EMIRATES PLANE CRASH-LANDS IN DUBAI
Transcription
EMIRATES PLANE CRASH-LANDS IN DUBAI
THURSDAY | AUGUST 4, 2016 | SHAWWAL 30, 1437 AH VOL. 35 NO. 264 | PAGES 32 | BAISAS 200 Editor-in-Chief ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI Oman Establishment for Press, Publication and Advertising PO Box 974, Postal Code 100, Muscat, Sultanate of Oman PELE MAY LIGHT RIO’S OLYMPIC FLAME P25 THE 28-YEAR-OLD ACTIVIST WHO TOOK ON FACEBOOK AND WON P24 www.omanobserver.om editor@omanobserver.om FISH TACKLE OCEAN GLOBAL WARMING BY PRETENDING IT’S NIGHT P30 EMIRATES PLANE CRASH-LANDS IN DUBAI MIRACULOUS ESCAPE: All 300 on board the plane safe after fire on landing; firefighter loses life while battling the blaze Muscat airport handles diversions Muscat International Airport handled diverted flights on Wednesday. VINOD NAIR MUSCAT An Emirates plane is seen after it crash-landed at Dubai International Airport on Wednesday. — Reuters DUBAI: Three hundred passengers, including 18 crew members, on an Emirates flight from Thiruvananthapuram in southern India had a close escape on Wednesday when the plane burst into flames after landing at Dubai airport, its scheduled destination. Emirates chief executive Shaikh Ahmed bin Saeed al Maktoum said that there were no fatalities, but 13 people were taken to hospitals with minor injuries. He added that a firefighter lost his life while battling the blaze. “Evacuation procedures were executed professionally. Cabin crew were the last to leave the plane,” the official said at a press conference in Dubai. He added that the Boeing 777 aircraft was up to date with inspection checks. “As an operator it’s our duty to apply all the rules when it comes to safety.” However, Al Maktoum called for people to await the findings of an inquiry into the incident that occurred at 12:45 pm (08:45 GMT), minutes before the scheduled landing at 12:50 pm. The incident prompted the closure of Dubai International Airport, one of the busiest in the world, for both take-offs and landings. Departures and arrivals resumed at 6:30 pm (14:30 GMT) at the airport, the government Dubai Media Office reported. The first to depart was a Gulf Air flight to Bahrain, and the second a Qatar Airways flight to Doha, Dubai airport said. One passenger was quoted by local Indian media as saying the flight SAFE INSIDESTORIES As an operator, it’s our duty to apply all the rules when it comes to safety. Evacuation procedures were executed professionally. Cabin crew were the last to leave the plane. SHAIKH AHMED AL MAKTOUM Emirates Chief Executive PRACTICES came down suddenly while landing and bounced upwards, with some passengers suffering minor injuries before escaping via the emergency escape chute. They were then taken to a corner of the tarmac, where some were treated for their injuries, a Kerala news website quoted the passenger as telling a local television channel over the telephone. A pilot who witnessed the incident told an Indian news channel that the plane came in fast and hit the runway tail first. “We saw big flames, then the body hit the runway and the right landing gear collapsed, followed by the right engine coming off. Then it skidded for a while until it stopped,” he said. TURN TO P5 August 3: The Public Authority for Civil Aviation (PACA) confirmed to the Observer that Muscat International Airport has been handling more air traffic due to closure of operations at Dubai airport on Wednesday. Operations at Dubai had to be partially or fully suspended after an Emirates airline flight EK521 arriving from Thiruvananthapuram in India had to crash-land at 12.45 pm because of a mechanical failure. Dubai airport announced the resumption of operations at 6.30 pm with priority given to larger aircraft. An official source at PACA said: “We are awaiting details from the ATC to know the exact number of extra aircraft Thank God ‘we are all safe’ LAKSHMI KOTHANETH MUSCAT While thanking God that “we are all safe”, Mai said some airport staff did not know whether the airport was closed or flights were being August 3: According to a first-hand account from Mai al Abria, from Oman, postponed. “We do not know how to book the who was at the airport to catch a flights as all the late flights are full.” flight to Muscat, “Flights seem to be Areen al Fahadiya was to have suspended, but it is very crowded boarded an Oman Air flight, expected here. Airport employees told us to book online for the next flight, but all to leave for Muscat at 3.30 pm. TURN TO P5 flights are full.” ALL SET FOR THE BIG DAY Avoid over-prescription and over-consumption of drugs, says WHO P7 NEPAL LAWMAKERS ELECT MAOIST CHIEF AS PRIME MINISTER 9 DONALD TRUMP INSISTS HIS CAMPAIGN IS UNIFIED P 12 SOUTH AFRICAN VOTE TESTS ANC HOLD ON CITIES P WEATHER TODAY MUSCAT MAX: 370C MIN: 300C SALALAH MAX: 260C MIN: 240C SUNRISE 05.36 AM PRAYER TIMINGS FAJR: 04:13 DHUHR: 12:12 ASR: 15:37 MAGHRIB: 18:47 ISHA: 20:17 NIZWA MAX: 430C MIN: 290C “We strongly advise both medical practitioners as well as end users to adopt what is called ‘Rational Use of Medicines’ as antibiotic resistance is one of the biggest threats to global health today as it can affect anyone, of any age, in any country,” said the WHO source. According to experts, all types of medication — those considered ‘natural’ or those produced in a laboratory, have some sort of after-effects. Although prescription drugs are expected to undergo stringent tests and clinical trials, federal drug regulators allow some level of side effects. World-wide, a large number of patients suffer or die because of the side effects of prescription drugs, say reports. Almost all medications, both over-the-counter and prescription, have some kind of after-effects, including muscle aches to even death. TURN TO P5 Rural areas will get broadband service by 2020 MUSCAT: The approval of the Council of Ministers for National Broadband Strategy (NBS) marks an impressive jump in terms of keeping pace with modern developments in the field of broadband and meeting the needs of the market and operators of broadband. The Council has mandated the Ministry of Transport and Communications to oversee the implementation of the strategy. The strategy seeks to overcome various constraints for expansion of mobile broadband coverage, including spectrum limitations, provision of backhaul connectivity, adding new towers, limited competition among broadband providers and high cost to reach rural areas, which represent 23 per cent of the total population. DETAILS ON P3 KABEER YOUSUF MUSCAT August 3: Over-prescription and overconsumption of medicines are a “social menace” that needs to be curbed to safeguard public health and save the nation’s resources, said a source at World Health Organization (WHO). Citing media reports, the source said that doctors at both government and private hospitals are in the habit of prescribing medicines over and above the required amount. For instance, a patient with complaints of seasonal flu is prescribed an expectorant and painkillers, besides generic medicine for common flu. “Since over-prescription (of medicines) puts lives at risk, one has to be rational when prescribing medicines,” said the source at the WHO office in Muscat. Moderation is required even in the consumption of medicines, he added. Over-prescription of medicines at Public Health Centres (PHCs) are causing a loss to the tune of millions to the state exchequer every year. At the same time, private medical centres and hospitals are cashing in on the ministry directive to all companies to provide insurance cover to their employees, said the source. handled at Muscat.” He said except for flights bound for Dubai, there have been no delays of flights operating out of Muscat to other destinations. “Resumption of operations at Dubai will increase congestion in the airspace as all pending flights will be trying fly in and out of the city. There will be also more pressure on us with regards to aircraft movement,” he said. Oman Airport Management Company in a statement said that all facilities at Salalah and Muscat are in place to handle the diverted flights. It also announced the suspension of flights from Muscat and Salalah to Dubai for at least four hours. Oman Air too in a statement announced the uncontrollable delay due to runway closure at Dubai International Airport. A general view of the swimming venue at the Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Just a day ahead of the opening ceremony at the Olympics, organisers say that 1.3 million tickets remain unsold, an indication that spectator demand for Rio has lagged behind previous summer games. SEE SPORT PAGES 25 & 26 inside s deoman o a oman 2 OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U ST 4 l 2 0 1 6 MSM index loses 8 points Muscat Securities Market (MSM) general index 30 yesterday lost 8.1 points, comprising a decline by 0.14 per cent to close at 5,848.21 points, compared to the last session, which stood at 5,856.28 points. Royal Office Minister visits ROP-STF Qurayat unit MUSCAT: Gen Sultan bin Mohammed (STF) in the Wilayat of Qurayat in the on its duties. He also viewed some shows, exercises and training provided al Numani, Minister of the Royal Office, Governorate of Muscat. yesterday visited the Royal Oman Gen Al Numani toured the unit’s to policemen. — ONA Police (ROP) Special Task Force Unit facilities during which he was briefed Sultanate, Qatar review expertise in combating pollution MUSCAT: Mohammed bin Salim al Toobi, Minister of Environment and Climate Affairs, received in his office yesterday Mohammed bin Abdullah al Rumaihi, Minister of Municipality and Environment, and his accompanying delegation, currently visiting the Sultanate. The two sides reviewed of enhancing means the joint cooperation between the Sultanate and Qatar, within the framework of encouraging cooperation and sharing experience with the friendly countries in scientific, research and academic fields, in addition to the importance of enhancing cognitive exchange in the environmental and climate affairs areas. The two sides also reviewed the advanced experience to protect the environment and combating pollution, as well as benefiting from the international experiences and activating them to promote sustainable development level. The Qatari guest toured Al Qurum Nature Reserve during which he familiarised himself with its natural components and the exerted efforts in protecting marine organisms and birds, besides reviewing the planting of mangroves. — ONA inside s deoman o a oman Broadband strategy to keep pace with rising needs OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U S T 4 l 2 0 1 6 3 EXCELLENT CONNECTIVITY: Council of Ministers’ nod comes in response to the growing demand for high-speed broadband Internet services MUSCAT: The Council of Ministers’ approval of the National Broadband Strategy (NBS) marks an impressive leap in terms of keeping pace with the modern developments in the field of broadband and meeting needs of the market and operators in relation to broadband. The Council of Ministers mandated the Ministry of Transport and Communications to oversee the strategy implementation, provide the Council of Ministers with periodic reports on the work progress and approve the recommendations proposed hereto. This important move comes in response to the growing demand for high-speed broadband Internet services during the last few years, especially since the Internet-based applications and services have become an integral part of economic life and a perquisite for improving the standard of living of all beneficiaries. The Sultanate’s NBS is designed in a manner to ensure that it is in line with the other national strategies in a bid to maximise their prevalence and the socioeconomic benefits generated by it. By approving the NBS, the Sultanate’s Government seeks to FILE PICTURES overcome several challenges, such as low percentage of fixed broadband consumers with slower growth and high cost of broadband compared to GDP per head benchmarked across the region and globally. The strategy also seeks to overcome various constraints for expansion of mobile broadband coverage, including spectrum limitations, provision of backhaul connectivity, adding new towers, limited competition among broadband providers and high cost to reach rural areas, which represent 23 per cent of the total population. The broadband services enable citizens and expatriates to get high- SQC-TANNS organises cultural ceremony MANAH: The Sultan Qaboos College for Teaching Arabic to NonNative Speakers (SQC-TANNS) on Wednesday organised a cultural ceremony under the patronage of Hamoud bin Ali al Aisari, Assistant Secretary General of the Sultan Qaboos Higher Centre for Culture The strategy is based on three main pillars namely, reviewing telecom regulatory framework, stimulating demand for broadband and enhancing the broadband infrastructure and Science (SQHCCS). The ceremony included several programmes including poems in Arabic, English, German and Spanish literature translated into Arabic, in addition to plays and entertaining activities. — ONA speed Internet services at affordable rates, which will make the services provided by the various organisations as per international standards and more competitive that in turn will bridge the digital divide. The strategy is based on three main pillars namely, reviewing telecom regulatory framework, stimulating demand for broadband and enhancing the broadband infrastructure. Oman Broadband Company (OBC) endeavours to provide high quality infrastructure with high capacity to cover 50 per cent of the urban areas by 2020 and 95 per cent by 2030. It also seeks to close the digital divide in the Women’s role: Balancing family, work DISTURBING TREND and extra work to ‘make ends meet’ Road crashes August 3: Residents of Ibri, whose major water sources of irrigation have been hit, could breathe a sigh of relief soon as repair works are in full swing. Cracks in two of Ibri’s biggest aflaj (canals) —Al Mabaoth and Al Mafjoor — have hit the local farmers who depend on them for irrigation. A total of 30 young Omani volunteers are working to repair the aflaj under the supervision of Sunaidi bin Humaid al Suaily, a member of the municipal council. The work is expected to be completed in the next two months. The repairs, which began 95 days ago, include fixing the cracks and desilting the canals. “We welcome any help to the workers at the site,” said Al Suaily. claim 8 lives this week AMANI NASSER MUSCAT August 3: Moonlighting is something many would like to take up at some point in their careers to supplement their income. With costs skyrocketing and oil slump adding to the woes, many in Oman, especially women, have taken up extra jobs or are considering such a move. Money, however, is not the reason all the time. Some look at it as a way of gaining experience and improving skills. Take Amal Tannaf al Amri, for instance. A senior nurse at the Renal Medicine Unit in Ibri Hospital, she also doubles as a sports coach. A fitness buff herself, she gives fitness lessons to women, where she teaches them different ways of exercising and keeping fit. For Amal, extra work is an “opportunity to improve skills and an ideal way of increasing incomes”. She loves sports, and she has been “doing it for health, not financial, reasons”. “Balancing a regular job along with an additional one is a delicate task. It depends on a person’s ability to set priorities. A ‘second job’ should never affect the main job,” she said. Another employee, a designer in a government company, said on condition of anonymity that she works in a law firm. “It is an excellent way of gaining experience,” she said. The extra work also helped her overcome a serious financial crisis in the family. Narjees al Manni, who teaches physics at Al Ghalia bint Nasser School, Picture for representation purpose only ZAINAB AL NASSRI MUSCAT however, refuses to believe an additional job will help boost career prospects. A second work can prepare you for life, but “it will not get you a leg-up”, she adds. After spending eight hours at school every day and looking after children at home, she is not keen on shouldering an additional responsibility. Asma al Guzaili, a chemistry graduate, thinks a second job is “good only for men”. “They (men) have to find new sources of income and not women because they have a lot of responsibilities at home, have a career to think of and a family to take care of.” On the other hand, she said: “Since women tend to spend more, they too need to think of alternative sources of income.” Of course, men too have similar views. Ibrahim al Saraai, a public relations student at Nizwa University, feels men should have hobbies such Cracks in Ibri aflaj to be fixed soon RAHMA ALI AL KALBANI MUSCAT rural areas by providing broadband network with basic capacity by 2020. This is in line with the government vision towards building a knowledgebased economy. The company builds and operates the broadband network infrastructure in a way that meets international quality standards and become environment friendly. It seeks to provide the service to more beneficiaries through novel ways. To this end, it signed agreements with other infrastructure providers to streamline efforts and reduce the cost of construction, which in turn will ensure affordable cost for all service providers. — ONA as writing articles or selling products through Instagram besides a regular job. Media professional Rashid al Jabri is “ready to do anything” to make some extra money. “If I need money, I will do anything, even if it means driving a taxi or a water tanker.” Issa al Hinai, a clerk at the College of Sciences at SQU, manages and organises volunteer teams’ activities during his free time. “Extra work fetches me handsome financial rewards, besides helping make new friends, serve society and boost my career,” he said. An engineering professional at Ibri College of Technology said, “Extra work is a big booster for women in terms of knowledge, though I’m not looking at it from the financial point of view.” He has no problem if his wife takes up extra work. “We both have a responsibility, and it’s all for the welfare of our children,” he added. August 3: A total of eight people have so far died in a spate of horrific vehicle crashes reported around the Sultanate this past week. The most appalling of these mishaps took place near Sultan Qaboos University (SQU) just after midnight on Sunday. Five people lost their lives when a speeding vehicle careened into them in a tragedy that has shocked the capital region and indeed the nation. Among those who perished were two policemen preparing an accident report when the car barreled into them at around 1.30am. The shocking incident sparked a flurry of versions and interpretations on social media. On Monday, two Emiratis — part of a family of tourists returning after a holiday in rain-bound Salalah — were killed when their vehicle went off the road near Haima in central Oman. The mishap occurred when the driver lost control of his SUV apparently as a result of fatigue. He died in the crash along with his young son. Four other members of the family survived with moderate injuries. Also among the fatalities of the week was an Indian salesman who died when his car collided with a pickup van in Al Kamil near Sur on Tuesday evening. inside s deoman o a oman 4 OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U ST 4 l 2 0 1 6 Ministry holds workshop on annual financial reports MUSCAT: The Ministry of Commerce and Industry yesterday organised a workshop on annual financial reports under the auspices of Ahmed bin Hassan al Dheeb, Under-Secretary of the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. The workshop aimed at introducing the annual e-financial report service, which was launched by the ministry in June 2016, and how to use it through “Invest Easy” portal. report for all government agencies. This service helps the investor in The workshop was attended by 25 e-management of the final accounts of representatives from various companies their institution through Invest Easy and audit offices. without the need to deliver its financial — ONA SAF CHIEF RECEIVES IRANIAN MILITARY DELEGATION MUSCAT: Lt Gen Ahmed bin Harith al Nabhani, Chief of Staff of the Sultan’s Armed Forces (SAF), received in his office at Muaskar Al Murtafa yesterday Brigadier Mehrali Baranchashmeh, Head of Physical Education Department of Armed Forces of Iran and his accompanying delegation, currently visiting the Sultanate. The two sides exchanged talks on several matters of common concern. The visit of the Iranian delegation comes within the framework of attending the joint coordinating meeting of the Omani-Iranian Military Friendship Committee, in relation to the cooperation between the two countries on various sport and military areas. The meeting was attended by senior SAF officers. — ONA Boost to military ties with India MUSCAT: Air Vice Marshal Matar bin Ali al Obaidani, Commander of the Royal Air Force of Oman (RAFO), received in his office at Muaskar al Murtafa yesterday Air Vice Marshal Sreekumar Prabhakaran, Vice Chief of Air Staff in the friendly Republic of India and his accompanying delegation, currently visiting the Sultanate. The two sides exchanged viewpoints and discussed several matters of common concern in military fields. The meeting was attended by Air Commodore Al Zubair bin Mohammed al Zubair, DirectorGeneral of Operations at the RAFO Command. — ONA Khareef boosts water resources GROUNDWATER RECHARGE: Chances of a good recharge is better this year in Dhofar KAUSHALENDRA SINGH SALALAH August 3: A good khareef excites not only the tourists, local people of Salalah and those getting benefited by doing some business or the other during the season. It also excites scientists, agriculturists and weathermen, who observe khareef from their own perspective, analyse data and use them for future planning. People involved in the water resources sector find khareef an important source of groundwater recharge, as continuous drizzling creates a situation for horizontal precipitation in the Salalah coastal plain aquifer. Dr Khalid al Mushaikhi, Head Section of Dams and Springs, Water Resources in Salalah, said it was beyond doubt that the khareef recharges groundwater and the chances of good recharge is better this year due to long and intense monsoon this year. “There has been less evaporation due to absence of intense sunlight and less run off of water due to drizzling like condition. Unlike heavy rain, continuous drizzling charges the groundwater more because whatever is accumulated goes directly into the earth,” said Dr Khalid. He expressed happiness over good accumulation of water in dams and springs in Dhofar Governorate due to the khareef, which is more intense and likely to have longer duration this season. Dr Mahaad Mahaad I Shammas, a senior faculty in Dhofar University has done a detailed study on ‘Impact of Dhofar fogwater forest on groundwater recharge in the coastal aquifer’ in which he has thrown light on the connection between the experimental work in Jabal Al Qara fogwater forest on horizontal precipitation and groundwater recharge to the Salalah coastal plain aquifer. “The future impact of the forest continuous decline on the aquifer was investigated by simulation modelling. The results of the fieldwork prove that measured horizontal precipitations Nobel, HM Prize-winning Egyptian scientist, 70, dead (interaction between trees and fogwater) are considerably higher than measured vertical precipitations (rainfall) during the wet monsoon season. “Simulation modelling of the impact of reduction in groundwater recharge originating from the mountain indicated that the reduction of the tree cover would result in a significant impact on the aquifer sustainability,” mentioned Dr Mahaad in his work. Ground water scientist Dr Akram Ali, who works as General Manager Drilling at Eastern Overseas, finds khareef as “an important source of groundwater recharge in Dhofar, as a minimum of 15,680,000 litres of water on an average is recharged annually from the monsoon water.” “The climate of Salalah is dry and arid, but the climate changes dramatically during the monsoon season called khareef. The mountains surrounding Salalah work as a controlling factor in precipitation from the monsoon,” he said. Salalah has about 30 rain days per year and monsoon rain account for about 70 per cent of the rainfall on the Salalah plain. Average rainfall on the Salalah plain is typically between 100 and 120 mm per year, whereas it is much higher, from 230 to 450 mm, over the mountain areas. The averages are based on rain guage readings only and do not include the other significant but unmeasureable components of precipitation such as that derived from interception of mist and fog moisture,” said Dr Akram. Dr Ahmed al Shanfari, Director of the Department of Agricultural and Livestock Research in Dhofar, finds khareef beneficial for agriculture in many ways. “First of all the plants get enough irrigation and wash out trees from pests and diseases. It creates a green house environment for Salalah and helps the farmers in many ways,” he said and added that the problems of papaya mealybug and other pests were less during the season. Haj Mission chairman meets owners of Haj companies TAYMORA AL GHAWI MUSCAT August 3: Ahmed Zewail, an Egyptian scientist who had won the Nobel prize, died on Tuesday. He was 70 years. The cause of death is unknown ... whether it is cancer or something else ... His doctor said his condition was stable the last time I called him last week,” a Reuters report said, citing spokesman Sherif Foad. A spokesman from California Institute of Technology, where he was a faculty member, confirmed Zewail’s death but had no information about the circumstances. Besides the Nobel chemistry prize in February 1999 for his work in femtochemistry, the study of chemical reactions in ultra-short time scales, Zewail had won the Sultan Qaboos Prize in Sciences and Physics in 1989. In 2009, he was chosen by the White House to be one of US President’s advisers for science and technology, along with 20 other scientists. Zewail was born on February 26, 1946 in Damnhor, Egypt. He lived in the San Marino city in Los Angeles. MUSCAT: Shaikh Nasser bin Yousef al Azri, Chairman of the Omani Haj Mission, yesterday met with owners of Haj companies and campaigns in the Sultanate. The meeting began with a review of new regulations and laws in Saudi Arabia during the season to serve pilgrims and the new systems for the development of performing pilgrimage in connection with the owners of Haj companies and campaigns, including e-payment for Haj companies and campaigns with respect to housing, catering and transportation. The meeting also touched on the role of the Ministry of Awqaf and Religious Affairs, being the organiser and responsible for the Omani Haj Mission. The meeting highlighted the provided services by the mission for Omani pilgrims, in particular and the campaigns in general. It also clarified the followed procedures with regard of campaigns and services offered by Haj companies and campaigns, as well as the role of the mission in taking care of pilgrims, citizens and residents in the Sultanate. The meeting also highlighted the importance and role of Haj campaigns in serving the pilgrims, transporting them to the Sacred Lands and taking care of them and to provide all means of comfort to them. — ONA The workshop will have brainstorming sessions to divide areas for specific innovation Diving for the disabled from Aug 21 MUSCAT: Scuba diving classes will be conducted for the physically challenged people by Oman Disabled Divers in association with International Association for Handicapped Divers (IAHD) and Euro Divers Oman. Titled ‘Diving for Disabled People’, the classes will be held from August 21 to 23 at the Marina Al Bandar Rhowda. “The event will be a wonderful opportunity for the handicapped people of Muscat to experience scuba diving for the first time,” Karin, Euro Divers Team (Gulf Divers LLC), told the Observer. Scuba diving offers a unique experience for the handicapped people as it gives them the freedom to move in a weightless environment. Scuba diving can be enjoyed by anyone regardless of their physical/mental ability. Youth panel offers young Omanis chance to innovate AMANI NASSER MUSCAT August 3: The National Youth Commission is planning to hold a series of workshops and brainstorming sessions soon to promote the concept of innovation. The initiative, founded by a group of talented and entrepreneurs, aims to produce a series of YouTube episodes. Participants must be skilled in seven areas: designing, script-writing, innovation, electronic drawing, film direction and montage. “The youth will produce 10-12 episodes focusing on innovation culture. The commission will provide all materials required. Entries will be received until mid-August,” said Badriya al Amri, a part of the Media Committee at the National Youth Commission. “Participation will be through phases. The first process includes registration through the website, after which we will meet participants and give them an idea of the programme. Then, we will have a brainstorming session to divide ideas to specific innovation categories,” she said. Participants must attach samples of their works as well as personal information on the commission’s website, www. nyc.om. Their videos should focus on exploiting resources and new innovations. The National Youth Commission recently launched workshops and activities to improve skills, national cadres’ peroration, research programmes for researchers and experts from the Sultanate. The commission will celebrate the Third Omani Youth Day in October to confirm the necessity of citizenship, partnership, dialogue and innovation. o a latenews oman ate e s oman EMIRATES PLANE CRASH-LANDS OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U S T 4 l 2 0 1 6 Avoid over-consumption of drugs FROM PAGE 1 “Most side effects, however, vary from person to person, depending on the dosage, type of disease, age, weight, gender, ethnicity and overall health,” said a source at a private hospital. A statement from WHO says drug prescription habits must follow WHO standard indicators to obtain the desired results. The regional strategy to promote the rational use of prescribed medicines, updated at the regional meeting of July 2010, recommended an analysis of medicines in health care delivery in order to plan a coordinated approach to improving the use of medicines. Following the meet, the regional committee adopted Resolution SEA/RC64/R5 and the national essential drug policy, including the rational use of medicines. Accordingly, WHO initiated a global action plan on anti-microbial resistance, including antibiotic resistance, at the World Health Assembly in May 2015. This global action plan, titled ‘Antibiotics: Handle with care’, envisages prevention and treatment of infectious diseases through safe and effective medicines. 5 FROM PAGE 1 A video clip shared on social media appeared to show the plane sliding across the runway with the right engine becoming detached from the wing. A picture posted online by the Gulf News site showed a plane in Emirates livery with its fuselage on the ground and emergency chutes deployed. Thick clouds of smoke were coming from the forward and middle sections of the fuselage, and fire and emergency vehicles were positioned around the aircraft. The roof of the plane had completely collapsed by the time emergency services extinguished the fire. Emirates said that the passengers and crew included 226 Indians, 24 British people and 11 Emiratis, with the remainder coming from 17 different nationalities. In the wake of the incident, Emirates cancelled 22 flights originating in Dubai and their return legs as well as six incoming flights. “Thankfully there was no fatalities among our passenger(s) and crew,” Al Maktoum said in a video message posted by the airline. “Our first priority in this case...(is) the well-being of our passengers and crew and answering the queries from all the family.” “We have extended our full cooperation to the (authorities) and emergency service,” he added. A German aviation safety consultant said it seemed unlikely that the plane had suffered technical problems during the flight. In that case there would have been major emergency preparations in the airport and the aircraft would normally have circled before landing to use up fuel and prevent any major fire, Heinrich Grossbonghart said. The plane appeared to be at the end of the runway, suggesting the pilot had wanted to go around for another attempt at landing but had been unable to complete the manoeuvre, he added. — dpa Tropical Storm bears down on Central America GUATEMALA CITY: A tropical storm, dubbed Earl and packing nearly hurricane-force winds, was to hit northern Central American countries Wednesday, prompting warnings and emergency planning by authorities. Earl was moving slowly westward across the Caribbean and was expected to drive across the northern coast of Honduras and Guatemala on Wednesday and slam directly into Belize late Wednesday or early Thursday before moving into southeastern Mexico. Honduras issued a red alert for its Caribbean island group the Bay Islands and closed airports and schools in the north. Officials warned of winds of 118 kilometres per hour. If the wind force strengthens any more, Earl would be classified as a hurricane. Belize’s National Emergency Management Organization said Earl “is expected to deteriorate to hurricane conditions” by late Wednesday or early Thursday and warned of heavy rains. It previously said extreme flooding, uprooted trees, power cuts and the destruction of “poorly constructed and older timber buildings” were likely. Authorities in Belize will open several shelters early Thursday. They told non-essential government workers they could go home to secure their properties. The US National Hurricane Center said Earl was moving westward at 22 kilometres per hour. It said its winds were forecast to reach peak strength by the time it reaches Belize, and then weaken progressively as it moves inland, toward Mexico. Very heavy rain in Belize and Mexico “could result in life-threatening flash floods and mud slides,” it said. — AFP Thank God ‘we are all safe’ FROM PAGE 1 She was found standing in a long queue along with her mother to check into the next available flight. “They say it might take four hours (for resumption of flights). There are long queues everywhere, be it the check-in counters or the coffee shops. With no place to sit, people are squatting on floors,” said Areen. With flights getting delayed, some passengers were agitated. The Observer was told that the flights to Dubai might be diverted to Al Maktoum International Airport (Dubai World Central). While an announcement that all departures from the airport would resume at 18.30 came as a relief to many, some were sceptical about it. Meanwhile, the Emirates, through the social media, said: “Our priority remains those involved and offering support to families and friends concerned.” Many congratulated the Emirates crew on the social media for the safe evacuation of all passengers. asia asia N Korea fires missile into Japan sea for first time 6 OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U ST 4 l 2 0 1 6 TOKYO SLAMS LAUNCH: One missile had landed in the Sea of Japan, another exploded on take off SEOUL: North Korea on Wednesday fired a ballistic missile directly into Japanese-controlled waters for the first time, drawing an outraged response from Tokyo and ramping up tensions with the United States and South Korea. The US military said the North had actually launched two Rodong intermediate-range missiles simultaneously, but one appeared to have exploded on take-off. The launches followed a North Korean threat of “physical action” over the planned deployment of a sophisticated US anti-missile system in South Korea, and came just weeks before the start of large-scale joint South Korea-US military exercises. Japan said the one missile had landed in the Sea of Japan (East Sea), some 250 kilometres (155 miles) off its north coast and within its Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). “It’s a serious threat against our country’s security,” Prime Minister Shinzo Abe told reporters. “This is an outrageous act that cannot be tolerated.” The United States condemned what it called a clear violation of UN Security Council resolutions explicitly banning North Korea’s use of ballistic missile technology. “This provocation only serves to increase the international community’s resolve to counter (North Korea’s) prohibited activities,” said Pentagon spokesman Gary Ross. The European Union said the North was “clearly violating” its international obligations set out in multiple UN Japan names hawkish defence minister resolutions. Germany’s foreign ministry said Pyongyang has “deliberately put at risk the security of another country”. US Strategic Command said the two missiles were launched from a site in western North Korea at around 7:50 am Seoul time (22:50 GMT Tuesday). “Initial indications reveal one of the missiles exploded immediately after launch, while the second was tracked over North Korea and into the Sea of Japan,” it said in a statement. It was the first time a North Korean missile has been fired direct into Japanese waters. The second stage of a missile fired over Japan had splashed down inside the EEZ off Japan’s Pacific Ocean coast in 1998. Japan’s top government spokesman Yoshihide Suga slammed Pyongyang for providing no advance warning of Wednesday’s test. TOKYO: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe appointed a conservative ally as defence minister on Wednesday, in a cabinet reshuffle that left most key posts unchanged, and he promised to speed up the economy’s escape from deflation and boost regional ties. New Minister of Defence Tomomi Inada (pictured), previously the ruling party policy chief, shares Abe’s goal of revising the post-war, pacifist constitution, which some conservatives consider a humiliating symbol of Japan’s World War Two defeat. She also regularly visits Tokyo’s Yasukuni Shrine for war dead, which China and South Korea see as a symbol of Japan’s past militarism. Japan’s relations with China and South Korea have often been frayed by the legacy of Japan’s military aggression before and during World War Two. Abe told a news conference the economy was his top priority and he would devote himself to lifting the country out of deflation, but that he “From the perspective of the safety of aircraft and ships, it is an extremely problematic, dangerous act,” Suga said. The Rodong is a scaled-up Scud variant with a maximum range of around 1,300 kilometres (800 miles). Pyongyang has conducted a series of missile tests this year in defiance of UN sanctions imposed after its fourth also aimed to mend regional relations in the face of the threat posed by North Korea. “We will steadily strengthen ties with neighbouring countries such as China and South Korea, and proceed with talks with Russia for a peace treaty,” he said, referring to the fact that Japan and Russia never signed a treaty after World War Two because of a territorial dispute. Inada, a 57-year-old lawyer, is the second woman to hold the defence post. The first, Yuriko Koike, who held the job briefly in 2007, was recently elected Tokyo governor. nuclear test in January. On July 19 it launched three ballistic missiles — including one Rodong — in an exercise that the North said simulated a nuclear strike on the South. That came just days after Washington and Seoul announced an agreement to deploy the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defence, or THAAD, system in South Korea by the end of next year — a move condemned by Pyongyang and also vehemently opposed by China and Russia. South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-Se said on Wednesday’s missile test only served to “underline the need to deploy THAAD”. Tensions on the divided Korean peninsula are also building up ahead of an annual South Korea-US military exercise later this month that involves tens of thousands of troops. North Korea says such drills are a provocative rehearsal for invasion, while Washington and Seoul insist they are purely defensive in nature. Nearly 30,000 US troops are permanently stationed in South Korea. Pyongyang has repeatedly warned of pre-emptive nuclear strikes against the South and US targets there and elsewhere, although the main focus of its nuclear weapons programme is to develop a credible strike threat against the US mainland. Since its fourth nuclear test, North Korea has claimed a series of technical breakthroughs for its weapons programme. It said it had miniaturised a nuclear warhead and successfully tested an engine designed for an intercontinental ballistic missile that could reach the US mainland. While some experts say the claims are exaggerated, most acknowledge that the North’s nuclear and ballistic missile programmes have made significant strides. — AFP FUTURISTIC TRANSPORT Volcanic eruptions hit air travel A model of an innovative street-straddling bus called Transit Elevated Bus is seen after a test run in Qinhuangdao, Hebei Province, China, on Wednesday. The test bus currently consists of one segment, and is capable of carrying 300 people, according to local media. — Reuters Goodbye Jade Rabbit BEIJING: China’s troubled but beloved Jade Rabbit lunar rover has whirred its last, state media said on Wednesday, after it bid humanity farewell on social media. The device, designed for a lifespan of a mere three months, surveyed the moon’s surface for 31 months, the official Xinhua new service said, overcoming numerous technical problems and design flaws to become a national icon. But the machine has stopped operations, Xinhua cited the State Administration for Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense as saying on Wednesday. The rover was part of the Chang’e-3 lunar mission. Millions of Internet users took part in an online contest to select its name, which comes from the pet of a moon goddess in Chinese mythology. It began its adventure on December 2013, sending back photographs of the lunar surface and gaining huge popularity with Internet users along the way. Not long after landing its legend grew after a “mechanical control abnormality” forced it offline, prompting anxiety from its many supporters. The rover later turned dormant and stopped sending signals during the lunar night, which lasts for two weeks and sees temperatures plummet. But it made a dramatic recovery, to the delight of its admirers. It was not clear on which day the device finally “retired”. An official media account carried a post written as a first-person message from the plucky rover to its fans on Sunday saying: “This time it really is goodnight. “There are still many questions I would like answers too, but I’m the rabbit that has seen the most stars!” it added. “The moon says it has prepared a long, long dream for me.” The post also contained a link to “Universal Traveler”, a song by French electronica band Air. It has received nearly 100,000 shares, likes and comments, with one poster promising it “countless carrot pies” according to Xinhua. Another said: “I don’t know why I am so heartbroken. It’s just a machine after all.” The Chang’e-3 probe’s landing was the third such soft-landing in history, and the first of its kind since a Soviet mission nearly four decades ago. It has been a source of national pride. China sees the space programme as a symbol of its rising global stature and technological advancement, as well as of the Communist Party’s success in reversing the fortunes of the onceimpoverished nation. By 2018 the country aims to land its Chang’e-4 probe — named for the moon goddess in Chinese mythology — on the dark side of the moon. — AFP JAKARTA: Volcanic eruptions in Indonesia in recent days have forced the closure of two airports and disrupted some flights to the holiday island of Bali, officials said on Wednesday. Mount Gamalama on the eastern island of Ternate erupted early on Wednesday after a moderate earthquake in the area, sending ash up to 600 metres (1,900 feet) into the air and closing the island’s airport, said the national disaster agency. “People are advised to stay calm,” said agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, adding that authorities were not yet planning evacuations. The airport was expected to stay shut until Thursday morning. The volcano had stopped violently erupting by Wednesday afternoon. The airport on Lombok was closed overnight from Monday to Tuesday due to a drifting ash Residents look at the Mount Sinabung volcano as it spews volcanic ash near the Tiga Pancur village in Karo, North Sumatra on Wednesday. — AFP cloud from erupting Mount Rinjani, causing the cancellation of 29 domestic and international flights to the resort island. The airport on neighbouring Bali, which attracts millions of foreign visitors every year, remained open but several flights between Lombok and Bali were cancelled while a handful of services between Australia and Bali were also axed. — AFP Philippine cops kill six linked to drug tainted mayor MANILA: Philippine police commandos killed six bodyguards on Wednesday who worked for a town mayor who had turned himself in over links to the illegal drug trade, as President Rodrigo Duterte’s anti-drug war shifted from street peddlers to officials. Close to 400 people have been killed in police operations against illegal drugs since Duterte was sworn in as president on June 30. Media and rights groups have put the figure almost twice as high at 770, including more than 200 killed by vigilante groups. The number of drug-related killings has alarmed human rights groups, who have called on the United Nations to condemn the rise in extrajudicial killings in the Philippines. The Philippine Senate is to hold a legislative inquiry. National police spokesman Dionardo Carlos told reporters there had been a gunbattle between the police and bodyguards working for Rolando Espinosa after police went to search Espinosa’s home on Leyte island in the central Philippines earlier on Wednesday. — AFP subcontinent subcontinent i Nepal selects Maoist as premier OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U S T 4 l 2 0 1 6 amid revolving-door politics NEW LEADER: Prachanda becomes 24th prime minister of the Himalyan country KATHMANDU: Nepal’s parliament on Wednesday elected Prachanda, who led a decade-long insurgency that topped a feudal monarchy, as the Himalayan nation’s new prime minister, a week after K P Oli stepped down to avoid a no-confidence motion. Nepal has long been mired in political instability and Prachanda, 61, becomes its 24th prime minister since protests led to the establishment of a multi-party democracy in 1990. He has served once before, after winning power in 2008. Prachanda, whose real name in Pushpa Kamal Dahal, won 363 votes of the 573 votes cast in the 595-member parliament. Lawmkers draped Buddhist prayer scarves around his neck after he was elected unopposed. “I will work for national unity, to promote the interest of the country and its people,” the bespectacled leader had told lawmakers earlier. The return of Prachanda, who still uses his nom de guerre, which means “fierce”, but has lost his former Robin Hood image, is unlikely to end the revolving-door politics that has sapped business confidence in one of the world’s poorest countries. “I don’t think he will be stable,” said Guna Raj Luitel, editor of the daily Nagarik. “There is no agreement between parties on a basic agenda for the country. They have only agreed for convenience, and there is already a deal to change the prime minister after nine months.” Prachanda’s confirmation became possible with the support of parliament’s biggest party, the centrist Nepali Congress, and several smaller parties. The Maoists are the third biggest group in the legislature. Under a widely reported power-sharing deal, Nepali Congress leader Sher Bahadur Deuba is expected to take over from Prachanda before Nepal holds a general election at the beginning of 2018. Party officials have declined to comment. The two leaders make for a disparate combination. Deuba headed the cabinet that offered a bounty of Rs 5 million ($50,000) for Prachanda in 2001, at the peak of the insurgency. Two years later, Maoist guerrillas shot up Deuba’s convoy in west Nepal, but he escaped unhurt. Nepal’s newly-elected Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal, known as Prachanda, greets supporters as he leaves the Parliament Building in Kathmandu on Wednesday. Nepal’s parliament elected former guerrilla and Maoist leader Pushpa Kamal Dahal as prime minister on August 3 after his predecessor resigned following deadly unrest over a divisive new constitution. — AFP 7 Tough measures to combat drugs mooted in Myanmar YANGON: Military officials and lawmakers in Myanmar have voiced disappointment over the southeast Asian nation’s lacklustre efforts to combat illegal drugs, urging it to step up the battle on the narcotics trade. Drugs pose a major headache for the government led by Aung San Suu Kyi, which governs the large, impoverished and fractious country after winning a landslide election victory in November. Most drugs are produced in border areas controlled by ethnic minority rebels or by militias allied with the military. “The narcotic drug problems have become perennial ones in Myanmar, just like in other countries,” the staterun Myanma Alinn Daily on Wednesday quoted Lt Gen Kyaw Swe, the home minister, as saying. Myanmar was directly ruled by the military until 2011, when a semicivilian government took power. The Ministry of Home Affairs is one of three ministries overseen by the military. The statement came during a twoday discussion of drug-related issues by nearly 20 lawmakers in parliament’s upper house. “Some government employees are engaged in drugs trafficking and abuse,” lawmaker Okka Min said on Monday, urging police to work more closely with ordinary people to root out traffickers. “Although the police do not know who is trafficking the drugs, the people do,” he added. “When the police try to arrest the traffickers acting on tipoffs, nobody gets arrested. The culprits have fled after receiving information in advance.” For decades, Myanmar has been a major producer of opium and its refined form, heroin, and is now also a major source of methamphetamine pills found across Southeast Asia and beyond, a United Nations agency on drugs and crime said last year. Police figures show 49.95 million of the pills were seized in 2,815 busts across Myanmar last year. The deputy home minister, Maj Gen Aung Soe, enumerated a series of measures planned to combat the drug problem. “More budget will be sought from the government, the police force will be expanded and laws to combat narcotic drugs will be amended, in addition to promoting educational campaigns,” he said. — Reuters Pushpa Kamal Dahal, an emotional and mild-mannered man Five militants gunned down in Pakistan KATHMANDU: Pushpa Kamal Dahal became Nepal’s 39th prime minister on Wednesday. Dahal, also known as Prachanda, or the fierce one, was the leader of the Maoist guerrilla movement in Nepal during the 19962006 civil war. He entered mainstream politics through the Constituent Assembly elections of 2008, before serving as prime minister from 2008-2009. Dahal was forced to resign in May 2009 after then-president Ram BaranYadav opposed his attempt to sack army chief Rookmangud Katawal. ISLAMABAD: At least five militants were killed in a shootout with security forces in Pakistan’s northwest on Wednesday, the media reported. The exchange of firing was triggered off when militants opened fire at security forces in Kailash area of Chitral district, a district located near Pakistan-Afghanistan border. The forces responded and killed five Frequent changes of government are blamed on politicians who are seen as selfish and power hungry, and who show little concern for the plight of Nepal’s 28 million people. Nearly a quarter live on less than $2 a day. Politics in Nepal, which has great potential to generate hydroelectric power, is closely watched by giant neighbours China and India as they vie for influence over the country that is home to Mount Everest and the birthplace of Lord Buddha. In 2008, Prachanda visited China Dahal has received criticism for the luxurious lifestyle he has enjoyed since joining mainstream politics. He has also been criticised by hardline Maoists for “wavering” from their original stance and becoming like “conventional Nepali politicians,” leading the main Maoist party to fragment into splinter groups. Baburam Bhattarai, seen as his main opponent within the party, went on to form his own party, Naya Shakti, earlier this year. Born in Dhikurpokhari, Kaski district, Dahal has a degree in agriculture before India, breaking a tradition of new Nepali leaders making New Delhi their first foreign port of call. n a March visit, Oli cosied up to China with a deal to use its ports for trading goods with third countries, ruffling feathers in India, which controls landlocked Nepal’s main overland trade route. India is blamed in Nepal for imposing a blockade on fuel and essential goods last year after its Madhesi minority protested against the first post-monarchy constitution. and worked briefly as a development worker in Nepal’s villages. Between 1996-2006, Prachanda lived an underground life in Nepal’s forests training the rebels. Bhattarai was seen as the movement’s face during this time. Despite being a former rebel leader who was at the forefront of the Maoist movement for years, Dahal is known to be a mild-mannered and emotional politician. Photographs taken during the period of the Maoist insurgency show Dahal crying over the death of his soldiers. — dpa India denies the accusation. Prachanda said his government would continue the pacts Oli signed with China and India. The Madhesis, mostly southern plains dwellers with ties to India, say the charter weakens their position in the central government by dividing their homeland. The new leader also faces a huge reconstruction effort after earthquakes that killed 9,000 people last year, besides overseeing settlement of war crimes cases against the Maoists and the security forces. — Reuters militants, while their accomplices fled the scene. The incident happened after Afghan Taliban launched two attacks in Chitral district, in the country’s northwest Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, and stole hundreds of cattle. In one of the attacks on Sunday, the Afghan Taliban killed two shepherds and took away their herd of over 400 cattle with them. — IANS Chinese ship docks at Bangladesh port DHAKA: Operations at Bangladesh’s Payra Sea Port were unofficially flagged off with the anchorage of a commercial vessel from China. MV Fortune Bird reached the outer anchorage of the port in southwestern of Patuakhali district on Monday afternoon. The port will be officially inaugurated in a ceremony on August 13, Payra Port Authority Chairman Captain Saidur Rahman told bdnews24. com. The vessel, however, could not unload the 53,000 tonnes stone, mostly for the Padma Bridge, due to bad weather, Captain Saidur said. Several other foreign ships would reach the port in the next few days. “Ships depend on high tide in other ports, but there is no such problem with Payra port because of its deep navigability. Ships can travel to the port 24 hours a day,” the chairman added. — IANS FLOOD HAVOC IN MYANMAR Bangladesh police kill suspect in minority murders DHAKA: Bangladesh police shot dead a hardline leader suspected in a series of recent killings targeting foreigners and religious minorities, an official said on Wednesday. Nazrul Islam, 28, was killed on Tuesday in a shoot-out with police, who said he had been involved in at least 11 murders and two other attempts and was a senior leader of the banned group Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB). Dhaka police described Islam, also known as Bike Hasan, as a “top JMB terrorist” and said they recovered a pistol and bullets from the site of the gunfight. Bangladesh blames the JMB for a recent wave of killings that have raised fears for the safety of religious minorities in the country. “He was shot dead during a gunfight at Mahendra Crossing in Rajshahi city early Tuesday morning when we raided the area,” the city’s police commissioner Shafiqul Islam said. “Later we learned that the person killed in the raid was the notorious Bike Hasan.” The 28-year-old earned the nickname for his skills on the motorbikes that the men behind the wave of killings have frequently used to make a quick getaway, Islam said. “It’s a major success in our ongoing drive against extremists,” he added. Police suspect Nazrul Islam of involvement in the murder of at least five Hindu men as well as a Japanese farmer shot dead in northern Bangladesh last year. He is also accused in the killings of a liberal university professor, a leader of the minority Sufi faith and a Christian grocer. Bangladesh authorities are under pressure to crack down on extremism in the world’s third largest Muslim-majority nation after a recent increase in gruesome attacks. Five gunmen stormed an upscale cafe in the capital on July 1, killing 20 mainly foreign hostages and two police officers in Bangladesh’s deadliest single militant attack of recent years. — AFP A resident rides a wooden boat as other residents wade through floodwaters at a village in Mandalay on Wednesday. Floods from monsoon rains have claimed two lives in Myanmar’s Kachin state and displaced some 120,000 people in five regions across the country’s north and central areas, a Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement official said on Wednesday. — AFP The farmers have also taken an economic blow as hundreds of their livestock have been stolen by militants from across the border in Afghanistan Pakistan’s Kalash tribe fears for survival after recent attacks ISLAMABAD: Still reeling from the brutal slaying of two of its people, the Kalash tribe, known to keep to itself, has urged the government step up to the plate and ensure the security of its people. Apart from an emotional toll, the farmers have also taken an economic blow as hundreds of their livestock were stolen allegedly by militants from across the border in Afghanistan. “The only livelihood and source of income we have is through agriculture and our livestock,” said Baaghi Gul, the sister-in-law of slain farmer Noor Ahmed. “If that too is taken away, what are we left with?” she questioned. Her brother was among the two men killed in Charagah, Bahbaret in Upper Chitral. Ahmed’s nephew, an eyewitness, said he would also have been killed had he not managed to escape from a hole created by water flowing through a glacier. Talking about that brutal incident, the 16-year-old boy said he and his uncles were sleeping near the animals. He added Ahmed woke up at around 5 am to milk the goats when the attack took place. Ahmed called out to him, telling the boy not to come any closer as there was danger. The teenager recalled he and his other uncle grabbed their pistol and ventured out, only to see Ahmed falling to machine gun fire. When the assailants turned their attention to the boy, he managed to narrowly escape. The victim’s house, in mourning over the death caused by Friday morning’s attack, had Ahmed’s father, an aged man, sitting inside. The man found it difficult to overcome the grief caused by his son’s murder. In a corner of the room sat Ahmed’s wife, draped in a black chador as is customary for a Kalash widows. She has to remain in this state for seven days after the death and cannot attend any ceremony for five months. Besides her, Ahmed is survived by nine children. Three days before the attack, locals said they had seen some people moving about suspiciously in the area. This is the second such incident being mourned by the family in just a few years. Around two years ago, Ahmed’s cousin’s son was also killed and at least 500 of his goats were taken away. Residents of Kalash valleys believed it was just the people of their community that was being targeted, adding the livestock of Muslims was also present in the area. It is not just the locals who are targeted, but also those working for their well-being. Athanassios Lerounis, a Greek volunteer, was working in the valley a few years ago. He had, among other things, constructed a school, a museum and a place for Kalash women to wash their clothes and perform other chores. However, he was abducted in 2010. After much effort and negotiations, he was released in 2011 and later left Chitral due to the obvious threat to his security. Another foreigner, a Spaniard called Jordi, was also killed, said a minority councillor in the valley. She said Jiordi had been living in the valley for some time before he was killed in 2002. A boy from Birir, living with him as a helper, was also slain. Under such circumstances, it is hardly surprising that the Kalash community fears for its safety and ultimate survival. — Internews analysis analysis l 8 OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U ST 4 l 2 0 1 6 THE CRISSCROSS OF RACE AND GENDER IN MEDIA SONIA AMBROSIO DE NELSON soniambrosio@gmail.com W inning her Democratic Party nomination for the 2016 presidential election in November, Hillary Clinton has brought new dynamics into the race for the Oval Office in the United States. Her perseverance and goal oriented crusade saw no obstacles. Looking back into the race in 2008, the battle between senators Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton for the Democratic Party’s nomination for the presidential election offered two forms of political mobilisation: ethnicity and gender. Just as Barack Obama’s campaign had empowered African-Americans, Senator Clinton’s run had inspired women across the United States. The context was a media spectacle as well as a sociological case for in-depth studies on unconscious bias in voters’ attitudes and the media stereotyping role — particularly — during the political campaign. However, the failure of Hillary Clinton in reaching the Democratic Party’s nomination 8 years ago should not be seen as a problem of gender. From the beginning, Hillary Clinton projected herself as the candidate better fit for the presidency. Womanhood was not originally the focus of her campaign: experience was Senator Clinton entered the race with the winning ticket in her hands — she had the name recognition like few other candidates. Clinton showed fighting spirit persistence and toughness. Yet it has both inspired and annoyed many people. Critics would claim that she reached such high phase of political influence because of her role as a former first lady and as a senator. As a woman running for the commander-in-chief post for one of the most powerful military country in the world, Clinton projected an iron will and toughness that earned her remarks for being harsh and sometimes cold. Even though, some of her most vehement female supporters complained of sexism in the media. However, media gender stereotyping woman who seeks political office is said to be as old as political institutions themselves. Hillary Clinton, throughout her pursuit for the White House, has exhibited a mix of skills from a tough person to a sensitive girl to the point to identify herself with the ordinary woman who stays home baking cookies, one of her own expressions to mark herself out from the ordinary homemakers. During her years as First Lady, she attracted public and media attention. Hillary had broken all the norms. Probably as a consequence of her political performance and exposure, she received the largest proportion of negative media coverage than any previous First Lady. Then as a senator, Clinton started her 2008 campaign saying she wanted to shatter the ultimate glass ceiling. From the start, she showed she can take the punch. But researchers such as Crystal Hoyt explain that when a woman is tough, people tend not to like her. Professor Lynn Sanders, from the University of Virginia, thinks that Hillary had successfully neutralised gender as an issue. So, any assumption that sexism has hurt Clinton’s chances in the past and in the 2016 electoral campaign is open to question since it has been reported that she had surpassed almost every milestone for a politician, male or female, seeking to occupy the White House. A female president in the United States is long overdue. The question then is, if rich and poor countries around the world are able to vote for or nominate a female leader, why one of the most powerful nations in the world is not able to elect one of the most politically influential women in the country? For Kathleen Dolan, a political scientist at the University of WisconsinMilwaukee, Hillary Clinton is the only woman who could have done this- twice. When the role of women in politics in other countries is compared to the United States, it becomes clear that the US is lagging behind in this area. Though, Clinton is not the first woman to seek the office. Victoria Claflin Woodhull, at the age of 34, ran in the 1872 election as the Equal Party nominee. She had Frederick Douglas, an African-American running as her vice president. Other four intentional candidates were Gracie Allen in 1940, Shirley Chisholm and Linda Jenness in 1972, and Jill Stein in 2012. Indian prime time needs truce SANJEEV SRIVASTAVA T better part of his career, I will admit that if my phone wo of the biggest stars of Indian News TV — Barkha Dutt was being thus tapped one could have also chanced upon and Arnab Goswami — are now fighting in full public conversations with some politician friends that could have glare. The gloves are off. And how! That this would happen been misconstrued without knowing the proper context. — sooner or later — was inevitable. By the way, there is a conversation in those tapes where The signs were there for anyone who cared to see. Niira Radia is criticising me for being a “show off and a loud And not many viewers of prime time news were mouth”. Meanwhile, Arnab was emerging as the knight in oblivious to these almost impossible-to-miss the signals. shining armour in the collective consciousness of Indian These were the not-so-subtle innuendos, the in-your- chattering classes. Raising issues of corruption in UPA-II, face suggestions, mocking not just the style of journalism he was unsparing and clearly partisan. and presentation of the other, but also questioning each But he was riding on the common man’s disgust with the government, was on the right side of public perception and other’s motives and ideology. Prime time news became an soon created an almost embarrassing obsession with a section of the English gap between himself and others in elite. It became a heady cocktail which the ratings game. He did not always combined pain and pleasure, ecstasy follow journalism ethics and enjoyed and agony in equal measure. News Prime time news became tossing out — from the NewsHour became secondary. windows — rules of fair play and balance. Others in the TV news So did the debates. As star anchors an obsession with a section became gladiators, the viewers began of the English elite. It genre either followed him or did not to behave more like spectators in a change. became a heady cocktail Roman arena; baying for blood and Not so much because she constantly looking for their evening which combined pain and supported the Congress and the fix of adrenaline rather than reasoned, pleasure, ecstasy and agony UPA but because she was seen as a well-articulated arguments. So the die-hard Modi critic, an enemy in in equal measure. News writing was on the wall. the eyes of Modi bhakts. On the other hand and largely It all began with the second term became secondary. of the United Progressive Alliance thanks to his anti-establishment government (UPA-II). Times Now image and his relentless campaign was climbing the ratings charts on against the UPA — which the back of its coverage of the 26/11 interestingly continued even after the Mumbai terror attack. Congress lost the 2014 elections — Arnab is now perceived And then — out of nowhere — came the Radia Tapes. as a supporter of the Modi government. In the controversy that followed, Barkha Dutt’s The Barkha-Arnab slugfest is now not just about credibility took a hit. She has never fully recovered from clashing egos and contrasting styles, it’s about who is on the episode. Those were difficult times for her. The more which side of our sharply polarised polity. she tried to defend herself, the more she tied herself in So Arnab, please stop calling journalists names on your knots. She argued well, with an equal measure of logic and show. We are still a democracy. Allow them the freedom to emotion. But she lost out on public perception and there’s tell a story as they want to. And Barkha, the shoe may be on no fighting that. And here’s my disclaimer. someone else’s foot today but it does not behove you to call As somebody who has been a reporter/editor for a anyone a “chamcha”. Aleppo residents defiant as rebels launch push to break siege WEEDAH HAMZAH S moke has been rising over the streets of eastern Aleppo, shattered by years of Syrian government air raids and shelling. Activists and children have been making bonfires from car tires across the rebelheld enclave. According to videos posted to social media, they hope the reduced visibility will make it harder for warplanes to find targets. Eastern Aleppo last month took its heaviest blow since rebels seized control in 2012: Syrian forces backed by Russian air strikes severed the Castello Road, the enclave’s last route to the outside world. A humanitarian catastrophe seemed in the making. The UN warned that food supplies for the enclave’s estimated 250,000 to 300,000 residents were likely to run out in mid-August. Local medical officials said there were only about 20 medical specialists left, and only two hospitals still operating after air strikes put other facilities out of action. Russia, whose air campaign has turned the tide in favour of Syrian President Bashar al Assad’s overstretched forces, announced it would begin a major humanitarian operation in the city. The government would open three humanitarian corridors for both civilians and rebel fighters wishing to leave, Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said. In the Salaheddine neighbourhood where one of the corridors is supposed to have been opened, activist Kenan is scornful. “Hear the buzzing of the sniper fire; it Rebel-held eastern Aleppo, after enduring years of Syrian air strikes and shelling, is now facing a suffocating siege. But many locals would rather trust in a rebel counteroffensive than in Russian and government promises that they can cross the frontlines. is still over our heads,” he tells over Skype. Through the camera of his laptop, Kenan — who, like others in eastern Aleppo, prefers for security reasons to be known only by his first name — shows the area where the corridor is supposed to be. It is a deserted no-man’s land, with rubble marking the division between rebel-held east and government territory in western Aleppo. “Do you see people gathering, can you see women and children?” he questioned. Syrian state media has reported that dozens of families and some opposition fighters have left western Aleppo through the safe corridors, but the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group, puts the figure at precisely twelve persons. Local resident Abdullah, 32, says he thought about using the corridor to get his wife and three children to safety. But, he says, “I was told that the regime snipers could target them. One opposition checkpoint in (the) Bustan al Qasr (neighbourhood) said that my family can pass but I am responsible for what they could face.” Men read one of the leaflets dropped by the Syrian army over opposition-held Aleppo districts asking residents to cooperate with the military. — Reuters a a ys s analysis analysis i OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U S T 4 l 2 0 1 6 9 Everything in existence exists for a specific purpose T AHMED AL HARTHY ahmed_harthy@outlook.com he 20th and 21st centuries have seen religion come under scrutiny due to the advancement of scientific understanding and the sudden rise of religious extremism. Religious belief has become, to the likes of prominent atheists Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris, irrational and, to an extent, evil. This does not mean that religion went unquestioned and unchallenged before the modern day. Philosophers have long been pondering questions pertaining to the unseen. Why are we here? Does God exist? If so, which god is he? And so on. Religious faith and the belief in god were put under the magnifying glass during the Age of Enlightenment, where no claim or proposition was left unchallenged. Religious thinkers were thus prompted to justify and rationalise their beliefs by constructing arguments that they believed were strong enough to stand the barrage of scientific inquiry and the waves of scepticism. It is for this that religion was in dire need of a robust, but logical, defence. This article looks at one such defence — William Paley’s watchmaker argument. Paley’s argument is an example of a teleological argument. The word teleology comes from the Greek word telos which means ‘end’ or ‘purpose’. The second half of the word comes from the Greek word logos i.e. ‘study of’. Hence, teleological arguments are constructed to argue that everything in existence exists for a specific purpose. A purpose indicates a will, a will indicates a personality, and that personality is god. Such purposes are intrinsic in nature; they exist regardless of human will. Teleological arguments can be seen as a direct response to the agnostic and atheistic position that the universe and everything in existence is a product of chance or of necessity. Aristotle once said: “It is absurd to suppose that ends are not present [in nature] because we do not see an agent deliberating”. William Paley provides an analogy to illustrate his reasoning. Suppose you were walking in a garden and you were to come across a rock lying on the grass. One would think the rock had been lying there for eternity; you would have no reason to doubt this. Suppose you continued walking and then stumbled across a fully-functioning watch — with all its machinery and cogs suitably placed to be able to tell time. To assume that the watch, like the rock, had lain there forever would be absurd to Paley. One would need to attribute the watch to a watchmaker. Similarly, the universe with its apparent fine-tuning and its harmonious flow of planets and stars must be attributed to a designer — we cannot say that it has existed forever. The reasoning for such a comparison is due to the universe being too suitable for life that it cannot be a product of chance. The physical constants that make up and hold up the basic fabrics of our universe are perfect for life and for the formation of the universe. Even the processes that led to the formation of the universe were “finely-tuned” to allow for its formation. It is well established that if the Big Bang occurred a split second faster than it did, the initial particles would have flown too far away from each other to form the universe. In examining the similarities between a watch and the universe, one finds that the only thing they have in common is their complexity and harmonious functions. However this does not automatically mean that harmony and complexity warrant a designer. A watch is already known to be a human invention. On the other hand, no one can be certain that the universe was created by a deity. David Hume was one of the first to spot the weakness of analogical arguments, and despite developing his arguments before Paley’s work, Hume’s arguments provide a direct line of refutations against the watchmaker argument. One of Hume’s main criticisms was of the analogical nature of the argument, whose faults are aforementioned. Hume believes it is not logically sound to compare a watch to the universe, as we have multiple watches by which to compare but only one such universe in existence. The monotheistic traditions posit a perfect, eternal and all-powerful being as being god. However, our universe observes that like produces like and thus a perfect god would automatically create a perfect universe. Surely, according to Hume, a perfect god would not allow for fault lines, earthquakes and disease to be a part of his desired universe. Furthermore, in regard to Hume assuming that this imperfect world results in there being a God that intends or allows evil to occur with in it, German philosopher Gottfried Leibniz seems to provide an adequate response. Leibniz argues that the universe created by god is the most perfect an imperfect universe can be. The universe has a considerable amount of good and the least amount of evil in it; if this was not the case then we would all be leading depressed lives. According to Leibniz, this is the only possible world we can ever hope to live in as without this small amount of evil, the good in the world would not be manifest. Leibniz uses the example of courage to illustrate this point. If there was no fear, courage would not even exist as a trait. Similarly, without sadness or such negative feelings, we would not know or experience the meaning of happiness. In other words, evil provides contrast in our lives. Using analogies is always tricky when building arguments, and should one decide to use them they must be careful in deciding its variables. Paley might have avoided much of the criticism should he have refrained from using this analogy in his teleological argument. Alternatively, Paley could have used a more appropriate comparison. Instead of using a stone as a variable, Paley could have used a more complex variable such as the sun which, like the watch, also tells time. However, one would question if an analogy is ever suitable in trying to compare god’s (or nature’s) handiwork with that of man. MAOIST-TURNED PM PAAVAN MATHEMA N A supporter photographs Donald Trump during a campaign event at Briar Woods High School in Ashburn, Virginia. epal’s new Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal spent years hiding out in the jungle directing a guerrilla war against the state, before transforming his Maoist revolutionary movement into a political party. The charismatic 61-year-old — better known by his nom-de-guerre Prachanda (“the fierce one”) — recruited thousands into his Maoist army with a rousing call to end centuries of feudal inequality and overthrow a 240-year-old monarchy. The ten-year insurgency he led brought the Nepali state to its knees as the Maoists won control of large swathes of countryside. After a 2006 peace agreement the father-of-four made a triumphant entry into politics, becoming prime minister for the first time after his party won elections in 2008. But the gloss quickly wore off and he resigned just nine months later after the president blocked his efforts to sack the army chief in a row over the integration of former Maoist fighters. Prachanda was born a Brahmin — the highest Hindu caste — but his family was poor and he spent his childhood herding goats and buffalo. The extreme poverty he witnessed first hand in rural Nepal spurred an interest in far-left ideology and he joined a communist party in 1980 at the age of 25. He worked as a teacher, but gradually became convinced that an armed insurgency was the only way to bring radical change to one of the world’s poorest countries. Inspired by China’s Cultural Revolution, he launched the “People’s War” in 1996, recruiting thousands of youngsters including children into his Maoist army. In recent years many former guerrillas have quit the party, accusing Prachanda and other leaders of betraying their sacrifices. He has come under fire for his lavish lifestyle, notably when it emerged that he had rented a sprawling estate in Kathmandu that includes a 15-room mansion, parking space for more than a dozen vehicles, a building to house 70 guards and a table tennis room. “He began to be seen as (someone) attracted to not just money and power but also to people outside the movement who were rich and powerful, abandoning the rank and file and alienating his base,” said Aditya Adhikari, an author and expert on the Maoist movement. — Reuters Donald Trump insists the campaign is unified DOINA CHIACU R epublican Donald Trump insisted on Wednesday that his presidential campaign is unified, even as he faces open revolt from some in his party amid one of the most disruptive controversies of his unruly White House run. “There is great unity in my campaign, perhaps greater than ever before. I want to thank everyone for your tremendous support. Beat Crooked H!” the Republican nominee wrote on Twitter early on Wednesday, referring to Democratic rival Hillary Clinton. The message belied the chaos that has erupted in the Republican Party after the New York real estate magnate engaged for days in a public dispute with the parents of a Muslim American soldier who died in Iraq. The uproar has led many Republicans to distance themselves from Trump and voice support for the Khan family. Several media outlets reported on Wednesday that the campaign is in disarray and that Trump had rejected advice from his staff to drop the battle with the Khans. According to one news report, the Republican National Committee is looking at its options in case Trump drops out. RNC Chairman Reince Priebus is furious about the dispute with the Khans and has spoken with Trump repeatedly asking him to change course, ABC News reported on Wednesday. It said senior officials are looking into how to replace Trump on the Republican ticket for the November 8 election. The Trump campaign had no immediate comment on The uproar has led many Republicans to distance themselves from Trump and voice support for the Khan family. Several media outlets reported that the campaign is in disarray and that Trump had rejected advice from his staff to drop the battle with the Khans. the report. Late on Tuesday, Meg Whitman, a prominent Republican fundraiser and chief executive of Hewlett Packard Enterprise, endorsed Clinton’s White House bid, calling Trump an “authoritarian character” and a threat to democracy. In an interview with The New York Times, Whitman said it was time “to put country first before party.” Trump has had a running dispute with Khizr and Ghazala Khan since they took the stage at last week’s Democratic National Convention to cite their son’s sacrifice and criticise Trump’s proposal to combat terrorism by temporarily banning Muslims from entering the United States. Many Republican leaders, including House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan and Senator John McCain, have criticised Trump’s attacks on the parents of Army Captain Humayun Khan, who received the Bronze Star Medal after he died in Iraq in 2004. Trump hit back on Tuesday by denying both Ryan and McCain support in their re-election bids, in an interview with The Washington Post. Even Trump’s longtime ally, New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, said on Tuesday it was inappropriate to criticise the Khan family. Representative Richard Hanna of New York became the first Republican in Congress to endorse Clinton, although several other Republicans in Congress have said they will not support Trump. The dispute over Trump’s treatment of the Khans, coming just two weeks after he was formally anointed the White House nominee at the Republicans’ convention, was the latest rift in a party already frayed by internal dissent over Trump. A former reality TV star who has never held public office, Trump swept aside 16 rivals to win the party primary contests, winning support particularly from white blue-collar workers who feel neglected by the political establishment. His plans have included the ban on minorities and building a wall along the Mexican border to keep out illegal immigrants. He has also proposed renegotiating trade treaties, opening up to Russia, revamping Nato and has suggested Japan and South Korea should get nuclear weapons. ESTABLISHED ON 15 NOVEMBER 1981 EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: Abdullah bin Salim al Shueili HEAD OFFICE ADVERTISING Tel: 24649444, 24649450, 24649451, 24604563, 24699437 Fax: 24699643 AL OMANEYA ADVERTISING & PUBLIC RELATIONS, P.O. Box 3303, P.C. 112, Ruwi, Sultanate of Oman Tel: SWITCHBOARD: 24649444 DIRECT: 24649430/24649437/24649401 Fax: 24649434 SALALAH OFFICE Tel: 23292633 Fax: 23293909 NIZWA OFFICE Tel: 25411099 P.O. Box 955, P.C. 611 Website: omanobserver.om DISTRIBUTION AGENT Al OMANEYA for Distribution & Marketing, P.O. Box 974, P.C. 100, Muscat, Sultanate of Oman Tel: 24649351/24649360 Fax: 24649379 e-mail: editor@omanobserver.om PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY: Oman Establishment for Press, Publication and Advertising P.O. Box 974, Postal Code 100, Muscat, Sultanate of Oman subscribe@omanobserver.om Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in these pages are solely those of the authors and do not reflect the opinion of the Observer. india iindia d 2 buses with 22 washed away in 10 OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U ST 4 l 2 0 1 6 Kejriwal framing my family: AAP MLA AAP MLA and a former minister, Asim Ahmed Khan, on Wednesday accused Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal of trying to frame his family members in false cases and threatened to “expose” him. Khan said: “I know many things which would create problem for him (Kejriwal). This is why he want to frame my family members to silence me. But I will soon expose him.” IN BRIEF Arunachal cabinet expanded ITANAGAR: In its first expansion of the cabinet, Arunachal Pradesh Chief Minister Pema Khandu on Wednesday expanded his cabinet by inducting 10 ministers including former Speaker Nabam Rebia. Governor Tathagata Roy administered the oath of office and secrecy to the newly appointed ministers at Darbar Hall of the Raj Bhavan. Khandu was sworn in as the Chief Minister on July 17, ending months of political instability in the hilly state. The same day, senior Congress leader Chowna Mein was sworn in as Deputy Chief Minister. Those included in the cabinet on Wednesday include Tanga Byaling, Rajesh Tacho, Nabam Rebia, Honchun Ngandam, Wangki Lowang, Kamlung Mossang, Tapang Taloh, Kumar Waii, Takam Pario and Jomde Kena. All of them were sworn in as cabinet ministers. — IANS Mid-air crash averted over Guwahati GUWAHATI: Two Indigo aircraft miraculously escaped colliding with one another over Guwahati, leaving some passengers and crew members shaken and needing medical aid, officials said on Wednesday. At least four passengers and two cabin crew were shaken by the near disaster, a spokesman for Indigo Airlines said. The passengers complained of giddiness while the cabin crew needed first aid. The incident took place on Tuesday evening when an Indigo flight from Mumbai to Guwahati was about to land at the Lokapriya Gopinath Bordoloi International Airport. Just then, an Indigo flight bound for Chennai took off, crossing the flight path of the first aircraft. “The IndiGo flight en route to Guwahati experienced turbulence due to monsoon,” said the Indigo spokesman, adding this caused it to climb down by 250-300 feet, just when the Chennai-bound aircraft was taking off. The spokesman said the flight finally made a normal landing. The four passengers and two cabin crew were given medical assistance. — IANS Oppn moves no-confidence motion in Goa PANAJI: The opposition in Goa on Wednesday formally moved a noconfidence motion against the BJPled coalition government. Nine opposition members, including seven from the Congress, supported the motion of noconfidence that was allowed by Speaker Anant Shet. Earlier, the opposition staged a walkout during Question Hour, accusing the treasury benches and the Speaker of conspiring to ensure that questions critical of the government were missing from the day’s roster. “Pointed questions related to the offshore casino parked near the Dr Salim Ali bird sanctuary, garbage collection scam and a question related to purchase of government vehicles which we had asked are suspiciously missing today,” legislator Vijai Sardesai said. Chief Minister Laxmikant Parsekar said: “The opposition MLAs have asked the questions to the wrong department. — IANS Maharashtra as bridge collapses MONSOON TRAGEDY: The sheer force of flood waters built up huge pressure on the bridge RAIGAD (MAHARASHTRA): At least two buses with 22 people and four to five private vehicles were washed away early on Wednesday in flood waters after a British-era bridge collapsed on the Mumbai-Goa highway, authorities said. Till late evening there was no trace of either the Maharashtra State Road Transport Corp buses or the other vehicles after they plunged into the swollen Savitri river in Raigad district, officials said. The Maharashtra government, National Disaster Response Force, Navy and Coast Guard launched a massive air and sea operation. Two bodies were found amid fears that all the vehicles may have been washed away to the Arabian Sea in the coastal Konkan region. Because the buses were plying at night, they carried only 11 people each, Raigad Collector Sheetal Ugale said. Both buses were headed to Mumbai. One started from Jaigad, driven by S S Kamble with V K Desai as the conductor. The other set off from Rajapur with E S Munde at its wheels and P B Shirke as its conductor. In the afternoon, Munde’s bag and tiffin box were recovered a short distance away from the tragedy site. The disaster struck after heavy rains flooded the Savitri river, which originates in Mahabaleshwar and flows through Ratnagiri-Raigad districts. The sheer force of the flood waters built up huge pressure on the sevendecade-old bridge near Mahad around midnight and it collapsed, with around Bystanders watch as rescue personnel use a boat to patrol near the scene of a bridge collapse over the River Savitri in Raigad district some 100kms south of Mumbai on Wednesday. — AFP a dozen piers totally washed out by the gushing waters. “The bridge was built during the British era,” Ugale said. Traffic on the route has been diverted to a new parallel bridge nearby. By late afternoon, grieving relatives of the passengers on the two buses and one of the private vehicles reached Mahad and anxiously waited for information about the fate of their kin. Stunned by the tragedy, MSRDC Minister Eknath Shinde ordered a structural safety audit of all bridges on the busy and treacherous Mumbai-Goa highway, especially in view of the 10day Ganeshotsav next month. Prime Minister Narendra Modi called up Maharashtra Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis and offered help in the rescue work. Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu ordered deployment of railway medical teams. Fadnavis, his ministers and opposition leader Radhakrishna Vikhe-Patil rushed to the spot. Raigad Collector Ugale and Superintendent of Police Suvez Haque monitored the LURING KIDS rescue operations. Fadnavis announced a probe into the incident. Incessant rains continued to hamper rescue operations in the region. Rains also continued to lash the entire coastal Konkan region as well as northern and western Maharashtra. The tragedy found its echo in Parliament and the Maharashtra assembly where several opposition leaders attacked the government for not shutting down the old bridge though it had exceeded its lifespan. —IANS YSR Congress protests in LS over special status to AP NEW DELHI: Despite an assurance from the government that a solution will be found to Andhra Pradesh’s demand for special status, members of the YSR Congress on Wednesday continued their protest in the Lok Sabha — the assurance has, however, convinced NDA ally Telugu Desam Party (TDP) to stay away from the demonstration. As soon as the lower house assembled to begin the day’s proceedings and took up the conventional Question Hour, members from YSR Congress, Andhra Pradesh-based regional outfit, trooped near the speaker’s podium. The party members raised slogans like “we want justice” and “give special status to Andhra”. “You continue with the protest despite the statement by the Finance Minister, why do you do that,” Speaker Sumitra Mahajan was heard asking the agitating members. Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had on Tuesday assured the members that the issue of special status for the southern state was under consideration. Making a brief intervention amid noisy scenes in the house on Tuesday, Jaitley had said: “The government stands by the commitments it has made in supporting Andhra Pradesh to the fullest. Even today, I have had a word with Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister N Chandrababu Naidu and we are trying to find a solution.” TDP leader and union Minister of State for Science and Technology YS Chowdary on Tuesday told reporters that his party will maintain a “wait and watch policy”. — IANS V S Achuthanandan named head of Kerala reforms panel THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: Former Chief Minister V S Achuthanandan, who was in contention for the top political post in Kerala after the May 16 assembly elections, was on Wednesday appointed chairman of the Administrative Reforms Committee (ARC), a post carrying cabinet status. Now, all eyes are on 92-year-old veteran leader, who remained the Chief Minister of Kerala during 200611, whether he will accept the post. After Pinarayi Vijayan was made the Chief Minister of the Left Democratic Front (LDF) government in May, Achuthanandan categorically said that none of those who know him will believe he is hankering after any post. Sources close to the former chief minister said once he receives the government notification, cleared on Wednesday by the state Cabinet, he will speak to the media. It is the first time that a former Chief Minister has been given the ARC post. On two previous occasions, the ARC was headed by serving Chief Ministers — E M S Namboodiripad and later by E K Nayanar. Senior Indian Civil Service officer M K Vellodi, who also served as a diplomat, also led the ARC at one point of time. The ARC post is seen as an attempt to mollify the veteran who was aiming for the chief minister’s post for the second time after leading the LDF to a huge win in the May 16 assembly polls. Last month, the Kerala assembly amended a 1951 rule to enable a legislator to take up the post of ARC chairman, which was opposed by the Congress-led opposition. — IANS A vendor arranges stuffed animals and plush toys outside his shop at a wholesale market in Hyderabad on Wednesday. — AFP Court rejected Roy’s plea to sell Sahara’s property on its own to raise money to return investors’ deposits Deposit Rs 300 cr, says SC; extends Sahara chief parole NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Wednesday extended the parole of Sahara chief Subrata Roy till September 16 and directed him to deposit another Rs 300 crore to continue to stay out of jail. Asking Sahara to deposit Rs 300 crore, a bench of Chief Justice T S Thakur, Justice Anil R Dave and Justice A K Sikri gave the Sahara chief time till September 15 to deposit the money, orally observing that failing this he will be sent back to the Tihar jail here. “It goes without saying that you will go back (to jail) if you don’t deposit Rs 300 crore,” Chief Justice Thakur observed as Kapil Sibal, appearing for Roy, urged the apex court not to say in its order that default in depositing Rs 300 crore would result in the return journey to jail. Roy was granted parole on May 6 after his mother passed away on May 5. His son-in-law Ashok Roy Choudhary too was granted parole. The parole was extended for two months on May 11. Thereafter, it was extended till August 3 and, on Wednesday, till September 16. Besides directing for the deposit of Rs 300 crore, the bench said that Sahara would give a list of its immovable properties to Securities Exchange Board of India that it wants to sell. The court rejected Roy’s plea to be permitted to sell Sahara’s property on its own to raise money to return investors’ deposits collected in 2008 and 2009 through Optionally Fully Convertible Debentures (OFCDs). “We will not allow. Stop playing these games with us. We are tired of it,” the Chief Justice observed as Sibal urged the court: “Please allow me to sell the properties, (and tell market regulator Besides directing for the deposit of Rs 300 crore, the bench said that Sahara would give a list of its immovable properties to Securities Exchange Board of India that it wants to sell SEBI) don’t go ahead with the e-auction of his properties.” Seeking a free hand for Sahara to sell its assets instead of market regulator SEBI, Sibal told the bench that he (Subrata Roy) would get better buyers than what market regulator was getting through e-auctioning. The bench was told that if permitted a free hand, Sahara would sell properties at 110 per cent of the prevailing circle rates. Referring to one of the assets about which Sibal said there was a buyer willing to pay much more than the highest prices that SEBI got through e-auctioning, the bench told him to direct that buyer to approach the market regulator. Telling the court that his business has improved ever since he was set free on parole on May 6, Subrata Roy told the bench: “I have to give confidence in the market that now I am out.” He said this while assuring the court that if allowed to act on his own he would bring the money within one and a half years. Sibal offered to file an undertaking to that affect. The bench reminded Sibal of the group’s earlier claim that its worth was Rs 1,87,000 crore. “You know how many zeros are there,” the Chief Justice asked Sibal. Sibal told the court that whatever cash that the SEBI was getting over and above Rs 5,000 crore should be kept as margin money to get a bank guarantee of Rs 5,000 crore which it is negotiating with Canara Bank. — IANS india i Parliament passes tax reform Removal of unmanned level-crossings sought Most rail accidents take place around unmanned level-crossings, Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu told the Lok Sabha on Wednesday calling for the removal of such crossings as a national priority. “To remove unmanned level crossings should become national priority because most accidents happen there,” Prabhu told the members during Question Hour. CRISIS SOLUTION Saudi to assist thousands of stranded workers RIYADH: Saudi Arabia has agreed to assist thousands of laid-off Indian workers stranded in the kingdom without money or food, an Indian minister said on Wednesday. More than 6,200 of the stranded Indian workers were employed by construction firm Saudi Oger, a conglomerate owned by the family of former Lebanese prime minister Saad al Hariri, which has been unable to pay workers’ salaries for months, according to Indian officials. India’s junior foreign minister Vijay Kumar Singh, visiting Riyadh on Wednesday to meet Saudi Labour Minister Mufrej al Haqbani, said the Saudi government had provided assurances that it would resolve the crisis and ensure workers’ financial claims were pursued, even if the workers returned home. “Things are not as bad as they have been shown and projected,” the minister said in joint remarks with Haqbani after their meeting. “Things are very fine. We are in constant touch with all the officials and the various departments of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.” Haqbani said Saudi Arabia’s King Salman had directed officials to take all measures to resolve the problem at the government’s expense, and Riyadh would hire lawyers to pursue the workers’ claims and make sure their rights were respected. A total of about 7,700 Indian workers were stranded, according to Indian officials. Of these, 4,072 were staying in worker camps in Riyadh while 2,153 were in Jeddah. — Reuters india da OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U S T 4 l 2 0 1 6 IN BRIEF bill aimed at common market ECONOMIC BOOST: GST is one of the most significant tax reforms in the history of India NEW DELHI: India’s upper house of parliament backed a major tax reform on Wednesday that seeks to transform the country into a common market, though opposition benches urged Finance Minister Arun Jaitley not to overtax businesses and consumers. A bill allowing the constitution to be amended so that a nationwide Goods and Services Tax (GST) could be rolled out was held up for years by political infighting. Its passage marks a victory for Prime Minister Narendra Modi as he eyes an economic boost for Asia’s thirdlargest economy. “GST is one of the most significant tax reforms in the history of India,” Jaitley told lawmakers. The finance minister vowed to roll out the new sales tax as soon as possible, but refrained from committing to a firm schedule after missing the original launch date of April 2016. The measure would harmonise 11 state and central levies into a national sales tax, reducing business transaction costs. Economists at HSBC forecast the GST would produce a boost of 0.8 percentage points in India’s economic growth within three to five years. The gains are far from granted, however, and much will depend on its implementation, in particular pitching the tax at the right level to offset possible revenue losses without fuelling inflation. A government-appointed panel has suggested a standard GST rate of 17-18 percent but Indian states want a higher level. Morgan Stanley reckons a higher A customer buys plastic items at a shop in New Delhi on Wednesday. — AFP rate could push up retail inflation by as much as 70 basis points. That should worry Modi, whose Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) faces tough tests in crucial state elections next year. “There is most definitely a risk that the GST will contribute to a pickup in inflation,” said Amitabh Dubey, an analyst at Trusted Sources. “That will contribute to negative sentiment.” The Modi government’s most ambitious reform has been a long time coming. The Indian leader had wanted the GST to come into effect in April 2016, hoping to reap its economic dividends in time for his expected reelection bid in 2019. Although the measure enjoyed broad political support, its passage was blocked by differences over its design, and a series of compromises agreed to win over states risks diluting the tax’s impact. The two-year-old deadlock was broken only after the government offered concessions to the opposition Congress party, which had originally proposed the GST while in power but has opposed what it termed as a “flawed” tax. P Chidambaram, Jaitley’s predecessor and a senior Congress leader, blamed the government for the deadlock. “It could have been resolved in five minutes,” he said. “But the government was rather stubborn.” Chidambaram warned of the risk of “creeping taxation” and urged capping the GST rate by law at 18 percent to ensure it is “non-inflationary, acceptable to public and an efficient way of taxing without tax evasion”. He also asked for safeguards to prevent any tinkering in the rate without the approval from both houses of parliament. The passage of the constitutional amendment bill on Wednesday kicks off a legislative marathon in which both the federal and state parliaments will need to pass further laws setting the rate and scope of the GST. Tax experts say that passing further legislation, training tax collectors, setting up IT systems and preparing companies for the new tax regime makes launching the GST by next April, the start of the next financial year, very challenging. If all goes well, they say, a July or October 2017 start date looks more probable. — Reuters Government seeks mercy for 17 Indians on death row in Kuwait FLOWERY DAY R A K SINGH NEW DELHI Customers buy flowers at a wholesale flower market in Hyderabad on Wednesday. — AFP August 3: The Indian government has approached the Kuwaiti government with a request to show mercy to 17 Indians on death row in Kuwaiti jails, facing the capital punishment following their conviction in various serious crimes, including drug trafficking. The government is hopeful that Kuwait will show mercy to the Indians on death row and commute their death sentences into life imprisonment. The government apprised the Parliament of its daunting task to secure mercy for the 17 condemned Indian prisoners in Kuwait, amid the unfolding humanitarian crisis involving nearly 10,000 jobless, migrant Indian workers in Saudi Arabia, with the government obliged to take up the Herculean task of evacuating them. “There are 17 Indian nationals in Kuwaiti jails, awarded death penalty after being convicted to serious crimes. 13 of them are on death row on charges of drug trafficking,” Minister of State (External Affairs) Gen (Retd) V K Singh told the Lok Sabha yesterday, in response to a query whether the government has received any request to rescue Indians, facing death sentences in Kuwait, for their involvement in drug trafficking there. “Our Mission (in Kuwait) has taken up the matter with the Kuwaiti government, requesting them to show mercy and commute their sentences to life imprisonment,” said the minister. A senior MEA official later told the Observer, “We are pretty hopeful that the Kuwait government will show mercy to the condemned Indian prisoners.” The disturbing information about 17 Indians facing death penalty in Kuwait has come close on the heels of information about the stay of execution of Indian national Gurdip Singh, who was to be executed on the night intervening July 28-29 on drug charges in Indonesia, but was not been put to death following the last minute request by Indian government. Responding to Lok Sabha members query, Singh also told the House that “India and Kuwait have signed an Agreement for the Transfer of Sentenced Persons, which came into force in April 2015.” “This however, does not provide for transfer of prisoners on death sentences,” said Singh. Chief Minister said women are now empowered and they would not allow family members to consume or store liquor Women support Bihar’s stringent prohibition law PATNA: The fairer gender in Bihar are all for prohibition of liquor. While the men are divided over the Bihar Prohibition and Excise Bill 2016 that was recently passed by the assembly, women in the state are happy that the legislation will ensure a complete ban on liquor in the state. “After constructing roads and providing electricity in the last 10 years, Chief Minister Nitish Kumar (pictured) has now done a good job by banning liquor,” said Munia Devi, a resident of Gaunpura village near Patna. “No one will dare to violate the stringent law,” she said. Clearly, she doesn’t see the law to be 11 draconian as has been suggested by a large number of men and the BJP. Munia is not alone. A similar sentiment was expressed by Shanti Devi, a vegetable vendor at Pethia Bazaar on Patna’s outskirts. “We don’t care whether it is draconian or not. What matters is that the liquor ban should be total. Women suffer the most because of liquor trade,” she said. “Liquor ban is good for us. My husband, who spent half of his daily earnings on liquor, now saves money for the family,” said Shanti. Both Munia and Shanti thanked the chief minister for imposing prohibition in April. It’s not much different in middle class families where the prohibition has been welcomed by the women. Manorama Singh, a mother of two, said only a tough law can ensure a total liquor ban. “There are hundreds of rules to control pollution and smoking in public places. But no one cares to adhere to those rules. But here the liquor ban has been strictly implemented. The new legislation will address the loopholes that might be there,” she said. Mamata Sharma, a school teacher in Naubatpur, said the new legislation will create fear among the liquor mafia who take advantage of the shortcomings in the old prohibition law. Chief Minister Nitish Kumar, who lauded the support he received, has said that women are now empowered and they would not allow their family members to consume or store liquor in their houses. Under the law, all adult members of the family could be arrested if liquor was found stored in any household. But this has certainly irked many men. Sumit Kumar is one of those not happy with the new law. “The new prohibition law is like a Talibani diktat. Any one can be targeted by the police in the name of prohibition. It is wrong,” he said, adding that the BJP has rightly called the legislation as draconian. — IANS Sonia shifted to Ganga Ram Hospital, stable NEW DELHI: Congress President Sonia Gandhi was on Wednesday shifted to the Sir Ganga Ram Hospital here and was likely to undergo further tests for the fever and high blood pressure that she was suffering from, doctors said. “Soniaji was brought to our hospital around 1.30 pm. Her condition is stable now. Senior doctors are attending on her,” a senior doctor said. Earlier, Gandhi, who took ill in Varanasi on Tuesday, was admitted to the Army Research and Referral Hospital. According to doctors, she suffered from dehydration, fever and high blood pressure. A Ganga Ram Hospital doctor, who did not wish to be named, said that a medical board was being set up to study the Congress chief ’s health. She has previously been treated for several health complications, including chest infection, at the Ganga Ram Hospital. A health bulletin issued by the Ganga Ram Hospital stated that Gandhi’s condition was stable. — IANS Higher grant for martyred armed personnel CHANDIGARH: The Haryana government on Wednesday announced that it has increased ex-gratia grant given to the family members of Armed Forces personnel who die in the line of duty. “The revised rate of ex-gratia for battle casualties which occurred on or after March 24,2016, has been enhanced from Rs 20,00,000 to Rs 50,00,000. It is in case of death in war or IED Blast and action against militants or terrorist or border skirmishes,” a spokesman of the Haryana government said. The benefit will include martyrs from the Army, Navy and Air Force belonging to Haryana. “In case of death declared as battle casualty by the defence authorities, irrespective of any operation or any specified area of operation, defence forces personnel posted in United Nation Peace Keeping Force and accidents like air crash, motor transport accident, accident at sea, heart attack and loss of life during natural calamities, the rate of exgratia has been enhanced from Rs 20,00,000 to Rs 50,00,000,” the spokesman said. — IANS Bulandshahr incident causes ruckus in RS NEW DELHI: The gang-rape in Bulandshahr and other atrocities against women were raised in the Rajya Sabha on Wednesday, creating a brief ruckus as several members demanded a discussion on the matter. The issue was raised by Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) chief Mayawati in the upper house, who accused the government of remaining silent on the issue. Samajwadi Party member Jaya Bachchan also said there should be no politics on the issue of women, and added there should be a discussion on it. Congress leader Ambika Soni, meanwhile, said it was not the parliament members, but ministers of the Uttar Pradesh government who are playing politics on the issue. A woman and her daughter were gang-raped in Bulandshahr in Uttar Pradesh last week after their car was stopped on highway by robbers. In another incident, a 19-year-old schoolteacher was allegedly gangraped by three men in Uttar Pradesh’s Bareilly on Tuesday. — IANS t eworld the o d world l 12 OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U ST 4 l 2 0 1 6 Test for ANC as S Africa votes in local elections TUNNEL RIDE VOTERS AGAINST GOVT: Party risks losing control of key cities Engine driver Daniel Schaerer drives a train to the northern gates of the NEAT Gotthard Base Tunnel, the world’s longest train tunnel, during a media visit, near the town of Erstfeld, Switzerland on Wednesday. — Reuters Technocrat Chahed new Tunisia PM S Sudan president fires ministers allied to rival TUNIS: Tunisia’s President Beji Caid Essebsi named a littleknown technocrat as prime minister on Wednesday after parliament ousted Habib Essid in a vote of no-confidence over his handling of economic reforms and security. Opposition parties quickly denounced the appointment of Youssef Chahed, an agricultural science specialist and junior minister under Essid, saying he lacked the credentials for the job and had been chosen simply because he was a pliant ally of the president. Since its 2011 revolution to oust Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, Tunisia has grown into a model of democracy in a turbulent region. But militant attacks on tourist spots last year have tested the government, and political infighting in the ruling coalition has slowed economic progress needed to ease social tensions especially among the young employed. — AFP JUBA: South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir fired six ministers allied to his longtime rival Riek Machar late on Tuesday, widening a political rift in the world’s newest nation and drawing threats of more fighting. Kiir filled the vacant posts, including that of petroleum minister, with people linked to a breakaway faction of Machar’s SPLM-IO party, further aggravating divisions between senior politicians in the oil-producing nation. About 60,000 people have fled an outbreak of fighting between the two men’s supporters over the past three weeks, the United Nations says, on top of the hundreds of thousands already forced to flee in two years of ethnically charged violence. UN emergency relief coordinator, Stephen O’Brien, said the violence and “the culture of impunity” must stop before the humanitarian crisis worsened even further.“The people of this country have suffered far too much. There is no military solution to this conflict, the fighting must stop and the atrocities must end immediately,” he told a news conference during a visit to Juba. Both sides agreed a peace deal last year and set up a unity government. But the ceasefire broke down several times and Machar left the capital last month, demanding an international force intervene to keep their forces apart. The chaos has dismayed regional and world powers who helped broker South Sudan’s secession from Sudan in 2011, and had hoped its independence would draw a line under decades of war and instability that spread across east Africa. Kiir dismissed the ministers of the interior, petroleum, higher education, labour, water, as well as lands and housing in a statement read out on state television. The replacements were made on the recommendation of Vice-President Taban Deng Gai, who announced he was taking over the SPLM-IO in July. “We are not surprised by the steps taken by... Kiir and Taban Deng Gai,” Machar’s deputy spokesman, Nyarji Jermlili Roman, said. — AFP JOHANNESBURG: South Africans voted on Wednesday in closely contested municipal elections that could deal a heavy blow to the African National Congress (ANC), which has ruled since leading the struggle to end apartheid. Nelson Mandela’s former party risks losing control of key cities including the capital Pretoria, the economic hub Johannesburg and coastal Port Elizabeth, according to some polls. Development in South Africa has been patchy since Mandela won the first multi-racial elections in 1994, with many black communities still enduring poor housing, inadequate education and a lack of opportunities. With the economy stalling and unemployment hitting record levels, the main opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) and the radical leftist Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) both hope to secure major gains. In Johannesburg’s Soweto township, residents queued to vote at a school near the former homes of Mandela and Archbishop Desmond Tutu. “We are tired of this self-serving leadership. People are tired, even grannies are sick and tired of this government,” Nathi Mulaudzi, a 40-year-old unemployed truck driver, said. But President Jacob Zuma retains widespread support, especially in rural areas, and the ANC’s patronage network and deep coffers could help it maintain a hold in the majority of the 278 municipalities. “There are so many negative things that are said about ANC but I’m thinking about what (Mandela) went through under apartheid so I’m just doing it for him,” said Lebogang Maponyane, a 43-year-old unemployed woman from Soweto, after voting for the ANC. The election is seen by some as a referendum on Zuma, who has been weakened by corruption scandals, court Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu holds his balot paper before he casts his vote during the elections in Milnerton, Cape Town, on Wednesday. — AFP cases and dire economic data, including an unemployment rate of 27 per cent and zero per cent GDP growth. The DA, which controls in Cape Town, is looking to take new cities and build momentum ahead on the 2019 general election. “It is a historic day today, we have got to do everything in our power to vote for change. This is our moment,” said Mmusi Maimane, the party’s first black leader, as he cast his ballot in Johannesburg. The final polls by Ipsos showed the DA ahead in Nelson Mandela Bay (Port Elizabeth) and in a close fight in Tshwane (Pretoria) and Johannesburg. The results, most of which are expected on Thursday, may pile pressure on Zuma, 74, to step down before his second term ends in 2019. He exuded confidence as he voted in his rural village Nkandla, where publicly-funded upgrades to his sprawling homestead have been one of the biggest controversies of his administration. Adding to the vote uncertainty is the revolutionary socialist EFF party, which has not stood in municipal elections before, but has drawn large crowds to its rallies. “EFF will perform very well,” party leader Julius Malema said after he voted in the northern province of Limpopo. “Young people will come out — they are not apathetic and politically active and the EFF will mobilise them.” The party, which won six per cent of the vote in the 2014 general election, advocates land redistribution without compensation and the nationalisation of mines. “If ANC lose some big metros, it will be a dire situation for President Zuma,” Judith February, a researcher with the Institute of Security Studies, said. “It would be hugely symbolic to lose Nelson Mandela Bay or Johannesburg — cities of black workers. But we should never underestimate the ANC.” With polling due to end at 1700 GMT, voters are choosing mayors and other local representatives responsible for hot-button issues including water, sanitation and power supplies. — AFP Australia reject uranium mine over tiny creatures SYDNEY: Australian environmental authorities on Wednesday rejected a Canadian bid to build a mine at a major uranium deposit due to fears the project could threaten tiny underground wildlife. Cameco, one of the world’s biggest publicly listed uranium producers, wants to develop the Yeelirrie deposit in Western Australia after buying it from BHP Billiton four years ago. But the state’s Environmental Protection Authority (EPA) said on Wednesday the project could threaten the viability of some species of tiny subterranean fauna. “The stygofauna habitat at Yeelirrie is particularly rich, with 73 species recorded,” said its chairman Tom Hatton. He said despite Cameco’s “well-considered management strategies” the EPA concluded that “there was too great a chance of a loss of species that are restricted to the impact area”. Stygofauna, named after the Styx river in Greek mythology, are blind and colourless. Most live exclusively in groundwater, according to the Australian government. They are made up mostly of crustaceans but include some invertebrates, and in Australia, two blind fish species. Cameco said it respected the decision and would work with the government on how to manage the viability of such fauna at the proposed mine, which was to extract 7,500 tonnes of uranium oxide concentrate each year and include two open pits, processing facilities, roads and housing. “We believe that with further sampling and research, subterranean fauna can be appropriately managed” at Yeelirrie, said managing director Brian Reilly. — AFP AROUND THE WORLD IS names new leader of Nigeria’s Boko Haram Indonesian farmers launch case over oil spill Four more Japanese caught over ATM heist CAIRO: IS has named a new leader of Boko Haram, the Nigerian militant group which last year swore allegiance to it. Abu Musab al Barnawi was named IS governor for West Africa in a two-page interview in its weekly magazine, Al Naba, which was circulated late on Tuesday. Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, a former military ruler who took office last year, has made it a priority to defeat Boko Haram, which has tried to create a state adhering to strict sharia law in the northeast during a seven-year insurgency. Boko Haram controlled a swathe of land in northeast Nigeria around the size of Belgium at the end of 2014 but was pushed out by Nigerian troops, aided by soldiers from neighbouring countries, early last year. In the interview, Al Barnawi said Boko Haram was “still a force to be reckoned with” and that it had been receiving new recruits. Despite having been pushed out of most of the territory it controlled, Boko Haram has carried out suicide bombings in northeast Nigeria and Cameroon, Niger and Chad, focusing on busy public areas such as markets and mosques. SYDNEY: Indonesian seaweed farmers launched a Aus$200 million class action on Wednesday over a major oil spill in Australia, claiming the blow-out devastated their livelihoods. The spill in the Montara field in the Timor Sea, north of Australia, leaked thousands of barrels of oil for close to 10 weeks before it was capped. The case filed in Sydney’s Federal Court on behalf of up to 13,000 Indonesian farmers is against the firm which operated the well-head platform, PTTEP Australasia. Ben Slade, class actions principal at law firm Maurice Blackburn in Sydney, said the huge spill was still impacting farmers in the eastern Indonesian province of Nusa Tenggara Timur. “If the company thought that this issue would go away because the farmers are Indonesians, or because they didn’t understand their legal rights, they were sorely mistaken,” he said. “This case is a perfect example of how the Australian class action regime provides access to justice for people who would otherwise have no voice and no recourse against their corporate wrongdoer.” TOKYO: Japanese police arrested four people on Wednesday in connection with a multimillion dollar bank heist, including a member of a group affiliated with the country’s biggest organised crime syndicate. The 1.8 billion yen ($17.8 million) haul reportedly involved more than 100 people making a series of cash withdrawals from some 1,700 ATMs across Japan using fake credit card data from a South African bank. Investigators had already made at least two arrests after launching a nationwide manhunt in May but are yet to unveil exactly how the crime was organised and carried out. The latest four are accused of having coordinated to steal a total of 3.8 million yen from ATM machines located at five convenience stores in Ichihara city, east of Tokyo, according to an investigator with Chiba prefectural Police. The group included Takanari Fukuda, 49, a member of an underworld, or ‘yakuza’, group affiliated with the Yamaguchi-gumi, Japan’s largest organised crime syndicate, the investigator said. A man wearing a hat decorated with worthless note bearers’ cheques during a protest against government plans to introduce bond notes — a local token currency equivalent to the US dollar, and unemployement on Wednesday in Harare. — AFP region o region i Erdogan regrets Gulen alliance OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U S T 4 l 2 0 1 6 13 TURKEY FACES CHALLENGES: Council of Europe backs Turkey ‘clean-up’ after coup Men try to put out a fire of a loaded truck after an air strike on a truck parking lot in the rebel-held town of Atareb in Aleppo province on Wednesday. — Reuters Syrian forces roll back rebel gains in Aleppo BEIRUT: Syrian regime forces bolstered by Russian air strikes recaptured territory overnight in the southwest suburbs of the battleground city of Aleppo, rolling back the shortlived gains of a rebel offensive. Rebels and their radical allies launched an assault on Sunday in a bid to ease a more than two-week government siege of opposition-held districts of the city. But regime fighters have put up a fierce fightback, retaking several positions from beleaguered rebel forces, a monitor said on Wednesday. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said government forces seized two hilltops and two small villages in the southwest suburbs of Aleppo late Tuesday. “The regime is launching counterattacks to absorb the fierce rebel offensive,” said Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman. “The opposition offensive has not achieved the results that were expected at this stage,” he said. A journalist in east Aleppo said clashes and shelling could be heard throughout the night, followed by barrel bomb attacks and air strikes in the early morning. The groups waging the offensive — including fighters from Al Qaeda’s former Syria affiliate and the powerful Ahrar al Sham — have promised to end the government encirclement of eastern parts of Aleppo. They are seeking to capture Ramussa, a district in Aleppo’s southwest suburbs, in a bid to cut off government forces and open a new route into the city for rebels. But they have struggled to hold newlyacquired territory in the face of heavy Russian air strikes, Abdel Rahman said. They have managed to keep control of at least four hilltops and one small village, he added. Longtime regime ally Moscow launched an air campaign in support of President Bashar al Assad’s forces in September. Wednesday’s edition of Al Watan, a newspaper close to the government, said government forces, backed by Russian air strikes, “advanced again south and southwest The battle for Aleppo — Syria’s second city — is critical for both the regime in Damascus and the forces seeking to overthrow it. of Aleppo causing major setbacks” for rebel factions. And pro-regime website Al Masdar News said an initial rebel advance into the Ramussa district was pushed back “following a long and gruesome battle”. The Britain-based Observatory said more than 50 rebels and allies had been killed since the assault began, as well as dozens of regime troops. Overnight, at least 10 civilians, including four children, were killed in rebel shelling of government-controlled districts on Aleppo’s southwestern edges, the monitor said. More than 40 civilians have been killed by shelling on government-held neighbourhoods since Sunday. The battle for Aleppo — Syria’s second city — is critical for both the regime in Damascus and the forces seeking to overthrow it. It was Syria’s commercial hub until 2012, when clashes left it roughly divided between government troops in the west and rebels in the east. Eastern districts came under government siege on July 17, sparking concerns for the estimated 250,000 people still living there. Last week Russia announced the opening of “humanitarian corridors” to allow residents and surrendering fighters to flee for government-held territory. This was met with scepticism by residents and international observers, and 35 NGOs in a statement on Tuesday called the initiative “deeply flawed”. The groups, including Save the Children and Oxfam, urged implementation of a UN call for a weekly 48-hour humanitarian pause in Aleppo. — Reuters ISTANBUL: The head of a top European rights watchdog on Wednesday backed a “cleaning up” of Turkish institutions after a failed coup blamed on supporters of US-based preacher Fethullah Gulen. Despite growing concern over the post-coup crackdown, Council of Europe chief Thorbjorn Jagland said there had been insufficient understanding in Europe about the challenges faced by Turkey. His comments came as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in a rare apology, asked forgiveness for having an alliance with Gulen in the early years of his political career. Almost 26,000 suspects have now been rounded up after the coup, which Ankara blames on followers of Gulen who built up a presence in key institutions including the military. Gulen denies the accusations. Jagland’s comments accepting the need for a crackdown contrasted with the tone of several EU officials who while condemning the coup have expressed alarm over the scope of the arrests. “I recognise that of course there is a need for taking on those who were behind this coup and also on this secret network,” Jagland said after talks with Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu in Ankara. “I would like to say there has been too little understanding from Europe over what challenges this has caused to the democratic and state institutions of Turkey,” said Jagland, referring to Gulen’s group. “We however have been informed about it for a very long time. So therefore of course we see a need for cleaning up all of this,” added Jagland, one of the most senior European officials to visit Turkey in the wake of the botched July 15 putsch. According to Interior Minister Efkan Ala, 25,917 people have now been detained, 13,419 of whom have been Shadow of Turkey’s President Tayyip Erdogan is cast on a mosque drawing as he addresses the audience during a meeting of Turkey’s Religious Affairs Directorate in Ankara. — AFP remanded in custody over their roles in the coup. The CoE promotes democracy and the rule of law in Europe and its members include states who are not EU states like Turkey and also Russia. But Jagland, who was later to meet President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, also emphasised the importance of all moves being carried out within the rule of law and the European Convention on Human Rights. Turkey has declared a three-month state of emergency after the coup and said it will suspend the rights convention for this period. Cavusoglu said: “We have never made compromises on our understanding of SOLIDARITY AGAINST TERROR democracy and will never do.” Later the foreign minister took to Twitter to praise Jagland’s stance, saying he hoped the solidarity of the CoE chief “sets an example for our other European friends.” “Europe should realise how it moves away from its own values as it excludes Turkey,” Cavusoglu said. Turkey has sent an array of documentation to the United States asking for Gulen’s extradition and has so far expressed exasperation over the slowness of Washington in taking up the issue. “You have to be blind and deaf not to understand that he is behind all of this,” Erdogan said in an interview with Mexican television, describing any delay in extradition as “intolerable”. Gulen’s influence in Turkey goes back to the premierships of Bulent Ecevit in the 1970s and he was a strong presence in Turkish politics before anyone had even heard of Erdogan. As a new and untested forces in politics, Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party (AKP) was happy to team up with Gulen after it came to power in 2002, sharing a conviction that Islam should lie at the heart of politics. But in his first apology on the issue, Erdogan said he had failed to see the “true face” of his former ally. “I know that we have to give account both to our God and to our people. Let my God and my people forgive us,” he said. The coup was led by disgruntled elements in the military who the authorities say were followers of Gulen fast-tracked to senior positions by rigging in examinations. In a symbolic sign of how he has regained control of the military, Erdogan on Wednesday visited the chief of staff headquarters for the first time since the putsch. — AFP Pentagon probes another Syria strike for civilian deaths An Iraqi man gives a rose to a member of the Iraqi security forces on Wednesday in Baghdad’s Tahrir square as people put up posters bearing messages of solidarity from Nice and other cities hit by attacks, a month after the deadliest single bombing ever to strike the Iraqi capital. — AFP WASHINGTON: The US military has completed initial assessments of an air strike that allegedly killed civilians in northwestern Syria last month and is now formally investigating the incident, a defence official said on Wednesday. It is the second such full probe to be launched after two US-led strikes near the IS stronghold of Manbij in July allegedly left dozens of civilians dead. The latest investigation is into a July 28 strike northwest of Manbij, which according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights killed at least 15 civilians. “This incident has been found to be credible enough to warrant a formal investigation, which is under way,” said Colonel Chris Garver, a spokesman for the USled coalition fighting radicals of the IS group in Iraq and Syria. — AFP What was once a crowded shopping area has become a monument to the dead, where mourners light candles Iraq blast survivors live with fear and nightmares BAGHDAD: Sheets of flame and smoke engulfed the street and buildings around Sami Aziz’s Baghdad shop, burning people alive in scenes he likened to “the day of judgement”. Aziz and others are now repairing their stores at the site of a suicide bombing that sparked raging fires and killed 323 people on July 3, while also contending with the trauma of what they saw. What was once a crowded shopping area has become a monument to the dead, where mourners light candles and dozens of banners bearing the names of victims hang from the charred hulks of buildings that held upmarket stores. The blast took a devastating toll on survivors and the friends and relatives of the dead. “Many wounded entered here...the shop was full of blood, but we cleaned it,” said Aziz, 40, in his clothes shop near the scene of the blast. “The impact of families burning Honestly, we are having before my eyes is something that can’t be nightmares now...My future erased.” is unknown because I don’t One of his children was with him in the shop when the bomb exploded have any protection...I outside, and was deeply affected, am afraid that if I go out, I Aziz said. “Honestly, we are having won’t return nightmares now,” he said, adding that he now fears to leave his house. SAMI AZIZ “My future is unknown because I don’t have any protection...I am afraid little before 1:00 am on July 3. The area was teeming with shoppers that if I go out, I won’t return,” he said. The suicide bombing, claimed by the ahead of the holiday marking the end of IS group, hit the Karrada Dakhil street a the Muslim holy month of Ramadan. Life was “very happy” before the bombing, said Aziz, who filmed its aftermath from the entrance of his shop. Flames streamed from a nearby building, rubble covered the sidewalk, and when he looked to the right of his shop, the street was blocked by a wall of flame and smoke. “The situation wasn’t terrifying — it was more than terrifying,” said Aziz, describing it as being like “the day of judgement”. “The psychological impact will remain, because I saw with my eyes the people burning here.” The bombing destroyed millions of dollars’ worth of property and wrecked the livelihoods of shop owners, workers and their families, leaving people financially destitute as well as in mourning. “A woman came to me yesterday. Her husband died, his store was burned, his money was gone, only she and her child remained,” said Aziz. “She said, ‘I don’t have money for milk.’” Aziz is repairing his shop, which he said suffered an estimated $50-60,000 in damage plus some $100,000 in destroyed merchandise. He said he was paying for repairs himself. Ali Mohammed, 28, was in his clothing store when the suicide bomber struck, but was able to escape out the back before the building went up in flames. “As soon as I reached the street, the whole building was burned. I got out with only my clothes,” said Mohammed, who was wounded by shards of glass. “We’ve seen explosions before, but they didn’t reach the level of fire so that in five seconds, it burns a whole place,” he said. Mohammed said he lost around 150 of his friends in the explosion and subsequent inferno. “My friends are dear to me, because I see them more than my family,” he said. Mohammed said his family owns multiple stores on the street and suffered half a million dollars or more in losses. For now, they are only repairing one shop. Volunteers helped clear out the rubble and make repairs to the shop, but there has been no assistance from the government, he said. — AFP americas Icymi 14 OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U ST 4 l 2 0 1 6 ERADICATION Colombia destroys 104 cocaine labs Colombian law enforcement has destroyed 104 cocaine laboratories capable of producing some 100 tonnes of the drug annually, the head of the anti-narcotics police said on Tuesday. “This is a structural blow to the finances of drug trafficking,” anti-narcotics police Director-General Jose Angel Mendoza told Reuters in the jungles of Guaviare province. DRIVE Impeachment trial closer to sealing Rousseff’s fate Miami-Dade mosquito control worker Carlos Vargas sprays to eradicate the Aedes aegypti mosquito larvae at a home in Miami, Florida. — AFP file photo Florida to begin aerial spraying of insecticides to control Zika CHICAGO: Florida was scheduled to conduct an aerial insecticide spraying campaign on Wednesday in an effort to kill mosquitoes carrying the Zika virus, officials in Miami-Dade County said. The campaign will cover a 10-mile area that includes the one-mile-square area just north of downtown Miami that health officials have identified as the hub of Zika transmission in the state, the officials said on Tuesday. On Monday, the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention issued an unprecedented travel warning, urging pregnant women to avoid travel to the Miami neighbourhood at the centre of the investigation. The Zika outbreak was first detected last year in Brazil, where it has been linked to more than 1,700 cases of microcephaly, a birth defect marked by small head size that can lead to severe developmental problems in babies. The virus has spread rapidly through the Americas and Caribbean and its arrival in the continental United States has been widely anticipated. Florida health officials announced another non-travel related case of Zika on Tuesday, bringing the total to 15. The aerial spraying campaign was recommended by the CDC in conjunction with the Florida Health Department to reduce adult mosquito populations that might be capable of carrying the Zika virus. In a conference call on Tuesday, CDC Director Dr Thomas Frieden expressed concern that vector control efforts so far have not been as effective as hoped. A CDC expert is currently conducting tests in Miami to see if mosquitoes in the area have developed insecticide resistance. Florida had been using two products in the pyrethroid class of insecticides. In its aerial campaign, the state will use a chemical called Naled that has been approved by the US Environmental Protection Agency, according to Joseph Conlon, a spokesman for the American Mosquito Control Association. Naled is from a different class of insecticides known as organophosphates. According to the CDC, the chemical has been widely used to control mosquito populations in the United States, including in Miami, Tampa and New Orleans. The CDC recommended the same chemical for aerial spraying in Puerto Rico. — Reuters DAY OF AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTION MARKED Bolivia’s President Evo Morales speaks during a ceremony to mark the “Day of Agricultural Revolution” in Challapata south of La Paz. — Reuters Dilma Rousseff rides her bicycle near the Alvorada Palace in Brasilia on Wednesday. — Reuters BRASILIA: A Senate report found on Tuesday that Brazil’s suspended President Dilma Rousseff violated the constitution by manipulating government accounts, moving her drawn-out impeachment trial closer to deciding her fate. The report is expected to be approved by the impeachment committee on Friday and by the full Senate next Tuesday, leading to the final trial phase in which the 81 Senators must reach a verdict at the end of August or first days of September. The impeachment of the unpopular leftist leader has paralysed Brazilian politics for seven months and held interim President Michel Temer in a legal limbo that has hindered his efforts to pull Brazil from fiscal crisis and severe recession. Rousseff is accused of altering official budget figures and using funds from state-run banks to cover up the real state of Brazil’s faltering economy as she ran for re-election in 2014. Her impeachment would mark the end of 13 years of rule by the leftof-centre Workers Party and leave Latin America’s largest economy in the hands of the Temer, Rousseff ’s conservative vice-president. Brazil’s stock market and currency have strengthened since Rousseff was suspended by the Senate on May 12 as investors bet on her removal and replacement by Temer, who has outlined policies favouring private business. But Temer has avoided unpopular austerity measures needed to balance Brazil’s overdrawn accounts until he is definitely confirmed in the job to serve out Rousseff ’s mandate to 2018. While 54 votes are needed to convict Rousseff, or two-thirds of the Senate, Brasilia-based political consultancy ARKO Advice says between 56 and 60 Senators today favour removing her, a narrow margin that is unlikely to be reversed because Temer is seen delivering political and economic stability. Efforts to defend Rousseff by her Workers Party and its founder, former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who faces corruption charges, have not been enough to save her, Arko said. — Reuters California blaze near Big Sur traced to unattended campfire LOS ANGELES: A blaze that has scorched some 17,400 hectares and destroyed dozens of homes near California’s famed Big Sur coast was sparked by an illegal, unattended camp fire in a state park, authorities said. The so-called Soberanes Fire, which erupted on July 22, began as a small blaze, 2 feet in diameter, ignited by unknown individuals in a section of Garrapata State Park that was closed to camping and campfires, according to US Forest Service spokesman Don Jaques. No arrests have been made, he added. The more than 5,450 fire personnel battling the blaze have been able to draw containment lines — a measure of how much of its perimeter has been cleared by fire crews of unburned vegetation — around only 18 per cent of the wildfire so far. Steep, mountainous terrain as well as hot, dry conditions have hampered efforts to quell the fire tearing through drought-parched chaparral, grass and timber. One person, a bulldozer operator hired by property owners to help battle the flames, died last week when his vehicle rolled over. It was the second California wildfire-related death in a week. A firefighter stands on steep terrain while fire crews create fire breaks at Garrapata State Park during the Soberanes Fire north of Big Sur, California. — Reuters file photo In addition, 57 homes and 11 other structures have been destroyed while some 2,000 remained under threat on Tuesday, fire officials said. About 350 residents have been ordered to evacuate the area, though some evacuation orders have since been lifted. The fire threat, coming in the middle of the region’s summer travel season, has prompted the closure of several popular California campgrounds and recreation areas along the northern end of the Big Sur coastline, including Point Lobos State Natural Reserve and Pfeiffer Big Sur State Park. Another fire broke out on Saturday in grass and brush about 48 km northeast of Fresno, in central California. It has since charred about 817 hectares and is threatening 400 structures, prompting evacuations in the area, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. Five structures, including three homes, have been destroyed, fire officials said. — Reuters US Air Force declares F-35A fighter jet ‘combat ready’ WASHINGTON: The US Air Force declared an initial squadron of F-35A stealth fighters as ready for combat, a major milestone for the futuristic aircraft dogged by delays and cost overruns. The squadron of about 12 planes is based at Hill Air Force Base in Utah and the planes’ combat rating — known as initial operational capability — comes after completion of a raft of tests and training exercises. “The F-35A will be the most dominant aircraft in our inventory, because it can go where our legacy aircraft cannot and provide the capabilities our commanders need on the modern battlefield,” said General Herbert “Hawk” Carlisle, who heads the US Air Combat Command on Tuesday. Air Force officials did not give a timeline of when the squadron might see combat, but said an overseas deployment is likely by early 2017. With a price tag of nearly $400 billion for a total of 2,443 F-35 aircraft — most of them destined for the Air Force — the plane, built by Lockheed Martin, is the most expensive in history. — AFP The system is the second-busiest subway system in the United States, with 750,000 riders on an average weekday US capital city struggles with limping metro service WASHINGTON: Letitia stands on a metro station platform in downtown Washington, waiting for a train that she now realises is not going to come. “I will be walking home tonight and all the nights to come,” said the 28-yearold woman, who works as a cashier at a 24-hour supermarket. In the US capital city, an urgently needed upgrade of the metro system means service on Friday and Saturday nights now stops at midnight instead of 3 am, to allow for repair work overnight. But it also means people like Letitia, who would not give her last name, are losing a crucial mode of transportation. “I have 30 minutes walking at 1 am in a neighbourhood where you do not want to do that,” she said. “They don’t give us other options.” Much of the transportation infrastructure in the United States is decades old and in such poor condition that it has become an issue in the presidential election. “Our infrastructure is that of a thirdworld country,” Republican candidate Donald Trump has said repeatedly. The Washington metropolitan area, with a population of more than six million, is no exception. Its Metrorail system was a source of pride when it opened 40 years ago, but today it’s better known for shoddy carriages, delays and fires. Problems in recent weeks included a derailment and a near-collision. Complaining about Metro is a favourite pastime of DC residents and there’s even a popular Twitter account that features criticism in real time. The most serious incident recently ‘Our infrastructure is that was in January 2015, when an electrical of a third-world country,’ problem caused a tunnel to fill with smoke, choking passengers in a disabled Republican candidate train. One person died. “The metro has Donald Trump has said to be safe,” said Paul Wiedefeld, general repeatedly. The Washington manager and chief executive of the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit metropolitan area, with a Authority, which also provides bus population of more than six services. million, is no exception Wiedefeld is presiding over a yearlong programme called SafeTrack that started in June to repair and upgrade the intensive work was necessary because subway system, causing major service trying to fix problems with “small interruptions. bandages” was no longer adequate. Wiedefeld said the accelerated, The system is the second-busiest subway system in the United States, with 750,000 riders on an average weekday. “The DC Metro historically has been a great strength of this region, but over time we under-invested in maintenance and repair,” Wiedefeld said. Last week, he proposed making the midnight weekend Metro closure permanent, and rolling back Sunday night service from midnight to 10 pm. “SafeTrack is the right approach but we are going to need more time to continue the job,” he said. But businesses like restaurants, bars and clubs say a change like that would be a huge blow. “We have heard from member restaurants that sales are down as much as 20 per cent due to early Metro closures and the current SafeTrack schedule,” warned the head of the Restaurant Association of Metropolitan Washington, Kathy Hollinger. “The impact of the Metrorail’s schedule on restaurants and small businesses cannot be ignored.” Near the U Street Metro station, in an area packed with nightlife, the manager of Dukem Ethiopian Restaurant, Mahaylu Daasyn, said he was having to let employees leave earlier. “We don’t really feel an impact on clients. The problem is the employees. At this rhythm, we won’t have anyone in the kitchen anymore, then we’ll have no choice but to close earlier,” Daasyn said. People who can afford to are turning to ride-sharing services. — AFP eu ope eur europe Ireland against UK’s push to abolish customs union Italian PM Renzi meets Malala Italian Premier Matteo Renzi has met the youngest-ever Nobel peace prize winner, 19-year-old child education activist Malala Yousafzai, a spokesman said. The meeting took place on Tuesday at an undisclosed location. OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U S T 4 l 2 0 1 6 15 VOICE OF CONCERN: Ireland’s business leaders concerned that new Trade Minister is pushing an agenda that could be detrimental to Ireland ANDY JALIL LONDON August 3: Ireland’s business leaders are concerned that Britain’s new Trade Minister, Liam Fox is pushing an agenda that could be “detrimental” to Irish trade. Fox is putting pressure on his Prime Minister, Theresa May to break free from an agreement which ensures there are no tariffs on goods moving within the European Union. Despite the result of the referendum vote to leave the EU, it was believed that Britain would remain within the ‘customs union’ but Fox, who was one of the central figures in the Leave campaign, has indicated he wants the freedom to cut all existing ties with the EU. Such a move would impact greatly on Anglo-Irish relations, adding “significant” administrative costs and delays to trade crossing the border between Northern Ireland, which is in the United Kingdom, and southern Ireland which is part of the EU. Prior to the referendum, the UK Treasury warned that leaving the customs union would lead to crossborder transactions being subject to “various forms of customs control and their liability to duty determined according to complex rules or origin.” Historically, a customs union is a grouping of countries which agree not to apply tariffs or quotas on trade. Usually, they also agree to apply common tariffs and quotas to goods coming from outside. In reality, the European Union has a customs union at its core and is a purpose of the whole operation. The European Union was formed as essentially a customs union. The Treaty of Rome in 1957, which established the European Economic Community (EEC), banned duties on imports and exports between the Liam Fox six participating states, with common tariffs applying to outside countries. The EEC’s customs union was completed two years ahead of the 1970 deadline. That gave the whole enterprise a big boost in internal morale and international reputation. Armed Metropolitan Police counter terrorism officers take part in an exercise on the River Thames in London on Wednesday. Metropolitan Police Commissioner Bernard Hogan-Howe and Mayor of London Sadiq Khan announced the start of Operation Hercules in which 600 additional firearms officers will be deployed in visible roles in the capital. — AFP NOUMEA: More than a thousand people from New Caledonia’s indigenous Kanak community took to the streets of the territory’s capital on Wednesday to demand better access to jobs and official posts. Protesters gathered outside the headquarters of Noumea’s main employer federation as well as the French territory’s congress, government and high commission buildings. “If it isn’t taken into account, the (employment) issue carries serious social risks and could greatly destabilise relations in the country,” said Andre Forest, president of the USTKE union representing Kanak people, which called the strike. The union, which also called for a general strike, estimated some 3,000 people attended the protest. Police put the number at 1,500. A 1998 agreement between France and New Caledonia promised greater autonomy for the Pacific Ocean archipelago and its original population, but protest organisers said it had yet to yield concrete results. The territory is due to hold a referendum on independence from France by 2018 as part of the agreement. — AFP Ex-Yugoslav spies get life terms MUNICH: A German court sentenced two former Yugoslav intelligence chiefs to life in prison on Wednesday for masterminding the murder of a Yugoslav dissident in the southern German state of Bavaria more than three decades ago. Croats Josip Perkovic, 71, and Zdravko Mustac, 74, top officials in the communist-era Yugoslav secret service, were found guilty of complicity in the murder of Stjepan Durekovic, also a Croat, who was found dead of gunshot wounds and head injuries in a garage in the town of Wolfratshausen in 1983. Croatia extradited the two men in 2014, under pressure from Germany. Prosecutors alleged that Durekovic’s murder was ordered by a leading Yugoslav politician. Durekovic’s dissident activities had appeared to be the motive for his murder, but the politician actually wanted to prevent Durekovic from disclosing his son’s illegal business dealings in the state-owned petrol company INA, according to the indictment. Durekovic once ran the INA before leaving for the West. Another man, the owner of the garage who had managed to win Durekovic’s confidence, was sentenced to life imprisonment in Germany in 2008 for his part in the murder. At the time, the court established that 22 Croats were murdered in West Germany, at the behest of the Yugoslav leadership. — Reuters Sweden not to deport Turkish asylum seekers STOCKHOLM: Sweden will “for the time being” not deport Turkish asylum seekers linked to the country’s political opposition in the wake of last month’s attempted coup in Turkey, authorities said on Wednesday. The Swedish Migration Agency’s decision applies to individuals who have “credible links” to the failed July 15 coup attempt in Turkey, including supporters of preacher Fethullah Gulen who lives in the United States and members of the political opposition. The agency registered 11 asylum bids from Turkish nationals since July 18, citing weekly tallies. Since January, the agency has registered 172 applications for asylum from Turkey. — dpa a trade unit and does negotiation on all of our behalves using just one external border. It would be detrimental to trade crossing the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic (of Ireland).” McKeever said it would result in companies having to account for the origins of each individual piece of a product assembled in Ireland. “I’ve seen estimates that an importation of border and need to comply with all the rules and regulations and the extra paperwork which could mean hiring extra staff could add about 25 per cent to the cost of trade,” he said. During a visit to the United States last week, Fox told the “Wall Street Journal” staying in the custom union would limit Britain’s ability to negotiate lower tariffs with other trading partners. While members of the union do not charge each other tariffs for most goods, they do impose a common external tariff on all goods coming from outside. “We have nothing to fear from forging our own tree-trade environment and breaking out on our own,” Fox said. He also set a date of 2020 for completing the Brexit negotiations. Reports in London suggest Theresa May and Chancellor Philip Hammond have yet to be convinced that the advantages of leaving the customs union would be offset by the liberty to negotiate. A spokesperson for the Irish government said they were not concerned by his comments “because we’re so early in the process here.” However, Burke said it would be difficult to see how the Common Travel Area will be maintained if Fox’s agenda is followed. She said it “beggars belief ” that the UK would abandon an EUwide deal in order to “go chasing after potential trade with small economies.” Central London house prices show biggest fall in 7 years after Brexit OPERATION HERCULES IN BRITAIN IN BRIEF New Caledonian people seek better jobs Before the EU came on the scene there had been various smaller-scale attempts at customs unions. After very slow progress with other forms of European cooperation, including defence, the focus switched to trade which now remains as a major element in the Union. Fox’s approach has been described by the Director of Corporate, Strategic and International Affairs at Irish Business and Employers’ Confederation (IBEC), Mary Rose Burke as “madness”. She said: “I was a bit staggered when I read it. Any additional barriers, even if the tariff is set at zero, would be a hindrance. The paperwork would be very challenging.” Similarly Simon McKeever, Chief Executive of Irish Exporters’ Association, said the UK leaving the tariff-free zone has “potential to get very messy for us.” He said: “The EU is Italy probing possible IS role in migrant flows ROME: Italy is investigating whether IS is involved in organising the passage of tens of thousands of migrants across the Mediterranean, its justice minister said on Wednesday. The Turkey to Greece migration route has been largely shut down since a repatriation deal was struck between the European Union and Ankara in March, but hundreds of people are arriving in Italy every day, mostly from Libya. Criminal gangs have taken advantage of chaos in Libya to charge mainly sub-Saharan Africans, looking for a better life in Europe, hundreds of dollars to make the voyage. “From the information available, there is an investigation under way focused on whether representatives of ISIS have crucial roles in controlling and managing migrant flows to Italy,” Justice Minister Andrea Orlando told a parliamentary committee. He told the hearing on immigration, Europe’s border-free Schengen accord and the activity of European police agency Europol that details of the investigation were secret. “The risks we have to take on are high,” he said, adding there was also a suspicion the militants were trying to influence where in Italy migrants were eventually placed. The militant group has made money by selling oil from fields it seized in the Middle East and North Africa and from plundering weapons and ammunition. Militant groups have smuggled members into Europe among the migrants, German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said. The migrants are taking often unseaworthy boats from Libya to Italy. — Reuters LONDON: House prices in London’s most expensive areas recorded their biggest fall in nearly seven years in July after the Brexit vote reinforced a downward trend caused by a rise in property taxes, a consultancy said on Wednesday. Knight Frank’s prime central London index fell 1.5 per cent last month from a year earlier, due to the uncertainty created by the June 23 referendum and a rise in property taxes which pushed up prices and brought sales forward to the start of 2016. “Since the vote, a number of buyers have requested discounts due to the climate of political and economic uncertainty,” Head of London Residential Research Tom Bill said. “The decision to leave the European Union has provided a backdrop of short-term uncertainty that is affecting behaviour in the prime central London property market,” he said. Prime central London stretches from Notting Hill and Knightsbridge, home to department store Harrods, in the west to the City of London and Islington towards the north and east. In Knightsbridge, prices fell 7.3 per cent last month, the biggest drop of any of the 15 areas examined whilst the biggest rise was 5.3 per cent in the City of London. A row of houses seen in London. — Reuters Property prices in the capital’s most desirable areas began recording annual declines in the run-up to the vote, according to Knight Frank, but July’s fall is the biggest since October 2009, when Britain began recovering from the 20078 financial crisis. But Knight Frank said that the primary reason for the decline remained changes to stamp duty, a property tax, which raised the amount paid on the most expensive properties and on second homes and buy-to-let investments, key to the central London market. Commercial property took the biggest hit in the wake of the EU referendum with investors pulling out money from funds, forcing some to be suspended. But there have been warnings in recent weeks from housebuilders and estate agents that residential property prices and demand could suffer. Britain’s biggest house builder, Barratt Developments, said last month that it might slow the pace of construction to prepare itself for an expected slowdown. London-focused estate agent Foxtons blamed Brexit for its slump in profits. Knight Frank said rental values last month fell 3.6 per cent in London, a city where many young professionals cannot afford to buy their own homes due to high property prices. The number of prospective tenants fell 6.8 per cent year-on-year in the three months to the end of June, impacted by the vote, it said. — Reuters Most Germans don’t blame Merkel’s refugee policy for attacks BERLIN: An overwhelming majority of Germans do not blame Chancellor Angela Merkel’s open-border refugee policy for two recent attacks in the country linked to the extremist group IS, according to a poll released on Wednesday. Last month, Germany was reeling from four separate attacks that left a total of 13 people dead and scores injured, with IS claiming its “soldiers” carried out two of the assaults. A survey by the Berlin-based pollster Forsa found that 69 per cent of Germans do not believe there is a link between the two attacks claimed by IS and the large numbers of migrants who have arrived seeking refuge from conflicts in Middle East and Africa. — dpa SELFIE IN FRANCE Portuguese scouts take a selfie during the European scout meeting “Roverway 2016” at the Arenes de Lutece in Paris on Wednesday. — AFP world o dinpictures p ctu es panorama 16 OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U ST 4 l 2 0 1 6 Flashmob stunt triggers street panic in Spain C SAFE WITH MOM: A white lioness named Kleopatra laps up one of her three cubs born a few days ago at the Tbilisi zoo on Tuesday. — AFP AERO SHOW: Ukrainian fighters MIG-29 take part in the practical flights to fulfill the system of combat duty during the exercises at the Air Force military base in the small town of Vasylkiv, some 40 km from Kiev on Wednesday. — AFP BOIS BOVINE: Calves shelter in their pen at the Joli Bois farm in ValleroisLe-bois, on Tuesday. — AFP PERFECTING THE MOVES: Ballet dancer and stage performer Mikhail Baryshnikov performs during a rehearsal for the “Letter to a Man” show in Riga, Latvia. — Reuters Monkey gets another chance to claim his selfie NEW YORK: The People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (Peta) animal rights organisation has filed an appeal to the US Court of Appeals for justice to Naruto — a now-famous monkey known for taking a ‘selfie’ that prompted an unprecedented copyright lawsuit — at claiming ownership over his image. The image was taken in 2011 by Naruto, then a six-year-old male freeliving crested macaque in Indonesia. Photographer David J Slater had left his camera unattended in an Indonesian forest which allowed Naruto to take several photos of himself. Slater and his company, which both claim copyright ownership, published the photos that Naruto indisputably took. Peta sued, claiming that Naruto was the author of the photos and that Slater had infringed on Naruto’s copyright. Disappointingly, in January, a federal judge dismissed the monkey selfie suit, finding that a non-human animal could not own a copyright. “In every practical (and definitional) sense, he (Naruto) is the ‘author’ of the works,” argued PETA in the appeal brief filed on Tuesday. “Had the Monkey Selfies been made by a human using Slater’s unattended camera, that human would undisputedly be declared the author and copyright owner of the photographs. Nothing in the Copyright Act limits its application to human authors. Protection under the Copyright Act does not depend on the humanity of the author, but on the originality of the work itself,” the appeal read. According to Peta, if the lawsuit succeeds, it will be the first time that a nonhuman animal has been declared the owner of property rather than a piece of property himself or herself. It will also be the first time that a right has been extended to a nonhuman animal beyond just the basic necessities of food, shelter, water, and veterinary care. In our view, it is high time. “The fact that copyright ownership by an animal has not been previously asserted does not mean that such rights cannot be asserted,” Peta wrote. Peta is seeking the court’s permission to administer and protect Naruto’s copyright in the “monkey selfies,” without compensation, with all proceeds to be used for the benefit of Naruto and his community. Naruto is known to field researchers in Sulawesi who have observed and studied him for years as they work in the region. — IANS rowds ran in panic after mistaking a flashmob-style performance for a militant attack in a Spanish coastal resort, police and media said. Scores of people responded to social media invitations to descend on Platja d’Aro on Tuesday evening and run around pretending to be paparazzi, papers reported. Participants held tripods and selfie sticks and pretended to be chasing a celebrity. But other people in the streets mistook the objects for guns and fled, blocking traffic and sending restaurant tables flying, media reported. Eleven people were treated for minor injuries, anxiety attacks and heart palpitations, with at least two hospitalised police said. Five German women, aged between 20 and 25, were arrested, accused of involvement in the stunt, the force added. They were charged with public order offences and will appear in court later on Wednesday. Tensions are high after a series of attacks claimed by the IS in France and Germany in recent weeks. — Reuters Old German currency haul in donated laundry DUSSELDORK: Two charity group volunteers in Germany got more than they bargained for when a plastic bag containing thousands of Deutsche Mark tumbled out of the donated laundry they were sorting out. The two workers in the western German state of NorthRhine Westphalia informed the police of the discovery, and the rightful owners of the old western German currency were located, police said on Wednesday. Police would not say the exact amount discovered, only that it was in the five-figure range. At the current exchange rate, 10,000 Deutsche Mark could be cashed in for about $5,725. — dpa THURSDAY | AUGUST 4, 2016 business CRUDE OIL PRICE Oman Crude ---------------$ 39.59 Brent Crude -----------------$ 41.62 Light Crude -----------------$ 39.38 GOLD PRICES Oman 24 Kt per gram --------------------------RO 17.40 Oman 22 Kt per gram --------------------------RO 16.65 UAE 24 Kt per gram -------------------------AED 165.00 UAE 22 Kt per gram -------------------------AED 155.00 CURRENCY RATES (RO 1) US Dollar------------------------------------------------ 2.60 Euro --------------------------------------------------------2.32 British Pounds ----------------------------------------1.94 Indian Rupee ------------------------------------- 174.16 Pakistan Rupee ---------------------------------- 271.90 Philippine Peso --------------------------------- 122.38 SOURCE: MALABAR GOLD AND DIAMONDS Fuel price reform buoys gains of marketing firms REVENUE UPTICK: All three fuel marketing firms link earnings growth to price deregulation CONRAD PRABHU MUSCAT August 3: Deregulated fuel prices that came into force with effect from January 15, 2016 have boosted the gross earnings of all three fuel marketing companies operating in the Sultanate. Shell Oman Marketing Company SAOG, Oman Oil Marketing Company SAOG and Al Maha Petroleum Products Marketing Co SAOG — licensed by the Ministry of Oil and Gas to distribute and supply automotive fuels across the Sultanate — reported earnings growth averaging around 9 per cent for the first half of this year. All three firms attributed the uptick in sales revenues primarily to fuel price reform adopted by the Omani government as part of a raft of measures designed to cushion the effects of the global oil price downturn on national revenues. Oman Oil Marketing Company reported gross earnings of RO 199.466 million for the six months ended on June 30, 2016, versus RO 192.939 million posted for the corresponding period of 2015, entailing an increase of nine per cent. Company Chairman Salim Abdullah al Rawas ascribed the increase to “deregulation” of fuel prices. On the flip side, the scrapping of subsidy on fuel prices did contribute to a “notional drop” in retail business sales, the Chairman noted. Profit after tax declined 9 per cent to RO 5.022 million this year, down from RO 5.528 million for the corresponding period of 2015, he said. Shell Oman Marketing reported a 10.7 per cent jump in gross revenues, which climbed to RO 183.4 million during the first six months of this year, the company said in the Directors’ Report for H1 2016. Net earnings rose 28 per cent to RO 8.8 per cent, aided in part by a “significant non-recurring item” coupled with business growth and efficient cost management, the report added. Al Maha Petroleum Products saw its gross sales climb eight per cent to RO 186.3 million for the January-June 2016 period, up from RO 172.9 million for the corresponding period of 2015. “Retail sales increased during the period solely on account of the increase in (fuel) selling rates from mid-January 2016, despite a drop in product demand mainly in the border areas,” said Gamal Ali al Ghamal, Deputy Chairman. The price of Mogas Super (M95) rose almost 50 per cent to 180 baisas per litre last month in the highest it has ever reached since tariffs were linked to the international price of crude earlier this year. The pump price of M95 has since declined to 166 bs per litre. BoE set to axe rates to record low LONDON: The Bank of England is expected to slash interest rates to a record-low 0.25 per cent this week and could pump more stimulus into the economy as it battles the fallout from Britain’s vote to leave the EU, economists say. The announcement, due on Thursday after the British central bank’s latest monetary policy meeting, would take rates to their lowest level in the BoE’s 322-year history It would also be the first reduction since March 2009, when the bank cut to the current all-time low of 0.50 per cent — and launched its quantitative easing (QE) bond-buying programme to stimulate lending and growth during the global financial crisis. Analysts believe the BoE might possibly increase the amount of its QE. “The BoE is widely expected to ease monetary policy this week in response to... Brexit,” said economist Larry Hatheway at asset manager GAM, adding that inflation was less likely to be on target due to the weaker economic outlook. “The market anticipates at least a quarter-point cut in the base rate, but an expansion of asset purchases and a ‘bias to ease’ would not be surprises.” Bright data had showed last week that Britain’s economy accelerated 0.6 per cent in the second quarter of this year in the run-up to the shock decision by voters on June 23 to exit the European Union. However, more recent data has indicated that economic storm clouds are gathering — and a recession could be around the corner. Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) surveys have all signalled sharp drops in construction, manufacturing and private sector business activity for July. Adding to the gloomy picture is growing evidence of a faltering property market. The BoE flagged last month that it might deliver an interest rate cut in August in response to the Brexit vote but policymakers did not signal the precise size and nature of any stimulus measures. In July, the BoE had also maintained the amount of QE cash stimulus pumping around the economy at £375 billion ($497 billion, 448 billion euros). “This week’s manufacturing PMI report is the latest in a long list of survey data which shows that the vote to leave the EU has caused significant uncertainty, and negative shock is on the way,” said Hargreaves Lansdown economist Ben Brettell. “Prior to the referendum, the UK economy was ticking along quite nicely. “If the UK had voted to remain in the EU, there is no reason to suspect this trend would not have continued, and as per usual the Bank of England would now be discussing the likely timing of the first interest rate rise. “The Brexit vote has blown that completely out of the water,” Brettell said. — AFP www.omanobserver.om editor@omanobserver.om GULF STOCK MARKET Muscat ------------------------------------------------- 5,848.21 Abu Dhabi-------------------------------------------- 4,509.62 Dubai --------------------------------------------------- 3,431.90 Qatar -------------------------------------------------- 10,560.86 Kuwait ------------------------------------------------- 5,463.15 Bahrain ------------------------------------------------ 1,161.80 Saudi --------------------------------------------------- 6,232.62 SAATCHI BOSS TO STEP DOWN AFTER ROW PARIS: French advertising giant Publicis said Kevin Roberts (pictured), the Chairman of its Saatchi & Saatchi business, would resign on September 1 after the veteran advertising boss said some women lacked “vertical ambition”. Roberts, the British-born executive, sparked a sexism row after he was quoted in an interview as saying that he doesn’t spend any time on gender issues as the gender diversity debate was over in the advertising world. “The Supervisory Board and the Chairman and CEO of Publicis Groupe took note of Kevin Robert’s decision to step down with effect from September 1st 2016, prior to his retirement date due in May 2017,” Publicis said in a statement. Publicis had this week asked Roberts to take an immediate leave of absence as the group did not tolerate “anyone speaking for our organisation who does not value the importance of inclusion”. In an interview with the Business Insider website, Roberts said that some women at key junctures in their careers did not want to lead businesses and people, and that managers should reflect on how to deal with the ambitions of female and male employees who “simply want to be happy and do great work”. “Their ambition is not a vertical ambition, it’s this intrinsic, circular ambition to be happy,” Roberts was quoted as saying by Business Insider. “So they say: ‘We are not judging ourselves by those standards that you idiotic dinosaur-like men judge yourself by’. — Reuters omaninternational business b i 18 OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U ST 4 l 2 0 1 6 Lira slips most in emerging markets Turkey’s lira fell after data showed inflation accelerated more than forecast in July, undermining confidence in the central bank’s resolve to control price gains that eat into returns on the nation’s assets. Stocks and bonds also dropped. The currency weakened 0.9 per cent to 3.0189 per dollar as of 3:40 pm in Istanbul, the most in emerging markets. Bank Muscat lines up high value prizes in Salalah Al Mazyona draw MUSCAT: Bank Muscat is all set to celebrate the second quarterly prize draw of Al Mazyona Savings Scheme on Sunday, August 14, at Hilton Salalah Resort. Shaikh Abdullah Aqeel Al Ibrahim, Acting Deputy Governor of Dhofar, will be the guest of honour at the event in which six winners covering all governorates, including two from asalah Priority Banking and two from al Jawhar Privilege Banking, will receive high value prizes totalling RO 800,000. The ceremony will be attended by dignitaries, Premier banking customers and Management Team members from the bank. Al Mazyona quarterly prizes include RO 100,000 each for two customers across Oman, RO 250,000 each for two asalah Priority banking customers and RO 50,000 each for two al Jawhar Privilege banking customers. Al Mazyona 2016 scheme offering RO 10 million in prize money is an incredible incentive for maintaining a healthy savings habit. Al Mazyona ensures higher winning chance to all customers across the Sultanate. With attractive weekly, monthly, quarterly, special and year-end prizes, the popular scheme offers high-value prizes throughout the year to maximum number of customers in all regions. Committed to enhancing banking services to the premier segment, the bank’s strategy focuses on differentiated and specialised banking experience distinguishing Premier banking clients from competitors. The exclusive prizes for ‘asalah’ Priority banking customers include two monthly prizes of RO 50,000 each, two quarterly prizes of RO 250,000 each and the year-end jackpot prize of RO 500,000 for one customer. The bank also offers special prizes to al Jawhar Privilege Banking customers, including two monthly prizes of RO 25,000 each and two quarterly prizes of RO 50,000 each. Premier banking customers can also participate in all other al Mazyona weekly, monthly, quarterly and special prize draws. Reaching out with a powerful call for savings, al Mazyona offers exclusive prizes for different segments, including women, children, youth and high saving customers. As on date, al Mazyona savings scheme guaranteeing more for everyone to share is the biggest prize money in Oman and the region with prizes ranging from RO 1,000 a week to RO 10,000 a month and RO 100,000 every quarter, in addition to special and year-end prizes. Adding excitement to festivals and national celebrations, the 2016 savings scheme also rewards customers with special prizes, besides aspirational prizes of RO 1 million to be shared by two customers at the end of year. An exclusive draw for Zeinah women customers coinciding with Omani Women’s Day is a highlight in which 10 customers will be rewarded with RO 10,000 each. On the occasion of the National Day, a special draw will be held offering RO 10,000 each for 10 winners. The eligibility for al Mazyona prize draws is to maintain a minimum balance of RO 100 which entitles customers to win RO 1,000 every week. By maintaining a minimum balance of RO 1,000, customers are eligible win the RO 10,000 monthly prize, RO 100,000 quarterly prize and the grand prize of RO 500,000 at the end of the year. For every RO 100 balance, customers get 1 chance to win – so with RO 1000, they get 10 chances to win. The more the saving, the better the chances to win. Insight Information Tech named Omantel’s ‘Best Success Story’ BUSINESS REPORTER MUSCAT August 3: Insight Information Technology Company has won the Omantel’s 2015 SME Excellence Award for the Best Success Story. According to founders Rashid bin Salim al Salmi and Mohsin al Salmi, “Due to the increasing dependency on electronic systems in the public and private sectors and the great pace of technological development in the Sultanate, we saw a gap in the market and a great need for a quality, Oman-based, cyber security company.” Rashid continued, “We started in 2003 by providing cybersecurity solutions for companies according to the information security standards and needs of the market here in Oman. Our services cover a number of aspects of data infrastructure protection including supporting network security and data protection”. Speaking about the future vision of the company, Rashid added, “We have noticed a growing awareness of the importance of data protection among Omani organisations and we hope this trend will continue to grow in the coming years. We aim to play greater role in providing the latest technologies and services in this field.” Mohsin al Salmi, the founding co-partner of Insight Information Technology also noted, “Information security is a new and fast growing field that and face many challenges such as a lack of awareness among the public about the importance of information security and how to deal with increasing threats towards data infrastructure. We work together to provide these services for our clients.” Mohsin also noted the government’s focus and His Majesty the Sultan’s support for SMEs to play a greater role in economic and technological development in the Sultanate. “The invention of the Internet and the rapid d e vel opme nt Rashid bin Salim al Salmi of technology and telecommunications has revolutionized the way we do business as a society and has enhanced our reach to different markets, suppliers and customers. The royal directives reflects the growing importance of technology for SME development in this country.” SAMSUNG SAID IN TALKS TO BUY ASSETS OF FIAT AUTO PARTS UNIT SEOUL: Samsung Electronics Co is in advanced talks to buy some or all of the operations of auto-parts maker Magneti Marelli from Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV, according to people familiar with the matter. Samsung is particularly interested in Magneti Marelli’s lighting, in-car entertainment and telematics business and could consider an acquisition of the whole company, the people said, asking not to be identified as the discussions are private. The deal could be worth more than $3 billion with a goal of closing this year, said one of the people. That would make it Samsung’s biggestever acquisition outside South Korea. Fiat’s shares rose the most since October 2014. A move into automobile components would help decrease Samsung’s reliance on consumer electronics. Vice Chairman Lee Jae Yong, 48, is reshaping South Korea’s biggest company as he takes on more responsibilities once held by his father. He has sold off assets and narrowed the conglomerate’s scope as he seeks to bounce back from a downturn in the smartphone business. Lee, who has been a director of Fiat Chrysler’s controlling shareholder Exor SpA since 2012, would also position his company to benefit from the rising interest in cars from technology companies. Apple Inc, Baidu Inc and Google are pushing into automobiles, seeking to deploy their technology into new areas as cars become more advanced. Samsung had more than $70 billion of cash and marketable securities as of March 31, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. In addition to global leadership in smartphones, Samsung is the world’s biggest producer of memory chips and televisions. Samsung declined to comment in an e-mail statement. A Fiat Chrysler spokesman had no comment. Fiat Chrysler rose 7.3 per cent to 5.85 euros at 1:25 pm in Milan after gaining as much as 9.8 per cent. The shares have lost 31 per cent this year, compared with an 18 per cent decline in the Stoxx Europe 600 Automotive & Parts Price Index. Exor climbed 3.6 per cent to 34.10 euros. News of the talks also lifted shares of Sogefi SpA, another Italian parts maker that has attracted interest from private-equity firms. Sogefi gained 9.4 per cent to 1.62 euros. The first major carmaker to strike a deal with Google on driverless vehicles, the company is in discussions with other technology companies, Chief Executive Officer Sergio Marchionne said on a conference call after the company’s second-quarter earnings results last month. After calling off efforts to pursue a merger with General Motors Co, Marchionne has made eliminating debt his highest priority before he leaves the post in 2019. Achieving the goal would put Fiat Chrysler in a better position to find a partner. Marchionne contends that the auto industry wastes too much money and needs to consolidate to finance investment in new technology. “It makes sense for a manufacturer to separate and crystallize value from their components business,” George Galliers, an analyst at Evercore ISI, said by phone from London. “Ford and GM separated their businesses several years ago.” — Bloomberg BUSINESS ALERT Ford tests LiDAR sensor technology MUSCAT: Ford Motor Company has been actively involved in continuously redefining technology in its automobiles. Many of these futuristic features and technologies have made their way in to Ford vehicles allowing customers to go further on every journey. Recently, under the cover of night, a Ford Fusion Hybrid autonomous research vehicle with no headlights on, navigated along lonely desert roads, performing a task that would be perilous for a human driver. Driving in pitch black at Ford Arizona Proving Ground marks the next step on the company’s journey to delivering fully autonomous vehicles to customers around the globe. It’s an important development, in that it shows that even without cameras, which rely on light, Ford’s LiDAR — working with the car’s virtual driver software — is robust enough to steer flawlessly around winding roads. While it’s ideal to have all three modes of sensors — radar, cameras and LiDAR — the latter can function independently on roads without stoplights. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration data has found the passenger vehicle occupant fatality rate during dark hours to be about three times higher than the daytime rate. “Thanks to LiDAR, the test cars aren’t reliant on the sun shining, nor cameras detecting painted white lines on the asphalt,” says Jim McBride, Ford technical leader for autonomous vehicles. “In fact, LiDAR allows autonomous cars to drive just as well in the dark as they do in the light of day.” To navigate in the dark, Ford self-driving cars use high-resolution 3D maps — complete with information about the road, road markings, geography, topography and landmarks like signs, buildings and trees. The vehicle uses LiDAR pulses to pinpoint itself on the map in real time. Additional data from radar gets fused with that of LiDAR to complete the full sensing capability of the autonomous vehicle. Muzn National Charity campaign MUZN Islamic Banking has launched a new charitable initiative designed to encourage customers to give back in line with the principles of Islam. Each time a customer opens a Muzn savings or Flexi Wakala account with Muzn and deposits money in the account, the bank will donate a proportionate amount on their behalf to a charity at the end of the campaign period. To provide initial funding and momentum to the campaign, Muzn is making an upfront donation of RO 5,000 to the charity fund. Yuzly Yusof, Head of Muzn Islamic Banking, said: “Muzn strives to make meaningful contributions to the society. This campaign is built around the idea of donating and spreading smiles across the Sultanate by encouraging people to give back to their communities. We look forward to engaging our customers in this important new campaign over the comings weeks and months.” Muzn’s latest charitable campaign builds on National Bank of Oman’s recent Iftar Sa’im initiative to support families with essential provisions ahead of the holy month of Ramadhan. A team of NBO volunteers including the bank’s senior management team delivered more than 1,200 food hampers to low income families across the Sultanate to ensure they have all the essential food staples. In addition to the food parcels donated by NBO, the bank’s employees also made personal donations of essential items to help families ahead of the holy month New turbocharged engines give more power AUTOMOTIVE technologies are changing and in fact getting smarter. One of these technologies is the use of Turbocharged engines to increase fuel efficiency and environmental performance without compromising on the much needed power when you need it. Ever since the 1960s, automobile manufacturers have been pushing the automotive industry to make their cars more fuel efficient, without reducing the overall power output. Automobile manufacturers have learned that the best way to solve this problem has been to use smaller engines with turbochargers, which can deliver high power and efficiency. Mazda has been a pioneer in coming out with new efficient smarter technologies that can be used in mass production in the past like the rotary engines and quite recently the SKYACTIV technology that not only makes the engine more efficient without compromising on power, it also enhances the safety and response of the transmission to give more Zoom-Zoom The biggest advantage of utilising a turbocharged 4-cylinder engine is the ability to generate more power with the efficiency of a 4-cylinder. Turbo-4 engines operate much like their naturally aspirated 4-cylinder counterparts. While displacement remains the same, turbocharged engines have the ability to get a boost in power when it is needed. So when you need to get your car up to highway speeds, the turbocharger pushes compressed air to the cylinders, making more room for fuel. R R Nair, raffle draw winner of ‘Win up to 10 kilos of gold’ campaign by Malabar Gold & Diamonds receives the prize ¼ kg gold from Muhsin P, Branch head. omaninternational SocGen Q2 net up 8.1 per cent business siness French bank Societe Generale said its second-quarter earnings rose 8.1 per cent from a year earlier, bolstered by the sale of its shares in Visa Europe. The bank reported a 1.5 billion euro ($1.7 billion) net profit for the period, higher than the 1.4 billion euros predicted by economists in a survey by FactSet. GM and Ford US sales miss mark GM reported that sales fell 2 per cent to 267,258 vehicles, at the low end of expectations, while Ford posted sales of 216,479 vehicles, down 3 per cent. DETROIT: The biggest US automakers, General Motors Co and Ford Motor Co, reported July US sales that disappointed Wall Street but results were strong overall for the industry despite fears its long growth spurt may soon be over. GM reported that sales fell 2 per cent to 267,258 vehicles, at the low end of expectations, while Ford posted sales of 216,479 vehicles, down 3 per cent. Overall, July US auto sales rose 0.7 per cent to 1.52 million vehicles, according to Autodata Corp, for a seasonally adjusted annualised rate of 17.88 million vehicles. Autodata said the annualised rate for July was the highest since last November. Analysts polled by Reuters had expected, on average, 17.7 million vehicles on the annualised basis, and 21 economists polled by Reuters had expected 17.36 million vehicles. GM’s Chief Economist, G Mustafa Mohatarem, and Ford’s Sales Chief, Mark LaNeve, both said sales are still at healthy levels. Sales for the year were 1 per cent higher than they were at this time in 2015, which ended at a record high, Mohatarem said. “Let’s calm down on the doomsday talk,” he said at an industry conference in Traverse City, Michigan. GM thinks there is potential for a new record for US industry auto sales this year, Mohatarem said. Nonetheless, GM shares shed 4.4 per cent, Ford slid 4.3 per cent and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV dropped nearly 4 per cent. Each of Ford’s four top-selling models lost ground, including the Explorer SUV, which dropped 22 per cent. GM and Ford are the market leaders by sales volume. FCA, the No 4 by US sales, said its sales rose 0.3 per cent, missing estimates. Since 2009 when auto sales slipped to a modern-day low, the industry has posted annual growth. “The growth is over,” Ford Chief Financial Officer Bob Shanks said in an interview with Reuters last week. Pent-up demand built during the last recession has been satisfied, and lower used car prices are drawing some buyers away from new vehicles. Wes Lutz, owner of Extreme Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram in Jackson, Michigan, said consumers “are maxed out and can barely afford the vehicles they are driving.” Lutz said he is expanding his used car showroom, anticipating that new vehicle sales will decline. Japanese and South Korean automakers reported more robust monthly sales than had been expected, boosting total vehicle sales as consumers continued to spend on pickup trucks and SUVs. Toyota Motor Corp, No 3 in the US market, reported sales down 1.4 per cent, but it surpassed expectations. Showing the largest gains were corporate stablemates Hyundai Motor Co, sales up 5.6 per cent, and Kia Motors Corp , sales up 6.5 per cent, beating expectations. Incentive spending in July was 9.9 per cent of average vehicle selling prices, up from 9.6 per cent a year earlier, said auto sales website and industry analyst TrueCar Inc. — Reuters Standard Chartered profits slump as key markets stall HONG KONG: Asia-focused bank Standard Chartered said on Wednesday its net profit had slumped 66 per cent in a “challenging” environment, with growth shrinking in key markets and uncertainty following Britain’s vote to leave the European Union. The bank said it was making “good progress” although performance in 2016 would remain subdued and ordinary dividends were on hold. Good news on bad loans helped boost early trading in London — shares were up four per cent on Wednesday morning at 613.20 pence per share. The results showed loan impairment had been reduced by 34 per cent year-on-year to $1.1 billion from 1.65 billion. However, net profit fell to $509 million for the first half of 2016, down 66 per cent from $1.512 billion in the same period in 2015. Pre-tax profit was also down 46 per cent at $994 million from $1.82 billion last year while revenues dropped almost 20 per cent to $6.81 billion. Chief Executive Bill Winters pointed to lower growth rates in key markets including Hong Kong, Singapore and the US, and stalling global growth as having an impact, as well as the UK’s unexpected Brexit. “Although our performance has substantially improved, income growth remains muted and returns are weak,” Winters said in a statement. Chairman John Peace said that while Brexit had shaken the world economy, Standard Chartered was protected to an extent by its focus outside Europe. “There is a degree of economic uncertainty following the UK’s referendum on European Union membership, but the majority of our business operates in other parts of the world and is relatively less impacted,” said Peace. He added there was a “long way” to go to achieve the level of returns needed for shareholders. Operating expenses were down 13 percent, reflecting cost-cutting measures including senior staff redundancies. Like many global banks, Standard Chartered is battling turmoil in global financial markets that have seen stocks and commodities plunge. In February it said it had swung to a surprise $2.36 billion net loss in 2015 against a backdrop of global market volatility, restructuring costs and bad loans, adding that its 2016 performance would remain “subdued”. It announced in November that it was refocusing on “affluent retail clients” rather than corporate and institutional banking businesses and would exit or restructure $100 billion of assets and axe 15,000 jobs. The bank also said executive directors did not receive bonus payments for the year. Current bank chairman Peace will be succeeded in December by 62-year-old Jose Vinals, currently financial counsellor and director of the monetary and capital markets department at the International Monetary Fund. — AFP OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U S T 4 l 2 0 1 6 MUSCAT SECURITIES MARKET 19 international business 20 ING boosts operating profit by a quarter OMANDAILYOBSERVER Dutch bank ING, the country’s biggest lender, said its Q2 operating profits rose by more than a quarter as it boosted lending. Underlying net profit, which strips out one-off items, rose by 26.7pc to 1.4 billion euros ($1.6 billion). Net profit more than quadrupled to 1.3 billion euros, but the rise was due to the fact ING booked in the Q2 last year 1.1 billion in losses as it lowered its stake in domestic insurer NN Group. T H U R S DAY l A U G U ST 4 l 2 0 1 6 MARKET PENSIVE: Bond yields up globally on doubts of central bank support * Bank shares under pressure, energy hit by falling oil Asia markets slip, weak stimulus hits Japan stocks HONG KONG: Most Asian markets tumbled for a second day on Wednesday, extending a global retreat, with Tokyo taking a hit from a strong yen after Japan’s economy-boosting stimulus programme fell flat with investors. Stocks rallied last month on promises of support from central banks. But disappointments about stimulus, weak US data, plunging oil prices and worries about European banks have sent dealers scurrying for cover. Japan’s government on Tuesday unveiled details of a 28 trillion yen ($273 billion) package that it hopes will kick-start growth in the world’s number three economy. But the plan fell short of market expectations as only a quarter of it is new spending. The yen, seen as a safe haven asset in times of uncertainty, surged as a result. The disappointing package — unveiled days after another sub-par stimulus from the Bank of Japan — saw the dollar tumble to a three-week low of 100.86 yen. While it had edged up to 101.22 yen in Asian trade on Wednesday, the stronger Japanese currency dragged on the country’s exporters and the Nikkei closed down 1.9 per cent. “After all the build-up, it’s a disappointment,” Shane Oliver, a global investment strategist at AMP Capital Investors in Sydney, told Bloomberg News. This will weigh on Asian stocks, “reflecting the negative response we’ve Oil trades near four-month low as surplus withstands supply drop Traders work at their desks in front of the German share price index, DAX board, at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany. — Reuters already seen in the US and Europe overnight,” he added. Hong Kong was down 1.5 per cent in the afternoon with traders also playing catch-up with regional losses on Tuesday when the city’s exchange was closed because of a typhoon. By the close Sydney shed 1.4 per cent, Seoul was 1.2 per cent off and Singapore shed one per cent with Manila more than two per cent lower. Wellington and Taipei also tumbled. However, Shanghai bucked the regional trend to close 0.2 per cent higher. US and European markets ended down on Tuesday, with anxiety growing that stress tests on Europe’s banks were overly lenient, said Chris Low, Chief Economist at FTN Financial. The overriding fear concerns the difficulty banks face making money in a low interest rate era. Oil struggled to recover, with investors on edge after the commodity Rio Tinto Q2 underlying profit dives low SYDNEY: Mining giant Rio Tinto said its underlying earnings dived to their lowest point for a decade in the first half on Wednesday, hit by weak commodity prices, even as its net profits surged. Underlying profits — investors’ preferred measure — at the world’s second-biggest miner fell 47 per cent from a year earlier to $1.56 billion in the six months through June. The results were the lowest since 2004, according to Bloomberg News, and broadly in line with analysts’ expectations. They are the first delivered under new Chief Executive, Frenchman JeanSebastien Jacques, who took over from Sam Walsh last month. Jacques said the miner was focused on delivering value to shareholders, which includes cost-cutting, amid a backdrop of “continued volatility and lower commodity prices”. The cuts helped net profit more than double to $1.71 billion in the six months to June 30, up from $806 million in the corresponding period last year. Capital spending for the six months dropped significantly to $1.32 billion, while net debt fell six per cent to $12.9 billion. Raw material prices have suffered amid a supply glut due to slowing demand from China, world’s largest commodities consumer. — AFP Earnings drop as gloom gathers over Europe banks HSBC’s up-to-$2.5 billion buy-back soothes investors HONG KONG/LONDON: HSBC said its first-half profit tumbled 29 per cent, slammed by slowing growth in its home markets in Britain and Hong Kong, but Europe’s biggest bank cheered investors by announcing plans to buy back up to $2.5 billion of its shares. The lender’s shares rose as much as 1.9 per cent after the buy-back took the sting out of a drop it reported on Wednesday in January-June pre-tax profit to $9.7 billion, just below an average estimate of $10 billion compiled by Thomson Reuters. Analysts joined investors in welcoming the buy-back, along with a commitment from the London- and Hong Kong-based bank to maintain current dividend levels for the foreseeable future, despite gloom in its key markets. By 0653 GMT HSBC shares in Hong Kong were trading up 1.8 per cent at HK$51.70, rebounding from a fall of 1.7 per cent prior to the announcements. But as Britain’s vote to leave the European Union clouds economic prospects, and Hong Kong absorbs slower growth in China, HSBC warned it had decided to “remove a timetable” for reaching its targeted return on equity in excess of 10 per cent by the end of next year. Return on equity at end-June was 7.4 per cent. HSBC also said it was committed to sustain annual ordinary dividend for the A man walks past a HSBC bank branch in London, Britain. — Reuters year at current levels for the foreseeable future. That commitment, along with the buy-back, was described by Bernstein analysts in a note as positive for the bank’s shares in the short-term. Group Chief Executive Stuart Gulliver, however, said in a call with Reuters that the bank had removed the word “progressive” from its guidance on dividend payout plans, as a reflection of tougher market conditions. “’Progressive’ was interpreted by everyone as meaning it is going to go up every quarter notwithstanding what is happening in the world, so what we are saying is we are committed to sustain the dividend at the current level,” Gulliver said. Gulliver said in a statement the buy-back — following the disposal of HSBC’s Brazil unit last month in a $5.2 billion deal — “demonstrated the strength and flexibility” of its balance sheet. “The fall in profits is pretty much to be expected as indeed is lower guidance on ROE (return on equity) given nighon zero interest rates,” said Hugh Young, head of equities at Aberdeen Asset Management, a top HSBC shareholder. “The buy-back may be more of a token gesture, like the earlier marginal dividend increase,” Young said, adding that he believed the management would continue to invest in its business plan. The bank reported its earnings as clouds gather over Europe’s banking sector, rattled by deteriorating profit and yields amid record low interest rates and higher regulatory costs. — Reuters sank into a bear market — a 20 per cent fall from recent highs — on renewed worries about a supply glut as the crucial US summer driving season nears its end. Brent edged down 0.2 per cent to $41.79 and West Texas Intermediate added 0.2 per cent to $39.58. Both contracts are well down from the levels above $50 touched in early June when output was hit by disruptions in Nigeria and Canada. BIZ BRIEF Noble Group collapses 19 pc over 2-days as volumes surge SINGAPORE: Noble Group Ltd shares extended their slump to the lowest since 2003, ahead of a one-week period that’ll see the commodity trader’s new rights-issue stock begin trading and the company report quarterly earnings. The shares lost as much as 8.3 per cent to 12.2 Singapore cents and closed 0.8 per cent down at 13.2 cents in the city-state. On Tuesday, the stock sank 18 per cent, drawing a query from the exchange, and Hong Kong-based Noble Group said it was unaware of the reason for the move. The stock has lost 19 per cent over two days, with about 319 million shares traded on Wednesday, after 336 million changed hands on Tuesday. That compares with a daily average of about 93 million shares in 2016, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The one-for-one rights issue will see 6.5 billion new shares added. After a turbulent 2015 that saw a plunge in its shares and the first annual loss in almost two decades, Noble Group is facing further challenges. The company has raised about $500 million in the rights issue to shore up its finances, with the fund-raising supported by Chairman Richard Elman and China Investment Corp, and the new shares are expected to start on the main board of the exchange on Thursday. It’s also seeking a buyer for Noble Americas Energy Solutions, an asset it once labelled as core. “Investors are jittery over Noble’s continued cash-raising activity, with some uncertainty over the potential sale of the North American energy business given the recent slip in oil prices,” said Terence Lin, Assistant Director of Bonds and Portfolio Management at Singapore-based fund researcher iFast Corp. — Bloomberg HONG KONG: Oil traded near a four-month low in New York on signs the global supply surplus persists even as stockpile declines in the US pare the excess. Futures added 0.8 per cent in New York after slipping 5 per cent the previous two sessions. Inventories slid by 1.34 million barrels and gasoline stockpiles fell, the American Petroleum Institute was said to report. Energy Information Administration data on Wednesday is forecast to show crude and motor fuel supplies decreased. Brent oil, the global benchmark, entered a bear market on Tuesday, joining West Texas Intermediate. Oil has tumbled more than 20 per cent from its June peak, meeting the common definition of a bear market and ending a recovery that saw prices Attention will now turn to Friday’s US jobs report for a fresh snapshot of the US economy, with a weak figure likely to dent expectations of a Federal Reserve rate rise this year. Key figures: Tokyo — Nikkei 225: DOWN 1.9 per cent at 16,083.11 (close); Shanghai — Composite: UP 0.2 per cent at 2,978.46 (close); Hong almost double from a 12-year low in February. Analysts from Citigroup Inc to Bank of America Merrill Lynch are confident the slump will be shortlived and investors are paying the smallest premium in two months to protect against a drop in crude from now through the end of the year. “July was a brutal month for the bulls,” said Seth Kleinman, Londonbased head of European energy research at Citigroup Inc. “Supply is going down, demand is still going up. Those lines are going to cross. Have they crossed yet? At this point it’s hard to know.” WTI for September delivery was 33 cents higher at $39.84 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 10:22 am in London after advancing as much as 1 per cent earlier. — Bloomberg Kong — Hang Seng: DOWN 1.5 per cent at 21,800.43; Euro/dollar: DOWN at $1.1204 from $1.1224; Pound/dollar: DOWN at $1.3306 from $1.3354; Dollar/yen: UP at 101.22 yen from 100.90 yen; New York — DOW: DOWN 0.5 per cent at 18,313.77 (close); London — FTSE 100: DOWN 0.7 per cent at 6,645.40 (close). —AFP Axa H1 profit rises on life, health earnings MUNICH: Axa SA, France’s biggest insurer, said first-half profit rose 4 per cent as increased earnings from life and health insurance helped offset higher claims from natural catastrophes. Net income climbed to 3.2 billion euros ($3.6 billion) from 3.1 billion euros a year earlier, the Paris-based company said in a statement on Wednesday. That missed the 3.6 billion-euro average estimate of five analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Thomas Buberl was appointed to take over as Axa’s CEO after Henri de Castries unexpectedly said he would leave the company in September. Buberl, 43, plans to increase Axa’s profitability through 2020 by seeking 2.1 billion euros of cost cuts and growing digital investments. Growing earnings is increasingly difficult for insurers like Axa and Allianz SE as competition for premiums intensifies and quantitative easing hurts income from investments. “Our balance sheet remains very strong with a Solvency II ratio at 197 per cent, well within our target range,” Buberl said in the statement. The ratio, a measure of an insurer’s ability to absorb losses under regulatory rules introduced in Europe this year, stood at 205 per cent a year ago. Axa’s target range is from 170 per cent to 230 per cent. Axa rose as much as 3 per cent in Paris trading and was down 0.4 per cent at 17.32 euros as of 9:25 am. The stock has fallen 32 per cent this year, giving the company a market value of about 41.9 billion euros. The Bloomberg Europe 500 Insurance Index declined 22 per cent over the same period. — Bloomberg A money changer counts Turkish lira bills at an currency exchange office in central Istanbul, Turkey. — Reuters UK services shrink most since 2009 LONDON: Britain’s services sector, the largest part of the economy, is shrinking at the fastest pace in seven years, adding weight to arguments for the Bank of England to loosen policy this week. Markit said its Purchasing Managers Index plunged to 47.4 in July from 52.3 in June, below the 50 level that signals contraction. The gauge hasn’t been this weak since March 2009, when the BoE cut its benchmark interest rate to a record low and launched quantitative easing to aid the economy. Surveys of confidence and business activity have slumped since Britain’s decision in June to quit the European Union, and the BoE is expected to respond with fresh stimulus when it announces its next policy decision on Thursday. Markit said its services, manufacturing and construction indexes are signalling a quarterly economic contraction of 0.4 per cent. “It’s too early to say if the surveys will remain in such weak territory in coming months, leaving substantial uncertainty over the extent of any potential downturn,” said Chris Williamson, Chief Economist at Markit in London. The latest report comes as the National Institute of Economic and Social Research warns of a “marked” slowdown in UK growth as Brexit damps investment and consumer spending. They expect the BoE’s Monetary Policy Committee to reduce its key rate to 0.1 per cent from 0.5 per cent currently, with cuts this week and in November. — Bloomberg p pers p pective business OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U S T 4 l 2 0 1 6 DEBT TRAP 21 China’s robotics rush gets its debt out of control NATHANIEL TAPLIN D own a side street bracketed by massage parlours and cheap hotels in this city on the banks of the Yangtze river, a humanoid food service robot trundles around the corner of a table in a cafe, red eyes flashing in tune with synthesised classical music. The Wuhu Hands On Café’s waiter, named ‘Hero,’ has no customers on a drizzly Friday morning. He is, though, a symbol of Wuhu city’s hopes of becoming a major centre for robotics, and the local government’s ability to chase that dream through the debt markets, whether it makes commercial sense or not. ‘Hero’ was the result of six months research at a nearby robotics park that has cost 2.2 billion yuan ($332 million) to establish. For the park’s next stage, including a hotel, an exhibition centre and a cultural plaza, Wuhu is raising another 1.2 billion yuan through a socalled local government finance vehicle (LGFV), and offering a raft of incentives for firms to set up there. The problem is it is not alone. Dozens of other medium-sized Chinese cities like Wuhu, which is west of Shanghai in Anhui province and has a population of around four million, have similar robotics park plans. And the ease with which municipalities can use off balance Beijing’s drive to make the nation a leader in robotics through its ‘Made in China 2025’ initiative launched last year has set off a rush as municipalities up and down the country vie to become China’s robotics centre. A robot is presented at Wuhu robotics centre in Wuhu, Anhui Province, China. companies like LGFVs to finance infrastructure — some needed, some not — is rapidly boosting China’s already high debt burden. Meanwhile, investors gambling that Beijing will not allow the debt to default while infrastructure remains a critical support for growth, have bid up LGFV bonds to new highs. Beijing’s drive to make the nation a leader in robotics through its ‘Made in China 2025’ initiative launched last year has set off a rush as municipalities up and down the country vie to become China’s robotics centre. The investment boom comes as the industry is already showing warning signs of overcapacity, despite increasing demand for robots in auto manufacturing and electronics. Growth in demand for industrial robots in China fell by more than two- thirds to 17 per cent in 2015 — and yet more than 40 robotics parks have sprouted throughout the country in the last two years, according to industry data. In June, the National Business Daily reported Vice Minister of Industry and Information Technology Xin Guobin warning that China’s robotics industry is showing signs of over investment and of “a high-end sector becoming low-end.” China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology had no immediate comment when contacted. LGFVs first gained popularity in China in the 1990s as a way to fund municipal projects without running afoul of new restrictions on cities’ official borrowing. They played a key role in shoring up economic growth in the global financial crisis but also became a major source of China’s debt burden. Outstanding debt was $26.56 trillion, or 255 per cent of gross domestic product at the end of 2015, up from 220 per cent just two years before, according to the Bank for International Settlements. A short-lived crackdown by Beijing on LGFV financing in late 2014 was quickly watered down as growth sputtered to a twenty-five year low last year. In China as a whole, LGFV bond financing climbed 72 per cent in the first five months of 2016 from the same period last year to 740 billion yuan, while the vehicles’ total outstanding bond debt now stands at around five trillion yuan, according to Everbright Securities data sourced from the Chinese information provider WIND. “Loads of infrastructure-investing companies are exhausting every means they can get to get money,” says Li Yujian at Bohai Trust, which offers high-interest loans to companies who cannot get all the financing they need in mainstream debt markets. For a command economy, China has a very decentralised fiscal system with local governments responsible for about 85 per cent of fiscal spending but receiving only 50 per cent of tax revenues. Officials turn to debt to fill the gap. As a result, Beijing often lacks a clear picture of what local governments are doing, and cities have little reliable data on their neighbours, leading to a dangerous tendency for duplication — especially when Beijing throws its weight behind a given sector, like robotics. The convoluted work-arounds to funnel cash to oftentimes risky local projects also tend to muddy the question of who is actually responsible should matters go awry. “We are just a financing platform. We raise money and we lend it out,” says Yang Bin of the Wuhu city-owned Jiujiang Area Construction Investment Corporation, which sold the bonds for the robotic centre’s expansion. The money will be spent by building contractors for the robotics park. There are also local and central government subsidies to attract firms to use the facilities. The lynchpin of this elaborate edifice remains government backing, implicit and sometimes explicit. Market participants say investing in LGFV debt is essentially a bet on Beijing’s interest in keeping credit flowing smoothly to local governments. “All of those companies have very weak standard credit metrics. The reason they can borrow is because of local government support, which depends on central government policy,” says Jie Peng of Western Asset Management in Singapore, which invests in some LGFV debt in large Chinese cities. The support, including a 3.2 trillion yuan Beijing-backed local government debt swap last year, means LGFVs can offer relatively high interest rates while allowing bondholders to feel they are not likely to be heavily exposed to the consequences if investments sour. The yield to maturity on the Jiujiang Area Construction Investment Corporation’s 1.2 billion yuan bond is 3.8 per cent, about 0.5 of a percentage point higher than official local government debt in the same part of China. To many investors, that looks like a good deal — LGFV debt has outperformed most other corporate debt over the past year as defaults in other sectors have risen. The local debt boom, though, has raised fears of a new round of wasted investment. Elsewhere in China, cities are building gargantuan sports stadiums, far bigger than they need; hundreds of amusement parks, many of which do not have the attractions to compete against rivals in neighbouring towns; and innovation centres without enough entrepreneurs. — Reuters *What’s the big deal about India’s *Bitcoin tanks after TAX POLICY VIRTUAL CURRENCY Hong Kong exchange ‘hacked’ goods and services tax? UNNI KRISHNAN A I ndia’s decade-long wait for a national sales tax that will create one of the world’s biggest single markets could be almost over. On Wednesday evening, lawmakers in the upper house of parliament may finally vote on a constitutional amendment to enable the goods-and-services tax, known as GST. Once fully implemented, the tax will go a long way towards fulfilling Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s pledge to make it easier to do business in the world’s fastest-growing big economy. Q: What is the GST? The GST will replace at least 17 state and federal levies, making the movement of goods cheaper and seamless across a market holding 1.3 billion consumers, about four times the US population. It would be far simpler than the current system, where a good is taxed multiple times at different rates. The underlying principle is to tax goods at the point of consumption rather than production. What economic impact will it have? GST can boost economic growth by as much as 2 percentage points, according to Finance Minister Arun Jaitley. Greater tax compliance has the potential to boost revenues for the government, helping narrow Asia’s widest budget deficit and allowing more funds to be allocated to schools and highways. How early could we see these results? They may start to show up gradually in the fiscal year starting April 1, 2017. That’s because there are still some steps before the GST can be fully implemented. What obstacles are remaining? Once the bill clears the Upper House, the government will seek passage in the Lower House, where Modi’s ruling party has the numbers for approval. The legislation will then need to be ratified by at least half of India’s states, which could happen over the next few months. Once that is done, parliament needs to introduce at least one more bill detailing GST can boost economic growth by as much as 2 percentage points. Greater tax compliance has the potential to boost revenues for the government, helping narrow Asia’s widest budget deficit and allowing more funds to be allocated to schools and highways. the structure of the tax, which includes a state GST and a central GST. The earliest this could occur would be the socalled winter session of parliament that normally starts in November. What is the tax rate? That won’t be announced for months. The constitutional amendment bill would create a GST Council comprising the nation’s finance minister as well as representatives from the states. This body will determine the final rate. Modi’s top economic adviser and the main opposition Congress party want to cap the rate at around 18 per cent, while some states want a higher levy. Globally, rates for similar consumption taxes range from 5 per cent to 27 per cent, and the median for OECD countries is about 20 per cent. Why didn’t India’s founders implement a national sales tax? The constitution laid out the method of taxation in 1950, soon after several socalled princely states — territories ruled by a native monarch under the British Emperor — agreed to join the Dominion of India. Different levels of economic development and local sensitivities necessitated a two-tier system at the time. Are all goods and services covered under the GST? In negotiations over the GST, some state governments have managed to exempt chief revenue-generating products such as alcohol, petroleum and real estate. The GST Council may also decide to tax certain luxuries — such as a flat-screen TV, for example — at a far higher rate than food staples. How will the GST affect companies? Companies will have to overhaul their accounting systems, which may involve one-time investment costs. There may also be chaos in the short term as the government gets the computer software up and running. Will the GST affect inflation? Prepare for a short-term spike in prices. Citigroup Inc’s economists say countries like Canada, Australia and New Zealand saw a one-time increase in inflation after GST implementation, which normalised in a year. Modi’s advisers say the impact on India’s consumer prices will be negligible if the GST rate is capped at 18 per cent. If the rate is around 22 per cent, then they project inflation to accelerate 0.3 per cent to 0.7 per cent — mostly due to education and health services. What sectors will benefit? Logistics companies stand to gain as it becomes easier to ferry goods across India. Other sectors largely depend on the fine print of the GST, including exemptions. — Bloomberg major Hong Kong-based Bitcoin exchange has suspended trading after $65 million in the virtual unit was reportedly stolen by hackers — sending the digital currency plunging more than 20 per cent. Bitfinex said it had suspended all transactions after discovering that some users’ Bitcoins had been taken. “Today we discovered a security breach that requires us to halt all trading on Bitfinex, as well as halt all digital token deposits to and withdrawals from Bitfinex,” the company said in a statement posted on its website late on Tuesday. “We are investigating the breach to determine what happened... we will look at various options to address customer losses later in the investigation,” it said. Bloomberg News reported hackers took 119,756 Bitcoins, or about $65 million at current prices, from the platform. The value of the often-volatile currency plunged on Wednesday to as low as $482.82 from $603.06 on Tuesday, according to Bloomberg News data, before rising to $539.53 on Wednesday afternoon. “Yes, it is a large breach,” said Fred Ehrsam, co-founder of Coinbase, a cryptocurrency wallet and trading platform. “Bitfinex is a large exchange, so it is a significant short-term event, although Bitcoin has shown its resiliency to these sorts of events in the past.” The breach is the latest blow to digital currencies after the ‘New York Times’ reported in June that hackers diverted more than $50 million from an experimental fund of another platform that trades Ether, a similar unit to Bitcoin. But the biggest case was in 2014, when the Tokyo-based Mt Gox trading exchange, then the largest in the world, declared bankruptcy when hundreds of millions of dollars in Bitcoins were vanished or were stolen. The company admitted 850,000 coins — worth around $480 million at the time — had disappeared from its digital vaults. The collapse left a trail of angry investors calling for answers and denting the virtual currency’s reputation. Its former CEO Mark Karpeles is facing allegations that he fraudulently manipulated data and pocketed the cash. His lawyers said last month he had been released on bail in Japan a year after his arrest on embezzlement charges. In the wake of the scandal, Japanese lawmakers passed a bill stipulating that all “virtual currency” exchanges must be regulated by the country’s Financial Services Agency. Bitcoins are generated by complex chains of interactions among a huge network of computers around the planet, and are not backed by any government or central bank. Bitcoin was launched in 2009 as a bit of software written under the Japanese-sounding name Satoshi Nakamoto. — AFP THURSDAY l AUGUST 4, 2016 editor@omanobserver.om www.omanobserver.om RENTING & LEASING Tours and Airport Transfer Tel: 24582663 GSM: 95859497, Fax: 24582664, abcrent@omantel.net.om ····· RENT a car daily or yearly. ͻͳͳͻͻͻͲǤ ····· 4WD Land Cruiser Rent A Car, daily or yearly. ͻͳͳͻͻͻͲǤ ····· Supply of Pesticides, Gel (Cockroaches), Public Health chemicals, Agriculture chemicals, Snake repellent, Rodent baits and other insect repellent from Agropharm Ltd UK. PROFESSIONALS in Pest Control Service, Bedbug Treatment, Rodent Treatment, Snake Treatment and Termite Treatment (Pre and Post Construction). Tel: 24787606 / 24787503 Fax: 24787607 E-mail: pcomctom@omantel.net.om P. O. 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Looking for suitable position in ϐ Ǥ Presently working as a legal adviser. NOC available. 97351649. E-mail: advocatesharaf@ gmail.com ····· AZOOZ House of truest Providing all type of workers skill and unskilled from Filipino, Sri Lanka, India and Bangladesh. Email: deing651@hotmai.com 95330209/ 24831448. - 2 General doctors. - 1 Specialist obstetrician and gynaecologist. - 2 Paediatrician and specialist. - 1 Dermatologist. - 1 Spec phys otorhinolaryngology. - 2 X-Ray technicians. - 2 LAB technicians. ····· Situation Wanted ····· ····· REQUIRED Marketing/ PR Manager for a modern restaurant group in Oman. ϐ Photoshop. Charismatic, ǡ ϐǤ Excellent writing/editing skills. Degree in relevant area. Fluent in English. Send CV to marketingpr2016@gmail.com ····· A LEADING international ϐ information technology headquarter in Ruwi seeks an Omani female (secretary) holder of general diploma ϐ Wilayat Muttrah. The CV is emailed to rm.allawaty@gmail.com ····· URGENTLY required Building Technician. 98111363. ····· SUBCONTRACTORS required: SME contractors interested in telecom side — civil and underground telephone cable laying work — may contact Mr S Ravi 99424605 or Mr Sayed.99358733 of National Telephone Services Co LLC. PRIVATE medical centre in Mudhaibi requires females physicians in the following specialties: Obstetrics and gynaecology 1, Dermatologists & Cosmetologist 1, Dentist 1, Pharmacist 1, Nurses 3 93553245. ····· ····· ABU Sultan Trad. Steel fabrication workshop shade store gate car parking skib tank, all type of steel making. 923200920 Nazam. Barka Industrial Area. ····· ····· PROVIDES all kinds of legal works, LLC registration, agreements, contracts. Takes all kinds of cases of companies.97351649. ····· Ad agency background —Art Director/Sr Graphic Designer seeks job. Branding and print media with NOC. 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E-mail: prsabarish@gmail. com ····· INDIAN male graduate Civil Engineer from Muscat college, holding 2 years employment visa and D/L, seeks suitable placement. Contact 99315714. ····· INDIAN male, age 25, looking for suitable placement in sales and marketing. Having 2 years of Indian experience. Contact 97939084, 97351786. E-mail: mohammedusr126@ gmail.com. ····· INDIAN male, B.Tech (ECE) MBA (HR), 2 years of experience CCNA, CCNP and hands on practice on LINUX, MCSE, looking for suitable job, presently on employment visa, release available. Contact email: syedvizarat7@gmail. com 95584814 ····· INDIAN Commerce graduate with MBA Finance, having 9 years experience seeks suitable placement. Contact 0096893655079, 00919916317946 ····· AUTOCAD Civil Draftsman, having experience in road projects. Preparing plan ϐǡǧ and structural drawings. 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Currently at Muscat in family visit visa. 94907670/ 94517141. Email: jenisylviad@gmail.com ····· INDIAN male, 24 years civil engineer working in Oman, NOC available professional in building design, seeks job. 90342980. Email: marvinthomas06@gmail.com ····· For Sale For Rent USED CARS FOR SALE DIESEL Tanker, 1,600 gallon Volvo, 1987. 92836774. MERCEDES Benz C180 Model 2009 (234677Km run) in good running condition for sale. Further, Hyundai Sonata car Model 2003 (305684Km run) and Mazda 323 car Model 2001 (585273Km run) - for sale on asis-where-is basis. These can be inspected at NTS Camp in Ghala. ····· A COMMERCIAL residential plot, 594 sqm, have a title ϐ Seeb Municipality, has a corner open to two streets, RO 150,000. 95123578. Manpower WE provide cleaning and loading staff. MODERN SPARKLE LLC. +968 95367541. a) Carpenter -2 nos. b) Mason - 5 nos. c) Steel Fixer - 3 nos. d) Helper - 5 nos. e) Tile Mason - 5 nos. please send email to INDIAN female, IT graduate, BE (Hons) Systems Administration with 2 years experience in teaching, seeks suitable position in education/training industry, communication. 96447091. fatimahaq24@ outlook.com ····· MBA, HR Marketing (male 26), 3 years experience in Noor Islamic Bank (UAE), 1 year HR Coordinator looking for suitable placement. 901462412, mabeenkottekaran@gmail.com ····· Announcement THE company (Jasim Al Jabri and Partner Trade. (Partnership)) registered with the Directorate of Commerce and Industry in South Al Sharqiyah Governorate announces that it is changing its commercial name into the company of The Modern Elevated House (Partnership) and who is objecting to the ϐ objection at the Directorate of Commerce and Industry of South Al Sharqiyah Governorate. ····· Lost ROWENA Arcega has lost Filipino passport No EC4020330. Finder please handover to ROP. ····· AKHIL Thulasidharan Pillai has lost Indian passport No J9907590. Finder please handover to ROP. ····· Intersted parties may contact on 99259157/ 93891398. Sealed offers with vehicle-wise quote should be submitted on or before 4th August 2016 with security deposit. ····· INDIAN male, 29 years, BSc graduate with Omani driving licence and 7 years of sales experience in home appliances, IT products, ϐ equipment. Currently working on employment visa, NOC available, seeking for suitable placement immediately. 97890607, ashrafambar@ gmail.com URGENTLY REQUIRED A reputed Group requires following construction workers with local release for visa transfer. SHOP FOR SALE Tiles & sanitary wares showroom, Rustaq Sanaiya (before Jabreen Showroom). 97844477, 97844474. ····· GP Clinic (16 years) run by couple doctors for sale at Madha, Musandam region, Oman with or without sponsorship. 92510642, 26739221. ····· DENTAL clinic (modern) in Sohar. 91163316. ····· ····· 2007 model Toyota Corolla (1.8) in excellent condition, maintained by dealer, single owner (doctor) for sale 92510642, 26739221. ····· RESTAURANT in an excellent location in Salalah with equipment and workers. 93397812. A SHOWROOM in Al Qurum in strategic location with extravagant interior design on 280 sqm is offered for sale at RO 25,000. 92470024. ····· FOR sale: Extravagant and furnished residences for female students in Al Khuwair, Al Mawaleh and Al Khoudh along with all assets. 99001332. ͳȎ behind GUtech is offered for sale. The land enjoys a permit for twin-villa. 2) A LAND is for sale in Al Maabela 8 owner. 95959166. ····· ····· ····· 99639264 Ali al Maashari ali.almashari@omandaily.om ANNEX in Al Khoudh A’Sad Street, 2 bedrooms + sitting room and others. 98881738. MDRAFIQUL Islam has lost Bangladeshi passport No AC6918479. Finder please handover to ROP. ····· SUMON Ahmed Chowdaury has lost Bangladeshi passport No AD3691613. Finder please handover to ROP. ····· ····· TWO ϐ Al Hamriya main road. 99331448. MD Suhel Miah has lost Bangladeshi passport No AF8084681. Finder please handover to ROP. ····· ····· AGRICULTURAL Land of 60,000 sqm at the public road with no well. 94380002. ALA Audin has lost Bangladeshi passport No AF4384523. Finder please handover to ROP. ····· ····· DELUXE villa at M/Sultan ϐ Khuwair (A/CS), MBD and Walja Ruwi. 97167846. ····· ǧand ϐ Maabela consists of 3 bedrooms, sitting room and toilets for each room + sitting room and kitchen close to water source. 99700908. ····· Rent/Investment Industrial land in Rusayil, suitable for all industrial work and business99323957, 95490842. ····· Guest House QURUM BEACH HOTEL24564070. ····· 99841230 Mohammed al Rashdi m.alrahdi86@yahoo.com 94501166 DIRECT: 24649595 — FAX : 24649590 international business b i 24 OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U ST 4 l 2 0 1 6 Online shopping helps Deutsche Post German logistics group Deutsche Post said on Wednesday it had achieved its strongest-ever secondquarter operating result, boosted in large part by online shopping. „Our Post, eCommerce and Parcel division in particular contributed to the positive trend“ that saw Deutsche Post increase its net profit to 541 million euros ($606 million), a 66 per cent leap over the same period in 2015, chief executive said. Why rise of one per cent makes Yellen’s job harder JEANNA SMIALEK I ncome inequality could be making Janet Yellen’s job even harder. Rich Americans spend less of their pay cheques than households of more modest means. As the top one per cent accounts for an increasing share of the nation’s income, it may be reducing consumption, hurting growth and boosting savings. That could be contributing to rock-bottom interest rates that have left the Federal Reserve chair with little scope to ease in the next recession. Take David Levine, a former chief economist at Sanford C Bernstein & Co who’s been a member of the one per cent for decades. Levine says he’s “not living frugally” yet still spends only about a fifth of his income to maintain a very comfortable lifestyle on Manhattan’s affluent upper west side. Contrast that with a middle-class American family. Those making between $70,000 and $80,000 spent about 78 per cent of their incomes in 2014. The debate about income inequality, and the general lack of wage growth for America’s middle class, is being amplified as a social issue by this year’s presidential race. Now economists are taking a harder look at what it means for growth, and at a follow-on implication. By boosting savings and reducing overall demand in the economy, America’s large income divide could be one factor lowering the so-called neutral setting for interest rates, a theoretical concept that describes the interest rate that neither spurs nor slows growth. The neutral rate matters for monetary policy makers: if it settles at a lower level, it means policy is able to provide less stimulus than in the past and officials have less room to support the economy by cutting rates the next time recession strikes. That would matter for everyone. “There’s going to be a lot of interest in ways that we can increase that neutral rate,” said Gauti Eggertsson, a Brown The debate about income inequality, and the general lack of wage growth for America’s middle class, is being amplified as a social issue by this year’s presidential race. University economist who is researching the topic. “If inequality is playing a role there, that might suggest fiscal policy has a role to play.” Eggertsson and his colleague Neil Mehrotra are trying to quantify how much inequality is weighing on interest rates. They expect to release their findings by early next year in a study that may be the first of its kind, though it builds on well-established theories. Economists are almost positive that the neutral rate has fallen in the aftermath of the financial crisis. It’s hard to pin a precise number on the theoretical concept, but San Francisco Fed President John Williams and his co-author Thomas Laubach found in a recent paper that the rate in the US probably fell to 0.4 per cent adjusted for inflation in 2015, down from 2.3 per cent in 2007. The neutral setting is expected to rise over time as the economy returns to its full potential, but expectations for that longer-run rate have also dipped. Fed officials’ median projection stood at 3 per cent in June before counting for inflation, down from 3.75 per cent a year earlier. Various forces could be driving the drop, but much of it boils down to a lack of demand — and that’s where inequality comes in. According to secular stagnation, a theory developed by economist Alvin Hansen in the late 1930s, lower population growth rates cause an oversupply of savings, suppress aggregate demand and drive down growth. Harvard economist Lawrence Summers has suggested the 2008 crisis may have ushered in a new era of such mediocrity. As a result, the short-term neutral rate of interest may be lastingly lower. Higher inequality has caused a shift toward saving, Summers said in a 2014 speech. “Reduced investment demand and increased propensity to save operate in the direction of a lower equilibrium real interest rate,” he said. Last year, the top one per cent of American households took home $1 million in income on average, not including capital gains, and held 18 per cent of the total income share in the country, based on data from the World Wealth and Income Database. That’s up from 13.5 per cent two decades earlier and 8 per cent in 1960. Levine, who is a member of the inequality-focused network Responsible Wealth, retired in 1999 at age 52 after a career on Wall Street. Even though he lives off a small part of his investment income, that’s still sufficient to maintain a home on Central Park West and a house in the country, while indulging a love of fine dining — he recently took a party of nine or 10 guests to Del Posto in New York, where a five-course dinner starts at $149 a head before beverages. Levine said that today’s CEOs and top earners also live on a fraction of their income. “Even those with the very highest incomes probably don’t have consumption expenditures for the most part that are bigger than $5 million, $10 million — it’s hard to spend more than that.” While saved money finds its way back into the economy in other ways — money parked at banks can be lent, for instance — at the end of the day, money may stimulate less demand in the hands of the rich because the overall demand in the economy for discretionary products and services is reduced. “It’s a kind of chicken and egg thing — just having money in the bank doesn’t mean that there are profitable lending opportunities,” said John Schmitt, Research Director at the Washington Centre for Equitable Growth. “If they’re sitting on all this money, they have a sense that there’s not enough demand out there.” What’s up for debate is how significant of a factor inequality is in actually lowering rates. Eggertsson said that his preliminary works suggests it has played some role, and he suspects that it’s “nontrivial” — though the research will need to bear that out. Not everyone agrees. Former Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota said that while the prospect that inequality is lowering the neutral rate is “very interesting argument and it’s one that’s worth pursuing — it’s not one that immediately strikes me as being compelling.” Kocherlakota, who is a Bloomberg View columnist, reasons that inequality has been climbing for a long time, yet the neutral rate’s major moves, based on most models, have come since the financial crisis. Others, including Schmitt, argue that inequality’s full effects didn’t manifest themselves in the run-up to the housing crash because middle-class households boosted borrowing and spent out of their home wealth to mask their falling share of overall national income. It could create room for action if inequality is part of the reason interest rates are lower. Fiscal policies can be designed to lessen inequality. There’s no real solution to structural forces that have pushed down neutral rates, like the aging of the population. “Some of these forces are unlikely to revert back,” Eggertsson said. And society may find that it wants natural rates higher, because the lower they are, the less ammunition monetary policy can provide in a crisis. “We’re one shock away from hitting the zero bound again — that can create difficulties.” — Bloomberg The 28-year-old activist who took on Facebook and won ADAM SATARIANO AND STEPHANIE BODONI A new US-European Union data-privacy accord that took hold this week could have been a reason to celebrate for Max Schrems, the 28-year-old whose successful landmark lawsuit against Facebook last year led to the new rules affecting more than 4,000 companies. Instead, he’s saying the new rules should be thrown out as well. Schrems says the new framework is muddled, allowing mass amounts of data collected by American technology companies to continue making its way to US national security agencies. He expects the new policy to be struck down again by courts, leaving global companies further in limbo. “Privacy Shield is the product of pressure by the US and the IT industry — not of rational or reasonable considerations, “Schrems’’ said in a statement after the rules, which began on August 1, were passed by European lawmakers last month. ‘‘It is very likely to fail again.’’ Such predictions from a boyishlooking law student who works from an apartment in Vienna would have been shrugged off a few years ago. But after Schrems’s lawsuit led Europe’s highest court to overturn a longstanding agreement that was used by the world‘s biggest companies to transfer Internet data across the Atlantic, his threats are taken more seriously. ‘‘He’s as big of a disrupter as Snowden,’’ says Robert Bond, a veteran privacy attorney with the firm Charles Russell Speechlys LLC in London, referring to the former security contractor who leaked US secrets. ‘‘What he’s done has had a considerable impact on business.’’ At issue is the transfer and sharing of data from Europe to the US — all The rules governing the movement of the data, a 16-year-old pact called Safe Harbor, had never been given much thought outside of legal circles. Schrems‘s lawsuit changed that, with Europe‘s highest court saying they didn‘t adequately protect the privacy rights of European citizens. the Google searches, Facebook ‘‘likes,’’ and e-commerce transactions that companies use to refine its products and boost advertising. The rules governing the movement of the data — a 16-yearold pact called Safe Harbor — had never been given much thought outside of legal circles. Schrems’s lawsuit changed that, with Europe’s highest court saying they didn‘t adequately protect the privacy rights of European citizens. Companies were forced to scramble to strike new private contracts to transfer data legally to business partners and affiliates on the other side of the Atlantic — a more costly and cumbersome process than having a single standard like Privacy Shield. The new rules aim to address the concerns among many Europeans that their data is being misused by US government agencies. Privacy Shield creates new protections about how the data of Europeans is used, including guarantees that it won‘t be collected by intelligence agencies without justification, and the right to go to court if they think it’s being mishandled. Yet with the new rules likely to be challenged again in court, some companies are waiting to adopt them and instead are sticking to other legally binding contracts. ‘‘We are evaluating the text to decide if we will join the scheme,’’ Facebook said in a statement. Microsoft yesterday said that it would be adopting Privacy Shield. ‘‘We have a right to privacy in the constitution of the European Union; it’s like the US freedom of speech.’’ Privacy activist Max Schrems: Schrems acts the part of an online activist. He arrives late to a recent interview dressed in black shorts, black T-shirt and flip flops, rubbing his eyes after oversleeping. Once discussing the minutia of European privacy law, he perks up, speaking in mile-a-minute paragraphs dotted with profanity. His interest in privacy was piqued in 2011. Studying abroad in the heart of Silicon Valley, at Santa Clara University, attorneys from area technology companies including Facebook spoke to his class. He noticed a common misunderstanding — or disregard — for European data protection laws. ‘‘They didn’t know a European was in the room,’’ he says. As part of a research project, Schrems requested from Facebook all the data the company gathered on him dating back to when he started his account in 2008. He was shocked to find messages regarding a friend’s medical condition he thought were deleted. He filed 22 complaints against Facebook with the Data Protection Commissioner in Ireland, where Facebook has its European headquarters, over its use of people’s personal information. In 2013, when revelations about mass access to people’s data by US secret services broke, Schrems filed a new complaint against Facebook over its transfer of data to the US, where it wasn’t adequately protected. The case ended up in the EU Court of Justice, which sided with Schrems. He says the implicit contract people make by trading their personal data in exchange for free online services has gotten out of balance in favour of industry. ‘‘We have a right to privacy in the constitution of the European Union; it’s like the US freedom of speech,’’ Schrems says. Critics say Schrems and other privacy advocates are seeking unrealistic solutions. The new rules strike a better balance by providing Europeans with protections that weren‘t available previously, said Eduardo Ustaran, a lawyer specialising in privacy law at Hogan Lovells International LLP in London. ‘‘Policymakers need to be ambitious and realistic in equal measure,’’ he said. Schrems’s battle is one of many regulatory challenges US technology companies are facing in Europe. Google is being investigated for antitrust violations related to its search engine, advertising business and Android mobile operating system. Apple is facing what could be a multi-billion dollar tax bill for unpaid taxes in Ireland. And while Privacy Shield effects the transAtlantic movement of data, new rules starting in 2018 could have a tougher effect about how technology companies collect data within Europe. Taken together, the issues are challenging the borderless view adopted by technology companies that what they’ve created in the US will transfer seamlessly abroad. The technology industry has warned against the ‘‘Balkanisation’’ of the Internet, where a patchwork of regional laws creates different Internet experiences based on location. Schrems doesn’t see that as such a bad thing — likening it to McDonald’s changing its menu to appeal to local markets. ‘‘There’s this idea that one size fits all and the one size is made in Silicon Valley,’’ Schrems says. Schrems is happy he helped dent that view in Europe, but after being supported largely with family support during his legal tussles with Facebook, he still has a PhD dissertation to complete that he hasn’t made much progress on for about a year. He says he may eventually establish a nongovernmental organisation that will investigate and sue companies for privacy violations. ‘‘I’m basically working from home without any infrastructure and we still got a huge case done,’’ he says. ‘‘If you put that in a professional setting, you could possibly get a lot done.’’ — Bloomberg THURSDAY | AUGUST 4, 2016 | SHAWWAL 30, 1437 AH sport WILL RIO GAMES SET A RECORD FOR WOMEN ATHLETES? P26 www.omanobserver.om editor@omanobserver.om RAIN STALLS INDIA MARCH TOWARDS WIN OVER WINDIES P27 OMAN GEAR UP FOR ASIAN CUP QUALIFIERS P28 A DAY TO GO A Japanese gymnast practices on the vault of the men’s artistic gymnastics ahead of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. — AFP Olympic chiefs struggle to contain Russia doping scandal RIO DE JANEIRO: The Olympic movement struggled to douse mounting wrangling over the Russia doping scandal as football prepared to launch the Rio Games on Wednesday. International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Thomas Bach called for deep reforms of the World Anti-Doping Agency, while the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) rebuffed appeals by 17 Russian rowers against their exclusion from the Rio Olympics. With appeals involving a dozen other Russian swimmers, wrestlers and weightlifters still to be decided, the controversy over state-run doping blamed on the Russian government threatened to overshadow Friday’s opening ceremony. Late on Tuesday, Brazilian police used tear gas against demonstrators trying to obstruct the tour of the Olympic flame in a Rio de Janeiro suburb. Official competition starts on Wednesday with Marta’s Brazil taking on China in the top tie of the first day of women’s football matches. Zimbabwe’s women, ranked 93rd in the world, take on number-two ranked Germany in their first ever match at the Olympics. On Thursday, football golden boy Neymar’s Brazil start their campaign for a first-ever football gold in a match against South Africa. But sports politicians have been hogging the limelight in the run-up to the Games as they argue over how to answer Russia’s widespread doping. The IOC president said the Russia scandal, which he has described as “contemptuous,” had exposed deficiencies in Wada. International Olympic Committee (IOC) executive member and current president of the World Anti-Doping Agency Craig Reedie arrives for a press briefing during the 129th International Olympic Committee session in Rio de Janeiro. — AFP “Recent developments have shown that we need a full review of the Wada anti-doping system,” he told an IOC session that continues on Wednesday. REEDIE OFFENDED “The IOC is calling for a more robust and efficient anti-doping system,” Bach said. “This requires clear responsibilities, more transparency, more independence and better worldwide harmonisation.” He blasted calls for a “nuclear option” blanket ban on Russian athletes. Other IOC members launched direct attacks on Wada and veiled asides at its British chief Craig Reedie. “It saddens me to say this, but at times Wada has seemed to be more interested in publicity and self-promotion rather than doing its job as a regulator,” Argentina’s IOC member Gerardo Werthein said. Reedie said he was “personally offended” by Werthein’s comments, revealing that he confronted the Argentine during a break in the meeting. “I heard a view this morning that the system is broken,” he told IOC delegates. “I would like to say that all of it is not broken, part of it is broken and we should start identifying those parts that need attention.” The international sports tribunal is holding special hearings in Rio to help the process of deciding how many Russians will compete in Rio. CAS rejected a challenge by 17 Russian rowers against their exclusion from the Olympics over doping, a tribunal official said. Daniil Andrienko led 16 other rowers lodging a case against the World Rowing Federation and the IOC on Monday demanding to compete in Rio. The tribunal must still give a verdict on appeals by three swimmers, a wrestler and the Russian weightlifting federation. Russia has been at the centre of a new doping storm after an independent investigator, Canadian lawyer Richard McLaren, said in a report for Wada that there had been widespread state-backed doping in Russia. In reaction, the IOC ordered sporting federations to draw up lists of Russians who could compete in Rio. The federations have eliminated at least 117 competitors from the group of 387 athletes the Russian Olympic Committee had entered. Once all federations have reported and CAS has ruled on the appeals, a three-member IOC panel will decide the final Russian lineup. Canoeist Andrey Kraytor and wrestler Viktor Lebedev made their own appeals against the order along with swimmers Vladimir Morozov, Nikita Lobintsev and Yulia Efimova. Decisions on the swimmers had been expected on Tuesday. The Russian weightlifting federation is seeking to overturn its suspension by the International Weightlifting Federation over the doping. If successful, it said, the organization would launch a new case on behalf of eight weightlifters banned from the Olympics. On Wednesday, the IOC session is expected to accept that climbing, karate, surfing, skateboarding and baseballsoftball join the Olympic program at the 2020 Tokyo Games. — AFP Pele may light Rio’s Olympic flame the report, which showed the producer of the opening ceremonies, Abel Gomes, meeting in a restaurant with Pele. The report comes amid intense speculation as to who will be the last of the total of 12,494 torch carriers to light the Olympic flame at RIO DE JANEIRO: Brazilian football the stadium. legend Pele may be the person On Wednesday the names of a to light the Olympic flame at the number of prominent names were opening ceremony on Friday — revealed as those chosen to take provided he can clarify it with his part in the torch relay in the streets public relations firm, the news portal of Rio, including footballer Cafu, O Globo reported on Wednesday. football coach Carlos Alberto Parreira, The report said that the 75-yearvolleyballer Jackie Silva, and Helo old Pele had been approached Pinheiro, the inspiration for the song about lighting the flame at Maracana “Girl from Ipanema.” Stadium, but that he said he had Pele - Edson Arantes do to consult with his public relations Nascimento - was three times World company. Cup champion with Brazil and scored Among other factors, Pele noted more than 1,000 goals in his long that he had other appointments on career. Friday, O Globo said. In 1999, Pele was elected Athlete There was no official confirmation of the Century by the International from Rio Olympics officials to Olympic Committee. — dpa Olympics olympics l 26 OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U ST 4 l 2 0 1 6 Phelps to carry US flag at Games opening Swimming star Michael Phelps has been chosen as the US flag bearer at the Olympic Games open, the US Olympic team announced. “I’m honoured to be chosen, proud to represent the US, and humbled by the significance of carrying the flag and all it stands for,” said Phelps. Will the Rio Olympics set a new world record for women athletes? LONDON: The International Olympic Committee (IOC) is hoping the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro will set a new record for the participation of female athletes, beating the last Games where 44 per cent of the competitors were women. With two days to go to the opening ceremony, here are some facts about the path towards gender equality at the Olympics, which will bring together about 11,000 athletes from more than 200 countries: The ancient Greek Olympics were male-only Games. Women were barred from competing and only unmarried women could watch the events but thanks to a loophole, Greek women could win prizes as owners of race horses with male riders. Larisa Latynina in Tokyo olympiad 1964 The first ever female Olympic winner was Kyniska, daughter of King Archidamos of Sparta, whose chariot won the four-horse chariot race at the 96th Olympiads in 396 B.C. When the Olympics were resurrected in the 19th century, women were again initially banned. No female athletes took part in the first modern Olympics in Athens in 1896. The founding father of modern Olympics, Pierre de Coubertin, opposed female participation reportedly on the grounds that it was “impractical, uninteresting, unaesthetic, and incorrect”. Women first appeared at the 1900 Games in Paris, when 22 of 997 entries were female athletes who competed in five sports: tennis, sailing, croquet, equestrianism and golf. At the 1900 Games, Countess Hélène de Pourtalès, of Switzerland, became the first ever female gold medalist as part of a mixed-gender sailing crew. Days later British tennis player Charlotte Cooper became the first woman to win a singles event. In 1991 the IOC decided all new sports wishing to be included on the programme must feature both men’s and women’s events. The 2012 Games were the first where women competed in every single sport on offer. However men could not compete in synchronized swimming and rhythmic gymnastic and are still barred from doing so in Rio. The 2012 London Olympics were the first in which every participating nation fielded at least one female athlete, as Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Brunei which had previously failed to do so, bowed to pressure from the IOC. Pioneer Saudi sportswoman Sarah al Attar (right) has already raced at the Olympics, but now her campaign will become a marathon as she uses the Rio Games to break down barriers in the kingdom. Saudi Arabia is doubling its women’s team in 2016, fielding two runners, a fencer and a judoka. Qatar and Brunei are fielding a woman each. Some sports offering events for both sexes remain biased. Women can compete only in freestyle wrestling, not Greco-Roman. Boxing has only three weight classes for women versus 10 for men. Rugby sevens will debut in Rio as a new sport, marking the first time that women play the game at the Olympics. The United States will be represented in Brazil by the largest women’s team ever fielded by any nation, made of 292 athletes. While the IOC has been promoting gender equality in sport, the number of women holding leadership roles in governing bodies remains low. Only 25 out of the IOC’s 126 members and honorary members are women. Ukrainian gymnast Larisa Latynina is the most successful female Olympian to date, having won nine golds, five silvers and four bronzes for the Soviet Union between 1956 and 1964. Betty B ettty Robinson Rob (US, second from left) was the first 100m female Olympic O lyympic gold medalist in 1928. Ancient Greek Games was only for men. Sreejesh says India staying focused in Rio ‘magic world’ MUMBAI: PR Sreejesh says his dual role as India hockey captain and goalkeeper is to allow his teammates the freedom to express themselves in Rio but knows he must keep them focused on the medal hunt in the “magic world” of the Olympics. The 30-year-old was second choice at London 2012 behind then captain Bharat Chetri but has since established himself as the clear number one. He was named captain for the recent Champions Trophy in London where India rested some seniors, including regular captain Sardar Singh, ahead of the Rio Games. While Sreejesh led the side to the sliver medal, as India lost the final to Australia in a penalty shoot-out, he said he never imagined it would lead to him wearing the armband at the Rio Games too. “I never expected it,” Sreejesh said in a recent interview. “I have always said being part of the team and winning a medal for my country was my first preference. “I never dreamt of captaining the team and leading the side in the Olympics. It’s a great honour.” Sreejesh has been a rock for India in front of goal since making the junior national team in 2004. It took him another couple of years to make the cut for the senior side. He made crucial saves during the 2014 Asian Games final when India beat arch-rivals Pakistan, which sealed their spot for Rio. In 2015, Sreejesh received the Arjuna award for his contribution to the national team. Sreejesh said the captaincy would not have a huge influence on his role. “I am a goalkeeper. My first duty is to save the goal,” he said by telephone from the team’s training camp in Bengaluru. “The second is to communicate with my defenders and organise them. “Third is I need to give them confidence as a goalkeeper. I think as captain too I have to do these three things. There is no extra burden on me. “It’s all about giving them the freedom to do what they want. “Olympics is a place where you can Star Indian goalkeeper PR Sreejesh said the captaincy would not have a huge influence on his role. be easily distracted to a lot of things and it will seem like a magic world. It will all be about reminding them our goal as a team.” India are the most decorated nation in the sport’s Olympic history but the South Asians collected the last of their eight gold medals back at the Moscow Games in 1980. After failing to qualify for Beijing, India made it to London four years later but finished last of the 12 countries taking part. India, who are in Pool B in Rio along with Argentina, Canada, Germany, Ireland and the Netherlands, have created optimism back home thanks after a strong build-up to the Games. Sreejesh feels India have the right balance between youth and experience, with a number of players from London 2012 still part of the mix for Rio. Consistency will be the key, he added. “The last couple of years has given us confidence. We have beaten all the top teams and won medals,” he added. “It has given us confidence that now we are ready to beat any team and we will carry that to Rio.” — Reuters Chinese athletes and netizens round on Rio B EIJIING Chinese Internet users BEIJING: h avve accu have accused the Rio Olympics of b eiingg unsafe uns and inferior to Beijing’s being 22008 0008 off offering after athletes said th hey w ere robbed and faced broken they were fa acilitties. facilities. Ch hine hurdler Shi Dongpeng Chinese to old d sstate tate media that his personal told com mputer was stolen on arrival computer in n Br razil posting security camera Brazil, im magees o images of the alleged thief on his vverified errifieed social so media account. “L Losin money will help me “Losing avo av oid d gre avoid greater misfortune,” he wrote p hiilossoph philosophically. Ta able tennis star Fan Zhendong Table sshowed howed pictures on the Weibo so ociaal media me service of himself and social tteammate eam mmate Zhang Jike fixing a broken shower curtain rail in the Olympic village. London Olympic medal-winning gymnast Feng Zhe weighed in on a verified social media account with his own complaint about a clogged toilet in a training centre. Chinese Olympic-goers have been victims of “frequent” theft in Brazil, China’s foreign ministry said last week in a warning to its citizens abroad to take greater safety precautions. The warning received widespread coverage in China, which hosted impressive Games at a massive cost eight years ago, generating much national pride. “The environment of the Rio Olympics is too poor. Play me more clips of the 2008 Beijing Olympics,” one Weibo user said, expressing a common sentiment. Chen Ying, of state broadcaster CCTV, wrote on Weibo: “Started my Rio Adventure! I feel like I’m shooting a Wilderness Survival instead of reporting the Olympics.” Chinese screenwriter Zhou Yu quipped: “I feel that it’s necessary to send a peacekeeping force so the Olympics can be successfully held.” China are sending their largest team to an overseas Olympics, but forecasters predict the 416 athletes will fail to match the country’s greatest medal haul, achieved on home soil. — AFP The Chinese team pose as they arrive at the Olympic Village Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. — Reuters c cket cric et sport OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U S T 4 l 2 0 1 6 Rain stalls India against Windies TASK: The hosts crumbled to 48 for 4 and face a deficit of 256 runs to avoid defeat on fifth day BCCI 27 TALK INDIA BOARD OPPOSES ‘TWO-TIER’ TEST PLAN India to host Bangladesh Test for first time Anurag Thakur West Indies batsman Darren Bravo watches as bowler Mohammed Shami of India bowls a delivery to Kraigg Brathwaite on the fourth day of the second Test at Sabina Park in Kingston, Jamaica. — AFP KINGSTON, Jamaica: West Indies’ vulnerable top order crumbled again in between the showers to be 48 for four in their second innings on a rain-ruined fourth day of the second Test against India at Sabina Park in Jamaica on Tuesday. Trailing on first innings by 304 runs after the tourists reached 500 for nine declared at tea on the third day, the hosts, still facing a deficit of 256 runs to avoid a second consecutive innings defeat in the four-match series, were grateful for the passage of a tropical storm that limited play to just 15.5 overs in the morning session. Frustrated by the same weather system that erased the final session on day three and delayed the start of play on the fourth morning for over an hour, India’s varied attack nevertheless made up for the lost time by again exploiting the glaring weaknesses of the West Indies batsmen. With his place in the team on the line after a succession of low scores in his fledgling Test career, Rajendra Chandrika was the first to go, bowled for one by a delivery that made extra height from tall fast bowler Ishant Sharma and rebounded off the batsman’s right elbow onto the stumps as he attempted to pull out of the shot. His opening partner, Kraigg Brathwaite, and new batsman Darren Bravo were peppered with regular short-pitched bowling from both Sharma and Mohammed Shami. Bravo in particular was lucky to survive the concerted assault but at the other end, the introduction of Amit Mishra broke the 36-run stand when Brathwaite, on 23, miscued an attempted pull off the leg-spinner SCOREBOARD WEST INDIES 1ST INNINGS 196 INDIA 1ST INNINGS 500 FOR 9 DECL WEST INDIES 2ND INNINGS K Brathwaite c Rahul b Mishra ................ 23 R Chandrika b Sharma .............................. 1 D Bravo c Rahul b Shami ......................... 20 M Samuels b Shami .................................. 0 J Blackwood not out ................................. 3 Extras (nb-1) .................................... 1 Total (for 4 wkts, 15.5 overs) .......... 48 Fall of wicket: 1-5, 2-41, 3-41, 4-48 Bowling: I Sharma 6-0-19-1, M Shami 7.52-25-2, A Mishra 2-1-4-1 for Lokesh Rahul to take the catch running back from midwicket. Marlon Samuels was comprehensively bowled by Shami with no addition to the total and off what proved to be the last delivery before the interval, Bravo failed to Australia captain Smith banking on reverse swing on Galle turner GALLE, Sri Lanka: Galle has built a reputation as a spinners’ paradise but Australia captain Steve Smith hopes there will be substantial reverse swing at the venue as his top-ranked team bid for a series-levelling win against Sri Lanka in the second Test. Sri Lanka inflicted a 106-run defeat on the touring side at Pallekele last week in the opening match of the three-Test series with the spinners taking 18 out of 20 Australian wickets to fall. The hosts’ three-pronged spin attack will be brimming with confidence on a dry surface at Galle for the match that starts on Thursday, and will hope to take an unassailable lead against Australia, ranked number one in Tests by the International Cricket Council. South Africa pacemen Morne Morkel and Dale Steyn claimed 16 wickets between them as they bowled South Africa to a 153-run victory in Galle in 2014. Australia will hope their fast bowling duo of Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood can do something similar. Debutant left-arm spinner Jon Holland will replace the injured Steve O’Keefe and will partner off-spinner Nathan Lyon. “Looks pretty dry, I daresay it’s going to take some spin, which at the same time there’s quite a big breeze so I think it will drift a lot for the spinners,” Smith told reporters. “Talking to Allan Donald (bowling consultant) who was here with the South African team in that game, he said the ball reversed quite significantly from both ends. “Morkel had it going away from the Australia’s Jon Holland (right) delivers a ball as teammate Nathan Lyon looks on during a practice session at the Galle International Cricket Stadium in Galle. — AFP right handers and Steyn had it going into the right handers, so we’ve got Starc who can do and Hazlewood can do and Mitchell Marsh bowls good reverse swing as well, so we’ve got the bases covered.” Angelo Mathews’ side are reeling from injuries to their fast bowlers with Dhammika Prasad and Dushmantha Chameera ruled out of the three-match series, while Suranga Lakmal was also absent from the opening Test at Pallekele due to an ankle complaint. They suffered yet another injury setback with seamer Nuwan Pradeep injuring his hamstring during practice. Mathews said the team will wait till Thursday for Pradeep to get fit, failing which uncapped left-arm seamer Vishwa Fernando could be drafted in. The Sri Lanka captain was aware that the Australians will devise a way to neutralise their spinners, especially leftarmer Rangana Herath. “You can’t write the Australians off against Herath,” he said. “They came up with a different strategy in the second innings, like using the crease a lot, and sweeping him a little bit. We have got to be cautious. “They didn’t get runs, but they are a very attacking top order and the guys who didn’t get runs in Pallekele, we have to be cautious of. “It’s a tough place to play spin here. It will turn more than in Pallekele I reckon, but we still need to bowl in the right areas to take wickets.” — Reuters negotiate another lifting delivery angled into the body and Rahul held the catch at third slip to remove the left-hander for 20. In losing three wickets for seven runs at the end of the truncated session, the West Indies exactly replicated their predicament at the start of the match when their captain, Jason Holder, won the toss and chose to bat first. Roston Chase, who claimed five wickets with his off-spinners in India’s marathon innings, will be expected to join Jermaine Blackwood at the crease on the final morning, weather permitting, with the home side in desperate need of some meaningful resistance, and more realistically further significant intervention from the weather, to avoid another innings defeat. — AFP NEW DELHI: The head of India’s powerful cricket board has voiced opposition to controversial plans for a two-tier Test system being considered by the game’s governing body, a report said on Wednesday. Anurag Thakur, president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), told a newspaper smaller nations would lose out on revenue and the chance to compete against the top teams. “The BCCI is against the two-tier Test system because the smaller countries will lose out and the BCCI wants to take care of them. It is necessary to protect their interests,” The New Indian Express, a Chennai-based daily, quoted him as saying. “In the two-tier system, they will lose out on a lot, including revenue and the opportunity to play against top teams. We don’t want that to happen. “We want to work in the best interests of world cricket and that is why our team plays against all the countries.” The International Cricket Council (ICC) first discussed the proposal to split Test cricket into two divisions at a meeting in Edinburgh last month and is due to debate the plan further in September. Under the scheme being considered, the top seven-ranked teams would join a de facto premier league designed to boost interest in Test cricket. The other three lowest ranked sides — which are currently the West Indies, Bangladesh and Zimbabwe — would then join a second division which would also include the likes of Afghanistan and Ireland. Although England, Australia and New Zealand have all come out in favour NEW DELHI: Bangladesh will play their first-ever Test match in India next February, a top cricket official said on Wednesday. Although India have crossed the border to Bangladesh, the Tigers have never played a fiveday match on Indian soil since they gained Test status in 2000, mainly because of scheduling clashes. Bangladesh have featured in two limited-overs tournaments in India — the Champions Trophy qualifiers in 2006 and the World Twenty20 this year. Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) president Anurag Thakur called the upcoming match a historic occasion and a “great addition” to India’s home season. “As a leading Test-playing nation it is BCCI’s responsibility to give opportunity to every Testplaying nation,” he said. India are currently second in the International Cricket Council Test rankings while Bangladesh are ninth. Bangladesh Cricket Board chief Nazmul Hassan said the match would be a memorable experience for players and fans of both countries. “The long wait for us to play a Test match on Indian soil is finally over and this is a time for celebration,” he said. The one-off match will be played in Hyderabad from February 8 to 12. — AFP of the proposal, India’s opposition could well mean it is now dead in the water. Former BCCI president Shashank Manohar is head of the ICC and India, which is the game’s financial powerhouse, has a history of ensuring that its stance prevails on key debates within the global body. The plan has been fiercely opposed by the likes of Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. — AFP Muralitharan was delighted by the performances of century-maker Mendis and Sandakan who took seven wickets on his debut Sri Lanka proving life after legends, says Murali COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s first win over Australia in two decades proves the islanders have the talent to step into the boots of their recently retired greats, according to Test cricket’s most successful bowler Muttiah Muralitharan. Speaking ahead of the second Test in Galle which begins on Thursday, Muralitharan reflected in glowing terms on batsman Kusal Mendis and spin bowler Lakshan Sandakan’s key roles in last weekend’s thrilling victory in Pallekele even though both are newcomers to Test cricket. Muralitharan, who is a member of the Australia squad’s tour coaching staff, has been involved in a war of words with Sri Lanka’s board, bitter that his old employers have not sought out his advice themselves. But the man whose 800 Test wickets remains a world record six years after retiring has been keeping a close eye on Sri Lanka’s rebuilding efforts after the departure of some of the finest players in their history. Despite his current role for Australia, Muralitharan was delighted by the performances of Mendis, who hit a maiden Test ton in Pallekele, and in particular that of Sandakan who took seven wickets on his debut. It was only Sri Lanka’s second Test victory over Australia and the first since 1999. But Muralitharan cautioned that Sri Lanka’s Lakshan Sandakan (right) and team-mate Kusal Mendis play football during a practice session in Galle. — AFP Sandakan — a left-arm wrist spinner who got some dramatic turn in Pallekele — would need careful mentoring if he is to achieve his full potential and not fall by the wayside. “There’s no doubt about the talent we have. Those two young guys have bright futures ahead of them,” Muralitharan said. “But the thing is we need to nurture them.” Muralitharan, a former off-spinner, said he was “really impressed” with the 25-year-old Sandakan who took 4 for 58 in the first innings. But he said the fate of Ajantha Mendis — another Sri Lankan spinner whose Test career fizzled out after an impressive start — should serve as a cautionary tale. “Look at what happened to (Ajantha) Mendis. He took a truckload of wickets at the start. But when he went through a couple of lean series, he was put under pressure and then went into a defensive mindset,” he said. “Today he is nowhere.” TALENT SPOTTING Muralitharan said he was fortunate to have had a “strong leader” like Arjuna Ranatunga who skippered Sri Lanka to victory in the 1996 World Cup. “He (Ranatunga) was great in spotting talent and then guiding them,” Murali said. “He backed players even when they failed repeatedly. Then they repaid his faith big time. All the players who came into the national side when he was captain went on to have long and successful careers.” The 1996 triumph ushered in a golden age as Sri Lanka churned out a succession of top-class players. When established batsmen such as Ranatunga and Aravinda de Silva stepped aside, they were replaced by the likes of Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene who became Sri Lanka’s two highest run scorers. Both have retired in the past two years and other stars such as dashing opener Tillakaratne Dilshan and slingy fast bowler Lasith Malinga have also quit Test cricket. — AFP football ootba /sailing /sa g sport t Former Ferrari 28 OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U ST 4 l 2 0 1 6 driver Amon dies aged 73 AMON RESPECTED ON THE GRID DESPITE NEVER WINNING IN FORMULA ONE AUCKLAND: Former Ferrari driver Chris Amon, often described as one of the best in Formula One never to have won a race, has died at the age of 73 after a battle with cancer, family of the New Zealand motorsport great said on Wednesday. Amon was part of a well-known trio of New Zealand drivers competing in Formula One in the 1960s and early 70s alongside Bruce McLaren and Denny Hulme, who both enjoyed more successful careers in the sport’s premier series. Bad luck was often cited as the key reason for his lack of Formula One victories, with former world champion Mario Andretti once famously saying: “If he became an undertaker, people would stop dying.” Like McLaren, with whom he won the Le Mans 24-hour endurance race in a Ford GT40 50 years ago, he founded his own team but Chris Amon Racing failed to achieve much success. “Chris battled cancer in recent years but retained not only a close interest in Formula One — and his very wide range of favourite topics — but also his wonderful sense of humour complete with infectious chuckle,” Amon’s family said in a statement. McLaren chairman Ron Dennis praised Amon as he paid tribute to the driver. “It was with profound sadness that I heard the news this morning that Chris Amon had passed away,” Dennis said in a statement. “He nearly won a fair few, but always it seemed that his luck would run out before he saw the chequered flag,” Dennis recalled, terming Amon as “one of the fastest racing drivers”. Williams also paid tribute to Amon who finished on the podium 11 times, also driving for March and Matra among 13 teams in a career that spanned 14 seasons. — Reuters Chris Amon sitting in the Ferrari 412T F1 car Oman gear up for Asian Cup task CAMPS: Lopez Caro picks 31 players, second camp to end with a friendly against Turkmenistan OPL launches fixtures for first round of 2016-17 season MUSCAT: The Omantel Professional League (OPL) has launched the fixtures for the 2016-17 season with the Super Cup expected to inaugurate the season on September 8 where Fanja (defending league champions) take on Saham (defending His Majesty Cup Champions). The OPL starts on September 17 with newcomers Oman expected to open campaign against Suwaiq in the opening match of the league season. SIX-A-SIDE The launch of the league also included the launch of the reserve league as well as the Under-18, Under-15 and Under-13 competitions in accordance with the AFC criteria for club licensing. The second half of the season, whose fixtures will only be announced later, will be played from the first week of February to May 14, while the season will conclude with the HM Cup final either on May 19 or May 20, 2017. MUSCAT: Oman’s national football team is currently having a preparatory camp to identify the best team for the preparation of Asian Cup Qualifiers and the Gulf Cup the following year. Coach Juan Ramon Lopez Caro has picked a group of players as he prepares for next years Gulf Cup as well as Asian Championship in the coming 2016-17 Season. “Our aim is to create a strong team and for this we will need to put in a lot of effort. We will be focusing on both technical and tactical aspects as we prepare” said Lopez Caro when he spoke to the press before the first camp. The national team coach has picked 31 players and the second camp of the 2 proposed camps began yesterday as the coach looked to stay prepared. The camp ends with a friendly against Turkmenistan, which will be held this Monday at the Sultan Qaboos Sports Complex with a 19:30 Kickoff. The team list for the same is: Ahmed Faraj al Rawahi, Harib Jamil al Saadi, Hussain Ali al Hadhari, Motaz Saleh Abd Rabu, Fahad al Jalbobi, Yassin al Sheiadi, Nadir Awadh, Omar al Malki, Mohsin Jawhar al Khaldi, Saud Khamis al Farsi, Said Obeid, Abdul Majeed Shamas, Mahmood Mabrook al Mushaiferi, Ali al Busaidi, Azan Abbas, Mohammed Salim al Maashari, Raid Ibrahim, Omar al Fazari, Ahmed Saleem al Mukhaini, Abdul Salam Amer, Riyadh Sobait al Alawi, Mohammed al Habsi, Mohammed Ramadan, Abdul Rahman al Ghassani, Faiz al Rasheedi, Hosham al Shaaibi, Abdul Aziz al Muqbali, Eid al Farsi, Khalil Nassib al Darmaki, Khalid al Yaqoobi and Mohammed al She’eba. Al Farsi dominates Musannah ranking regatta HOCKEY Group picture of Ranking Race participants From Ranking Race in Musannah The Oman veteran’s hockey team. Oman veteran’s hockey team set for Morocco MUSCAT: The Oman veteran’s hockey team is leaving on August 4 to participate in the Morocco six-a-side indoor tournament being organised in Morocco from August 6 to 9. Teams from Egypt, Sudan, Libya, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia are the other teams apart from Oman that will participate in the tournament. Oman veteran’s team had earlier won a tournament in Egypt. The chairman of Oman Veteran Hockey Mohammed Shambeh al Raisi is accompanying 23-member team as head of the delegation. Abdul Rehman al Raisi is the coach, Mustafa al Lawati is the manager and Yusuf Darweesh will lead the Oman team in the competition. Oman will be fielding two teams in the competition. The team is supported by Oman Hockey Association. WJ Towels has offered to sponsor the trip. MUSCAT: Al Moatsem Hamood al Farsi, the young Optimist sailor who was Oman’s best prospect at the recent Optimist World Championships in Portugal, was top of the leaderboard in Oman Sail’s July Ranking Regatta at Musannah Sports City this week. The 14 year-old Al Farsi, a member of the Musannah Sailing School and the best performing Omani youngster in the 100 strong Optimist class at 2016 Musannah Race Week in January, was the runaway winner in a fleet of 33 youth competitors, the cream of Oman Sail’s Omantel Youth Programme. Over two days of intensive racing, he swept to victory in four of the six races completed to take the gold medal. Alaa al Amrani also from Musannah and Mohammed al Alawi from Sur were tied on points in second place but Alaa took the silver medal on tie break with Mohammed having to settle for bronze. The success of fourth placed Ahmed al Oraimi demonstrated the massive progress being made at Sur Sailing School, which is the newest and most remote of the Oman Sail sailing schools of which there are now four at Al Mouj, Musannah, Bandar Al Rowdha and Sur. These improvements were also in evidence in the Schools Team rankings where Sur closed the gap on defending champions Al Mouj to four points. The National Ranking Regattas are staged six times a year and are used as selection trials for the Omantel Youth Squad, which represents Oman at international competitions across the region and beyond, as well as training opportunities to upskill sailors, coaches and race officials. “We saw improved performances from the sailors on the second day of the ranking races and it gives us a better idea for our selections,” said Oman Sail’s Youth Manager, Mohsin al Busaidi. “These youngsters have a lot of work to do to be competitive at international level as we saw in the recent Worlds but they are talented and more than capable of achieving their aims. “The next time we will see them in action will be at the 2016 National Championships at Sur from August 14-18 where all the youth classes — the Optimists, Laser 4.7 and Techno 293 windsurfer — will be competing.” The Tour Women’s Team set to compete in Sweden MUSCAT: Oman Sail’s Dee Caffari is in Sweden this week with her all-women crew on board EFG Sailing Arabia — The Tour to compete in the Farr 30 Internationals as a training platform for next year’s offshore classic around the Arabian Gulf and to promote EFG Sailing Arabia — The Tour 2017. Caffari has put together a team of six mixed Omani and European sailors for the event in Bastad in Sweden, which runs from August 1-7 with four days of racing starting today. Most familiar among the Omani crew is Ibtisam al Salmi who has spent part of the summer competing in Europe on the Oman Sail all women’s J80 alongside Marwa al Khaifi and Tamadher al Balushi, her team-mates for the trip to Sweden, all of them taking time out from their ‘day jobs’ as Oman Sail sailing instructors. Volvo Ocean racers Libby Greenhalgh and Abby Ehler, who were both members of the all-women’s Team SCA in the last race will make up the rest of Caffari’s team alongside Kate Macgregor, the British match racer who competed at the London 2012 Olympics. Caffari and her Omani girls are all familiar with the one design Farr 30 boats, which have been used in EFG Sailing Arabia — the Tour, the Gulf region’s No 1 offshore race, since it was created in 2011. the switch back to Farr 30s should be — The Tour 2017 which is a fantastic “So far this year, the girls have straightforward but really this event is event especially for international been racing J80s in Europe so making all about promoting EFG Sailing Arabia teams looking for serious warm water competition in the European winter,” said Caffari. The annual EFG Sailing Arabia — The Tour has changed and grown with each edition over six years to become the most highly regarded sailing event in the Middle East as well as an effective platform for showcasing the Gulf, tourism and its maritime heritage. Sailor’s blogs from last year’s Tour gave an insight as to why EFG Sailing Arabia — The Tour is gaining ground among competitors and becoming an iconic and sustainable sailboat race. They spoke at length about the scenery, which ranged from ‘utterly barren to stunningly beautiful’ with 1,000m cliffs and massive sandbanks and of the navigational hazards that ocean going sailors find so irresistible such as giant tug boats and barges, oil fields, exclusion zones and islands. There were night time reports from Team Averda of ‘oilfields burning hot and red, oceans being lit up by ‘phosphorescence so luminous the boats left a trail of ‘glow in the dark’ plankton behind them’. All the teams made reference to the gruelling physical and mental exertion brought on by the long watches and the sudden changes in conditions from a perfect 10 knot breeze and clear skies to leaden skies, lumpy seas and 30 knot gusts. For the professionals, EFG Sailing Arabia — The Tour is a test of skills. To everyone else, it is a test of character which explains its appeal. oman The arrest of Anne Frank This day in 1944, during the Holocaust, a tip from a Dutch informer led the Gestapo to a sealed-off area in an Amsterdam warehouse, where they find and arrest Jewish diarist Anne Frank, her family and four others. @ art&photography features OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U S T 4 l 2 0 1 6 29 Omani clinches 2nd best photo in Nat’l Geographic contest Q RAHMA ALI AL KALBANI M ohammed Sulaiman al Badaai won second place in the National Geographic Moments Photography Competition besting hundreds of other submissions from different photographers coming from all Arab countries. With the theme: Arab Countries Food and Flavours, Mohammed’s photo showed mqadeed as it is being prepared by a man. Mqadeed is a dry thin layer of meat which is popular in the Dhofar Governorate. “When I responded to the competition announced by the National Geographic Abu Dhabi channel by sending my photo, I wasn’t expecting for it to go anywhere,” he said. “But when they communicated with me after one month saying that my picture was in the top 50 pictures, for me, it was already enough.” But the best was yet to come. “After two weeks they announced that my photo came second. There were no words to describe how happy and proud I felt at that moment,” Al Badaai said. “It was my first time to participate in a photography competition and winning such a big one encouraged me to learn more about photography and invest more in this hobby,” he added. Al Badaai is a 28-year-old geologist and photographer who currently works as a hydrological engineer in Ministry of Regional Municipalities and Water Resources. ‘Oman in the eyes of expatriates’ art expo opens Q KABEER YOUSUF F * or those who have chosen Oman as their second home, they need not to go far in order to scribble a few words of endearments or put emotions into paper and splash them with colour to show their admiration for their motherlands. Here in the Sultanate, dreams were made to come true. Five expatriate women have come together to answer the call of a hotel to display some of their finest works to announce to the rest of the world that Oman is their second motherland. They were provided a platform to put into art what they felt the first time they arrived in the country. Aptly titled ‘Wow’ or Wednesday on walls, artist homemakers Mahija Suresh, Usha Satheesan, Mita Poddar, Sony Libin along with Bincy Lee Binu who is also an employee of the hotel, have displayed their impressions on the huge walls of the City Seasons Hotel in Al Khuwair since yesterday. “It’s a monthly event aimed at promoting Oman as a destination and to support budding local artists,” Ahmed al Raisi, Deputy GM of the hotel, said. The expo begins on first Wednesday of each month. “We, our ex-GM Christian Palacin and I, first thought of doing something for the society in terms of helping and supporting the local talents and we decided to conduct monthly art expo on a regular basis. The response has been tremendous and we are planning to identify more local artists in the future,” he added. There are nearly 25 paintings that reflect the various aspect of the Omani life. Women in different abayas from different wilayats, traditional sports like camel racing and horse racing, children going to school, and not the least, the various attractions and historic monuments of the Sultanate are some of the topics that captured the imagination of the budding artists. The series of expos began last year with the works of Oman’s acclaimed artist and National Geographic Photographer Ahmed al Toqi, followed by Safiya al Bahlani, another creative name in the Oman’s art arena along with Ahmed al Raisi, Marriot Peens and Dalia al Bassami have displayed their works as part of the Wow — Wednesday on walls event. The expo which started yesterday will last for one month. crossword CRYPTIC PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Supporters very useful to actors (5) 6 Cries: ‘Shoot at random!’ (5) 9 Figures to go into town for a book (7) 10 Certificates of some description (5) 11 Taking a rest from being truthful (5) 12 Floral component in the form of a lacy cross (5) 13 Decoration of stone, possibly (7) 15 It doesn’t take long to get dry (3) 17 Desire it for a companion (4) 18 In World War II, a victor in a very thorough way! (6) 19 A boaster’s bloomer (5) 20 Join up with either 8 or 22 Down (6) 22 Members of an eleven (4) 24 Paternal army man (3) 25 Plants trees for a chap (7) 26 One can hardly make light of his villainy (5) 27 To fix something, I have to be in the right (5) 28 Noted duet arrangement, as from Chopin (5) 29 Imaginably apt to go up? How funny! (7) 30 Wine swilled by an unnamed comedian (5) 31 Though keen or cutting, it may be fine by the week-end (5) DOWN 2 Something hard for a space traveller to shoot up (6) 3 On which to stand statuesquely, stonily staring (6) 4 Little man of the month? (3) 5 Where there’s a point to gain, possibly (5) 6 Salvation Army crusade? (4,3) 7 Stone mostly derived from chalcedony (4) 8 Being bright, can upset little Leslie (6) 12 Roll down to the sea (5) 13 Punished a good number (5) 14 Reprove for having sold out the Conservative leader (5) 15 Deadly sins are so numerous! (5) 16 Categorise as a study group (5) 18 One of the pair we left incompletely finished (5) 19 Religious type, but he’d be acid if his self-starter went (7) 21 A name I have for being natural (6) 22 Attend to out-of-order inlets (6) 23 Golfed sportively with Bob (6) 25 Use of a veil? (5) 26 A champion may mean nothing to her (4) 28 Animal chewing some leeks (3) EASY PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Muscular pain (5) 6 Hit (5) 9 Previously (7) 10 Exhausted (5) 11 Dead language (5) 12 Danger (5) 13 Saunters (7) 15 Domestic fowl (3) 17 Rip (4) 18 Suitcase (6) 19 Black bird (5) 20 Expressed a view (6) 22 Dry (4) 24 Notebook (3) 25 Ship (7) 26 Tracks (5) 27 Biscuit (5) 28 Scope (5) 29 Take for granted (7) 30 Flower (5) 31 Snoops (5) DOWN 2 Fame (6) 3 Adviser (6) 4 Affectionate tap (3) 5 Insects (5) 6 Aquatic bird (7) 7 Russian river (4) 8 Peals (6) 12 Implore (5) 13 Bend (5) 14 Quick (5) 15 Bees’ homes (5) 16 At no time (5) 18 Swerves (5) 19 Wed again (7) 21 Country (6) 22 Cook gently (6) 23 Edit (6) 25 Conflict (5) 26 Agents, informally (4) 28 Unit of current (3) 12, Cloud 13, MI-chae-L 15, Rep. 17, Only 18, Fed-O-ra 19, FA-Red 20, Trader 22, S-it-E 24, Hen 25, M-utters 26, Al-tar 27, Hippo(crates) 28, Frome 29, Sweater 30, Med-ES 31, Dying. DOWN: 2, Re-TA-in 3, Smithy 4, Tun 5, S-tall 6, Endu-red 7, Age-D 8, Letter 12, C-Ed-ar 13, Mo-U-th 14, Clean 15, Rosie 16, Paces 18, Femur 19, Fellows 21, Retire 22, Sta-RR-y 23, T-rum-an 25, MArat 26, Apse 28, Fed. YESTERDAY’S EASY SOLUTIONS ACROSS: 1, Dream 6, Satan 9, Bestows 10, Sprat 11, Ether 12, Dubai 13, Rivulet 15, Sup 17, Ores 18, Better 19, Rower 20, Donkey 22, Arid 24, SAS 25, Athlete 26, Bombs 27, Tiber 28, Boils 29, Amorous 30, Chars 31, Stack. DOWN: 2, Repair 3, Abacus 4, Met 5, Stout 6, Sweater 7, Asti 8, Avenue 12, Decoy 13, Roads 14, YESTERDAY’S CRYPTIC Veins 15, Store 16, Pride 18, Beats SOLUTIONS 19, Reforms 21, Oafish 22, Almost ACROSS: 1, BR-est. 6, Eagle 9, 23, Italic 25, Abort 26, Bear 28, Must-ang 10, Sta-I-n 11, D-ebts Bus. international features @ 30 OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U ST 4 l 2 0 1 6 From Upper Volta to Burkina Faso This day in 1984, The Republic of Upper Volta changed its name to Burkina Faso. Burkina Faso is a francophone country. It has a population of 18.7 million as of 2016. reallife @ worldcheck #Australia 62-year-old woman becomes oldest Australian to give birth A 62-year-old Australian has become the country’s oldest woman to give birth, local media reported on Wednesday. The unnamed Tasmanian mother gave birth to a girl in Melbourne on Monday, the broadcaster Channel Seven Sri Lanka success whets international appetite for mangrove conservation Pioneering national programme to protect Sri Lanka’s coastal mangroves could be extended to another island country. S ri Lanka’s pioneering nationwide programme to save its damaged mangrove forests is bearing fruit a year on, prompting the US conservation group backing it to look for another island country to launch a similar effort. Duane Silverstein, Executive Director at California-based Seacology, a non-profit that protects island habitats, said he was planning to visit a candidate island state in the Caribbean in the next month. “This project, if it happens, is most definitely inspired by the success (in) Sri Lanka,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, declining to name the potential project site as negotiations were ongoing. From the late 1980s into the 1990s, the destruction of Sri Lanka’s mangroves had official sanction, as the government handed out public land to large companies to clear for shrimp farms along the northwest coast. “We were helpless — there was nothing we could do. Earth movers would come in and clear tracts overnight that had taken hundreds of years to grow,” said Douglas Thisera, director of conservation at the Kalpitiya-based Small Fishers Federation of Sri Lanka (Sudeesa), which is partnering on the mangrove scheme. Hundreds of acres of ecologically important mangroves in northwest Puttalam district — around 40 per cent of the area’s forests — were cleared and replaced by large ponds, Thisera said. But the threat ended last year when Colombo designated more than 37,000 acres (some 15,000 hectares) of coastal mangroves as protected, making it illegal to cut down the delicate forests. “It should have been done a long time back,” said Thisera, popularly known as the “Mangrove Master”, surveying large craters left by shrimp farms dotting the Puttalam lagoon now abandoned due to disease or business failure. IMPROVING LOCAL LIVES Mangrove trees grow in saltwater, forming a vital part of the natural cycle in coastal lagoons. Fish and other marine creatures like prawns use the deep roots as breeding areas. The forests protect coastal communities from abrupt tidal shifts and storms, while slowing shore erosion. Mangrove swamps also store carbon, helping to curb planet-warming emissions — another reason to keep them intact. Sri Lanka’s countrywide protection initiative, praised as the first of its kind in the world, has gained momentum in the past year, experts say. “Sri Lanka is showing the world that it is possible to conserve mangrove forests while also improving the lives of local people, restoring wildlife habitats, and helping to ameliorate climate change,” said Dhammika Wijayasinghe, Secretary-General of the Sri Lanka National Commission for Unesco, at the opening of a flagship mangrove museum on July 26. Sudeesa, which is hosting the museum at its main office in Chilaw, plans to conduct tours there for at least 20,000 schoolchildren who will come to learn about the nearby mangroves, as well as conservation training for adults. “We hope that other countries with mangrove forests will follow Sri Lanka’s lead and replicate the success of this model,” Wijayasinghe added, speaking on the first International Day for the Conservation of the Mangrove Ecosystem. According to Seacology, which partners with the government on the mangrove programme, around half the island nation’s identified mangrove forests have now been surveyed and marked out with posts, up from zero when the project began. Those who live alongside mangroves say no value was given to the forests in the past. “People would go in and just cut them to use as firewood,” said widow Anne Priyanthi, 53, who lives near Puttalam lagoon. Thisera said the destruction was partly due to lack of awareness. “But poverty also played a big role,” he added. A survey by the Fisheries Ministry some two years ago found the average monthly income among fisher families was around $16, while just over half lived below the national poverty line. Thisera said that without tackling poverty, efforts to protect mangroves would be futile, “because people just look at them as free cooking fuel”. RAISING AWARENESS Since the conservation scheme began, the government has enacted laws and provided manpower to protect the forests, with the navy sending personnel to plant over 36,000 mangrove trees. The plan aims to set up 1,500 community groups to look after existing mangroves, and to replant around 3,000 hectares within five years. Seacology has launched an island-wide push to reforest degraded areas, raise public awareness, and provide economic assistance to local people to raise them out of poverty. It aims to help more than 15,000 people, half of them widows and the rest school dropouts, living close to the 48 lagoons where mangroves thrive. In the last year, more than 190 women have received micro-loans to start small businesses. Priyanthi from Puttalam is one of them, setting up a pig farm with an initial loan of LKR 10,000 ($68.70). She then applied for a further LKR 75,000, and now earns about LKR 25,000 per month, which is enough to pay for her children’s education. The women and others benefiting from the project also act as community leaders in conservation work. Silverstein said the success of the Sri Lanka programme so far had enabled Seacology to raise $3.4 million from private donors and the World Food Programme to fund it fully for five years. The biggest challenge was when recent floods destroyed seedlings in a nursery, he added. Sudeesa’s Thisera said building community awareness about the advantages of protecting mangroves, after generations of neglect, was a tough task — as would be maintaining interest in conservation after the funding runs out. — Thomson Reuters Foundation reported. Australian Medical Association President Michael Gannon wrote on Twitter that it was “madness, selfish and wrong” for the woman to have the baby and asked whether “anyone thought ahead to its teens.” The woman gave birth at 34 weeks through cesarean section, Channel Seven said. The mother and baby were reportedly both in good health. The woman was implanted with a donor embryo in an operation outside Australia and was supported throughout the pregnancy by her78-year-old partner, the Sydney Morning Herald said. — dpa #Australia Some fish tackle ocean global warming by pretending it’s night S ome fish may cope with the changing chemistry of the oceans linked to global warming by permanently setting their body defences to night-time levels, the time of day when they find sea water least hospitable, a study said on Monday. Man-made carbon dioxide, released into the air by burning fossil fuels, forms a weak acid when mixed with water that can harm marine life in what is likely to be a worsening effect of global warming this century. Fish adjust their bodies every day because levels of carbon dioxide naturally in the seas peak at night and dip during sunlight hours when algae, seaweed and other plants absorb carbon dioxide to generate energy. The study of spiny damselfish, a small species from Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, found that those best able to tackle high carbon levels in the water produced offspring with flexible body clocks that helped adapt to acidification. In 2014, the UN panel of climate scientists said that “ocean acidification poses substantial risks to marine ecosystems” if man-made greenhouse gas emissions rise at medium to high levels this century. Acidification makes it harder for creatures such as scallops or lobsters to grow their protective shells. Other studies have found it can also disrupt the behaviour of fish, from sharks to salmon. — Reuters #United States Fluctuating atmosphere of Jupiter’s volcanic moon revealed J upiter’s volcanic moon Io has a thin atmosphere that collapses in the shadow of the planet condensing as ice, say Nasa-funded researchers, revealing the freezing effects of its shadow during daily eclipses on the moon’s volcanic gases. Io is the most volcanically-active object in the solar system. “This is the first time scientists have observed this remarkable phenomenon directly, improving our understanding of this geologically active moon,” said Constantine Tsang, scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado. The volcanoes are caused by tidal heating, the result of gravitational forces from Jupiter and other moons. These forces result in geological activity, most notably volcanoes that emit umbrella-like plumes of sulphur dioxide gas that can extend up to 480 km above Io and produce extensive basaltic lava fields that can flow for hundreds of miles. The new study documents atmospheric changes on Io as the giant planet casts its shadow over the moon’s surface during daily eclipses. “Io’s atmosphere is in a constant state of collapse and repair and shows that a large fraction of the atmosphere is supported by sublimation of SO2 ice,” added study co-author John Spencer. Though Io’s hyperactive volcanoes are the ultimate source of the SO2, sunlight controls the atmospheric pressure on a daily basis by controlling the temperature of the ice on the surface. “We’ve long suspected this, but can finally watch it happen,” Spencer noted. The study, published in the Journal of Geophysical Research, was funded by Nasa’s Solar System Workings and Solar System Observations programmes. — IANS Billboard 100 first publication This day in 1958, the Billboard Hot 100 was published for the first time. It is currently the music industry standard record chart in the United States for singles, published weekly by Billboard magazine. Chart rankings are based on radio play, online streaming, and sales (physical and digital). @ localscenes insideOman features OMANDAILYOBSERVER T H U R S DAY l A U G U S T 4 l 2 0 1 6 31 The thrill of cinematic make-up Q TAYMORA AL GHAWI A t one point, you may have wondered how movies make cuts and bruises so believable — like when limbs are cut off and blood oozes from a person creating that chilling, often nauseating effect. You might have sat inside a cinema, disgusted with the burnt skin of an actor seeing the tiny bits of muscles getting battered and abused. Movies wouldn’t be so believable if after a terrible fire, or an exaggerated highoctane fight, actors remain unscathed. We watch movies and enjoy them based on how close they are to reality. Movie making is an expensive, money-eating process. And beside the actors, directors and the scriptwriters, the behind-the-scene people contribute much more to the success of a film. The department in-charge of making most things we see on film is called the Special Effects (FX) department. Under this department, one particular area that takes time and so much effort is the work done by the cinematic make-up crew. Twenty-three-year-old Issa al Naamani is an Omani make-up artist who has been specialising in cinematic make-up for over three years now. Contrary to popular belief, not everyone who knows about make-up automatically qualifies for this kind of job. Fact is, Issa is a graduate of fine arts and the skill set he learned from the university armed him only but a little regarding the true difficulty of cinematic make-up. As he shared, the ability of making a fantasy into a reality is in itself an art. He said that artists normally take a very long time to get things right. In a conversation, Issa said that to get the desired look and feel, they have to use different chemicals and colours. Often this requires experimenting because the colours alone, of say a torn skin, has a range that they have to pay particular attention to get it right. Issa said the job demands a lot from an artist, adding he only survived because it has always been his passion. “I really am happy when I’m working with cinematic effects. In each project, I always have this strong desire to develop myself,” he said. Issa noted that small effects change the actor’s personality. As some film characters are very demanding, their team must work hard so that the character will achieve the effect suited for what the film requires. “There are many things to be considered when doing cinematic make-up,” he noted. “Sometimes, you have to consider the amount of light and exposure so that you can level the kind of effect that you must apply.” “The tools we used for cinematic make-up is not that different from the regular ones. We also use foundations, powders and eyeliners. There’s just a certain level of precision that is needed since the lights on the film set can truly show or hide the beauty of a creation,” he said. For those wishing to follow in Issa’s footstep, the artist shared that he went through different courses to improve his skills. “I’ve attended many workshops specific to this field and I also participated in many TV shows to refine my skills,” he said. It occurred to him he was totally ready when he won the cinematic effects competitions for Arabs held in KSA in 2014. Issa was also a winner in a talent competition for students of Colleges of Technology this year. @ sharedthoughts Texting while walking Nizar al Musalmy nizar.nmh.musalmy@gmail.com Smartphones, I can see, are causing us distress and forcing lifestyles that are unhealthy for our well-being. Individuals continue with work while at home, thus being diverted away from sleeping and resting time. E very time I look around, I get confronted by a clear reality — the smartphones. I see people using them for WhatsApp, viber, Twitter, email, Talk, Instagram, Skype and the list is endless. These smartphones have become part of everyone’s life. It is astonishing to see even children some of them so very young using high-value smartphones. The essence for now is the fact that the number using smartphones has increased immensely and continues to increase with each passing day. No doubt, we need them to keep us up-to-date with technology and the progression curve life is taking. However, smartphones, I can see, are causing us distress and forcing lifestyles that are unhealthy for our well-being. Individuals continue with work while at home, thus being diverted away from sleeping and resting time. The results would be insomnia and related problems. Worse still, is that there are people who actually drive while texting on their smartphones. These types of people are so pathetic and their deed so dangerous so much so that I refuse to talk about them in the name of protesting. For today, let’s concentrate on those who use smartphones while walking. In their effort to be well informed and to be up-to-date with what is going on around, you see people walking and crossing roads while their eyes are glued at their smartphones. As they reach to cross the road their eyes are still on the phone. You; as the drive will suddenly start to slow down while wondering what is going on. It does not bother them that they put their lives and those of others in danger and as you beckon them to cross, these people walk across and no sooner do they do so, they take their eyes back to their phones. I have also seen some women doing this even in high heels. You see them walking like they are about to topple over but they continue to glue their eyes on their phones while walking. Finding balance on high heels is enough a challenge leave alone doing it while your eyes are on the phone. Looking at your phone reduces your field of vision and makes you less aware of things happening around you. As a result, you may not see oncoming danger, such as a car or pothole or even your fellow pedestrian. On this account of seeing people looking at their phones while walking, I tasked my mind to function and come up with a solution. That is why I now call upon all business minded people to come across and join me in forming a manpower company that will have staff who will be hired to offer the service of guiding people while they walk in the streets. In this new service, if you are one of those who are always using their phones while walking, you will have a dedicated person who will talk directly to you. This person will hold your arm and tell you about humps and steps as you approach them and will say whether you need to go up or down, left or right. As you continue to concentrate on your phone screen, this service will allow you to get to know any potential hazards that lie ahead and say where they are. You will be guided to your destination and into your seat, and your guide will place his/her hand on the back of the seat before they sit you down, so you can orientate yourself. Be rest assured that your guide will not walk away without saying that he/she is leaving. And you can call him or her whenever you start a new journey. So, oh you business oriented persons, if you are interested in this kind of business, please get in touch and let’s create employment opportunities and make some money. Enjoy your weekend! THURSDAY | AUGUST 4, 2016 www.omanobserver.om editor@omanobserver.om The thrill of cinematic make-up Did you ever wonder how they get the visual effects of broken limbs so real in movies? Issa al Naamani has been working with cinematic make-up for over three years now. Find out what it takes to be one... P31 @editor’spick moviedate worldcelebration happeningtoday nowshowing ICE AGE — COLLISION COURSE COAST GUARD DAY Scrats epic pursuit of his elusive acorn catapults him outside of Earth, where he accidentally sets off a series of cosmic events that transform and threaten the planet. Coast Guard Day honours the courageous work of coast guards. Although originally celebrated to honour American coast guards for bravely saving 33,500 lives when Hurricane Katrina struck the US Atlantic coast, it is just apt to be adapted as a day for coast guards all over the world. To celebrate, treat a coast guard you know for a meal. That would surely make their day. — daysoftheyear.com Have you seen this movie? With 5 as the highest and 1 as the lowest, how would you rate this film? Send us your review at social@omanobserver.om and get a chance to see your feedback on this spot next week. An aerial view of an oil palm plantation in Musi Banyuasin Regency, South Sumatra, Indonesia, on August 2, 2016, in this photo taken by Antara Foto. — Reuters