HH the Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Al-Mubarak Al
Transcription
HH the Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Al-Mubarak Al
SU BS CR IP TI ON TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 KOC: 80 yrs of work changed lifestyle in Kuwait Jazeera shuts Egypt channel as Doha-Cairo tensions thaw NO: 16381 150 FILS 5 40 PAGES RABI ALAWWAL 1, 1436 AH 8 Airbus delivers first next-gen plane to Qatar Airways 23 www.kuwaittimes.net Tough Pathans find solace in Afridi’s Pakistan 17 Fadhl calls for granting non-Muslims citizenship MP labels move an Xmas gift for ‘Christian brothers’ Min 07º Max 20º High Tide 13:38 Low Tide 00:07 & 19:37 By B Izzak News i n KUWAIT: Independent MP Nabil Al-Fadhl said yesterday he has submitted a petition to the constitutional court challenging an article in the constitution that bars nonMuslims from being naturalized. The lawmaker said that he considers this move as a Christmas gift for “our Christian brothers”. The petition challenges an article that was added to the constitution by Islamist and conservative MPs in 1981 to ban granting Kuwaiti citizenship to non-Muslims. That amendment to the 1959 nationality law stipulates a set of conditions for those who can be granted Kuwaiti citizenship, and one of them is to be a Muslim. Continued on Page 13 b r i e f KD 750 guarantee for Indians? KUWAIT: A source at the Public Manpower Authority said the foreign, interior and labor ministries are coordinating to impose a guarantee of KD 750 on every Indian who wants to come and work in Kuwait, be it in the public or private sector. The guarantee will be paid at the Kuwait embassy in India. The source said the move comes after the Indian Embassy placed two conditions to bring in domestic workers - a KD 750 guarantee, and to check the house where the worker will work before arriving in Kuwait. The source stated that the Indian community numbers more than 830,000, and “there is a strong indication that hiring of Indian manpower may be halted”. US Navy chopper crashes in Kuwait KAC seals Boeing deal KUWAIT: Kuwait Airways announced yesterday it has signed a deal to purchase 10 777-300ER passenger aircraft from US manufacturer Boeing to upgrade its fleet. Kuwait Airways Chairperson and CEO Rasha AlRoumi said in a press statement that the new contract paves the way for revamping and upgrading the fleet to help the company compete with other airlines. Under this deal, delivery will start from Nov 2016, Roumi said. TUNIS: A supporter of Beji Caid Essebsi holds a campaign poster outside his party headquarters after he was elected president yesterday. — AP (See Page 7) KUWAIT: A US Navy helicopter has crashed during a training mission in Kuwait, slightly injuring three crewmembers, the Bahrain-based Naval Forces Central Command said yesterday. The MH-60S helicopter went down on Sunday morning during the overland training flight at Camp Buehring in Kuwait, it said in a statement. “All six personnel aboard the helicopter survived the crash and were transported to nearby medical facilities for evaluation. Three of the six crew members sustained minor injuries and received treatment. All have been released.’” — AFP CONDOLENCES Management and staff convey their deepest condolences to HH the Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Al-Mubarak Al-Sabah on the sad demise of his wife Sheikha Sheikha Sabah Al-Nasser Al-Sabah May Allah Almighty bestow His mercy on her TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23 2014 LOCAL Crime R e p o r t Deer spotted at Fourth Ring Road KUWAIT: Following a recent incident where a lion fatally injured a housemaid, motorists along the Fourth Ring Road were shocked to see a deer wandering around, causing a great deal of confusion as they all tried to avoid hitting it, said security sources. Case papers indicate that traffic police immediately rushed to the scene to direct traffic until a citizen arrived and took it away. Hit-and-run driver identified Following the Jahra hit-and-run incident where a 4year-old Saudi child was killed by a truck, security sources said that detectives indentified the driver and arrest him at his residence within a few hours. Child molester arrested An Arab private school teacher was arrested for sexually molesting a 5-year-old Moroccan girl, said security sources. Case papers indicate that the girl’s father reported that on noticing that the girl did not want to go to school, her mother inquired about the reason and on medically examining her, the report showed that the girl had been beaten and sexually molested. A case was filed and further investigations are in progress. Cardiac arrest A 25-year-old man collapsed in a cafe, said security sources, noting that on rushing him to Farwaniya Hospital, the man was already dead from a cardiac arrest and lung and liver damage. Doctors said that the man died of natural causes. Work mishap Two window cleaners were injured when they lost balance while cleaning the exterior of the PAAAET building windows and fell from a height, said security sources, noting that the two workers were rushed to Sabah Hospital in critical condition. Drugs possession A citizen and an Egyptian were arrested with 33 psychotropic pills, said security sources. Case papers noted that a police patrol stopped the two suspects’ vehicle, and noticing how confused they were, searched them to find the drugs. A cased was filed. Physical assault A Syrian who was recently rushed to Mubarak Hospital with several injuries reported that four people he knew had assaulted him in Tunis Street in Hawally, said security sources, noting that the man provided the police with the assailants’ description pending arresting them. KUWAIT: First Deputy Premier and Foreign Minister Sheikh Sabah Khaled Al-Hamad Al-Sabah chairs the Cabinet’s meeting yesterday. — KUNA Cabinet commends Egypt-Qatar reconciliation initiative Ministers condole premier on spouse’s death KUWAIT: The Cabinet yesterday commended the positive and constructive outcomes of a recent initiative launched by Saudi King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz targeting reconciliation between Egypt and Qatar. During its weekly meeting presided over by First Deputy Premier and Foreign Minister Sheikh Sabah Khaled Al-Hamad AlSabah, the cabinet lauded the sincere willingness of Egypt and Qatar to mend fences and to usher in a fresh stage of bilateral relations that could lead to constructive cooperation in order to serve the common interest of both nations and to promote pan-Arab cooperation, Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah Al-Mubarak Al-Sabah said in a news statement following the meeting. It also appreciated the sincere role and efforts of the Saudi King in the consolidation of Arab solidarity with a view to serv- ing both Arab and Muslim nations, in addition to the compliance of Qatari Amir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani and Egyptian President Abdelfatah Al-Sisi with the Saudi King’s initiative, he said. The eagerness of both Qatari and Egyptian leaders to develop and cement bilateral relations reflects the fact that they live up to national responsibility and are well aware of the size of challenges and risks the Arab world is facing, the minister added. At the onset of the cabinet meeting, the ministers reviewed a letter received by His Highness the Amir from Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, expressing satisfaction with the outcomes of his recent visit to Kuwait. Iraqi premier The ministers then listened to a briefing from First Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Sabah Khaled AlHamad Al-Sabah on the findings of a recent visit to Kuwait by Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi, where he met His Highness the Amir, His Highness the Crown Prince and His Highness the Prime Minister. Sheikh Sabah Khaled also briefed the ministers on the outcomes of the recent meeting of the Kuwaiti-UAE joint committee, which was held in Abu Dhabi and witnessed the signing of four memos of understanding in various cooperative domains. He also elaborated on the outcomes of a recent visit to Kuwait by Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shukry, as both sides inked 11 memos of understanding aiming to promote and consolidate bilateral cooperation in various fields. Moreover, the cabinet approved draft KD 200 theft Residency affairs department warns expats with renewed passports A citizen reported that he went to withdraw KD 200 from an ATM and that the transaction was rejected, but when he went home, he received a text message from the bank notifying him that the money had been debited from his account. Checking the bank CCTV cameras, he found out that someone used the machine after him, found the cash and took it. Further investigations are in progress to identify the man. By Hanan Al-Saadoun Youngster injured A young citizen was injured when he jumped from a moving vehicle in Qurain, said security sources. Case papers indicate that the young man was outside his family house when someone he knew accompanied by another person asked him to go for a ride with them, but he refused, which made them pull him into the vehicle and drive off for a while before he managed to open the door and jump off. A case was filed and further investigations are in progress. Stolen goods A female citizen who owns a supermarket in Hawally reported that on receiving new goods and having them unloaded in a warehouse, she found that goods worth thousands of dinars had been stolen from it. A case was filed and further investigations are in progress. Fugitive nabbed A 34-year-old Arab woman was arrested for being wanted for various financial cases, said security sources. Case papers indicate that a routine checkpoint near Khairan resort noticed that a woman was trying to avoid it by heading into the desert. To her bad luck, the woman’s vehicle got stuck in the sand and on checking up on her, policemen found she is wanted over financial claims and dud cheques. Jahra accident A 64-year-old citizen narrowly escaped death when he was hit by a vehicle while crossing a Jahra street, said security sources, noting that his right thigh was fractured. He was immediately rushed to hospital for treatment. Sailor hurt A sailor was injured at Doha port when a load of gypsum accidentally fell on him, said security sources, noting that the man was rushed to hospital for treatment. — Al-Rai/ Al-Watan Crime R e p o r t KUWAIT: The Commercial Bank of Kuwait sponsored a workshop for the Kuwait Institute of Banking Studies on the effect of giftedness, leadership and culture on booming business. The workshop took place at the Sheikha Salwa Al-Sabah hall featuring executives from banking institutes in Kuwait. GCC wildlife protection meeting kicks off KUWAIT: The 14th meeting of the Standing Committee tasked with preserving wildlife and natural habitats in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) kicked off yesterday at the senior officials level. Mohammad Al-Enezi, Deputy Director General for the Environment Public Authority, said in his speech that the Gulf Convention on wildlife plays an important role in preserving the natural heritage of the area, adding that the proposals submitted to the agenda of the meeting, such as the new organizational structure of the Convention and the Advisory Committee will have a significant impact on the development of the mechanisms of action and give multiple scientific alternatives for decision makers. He added that the environmental police proposal included on the agenda came at an appropriate timing, where the State of Kuwait will work on formulating a practical approach to such proposal. He added that the Authority is preparing to embark on the development of the executive bylaw of the Environmental Protection Act No. 42 of 2014 which obliges forming an environmental police. He explained that the environmental police will contribute to improving the quality of the environment through the effective application of the laws and give more support for environmental issues, noting that the celebration of the first wildlife day on September 30 every year gives further attention for the conservation of nature and biodiversity. For his part, Assistant Secretary Two suicide cases reported General for human affairs and the environment at the Secretariat General of the Gulf Cooperation Council, Dr Abdullah bin Oqla AlHashem in his speech thanked the State of Kuwait for hosting the meeting, which is a quantum leap in the work of the GCC Convention, where many proposals from Member States have been gathered. Hashem said that a proposal on raising awareness of wildlife by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia was submitted in addition to another submitted by Kuwait on illicit cheetah trafficking. He pointed to the proposal of Bahrain to establish a workshop on the preparation of the consolidated regional regime on access to genetic resources as well as follow-up to the passage of falcons between the GCC countries. —KUNA KUWAIT: Acting Director of Hawally Residency affairs department Lt Col Fawaz Al-Roumi said accurate information at the residency affairs department on expatriates contributes to presenting visa services easily to them, and their transactions will be processed without mistakes or complications. He said the residency affairs department has prepared an integrated work mechanism to upgrade information and data transfer for all expatriates, adding that those concerned should refer to the residency affairs departments to update their information or transfer data from old passports to new ones. The person will be given two months after the expiry of the old passport before fines are imposed. He said if the same passport is renewed, the person should go to the residency department before the passport actually expires, and will be given two months grace after the passport expires to avoid fines. He said this procedure must be followed to update information in the computer at the residency affairs department, as it was noticed that many expatriates have valid visas but their passports have expired, and this will result in fines against them. Roumi said the fine of not updating data is KD 2 per day, with a maximum of KD 600. He said for those who renew their passports outside Kuwait, they should refer to the department within one month after entering the country, otherwise they will have to pay a fine. He said an expat who arrives with a new passport will be informed to go to the residency affairs department within a month to update his data. Parliament panel discusses domestic workers file KUWAIT: The National Assembly committee of health, social and labor affairs discussed yesterday two draft laws on domestic workers and the establishment of closed joint stock companies concerned with bringing and hiring domestic workers. The meeting was attended by representatives from the Ministry of Interior and the public authority for workforce. MP Sadoun Hammad told the press following the session that the draft laws would lead to drastic reforms in the domestic workers system and its side effects that cause much trouble to Kuwaiti families. During the parliamentary meeting, it was agreed to thoroughly scrutinize the draft laws for the next two weeks before referring them to the National Assembly for final approval. — KUNA Cross-dressers to be expelled from Police Academy By Hanan Al-Saadoun KUWAIT: A 20-year-old bedoon girl committed suicide in Sulaibiya. The body was recovered and the case is with concerned authorities. Separately, a Yemeni expat selfimmolated in Sulaibiya farms. Police received a call about a murder in Sulaibiya, and the caller told them about a charred dead person near his car. Police found a note saying: “This is the number of the vehicle owner. I am the H. A. from Yemen. Forgive me if I made a mistake with anyone. Thank you.” decrees appointing new deputy directorsgeneral of the Kuwait Ports Foundation, a new director-general of the Public Environment Authority, setting up the Higher Environment Council, and appointing board members of the Public Authority for Manpower. The cabinet, afterwards, discussed several issues and matters bearing on the National Assembly and the latest regional and international developments. It mourned the demise of Sheikha Sabah Al-Nasser Al-Sabah, spouse of His Highness the Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Al-Mubarak Al-Hamad Al-Sabah, and the death of Khaled Ahmad Al-Jassar, the former minister of justice. Finally, the ministers congratulated Qatar and its leadership on the Gulf country’s National Day, wishing it more development and welfare. — KUNA KUWAIT: The GCC wildlife protection meeting in progress. — KUNA KUWAIT: Interior ministry assistant undersecretary for education and training affairs Maj Gen Sheikh Faisal AlNawaf disclosed that new measures would be taken concerning Saad Al-Abdullah Police Academy cadets including annual security assessments during their four-year study period to make sure there were no security restrictions on any of them. Sheikh Faisal stressed that cadets indicted with dishonoring or disgracing felonies like ‘cross-dressing’ during their study would be immediately expelled from the academy. —Al-Rai TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 LOCAL In Brief Job-seekers Labor market Solar panels KUWAIT: Manpower and Government Restructuring Program (MGRP) Secretary-General Fauzi Al-Majdali announced yesterday that the cabinet approved signing up laid-off workers of the private sector on the Civil Service Commission (CSC) system as “job seekers.” According to the approved Cabinet decree no 1577/2014 the CSC is obligated to register laid-off employees on its system in cooperation with MGPR. Majdali also said that discharged workers will receive their unemployment benefits at the end of this month. — KUNA KUWAIT: MPs Abdurrahman Al-Jeeran, Mohammad Al-Enizy, Askar Al-Enizy, Mohammad Al-Huwailah and Saud AlHuraiji filed a request to allocate a parliamentary session to discuss the labor market’s imbalances, and Kuwaiti workers’ percentage in the private sector. The session would address obstacles facing the employment of Kuwaitis in the private sector, and ways to resolve the issue. KUWAIT: The Ministry of Electricity and Water prepares to place the tender for the second phase of a project to install solar panels on rooftops of government buildings. The first phase, executed at the Ministry of Electricity and Water and Ministry of Public Works’ buildings, was deemed successful. The KD 22 million project contains four phases and is slated to end by 2019. Photo o f t h e d a y KUWAIT: Construction works are seen at the Jaber Al-Ahmad Cultural Center site at the old flag square site in Kuwait City. The project contains an opera house, and is slated for completion in 2015. — Photo by Yasser Al-Zayyat NBK launches 3 new multi-currency ATMs Adailiya 2nd ‘healthy town’ in Kuwait KUWAIT: The United Nations has registered Al-Adailiya district as a healthy town as part of its international network of healthy towns, following suit of another Kuwaiti district that had been chosen for healthy features, Al-Yarmouk. The announcement was made yesterday by Dr Amal Al-Yahya, the head of the healthy towns department of the Ministry of Health, in a statement, noting that such an international designation is based on several considerations such as the community quest for improving public health and for being distinguished with other characteristics, such as good level of education, family stability, minimum accidents, environmental protection and combating poverty. Residents of Al-Adailiya, one of the Kuwaiti residential regions, along with voluntary teams, have been exerting noticeable efforts for enhancing their neighborhood’s conditions. Dr Yahya, part of the “national committee for implementation of the healthy towns initiative,” is involved along with her fellow commission members, in diverse activities in this respect, such as holding coordination meetings with governors. Meanwhile, Salah Al-Saif, the head of the voluntary team, “nahtam (we care), “ said the Kuwaiti Voluntary Work Center, chaired by Sheikha Amthal Al-Ahmad AlJaber Al-Sabah, has been working with the council of local notables in Al-Adailiya to turn it into an exemplary residential district, health and public beauty wise. The team has been involved in multiple activities, such as distribution of plants to the neighborhoods as part of public beautification efforts. They also work on a wider scale in the country to combat desertification in the rural areas. — KUNA Mohammed Al-Othman The new ATMS at Kuwait International Airport. KUWAIT: National Bank of Kuwait (NBK) launched its new multi-currency ATM machines in the Transit Area at Kuwait International Airport. The new ATM machines allow NBK customers to withdraw cash amounts in six different currencies; Kuwaiti Dinar KWD, US Dollar USD, Euro, Sterling Pound GBP, Emirati Dirham AED and Saudi Riyal SAR. The machines are located near Gates 3 and 24. “NBK is dedicated to providing its customers with the most updated services and innovative products. We are keen to be closer to our customers and offer them the most convenient banking experience,” said Mohammed AlOthman, NBK’s Assistant General Manager, Consumer Banking Group. “The location of these ATM machines has been carefully selected to better serve travelers and allow them to withdraw cash in the currency of choice, depending on their destination”. NBK has maintained its leading position in the market by constantly investing in its local network to ensure the reach of products and services to a wider segment of customers. NBK enjoys the largest banking network in Kuwait with more than 65 branches, 8,200 Points of Sale and 239 ATMs to provide its customers with the most convenient services and products. For more information please contact NBK Call Center 1801801 or log onto www.nbk.com. ‘Energy Conference vital to bolster Arab oil cooperation’ ABU DHABI: The 10th Arab Energy Conference currently held in Abu Dhabi offers an ideal chance to exchange oil expertise among the Arab countries, Secretary General of the Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries (OAPEC) Abbas Ali Al-Naqi said yesterday. It is also a good occasion to discuss issues of common interest, Al-Naqi told KUNA on the sidelines of the conference organized by OAPEC, December 21-23, under the theme: “Energy and Arab Cooperation.” The event is held under patronage of UAE President Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan. The three-day discussions tackle current developments in the oil and natural gas markets and the implications on the Arab countries and investment requirements to develop the energy sector in Arab World, in addition to issues on energy, environment, and sustainable development, he said. Participants will also address energy resources, consumption and conservation in the Arab countries, as well as Arab electricity interconnection and technological developments, he noted. The conference is seeking to establish an Arab institutional framework to review oil and energy issues in order to develop a Pan-Arab perspective, besides coordinating relations among Arab institutions concerned with energy and development. The gathering also seeks to harmonize energy policies with development issues, investigate present and future Arab energy requirements and the means of meeting them. Kuwait’s delegation to the conference includes Minister of Oil and Minister of State for National Assembly Affairs Ali Al-Omair, Minister of Public OAPEC Secretary General Abbas Ali Al-Naqi Works and Minister of Electricity and Water Abdulaziz Al-Ibrahim. — KUNA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 LOCAL His Highness the Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah greets the audience as he arrives to the venue. A child present flowers to His Highness the Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah. KUWAIT: His Highness the Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah in a group photo with the honored athletes. —KUNA photos Crown Prince honors outstanding players Athletes portray ‘shining image’ of Kuwait KUWAIT: His Highness the Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad AlJaber Al-Sabah patronized and attended a ceremony to honor excellent players of national teams and sports clubs. Addressing the ceremony organized yesterday by the Public Authority for Youth and Sport (PAYS), HH the Crown Prince highlighted directives by HH the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah to provide utmost care to youth activities in all fields. This is prompted by HH the Amir’s belief that youth is “the pillars of national renaissance. They are the flourishing present and the promising future,” HH the Crown Prince said. Arriving at the venue of the ceremony earlier, HH the Crown Prince was received by Minister of Information and Minister of State for Youth Affairs Sheikh Salman Sabah Salem AlHumoud Al-Sabah, PAYS Chairman and Director General Sheikh Ahmad Al-Mansour Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, Deputy PAYS Director and head of the higher organizing committee Ahmad Abdulrazzaq Al-Khazel and a host of senior officials from both bodies. The ceremony started with the national anthem and then recitation of verses from the Holy Quran. HH the Crown Prince, on behalf of the Kuwaiti people, congratulated HH the Amir on the global honoring by the UN as a Humanitarian Leader and Kuwait as a Humanitarian Center. The unprecedented honoring recognized HH the Amir’s contributions to preserve people’s lives and alleviate their sufferings around the globe, HH the Crown Prince said. Such great benevolence has left everlasting impression on the Arab, Islamic and world levels. Superb results Then HH the Crown Prince congratulated the distinguished players for the superb results they achieved on the regional, Arab and international sports scenes, winning advanced ranks in various competitions. He added that they have shown “honorable faces” portraying a shining image of “beloved Kuwait.” HH the Crown Prince then lauded the “fruitful efforts” by Minister of Information and Minister of State for Youth Affairs Sheikh Salman Sabah Salem Al-Humoud Al-Sabah, Chairman of the Kuwait Olympic Committee Sheikh Talal Fahad Al-Ahmad AlSabah, also Chairman of the Kuwait Football Association, and PAYS Chairman and Director General Sheikh Ahmad Mansour Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah as well as heads of the Kuwaiti sports federations and associations. Then he addressed the honored players urging them to exert their utmost and persistent efforts to maintain the elevated ranks they have achieved, for their dear country. For his part, Sheikh Salman AlHumoud voiced his deep pleasure for the annual occasion to honor the Kuwaiti excellent players, saying the presence of HH the Crown Prince reveals high interest by the state’s leaderships, represented by HH the Amir, in promoting sports. The State has always been keen on supporting Kuwaitis in all fields, the Minister said, boasting the persevering efforts by the country’s players in general, and superlative ones in particular, to raise the name of Kuwait high on the regional and international scenes. He congratulated the high-caliber youth initiatives, Sheikh Salman AlHumoud said. He also highlighted state support to young people to help them make the best of their free time. Sheikh Salman Al-Humoud underscored the collaboration among the state institutions to realize success, paying tribute to the National Assembly for issuing a host of legislations topped with the law on investment and marketing for sports clubs and federations. He also expressed gratitude to the Cabinet chaired by HH the Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Mubarak AlHamad Al-Sabah, that was keen on producing balanced sports legislations His Highness the Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber AlSabah honors Sheikha Fraiha Al-Sabah, President of the Fatat (girls) Sports Club. players for their achievements that the “dear country will always recall.” Sheikh Salman Al-Humoud expressed deep appreciation for establishing the Ministry of State for Youth Affairs, almost two years before, which functions as a comprehensive incubator for sports and youth issues and requirements. Scientific, objective method Since inception, the Ministry has been adopting a scientific and objective method, taking the executive steps to offer the best possible educational, social, cultural, sports and refreshing care for young people. He stressed in this respect elevated directives by the State leadership and the Cabinet. The Ministry of State for Youth Affairs has embraced certain programs and strategic plans that were translated into tangible youth and development projects. These included adopting the recommendations of the First National Youth Convention “Kuwait Listens,” the Minister said. Up to 50 percent of these recommendations have been implemented thanks to youth efforts and up to 150 in line with the relevant international charters. Promoting sports The Minister of State for Youth Affairs also pointed to several projects adopted by PAYS as part of applying the national plan for promoting sports endorsed by the government. He also thanked Kuwaitis holding key post, at home and on the Asian and the international levels, for supporting the country’s sports clubs and federations. Addressing the ceremony on behalf of the honored players, leading international Squash player Abdullah AlMezin, thanked HH the Crown Prince for sponsoring the event. He also emphasized HH the Amir’s support, but for which it would have been a hard job to realize such achievements. Furthermore, he thanked Minister Sheikh Salman Al-Humoud and officials and the state sports bodies their backing. By the end of the ceremony, HH the Crown Prince honored players with special needs, leading sports and media figures and Kuwaitis who won outstanding ranks in competitions, in addition to sports officials. —KUNA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 LOCAL KOC: 80 years of work changed lifestyle in Kuwait 2.9 million bpd produced in 2013/2014 KUWAIT: Kuwait Oil Company (KOC) celebrates today the 80th anniversary of being granted oil drilling concession right in the country under the agreement signed by the late Amir Sheikh Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah on December 23, 1934. The agreement was the most prominent event in the history of the Kuwait Oil Company, which was then called (Kuwait Oil Company Limited). Some believe that the date of signing of the agreement is the same date of the company’s The beginning Kuwait Oil Company was established in February 1934 in London, with an initial capital of 50,000 pounds with joint ownership and equal shares among all of the Anglo-Persian oil company, now known as British Petroleum (BP) and Gulf oil company currently known as (Chevron). In December 1, 1975, an agreement was signed between the Kuwaiti Government, British Petroleum Ltd. (BP Kuwait) and Gulf oil company stipulating that as of March 5, 1975, all remaining shares of the two companies including concession rights be transferred to the government Kuwait. The signing ceremony, which was seen as an official reference to shifting KOC to become entirely owned by the government, took place on December 6, 1975 in Kuwait, and then over the past long years, there were many events that constituted milestones in the history of the KOC. Among the most prominent of these events was the discovery of oil in commercial quantities in the Burgan well in February 1938, however, Kuwait had not benefited from this wealth until on June 30, 1946 when the first shipment of oil was exported. Ahmadi City The year 1946 also saw the establishment of the southern pier at Mina Al-Ahmadi, while work began to build the city of Al-Ahmadi in an integrated manner to include the main offices, workshops, residential neighborhoods and facilities to become an integrated city in 1949. In the era of the late Amir Sheikh Abdullah Al-Salem AlSabah, increasing in oil production was seen, and in 1955, production began in Raudhatain in north Kuwait, while in 1959, discovery of oil in Managish was discovered in September, while north pier went into force in September of the same year. In the era of the late Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Salem Al-Sabah in 1969, the artificial island was launched in addition to its facilities. In 1970, four new collection centers started operation, raising to 25 the total number of gathering centers. After that, late Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Salem in November 1976 laid the foundation stone for the gas project in Mina AlAhmadi, as well as the docking of the largest oil tanker in February 1977 in the artificial island port of Al-Ahmadi. And one of the important dates to remember in the history of Kuwait Oil Company was the launching of gas project at Ahmadi port in February 1979 during the reign of the late Amir Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah. Iraqi Invasion In march 1991, the operation to put out fires at the oil installations and wells got underway. On July 27, Kuwait exported the first cargo of crude since liberation. On September 14, 1991, drilling resumed in Al-Muqawaa field and late Amir Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah extinguished the last burning well on November 6, 1991. Later on, Kuwait restored its status as one of the key oil exporting countries. Its experience in the carbohydrates had a record with the discovery of natural gas, of commercial quantities, in Um Naqa in the north in 2006. During era of His Highness the Amir Sheikh Sabah AlAhmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, a large number of achievements have been made in the oil sector. The KOC inaugurated the two water injection installations in Al-Muqawa and Burgan in 2007 and 2008. Moreover, the disassociated gas and condensates unit was opened in the north. Among the KOC major achievements was the project for renovating the installations, covering 16 gathering units and three gas boosting stations. The company tested maximum production on October 14-18, 2010, reaching up 3.052 million barrels of oil per day-the highest level in the KOC history. In the last fiscal year (2013-2014) that ended on March 31, the KOC dug 318 new wells, as compared to the projected number, 259. Crude productivity Productivity of the crude oil amounted to 2.9 million bpd in the 2013-2014 fiscal year. Moreover, the company is tendering establishment of three gathering centers in the north, at a projected cost of KD 818 million, in addition to several other affiliate ventures. It has already finalized designing one of its mega projects, worth KD 1.37 million, including operation, maintenance of heavy crude installations, drilling and testing the first horizontal well in Al-Manaqeesh field, thus developing the well and upgrading its output to 13,000 barrels per day. Daily output of associated and disassociated gas during the current fiscal year has reached 1.5 billion cubic feet per day, as compared to the projected target of 1.4 billion. The establishment, however, the company was established in February 1934. It was expected then that the agreement would have contributed to increase the wealth of Kuwait and its international importance through oil exploration concession, but the outbreak of World War II was one of the reasons for the delay in oil exploitation, and with the end of the war, Kuwait had turned from resource-poor desert country into a modern rich state. An oil tanker used by KOC. An oil well at Burgan Field. KOC accomplishments in the latest fiscal year were multiple covering not only construction works but also staff training and environmental protection activity. — KUNA Copy of the agreement signed by the late Amir Sheikh Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Ahmad AlSabah in 1934 to concede oil drilling rights in the country. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 LOCAL In my view Protecting journalists worldwide By Labeed Abdal [email protected] A department under the United Nations recently honored organizers of an international campaign that calls for protecting journalists and elevated their status as a nongovernmental organization recognized by the UN. This is a historical step in my opinion in light of the dangers that journalists face around the world, and the need to protect them from injury or even death while reporting the truth from places of conflict. There is no doubt that the step boosts the activity of the campaign and its over 50,000 members, in light of the increase of risks that journalists face There is no doubt that the step boosts the activity of the campaign and its over 50,000 members, in light of the increase of risks that journalists face these days. these days, as 64 journalists have died this year. Organizers of the campaign, which officially started in June 2004, said in a statement that journalists are being killed because of their profession, since they are the eyewitnesses of the world to record the most heinous human right violations and expose criminals. This is very true, especially when it comes to those who commit sabotage in the dark. Efforts are needed to protect journalists who are targeted in attempts to cover up the truth. Therefore, supporting the campaign is required to improve global efforts and regulations to protect journalists in places of conflict. kuwait digest Urdu and Tagalog By Saleh Al-Shayji A few days ago, the world celebrated the International Day of the Arabic language, and on such occasions, many speakers usually raise many concerns about Arabic. As usual, Arabs are always dominated by fear and being victimized in view of so many ‘conspiracies plotted against their nation and culture’. Such a list of defeatism and wailing is endless. Arabs are afraid that their language, culture and lands might be influenced by what they describe as ‘the foreign invasion’, while foreigners and Westerners have never shown any such fears of an ‘Arabic invasion’. The proof to this is that Western countries are full of millions of Arabs and Muslims who are free to build their own mosques and worship places, spread their culture, have their own newspapers, TV channels and forums. They managed to spread their own culture there to the extent that some of them started chasing away or killing the original inhabitants of the cities they lived in. Many of us may still remember the video where an English girl went to visit her town and found it changed and dominated by Muslims, who even dared insulting and threatening to kill her because she was an ‘infidel’! In those Western countries, some Arab and Muslim In those Western countries, some Arab and Muslim immigrants have even become members of parliament, ministers in their governments, merchants and businesspersons, and even thieves. immigrants have even become members of parliament, ministers in their governments, merchants and businesspersons, and even thieves, murderers and criminals. Nobody was ever afraid about his culture or language there, which is the exact opposite of what is happening in our Arab world where fears and obsessions dominate our lives! Some of those fears about Arabic includes the fear of the spread of English-speaking Arabs and the influence of non-Arabic communities, especially in the Gulf region. Well, I do not see a single justification for such fears because Arabic is well-protected and persevered by religious powers represented in the Holy Quran that is being used and recited far much more than the Arab populations. It is being used by all Muslims worldwide. Quran was revealed to last and be recited until doomsday. In addition, our literary and cultural heritage is so huge and influential that many people speaking various foreign languages, Orientalists and others learnt Arabic to study and add to it! The fear of foreign communities in the Gulf is also baseless because it was actually those people who started learning and speaking Arabic, while we did not start using their languages. We so often see Indians, Filipinos and many others speaking Arabic, but we have not yet started speaking Urdu or Tagalog! — Translated by Kuwait Times from Al-Anbaa Al-Jarida in my view The blessed lady and her modern son By Adnan Farzat M yths and superstitions can affect both scientists and uneducated people. The reason for this may be because most people are formed of a mixture of certainty and the unknown. Even CNN news network fell in that trap recently by showing a video where a man displays a loaf of bread that was burnt in the center and the brunt part looked like the face of a bearded man. The man holding the bread claimed that it had the Christ’s (PBUH) face on it. Well, let that person believe what he wishes but, what makes a prestigious news agency of this magnitude promote such beliefs? A few weeks ago, poet Dr Khaled Al-Shayji delivered a lecture at the Writers Association under the title “Prophets’ Arabism”, which was a unique topic that raised many arguments and discussions that sometimes diverted to many other issues including “how wrong beliefs have spread among people though they are not genuine parts of religions”. However, when it was Dr Khalifa Al-Waqian’s turn to speak, he said something of real essence. He stressed that some beliefs had been originally made for touristic reasons and that some of such stories were historically groundless. Well, one might find some religion-related beliefs justifiable because people usually revere ancestors. However, it would be a disaster that such worldly superstitions spread among sane people! A few years ago, an Well, one might find some religion-related beliefs justifiable because people usually revere ancestors. However, it would be a disaster that such worldly superstitions spread among sane people! ignorant old lady arrived to a small town after she was displaced from her own by war. The woman was charismatic and had the looks of old witches flying around by kuwait digest Books, opera and culture brooms. She claimed to be blessed and capable of operating on people without surgery. The funny thing is that one of those who believed her was a doctor working in the town, and another university graduate kept asking for her blessings seven times a day. The latter even waited for her nails to grow so that she clips them in order to collect the cut nails as precious omens. The woman had a son she claimed was also blessed. So, those who missed the mother’s blessings could seek it with the son, who was completely clean-shaven and had soft features with which one could never tell whether he was a man or a woman. The son, however started witchcraft and the people believed him until they found out that he was infatuated with the beautiful singer Nancy Ajram and had her posters all over his room walls. Exclaiming about this, they dared not speak about it to him and reported back to his mother, who looked at them with very cruel eyes, saying: “I represent the blessings of the old generation and he represents the blessings of newer ones!” Notably, that particular town was recently occupied by extremists and became a safe haven for them! — Translated by Kuwait Times from Al-Qabas kuwait digest What if liberals did it? By Mudaffar Abdullah T o start with, corruption cannot be eradicated in any country unless clear, strong methods are used to expose it. Commenting on the IS issue and the spread of its ideologies in Kuwait, I would like to highlight that there is too much commotion by preachers that deliberately delude people not to understand the matter. The recent court order sentencing a citizen and some expats to various periods behind bars for supporting and funding this particular organization inspired me to write about this issue. In previous years, the government has tried to initiate dialogues with extremists through the ministry of awqaf’s ‘International Moderation Center’ that was established in 2004 and headed by a Sudanese, but proved to be a total failure despite the millions allocated to it that got wasted for nothing. Kuwait is originally a religiously and socially tolerant country and the rise of extremism here was because of many reasons, including the appointment of some extremist figures in leading positions where they utilized media platforms to spread their one-sided ideas and impose their own visions. Meanwhile, all real scientific and moderate competent people were excluded from tolerant thinking-spreading positions, which is actually happening at the ministries of awqaf and education, namely in terms of setting religious curriculums. The news about imprisoning those supporting terrorism pleases but does not satisfy me. Extremism has to be fought by books, debates and ideas, which is an effort that requires a great deal of fully aware planning by everybody, not only by religious people. For example, we have recently noticed the emergence of groups of young story and novel writers, which is something that ought to be invested in by the youth ministry by literally and financially supporting them. Writing literature and human relations is but an indirect attempt to form a competitive public awareness to counter extremism and develop a passion for reading about others as a base for co-existence. I repeat, the Kuwaiti society is innately tolerant and history proves that all the extreme incidents that took place in it were imported from other Arab countries and used by local elements sympathizing with them, and those elements became ministers, senior officials and parliamentarians, who thanks to their positions, had full access to the media. In view of the unstable situations in the Arab region, what we need today is a serious activity through which state establishments would line up to defend Kuwait’s image that has been known for everybody for years as an open-minded tolerant country. Those particular two traits have been concealed on purpose for the benefit of some extremist blocs. The long awaited opera house project, NCCAL activities, Dar Al-Athar Al-Islamiya and young writers’ activities is the best indirect eloquent answer to fight those wishing to alter Kuwait’s nature and image! —Translated by Kuwait Times from Al-Jarida The recent court order sentencing a citizen and some expats to various periods behind bars for supporting and funding this particular organization inspired me to write about this issue. By Sami Abdullatif Al-Nisf T he vast majority of religiously committed Muslim youth is very virtuous and peaceful. They have no problems with others and nobody has any problem with them. The real problem that is devastating Muslim nations these days and contributes to shedding Muslims’ blood lies in the extremist clerics and scholars, be them known or disguised, who immediately brand others as infidels pending having them beheaded. This is becoming very dominant, to the extent that they cut down the total number of Prophet Muhammad’s (PBUH) followers from 1.5 billion Muslims to a few thousands of evil bloodshedders. The real reason behind the Muslim nation’s plight and tumults, crises, bloodshed and human remains seen all over Muslim countries nowadays are these extreme clerics who jump to label others as ‘infidels’. The funny thing is that these provokers lead very peaceful and well-off lives, and never do what they urge others to do. They are never in a hurry for martyrdom and meeting houris in paradise. Their houses are full of occasional joys and celebrations on getting their children, who had been safely kept at home, married, while grief, lamenting and condolences fill the houses of naive young people who believed them. We never hear these extremism clerics who immediately describe others as infidels, those who have their own agendas to destroy Muslim countries and who immediately issue ‘fatwas’ for these reasons say a single word denouncing or incriminating the massacres committed by IS, Al-Qaeda, Boko Haram and Taleban, the latest of which killed150 innocent Muslim schoolchildren for no reason. Just imagine what they would say if those massacres and destruction against Muslims in countries like Somalia, Syria, Libya, Iraq, Yemen, Mali, Egypt and Algeria had been committed by liberals! The silence of those clerics about those terrible crimes means only one thing. THEIR satisfaction and wish to spread more chaos and killing from Indonesia all the way to Morocco! Finally, let us all know that for one, the massacres and destruction taking place in regional countries by those their people had thought were angels and turned out to be demons shedding Muslims’ blood ought to be a moral lesson for other regional peoples who are still relatively safe. The terrible incidents committed under a fake flag of Islam are but a ‘historic recollection’ of the time of the Khawarij (a general term describing former Muslims, who while initially supporting the authority of Ali bin Abi Talib, the son-in-law and cousin of Prophet Muhammad PBUH, later rejected his leadership) who destroyed Islam pretending to be protecting it. The only difference between them is the magnitude of destruction that is thousands of times greater than that previously witnessed in all of Muslims’ history. —Translated by Kuwait Times from Al-Anbaa TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 Erdogan slams birth control as ‘treason’ Jazeera shuts Egypt channel Page 8 Page 8 TUNIS: Head of the Tunisian ISIE elections body, Chafik Sarsar (center) and ISIE fellow members applaud in front of a giant screen during a press conference yesterday to announce that anti-Islamist politician Beji Caid Essebsi (right on the screen) won Tunisia’s presidential election with 55.68 percent of the vote beating incumbent Moncef Marzouki. — AFP Essebsi elected Tunisia president Veteran anti-Islamist wins first free elections TUNIS: Veteran anti-Islamist politician Beji Caid Essebsi was declared the winner of Tunisia’s first free presidential election yesterday, capping off the transition to democracy in the birthplace of the Arab Spring. But in a sign of the challenges ahead for Tunisia, police fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of youths who burned tyres in protest at the result. Essebsi, an 88-year-old former official in previous Tunisian regimes, took 55.68 percent of the vote to defeat incumbent Moncef Marzouki in Sunday’s run-off, the electoral commission said. Essebsi had claimed victory shortly after polls closed but Marzouki, a long-exiled 69-year-old rights activist, refused to concede defeat. A first round of voting on Nov 23 had seen Essebsi in the lead with 39 percent of the vote, six points ahead of Marzouki. Participation in the second round was 60.1 percent, electoral commission chief Chafik Sarsar said, after authorities had urged a high turnout. The vote was seen as a landmark for democracy in Tunisia, which sparked the Arab Spring mass revolutions with the 2011 ouster of longtime strongman Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. The campaign was bitter and divisive, with Marzouki insisting a win for Essebsi would mark the return of Tunisia’s old guard of ruling elites. Essebsi in turn accused his rival of representing the moderately Islamist party Ennahda that ruled Tunisia after the revolution and which installed him as president. Continued divisions were clear as some 300-400 protesters clashed with police in the town of El Hamma in Tunisia’s south, where Marzouki had widespread support. The protesters “set fire to tyres and tried to attack a police Rubbish lorry ploughs into Glasgow shoppers LONDON: A rubbish lorry careered along a pavement crowded with Christmas shoppers in a busy shopping street in Glasgow yesterday, killing several people, police said. A spokesman for Scotland’s police service said he could not give an exact number. At least seven people were seriously injured and the number might rise, he said. Sky News said six people had been killed. One witness told Reuters the truck appeared to have driven out of control along a pavement for about 70 m in the city centre shopping area, close to fairground attractions and an ice rink set up for the Christmas holiday. “A bin lorry did a run of about 70 to 80 metres on a pavement, mostly on a pavement and knocked down people because it was on a very busy crossing,” George Ieronymidis, 58, owner of the nearby Elia Greek restaurant on George Square, said. The police spokesman, referring to the possibility that the incident was an attack, said: “It’s a terrible incident but we don’t believe that there is anything at this juncture that is sinister about the accident.” Television images showed a large green truck at a standstill by buildings outside Queen Street train station. Two witnesses on a tour bus said the driver of the truck had been slumped over the steering wheel as it moved down the street, Ieronymidis said. The police spokesman said the driver was receiving treatment in hospital. Just over a year ago, eight people were killed and 14 others seriously injured when a police helicopter crashed into the roof of a packed Glasgow pub. —Reuters station by throwing stones. Security forces responded with tear gas,” interior ministry spokesman Mohamed Ali Aroui said. Several police were wounded in the clashes, which began late on Sunday, Aroui said without providing further details. After declaring victory on Sunday, Essebsi had urged his rival to “work together for the future of Tunisia”. ‘Milestone’ Vote The vote was the first time Tunisians have freely elected their president since independence from France in 1956. French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius on Monday congratulated the country on its “milestone” vote. “The successful staging of this presidential election confirms Tunisia’s historic role,” he said in a statement.The weekly Tunis Hebdo said the vote would “enhance Tunisia’s reputa- • Clashes break out tion as the only Arab Spring country that has managed to survive”. The revolution that began in Tunisia spread to many parts of the Arab world, with mass protests in Egypt, Libya, Syria and Yemen. In every country except Tunisia the revolution was followed by violent turmoil or, as in Syria’s case, a devastating civil war. Sunday’s vote was largely peaceful, though troops guarding ballot papers in the central region of Kairouan came under attack, shooting dead one assailant and capturing three, the defence ministry said. The authorities had deployed tens of thousands of soldiers and police to provide security for polling day. Ahead of the vote, jihadists had issued a videotaped threat against Tunisia’s political establishment. Essebsi’s Nidaa Tounes party won parliamentary polls in October and he promised to begin the process of forming a government after the presidential vote. Under a new post-rev- olution constitution, the powers of Tunisia’s president have been curbed to guard against a return to dictatorship. Ennahda came second in the vote and has not ruled out joining in a governing coalition. The next government will face major challenges. The small North African nation’s economy is struggling to recover from the upheaval of the revolution and there are fears that widespread joblessness will cause social unrest. A nascent jihadist threat has also emerged, with militant groups long suppressed under Ben Ali carrying out several attacks including the killings of two anti-Islamist politicians. Yesterday’s edition of the French-language La Presse newspaper said Tunisia was still experiencing “investment failures, an alarming unemployment rate, purchasing power at its lowest and a totally disordered social situation”. —AFP p8_Layout 1 12/22/14 9:43 PM Page 1 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 I N T E R N AT I O N A L Jazeera shuts Egypt channel DUBAI: Qatar’s Al-Jazeera network said yesterday it was “temporarily” closing its Egypt-dedicated channel, accused of bias towards the banned Muslim Brotherhood, a day after the Gulf state pledged support for Cairo. The decision appeared to be a direct result of a thaw between Doha and Cairo two days after Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi received a Qatari envoy following Saudi mediation. AlJazeera Mubasher Misr has “temporarily ceased broadcasting until such time as necessary permits are issued for its return to Cairo in coordination with the Egyptian authorities”, the Doha-based network said on its website. However, the live channel will not return in its Egypt-specific identity as it will be merged with another live station to form Al-Jazeera Mubasher Al-Amma (General), the network said. The pan-Arab news broadcaster has been strongly criti- cised in Egypt over coverage seen as favourable to the Muslim Brotherhood, the movement of ousted Islamist president Mohamed Morsi. Qatar repeatedly denounced Morsi’s removal by the army in July 2013, and still shelters many Brotherhood leaders, including those who have fled a crackdown by authorities in Egypt. Three Al-Jazeera journalists, including the award-winning Australian Peter Greste, were sentenced to seven years in jail by a Cairo court, accused of supporting the blacklisted Brotherhood, in a verdict condemned worldwide. A statement yesterday from the office of Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani said “the security of Egypt is important for the security of Qatar”. According to the Saudi daily Asharq Al-Awsat, Sisi and Thani are expected in Riyadh soon for a summit hosted by Saudi King Abdullah. — AFP Erdogan slams birth control as ‘treason’ ISTANBUL: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan described efforts to promote birth control as “treason”, saying contraception risked causing a whole generation to “dry up”, reports said yesterday. Erdogan made the comments on Sunday, directly addressing the bride and groom at the Istanbul wedding ceremony of the son of businessman Mustafa Kefeli, who is one of his close allies. He told the newly-weds that using birth control was a betrayal of Turkey’s ambition to make itself a flourishing nation with an expanding young population. “One or two (children) is not enough. To make our nation stronger, we need a more dynamic and younger population. We need this to take Turkey above the level of modern civilisations,” Erdogan said. “In this countr y, they (opponents) have been engaged in the treason of birth control for years and sought to dry up our generation,” Erdogan said. “Lineage is very important both economically and spiritually. I have faith in you,” he said in comments reported by the Dogan news agency, which also posted a video of his speech. Erdogan went on to praise marriage in front of the couple, who were declared man and wife by Istanbul’s mayor Kadir Topbas. “Marriage is a long journey. There are good days and bad days. Good days become more frequent as we share them and bad days finally bring happiness if we are patient,” said Erdogan. He added: “One (child) means loneliness, two means rivalry, three means balance and four means abundance. And God takes care of the rest,” he added. ‘Women are not Incubators’ Erdogan’s government has long been accused by critics of seeking to impose strict Islamic values on Turks and curtailing the civil liberties of women. The president who has two sons and two daughters - has angered feminist groups for declaring that every woman should have three children and saying that women are not equal to men. He has also made proposals to limit abortion rights, the morning-after pill and Caesarian sections. But this appears to be his strongest attack yet on the principle of birth control. Erdogan has repeatedly warned that Turks must have more children to prevent the rapid ageing of the population. Turkey’s population has risen exponentially in recent decades to over 76 million but the birth rate has begun to slow. Erdogan’s latest remarks gave fresh ammunition to critics who argue the devout Muslim is trying to raise the profile of Islam in secular Turkey. Opposition lawmaker Aylin Nazliaka said in a written statement that Erdogan portrayed women as “incubators” rather than “individuals”, leaving them exposed to violence. “Erdogan has become the president but he continues to act like a guardian. Would he talk so blatantly about the female body if he was capable of giving birth to a child?” she said. Health Minister Mehmet Muezzinoglu, a doctor with two children, had at the weekend also caused controversy by declaring pregnant women did not have the right to decide how they would deliver their child. “It is the duty of the midwives and the doctors to prepare them for the birth. The patients cannot say ‘I want a Caesarean’. They don’t have such a right,” he said. “The doctors’ job is to fulfil their medical responsibilities not to follow the patients’ demands. Doctors must give the medical treatment that the patients have a right to. The C-section is not one of those rights.” — AFP MT SINJAR, Iraq: Iraqi Kurdish forces head to battle Islamic State militants on the summit of Mount Sinjar on Sunday. —AP In IS-held town, Kurds face heavy resistance Fighters slowly advancing in Kobane too MOUNT SINJAR, Iraq: Iraqi Kurdish forces forged ahead with their assault yesterday on a militant-held town in nor thern Iraq, but encountered heavy resistance from Islamic State fighters whose snipers fired at the attackers and who used burning tires to create a smoke screen against coalition airstrikes. The battle for the town of Sinjar has emerged as the latest fighting front in the campaign to chip away at the territory that IS captured in its summer blitz across northern and western Iraq. Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga fighters launched their offensive on the town, located some 400 km northwest of Baghdad, last week. In the opening days of the operation, the Kurds managed to reach thousands of Yazidis who were trapped on Mount Sinjar, which overlooks the town and sweeping deser t plain below. Peshmerga forces opened up a corridor to the mountain and are regularly bringing truckloads of aid and food to the area. The clashes have moved to the edges of Sinjar itself, which the militants have held since August. One Kurdish fighter, Bakhil Elias, said the fighting has been fierce. “ They were using snipers and the peshmerga were responding with machine gun fire, missiles, and anti-aircraft guns,” he said before heading back to the front lines with his group of five other fighters. At least two Kurds have been killed by snipers and 25 wounded in the latest fighting. Kurdish forces also said the militants are burning tires and oil to create a smoke screen of thick dark clouds to obstruct airstrikes against their positions by the U.S-led coalition. From a lookout atop Mount Sinjar yesterday, several pillars of thick smoke could be seen billowing over the town. The heavy thud of artillery and crackle of small arms fire echoed up the mountain. Since its surprise push across Iraq this summer, the Islamic State group has struggled to further expand territory under its control as the Kurds as well as the Iraqi government and allied Shiite militias have found their footing. In neighboring Syria, where IS also controls a large chunk of land, the militants have become bogged down in the fight for the predominantly Kurdish town of Kobane on the Turkish border. Kurdish fighters have been slowly advancing in Kobane in recent weeks with the support of Iraqi peshmerga fighters who came to help. The US-led coalition has also played a key role, carrying out waves of airstrikes against IS positions. Early yesterday, the Kurds captured a cultural center that they had laid siege to over the weekend. A Kobani-based activist, Mustafa Bali, said the center “is very important morally and militarily” because it is located on a hill that overlooks several neighborhoods east and southeast of the town. “This will change the military rhythm in the coming days,” he said, adding that the aim of Kurdish fighters in Syria is to evict IS militants from Kobane and nearby villages. The IS began its Kobane offensive in midSeptember, and quickly overran much of the town as well as almost all of the surrounding villages. Hundreds of fighters on both sides have been killed since. Idriss Nassan, a local official in Kobani, said that over the past days the Syrian Kurdish force known as the People’s Protection Units, or YPG, “has taken the initiative” and advanced in IS-held neighborhoods. Nassan said peshmerga fighters usually bombard IS positions in the town while YPG fighters carry out the ground attack with the help of airstrikes that target militant positions. — AP Obama takes foreign policy risk, but on his own terms WASHINGTON: US President Barack Obama has been criticized as cautious on foreign policy, but the secret negotiations on Cuba suggest a willingness for bold and risky action, if he can keep tight control and rely on a few close aides. It’s a pattern Obama followed during clandestine talks with Iran that led to an interim nuclear deal and in under-the-radar discussions with China on a climate change agreement announced last month. out of Washington. The Iran talks were handled by State Department officials William Burns and Jake Sullivan, who have since left the administration. The point person on China was White House counselor John Podesta. Leading the Cuba mission from the White House were deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes and senior Latin America adviser Ricardo Zuniga, who met with Cuban officials WASHINGTON: In this Dec 20, 2013 file photo, US President Barack Obama listens to a question during his end-of-the-year news conference in the Brady Press Room at the White House.—AP Such diplomatic breakthroughs have buoyed Obama and may help counter charges that his responses to other international matters, including the rise of Islamic State militants and Russia’s aggression in Ukraine, are weak and ineffective. “Around the world, America is leading,” Obama said Friday in a year-end news conference. The president cited the announcement that he was normalizing diplomatic relations with Cuba after more than five decades of Cold War acrimony with the communist island nation and “turning a new page in our relationship with the Cuban people.” The secret talks with Cuba, like the negotiations with Iran and China, were carried out by a small number of officials who slipped in and nine times in Canada and at the Vatican. In each instance, the advisers’ close proximity to the president was intended to send a message to their counterparts that they were negotiating with Obama’s full authority. The overtures to Iran and Cuba were gambles for Obama. The US was negotiating with two countries with whom it had not had diplomatic relations in decades. Leaks about the talks could have undermined what little trust there was on either side. In opening a direct channel with Iran, Obama also risked angering Israel, which sees the Islamic Republic and its pursuit of a nuclear weapon as an existential threat. In shifting course on Cuba, the president risked antago- nizing congressional Republicans and a few Democrats, though his new position largely puts the US in line with how the rest of the world deals with the small island just 90 miles off US shores. There are few guarantees that Obama will achieve his goals. The president has given the negotiations over a final nuclear deal with Iran a 50 percent chance of succeeding, and he acknowledged on Friday that substantial political and social change may be slow to come to Cuba. On other foreign matters, Obama has proved less willing to gamble, especially when potential military options are up for discussion. For example, his policy on Syria’s civil war has been seen by critics and allies as slow and indecisive. The president has faced questions, too, about whether he has acted aggressively enough in helping Ukraine counter Russia; his response so far has relied chiefly on economic penalties. They have contributed to a precipitous fall in Russia’s currency, but there is little indication that economic pain is causing Russian President Vladimir Putin to pull back from Ukraine. “It’s great when you can do something with two guys in the White House,” said Jon Alterman, senior vice president at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “When you get a higher level of complexity, people are baffled at what the administration is trying to do.” Beyond diplomacy, Obama also has taken risks by approving rescue attempts of hostages in Syria and Yemen, and aggressively used drones and special operations forces against terrorists, including the 2011 raid in Pakistan that led to the death of Osama bin Laden. Yet Obama sometimes has helped perpetuate the image of a president paralyzed at the prospect of risk. When Obama was asked this year to outline his foreign policy doctrine, he described it a strategy that “avoids errors”. “You hit singles, you hit doubles,” Obama said, turning to a baseball analogy. “Every once in a while we may be able to hit a home run.” Some supporters cringed, believing that description misconstrued an appropriately cautious approach in a complicated world. —AP GAZA: Palestinians await permission to enter Egypt as they gather at the Rafah border crossing between Egypt and southern Gaza Strip yesterday. Around 630 Palestinians left Gaza and entered the Egyptian Sinai through the Rafah crossing the previous day after Cairo authorised a temporary reopening of the border, a Palestinian official said. —AFP Syria allows medicine deliveries to Aleppo BEIRUT: The Syrian government has approved the delivery of medicine and surgical supplies to three areas of the country aid workers were previously unable to reach regularly, including opposition-held Aleppo, the World Health Organization said yesterday. All sides in Syria’s three-year civil war have prevented medicine from crossing front lines fearing it could be used to help wounded enemy fighters. This has deprived trapped civilians from life-saving medical assistance. Elizabeth Hoff, the WHO’s Syria representative, told Reuters the government has now promised access to Aleppo, the besieged Damascus district of Mouadamiya, and Eastern Ghouta, outside the capital. “It is something that we have been negotiating, after the constraints we’ve had, we have had top level meetings. There has been a willingness from the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. We see a positive outlook,” Hoff said. “We have had some constraints in the past with delivering surgical supplies, syringes, but the situation is much better at the moment,” she said. The United Nations says 4.7 million Syrians live in areas that are hard to reach, including at least 241,000 people who remain besieged by either government or opposition forces. “We have actually got promises to deliver to Aleppo and the hard to reach areas around Aleppo. This will happen this week. And next week we have deliveries for Mouadamiya, which has been besieged for a long time,” she aid. United Nations peace envoy Staffan de Mistura has proposed a freeze in fighting in Aleppo to help get humanitarian assistance into the city that has been divided for more than two years between opposition fighters and government troops. “We also promised to deliver vaccines for regular vaccination programs to Eastern Ghouta which has been closed for a long time,” Hoff said. “These are the prospects for the next two weeks and approved by the government.” Syrian activists in these areas say disease is spreading due to poor sanitar y conditions and government siege. A plunge in vaccination rates from 90 percent before the war to 52 percent this year and contaminated water have allowed disease to take hold. Insecurity from the war remains the biggest impediment to aid deliveries, Hoff said. More than 200,000 people have been killed in Syria’s conflict, which began in March 2011 with popular protests against President Bashar Al-Assad and spiralled into civil war after a crackdown by security forces. —Reuters TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 I N T E R N AT I O N A L Police slaying raises pressure on NY mayor NEW YORK: New York Mayor Bill de Blasio faced the biggest crisis of his political career on Sunday after a gunman killed two police officers in an attack intended to avenge recent police killings of unarmed black men in the United States. New York police officers turned their backs on de Blasio in protest during a news conference and their union said the mayor had blood on his hands after Saturday’s shooting. Police investigators have said the killings were the work of a 28-year-old black man with a long arrest record who may have had past mental troubles and who warned of his intentions on social media. The gunman’s posts on Instagram indicated he had been motivated by the deaths of 18-year-old Michael Brown and Eric Garner at the hands of police officers. De Blasio was elected last year on a promise to advance civil rights after two decades of tough policing helped New York shed its reputation for violent crime. He has been sympathetic to the protesters who poured into New York’s streets after a grand jury declined earlier this month to indict the officer who killed Garner in a chokehold in July as he resisted arrest. The mayor’s stance has led to sometimes tense relations with the city’s largest police union. Critics within the force view the mayor as not supportive enough at a time of public anger. “Mayors tend not to do well when the police department and its officers are not happy,” said New York political strategist Hank Sheinkopf, whose clients have included de Blasio’s predecessor, Ex-officer not charged in fatal Milwaukee shooting MILWAUKEE: A white Milwaukee police officer who was fired after he fatally shot a mentally ill black man in April won’t face criminal charges, the county’s top prosecutor said yesterday. Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm said Christopher Manney won’t be charged because he shot Dontre Hamilton in self-defense. Manney is at least the third white police officer to not be charged in the past month after a confrontation that led to a black man’s death. “This was a tragic incident for the Hamilton family and for the community,” Chisholm said in a statement. “But, based on all the evidence and analysis presented in this report, I come to the conclusion that Officer Manney’s use of force in this incident was justified self-defense and that defense cannot be reasonably overcome to establish a basis to charge Officer Manney with a crime.” The Hamilton family released a statement through their attorney saying they were “extremely disappointed” with the decision and that the case “cries out for justice, criminal charges against Christopher Manney, and accountability to Dontre Hamilton’s family.” The family said it has asked the US attorney in Milwaukee to seek a federal investigation. Manney’s attorney did not immediately return a message seeking comment. The executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin, Chris Ahmuty, issued a statement saying the decision not to charge Manney left “a cloud of uncertainty over the circumstances of and the responsibility for Mr Hamilton’s death”. Manney shot 31-year-old Hamilton on April 30 after responding to a call for a welfare check on a man sleeping in a downtown park. Manney said Hamilton resisted when he tried to frisk him. The two exchanged punches before Hamilton got a hold of Manney’s baton and hit him on the neck with it, the former officer has said. Manney then opened fire, hitting Hamilton 14 times. Several witnesses told police they saw Hamilton holding Manney’s baton “in an aggressive posture” before Manney shot him, according to Chisholm’s news release. Chisholm consulted with two experts on the use of force by police officers, and both concluded Manney’s conduct was justified. Emanuel Kapelsohn of the Peregrine Corporation concluded that all the shots were discharged in 3 or 4 seconds and there was no evidence that Manney continued firing after Hamilton hit the ground. Police have no video of the event. Manney also suffered minor injuries, including a bite to his right thumb, a neck strain and neck contusion, the report said. He treated for post-concussion syndromes, a mild traumatic brain injury and had physical therapy for bicep and rotator cuff injuries, the report said. Hamilton’s family said he suffered from schizophrenia and had recently stopped taking his medication. Police Chief Edward Flynn fired Manney in October. He said at the time that Manney correctly identified Hamilton as mentally ill, but ignored department policy and treated him as a criminal by frisking him.—AP Immigrants line up for Arizona driving licenses PHOENIX: Dozens of young immigrants protected from deportation under an Obama administration policy lined up outside government offices Monday in Arizona to apply for driver’s licenses, a privilege first denied by the state but now given to them by the courts. Yesterday marked the first day they could get licenses after a judge barred enforcement of Gov Jan Brewer’s policy of denying licenses to about 20,000 immigrants living in the country illegally. Young immigrants waited outside a Motor Vehicle Division office in west Phoenix an hour before it opened. A cheer erupted when the office’s doors opened. They said they were excited to finally get the chance to drive legally. Many said they had been driving to their jobs for years without licenses and feared being pulled over. Young immigrants have said the governor’s policy made it difficult or impossible for them to get essential things done in their everyday lives, such as going to school, work or the store. State officials are expecting a rush of immigrant applicants in the weeks ahead. The move in Arizona to deny the licenses was a reaction to steps taken by the Obama administration in 2012 to shield thousands of immigrants from deportation. The president’s policy applied to people younger than 30 who came to the US before turning 16; have been in the country for at least five continuous years; are enrolled in or have graduated from a high school or equivalent program; or have served in the military. In the nation’s most visible challenge to Obama’s deferred-action program, Brewer issued an executive order in Aug 2012 directing state agencies to deny driver’s licenses and other public benefits to immigrants who get work authorization under the policy. Her attorneys have argued that the decision grew out of liability concerns and the desire to reduce the risk of the licenses being used to improperly access public benefits. Despite her belief that issuing licenses is a state matter, Brewer’s office confirmed she would comply with the court’s orders.—AP Michael Bloomberg. The deaths of Garner in New York and Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, led to sometimes violent protests across the United States. A grand jury also declined to charge the officer involved in Brown’s death. The cases provoked a bitter public debate about race and law enforcement that has drawn in President Barack Obama and his black attorney general, Eric Holder. Leaders of recent anti-police protests, including longtime New York civil rights activist Reverend Al Sharpton, have condemned the officers’ murder. About 100 protesters, part of a group who recently met with de Blasio to call for police reforms, held a demonstration on Sunday night in Harlem. In contrast to usually boisterous protests critical of police, participants marched in silence bearing candles. A candlelight vigil for the slain officers was also held in Brooklyn near the scene of the shooting. Obama, briefed on Saturday about the police deaths while on vacation in Hawaii, called New York Police Commissioner William Bratton on Sunday to express condolences for the killing. Bratton heads the largest police department in the country. ‘Tension and Division’ New York’s Roman Catholic cardinal, Timothy Dolan, warned of rising tensions during a Sunday service attended by de Blasio and Bratton. “We worry about a city tempted to tension and division,” Dolan said at St Patrick’s Cathedral. Flags across the state flew at half staff and the 13-year-old son of one of the deceased officers bid his father good-bye in a Facebook post. “It’s horrible that someone gets shot dead just for being a police officer,” wrote the son of Rafael Ramos, 40, who was killed alongside his police partner, 32-year-old Wenjian Liu. Funeral plans had not yet been announced for Ramos and Liu, who were the first on-duty police officers to die in gunfire in the city since 2011. But the ceremonies could end up underscoring the divisions between the police and the mayor. The police union had previously started a campaign in which officers could fill out a form asking de Blasio and other city officials not to attend their funerals if they were to die in the line of duty. It was not clear on Sunday how many officers had filled out the forms. Police on Edge Across the country, police departments were on edge on Sunday following the attack in New York and another in Florida. A police officer on duty outside Tampa was shot to death early Sunday and a suspect has been arrested, local authorities reported. There was no indication yet of a motive. The St Louis Police Officers Association on Sunday asked the department to step up security, while Baltimore’s police union said the current political environment was the most dangerous for officers since the 1960s. Police said the gunman, Ismaaiyl Brinsley, shot and wounded his former girlfriend in a Baltimore suburb before traveling to New York City and attacking the officers while they were sitting in their patrol car. Just before the shooting, Brinsley said to two bystanders, “Watch what I’m going to do,” NYPD Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce told a news conference. Brinsley killed himself soon after the shooting. Georgia court documents portray Brinsley as having had numerous run-ins with the law and possible mental trouble. He was booked into jail in Fulton County, Georgia, nine times between 2004 and 2010 on charges including simple battery, obstructing a law enforcement officer and terroristic threats. A sentencing document in Cobb County, Georgia, where he pleaded guilty to weapons charges in 2011 showed that when asked if he had ever been a patient in a mental hospital or been under the care of a psychologist or psychiatrist, Brinsley said, “Yes,” but there were no details of his mental problems. He said he had gone as far as 10th grade in school. He was arrested a total of 19 times, Boyce said. Members of Brinsley’s family told NYPD investigators that he had attempted suicide in the past and that his mother believed he had undiagnosed mental health issues, Boyce said. “His mother expressed fear of him and hadn’t seen him in a month,” Boyce told reporters. Police identified Brinsley’s former girlfriend as Shaneka Nicole Thompson, 29. She was in critical but stable condition at an area hospital, police said. — Reuters Police departments on alert after cop killings Fears rise about safety of law enforcement officials NEW YORK: Big-city police departments and union leaders around the US are warning the rank and file to wear bulletproof vests and avoid making inflammatory posts on social media in the days after a man ambushed two officers and shot them to death inside their patrol car. The killings of Officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu on Saturday afternoon in the New York borough of Brooklyn heightened fears about the safety of law enforcement officials nationwide. The gunman, 28-year-old Ismaaiyl Brinsley, had vowed in an Instagram post to put “wings on pigs” as retaliation for the deaths of black men at the hands of white police. Brinsley was black; the slain New York Police Department officers were Hispanic and Asian. Officials in New York investigated at least a dozen threats against police since the shootings, and one man was arrested at a Manhattan precinct after he walked in and said: “If I punch you in the face, how long would I go to jail?” and refused to leave. Investigators are trying to determine if Brinsley had taken part in any protests over the deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner, whose names he invoked in his online threat, or simply latched onto the cause for the final act in a violent rampage. The killings come at a tense time as police nationwide are being criticized following Garner’s death in a New York officer’s chokehold and Brown’s fatal shooting in Ferguson, Missouri. Protests erupted in recent weeks after grand juries declined to charge the officers involved. After the officers’ killings, a union-generated message at the 35,000-officer NYPD warned officers that they should respond to every radio call with two cars - “no matter what the opinion of the patrol supervisor” - and not make arrests “unless absolutely necessary.” The president of the detectives’ union told members in a letter to work in threes when out on the street, wear bulletproof vests and keep aware of their surroundings. Another directive warned officers in Newark, New Jersey, not to patrol alone and to avoid people looking for confrontations. At the same time, a memo from an NYPD chief asked officers to limit their comments “via all venues, including social media, to expressions of sorrow and condolence.” In Philadelphia, Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey urged the leaders of protests over the deaths of Garner and Brown to “call for calm and not let this escalate any further.” In Boston, Police Commissioner William Evans said police issued an alert warning officers about the New York City killings and added that the department had issued several alerts following the Ferguson grand jury’s decision. At a news conference in New York on Sunday, Chief of Detectives Robert Boyce detailed Brinsley’s long criminal NEW YORK: New York City police officers gather near a makeshift memorial yesterday near the site where fellow officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu were murdered in the Brooklyn borough. — AP record, hatred for police and the government and apparent history of mental instability that included an attempt to hang himself a year ago. Brinsley had at least 19 arrests in other states, spent two years in prison for gun possession and had a troubled childhood so violent that his mother was afraid of him, police said. He ranted online about authority figures and expressed “self-despair and anger at himself and where his life was,” Boyce said. Hours before shooting the officers, Brinsley had shot and wounded his ex-girlfriend, Shaneka Thompson, at her home in Baltimore. After leaving Baltimore, authorities said, Brinsley took a bus north to New York City and used Thompson’s phone to write on Instagram: “They take 1 of ours, let’s take 2 of theirs.” He ended the post with references to the Brown and Garner cases. Once in New York and shortly before he opened fire on the officers, Brinsley walked up to people on the street and asked them to follow him on Instagram, then told them, “Watch what I’m going to do,” Boyce said. Then Brinsley approached the squad car and fired four shots, killing the policemen. He ran into the subway station and committed suicide. The shootings also deepened acrimony between rankand-file police and Mayor Bill de Blasio. Their union president recently suggested officers sign a petition telling the mayor not to attend their funerals if they died on duty, and some officers turned their backs on de Blasio Saturday as he walked through the hospital where Liu and Ramos had been taken. Police Commissioner William Bratton said Monday on NBC’s “Today” show that he didn’t consider that gesture appropriate, “but it’s reflective of the anger of some” police officers. The mayor has lost some officers’ confidence, Bratton said, but he suggested that recent pension changes and ongoing contract negotiations also had contributed to the uneasy atmosphere. — AP p10 2_Layout 1 12/22/14 8:32 PM Page 1 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 I N T E R N AT I O N A L Brutal French driver attack ‘not a terrorist act’ DIJON, France: A Frenchman who ploughed into pedestrians shouting “God is great” had been to psychiatric hospital 157 times and had no known links to jihadist groups, a prosecutor said yesterday, easing concerns the attack was inspired by Islamic extremism. The incident in the eastern town of Dijon left 13 people hurt in a scene one witness described as “apocalyptic” and came a day after a man assaulted police in the central town of Joue-les-Tours with a knife, slashing one officer in the face. That man, who was shot dead, had also reportedly shouted the Islamic phrase that has previously been used by extremists when waging violent attacksprompting speculation both assaults were motivated by radical Islamism. But French leaders were quick to play down any links between the two incidents, with President Francois Hollande urging the French not to panic and government spokesman Stephane Le Foll warning against “lumping them together.” In Saturday ’s attack, Bertrand Nzohabonayo, a French convert to Islam who was born in Burundi, was shot dead after entering a police station in Joueles-Tours armed with a knife, seriously wounding two officers and hurting another. The assault prompted the government to step up security at police and fire stations nationwide. Nzohabonayo had previously committed petty offences but was not on a domestic intelligence watch-list although his brother Brice is known for his radical views and once pondered going to Syria. Brice was arrested in Burundi soon after the Saturday incident, intelligence services there said yesterday. “He has been detained in our premises and he is being questioned,” intelligence spokesman Telesphore Bigirimana said. The anti-terror branch of the Paris prosecutor’s office quickly took over a probe into the attack amid heightened vigilance over potential “lone wolf” attacks by individuals heeding calls for violence by the Islamic State jihadist group. The radical group has repeatedly singled out France for such attacks, most recently in a video posted on jihadist sites. Bertrand Nzohabonayo, who had taken the name Bilal when he converted to Islam, had posted a flag of the Islamic State group on his Facebook page Thursday, although people who knew him said at the weekend they refused to believe the attack was spurred by radical Islamism. Acted for Chechnya children The second attack on Sunday also saw the assailant shout “God is great”, witnesses told police. The driver targeted groups of passers-by at five different locations in Dijon in a rampage that lasted around half an hour, before being arrested. Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve, who visited the town on Monday, said 13 people were injured in the rampage though none of the victims are critical. Local prosecutor Marie-Christine Tarrare told reporters that the man, born in 1974, had a “long-lasting and severe psychological disorder” and had visited psychiatric hospital 157 times. She said he told police that he ploughed into people due to a sudden “outburst of empathy for the children of Chechnya.” “He was not guided by religion but because he felt that politically he had to react,” she said, adding that nothing had been found at his parents’ home that would suggest he had any interest in the Islamic State group or other extremist gatherings. A witness to his rampage, meanwhile, described an “apocalyptic scene.” “We were going home, we saw four people on the ground... who weren’t moving at all,” said the witness, who refused to be named. “Cars stopped to give them first aid. Very quickly, firefighters and emergency medical workers arrived.” — AFP Pope’s scathing attack on Vatican plagued by ills VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis lambasted the Vatican’s bureaucracy yesterday, saying some within the Church lusted for power and suffered from “spiritual Alzheimer’s” in comments likely to outrage his adversaries. The Argentine used a Christmas speech to cardinals, bishops and priests to list a catalogue of ailments plaguing the the very top of the Church. He said the Vatican was riven with “existential schizophrenia”, “social exhibitionism”, “spiritual Alzheimer’s” and a lust for power, all of which made for an “orchestra that plays out of tune”. The outspoken pope also warned against greed, egoism and people who think they are “immortal”. It is not the first time the 78-year-old has taken on the scandal-hit, intrigue-filled Curia, and called for them to renounce gossip and act responsibly. But rarely has he used such vivid terms to describe the sins he says afflict the heart of the Italian-dominated body, and the speech was very stonily received. He slammed those who are slave to their “passions, caprices and manias” as well as those who “possess a heart of stone and a stiff neck”. He bemoaned the “scandal” caused by infighting and those who live a “double life”-their public one and a “hidden and often immoral” one. He pitied those who, ridden with jealousy, “feel joy in seeing others fall down” and urged top official to help him find a “cure”. The pope advised red-hatted cardinals full of their own self-importance to “pay a visit to the cemeteries” to look at those “who thought they were immortal, immune and indispensable!” ‘Cold-blooded murder’ And with relish, he also returned to one of his favorite themes: the evils of gossip. Backstabbing by “cowards who don’t have the courage to say things openly” is tantamount to “murder in cold blood”, he said. The diatribe will doubtless fuel the opposition to the reform-minded Francis which has been growing within the Church, according to Vatican watchers. But religious expert Gianni Valente told La Stampa’s Vatican Insider that he would also be applauded for “calling the diseases which plague his surroundings by their names.” His performance “foiled once more the stereotype of the ‘Latin American martian’ who is unaccustomed to the Roman and European ‘complexities’ with which his detractors and aspiring courtiers try to neutralize him,” he said. Francis was elected in March last year on a mandate to overhaul the Vatican and put an end to decades of infighting within the powerful but troubled body. Since then he has establish a series of specialist bodies to tackle corruption and poor management, including the naming of eight cardinals from around the world to advise him on the Curia’s overhaul. Despite winning the hearts of many religious and non-religious people alike around the world, the pope has also made enemies, particularly within the conservative arm of the Church. Francis’s attempts to kick-start dialogue within the Church earlier this year over a possible new approach to remarried, divorced people and homosexuals sparked an outcry in some quarters. His most vocal critic, the American cardinal Raymond Burke, was later demoted. But Vatican watcher Andrea Tornielli said yesterday’s speech did not herald “the start of witch-hunting season”, with other red hats ready to roll. —AFP KIEV: Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko (right) listens as his Kazakh counterpart Nursultan Nazarbayev speaks during their statements for the results of the talks in Kiev yesterday. Nazarbayev is in Ukraine for a one-day working visit. — AFP Crisis-hit Russia’s top allies build ties with Ukraine KIEV: Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev followed his Belarussian counterpart to Ukraine yesterday as Moscow’s old allies built bridges to Europe while Russia’s financial crisis and diplomatic isolation grew. Both visits were ostensibly made to kickstart stalled peace negotiations between Kiev and the two Russian-speaking regions of eastern Ukraine that rebelled against Kiev in April. Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko hosted such talks in September and is hoping to do so again in Minsk in the coming days. But Nazarbayev has no evident link to the eight-month conflict and remains a prominent member of a Russian-dominated economic union that includes Belarus and once had aspirations to enlist Ukraine. A senior Ukrainian official told AFP that both leaders-criticized in the West for their intolerance of political dissent-were now trying to shake off the Kremlin and forge partnerships in Europe because Russian President Vladimir Putin “is weak”. Some political analysts in Russia agreed. “This is an unambiguous signal to Putin,” said Konstantin Kalachyov of Moscow’s Political Expert Group think tank. “Both Kazakhstan and Belarus fear that their union with Russia will be engulfed by (an economic) crisis.” ‘Honest broker’ Putin angrily rejects backing Ukraine’s separatist fighters and calls the waves of Western sanctions a remnant of Cold Warera thinking designed to contain Russia and possibly even topple his team. The veteran Kremlin leader is due today to receive both Nazarbayev and Lukashenko for a summit of leaders from neighboring nations that have formed a loose military bloc. But his relations with Lukashenko have been strained by the Belarussian strongman’s refusal to let Russian industrial giants take over his state companies in return for discounted energy deliveries. And Nazarbayev has balanced his Central Asian country’s interests evenly between those of Russia and China-its southeastern neighbor and increasingly important trading partner. “Kazakhstan has equal regard for both Russia and Ukraine,” Nazarbayev said on the eve of his visit to Kiev. “We have no conflicts of interest. I am what they call an honest broker.” Lukashenko also appeared keen to cast himself as someone ready to stand up to Russia if their views did not coincide, during talks with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko on Sunday. He appeared to be referring to Putin when he told the Ukrainian leader: “They keep saying that Lukashenko is afraid of someone. But I am not afraid.” Belarussian state media then quoted Lukashenko as saying that he supported holding “secret” negotiations about building stronger cross-border ties with Ukraine. “Let’s not say anything to anyone at all but do it in secret-just as long as there is progress in this direction,” Lukashenko was quoted as saying.—AFP BARCELONA: This combination of two images shows (right) Spain’s Princess Cristina arriving to attend a funeral mass for former International Olympic Committee president Juan Antonio Samaranch at Barcelona’s cathedral on April 22, 2010 and Spanish King’s son-in-law and husband of Princess Cristina, Inaki Urdangarin (left) arriving to the courthouse in Barcelona on July 16, 2013. — AFP Spain’s Princess Cristina to stand trial in tax fraud case Another blow to monarchy trying to revive its image MADRID: Cristina de Borbon, sister of Spain’s King Felipe VI, is to stand trial on tax fraud charges as soon as next year, becoming the first Spanish royal to face prosecution. Princess Cristina’s father Juan Carlos abdicated in June after a series of scandals, and his son Felipe is riding high in opinion polls. He has tried to modernize the monarchy and has taken away rights and duties from his two sisters, neither of whom is now formally part of the royal family. Prosecutors have been conducting an investigation into the affairs of Cristina’s husband, former Olympic handball player Inaki Urdangarin, for four years. They have ordered Cristina, 49, Urdangarin and 15 others to stand trial in the case involving his Noos Foundation charity, the High Court of the Balearic Islands said yesterday. Graft investigations in Spain have exposed high-level corruption among politicians, trade unions and bankers among others, and have eroded Spaniards’ faith in their institutions after a major economic crisis and a government austerity drive. As Spain heads into a general election year, corruption will be high on the political agenda. Polls show the issue as Spaniards’ second biggest concern after sky-high unemployment. New anti-establishment party Podemos “we can” in Spanish - has already benefited from the disaffection, and threatens to eat away at support for mainstream political leaders, including those from the ruling centre-right People’s Party (PP) and the opposition Socialists. Cristina and her husband have both denied any wrongdoing in the case, triggered by a complaint from anti-graft campaigners Manos Limpias - “clean hands” in Spanish. Urdangarin has been charged with breach of legal duty, embezzling public funds, fraud, influence-peddling and money-laundering. The princess is accused of two tax crimes. Her lawyer Miquel Roca said yesterday said she had been surprised by the court order. Spanish law can allow the accused to escape trial if the victim of a crime - in this instance, the Spanish state does not back the charges, as was the case here. He said Cristina would be launching an appeal based on that. “It’s a serious, surprising and exceptional situation,” Roca told journalists. The couple have been ordered to deposit funds with the court to cover possible liabilities - 2.6 million euros ($3.2 million) in the case of Cristina, and nearly 15 million for Urdanganrin. They now have 20 days to deposit the money, according to a written court ruling, or face having assets seized. Cristina remains sixth in line to the throne. A spokesman for the royal household declined to comment on whether the princess would give up her succession rights. —Reuters Greek parliament vote in balance after Samaras election offer ATHENS: Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras’ surprise offer to lawmakers to go to the polls late next year in exchange for a vote for his presidential nominee has injected fresh momentum into his flight against the anti-austerity left. However, as parliament prepares for a second round of voting today to elect a successor to 85 year-old President Karolos Papoulias, the outcome still appears open with only a handful of independents pledging firm support to the government. If a new president is not elected by a third round on Dec 29, elections will have to be held by early February, potentially handing power to Syriza, the main leftwing opposition party, which wants to renegotiate the international bailout agreement that Greece still needs to keep its battered finances afloat. Such an outcome could rock the euro-zone, which is only just emerging from its debt crisis. Greek media reported yesterday that Samaras’ candidate, Stavros Dimas, could get 169 votes in the second round, still 11 short of the 180 vote threshold required in the decisive third vote, leaving the race still too close to call. The second vote needs 200. “There are already a few additional positive votes but I think that the chances of electing a president are extremely slim,” said Costas Panagopoulos, the head of Athens-based polling institute ALCO. With financial markets and Greece’s European partners all watching closely, voting on Tuesday will begin at midday (1000 GMT), with the result likely around an hour later. Dimas is not expected to be elected on Tuesday, but the result will offer a pointer to the final result. Only five independents backed Dimas in the first round, giving the government 160 votes. Samaras, whose normal term ends in mid-2016, called on parliament for support on Sunday, promising to bring pro-European independents into the government and hold new elections by the end of 2015 in exchange for voting in Dimas. Syriza and the small Democratic Left and Independent Greeks parties have all rejected the offer. The main Athens index rose 2 percent at first on hopes of a deal that could avert snap elections. However it fell back later to trade flat. The already uncertain outlook was complicated on Friday by claims of an attempt to bribe an Independent Greeks lawmaker to vote with the government.—Reuters SKOPJE: Protesters hold a banner “No to state racketeering” during a protest yesterday in Skopje against the new law for freelance workers yesterday. From January 1, the government will take 37 percent of the fees for social and health security. — AFP Court opens case against Catalan leader for vote BARCELONA: Catalonia’s president Artur Mas was placed under investigation yesterday for holding a banned vote on whether his region should be independent from Spain. The Catalonia High Court said that Mas was under judicial investigation for flouting a injunction against holding the symbolic vote on November 9. Prosecutors have accused him of civil disobedience, abuse of power and embezzlement of public funds for pressing ahead with the vote. If charges were brought against him, Mas could risk a jail sentence of several years and a ban from public office. “Personally I do not understand these accusations, that someone should take you to court for organizing a vote,” Mas said yesterday ahead of the court’s announcement. “But I fully respect the courts’ decisions.” An injunction by Spain’s Constitutional Court had forced Mas to water down his plan for an official vote. Instead the November 9 ballot was merely symbolic and organized by volunteers. But prosecutors allege Mas and other Catalan officials used their influence as well as public money to hold the ballot. The Catalan government says 2.3 million people took part in the vote on November 9. Roughly 80 percent of those who voted-some 1.86 million people-favored independence. Mas is in favor of independence and wants a full referendum on it, but Spain’s conservative government has vowed to prevent any breakup of the country. Proindependence feeling has surged in the rich region over recent years, fanned by disagreements with the central government over Catalan sovereignty and the economic crisis. However a poll by Mas’s regional government published last week indicated for the first time that those opposed to independence narrowly outnumbered those in favor. Of the Catalans questioned, 45.3 percent said they would vote against breaking away from Spain while 44.5 said they would vote in favor of such a move. —AFP TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 I N T E R N AT I O N A L Protests in India over conversions set back reform agenda NEW DELHI: Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s reform agenda suffered a setback yesterday as protests erupted in parliament and in the streets over a campaign by Hindu hardliners linked to his party to convert Muslims and Christians to Hinduism. Opposition members threw papers and swarmed to the centre of the upper house of parliament, forcing the suspension of the session and effectively preventing the government from tabling a bill to increase foreign participation in the insurance sector. The long-pending insurance legislation to raise the cap on foreign investment to 49 percent from 26 percent, and another bill to replace a decree to overhaul the coal sector, were considered low-hanging fruits that Modi hoped to push through parliament’s winter session, which ends on Tuesday. But comments by the head of the right-wing Hindu group, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, that India was a “Hindu nation” provoked a storm of criticism, snuffing out any chance of opposition support for government business in the upper house of parliament, where Modi lacks a majority. “This is an attempt to divide the society,” Nitish Kumar, an opposition leader from the state of Bihar told hundreds of people at a protest in New Delhi, referring to religious conversions. “The government is not capable of resolving the core issues of our country, so they want to divide the society and distract people.” Modi is facing a backlash for not doing enough to rein in hardline affiliate groups that have become emboldened in their pursuit of a Hindu-dominant agenda, threatening India’s secular foundations, critics say. Trouble erupted this month after a group of Muslims complained they had been tricked into attending a conversion ceremony by Hindu groups. A Hindu priestturned-lawmaker of Modi’s party had planned a mass conversion ceremony on Christmas Day, but that has been put off. About a fifth of India’s 1.2 billion people identify themselves as belonging to faiths other than Hinduism. Conversion is a sensitive issue with Hindu groups saying many poor Hindus were forced over the ages to give up their faith, or lured into Christianity and Islam. Yesterday, opposition Congress party leader Anand Sharma urged Modi to make clear where he stood on conversions. Modi actively communicates via social media and addresses the nation every month on radio, but has not commented on conversions, letting colleagues tackle the criticism. — Reuters NEW DELHI: Rashtriya Janata Dal and Samajwadi Party supporters participate in an anti government protest in New Delhi yesterday. The protesters voiced their disapproval for right wing Hindu groups allied to the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party conducting a series of ceremonies across India over the past week to convert Christians and Muslims to Hinduism. —AP Afghan forces launch operations near Pakistan ASADABAD, Afghanistan: Afghan security forces have launched an operation against militants in an eastern province seen as a rear base for the Pakistani Taleban which carried out a school massacre last week, officials said yesterday. Pakistan’s army chief met Afghan President Ashraf Ghani in Kabul in the aftermath of the school attack in the Pakistani city of Peshawar which killed 149 people, mainly children. The army chief sought Ghani’s support in defeating the Tehreek-e-Taleban Pakistan (TTP). TTP leader Mullah Fazlullah is believed to be hiding in Afghanistan’s Kunar province, which borders Pakistan’s restive tribal areas. Kunar has been the scene of fierce fighting between local forces and the Afghan Taleban for the past 10 days. “Afghan security forces have launched a joint anti-militant operations in several parts of Dangam district of Kunar province,” Dawlat Waziri, deputy defence ministry spokesman, said. “So far in the operation, 21 armed insurgents have been killed and 33 others wounded,” Waziri said, adding that seven security personnel were wounded. Kunar governor Shujaul Mulk Jalala said more than 1,500 Afghan Taliban fighters attacked remote villages in Dangam. Jalala said Pakistani Taliban and Lashkar-eTaiba militants were also battling Afghan security forces in Dangam. Pakistan has repeatedly asked Afghanistan to capture and hand over Fazlullah. Each nation has long accused the other of allowing militants to shelter in the border region and launch bloody attacks that threaten regional stability. The Afghan Taleban have stepped up their attacks as NATO wraps up its combat operations, which end on December 31. A follow-up mission of about 12,500 US-led NATO troops will stay on to train and support Afghan security forces. — AFP PESHAWAR: A grieving Pakistani family departs an army-run school in Peshawar yesterday where their family member Ali was killed during the December 16 massacre by Taleban militants. — AFP Pakistan to execute 500 terror convicts in weeks Troops intensify operations against Taleban ISLAMABAD: Pakistan plans to execute around 500 militants in coming weeks, officials said yesterday, after the government lifted a moratorium on the death penalty in terror cases following a Taleban school massacre. Six militants have been hanged since Friday amid rising public anger over Tuesday’s slaughter in the northwestern city of Peshawar, which left 149 people dead including 133 children. After the deadliest terror attack in Pakistani history, Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif ended the six-year moratorium on the death penalty, reinstating it for terrorism-related cases. “Interior ministry has finalized the cases of 500 convicts who have exhausted all the appeals, their mercy petitions have been turned down by the president and their executions will take place in coming weeks,” a senior government official told AFP on condition of anonymity. A second official confirmed the information. Of the six hanged so far, five were involved in a failed attempt to assassinate then military ruler Pervez Musharraf in 2003, while one was involved in a 2009 attack on army headquarters. Police, troops and paramilitary rangers have been deployed across the country and airports and prisons put on red alert during the executions and as troops intensify operations against Taleban militants. Sharif has ordered the attorney general’s office to “actively pursue” capital cases currently in the courts, a government spokesman said. The “prime minister has also issued directions for appropriate measures for early disposal of pending cases related to terrorism,” the spokesman said, without specifically confirming the plan to execute 500 people. Pakistan has described Tuesday’s bloody school rampage, claimed by the Tehreek-e-Taleban Pakistan (TTP), as its own “mini 9/11,” calling it a game-changer in the fight against extremism. Political and military leaders vowed to redouble efforts to stamp out the scourge of terror in the wake of the attack, which the TTP said was revenge for the killing of their families in an army offensive in the tribal northwest. The offensive against longstanding Taleban and other militant strongholds in North Waziristan and Khyber tribal agencies has been going on since June. But a series of fresh strikes since the Peshawar attack, in which dozens of alleged militants were killed, suggest the campaign is being stepped up. The decision to reinstate executions was condemned by human rights groups, with the United Nations also calling for Pakistan to reconsider. Human Rights Watch on Saturday said the executions were “a craven politicized reaction to the Peshawar killings” and demanded no further hangings be carried out. Pakistan began its de facto moratorium on civilian executions in 2008, but hanging remains on the statute books and judges continue to pass death sentences. Before Friday’s resumption, only one person had been executed since 2008 — a soldier convicted by a court martial and hanged in November 2012. Rights campaigners say Pakistan overuses its anti-terror laws and courts to prosecute ordinary crimes. — AFP TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 I N T E R N AT I O N A L Australian PM under fire for women comments SYDNEY: Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott was accused yesterday of craving “a world where men do the big jobs and women do the ironing” after saying his biggest achievement for females was reducing household bills by axing a carbon tax. The backlash came after he unveiled sweeping changes Sunday to his ministry, dumping Defense Minister David Johnston, promoting Immigration Minister Scott Morrison and appointing only his second woman to cabinet. It followed recent opinion polls showing his personal approval rating and that of his conservative government had plunged over tough spending cuts and perceived broken promises since coming to power late last year. Abbott hit the airwaves yesterday to sell the reshuffle as a “reset and refocus” for the new year, but found himself the brunt of criticism after saying his biggest achievement for women this year was repealing the carbon tax. “As many of us know, women are particularly focused on the household budget and the repeal of the carbon tax means a Aus$550 (US$447) a year benefit for the average family,” Abbott, who doubles up as minister for women, told the Nine Network. In opposition Abbott, who was accused of sexism by former leader Julia Gillard in an infamous speech about misogyny, claimed repealing the tax would help women by lowing electricity costs associated with ironing. Labor frontbencher Anthony Albanese told Fairfax Media Abbott was stuck in a time warp. “The problem isn’t that Tony Abbott’s stuck in the past, it’s that he wants the rest of Australia to go back there and keep him company in a world where men do the big jobs and women do the ironing,” he said. Labor Senate leader Penny Wong added: “I think we can safely say that time and time again, over and over again, Tony Abbott just reminds us how out of touch he is with the lives of women in modern Australia.” His comments spawned numerous digs on social media as women pondered what they would do with the extra money, with the hashtags #thankstony, #PutYourIronOut and #ministerforwomen trending, with people posting pictures of irons. “Was planning to write paper for Astrophysical Journal today but too distracted by household budget,” tweeted scientist Lisa Harvey-Smith. Another said: “#thankstony, with the Carbon tax repeal I can buy a new apron,” while tweeter Willa McDonald added: “I know where I’d like to put my ironing board.” Damage control? Since assuming power in September 2013, the government has announced savings across the board to rein in a growing budget deficit. But critics have slammed some of the measures, which include slashing health and education spending while tightening welfare benefits, as broken pre-election promises and too harsh. There has also been criticism of the government’s ability to adequately explain why the cuts were needed, but Abbott denied the reshuffle was damage control. “No,” he told the Seven Network when asked if this was the case. “This is a good way to end the year after a year of considerable achievement. “The vital challenge of government next year is more jobs, more prosperity for families, but the way to achieve that is to build a stronger economy and that means continuing our work to get the budget back under control,” he added. Among the cabinet changes, Morrison was moved to the social services ministry with Abbott making welfare reform one of his key priorities. Johnson was replaced by Health Minister Peter Dutton while Assistant Education Minister Sussan Ley assumed the health and sport portfolios, doubling the number of women in the ministry. Julie Bishop is Foreign Minister. —AFP US Marine asks Philippines to dismiss murder case Trial opens in killing of Filipina transgender MANILA: A US Marine facing trial for the murder of a Filipina transgender woman urged the Philippine Department of Justice yesterday to dismiss the case against him. In a petition filed with the department, the lawyer for Private First Class Joseph Pemberton argued that prosecutors did not present enough evidence to charge him with the killing of Jennifer Laude. The body of Laude 26, also known as Jeffrey, was found at a cheap hotel in the red light district of the northern port of Olongapo in October after she checked in with Pemberton, police in that city said. But the petition argued that the evidence linking Pemberton to the killing was “based on nothing but conjectures and speculations”. “There was no evidence presented as to the details of the purported Marilou Laude (center), sister of Jennifer Laude, 26, also known as Jeffrey, speaks during a protest after attending a court hearing in the city of Olongapo, north of Manila yesterday. —AFP assault during the preliminary investigation other than the surmises and conjectures of the supposed witnesses and the baseless conclusions of the (Olongapo) police,” the petition argued. The murder case against Pemberton was filed with an Olongapo court which issued a formal arrest warrant for him last week. However a petition to the justice department is also an option for the accused in such criminal cases. Pemberton also wanted court hearings suspended pending a decision on his petition. But Philippine prosecutors argued that this would delay proceedings, which under a US-Philippine agreement must be completed in a year. In Olongapo a lawyer for the Laude family, Harry Roque, said Pemberton’s petition was “not a basis for suspension, especially for cases like this”. The high-profile case has inflamed anti-US sentiment in the Philippines and strains in relations between the longtime allies, which both sought custody of the suspect. The US government has refused to hand over custody to Philippine authorities even after prosecutors charged Pemberton with murder. He is currently under US military guard at a Philippine military base in Manila. —AFP Sydney siege gunman’s partner has bail revoked after review SYDNEY: The partner of Sydney siege gunman Man Haron Monis had her bail revoked yesterday after Australian authorities requested a review amid public anger that the pair were on the streets. Amirah Droudis, 35, had been on bail for a year since being charged with the brutal killing of Monis’s ex-wife. Monis was also free despite facing charges of abetting the murder and a string of sexual offences. Noleen Hayson Pal suffered a gruesome death in April 2013 when she was stabbed 18 times and set alight in western Sydney. Outrage over their bail grew after the deadly SYDNEY: Photos showing Katrina Dawson (left) and Tori Johnson (right) sit amongst the floral tributes left outside the Lindt cafe in Sydney’s Martin Place, one week after a siege at the cafe which saw two hostages Dawson and Johnson along with the gunman killed yesterday. —AFP siege last week-in which Monis and two hostages died after a 16-hour standoff-forcing New South Wales Attorney-General Brad Hazzard to demand that the state’s director of public prosecutions review the case. Chief Magistrate Graeme Henson told the Downing Centre Local Court in Sydney that Droudis posed an “unacceptable risk” to the community given her previous convictions and the nature of the allegations. “The case against the accused is stronger than it was 12 months ago,” Henson told the court, without elaborating, adding that the risk could not be mitigated by adding conditions. He revoked her bail and she was ordered into custody immediately. NSW Premier Mike Baird welcomed the decision. In a statement, he added that the “government expects community safety to be front and centre of all bail decisions and that is why the attorney-general expressed concern and requested a review of the case”. Droudis, together with Monis, had previously been found guilty in 2013 of sending offensive letters to the families of dead Australian soldiers seven years ago. The magistrate who bailed Monis last December over the murder and the lawyers who defended him on a string of charges have been the subject of death threats. Concern about Monis’s freedom given his history of violence also led Prime Minister Tony Abbott to order an urgent inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the siege, and into why the gunman was free and not under surveillance. Memorial services for the two victims of the siege, 34-year-old Tori Johnson and 38-year-old Katrina Dawson, will be held at separate venues in Sydney on Tuesday. The body of the Iranian-born gunman was to be released to his family yesterday after investigators completed an autopsy, the NSW Justice Department told AFP. —AFP Thai maid sentenced to death for drugs in Malaysia KUALA LUMPUR: A Thai woman was sentenced to death yesterday after a Malaysian high court found her guilty of trafficking drugs, Bernama news agency reported. Duangchit Khonthokhonbari, 33, who had been working in Malaysia as a maid, was caught with 2.81 kilogrammes (6.2 pounds) of methamphetamine at Kuala Lumpur International Airport in March last year. Anyone with at least 50 grams of methamphetamine is considered a trafficker in Malaysia and subject to the death penalty. Defence lawyers could not be reached for immediate comment, but Duangchit is expected to appeal against the death sentence, which is carried out by hanging in Malaysia. The verdict comes just days after an Australian mother-of-four, Maria Elvira Pinto Exposto, was also charged with drug trafficking in Malaysia. A customs check at the airport on December 7 discovered 1.5 kilograms of crystal methamphetamine, or “ice,” in a hidden compartment in her bag. Her lawyers insist she was innocently duped into carrying a bag that appeared to contain only clothing by a stranger in Shanghai. Exposto is due to appear in court again on January 23, when a chemist’s report on the suspected drugs will be submitted. Hundreds of Malaysians and foreigners are on death row in the Muslim-majority country, many for drug-related offences, though few have been executed in recent years. Two Australians were hanged in 1986 for heroin trafficking-the first Westerners executed in Malaysia-in a case that strained bilateral relations. Last year Dominic Bird, a truck driver from Perth, was acquitted on drug trafficking charges after he was allegedly caught with 167 grams of crystal methamphetamine. —AFP Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha (second right) and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang (right) prepare to inspect Chinese honor guards during a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing yesterday. Prayut Chan-o-cha is on a visit to China from Dec 22 to 23. —AFP Indonesia jails cleaners over school sex abuse JAKARTA: Five cleaners were jailed yesterday over the sexual abuse of a young boy at one of Indonesia’s most prestigious international schools, in a scandal that has rocked Jakarta’s expatriate community. In separate hearings, judges told the South Jakarta district court that four male cleaners-Agun Iskandar, Virgiawan Amin, Zainal Abidin, and Syahrial, who goes by one name - were “proven legally and convincingly guilty of committing sexual abuse and violence on minors”. They were each sentenced to eight years in jail and a fine of 100 million rupiah ($8,000). Afrischa Setyani, the only female cleaner among the five defendants, was earlier yesterday “found guilty of assisting in violence and sexual abuse of children”, presiding judge Mohamad Yunus said. “We sentenced her to seven years in prison and a fine of 100 million rupiah ($8,000),” he added. Their sentences were lower than the prosecutors’ recommended 10 years. Their trials began in August, following the first allegation in April that cleaners had raped the six-year-old nursery school boy at the Jakarta International School, which has long been favored by expatriates and wealthy Indonesians but is now facing the worst crisis in its 60-year history. Several of the cleaners who originally confessed have since recanted, claiming they were beaten by police. The family of the abused boy is suing the school and seeking $125 million in damages. Their lawyers said their clients were innocent and would appeal. The school’s workers union in a statement said medical reports from four hospitals “stated that there was no evidence of sexual abuse” and called for the cleaners and their families to appeal to the High Court. “We believe the truth is there and there will always be a way to uncover it,” union representative Rully Iskandar was quoted as saying. A sixth cleaner was implicated in the case but died in custody, with police saying he committed suicide by drinking floorcleaning fluid. Canadian Neil Bantleman, an administrator at the school, and Indonesian teaching assistant Ferdinand Tjiong, are also on trial separately, accused of sexually assaulting children. They deny the charge. —AFP Alleged Australia child killer coping as best she can SYDNEY: An Australian mother charged with killing eight children will have her case heard in January, a court said yesterday as she struggles to come to terms with what happened. Raina Mersane Ina Thaiday, 37, also known as Mersane Warria, is accused of eight counts of murder after the bodies of the children were found in a house in the northern city of Cairns on Friday morning. Seven of them were hers and she was an aunt to the eighth. The childrenfour girls and four boys-were aged between two and 14. The Cairns Magistrates Court refused an application by the women’s lawyer Steven MacFarlane for the next hearing on January 30 to be in a mental health court. This is procedural as MacFarlane said she was currently on an involuntary treatment order and would be assessed, “so once she gets assessed, then it may go to a mental health court at that stage”. MacFarlane said Thaiday, who did not attend the hearing as she remained in a Cairns hospital under police guard with non life-threatening injuries, was still coming to terms with what happened. “I’ve spoken to her, she’s coping as best she can at the moment,” he told reporters outside the court. “I’m not a doctor, I think she probably knows what’s happened but doesn’t realise it, it hasn’t sunk in, is my personal opinion only.” Permanent memorial The hearing came as the local mem- ber of the Queensland state parliament, Gavin King, said the public housing home in the suburb of Manoora where the bodies were found would be demolished and a permanent memorial instead built on the site. “It’s the right thing to do going forward to help with the healing process, of course for the family but also the local residents around us, but also the broader community who... have been very deeply shocked by this tragedy,” King told reporters. “I’ve been here since Saturday morning and I haven’t had anyone say that they would like the house to stay. “Everyone across the board... they are very unanimous in terms of saying they would like to see an appropriate memorial in this location.” King said he had been talking to family representatives, local residents and agencies to get a sense of what form of permanent memorial they wanted. “My conversations and directions from those range of people has been that they just want an appropriate memorial that... they can pay their respects, certainly local children and the local community can use on a longterm basis,” he said. Police said Sunday that crime scene investigators were still working in the house, describing it as a “long process”. “We still have experts there. It will be a long, hard road from here on in,” detective inspector Bruno Asnicar said. Officers have not revealed the cause of death of the children but said they were looking into various scenarios, including suffocation. They also said knives were found at the house. —AFP TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 NEWS A couple of Russian Army helicopters fly over the Monument to Scuttled Ships, during a promotional campaign for contract service for the Russian Army in Sevastopol, Crimea, on Dec 20, 2014. — AP N Korean cinema: Kidnappings and evil Americans SEOUL: North Korea hates the currently scrapped Hollywood film that revolves around the assassination of its beloved leader, but the country has had a long love affair with cinema - of its own particular styling. In the six decades since North Korea began to cultivate its own film industry, a South Korean director and his movie star wife have been kidnapped, a Godzilla-inspired monster movie has bombed at the box office in the South, American defectors have hammed it up in anti-US propaganda films - and there has even been a foray into “girl power” cinema with the more recent “Comrade Kim Goes Flying”. The US blames North Korea for the recent cyberattack on Sony Pictures, which produced “ The Interview,” and also for threats of terror attacks against US movie theaters. Sony canceled the movie’s release. North Korea has denied a role in the hacking, but also praised it as a “righteous deed”. Pyongyang began building its cinema industry in the 1950s as a wing of a propaganda machine meant to glorify the country’s late founder, Kim Il Sung, the grandfa- ther of current leader Kim Jong Un. The elder Kim once declared movies to be the most important tool to educate the masses, according to archive material maintained by the South Korean government. North Korean moviemakers have since dabbled with science fiction, action and romantic comedy, but they’re mostly expected to stoke public animosity against rivals Washington and Seoul, and to portray the Kim family as a fearless bastion against evil foreign imperialists. North Korea’s progress in filmmaking technology has been slow, espe- Fadhl calls for granting non-Muslims... Continued from Page 1 Fadhl said he chose to appeal against that constitutional amendment in the constitutional court, the highest court in the country and whose rulings are final, and not through the National Assembly because “he did not want to embarrass my colleagues and enter into a dispute of personal views”. If the challenge is accepted, it will allow non-Muslims to become Kuwaiti citizens. But if rejected, the status quo will be maintained. Fadhl is not a member of any political party but he is an independent, sometimes pro-government, liberal-secular lawmaker who became a member of parliament in July last year. He however was elected twice before but both assemblies were scrapped by the constitutional court. The lawmaker said the article that bans non-Muslims from becoming Kuwaitis is a “stigma on the Kuwaiti constitution and laws”, adding that those who added it to the constitution in 1981 do not deserve to become members of parliament who took the oath to respect the constitution and laws. He also stressed that the presence of the article in the Kuwaiti constitution defies the morals of the Kuwaiti people and their principles. The Kuwaiti population of 1.27 million is predominantly Muslim, with a Sunni majority and Shiite minority. But there are around 200-250 Kuwaiti Christians who were naturalized before the introduction of that article. Most of them hail from Iraq, Palestine and Lebanon. The constitutional court is not expected to rule on the case before several months. It has to be seen first whether the court will accept the challenge or not, and whether it will agree to rule on an issue related to citizenship. cially when compared to a South Korean film industry that’s the envy of Asia. Isolation The country’s relative isolation means North Korean filmmakers rarely get the opportunity to work with foreign artists. A notable exception was “Comrade Kim Goes Flying,” a romantic comedy from 2012 about a young female coal miner who dreams of becoming a trapeze artist. The movie was co-produced with Western partners. The 1980s were a heyday for North Korean movies. The current leader’s father, Kim Jong Il, was an ardent movie buff and ensured generous funding for filmmakers. When Kim soured on the quality of films produced by his countrymen, he ordered the abduction of South Korean film director Shin Sang-ok and his then-wife, actress Choi Eun-hee, in 1978, Shin said after he escaped the North in 1986. Shin shook the North Korean movie scene with his entertainmentfocused works. They included 1984’s “Love, Love, My Love,” responsible for the first on-screen kiss in North Korean films, and “Runaway,” an action film released the same year that included an exploding train, according to a South Korean govern- In this file image made out of film “Comrade Kim Goes Flying” released on Oct 3, 2012 by the Busan International Film Festival, Comrade Kim Yong Mi played by Han Jong Sim smiles as she wears a coal miner’s helmet. — AP ment website. North Korea has long shown Shin and Choi managed to American characters in its movies as escape during a business trip to villains, sometimes played by North Vienna in 1986, a year after Shin Koreans in makeup, but also by actucompleted “Pulgasari,” a science-fic- al Americans who defected to the tion film inspired by Japan’s iconic North in the 1960s. Four such “Godzilla” series. Pulgasari, which Americans appeared together as evil features an actor waddling around capitalists and military officials in in a padded monster suit, flopped “Nameless Heroes,” a 20-part propawhen it was released in South Korea ganda film series filmed from 1979 in 2000 during a period of warmer to 1981, according to the South relations between the rivals. Korean government website. — AP TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 ANALYSIS THE LEADING INDEPENDENT DAILY IN THE ARABIAN GULF ESTABLISHED 1961 Founder and Publisher YOUSUF S. AL-ALYAN Editor-in-Chief ABD AL-RAHMAN AL-ALYAN EDITORIAL : 24833199-24833358-24833432 ADVERTISING : 24835616/7 FAX : 24835620/1 CIRCULATION : 24833199 Extn. 163 ACCOUNTS : 24835619 COMMERCIAL : 24835618 P.O.Box 1301 Safat,13014 Kuwait. E MAIL :[email protected] Website: www.kuwaittimes.net Focus Gaza ripe for new explosion By Adel Zaanoun B arely four months after a bloody conflict battered Gaza, experts warn that a new war could be in the offing if reconstruction is not accelerated and Palestinian divisions remain. Since the end of the deadly 50-day war between Israel and Hamas, which killed nearly 2,200 Palestinians and 73 in Israel, little has changed on the ground in Gaza. Swathes of the territory lie in ruins and tens of thousands of people remain homeless. With reconstruction still conspicuous by its absence and talks to bolster the August truce repeatedly postponed, frustration is growing in Gaza - and with it the danger of a new outbreak of violence. This weekend, for the first time since the war ended on Aug 26, Israeli warplanes struck southern Gaza after militants fired a rocket over the border, the third time this has happened in four months. Although nobody was hurt on either side, the exchange of fire raised concerns that the fragile truce could deteriorate rapidly. Last week, as Hamas militants paraded through Gaza with rocket launchers and missiles in a show of force to mark the 27th anniversary of the Islamist group’s founding, they were quick to warn that the situation was unsustainable. “If there is no reconstruction of what Israel destroyed, we warn you that there will be an explosion,” warned the Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, Hamas’s military wing. “If our demands are ignored, there will be consequences for the enemy, its people and its leaders.” Slipping Towards War The glacial pace of reconstruction is the most immediate concern for Gaza, where UN figures show more than 96,000 homes were damaged or destroyed in the war, leaving 100,000 people homeless. Over the past eight years, Gaza has been subjected to an Israeli blockade which has effectively barred the entry of most construction materials on grounds that militants could use them for other purposes. After the war, the UN brokered a mechanism which would allow such goods in while ensuring they do not fall into the wrong hands. Palestinian officials say Israel has effectively blocked reconstruction by limiting supplies entering Gaza, but diplomatic sources say the UN-brokered mechanism has taken longer than expected to get up and running. The process has also been slowed by infighting between Hamas and Fatah, its West Bankbased rival which dominates the Palestinian Authority and has been tasked with managing reconstruction. “The circumstances are as they were before the war,” Israeli commentator Avi Issacharoff said. “If the blockade continues, the borders remain closed and building is slow in the next six months, Hamas will move towards escalation, and depending on Israel’s response, it could turn into a new war.” Gaza-based analyst Walid Al-Mudallal agreed that Hamas was under increasing pressure. “If it remains frozen in terms of reconstruction, war will be the only option. Hamas will have no choice,” he said. Figures cited by international aid charity Oxfam indicate 287 truckloads - each carrying around 40 tonnes of essential building materials - entered Gaza in November. But officials say that if Gaza is to be rebuilt within three years, it would need to be receiving at least 7,000 tonnes - or 175 truckloads - every day. “The options are few and very difficult, ranging from bad to worse. As Israel slows the entry of building materials, Egypt closes the (Rafah) border and reconciliation fails to be implemented,” Mudallal said. ‘At Boiling Point’ Reconstruction aside, analysts say the conditions which led to the deadly summer conflict are largely still in place. “Gaza, almost four months after the war, remains a pressure cooker at boiling point,” wrote Amos Harel in Israel’s Haaretz newspaper, saying the situation was similar to before the fighting that began on July 8. Before the war, Hamas - already struggling under the Israeli blockade - found itself under increasing pressure from Egypt which dealt Gaza a harsh blow by destroying a network of crossborder smuggling tunnels and closing the Rafah crossing, triggering a major financial crisis. In a bid to ease the pressure, Hamas signed a unity agreement with Fatah in the hope that the Palestinian Authority would facilitate payment of its Gaza employees. But the deal has never been properly implemented, and tensions between the two has only festered. “The likelihood of war is there,” said Naji Sharab, a politics professor at Al-Azhar University. “Hamas’s popularity will wane if the building freeze continues and if the financial issues aren’t solved, and this will happen the longer reconciliation stagnates,” he said. With the Palestinian Authority slated to play a key role in reconstruction and monitoring the crossings with Israel and Egypt, overcoming internal divisions is crucial. “If the political and internal situation continues like this and Hamas does not find a way out, then it might decide it has no other option” than war, Sharab said. —AFP All articles appearing on these pages are the personal opinion of the writers. Kuwait Times takes no responsibility for views expressed therein. Kuwait Times invites readers to voice their opinions. Please send submissions via email to: [email protected] or via snail mail to PO Box 1301 Safat, Kuwait. The editor reserves the right to edit any submission as necessary. Young Cuban-Americans emerge as Obama allies By David Adams F or a handful of Cuban-Americans, President Barack Obama’s new Cuba policy wasn’t much of a shocker. For months, they quietly advised the White House in hopes of shaping a new policy towards the communist-run nation. “A lot of what the president announced is what we, and others in Miami, have been doing for a long time,” said Felice Gorordo, co-founder of Roots of Hope, a non-partisan group of Cuban-American university students and young professionals. Their mission: Closer contact with the island to build mutual understanding - a point of view that’s often at odds with their parents and grandparents. But they offer much more than policy advice. Obama is counting on this organization, and others like them, to help pave the way for his new policy that includes measures from promoting private sector entrepreneurship, to modernizing the island’s telecommunications infrastructure and restoring access to US banking services. “There is a clear understanding in the White House that politically they are going to have to focus on and cultivate the younger generation of Cuban-Americans who are mobilized and out there supporting the president’s decision,” said Frank Mora, a Cuba scholar at Miami’s Florida International University, and a former top Pentagon official for Latin America in the Obama administration. Obama is going to need that support as he faces opposition from his Republican rivals and the Cuban-American political establishment that opposes closer ties with Cuba. Establishing Roots Gorordo co-founded Roots of Hope in 2002 while studying government affairs at Georgetown University after a visit to Cuba where he was inspired by the number of educated youths hungry for change. The group first gained notice in Miami in 2009 when it got behind a controversial peace concert in Havana by Colombian rocker Juanes who lives in Miami. Now, it says, there are some 9,000 members, a Miami office and three staffers. As far as politics is concerned, the organization said it is bipartisan. Indeed, its leaders added, not all its members support normalization of relations with Cuba. Members include second-generation Cuban-Americans born in Miami, as well as recent arrivals from Cuba. “We are not here to push political agendas. We are seeking to be a platform for anyone who cares about a better future in Cuba,” said Raul Moas, the group’s director. Still, while respectful of their parent’s bitter memories, they say it’s time to move on. “The pain is real,” said Gorordo. “We inherit this baggage and carry it like a backpack. It gives us the ability to empathize with our parents’ struggle, and we also know when to take off that backpack in order to see the change we all desire.” Roots of Hope’s main focus is what they call “people-to-people connectivity” with the island. It sends smart phones to Cuba. It encourages Cuban-Americans to visit the country and reconnect with lost relatives and discover their heritage. They have also worked with Silicon Valley executives at Google, Twitter, Facebook and Apple to improve digital services in Cuba, where the Internet is strictly limited by the Cuban government. It was, for example, instrumental in helping Google win US permission in August to make its Chrome browser available to users in Cuba. “In order to be able to advance you have to be able to engage,” said Gorordo, 31, a former White House fellow in 2011-12 who is also chief executive of Clearpath, a tech company for online immigration filings. The Obama administration confirmed its involvement with Roots of Hope. It has consulted with the organization on “the kinds of action they thought might contribute to greater openings in Cuba,” said Bernadette Meehan, spokesperson for the National Security Council, the president’s advisory body on foreign policy. CubaNow Roots of Hope, as far as young Cuban-Americans are concerned, aren’t the only game in Miami. In an email Meehan also credited another Miami-based group, CubaNow, with urging the White House “to focus on helping improve conditions for Cuban citizens,” while continuing to promote human rights and democracy. CubaNow, launched in April, is backed by a handful of deeppocketed benefactors, including Ralph Patino, a Miami lawyer and Democratic party fundraiser who contributed $78,800 to the Obama campaign in 2012. “We have to do everything possible to ensure these gains survive the next election and work with Congress to see how we can continue updating our policy to Cuba,” said Ric Herrero, 36, CubaNow’s director. The group describes itself as a political advocacy organization led by young Cuban-Americans. It has urged Obama to use his executive authority to refocus Cuba policy away from punishing the Cuban government to empowering the Cuban people. The White House outreach began shortly after Obama visited Miami in November last year for a fundraiser at which he said US Cuba policy might need an “update”. But Wednesday’s announcement was met with scorn from many older Cuban exile leaders who strongly oppose relaxing pressure on the Cuban government which they believe is on its last legs. In addition, the new groups are largely dismissed as bit-players by the well-heeled, conservative Cuban-American political establishment. US Representative Mario Diaz-Balart said media reports have talked for decades about “a change in perception,” but he noted that no Cuban-American has been elected who supports normalization. “So where are all these people? You might want to interview them.” Other older Cubans are even less flattering. “It’s sad that young people can be so ignorant. They must be communists,” said Laura Vianello, 68, a Cuban exile with the hardline Miami group Vigilia Mambisa. That point of view, though, seems to be softening. Street protest in Miami were small this week, a sharp contrast to the large demonstrations in 2000 when the Justice Department ordered a 6-year-old rafter boy, Elian Gonzalez, returned to his father in Cuba. —Reuters Party’s over in Kabul as expat era fades By Ben Sheppard T he tennis club is deserted, the pool-side French restaurant is closed and picnic trips are cancelled. The US-led war in Afghanistan brought a flood of international aid workers, diplomats and security contractors to Kabul, creating a frenetic social scene that is now a distant memory. A series of Taleban attacks on expat hang-outs shattered any illusions that foreign civilians were safe in the city, and those places still open have bored waiters and empty tables. As the United States and its allies officially end their 13-year war on Dec 31, Afghanistan appears in the grip of worsening violence and the remaining foreign workers have retreated further inside fortified compounds. “I used to employ 28 people a year ago. Now I employ only eight,” an expat restaurant manager told AFP on condition of anonymity over espresso coffee and almond cake. “I am married to an Afghan and I will stay, but we are very worried. We used to be so busy. All the aid groups and embassies had a list of places that their staff could go. Now everywhere is off-limits,” she said, gesturing to her deserted restaurant one lunchtime. All-night parties with plenty of alcohol and a lot of young, single people were always incongruous in the capital of conservative Muslim Afghanistan, but now Kabul’s “Kabubble” - as it was known - has truly burst. Old Haunts Shut “The days of big parties ended long ago,” said Francesca Recchia, the Italian author of the Little Book of Kabul, a new collection of essays about the city. “Any social life is inside people’s houses or compounds. Of course, many internationals are restricted where they can visit, but some of us try to lead normal lives with Afghan friends. “There are simply a lot less expats than the crazy days of 2008 or 2010, and those who are here you don’t see out and about. There is a lot of fear.” The final tipping point for many came last January when a Taleban attack on the popular Taverna du Liban restaurant killed 21 people, including 13 foreigners enjoying mezze and a discreet beer. Among the dead were senior United Nations staff, European Union police officers, In this photograph taken on Dec 7, 2014, Afghan carpet trader Haji Abdul Hakim displays a carpet as he waits for customers in his shop on Chicken Street in Kabul. —AFP American teachers and British aid contractors. Today, the site is boarded up and abandoned. Five minutes’ drive away, the steel doors of the Gandamack Lodge have been locked since April. It was perhaps the best known restaurant and hotel in Kabul, serving British favourites such shepherd’s pie and bread pudding with custard. After dinner, its basement pub boasted a warm log fire, a well-stocked bar and antique rifles hanging on the walls - until the whole premises was closed down by the government for being a “nest for intelligence agencies”. Old expat haunts like French restaurant L’Atmosphere - once famed for its pool parties have closed, and picnic trips to Qargha lake outside Kabul or to the Panjshir valley are now often deemed too risky. “Every Thursday and Friday there would be parties for hundreds of people, with guest lists that really meant any Westerner could just walk in,” said Kabul-based American journalist Courtney Body. “With the troop surge (2010-2012), there was also a civilian surge. It was hedonistic and we never worried about anything. There were no rules compared with back home, so foreigners liked it. There was a sense of freedom. I remember all-day parties. You could enjoy a beer and a swim, and someone would always get thrown into the pool with their iPhone in their pocket.” Secret Bar The tennis club was one centre of the social whirl, where ambassadors teamed up with NGO workers for mixed doubles in the afternoon. Now the umpire chairs have rotted to bits, and the disintegrating net is repaired with patches of ribbon. “No one comes any more,” said the forlorn coach, who asked for his name to not be used for fear of attracting attention from the Taleban. Small signs of the old era do remain - a chic and heavily-protected cafe selling $14 burgers, and a secret bar offering small cans of Heineken for $12. Ganjina, a collection of upmarket shops, offers iPad cases sewn by Afghan refugee women and elegant clutch bags made out of the same material used for the all-encompassing burqa. But sales have plunged this year as deadly attacks targeted a luxury hotel, residential compounds, vehicle convoys and foreign guesthouses, journalists and doctors. “Business is down 40 percent since January and the shop is hanging on by the skin of its teeth,” said Kerry Jane Wilson, director of Zardozi, which runs an outlet in Ganjina. Wahid Abdullah, owner of Herat Carpets on Chicken Street, the souvenir market since the hippy days of the 1970s, recalled how the US war brought a sudden glut of customers after 2001. “We used to be so busy we didn’t have time for lunch,” said Abdullah. “The first years were super, and I hired extra weavers in Kabul and Kunduz province. “I know many expats are leaving. But we will keep working. Selling carpets is what my family does.” —AFP p15_Layout 1 12/22/14 8:29 PM Page 1 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 S P ORTS Malinga returns from injury Kramer extends contract No retirement for Cahill COLOMBO: Sri Lanka pace spearhead Lasith Malinga is recovering well from his ankle surgery and should be back in action during the later stages of the one-day international series in New Zealand next month, according to coach Marvan Atapattu. The mercurial Malinga underwent surgery on his left ankle in September and missed the team’s one-day series against India and England. The 31-year-old, whose yorkers delivered with a sling-shot action at times makes him almost unplayable, will be crucial for Sri Lanka’s chances in the 50-over World Cup in Australia and New Zealand. “Malinga is still recovering from surgery and everything is going well according to plan,” former Sri Lanka batsman Atapattu said. “He will return for the last two ODI games in New Zealand.” Malinga, who has taken 271 wickets in 177 ODIs, has been named in Sri Lanka’s provisional 30-man squad for the World Cup. Sri Lanka, who finished runnerup to India at the 2011 World Cup, will play seven onedayers in New Zealand to warm up for the Feb. 14March 29 tournament.—Reuters BERLIN: German World Cup winner Christoph Kramer has ended months of media speculation about his future by signing a two-year contract extension that will keep him at Bayer Leverkusen until 2019. The defensive midfielder, who has yet to play for Leverkusen since joining them in 2011 and is on loan at Borussia Moenchengladbach this season, won the World Cup with his country in Brazil in July. “With the return of Christoph Kramer (next summer) we have succeeded in our concept of developing young and talented players at other clubs,” said Leverkusen CEO Michael Schade. Kramer, seen as a natural replacement to Leverkusen captain Simon Rolfes who is retiring at the end of the season, said a few months ago that the way players were treated by clubs sometimes reminded him of the “slave trade”. That triggered an angry reaction from Leverkusen officials but the 23year-old, who has also had a loan spell at VfL Bochum, said he was now ready to play for his parent club. “I have known Bayer since my youth and always dreamt of making it among the pros,” added Kramer. “I have now succeeded in that via Bochum and Gladbach and I am very happy.” Leverkusen meet Atletico Madrid in the last 16 of the Champions League in February.—Reuters SYDNEY: Australia’s all time leading goal-scorer Tim Cahill is feeling as fit as ever and thinks he could continue playing for another four seasons into his 40th year. With his weight and body fat ratio unchanged since he was 17, Cahill said he would be looking for a two or three year contract when his deal with Major League Soccer (MLS) club New York Red Bulls expires next year. The 35-year-old forward, in Australia to prepare for next month’s Asian Cup, said he could yet return to the English Premier League, where he spent nine years with Everton before making the switch stateside. “ The future’s bright,” Cahill told the Australian Associated Press. “I’ve got another year left on my New York Red Bulls contract. The main feeling for me is every time I’m at a club, I like to be there for a long time. “To be totally honest, I could have gone back to the Premier League on loan after the World Cup and I decided to stay with Red Bulls for the remainder of the season and still (have) options to go back to the Premier League if it’s the right one for me.—Reuters Flyers soar over Jets WINNIPEG: Rob Zepp made 25 saves in his NHL debut and Jakub Voracek scored 10 seconds into overtime, sending the Philadelphia Flyers to a 4-3 victory over the Winnipeg Jets on Sunday night. Voracek and linemate Claude Giroux forced a Dustin Byfuglien turnover behind the Winnipeg net, and Voracek slid the puck through Ondrej Pavelec’s pads for his second goal of the game. Vincent Lecavalier had two third-period goals for the Flyers, who rallied from a 3-1 deficit. Matt Halischuk, Mathieu Perreault and Byfuglien scored for Winnipeg. Pavelec made 19 saves. The 33-year-old Zepp was promoted from Lehigh Valley of the American Hockey League due to an injury to starter Steve Mason. The Flyers say he is the oldest goaltender to win his NHL debut since 1926. Zepp, who spent the previous seven seasons in Germany, had a sprawling toe save on Mark Scheifele late in the second period. BLACKHAWKS 4, MAPLE LEAFS 0 Patrick Kane had a power-play goal and two assists, leading Antti Raanta and the Blackhawks to the win. The Blackhawks played with a “CR” decal on their helmets after assistant equipment manager Clint Reif died earlier in the day. The team said it was “deeply saddened” by the loss and declined further comment while asking for respect for the privacy for Reif’s family and friends. Raanta made 31 saves for his second shutout of the season, helping Chicago rebound from a 3-2 shootout loss Saturday night in Columbus. James Reimer made 30 saves in Toronto’s third straight loss following a six-game winning streak. AVALANCHE 2, RED WINGS 1 Jarome Iginla scored in the ninth shootout round to lift the Avalanche to the victory. Iginla got a wrist shot past Petr Mrazek, who had turned away six straight Avalanche shooters. Nathan MacKinnon and Matt Duchene also scored in the tiebreaker as Colorado ended a three-game road trip with five points. Gustav Nyquist and Tomas Tatar had shootout goals for Detroit, which fell to 1-7 this season in the tiebreaker. Detroit had a 22-12 shots advantage five minutes into the third period and finally cashed in when Pavel Datsyuk wristed a power-play shot past Avalanche goalie Calvin Pickard for his 13th goal. The Avalanche tied it with 4:15 left in regulation when Erik Johnson scored on the power play for his eighth of the season. RANGERS 1, HURRICANES 0 Ryan McDonagh scored in the first and Cam Talbot made 18 saves, leading New York to its sixth consecutive win. The Rangers completed a sweep of the home-and-home weekend series against the Eastern Conferenceworst Hurricanes, who lost for the eighth time in nine games. Talbot is 3-3-1 this season backing up Henrik Lundqvist, with all three of his victories being shutouts. McDonagh scored his second goal of the season 4:10 into the game. He slapped the puck past goaltender Anton Khudobin, who has yet to win this season (0-8-2). BRUINS 4, SABRES 3 Loui Eriksson scored 2:14 into overtime, and the Bruins rallied for the victory. Dougie PHILADELPHIA: Nick Schultz No. 55 of the Philadelphia Flyers passes the puck in this file photo. —AFP Hamilton scored twice for Boston, including a STARS 6, OILERS 5 tying goal with 1:31 left in the third after the Tyler Seguin had two goals and an assist, Bruins pulled goalie Tuukka Rask. Chris Kelly also scored for Boston, and defenseman and then scored in the shootout to help Dallas to its fourth consecutive win. Shawn Zdeno Chara had two assists. Buffalo couldn’t quite hang on after hold- Horcoff had the winning score in the eighth ing a 3-2 lead for most of the third period on round of the tiebreaker, and also collected his Tim Schaller’s first NHL goal. Schaller was fifth goal in the first period. Erik Cole and recalled from Rochester earlier in the day and Jamie Benn also scored in regulation for the played his third career game 50 miles south Stars (14-13-5), who have won five of six. Taylor Hall and Mark Arcobello each had of his hometown of Merrimack, New Hampshire. Andrej Meszaros and Rasmus two goals for the Oilers (7-20 -7), who blew a Ristolainen also scored for the Sabres, who 5-2 lead. Edmonton has lost seven straight and 18 of 19.—AP were outshot 37-28. NHL results/standings Colorado 2, Detroit 1 (SO); Dallas 6, Edmonton 5 (SO); Boston 4, Buffalo 3 (OT); NY Rangers 1, Carolina 0; Chicago 4, Toronto 0; Philadelphia 4, Winnipeg 3 (OT). Western Conference Pacific Division W L OTL GF GA PTS Anaheim 22 8 5 101 96 49 San Jose 19 11 4 97 87 42 Vancouver 19 11 2 92 90 40 Los Angeles 17 11 6 94 84 40 Calgary 17 15 3 100 95 37 Arizona 11 17 4 74 104 26 Edmonton 7 20 7 74 116 21 Central Division Chicago 23 9 2 106 67 48 St. Louis 21 9 3 100 81 45 Nashville 21 8 2 87 64 44 Winnipeg 17 10 7 83 80 41 Minnesota 16 12 3 91 84 35 Dallas 14 13 5 95 109 33 Colorado 12 13 8 85 101 32 Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Montreal 21 11 2 92 83 44 Tampa Bay 20 11 4 113 93 44 Detroit 17 8 9 94 84 43 Toronto 19 12 3 114 102 41 Boston 17 14 3 86 88 37 Florida 14 9 8 69 79 36 Ottawa 14 13 6 89 92 34 Buffalo 13 18 3 66 109 29 Metropolitan Division Pittsburgh 22 6 4 102 72 48 NY Islanders 23 10 0 104 91 46 NY Rangers 17 10 4 93 81 38 Washington 16 10 6 95 85 38 Philadelphia 13 14 6 92 99 32 Columbus 14 15 3 79 102 31 New Jersey 12 17 6 77 102 30 Carolina 9 20 4 68 92 22 Note: Overtime losses (OTL) are worth one point in the standings and are not included in the loss column (L). p16_Layout 1 12/22/14 9:12 PM Page 1 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 S P ORTS Grizzlies fall, Kings march Ferrari braced for hard year in 2015 MARANELLO: Ferrari chairman Sergio Marchionne drew a line under a dismal year for Formula One’s most glamorous and successful team on Monday but made clear that 2015 would also be a season of struggle. Speaking at a news conference before Christmas lunch at the team’s Fiorano test track, Marchionne left no doubt there was a hard road ahead before Ferrari could catch up with dominant Mercedes. “We must forget 2014,” said the Fiat Chrysler (FCA) chief executive who replaced Luca Di Montezemolo as Ferrari chairman in October. “I don’t want to talk about 2014.” The Italian outfit failed to win a race this year, their first blank season since 1993, and have said farewell to two team principals in a general clearout and restructuring. Double world champion Fernando Alonso has left for McLaren, with Red Bull’s quadruple champion Sebastian Vettel arriving to try to galvanise the restructured team after they finished fourth overall. Newly-appointed principal Maurizio Arrivabene warned, in his first official news conference, that he could not work miracles and Marchionne agreed the team now needed time. Marchionne said Ferrari, whose engine has been outperformed by champions Mercedes, were paying a price for decisions made under the previous management. “We started late with the 2015 car, certain choices and strategies that were made by others and that, in retrospect, I don’t necessarily share,” he added. “So 2015 will be a difficult year that will put the team to a real test.” Asked how long it would take Ferrari to recover, Marchionne said: “I think 2015 is going to be a reconstitution year. It will be Maurizio’s first full year with the team. “I think hopefully within the next 12 months we will remove all the baggage of uncertainty that is going to plague at least the initial phase of 2015. “Not to underestimate the significance or the magnitude of the task, I think Ferrari can probably get to the same place (as Mercedes) by the end of 2015. Some of the work has already started. We need to be able to emulate their success.” Arrivabene, who has years of experience working on the governing body’s F1 commission as a sponsor representative, said the 2015 car was on schedule and had passed crash tests. He said two wins next year would be a success, even if the legions of fans might not see it the same way, and three a triumph. “If we win four, we go to heaven,” added Marchionne. —Reuters Wayne Smith rejoins All Blacks WELLINGTON: Former All Blacks coach Wayne Smith is to rejoin the World champion side to bolster their bid to become the first team to win back-toback World Cups. The re-appointment of 57-year-old Smith as a specialist coach was confirmed Monday with head coach Steve Hansen saying they needed his “vast knowledge” of the game. “He is one of the most astute rugby coaches in world rugby and having worked with him in the past, we know just how valuable he is to any team he is involved in,” Hansen said. “Smithy’s role will be purely around defence, but as we do with all our coaches we will tap into his vast knowledge of other areas of the game.” It will be Smith’s fourth time with the All Blacks, which began in 1980 when the fly-half played the first of his 17 Tests. He returned as head coach in 2000 and 2001, and rejoined as an assistant to Graham Henry in 2004 where he remained until the All Blacks won the World Cup in 2011. He has since worked with the Waikato Chiefs, helping them secure Super rugby titles in 2012 and 2013. He has previously coached the Canterbury Crusaders to consecutive Super titles in 1998 and 1999, alongside Hansen. Between 2001 and 2004, Smith spent three seasons with English club Northampton. In 2012, when England made a strong bid to secure Smith’s ser vices as an assistant to Stuar t Lancaster, New Zealand rugby boss Steve Tew said he was too important an asset to lose. Smith was considered “an incredibly important asset to New Zealand rugby, not just the All Blacks”, Tew said then.—AFP Kuwait thrash Bahrain By Abdellatif Sharaa KUW AIT: Kuwait National Handicapped Basketball team dominated Bahrain from the start of their match, the second in the 7th Gulf Handicapped Basketball Tournament, as the match ended 56-25. Kuwait national team players were technically sharp, and maintained a comfortable lead throughout the match to top the group, in this tournament while Bahrain remains at the bottom. Meanwhile Saudi Arabia’s team dealt Oman a big blow when they beat them 79-35. It was obvious that the Omani team lacked the experience and most of its members are participating for the first time. There will be two matches today in the third round of the tournament, as Kuwait face Saudi Arabia, and this match will decide to a large extent the winner of the tournament. Bahrain and UAE will play earlier today. Kuwait’s team member Yousuf Khalaf told Kuna that he is happy for the second win, and appreciated the efforts of the board of directors in their support to the team. Khalaf who scored 19 points in the match said players are treating each match as the final, adding that they are looking forward for the Saudi match today. CLEVELAND: LeBron James had 25 points and 11 assists, Dion Waiters scored 13 of his 21 points in the fourth quarter and the Cleveland Cavaliers handled one of the Western Conference’s best teams, beating the Memphis Grizzlies 105-91 on Sunday. James scored 16 points in the second half and the Cavs shot a season-best 61 percent from the field to improve to 3-6 against West teams. Anderson Varejao added 18 points and Kyrie Irving had 17 points and 12 assists for the Cavs, who are 11-3 since their sluggish 5-7 start. Cleveland, which has won eight of nine at home, is 9-2 when James has at least nine assists. Marc Gasol had 23 points and 11 rebounds for the Grizzlies, who played without forward Zach Randolph. He’s nursing a sore and swollen right knee he injured Friday night in a loss at Chicago. Jon Leuer added 16 points for Memphis, which dropped to 21-6. KINGS 108, LAKERS 101 DeMarcus Cousins had 29 points and 14 rebounds in his second start since returning from a serious illness, and Sacramento beat Los Angeles to snap a five-game losing streak. Rudy Gay scored 24 points, and Ben McLemore added 23 points and eight rebounds to help the Kings pull away late. Sacramento had lost 10 of 12 games - going 2-8 while Cousins recovered from viral meningitis - and fired coach Michael Malone last week. Tyrone Corbin won for the first time in three games as Sacramento’s interim coach. Nick Young scored 26 points, and Kobe Bryant had 25 for the Lakers, who have lost six of eight. Bryant shot just 8 of 30 and had five rebounds and three assists. PELICANS 101, THUNDER 99 Anthony Davis scored 38 points to lead New Orleans past Oklahoma City. It was the thirdhighest point total of Davis’ career. He made 16 of 22 shots and had 12 rebounds. Jrue Holiday had 11 points and matched a career high with 15 assists for the Pelicans. Russell Westbrook scored 29 points for the Thunder, but he missed a 3-pointer that could have given Oklahoma City the lead in the closing seconds. Reggie Jackson added 19 points. Oklahoma City forward Kevin Durant missed his second straight game because of a sprained right ankle. SUNS 104, WIZARDS 92 Eric Bledsoe and Markieff Morris each scored 17 points, Goran Dragic added 16 and Phoenix beat Washington to end the Wizards’ winning streak at six. The Suns finished 3-0 on their trip after losing six in a row. They opened the road swing in Charlotte on Wednesday night and beat New York on Saturday. Rasual Butler led the Wizards with 17 points, and Kevin Seraphin had a season-high 16. Washington cut it to 95-89 on Paul Pierce’s layup with 2:40 to play, but the Suns scored nine straight - seven by Bledsoe - to take a 10489 lead with 1:01 to play. RAPTORS 118, KNICKS 108 Lou Williams and Kyle Lowry each scored 22 points, and Toronto Raptors beat New York for its sixth consecutive win. Greivis Vasquez had 21 points and Terrence Ross added 18 for the Raptors, who never trailed in matching their longest winning streak of the season. Toronto also won six straight from Nov. 15-26. Carmelo Anthony scored 28 points for New York. The Knicks lost their fifth straight and have CLEVELAND: Cavaliers’ LeBron James (left) shoots over Memphis Grizzlies’ Quincy Pondexter in the third quarter of a NBA basketball game. —AP dropped 15 of 16 overall. New York fell to 2-13 on the road and 1-6 in the second game of back-to-backs. HEAT 100, CELTICS 84 Luol Deng had 23 points, James Ennis scored 10 of his 16 in the fourth quarter and Miami beat Boston end five-game home losing streak. It was the first time in 154 games that Miami didn’t have any of its former Big Three - Dwyane Wade, Chris Bosh or LeBron James. Wade sat with a bruised right knee, Bosh missed his fifth straight game with a left calf strain and James now plays for Cleveland. Tyler Zeller scored 22 points for Boston, which had won three straight. PACERS 100, TIMBERWOLVES 96 CJ Miles scored 28 points and David West bulled his way to the basket for two big points with 34 seconds to play to help Indiana hold off Minnesota. Miles hit 10 of 18 shots and Roy Hibbert had 15 points, eight rebounds and four blocks for the Pacers, who got 48 points from their bench. They shot a season-high 50 percent from the field on the second night of a back-toback and forced 16 turnovers to win for just the second time this month. Mo Williams had 24 points and 10 assists for the Timberwolves. 76ERS 96, MAGIC 88 Michael Carter-Williams scored 21 points and Philadelphia rallied in the second half to beat Orlando for its third victory of the season. The 76ers ended a five-game losing streak. All three of their victories have come on the road. Victor Oladipo had 23 points for the Magic. NETS 110, PISTONS 105 Mason Plumlee scored 10 of his 21 points in the fourth quarter and had 12 rebounds in Brooklyn’s victory over Detroit. Joe Johnson added 16 points, including four free throws in the final 12 seconds. Kentavious Caldwell-Pope had 20 points for Detroit, and Andre Drummond finished with 18 points and 20 rebounds.—AP NBA results/standings Toronto 118, NY Knicks 108; Cleveland 105, Memphis 91; Sacramento 108, LA Lakers 101; Brooklyn 110, Detroit 105; Miami 100, Boston 84; Philadelphia 96, Orlando 88; Phoenix 104, Washington 92; Indiana 100, Minnesota 96; New Orleans 101, Oklahoma City 99. Toronto Brooklyn Boston NY Knicks Philadelphia Chicago Cleveland Milwaukee Indiana Detroit Atlanta Washington Miami Orlando Charlotte Eastern Conference Atlantic Division W L 22 6 11 15 10 15 5 25 3 23 Central Division 17 9 16 10 14 14 9 19 5 23 Southeast Division 19 7 19 7 13 15 10 20 8 19 PCT GB .786 .423 10 .400 10.5 .167 18 .115 18 .654 .615 .500 .321 .179 1 4 9 13 .731 .731 .464 7 .333 11 .296 11.5 Western Conference Northwest Division Portland 22 6 Oklahoma City 13 15 Denver 12 15 Utah 8 20 Minnesota 5 21 Pacific Division Golden State 22 3 LA Clippers 19 8 Phoenix 15 14 Sacramento 12 15 LA Lakers 8 19 Southwest Division Memphis 21 6 Houston 19 7 Dallas 20 8 San Antonio 17 11 New Orleans 14 13 .786 .464 .444 .286 .192 9 9.5 14 16 .880 .704 .517 .444 .296 4 9 11 15 .778 .731 .714 .607 .519 1.5 1.5 4.5 7 p17 2_Layout 1 12/22/14 9:58 PM Page 1 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 S P ORTS Hughes’ death unites cricket in grief ABU DHABI: This photograph taken on December 19, 2014, shows Pathan spectators in traditional headgear during the fifth and final day-night international match between Pakistan and New Zealand. —AFP Pathans find solace in Afridi’s Pakistan DUBAI: For 59-year-old taxi driver Kamal Khan, cricket is war without the shooting. Like most Pathans, known for their tough, battle-hardened nature, defeat is unacceptable. They may not know all the rules of the game, like the Barmy Army fans of England or India’s Swami Army but Pathans watch cricket out of passion for the sport and for the love of Pakistan. Kamal, like most of his fellow Pathans, often skips his taxi-driving duties to watch cricket in the United Arab Emirates, the neutral venue where Pakistan have been forced to play since 2009’s terror attacks on the visiting Sri Lanka team back home. A 30-dirham ticket ($8) gives fans a comfortable seat in the stands or a place on the mound and the rest is enjoyment. “Cricket is the only entertainment for us in this country,” Kamal, who has been driving a cab in Abu Dhabi for 13 years, told AFP. The 9/11 attacks on the United States, and the ensuing war in Afghanistan and around Pakistan’s north-west Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, forced hundreds of Pathans to move to the Gulf in search of a more lucrative and peaceful way of life. A taxi driver like Kamal earns 4,000 dirhams to 7,000 dirhams (around $1,100 to $1,900) a month but the 24/7 job takes its toll. “Most of the taxi drivers have kidney stones because they don’t drink much water to avoid going to the toilet,” said Kamal. “Life is tough and there was no enjoyment but since cricket arrived here we are very happy that we can watch our players.” Needless to say, the Pathans demand aggression and passion on the field. They come in large numbers to watch sixes and boundaries in a Twenty20 or a one-day international. And that is the reason that star allrounder Shahid Afridi, who hails from the Khyber Agency, is the star attraction even after 18 years in the game. “We just come to watch Afridi,” said Taif Khan, who drives a taxi in Sharjah. “I got my money’s worth when I watched the third one -dayer (against New Zealand) last Friday because Afridi got a fifty.” Afridi hit a 25-ball 55 to help Pakistan reach 364-7 and went on to win the match by 147 runs. New Zealand, however, took the five-match series 3-2. “Our cricket begins and ends with Afridi,” said Wahid Khan, a trader from Miranshah in North Waziristan Agency in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan. “I lost millions in the recent operation in Miranshah,” said Wahid, referring to the military operations by the Pakistan army aimed at clearing the area of militants. Those military sweeps resulted in his shops being razed. Wahid now lives in Abu Dhabi and finds solace in cricket.”Cricket is a way of forgetting our pains,” he said. “By default we are watching our players here and it’s great entertainment.” Afridi acknowledges the support he receives. “They love me very much,” admitted the 34-year-old Afridi. “Most of them drive taxis and whenever I get time I meet them. It’s their love and affection that drives me. “It is good that we provide them with some amazement in an otherwise labored life.” —AFP Boxing Day test of India MELBOURNE: With all hope of a first series triumph in Australia gone after defeats in the first two tests, India need to draw on their reserves of pride and motivation to avoid a seventh straight test loss on Australian soil this week. If the tourists can retain the fighting spirit that has made the Adelaide and Brisbane tests anything but one-sided contests, however, they could record a victory of some significance at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG). Since they triumphed in Perth in January 2008, neither side has won a test match in the other’s country with Australia suffering 2-0, 2-0 and 4-0 defeats on the sub-continent and India losing all four tests on their 2011-12 tour. There have been signs too that Australia, for all the confidence that backto-back test victories will bring to any side, have a fragility to their batting order that India’s pace attack can exploit. Prolific opener David Warner has a bruised thumb that could hamper him if he is passed fit to play, veterans Shane Watson and Brad Haddin are in poor form, while injured all-rounder Mitch Marsh has been replaced by the uncapped Joe Burns. Quite how Australia will line up when the test starts in front of the traditional bumper crowd on Friday is matter of some conjecture with coach Darren Lehmann suggesting Burns could slot in anywhere in the top six. Against that instability, there is the sparkling form of stand-in skipper Steve Smith and the mercurial menace of paceman Mitchell Johnson, whose performances with bat and ball turned the Gabba test. Fast bowler Ryan Harris has recovered from a thigh strain and should return in place of left-arm quick Mitch Starc alongside Johnson and Josh Hazlewood, who took 568 in his first innings in test cricket. India look the more settled of the two sides, though, with the fast bowlers working as unit and taking wickets, while the top six batsmen have all got into the runs at some stage of the series. Just how long the unrest caused by opener Shikhar Dhawan’s decision not to bat on day four in Brisbane after injuring his arm in the nets continues to unsettle Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s dressing room remains to be seen. But if Dhoni, who has been criticised for appearing less than convinced of the importance of the longest form of the game, can lead his team to victory, he could make a considerable addition to his legacy as skipper. His predecessor Anil Kumble rated the 72-run victory at the WACA in 2008, when India were also 2-0 down in the series, the best of his 132-test career. —Reuters LONDON: Cricket confronted tragedy in 2014 with the death of Phillip Hughes after the Australia batsman was hit by a bouncer in a domestic first-class match. Several batsmen had previously been killed in similar incidents, albeit at lower levels of the game, and two days after Hughes’ death Israeli umpire Hillel Oscar died after a ball ricocheted off the stumps. But the fact Hughes, 25, had scored three Test hundreds and was wearing a helmet, although the ball hit him on an unprotected area of the skull, contributed to a huge sense of shock throughout the cricket world. Australia captain Michael Clarke, in a moving eulogy at Hughes’ funeral, recalled walking out to the pitch at the Sydney Cricket Groundwhere his friend died-for the first time following his former team-mate’s passing. “I swear he was with me... Telling me we just needed to dig in,” Clarke said, before adding: “We must play on.” Following a short delay to Australia’s ongoing Test series at home to India, that is what happened with no great reduction in bouncer use. Indeed New South Wales quick Sean Abbott, who received much sympathy after delivering the ball that killed Hughes, bowled a bouncer in his first over following the fatal accident on his way to a remarkable haul of six for 14 against Queensland at the SCG. Clarke made a hundred in the first Test win over India but was sidelined soon afterwards with a career-threatening hamstring injury. That fast bowling is central to much cricket success was emphasised when Australia’s Mitchell Johnson won the International Cricket Council player of the year award. Left-arm quick Johnson led Australia’s attack during a 5-0 Ashes sweep of England in 2013/14 and then starred in a 2-1 series win over South Africa while collecting 59 Test wickets from August 2013 to September 2014. The end of the South Africa-Australia series saw the retirement of Proteas captain Graeme Smith. Thrust into the leadership aged just 22, Smith captained in a world record 109 Tests, while overseeing notable series wins in both Australia and England as well as scoring more than 9,000 Test runs, including 27 hundreds. That the non-white Hashim Amla, a practising Muslim, became Smith’s successor as South Africa captain was significant in a country still grappling with post-apartheid ‘transformation’. The ongoing problem of cricket corruption was highlighted when former New Zealand batsman Lou Vincent was banned for life in July after being found guilty of matchfixing in English one-day county matches. Meanwhile Narayanaswami Srinivasan headed up the ICC, controversially revamped in favour of the ‘Big Three’ of India, Australia and England, despite India’s Supreme Court suspending him as president of the Indian board following corruption allegations stem- COLOMBO: In this file picture taken on September 19, 2011, Australian batsman Phillip Hughes raises his bat and helmet in celebration after scoring a century (100 runs) during the fourth day of the third and final Test match against Sri Lanka. —AFP ming from last year’s Indian Premier League. However, Srinivasan was exonerated of match-fixing by the court in November. West Indies, long plagued by poor results, suffered a new low when a players’ revolt over pay saw October’s tour of India cut short, a move that risked financial ruin for Caribbean cricket. On the field, captain Brendon McCullum became the first New Zealand batsman to score a Test triple hundred with 302 against India in Wellington in February. Pakistan skipper Misbah-ul-Haq defied a reputation for slow scoring and his 40 years of age with a 56-ball century against Australia in Abu Dhabi in November that equalled West Indies great Vivian Richards’ record for the fastest Test hundred. Misbah’s innings helped seal a 2-0 series win, Pakistan’s first over Australia in 20 years. This victory was all the more creditable as Pakistan, who have not played a major match on their own soil since an armed attack on Sri Lanka’s team bus in Lahore in 2009, were without star spinner Saeed Ajmal, one of several bowlers suspended in 2014 as the ICC cracked down on illegal actions. Rohit Sharma’s 264 against Sri Lanka in Kolkata last month obliterated compatriot Virender Sehwag’s 219 as thd highest individual one-day international score. Sharma’s 173-ball innings featured 33 fours and nine sixes. However, this could not disguise the one-day world champions ongoing poor Test record away from home, with India losing series in both New Zealand and England. Victory over India was a rare highlight for England, who spent much of 2014 dealing with the fall-out from batsman Kevin Pietersen’s sacking and the bitter recriminations in his autobiography. Amid the controversy, England captain Alastair Cook ended the year having failed to score an international century in his last 59 attempts spanning both Tests and one-dayers. Sri Lanka, however, enjoyed a successful 2014 that included winning both the World Twenty20 and their first Test series in England as they began a long farewell to batting stars Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene set to culminate at next year’s World Cup in Australia and New Zealand. Zimbabwe upset the odds in Harare in August when they beat Australia in a one-day international, just their second victory in meetings between the countries since the Africans’ equally stunning success in the inaugural clash at the 1983 World Cup in England. But come the year’s end, Zimbabwe had been whitewashed in both Test and one-day series away to fellow minnows Bangladesh, with home left-arm spinner Taijul Islam becoming the first cricketer to claim a hat-trick on his ODI debut. —AFP India call up Patel to replace injured Jadeja NEW DELHI: Rookie all-rounder Akshar Patel will replace the injured Ravindra Jadeja in India’s squad for the remaining two Test matches in Australia, the Indian cricket board announced yesterday. Patel, who turns 21 in January, is a left-arm spinner and useful lefthand batsman like Jadeja. He has taken 14 wickets in nine one-day internationals, but has yet to play a Test. Jadeja has a shoulder injury and will return home to undergo a rehabilitation programme, the board said in a statement. It remained unclear if Jadeja, who did not play in the first two Tests, will be available for the World Cup that opens in Australia and New Zealand on February 14. Australia lead the four-Test series 2-0. The third Test starts in Melbourne on December 26 and the fourth will be played in Sydney from January 6. India are also due to take part in a triangular oneday series with Australia and England ahead of the World Cup. Meanwhile, captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni said India have the pace threat and aggression to win Tests away from home and it’s just a matter of time before results go their way. The Indians lost by four wickets to Australia in Saturday’s second Test in Brisbane after going down all guns blazing by 48 runs chas- ing 364 in the opening Adelaide Test. While India have been in contention in both Tests, the Australians have won the key moments to turn around the contests. The Brisbane loss was India’s fifth straight away defeat and their 15th in the last 18, with only one win. India were thumped 3-1 in England this year and trail Australia 2-0 in the four-match Border-Gavaskar series, but Dhoni is undeterred. “There’s plenty of areas we’re showing improvement, but we’re still not crossing the line,” Dhoni said. “We need to give it a bit more time. Once they start crossing that line, once they harness that aggression in the right channel you’ll see plenty of good results from this side.” Dhoni, lining up for his 90th Test match as a player and 60th as captain in the third Test in Melbourne on Boxing Day, said it is important for India to compete against the Australians in what is the toughest tour for overseas teams. “The exciting thing is we have competed. What’s really important is it can turn at any point of time,” he said. “The competition has been good, though the results have not been in our favor. “It’s exciting to see the youngsters putting in a fight. It’s just a matter of time. It will turn out to be a very consistent side.” Dhoni said it was important for his team to fight it out to the end of their Test matches, irrespective of their situation in the contest. “It’s important that you fight it out with the opposition and then whatever the result is, you accept it,” he said. “At the same time, you don’t throw in the towel. It was quite good to see our fast bowlers still running in, giving 100 percent. “We have seen the execution power of our fast bowlers has increased. “Ishant Sharma is the leader of the pack. He is someone who can consistently now bowl in one area. “Varun Aaron is still raw. He does go for runs, but it’s exciting to see somebody from India bowling at a good pace and using the bouncer to get the opposition out. “We were able to get a few wickets in Australia’s second innings and that helps the youngsters learn that to get another 50, 60, 70 runs it can really matter. Especially, when it comes to Australia and a fifth-day wicket.” India have not beaten Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in 33 years and have lost their last five Tests there by big margins. —AFP South Africa call up new boy Rossouw JOHANNESBURG: Left-handed batsman Rilee Rossouw was named on Sunday to replace injured wicketkeeper-batsman Quinton de Kock in South Africa’s squad for the remaining two Test matches against the West Indies. De Kock was ruled out of the Tests and limited overs matches of the West Indian tour after tearing ankle ligaments during the first Test at Centurion, which South Africa won by an innings and 220 runs on Saturday. Rossouw, 25, made his one-day international debut earlier this year and has been a prolific scorer for the Knights franchise and South Africa A. He hit 231 for South Africa A against Australia A in Townsville in August, sharing a partnership of 343 with Temba Bavuma (162), who is also in the Test squad. Bavuma was on the field throughout both West Indian innings in Centurion following De Kock’s injury. The selection of Rossouw means that AB de Villiers, who took over as wicketkeeper in Centurion, will keep the gloves for the remaining Tests, starting in Port Elizabeth on December 26 and Cape Town on January 2. Meanwhile, Windward Islands left-arm seamer Kenroy Peters will replace fast bowler Kemar Roach in the West Indies squad. Roach suffered an ankle injury while bowling in the first Test. Peters, 32, was the leading wicket-taker in the West Indian domestic four-day competition in 2013/14. Peters will be the second replacement in the touring squad. It was announced on Saturday that Narsingh Deonarine will replace injured batsman Assad Fudadin. —AFP LAHORE: This combination photograph shows Pakistani spinner Saeed Ajmal delivering a ball during the One Day match with the visiting Kenyan team at the Gaddafi Cricket stadium. Ace Pakistan spinner Saeed Ajmal on December 19 said he is confident of a comeback at international level after bowling for the first time with a remodelled action, three months after his suspension.—AFP TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 S P ORTS Cowboys defeat Colts, Seahawks win ARLINGTON: Dallas ended a four-year playoff drought Sunday in a dominating 42-7 victory over the Indianapolis Colts, with Tony Romo throwing four touchdown passes and breaking Troy Aikman’s franchise record for yards passing. The Cowboys (11-4) emphatically ended a three-game home losing streak, scoring touchdowns on their first four possessions. Dallas had an opening for its first NFC East title and postseason berth since 2009, and first under coach Jason Garrett, because of Philadelphia’s 27-24 loss at Washington on Saturday. The Eagles were eliminated with the Cowboys’ win. The Colts (10-5) didn’t have much to play for with the AFC South title secured, and looked like it while barely avoiding their first shutout loss in 21 years. The Cowboys had already ended their three-year rut of 8-8 finishes that included losses in finales that kept them out of the playoffs. But they had to keep winning to make sure they got in. NFL rushing leader DeMarco Murray played with a broken left hand, but the Cowboys didn’t need much from him. He finished with 58 yards, with a 1-yard score. 35, CARDINALS 6 Russell Wilson threw for two touchdowns and ran for another, Seattle set a franchise record with 596 yards of offense and the streaking Seahawks closed in on another NFC West title. Seattle (11-4) moved into a tie with Arizona (11-4) for first in the NFC West and the Seahawks hold the tiebreaker by virtue of two wins over the Cardinals. Both already have clinched playoff berths. Wilson had the longest run of his career (55 yards) and matched the longest pass of his career (80) in the Seahawks’ fifth straight victory. Marshawn Lynch sat out the first quarter with what the team called an “upset stomach,” then came in to score on a 6-yard run in the second quarter and a spectacular, multiple tackle -breaking 79-yarder in Seattle’s 21-point fourth quarter. STEELERS 20, CHIEFS 12 Ben Roethlisberger passed for 220 yards and a touchdown, Le’Veon Bell added a score and the Steelers locked up a postseason berth. Pittsburgh (10-5) faces Cincinnati next week for the AFC North title. Either way, the Steelers will be playing January football for the first time since Tim Tebow and Denver stunned the defending AFC champions in the wild-card round three years ago. Antonio Brown caught seven passes and a touchdown for Pittsburgh, which has won seven of nine. Kansas City’s Alex Smith passed for a season-high 311 yards but was sacked six times. The Chiefs (8-7) have lost four of five and need to beat San Diego next Sunday and receive plenty of help to make it back to the playoffs for a second straight year under coach Andy Reid. FALCONS 30, SAINTS 14 Julio Jones returned from a hip injury to catch seven passes for 107 yards, and the Falcons remained in playoff contention. Matt Ryan completed 30 of 40 passed for 322 yards and a touchdown, and Devonta Freeman ran for a 31-yard score for Atlanta (6-9), which can win the NFC South by beating Carolina next week. The Saints (69), who committed three turnovers in the fourth quarter, lost their fifth straight at home and were eliminated. Jimmy Graham fumbled inside the Atlanta 1-yard line early in the fourth quarter. The Saints had a chance to drive for a winning score inside the final three minutes, but Robert McClain’s interception of Drew Brees in Saints territory set up a field goal, and Osi Umenyiora returned Brees’ fumble for an 86-yard TD as time expired. PANTHERS 17, BROWNS 13 Cam Newton threw for one touchdown and ran for another as Carolina (6-81) took over sole possession of first place in the NFC South. The victory sets up the winnertake-all showdown next Sunday at Atlanta. The winner will join the 2010 Seattle Seahawks as the only teams in NFL history to reach the postseason in a non-strikeshortened season with a losing record. Newton threw for 201 yards and ran for 63 yards just 12 days after the quarterback suffered two fractures in his lower back following an automobile accident. Jonathan Stewart ran for 122 yards and caught a 9yard touchdown pass from Newton. Johnny Manziel made his second NFL start for Cleveland (7-8) but left with 1:49 remaining in the first half with a hamstring injury and did not return. PACKERS 20, BUCCANEERS 3 Aaron Rodgers threw for 318 yards and one touchdown to help the Packers clinch a wild- card playoff ber th. Eddie Lac y scored on a 44-yard run, Jordy Nelson caught a 1-yard TD pass in the fourth quarter and had nine receptions for 113 yards, while Randall Cobb finished with 11 catches for 131 yards. A 21-13 loss to Buffalo a week ago cost Green Bay (11-4) sole possession of first place in the division. I t also hur t its chances for earning home-field advantage throughout the NFC playoffs. Green Bay closes the regular season at home against Detroit, and a victory will give the Packers another NFC North crown. The Bucs (2-13) have lost five straight and remain in contention for the first overall pick in the 2015 draft. ST. LOUIS: Rams wide receiver Kenny Britt (left) catches an 8-yard pass as New York Giants cornerback Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie defends during the second half of an NFL football game. —AP PATRIOTS 17, JETS 16 Jonas Gray scored the go-ahead touchdown on a 1-yard run early in the fourth quarter after the Patriots intercepted Geno Smith, and New England clinched a firstround playoff bye. Tom Brady threw a 3-yard TD pass to Rob Gronkowski for the Patriots (12-3), who could earn home-field advantage throughout the AFC playoffs if Denver loses at Cincinnati on Monday night. With the Jets (3-12) leading 13-10 late in the third quarter, Smith’s pass for Jace Amaro hung in the air for an easy interception by Jamie Collins - and led to Gray’s score minutes later. Nick Folk’s 52-yard field goal attempt could have given New York a lead with just over five minutes left, but it appeared to be partially blocked and fell short. Brady and the Patriots then ran out the clock. to make it 16-0 in the second quarter. RAIDERS 26, BILLS 24 Derek Carr threw two touchdown passes and Sebastian Janikowski kicked four field goals to help the Raiders knock the Bills from playoff contention. The Bills (8-7) needed to win their final two games and get some help to end the NFL’s longest active playoff drought at 14 seasons. But they failed at the easiest part, beating the lowly Raiders (3-12), and will miss the playoffs for a 15th straight season. Oakland has the second-longest active postseason drought at 12 years but has done a good job of playing spoiler in recent weeks, beating Kansas City, San Francisco and Buffalo the past five weeks. DOLPHINS 37, VIKINGS 35 Dolphins owner Stephen Ross, buoyed take the lead, but trailed again after giving up 15 points in an 11-second span in the fourth quarter. Philbin’s job had been considered in jeopardy because the Dolphins will miss the playoffs for the sixth year in a row. But they’re 8-7 and have a shot at a winning season if not the playoffs.Minnesota fell to 6-9. GIANTS 37, RAMS 27 Odell Beckham Jr. caught two touchdown passes and rolled up 148 yards receiving against a defense that hadn’t allowed a TD in three straight games. Beckham set a franchise rookie record with his 10th and 11th TD catches, shattered another rookie mark for receptions and topped 1,000 yards while shrugging off a pair of late hits in the second quarter. The second led to a brawl and three ejections, none of them to starters. LIONS 20, BEARS 14 Joique Bell scored the go-ahead touchdown on a sweet run in the fourth quarter, and Ndamukong Suh had two sacks. Calvin Johnson added six catches for 103 yards for Detroit (11-4), which came away with a narrow victory over a struggling team after locking up its second trip to the postseason in 15 years. The Bears (5-10) benched quarterback Jay Cutler this week in favor of the undistinguished Clausen. The Lions secured a playoff spot with Philadelphia’s loss to Washington on Saturday. They were hoping to lock up their first division championship since 1993. But because the Packers beat Tampa Bay, the NFC North race will come down to next week’s game at Green Bay. Matthew Stafford overcame two interceptions and completed 22 of 39 passes for 243 yards. He hit the 4,000-yard mark for the fourth straight year. TEXANS 25, RAVENS 13 Running back Arian Foster threw a touchdown pass, Randy Bullock made a franchise -record six field goals and Houston’s defense dominated to keep slim playoff hopes alive. The Ravens (9-6) now need some help next week to get into the postseason after Joe Flacco threw a season-high three interceptions and the offense struggled all day. Houston (8-7) remains in the hunt with the victory, but needs several teams to lose next week. With three quarterbacks hurt, the Texans started Case Keenum, who got his first win in nine NFL starts. Foster ran for 96 yards. But his highlight came when he took a pitch from Keenum and, with a defender in his face, threw a 5yard touchdown pass to C.J. Fiedorowicz OAKLAND: Buffalo Bills running back Marcus Thigpen (11) is tackled by Oakland Raiders’ Chance Casey (top) over linebacker Spencer Hadley during the second quarter of an NFL football game. —AP by a thrilling comeback win, said Joe Philbin will return as coach next season. Ross made his announcement in the locker room shortly after the Dolphins won on a safety. Rookie Terrence Fede blocked a punt for a safety with 41 seconds left, and Ryan Tannehill threw four touchdown passes. The Dolphins overcame a 14-0 deficit to The Giants (6-9) had a season-best 514 yards in total offense and have won three in a row heading into their finale at home against the Eagles. They had lost seven straight before the current streak started. Kenny Britt made nine catches for 103 yards and Tre Mason had 13 carries for 76 yards and a score for the Rams (6-9). —AP NFL results/standings Carolina 17, Cleveland 13; Detroit 20, Chicago 14; Houston 25, Baltimore 13; Miami 37, Minnesota 35; Atlanta 30, New Orleans 14; New England 17, NY Jets 16; Pittsburgh 20, Kansas City 12; Green Bay 20, Tampa Bay 3; NY Giants 37, St. Louis 27; Dallas 42, Indianapolis 7; Oakland 26, Buffalo 24; Seattle 35, Arizona 6. New England Miami Buffalo NY Jets Cincinnati Pittsburgh Baltimore Cleveland Indianapolis Houston Jacksonville Tennessee OAKLAND: Raiders cornerback Charles Woodson (24) tackles Buffalo Bills wide receiver Sammy Watkins (14) during the fourth quarter of an NFL football game. —AP Denver San Diego Kansas City Oakland American Football Conference AFC East W L T OTL PF 12 3 0 0 459 8 7 0 0 364 8 7 0 0 326 3 12 0 1 246 AFC North 9 4 1 0 311 10 5 0 0 409 9 6 0 0 389 7 8 0 0 289 AFC South 10 5 0 0 431 8 7 0 1 349 3 12 0 0 232 2 13 0 0 244 AFC West 11 3 0 1 407 9 6 0 0 341 8 7 0 0 334 3 12 0 0 239 PA 296 336 280 377 PCT .800 .533 .533 .200 289 351 292 317 .679 .667 .600 .467 359 290 389 411 .667 .533 .200 .133 Carolina Atlanta New Orleans Tampa Bay 303 329 274 405 .786 .600 .533 .200 Seattle Arizona San Francisco St. Louis Dallas Philadelphia NY Giants Washington Detroit Green Bay Minnesota Chicago National Football Conference NFC East 11 4 0 1 423 9 6 0 0 440 6 9 0 0 354 4 11 0 0 284 NFC North 11 4 0 0 301 11 4 0 0 456 6 9 0 0 312 5 10 0 1 310 NFC South 6 8 1 0 305 6 9 0 0 378 6 9 0 2 378 2 13 0 2 257 NFC West 11 4 0 0 374 11 4 0 0 293 7 8 0 1 286 6 9 0 0 318 335 374 366 394 .733 .600 .400 .267 252 328 334 429 .733 .733 .400 .333 371 383 404 387 .433 .400 .400 .133 248 279 323 334 .733 .733 .467 .400 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 S P ORTS Club World Cup still a hit outside Europe MARRAKECH: Greeted with overwhelming indifference in Europe, the Club World Cup is still seen as the pinnacle of club football elsewhere as thousands of San Lorenzo fans demonstrated this week. An estimated 9,000 fans made the tortuous and costly trip from Buenos Aires to Marrakech to witness what they believed was the most important week in their club’s history. Goalkeeper Sebastian Torrico said before Saturday ’s final against Real Madrid, won 2-0 by the European champions, that it would be “the most important game of my life” and coach Edgardo Bauza expressed similar sentiments. “It’s the match all the players want to play. This is the most important game at club level,” he said. “At my age this is like touching heaven,” added 34-year-old team captain Juan Mercier. “I’ve played a lot of second division football and reached the top flight at a late age, so I never thought I’d ever be in a situation like this, about to take on Real Madrid.” San Lorenzo had become almost obsessed by the tournament since winning the South American Libertadores Cup five months ago. Until the 1990s, the South American champions used to compete on equal terms with their European counterparts and led by 13 titles to 12 when the old Intercontinental Cup was scrapped in 2004. But Europe leads by seven wins to three under the new format, reflecting the huge gulf which has been caused by the continued exodus of top players worldwide towards Europe. The December timing of the tournament also does not help. HUGE PULL While the European sides reinforce their teams in the six months between winning the Champions League and taking part in the club cup, the opposite happens with teams from the rest of the world where winning a title means the best players get sold. Asian champions Western Sydney Wanderers have yet to win a league game this season and Moghreb Tetouan, who qualified as champions of the host nation, are 10th in the Moroccan league and had not won in five games going into the tournament. San Lorenzo, meanwhile ambled through the 19-match campaign in the Argentine Inicial tournament, winning eight times to finish eighth. Nevertheless, the chance to pit themselves against teams such as Real Madrid remains a huge pull for the likes of San Lorenzo and their mainly journeyman players. Predictably, Real Madrid sailed through their two matches without conceding a goal, beating Cruz Azul 4-0 and San Lorenzo 2-0, reinforcing the concept that the tournament is uncompetitive. In fact, Real probably encountered more resistance in those two games than they would in a typical La Liga game or Champions League group stage tie. San Lorenzo coach Edgardo Bauza pointed out that it is not just teams from other continents that succumb to Real’s array of cherry-picked, world class players as the Spaniards had won their previous 20 games going into the tournament. Bauza said there is also a huge gap between the elite group of European teams, such as Real, Barcelona and Bayern Munich, and the rest of their own continent. “The big difference is between us and the four or five best teams in the world, not all the European teams,” he said. “If you take out the top four or five, we could play a match on equal terms against almost any European opposition.” The semi-professionals of Auckland City were another team who had no complaints about the tournament after the New Zealanders surpassed all expectations and finished third after wins over Moghreb Tetouan, ES Setif and Cruz Azul. “It’s a luxury to come to a tournament like this and play against high level team,” said coach Ramon Tribulietx. —Reuters FRANCE: Elisabeth Goergl, of Austria, celebrates at the finish area after winning an alpine ski women’s World Cup Super-G in Val díIsere. —AP Goergl wins Val d’Isere super-G FRANCE: Elisabeth Goergl beat fellow Austrian Anna Fenninger in the women’s World Cup super-G at Val d’Isere on Sunday as Lindsey Vonn crashed out. Vonn was seeking to follow up Saturday’s downhill win in the French Alps which put her to within one of Annemarie Moser-Proell’s all-time World Cup record of 62. But as the American snow queen’s record-equalling bid failed to take off Goergl was celebrating a tight five hundredths of a second win over Olympic champion Fenninger. The 33-year-old slalom and super-G world champion in 2011, who had come in second to Vonn in the downhill 24 hours earlier, clocked a time of 1min 25.42 seconds. This was her seventh World Cup win and she nailed it with a lightning final section at more than 106kph. “My coaches inspected the slope and gave me all the information on the complicated bits of the circuit,” said Goergl. “I felt I was skiing fast but before I arrived at the bottom of the run I didn’t think it was going to be enough to win.” Slovenia’s Tina Maze finished in third, and following Saturday’s fourth place, she retained control of the overall World Cup standings. For defending World Cup champion Fenninger this was a bolder performance than her 11th place in the downhill. She said: “I’m thrilled to be back in business after some tricky races. “It was far from easy today, there were lots of changes in rhythm to handle, very fast sections and others that were slower. “Without one little mistake I could have posted the best time.” Fenninger started well before her speed dropped off a little on a demanding Oreiller Killy slope which proved the measure of a number of competitors, including Vonn. Any fears that this latest fall may have had damaging repercussions following the serious in knee injury she suffered in a high speed crash in 2013 were unfounded. “I was a little tired,” reported Vonn.”I hurt my elbow when I fell, but my knee is fine.” Another favorite, Switzerland’s defending World Cup super-G titleholder. Lara Gut, posted a time of 1min 25.65 with her run marred by a mistake as she approached the finish. —AFP RUSSIA: In this Feb. 8, 2014, file photo, United States’ Sage Kotsenburg takes a jump during the men’s snowboard slopestyle final at the Winter Olympics in Krasnaya Polyana. —AP 2014 provides plenty of eye candy for sports fans NEW YORK: Some of them won the game, some of them saved the game and others made for some very impressive eye candy. Odell Beckham Jr., James Rodriguez, Richard Sherman and Aaron Harrison were among those who put their distinctive stamp on sports in 2014 with shots, catches and plays that nearly broke the Internet and led off all the highlight shows. A quick review of some of the best plays of the year: ODELL’S OPUS: This one blew up almost within minutes of it happening. Giants receiver Odell Beckham Jr., who regularly practices the one-handed grab, made the catch of the year against the Cowboys. Quarterback Eli Manning threw a high pass down the right sideline and Beckham freed himself after tangling feet and arms with defensive back Brandon Carr. Beckham reached his right hand behind his head, grabbed the ball and cradled it into his stomach while falling to his back in the front corner of the end zone, as the yellow flag flew for the pass-interference call against Carr. Through it all, Beckham’s left hand never touched the ball. TIP AND TALK: Before The Rant, there was The Tip. Richard Sherman’s game-saving swataway from Michael Crabtree in the NFC championship game wrapped up Seattle’s trip to the Super Bowl and came only moments before his rant in a postgame interview with Erin Andrews that drew more attention that his play on the field. With the Seahawks protecting a six-point lead with 32 seconds left and the Niners on their 18, Sherman got his bearings, left his feet, arched his left hand up and not only swatted Colin Kaepernick’s pass away from Crabtree, but directed it to teammate Malcolm Smith, who is officially credited with the interception that sealed the game. THREES, PLEASE: It only looked like a replay. In back-to-back games, Kentucky freshman Aaron Harrison spotted up from the behind the upper-left part of the 3-point arc and drained a shot to win the game. The first one sent Harrison, his twin brother Andrew and the rest of Kentucky’s fabulous freshmen to the Final Four. The second one provided the winning points against Wisconsin in the national semifinals. In the Sweet 16 game against Louisville, Harrison also made a key 3 from the left corner the shot that gave Kentucky the lead for good with 39 seconds left in a 74-69 win. “He’s not afraid to miss,” said his coach, John Calipari, in explaining why he called the play for Harrison. And when the chips were down, Harrison didn’t. THE BEAUTIFUL SHOT: The prettiest goal at the World Cup? No question, it was scored by Colombia’s James Rodriguez. About midway through the first half of the round-of-16 game against Uruguay, Rodriguez stood with his back to the goal a few steps outside the penalty area. He received the ball, chested it to himself, then, took three baby steps to turn 90 degrees before kicking the ball out of midair, left-footed, for a goal that grazed the underside of the crossbar. And then, as Jeremy Wilson of The Telegraph put it, “An initial moment of stunned silence soon gave way to audible gasps from both sets of supporters inside the Maracana.” NOW, THAT’S A BACKHAND: Pro tennis players are so athletic, the between-the-legs shots barely register anymore. But how about a back- hand while sitting down? Eugenie Bouchard pulled it off at a clay court tournament in Estoril, losing her footing and falling flat on her back, but still getting the next shot back after her opponent hit it right back to her. She scrambled to her feet and ended up winning the point. BEST CATCH: The AL MVP overran a screaming line drive to center field by Kendrys Morales. No problem. He stopped. Jumped as high as he could, then reached behind his head for a onehanded, no-look grab. “BACK 1620 JAPAN AIR:” American snowboarder Sage Kotsenburg got points for degree of difficulty and originality, winning the first Olympic gold medal in slopestyle with a trick he had never tried before. On a sparkling day in the Russian Caucasus, he closed his run by helicoptering off the final jump of the course, grabbing his board and flexing it behind his back while spinning for 41/2 revolutions. Stuck the landing. Then, in true snowboarder fashion, admitted he had never really, well, practiced the trick before. “Never ever tried it in my life,” he said. A LATE ENTRY: This, from Dec. 21: Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch started left, took a straight, diagonal line to his right, busted through two tacklers on the sideline, then outran the rest of the Cardinals defense to the end zone for a 79-yard touchdown. “One of the greatest plays I’ve ever seen, right there,” said NBC’s Cris Collinsworth. Lynch, no fan of the media, was asked a couple of times about the run. His stock answer: “Thank you for asking.” Yes, sometimes the pictures speak louder than words. —AP Hirscher overtakes Klammer ITALY: Austria’s triple overall World Cup champion Marcel Hirscher claimed Sunday’s giant slalom in Alta Badia to overtake his legendary compatriot Franz Klammer in number of World Cup wins. This fourth success of the season took Hirscher’s tally to 27, one clear of Klammer, the former Olympic champion who dominated the downhill discipline in the 1970s. “I may have beaten Klammer’s total but he only had downhills to compete in, and so, for the time being, that doesn’t interest me, in a few years perhaps,” he said. Hirscher still has some way to go to threaten Swedish alpine ski great Ingemar Stenmark’s record of 86 World Cup titles in a 16-season career from 1974 to 1989. Hirscher posted a time of 2min 30.17sec to beat American Ted Ligety, who came in 1.45s adrift, with France’s Thomas Fanara (1:48) completing the podium. The inform 25-year-old was adding this to his wins in the giant slaloms in Solden and Are, the Swedish resort where he also took this month’s slalom. Norway’s speed specialist Kjetil Jansrud remains in control of the overall World Cup standings but Hirscher will have the chance to overtake him in late yesterday’s slalom under the floodlit Madonna di Campillo slope. “This is my best ever start to a World Cup season,” commented Hirscher. “But I still have Kjetil in front of me. He skies incredibly well in speed races, he never makes a mistake.” Olympic champion Ligety complained of a poor first leg. “I was very unhappy with it, the second was more convincing, with more spaces between gates and more speed,” the 30-year-old said. He added that his left hand continued to give him problems - last month he underwent surgery after breaking a bone in his wrist in a training fall.—AFP Benfica scrape through LISBON: Coach Jorge Jesus said impatient Benfica fans were making his players nervous after the leaders struggled to a 1-0 win over bottom club Gil Vicente on Sunday. Nicolas Gaitan scored the only goal on the half hour, firing into an empty net after Maxi Pereira’s shot hit the post, to keep Benfica six points clear of Porto at the top of the Primeira Liga after 14 matches. Pereira appeared to be offside as he ran on to Ola John’s pass before chipping the ball over goalkeeper Adriano Facchini. The supporters clearly expected more from Benfica as they toiled against the only team yet to win a league game this season. “The fans made the team nervous,” Jesus told Benfica TV. “They usually help the team when we are playing badly but, on the contrary, that did not happen today. “We need their support to continue in first place and reach our big target which is to win the title for a second season in a row.” Gil Vicente finished with 10 men after Diogo Viana was sent off in stoppage time. Porto beat Vitoria de Setubal 4-0 on Friday, making them the only team to score more than one goal in the top flight this weekend. —Reuters ITALY: Austria’s Marcel Hirscher (center) the winner, is flanked by Ted Ligety (left) of the United States (second placed) and third placed Thomas Fanara, of France, after an alpine ski, men’s World Cup giant slalom race. —AP Grizzlies fall, Kings march 16 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 Pathans find solace in Afridi’s Pakistan 17 Cowboys defeat Colts, Seahawks win Page 18 Lazio go third as Inter save Mancini blushes SPAIN: Athletic Bilbao’s Oscar de Marcos (right) duels for the ball with Atletico de Madrid’s Arda Turan during their La Liga soccer match. — AP Atletico hammer Bilbao MADRID: France international Antoine Griezmann scored a hat-trick as Atletico Madrid produced a stunning second-half display to hammer Athletic Bilbao 4-1 away on Sunday and move to within four points of La Liga leaders Real Madrid. The Spanish champions looked on course for back-to-back league defeats for the first time since April 2012 when Mikel Rico gave Athletic a deserved halftime lead. But Griezmann levelled straight from the kick-off at the start of the second period and completed his hat-trick after Raul Garcia had put the visitors ahead from the penalty spot. Victory moves Atletico back to within three points of Barcelona, who were 5-0 winners over Cordoba on Saturday, in second. However, Real have a game in hand on their two main title rivals as they won their fourth trophy of the year in the Club World Cup final against Argentine side San Lorenzo in Morocco on Saturday. “This was my best match since I’ve been here. I need to keep on this path and keep working,” Griezmann said. At the new San Mames both sides were missing a number of key players with Aymeric Laporte and Ander Iturraspe banned for the hosts, while Atletico were without the suspended duo of Koke and Mario Mandzukic, as well as Miranda through injury. It was the Basque outfit who settled much quicker, and went ahead after 17 minutes when Markel Susaeta’s free-kick was expertly nodded into the far corner by the unmarked Rico. Atletico failed to create anything of note in the opening 45 minutes, and could have been even further behind at the break had Aritz Aduriz decided to shoot when he was released clear on goal by Susaeta rather than trying to turn inside before being crowded out. However, the champions emerged a different side after an inspired half-time pep talk from Diego Simeone and equalised straight from the kick-off as former Real Sociedad winger Griezmann came back to haunt his old Basque rivals once more with a precise header from Juanfran’s cross. — AFP MILAN: A first-half brace from Felipe Anderson was enough to secure third place for Lazio in Serie A prior to the festive break on Sunday in a hard-fought 2-2 draw away to Inter. Inter only claimed their maiden win under Roberto Mancini, their first in six games, last week but had the worst possible start at the San Siro where Anderson hit the first of his goals after just two minutes. Anderson, who broke his Serie A duck last week, beat Samir Handanovic with a fine angled strike after collecting Stefan Radu’s assist in the box. The Brazilian almost had his brace moments later when he sprung the offside trap to fire over but made amends minutes before half-time after collecting on the halfway line and carrying the ball all the way before beating Handanovic at the keeper’s near post. Inter emerged doubly determined after the break and after Mateo Kovacic and Mauro Icardi tested Federico Marchetti in the Lazio goal it was the former who reduced arrears in spectacular fashion. Kovacic was just outside the box when a headed clearance fell kindly for the Croatian, who struck on the volley to see his shot sting the palms of a flailing Marchetti before hitting the back of the net. Mancini replaced Colombian Fredy Guarin with Federico Bonazzoli and two minutes later the highly-rated Inter youth player had a hand in Inter’s 80th minute leveller. Bonazzoli’s free kick found the head of Danilo D’Ambrosio in the box and after the ball rolled into the path of Rodrigo Palacio the Argentinian blasted past Marchetti from close range. The draw left Inter in 11th place at 18 points adrift of leaders and champions Juventus, four behind city rivals Milan and six behind Lazio in the third and final Champions League qualifying spot. But Mancini warned he will expect improvements when Inter resume after the festive break. “We can’t become a team like Barcelona or Bayern in the space of a month. We’re having a few difficulties but we need to get over them,” ITALY: Inter Milan’s Mateo Kovacic (left) is tackled by Lazio’s Miroslav Klose during a Serie A soccer match at the San Siro stadium. — AP said Mancini. “Let’s hope we can improve over our coming games.” Lazio coach Stefano Pioli admitted Kovacic’s goal had changed the prospects for his side. “Teams like Inter have a certain kind of quality and Kovacic’s goal set them up well for the rest of the game,” said Pioli, who admitted third place was a firm objective. “It’s early yet but we’re doing very well. Now we have a chance to recharge our batteries for January which will be crucial for us. But the lads have shown they are up to the job.” Earlier, Italy striker Manolo Gabbiadini confirmed he could quit Sampdoria in the January transfer window after heading a late equaliser to secure a share of the spoils in a 2-2 home draw with Udinese. Gabbiadini has been linked with a move to Napoli and the highly-rated 23-year-old told Sky Sport after the game: “I don’t know if this will be my last goal in a Sampdoria shirt, I always honour the shirt that I’m wearing.” Sampdoria are 12 points behind Juventus, who will face Napoli in the Italian Super Cup final in Doha on Monday with a chance for a double Christmas celebration after Roma were held to a scoreless draw at home to Milan on Saturday. Alberto Paloschi struck late to secure the points as Chievo beat Verona 1-0 in the city derby to give them some breathing space in the battle for relegation. Torino had defender Kamil Glik to thank for a brace of goals in a precious 2-1 home win over Genoa which secured just their fourth win of the campaign. — AFP Business Oil prices likely to rebound in 2015 H1: Poll Page 22 US existing home sales hit 6-month low, inventories low TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 Page 25 The new AMG 4.0-litre V8 biturbo engine Kalyan Jewellers invests KD7 million in Kuwait Page 26 Page 23 MOSCOW: Russia’s Communist Party supporters dressed as white bears, symbol of pro-President party United Russia, saw a model of a one Russian ruble coin during a rally against ruble fall in exchange in front of the headquarters of the government in central Moscow yesterday. — AFP Oil markets face uncertain future OPEC targets competitors after game-changing move ABU DHABI: The determination of powerful Gulf OPEC members to stifle competition from new oil producers has left the global energy market reeling and sparked unprecedented uncertainty, officials and experts say. Gathered in Abu Dhabi for a key conference, senior energy officials from Arab Gulf nations insisted they will not cut production despite the freefall in oil prices. A supply glut, lower demand and the stronger US dollar have all contributed to pushing down oil prices, which have dropped nearly 50 percent since June to around $60 a barrel. Experts say there is little doubt that OPEC is looking to drive new producers with higher costs-in particular North American shale venturesout of the market. And how long the effort will continue is anyone’s guess. “We have to wait and see if tight (shale) oil can continue” after the sharp fall in oil prices, Saudi Oil Minister Ali Al-Naimi, whose country pumps a third of OPEC’s 30 million barrels per day output, told a conference session. “Things could need one year, two years or three. We don’t know what will happen in the future. What is certain however is that high-efficiency producers will rule the market in the future,” the Saudi minister said. OPEC’s conventional producers, for decades part of an oil alliance that has dominated the global energy trade, have been feeling the pressure from the emergence of shale oil. Technological innovations have unlocked shale resources in North America and raised daily US oil output by more than 40 percent since 2006, but at a production cost which can be three or four times that of extracting Middle Eastern oil. For years OPEC has helped control oil prices by increasing or cutting production, but experts say it is now signalling that it won’t bear the burden for its competitors. ‘Big game changer’ Qatar Energy Minister Mohammed Al-Sada told the conference that OPEC’s decision last month to stay firm on output was a “big game changer” for the global energy market. “Cycles in our business are the norm,” Sada said. “The decline in oil prices will have a different behavior this time... The role of swing producer (like Saudi Arabia) could be changing from government control to market dynamics.” OPEC seems determined not to interfere this time, even if the move to maintain output is hitting the pockets of some of its own members, like Nigeria and Venezuela, who have not built up the fiscal reserves of Gulf Arab nations. Some reports have suggested the Gulf Arab nations are also trying to put pressure on the economies of energy-dependent Russia or even fellow OPEC member Iran, but officials have denied any political motives. Experts told the conference the next 12-18 months will be crucial for the global energy market and that there are few signs the price will rise. Weak demand in Markets rise on oil, Saudi budget hopes MIDEAST STOCK MARKETS DUBAI: Most Gulf equity markets continued rising yesterday but their uptrend slowed, suggesting the benefits of stabilizing oil prices and expectations for a large Saudi Arabian state budget had now largely been factored into stocks. The main Saudi index closed 0.3 percent higher, after jumping 16 percent over the previous three days. Turnover remained active but dropped by about a fifth from Sunday’s level. Brent crude climbed over 1 percent to above $62 per barrel yesterday. Analysts said Brent had received broad support after testing $60 a barrel earlier this month, and that a consensus was growing that prices would likely remain above that level for the rest of the year. This has improved sentiment among Gulf stock market investors, even though the long-term outlook for oil prices remains murky and fresh falls cannot be ruled out next year. Also, contrary to the stock markets’ earlier fears, Saudi Arabia’s 2015 budget is not expected to cut spending much if at all in response to the recent slide of oil prices. Saudi Finance Minister Ibrahim Alassaf went out of his way to reassure the markets last Wednesday when he said his government would continue spending strongly on development projects and social benefits in the budget. The budget was originally expected to be announced yesterday afternoon, but Saudi media reported the release would occur later this week, after a special cabinet meeting. Yesterday saw profit-taking in some stocks which led the recent rally such as property developer Dar Al Arkan, which fell 0.8 percent and was again the most heavily traded Saudi stock. On Sunday, Dar Al Arkan had soared 9.3 percent. But petrochemical producer Saudi Kayan, up 9.8 percent on Sunday, added a further 6.2 percent yesterday. Other major gainers included second- or third-tier stocks that had been neglected in the rally, such as Islamic insurer Solidarity , up 5.6 percent. DUBAI The Dubai index climbed 2.3 percent after jumping 9.9 percent on Sunday and 13.0 percent on Thursday. Bourse operator Dubai Financial Market soared 10.1 percent, a fresh sign that investors believe the bruising downtrend in Gulf equities of recent weeks has ended and that investor activity will revive. Qatar rose 3.3 percent; property developer Ezdan Holding was the most heavily traded stock, rising 3.4 percent. Gulf International Services, an oil and gas drilling services firm which was hit hard during recent weeks because of the slump in oil prices, surged its 10 percent daily limit. “The recent selloff in the Gulf has opened up opportunities in the Qatar market, given the undemanding valuations sparked by the current volatility,” Nick Wilson, chairman of London-listed Qatar Investment Fund, said in a note. He estimated the Qatar index’s prospective price/earnings ratio at 13.7 times with a dividend yield of 4.4 percent, which he said was attractive given the fact that Qatar needs a relatively low oil price to balance its budget. But Gulf Warehousing sank 0.6 percent to 53.00 riyals in active trade after its board proposed boosting the company’s capital by 25 percent via a rights issue to shareholders at 40.00 riyals per share. Oman’s market climbed 3.7 percent. It has outperformed most of the Gulf since the executive president of the State General Reserve Fund, the country’s largest sovereign wealth fund, told Reuters at the end of last week that the SGRF had boosted its buying of shares in the local market because prices had slid to attractive levels. The Tunisian market rose 0.6 percent, bringing its gains in the last four trading days to 3.7 percent, though it closed well off its intra-day high. Veteran politician Beji Caid Essebsi declared victory in Sunday’s presidential run-off vote, seen as the last step in Tunisia’s shift to full democracy four years after an uprising ousted autocrat Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali. — Reuters China-where the economy is slowing after decades of spectacular growth-is likely to continue, said Bassam Fattouh, director of the independent Oxford Institute for Energy Studies. Competition for Asian markets has meanwhile grown, he said, after the production increase in the United States allowed it to reduce or stop crude imports from the Middle East, west Africa and Latin America. “That has created a shift in oil trade flows,” he said. Other factors will help to keep prices low, he said, including the continued weakness of the global economy and potential output increases of around three million barrels per day if Libya, Iran and Iraq manage to restore or boost production. In the long run, he said, the next few years could consolidate shale oil producers-pushing the less competitive out of the market and strengthening those that remain. “Some bankruptcies are expected but the developments may still create a much more resilient sector.” — AFP Russia bails out bank following ruble slide MOSCOW: Russia has bailed out a mid-sized bank for about $500 million to save it from bankruptcy- a clear sign that the slide in the value of the ruble in the wake of sliding oil prices is straining the banking system. The Central Bank said yesterday it will give Trust Bank 30 billion rubles that will allow it to continue operating as normal. It will also place Trust Bank under its own supervision until it finds an investor. Major Russian banks said they had no interest in acquiring Trust, a top 30 Russian bank with about $5 billion in assets. The problems afflicting Trust Bank follow a tumultuous period for the ruble, which is one of the worst-performing currencies this year, along with the Ukrainian hryvnia. A respected former Russian finance minister warned that the country is headed for “a full-blown economic crisis.” It has fallen by a half this year as oil prices have fallen. Last week, its descent gathered pace, sparking a consumer boom as worried Russians flocked to shops to buy cars and durable goods before prices rose further. Still, deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov said yesterday he expects the ruble to rally following some signs of stability over the past few trading sessions. Following moderate gains at the end of last week, the ruble surged 8 percent in early evening trading yesterday, at 54 against the US dollar. He also said the government is not planning to introduce currency controls on Russian companies. The ruble’s collapse has stirred rumors that Russia could introduce capital and currency controls to keep the rate high. The Russian currency has been battered by low oil prices, now around $60 a barrel, down from a June high of $107, as well as the sanctions that the West imposed on Russia for its involvement in Ukraine and the annexation of Crimea. The fall in oil prices is one of the major reasons why Russia is expected to fall into recession next year. Alexei Kudrin, a well-respected former Russian finance minister, said oil prices weren’t the main reason why the ruble has suffered this year. In comments to reporters, he said low oil prices account for as little as a quarter of the ruble decline whereas the sanctions imposed on the country could be contributing up to 40 percent of the collapse. — AP TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 BUSINESS Oil prices likely to rebound in second half of 2015: Poll Analysts slash Brent 2015 price forecasts by $8.50 Crude oil prices are likely to bottom out in the first half of 2015, until a possible slowdown in US shale production counters a supply glut exacerbated by OPEC’s decision not to cut output, a Reuters monthly survey showed. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries’ agreement last month to stand pat on output meant the onus for any supply cutbacks was now on non-OPEC producers, primarily led by US shale oil, analysts said. “Oil prices will be lower, making shale oil production less attractive for investments, which are necessary to keep shale oil production growing,” Commerzbank’s Carsten Fritsch said. Oil is seen recovering in the second half as non-OPEC production responds to lower prices, while demand picks up in the course of the year, the poll showed. The survey of 30 economists and analysts projected Brent to average $74.00 a barrel next year and $80.30 in 2016. The forecast for 2015 is $8.50 below the average projection in the previous Reuters poll. The November poll number was down $11.20 from October, marking the biggest downgrade in average forecasts since the 2008 economic downturn. Brent this month hit five-year lows below $60 a barrel, down almost half from peaks reached in June. Brent has averaged $100.57 so far this year. Brent was up 74 cents at $62.12 yesterday. US crude was up 66 cents at $57.79 a barrel. “In terms of the floor price, we think $60 per barrel will be the level at which fast-rising US shale oil producers will feel the pinch,” ANZ analyst Natalie Rampono said. “Supply cuts above this level will be limited to other smaller, high-cost US and Canadian Raiffeisen Bank said. Raiffeisen is among the most bullish forecasters, projecting Brent to average $80 a barrel in 2015, and is one of 11 institutions that had participated in the previous poll and retained their outlook since then. Of the 14 banks polled that have cut their forecasts since the previous month’s survey, Morgan Stanley slashed its projection by $28 to an average 2015 Brent price of $70. ANZ, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, JBC, LBBW and Deutsche Bank also lowered their North Sea crude forecast for next year by more than $15 per barrel. ABN AMRO had the highest Brent forecast at $85 for 2015, while Nomisma Energia had the lowest at $59 a barrel. Brent’s premium to US crude will narrow to $5.30 a barrel in 2015 from $6.68 so far this year and $10.58 in 2013, the poll said. —Reuters unconventional oil producers. Although we think it will take six to 12 months for these supply cuts to become apparent,” she added. Some analysts, however, were sceptical whether OPEC’s stand would serve as a deterrent to US shale oil producers. “The lag in oil production response from existing wells from the US suggests that only the marginal oil projects will be discouraged at this stage,” Vyanne Lai of National Australia Bank said. The poll forecast US light crude would average $68.70 a barrel next year, and $74.90 in 2016. US crude has averaged $93.99 so far in 2014. “Some of the highly leveraged US shale oil producers will face serious trouble. In the long term, OPEC strategy should pay off for OPEC as this strategy should lead to higher oil prices from 2016/17 on,” Hannes Loacker of Production The minister said Iraq now produced around 3.2 million bpd in the south of the country and expected this to rise about 100,000 or 200,000 bpd next year. That would bring total crude oil production by Iraq, after its export agreement with the Kurdish region, to 4 million bpd in 2015. But Abdel Mehdi said he didn’t think that would trigger any pressure from OPEC next year to cap Iraq’s production, which has been exempted from quotas because of wars and sanctions. “Last year, almost a million barrels (per day) have been cut from the market because of Kirkuk and the KRG (Kurdish regional government), so we have already done a lot of cutting in favor of OPEC and I think OPEC understands that.” Abdel Mehdi also said he expected oil prices to stabilize over $70 a barrel by the middle of next year. Brent crude is now trading around $62, down from about $115 in June. —Reuters Egyptian pound steady on official market CAIRO: The Egyptian pound held steady at a central bank dollar sale yesterday and weakened slightly on the black market. The bank offered $40 million and said it had sold $38.2 million at a cut-off price of 7.1401 pounds to the dollar, unchanged from its last sale on Sunday. The rates at which banks are allowed to trade dollars are determined by the results of central bank sales, giving the bank effective control over official exchange rates. In the unofficial market, the pound was trading at 7.81 to the dollar, a trader said, down slightly from Sunday’s rate of 7.80 pounds. i n b r i e f OPEC crude price down to $55.52pb VIENNA: OPEC daily basket price stood at $55.52 a barrel Friday, compared with $56.30 the previous day, the cartel said here yesterday. The monthly rate of the OPEC hit $75.57pb in November against $85.06pb in October, it said. The new OPEC Reference Basket of Crudes (ORB) is made up of the following: Saharan Blend (Algeria), Girassol (Angola), Oriente (Ecuador), Iran Heavy (Islamic Republic of Iran), Basra Light (Iraq), Kuwait Export (Kuwait), Es Sider (Libya), Bonny Light (Nigeria), Qatar Marine (Qatar), Arab Light (Saudi Arabia), Murban (UAE) and Merey (Venez). During their recent meeting, OPEC oil ministers decided to maintain the cartel’s production level at 30 million barrels per day. US dollar stable against Kuwaiti dinar at KD 0.292 KUWAIT: The US dollar exchange was stable against the Kuwaiti dinar in yesterday’s trading at KD 0.292 while the euro rose to KD 0.358, compared with Sunday’s rates, said the daily bulletin of the Central Bank of Kuwait (CBK). The pound sterling exchange rate stabilized at KD 0.457, likewise the Swiss franc, KD 0.297. The Japanese yen also remained unchanged at KD 0.002. Vietnam will license $22bn refinery in early 2015 HANOI: Vietnam will grant a license for a $22 billion refinery and petrochemical complex by Thai top energy company PTT Pcl and Saudi Aramco, the world’s biggest oil producer no later than February 2015, a Vietnamese government official said yesterday. PTT and Aramco will each fund 50 percent of the project, should the firms fail to find any Vietnamese counterpart, said Man Ngoc Ly, head of the Nhon Hoi economic zone in the central province of Vietnam, where the project will be developed. Vietnam’s Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has approved the project, which is designed to refine 20 million tons of crude oil annually, or 400,000 barrels per day, the government said in a report on its website late last week. Iraq to start work on final oil deal with Kurdish region ABU DHABI: Iraq’s Kurdish region will continue to export its own crude oil under an initial deal with Baghdad until a comprehensive deal is reached, with work on a final agreement expected to start within weeks, Iraqi oil minister Adel Abdel Mehdi said yesterday. Early this month, the Iraqi central government reached a temporary agreement with Kurdish regional authorities ending a bitter dispute over oil exports by and budget payments to the semiautonomous Kurdish region. Under the deal, Kurdish fields would export 250,000 barrels per day through Iraq’s state oil marketing organization (SOMO), while an additional 300,000 bpd from the Iraqi area of Kirkuk would be exported via a pipeline running through Kurdish territory. In an interview yesterday, Abdel Mehdi said the initial deal was put together mainly so Baghdad could form a budget for 2015, and that a final settlement “should be worked out in the coming weeks”. In the meantime, the Kurdish region can continue exporting above the 250,000 bpd limit on its own, but legal action taken by Baghdad against Kurdish authorities in Arbil over oil exports will remain in place, he said. “We agreed for the time being things would stay as they are. It means, they were producing, they were exporting and we are putting some claims on that. This is not legal, so things will continue as they are now.” There is now “confidence and goodwill” between the two sides, Abdel Mehdi said. “We think we can sit together and settle all those pending issues like the payments and claims from either side.” News HERAT: Afghan workers make wood burning stoves, used for heating and cooking, at a workshop in Herat yesterday. Afghans are busy preparing for winter, as high unemployment and the high cost of living have increased the vulnerability to the weather for large sections of the population. —AFP Moroccan consumer price inflation rises to 1.2% RABAT: Morocco’s consumer price inflation rose to an annual 1.2 percent in November from 0.6 pct in October in part because of rising food prices, the High Planning Authority said yesterday. Non-food inflation was up 2.1 percent in the 12 months through November. The food price index pushed up slightly to 0.1 percent from the previous month. Health expenses fell 1.1 percent while housing, water and electricity costs rose 4.4 percent as the North African government started to cut subsidies. On a month-on-month basis, the consumer price index was steady in November after rising 0.6 percent in October. The food price index rose 0.2 percent on the month and nonfood prices were down 0.1 percent. Budget pressure unlikely to deflect Iran from nuke goals DUBAI: A big oil price slide will hurt Iran’s attempts to rescue battered living standards, but economic pain is unlikely to soften its stance in nuclear talks or end aid to allies such as Syria, matters seen by its ruling clerics as strategic priorities. Economic misery due to sanctions and mismanagement has been a reality for years, and while social strains in the 76 million population are deep, the clerics will seek to contain them, say experts examining Iran’s budget plans for 2015. The largest drop in oil prices since the 2008 financial crisis means more budget pressure for the OPEC member, already bereft of tens of billions of dollars in oil revenue due to Western sanctions and years of economic mismanagement. And tougher economic times may spur Tehran’s determination to end a nuclear dispute and lift sanctions that isolate it from the global banking system and deter most foreign investors. But significant changes in Iran’s regional strategy including its approach to any nuclear deal are unlikely. That is partly because funds for security affairs come from Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, not the government. He also decides nuclear policy. “Our support to our brother Assad will never change,” said a senior Iranian official, referring to Syrian President Bashar alAssad. “Because of (declining) oil prices we face economic hardship ... but we will manage to continue our support to Syria, militarily and financially.” Ali Vaez, of the International Crisis Group think-tank, said the oil price fall would hurt, but was unlikely to make Iran accept a nuclear deal “that it views as lopsided”. “Iran’s support for its allies in Iraq and Syria is not a questions of means, it’s a strategic necessity. This is why neither the fall of the rial in 2012 or economic malaise in 2013 affected Iran’s support for its Syrian and Iraqi allies.” Iran and world powers are negotiating to end a standoff over Tehran’s nuclear goals. Tehran denies Western charges it is seeking nuclear weapons. President Hassan Rouhani presented a “cautious, tight” budget on Dec 7 in response to falling oil prices, now almost $10 a barrel below the $70 his budget was based on. Spending was six percent above this year, a real terms cut due to inflation of 20 percent. But with revenues pressured, plans to hike defence spending 33 percent prompted speculation that Rouhani wants to placate security hardliners, hoping they will indulge his bid to win a nuclear deal and end sanctions. Powerful hawks Powerful anti-Western hawks in the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), who report to Khamenei, have been wary of the negotiations. They have tolerated the talks, diplomats speculate, largely because his big 2013 election win revealed the depth of anger over economic mismanagement and support for his aim of ending Iran’s international isolation. Mehrdad Emadi of Betamatrix International Consultancy suggested Rouhani had to consider the IRGC in setting economic policy because it could spoil any nuclear deal. Greater defence spending was aimed at “giving them a big piece of the public pie so they can stop kicking up a fuss when it comes to negotiations, especially those with the Americans.” “The IRGC are extremely sensitive to any reduction of ‘military aid’ to what they see as strategic allies.” The IRGC could ruin any rapprochement with the West it felt might hurt its interests. Last year, Iran granted Syria a $3.6 billion credit facility to buy oil products, with another $1 billion for non-oil products. Domestically the government has ways of mitigating the pain. One is gradual depreciation of the official exchange rate at which it converts oil revenues from dollars into rials. This allows a progressively smaller amount of dollars to supply the same rial revenues. The central bank’s official exchange has dropped to 27,043 from 25,651 at the end of June and 24,774 at the end of last year. Next year’s budget is based on a rate of 28,500, showing the government plans to continue this strategy. Meanwhile, the free-market price of the rial has stabilized at about 35,000, far from lows near 40,000 two years ago. That suggests most Iranians think that while cheaper oil will pressure the rial, they do not yet expect an economic collapse or a run on the currency.—Reuters EXCHANGE RATES Al-Muzaini Exchange Co. Japanese Yen Indian Rupees Pakistani Rupees Srilankan Rupees Nepali Rupees Singapore Dollar Hongkong Dollar Bangladesh Taka Philippine Peso Thai Baht Irani Riyal transfer Irani Riyal cash Saudi Riyal Qatari Riyal Omani Riyal Bahraini Dinar UAE Dirham ASIAN COUNTRIES 2.455 4.645 2.917 2.220 2.878 223.630 37.783 3.746 6.549 8.939 61.555 121.740 GCC COUNTRIES 78.151 80.514 761.500 778.400 79.812 ARAB COUNTRIES Egyptian Pound - Cash 42.450 Egyptian Pound - Transfer 40.887 Yemen Riyal/for 1000 1.367 Tunisian Dinar 157.920 Jordanian Dinar 413.600 Lebanese Lira/for 1000 1.966 Syrian Lira 2.089 Morocco Dirham 33.102 EUROPEAN & AMERICAN COUNTRIES US Dollar Transfer 292.950 Euro 360.330 Sterling Pound 459.930 Canadian dollar 255.180 Turkish lira 126.270 Swiss Franc 301.700 Australian Dollar 242.270 US Dollar Buying 291.750 20 gram 10 gram 5 gram GOLD 238.100 121.740 61.560 UAE Exchange Centre WLL COUNTRY Australian Dollar Canadian Dollar Swiss Franc Euro US Dollar Sterling Pound Japanese Yen Bangladesh Taka Indian Rupee Sri Lankan Rupee Nepali Rupee Pakistani Rupee UAE Dirhams Bahraini Dinar Egyptian Pound Jordanian Dinar Omani Riyal Qatari Riyal Saudi Riyal SELL DRAFT 231.71 256.71 302.93 362.08 293.55 461.65 2.49 3.761 4.636 2.220 2.893 2.918 79.77 779.11 40.93 417.10 761.26 80.83 78.19 SELL CASH 228.71 257.71 300.93 363.08 296.55 464.65 2.51 4.031 4.936 2.655 3.428 2.790 80.23 781.18 41.53 422.75 768.56 81.38 78.59 2.710 3.945 87.645 48.035 9.885 131.225 Sierra Leone Singapore Dollar South African Rand Sri Lankan Rupee Taiwan Thai Baht 0.000065 0.219794 0.019360 0.001877 0.009211 0.008575 0.000071 0.225794 0.027860 0.002457 0.009391 0.009125 Bahrain Exchange Company Bahraini Dinar Egyptian Pound Iranian Riyal Iraqi Dinar Jordanian Dinar Kuwaiti Dinar Lebanese Pound Moroccan Dirhams Nigerian Naira Omani Riyal Qatar Riyal Saudi Riyal Syrian Pound Tunisian Dinar Turkish Lira UAE Dirhams Yemeni Riyal Arab 0.770861 0.038725 0.000081 0.000199 0.409260 1.000000 0.000145 0.024004 0.001189 0.755147 0.079783 0.077510 0.001737 0.153886 0.124609 0.078805 0.001323 0.778861 0.041825 0.000082 0.000259 0.416750 1.000000 0.000245 0.048004 0.001824 0.760827 0.080996 0.078210 0.001957 0.161886 0.131609 0.079954 0.001403 Syrian Pound Nepalese Rupees Malaysian Ringgit Chinese Yuan Renminbi Thai Bhat Turkish Lira COUNTRY Belgian Franc British Pound Czech Korune Danish Krone Euro Norwegian Krone Romanian Leu Slovakia Swedish Krona Swiss Franc Turkish Lira Dollarco Exchange Co. Ltd Rate for Transfer US Dollar Canadian Dollar Sterling Pound Euro Swiss Frank Bahrain Dinar UAE Dirhams Qatari Riyals Saudi Riyals Jordanian Dinar Egyptian Pound Sri Lankan Rupees Indian Rupees Pakistani Rupees Bangladesh Taka Philippines Pesso Cyprus pound Japanese Yen Selling Rate 291.750 260.085 456.630 366.500 303.035 775.760 79.330 80.935 77.975 411.660 40.707 2.225 4.716 2.867 3.759 6.481 715.865 3.480 Australian Dollar New Zealand Dollar America Canadian Dollar US Dollars US Dollars Mint Bangladesh Taka Chinese Yuan Hong Kong Dollar Indian Rupee Indonesian Rupiah Japanese Yen Kenyan Shilling Korean Won Malaysian Ringgit Nepalese Rupee Pakistan Rupee Philippine Peso SELL CASH Europe 0.007632 0.452259 0.005047 0.044361 0.354006 0.035743 0.084057 0.008572 0.034131 0.291709 0.124609 SELLDRAFT 0.008632 0.461259 0.017047 0.049361 0.362006 0.041143 0.084057 0.018572 0.039131 0.301909 0.131609 Australasia 0.230411 0.219694 0.241911 0.229194 0.247352 0.288950 0.289450 0.255852 0.293650 0.293650 Asia 0.003432 0.046192 0.035698 0.004436 0.000019 0.002381 0.003275 0.000255 0.080985 0.002995 0.002745 0.006509 0.004032 0.049692 0.038448 0.004837 0.000025 0.002561 0.003275 0.000270 0.086985 0.003165 0.003025 0.006789 Al Mulla Exchange Currency US Dollar Euro Pound Sterlng Canadian Dollar Indian Rupee Egyptian Pound Sri Lankan Rupee Bangladesh Taka Philippines Peso Pakistan Rupee Bahraini Dinar UAE Dirham Saudi Riyal *Rates are subject to change Transfer Rate (Per 1000) 291.800 366.550 461.000 252.550 4.597 40.785 2.212 3.738 6.522 2.905 776.900 79.500 78.000 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 BUSINESS Kalyan Jewellers invests KD7 million in Kuwait Three signature showrooms to open on Friday l Mega Prize of KD75,000 for single winner Amitabh Bachchan, the Brand Ambassador of Kalyan Jewellers KUWAIT: Kalyan Jewellers, one of India’s most-trusted jewellery brands, has announced its foray into Kuwait with an investment of more than KD7 million. Kalyan Jewellers has offered a special consumer scheme to mark the launch. Consumers will be given a free gold coin on purchase of jewellery worth KD150 and will be eligible to participate in a lucky draw and win the mega prize of KD75,000. Amitabh Bachchan, the stalwart of Indian cinema and the Brand Ambassador of Kalyan Jewellers, who is on his first visit to Kuwait, will inaugurate the outlets on Friday (December 26, 2014) along with the other ambassadors Manju Warrier (Malayalam film actor), Nagarjuna Akkineni (Telegu film actor) and Prabhu Ganesan (Tamil film actor). The Chairman of the Group T S Kalyanaraman, the Executive Directors Rajesh Kalyanaraman and Ramesh Kalyanaraman will also be present for the inauguration. During the inauguration of the showrooms, the celebrities will jointly address the public from a specially erected stage. The timings for inauguration are as follows: December 26 : Al-Rai 11.15 am - 11.45am, Malia, Kuwait City) 2.45 pm 3.05 pm and Fahaheel 3.45 pm - 4.15 pm. T S Kalyanaraman, Chairman and Managing Director, Telugu film actor Nagarjuna Akkineni Tamil film actor Prabhu Ganesan Malayalam film actress Manju Warrier Kalyan Jewellers said, “The expansion in Kuwait is part of our growth strategy to consolidate our presence in GCC countries. The launch of three Kalyan stores in one day in Kuwait is a reiteration of our commitment to provide the best jewellery buying experience for connoisseurs of jewellery in Kuwait. The investment of KD7 million has been made to ensure that we can reach out to more customers through these three outlets. Our stores will offer an exquisite collection of contemporary and traditional designs that will fulfill distinct needs of the evolved Kuwait consumer.” Jewellers will have 77 outlets spread across West Asia and India including nine in the UAE. It will also add Qatar to its presence shortly. By the end of fiscal 2015, Kalyan Jewellers is targeting 100 showrooms. Kalyan Jewellers recently attracted a significant investment of $200 million from leading private equity investor Warburg Pincus. The investment is set to accelerate the growth plans of Kalyan Jewellers as it consolidates its leading position in the existing markets and enters global markets including Singapore and Malaysia. Since the investment from Warburg Pincus, Kalyan Jewellers has added over 15 showrooms to its network. Kalyan Jewellers is one of the most trusted brands in India and has developed a deep connect among its stakeholders with its brand promise of ‘Trust is Everything’. Kalyan Jewellers has developed a distinct image among consumers by smartly leveraging its brand ambassadors. Kalyan was the first jewellery brand in the country to have a male as a brand ambassador, successfully defying the convention in jewellery marketing. Kalyan Jewellers has also invested in educational campaigns for consumers to share their insights on buying jewellery. Amitabh Bachchan and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan are the brand ambassadors of Kalyan Jewellers. The brand also has regional icons like Prabhu Ganesan, Nagarjuna, Shivaraj Kumar and Manju Warrier associated with the brand. Kalyan Jewellers has been ranked among Top 10 Trend Setting Brands in India (Pitch, 2013). Target With the three showrooms opening in Kuwait, Kalyan Oil price fall puts squeeze on North Sea energy minnows LONDON: Plunging oil prices have increased the strain on the many small energy firms operating in the North Sea who were already facing diminishing returns from an area that once helped power the British economy. With fields more mature and oil harder to find, heavyweights such as BP and Shell turned their attention elsewhere long ago, leaving smaller independent firms to explore the more remote areas. As many as 133 companies are now active in the British part of the North Sea. However, a third of those companies are deemed by experts to be too small to finance big ticket projects and a fall of around 45 percent in oil prices since June has lessened the sector’s appeal to big investors. Efforts to find new oil and gas fields have slumped to the lowest level since exploration started in the 1970s because of reduced investment. That has sharply cut the amount of revenue the government can expect to take from the sector in taxation. “Nothing less than radical change will prevent the premature demise of the basin, let alone maximize economic recovery,” said Dave Blackwood, former head of BP’s North Sea business, adding his voice to industry calls for tax cuts. Britain’s finance ministry has said it is working on a reform of its oil and gas tax policy but its drive to reduce the budget deficit will limit its ability to cut rates. An election next May only adds to the political uncertainty. British oil companies pay a supplementary levy on top of production income tax, which will drop by 2 percentage points to 30 percent on Jan. 1. The oil industry is crying out for steeper cuts to help dampen the impact of surging costs. “You’ve got to get the tax change right. If you put it up too much, and arguably that has happened, then it strangles activity,” Mark Routh, chief executive at small North Sea player Independent Oil and Gas, told Reuters. Receipts fall During the early 1980s, annual tax receipts to Margaret Thatcher’s govern- ment peaked at 12 billion pounds ($18.8 billion) when booming North Sea oil output coincided with high oil prices, four times the 3 billion pounds predicted for 2014. Promised oil revenues were in part used to justify Scotland’s independence movement which banked on oil to underwrite a historic break for the rest of Britain, thwarted in a referendum in September. Instead, Brent crude prices fell as low as $58.5 a barrel last week and the major oil firms are shifting their focus to more promising new areas in south-east Asia, Africa and shale oil plays in North America. While Britain’s growing pool of small-scale firms, such as Parkmead, Hurricane Energy and Infrastrata , can be more nimble when it comes to adopting new technologies, many of the areas remaining to be explored are remote and therefore costly. “If they don’t have the money they can’t fund activity,” said Brian Nottage, general manager at oil and gas advisory Hannon Westwood. An example is Atlantic Petroleum, which produces oil in the UK North Sea and has cut its exploration spending for 2015 by 75 percent, arguing it needed to save cash to fund its operating fields in the current oil price environment. An increasing number of firms looking to enter new fields are now offering “farmouts”, allowing investors including rival companies, to take a stake in the new project. “(But) not that many are successful, hence the problem that we see in exploration activity,” Nottage said. Of the 133 companies in the UK North Sea, more than a third have not developed reserves in the basin, meaning they cannot bank on any revenue from production in the short term. In the longer term, the large number of small-scale players accessing the North Sea exploration market could lead to merger activity to create more robust businesses. “The UK North Sea is definitely at an inflection point. That inflection point will either send it down or have the potential to make sure it remains as a basin for another 10-15 years,” said Alison Baker, head of PwC’s UK oil and gas practice. —Reuters Russia’s new grain export duty sows confusion MOSCOW: Russia stiffened its bid to curb grain exports yesterday with plans for a duty on shipments, to defend domestic bread supply against a crumbling ruble. Russia, one of the world’s top wheat exporters to North Africa and the Middle East, has been exporting record volumes of grain this year as the ruble fall attracted buyers. It brought in a large grain crop of 104 million tons but after the surge in exports Moscow needed to hang on to its remaining stocks, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev told a meeting with officials. “(We will) prepare a proposal for a decision on export duty. It will be done within 24 hours,” Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich told the meeting. Medvedev told Dvorkovich to submit the proposal for his signature. Turkey and Egypt are the largest buyers of Russian wheat. Neither man said when, at what level or for which type of grains the duty was to be imposed. Russia used a protective duty on wheat exports in 2008. Officials are discussing a prohibitive duty and may impose it earlier than exporters are able to fulfil already-signed contracts, an industry source familiar with the discussions told Reuters. Dmitry Rylko, the head of IKAR consultancy, said he expected the duty to be at a prohibitive level. Traders have forward contracts for Russian grain until April. Last week, Russia cut railway loadings of grain for export, industry sources said. State-controlled Russian Railways, which has a monopoly on rail shipment, declined to comment. —Reuters Airbus CEO Fabrice Bregier (left) and Qatar Airways CEO Akbar Al Baker pose with a replica of an Airbus A350 during a ceremony in Toulouse, southwestern France, yesterday. —AP Airbus delivers a350-900 plane to Qatar Airways TOULOUSE, France: Airbus delivered its first next-generation A350900 plane to Qatar Airways yesterday in a formal ceremony that kickstarts its bid to erode rival Boeing’s dominance in the lucrative long-haul market. The Dohabased company, owned by the energy-rich Gulf state, has ordered 80 of the planes, making it not only the launch customer but also the largest single customer of the fuel-efficient A350 so far. Qatar Airways’s first A350 had been due to be delivered on December 13 in the southwestern French city of Toulouse where Airbus is based, but the airline postponed the handover at the last moment, citing equipment in the cabin that did not correspond to its requirements. “My dear Akbar, you are a demanding customer, particularly demanding and sometimes even a little too demanding, but you are also one of the architects of the A350,” Airbus chief Fabrice Bregier told Qatar Airways head Akbar Al-Baker at the ceremony. “We owe you a lot for this program.” Fuel savings crucial Airlines are in a major push to modernize their fleets to reap the energy savings that the latest generation of planes offer, especially as competition in the sector is fierce But Airbus hopes to catch up with its A350, whose wings and fuselage are made of carbon fibre and which will save up to 25 percent in fuel consumption. Airbus invested 10-12 billion euros ($12-$15 billion) in its strat- TOULOUSE: A Qatar Airways A350 takes off from the Airbus headquarters in Toulouse yesterday. —AFP and fuel is one of biggest costs. For the moment, Boeing dominates the lucrative market for long-haul, midsized planes with its B777 and nextgeneration 787 Dreamliner outweighing the European firm’s A330. egy to position the A350 between the popular B777 and the Dreamliner, hoping to eat away at both planes’ markets. So far, the plane has been a success with 778 orders already regis- tered by the end of November. Boeing, meanwhile, has accumulated 1,055 orders for the Dreamliner, which was launched several years ago. The first commercial flight of Qatar Airways’s brand new plane will take place on January 15 on the Doha to Frankfurt route, and the second A350-900 should come into operation in February. The airline is one of a trio of fastgrowing Gulf carriers seeking to further muscle into European markets, as energy-rich states in the region seek to develop new sources of income to reduce their dependence on oil. Baker has described the delivery of the A350 as the “second significant fleet milestone” for the carrier after recently receiving three of 14 A380 superjumbo planes bought from Airbus. The airline has also purchased Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner. The A350 program was launched in 2007, and the first test flight for the plane took place in June last year. Bregier told reporters in Toulouse that Airbus planned to ramp up production of its newest plane from two to 10 aircraft a month within four years. —AFP TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 BUSINESS Euro stocks enjoy ‘Santa Claus rally’ LONDON: Europe’s main stock markets rose strongly yesterday in a renewed “Santa Claus rally” powered by a modest recovery in oil prices, dealers said. In late morning deals in the British capital, London’s FTSE 100 index of leading shares jumped 1.02 percent to 6,611.96 points compared with Friday’s close. Frankfurt’s DAX 30 won 0.67 percent to 9,852.58 points and in Paris the CAC 40 leapt 1.04 percent to 4,285.94. The euro edged up to $1.2260 after sliding as low as $1.2220 in earlier Asian deals, matching Friday’s two-year trough that was struck as the Federal Reserve signalled it may rise US interest rates in the middle of 2015. “As the markets begin to wind down for Christmas, the Santa rally was still being felt ... with a quiet economic day ahead,” said Spreadex trader Connor Campbell. “After spending the last six weeks as the Scrooge of the economic world, oil has undergone a slight rejuvenation; in this current climate, any price above $60 per barrel for Brent crude oil is a signifier of hope for the markets.” Global oil prices rebounded slightly, with analysts predicting the sector has bottomed out after plunging by around 50 percent since June. • Oil market forges ahead London’s Brent crude for February delivery advanced 76 cents to $62.14 per barrel in late morning deals, and US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for February climbed 53 cents to $57.66 a barrel. The gains extended a rebound on Friday, wiping out losses earlier last week that saw prices hit fresh five-year lows on the back of ample supplies and mounting demand worries. Oil has however shed about half its value since June, and a decision in November by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to maintain output levels despite falling prices has weighed heavily on the market. “Brent crude is up ... boosting energy shares across the FTSE,” added ETX Capital analyst Daniel Sugarman. “Tullow Oil, always sensitive to oil fluctuations, is currently up, as are both BP and Royal Dutch Shell.” In London, Tullow Oil stock added 1.46 percent to 430.40 pence, while BP gained 1.39 percent to 418.72 pence and Shell’s ‘B’ share price added 2.17 percent to 2,270.79 pence. French oil and gas giant Total was the biggest winner on the CAC index in Paris. Shares were 2.57 percent higher at 43.96 euros. Rising oil prices lift the energy sector because they boost company profits. Trading volumes meanwhile remained low with many investors away from their desks for the traditional Christmas and New Year holiday shutdown. The Frankfurt stock market closes for Christmas after the close on Tuesday, while London and Paris will shut down at lunchtime on Wednesday. • Focus ‘remains on oil’ “As we head towards the Christmas break and a short week, the main focus going forward is likely to remain on the recent volatility in the oil price, particularly if we get a fresh bout of selling pressure,” said CMC Markets analyst Michael Hewson. He added there were widespread concerns that further oil-market declines “could prompt instability in oil producing countries like Venezuela, Angola, Nigeria and Ecuador, and of course not forgetting Russia, as these countries struggle to balance their books, against a weakening currency, and a much weaker oil price”. Elsewhere, Asian equities also rose in thin trade Monday amid the festive season, tracking cues from Wall Street where stocks had also surged in a Fedfuelled “Santa Claus rally” last week. Sydney soared 1.94 percent, Seoul gained 0.68 percent, Hong Kong climbed 1.26 percent and Shanghai was up 0.61 percent, while Tokyo closed flat. I n Monday deals on the London Bullion Market, gold firmed to $1,196.32 per ounce from $1,195.50 on Friday. — AFP TOKYO: A man looks at an electronic stock indicator of a securities firm in Tokyo yesterday. Global markets were mostly higher yesterday after the Federal Reserve’s pledge not to rush to raise interest rates prompted investors to add risky assets ahead of the year-end holiday. A rise in the price of oil boosted energy stocks. — AP Oil falls towards $61 on supply outlook LONDON: Oil fell towards $61 a barrel yesterday, reversing gains after Saudi Arabia indicated it could increase its output. Saudi Arabia is prepared to increase output and gain market share by meeting the demands of any new customers, yesterday’s edition of the Saudi-owned al-Hayat newspaper quoted the kingdom’s oil minister Ali Al-Naimi as saying. On Sunday Naimi said lower crude prices would help demand by stimulating the economy. Brent fell 23 cents to $61.15 by 1215 GMT. It is down more than 46 percent from the year’s peak in June above $115 per barrel. US crude was down 28 cents at $56.85 a barrel. “We are going down because you have some OPEC ministers who come every day making statements trying to drive the market down, said Olivier Jakob, an oil analyst at Petromatrix Oil in Zug, Switzerland. “They come every day to convey the message that they are not doing anything to restrict supplies and that they basically want oil prices to move lower to reduce pro- duction in the US.” OPEC’s decision not to reduce production at a meeting in November sped up the decline in already falling oil prices. Prospects for a cut in the near future look remote. While analysts said Brent would likely remain above $60 a barrel this year, they said fur ther large jumps in price were unlikely. Analysts said that the price drop would have only a gradual impact on the outlook for production. “Given the lead time in permit approval and rig construction ahead of oil production, a sizeable negative US supply response given the price drop is unlikely to take place until late 2015, which places further downward pressure on oil prices in the first six months of next year,” National Australia Bank said in a note. It said it expected Brent and US crude to average $68 and $64 per barrel respectively in 2015. Analysts also said they expected relatively low price volatility for the rest of the year as traders begin to wind down their 2014 positions. — Reuters Gold inches higher as dollar weakens, shares limit gains LONDON: Gold edged up yesterday as the dollar retreated against the euro, though stronger equities and appetite for risk continued to dull the metal’s appeal as an alternative investment. Strength in oil prices also supported bullion, which is usually seen as an hedge against oil-led inflation. Spot gold was up 0.1 percent at $1,196.30 an ounce by 1025 GMT. It lost about 2 percent last week on a strong dollar and expectations of rising US interest rates. Prices were forecast to remain in tight ranges during the holiday-shortened week. “I don’t think investors will enter the market at this time of the year, but liquidity is so thin that if there are orders to be filled the impact could be very large,” ABN Amro analyst Georgette Boele said. “I remain very bearish for 2015 ... If you have a sentiment of positive risk appetite and the same time for a higher dollar and higher interest rates, gold will not be able to move higher.” The dollar fell 0.1 percent against a basket of major currencies, mostly because of euro strength, but was still holding within striking distance of a nine-year peak set on Friday. A weaker dollar makes gold cheaper for holders of other currencies. European equities rose, underpinned by stronger energy shares that were lifted by expectations that Brent crude futures are likely to remain above $60 for the rest of the year. Gold received some early support from buying in top gold consumer China, where local prices were at a premium of about $3 an ounce to the global benchmark, though they slipped later in the session to about $1. But the metal’s gains could be difficult to hold because of expectations of higher US interest rates and a strong outlook for the dollar. The market will monitor a series of US economic data, including GDP numbers, for the third quarter today. Higher interest rates would boost the dollar and hurt non-interest-bearing bullion, which was lifted by central bank liquidity and a low interest rate environment in the years following the 2008 financial crisis. Among other precious metals, silver was down 0.1 percent at $16.05 an ounce. Platinum was unchanged at $1,194.90 an ounce, falling again into parity with gold, and palladium gained 0.3 percent to $802.40 an ounce. — Reuters TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 BUSINESS Ali Alghanim & Sons Automotive among first car dealerships in Kuwait to offer valet parking service KUWAIT: With a constant focus on providing enhanced customer experience, Ali Alghanim & Sons Automotive (AAS), the exclusive importer for BMW, MINI, Rolls-Royce, Land Rover and McLaren, becomes one of the first automotive dealerships in Kuwait to offer valet parking services and make it even more enjoyable for car enthusiasts to shop for the car of their dreams. Through its latest partnership with Parking Pal, the valet parking service provider for some of Kuwait’s luxurious shopping destinations as well as hotels, all customers who come and visit the Ali Alghanim & Sons showroom will now relish the comfort and convenience of not having to worry about having to park their cars. “We at Ali Alghanim & Sons Automotive always put the customer first in our list of priorities,” said Yousuf Al-Qatami, General Manager of Ali Alghanim & Sons Automotive. “By doing so, we ensure an unrivalled customer experience right from the moment they arrive at our showroom”. “To enable them to enjoy the widest range of choices from some of the world’s foremost car brand manufacturers, we make sure that their cars are properly parked only by the finest valet parking service available in the market today,” he added. For his part, Walid Asaloa, GM and founder of Parking Pal company commented: “We are happy to be working together with Ali Alghanim & Sons Automotive in providing the best valet parking ser vice. Using the latest technology, which includes the auto request via text messages or IVR system or the scanning of the Q-R code, we are truly proud of this collaboration as we always strive to improve our services and exceed the expectations of our valued customers.” ABK launches the latest mobile banking application KUWAIT: Al-Ahli Bank of Kuwait launched a new Mobile Banking application that customers can download for a secure and unique banking experience. Sawsan Ali, Senior Manager, Alternative Delivery Channels stated, “ABK wanted to provide a distinctive mobile banking experience to meet a growing demand to make banking easy, convenient and accessible at all times. At the same time the mobile banking had to be a smooth and secure experience. We are happy that this newly launched app meets all criteria, riding on the wave of new technology to deliver a safe and fast means of banking to the customer.” She elaborated that the updated application allows customers to keep track of their account balance, transfer money locally and internationally, settle credit card payments and calculate their loans. She added, “Customers can instantly access the latest promotions offered by ABK on this application, in addition to locating ABK’s ATM machines, and currency exchange rates, along with several other services and banking possibilities round the clock”. Sawsan Ali LOS ANGELES: A house for sale in Los Angeles. The National Association of Realtors reports on sales of existing homes in November yesterday. — AP US existing home sales hit 6-month low, inventories low Median house price rises 5.0% from a year ago WASHINGTON: US home resales tumbled to a six-month low in November after two straight months of strong increases, underscoring the uneven nature of the housing market recovery. The National Association of Realtors said yesterday existing home sales dropped 6.1 percent to an annual rate of 4.93 million units, the lowest level since May. November’s steep decline probably does not signal the start of a weakening trend and in part reflected stubbornly low inventories, which touched an eight-month low, giving buyers limited options. Sales were up 2.1 percent from a year ago. “The report suggests that the housing market remains on a somewhat rocky footing as data remains quite choppy,” said Gennadiy Goldberg, an economist at TD Securities in New York. Housing has struggled to shift into higher gear after stagnating in the second half of 2013 in the wake of a jump in mortgage rates, which have since pulled back from their peaks. It has lagged an acceleration in economic activity as tepid wage growth, a shortage of properties available for sale and higher home prices sidelined first-time buyers. But there optimism that a broadening of job gains will translate into stronger wage growth in 2015 and stimulate demand for housing. Household formation, a key ingredient for a healthy housing market, is running at about 500,000 a year, well below the more than one million that is considered ideal. Economists polled by Reuters had expected sales to fall only to a 5.20-million unit pace. The dollar slipped against a basket of currencies after the report. US stocks held their gains, though the housing index was trading down 0.3 percent. Prices for US Treasury debt were little moved. First-time buyers are wading back into the market, accounting for 31 percent of transactions last month. That was the biggest share since October 2012 and was up from 29 percent in October. Economists and real estate agents say a share of 40 percent to 45 percent is required for a strong housing recovery. Investors, who had supported the market, continued to withdraw in November. They accounted for 15 percent of transactions last month, down from 19 percent in November 2013. The inventory of unsold homes on the market fell 6.7 percent from a year ago to 2.09 million. At November’s sales pace, it would take 5.1 months to clear houses from the market, unchanged from October. A six months’ supply is viewed as a healthy balance between supply and demand. With supply declining, house price gains remained elevated, though the pace of increases is slowing. The median home price increased 5.0 percent in November from a year ago. — Reuters S Korea lowers outlook on weak private sector SEOUL: South Korea lowered its growth forecast for next year, citing persistently weak sentiment among consumers and businesses. But the government predicted that overall economic conditions will improve from this year thanks to government measures, recovery in the US economy and the fall in oil prices. The finance ministry said yesterday that Asia’s fourthlargest economy will expand 3.8 percent in 2015. Six months ago, it forecast growth of 4.0 percent. It also lowered its forecast for this year to 3.4 percent growth from the previous forecast of 3.7 percent. In 2013, South Korea’s economy expanded 3.0 percent. The downward revision, which still represents an improvement from the growth estimated for this year, shows the government’s challenge in encouraging consumers to spend more and businesses to boost investment despite its expansionary policies and the central bank’s two rate cuts this year. Director-General Lee Chanwoo said the recovery in consumer spending and capital expenditure remained weaker than expected in the last two months as consumers and businesses still have great uncertainties about next year. The economic improvement in the last quarter stemmed mostly from the government policies. The government will introduce measures next year to boost wages and to push businesses to use their cash reserves to create jobs and increase investment, he said. As one of those measures, the country’s national pension fund will play a more active role as a shareholder to pressure companies to increase dividends. The government will also seek to increase minimum wages and spend nearly 60 percent of its annual budget during the first half of next year. Lee said these measures will boost domestic demand and also reduce the economy’s reliance on exports. South Korea’s growth was mostly driven by exports of goods, such as cars and televisions, but the government has been trying to boost domestic demand. Next year, the contribution of domestic demand to growth will outpace that of exports according to Lee.—AP Tesco masterplan? New boss keeps investors guessing LONDON: When Phil Clarke was sacked as Tesco’s CEO, senior executives hoped his 0700 strategy meetings would go with him. They did - new boss Dave Lewis starts his at 0630. Parachuted in from Unilever in September, Lewis soon faced the task of making the shock announcement that a 250 million pound ($391 million) hole had been found in Tesco’s profits, in an accounting scandal that led to the departure of several senior executives. Now the CEO - despite having no direct retail experience - is keeping management on a tight rein and personally taking charge of key areas of the business, sources say. And as he conducts a vast review of Tesco’s operations to come up with a strategy to revive its fortunes, he is giving little away - even to insiders. The 49-year-old has promised to give some details on Jan. 8 about the measures he plans to take, but all the contents of his blueprint have not yet even been seen by senior management at the firm, according to a source close to the situation. In fact the only member of the leadership team to be consulted on the new strategy is another newcomer to the firm, Chief Financial Officer Alan Stewart, the source said. Key internal talks around financials, customer issues and products have been kept to separate teams, with all big decisions taken by Lewis and Stewart, the former finance chief at Marks & Spencer. “He tends to operate keeping everything compartmentalised, so he keeps his own counsel on the masterplan,” said the source, who did not wish to be named. “He doesn’t have a core five or six people that he discusses everything with.” Tesco declined to comment for this story. Lewis arrived in the worst crisis in the grocer’s 95year history. Nicknamed “Drastic Dave” after fixing units of Unilever with cost cuts and innovative marketing, he will have to show similar resolve to improve Tesco’s competitiveness and strengthen the balance sheet of the firm which issued its fourth profit warning in five months two weeks ago. After two decades of growth, Tesco has lost its way - distracted by an expensive overseas expansion strategy when it needed to respond to the rise of discount grocers; and wrong-footed by a boom in convenience stores and online shopping. ‘In the gang’ Lewis has said there is no quick fix, and favors steady customer-focused improvements. Price cuts, major asset disposals and a cash call to fix creaking finances are all options. His decision to take over temporarily the day-to-day leadership of the UK operation - whose boss left after the accounting scandal - is illustrative of his hands-on approach, punctuated by emails fired off to staff around the clock. Earlier this month, according to an industry source, he personally took charge of meetings with Tesco’s top 25 suppliers, instead of newly promoted commercial director Jason Tarry, to the surprise of some attendees. Incorrectly booking payments from suppliers was at the centre of the accounting debacle, which is being investigated by Britain’s accounting watchdog and Serious Fraud Office. With Tesco’s share price having halved in a year, the spotlight is on what it must do to revitalize a business still the UK market leader but now steadily losing share. However, company insiders say challenges also lie much closer to Lewis at his head office in Cheshunt, north of London. During Clarke’s disastrous three-year-and-a-half year tenure, Tesco’s management talent pool was irresponsibly reduced, according to former company directors. Lewis now heads a team depleted further still by suspensions and exits, and retaining talent could be a difficult task. “Him keeping ... everyone sort of slightly in the dark feeds uncertainty. Nobody is quite sure whether they are in the gang or not,” the source close to the situation said. Investors will hope that in his Jan. 8 update Lewis will ditch the corporate jargon which despite an army of PR advisors - has proved a hindrance both internally and externally. The Financial Times this month ran a “Dave Lewis jargon-buster” to help readers decipher phrases such as “rebasing relationships with suppliers”. Analysts, drawing parallels with Tesco’s current plight, say when Lewis returned to Unilever UK in 2005 it was suffering from declining market share, had an uncompetitive cost base and a weak image with customers. Nine years on, it’s revitalized. One unnamed former UK Tesco director, who knows Lewis, said he was a “formidable” fighter. “I think he’s getting a good grip of things and I think he’ll do a decent job,” he told Reuters. “The big issue is how he sets his stall out for the next two to three years, not the current focus on profits.” — Reuters Moscow set to subsidize ailing ruble-hit airlines MOSCOW: Moscow is to set to step in to support troubled Russian airlines badly hit by the collapse of the ruble and falling passenger numbers. Deputy Prime Minister Arkadi Dvorkovitch said Monday he was considering credit guarantees and subsidies worth up to 28 million euros ($34 million) to support struggling airlines. He told the business daily Vedomosti that two of the top three domestic airlines, Transaero and UTair, were already in difficulty. “Firstly (we are looking at giving) companies credit guarantees which are very powerful because they give banks an interest in resolving the problem,” he said. “Second comes subsidies for domestic flights. We are ready to widen the number of subsidized routes to make connections viable,” he added. The newspaper said Transaero will begin to benefit from credit guarantees this week. Airlines have been among the first hit by the currency crisis because of the international nature of their business and the landing charges they must pay in foreign currency. The price of air tickets has jumped twice by 12 percent and then 14 percent as the ruble has tumbled against the euro and the dollar. With rising prices, passenger numbers have dropped back sharply in recent months. On Sunday the TASS official news agency said Transaero, the country’s second airline, had asked for state help claiming there was “a risk of flights being suspended before the end of the year because the company did not have the money to pay its sub-contractors.” The company denied it was about to cut flights, claiming there was a campaign to “discredit” it, but admitted that as during the crisis of 2008-2009, public help was needed. The leading regional carrier UTair is having trouble repaying its debts to Russia’s Alfa Bank, which took it to court in early December and threatened to seize part of its fleet. The company claims it is working normally despite the legal action. The airline made world headlines in November when passengers on one of its flights from Siberia had to get out and push their plane in temperatures of minus 52 degrees Celsius after the parking brake froze shut. — AFP TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 BUSINESS Al-Sayer Group Holding signs partnership agreement with UNEP Strategic cooperation for sustainable development KUWAIT: Al-Sayer Group Holding on December 9, 2014 signed a partnership agreement with one of the United Nations Environmental Program (UNEP). This agreement will support key International Awards assigned by UNEP to enhance kid’s participation in the environmental activities. The agreement was signed by Dr Iyad Abumoghli, Director & Regional Representative for the UNEP and Mubarak Naser AlSayer, CEO Al-Sayer Group Holding. Heads of business divisions as well as CSR representatives of the Group also attended the official event. Mubarak Al-Sayer said, “The new partnership of AlSayer Group as a private sector enterprise and UNEP, lays the foundation stone for the strategic cooperation towards the sustainable development on the regional, national and international levels”. Meanwhile Dr Iyad Abu Moghly mentioned, “The UNEP association with Al Sayer Group’s reflects their efforts to become an international partner for different type of activities intended to enhance socio-economic well-being and to reduce the ecological footprint to assure the sustainability of this planet”. Finally announcing the “Toyota Dream Car Art Contest” being held in Kuwait between November and March 2015, Eng Nehad Al-Haj Ali - Manager, Corporate Sustainability & Responsibility stated “RENEWBLE ENERGY” is the theme of this year’s contest. To help children develop and express their creativity and to share their dreams with them, Toyota has been holding this contest since 2004. More than 662000 children from over 75 countries/regions has participated and expressed their dream cars in the 2014 contest. All kids between the age group 6-14 are invited for participation. Al-Sayer Group will also open a “Green Camp” in Sulaibiya - Kabad, which is a solar powered facility to host several environmental seminars and activities, organized in partnership with Ministry of Electricity, Ministry of Education and Society of Engineering. The Green Camp, which will also be organized between November and March 2014 - 2015, will benefit employees as well as the local community through educational seminars and workshops to gain better understanding about saving energy and protecting environment. Students from different schools who participat- ed in the recently conducted KIDS ISO workshop will visit the camp for an educational trip in addition to taking part in the Toyota Dream Car Art Contest and delegates from M ouvement I nternational pour le Loisir S cientifique et Technique (MILSET), Environmental Committee at Engineering Society in Kuwait will be invited for a facility tour of the camp. Service Hero Customer Satisfaction Index 2014 attracts record number of customers KUWAIT: Service Hero, Kuwait’s first and only annual customer satisfaction index, begins the countdown towards the conclusion of the 2014 assessment’s sampling phase which ends on midnight of December 31. Positive participation gives customers the opportunity to evaluate the level and quality of the services they acquire on a regular basis, and express requirements, needs and expectations. Assessment is available via Service Hero website, various social media platforms and a smart phone application. Faten Abu-Ghazaleh The assessment index is divided into 17 industry categories. These are: cafes, casual dining, fine dining, fast food, retail clothes, home furniture, regional airlines, retail and Islamic banks, hospitals, electronics stores, internet services providers, mobile operators, car agents, car service centers, supermarkets and health clubs. Faten Abu-Ghazaleh, Service Hero President, said: “This year we celebrate Service Hero’s fifth anniversary in Kuwait, and we believe, and results do show, that we have started to make a real difference and will continue to achieve the goals this company was established for. On the one hand, we have given regular consumers an empowering platform that allows them to rate the service they receive whether positive or negative. On the other hand, we have available for companies detailed industry category reports that are rigorous, credible and neutral so that they can learn about their market position. While counting down to the conclusion of the sampling phase, where we receive customers’ detailed feedback on the quality of products and services they have bought or used, I would urge consumers in Kuwait to go ahead and fill up the assessment if they haven’t done so, their comments whether negative or positive, are valuable and will help improve services to meet their expectations now and in the near future”. Data collection so far has surpassed 22,000 consumer assessments which is a record sample size on a national level and which ensures small error margins. Data is 100 percent based on consumer feedback and the second phase of the assessment process will be the ‘findings and analysis phase’ where quality checks are conducted, followed by validation of the results and then tabulate all the votes. Top ranking companies in each category will be honored during Service Hero’s annual awards ceremony taking place in February 2015. Each industry category is measured across up to eight service dimensions, which are reliability, speed, product quality, staff quality, value for money, location, call center and website quality. These dimensions are assessed on a ‘before and after experience’ basis to evaluate the difference between customer expectations of service and actual satisfaction with the service. This method will allow participating companies to learn about any shortcomings and where they fall below expectations. The index also measures loyalty of customers towards their service providers. The company has facilitated accessibility of the survey by making it available not only through the website, www.servicehero.com, but also through the company’s social media channels and by downloading it as an application for smart phones, making it as easy as possible for customers to voice their opinions. The new AMG 4.0-litre V8 biturbo engine KUWAIT: Mercedes-AMG presents a new technological masterpiece: the AMG 4.0-litre V8 biturbo engine is a new development at the sporting heart of the new Mercedes-AMG GT car. This innovative eight-cylinder unit stands out for its sublime power delivery, the purposeful lightweight construction, as well as its high efficiency and environmental compatibility. With peak power of up to 375 kW (510 hp) and maximum torque of up to 650 Nm the new AMG V8 delivers motorsport-inspired performance. The new sports car engine follows in an impressive V8 tradition that started in 1967 with the M100 in the legendary 300 SEL 6.8 AMG racing car and continues with trendsetting features of the future. Huawei listed as key smart city vendor in Navigant Research leadership report KUWAIT: Huawei-a global ICT solutions provider- has recently been listed as one the world’s leading smart city technology vendors as part of a global study by Navigant Research. The report cites that Huawei’s smart city strategy and execution were key areas of strength that makes Huawei a strong Contender in the smart city market. In a bid to highlight the key players in the market, Navigant Research developed an assessment that offers an evaluation of vendors that have the capacity to support cities across a range of operational and infrastructural issues. The report also assessed vendors who were able to deliver on large-scale projects spanning multiple city requirements. The Navigant Research report, published as of Q4 2014, outlined the position of 16 of the world’s most prominent smart city vendors and where they place in the market. The report maintains the growing importance of benchmarking vendors as city service providers go in search of technology providers who can help them deliver on their smart city vision. Dr. Eric Woods, Research Director, Navigant Research said: “Huawei’s appearance on the Smart City Suppliers Leaderboard reflects both its core role delivering communications and IT infrastructures for smart city initiatives and the growing ambitions of suppliers in this market.” “The research is a reflection of the competition in the market as vendors are becoming much more serious about developing Smarty City initiatives. Governments and city leaders are looking to deepen their vendor relationships to plan for larger scale programs and deployments. We look forward to seeing the maturity of Smart Cities develop, where they can leverage the integration of technology into a strategic approach to sustainability, citizen well-being, and economic development.” The vendor eco-system for smart city developments continues to expand at an increasing rate, which has created a complex and dynamic market, especially in the Middle East. The smart city technology market is characterized by a diverse range of vendors spanning across a variety of sectors, which makes a comparison of their strengths and capabilities a challenging exercise. Huawei was identified as a strong Contender on the Navigant Research Smart City Leaderboard by meeting a series of criteria that showed its ability to: deliver smart infrastructure IT and communications solutions, support cities across multiple operational and vertical sector infrastructure issues and use its global network in order to work with cities in multiple regions. According to Navigant Research estimates, the global smart city technology market is expected to be worth more than $27.5 billion annually by 2023, compared to $8.8 billion in 2014. This represents a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) during that period of 13.5 percent. Cumulative global investment in smart city technologies over the decade is expected to reach $174.4 billion. The concept of the smart city covers a wide range of communities and governance models spanning from megacity regions to small towns and from historic urban centers to greenfield developments. Similarly, an incredible diversity of customers, suppliers, technologies, and requirements fall under the smart city banner. Commenting on the announcement, Safder Nazir, Regional Vice President of Smart Cities & IoT at Huawei, Middle East said: “It is encouraging to see that the industry is recognizing our Smart City capabilities a strong contender in this market. Following the announcement of Huawei’s Smart City ‘Center of Excellence’ in 2014, Huawei is in a position to provide the right expertise to transform regional smart city initiatives from concept to reality.” A key player in supporting the development of the region’s smart city initiatives, Huawei believes that the future of smart cities lies in Mobile Broadbandbased services. The global ICT solutions provider recently launched a white paper in collaboration with IDC highlighting the enablement of smart cities with Mobile Broadband. The white paper follows another recent IDC report unveiling figures that government spending in the Middle East and Africa is set to top $8.27 billion, an 11.4 percent increase as more regional governments expand their mobile government, online services and mobile broadband networks1. Powerful V8 engines have long been a core competence at AMG, the performance brand from Mercedes-Benz. Innovative and exciting high-performance engines come out of the location in Affalterbach. On this occasion, Mercedes-AMG GmbH is entirely responsible for both development and production. Tobias Moers, Chairman of the Board of Management of Mercedes-AMG GmbH: “V8 engines are an integral part of the AMG philosophy and the brand’s commitment to ‘Driving Performance’. The V8 biturbo engine for our new GT is going to delight our customers!” Christian Enderle, Head of Engine and Powertrain Development at Mercedes-AMG: “The new AMG 4.0-litre V8 biturbo sees us presenting an exciting and powerful sports car engine which, thanks to a number of measures, also represents the next step in efficiency.” First sports car engine with ‘hot inside V’ and dry sump lubrication The new AMG V8 engine has two turbochargers which are not mounted on the outside of the cylinder banks but rather inside the V configuration - experts call it a ‘hot inside V’. The benefits are a compact engine design, an optimum response and low exhaust gas emissions. Dry sump lubrication allows the engine to be installed lower, which moves the centre of gravity closer to the road and forms the basis for high lateral acceleration. The M178 (in-house designation) from AMG is thus the world’s first sports car engine with hot inside V and dry sump lubrication. With a dry weight of 209 kg the new AMG V8 is also the lightest engine in its competitive segment. The new AMG M178 V8 engine at a glance: Superior power delivery and motorsport-inspired performance As the latest member of the Mercedes-Benz BlueDIRECT engine family, the AMG M178 stands out for its superior power delivery and motorsport-inspired performance. It boasts an emotive and unmistakable AMG V8 engine sound, along with an immediate response and high pulling power. The torque curve is synonymous with good driveability: the peak of 650 Nm is available in the broad range from 1750 to 4750 rpm. With a displacement of 3982 cc, in terms of technology the V8 is closely related to the AMG 2.0-litre turbo engine in the A 45 AMG, CLA 45 AMG and GLA 45 AMG, which is currently the most powerful, series-production four-cylinder engine in the world. Both AMG engines have the same bore/stroke ratio, guaranteeing high revving ability. Mixture formation comes courtesy of third-generation direct petrol injection with piezo injectors. The highly efficient and economical AMG 4.0-litre, V8 biturbo engine meets the Euro 6 emissions standard. Cylinder bore liners The aluminium crankcase is produced using sand casting technology and features a closed deck design. This ensures extreme strength whilst keeping the weight as low as possible, and enables high injection pressures of up to 130 bar. The cylinder bore surfaces feature NANOSLIDE(r) technology which makes them twice as hard as conventional cast-iron linings. Dry sump lubrication Thanks to the use of dry sump lubrication, a conventional oil pan is redundant. Already installed low down, the engine could thus be dropped by a further 55 millimetres. This lowers the vehicle’s centre of gravity, which is ideal for a sports car with extremely high lateral dynamics. In addition to improved agility, dry sump lubrication ensures direct oil extraction from the crankcases for optimal engine lubrication, even at high speeds on bends. Cylinder heads with zirconium alloy The cylinder heads in the new AMG 4.0-litre, V8 biturbo engine are made of a zirconium alloy for maximum temperature resistance and thermal conductivity. Four overhead camshafts control a total of 32 valves. Camshaft adjustment on the inlet and outlet side enables an excellent response and optimises the gas cycle for each operating point. Optimised valve springs and the low-friction valve gear with cam followers deliver further fuel savings. Cyber security landscape and threats KUWAIT: Hasibat Information Technologies Co, the premier ICT systems integrator in Kuwait organized Cyber Security Landscape and Threats seminar showcasing the solutions from its strategic partner, FORTINET. FORTINET is a worldwide provider of network security appliances and the market leader in unified threat management (UTM). FORTINET products and subscription services provide broad, integrated and high-performance protection against dynamic security threats while simplifying the IT security infrastructure. Hasibat is Fortinet Gold partner in Kuwait. Since 2008, Hasibat has increased the market share of FORTINET in Kuwait with over 20 percent of market share. Hasibat has implemented a large number of projects across various customer segments and is proud of one of its largest FORTINET project ($4 million) in Kuwait for a premier government organization that takes care of government IT policies. Maya Zakhour -Channel Director, Osama Abduo - System Engineer and Kalle Bjorn-Director System Engineering were the speakers from the FORTINET team. They presented an overview of FORTINET vision in tackling the ever increasing and threatening menace of Cyber attack and how FORTINET is developing solutions for the businesses to protect themselves against these attacks. Hasibat would extend its thanks to the customers and FORTINET team for this event. During the event the CEO of Hasibat, Mazen Ishbib, reiterated the importance of the strategic partnership with Fortinet. He also stressed upon the fact, with the growing concerns about IT security and threats on daily basis, businesses have to be proactive in protecting their company information and infrastructure to avoid any damage to their operations and reputation. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 technology US finds malware targeting visitors to Afghan websites WASHINGTON: Malicious software likely linked to China was used to infect visitors to a wide range of official Afghan government websites, US cybersecurity researchers say. ThreatConnect, a Virginia-based cybersecurity firm, said its researchers last week found a corrupted JavaScript file that was used to host content on “gov.af” websites, and there are no known antivirus protections available for the malware. Rich Barger, chief intelligence officer of ThreatConnect, told Reuters his company was confident the new campaign, “Operation Poisoned Helmand,” was linked to the “Poisoned Hurricane” campaign detected this summer by another security firm, FireEye, that linked it to Chinese intelligence. He said the latest attack was very recent and one timestamp associated with the Java file was from Dec. 16, the same day Chinese Prime Minister Li Keqiang met with Afghanistan’s chief executive officer, Abdullah Abdullah in Kazakhstan. China is seeking to take a more active role in Afghanistan as the United States and NATO reduce their military presence. “We found continued activity from Chinese specific actors that have used the Afghan government infrastructure as an attack platform,” Barger said, adding that Chinese intelligence could use the malware to gain access to computer users who had checked the Afghan government sites for information. Barger said the attack was a variant of what he called a typical “watering-hole” attack in which the attackers infect a large number of victims, and then follow up with the most “promising” hits to extract data. He said researchers this summer saw a malicious Java file on the website of the Greek embassy in Beijing while a high-level delegation led by Keqiang was visiting Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras in Athens. The two events were not directly related, Barger said, and additional research was needed into the status of ministerial and official government websites on or around the dates of notable Chinese delegations and or bilateral meetings. In this case, the malware was created on Dec. 13, just days before the high-level meeting, Barger said. The malware was found on numerous Afghan government websites, including the ministries of justice, foreign affairs, education, commerce and industry, finance and women’s affairs, and the Afghan embassy in Canberra, Australia, according to ThreatConnect, which was formerly known as Cyber Squared. By late Sunday, Barger said it appeared that the malicious Java file had either been inactivated by the attackers or “cleaned up” by the Afghan government. — Reuters Puzzle over safety of driverless cars LOS ANGELES: California’s Department of Motor Vehicles will miss a year-end deadline to adopt new rules for cars of the future because regulators first have to figure out how they’ll know whether “driverless” vehicles are safe. It’s a rare case of the law getting ahead of an emerging technology and reflects regulators’ struggle to balance consumer protection with innovation. Safety is a chief selling point, since selfdriving cars - thanks to an array of sensors - promise to have much greater road awareness and quicker reaction time than people. Plus, they won’t text, drink or doze off. Though the cars are at least a few years away from showrooms, seven companies are testing prototypes on California’s roads, and regulators have questions: Do they obey all traffic laws? What if their computers freeze? Can they smoothly hand control back to human drivers? DMV officials say they won’t let the public get self-driving cars until someone can certify that they don’t pose an undue risk. The problem is that the technology remains so new there are no accepted standards to verify its safety. Absent standards, certifying safety would be like grading a test without an answer key. Broadly, the department has three options: It could follow the current U.S. system, in which manufacturers self-certify their vehicles; it could opt for a European system, in which independent companies verify safety; or the state could (implausibly) get into the testing business. “It’s a huge undertaking,” said Bernard Soriano, who oversees the DMV’s regulatory process. “There are all of these issues that need to be adequately answered.” Manufacturers generally would prefer self-certification. That may be where California ends up, but for now the DMV is exploring independent certification something that doesn’t exist for driverless cars. In July, the DMV asked third-party testers whether they’d be interested in getting into the game. The department doesn’t have the expertise to create a safety standard and testing framework, so “the department wanted to get a very good sense of what is out there in the market,” according to Russia Chavis, a deputy secretary at the California State Transportation Agency, which oversees the DMV and requested a deeper exploration of third-party alternatives to selfcertification. Two large European testers and two businesses in Ohio responded to the DMV’s request. None was ready to implement a program immediately. So the department is asking industry, consumer groups and other interested parties to gather in January for a public workshop on safety standards. Whatever course California officials take could influence how other states and perhaps even the federal government - approach the issue. California is such a large consumer market that in many cases its rules become de facto national standards. Federal transportation officials have said they don’t plan to write driverless car safety standards any time soon, and they don’t want states writing their own. SAE International, an association of engineers, has been developing a set of safety guidelines - but those are for vehicle testing and don’t get into specific performance levels that would be needed for commercially available cars. California’s Jan. 1 deadline was set by a 2012 state law that regulated testing on public roads and required the DMV to publish rules guiding what carmakers need to do before they can bring the vehicles to market. The law also says the DMV should encourage the development of driverless cars. Regulations often lag cutting-edge technology, but California’s driverless car policy has developed sooner because of lobbying from one of the state’s signature companies: Google. Self-driving vehicles are a departure from the Silicon Valley giant’s Internet search and advertising core, but a priority for co-founder Sergey Brin. Even before Google pushed the 2012 law that officially legalized driverless technology, the Silicon Valley giant had dispatched its cars hundreds of thousands of miles. Google says its Toyota Priuses and Lexus SUVs, souped up with radar, cameras and laser sensors, have an excellent safety record. They have been involved in just a “few” accidents, though not at fault in any of them, spokeswoman Courtney Hohne said. Google has its own idea for how to determine whether vehicles are safe. At a March hearing on DMV regulations, Ron Medford, the company’s driverless car safety director and a former federal transportation official, suggested the department do road testing. “I would be cautious,” he said, “not to make some of these things more complicated than they are.” — AP MOUNTAIN VIEW: In this May 13 2014, file photo, a Google self-driving car goes on a test drive near the Computer History Museum. — AP Activity trackers get smarter NEW YORK: Fitness activity trackers have come a long way since Leonardo da Vinci sketched a rudimentary gear-and-pendulum pedometer to track the treks of 15th century Roman soldiers. Today’s devices count calories, measure sleep patterns and monitor heart rates as well as steps. Fitness experts predict their popularity and usefulness will grow as they become more sophisticated. “Two big changes to fitness trackers since last year is that more of them now support heart rate monitoring and several of them have smartwatch functionality,” said Jill Duffy, a senior analyst at the computer magazine PCMag.com. She said smartphone functionality means, for example, showing incoming text messages from one’s smartphone on the tracker itself. “The upcoming Apple Watch, which is due out in January, will be both a complete smartwatch and fitness tracker, and will include heart rate data,” Duffy said. Consumers bought an estimated 84 million fitness tracking devices in 2013, ranging in price from $49 to $200, according to the analyst group IHS technology. It predicts that number will grow beyond 120 million by 2019. “Even with all the options for fitness trackers, we’re still early in the game,” said Neal Pire, an exercise physiologist with the American College of Sports Medicine. He said tracking information and storing it in the cloud for easy access helps some, but not all exercisers stay on track. “There are people who work really well with keeping a food or exercise log,” he explained. “Others are not only disinterested: they hate it.” Los Angeles-based trainer Shirley Archer agreed but added their use is not always long lasting. “Surveys show that as of September 2013, one in 10 American adults wore a fitness tracker,” said Archer, author of “Fitness 9 to 5.” But 30 percent of people who buy a device, no longer use it within six months. To select a tracker, Archer suggests considering three factors - how it is intended to be used, where it will be worn and how much data will be tracked. She also said novices should begin with a simple model, establish a baseline, and try to gradually increase those levels. bDuffy envisions a time when trackers will focus more on overall health than exercise. “Imagine if your doctor had access to your heart rate information over the last 60 days and could see when a change occurred?” she said. “That’s why all these trackers are meaningful in the long run.” — Reuters NYC subways slowly upgrading from 1930s-era technology NEW YORK: New York City’s subways - the biggest U.S. mass transit network - serve more than 6 million daily riders who depend largely on a signal system that dates back to the Great Depression of the 1930s. Antiquated electro-mechanics with thousands of moving parts are still critical to operations. Dispatchers still monitor most trains from 24hour underground “towers,” and they still put pencil to paper to track their progress. That eight-decade-old system is slowly being replaced by 21st-century digital technology that allows up to twice as many trains to safely travel closer together. But there’s a big caveat: It could take at least 20 years for the city’s 700 miles (1,127 kilometers) of tracks to be fully computerized. Of the subway system’s almost two dozen major lines, just one, the L linking Manhattan and Brooklyn, currently operates on new, computerized, automated signals. And the modernization of the No. 7 line from Manhattan to Queens has begun, to be completed by 2017. So, for at least the foreseeable future, New York subway riders can expect the snags, weekend shutdowns and overcrowding they have become accustomed to. “We’re at the physical limits of what the original technology can carry,” acknowledges Adam Lisberg, spokesman for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority that New York City Transit’s subways. But he says safety is not being sacrificed. “This stuff is old, but it works - it works really well,” he says, his voice rising above the roar of a 400-ton train passing through a Greenwich Village station. Much of New York’s subways continue to operate with the equipment from the 1930s, kept running by a maintenance team that’s forced to fabricate replacement parts long out of production. Wynton Habersham, the MTA’s chief of signals and track operations, recently led an Associated Press reporter and photographer on a walking tour through some of the 22 control “towers” - as the dispatcher spaces are called, though they’re buried deep beneath the streets. In the cramped, worn-out Greenwich Village tower, MTA workers monitor light boards that show train locations and movement. The dispatchers answer phone calls and listen to two-way radio reports while keeping an eye on each train’s progress. A massive cabinet is arrayed with levers to move switches through a warren of electrical connections to relays that were cutting-edge technology at the same time as the Hindenburg airship. NEW YORK: This Dec. 16, 2014 photo shows manual levers on a section of the MTA subway interlocking switch and signal control board, in New York. Transit officials are now replacing the 1930s manual signal system with 21st century digital technology that will allow more trains to travel closer together and a growing ridership to move around the city faster. — AP Hidden from straphangers, these are the guts of the urban transit network that guide subway traffic through nearly 500 stations. Behind a door off a platform on Manhattan’s West Side at 14th Street is the system’s single gleaming, high-tech operation. It allows about two dozen L trains to move each hour in both directions - compared to about 15 with the old mechanics - on a route that takes an average of 37 minutes. Amid peeling paint, rusty stairs and oldfashioned metal cabinets is a labyrinth of digitalized panels and switches that automatically relay signals in the tunnels, tracing both direction and speed without human help. In case of an emergency, however, the computerized controls can be manually overridden by operators in the cab of each train. The updating has allowed more cars to be added to the L line, which has become one of the city’s most crowded thanks to growth in Brooklyn’s hip Williamsburg neighborhood. It will cost up to $250 million to convert each control tower and link it to tracks and switches. The work is included in the MTA’s five-year capital program, which uses city, state and federal money but has a $15 billion funding gap. Europe has long been ahead of the United States, with several cities including London and Paris operating mass transit rails equipped with updated signals. “The New York system is big and a finite amount of money was available, for decades,” concludes engineer Nabil Ghaly, the MTA’s chief signal engineer until he retired in 2007. “We have to catch up. — AP Wall Street eyes Uber, Airbnb NEW YORK: Wall Street in 2014 enjoyed its best year for initial public offerings since 2000, thanks to the record-setting flotation of Chinese Internet giant Alibaba and a barrage of biotech deals. Activity was “uninterrupted” and proved largely immune to forces that at times rattled equity markets, Renaissance Capital said in a report this week. “While various global events, such as Russia’s incursion into the Ukraine and conflicts in the Middle East, caused nervousness in global markets, they largely failed to disrupt the US IPO applecart,” Renaissance said. Renaissance said there were 273 stock debuts in 2014, up 23 percent from 2013. Dealogic released similar numbers, counting 291 offerings, up 27 percent from 2013. Analysts are gearing up for another heady year in 2015, citing a deep pipeline of securities filings from leading prospects and investor zeal for such hot names such as apartment rental website Airbnb and app-based taxi service Uber. New entrants to US equity markets raised $85 billion in 2014, according to Renaissance, about 55 percent more than in 2013. “What is behind the growth is that companies are really growing and need more capital to continue to accelerate their growth,” Bob Greifeld, Nasdaq chief executive, said on CNBC. “That is great for the overall economy.” The year 2000 remains the best on record for IPOs, with 406 offerings raising $96 billion, Renaissance noted. Paradoxically, while the US and China spar for the distinction of the world’s biggest economy, the Chinese Internet marketplace Alibaba emerged as a key player behind New York’s banner year. Alibaba in September became the biggest IPO in history, raising $22 billion. Besides Alibaba, nine other companies raised more than $1 billion in 2014. They included Citizens Financial, a unit of British bank Royal CHINA: The Baidu logo is seen outside the Baidu headquarters in Beijing. Baidu, China’s leading search engine, and ride sharing company Uber announced a strategic investment and cooperation agreement. —AFP Bank of Scotland, with $3.0 billion gained, and Synchrony Financial, which was spun out of General Electric, with $2.9 billion. A big chunk of this year’s IPOs came out of the health sector, with biotechs comprising 25 percent of total deal volume at 69 offerings, Renaissance said. Biotech offerings also accounted for eight of the top 10 IPOs in terms of return to shareholders. However, the health sector also was responsible for five of the 10 worst-performing new stocks. In all, the average new stock finished 16 percent higher at the end of the year compared with its IPO price. That was well below the 40.8 percent gain in 2013. Renaissance cited the sell-off in energy IPOs in the latter part of the year as oil prices tanked, as well as a correction in high-multiple tech stocks in March and April, for the year-over-year decline. Twice as many deals were postponed in 2014 compared with the prior year and 40 percent came to market below the proposed pricing range, the report said. Experts expect another strong year in 2015, owing to a heavy number of securities filings from companies disclosing plans to do offerings. Renaissance has a private company “watchlist” of 255 companies that could go public. More than 80 percent are in the tech sector. The list includes web registration company GoDaddy and subscription-based music streaming service Spotify. “Overall positive returns and a large pipeline suggest that consistent deal flow should continue into 2015, tempered by disciplined pricing,” Renaissance said. “While IPOs in 2015 will have to grapple with a Fed ready to raise interest rates, a depressed energy sector and concerns over economic growth abroad, the US IPO market proved its resiliency this year, and has the potential to create another post-2000 record.” — AFP TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 H E A LT H & S C I E N C E Unlicensed Cambodian doctor charged over mass HIV infection PHNOM PENH: An unlicensed Cambodian doctor was charged yesterday over an apparent mass HIV infection in a remote village after admitting he reused needles when treating patients, officials said. Hundreds of panicked residents of Roka village in the western province of Battambang have flocked for testing since news of the infections emerged two weeks ago, with more than 100 people believed to have been infected. Yem Chroeum, a 55-year-old self-styled doctor detained since last week, has admitted reusing needles and syringes on different patients, Battambang provincial police chief Sar Thet told AFP. “He has confessed to sometimes reusing needles and syringes over the past years,” said Thet, adding that the man, who is not thought to have undertaken formal medical training, “had the intention to infect villagers with the HIV virus”. Last week health officials said a total of 106 people may have been infected in Roka. They could not immediately be reached for a new toll but the Pasteur Institute told The Phnom Penh Post newspaper Saturday that it had confirmed at least 119 cases in a third round of testing. Formal charges were pressed against Chroeum at Battambang provincial court yesterday. “He was charged with three counts which include the inten- tion to infect others with HIV/AIDS, murder with cruel act, and operating an unlicensed clinic,” prosecutor Nuon San told AFP. He faces a maximum sentence of life imprisonment if convicted just of murder with “cruel act”. The motive for the alleged deliberate infections was unclear. Despite the murder charge, no deaths have yet been reported in connection with the case. The outbreak in the village of around 800 residents emerged in late November when a 74-year-old Roka man tested positive at a local health centre for the virus. He was swiftly followed by his grand-daughter and sonin-law, according to the health ministry. The infected villagers have accused Chroeum of spreading the virus by reusing contaminated needles on patients including children and the elderly. An investigation into the outbreak by the kingdom’s Ministry of Health, the World Health Organization and UNAIDS is under way. Cambodia has been widely hailed for its efforts in tackling HIV/AIDS. The National AIDS Authority says the rate of HIV infection among people aged 15 to 49 has declined from 0.6 percent in 2013 to 0.4 percent in 2014. Currently, Cambodia estimates more than 73,000 people live with the disease. The country is aiming for a zero-percent HIV/AIDS infection rate by 2020 — AFP CHINA: This picture taken on December 18, 2014 shows an eight-year-old boy - who suffers from HIV and was given the pseudonym Kunkun by Chinese media - lying on the ground in a village in Xichong county. — AFP photos CHINA: An eight-year-old boy - who suffers from HIV sitting on a doorsill in a village. China promises medical care for HIV-positive boy ‘Stigma and discrimination are our biggest enemies to end HIV’ BEIJING: Beijing has pledged to provide medical treatment and a living allowance for an HIV-positive 8-year-old boy who was last week threatened with expulsion from his village, state media reported yesterday. In a case that sparked intense soul-searching in China, some 200 residents including the child’s own grandfathersigned a petition to expel him from their village in southwestern Sichuan province to “protect villagers’ health”. Beijing has now pledged to ensure the boy, dubbed Kunkun in the media, gets an education after reports he was having trouble finding a school that would take him, the China Daily said. China’s health ministry has also pledged to conduct spot checks around China to uncover any other violations of anti-discrimination policies, the state-run paper reported. It was unclear yesterday whether Kunkun still faces expulsion from the village, where he had been living under his grandfather’s care. The United Nations said that it was “deeply concerned” about that case, which has prompted huge debate in China and highlighted the stigma attached to the virus in a country where sufferers face widespread discrimination. “Stigma and discrimination are our biggest enemies in the fight to end HIV,” the UN said in a statement published Friday. “But sadly, this week’s reports demonstrate that breaching confidentiality, ignorance and fear continue to have devastating consequences for those living with HIV.” The child’s grandfather and guardian, Luo Wenhui, told the Beijing News on Saturday that he had signed the petition to remove Kunkun because he “hoped that it would make things better,” as he would receive better care elsewhere. The boy was reportedly referred to as a “time bomb” by villagers worried about being infected and local children shunned him. Reports said Kunkun was born HIV-positive through transmission from his mother. — AFP Can the blood of Ebola survivors create a cure? CHICAGO: For months, Vanderbilt University researcher Dr James Crowe has been desperately seeking access to the blood of US Ebola survivors, hoping to extract the proteins that helped them overcome the deadly virus for use in new, potent drugs. His efforts finally paid off in mid-November with a donation from Dr Rick Sacra, a University of Massachusetts physician who contracted Ebola while working in Liberia. The donation puts Crowe at the forefront of a new model for fighting the virus, now responsible for the worst known outbreak in West Africa that has killed nearly 7,000 people. “They can take antibodies they find in my blood and map them out,” Sacra said in an interview. “They are looking for the ones that are most important in neutralizing the virus.” Sacra, a medical missionary for Christian group SIM USA, said he made the blood donation with “no strings attached,” and does not stand to gain financially if a product based on his antibodies reaches the market. Crowe is working with privately-held drugmaker Mapp Biopharmaceutical Inc, which he said will manufacture the antibodies for further testing under a National Institutes of Health grant. Mapp is currently testing its own drug ZMapp, a cocktail of three antibodies that has shown promise in treating a handful of Ebola patients. Crowe’s hope is to improve on ZMapp by isolating the human antibodies of actual survivors and create a drug effective against all strains of Ebola. Several leading scientists have embraced the idea of using survivors’ antibodies as the most promising approach in the fight against Ebola. Crowe is also part of a large consortium of academic and corporate partners working to develop and test human antibodies from Ebola survivors treated at Emory University that is being assembled by Department of Defense. The push is part of the race to develop drugs to address the ongoing outbreak in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea. Canada’s Tekmira Pharmaceuticals Corp is also testing a treatment, while drugmakers including GlaxoSmithKline Plc and Merck & Co, in partnership with NewLink Genetics Corp, are working on vaccines. Last month, a group of prominent scientists including three Nobel laureates, urged the US government to accelerate the antibodies push, Reuters reported. “We’ve moving night and day around this,” Crowe said. Foreign invaders Antibodies are immune-system proteins that seek and destroy foreign invaders, such as viruses or bacteria. Crowe, who directs the Vaccine Center at Vanderbilt, is working with Sacra’s B cells - white blood cells that form antibodies. They will synthesize genes from the most potent of these antibodies, which can be made into treatments. Drugs created this way are called monoclonal antibodies, a manufactured protein that attacks a specific target, in this case a receptor on the Ebola virus. The current version of ZMapp was developed in mouse blood cells that were exposed to samples containing Ebola virus fragments from the 1995 Kikwik outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo. These cells were genetically modified to make them more human. “They may or may not work. We don’t know that yet,” Crowe said of ZMapp. The next-generation product Crowe is working on will be fully human, using antibodies generated by Ebola survivors, making it less likely to cause side effects. Mapp would not comment about its drug development plans. All of the antibodies generated in this work will be tested against live Ebola virus samples in a high-security laboratory run by Dr Thomas Geisbert at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston. Promising candidates will be tested in mice and guinea pigs before going to primates than then humans, a process that could take several months. “We hope to have antibodies that are like ZMapp or better,” said Geisbert, who has a $26 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to study experimental Ebola treatments. A key production issue for ZMapp has been its slow method of growing antibodies in the cells of tobacco plants. In October, Mapp started working with biotechnology company Amgen to mass produce ZMapp antibodies in mammalian cells, a well established manufacturing process. Crowe said the antibodies he is working on would be produced in both cell lines and tobacco plants. Vanderbilt will license the most promising drug candidates, and at least four commercial partners, including Mapp, are considering whether to license them. Crowe said he has also been in discussions with US health regulators about how to design clinical trials for drugs developed from survivors’ antibodies. He estimates trials could begin in late spring or early summer of 2015. Sample shortage Crowe’s lab has been working on Ebola for the past two years. In that time, he said he has spent “a tremendous amount of effort” trying to get samples from Ebola survivors out of Africa. Obtaining the samples during the current outbreak has proved nearly impossible, as governments in West Africa struggle to curb the virus and US authorities tighten restrictions around the transfer of highly infectious materials. As a result, Crowe and his peers in the field have been seeking out the small number of US survivors who were treated in this country. Scarcity has made the Sacra donation all the sweeter for Crowe and Geisbert. Crowe believes his luck turned when he mentioned the problem to Dr Larry Zeitlin, Mapp’s president. Zeitlin used his connections with missionary organizations, some of which have used ZMapp to treat their infected staff, Crowe said. Soon after, Sacra volunteered. While none of the experimental Ebola treatments have been proven effective in rigorous clinical trials, Sacra believes they played a significant role in his own recovery in September. He received Tekmira’s TKM-Ebola and a plasma infusion from fellow survivor, and medical missionary, Dr Kent Brantly, and said his condition improved immediately. With a new lease on life, Sacra announced last week that he would return to Liberia to continue his medical work. — Reuters INDIA: Part of farmland destroyed by asbestos is seen in Roro. Forgotten asbestos mine sickens Indian villagers RORO VILLAGE: Asbestos waste spills in a gray gash down the flank of a lush green hill above tribal villages that are home to thousands in eastern India. Three decades after the mines were abandoned, nothing has been done to remove the enormous, hazardous piles of broken rocks and powdery dust left behind. In Roro Village and nearby settlements, people who never worked in the mines are dying of lung disease. Yet in a country that treats asbestos as a savior that provides cheap building materials for the poor, no one knows the true number and few care to ask. “I feel weak, drained all the time,” Baleman Sundi gasped, pushing the words out before she lost her breath. “But I must work.” The 65-year-old paused, inhaled. “I don’t have a choice.” Another gasp. “I have to eat.” Sundi and 17 others from a clutch of impoverished villages near the abandoned hilltop mines were diagnosed in 2012 with asbestosis, a fatal lung disease. One has since died. Tens of thousands more, some of them former mine workers, remain untested and at risk. Asbestos makes up as much as 14.3 percent of the soil around Roro Village, analysis of samples gathered by The Associated Press showed. Few have done anything to help people such as Sundi. The villagers have no money for doctors or medical treatment, and cannot afford to move. Neither the government nor the Indian company that ran the mines from 1963 to 1983 has made any move to clean up the estimated 700,000 tons of asbestos tailings left scattered across several kilometers (miles) of hilly mining area. The mine’s operator, Hyderabad Asbestos Cement Products Ltd, nowadays known as HIL Ltd., says it has done nothing illegal. “The company had followed all rules and procedures for closure of a mine and had complied with the provisions of the law, as in force in 1983,” it said in a statement released to the AP. Sundi and the others are suing in the country’s environmental court for cleanup, compensation and a fund for future victims of asbestos-related disease. If they win, the case would set precedents for workplace safety and corporate liability, subjects often ignored or dismissed in developing India. “There will be justice only if we win,” Sundi rasped. “Whoever did this must pay.” India placed a moratorium on asbestos mining in 1986, acknowledging that the fibrous mineral was hazardous to the miners. Hazardous substance But that was the government’s last decision curtailing the spread of asbestos. It has since embraced the mineral as a cheap building material. Today India is the world’s fastest-growing market for asbestos. In INDIA: Kalyan Bansingh, left, main plaintiff in a case suing the country’s environmental courts for cleanup, compensation and a fund for future victims of an abandoned asbestos mine sits outside his home in Roro. — AP photos the last five years, India’s asbestos imports shot up 300 percent. The government helps the $2 billion asbestos manufacturing industry with low tariffs on imports. It has also blocked asbestos from being listed as a hazardous substance under the international Rotterdam Convention governing how dangerous chemicals are handled. The country keeps no statistics on how many people have been sickened or died from exposure to the mineral, which industry and many government officials insist is safe when mixed with cement. Western scientists strongly disagree. The World Health Organization and more than 50 countries, including the United States and all of Europe, say it should be banned in all forms. Asbestos fibers lodge in the lungs and cause many diseases. The International Labor Organization estimates 100,000 people die every year from workplace exposure, and experts believe thousands more die from exposure elsewhere. “My greatest concern is what will happen in India. It’s a slow-moving disaster, and this is only the beginning,” said Philip Landrigan, a New York epidemiologist who heads the Rome-based Collegium Ramazzini, which pioneered the field of occupational health worldwide. “The epidemic will go largely unrecognized,” he said. Eventually, “it’s going to end up costing India billions of dollars.” From the top of Roro Hill, a small boy leaped out to slide down the cascade of fluffy grey dust. A few villagers followed, nudging a herd of cows and goats. Huge clouds billowed in their wake. The villagers often ignore the warnings from visiting doctors and activists to stay away from the waste. Many don’t believe the asbestos, which looks like regular rocks and dirt, could be dangerous. Others are more fatalistic, noting they hardly have a choice. Private companies “What can we do? This is our land,” said 56-yearold Jema Sundi, diagnosed with asbestosis though she never went into the mines. “We tell the children, don’t go there. But they are children, you cannot control them.” She then noticed her 4-year-old nephew Vijay, his tiny body covered with chalky white streaks, shrinking into himself as if trying to disappear. “You went up there today again?” she exclaimed. Vijay, lowering his head, attempted a half-smile. When Hyderabad Asbestos first began mining in Jharkhand in 1963, India was in its second decade of independence and attempting to industrialize. Most services and industries were nationalized, but some heavy industries and mining were opened to private companies, many of which operated opaquely. Hydrabad Asbestos employed about 1,500 people in the asbestos mines. Most were tribal villagers eager to participate in the country’s development. But for them that development never arrived. Kalyan Bansingh, lead plaintiff in the court case, worked more than a decade building scaffolding inside newly blasted mining caverns. Like many laborers across India, he took to chewing an unrefined sugar product called jaggery in the misguided belief that airborne fibers would adhere to the sticky bolus and stay out of his lungs. — AP TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 H E A LT H & S C I E N C E KUALA LUMPUR: In this picture taken December 9, 2014, Bangladeshi woman Nusrat Hussein Kiwan poses in front of the International Patients Centre reception area at a private hospital. — AFP photos KUALA LUMPUR: Alexandria Garvie from Australia looks at herself in a mirror following a tummy-tuck operation at a private hospital. KUALA LUMPUR: Alexandria Garvie from Australia poses following a tummy-tuck operation. Seeing the doctor, overseas: Medical tourism booms in Asia KUALA LUMPUR: The lines snaking into Bangladesh’s overwhelmed hospitals are often so long, says Nusrat Hussein Kiwan, that they extend into the street outside-too many patients seeking too few quality doctors. So, through a Google search, the wife of a Bangladeshi construction executive chose a Malaysian hospital for her heart bypass surgery. “It’s peaceful here, and my doctors are good,” Kiwan, 65, said during a post-op check-up at a Kuala Lumpur private hospital, looking full of life in an orange headscarf and sparkling gold bracelets. “I didn’t expect to be as good as before. But I’m better.” Kiwan spent $20,000 on the procedure earlier this year, joining a booming global medical tourism market that is seeing particularly rapid growth in Southeast Asia. US-based industry resource Patients Beyond Borders estimates the world market is expanding by 25 percent per year-it reached $55 billion with 11 million medical tourists in 2013. International medical tourism began to gain ground in the 1980s as Latin American countries such as Costa Rica and Brazil offered relatively cheap dental, cosmetic and other procedures to US and European patients driven south by high costs. But the onetime niche market has developed into a multi-billion-dollar industry as developingworld health systems improve, global aviation links spread, and the Internet broadens patients’ horizons. Procedures vary widely from fertility treatments in Barbados, to cosmetic surgery in Brazil, heart and eye operations in Malaysia, and gender-reassignment in Thailand. ‘Perfect storm’ The sector benefits from a “perfect storm of an ageing global population, rising affluence and greater choice in quality hospitals,” said Josef Woodman, CEO of Patients Beyond Borders.”This is particularly true in Asia, where disparities in quality of care are driving millions of patients to countries such as Thailand, Malaysia, South Korea, Taiwan-and even the US and UKin search of medical treatment not yet available in their homelands.” “The near-term growth potential is significant,” he said. Increasingly, major Asian players like India, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand are aggressively promoting treatments at up to 80 percent savings compared to developed nations, with some companies arranging package trips that combine a nose job with a little beach time. Southeast Asia, in particular, is considered a medical-tourism “sweet spot,” with decades of solid economic growth creating high-quality medical systems that remain competitively priced. Patients come from both rich and poor nations, the former driven by high costs at home, and the latter seeking better-quality care. Malaysia’s market has nearly doubled since 2010, reaching 770,000 patients and $200 million in revenue last year, according to government figures. “We are behind Thailand for sure, but we are giving Singapore a good fight,” said T Mahadevan, head of the Association of Private Hospitals of Malaysia. Thailand says it attracted 2.53 million medical tourists in 2012. Though its figures include spa tourists, that’s a onethird increase in just two years, a period in which revenues nearly doubled to around $4.2 billion. In Singapore, medical tourists spent $630 million last year, a figure likely inflated by the modern city-state’s relatively higher costs. Patients Beyond Borders estimates Singapore draws more than a half-million treatment-seekers annually, mostly from neighboring Indonesia, where health systems lag.Malaysia set up a special body in 2009 to streamline and organize industry players.Patients Without Borders calls Malaysia “medical travel’s best-kept secret”, noting the widely spoken fluent English and far cheaper medical costs compared to Japan, the United States, Europe and other key clientele sources. “I would come back here again. I would definitely recommend it,” Alexandria Garvie, 61, said from her hospital bed in Kuala Lumpur after a tummy tuck. The $5,000 procedure-around one-quarter of what she would have paid at home in Australia-was per- Germany to step up bird flu testing after new cases discovered GERMANY: Picture taken on December 16, 2014 shows laboratory assistant Sabrina Dewald holding samples from animals of a poultry farm in front of an analytical apparatus at Lower Saxony’s state office for consumer protection and food safety. HAMBURG: Germany announced Yesterday compulsory testing of ducks and geese for bird flu before slaughtering after two more cases of the H5N8 strain of the disease were discovered, the country’s agriculture ministry said. A new regulation forcing all ducks and geese to be tested for bird flu before slaughter under urgent approval procedures, a ministry spokesperson said. It is set to take force today, she said. This is because ducks and geese show late or even no clinical symptoms of the disease and intensified monitoring is needed, she said. The move follows the confirmation on Saturday of another case of H5N8 bird flu on a farm in the German state of Lower Saxony, a leading poultry production region. Another H5N8 case was confirmed in a wild duck in the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt, bringing to five the number of reported cases in the country since November. Germany, the Netherlands, Britain and Italy have been since November been hit by the H5N8 bird flu strain which has devastated poultry flocks in Asia, mainly South Korea, earlier this year but has never been detected in humans. More humane free range poultry farming methods introduced in recent years have increased the risk that farm poultry can contract diseases from wild birds. The first H5N8 case in Germany was confirmed on Nov 4 on a poultry farm in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern in east Germany. Britain on Sunday lifted restrictions around a duck farm in northern England where the disease had been discovered. —Reuters formed at the Beverly Wilshire Medical Centre. The company also recently opened a new branch near the border with Singapore to entice patients from the more affluent city-state. Most medical tourists to Malaysia, however, are well-heeled visitors from lessdeveloped Indonesia, followed by Indians, Japanese and Chinese. Future growth is expected from the wealthy Middle East. Sun and silicone Ancillary businesses have sprouted. Beautiful Holidays, based on the northern Malaysian island of Penang, connects overseas clients with local cosmetic surgeons, arranges their accommodations, and shepherds them to pre- and post-op check-ups. But it also arranges drinks, dining and sightseeing in Penang, know for its historical sites, beaches and cultural melange. “The idea is to have people come here for holidays-sun and silicone, that kind of thing,” said Tony Leong, the company ’s program director. Ashley Higgins, a 30-year-old American, has used the company twice, first for a breast augmentation, then a nose job.She was initially wary of going under the knife on the other side of the globe, but price concerns won out.”The hard part is trusting people when you are 1,000 miles from home. I felt comfortable coming here,” she said. — AFP China punishes hospital for operating room photos BEIJING: Chinese health authorities put a hospital president on probation and fired three other supervisors following public outrage over photos posted online of smiling medical staff posing with patients in the middle of surgery. The photos were taken in August at privately owned Fengcheng Hospital in the north-central city of Xi’an and leaked on social media over the weekend. Online commentators criticized medical staff for being unprofessional and disrespectful of patients, while others defended the photos, saying they were intended to be private and were taken at the end of surgical procedures. Tensions have run high between health workers and patients in China. Patients often complain about poor medical services and high costs, especially the need to bribe doctors and nurses in exchange for competent services. Chinese health workers say they are overworked, underpaid and underappreciated. The Xi’an Bureau of Public Health, which handed out the punishment, said in a statement Sunday that the staff at Fengcheng took the photos to memorialize the operating room, which was to be relocated. Nevertheless, the bureau said the picture-snapping violated proper medical procedures and had a negative social impact. It requested everyone involved in the photo scandal to offer “deep” self criticisms. The bureau also put the hospital president on probation for one year and fired a deputy president, the head nurse and the person in charge of anesthetics. The bureau also demanded that the hospital issue an open apology and rectify its management to avoid similar incidents in the future.—AP TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 W H AT ’ S O N Dow Marine Conservation Program organizes beach clean-ups T he Dow Chemical Company, in partnership with the en.v Initiative (en.v) and implementing partner the Kuwait Society for Protection of Animals and Their Habitat (K’S PATH), launched the annual Dow Marine Conservation Program (DMCP) with the first series of beach clean-ups of the season, on November 14 and December5 at Sulaibikhat Beach. Representatives from Dow Chemical Kuwait, en.v representative, K’S PATH staff, along with a number of volunteers from across different groups and organizations, took part in these latest clean-up efforts. Over a period of two hours, volunteers cleared up terrestrial marine waste from across an 8000 square meter stretch of shoreline at Sulaibikhat Beach. The inaugural clean-up of the season engaged the efforts of 42 volunteers, including students from Al-Bayan Bilingual School (BBS) and members of AUKause (an American University of Kuwait club), who collected approximately 448 kilograms of terrestrial marine waste, filling up 56 large trash bags. The second clean-up included a total of 26 volunteers, including students from the Universal American School and members of the Kuwait Red Crescent, who managed to clear up approximately 472 kilograms of waste, filling up 59 large trash bags. “The Dow Marine Conversation Program is an excellent example of how cooperation, between businesses and responsible citizens, can help make a difference to our environment,” said Jamel Attal, managing director, Dow Kuwait. “As a company with a global commitment to preserving our planet and promoting sustainable practices, it was only fitting for us to support this initiative to help conserve Kuwait’s valuable coastal habitats and marine ecosystems. Its success so far, in clearing tons of waste from Kuwait’s beaches over the past 3 years, helps validate the need for such a program and we are pleased to have been able to play a role.” Introduced in 2011, the DMCP initiative promotes the protection of fragile marine habitats in Kuwait such as Sulaibikhat beach, lovingly dubbed the Mangrove Beach by volunteers. The program carries out its work through sustained beach clean-ups, educational outreach activities and volunteer engagements. Since April 2011, the DMCP has conducted a total of 55 clean-ups at the Mangrove Beach, which has resulted in the clearing up of more than 14 tonnes of terrestrial marine waste from the beach. In 2013 alone, the DMCP held eight clean-ups at Sulaibikhat, engaging a total of 325 volunteers from 12 different volunteer groups, embassies and educational institutions, and cleaning up close to4912 kilograms (almost five tonnes) of waste. Zahed Sultan, Managing Director at the en.v Initiative, said: “Now more than ever, the DMCP is committed to carry out its mission of spearheading the marine environmental conserva- tion movement in Kuwait. Our goal has always been to encourage long-term, sustainable environmental change in the country, helping to foster a national sense of environmental consciousness. Over the past few years, we have seen tremendous results, and we are optimistic that our efforts this year will prove just as fruitful.” Fresh volunteers who were taking part in the program for the first time, underwent a training session ahead of the clean-ups with an educational presentation on leadership and volunteering. The clean-ups were also preced- ed by a site survey and trial clean up, conducted on October 31. The DMCP’s outreach efforts have educatedal most 650 students and adults through various interactive presentations, and engaged a total of 1,500 members of the public during its 2013 Summer Awareness Campaign, which was held in key commercial centers around Kuwait. The DMCP was also bestowed with the “Corporate Social Responsibility Initiative of the Year Award” at the Middle East Oil and Gas Awards 2013, in recognition of the program’s efforts and accomplishments. SABECO hosted La Masiya Football Academy members recently at its restaurants, which include Abou Jassem, Sandawicha, JJ’s and Meywa. IEI Family Day at Green Farm House, Wafra T he Institution of Engineers (India), Kuwait Chapter is pleased to inform you all that IEI Family Day will be celebrated on 26th December 2014 Green Farm House, Wafra. This long day event shall be started at 8.30am with Yoga Class. This Family Get together event will be filled with the Group Games, Bingo, Talent Shows, Songs, Music and Creative Works, Group Dance, Bonfire etc. Attractive prizes will be distributed to the winners of the each games and events. It is the day with full of fun and enjoyment for entire family members and Guests. TIES CENTER The Effects of Food Additives on the Body and Mind by Dr Kamel Al-Farraj What are the effects of addictive chemicals in food? Why do food companies add so many chemicals? Why is fast food bad for you? What do neuroexyto toxins do to your food and to your brain? Dr Kamel will answer all these questions and many more. Today, December 23 @ 7pm What’s On - Submission Guidelines All photos submitted for What’s On should be minimum 200dpi. Articles must be in plain text and should include name and phone numbers. Articles and photos that fail to meet these requirements will not be published. Please send them to [email protected] FOSTALGIA 2014 family get-together conducted by FOSA Kuwait K uwait Chapter of FOSA (Farook College Old Students’ Association) held a family get-together “FOSTALGIA 2014” on December 12,2014,at Kuwait Medical Association Hall, Jabriya. The function started with recitation of holy Qur’an by Basit Ashraf, and was presided over by Mohammed Rafi, President of FOSA Kuwait. Riyas Ahmed, General Secretary welcomed the gathering. The chief guest of the function Laila Yousuf AlSaqar, a well-known business person in Kuwait and who extended financial support for the various projects for the development of Farook College, made the felicitation speech. Fosa Kuwait chapter honored her by presenting a memento as token of appreciation of her contributions in the field of education. During the function, FOSA honored its member P.P Junoob with an Excellency Award for his performance in the field of Journalism, a memento was presented to him by K.V. Ahmed koya, Ex-president of Fosa Kuwait chapter. Anoop an old student of Farook College from Dubai also attended the function as a guest. It was a wonderful gathering of different generations of Farook College alumni who are working in different fields in Kuwait, which started with a buffet lunch. This unique family get-together gave the people a variety of experi- ences. The program was filled with games, quizzes, cultural performances by kids, music etc. A team of FOSA, consisting Mohammed Rafi, Riyas Ahamed, Ahmed Koya KV, Basheer Batha, Imtiaz CEV, Rameez, Mohamed TV, Ashraf Mohammed, Ashraf Moosa, Subair MM, Haneef Mohammed, Kabeer and Kamal Koshani controlled the entire program. Ashraf Mohamed, Treasurer of FOSA thanked each and every member of FOSA for organizing such a wonderful program. He also extended his gratitude to the program sponsors, QualityNet, Gulf Bank, Al-Sayar Group and Geepas electronics. W H AT ’ S O N TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 Relax, Renew and Ring in 2015 at Marina Hotel Kuwait F rom a New Year’s Eve reception and dinner to a rejuvenating accommodation package, Marina Hotel Kuwait is offering unique experiences for guests to welcome 2015.When guests choose to ring in the New Year at Marina Hotel, they will have more to celebrate than the passing of another year. The Hotel offers the perfect venue for New Year’s Eve and New Year celebrations with your family, friends and loved ones under the twinkling lights and the cool breeze of the Arabian coast. The hotel has fabulous feasts lined up with mouth-watering menus and special entertainment to make your yearend unforgettable. Guests can celebrate the end of 2014 in style at the Six Palms Restaurant or the Atlantis Restaurant with a magnificent international buffet dinner at both restaurants. Stimulate your appetite with a mouth-watering assortment of appetizers, soups, signature dishes as well as desserts prepared by a team of culinary experts. After a night of celebration, indulge in a deserving year-end getaway with a host of privileges that include a New Year room package of one night stay starting from KD 170 inclusive of buffet breakfast and buffet dinner at the Six Palms restaurant or Atlantis restaurant for two persons. What better way than to start the first day of the year with your loved ones through a delectable selection of special treats and surprises for the entire family at a delightful international lunch buffet at the Atlantis restaurant. Delight yourself in a lavish experience and visit Marina Hotel Kuwait for the fun and festivities. For more information, please visit our website: www.marinahotel.com Viswakarma organization celebrates Viswakala-2014 V iswakarma Organization for Ideal Career and Education (VOICE KUWAIT) celebrated its 10th Anniversary “VISWAKALA-2014” at Carmel school Auditorium Khaitan.The function was inaugurated by lighting the lamp by Baluchandran. This was followed by welcome address by Baiju Vijayan (General convener). Voice Kuwait president PG Binu made presidential speech, General secretary Chandra Mohanan read the annual report for 2014. Vargheese Puthukulangara, Siddeeque Valiyakath, Sasi Kattoor (VSV Baharain, General Secretary), Surendran Mathoor (patron, Voice Kuwait) and VK Bhargavi (Rtd.RDO & sub divisional Magistrate) made felicita- ACK team placed in top 3 during regional competition nder the patronage of HH the Amir, Sheikh Sabah Al Ahmed Al Jaber Al Sabah, and in the presence of honorary guest, His Excellency, Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah Al-Mubarak U ning teams were awarded for their outstanding achievements. INJAZ Young Arab Entrepreneurs Competition was launched in 2007 and is attended yearly by national competition winners from Al-Sabah Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs, INJAZ Al Arab announced the successful conclusion of the 8th annual Young Entrepreneurs 2014 Regional Competition. The event was concluded with a prestigious awards ceremony held at the Kuwait Regency Hotel, where win- countries across the region. This year’s competition was the culmination of 18 teams from 13 different countries; namely Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Lebanon, Kuwait, Morocco, Oman, Palestine, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, UAE and Yemen. Representing Kuwait, ACK students placed in the top 3 for Best Product of the Year and the Best Company of the Year categories. The competition was judged by two prestigious judging panels. Student companies were assessed on their ability to demonstrate sound business insight, financial knowledge, marketing support and feasibility studies. In addition, competing students were required to spend one day showcasing their products, presenting to the public, and holding a private question and answer session with the judging panel in order to present their business in its entirety. Professor Jehad Yasin, Head of School of Business at ACK, commented: “For the second consecutive time our “Skraab” team participated and succeeded by representing Kuwait in this prestigious competition. We are very proud of our students. This demonstrates excellence and dedication, as well as their desire to always aim high. I personally would like to thank Ms. Johanne Flynn, their instructor, for all the efforts and support provided, as well as her leadership and persistence which led to this success and we look forward to participate in next year’s version.” The ACK Family would like to congratulate the “Skraab” team for once again successfully representing Kuwait and the College. tion speeches on the occasion. Senior organization members Haridasan Mookambika and Keloth Vijayan were felicitated in the event. Gold Medals were distributed to the students who made outstanding performance in SSLC & Higher Secondary exams. Folk dance competition were conducted among the Indian schools in Kuwait and Integrated Indian School won the First Prize. Musical nite was conducted by the popular idea star singers Jins Gopinath and Deepthi Valsan. Danseur Anu Ashok also gave her performance. The program was beautifully compered by Manoj Mavelikkara. Treasurer voice Kuwait, Raghunathan Achari proposed the vote of thanks. Celebrate the festive season with Sheraton & Four Points Kuwait A s we countdown the 2014 year, Sheraton Kuwait, A Luxury Collection Hotel and Four Points by Sheraton Kuwait families wish the beautiful Kuwait and its people happy holidays and a prosperous New Year. Throughout this time the hotels have been extensively preparing for a stunning Season and New Years Eve dining experience, inviting all our distinguished guests to join us in making the occasion most memorable and start the new year with the most delicious cuisine. Indulge in any of the specialty restaurants located within the elegant and enchanting hotel walls in Kuwait city or one of the largest malls in the region, the Avenues. Experience a trip around the world with the international cuisine of Al Hambra; explore the piquant and exotic Indian palate at Bukhara, savor the delicious haven of authentic Lebanese at Le Tarbouche, treasure the most exquisite Iranian cuisine at Shahrayar, captivate your taste buds whilst in the most tranquil atmosphere with marvelous English Tea and snacks at the English Tea Lounge. Treat yourselves, family, and friends to the first fine dining Italian restaurant in Kuwait, where you are able to enjoy the most bona fide delicacies of Italy hidden behind the most lavish and elegant marble filled walls of the first five star hotel in Kuwait, Sheraton Kuwait. For those looking to just sit back, relax, and enjoy the most comfortable, casual, down to earth holiday season and start to the New Year, the Four Points by Sheraton Kuwait has the perfect choices for you. Indulge in the most laid back trip across the globe with Asseef offering the most delicious international cuisine or treat yourselves to the most feel good treat of all; pizza, prepared by our specialty pizza chef in the most modern pizza oven only found at La Mamma Pizzeria. The Jordanian community in Kuwait hosted a dinner banquet in Julai’ah in honor of Speaker of the Jordanian Senate Dr Abdur-Rauf Rawabdeh, who visited Kuwait recently. —Photos by Yasser Al-Zayyat TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 TV PROGRAMS 22:20 Coronation Street 22:50 Emmerdale 23:45 Four Weddings UK 00:20 Gold Rush 01:10 Alaskan Bush People 02:00 Fast N’ Loud 02:50 Storage Hunters 03:15 Container Wars 03:40 Garage Gold 04:05 How It’s Made 04:30 How It’s Made 05:00 Treehouse Masters 06:00 Wheeler Dealers 06:50 Robson Green’s Extreme Fishing Challenge 07:40 Fast N’ Loud 08:30 Storage Hunters 08:55 Container Wars 09:20 Garage Gold 09:45 How It’s Made 10:10 How It’s Made 10:35 Gold Rush 11:25 Gold Rush 12:15 Alaskan Bush People 13:05 Storage Hunters 13:30 Container Wars 13:55 Garage Gold 14:20 Robson Green’s Extreme Fishing Challenge 15:10 Wheeler Dealers 16:00 Fast N’ Loud 16:50 How It’s Made 17:15 How It’s Made 17:40 Treehouse Masters 18:30 Deadly Islands 19:20 Manhunt 20:10 Container Wars 20:35 Garage Gold 21:00 Get Out Alive With Bear Grylls 21:50 Deadly Islands 22:40 Manhunt 23:30 Get Out Alive With Bear Grylls 00:00 Giuliana & Bill 00:55 The Soup 01:25 Keeping Up With The Kardashians 02:20 E! News 03:15 Escape Club 04:10 E!ES 05:05 THS 06:00 Keeping Up With The Kardashians 06:55 Keeping Up With The Kardashians 07:50 Style Star 08:20 E! News 09:15 Giuliana & Bill 10:15 Giuliana & Bill 11:10 #RichKids Of Beverly Hills 11:35 #RichKids Of Beverly Hills 12:05 E! News 13:05 Extreme Close-Up 13:35 The E! True Hollywood Story 14:30 Style Star 15:00 Keeping Up With The Kardashians 16:00 Eric And Jessie: Game On 16:30 Eric And Jessie: Game On 17:00 Eric And Jessie: Game On 17:30 Eric And Jessie: Game On 18:00 Eric And Jessie: Game On 18:30 Eric And Jessie: Game On 19:00 Eric And Jessie: Game On 19:30 Eric And Jessie: Game On 20:00 Eric And Jessie: Game On 20:30 Eric And Jessie: Game On 21:00 Eric And Jessie: Game On 21:30 Eric And Jessie: Game On 22:00 E! News 23:00 Kourtney And Khloe Take The Hamptons 00:05 Chopped 00:55 Amazing Wedding Cakes 01:45 Guy’s Big Bite 02:10 Guy’s Big Bite 02:35 Jenny Morris Cooks The Riviera 03:00 Jenny Morris Cooks The Riviera 03:25 Charly’s Cake Angels 03:50 Amazing Wedding Cakes 04:40 All You Can Meat 05:05 Roadtrip With G. Garvin 05:30 Reza, Spice Prince Of India 05:50 Siba’s Table 06:10 Sweet Genius 07:00 Roadtrip With G. Garvin 07:25 Roadtrip With G. Garvin 07:50 Diners, Drive-Ins & Dives 08:15 Chopped 09:05 Barefoot Contessa - Back To Basics 09:30 Chopped Canada 10:20 Recipes That Rock 10:45 All You Can Meat 11:10 Roadtrip With G. Garvin 11:35 Grandma’s Secret Cookbook 12:00 Chopped 12:50 Siba’s Table 13:15 Jenny Morris Cooks Morocco 13:40 Mystery Diners 14:05 Guy’s Grocery Games 14:55 Roadtrip With G. Garvin 15:20 Diners, Drive-Ins & Dives 15:45 Amazing Wedding Cakes 16:35 Chopped 17:25 Jenny Morris Cooks Morocco 17:50 Guy’s Big Bite 18:15 Diners, Drive-Ins & Dives 18:40 Siba’s Table 19:05 Grandma’s Secret Cookbook 19:30 Mystery Diners 19:55 Burger Land 20:20 Guy’s Grocery Games 21:10 Amazing Wedding Cakes 22:00 Reza’s African Kitchen 22:25 Reza’s African Kitchen 22:50 Ching’s Restaurant Redemption 23:15 Ching’s Restaurant Redemption 23:40 Burger Land 00:40 01:30 02:00 02:55 03:25 04:20 Dogs 05:15 06:10 07:05 07:30 08:25 Dogs 09:20 10:15 11:10 12:00 12:30 13:25 14:20 14:45 15:35 16:30 17:25 18:20 19:10 19:35 20:30 21:25 The Hungry Sailors Holiday: Heaven On Earth Emmerdale Coronation Street Cilla Paul O’grady For The Love Of Four Weddings UK The Chase Holiday: Heaven On Earth Cilla Paul O’grady For The Love Of Tricked Four Weddings UK Emmerdale Coronation Street The Hungry Sailors The Chase Holiday: Heaven On Earth Four Weddings UK Big Star’s Little Star Murdoch Mysteries Murdoch Mysteries The Jonathan Ross Show Coronation Street Big Star’s Little Star Murdoch Mysteries Murdoch Mysteries 00:00 01:00 02:00 03:00 04:00 05:00 06:00 07:00 08:00 09:00 10:00 11:00 12:00 13:00 14:00 15:00 16:00 17:00 18:00 19:00 20:00 21:00 22:00 23:00 Predator CSI Engineering Connections Situation Critical Battleground Brothers Ancient Megastructures Britain’s Greatest Machines Britain’s Underworld Tigers Of The Snow Predator CSI Engineering Connections Situation Critical Megacities Knights Of Mayhem Family Guns Wild Untamed Brazil The Known Universe Chasing UFOs Salvage Code Red Master Of Disaster The Known Universe Access 360 World Heritage Salvage Code Red Master Of Disaster Megacities 00:00 Mystery Girls 00:30 The Daily Show With Jon Stewart 01:00 The Colbert Report 01:30 Saturday Night Live 02:30 Mixology 03:00 Raising Hope 03:30 The Goldbergs 04:00 Growing Up Fisher 04:30 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon 05:30 Better Off Ted 06:00 Til Death 06:30 My Name Is Earl 07:00 Late Night With Seth Meyers 08:00 Growing Up Fisher 08:30 Better Off Ted 09:00 Raising Hope 09:30 Dads 10:00 Baby Daddy 10:30 My Name Is Earl 11:00 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon 12:00 Til Death 12:30 Growing Up Fisher 13:00 Better Off Ted 13:30 My Name Is Earl 14:00 The Goldbergs 14:30 Dads 15:00 Baby Daddy 15:30 The Daily Show With Jon Stewart 16:00 The Colbert Report 16:30 Til Death 17:00 Late Night With Seth Meyers 18:00 Raising Hope 18:30 About A Boy 19:00 The Simpsons 19:30 Baby Daddy 20:00 The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon 21:00 The Daily Show With Jon Stewart 21:30 The Colbert Report 22:00 Eastbound & Down 22:30 Ja’mie: Private School Girl 23:00 Mixology 23:30 Late Night With Seth Meyers 00:00 Rake 01:00 Outlander RED DAWN ON OSN MOVIES HD ACTION 03:00 04:00 05:00 06:00 08:00 09:00 11:00 12:00 12:30 13:00 14:00 15:00 16:00 16:30 17:00 18:00 19:00 20:00 23:00 Supernatural Revenge Once Upon A Time Rake Bones Once Upon A Time Revenge Emmerdale Coronation Street The Ellen DeGeneres Show Bones Rake Emmerdale Coronation Street The Ellen DeGeneres Show Bones Switched At Birth State Of Affairs Supernatural 00:00 01:00 03:00 04:00 05:00 07:00 07:30 08:00 09:00 10:00 10:30 11:00 12:00 13:00 14:00 15:00 17:00 18:00 19:00 20:00 21:00 22:00 23:00 Witches Of East End Good Morning America Grimm The Knick Good Morning America Emmerdale Coronation Street The Ellen DeGeneres Show 24 Emmerdale Coronation Street The Ellen DeGeneres Show Castle Witches Of East End 24 Live Good Morning America Castle Witches Of East End 24 Burn Notice Franklin & Bash Grimm The Knick 00:00 Daylight 02:00 Deja Vu 04:15 Maximum Conviction 06:00 Marvel’s Hulk vs. Thor & Wolverine 08:00 Stolen 10:00 Red Dawn 12:00 Maximum Conviction 14:00 Daylight 16:00 Stolen 18:00 Red Dawn 19:45 Jack Reacher 22:00 Walking Tall 00:00 Deja Vu-PG15 02:15 Maximum Conviction-PG15 04:00 Marvel’s Hulk vs. Thor & Wolverine-PG 06:00 Stolen-PG15 08:00 Red Dawn-PG15 10:00 Maximum Conviction-PG15 12:00 Daylight-PG15 14:00 Stolen-PG15 16:00 Red Dawn-PG15 17:45 Jack Reacher-PG15 20:00 Walking Tall-PG15 22:00 Legendary Amazons-PG15 STOLEN ON OSN MOVIES ACTION 00:00 02:00 04:00 06:00 08:00 10:00 12:00 Ass Backwards-18 The Guilt Trip-PG15 Girl In Progress-PG15 Wild Hogs-PG15 Parental Guidance-PG Wild Hogs-PG15 Girl In Progress-PG15 14:00 16:00 18:00 20:00 22:00 Bean-PG15 Parental Guidance-PG Timer-PG15 Hope Springs-PG15 The Details-18 01:00 Red Lights-PG15 03:00 The English Teacher-PG15 05:00 The Last Harbor-PG15 07:00 Trespass-PG15 09:00 Inescapable-PG15 10:45 The Last Harbor-PG15 12:30 Amour-PG15 14:45 The Next Three Days-PG15 17:00 Inescapable-PG15 18:45 Jobs-PG15 21:00 Seeking A Friend For The End Of The World-PG15 22:45 The Frozen Ground-18 01:15 The Doors: When You’re Strange-18 03:00 Texas Killing Fields-PG15 05:00 Bully-PG15 07:00 Robot & Frank-PG15 09:00 Not Without My DaughterPG15 11:00 Reviving Ophelia-PG15 12:45 Mud-PG15 15:00 Blancanieves-PG15 17:00 Not Without My DaughterPG15 19:00 Dangerous Minds-PG15 21:00 The Perks Of Being A Wallflower-PG15 23:00 Being Flynn-18 01:00 03:00 05:00 07:00 09:00 10:45 13:00 14:45 16:45 18:45 21:00 23:00 10:00 The Music Never StoppedPG15 11:45 Life Of Pi-PG 14:00 Marvel’s Ultimate Avengers II-PG 16:00 Run For Your Wife-PG15 18:00 Skyline-PG15 20:00 The Worricker: Turks & Caicos-PG15 22:00 Immortals-PG15 03:00 Top 14 Highlights 03:30 Challenge Series Golf Highlights 04:00 Afrasia Golf Masters 05:00 Top 14 07:00 Afrasia Golf Masters 08:00 PDC World Darts Championship 13:00 Top 14 Highlights 13:30 F1 H20 World Cup Highlights 14:00 Afrasia Golf Masters 15:00 Top 14 Highlights 15:30 Ryder Cup Official Film 17:00 Challenge Series Golf Highlights 18:30 Afrasia Golf Masters 19:00 NFL 21:30 Futbol Mundial 22:00 Live PDC World Darts Championship 01:30 Top 14 Highlights 02:00 Ryder Cup Official Film 03:30 WWE This Week 04:00 Live WWE Raw 07:30 Pool Mosconi Cup 11:30 F1 H20 Powerboat World Champs Highlights 12:00 World Aquabike Championship Highlights 13:00 V8 Supercars Highlights 14:00 V8 Supercars Highlights 15:00 WWE Raw 18:00 NHL 20:00 WWE Raw 23:00 F1 H20 Powerboat World Champs Highlights 23:30 World Aquabike Championship Highlights 11:30 12:30 13:30 14:00 14:30 15:00 16:00 17:00 18:00 19:00 20:00 21:00 21:25 22:00 23:00 00:30 Big Bash League T20 Highlights 01:30 ICC Cricket 360 02:00 Bangladesh v Zimbabwe ODI Highlights 03:00 Bangladesh v Zimbabwe ODI Highlights 04:00 Bangladesh v Zimbabwe ODI Highlights 05:00 Bangladesh v Zimbabwe ODI Highlights 06:00 Bangladesh v Zimbabwe ODI Highlights 07:00 ICC Cricket 360 07:30 LG ICC Awards 2014 08:30 ICC Cricket World Cup Tales 09:00 ICC Cricket World Cup Tales 09:30 ICC Cricket World Cup Tales 10:00 Big Bash League T20 Highlights 11:00 Live Big Bash League T20 14:30 ICC Cricket 360 15:00 ICC Cricket World Cup Tales 15:30 ICC Cricket World Cup Tales 16:00 Big Bash League T20 Highlights 17:00 Big Bash League T20 20:30 ICC Cricket 360 21:00 ICC Cricket World Cup Tales 21:30 ICC Cricket World Cup Tales 22:00 Big Bash League T20 Highlights 23:00 ICC Cricket 360 23:30 LG ICC Awards 2014 01:25 The Wrath Of God-18 03:15 Northern Pursuit-PG 04:50 Tribute To A Bad Man-PG 07:00 Spinout-FAM 08:35 Seven Brides For Seven Brothers-FAM 10:15 The Merry Widow-FAM 12:00 Challenge To Lassie-FAM 13:15 Texas Carnival-FAM 14:35 Seven Women-PG 16:00 Casablanca-FAM 17:45 The Unsinkable Molly BrownFAM 19:55 Mr. Skeffington-FAM 22:00 The Last Run 23:35 The Big Sleep-PG 00:45 Miracle 03:00 Owning Mahowny-U 04:45 Death At A Funeral 06:30 Fun With Dick And Jane 08:00 Barricade-U 09:30 Con Air 11:30 Crimson Tide 13:30 The Haunted Mansion 15:00 The Nightmare Before Christmas-PG 16:15 The Odd Life Of Timothy Green-U 18:00 Shanghai Knights 20:00 The Insider 22:30 Pearl Harbor 00:00 00:30 01:30 02:30 03:00 04:00 05:00 05:30 05:55 06:30 07:30 08:30 09:30 10:00 11:00 According To Jim Castle Grey’s Anatomy According To Jim The Listener The Listener According To Jim Melissa & Joey Melissa & Joey Dirt The Walking Dead Castle According To Jim Grey’s Anatomy According To Jim 00:00 02:00 03:00 07:00 08:00 23:30 The Listener The Listener According To Jim Melissa & Joey Melissa & Joey Dirt The Walking Dead Grey’s Anatomy Army Wives MasterChef Australia Switched At Birth According To Jim According To Jim Detroit 1-8-7 The Walking Dead Pawn Stars Christmas Specials Pawn Stars Christmas Specials American Restoration Christmas Specials 00:45 The Face UK 01:35 Return To Amish 02:25 I Didn’t Know I Was Pregnant 02:50 Body Bizarre 03:40 Long Island Medium 04:05 Say Yes To The Dress 04:30 Say Yes To The Dress 05:00 Toddlers & Tiaras 06:00 Something Borrowed, Something New 06:25 Your Style In His Hands 07:15 Driving Me Crazy 08:05 Cake Boss 08:30 Cake Boss 08:55 Ultimate Shopper 09:45 Cake Boss 10:10 17 Kids And Counting 10:35 Little People, Big World 11:00 Toddlers & Tiaras 11:50 Say Yes To The Dress 12:15 Say Yes To The Dress 12:40 Your Style In His Hands 13:30 Oprah: Where Are They Now? 14:20 Oprah Presents: Master Class 15:10 Something Borrowed, Something New 15:35 Cake Boss 16:00 Driving Me Crazy 16:50 17 Kids And Counting 17:15 Little People, Big World 17:40 Toddlers & Tiaras 18:30 Something Borrowed, Something New 18:55 Say Yes To The Dress 19:20 Say Yes To The Dress 19:45 Ultimate Shopper 20:35 Cake Boss 21:00 Medical Anomalies 21:50 Too Ugly For Love 22:40 Long Island Medium 23:05 Body Bizarre 23:55 Hoarding: Buried Alive World War Z-PG15 Standing Ovation-PG15 In A World...-PG15 There Be Dragons-PG15 R.I.P.D.-PG15 Captain Phillips-PG15 No Clue-PG15 Almost Christmas-PG15 R.I.P.D.-PG15 The Butler-PG15 A Family Reunion-PG15 The East-18 01:00 Tony Hawk: Boom Boom Sabotage 02:45 A Cat In Paris 04:15 Planet 51 06:00 Patoruzito 08:00 Twigson 10:00 Dr. Seuss’ Horton Hears A Who 11:30 Barbie As Rapunzel 13:00 A Cat In Paris 14:15 Back To The Sea 16:00 Scooby-Doo! Adventures: The Mystery Map! 18:00 Dr. Seuss’ Horton Hears A Who 20:00 Imaginum 21:45 Back To The Sea 23:30 Wallace & Gromit: The Curse Of The Were-Rabbit 00:15 02:00 04:00 06:00 08:00 Stranded In Paradise-PG15 Death Clique-PG15 The Sapphires-PG15 Absolute Fear-PG15 Run For Your Wife-PG15 WILD HOGS ON OSN MOVIES COMEDY HD Classifieds TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 ACCOMMODATION Kuwait KNCC PROGRAMME FROM THURSDAY TO WEDNESDAY (18/12/2014 TO 24/12/2014) SHARQIA-1 THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES 12:00 PM 3:00 PM 6:00 PM 9:00 PM 12:05 AM SHARQIA-2 NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB 12:15 PM 2:15 PM 4:30 PM 6:30 PM 8:30 PM 10:30 PM 12:30 AM SHARQIA-3 HOME HOME DECOR (Arabic) P.K -HINDI DECOR (Arabic) DECOR (Arabic) HOME 12:30 PM 2:30 PM 4:15 PM 6:45 PM 6:45 PM 9:45 PM 12:15 AM MUHALAB-1 HOME HOME HOME P.K -HINDI DECOR (Arabic) DECOR (Arabic) DECOR (Arabic) HOME 11:45 AM 1:30 PM 3:30 PM 5:15 PM 5:15 PM 8:15 PM 10:45 PM 1:15 AM MUHALAB-2 THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES MONTANA THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES MONTANA THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES MUHALAB-3 NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB FANAR-1 FOXCATCHER THE GOOD LIE FOXCATCHER THE GOOD LIE FOXCATCHER FOXCATCHER 11:30 AM 2:15 PM 5:00 PM 7:15 PM 10:00 PM 12:15 AM 11:45 AM 1:45 PM 3:45 PM 5:45 PM 7:45 PM 9:45 PM 11:45 PM 11:45 AM 2:30 PM 4:45 PM 7:30 PM 9:45 PM 12:30 AM FANAR-2 NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB 12:15 PM NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB 2:15 PM 4:15 PM 6:15 PM 8:15 PM 10:30 PM 12:45 AM FANAR-3 DECOR (Arabic) DECOR (Arabic) DECOR (Arabic) DECOR (Arabic) DECOR (Arabic) DECOR (Arabic) 11:30 AM 2:00 PM 4:30 PM 7:00 PM 9:30 PM 12:05 AM MARINA-1 HOME HOME HOME DECOR (Arabic) DECOR (Arabic) DECOR (Arabic) HOME 11:45 AM 1:45 PM 3:30 PM 5:15 PM 7:45 PM 10:15 PM 12:45 AM MARINA-2 NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB PENGUINS OF MADAGASCAR NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB 12:00 PM 2:00 PM 4:00 PM 4:00 PM 6:00 PM 8:00 PM 10:00 PM 12:05 AM MARINA-3 THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES MONTANA THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES -3D MONTANA THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES MONTANA 11:30 AM 2:15 PM 4:30 PM 7:15 PM 9:30 PM 12:15 AM AVENUES-1 HOME HOME HOME HOME HOME HOME HOME 1:15 PM 3:15 PM 5:15 PM 7:15 PM 9:15 PM 11:15 PM 1:15 AM AVENUES-2 THE GOOD LIE THE GOOD LIE THE GOOD LIE THE GOOD LIE THE GOOD LIE THE GOOD LIE 12:00 PM 2:30 PM 5:00 PM 7:30 PM 10:00 PM 12:45 AM AVENUES-3 THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES -3D 11:30 AM THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES 2:30 PM THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES -3D THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES P.K -HINDI P.K -HINDI P.K -HINDI P.K -HINDI P.K -HINDI 5:30 PM 8:30 PM 11:30 PM 12:30 PM 3:30 PM 6:30 PM 9:30 PM 12:30 AM 360º- 1 THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES -3D THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES -3D THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES P.K -HINDI THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES 11:30 AM 2:30 PM 5:30 PM 8:30 PM 8:30 PM 11:30 PM 360º- 2 THE GOOD LIE THE GOOD LIE THE GOOD LIE THE GOOD LIE THE GOOD LIE 1:30 PM 4:00 PM 6:30 PM 9:00 PM 11:45 PM 360º- 3 MONTANA MONTANA MONTANA MONTANA MONTANA MONTANA 1:15 PM 3:30 PM 5:45 PM 8:00 PM 10:15 PM 12:30 AM AL-KOUT.1 THE GOOD LIE THE GOOD LIE THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES -3D THE GOOD LIE THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES THE GOOD LIE 11:30 AM 1:45 PM 4:00 PM 6:45 PM 9:00 PM 12:05 AM AL-KOUT.2 MONTANA FOXCATCHER FOXCATCHER MONTANA FOXCATCHER MONTANA 11:30 AM 1:45 PM 4:30 PM 7:15 PM 9:30 PM 12:15 AM AL-KOUT.3 NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB 12:15 PM 2:15 PM 4:15 PM 6:15 PM 8:30 PM 10:30 PM 12:30 AM BAIRAQ-1 NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM:SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM:SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM:SECRET OF THE TOMB 11:45 AM 1:45 PM 3:45 PM 5:45 PM NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM:SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM:SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM:SECRET OF THE TOMB 7:45 PM 9:45 PM 11:45 PM BAIRAQ-2 P.K -HINDI DECOR (Arabic) DECOR (Arabic) P.K -HINDI DECOR (Arabic) DECOR (Arabic) DECOR (Arabic) 1:00 PM 1:00 PM 4:00 PM 6:30 PM 6:30 PM 9:30 PM 12:00 AM BAIRAQ-3 MONTANA HOME THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES MONTANA HOME 12:00 PM 2:15 PM 4:00 PM 7:00 PM 10:00 PM 12:15 AM PLAZA NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB P.K -HINDI DECOR (Arabic) DECOR (Arabic) NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB 3:30 PM 5:30 PM 5:30 PM 8:30 PM 11:00 PM LAILA NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB DECOR (Arabic) NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB THE HOBBIT: THE BATTLE OF THE FIVE ARMIES 4:00 PM 6:00 PM 8:30 PM 10:30 PM AJIAL.1 LINGAA - TAMIL LINGAA - TAMIL LINGAA - TAMIL 3:15 PM 6:30 PM 9:45 PM AJIAL.2 NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB DECOR (Arabic) NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: SECRET OF THE TOMB 3:30 PM 5:45 PM 8:00 PM 10:30 PM AJIAL.3 ACTION JACKSON-HINDI ACTION JACKSON-HINDI ACTION JACKSON-HINDI P.K -HINDI P.K -HINDI P.K -HINDI 3:00 PM 6:00 PM 9:00 PM 3:00 PM 6:00 PM 9:00 PM AJIAL.4 LINGAA - TAMIL IYOBINTE PUSTAKAM- Malayalam LINGAA - TAMIL P.K -HINDI P.K -HINDI P.K -HINDI 3:45 PM 7:00 PM 10:00 PM 4:00 PM 7:00 PM 10:00 PM C/A room available from Jan 25, 2015 for a decent couple or single ladyes in in Farwaniya beside Kabayan supermarket for Filipinos only. Call 66152130. 22-12-2104 Room for rent in C-A/C flat from 25 Dec 2014 for couple, airport road Khaitan. Contact: 66253647. (C 4889) 17-12-2014 CHANGE OF NAME I, Utukuru Rama Gubbaiah, holder of Indian Passport No. J2020031 hereby changed changed my name to Utukuru Rama Subba Reddy. Upparapalli Konduru Penagalur, Kadapa, A.P. (C 4891) 22-12-2014 I, A. Sahaya Newton, son of Thiru Augustine, born on 24th February 1980 (native district: Tirunelveli), residing at old No.40, New No.640, Thilagar Street, Perunkudi, Kavalkinaru, Tirunelveli-627105, shall henceforth be know as A. MARIA SAHAYA NEWTON. 18-12-2014 Prayer timings Fajr: 05:14 Shorook 06:39 Duhr: 11:47 Asr: 14:37 Maghrib: 16:55 Isha: 18:17 112 Directorate General of Civil Aviation Home Page (www.kuwait-airport.com.kw) Airlines BBC JAI JZR JZR KLM JZR THY FDB QTR PGT ETH GFA UAE JAI FDB RJA ETD MSR KKK OMA QTR ICV MSC THY JZR THY TZS BAW KAC KAC FDB QTR SVA KAC KAC KAC KAC UAE ABY ETD FDB QTR IRA GFA UAE MSC JZR MEA UAE MSR KAC KAC JZR KAC QTR KNE Flt 043 574 239 267 411 539 772 069 1048 858 620 211 853 526 067 648 305 612 6507 643 1076 673 401 6776 503 770 170 157 416 412 053 1086 512 352 302 206 332 855 125 301 055 1070 675 213 873 405 165 404 871 610 514 382 561 672 1078 472 Arrival Flights on Tuesday 23/12/2014 Route Dhaka Mumbai Amman Beirut Amsterdam/Dammam Cairo Istanbul Dubai Doha Istanbul Addis Ababa Bahrain Dubai Chennai/Abu Dhabi Dubai Amman Abu Dhabi Cairo Istanbul Muscat Doha MXP Alexandria Istanbul Luxor Istanbul Bahrain London Kuala Lumpur/Jakarta Manila/Bangkok Dubai Doha Riyadh Kochi Mumbai Islamabad Trivandrum Dubai Sharjah Abu Dhabi Dubai Doha Lar Bahrain Dubai Sohag Dubai Beirut Dubai Cairo Tehran Delhi Sohag Dubai Doha Jeddah Time 00:05 00:10 00:25 00:30 00:40 00:40 00:45 00:55 01:00 01:35 01:45 02:30 02:35 02:50 02:55 03:05 03:10 03:10 03:20 03:25 03:45 04:00 04:05 05:05 05:25 05:35 05:40 06:40 06:45 07:10 07:45 07:50 07:55 08:10 08:20 08:25 08:30 08:40 09:00 09:20 09:40 10:00 10:40 10:40 11:00 11:25 11:30 11:55 12:50 13:00 13:10 13:45 13:45 13:55 14:05 14:25 SVA FDB GFA KAC KAC ABY UAE FDB NIA KAC QTR RJA ETD SVA GFA UAL JZR UAE TAR JZR FDB ABY KAC QTR SYR KAC KAC AXB KAC KAC KAC GFA KAC KAC KAC JAI MSR FDB OMA ETH DLH ALK MEA ETD FDB UAE GFA QTR JZR KLM ETD FDB AIC PIA UAL JZR JZR THY FDB 500 057 221 788 284 127 857 051 251 562 1072 640 303 510 215 982 777 875 328 177 063 121 786 1080 341 774 618 393 674 542 678 217 166 104 742 572 618 061 647 3718 636 229 402 307 073 859 219 1074 135 415 309 059 981 239 981 185 553 764 071 Jeddah Dubai Bahrain Jeddah Dhaka Sharjah Dubai Dubai Alexandria Amman Doha Amman Abu Dhabi Riyadh Bahrain IAD Jeddah Dubai Tunis/Dubai Dubai Dubai Sharjah Jeddah Doha Damascus Riyadh Doha Kozhikode Dubai Cairo Muscat/Abu Dhabi Bahrain Paris/Rome London Dammam Mumbai Alexandria Dubai Muscat LGG Frankfurt Colombo Beirut Abu Dhabi Dubai Dubai Bahrain Doha Bahrain Amsterdam Abu Dhabi Dubai Chennai/Hyderabad/Ahmedabad Sialkot Bahrain Dubai Alexandria Istanbul Dubai 14:30 14:30 15:00 15:10 15:15 15:45 15:45 16:00 16:15 16:20 16:40 16:55 16:55 17:15 17:30 17:55 17:55 18:00 18:05 18:20 18:40 18:40 18:45 18:50 18:55 19:15 19:15 19:15 19:25 19:25 19:25 19:30 19:40 19:55 20:00 20:00 20:05 20:20 20:20 20:45 20:50 21:10 21:20 21:30 21:35 21:40 21:45 21:55 22:05 22:15 22:15 22:30 22:30 22:35 23:10 23:15 23:25 23:35 23:45 Airlines AIC PIA FDB JAI BBC KLM DLH KAC ETH THY PGT KAC UAE FDB ETD MSR KKK OMA QTR MSC QTR THY ICV FDB JAI THY JZR RJA JZR GFA THY FDB BAW QTR KAC SVA KAC KAC ABY KAC UAE ETD KAC FDB QTR KAC GFA IRA KAC JZR KAC MSC UAE MEA KAC JZR Departure Flights on Tuesday 23/12/2014 Flt Route 976 Goa/Chennai 206 Lahore 072 Dubai 573 Mumbai 044 Dhaka 411 Amsterdam 635 Frankfurt 283 Dhaka 621 Addis Ababa 773 Istanbul 859 Istanbul 381 Delhi 854 Dubai 068 Dubai 306 Abu Dhabi 613 Cairo 6508 Istanbul 644 Muscat 1085 Doha 406 Sohag 1077 Doha 765 Istanbul 673 MXP 070 Dubai 525 Abu Dhabi/Chennai 6776 Dubai 164 Dubai 649 Amman 560 Sohag 212 Bahrain 771 Istanbul 054 Dubai 156 London 1087 Doha 513 Tehran 513 Riyadh 787 Jeddah 671 Dubai 126 Sharjah 101 London/New York 856 Dubai 302 Abu Dhabi 561 Amman 056 Dubai 1071 Doha 165 Rome/Paris 214 Bahrain 674 Lar 541 Cairo 776 Jeddah 677 Abu Dhabi/Muscat 402 Alexandria 874 Dubai 405 Beirut 785 Jeddah 176 Dubai DIAL161 FOR AIRPORT INFORMATION Time 00:05 00:40 00:45 01:10 01:35 01:55 02:15 02:25 02:45 02:55 03:25 03:40 03:50 03:55 04:05 04:10 04:10 04:15 04:30 05:05 05:15 05:40 05:45 06:30 06:35 06:35 06:55 07:05 07:10 07:15 07:30 08:25 08:45 08:50 08:55 08:55 09:25 09:25 09:40 09:50 09:55 10:20 10:25 10:35 11:00 11:15 11:25 11:40 12:05 12:20 12:20 12:25 12:30 12:55 13:00 13:45 MSR UAE KAC QTR FDB KAC KNE SVA GFA KAC JZR ABY KAC FDB JZR NIA QTR JZR UAE ETD RJA SVA GFA JZR JZR TAR JZR UAL ABY UAE QTR SYR FDB AXB GFA KAC KAC JAI MSR KAC OMA FDB DLH TZS ALK ETD KAC MEA FDB GFA UAE KAC ETD QTR KLM KAC PIA FDB 611 872 673 1079 058 617 473 501 222 773 552 128 741 052 266 252 1073 538 858 304 641 511 216 184 238 328 134 982 122 876 1081 342 064 393 218 361 343 571 607 351 648 062 636 171 230 308 301 403 074 220 860 205 310 1075 415 411 240 060 Cairo Dubai Dubai Doha Dubai Doha Jeddah Jeddah Bahrain Riyadh Alexandria Sharjah Dammam Dubai Beirut Alexandria Doha Cairo Dubai Abu Dhabi Amman Riyadh Bahrain Dubai Amman Tunis Bahrain Bahrain Sharjah Dubai Doha Damascus Dubai Kozhikode Bahrain Colombo Chennai Mumbai Luxor Kochi Muscat Dubai Dammam Bahrain Colombo Abu Dhabi Mumbai Beirut Dubai Bahrain Dubai Islamabad Abu Dhabi Doha Dammam/Amsterdam Bangkok/Manila Sialkot Dubai 14:00 14:15 15:00 15:05 15:10 15:15 15:20 15:45 15:45 15:50 16:10 16:25 17:00 17:00 17:05 17:15 17:40 17:45 17:45 17:50 17:55 18:15 18:20 18:40 18:50 18:55 19:10 19:15 19:20 19:40 19:50 19:55 19:55 20:15 20:15 20:50 20:55 21:00 21:05 21:15 21:20 21:20 21:35 21:50 22:10 22:15 22:15 22:20 22:30 22:30 22:50 22:55 23:00 23:05 23:15 23:30 23:35 23:55 34 stars CROSSWORD 763 STAR TRACK Aries (March 21-April 19) You may find a physical move or some other type of major change is being discussed today. This may mean that higher-ups in your workplace are looking for a place to relocate the company. You will ponder many questions by analysis and deep, penetrating thoughts. This could all be temporary if the company building is in need of being refurbished. You could be asked to do some location research at this time. Putting yourself in a position to gather and share more information seems most important to you at this time. Many obstacles and responsibilities are about to dissolve. Someone close to you may come to you for your psychological perceptiveness and comprehension. Expressing your insights through poetry or song becomes impressive. Taurus (April 20-May 20) Watch out-an independent streak seems to be surfacing at this time. Others will admire your unique and rather unusual way of perceiving things. Your sense of humor simply shines and added to your rather eccentric behavior, should set you apart from the crowd. You find the benefits from new insights into your living situation or life conditions. Your friends or associates may come to you for help today as you have advanced teaching qualities and can patiently instruct those that have a hard time understanding some code or technique. This should all go rather smoothly. Your more reserved qualities may make others wonder what you have been up to lately-as you are not always so quiet. Keeping people guessing is a fun pastime for now. Gemini (May 21-June 20) ACROSS 1. A compartment in front of a motor vehicle where driver sits. 4. French painter (born in Russia) noted for his imagery and brilliant colors (1887-1985). 11. In bed. 15. A constellation in the southern hemisphere near Telescopium and Norma. 16. Genus of tropical shrubs and trees having usually odd-pinnate leaves with large leaflets and pink to reddish wood. 17. A quantity of no importance. 18. A young woman indulged by rich and powerful older men. 20. The state or fact of existing. 21. Winning all or all but one of the tricks in bridge. 22. A republic on the west coast of Africa. 23. A member of the Siouan people inhabiting the valleys of the Platte and Missouri rivers in Nebraska. 25. The basic unit of electric current adopted under the System International d'Unites. 26. A tiny or scarcely detectable amount. 28. Collect or gather. 31. The positive fractional part of the representation of a logarithm. 34. A salt deposit that animals regularly lick. 37. Eaten as mush or as a thin gruel. 38. American prizefighter who won the world heavyweight championship three times (born in 1942). 40. A city in central southwestern Iran. 42. A toxic nonmetallic element related to sulfur and tellurium. 45. A federal agency established to regulate the release of new foods and health-related products. 46. Resembling or characteristic of or appropriate to an elegy. 49. American Revolutionary patriot. 52. A silvery ductile metallic element found primarily in bauxite. 53. Informal abbreviation of `representative'. 54. Mature female of mammals of which the male is called `buck'. 55. Any customary and rightful perquisite appropriate to your station in life. 57. Employed in accomplishing something. 59. Optical instrument consisting of a pair of lenses for correcting defective vision. 61. The capital and largest city of Yemen. 62. (Akkadian) God of wisdom. 63. A public promotion of some product or service. 65. A bachelor's degree in religion. 67. Excessively agitated. 71. A state-chartered savings bank owned by its depositors and managed by a board of trustees. 74. The sister of your father or mother. 76. Shattered or torn up or torn apart violently as by e.g. wind or lightning or explosive. 77. Large burrowing rodent of South and Central America. 78. Any of numerous local fertility and nature deities worshipped by ancient Semitic peoples. 79. Relating to or occurring or living in or frequenting the open ocean. 82. A workplace for the conduct of scientific research. 83. Founder of Christian Science in 1866 (18211910). 84. Exaggerate one's acting. 85. A loose sleeveless outer garment made from aba cloth. DOWN 1. Open-heart surgery in which the rib cage is opened and a section of a blood vessel is grafted from the aorta to the coronary artery to bypass the blocked section of the coronary artery and improve the blood supply to the heart. 2. An elaborate song for solo voice. 3. A young child. 4. Small tough woody zamia of Florida and West Indies and Cuba. 5. A period of time equal to 1/24th of a day. 6. A platform raised above the surrounding level to give prominence to the person on it. 7. United States army officer and engineer who supervised the construction of the Panama Canal (1858-1928). 8. A genus of European owls. 9. In a straight unbroken line of descent from parent to child. 10. The act of slowing down or falling behind. 11. The part of the nervous system of vertebrates that controls involuntary actions of the smooth muscles and heart and glands. 12. A pale rose-colored variety of the ruby spinel. 13. Mild yellow Dutch cheese made in balls. 14. Slightly wet. 19. Distributed or sold illicitly. 24. German organist and contrapuntist (16851750). 27. A very poisonous metallic element that has three allotropic forms. 29. An unpredictable outcome that is unfortunate. 30. Narrow wood or metal or plastic runners used for gliding over snow. 32. Spider monkeys. 33. A deep pan with a handle. 35. A member of an agricultural people of southern India. 36. Any of numerous ornamental shrubs grown for their showy flowers of various colors. 39. (Old Testament) The second patriarch. 41. A substance produced by the hypothalamus that is capable of accelerating the secretion of a given hormone by the anterior pituitary gland. 43. A member of the Pueblo people living in northern New Mexico. 44. A system of one or more computers and associated software with common storage. 47. A fencing sword similar to a foil but with a heavier blade. 48. A state in the Rocky Mountains. 50. An independent group of closely related Chadic languages spoken in the area between the Biu-Mandara and East Chadic languages. 51. An unforeseen obstacle. 56. Genus of beetles whose grubs feed mainly on roots of plants. 58. In a mildly insane manner. 60. United States swimmer who in 1926 became the first woman to swim the English Channel (1903- ). 64. Of or relating to a seizure or convulsion. 66. Two items of the same kind. 68. A collection of things (goods or works of art etc.) for public display. 69. A drop of the clear salty saline solution secreted by the lacrimal glands. 70. Any tree or shrub of the genus Inga having pinnate leaves and showy usually white flowers. 72. Someone who works (or provides workers) during a strike. 73. A small cake leavened with yeast. 75. A coenzyme derived from the B vitamin nicotinic acid. 80. A unit of energy equal to the work done by an electron accelerated through a potential difference of 1 volt. 81. A New England state. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 You may be feeling very good about yourself just now and appreciating your own better qualities. Creative writing projects can be used in the workplace to introduce better advertising jingles. You may see value in or feel love for an older person or someone in authority. You seem to appreciate feelings and movement in general, and could possibly find yourself looking for a little romance. You may just want to get out and about and walk or exercise. It’s just a wonderful time to be in the company of others in play or work. A particular job may be just right for someone with your credentials. You certainly know how to manage and direct others. Your particular ideas and thoughts are exceptionally good today; they have not gone unnoticed. Cancer (June 21-July 22) Now is a good time for that one-on-one with a higher-up, or supervisor. This is the time that you can express your desire for a new position within the company. Perhaps you could be in management. It’s a period when you can put your practical insights into words and convey them to others. Taking care of business is a major theme where your emotional orientation is concerned. You crave organization and you want to get things accomplished. You aim to have a place for everything and everything in its place. Health and work goals take on greater importance now. You can demonstrate much understanding of and sensitivity to other’s needs at this time. A romance in your life becomes more stable. There is a deeper sense of intimacy. Leo (July 23-August 22) Expect some challenges in the workplace from time to time. You find you are appreciated for your talent in getting things done. It would be appropriate to ask for help. You are disciplined, work hard and are good at getting others to work with and for you. You have a fantastic appetite for detail work and can take it all in and still look for more. Willing and able to respond to almost any emergency-you are responsible and always ready. Being successful in life is easy; you have a built-in sense of how to approach and unravel even the most difficult problems. Helpful advice comes from a trusted confidante. You and another family member decide to visit an ill or elderly person this evening. You will meet with deep and loving acceptance. Virgo (August 23-September 22) Taking the novel approach, trying out new ideas and breakthroughs in thinking could be what life is all about. You just simply feel like being different, trying out something new and unusual. Perhaps you feel that you are too complacent, or are you getting bored with the status quoadding a little variety to your life will give it a little extra spice and adds interest. You may want to go where no one has gone before, or may just want to travel a less traveled path. Growth comes from allowing yourself to make changes, allowing yourself to see things through different eyes, so to speak, and being unafraid of taking a completely unfamiliar path or journey into the unknown. If you are reasonable, fear not what awaits you on the other side of any adventure. Word Search Libra (September 23-October 22) You may have to use a great deal of diplomacy around others. There may be some problems with a negotiation, but the event will end positively. You would just love to be out and about and enjoying the company of your friends. Unfortunately, however, you may find yourself working inside four walls. This time will pass-patience. It may be a good time to think about the vocational or career decisions you will want to change. This afternoon you look for a belated gift or two that expresses your gratefulness. Home is likely to be a very nice place this evening! This is a great time to spend with loved ones and family. Nostalgia and domesticity could begin emphasizing a need for security and a sense of roots. Scorpio (October 23-November 21) Your humor may be overshadowed, but only by your rather eccentric behavior for now. Your independence and unique qualities are appreciated by those around you. This should all give you some new ways of looking at things. Feel free to allow yourself to dream occasionally. Since you will not find these days coming too often, you should not ignore the opportunity to let your imagination loose. Maybe a good book or movie will take on that more than real dimension. Even if your friends do not see eye to eye on your unrealistic, dreamy mood, do not allow that to stop you from exploring the many possibilities that this could bring you. A plot for a play is available. Tonight you work on a new look with regard to hair or clothes style. Sagittarius (November 22-December 21) You may find yourself working extra hard to get things and people organized. Wanting and needing to feel respected is an emotionally charged issue in your life. Achieving things, working especially hard and having a strong ambition are all things that are especially important to you now. A good understanding of those around you can almost assure you of a special time with someone you love. Great feelings and knowing how much you are loved should make this a very happy time. Some very important matters may be on the mind of someone younger than you, and you may be asked for your guidance and advice. If you have time, consider making a fun gift, just for the fun of it. Your social life is bright and active. Capricorn (December 22-January 19) Professionally speaking, you are in the right frame of mind. A new person you meet today will be most important to you in the future. You enjoy meeting new people and see each person in your life as a special individual. A dream or two may have helped you to remember a promise or a project you would like to achieve before the end of the year. This may be something as simple as creating a decorative object for a friend’s gift: a homemade flower arrangement, candle, vase, drawing, etc. The noon break affords you a little time to shop and before the evening approaches you will have the art supplies you need to finish the project. Speaking of a gift, you may receive a few yourself; patience, there will be time to play soon. Smile! Aquarius (January 20- February 18) Extra support comes your way now. You may have the feeling that you are very much in touch and have a good connection with those around you; conversations have never been so interesting. All of the support that you need will be there for you. There is very little time to complete unfinished business before the year ends, but you manage to do it. Legal matters are concluded successfully today. Your taste in art and your creative thinking is heightened. Maybe this is the perfect time to pick out furnishings, colors and so forth-the more elegant things in life-or at least to communicate your ideas with loved ones. Also-this is a wonderful time to be around friends and associates and to work together. Healing is accelerated by your peaceful ways. Pisces (February 19-March 20) Work ethics are very important to you and should you choose to take time away from work today, you might allow yourself the time and call it a vacation day. Keep a good attitude about competition and prepare for some extra projects. This is a very busy time in your professional life. At home this afternoon, you also enjoy staying busy. Just whiling the time away is not your bag! It should be a good time to really look at yourself and understand what is really important. Writing efforts can be a spectacular success. Don’t hesitate if a travel opportunity arises-a journey begun this afternoon can be joyful and romantic. Do something fun with a good friend. You have a good attitude and this evening you are expressive. Yesterday’s Solution Yesterday’s Solution Daily SuDoku Yesterday’s Solution TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 i n f o r m at i o n For labor-related inquiries and complaints: Call MSAL hotline 128 INTERNATIONAL CALLS GOVERNORATE Sabah Hospital 24812000 Amiri Hospital 22450005 Maternity Hospital 24843100 Mubarak Al-Kabir Hospital 25312700 Chest Hospital 24849400 Farwaniya Hospital 24892010 Adan Hospital 23940620 Ibn Sina Hospital 24840300 PHARMACY Ahmadi Jahra Capital Al-Razi Hospital Physiotherapy Hospital Farwaniya Hawally 24846000 24874330/9 Kaizen center 25716707 Rawda 22517733 ADDRESS PHONE Afghanistan 0093 Luxembourg 00352 Albania 00355 Macau 00853 Algeria 00213 Macedonia 00389 Andorra 00376 Madagascar 00261 Angola 00244 Majorca 0034 Sama Safwan Abu Halaifa Danat Al-Sultan Fahaeel Makka St Abu Halaifa-Coastal Rd Mahboula Block 1, Coastal Rd 23915883 23715414 23726558 Anguilla 001264 Malawi 00265 Modern Jahra Madina Munawara Jahra-Block 3 Lot 1 Jahra-Block 92 24575518 24566622 Antiga 001268 Malaysia 0060 Argentina 0054 Maldives 00960 Armenia 00374 Mali 00223 Australia 0061 Malta 00356 Austria 0043 Marshall Islands 00692 Bahamas 001242 Martinique 00596 Bahrain 00973 Mauritania 00222 Bangladesh 00880 Mauritius 00230 Barbados 001246 Mayotte 00269 Belarus 00375 Mexico 0052 Belgium 0032 Micronesia 00691 Belize 00501 Moldova 00373 Benin 00229 Monaco 00377 Bermuda 001441 Mongolia 00976 Bhutan 00975 Montserrat 001664 Bolivia 00591 Morocco 00212 Bosnia 00387 Mozambique 00258 Ahlam Khaldiya Coop Fahad Al-Salem St Khaldiya Coop 22436184 24833967 New Shifa Ferdous Coop Modern Safwan Farwaniya Block 40 Ferdous Coop Old Kheitan Block 11 24734000 24881201 24726638 Tariq Hana Ikhlas Hawally & Rawdha Ghadeer Kindy Ibn Al-Nafis Mishrif Coop Salwa Coop Salmiya-Hamad Mubarak St Salmiya-Amman St Hawally-Beirut St Hawally & Rawdha Coop Jabriya-Block 1A Jabriya-Block 3B Salmiya-Hamad Mubarak St Mishrif Coop Salwa Coop 25726265 25647075 22625999 22564549 25340559 25326554 25721264 25380581 25628241 Adaliya 22517144 Botswana 00267 Myanmar (Burma) 0095 Khaldiya 24848075 Brazil 0055 Namibia 00264 Brunei 00673 Nepal 00977 Kaifan 24849807 Bulgaria 00359 Netherlands 0031 Shamiya 24848913 Burkina 00226 Netherlands Antilles 00599 Burundi 00257 New Caledonia Cambodia 00855 New Zealand 0064 Cameroon 00237 Nicaragua 00505 Canada 001 Nigar 00227 Cape Verde 00238 Nigeria 00234 Cayman Islands 001345 Niue 00683 Central African 00236 Norfolk Island 00672 Chad 00235 N. Ireland (UK) 0044 Shuwaikh 24814507 Abdullah Salem 22549134 Nuzha 22526804 Industrial Shuwaikh 24814764 00687 Qadsiya 22515088 Dasmah 22532265 Chile 0056 North Korea 00850 Bneid Al-Gar 22531908 China 0086 Norway 0047 Colombia 0057 Oman 00968 Shaab 22518752 Comoros 00269 Pakistan 0092 Qibla 22459381 Congo 00242 Palau 00680 Cook Islands 00682 Panama 00507 22451082 Costa Rica 00506 Papua New Guinea 00675 22456536 Croatia 00385 Paraguay 00595 Cuba 0053 Peru 0051 Cyprus 00357 Philippines 0063 Cyprus (Northern) 0090392 Poland 0048 Czech Republic 00420 Portugal 00351 Denmark 0045 Puerto Rico 001787 Diego Garcia 00246 Qatar 00974 Djibouti 00253 Romania 0040 Dominica 001767 Russian Federation 007 Ayoun Al-Qibla Mirqab Sharq 22465401 Salmiya 25746401 Jabriya 25316254 Maidan Hawally 25623444 Bayan 25388462 Mishref 25381200 Dominican Republic 001809 Rwanda 00250 22630786 Ecuador 00593 Saint Helena 00290 Egypt 0020 Saint Kitts 001869 24810221 El Salvador 00503 Saint Lucia 001758 Jahra 24770319 England (UK) 0044 Saint Pierre 00508 Equatorial Guinea 00240 Saint Vincent 001784 New Jahra 24575755 Eritrea 00291 Samoa US 00684 West Jahra 24772608 Estonia 00372 Samoa West 00685 South Jahra 24775066 Ethiopia 00251 San Marino 00378 Falkland Islands 00500 Sao Tone 00239 North Jahra 24775992 Faroe Islands 00298 Saudi Arabia 00966 North Jleeb 24311795 Fiji 00679 Scotland (UK) 0044 Finland 00358 Senegal 00221 Ardhiya 24884079 France 0033 Seychelles 00284 French Guiana 00594 Sierra Leone 00232 French Polynesia 00689 Singapore 0065 W Hawally Sabah Firdous 24892674 Omariya 24719048 Gabon 00241 Slovakia 00421 N Khaitan 24710044 Gambia 00220 Slovenia 00386 Georgia 00995 Solomon Islands 00677 Germany 0049 Somalia 00252 Ghana 00233 South Africa 0027 Gibraltar 00350 South Korea 0082 Greece 0030 Spain 0034 Greenland 00299 Sri Lanka 0094 Grenada 001473 Sudan 00249 Guadeloupe 00590 Suriname 00597 Guam 001671 Swaziland 00268 Guatemala 00502 Sweden 0046 Guinea 00224 Switzerland 0041 Guyana 00592 Syria 00963 Haiti 00509 Serbia 00381 Fintas 23900322 PRIVATE CLINICS Ophthalmologists Dr. Abidallah Al-Mansoor 25622444 Dr. Samy Al-Rabeea 25752222 Dr. Masoma Habeeb 25321171 Dr. Mubarak Al-Ajmy 25739999 Dr. Mohsen Abel 25757700 Dr Adnan Hasan Alwayl 25732223 Dr. Abdallah Al-Baghly 25732223 Ear, Nose & Throat (ENT) Dr. Ahmed Fouad Mouner 24555050 Ext 510 Dr. Abdallah Al-Ali 25644660 Dr. Abd Al-Hameed Al-Taweel 25646478 Dr. Sanad Al-Fathalah 25311996 Dr. Mohammad Al-Daaory 25731988 Dr. Ismail Al-Fodary 22620166 Dr. Mahmoud Al-Booz 25651426 General Practitioners Dr. Mohamme Y Majidi 24555050 Ext 123 Dr. Yousef Al-Omar 24719312 Dr. Tarek Al-Mikhazeem 23926920 Dr. Kathem Maarafi 25730465 Dr. Abdallah Ahmad Eyadah 25655528 Dr. Nabeel Al-Ayoobi 24577781 Dr. Dina Abidallah Al-Refae 25333501 Urologists Dr. Ali Naser Al-Serfy 22641534 Dr. Fawzi Taher Abul 22639955 Dr. Khaleel Abidallah Al-Awadi 22616660 Dr. Adel Al-Hunayan FRCS (C) 25313120 Dr. Leons Joseph 66703427 Psychologists /Psychotherapists Paediatricians Plastic Surgeons Dr. Mohammad Al-Khalaf 22547272 Dr. Khaled Hamadi Dr. Abdal-Redha Lari 22617700 Dr. Abd Al-Aziz Al-Rashed Dr. Abdel Quttainah 25625030/60 Family Doctor Dr Divya Damodar 23729596/23729581 Psychiatrists Dr. Esam Al-Ansari 22635047 Dr Eisa M. Al-Balhan Dr. Zahra Qabazard DrAdrian arbe 23729596/23729581 Dr. Verginia s.Marin 2572-6666 ext 8321 25340300 25710444 Dr. Sohail Qamar 22621099 Dr. Snaa Maaroof 25713514 Dr. Pradip Gujare 23713100 Dr. Zacharias Mathew 24334282 Dermatology 22613623/0 Gynaecologists & Obstetricians Endocrinologist 25665898 Dr. Mohammed Salam Bern University 23845955 Dentists Dr Anil Thomas Dr. Majeda Khalefa Aliytami 25343406 Dr. Shamah Al-Matar 22641071/2 Dr. Ahmad Al-Khooly 25739272 Dr. Anesah Al-Rasheed 22562226 Dr. Salem soso 22618787 Dr. Abidallah Al-Amer 22561444 Dr. Faysal Al-Fozan 22619557 Dr. Abdallateef Al-Katrash 22525888 Dr. Abidallah Al-Duweisan 25653755 Dr. Bader Al-Ansari 25620111 Dr. Amer Zawaz Al-Amer 22610044 Dr. Mohammad Yousef Basher 25327148 Internists, Chest & Heart Dr. Adnan Ebil 22639939 Dr. Mousa Khadada 22666300 Dr. Latefa Al-Duweisan Dr. Nadem Al-Ghabra 25728004 25355515 Dr. Mobarak Aldoub 24726446 Dr Nasser Behbehani 25654300/3 Soor Center Tel: 2290-1677 Fax: 2290 1688 [email protected] www.soorcenter.com Dr. Kamal Al-Shomr 25329924 Physiotherapists & VD Dr. Deyaa Shehab 25722291 22666288 Rheumatologists: Dr. Adel Al-Awadi 22655539 25339330 Dr. Ahmad Al-Ansari 25658888 Dr. Musaed Faraj Khamees Dr. Fozeya Ali Al-Qatan General Surgeons Dr. Abd Al-Naser Al-Othman 25330060 3729596/3729581 Neurologists Dr. Sohal Najem Al-Shemeri 25633324 Dr. Jasem Mola Hassan 25345875 Gastrologists Dr. Sami Aman 22636464 Dr. Mohammad Al-Shamaly 25322030 Dr. Foad Abidallah Al-Ali 22633135 Kaizen center 25716707 Noor Clinic 23845955 Dr. Khaled Al-Jarallah 25722290 Internist, Chest & Heart DR.Mohammes Akkad 24555050 Ext 210 Dr. Mohammad Zubaid MB, ChB, FRCPC, PACC Assistant Professor Of Medicine Head, Division of Cardiology Mubarak Al-Kabeer Hospital 25339667 Consultant Cardiologist Dr. Farida Al-Habib MD, PH.D, FACC Inaya German Medical Center Te: 2575077 Fax: 25723123 2611555-2622555 William Schuilenberg, RPC 2290-1677 Zaina Al Zabin, M.Sc. 2290-1677 Holland (Netherlands) 0031 Taiwan 00886 Honduras 00504 Tanzania 00255 Hong Kong 00852 Thailand 0066 Hungary 0036 Toga 00228 Ibiza (Spain) 0034 Tonga 00676 Iceland 00354 Tokelau 00690 India 0091 Trinidad 001868 Indian Ocean 00873 Tunisia 00216 Indonesia 0062 Turkey 0090 Iran 0098 Tuvalu 00688 Iraq 00964 Uganda 00256 Ireland 00353 Ukraine 00380 Italy 0039 United Arab Emirates 00976 Ivory Coast 00225 United Kingdom 0044 Jamaica 001876 Uruguay 00598 Japan 0081 USA 001 Jordan 00962 Uzbekistan 00998 Kazakhstan 007 Vanuatu 00678 Kenya 00254 Venezuela 00582 Kiribati 00686 Vietnam 0084 Kuwait 00965 Virgin Islands UK 001284 Kyrgyzstan 00996 Virgin Islands US 001340 Laos 00856 Wales (UK) 0044 Latvia 00371 Yemen 00967 Lebanon 00961 Yugoslavia 00381 Liberia 00231 Zambia 00260 Libya 00218 Zimbabwe 00263 Lithuania 00370 36 TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 LIFESTYLE O’Connell reveals Pitt helped him prepare for Unbroken role A nsel Elgort is releasing an album. The 20-year-old actor - who is known for appearing as Augustus Waters in ‘The Fault in Our Stars’ is hoping to release his debut electronic music album in February 2015 under the moniker Anslo. He said: “I have a record coming out hopefully next month or in February that has crossover potential. It has radio appeal,” The ‘Divurgent’ star has shown his musical side before by releasing remixes of Lana Del Rey and Felix Cartal, and has now teased details of his upcoming LP, which he has yet to settle on a name for. He continued: “It’s called ‘Shadow’, or ‘I Will Be A Shadow’. I’m not sure yet. It has a vocal on it. No, it’s not my vocal-it’s my production. I wanted to make sure that people knew that I was the producer and not the vocalist.” However, the Hollywood heartthrob assured fans his hope of becoming a successful musician doesn’t mean he will be giving up acting, because he has so much spare time to spend making tracks. He explained to MTV News: “I’m probably doing 4 or 5 movies, but I can do it both at the same time,” he said. “The thing is you have so much downtime and like what do you do with that downtime? Do you make an ass out of yourself and party and do stupid things? Or do you stay artistic and do something you love? So that’s what music is for me.” Olly Murs’ nan bans song Ansel Elgort releasing album G o s s i p J ack O’Connell lent a Dictaphone off Brad Pitt so he could prepare for ‘Unbroken’. The 24-yearold actor stars in the Angelina Jolie-directed war drama based on the life of Louis Zamperini - an American World War II prisoner of war survivor and an Olympic distance runner - and he’s revealed that Brad, 51, helped him to prepare for the role. Jack explained: “Brad Pitt lent me a little Dictaphone thing, like a cassette recorder, and I really liked the authentic dated nature of that process, of putting this cassette player on during our conversations, mine and Louis’s.” Jack took the Dictaphone with him to Australia, where the film was being shot and said it helped him a great deal. The actor - who starred in ‘This Is England’ - told Collider: “So I had this borrowed cassette thing that I took to Australia with me and that was constantly there to listen to. So if I was bored or if I was killing time usually I’d just be listening to that. “Not to hear him speak. It wasn’t particularly useful at all for the voice, because obviously I’m dealing with a 96 year old at that stage, but the essence of him, the kind of thing that might have made him.” Christian Bale: Moses is ‘most extreme’ role ever C O lly Murs’ nan banned him from performing his track ‘I Don’t Love You Too’. The ‘Wrapped Up’ hitmaker revealed his grandma, Eileen, was not impressed with a track which the star wrote about her and her husband’s arguments, requesting for her grandson stopped singing the song at his shows. He said: “I wrote a song on my second album and it’s called ‘I Don’t Love You Too’. It’s about two people having an argument - it was about my nan and grandad. “She’d be the first to admit that they do argue. She says: ‘I hate you Stan,’ and then she says ‘I don’t mean it.’” Despite confessing she does row with Olly’s grandad, the 30-year-old singer confessed “she didn’t like it”. He explained: “I didn’t sing it on tour because I didn’t want her to be upset watching it. I decided to cut that from the set.” The star - hristian Bale says the character of Moses in ‘Exodus: Gods and Kings’ was the “most extreme” role he has ever undertaken. The ‘American Hustle’ star plays the Egyptian prince in the new blockbuster and felt compelled to act differently around the set when filming the movie because he wanted to do the character justice. He revealed: “Moses is the most extreme character I’ve ever played. Because of that I actually changed the way I behaved on set. I kind of kept to myself, because I find it very difficult to get to know people too well and then play a character.” The film - directed by Ridley Scott - features Christian’s character as the defiant protagonist who fights against Pharaoh Ramses (Joel Edgerton) by sending 600,000 slaves on a journey to escape Egypt, and the star admitted the character was even more difficult to perfect than gruesome murderer Patrick Bateman in the 2000 movie, ‘American Psycho’. He continued: “I thought: ‘I’ve got to turn him on and off because he’s too much.’ You know, I played Patrick Bateman in ‘American Psycho’ where I stayed in character, but Moses is way more extreme than Patrick Bateman.” Christian - who is married to Hollywood stunt double Sibi Blazic - added he found it tough getting back into shape for the movie, having previously played overweight con man Irving Rosenfeld in the Golden Globe winning picture, ‘American Hustle’. He told Notebook magazine: “I was thankful to wear loose-fitting tent-like clothes throughout the film, as I was desperately trying to lose weight. I didn’t feel playing Moses as a fat guy would be fitting.” who released his fourth studio album ‘Never Been Better’ last month - said his grandmother would probably still be getting angry if she comes to see him in concert though, because she gets jealous of other women showing affection towards him. He told the Sunday Mirror newspaper: “I get a lot of nans who like me. “My nan gets very jealous if she sees anyone come up and kiss me. She says, ‘He’s my grandson, not yours’.” Wonder Woman waiting on green light from Warner Bros ‘W onder Woman’ is still to be given the official green light by Warner Bros. The hotly-anticipated project has been spoken about at length over the last few months, but ‘Game of Thrones’ and ‘Walking Dead’ director Michelle MacLaren has revealed the film remains some way off, with ‘Wonder Woman’ still lacking a script and an official release date. Quizzed on the proposed ‘Wonder Woman’ movie, Michelle was very coy, telling Vulture: “I really, really, really can’t talk about this.”I just picture a drone coming in over the hills and crashing through the glass and flying over here and putting duct tape over my mouth, you know?” Despite Michelle’s reluctance to reveal any details about the film, Gal Gadot is still expected to star in it after her debut in ‘Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice’, which will also feature Ben Affleck and Henry Cavill. ‘Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice’ will be released on April 29, 2016 in the UK and May 6, 2016 in the US. Meanwhile, the much-anticipated ‘Wonder Woman’ movie is expected to open in June 2017, although Warner Bros is still to confirm the date. Brian May praises Adam Lambert Chloe Grace Moretz wore heels with sprained knee C hloe Grace Moretz wore high heels to the People Magazine Awards despite having a sprained knee. The 17-year-old actress ditched the crutches she’d been using earlier in the day to take to the stage to accept her award for Next Generation Star in a stunning pair of bejewelled heels. She said: “Usually in show business, they say, ‘Break a leg’. For me, it’d be more fitting to say, ‘Sprain a knee’, because I can barely walk right now. So, sorry for my graceful entrance.” Chloe’s hair stylist Gregory Russell has also shared the secrets behind his client’s stunning hair do at the ceremony at the Beverly Hilton Hotel in California. He revealed: “We wanted to create a beautiful, effortless look to complement Chloe’s Dior dress.” In order to do so he worked Jasmine Oil Serum through Chloe’s damp hair, spritzed it with volumising spray and blew it out with a ceramic round brush before pinning up the top sections to create volume. He then deep-parted her locks, added waves with a flat iron and smoothed loose strands with glossing serum before tucking “one side behind her ear to show off her rad ear cuff”. The ‘Carrie’ star also thanked people for voting for her, admitting she felt lucky to be in the position she’s in at such a young age. She added: “I’m only 17-years-old and I feel like one of the luckiest 17-year-olds in the world right now.” A dam Lambert “can sing higher than even Freddie” according to Brian May. The 67-year-old Queen guitarist has praised the former ‘American Idol’ contestant - who has collaborated with Brian and drummer Roger Taylor since 2011 - by saying his vocal ability is enough to challenge the band’s late frontman, Freddie Mercury. He said: “They’re difficult songs to sing, Queen songs. There’s too much range. So many people can’t sing them in the original key-even if they are good singers, Adam comes along, [and] he can do it easy. He can do it in his sleep! He can sing higher than even Freddie could in a live situation.” The ‘Don’t Stop Me Now’ hitmaker admitted Freddie - who died of bronchopneumonia brought on by AIDS in 1991 - may even feel peeved the star’s singing ability lives up to his legacy. He continued: “So I think Freddie would look at this guy and think, ‘Hmm... Yeah. Okay.’ There would be a kind of, ‘Hmm ... You are good. You can do this.’” The musician also complimented Adam, 32, for his expert showmanship when on stage, which is exciting while not being a copy of the former lead singer’s behavior. Speaking to Japan’s Universal Music, he added: “He doesn’t have to try. He is a natural, in the same way that Freddie was. “We didn’t look for this guy, [but] suddenly he’s there, and he can sing all of those lines. ... He doesn’t imitate; he just does his own thing.” Minaj is the new face of Cavalli N icki Minaj is the new face of Roberto Cavalli. The ‘Anaconda’ rapper was chosen by the Italian label’s founder, Roberto Cavalli, to star in his eponymous brand’s spring/summer 2015 campaign as she “embodies the exuberant and modern femininity of the Cavalli woman”. The 74-year-old fashion designer also revealed he chose the voluptuous star to encourage women to embrace their curves. He said: “I chose Nicki Minaj because she embodies the exuberant and modern femininity of the Cavalli woman. In recent years we have become accustomed to women castigated in clothes that hide their body shapes. With this campaign, I wanted to send a strong countertrend message. I wanted a sensual woman who is aware of her body, who is not afraid to show her curves, rather she make them as a strength.” The campaign - which features Nicki sporting flamboyant, tribal-inspired designs - was shot by Francesco Carrozzini. Nicki has taken over as the face of the label from fellow singer Rita Ora who fronted their winter campaign for 2014. Meanwhile, Roberto who is spending the holidays with his wife and family in his hometown Florence - recently confessed he will soon be swapping his luxury apparel for an iconic Father Christmas outfit. The designer - who has children Robin, Christiana, Rachele, Daniele and Tommaso with his wife Eva, and seven grandchildren - said: “Of course I’m going to be Santa Claus, what do you expect? I have seven grandchildren.” 37 LIFESTYLE TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 G o s s i p China indicts Chan’s son on drug charge C hinese prosecutors on Monday indicted the son of Hong Kong action film star Jackie Chan on the charge of sheltering others to use drugs, more than four months after he was detained. If convicted, singer-actor Jaycee Chan could be jailed for up to three years. Chan, 32, was among a string of celebrities detained over the summer for vices such as drug use and hiring prostitutes, as Beijing vowed to clean up social morals. The detention of Jaycee Chan has been particularly embarrassing for his father, who was named by Beijing as an anti-drug ambassador in 2009. Beijing police detained the younger Chan at his Beijing apartment in August along with Taiwanese movie star Ko Kai. Police said Chan and Ko both tested positive for marijuana and admitted using the drug, and that 100 grams (3.5 ounces) of it were taken from Chan’s home. Ko, whose real name is Ko Chen-tung, was released after a 14-day administrative detention for the drug use, but Chan - who has remained in detention since August - is faced with the more serious criminal charge. State broadcaster CCTV in August aired video of the police raid on Chan’s apartment, in which Chan was shown identifying marijuana. Ko testified on camera that he had used drugs at Chan’s home. Chan has never publicly contested the charge, and his father has openly apologized over his detention. “Regarding this issue with my son Jaycee, I feel very angry and very shocked,” Jackie Chan wrote on his microblog in August. “As a public figure, I’m very ashamed. As a father, I’m heartbroken.” Prosecutors from Beijing’s Dongcheng District announced the indictment in a one-line statement that did not mention when a trial would be held. In June, Chinese President Xi Jinping declared that illegal drugs should be wiped out and that offenders should be severely punished. The crackdown snared more than 7,800 people in Beijing alone, according to police, and celebrities were targeted because of their influence over the public. Jaycee Chan has appeared in several films and has released three albums. Isabella Rossellini: Actresses are replacing models I sabella Rossellini claims actresses are replacing models. The 62year-old star - who made a name for herself in the fashion industry aged 28 after making her debut appearance in British Vogue - believes movie stars are being chosen over models in beauty campaigns because consumers have developed a “celebrity fixation”. She said “Models are not doing so many of the campaigns - it’s actresses. Now, there is a celebrity fixation.” Isabella - who worked as a spokesmodel for cosmetics brand LancÙme for 14 years until she was fired for being too old in her 40s believes labels are happy to use actresses to front their campaigns as their careers last much longer. She explained: “And if they are in a successful film when they are 38 or 40, they still get the campaigns.”It’s the celebrity that gives them the longevity. Most models start working less at 30, and then by the time they are 35 it’s over completely.” The brunette beauty added she had been shocked to discover that ageism was “rampant in fashion” when she first started out as a model. She told The Daily Telegraph newspaper: “In two or three photo-shoots I had the cover of Vogue and my career exploded.”But I didn’t know that ageism was rampant in fashion. “No one asked me how old I was at the beginning, and when they found out, they were horrified.” Actor Booth Colman Dies at 91 B ooth Colman, who had a long career as an actor including the role of ape scientist Dr. Zaius in the 1970s “Planet of the Apes” TV series, died in his sleep on Dec 15 in Los Angeles. He was 91. Colman was a Shakespearean authority who essayed mostly dramatic roles. He had a gravitas that was well-used in his many performances as authority figures, such as doctors, clergymen, scientists and attorneys. Though he was never a comedian, he appeared in comedies and treasured his friendship with classic performer Stan Laurel of Laurel & Hardy. (Colman is pictured above with Lois Laurel, the daughter of Stan Laurel.) Though he worked in film-with more than 50 bigscreen appearances-and onstage, Colman was best known for his work on television. He racked up many credits, from the early days of TV in the 1950s through 2008. He guested, often multiple times, on series including “Gunsmoke,” “Perry Mason,” “Star Trek,” “The Waltons,” “77 Sunset Strip,” “Route 66,” “The Rifleman,” “Have Gun Will Travel,” “Bonanza,” “Mannix,” “Marcus Welby,” “Mission: Impossible” and “The Untouchables,” “Star Trek: Voyager” and “Chicago Hope.” He also appeared in TV comedies including “My Three Sons,” “Hogan’s Heroes,” “I Dream of Jeannie,” “The Monkees,” “The Flying Nun” and, later, “Frasier” and “My Name is Earl.” The actor also occasionally had recurring roles in such soap operas as “The Young and the Restless” and “General Hospital.” Colman made his film debut in 1952’s “The Big Sky” and last appeared on the bigscreen in the Coen brothers’ 2003 “Intolerable Cruelty.” He worked on Broadway, appearing with the likes of Basil Rathbone and Fredric March, and appeared as Scrooge onstage in “A Christmas Carol” almost every year for decades. As a young actor, Colman studied with the Maurice Evans company, with which he appeared in “Hamlet.” Eventually the association led to Booth assuming the role of Dr. Zaius, which Evans originated in two bigscreen “Planet of the Apes” films. Colman’s work on the series led to acclaim from fans as well as invitations to appear at film conventions. Colman was born in Portland, Oregon, and he attended the University of Washington, and the U. of Michigan, where he began his career in radio. He mastered multiple languages. In lieu of flowers, the family requests a donation to the Actors Fund of America, National Federation for the Blind, or United Jewish Appeal. Friends, family and fans are invited to share memories of Colman at [email protected]. Bromfield to match outfit to Christmas tree D ionne Bromfield wants to match her Christmas outfit to her tree. The ‘Mama Said’ hitmaker - who is the goddaughter of late singer Amy Winehouse - has adorned her house with silver-themed decorations for the festive period and is planning on sporting a metallic dress to coordinate with the color scheme. She exclusively told BANG Showbiz: “I always tend to wear a red dress. I might switch it up this year. “I’m thinking silver because my whole house is silver themed this year. I don’t know if that would be a bit tacky. I’ve got a silver tree with silver baubles... a bit of a silver theme.” The 18-year-old singer also mixes up her beauty regime for the party season. She said: “I like a lot of glitter. So I usually put a bit of glitter on my eye lids.” Dionne also confessed to being a huge fan of popstar Rihanna’s “different” style and credits the Barbados-born beauty for being a “trendsetter”. She said: “I really love Rihanna’s style. I love how Rihanna... she could wear a dress with trainers and look amazing. “Her style... I like how it’s very different. She’s a massive trendsetter but I like the way she always changes it up its never samey.” CARPISA autumn winter 2014 collection T he autumn/winter 2014-15 Carpisa collection reconsiders the virtues and the beauty of our Country, and what the world know how the Italian Feeling. The details decorate the bags as well as the monuments and the beauties of our country decorate Italy. The metallic is protagonist in various forms, from the metal decorated connections, to the metal brackets that give light to the bag and the accessory. The rock-chic is one of the main subject of the collection where the black colour is protagonist. There are gold studs opposing to the more romantic matelassÈ combine to bows details. The textile of the collection is the “Pied de Poule”, both in micro and maxi variation; a classic textile that become minimized and made young to the match with micro studs and chain details; present itself in collection with the “optical” black &white version. A funded must is the animalier subject, present in collection in the coconut print, in the spotted, in the shiny and opaque python leather. Characterized by materials that have an important and luxurious relevance, it refers to the world-known conception of the artisan Italy. The final subject of the collection is the country-chic, bags with soft structures, grainy materials match with the suede and the fur; lines that have a romantic taste and recall to the conception of hill landscape and farmland that characterize the beautiful country. Welcome to Italy, welcome to Carpisa. Treat yourself to the latest collection at The Avenues- The Mall. Upton most searched model of 2014 K ate Upton was the most searched model of 2014. The Sports Illustrated star - who recently won the Sexiest Woman Alive gong at the People Magazine Awards - topped the Google list, obtained by Style.com, which also featured supermodels Kate Moss and Naomi Campbell. Kendall Jenner’s emerging fashion career earned her a place in second whilst Miranda Kerr - who has a 3-year-old son with Orlando Bloom - came third. Despite being named Model of the Year at last month’s British Fashion Awards, Cara Delevingne only made it to sixteenth on the list, being topped in the rankings by Heidi Klum, 41, Behati Prinsloo - the wife of singer Adam Levine - and Kate Upton’s fellow Sports Illustrated Swimwear Issue model, Lily Aldridge, 29. Lily - who is also one of the Victoria’s Secret angels - wasn’t the only Angel to make the list; Karlie Kloss, 22, Alessandra Ambrosio, 33 and Doutzen Kroes, 29, also made the grade. Karlie - who came ninth - has made quite a presence for herself on social media, with over 1.7 million followers on Instagram. Similarly, her fellow Angel, Alessandra is a big hit on social media too, with well over three million followers on the photo sharing site. The youngest model to feature on the list was Hailey Baldwin at just 18-years-old. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 lifestyle F a s h i o n A model presents a creation by Kuwaiti fashion designer Nora Alhdhiran during the Gulf’s Forum of Elegance event on December 21, 2014 in the Omani capital, Muscat. Models present creations by fashion†designers Mohammed al-Sobhi and Amal al-Balushi. Fashion designers Mohammed Al-Sobhi and Amal Al-Balushi — AFP photos GULF’S FORUM OF ELEGANCE EVENT Bahraini fashion designer Kobrai Al-Qoseer Emirati fashion designer Mona Al-Mansouri Omani fashion designer Reem Al-Alawi Emirati fashion designer Mona Al-Mansouri Omani fashion designer Amal Al-Balushi Saudi Arabia fashion designer Umaymah Azouz Emirati fashion designer Mona Al-Mansouri Saudi Arabia fashion designer Rana Riri Kuwaiti fashion designer Nora Alhdhiran Bahraini fashion designer Kobrai Al-Qoseer TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 lifestyle M u s i c A picture taken in Saint-Pierre-des-Corps shows a Pleyel piano. — AFP photos & M o v i e s The original rosewood Pleyel piano that will be exposed at the Grand Palais in Paris as part of the event “Osons la France”. Jean Jude, musicologist and music teacher poses in Saint-Pierre-des-Corps, to show the original mechanic of the rosewood Pleyel piano. Eccentric French collector turns home into piano ‘orphanage’ J ean Jude, glasses perched on the end of his nose, is practicing scales when his visitor arrives. “Sorry there isn’t much room in here,” Jude says, getting up from one piano before wending his way among countless others filling his living room, part of a unique collection totaling around 150. Jude and his cat live among the pianos in a four-bedroom house at the end of a cul-de-sac in Saint Pierre des Corps, a suburb of the central French city of Tours. A wooden gate opens into a yard cluttered with pianos stored in crates and protected from the elements with blue tarpaulins. These are overflow instruments that the 63-year-old music teacher cannot manage to squeeze inside or in the garage. His passion for the stately instruments has driven Jude to rescue scores of them from oblivion, sniffing out hidden treasures at charity shops and auctions, then restoring them when necessary. “You’re in a sort of orphanage here,” Jude smiles. “In the ‘70s and ‘80s it was fashionable to turn pianos into furniture. Many of those that I bought for a pittance would no doubt have ended up as bars, bookcases or writing desks.” People often are unaware of the value of the pianos they give away or sell for a song. Five of Jude’s pianos have been recognized as national heritage: an upright Clementi from 1820, a 1836 Pape grand and three Pleyels, including the first grand built by the iconic French piano maker in 1820, a concert grand from 1843 and an 1825 square piano. The oldest piece in the collection dates to 1782. But it was an 1855 Pleyel model, built specially for that year’s Universal Exhibition in Paris, that Jude loaned to the capital’s Grand Palais museum for a recent forum on French innovation. “The press spoke of it in glowing terms (in 1855). It still has a very good sound,” Jude remarks, playing a few notes on the elegant instrument made of rosewood with bronze trim. At the Phil Rudd Grand Palais event, it was juxtaposed with Pleyel’s latest model, a futuristic creation with lid and legs made of carbon fibreunderscoring the venerable company’s evolution from its beginnings as piano maker to Frederic Chopin. Breaking a ‘taboo’ For Jude, the journey has been in the collecting. “My family couldn’t afford to buy a piano. I grew up with the idea that obtaining such an instrument was taboo,” he said. His first piano lesson from an elderly teacher in 1968 blew the taboo to pieces. Determined to equal her mastery of Mozart’s “Turkish March”, the aspiring musician saved up his own money to buy a piano-unbeknownst to his parents. “I was seriously chewed out when the delivery men arrived, but that consuming passion has stuck with me to this day,” he says. Jude is generous with his collection, willingly lending instruments to record companies or musicians who want to record pieces on period pianos. Among his gems is a piano that once belonged to French president Sadi Carnot, who governed from 1887 to 1894. Another is a rosewood Pleyel upright that once belonged to the writer Honore de Balzac’s sister Laure Surville. Rare pieces like this could fetch small fortunes, but while admitting to having received some tempting offers, Jude confesses to more than a shade of separation anxiety. “I’m not psychologically prepared to let go of my pianos,” he says. He does however dream of founding a museum to house his collection. The learned piano protector would, of course, serve as guide. — AFP Madonna speaks of ‘crazy times’ after songs leaked M adonna and Sony Pictures both were separately torpedoed by major hacks this month, in what the pop icon called “crazy times.” It’s crazy,” she told Billboard magazine, when asked about the investigation into how at least 10 of her unfinished, unreleased songs were leaked onto the Internet. “I mean, look at what’s going on with Sony Pictures. It’s just the age that we’re living in. It’s crazy times.” Washington accuses Pyongyang of being behind the hack at Sony that led to the release of embarrassing emails and caused executives to halt the debut of the madcap comedy action film “The Interview.” The film about a fictional CIA plot to kill the country’s leader infuriated North Korea, although Pyongyang has repeatedly denied it was behind the cyber-assault on Sony. “The Internet is as constructive and helpful in bringing people together as it is in doing dangerous things and hurting people. It’s a double-edged sword,” Madonna said. —AFP ‘The Omen,’ The Krays’ actress Billie Whitelaw dies at 82 AC/DC drummer says he wants to keep his job A C/DC drummer Phil Rudd described allegations he tried to hire a hitman as “ludicrous” yesterday and said he wanted to keep his job with the top-selling rock band. Rudd faces charges of threatening to kill and drug possession in New Zealand and fellow band members, including guitarist Angus Young, have hinted he will be dropped for AC/DC’s upcoming world tour. The 60-year-old drummer said he wanted to remain part of the band he first joined in 1975 after his arrest last month. “I want my job back and I want my reputation back and I’m going to get them,” he told TVNZ. Rudd was also accused of “attempting to procure murder” by hiring a hitman, but the charge was dropped after less than 24 hours due to insufficient evidence. “It’s all wrong and I’m very upset about the whole thing. It’s ludicrous, ludicrous-as if I’d need anybody to do that,” he said. Rudd, who has lived in the New Zealand North Island seaside town of Tauranga since 1983, has pleaded not guilty to the drugs and threatening to kill charges, the latter of which carries a jail term of up to seven years. He also rejected media reports that his legal woes stemmed from a dispute over dealings with prostitutes, describing himself as “a good guy”. “This has just been a big ball of cheese and all the rats are gathering and having a piece,” he said. “That’s not who I am.” Rudd, who played on hits including “Dirty Deeds Done Dirty Cheap” and “Highway to Hell,” is free on bail and will be back in court to have his case reviewed on February 10. Rudd’s lawyer has said his client’s reputation has suffered “incalculable damage” due to sensational worldwide publicity surrounding the case, adding that they are considering “any possible remedies he may have”. AC/DC plan a world tour next year to promote their latest album “Rock or Bust” and any conviction for Rudd could prevent him from taking part. Angus Young, whose brother Malcolm left the band this year suffering from dementia, has said Rudd’s potentially lengthy court case would definitely not stop them from hitting the road next year. — AFP ‘Inside the Mind of Leonardo in 3D’ D oes Leonardo da Vinci need 3D? Maybe if he were the nimble-footed centerpiece of a videogame like “Assassin’s Creed,” but certainly not as conceived in Julian Jones’ unnecessary “Inside the Mind of Leonardo in 3D.” Restricting all dialogue to Leonardo’s own words, jotted down in his famously sprawling notebooks, the documentary envisions the groundbreaking visionary as a voracious polymath (true) while giving shockingly short shrift to the man as artist. Animating his drawings makes him more child’s cartoonist than incomparable draughtsman, and Peter Capaldi’s modern-dress impersonation has a gratuitously histrionic intensity. Stereoscopic treatment aside, a theatrical release seems beside the point, since this sort of thing is best consumed on presenter History Films’ broadcasts. Biographical information is reduced here to the briefest of lines written out onscreen, establishing Leonardo’s illegitimacy, his Tuscan roots, and his first known artwork, assisting his teacher Verrocchio in a painting of “The Baptism of Christ.” Jones and co-scribe Nick Dear regurgitate the usual embellished mythology, courtesy of Giorgio Vasari, of Verrocchio being so humbled by his pupil’s gifts that he abandoned painting altogether-but in any event, viewers wanting even the merest of insights into the artistic world of 15th-century Florence should look elsewhere. Instead, the superficial documentary’s focus is on Leonardo as engineer and observer of nature. Attractive shots of a falcon, accompanied by Capaldi’s theatrical recitation of Leonardo’s words about birds and flight, logically lead to images of the artist’s drawings of wings, made to “come alive” via 3D animation. Practically none of his creations are allowed to just “be”: Instead their backgrounds are turned into roiling smoke, their rapid, masterly lines extended and contracted so the images move. Leonardo, whose genius with pen and ink reproduced the sensation of movement via drawings of water, projectiles, even clouds, apparently is still too static for the movies and needs the animator’s touch. Unrealized project Viewers will be forgiven for thinking that Leonardo left Florence because of a sodomy charge-a not uncommon accusation in the period, though not the cause for the artist’s move to Milan. The documentary spends a fair amount of time on his unrealized project for a monumental equestrian statue of the local ruler, yet the reason for expending so much footage on smelting and practically zero on “The Last Supper” is likely because a mural is just a mural, whereas a discussion of molten bronze allows Jones to shoot demonic-looking images in a foundry.—Reuters B ritish actress Billie Whitelaw has died at the age of 82, the BBC reported yesterday. She was best known for her role as Mrs Baylock, the guardian of the demonic Damien in “The Omen.” Whitelaw appeared in more than 50 films, including crime drama “The Krays” and comedy “Hot Fuzz,” but was equally known for her TV and stage performances, and Samuel Beckett’s plays in particular. He described her as a perfect actress. Whitelaw made her stage debut in 1950 in “Pink String and Sealing Wax” in her home town, Bradford, England, and made her TV bow in a BBC adaptation of Frances Hodgson Burnett’s story “The Secret Garden” in 1952. She later appeared in several episodes of BBC police series “Dixon of Dock Green.” Her early stage career included spells with Joan Littlewood’s Theatre Workshop and the National Theatre. In 1964, she played Desdemona opposite Laurence Olivier as Othello at the Chichester Festival. By then she had met Beckett, who wrote parts for her in several experimental plays. “He used me as a piece of plaster he was molding until he got just the right shape,” she said. Her first performance in one of his works was “Play,” which debuted in 1964. Others roles in Beckett plays included “Happy Days” and “Not I.” Film parts included “Charlie Bubbles,” in which she played opposite Albert Finney, and psychological thriller “Twisted Nerve.” She won a BAFTA for these roles in 1969. She also won a BAFTA for TV drama “The Sextet” in 1972. Later film roles include 1976’s “The Omen,” “The Dressmaker” in 1988, and 1990’s “The Krays,” in which she played the bullying mother of criminal twins, played by Spandau Ballet’s Martin and Gary Kemp. Whitelaw was married to actor Peter Vaughan between 1952 and 1966, and later married actor and writer Robert Muller, who died in 1998. She died on Sunday at a nursing home in London, her son Matthew Muller told the BBC. — Reuters Aamir Khan’s ‘PK’ scores at int’l box office, enrages religious groups “P K,” a Bollywood drama film that represents a re-teaming of key elements from global hit “3 Idiots,” looks to have set records in a number of markets - despite the controversies it has raised. The UTV Disney-backed picture stars Aamir Khan and is directed by Rajkumar Hirani and produced by Vidhu Vinod Chopra. Rentrak estimated its global total for its opening weekend at US$25.6 million. That includes some $3.5 million from North America, where it charted as the tenth biggest movie of the session. Globally it was the fourth biggest film of the weekend behind “The Hobbit: The Battle of Five Armies,” Chinese director Jiang Wen’s “Gone with the Bullets” (on $36 million) and “Might at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb.”UTV, which financed the picture and is distributing it in India under the Disney label, says that picture was released on Friday and expanded on Saturday to be the second biggest Saturday gross in Indian history. It grossed US$4.21 million on Friday, followed by US$4.79 million on Saturday for a first two day total of $9.0 million. UTV forecast a record Sunday. The film sees Khan arrive on earth as a naked and innocent alien who has an ability to easily learn languages, but struggles more in negotiating human customs. En route the picture takes a big swipe at bigots and fraudsters peddling various religions. In a country where religious groups routinely protest film industry targets, “PK” has sent some into a frenzy, with #boycottPK trending on Twitter at one point. In the UK “PK” grossed GBP172,000 on opening Friday, followed by GBP244,000 on Saturday, for a two day total of GBP417,000 ($667,000), according to UTV. That was the best opening day for any Hindi-language film this year and is the fifth biggest Hindi score in the territory. In Australia, “PK” enjoyed the biggest ever opening day for an Indian film with A$162,000 and A$392,000 (US$323,000) after two days. — Reuters Bollywood actress Anushka Sharma, former Indian cricketer Sachin Tendulkar and Bollywood actor Aamir Khan pose for a photograph during a promotional event for the forthcoming Hindi film ‘PK’ directed by Rajkumar Hirani in Mumbai. — AFP Eccentric French collector turns home into piano ‘orphanage’ TUESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2014 39 A Palestinian man dressed up as Santa Claus distributes Christmas trees along the wall of Jerusalem’s Old City, yesterday as Christians around the world prepare to celebrate the holy day. — AFP US Christmas tree controlled by tweets School children hold lottery balls, during the Spain’s Christmas lottery known as ‘El Gordo’ or ‘The Fat One’, in Madrid yesterday. — AP/AFP photos T witter users anywhere in the world can control the lights on a holiday display in New Jersey. Tweets will turn on a 9foot (3-meter) Christmas tree, menorah and over 1,000 LED lights at Oxford Communications in Lambertville and also turn them off. School children sing out the numbers for the top prize of Spain’s Christmas lottery known as ‘El Gordo’ or ‘The Fat One’, as they hold lottery balls. The company says it designed the display with the intention to help charities, towns and businesses to develop awareness and fundraising campaigns. Tweet #brilliant#twinkle to @Oxmas_Tree to light the display and tweet #figgyypudding to turn them off. — AP Gonzalo Presa, a worker at the Wax Museum shows his winning ticket after he and several other workers won the main Christmas lottery prize. Spain’s ‘Fat One’ lottery pays out 2.2 billion euros S pain’s Christmas lottery El Gordo, considered the world’s richest in prizes, shared out 2.2 billion euros ($2.7 billion) yesterday in a country fighting to recover from years of recession. Holders of tickets with this year’s top winning number — the Gordo itself, or “Fat One”-won 400,000 euros each, with thousands of other smaller cash prizes. “I can’t believe it. It was a really happy and emotional moment,” the owner of one of the shops that sold the winning number in Madrid told radio station Cadena Ser. Unlike other big lotteries that generate just a few big winners, Spain’s Christmas lottery aims to share the wealth, with thousands of numbers getting a prize. Since last year however the taxman has taken a fifth of all prizes over 2,500 euros, as part of the government’s austerity measures. Tickets with the winning number were sold this year in various regions around the country including Madrid, Murcia and Valencia. As tradition dictates, children from a Madrid school picked wooden balls bearing the winning numbers out of two giant golden tumblers and then sang them out in a live television draw lasting four hours. The Christmas lottery has been held uninterrupted since 1812. Even Spain’s 1936-39 civil war did not end it, as each side held its own draw during the conflict. It has become a popular Christmas tradition in Spain, with friends, colleagues and bar regulars banding together to buy tickets. Although other draws around the world have bigger individual top prizes, Spain’s Christmas lottery ranks as the world’s richest for the total sums paid out. — AFP Winners of a Spain lottery celebrate the first Christmas lottery prize “El Gordo” (“The Fat One”). Lottery Administration shop owners on General Pastor Avenue in Eliana near Valencia celebrate having sold the first prize. Lottery Administration shop owners on General Pastor Avenue in Eliana near Valencia celebrate having sold the first prize. An owner of a lottery office puts a banner with the number prize after selling the second Christmas lottery prize “El Gordo”.