary decisions that need to be made in Britain,” she told German parliament in Berlin. Cameron will meet other European counterparts one-on-one before addressing them all at what promises to be a frosty dinner to discuss what has become known as Brexit. EU lawmakers say they want him to trigger the exit process at the dinner, but an EU official said that was unrealistic given the political chaos in London, where both Cameron’s party and opposition Labour lawmakers are deeply divided. The vote has caused new friction in the EU at a time of crises over a mass influx of refugees, economic weakness and tensions on its borders with Russia. Poland’s foreign minister demanded Juncker and other leaders of the executive European Commission quit for not preserving the Union. The prime minister of Greece, enduring austerity measures in return for aid, said Europe must change direction. Germany’s financial market regulator delivered a double blow to London, saying it could not host the headquarters of a planned European stock exchange giant after Britain leaves the EU, and could not remain a centre for trading in euros. Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said England had collapsed “politically, monetarily, constitutionally and economically”. Hungary’s Orban for Special EU-UK deal may be inevitable even if it takes time migration overhaul By Philip Blenkinsop, Reuters Brussels Reuters Budapest T he European Union will face more big challenges in the wake of Britain’s decision to leave if it fails to get to grips with the migration crisis, Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban said yesterday. Orban, a staunch EU critic, told state television m1 that in his view migration was the decisive issue in last week’s British referendum. “The important question is what lessons to draw from what happened, for us Europeans who are still members of the European Union and want to stay in,” Orban said. “If the EU cannot solve the migration situation then such challenges as we saw in the case of the United Kingdom will increase.” Orban’s ruling Fidesz party has initiated a referendum of its own, to be held in September or October, on whether Hungary should reject any future mandatory quotas from Brussels to resettle migrants arriving en masse from countries such as Syria. Hungary, which built a fence on its southern border to keep out migrants, has repeatedly accused the EU of weakness in the face of the crisis, calling for tough policies like fortified borders and strict immigration procedures. Politicians in several other countries have proposed referendums of their own on EU membership, largely on the grounds of what they see as a failed immigration policy. “Plebiscites are raised in more and more places because the European Union is seen as unable to tackle the situation,” Orban said. “And it criticises countries that remedy the situation on their own, instead of honouring and supporting them. That is bad politics.” He said Hungary’s referendum was about winning a political mandate for an impending European debate in which member states will have to thrash out a robust new migration policy. “Our goal is to stop (migrants). Many countries here have a different goal: to let them in, or bring them in, then spread them around... There will be no unified migration policy until we make clear what goals to use Europe’s resources for.” W ith no suitable readymade deal, the European Union and Britain could face years of negotiations to find a settlement that balances London’s wish to maximise access to EU markets with its demand to regain sovereignty and limit migration. The EU’s off-the-shelf model, the European Economic Area, extending EU markets to Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein, ticks the box of securing market access, although excludes agriculture and fisheries. The City of London, the country’s financial hub, is in talks with government officials to secure a trade deal similar to Norway’s that would allow it to sell financial services across the EU single market of 27 countries. “Clearly, one of the options is the Norway model, but whether that is acceptable to people who wanted Britain to leave is another matter,” said Mark Boleat, City of London head of policy, adding trade bodies and others have been in “non-stop meetings” since late last week when Britain voted in a referendum to leave the EU. However, the model gets a sizeable cross because it would mean accepting rules set by Brussels, free movement of people and payment. Many backers of the campaign to leave the bloc complained the EU had eroded Britain’s sovereignty and allowed uncontrolled numbers of migrants to arrive from eastern Europe. Liechtenstein has some control on migration, its tiny size limiting the right to reside there, although around half of its workforce still commute from neighbouring countries. Norway pays an annual 400mn euros ($443mn) mainly to support eastern EU members and another 400mn euros into EU programmes, such as the Galileo satellite navigation project, some of which it gets back. Norway’s Prime Minister Erna Solberg has said she doubts a Norway-style relationship with the EU would work for a much larger country such as Britain, with its history. “We accept a lot of the rules and regulations that are part of the internal market decided by roundtables that we don’t participate in,” Solberg said. “Norway is a small country with a different history. We can accept it because it gives mar- ket access, job security, it makes it possible to secure economic growth,” she said. The EU-Swiss approach has been a patchwork of agreements, but the two have stopped short of an agreement covering financial services. Swiss banks are not allowed to directly sell products in the bloc. The deals include free movement of people, although the parties are wrestling with a 2014 referendum at which the Swiss expressed their desire to curb migration. The Swiss also have to pay for access, although at around half the rate related to gross domestic product as Norway. A failure to reach an agreement is not an option for either side. Britain is in the top six world economies and a trade war would damage both sides, with threats to German car sales or Belgian ports if tariffs curbed trade. “If you look at it rationally, there is good case to be made for the EU to become more flexible,” Pieter Cleppe of think tank Open Europe said. “At the end of the day, reason will prevail though there will be a lot of screaming and shouting before then.” A number of Brexit supporters — including former London mayor Boris Johnson, a likely contender for prime minister — have pointed to the free trade deal (CETA) struck between the European Union and Canada as a way forward. Agreed in 2014, it has yet to enter force. Under such a system, Britain would avoid having to accept migrants from elsewhere in the bloc or contributing to the budget, but would only secure partial access to the EU’s internal market, particularly for services, which make up nearly 80% of Britain’s economy. For banks, in particular, Canadian companies have to establish a presence in the EU and comply with EU regulations. Under this model, UK-based financial services firms could find it more difficult to sell into the EU. New EU rules set to enter force in 2018 may allow firms outside the EU to sell investment services inside the bloc. However, it does not apply to all financial services and relies on the European Commission recognising the third countries’ rules. Hosuk Lee-Makiyama, director of think tank European Centre for International Political Economy (ECIPE), says that a planned EU-US trade deal (TTIP), the most ambitious each side has undertaken, could serve as a template for future EU-UK ties. “CETA is basically a tariff agreement, which makes sense because Canada and the EU are mainly trading goods. The UK and EU are much more integrated so it would need to cover services and investment,” Lee-Makiyama said. CETA is the EU’s most ambitious trade deal to date. TTIP, still being negotiated by the European Union and the United States, is designed to go beyond traditional tariff reduction, including cooperation over regulation. “If you take the European stance in TTIP, Britain has already agreed to this and it covers regulatory co-operation, there’s already a template, but no money or migration,” Lee-Makiyama said. Still, TTIP talks have lasted almost three years, CETA has yet to enter force nearly seven years after negotiations began. Under EU law, a nation would leave the EU within two years of its request to go unless the other member states agree to an extension. “It’s unlikely any country would veto such an extension,” said Cleppe.”It’s conceivable that it could take seven to 10 years.” Benedict delights with surprise Vatican speech AFP Vatican City P Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI is greeted by Pope Francis during a ceremony at the Vatican yesterday to mark the 65th anniversary of his ordination as a priest. ope Emeritus Benedict XVI yesterday made a rare public appearance, delighting senior clerics with an impromptu speech at a celebration to mark the 65th anniversary of his ordination. Three years after he became the first Pope to retire in seven centuries, the 89-year-old German confounded rumours that his health was failing by standing for nearly 10 minutes as he spoke in a clearly audible, steady voice in a mixture of Italian and Latin. “Thank you Holiness, I feel protected by you,” the erstwhile Joseph Ratzinger said. “Let us hope that you can go forward in your goodness.” Benedict was replying to a homage from Pope Francis, who said his predecessor’s prayers “do so much good and give so much strength, to me and to the entire Church.” Departing from his prepared speech, Francis also hailed Benedict’s “healthy and wise sense of humour” — a quality that the austere-seeming academic rarely managed to project during his time in office. Benedict, who has the official title of Emeritus Pope, was last seen in public on December 8 last year, when he appeared frail as he joined Francis to launch a Catholic Jubilee year on the theme of mercy. Guests at yesterday’s ceremony included all the heads of the various departments of the Vatican bureaucracy, the curia, and Georg Ratzinger, who was ordained as a priest on the same day as his younger brother in 1951. Ever since Benedict stepped down there have been suggestions that he is a focus for Church conservatives opposed to Francis’s reform agenda and that he continues to wield significant influence. The current Pope addressed those ideas on Sunday during his flight home from Armenia. “When he retired, he said ‘I promise obedience’ and he has given it,” Francis told reporters. “Some have gone to him to complain about ‘this new Pope’ and he chased them away. With his Bavarian good manners of course, but he chased them out. He is a man of his word, straight, straight.” Benedict has made only a handful of public appearances since he retired on February 28, 2013 saying he no longer had the strength of mind or body to carry on at the helm of a church beset by problems ranging from paedophile priests to financial scandals surrounding the Vatican bank. A few months later he took up residence in a former convent inside the Vatican, where he has since spent most of his time praying, reading or writing. Friends say he is slightly unsteady on his legs but that his mind remains agile — he can still play pieces by his beloved Mozart on the piano from memory, according to his personal secretary. Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 19 EUROPE French again march to protest labour reform AFP Paris T housands of people took to the streets of Paris yesterday in the latest protest march in a marathon campaign against the French Socialist government’s job market reforms. The march, along with a strike that shut down the Eiffel Tower, came as the French Senate prepared to vote on the hotly contested reforms aimed at reining in unemployment by freeing up the job market. Seven unions yesterday submitted what they called partial results from a public survey on the draft law, with 92% of 700,000 respondents calling for its withdrawal. French President Francois Hollande said last week that his government would “go all the way” to enact the reforms, which are seen by critics as too pro-business and a threat to cherished workers’ rights. “It is essential not only to allow businesses to be able to hire more” but to step up training that will lead to more jobs, he said. Prime Minister Manuel Valls will meet union leaders today and tomorrow but has already signalled he is not open to further modifying a text that has already been watered down. Valls, who has been a lightning rod for criticism because of his unrelenting stance on the reforms, conceded little by agreeing to the meetings. The prime minister’s office said they would “review” the situation but “it is not a matter of reopening a cycle of negotiations.” Philippe Martinez, secretary general of the hardline CGT union, said he hoped the meeting would not be a mere “courtesy call just to have a coffee”. Unions say the main sticking point is a measure giving precedence to agreements negotiated between companies and their staff over deals reached with unions across entire industrial sectors — notably on working hours. The two sides have not met since Demonstrators walk with flares during a demo against proposed labour law reforms in Bordeaux yesterday. early March, though Valls telephoned union leaders on May 28. Yesterday afternoon saw the 11th demonstration against the reforms since the wave of protests began on March 9. Many of the protests have descended into violence, reaching a peak in Paris on June 14, just four days after the start of the Euro 2016 football championships in France. Hundreds of masked protesters and police fought running street battles, and police used water cannon to quell rioters who hurled projectiles at them and bashed in storefronts, with 40 people hurt and dozens arrested. The unrest led to a tug-of-war last week when the government initially banned a planned march before allowing it to take place along a shortened route. Tens of thousands took part in the march, which passed off peacefully under the close watch of 2,000 riot police and after 100 people were arrested for carrying potential projectiles or face coverings. A longer march was authorised for yesterday, with a beefed-up security contingent of 2,500. At least 24 arrests were made ahead of the march from the historic Place de la Bastille across the Seine to the Place d’Italie in southern Paris. The right-dominated Senate was to vote in the early evening on its version of the labour reform bill, which is tougher on workers’ rights than the lower house version. The Senate wants to scrap the 35hour work week and restore a cap on the amount employers would have to pay out when they lose labour disputes. The bill then returns to the National Assembly on July 5 — already on the hardline CGT union’s calendar for another protest. Last month the government used a constitutional manoeuvre to push the bill through the lower house without a vote in the face of opposition from Socialist backbenchers. With the two chambers unlikely to agree a final version, the lower house will have the final say, and the government is expected to use the same manoeuvre to pass the bill into law without a vote. According to an opinion poll published yesterday, 73% of the French would be “shocked” by such a move. Kremlin dents Turkish hopes for quick restoration of ties Reuters Moscow/Ankara T he Kremlin yesterday sought to dampen Turkey’s hopes for a swift restoration of normal relations, a day after Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan expressed regret over the downing of a Russian warplane last year. The Russian jet was shot down, with the loss of the pilot, in November while taking part in the Kremlin’s military campaign in war-ravaged Syria. Ankara said it acted lawfully because the plane had crossed into Turkish air space; Moscow denied that happened. The incident triggered Russian sanctions against Turkey that have damaged trade and tourism. After writing to Russian President Vladimir Putin to voice his regret on Monday, Erdogan said he believed Ankara would normalise relations with Moscow “rapidly”. But the Kremlin struck a more cautious tone yesterday. “One should not think it possible to normalise everything within a few days, but work in this direction will continue,” spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on a conference call. “President Putin has expressed more than once his willingness to maintain good relations with Turkey and the Turkish people,” Peskov said. “Now a very important step has been made.” Putin and Erdogan will hold a telephone conversation today at Moscow’s initiative, Peskov said. Putin has said an apology from Erdogan was necessary to repair relations. Erdogan spokesman Ibrahim Kalin said the Turkish president had expressed regret over the shooting in a letter to Putin, but added that this was not an apology. Even as ties between the two countries improve, Kalin added, sticking points over Syria and other issues would continue. “In the coming period, Turkey’s ties with Russia will enter a normalisation phase. Our policies on Ukraine, Syria and Crimea will not change, we don’t agree with Russia on these areas but we will continue to discuss these issues,” he told reporters. In the Syrian conflict Russia backs President Bashar al-Assad while Turkey and its Western allies support groups opposed to him. Ankara said it shot down the plane because it entered Turkish airspace, an allegation Moscow denies vehementaly. The Russian pilot ejected from the plane but was killed by gunfire from rebels on the ground in Syria as he parachuted down to earth. As well as an official apology, Moscow has also said it wants Turkey to pay compensation for the incident, in which the Russian pilot ejected but was killed by rebel gunfire on the ground in Syria as he parachuted down to earth. Kalin said Turkey may pay aid to “relieve Russian pain” over the shooting but he said that would not constitute compensation, which would require a legal ruling or an agreement. Turkey says legal proceedings are underway against an individual al- legedly responsible for the killing of the pilot. Turkey has been hard hit by the Russian sanctions, particularly in its key tourism sector. Data yesterday showed that tourist arrivals in Turkey saw their biggest drop in at least 22 years in May, with the number of Russians down by more than 90%. Turkey’s expression of regret to Russia on Monday came as it also announced the restoration of diplomatic ties with Israel after a six-year rupture. Both moves appear to be aimed at mending Turkey’s sense of isolation on the world stage, though Kalin denied they represented a big policy shift on Ankara’s part. “Solving these issues allowed us to return to the normal format. Turkish foreign policy is not going through a grand revision,” he said. Germany puts spy service on a tighter leash AFP Berlin G ermany yesterday approved new measures to rein in the activities of its foreign intelligence agency after a scandal over improper collusion with the US National Security Agency. Two months after replacing the head of the BND service over the damning revelations, Chancellor Angela Merkel’s cabinet signed off on the reforms to keep the country’s spies on a tighter leash. Oversight of the spy agency directly from Merkel’s office will be beefed up with an external watchdog panel of jurists, and the list of duties the BND carries out for the NSA has been overhauled. While intelligence gathering from EU institutions or partner states will not be explicitly banned, it will be limited by law to “information to recognise and confront threats to internal or external security”. Economic espionage is barred. The reforms, which still require approval from parliament, are based on the findings of a government-appointed investigator into claims that the BND spied on its European allies for the NSA. The 300-page report found the NSA had kept a long list of European government offices as targets for espionage and that the United States had thus “clearly violated treaty agreements”. The probe was based on a review of telephone numbers and IP addresses the NSA handed to the BND’s surveillance apparatus with the request that the results to be sent back to the United States. The findings indicated that over the years the BND whittled down the list of thousands of NSA targets while still maintaining cooperation. Germany had reacted with outrage when information leaked by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealed in 2013 that US agents were carrying out widespread tapping worldwide, including of Merkel’s mobile phone. Merkel, who grew up in communist East Germany where state spying on citizens was rampant, declared repeatedly that “spying among friends is not on” while acknowledging Germany’s reliance on the US in security matters. Germany announced in late April that it was replacing the head of the BND. Gerhard Schindler, 63, will take early retirement from July 1, leaving the reins to Bruno Kahl, a 53-year-old trained lawyer and high-ranking finance ministry official. Extremism on the rise in Germany Political extremism rose sharply in Germany last year — among far-right but also far-left and Islamist radical groups — the domestic intelligence agency said yesterday. “Extremist groups, whatever their orientation, are gaining ground in Germany,” said Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere, presenting the 2015 report. The security agency had “observed not just a rise in membership but also an increase in violence and brutality,” he said in a statement. Some 1,408 acts of far-right violence were recorded last year against 990 the previous year, said the service called the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution. The sharp rise in racist hate crimes came as Germany took in a record number of more than 1mn refugees and migrants asking for political asylum, and as militant attacks in Paris and Brussels stoke terrorism fears in Europe. “The intensity of right-wing extremist militancy started in early 2015 and increased steadily — from threats against politicians and journalists to arson attacks on asylum seeker shelters and attempted killings,” said the report. There were 75 arson attacks against refugee shelters in Germany, five times more than 2014. The report said that online “social networks play an important role in agitation and radicalisation”, as uninhibited hate speech dehumanises minorities and fuels real-world violent crime. Far-left acts of violence — often targeting far-right activists or police — also rose sharply, to 1,608 violent offences from 995 the previous year, said the report. The worst spate of attacks came during mass protests in March against the European Central Bank in Frankfurt, when rioters rampaged through streets and set ablaze police cars. The service also pointed to the rising threat posed by Islamists, estimating their number at about 10,000. Warsaw risks Moscow’s ire with plan to relocate historic World War II memorials By Tadeusz Kolasinski, Reuters Warsaw M A man rides a bike in front of the monument of the Gratitude for the Soviet Army Soldiers in Warsaw. ore than 200 monuments to Stalin’s Red Army could be taken from towns across Poland and relocated on the site of a former Soviet military base under plans announced yesterday by a state-backed Polish historical institute. At the risk of upsetting Moscow, the Institute of National Remembrance (IPN) proposes to house the so-called “monuments of gratitude to the Red Army” in a park in the former base at Borne Sulinowo, a small town 440km northwest of Warsaw. Poland, once a member of the former Soviet bloc but now a western ally in Nato, is still grappling with the legacy of war and communist rule and its relations with Moscow have been strained for some years. All the same the IPN’s plan is diplomatically sensitive, as Moscow protested strongly when one such monument was removed from the town of Pieniezno last year. A spokeswoman for the Russian embassy in Warsaw, Ekaterina Glazova, said that Poland is obliged to protect all war memorials under a 1994 bilateral agreement with Russia. Poland argues the agreement only relates to cemeteries, while Russia says it concerns all war memorials on Polish territory. The Soviet Union lost more than 20mn people — more than any other country — in World War II, and Russia considers the memorials a witness to its sacrifices in liberating Europe from the Nazis. But many Poles resent them as reminders that Stalin and Hitler invaded their country simultaneously in 1939, and it remained under Soviet domination for more than four decades after the war until the overthrow of Communism in 1989. Poland’s new conservative government of the Law and Justice (PiS) party has been critical of Russian policy on Ukraine and is in favour of keeping EU sanctions on Moscow. PiS has also reopened an inves- tigation into the death of president Lech Kaczynski, the twin brother of current PiS leader, in a plane crash in Russia in 2010. PiS has never explicitly accused Russia of orchestrating the president’s death, but has said the Kremlin benefited from the crash. “The plan will include only monuments expressing the gratitude towards the Red Army, and it will not affect Soviet cemeteries,” said Andrzej Zawistowski, director of the IPN’s education department. For that reason, the IPN said, it had not consulted Russia. “The educational park will show these monuments within the right historical context,” Zawistowski said. “Educational parks and institutions of this type exist equally in other states such as Lithuania, Hungary or even Russia.” The agency has catalogued 229 such monuments and it will now assist local authorities in delivering them to the park. But final decisions on whether to take them off the streets will be made by local councils. 20 Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 INDIA LEGAL CRIME LAW AND ORDER OBITUARY EDUCATION Sadhvi Pragnya’s bail plea rejected Gang loots Rs120mn from Thane cash firm Main accused in NIA official’s murder held Bengaluru woman taxi driver found dead Board clerk detained in exam toppers scam A special National Investigation Agency court in Mumbai yesterday rejected the bail application of 2008 Malegaon blast accused, Sadhvi Pragnya Singh Thakur. In her plea, Thakur argued that no case was made out against her as per evidence collected by the NIA. However, the judge ruled that prima facie there was evidence available against the accused, hence the bail application cannot be considered. The NIA had last month given its no-objection to the bail and said that the evidence on record against Thakur was not sufficient to prosecute her. Seven people were killed in a massive blast at Malegaon, a predominantly Muslim town in Nashik district of north Maharashtra, on September 29, 2008. In one of the biggest thefts of its kind in Maharashtra, armed dacoits stormed into a cash management firm in Thane and fled with around Rs120mn in cash, police said yesterday. The incident occurred around 3am when at least six-eight armed men wielding guns, revolvers and knives broke into the offices of CheckMate Pvt Services Ltd. The gang cut the CCTV cameras’ wires before looting the cash kept in a van for disbursal to various bank ATMs. The cash van had been loaded with currency chests a short while earlier and was preparing to go on its regular rounds to refill cash at ATMs when the gang struck. The main accused in National Investigation Agency official Mohamed Tanzeel Ahmed’s murder was arrested by the special task force (STF) of the Uttar Pradesh (UP) police in Noida yesterday. The accused, Muneer, was arrested along with two associates. He had been staying in Noida for the last three days. A 9mm pistol was also recovered, the official said. Soon after his arrest, the UP police, NIA officials and the STF have begun interrogating the accused, who is alleged to have shot Ahmed, 49, two dozen times on April 13 in Budayun. Ahmed’s wife succumbed to gunshot injuries later at a Delhi hospital. A 40-year-old woman taxi driver was found dead at her rented house in the city’s northwest suburb, police said yesterday. “It appears to be a case of suicide, as the victim’s (V Bharathi) body was found hanging from the ceiling of a room by her landlord on Monday night,” Sanjay Nagar police inspector Prakash said. No suicide note was found at her house. Police have registered a case of unnatural death and shifted the body to a state-run hospital for autopsy to ascertain the cause of death. Hailing from Guntur in Andhra Pradesh, Bharathi was staying alone in the house as she was single and orphaned. Her cab was found parked in front of the house in Nagashettyhalli colony. The Special Investigation Team (SIT) yesterday arrested Bihar School Examination Board clerk Ram Bujhawan Jha in connection with the class XII toppers’ scam, police said. Earlier, Jha was detained and interrogated by the SIT. “SIT has arrested Jha on the basis of revelations made by others who have been arrested in connection with the toppers scam,” a police official said. Jha was produced in a Patna court that sent him to judicial custody for 14 days. The SIT on Monday had arrested former board secretary Hariharnath Jha in connection with the scam. Last week, the SIT had arrested the board’s former chairman Lalkeshwar Prasad and his wife Usha Sinha from Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh. Protests in Kashmir as security forces kill militant IANS Srinagar I n a major setback to the Hizbul Mujahideen terror outfit, security forces yesterday killed one of its top commanders who was wanted for last year’s attacks on communication towers in Jammu and Kashmir and many other terror-related cases, officials said. The killing triggered violent protests in Sopore, to where he belonged. Police said Sameer Wani was shot dead after security forces surrounded a house in Nagri village in Kupwara district, some 100km from here, after information that some militants were hiding there. A police officer said security forces came under heavy fire from the hideout, leading to fighting that left Wani, the Hizb divisional commander for north Kashmir, dead. Police alleged that Wani was wanted for his involvement in dozens of attacks in Jammu and Kashmir and had unleashed a reign of terror last year after masterminding strikes on communication towers and their owners to cripple cellphone services in the state. The attacks on cell phone towers were claimed by a littleknown militant outfit, Lashkare-Islam. Police said that Wani, who had earned a nickname “tower hunter”, had set up the group as an offshoot of Hizbul Mujahideen. The Hizbul Mujahideen had then denied any involvement and blamed security agencies for the attacks that had caused severe disruption of cellphone services in parts of the Kashmir Valley. Hizbul Mujahideen chief Syed Salahuddin, who also heads the United Jihad Council (UJC) paid tributes to the slain militant in a statement to a Srinagar-based news agency, CNS. Wani’s death triggered angry protests in parts of north Kashmir. As soon as reports of his killing reached his Dooru village in Sopore sub-district, hundreds of residents came out to protest, shouting anti-government and pro-freedom slogans, witnesses and officials said. The protesters set ablaze a police vehicle in Shiva area after his body reached the village but its occupants were not harmed. Dozens of motorcycle-borne young men took out a rally as the militant commander’s body was taken in a procession for funeral prayers. Hundreds of people attended Wani’s burial in his village. Markets were closed and public transport spontaneously went off the road following Wani’s death. The protesters also clashed with police and threw stones at them. Police fired tear gas canisters to disperse them as tension ran high in and around the area. Meanwhile, suspected militants yesterday snatched an AK 47 rifle of a personal security guard of a Bharatiya Janata Party leader in central Kashmir Badgam district. In Delhi, Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh reviewed the security situation in the state that has seen a sudden surge in militancyrelated violence. On Saturday, militants killed eight paramilitary troopers in one of the deadliest firing attacks on their bus in a south Kashmir town. National security adviser Ajit Doval, Union Home Secretary Rajiv Mehrishi, chiefs of intelligence agencies and other senior home ministry officials attended the meeting that also discussed militant incursion from across the border. Heavy rains wreak havoc Residents wade through flood waters after heavy monsoon rain in Dimapur yesterday. Thousands of people were flooded out of their homes in the northeastern state of Nagaland following heavy monsoon rains. BJP plotting to get me arrested: Delhi minister IANS New Delhi D elhi Water Minister Kapil Mishra yesterday said he feared he could be arrested by the Anti-Corruption Branch (ACB) which has summoned him on July 4 regarding a “water tanker scam” which he had exposed. “I have come to know from reliable sources that the ACB is planning to arrest me at the earliest,” Mishra told journalists. “They want to arrest me as early as possible.” The minister said the ACB, which is under the central government, had summoned him for questioning regarding the scam which took place during the previous Congress regime in Delhi. Congress leader Sheila Dikshit headed the Delhi government for 15 years till December 2013. “Why is the Bharatiya Janata Party after us and not Dikshit?” Mishra asked, adding he was not afraid of going to prison. “My fight against corruption will continue even if I am sent to jail,” he said. Mishra said he had submitted the entire fact-finding report of the water tanker scam with all proofs against Dikshit to the Delhi lieutenant governor, but no action was being taken against her. “The ACB is not calling Dikshit for questioning in the Rs400mn water tanker scam, instead they have registered charges against (Chief Minister Arvind) Kejriwal and summoned me for questioning,” he said, adding, “This shows they want to use this report politically.” Mishra alleged the ACB was targeting ministers and officers of the Aam Aadmi Party government. “We had filed three chargesheets against Dikshit in different matters but the ACB did not take any action against her. The vigilance department has sent 38 cases to ACB to file an FIR but it did not file any case. They are only targeting the AAP government,” Mishra claimed. The AAP government in June 2015 constituted a five-member fact-finding committee to probe the irregularities in hiring some 385 stainless steel water tankers by the Delhi Jal Board in 2012 during Dikshit’s rule. Its report submitted to Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal in August 2015 highlights alleged corruption of Rs400mn in the process of awarding tenders for hiring water tankers, and recommended action against Dikshit and a probe by the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and the ACB. The ACB had registered charges against Kejriwal and his predecessor Dikshit on June 20 in connection with the water tanker scam. The chargesheet against Kejriwal was registered on the complaint of BJP legislator Vijender Gupta “for causing delay in the probe and not cancelling the contract for water tankers”. Marxists’ embarrassment continues post-Bengal O bituaries of India’s communist movement, significantly the Marxist version since the others have been reduced to just hangers-on, had been set and ready for publishing by several newspapers but the election results of the Kerala assembly last month made sure that these remained in cold storage at least for some more time. With the Bengal bastion laid to waste once again, only Kerala remained for the Marxists to show their relevance in the 21st century. (Tripura has been with the Marxists for long but a small speck of a state way out in the north-east does not produce any echo in the national capital for it to be considered a talking point.) The decisive victory in Kerala was expected to inject fresh life into the party that seemed ready to wither away with each passing election. But despite Pinarayi Vijayan’s much trumpeted ascendency to the chief minister’s chair in Thiruvananthapuram, the Marxists are being tugged in different directions and the crisis that seemed to have blown over is once again confronting the party at the national level. With the nascent rebellion that V Achuthanandan seemed to mount against Vijayan having been quelled, at least for the time being, the Marxists must have been looking to get ahead to regroup and recoup. But times have certainly changed from the days when everything was decided by the general secretary and the Politburo and the cadres down below simply followed those diktats. Like in everything else, free enterprise has caught on among the Marxists as well and every move of the leadership is getting questioned. Jagmati Sangwan is not the first top leader to be expelled from the party for “gross indiscipline” she claims she had resigned before being expelled, but that’s hairsplitting - but the announcement last week that the social reformer from Haryana was being shown the door could well turn out to be the beginning of another rebellion within the party. Sangwan had opposed the Left’s disastrous tie-up with the Congress Party in the West Bengal assembly elections. Although many in the leadership, former general secretary Prakash Karat foremost among them, also opposed the alliance, the party went ahead with it and, in the event, even lost its position as the main opposition in the state. But Sangwan had to pay the price for being vocal about her opposition. If opposing the alliance with Congress was Sangwan’s sin, CPM member of the West Bengal assembly, Tanmoy Bhattacharaya, Delhi Diary By A K B Krishnan Gulf Times Correspondent presented the party with another problem, this time joining hands with the Congress Party at a rally in Kolkata to protest against price rise under the Trinamool Congress rule. What made matters worse was the fact that the CPI(M)-led Left Front had decided not to join the rally because it wanted to distance itself from being seen as cosying up to the Congress in any manner. Bhattacharya is a first-time legislator and, therefore, his utterances like “no one has the right to disrespect the public mandate” could well be brushed aside by the party leadership but not before he was censured for his indiscipline. But Kerala Finance Minister Thomas Isaac is no greenhorn as far as Marxist ideology is concerned and it is his public support for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s moves on the goods and services tax (GST) that has created the biggest embarrassment both for the CPI(M) and the Congress. Isaac was quoted by Indian Express newspaper as saying he “did not find any reason for standing in the way of GST”. The CPI(M), led by its general secretary, Sitaram Yechuri, had mounted a major offensive against several GST provisions in the Rajya Sabha thanks to its intimacy with the Congress, their common enemy being the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). But that was before the assembly elections and that was when these parties were working out an “arrangement” in West Bengal. But having lost Bengal and won Kerala, the equations have changed for the Marxists. Isaac realises that attacking the ruling dispensation from the opposition benches is one thing, but being in power and facing up to the rigours of governance when the whole nation is on an aspirational high is something totally different. “As (the) practising finance minister of Kerala, I will be foolish to say I don’t want it (GST),” the daily quoted Isaac as saying. In case someone thought that Isaac had exceeded his brief, endorsement of what the finance minister said came from none other than his Chief Minister, Vijayan. “CPI(M) had earlier raised some reservations. Kerala government has agreed with the bill. In parliament, when it was discussed, CPI(M) had raised certain reservations. Kerala government has no objections,” said Vijayan. The CPI(M)’s central committee meeting was a stormy affair not just because of the Sangwan issue but also due to Vijayan and Isaac taking a stand contrary to the party’s declared position. The objection from the Congress was a minor issue compared to what was decidedly an in-house rebellion. The central committee announced it would try to build “a consensus around the GST” before taking a final decision. If both the chief minister and the finance minister of the only frontline state where it is in power want the GST, will the committee or the Politburo dare to go against their wishes? We will soon know. Kejriwal’s ‘Brexit’ moment Britain wants out. Or does it, considering how second thoughts are emerging to overpower the first one? How will ‘Brexit’ affect - or not affect - India was the subject of much discussion in all forms of media these past few days. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who was away in Beijing while Britons voted to exit European Union (EU), was quick to announce that India was well cushioned to take any blow that might come its way. Reserve Bank Governor Raghuram Rajan reiterated the country’s financial strength to weather such storms. The financial markets did exhibit some panic initially with the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) prime index falling by as much as 1,000 points before recouping much of those losses. The rupee, too, did not go through the sort of mayhem that some of the other major currencies experienced against the dollar. Experts are of the view that except for a few industrial houses that have heavy investments in Britain - Tata Sons Ltd for instance - there could be next to no adverse impact on India. In fact, some say this could well be to India’s advantage as both Britain and the European Union will now look to India for new partnerships. The Tatas own 19 different industrial units in the United Kingdom - Jaguar Land Rover prominent among them - but the company says it has no anxiety about how things will pan out. Analysts also provided insight into what ‘Brexit’ could mean in sociological terms and how nationalists were gaining ascendency all across Europe. Ideas like in- ternationalism and globalisation, they felt, have suffered a major blow and more and more nations have started looking inward. Anti-immigrant movements in the Netherlands, France and Germany also got a boost from Britain’s exit vote though in practical terms it might take as much as two years for the separation to take complete effect. Such high-table analyses were beyond Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal. Since it was purely a matter involving the British, he could also not blame his favourite whipping boy, Prime Minister Narendra Modi, for one of the most momentous political convulsions in recent times. Had Kejriwal known that during Modi’s visit to Britain he had supported Prime Minister David Cameron’s (eventually losing) campaign to remain in EU, then he would have had something to say. But since no one in his camp brought this to his notice, India’s self-appointed prime minister-inwaiting could only react in typically parochial fashion: he demanded a referendum in Delhi for the city’s full statehood. Better sense seems to have prevailed since then as subsequent reports said the Delhi government was planning a “larger and longer public debate” before pushing for the referendum. Rest assured Kejriwal will find a way to remain in the arclight. Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 21 INDIA ANGER Indian railway employees, along with members of Northern Railway Men’s Union (NRMU), hold placards and shout slogans against the 7th Pay Commission during a demonstration at a railway station in Amritsar on yesterday. OBITUARY LAW AND ORDER ECONOMY TRAVEL Veteran Naga leader Isak Chisi Swu dies in Delhi Chargesheet filed in Kolkata flyover case Bad loans by banks still rising, warns RBI Airline offers seats at same fare as Rajdhani Express Isak Chisi Swu, who for decades spearheaded a bloody insurgency in Nagaland before shaking hands with New Delhi, died yesterday after months of battling a kidney ailment. Swu, the 85-year-old chairman of the National Socialist Council of Nagalim-Isak-Muivah (NSCN-IM), died at 12.40pm at the Fortis Hospital in New Delhi, doctors said. He had been admitted to the hospital on July 5 last year for a series of surgeries that confined him to bed for months. His illness prevented Isak Swu from attending the signing of a historic Naga Peace Accord on August 3, 2015 between the NSCN-IM and the government at Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s residence. The Kolkata police filed a chargesheet before a court indicting 10 people for culpable homicide among other offences, in the flyover collapse case that claimed 26 lives. The police yesterday also arrested two engineers of the Kolkata Metropolitan Development Authority. A portion of the Vivekananda Road flyover in Posta area had collapsed on March 31 killing 26 people besides injuring over 100. While the 10 accused arrested in the case were initially booked for murder among other offences, the police in the chargesheet have not included the charge. The police did not comment on the withdrawal of murder charges citing the matter to be “sub judice.” Bad loans held by banks are still rising sharply, the central bank said yesterday, as it warned the country’s lenders face “significant challenges”. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) noted in its Financial Stability Report that gross nonperforming assets at Indian banks stood at 7.6% of their total in March 2016, up from 5.1% in September. Outgoing RBI governor Raghuram Rajan has made cleaning up the banking sector’s mountain of soured loans — defined as in default or close to it — a priority of his tenure. “India’s financial system remains stable, even though the banking sector is facing significant challenges,” the RBI said in its report. Air India yesterday said it will offer ‘Super Fares’ seats to those who are unable to get confirmed bookings on Rajdhani Express at a price equivalent to first class seats in the train. “Under the (Super fares) scheme, passengers can book the tickets four hours prior to the flight departure at a fare which is equivalent to that of Rajdhani Express (1A),” it said in a statement. The airline said passengers can avail an allinclusive economy class one way fare on select domestic routes from June 26 to September 30. At present, 21 Rajdhani Express trains run across the Indian Railways network and close to 20,000 passengers travel with the train on daily basis. Dalits’ arrest issue stalls Kerala assembly IANS Thiruvananthapuram T he Congress-led opposition yesterday staged its first walkout in the Kerala assembly to protest against the alleged high-handedness of Communist Party of IndiaMarxist (CPI-M) workers towards two Dalit women in Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan’s hometown and the “callous” attitude of the police. Yesterday was to have been the first full day of the assembly session after Vijayan assumed office last month. Leading the walkout, opposition leader Ramesh Chennithala criticised the manner in which Vijayan had reacted to the issue of the two Dalit siblings, Akhila and Anjana, who were falsely implicated in a trespassing case and jailed earlier this month. Akhila’s 18-month baby is with her at the Kannur jail. “The chief minister’s first reaction to this inhumane incident was to claim ignorance. Then came his next reaction, ‘ask the police’, and then he said that it’s not the first time that an 18-month baby along with her mother was sent to jail. This clearly shows the attitude of this government towards Dalits. The entire approach was callous and the police was dancing to the tunes of the political leadership,” Chennithala alleged. The incident took place at a village near Thalassery where the Dalit family of Rajan, a local Congress leader, has been under frequent attack from local CPIM workers. Senior Congress legislator, K C Joseph, who sought leave for an adjournment motion to discuss the issue, said the two siblings fed up by the insinuations of the local CPI-M leadership had gone to the CPI-M area office to discuss the issue. The police then arrested them on June 17 and produced them before a magistrate who sent the two along with the baby to Kannur jail. “The arrest was recorded against the apex court’s guidelines and the magistrate also did not do a fair job. The next day, the two women got bail. The same night Anjana was humiliated by two leaders of the party when she took part in a TV channel debate. Pained by the remarks she attempted suicide at her home. Later, she was taken to a hospital. This is the inhumane manner in which the CPI-M is acting and the police are being used as a tool,” Joseph claimed. Vijayan, however, claimed there have been three earlier cases against the siblings reported by neighbours, including two of Rajan relatives and his family. Visiting Pakistani photo journalists and ORF organisers hold Indian and Pakistani flags during the Mumbai Karachi Friendship Forum in Mumbai yesterday. Sena protests Pak team’s Mumbai visit IANS Mumbai S hiv Sena activists yesterday attempted to disrupt a function at the Mumbai Press Club here, where a delegation of Pakistani press photographers was present. The protesters also raised anti-Pakistan slogans during the address by the event organisers. At least two Shiv Sena activists were whisked away and later detained by the Azad Maidan police. Police presence at the venue ensured no serious ruckus was created by the Shiv Sainiks, as there were also attempts to pelt stones at the car of Observer Research Foundation chairman Sudheendra Kulkarni. Kulkarni was scheduled to address a press conference to introduce the visiting Pakistani photojournalists. The Shiv Sena activists raised slogans to protest Kulkarni’s decision to invite the photojournalists from the neighbouring country. In October last year, Shiv Sena activists had black- ened the face of Sudheendra Kulkarni, a former BJP leader and aide to former prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, ahead of the launch of a book written by former Pakistan foreign minister Khurshid Kasuri. The Pakistan delegation arrived here as part of an ORF project ‘Tasveer-eKarachi’ and ‘Tasveer-eMumbai’ under which five photographers each from both countries will exchange visits as “messengers of peace”, Kulkarni said. The Pakistani delegation comprises Malika Abbas of Dawn; Farah Mahbub, a fine art photographer and educator; Amean J, a fashion photographer; Mobeen Ansari, a photojournalist and storyteller; and documentary photographer Malcolm Hutcheson. The Pakistani photojournalists arrived in Mumbai on June 20 for a 10-day trip, while the Indian photojournalists will visit Karachi in early July. The Indian delegation will include Chirodeep Chauduri of Nat Geo India, Indranil Mukherjee of Agence Album launch Missing boy to be brought home soon An Indian boy, Sonu, who went missing from Delhi six years ago and was traced in Bangladesh will be brought back to India on June 30. This was revealed by External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj. “Sonu - who was kidnapped from Delhi was found in a shelter home in Bangladesh. We matched the DNA with his mother. The test is positive,” Sushma tweeted. “The Indian High Commission in Dhaka has obtained Sonu’s custody. He will reach Delhi on June 30,” the external affairs minister wrote in another tweet. Sushma Swaraj also thanked all those who looked after Sonu, now 12, in Bangladesh. Bollywood actors, Tiger Shroff (left) and Disha Patani (right) pose with producer Bhushan Kumar during the launch of the single Hindi album Befikra in Mumbai yesterday. France-Presse, Prashant Nakwe of The Hindu, S L Shanth Kumar of The Times of India, and documentary photographer Harkiran S Bhasin. “They threatened us and said we must not permit any Pakistani to enter Mumbai. We are not scared. Despite their threats, we released Khurshid Mehmood Kasuri’s book in Mumbai last October. We shall continue doing so again and again,” Kulkarni said. The ORF chief said Mumbai was not the sole preserve of those who claim to be “protectors of national interest” and even “we are patriots, are opposed to terror and extremism”. “However, we shall not bow before such extremists who try to stop us from promoting India-Pakistan friendship,” the ORF chief declared, adding that all Pakistanis are not terrorists and a big section there is a victim of terror and condemns terrorism.” Referring to the new ORF project, he said it would be “photography for peace” between the two neighbours. Opposition dubs Modi interview ‘a PR exercise’ IANS New Delhi O pposition parties yesterday dubbed Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s TV interview to the TimesNow channel as a “PR exercise” and slammed him for the “imbalance” between his words and actions. The Congress said the prime minister’s body language looked defensive while the Communist Party of India-Marxist termed his interview a public relations exercise. Delhi’s ruling Aam Aadmi Party found fault with the prime minister’s remarks on Pakistan and the Janata Dal-United criticised him for “no action” over Bharatiya Janata Party leaders and union ministers who create controversies by making divisive and communal statements. The Congress said it would have been better if the prime minister had held a press conference instead of giving an interview to the news channel. “It would have been better if he had done a press conference so (that) other journalists could have got a chance to participate in a question-answer session. But that did not happen and I don’t think that will happen,” leader of opposition in the Rajya Sabha, Ghulam Nabi Azad, said. He said the prime minister Minister fumes after missing Air India flight Union Minister M Venkaiah Naidu yesterday criticised Air India after missing a flight to Hyderabad though he claimed he had reached the airport ahead of the scheduled departure time. The minister said he was at the airport at 12.30pm to catch the flight set to depart at 1.15pm, only to be told it had been delayed because the pilot had not yet come. After waiting for half hour, the minister returned home. By the time he returned to the airport, the flight had departed. “I had to travel to Hyderabad by Air India AI544... was told (it was) on time.. reached airport by 1230,” Naidu tweeted. “Was informed at 1315 that the flight was delayed as the pilot had not yet come. Waited up to 1345, boarding didn’t start. Returned home.” Naidu criticised the air carrier for lack of transparency. “Air India should explain how such things are happening. Transparency and accountability are the need of the hour. Hope Air India understands that we are in the age of competition. Missed an important appointment.” Minister of State Mahesh Sharma said Air India chairman and managing director Ashwani Lohani said they will conduct an enquiry into the incident. “We deeply regret the inconvenience caused due to flight delay. The pilot was stuck in traffic jam. An enquiry has been ordered,” Air India said in a reply to the minister’s ‘tweet’. Air India’s on-time performance has been the poorest among all airlines in the country. According to the latest official data, only 74.3% of Air India’s flights arrived and departed on time in May at metro airports compared to 90.2% on time performance by AirAsia, 85.1% by Vistara, 83.1% by IndiGo and 82.3% by Jet Airways. looked defensive, going by his body language. “I saw a prime minister being so defensive for the first time. The lion that would roar in April 2014; we saw him as an old lion. He looked weak; he was not decisive. It is sad,” Azad said. The Congress leader also questioned the outcome of India’s foreign policy ever since the National Democratic Alliance government came to power in May 2014, about which Modi spoke so extensively. CPI-M leader Brinda Karat termed Modi’s interview as a “successful public relations exercise, free of cost”. “Selfies and self praise seem to be the motive of present prime minister and his government. The basic problems that people are facing, whether it is price rise, unemployment or severe drought condition...such issues do not even occur to the prime minister to answer,” Karat said. AAP leader and Delhi Water Minister Kapil Mishra slammed Modi for his statement on Pakistan, saying the prime minister is still confused over the neighbouring country. “I am disappointed to see Modi’s changed stance on Pakistan and also to see his confusion that whom should India talk to when it comes to Pakistan,” Mishra told the media. He added: “He should listen to his speeches which he delivered before becoming prime minister. He is actually talking like former prime minister Manmohan Singh.” Modi had said the issue for New Delhi was who to deal with. “Will it be with the elected government or other actors? That is why India will have to be on alert all the time. India will have to be alert every moment. There can never be any laxity in this.” Senior Janta Dal-United leader Ali Anwar criticised Modi over the imbalance in his words and actions. “You (Modi) are now prime minister. Rather than giving sermons, he should have acted. He gave a lecture on (Subramanian) Swamy but didn’t show courage to act against him. Such an approach of the prime minister encourages people like Sakshi Maharaj, Yogi Adityanath and others,” Anwar said. “How will one have faith in the prime minister’s word when there is no action,” he added. Modi had described the Reserve Bank of India Governor Raghuram Rajan “no less patriotic than anyone” and said Swamy’s attacks on top finance ministry officials were “inappropriate”. He also dubbed Swamy’s attack on Rajan and top finance ministry officials a “publicity stunt” and in unmistakable terms warned him not to consider himself “bigger than the system”. 22 Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 LATIN AMERICA Vaccine against Zika for humans one step closer Dengue is endemic in Brazil AFP Paris N ew research in lab animals, including Zika vaccines successfully tested on mice, boosted hopes yesterday for a jab to shield humans against the brain-damaging virus. Two prototype vaccines tested on lab mice “provided complete protection against the Zika virus” with just a single shot, reported the first team. “These findings certainly raise optimism that the development of a safe and effective vaccine against Zika virus for humans may be successful,” said Dan Barouch, director of the Harvard Medical School’s Center for Virology and Vaccine Research, who co-authored a paper in Nature. His optimism was echoed in a separate study into Zika infection in rhesus macaques – close genetic relatives of humans and well-matched animal models for medical testing. In a study in sister journal Nature Communications, a USbased team said they managed for the first time to infect lab monkeys with the Zika virus. And they found that a single infection, mostly symptom-free as in humans, provided “complete protection” against later Zika exposure. “This is a key finding because it means that a vaccine could be quite effective against the virus,” said study co-author Dawn Dudley of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “It also indicates that people who are already infected with Zika virus are not susceptible to future infection, for example during a future pregnancy.” Benign in most people, Zika has been linked to a form of severe brain damage called microcephaly in babies, and to rare adult-onset neurological problems such as Guillain-Barre Syndrome, which can result in paralysis and death. In an outbreak that started last year, about 1.5mn people have been infected with Zika in Brazil, and more than 1,600 babies born with abnormally small heads and brains. On the downside, Dudley’s team found that the virus persisted as much as two months longer in pregnant monkeys as nonpregnant ones, who were generally virus-free within 10 days after infection. One hypothesis was that the foetuses themselves are infected, and remain so for much longer than adults. “(M)y concern for Zika virus in pregnancy is much higher now than it was six months ago,” Dudley said of the discovery. The macaque babies have yet to be born. There is no cure or vaccine for Zika, but the World Health Organisation said in April that more than 60 companies and research institutions were working on drug candidates – including 18 vaccines targeting women of childbearing age. Barouch said the two vaccines his team tested worked against two strains of the Zika virus, including one from the Brazil outbreak. This was the first report of complete Zika protection in an animal model, he claimed, and “a step forward in the development of a Zika virus vaccine.” It was unclear, though, how long the immunity lasts. At least one other vaccine, developed by US biotech firm Inovio Pharmaceuticals, prompts animals to produce virus-attacking Zika antibodies, but this was not necessarily the same as full protection, Barouch explained. Inovio recently received approval to conduct a Phase I safety trial in humans. Outside experts welcomed the studies but highlighted a number of unknowns. “DNA vaccines that work in mice have a sorry history of not working in humans,” Peter Openshaw, president of the British Society for Immunology, cautioned via the Science Media Centre. Crucially, it was not clear if the vaccines also produced antibodies against other viruses in the Zika family, such as dengue, which could cross-react with the Zika antibodies to dangerously enhance infection, commentators said. Dengue is endemic in Brazil. Brazil educates public on terrorism dangers AFP Rio de Janeiro B razil’s security forces yesterday unveiled a terrorism awareness campaign one month ahead of the Rio Olympics in a bid to educate ordinary Brazilians over a novel threat to the Latin American country. Although subject to rampant violent crime, Brazil has no history of militant attacks and is not involved in any of the many conflicts featuring religious extremists around the world. However with Rio staging South America’s first Olympic Games from August 5-21, there are worries that the country’s inexperience could make it vulnerable. “As our country does not have a tradition of this kind of threat, we need people to be more aware,” General Luiz Felipe Linhares, spokesman for the defence min- istry on major events, said in a statement. “The message we want to pass on is: if you are suspicious and find a suspicious situation, then it’s de facto suspicious,” he said. The government is distributing leaflets and posters through the city, especially at tourist sites like hotels and bars, with simple pointers to potential signs of danger. These include people “acting strangely and showing intense nerves,” people pretending to be officials but unable to show proper accreditation, the presence of drones in crowded areas, unattended baggage, and “strong smells and strange substances.” “If you think something is suspicious, that’s because it’s suspicious!” the campaign’s slogan goes. The material also shows a photograph of a woman in a traditional black and white maid’s costume with a feather duster apparently discovering a cache of passports, mobile phones and a detailed map in a hotel room. Anyone with worries is encouraged to phone the emergency services numbers, such as the police on 190. The authorities say they expect some 700,000 tourists from 209 countries to pour into Rio. There will also be about 100 heads of state and more than 12,000 athletes. Rio, like most of Brazil, suffers serious gun crime and 85,000 police and soldiers will be deployed to keep a lid on trouble during the Games. That’s twice as many security forces as during the 2012 London Olympics. A budget crisis means that police are not being paid on time and officers demonstrating at a rally on Monday told AFP that police stations lacked everything from fuel for squad cars to toilet paper. A chef preparing a dish at Cafe Bohenia restaurant in Havana. Change brings culinary revolution to Cuba By Carlos Batista AFP/ Havana A t 65, Ramon Alfonso has seen a lot of history in his native Cuba. But this is the first time he has eaten a vegan salad. After decades of Communist rule and centuries of eating meat and beans, the island is opening up – and so are its taste buds. Sitting at Cafe Bohemia on Havana’s Old Square, Alfonso gobbles lettuce, eggplant and cabbage. There is not an ounce of meat and rice in sight, but in the searing heat, that suits him just fine. “I don’t know if I’ll be eating this every day because I’m not used to it,” he says. “But it is tasty. And it’s better for the health and for the weather in a tropical country like this.” Under the communist regime, the few diners who could afford to step out for dinner faced dreary state-run eateries with stodgy food and bad service. Now those state-run restaurants are empty. The government authorised privately-run restaurants five years ago, and the change was slow to take effect. But with more tourists coming to Cuba in the past year, its impact is clear to see now on the terraces of Havana. At one state-run joint in Havana’s old quarter, four waiters sit chatting with not a single one of the tables occupied. A few dozen yards away, the privately-run Cafe de las Letras is crammed with diners munching its trademark moussaka. With eggplant smothered in meat and A waitress holding a dish at Cafe Bohenia restaurant in Havana. cheese, that is a novel dish for Cubans who were used to eating the vegetable fried in breadcrumbs. At another of Havana’s new wave of trendy restaurants, Versus 1900, the smell of rosemary fills the kitchen. Chef Alain Prieto is seasoning mutton in a Peruvian-inspired fusion creation. Beside him a colleague is cooking crispy vegetable tempura. “International dishes have been added to the traditional creole cuisine,” Prieto says. “People are starting to eat differently,” he adds. “More refined.” In a kitchen workshop run by the country’s Culinary Federation, its president Eddy Fernandez chucks a spot of oil in the pan and adds peppers, onion and garlic. The shredded beef is pre-cooked and goes into the pan to sizzle briefly. It is his modern take on the Cuban clas- sic vaca frita, or “fried cow”. Fernandez is helping train a new generation of Cuban chefs. Demand for their services has surged in the past two years, he says, and standards have risen. The health ministry says 45% of adults in Cuba are overweight and 12 % suffer full obesity. Chefs are wanted who can cook classic Cuban dishes but “with less fat and sugar, little salt and more fruit and vegetables”, Fernandez says. When Italian chef Annalisa Gallina arrived in Cuba three years ago, she says, salad was something stuck on the side of the plate as a decoration. The country’s cooking was still emerging from the economic crisis that followed the collapse of its ally, the Soviet Union. That crisis limited eating options in a country that imports most of its ingredients. For many Cubans, “if it doesn’t have rice, beans and meat, it isn’t food”, says Gallina, 37, who works at Cafe Bohemia. “The Cubans who are most open to vegetarian cooking are the ones who have had the chance to travel abroad.” President Raul Castro took over from his brother Fidel, leader of the 1959 revolution, in 2008. He has loosened travel restrictions for Cubans. The government’s migration department says hundreds of thousands of Cubans have travelled abroad since 2013. Castro has also authorised some private businesses and has transferred state eateries to private hands. “That is a good thing,” says Fernandez. “State gastronomy was not working.” The new generation of restaurateurs faces the challenge of pleasing the 4mn tourists now coming to Cuba every year – including a growing number of US visitors. In the kitchen at Versus 1900, Prieto and colleague Omar Gil show off their organic goods: cherry tomatoes, raisins and strawberries. They have grown the ingredients in their own garden. “There is lots of produce to make the most of in Cuba,” says Gallina at Cafe Bohemia. Cubans are used to fruit juice, but not like the exotic mixes she serves: guava with pepper and basil, carrot with ginger or pineapple with mint. Cooking programmes on Cuban television have multiplied. “You sit down in a park with wifi and download a recipe. That is how we have learned,” says Prieto. “We want to go on like that and improve Cuban cooking.” Expanded Panama Canal hopes to win back shipping lines By Mimi Whitefield Miami Herald/TNS M ore than 100 years ago when the SS Ancon sailed into the history books as the first ship to transit the Panama Canal, the waterway was a display of American ingenuity and the Panama Canal Zone was firmly in US hands. But the ship that made the first official trip through the newlyexpanded canal on Sunday was a Chinese megaship. The United States completely withdrew from the canal on December 31, 1999, and there was barely any US participation in the $5.5bn canal project, which allows the world’s bigger ships to transit Panama’s “highway of the sea”. The United States remains the most important user of the canal and canal officials say it will be for the foreseeable future, but world trade patterns have shifted in the past century and China has become the world’s largest trading nation. On Sunday, China COSCO Shipping’s recently renamed 984-foot-long Panama undertool the first official voyage through the expanded canal. It won the honour in a drawing among the canal’s top customers. Although the new locks - tall as an 11-story building - are an engineering marvel and the expansion is expected to double the canal’s capacity, it’s been a long slog. The project is being delivered nearly two years behind schedule and various claims by the Grupo Unidos por El Canal (Group United for the Canal), the international consortium that built the expansion, could push the price for the project even higher. The Panama Canal Authority also has its own counter-claims. Arbitration on the first unresolved claim gets underway in Miami in July. But now- 110mn man hours, 292,000 tons of structural steel, 1.6mn tons of cement and 5mn cubic meters of concrete later the project is finished. Panamanian voters approved it in a 2006 referendum. “This is a great project from an engineering and logistical point of view,” said Giuseppe Quarta, chief executive of the consortium. The project, which got underway in 2007, included deepening and widening the entrances to the canal, widening and deepening the navigational channel through Gatun Lake, deepening the channel at Culebra Cut, raising the level of the lake, building a new 3.8-mile Pacific access channel, and construction of larger Atlantic and Pacific locks that are as long as three Empire State Buildings laid end to end. The original canal, built at great human and financial cost, is simply too small to handle the bigger ships now plying the world’s trade routes. Smaller ships, however, will continue to use the original locks, and the old and new locks share much of the original canal route. With the expansion able to handle longer, wider and heavier post-Panamax ships, the canal authority hopes to win back shipping lines that switched to the Suez Canal or used US West Coast ports because their ships couldn’t fit through the original locks inaugurated on August 15, 1914. In Panama, the canal is not A view of the new Pacific locks at the Panama Canal, looking toward the Balboa port and Panama City. only the economic lifeblood of the country that sits between two oceans, but the expansion project has become a huge source of pride for Panamanians. “The canal is the advantage that Panama has over everyone - and it always will,” said Philip Nichols, professor of legal studies and business ethics at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School. “They know they have an income, no matter what. It’s like having a good, solid lead tenant when you’re building a development.” But fees from ships transiting through the canal aren’t Panama’s only source of canal-derived income. Panama has become a thriving trans-shipment point for Latin America-bound cargoes, it is developing a new port on the Atlantic side of the canal and it is in the process of bidding out construction for a new port at Corozal on the Pacific side. “Panama is a natural transshipment hub,” said Benitez. In recent years, cargo handled by the Port of Balboa on the Pacific has grown from about 250,000 containers a year to 3.5mn, he said. Although the paint is barely dry on the new locks, the Panama Canal Authority is already studying the possibility of another larger set of locks because ships too big to fit through the new locks are already being built. Panamanians who have worked on the canal feel a sense of accomplishment now that the project is complete. During the peak of construction, there were 30,000 workers labouring around the clock. In the last few weeks, about 2,000 workers have rushed to complete roads, landscape, paint, work on the blue-roofed buildings and finish other last-minute details. The international consortium responsible for the design and construction of the project completed the locks on May 31. The consortium includes Spain’s Sacyr Vallhermoso; Italy’s Salini Impregilo, which specializes in water projects; Jan de Nul Group, a Belgium-based dredging company; and CUSA, a Panamanian construction company. Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 23 PAKISTAN/AFGHANISTAN Pakistan’s military courts challenged over abuse claims Almost all military court convicts sentenced to death; Twenty-seven people file appeals in civilian courts; Supreme Court may rule on 12 cases in coming weeks; Lawyers and families complain of lack of proper legal process Reuters Islamabad P akistan’s Supreme Court is expected to rule soon on whether secret military tribunals set up in early 2015 to try civilians accused of terrorism have violated the constitutional rights of 12 people convicted by these courts. The military tribunals were established after the massacre in December, 2014, by Islamist militants of 134 students at an army-run school in the northwestern city of Peshawar. Lawmakers authorised the courts in January last year, handing over significant judicial control to a military that is already powerful and has ruled the country of 190 million people for about half of its existence. They have so far convicted 81 people, 77 of whom were sentenced to death, according to the military’s press wing. There have been no acquittals, the military says. At least 27 convicts have filed appeals with civilian courts, alleging coercion of confessions and denial of access to lawyers and to evidence used against them, according to Reuters research and local media reports. Of the 12 cases that have come before the Supreme Court, the legal arguments have concluded in nine. The court has been hearing the case for the remaining ap- pellants, and is expected to give a verdict on all 12 cases together, possibly in the coming weeks. Lawyers and relatives of 10 convicts contacted by Reuters have all complained of abuse by the military courts while in custody and of serious procedural shortcomings. Of those 10, three are before the Supreme Court, one is at Islamabad High Court and six at Lahore High Court. Reuters was unable to independently verify any of the accusations. Reuters provided written details of the specific allegations in all 10 cases to the military’s public relations wing. The office declined to respond. One of the convicts, Sabir Shah, was already on trial for murder in a civilian court when he disappeared from Lahore’s central jail in April 2015, according to his family and lawyers. Five months later, his family read a press release saying he had been sentenced to death by a military court. His lawyers say they still do not know what evidence was used against him. Shah was originally on trial for murder as an alleged member of a sectarian group’s hit squad, and that process had not been concluded. Even after the family filed an appeal with the Lahore High Court, Shah’s lawyers said they were not allowed to view the military’s evidence. “All of these things will only become clear to us when we are provided the (military) judgment,” said Malik Adeel, who has filed an appeal with the Lahore High Court. The military said in a press release that Shah confessed to having been involved in the A man rides a bicycle past the Supreme Court building in Islamabad. murder of Lahore lawyer Syed Arshad Ali. Parliamentarians have explained that the courts were borne out of necessity in the face of the militant threat, because Pakistan’s judicial system was inefficient and some judges were afraid to take on cases for fear of retaliation. “It was endorsed by the parliament. If the normal courts could do the job, why would the military want to do it?” said a senior security official, who asked not to be named because he was not authorised to speak to the media. At a recent Supreme Court hearing challenging the military tribunals, Pakistan’s chief justice questioned whether convicts should be allowed basic legal rights. US probing reports that it bombed hostages in Taliban prison DPA Kabul R eports that a US airstrike hit a Taliban prison and killed several captives were being investigated, the US military said yesterday. “Allegations of civilians killed in that airstrike is being investigated, that is all I can tell you at the moment,” said Commander Ron Flesvig, a spokesman for the US forces in Afghanistan. The Taliban said one of their prisons was hit on Saturday night by a US airstrike, adding that the prisoners killed were members of the security forces. “Six Kabul administration soldiers imprisoned by Mujahideen were killed and two others were wounded,” spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said late Monday. Five militants including prison head and local commander Mullah Jannat Gul were also killed, he said. An Afghan government official said earlier that three prisoners were killed in the airstrike. Another official, governor spokesman Hamdullah Danish, said the three were killed by the Taliban themselves in retaliation after the airstrike. The militants denied that account, and said the “barbaric Americans” had bombed the prison knowing people were held there. Orders approved by President Barrack Obama this month allow a broader US role against the Afghan insurgency, including more airstrikes, but no additional boots on the ground. Around 9,800 US troops are currently stationed in Afghanistan with plans to reduce that number to 5,500 at the end of 2016. “Terrorists are challenging the constitution and the law of the land, but their counsel are citing fundamental rights in their defence,” said Anwar Zaheer Jamali, adding that international war crimes precedent allows summary trials and executions. At a separate hearing, he added: “There are exceptional circumstances, therefore exceptional measures have to be taken by the state for proper dispensation of justice.” The senior security source added: “If someone kills 30 people, you are telling me I should give him justice? Justice should be given to those 30 people killed.” All the lawyers representing the 10 convicts whose cases Reuters examined said they were denied access to court records and were not allowed to meet their clients for the duration of the military trial. They also said their clients were either coerced into confessing or deny confessing at all. According to the military’s press wing, 78 of 81 accused were convicted on the basis of confessions. Human rights lawyer Asma Jehangir, counsel for two people who have appealed their death sentences, said her clients were forced to affix a thumbprint to a blank sheet of paper, which was later turned into a confession. The military declined to comment on those allegations. Two families and one lawyer also said they had been harassed or threatened after filing appeals. The father of one convict told Reuters that four family members were abducted by men in military uniform and beaten. “They said that we have dishonoured them and the army as an institution, and that it would be better for us if we withdraw the,” said the father, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals. Reuters could not independently verify his account, and the military declined to comment. The International Commission of Jurists, a non-governmental organisation that promotes human rights through the rule of law, has criticised the army-run courts. “Proceedings before Pakistani military courts fall well short of national and international standards requiring fair trials before independent and impartial courts,” it said in a statement earlier this year. In a televised interview, the army’s spokesman defended the courts. “Through a due process of law the whole case proceeds, after which the court makes a decision. And then the death sentence or whatever sentence is confirmed,” General Asim Bajwa said. Since 2007, more than 25,000 Pakistanis have been killed by Islamist extremists, according to the South Asia Terrorism Portal. Pakistan has for years been battling the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and other militants fighting to overthrow the government and impose a strict interpretation of Islamic law. The number of militant attacks has come down since Pakistan announced an anti-militancy plan after the assault on the Army Public School in December, 2014. Media groups decry rise in violence against journalists Reuters Kabul V iolence and intimidation against journalists in Afghanistan has spiked sharply this month, with much of it coming from government security forces, the main journalists’ right groups said yesterday. In addition to the deaths of two journalists working for the US National Public Radio, who were killed in the southern province of Helmand, numer- ous cases of beating and intimidation were reported to the Kabul Press Club and Afghan Independent Journalist Association (AIJA). Twenty-two cases were reported in June, around double the monthly level seen in past years, with 15 carried out by security forces, four by the Taliban and another three by unnamed armed groups, Rahimullah Samander, the head of AIJA, told a press conference. “We ask government departments, armed groups and those who involved in the fighting to pave the way for reporters to do their jobs properly,” Samander said. International concern about attacks on journalists has grown since a Taliban suicide bomber killed seven staff of Afghanistan’s largest private television station in January. But the jump in cases of mistreatment underscores the sometimes precarious situation facing media workers in Afghanistan, not just from the Taliban but also from security forces. Hina Rabbani Khar Pakistan cannot conquer Kashmir ‘through war’ Agencies Islamabad P akistan cannot “conquer Kashmir through war” and Islamabad can progress on the issue only in an environment of mutual trust with New Delhi, former foreign minister Hina Rabbani Khar has said. “I believe that Pakistan cannot conquer Kashmir through war, and if we cannot do that, the option we are left with is dialogue; and dialogue can only proceed with a partner with which we have normal relations and a certain level of mutual trust,” Khar said in an interview with Geo News. She claimed that the earlier Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) government, despite being a coalition government, tried its best to normalise ties with India through relaxation of visa rules and by normalising trade ties, adding that the present Nawaz Sharif regime can do much more as it enjoys majority. “The issues between the two countries cannot be resolved in a hostile environment.” Khar, who remained Pakistan’s foreign minister from 2011 to 2013, maintained that the Kashmir issue can be resolved “if we continue to talk on the issue, then we will reach somewhere”. DISASTER Clashes with IS forces displace hundreds Between 400 and 500 families have been displaced in eastern Afghanistan by days of fighting between Islamic State (IS) militants and national security forces, an official said yesterday. “We have sent research teams to Kot district to find out exact figures” of the displaced, said Attaullah Khugyani, governor’s spokesman in the eastern province of Nangarhar. The ongoing clashes first broke out on Friday when militants affiliated with the movement that has declared a caliphate across northern Iraq and Syria attacked a checkpoint in the district, he said. “More than 160 Islamic State militants have been killed,” Khugyan said. Seven Afghan troops and five civilians were also killed, and more than 30 soldiers and civilians were wounded, he said. Afghan president orders investigation into child sex abuse AFP Islamabad A fghanistan’s president has ordered a “thorough investigation” into institutionalised sexual abuse of children by police, after AFP revealed the Taliban are using child sex slaves to launch deadly insider attacks. There has been international condemnation of paedophilic “bacha bazi” – literally “boy play”– which AFP found has been exploited by the Taliban to mount a series of Trojan Horse attacks over two years that have killed hundreds of policemen in the remote southern province of Uruzgan. “The president has ordered a thorough investigation (in Uruzgan) and immediate action based on findings of the investigation,” the presidential palace said of Ashraf Ghani in a statement. “Anyone, regardless of rank within the forces, found guilty will be prosecuted and punished in accordance and in full compliance of the Afghan laws and our international obligations,” the English language statement said. The ancient custom of bacha bazi, one of the country’s worst human rights violations, sees young boys – sometimes dressed as women – recruited to police outposts for sexual companionship and to bear arms. It is deeply entrenched in Uruzgan, where police commanders, judges, government officials and survivors of such attacks told AFP that the Taliban are recruiting bacha bazi victims to attack their abusers. The claims – strongly denied by the Taliban – expose child abuse by both parties in Afghanistan’s worsening conflict. The presidential statement said there was “no place” in the Afghan establishment for abusers, adding it will do “whatever it takes” to punish them. The announcement follows a flurry of international reaction to AFP’s report. “We strongly condemn any abuses of the horrific nature described in the article,” the US embassy in Kabul said. “We urge the Afghan government to protect and support victims and their families, while also strongly encouraging justice and accountability under Afghan law for offenders.” In a letter last week to US Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter, Congressman Duncan Hunter demanded a proactive American role to end bacha bazi in Afghan forces. Ashraf Ghani “I remain concerned that the Taliban is increasing its use of children to access security positions and mount insider attacks against Afghan police,” Hunter said in the letter seen by AFP. “It is my belief that we can begin taking immediate steps to stop child rape from occurring in the presence of US forces and reduce any risk of coinciding insider attacks. This includes imposing a zero-tolerance policy.” The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said bacha bazi is of “high concern” for the international community. “UNAMA continues to receive anecdotal reports of bacha bazi, This file photograph taken on April 30, 2016, shows an Afghan military checkpoint on the outskirts of Tarin Kot, the capital of southern Uruzgan province. Afghanistan’s president has ordered a “thorough investigation” into institutionalised sexual abuse of children by police. including within Afghan security forces, and continues its engagement with government to ensure the criminalisation and prevention of all forms of exploitation and abuse of children,” Mark Bowden, the UN deputy special representative for Afghanistan, told AFP. The Afghan government an- nouncement, which did not specify a timeframe for the investigation, comes ahead of two crucial donor conferences on Afghanistan in Warsaw and Brussels this year. The war-battered country remains heavily dependent on international financial and military assistance, which helps sus- tain security forces – including police. Any perception of apathy about bacha bazi risks jeopardising that assistance, said Michael Kugelman, an analyst at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington. “No donor in good conscience can justify funding police forces that engage in such reprehensible practices,” Kugelman told AFP. “There’s already much talk of donor fatigue, but as donors hear more about bacha bazi, there’s bound to be donor fear as well fear of bankrolling institutions that do morally reprehensible things.” The Afghan interior ministry has said it is committed to institutional reforms, while acknowledging that bacha bazi within police ranks is a “serious crime”. The government last year launched a probe into sexual abuse and the illegal recruitment of child conscripts around Afghanistan. But the country has yet to pass legislation criminalising bacha bazi and no initiatives have been publicly announced to rescue any children enslaved by police. “The absence of any initiatives to release and recover children from their abusers is a serious failure on the part of Afghan authorities,” Charu Lata Hogg, an associate fellow at Londonbased Chatham House think tank, told AFP, adding that donors must pressure Kabul for change. “Abuse of children cannot be passed off as cultural practice.” 24 Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 PHILIPPINES Ex-justice pushes for federal structure Manila Times Makati F Philippines president-elect Rodrigo Duterte speaks before city hall employees in Davao City, on the southern island of Mindanao. Duterte to destroy ‘Imperial Manila’ The president-elect is eager to devolve power to the provinces AFP Manila P hilippine president-elect Rodrigo Duterte takes office this week looking to end the domination of “Imperial Manila” with a radical shift to federalism that he says is vital to fighting poverty and ending a deadly Muslim separatist insurgency. Duterte, who won last month’s elections in a landslide, has vowed to have the constitution rewritten to achieve his bold plans — which would see power devolved from the central government in the capital to newly created states governing the current 81 provinces. “It (the current system) is an excuse for them to hang onto power in Imperial Manila. They have always been there in one single office, running the Philippines,” Duterte said in a speech during the election campaign. Such comments are typical fare for Duterte, an anti-establishment figure who relentlessly rails against the elites who have mostly ruled the Philippines since independence from the United States after World War II. Duterte will tomorrow take over from Benigno Aquino, who remains a generally popular figure but nevertheless comes from one of the remarkably small number of wealthy clans that have long dominated national politics and overseen one of Asia’s biggest rich-poor divides. Duterte will become the first president from the vast southern region of Mind- anao, which is one of the nation’s poorest areas and home to decades-old communist and Muslim insurgencies that have claimed tens of thousands of lives. Highlighting his antipathy for Manila rule, Duterte snubbed his proclamation by congress as the winner of the elections — an event normally rich in tradition and ceremony. Duterte has also travelled to the capital just once since winning the election, and vowed to spend the bulk of his six years as president based in Davao, which has less than 2% of the nation’s population and is 1,000km from Manila. Under Duterte’s federal set-up, the states will be largely autonomous and allowed to retain most of their income, rather than remitting it to the central government, which he believes will be a key driver of economic growth in the impoverished countryside. He has said the central government would retain essential national functions, such as defence, foreign policy and customs. Duterte has repeatedly said one of the main benefits of federalism would be to end separatist rebellions waged by the country’s impoverished Muslim minority because they would in effect have autonomy in the new states. “Nothing short of a federal structure will give Mindanao peace,” Duterte said on the campaign trail, and broadly supportive comments from Muslim rebel leaders in recent weeks have indicated they are receptive to the plans. Amending the constitution is a highly sensitive subject in the Philippines. Lawmakers have not touched it since it was rewritten in 1987 following the “People Power” revolution that overthrew dic- tator Ferdinand Marcos the previous year. The constitution was redrawn to put in place safeguards to avoid another dictatorship, including limiting presidents to a single term of six years. Tentative attempts by previous presidents to revise the constitution failed amid strong opposition from groups that feared the leaders were merely seeking to extend their reigns. However Duterte, flush with his election success that has seen political opponents swiftly shift allegiances to him, is confident of enjoying big majorities in both houses of congress, as well as broad popular support, to propel his push. With Duterte due to turn 77 at the end of his presidential term, many voters do not see him as someone who will want to extend his rule. Seeking to capitalise on his early-term popularity, Duterte is aiming to lay the framework for a referendum to change the constitution in the first half of his presidency, according to his allies. Still, what would be the biggest shakeup to Philippines’ democracy since 1987 is by no means assured, and political analysts say opposition could build. Critics have accused Duterte of being very vague about his plans, questioned whether federalism is indeed the panacea to the nation’s woes, and warned that it could cause more problems than it solved. In a nation which already has issues with weak governance like the Philippines, federalism might result at worst in the break up of the country, according to Temario Rivera, chairman of the Center for People Empowerment in Governance think-tank. He said federalism could strengthen the hold of political dynasties or clans that al- ready monopolise power in local governments, often through the use of private armies, with a weakened central authority unable to respond. “Shifting to a federal system will have uncertain and unpredictable results,” Rivera told AFP. As part of tradition not to steal the limelight from the incoming president, outgoing president Benigno Aquino 3rd will be in his home in Quezon City as a private citizen while president-elect Rodrigo Duterte takes his oath of office tomorrow. In his final news briefing yesterday, presidential communications secretary Herminio Coloma Jr said Aquino intends to go back to his residence on Times Street in Quezon City and rest. Coloma added that Aquino and Duterte will meet before the latter takes his oath of office at Malacanang’s Rizal Hall. “They will have a one-on-one meeting inside the palace after which president Aquino will move downstairs to the Palace grounds where he will be given departure honours,” he said. President Aquino, according to Coloma, will go straight to his car for his departure from Malacañang, his official residence for six years. Duterte will then go back inside the Palace for the inauguration ceremony. During Aquino’s inauguration in 2010, he shared a car ride with then outgoing president Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo from the palace to Quirino Grandstand in Manila’s Rizal Park (Luneta). Meanwhile, Coloma said preparations for the inauguration are yet to be made final. Aquino has only a day left in office before his popular successor, Durterte, assumes power. PDP-Laban misses recruitment target for house of representatives Manila Times Makati T he Partido Demokratikong Pilipino (PDP)-Laban party of incoming president Rodrigo Duterte is having a tough time recruiting Duterte’s foot soldiers in the house of representatives. The recruitment has been snagged by lawmakers tending to join other political parties that had signed a coalition agreement with the PDP-Laban rather than join Duterte’s party. The PDP-Laban has already signed coalition pacts with the Nacionalista Party (NP), Nationalist People’s Coalition (NPC) and National Union Party (NUP) and with 57 allied party-list lawmakers. As of latest count, at least 210 lawmakers from the PDP-Laban and its allied political parties and party-list groups will form the majority bloc in the House. But of the 210, there are only 67 lawmakers who are PDP-Laban members or 23% of the chamber. This is in contrast to the at least 174-strong majority bloc in the 15th Congress in 2010 wherein the bulk of them (90 The house of representatives lawmakers) were from then presidentelect Benigno Aquino 3rd’s Liberal Party. The rest of the 174 were from NP (16), NPC (38) and NUP (30). Excluded from the 174 are party-list groups allied with the LP. By the 16th Congress, the majority bloc had at least 185 members. Of this number, 110 lawmakers were from the LP, 35 legislators from the NPC, 24 from the NUP and 16 from the NP. Also excluded from the 185 were the LP’s allied party-list groups. Outgoing speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr, LP vice chairman, said the party is yet to decide on whether to join the Duterte allies in Congress because the PDP-Laban wants to limit the number of members of the political parties that want to join the so-called super majority coalition in the house of representatives. “What the PDP-Laban wants is for our party to have 20 members joining the majority. Where will our other members go then?” Belmonte told reporters in a chance interview. He was at the house of representatives yesterday for turnover of a bronze statue of national hero Jose Rizal and of the original copy of the 1935 constitution–Belmonte’s erstwhile collection that he donated to the chamber. “If we are [fewer] than 20, then there’s no problem,” according to Belmonte. At least 50 LP members stayed with the party even after the defeat of LP standardbearer Manuel Mar Roxas 2nd in the May polls. And despite having a meeting with Duterte in Davao City recently, Belmonte could not say if the LP remains determined to join the super majority coalition led by Duterte’s PDP-Laban. “The LP is not a party with one opinion [at this point]. Our members have differing views in different situations,” he said when asked how committed is LP to securing an alliance with the PDP-Laban. Belmonte offered unsolicited advice. “I understand that they had to recruit. They need the numbers to govern congress. When we also came in 2010, we [in the LP] were not the biggest party. But it only took a little while when the recruitment was stopped,” he said. During Belmonte’s speakership in the 15th and 16th congresses, the members of other political parties such as the NP, NPC and NUP were allowed to join the minority or the opposition bloc even if the LP had an alliance with these political parties. “That’s because I have maintained good relations with them. I’ve treated them fairly, equally…given them recognition. It is on these bases that I made allies, rather than forcing them to join the party,” the speaker said. ormer chief justice Reynato Puno yesterday called for the junking of the unitary form of government, saying it is time to shift to a federal system which is “citizen-friendly”. Speaking at a forum on federalism in Manila, Puno noted that a presidential form of government has not brought progress to the country. “Too much power has been given to our national government and even within the national government there is an imbalance of power between and among executive, legislative and judicial branches of government. Too little power has been given to the local governments and this insufficient power has stunted their growth,” he said. “In sum, I respectfully submit that our unitary form of government, Imperialist Manila, has failed us,” Puno added, drawing thunderous applause. “Our unitary government is bad enough for its wrong allocation of the powers of government but what is worse is that our unitary government has been captured by vested interests. We are ruled by dynasties. We are run by economic elite. And we are threatened by criminal syndicates. It is far more difficult to capture powers of government in a federal state than a unitary state,” he said. According to the former chief justice, the biggest abuse of power in a tripartite government has been committed by the executive department. “That’s why almost all of our presidents are being impeached. Why? [They have] all the powers,” he said. “Federalism challenges the political norm that power is best when centralised, that sovereignty is indivisible and cannot be shared and posits the thesis that states can be bound together on the basis of responsible power-sharing, where the will of the majority of the people will reign but where the rights of the minority will be allowed to flourish,” Puno explained. He noted that even the judiciary is affected by the “political virus”. “Reality will reveal that the independence of the judiciary is sufficiently insulated in our constitution. The appointment process in the judiciary is still infected by political virus. Why is this happening? Wrong allocation of powers! In [a] federal government, we will correct this,” Puno told his audience. Alex Brillantes, former University of the Philippines’ dean of the College of Public Administration and Governance, however, said there is a need to change the people’s mindset before the country can make the shift from presidential to federal form of government. Brillantes also noted that it is not easy to give up powers. “That is why we need to change values,” he said at the same forum. Eduardo Araral, vice dean of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore, said changing the system will take time. He advised the PDP-Laban, the political party of president-elect Rodrigo Duterte, to start campaigning for federalism among millennials. Araral reminded the audience that the basic principle in federalism is that local public goods must be managed locally. The PDP-Laban held a series of conferences on federalism and Charter change and invited experts as speakers. Puno and Brillantes were the speakers yesterday. Araral was the guest speaker on Monday. The other speakers were senator Aquilino Pimentel 3rd and Jose Abueva, former president of the University of the Philippines. All of them favour a presidential-federal system except for Abueva, who supports a parliamentary-federal form of government. Duterte has planned to form a committee that will accept and document proposals for the shift to a federal form of government after which a constitutional convention will be called. Visaya plans ‘24/7 offensive’ against Abu Sayyaf Manila Times Makati I ncoming armed forces chief lieutenant general Ricardo Visaya disclosed a plan to launch non-stop, 24/7 operations against the terrorist Abu Sayyaf Group (ASG), saying it will be the fastest way to defeat the jihadists. “We are planning that, to fight the Abu Sayyaf 24/7. We would like to defeat [them]. That’s the fastest way and can be the best option to fight them,” Visaya said yesterday. He said he will formally make the proposal on July 1 when top military officials meet president-elect Rodrigo Duterte in a command conference. “After the turnover on July 1, there will be a command conference in the presence of our new president, then we will be hearing the guidance of the president, so we will start from there,” according to Visaya. Told about the option given by Duterte to talk or to fight, he said that is the prerogative of the commander-in-chief. “That is why I said we will know his instructions on July 1, but in so far as I am concerned I will fight them 24/7,” Visaya pointed out. He said the armed forces of the Philippines (AFP) has enough resources and personnel to launch a 24/7 offensive against the militants who recently beheaded two Canadian hostages in Sulu. The jihadists executed John Ridsdel and Robert Hall on April 25 and June 13, respectively, after the government rejected a total of P600mn in ransom demanded by the terrorist group for the release of the two captives. Meanwhile, Visaya said he will visit the air force, navy and army and attend some functions in Manila before flying to Jolo to discuss with military commanders there the AFP’s plan against the Abu Sayyaf Group. Earlier, Visaya disclosed that he may recommend to Duterte the imposition of martial law in Jolo (Sulu) and Basilan in southern Mindanao if the result of the study being conducted by the military deemed it necessary in crushing the ASG. The jihadists have strongholds in Sulu and Basilan. Last week, the bandits seized seven Indonesian sailors off the southern Philippine province of Tawi-Tawi. The group on Friday freed Marites Flor, Hall’s fiancee. It is still holding several hostages, including a Dutch seized along with the Canadians. Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 25 SRI LANKA/BANGLADESH/NEPAL Bangladesh charges 7 over Italian’s murder AFP Dhaka B angladesh police have charged seven people including a senior opposition leader over the murder of an Italian aid worker last September, an officer said yesterday. The killing near the capital’s diplomatic zone was the first in a wave of attacks to be claimed by the Islamic State group, and was followed days later by the gunning down of a Japanese farmer in northern Bangladesh. Bangladesh authorities reject- ed the IS claim of responsibility, saying the group had no presence in the country. The government and police say homegrown militants are responsible for the deaths of nearly 50 secular activists, foreigners and religious minorities killed over the last three years. They say the deaths are part of a plot to destabilise the country, and have blamed the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and its Islamist ally. Dhaka Metropolitan Police deputy commissioner Sheikh Nazmul Alam said seven people had been charged with the murder of 50-year-old Italian Cesare Tavella, including two BNP officials. “We submitted the chargesheet against the seven on Monday. Those who are charged include Abdul Quayum who masterminded the attack,” Alam said, referring to a senior BNP official who is believed to be living in exile in Malaysia. He said the attack was part of a plot “to tarnish the image of the country and destabilise it”. Quayum denied the charge, telling the Daily Star newspaper he was being victimised because of his political affiliation. BNP spokesman Ruhul Kabir Rizvi said the charge was “false and politically motivated”. “It is an attempt to hide the real killers,” Rizvi said. Bangladesh this month launched a nationwide crackdown on local jihadist groups, arresting more than 11,000 people, under pressure to act on the spate of killings. But many rights groups allege the arrests were arbitrary or were a way to silence political opponents of the government. Experts say a government crackdown on opponents, in- cluding a ban on the country’s largest Islamist party following a protracted political crisis, has pushed many towards extremism. Dhaka police chief Asaduzzaman Khan said after Tavella’s death that his murder was intended to “embarrass the government” and prove the country was unsafe for foreigners. International schools closed temporarily after the murders and embassies restricted their diplomats’ movements, while Australia’s cricket team cancelled a planned tour over security concerns. Despite dip in ties, Nepal and India continue meetings Sri Lanka’s Deputy Foreign Minister Harsha de Silva IANS Kathmandu Exports will be D hit by Brexit, says minister AFP/IANS Colombo S ri Lanka said yesterday its trade would be hurt by the United Kingdom’s “nightmare” vote to leave the European Union, with $1bn in annual exports to the British market now clouded by uncertainty. The South Asian nation famed for its tea and spices is on the brink of signing up to a scheme with the European Union that would grant it lower tariffs on many goods. But with Britain its largest EU export market, the shock Brexit vote will make things tougher for the cash-strapped island, likely leading to new restrictions. “We knew it was going to be a nightmare,” Deputy Foreign Minister Harsha de Silva said. The dramatic fall in sterling is likely to inflict extra pain on Sri Lanka’s exporters, the minister added. De Silva and colleagues had travelled to London last week to urge voters of Sri Lankan origin to support the “remain” campaign. Britain is one of Sri Lanka’s biggest export markets and the country was hoping to improve trade with Britain under the EU GSP plus trade concession. Silva said Sri Lanka will this week formally submit its application to regain GSP plus from the EU, but since Britain will now be out of the EU, Colombo will look to sign a new free trade agreement with the UK. “We are now confident of getting back GSP plus but since Britain will not be in the EU we are studying the possibility of signing a free trade agreement with Britain,” Silva said. Sri Lanka lost the EU GSP plus trade concession when the former government was in office over human rights related issues but the new government which took office last year has met most conditions to regain GSP plus. De Silva said Colombo would now look to fast-track separate free trade agreements with China and India to counter the damage. He said a committee has been appointed by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe to study the impact Brexit will have on Sri Lanka and the remedial measures the country must take. “We will strengthen trade ties with Asia. We need to expedite the proposed trade agreements with China and India,” he said. The government hopes to finalise a free-trade deal with Singapore within a month and is discussing similar agreements with Japan and South Korea. Sri Lanka this month received the first tranche of a $1.5bn bailout loan from the International Monetary Fund. Bangladesh forex reserves top $30bn Bangladesh’s foreign exchange reserves have crossed the $30bn mark amid a boom in inflow of remittances ahead of one of the biggest Muslim religious festivals - Eid al-Fitr that marks the end of the holy month of Ramadan. A senior official of the Bangladesh Bank (BB) who did not like to be named said yesterday that the country’s foreign exchange reserves reached a record amount of $30,001.88mn on Monday, reflecting the country’s strength from the economical and financial point of view.” Officials reported an increase in the amount of remittances ahead of Eid al-Fitr, as millions of Bangladeshis living and working abroad scrimp and save during Ramadan to send more money home for relatives. “Like previous years Eid has also come as a big boon for Bangladesh as the country has been receiving huge remittances from millions of expatriates,” said the BB official. Bangladesh’s foreign exchange reserves in April this year touched the $29bn mark for the first time. Officials said Bangladesh’s current reserves were enough to pay the country’s import bills for eight to nine months. espite the dip in bilateral relations - particularly in the wake of a prolonged border blockade till only five months ago, Nepal’s decision to recall its envoy and cancellation of the president’s visit, bilateral engagements and planned meetings with India remain on track. After the deterioration in ties since September last year, when India expressed its unhappiness with the new Nepali constitution promulgated on September 20, bilateral relations were steadily improving till the K P Sharma Oli government abruptly cancelled President Bidhya Bhandari’s visit to India at the last moment. The perception within the ruling Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist-Leninist) that Delhi made a failed bid to topple the Left-led regime in Kathmandu has not resulted in the ruling coalition cancelling bilateral consultations. Officials said that at least one dozen meetings between Nepal and India will be completed ahead of the planned fourth meeting of the Nepal-India Joint Commis- sion at the foreign minister’s level scheduled to take place in New Delhi after mid-August. The joint commission is the highest-level mechanism between Nepal and India that is mandated to review the entire gamut of two neighbours’ bilateral relations. Meetings at the energy secretary- and commerce secretarylevel began yesterday in New Delhi on the two key issues between Nepal and India. In the energy secretary-level meeting, India has pledged to supply additional 120 MW electricity to Nepal through the MuzaffarpurDhalkebar trans-border transmission line - in this regard, India has called on Nepal to complete the construction of a sub-station at Dhalkebar at the earliest. During a meeting of the joint steering committee (JSC) in New Delhi, which began on Monday, the Indian side accepted the request from the Nepali side to export more electricity to Nepal. The Nepal-India commerce secretary-level meeting kicked off in New Delhi yesterday with bilateral trade-related matters prominent on the agenda, tweeted Nepal’s ministry of foreign affairs. Trade, construction of integrated check posts on the Nepal- India border, expansion of Indian rail up to the Nepal border, and banking facilities to Nepali nationals working in India, among others, are on the agenda of the meeting. According to Indian ambassador Ranjit Rae, the visits of Nepali President Bhandari to India and Indian President Pranab Mukherjee to Nepal are on the cards and these will improve bilateral ties. Senior officials from the ministries of water resources held a meeting in New Delhi in Mayend to discuss issues including the proposed Koshi high dam project, inundation in bordering areas in the Nepali Terai due to building of embankments on the Indian side and compensation for the Koshi- and Gandakaffected victims. Last week, surveyors general from Nepal and India also held a meeting and decided to install GPS in all 8,000 Nepal-India border pillars and decided to clear the No-Man’s land of all encroachments. Earlier this month, another meeting that deals with procurement of arms and ammunition from India, which was postponed during the economic blockade, also took place in New Delhi. Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein speaking during a press conference on Sri Lanka in Geneva. Lanka urged to rein in military, prosecute war crimes Reuters Geneva S ri Lanka must rein in its military forces, prosecute war crimes committed during the long civil war with Tamil rebels and win the confidence of the Tamil minority, the United Nations said yesterday. Witnesses must be protected under an effective transitional justice mechanism that should include international judges, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein said in an annual report. The military and Tamil Tiger rebels - who were fighting for an independent Tamil state in the north and east of the Indian Ocean island - are both likely to have committed war crimes during the 26-year conflict that ended in 2009, the UN said last year. President Maithripala Sirisena’s government, formed in March 2015, has “consolidated its position, creating a political environment conducive to reforms”, but governance reform and transitional justice had lagged, the report said. “The early momentum established in investigating emblematic cases must be sustained, as early successful prosecutions would mark a turning point from the impunity of the past,” it said. “Continuing allegations of arbitrary arrest, torture and sexual violence, as well as more general military surveillance and harassment, must be swiftly addressed, and the structures and institutional culture that promoted those practices be dismantled.” A spokesman for the government in Colombo was not immediately available for comment. Sirisena has said that foreign participation is not needed for an impartial inquiry. Many Sri Lankans oppose foreign involvement and supporters of former President Mahinda Rajapakse believe that UN efforts aim to punish the military unfairly. The UN Human Rights Council will debate Zeid’s report today when the government is expected to come under fresh pressure to commit to prosecuting perpetrators. Sri Lanka acknowledged this month for the first time that some 65,000 people were missing from the war. The United Nations and activists have long urged justice for the families of those who disappeared, including those alleged to have been secretly abducted by state-backed groups and paramilitary outfits. At least 250 security detainees were still being held under the Prevention of Terrorism Act, the UN report said, noting that Zeid had urged the government during a visit last September to quickly charge or release them. The report voiced concerns over “military engagement in commercial activities, including farming and tourism” and aggressive campaigns in social media that it said “stoke nationalism against ethnic, religious and other minorities”. Shortage of safe land frustrates Lanka disaster relocation efforts Thomson Reuters Foundation Gamthuna E very time the wind picks up in the night, the Karunadasas get the shivers. The couple has been living in this remote village in the western foothills of Sri Lanka’s central mountains for over five decades. But since May, when a massive landslide hit another mountain slope 15km away, they have struggled to sleep at night. The landslide, which followed relentless rainfall, buried 130 people in the Egalpitiya area. But the Karunadasa’s village may have been on the verge of slipping as well. The only road that runs through town has sunk about two inches at a spot where it goes around a narrow curve. On either side of it, houses now sport large cracks running across their walls. “How can you live here? It is like living in a death trap,” said 81-year-old P P Karunadasa, as he stared at a large fissure running down the wall of his living room. But his wife said they have no option but to remain. “No one has told us whether these are high risk areas or not, but we have been told unofficially that they are,” she said. The Karunadasa family stand in their living room, near a crack in their wall that first appeared on May 17, a night when landslides claimed 130 lives in a neighbouring area, and that has been slowly widening since. More extreme weather, linked to climate change, is raising the threat from disasters such as flooding, landslides and drought in a range of already at-risk places around the world. But moving people out of harm’s way is an enormous challenge, not least because safe places to relocate families are in short supply almost everywhere. The Karunadasa family stand in their living room, near a crack in their wall that first appeared on May 17, a night when landslides claimed 130 lives in a neighbouring area, and that has been slowly widening since. TRF/Amantha Perera In Kegalle district, where the Karundasas live, most of the land is hilly, and flat, safe places are rare. But those are precisely what authorities are looking for, with the aim of relocating landslide victims and families like the Karundasas who live in high-risk areas. “Right now we are having a problem trying to locate safe land to move out those displaced,” said Jagath Mahedra, the Kegalle district head for Sri Lanka’s national Disaster Management Centre. A month after the disaster, 42 displacement centres had been set up around the district, offering safe housing for 3,500 people. But most of those were located in public institutions such as schools and places of worship. Those now need to be vacated, so they can be put back to their original use. But that process has been hampered by a severe shortage of safe land to relocate people, officials said. The National Building Research Organisation (NBRO) is currently conducting surveys in the region to determine zones at high risk of landslides. So far it has mapped 20 out of the 61 administrative divisions in the Kegalle district. “We have 610 families that need to be relocated. That number is definitely going to rise as the surveys progress,” said Mohamed Faizal, the top public official in the landslide-hit area. The government estimates it will need more than 300 acres of land to relocate those whose homes were destroyed or who are at high risk, said Anura Priyadarshana Yapa, the Minister for Disaster Management. Faizal noted that “not money, but land, will be our biggest headache.” It is not only in the hilly regions that the government is likely to run short of relocation land. Since landslides and flooding killed close to 200 people in May and water marooned over 300,000 others in their homes, the Sri Lanka government has been exploring the possibility of relocating thousands of families living in low-lying areas prone to floods. But finding suitable land has been a struggle. “All over Sri Lanka we are facing a situation where we just cannot distribute land ad-hoc,” Minister Yapa said. In urban areas, like the capital Colombo, an already large population is one key reason finding unused land is difficult. Yapa said that, to deal with the problem, the government is discussing building high-rise apartments, which are still a rarity in rural Sri Lanka, as well as single-family houses on land used for relocation. The minister said that while land was the biggest problem, families relocating have also raised concerns over access to jobs, schools and amenities like transport. “It is a complex problem that we are facing, and it does not have easy answers,” Yapa said. 26 Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 COMMENT Chairman: Abdullah bin Khalifa al-Attiyah Production Editor: C P Ravindran P.O.Box 2888 Doha, Qatar [email protected] Telephone 44350478 (news), 44466404 (sport), 44466636 (home delivery) Fax 44350474 GULF TIMES GCC needs to plan for EU without UK The UK has voted itself out of the European Union and is nearing a life without the 28-member union, the largest trading bloc in the World. Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) policymakers have generally sounded confident the overall Brexit impact on Gulf economies will be muted. Qatari banks face “immaterial net exposures” to Brexit-related currencies such as the pound and euro, according to QNB Financial Services. A prolonged period of a low interest rate regime, in view of Brexit, should be positive to GCC economies, says Global Investment House. The bilateral trading landscape between the GCC and the UK as well as the EU may not necessarily be altered by Brexit, according to experts. The EU has been unable to reach a free trade agreement with the GCC since 1988. It may now be possible for the UK, which last month signed a double taxation avoidance deal with the UAE, to strike beneficial trade deals with Gulf governments. But the “biggest jolt since the fall of the Berlin Wall” that erased about $3tn from global equity values last Friday, should be a longer-term concern for Gulf investors. Sovereign and private investors from Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the UAE have been prolific buyers of British assets in the past decade but they are holding back now over fears of a property price slump over Brexit. Qatar is one of the most high-profile investors in London property. The Qatar Investment Authority has at least $7bn directly invested in equities traded on the London stock Exchange, in which it also holds a 10.3% stake. Qatar’s total investments in Britain are worth around £30bn ($44bn), according to a Financial Times report. Gulf funds may shun the UK with Brexit becoming a reality, according to the Institute of International Finance (IIF). A UK exit would also hit GCC companies with high exposure to the UK through multiple channels, the IIF said. Longer term, GCC investments in the UK as well as Europe are mainly keeping line with the futuristic strategy of economic diversification. Total assets acquired by GCC private investors and sovereign funds in the EU are estimated at more than €400bn, according to a 2015 estimate. A Brexit-induced slowdown in the UK as well as Europe could affect Gulf investments in the continent; a perceived fall in demand for oil, the national lifeline of most Gulf states, could be another worry. While the post-referendum plunge in the pound may look UK assets cheaper for Gulf buyers, the nosedive could also bring down valuations of pounddenominated Gulf assets in the UK. Britain has now lost its gold-plated AAA rating, following the Standard & Poor’s downgrade; and the pound has hit a new 31-year low against the dollar. But the Brexit impact will largely be determined by the policies adopted by a country to deal with the contagion. Brexit is becoming a reality (despite the theoretical possibility of a second UK referendum on EU membership). The Gulf needs to plan for an EU sans the UK. End of an era as Britain forsakes European role The UK has now officially lost its chance at securing, once and for all, the leading role in Europe that was there for the taking By Carl Bildt Rome I n the early 1960s, former US secretary of state Dean Acheson famously quipped that the United Kingdom had lost an empire, and not yet found a role. Afterwards, successive British leaders tried to change that, by forging a new role for Britain in Europe. The country’s just-concluded “Brexit” referendum, in which a majority of voters expressed their desire to leave the European Union, represents the spectacular failure of that effort – and the end of an era. Britain’s journey toward Europe began in the early 1970s, when the firmly pro-European prime minister Edward Heath took the country into the European Economic Community, the EU’s forerunner. His successor, Harold Wilson, secured the membership with a 1975 referendum. And Margaret Thatcher signed the Single European Act, which created the single market –one of the most important steps in European integration, and one that owed much to British inspiration. Her successor, John Major, who campaigned actively for Britain to remain in the EU prior to the recent referendum, was instrumental in forging the Maastricht Treaty. While Tony Blair was in power, he spoke eloquently about Britain’s European mission. Then came David Cameron, who wavered in his attempt to keep the Conservative Party united, and ended up with losing both Europe and the party. To be sure, Cameron was not necessarily pitching Europe to an agreeable audience. Many Britons retain a certain nostalgia about the past, which they recall as more familiar, controlled and safe. Many Britons retain a certain nostalgia about the past, which they recall as more familiar, controlled and safe That nostalgia was constantly reinforced by a vitriolic anti-European – and, in particular, anti-German – campaign spearheaded by some of the country’s leading media. To read the Daily Mail or the Sun in the last few years was to encounter a kind of atavistic nationalism – often backed by blatant lies – on a scale rarely seen in other European countries. But there was also a problem with the pitch. Fearing political fallout, even leaders who genuinely supported European integration hesitated to defend the EU in a bold or inspiring manner to their constituents. For their part, the leaders those who opposed the EU, such as former London mayor Boris Johnson, who led the “Leave” campaign, simply continued to apply a tried and true formula: stoking the fires of fearbased nationalism. When British leaders crossed the English Channel to Europe, however, everything changed. Leaving their Euroscepticism behind, they continued to deepen the UK’s role in Europe. When I was Sweden’s foreign minister, I attended more than 130 meetings of the EU’s various ministerial councils, and I can honestly attest that the UK’s voice was among the most prominent in every one. The truth is that the EU that has emerged over the last decade has been shaped in no small part by the UK. Progress on the single market has helped to boost competitiveness. New free-trade agreements are giving European economies access to major markets around the world. The achievement of a global climate agreement promises not just to protect the environment, but also to cement Europe’s role as a leader in sustainability. And enlargement has enhanced Europe’s security substantially. These are, by all reasonable standards, remarkable UK-led achievements. But this was mostly a well-guarded secret back home. And that is the failure that lies at the root of the calamity that is Brexit. The UK has now officially lost its chance at securing, once and for all, the leading role in Europe that was there for the taking. What is more, the UK’s national political landscape is in ruins. The Conservative Party is deeply split; the Labour Party is inert under a nostalgic leftist leadership; and the Liberal Democrats have more or less left the scene. And the UK may be headed toward further ruptures. Nicola Sturgeon, the first minister of Scotland, which overwhelmingly voted to remain in the EU, has said that another referendum on Scottish independence is “highly likely”, calling the removal of Scotland from the EU “democratically unacceptable”. While the likelihood of a breakup remains impossible to predict, the virus of political divorce has certainly proved contagious – and a more fragmented Europe is undoubtedly a less safe one. In answering one question, elderly English voters – the core of the “Leave” electorate – have raised a bevy of new ones. Will the UK settle for a satellitetype relationship with the EU? Will it become little more than the rural hinterland of an offshore financial centre on the Thames? Will its leaders find yet another role for it to play in the world, or allow their country to fade slowly into irrelevance? Only time will tell. In the meantime, the UK is set to endure substantial political and economic pain.- Project Syndicate zCarl Bildt is a former prime minister and foreign minister of Sweden. Qatar is one of the most high-profile investors in London property To Advertise [email protected] Display Telephone 44466621 Fax 44418811 Classified Telephone 44466609 Fax 44418811 Subscription [email protected] 2016 Gulf Times. All rights reserved Britain’s Liberal Democrats Party leader Tim Farron (below right, blue shirt) joining people at an anti-Brexit protest in Trafalgar Square in central London yesterday. Lessons to be learnt from Brexit By Abdulbasit A al-Shaibei Doha T he global financial system in particular has been closely following the British referendum dubbed “Brexit”, which was meant to decide on whether the United Kingdom (UK) should continue in the European Union (EU) or not. Given the importance of the EU and the UK to the global economy, the June 23 referendum was closely watched all over the world. And in a rather stunning move, voters in the United Kingdom through a slender majority opted to leave the European Union, making the UK the first country to voluntarily withdraw from the 28-member political and economic bloc. Obviously, many have lined up on both sides – the “Remain” and the “Leave” campaign, but the results of the referendum teach us one very important thing- not just in politics, but in all areas - we should not be overconfident. One should not discount surprises. As the referendum has shown, sometimes people’s perception may be against you, no matter how you feel or think about it. Leading up to the vote, polls suggested voters would likely stay in the EU, but in a huge upset on June 23 night, “Leave the European Union” scored a narrow victory- 52 to 48%. Another important thing to consider is that no matter what you do, the risks are always there. In life, we face two kinds of risks – risks right in front of you or foreseen risks and risks you cannot see- hidden risks or unforeseen risks. Brexit’s impact on the world economy is quite palpable This referendum, I believe, is a good lesson for everyone - politicians, economists and policymakers on the risks involved in taking things very casually. Overconfidence lands one in trouble, as the results of the referendum have shown. There are many who think this referendum was not required in the first place. There is a perception that some of the British leaders have put their own eye out. That said, the fact remains that the UK is a wonderful and great country. Great Britain accounts for nearly 4% of the world’s output and London is a major financial centre of the world. The UK has survived before the EU and may be able to do without it. While there will be a fallout on the UK’s move to leave the EU, the fact, however, remains that the United Kingdom was never fully integrated with the European Union. The British always had their own currency and their visa processes are totally different from that of the EU. They always wanted to carry their own identity. This, we must take into account. And then, there are many, particularly in Europe, who believe that “Brexit” will indeed, do good to the EU. They hold the view that Great Britain is an obstacle to their decisiontaking capabilities. On many issues, the EU and UK had divergent views. So, while there may be some negatives in the process, there could be some positives as well, if only those concerned can leverage on that. Brexit’s impact on the world economy is quite palpable. In the short-term, people may panic. But what we see right now is not the “real impact”, but only a “reaction” to the unexpected results of the referendum. But a closer look at the global markets in the days following the referendum, gives an impression that it is a “clear over-reaction”. But as in the case of any transition, “Brexit” will certainly pose challenges to policymakers and financial authorities, both in the UK and European Union. People who held divergent views in the referendum, both within and outside of the UK, must be carried along. Any differences of opinion must be sorted out amicably. In that way, the process can be made smoother in the best interest of the British, European and global economy. Because of its sound economy and robustness, the UK has been a favoured destination for discerning investors. The high-profile investors in the UK include many from the GCC region including Qatar. In the post-Brexit period, investors must consider a “basket of investments” like the “basket of currencies”, which many countries have for their own currencies. This way, the investment-related risks can be mitigated to a large extent. Many analysts are also concerned about currency and market volatility in the days and weeks ahead. Volatility in the market is part of a cycle. Clearly, it is a cyclical process. Volatility is not always bad; with volatility, opportunities come…if the market is flat, there will be fewer opportunities. zAbdulbasit A al-Shaibei is a prominent Qatari banker and is the chief executive officer of Qatar International Islamic Bank Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 27 COMMENT A brief respite to Gaza’s hungry The traditional tekiyya is helping to alleviate the humanitarian crisis in Gaza By Sakher Abou El Oun AFP/Gaza City I n her modest home in the Gaza Strip, Sahar Sherif’s family watches as she ladles out a broth of meat and vegetables for a rare heart-warming meal. For just a month of the year, a soup kitchen in the Palestinian enclave is offering struggling families like Sherif’s a welcome break from daily worries about where they will find their next meal. During the holy month of Ramadan, the charity provides the 40-year-old divorcee and her five children - and grandchildren - with a square meal every day at no cost. “When we eat food from the tekiyya, we feel better,” says Sherif, using an Arabic name for the soup kitchen, an Islamic tradition said to date back to the era of the Prophet Ibrahim. But during the rest of the year when the kitchen is closed, “I make a pot of tea, I get two tomatoes out and that’s it”, she says, wearing a black nylon overcoat and face veil. “When there’s no food, we constantly feel dizzy.” Residents in the Hamas-ruled territory have lived under a punitive Israeli blockade for the last 10 years, and Egypt has largely kept its border with Gaza closed since 2013. Nearly half the war-torn enclave’s 1.9mn inhabitants live under the poverty line, with 80 % surviving on humanitarian aid. During Ramadan, Sherif can carry home a plate of rice and chicken for Palestinians preparing food at the tekiyya, Arabic name for the soup kitchen, during the holy month of Ramadan in Gaza City. For just a month of the year, a soup kitchen in the Palestinian enclave is offering struggling families a welcome break from daily worries about where they will find their next meal. Right: A Palestinian girl receiving food from the tekiyya. her family to break the daily fast after sunset - and a broth to eat before sunrise and another 16 hours of daytime fasting. For the rest of the year, food is one of many daunting expenses for the head of a poverty-stricken household. “I have to pay 500 shekels (115 euros) in rent as well as water and electricity bills,” says Sherif, whose two sons are unemployed. “I receive 100 to 200 shekels in support, but I’m supposed to pay the rest on my own,” she says. The Gaza Strip has been ravaged by three wars with Israel since 2008. The Mediterranean enclave’s unemployment rate of 45% is one of the highest in the world. Inside the soup kitchen, volunteers pile marinated chicken pieces onto huge trays and stir translucent onions in cauldrons with paddles. “In the past, families used to ask for chairs, a mattress or a fridge,” says volunteer Deeb Abdul Hamid. “But these days, they just ask for food.” The kitchen gives priority to families without breadwinners such as those headed by widows, divorcees or women whose husbands have emigrated, he says. Today, government employees who haven’t received their salaries also depend on the charity, says the 24-year-old graduate, who is unemployed. The traditional tekiyya is helping to alleviate the humanitarian crisis. Hassan al-Khatib, who manages the soup kitchen in Gaza city, says every day 150 to 200 families queue up outside for food. And more families head to another kitchen in Khan Yunis in southern Gaza. “The tekiyya is an element of our culture, heritage and history,” says al-Khatib, his head covered in a sparkling white scarf and his salt-and-pepper beard neatly trimmed. Tradition has it that the first soup kitchen opened centuries ago in Hebron in the West Bank, the other Palestinian territory now occupied by Israel. The Prophet Ibrahim - who is believed to have been buried in Hebron with his wife Sarah and sons - is said to have left food there for the poor. The Hebron kitchen - which is said to stand on the ground where he made the first donations - is open all year round. But in Gaza, the end of Ramadan in early July will mean an end to these food handouts. After the holy month ends, the soup kitchen will only open twice a week and only as long as private donations from abroad allow. Weather report Letters Three-day forecast TODAY A worrying prospect Dear Sir, The historic vote in the United Kingdom to leave the 28-nation European Union (EU) is having repercussions far beyond the European continent, to no one’s surprise. The British people, it seems, want greater control of their economy and their country’s borders. Stock markets in many countries tumbled immediately after the results of the referendum were announced. The so-called Brexit has come at a time when the global economy is going through a period of instability and uncertain times. GCC countries need to adjust to the new situation. As Dr Christian Koch, of the Geneva-based Gulf Research Centre Foundation, observed the other day (“For the GCC states, a different Europe to deal with from now on”, Gulf Times, June 26), the GCC states will now have to deal with a more fractured Europe and an EU institution struggling to define its purpose in the wider integration process. It has been observed that the vote will provide further impetus for European separatism. Nationalist forces in countries like France, Germany, Poland and Hungary are likely to intensify their own campaigns against Brussels and against further European integration. The GCC states will have to deal with a UK that is now taking on a different sort of European identity. Especially on foreign policy and defence matters, it is correct to assume that the UK and other European countries will no longer be following a similar approach. Where will all this lead to? Are we witnessing the beginning of the end of the European integration project? As two world wars had their origins in Europe, that is a worrying prospect. Ramesh G Jethwani (e-mail address supplied) Great times ahead for the Philippines Dear Sir, Further to the letter, “Changes in store for Philippines” (Gulf Times, June 28), I also feel that great times are lying ahead for the Philippines under the presidency of Rodrigo Duterte. I support his plans to step up the government’s war on crime. He said the other day that he believed in retribution. “Why?” he asked and answered himself: “You should pay. When you kill someone, rape, you should die.” The Philippines has been drifting along far too much in the past. It is time for action now. Our country has an enormous pool of talented workforce. But the nation still remains in the clutches of poverty. We must High: 41 C Low : 32 C race ahead and I believe Duterte is the right leader for our country at this juncture. Hope he will fulfil all his promises. Hazy at places at first becomes hot daytime with slight dust and humid with hazy to misty at places by night SN THURSDAY High: 42 C Low: 33 C (Full name and e-mail address supplied) Sunny Please send us your letters FRIDAY High: 43 C Low: 34 C Sunny By e-mail [email protected] Fax 44350474 Or Post Letters to the Editor Gulf Times P O Box 2888 Doha, Qatar Fishermen’s forecast OFFSHORE DOHA Wind: NE-SE 03-12 KT Waves: 1-3 Feet INSHORE DOHA Wind: NW-NE 05-15KT Waves: 1-2 Feet Around the region Abu Dhabi Baghdad All letters, which are subject to editing, should have the name of the writer, address and phone number. The writer’s name and address may be withheld by request. Dubai Kuwait City Manama Muscat Riyadh Tehran Weather today Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny P Cloudy M Sunny Sunny Max/min 44/31 48/31 42/32 48/32 39/31 38/32 46/31 39/26 Weather tomorrow Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny Sunny M Sunny P Cloudy Sunny Max/min 43/30 48/32 41/32 49/33 40/34 39/33 46/31 41/27 Weather tomorrow Sunny Sunny T Storms S Showers Sunny Cloudy S T Storms M Cloudy T Storms Showers T Storms S T Storms P Cloudy T Storms P Cloudy P Cloudy Sunny Showers P Cloudy P Cloudy M Sunny P Cloudy Cloudy Max/min 32/26 29/23 32/26 26/14 37/23 18/11 29/26 33/27 33/28 28/22 32/24 36/29 21/15 31/24 29/17 37/28 31/21 21/16 25/13 30/22 32/26 17/08 28/20 Live issues A must-read book? Go on, make me By Oliver Burkeman New York S omewhere around the 500th headline I read in praise of Hamilton, the universallyacclaimed Broadway musical due in Europe next year, I was struck by a deflating thought: I’ll probably never see it. Not just because it’s virtually impossible to get a ticket, but because so many people – people whose tastes I trust – have raved about it that I now regard the prospect with annoyance. Two years ago, it was the Richard Linklater movie Boyhood, which I still haven’t seen; then Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan novels, which I still haven’t read. Straw polls of friends suggest I’m not alone in this reaction – call it “cultural cantankerousness” – which seems to affect books, films, plays, holiday destinations and restaurants equally. Increasingly, my first thought on seeing something described as a “must-read” is‚“Oh really? Try and make me”. “Whenever you find you are on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect” It would be easy to dismiss this as simple contrarianism. After all, we live in an era that champions ostentatious dissent from the mainstream, whether you’re a journalist trolling for clicks by explaining what “Donald Trump gets right”, or a hipster embracing fashions because others disdain them. And contrarianism has its merits: “Whenever you find you are on the side of the majority,” Mark Twain said, “it is time to pause and reflect.” But unlike contrarianism, cultural cantankerousness isn’t solely about appearing different from others: even alone in a room, I’d be disinclined to pick up Ferrante’s books if others were available. Nor is it because I suspect these works of art are no good; they’re probably all sensational. When it comes to, say, TV shows about competitive baking, I resist the pull of the crowd because I’m confident I’m not missing much. In the case of Hamilton or Boyhood, I’m sure my perversity is costing me real enjoyment. So what’s going on? One explanation is what psychologists call “optimal distinctiveness theory” – the way we’re constantly jockeying to feel exactly the right degree of similarity to and difference from those around us. Nobody wants to be exiled from the in-group to the fringes of society; but nobody wants to be swallowed up by it, either. In toddlerhood and teenagerhood, this manifests as a bloody-minded refusal to do what we’re told, precisely to show we can disobey our parents. Perhaps it never entirely goes away. But I have a different hunch about cultural cantankerousness: I think it’s a defence against the “fear of missing out”. These days, thanks largely to technology, we’re more aware than ever of all the exciting things other people are up to, in other places. The result is an edgy, distracted state of worry that undermines the pleasure of whatever we’re doing: what if we could be doing something better? My irritation at the plaudits heaped on any given book, film or play is a way of reasserting control. Instead of worrying about whether I should be reading Ferrante, I’m defiantly resolving that I won’t. That’s one less thing to worry about missing, leaving me free to focus instead on haranguing other people to watch Better Call Saul. No, really – if you haven’t seen it, you must. - Guardian News and Media Around the world Athens Beirut Bangkok Berlin Cairo Cape Town Colombo Dhaka Hong Kong Istanbul Jakarta Karachi London Manila Moscow New Delhi New York Paris Sao Paulo Seoul Singapore Sydney Tokyo Weather today M Sunny Sunny T Storms Rain Sunny Sunny T Storms P Cloudy T Storms S T Storms S T Storms P Cloudy S Showers S T Storms P Cloudy P Cloudy M Sunny M Sunny P Cloudy P Cloudy P Cloudy Sunny Rain Max/min 32/25 30/24 32/26 25/13 38/23 17/08 29/26 34/27 33/28 27/21 32/24 37/28 17/14 31/24 28/16 38/29 30/20 23/15 25/12 31/21 33/26 18/06 25/20 28 Gulf Times Wednesday, June 29, 2016 QATAR Ministry issues travel advisory T he Ministry of Interior (MoI) has offered tips on a wide range of travel-related issues in view of the upcoming holiday season. The advisory, “Tips for Safe Travel”, lists a series of dos and don’ts for people who would travel in the coming weeks to ensure their safety. Official documents: To begin with, the advisory urges travellers to ensure that their passports are valid for at least six months and obtain a visa on time. “Some embassies in Qatar require the signature of children aged 10 years or more on the passport,” it notes. One should also confirm the validity of official documents such as the ID card, driver’s licence, car ownership card and debit/credit cards. “Always keep official documents and personal valuables in a safe and secure place while travelling. Do not pawn your passport or ID card to any party in any way,” the advisory further states. In case of any problem, one must immediately inform the nearest diplomatic mission of his/her country and notify officials about the problem in detail. Travellers have also been advised to arrange for an international driver’s licence as the transit system in some countries does not allow a foreigner to drive unless he/she carries a licence issued by those countries. “Get the international customs transit book (Triptyque) as this will serve as a guarantor in front of the Customs authorities of countries through which you pass or stop during your journey. Some Arab states require the Triptyque for passing through their territory,” the MoI has said, adding that one should keep a copy of the passport and visa as this may help in case the originals go missing. This may be done by saving copies of both in one’s email. Travellers should also collect the address and telephone numbers of the embassies/consulates of their country located in their travel destinations. This will help them in case of any emergency, the advisory adds. Awareness and caution: The MoI has advised travellers to be extra cautious about the situation around them – at hotels, airports, markets, etc – in order to ensure personal security and safety. “Please avoid mingling with unknown persons while travel- Keep money secure in a wallet. Secure the house before travelling. Images courtesy of MoI Carry proper currency during the trip. Check the tyres before leaving. Get the international customs transit book (Triptyque). Arrange for an international driver’s licence. ling,” the advisory says. “Please avoid carrying jewellery or any valuables unnecessarily with you during the travel period. Keep your money in a purse and ensure it is available at its place constantly.” Travellers have also been advised to avoid using illegal taxis and visiting suspicious localities. They should act as ambassadors of their country, follow the rules and regulations of the host country as well as aviation laws, and not carry prohibited items. If accompanied by domestic workers, the sponsor must enquire about their visas and procedures in this regard. The advisory also reminds travellers to ask security agencies for necessary legal approvals to conduct a search at the place where they are staying in the host country if such a situation arises. “In case there is an investigation in any case, you must report to the State Mission as soon as possible,” the MoI has said, adding that people should “carry currencies consistent with instructions of the host country” and excessive cash is required to be declared before Customs officers. Securing the house before travel: The MoI has advised travellers to ensure that they lock the doors of their house properly – by using one or more highquality locks – before leaving. They must not leave money, jewellery or other valuables inside and should instead deposit them in a bank. People should also switch off Keep a functional fire extinguisher in the car. the electric switchboard, gas pipelines and main water valve before leaving their house. Relatives or neighbours could be requested to pass by the house at intervals during the travel period to ensure their safety. Safety tips for travel by road: The advisory also includes safety tips for those travelling by road, some of which were published in Gulf Times yesterday based on information obtained from the ministry’s Facebook page. One should ensure the capacity of his/her vehicle by getting a comprehensive technical test done before starting the trip. “Check the validity and safety standard of your vehicle’s tyres and replace them if needed,” it notes. Other safety measures include wearing seatbelts throughout the trip as this can prevent injuries and fatalities, always keeping a first-aid kit and a functional fire extinguisher in the vehicle as well as keeping a set of spare key(s). Travellers should keep a route map of the country they are visiting and not allow the fuel level to dip below the halfway mark, the advisory states, noting that children should be made to sit in the rear seat only. Overloading a vehicle can be dangerous for its occupants and pose a risk to the lives of others. It can also lead to accidents and impeding the driver’s vision and freedom of movement, the MoI has said. One should not accompany unknown persons while travelling or carry any kind of lug- Maintain enough distance from the vehicle in front. gage or bags given by such unknown persons. The advisory has urged travellers to follow traffic signs and boards put up along the road to ensure a safe journey, avoid getting fatigued before starting a trip as tired motorists are often involved in serious accidents on highways, switch driving duties with others (holding a valid licence) every one or two hours if possible, make several halts to get adequate rest during long trips and remain cautious while approaching areas where animal movement is expected, especially at night. “If you feel drowsy, immediately stop your vehicle and resume your journey only after giving yourself some rest. Then, continue your travel peacefully and safely and avoid driving during the late hours of the night as much as possible,” it adds. Driving in emergency situations (rain, fog and dust): In such conditions, motorists have been advised to reduce the speed as much as possible, drive the vehicle on the right side of the road, use wipers if it is raining, switch on the dim lights, not to overtake and maintain enough distance from the vehicle in front. If a vehicle has to be stopped due to poor visibility or for other factors, one should stay off the road and switch on the hazard lights. Also, s/he should strictly avoid sudden braking without giving signals in advance. The advisory has been issued by the MoI’s Public Relations Department. IIFA: Qatar Airways hosts Bollywood stars and fans Q atar Airways was the official airline partner of the 17th International Indian Film Academy (IIFA) celebrations in Madrid, Spain, this weekend, attracting leading celebrities from the Indian and international film fraternity. In a statement yesterday, the Doha-based airline said it “played an important role in flying distinguished members of the Indian film industry” as guests on board Qatar Airways to Madrid, including leading celebrities such as Sonakshi Sinha, Bipasha Basu, Fawad Khan, Abhay Deol, Neil Nitin Mukesh, Vivek Oberoi, Subhash Ghai, David Dhawan, Gulshan Grover and others. Jonathan Harding, Qatar Airways senior vice-president (Europe), said the airline was delighted to have well-known celebrities on board from the Indian film fraternity. “Qatar Airways has the proud tradition of sponsoring some of the biggest events in the world, and as a partner to IIFA, we are very excited to have hosted these leading Bollywood celebrities on our double-daily flights to Madrid, allowing them to experience our acclaimed Qatari hospitality and service. As one of the most popular international events in Bollywood, IIFA is watched by Indian film fans from around the world, and is therefore a perfect platform to showcase Qatar Airways’ popularity among film fans.” One of the most talked-about annual events in the Indian film circuit, IIFA 2016 in Madrid attracted more than 150 Bollywood celebrities and an audience of approximately 6,500 people. Bollywood film fans keen to catch Ooredoo’s popular mascots the Alrabaa entertain children on Doha Corniche. Ooredoo gifts water and dates on Doha Corniche A Actor Ranveer Singh pictured with the airline’s cabin crew. Actor Anil Kapoor with Qatar Airways cabin crew at IIFA 2016. a glimpse of their favourite stars were not disappointed as many, including Salman Khan, Hrithik Roshan, Ranveer Singh, Deepika Padukone, Priyanka Chopra, Shahid Kapoor, Farhan Akhtar and Tiger Shroff, made appearances and gave “spell-binding performances” during the celebrations. IIFA has been instrumental in attracting the most well-known celebrities in India to travel to Spain. As the official airline, Qatar Airways has also been able to facilitate fans travelling from 13 key Indian cities it serves, the statement adds. Qatar Airways currently flies to Madrid two times a day and connects seamlessly via Doha to Ahmedabad, Amritsar, Bengaluru, Chennai, Goa, Hyderabad, Kochi, Kolkata, Kozhikode, Mumbai, New Delhi, Nagpur and Trivandrum. fter distributing dates and water to walkers and families on the Corniche during the first week of Ramadan, Ooredoo volunteers have returned to the site again. A group of Ooredoo volunteers, and the company’s popular mascots the Alrabaa, arrived on Monday to surprise people walking along Doha’s Corniche with a special gift of water and dates to break their fast for Iftar. The volunteers, who represented some of the business units across the company, were stationed at the end of the Corniche near West Bay, to distribute the gifts at sunset to passersby as well as people driving along the seafront. The Alrabaa were also on hand to entertain children and their parents, pose for photographs and spread joy. Fatima Sultan al-Kuwari, director of community and public relations at Ooredoo, said: “After the success of our first distribution on the Corniche, we wanted to come back and A child receiving the Iftar kit. give anyone a chance who had missed us to join the fun. The Corniche is beautiful at sunset and the unity of breaking our fast with families and our community was a highlight of our #CloserConnection campaign. Thank you to everyone who said hello.” Customers can follow Ooredoo’s Ramadan campaign via its Facebook, Instagram or Twitter page and the hashtag #CloserConnection