Assad may go as part of Syria settlement: Russia
Transcription
Assad may go as part of Syria settlement: Russia
DOHA PLAYERS TO PRESENT LIPSTICK DREAMS VIP DINNER MARKS LAUNCH OF ‘DEFINITELY ABLE’ CAMPAIGN THE OUTFITS THAT SAY ‘THE QUEEN’ PAGE 17 | NATION PAGE 31 | SPORTS PAGE 33 | CHILL OUT www.qatar-tribune.com First with the news and what’s behind it WEDNESDAY DOW JONES 21,108 JUNE 6, 2012 QE +6 PTS SENSEX 8,322 -10 PTS 16,020 CURRENCY +32 PTS Indian Rupee QR 15.26 Philippine Peso QR 11.93 WEATHER HOT AND HAZY 0 0 HIGH: 43 C | LOW: 30 C Newsline Villaggio fire report submitted to Heir Apparent’s office THE Attiyah committee probing the fire that claimed the lives of 19 people, at the Villaggio shopping mall last week, has submitted its report to the office of HH the Heir Apparent. The committee is to announce its findings after informing relatives of the victims about the reasons and circumstances of the fire. (PG 18) Qatar 2022 panel wins award THE Qatar 2022 Supreme Committee was presented an honourary award for outstanding contribution to the development of sports in Qatar and for putting Qatar on the world map as a booming sporting hub at the World Stadium Awards ceremony as part of the World Stadium Congress 2012 being held in Doha. (PG 31) Al Meera to acquire net assets of Omani firm THE Al Meera Holding Company on Tuesday said it will acquire the net assets of Oman-based Safeer Arabian International. Al Meera signed an MoU to this effect with JP Kalwani, who owns the entire issued share capital of Safeer. According to the MoU, Kalwani will transfer and sell the net assets of Safeer to Al Meera Holding. (PG 25) New RIM OS in Qatar soon RIM, makers of BlackBerry, plans to introduce its latest operating system in Qatar and the M-E soon. “We plan to launch the BlackBerry 10 operating system in Qatar by the year end,” RIM Director Mohammed al Mefleh said on Monday. (PG 25) Newsline Nationline Businessline Lifeline Sportsline RAJAB 16, 1433 Qtel plans to double stake in Asiacell ASIF IQBAL DOHA QATAR Telecom (Qtel) will double its stake in Iraqi mobile operator Asiacell to 60 percent at the cost of $1.47 billion. “Qtel will initially increase its ownership in Asiacell to 53.9 percent, the further increase in shareholding is subject to Iraqi government and regulatory authority approval. The transaction will be financed from existing funds,” the telecom company said in a statement on Tuesday. Asiacell is a leading provider of mobile telecommunications services in Iraq, with 9.02 million subscribers. In 2009, it became the first mobile telecommunications provider in Iraq to achieve nationwide coverage, offering its services across all of Iraq’s 18 governorates, including the national capital. Commenting on increasing its stake in Asiacell, Qtel Group Chairman Sheikh Abdullah bin Mohammed bin Saud al Thani, described Asiacell as an “outstanding business” that has seen excellent performance year on year. “The Iraqi market is about to enter a period of rapid broadband and data growth and Asiacell is well positioned to meet the demands of the population for high quality, reliable and affordable voice and data services”, he added. He voiced Qtel’s commitment to reinforcing Asiacell’s position as the leading communications company in Iraq. Qtel plans to invest significantly in the Asiacell and continue to work hard on preparing for the Iraqi company’s landmark IPO planned for later this year, he said. In October last year, Asiacell appointed HSBC and Morgan Stanley to manage an initial public offering of its shares in Iraq. Asiacell was awarded a 15year mobile licence in 2007, as were Zain’s Iraq unit and France Telecom affiliate Korek. Asiacell paid $1.25 billion for the licence. Under the terms of their licences, the three operators were meant to launch mandatory IPOs to offload 25 percent of their shares by the end of August 2011, but all three missed the deadline. The Qtel group has a significant presence in the MENA region and Southeast Asia with a consolidated customer base of 84 million. It operates a portfolio of brands including Qtel, Indosat, Asiacell, Wataniya, Nawras, Nedjma and Tunisiana. Asiacell Board Chairman Faruk Rosool said his company has consistently delivered strong results and is looking forward to more growth in the future, especially in data and broadband services. VOL. 6 NO. 2102 QR 2 EMIR WITH GERMAN MINISTER The Emir His Highness Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al Thani with Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Federal (See also page 17) Republic of Germany Guido Westerwelle, in Doha, on Tuesday. Assad may go as part of Syria settlement: Russia AFP DAMASCUS RUSSIA said on Tuesday that President Bashar al Assad could relinquish power as part of a settlement to end bloodshed in Syria, as Saudi Arabia called on Moscow to end its support for the regime. Moscow is under growing pressure to back Assad’s departure as a first step in a peace accord that would see his inner circle assume command in the interim, based on a US-backed transition this year in Yemen. “We have never said or insisted that Assad necessarily had to remain in power at the end of the political process,” said Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov. “This issue has to be settled by the Syrians themselves,” ITARTASS news agency quoted him as saying. The statement was one of Russia’s most explicit about Assad’s position since Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov refused to clearly back his rule during a visit to Damascus in February. It came as Moscow and Beijing, which have stalled Western-led moves against Damascus, began talks on ending nearly 15 months of violence that has killed more than 13,500 Syrians, and cost the lives of at least another 26 on Tuesday. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged both Russia and China to be “part of the solution” to the crisis after they agreed to work together more closely in the United Nations. SEE ALSO PAGES 2 & 3 Fire at Pearl building; 39 workers rescued: MoI The tower 21 (left) at the Viva Bahriyya section of The Pearl-Qatar, where a fire broke out at 7.30pm, in Doha, on Tuesday. (HANSON K JOSEPH) A FIRE broke out on Tuesday in an under-construction building of The Pearl-Qatar project. Civil defence personnel with the support of the other specialised forces put out the fire within a short time and rescued 39 workers trapped in the building, according to a Ministry of Interior (MoI) release. The operations room of the Ministry of Interior received a call reporting the fire breakout on a plot located away from the residential and recreational areas in the ‘Viva Bahriyya’ part of The Pearl-Qatar. Immediately, the security agencies including Al Fazaa (Rescue Police), firefighters of Civil Defence, traffic police, and search and rescue team under the Internal Security Force rushed to the accident site and doused the fire in a highly profes- sional and efficient operation. The fire that broke out on lower floors of the building left workers trapped on the upper floors . The rescue and evacuation operation was executed according to the plan under which trapped workers were assembled on the 13th floor for a quick and safe evacuation. The rescue team reached them through special mobile escalators designed for dealing with accidents in the high rise buildings. All the 39 trapped workers evacuated from the building are in good health condition. A team has been formed for carrying out search operation inside the building to ensure that nobody was left trapped in the multi-storey building. Firefighters try to extinguish the blaze at tower 21 at the Viva Bahriyya section of The Pearl-Qatar, and (below) rescuers help a person get out of the building. (PHOTO: MOI) 02 Wednesday, June 6, 2012 GULF / MIDDLE EAST www.qatar-tribune.com Libya takes back Tripoli airport from ex-rebels Annan, Clinton to hold Syria talks on Friday AFP BEIRUT/ WASHINGTON AFP TRIPOLI LIBYAN authorities wrested back control of Tripoli International Airport from ex-rebels who seized the runway on Monday, surrounding planes and grounding all flights after their leader’s apparent arrest, officials said. It took until evening for the authorities to regain control of the airport when loyalist forces stormed it after negotiations with the militiamen broke down, deputy interior minister Omar alKhadrawi told journalists. Flights were not expected to resume for at least 24 hours because of the damage caused to the airport’s infrastructure. The assault by the militiamen on the Libyan capital’s main gateway to the outside world underlined the massive task facing the authorities in reintegrating the disparate armed groups that took part in the overthrow of now slain dictator Moamer Qadhafi’s regime last year. The raid was carried out by gunmen who fired into the air and slightly wounded an airport employee, causing panic among travellers, according to the official LANA news agency. “It is total confusion. Everyone is fleeing,” an official at the airport said, adding that several armoured vehicles were positioned on the tarmac blocking traffic. “Cars mounted with antiaircraft guns and armed men are surrounding the aircraft and preventing them from moving,” another official said, adding that some passengers were forced to leave planes. The motive of the gunmen was to pressure the government to explain the whereabouts of their leader, Abu Ajila al Habshi. Tripoli’s security commission, which answers to the interior ministry, said it had nothing to do with “the disappearance and abduction of Colonel Abu Ajila al Habshi.” Libyan government forces arrive at Tripoli international airport for talks with the Al Awfya brigade, on Monday. (AFP) UN envoy Kofi Annan will hold talks with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Washington on Friday as the international community tries to find a way to end the bloodshed in Syria, a US official said. “There’s actually quite a lot going on with Syria this week in terms of international efforts,” State Department deputy spokesman Mark Toner said on Monday, as he dismissed a weekend speech by Syrian President Bashar al Assad as “out of touch with reality.” Clinton will attend a meeting in Istanbul on Thursday to discuss the unrelenting violence in Syria which has dragged on since March 2011, and will then meet with Annan in Washington on Friday. It was not yet clear whether Annan, the UN-Arab League envoy to Syria, would also meet with US President Barack Obama. Annan has demanded a “serious review” of the deadlocked efforts to end the Syria violence, and was also to discuss the crisis at the UN Security Council and UN General Assembly on Thursday. “The fact of the matter is... the international community needs to come together and unify around the idea that a political transition must happen sooner rather than later in Syria,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said. “We support the Annan plan and we have even though we’ve remained extremely skeptical, with good reason, about Assad’s willingness to comply UN-Arab League special envoy Kofi Annan (left) with Swiss Foreign Minister Didier Burkhalter at the United Nations European headquarters, in Geneva, on Tuesday. (REUTERS) with it.” Seeking to shore up the plan, Clinton spoke on Monday with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov “about bringing more pressure to bear on Assad, on the regime to comply with all six aspects or components of the Annan plan, including a democratic or political transition,” Toner told journalists. She told her Russian counterpart that Moscow, a key ally of Syria, had a “very significant role to play in trying to persuade Assad, using their influence... that the Annan plan offers the best way forward.” Toner also said that a sanctions group, led by Washington, was to meet this week to look at ways to “tight- en, strengthen, better coordinate sanctions” on the Syrian regime. “But that’s not where we’re stopping. We’re obviously going to continue our work both within the UN Security Council and with the Friends of the Syrian People to continue the political and economic pressure,” he said. “So, you know, this is a multi-front battle, if you will, to keep pressure up on Assad.” Meanwhile, in a related development, clashes between troops and rebels in Syria’s western Latakia province killed 15 soldiers on Tuesday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported, bringing the day’s death toll to at least 34. “Fifteen soldiers were killed and dozens wounded, while three opposition fighters also died in continuing clashes in several villages of Al-Heffa region in Latakia,” the Observatory’s Rami Abdel Rahman said. Two civilians were also killed in the province. The clashes took place in the villages of Bakas, Shirkak, Babna, Al-Jankil, and Al-Dafil in the Al-Heffa region, while troops stormed the town of AlHeffa itself, according to Abdel Rahman. State news agency SANA reported that “armed terrorist groups attacked citizens and security forces on Tuesday in Al-Heffa and tried to sabotage public and private institutions after the destruction of two ambulances used by medics in the city.” Crowds flock to Tahrir to oppose Cairo verdicts AFP CAIRO CROWDS of Egyptians flocked to Cairo’s iconic Tahrir Square on Tuesday for a mass demonstration to protest against verdicts handed down in expresident Hosni Mubarak’s murder trial. Marchers prepared to leave from several mosques around the capital led by the runners-up in last months’s presidential election first round — Hamdeen Sabbahi, Abdel Moneim Abul Fotouh and Khaled Ali— to join thousands already in the square. In Tahrir, demonstrators chanted against the ruling military council and vowed to keep their revolution alive. “Revolutionaries, free, we will continue our journey,” they chanted. Mubarak, 84, and his interior minister Habib al Adly were sentenced to life in prison on Saturday, but six security chiefs were acquitted of the killings of demonstrators during last year’s uprising that left some 850 people dead and ousted the veteran president. The ruling sparked nationwide outrage, with thousands taking to the streets to vent their rage that no one had been found directly guilty of killing the protesters. Mubarak — the only autocrat toppled in the Arab Spring to be put in the dock — could have been sent to the gallows as demanded by the prosecution but was instead given a life term, angering many. He was also cleared of graft charges. Along with the acquitted police chiefs, Mubarak’s sons Alaa and Gamal had corruption charges against them dropped on a technicality, but they will remain in custody pending trial on other graft charges. “We reject the trial. It’s a big farce,” said Hisham Khalifa, 30, in Tahrir Square. He said demonstrators also wanted the dismissal of the prosecutor general “who has ignored many corruption cases.” Demonstrators also want the implementation of a law that would see senior Mubarak-era figures barred from standing for public office. The legislation could have serious implications for Ahmed Shafiq, Mubarak’s last prime minister, who is due to face the Muslim Brotherhood’s Mohammed Mursi in a presidential election runoff next week.Tuesday’s protest was called by youth groups which were a driving force against Mubarak’s regime last year, including the Coalition of Revolution Youth. Egyptian held in Cairo on NGO trial-eve AFP WASHINGTON AN Egyptian-American was arrested in Cairo as he returned from the US for a hearing in the case of democracy activists accused of operating unlicensed NGOs in Egypt, a US official confirmed on Monday. “Former Freedom House employee Sherif Mansour did return to Egypt and... was arrested upon his arrival” late Sunday, a State Department spokesman, Mark Toner, said. Tuesday marks the next hearing in the case of the activists, launched earlier this year after Egypt’s military council — which took power following the uprising toppling veteran leader Hosni Mubarak — accused foreign groups of funding street protests against them. Egyptian authorities brought the case against 43 defendants — 16 Egyptians and 27 foreign nationals, and at one point barred the foreigners from leaving the country. After months of pressure from Washington, 13 of the foreign defendants — including six Americans — were allowed to fly out of Cairo airport in March after posting bail. Reports said a $5 million bail was paid for their release. After months of pressure from Washington, 13 of the foreign defendants — including six Americans — were allowed to fly out of Cairo airport in March after posting bail. “We continue to make very clear our objection to what we view as these politically-motivated trials,” Toner told journalists. He said Washington urged “the government to stop trying these individuals and instead resolve any outstanding issues that they may have on this matter in a government-to-government basis.” Mansour, who only recently obtained American citizenship, said before heading back to Cairo on Sunday that he could not abandon those Egyptians who had been left behind, and accused US officials of being too passive in the affair. “This case is extraordinary and it needs an extraordinary response,” the 32-year-old said, quoted by the Washington Post. “They were hoping that if we all kept a low profile, it would fizzle away. But that’s not acceptable for me. This is a battle that should be fought.” The Post said that another American, Robert Becker, 43, a former employee of the Washington-based National Democratic Institute, had chosen to stay in Cairo when the other Americans left and would also appear at Tuesday’s hearing.“The whole idea of being safely ensconced in the US while people who worked directly for me were on trial was unfathomable,” he said. “I felt they were being abandoned and I wouldn’t have been able to live with myself.” Jordan nabs 2 militants on way to Syria AFP AMMAN JORDANIAN police have arrested two alleged militants on their way to Syria to fight against President Bashar al Assad, security and Islamist officials said on Tuesday. It is the first time that Jordan has publicly stated that its own militants are joining other Arab fighters to support the Syrian opposition. Last month, Syria said it arrested 26 alleged Al Qaeda “foreign terrorists,” including one Jordanian. But Jordan never commented on the allegation. The Syrian uprising, which began in March 2011 with mostly peaceful protests calling for change, has turned into an increasingly militarized conflict. Activists put the death toll at over 13,000. One year after the revolt started, the UN put the toll at 9,000, but many more have died since. Al Qaeda-style suicide bombings have become increasingly common, and Western officials say there is little doubt that Islamist extremists, some associated with the terror network, have made inroads in Syria as instability has spread. The security official said the two Jordanians belong to a small extremist militant organization called the Salafi Movement. Authorities say the group numbers 800 activists, including many who fought alongside the al-Qaida in Iraq group. “Salafi” is also a broader term used by a large movement of ultraconservative Muslims, militant and other- wise. The official said the two were arrested Sunday near the Syrian border, but declined to provide other details. He insisted on anonymity, citing the ongoing investigation. A Salafi Movement member confirmed the arrest in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. He identified them as Omar Bazayaah and Khaled Khateeb, saying both were middle-aged men who hailed from prominent tribal Jordanian families. He said the two confessed to police that they were on their way to Syria to “take part in the Jihad (holy war) against the Syrian regime and its sinful gang.” He insisted on anonymity, fearing police retribution. GULF / MIDDLE EAST Wednesday, June 6, 2012 www.qatar-tribune.com Maliki appeals for calm after Baghdad blast; toll reaches 25 AFP BAGHDAD IRAQI leaders appealed for calm after a suicide bomber killed 25 people at a Shiite foundation’s offices in Baghdad, sparking fears of sectarian strife at a time of political crisis. The attack in the centre of the capital on Monday, Baghdad’s deadliest blast in over four months, was followed later by an explosion near a Sunni religious foundation’s headquarters, causing no casualties. The attacks came amid a dispute between the two Muslim endowments which manage Iraq’s religious landmarks over a shrine north of Baghdad, and during a protracted political standoff that has raised sectarian tensions in a country racked by brutal communal bloodshed from 2006 to 2008. Prime Minister Nuri al Maliki and parliament speaker Osama al Nujaifi both issued condemnations of the violence and appealed for calm, as did UN envoy Martin Kobler. “We call on the people to be aware, and dismiss sectarianism and hold on to national unity,” Maliki said, warning of “enemies who do not want citizens to live in safety, stability and unity.” Monday’s first attack struck Rescuers search for victims at the site of a bomb attack in the central Bab al Muadham area of Baghdad, Iraq, on Tuesday. (AFP) at 11:00 am (0800 GMT) outside the Shiite endowment in Baab al Muadham, in central Baghdad, and left at least 25 people dead and more than 65 wounded, medical officials said. The bombing completely destroyed the endowment headquarters, its deputy chief, Sami al-Massudi, told AFP. “We do not accuse anyone, but we call on the Iraqi people and especially on the sons of our religion to bury the strife because there is a plan to launch a civil war between the people, and between the Iraqi sects,” Massudi said. He said the Shiite endowment had received threats in recent days because of a dispute over the Shiite Al-Askari shrine in the mostly Sunni city of Samarra. The iconic gold-domed shrine was hit by an Al Qaeda suicide attack in February 2006 that ignited Iraq’s bloody confessional violence. Massudi and his aides had produced documents that attributed the management of the shrine to the Shiite reli- gious endowment, sparking tensions with its Sunni counterpart. The attack also fell on a significant day for Shiite Muslims — the birthday of Imam Ali, a cousin and son-inlaw of the Prophet Mohammed, who is a revered figure in Shiite Islam. AFP journalists near the site of the attack said security forces cordoned off the area and barred anyone from approaching, while emergency workers searched for survivors in the remains of the endowment headquarters. Several cars and nearby buildings were badly damaged by the explosion, and helicopters hovered overhead. Later on Monday, a statement on the Sunni endowment’s website said that a mortar round struck near its headquarters in Adhamiyah in north Baghdad, but did not cause any casualties. The latest bloodshed comes less than a week after a spate of bombings in Baghdad left 17 dead on May 31, shattering a relative calm in the city. The spike in attacks coincides with a ratcheting up of months-long tensions in which several political parties have called for the prime minister to be unseated. Monday’s death toll was the highest from a single attack in Baghdad since a suicide bomber blew up a car outside a hospital on January 27 killing 31 people. Violence in Iraq has declined dramatically since its peak in 2006-2007, but attacks remain common, especially in Baghdad. A total of 132 Iraqis were killed in violence in May, according to official figures. Iran nominates Syria allows aid workers in 4 areas ex-oil minister for OPEC post AP GENEVA REUTERS DUBAI IRAN has nominated former oil minister Gholam Hossein Nozari as its candidate to be the next Secretary General of OPEC, Mehr news agency reported on Tuesday. Nozari was Iran’s oil minister during President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s first term in office, between 2007 and 2009. Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Ecuador have already nominated candidates to replace the oil cartel’s current head who will finish his term at the end of this year. Meanwhile, in a separate development, Iran says it will make international complaints against 20 European companies for failing to supply contracted equipment for its oil refineries, Mehr news agency reported on Tuesday. The European Union banned all EU companies from supplying equipment to Iran’s oil or gas industry in 2010, while other multinationals have ceased dealing with Tehran to protect their interests in the United States. “In the last few months, some of these foreign companies and especially some of those companies holding European licences under contract with Iran have not adhered to their contractual obligations in the development of oil refineries,” deputy oil minister Ali Reza Zeighami said. “Nearly 40 foreign companees have not carried out their contractual obligations in the plans for oil refineries,” said Zeighami, who is also the director of the National Iranian Oil Refining and Distribution Company (NIORDC). He said some goods and spare Gholam Hossein Nozari parts that Iran’s oil refineries need had been received from foreign companies but that others had still not supplied equipment as they had agreed. “Some of these companies have met their obligations through intermediaries... Iran will make a complaint about the other 20 foreign companies,” Mehr quoted him as saying. No companies were named in the report and Zeighami gave no details as to how or where Iran would make its complaints. Reuters tried to contact Iranian officials for details without success. Inadequate refinery infrastructure and rising demand intensified Iran’s gasoline import dependency until 2007 - a vulnerability that Washington and Brussels have targeted by blocking fuel supplies and technology sales. International energy companies that had hoped to tap the country’s vast gas reserves have pulled out over the last few years, followed by European engineering firms such as Technip, ABB, and Linde. Iranian oil minister Rostam Qasemi said companies that had failed to meet their contractual obligations would be excluded from Iran’s oil and gas industry in future and that Iran would complain to the EU about it. SYRIA’S government has agreed to a written deal with the United Nations and other international organizations that would allow aid workers and supplies to enter four hard-hit provinces, UN officials announced on Tuesday. The agreement with Damascus and representatives of the government in Geneva should allow convoys with supplies and aid workers from nine UN agencies and seven other non-governmental organisations to enter Daraa, Deir el-Zour, Homs and Idlib within days, said John Ging of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. “Whether this is a breakthrough or not will be measured in the coming weeks,” Ging told reporters on Tuesday in Geneva after emerging from a closed-door session to discuss the dire humanitarian situation in Syria. The pact with Damascus should allow convoys with supplies and UN workers to enter Daraa, Deir el-Zour, Homs and Idlib Ging said the government has pledged to grant visas and clear up other bureaucratic hurdles that have blocked help from being delivered, and he hopes to have workers and supplies entering within “days, not weeks.” He said at least 1 million Syrians are in urgent need of some form of humanitarian aid, including people injured during fighting, and families who have lost jobs or homes. More than 78,000 Syrian refugees were also being helped in Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey, the UN refugee agency said. Syria barred a string of US and European diplomats on Tuesday, saying they were “no longer welcome” as the country plunged into its most profound global isolation in decades. Last week, Western nations expelled Syrian diplomats in a coordinated move over the Houla massacre, in which more than 100 people were slaughtered over one weekend in a cluster of small villages. The UN says pro-regime gunmen were believed to be responsible for at least some of the killings. President Bashar Assad has insisted his forces had nothing to do it. The countries targeted by the expulsion order have already pulled their ambassadors from Damascus, but the move was symbolic of how far diplomatic ties have disintegrated over the course of the uprising that began last year in March. “Some countries have informed our diplomatic missions and our embassies’ staff that they are unwelcome,” Syrian Foreign Ministry spokesman Jihad Makdissi said in a statement. He said Damascus has decided to take a “reciprocal measure” against ambassadors from the US, Britain, Turkey, Switzerland, France, Italy and Spain. A number of French, German, Canadian, Bulgarian and Belgian diplomats also are affected, Makdissi said. Syria is struggling to crush an increasingly deadly uprising against Assad’s rule, but the regime’s deadly crackdown on dissent has brought widespread condemnation. 03 Help Syrians defend themselves from Assad, says Riyadh AFP JEDDAH SAUDI Foreign Minister Prince Saud al Faisal urged Gulf states on Tuesday to mobilise their resources to help Syrians themselves” “defend against the President Bashar al Assad’s regime. Speaking at a meeting of Gulf Cooperation Council foreign ministers in the Saudi port city of Jeddah, Faisal called on GCC countries to “to use their resources to... enable the Syrian people to defend themselves against the murderous and destructive machine of the government.” He did not elaborate but both Saudi Arabia and Qatar have previously called for the arming of the Syrian rebels. “The killing and torture of civilians has continued,” said Faisal adding that the GCC must find a “quick solution to this crisis.” The Syrian pro-government daily Al Watan accused Saudi authorities on Monday of “plotting” against Syria and of turning Lebanon into a springboard for attacking the country. The newspaper accused the Saudi foreign minister personally of “sending arms to fighters and mercenaries they are financing in north Lebanon,” where weekend clashes between pro- and antiDamascus factions left 14 people dead. Prince Saud also called on GCC member states to provide urgently needed economic aid to Yemen, where a year-long Arab Spring style uprising forced veteran leader Ali Abdullah Saleh out of power and plunged the already impoverished nation into a dire humanitarian crisis. Saudi Arabia has already pledged $3.2 billion in financial assistance to Yemen, a commitment it made at a Friends of Yemen meeting in Riyadh last month. “We need to translate our political support to economic support to help the government restore stability and provide basic aid to the Yemeni people,” Prince Saud said. Palestine town on Green Line bears scars of history AFP BARTAA “THE Green Line? Here it is!” jokes Yussef Kabha, drawing an imaginary line through the main street in Bartaa’s souk, between a shop selling sequined dresses and a dried fruit stall. The fabled Green Line is the de facto boundary laid down in the 1949 armistice agreement which ended the war that broke out when Israel declared its independence a year earlier. A constant point of reference within the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the Green Line — which gets its name from the green pen used to trace its route — is mentioned in every international peace plan since 1993, and is considered by the Palestinians as the starting point for peace talks, with negotiators referring to it as “the pre-1967 lines.” But in Bartaa, an Arab village in Wadi Ara which straddles the Green Line between Israel and the Palestinian territories, the invisible boundary has been the bane of their existence Bartaa, a village in Wadi Ara, which straddles the Green Line between Israel and the Palestinian territories. for more than 60 years. Though the line is not marked, those living in the eastern part of the village need a permit to visit family and friends in the west. “That yellow house over there? That’s my aunt’s house,” explains Khatib Kabha, pointing through the window of his barber shop to a building some 200 metres (yards) away — which is on the western side of the line. “If I go and see her without a permit, I could be arrested by the border police and I risk being fined,” he says, explaining that on a quiet day, the border police sometimes look the other way. Until 1949, the village, which is populated mostly by a family called the Kabha clan, lived a normal life. After the war, the eastern side fell under Jordanian control along with the rest of the West Bank, while the western half became part of Israel. Between 1949 and 1967, moving between the two halves of the village was practically impossible. But the 1967 SixDay War, when Israel captured the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem, changed all that and paradoxically brought about something of a family reunion. At the moment, Israel’s vast separation barrier passes several kilometres to the east of the village, further complicating the situation for residents living in the east of the village. In order to go to the West Bank, they must apply for permission from the Israeli military to cross the wall through a gate which opens between 6:00 am and 9:00 pm. “We don’t know who we are any more,” complains one of the elder members of the Kabha clan who serves as an intermediary between the village residents and the Israelis. “For security, we rely on Israel, but for the rest — health, education — we depend on the Palestinian Authority,” he said. “When there is a medical emergency during the night, I have to call the Israelis to coordinate in order to take someone to hospital in Jenin,” he says, referring to the nearest Palestinian town in the northern West Bank. 04 Wednesday, June 6, 2012 EUROPE www.qatar-tribune.com ‘Spain needs banking Clinton urges Georgia to hold free, fair polls union to solve crisis’ AFP BATUMI (GEORGIA) DPA BRUSSELS/MADRID SPAIN needs other euro area partners to agree on a banking union to get out of its financial crisis, Finance Minister Cristobal Montoro said on Tuesday, but he did not clarify whether that would comprise direct aid for its banks. The banking union idea was launched last week by the European Commission and the European Central Bank. It would require all 17 euro members to jointly underwrite bank deposits, devise common schemes to deal with failed banks and agree on joint supervision. In an interview with Onda Cero radio, Montoro said “the sums that the Spanish banking sector needs to recapitalize itself are not very high, they are not excessive.” “The question is the procedure, where that money will come from, and that is why it is so important for European institutions to act” so that they can “facilitate” the task, the minister said. A decision in this sense should be adopted at the next EU summit on June 2829, he added. A debate is ongoing on whether the banking union reform should include a rule change for the European Stability Mechanism, the eurozone’s new bailout fund, allowing it to directly rescue banks without first needing a formal bailout request by a government. Montoro stuck to the government’s line that Spain “does not need” a full EU bailout, despite acknowledging, in reference to recordhigh borrowing costs, that “at the moment we have a problem with access to the markets.” Spanish Finance Minister Cristobal Montoro Reforms will bear fruit: Spain’s king BRASILIA Spain’s King Juan Carlos said Monday his nation’s economic fundamentals were “solid” and that tough measures to firm its footing “will not take long to bear fruit,” during a visit to Brasilia. “My country has the strong will and determination to overcome the crisis... The Spanish economy’s fundamentals are strong, our public debt is smaller than that of other EU nations,” the monarch told Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff and a group of Spanish and Brazilian business leaders. “The government has undertaken significant reforms that will not take long to bear fruit,” he added. The king underscored that “Spain is working with its European partners to stabilise He also rejected suggestions that Germany was pressing Madrid to seek outside aid. “No, that is not the case,” he said. US SECRETARY of State Hillary Clinton called on Georgia’s leaders on Tuesday to strengthen their democracy by ensuring that upcoming parliamentary and presidential elections are “free and fair”. Clinton also reaffirmed US support for the territorial integrity of the former Soviet republic that is a strong US ally, calling on Russia to pull back its forces from Georgia’s breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. She delivered her message in meetings with Prime Minister Nika Gilauri and representatives of the country’s opposition parties after arriving in the Black Sea port city of Batumi late Monday from Armenia as part of her European tour. President Mikheil Saakashvili is facing a strong political challenge from billionaire tycoon turned opposition leader Bidzina Ivanishvilli, with parliamentary elections to be held in autumn and presidential polls next year. “We urge Georgia’s leaders to ensure it will be a competitive campaign and that elections are free and fair both on election day and in the weeks and months running up to it,” Clinton said at a session with Georgian and US officials. “The more difficult and ultimately the more important work may well be ahead — the work of building the habits and practices that sustain democracy over time,” she added ahead of a meeting with the pro-US, pro-NATO Saakashvili. She said the United States “remains steadfast in our support for Georgia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.” “We reject Russia’s occupation and militarisation of Georgia’s territory and we call upon Russia to fulfill its obligations under the 2008 ceasefire resolution including the withdrawal of its forces to pre-conflict positions, and free access for humanitarian assistance,” she said. After Georgia and Russia fought a war in 2008, Moscow recognised Abkhazia and South Ossetia as independent and permanently stationed troops there. The Georgian prime minister expressed gratitude for Washington’s backing. “Now that 20 percent of Georgia is occupied by its northern neighbour, Tbilisi is convinced that the international community will not spare any effort to help restore justice peacefully,” Gilauri said. Clinton said the United States would continue to help Georgia modernise its military and upgrade its capabilities to defend itself and operate with NATO forces. She presided over the commissioning of a refurbished Soviet-era Coast Guard patrol boat, redesignated the P-109, that was gutted and re-equipped to US and NATO specifications with US funds. The US plans to provide Georgia with two refurbished US Coast Guard cutters and is building a ship repair depot to maintain a growing fleet of patrol boats. It also has provided communications and observation equipment, a high-tech maritime information centre and radiation detectors deployed at border points. financial markets, cut public debt and bolster the euro.” The king also emphasised the importance of ties with Brazil to help resolve the crisis in Europe that has lashed Spain, weakened by its banks. Spain is the second-largest foreign investor in Brazil with $85 billion poured into sectors such as oil, telecommunications and infrastructure. For her part, Rousseff renewed her criticisms of austerity measures that are affecting global growth and called for “coordinated action” to stem the crisis. “Growth is necessary so that the measures are not harming people, and countries,” she added. (AFP) What is needed is “measures that provide for more Europe ... not measures to rescue anyone but to bring about a European banking union, so that we have a European financial system with the same supervision, with the same guarantees for all,” the minister said. Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili (left) speaks with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, in Batumi, on Tuesday. (AFP) G7 conference call not sign of worsening EU crisis, says Rehn DPA BRUSSELS A CONFERENCE call between the Group of 7 (G7) industrialised countries on Tuesday is just part of “regular” exchanges, a European Union spokesman said, rejecting suggestions that it was a sign of the bloc’s eco- nomic crisis getting worse. “I would say that this is an exaggeration,” Amadeu Altafaj, spokesman for EU Economy Commissioner Olli Rehn, told reporters in Brussels. “I would not describe any of these regular exchanges as an extraordinary, crisis, alarm, alert meeting or exchange.” He said they typically “consist in informing our international partners about the state of play in our crisis response,” including efforts to implement fiscal consolidation, bolster the banking sector and support growth. Speculation about Spain needing an international bailout has been plaguing the Altafaj said that the European Commission is “always involved in these exchanges” and that although Rehn was in Riga on Tuesday, “phones work everywhere.” EU in recent weeks, as the country struggles to tackle problems in its banking sector. “That there is concern about the situation in Europe, frankly I find that completely normal,” Altafaj said. “We are the first to confront it. We are not sweeping anything under the carpet.” The G7 encompasses the finance ministers of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States. European officials such as Jean-Claude Juncker, the president of the Eurogroup panel of EU finance ministers, have also taken part in past meetings. Altafaj said that the European Commission is “always involved in these exchanges” and that although Rehn was in Riga on Tuesday, “phones work everywhere.” He declined, however, to confirm his participation. Central bankers were also expected to take part in Tuesday’s call. Tymoshenko improving: Doctors AP BERLIN FORMER Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko’s chronic back ailment has improved somewhat, but she is far from cured and the conditions at a hospital in her homeland are making treatment very difficult, German doctors said on Tuesday. The case of Tymoshenko, who was sentenced to seven years in prison for abuse of office, has become a political hot potato as Ukraine prepares to co-host football’s European Championship with Poland. France’s government says it will boycott matches held in Ukraine because of Tymoshenko’s case. Officials in Berlin have tried to persuade Ukraine to allow Tymoshenko to travel to Germany for treatment. But Karl Max Einhaeupl, the head of Berlin’s Charite hospital, said he sees “no tendency in Ukraine to allow her to leave” for treatment. Lithuania’s President Dalia Grybauskaite (left) with jailed Ukrainian leader Yulia Tymoshenko, in Kharkiv, recently. (REUTERS) Einhaeupl and colleagues from Charite have examined her and supervised her treatment at a hospital in Kharkiv, where she has been serving her sentence, in recent weeks. “The medical condition has improved — she is more mobile, she is moving around at least a few hours a day,” Einhaeupl told reporters. “The pain is a little bit less than at the beginning of the treatment, but it’s not gone at all.” Tymoshenko’s deep distrust of Ukrainian officials and government-appointed doctors hasn’t helped and was fed, for example, by an incident in which her medical records were shown on television, he said. Her treatment at the hospital is “under constant surveillance, by video cameras and by guards,” he added. The German doctors insisted on the cameras being taped over during visits, but Tymoshenko fears that there may be more, hidden cameras. Doctors also pressed for authorities to uncover one hospital room’s windows for a short time each day and allow in daylight. “I think I can say that ... Mrs. Tymoshenko has great trust in the doctors from Germany, but we are never alone with her — there is always someone there,” not least a second patient in the same room, Einhaeupl said. “It is proving to be very difficult and, in the end, it is impossible to predict whether, under these conditions, we can really bring about a cure,” he said. Einhaeupl said Tymoshenko has raised the possibility of being transferred to Kiev, which the German doctors would welcome as it would make it easier for them to travel to treat her. Putting Tymoshenko under house arrest also would make matters easier, he added. Wednesday, June 6, 2012 UNITED KINGDOM www.qatar-tribune.com Queen wraps up 4-day jubilee festivities without Philip AFP LONDON BRITAIN’S Queen Elizabeth II on Tuesday wraps up four days of diamond jubilee celebrations but without her husband Prince Philip after he was hospitalised with a bladder infection. The festivities conclude with a ceremonial carriage procession in London, a formal contrast to Monday’s spectacular pop tribute staged outside Buckingham Palace. Prince Philip, who turns 91 on Sunday and has been at the queen’s side throughout her 60-year reign, missed the musical extravaganza and will remain in hospital for several days. Buckingham Palace said Philip, the longest-serving royal consort in British history, was “disappointed” to miss the concert as well as Tuesday’s thanksgiving service at St Paul’s Cathedral and carriage procession. The new health scare comes less than six months after the outspoken British royal patriarch suffered chest pains during the Christmas break and was treated for a blocked coronary artery. Queen Elizabeth (left) with Duchess of Cornwall Camilla (right), and Prince Charles at Westminster House, in London, on Tuesday. (REUTERS) Prince Philip appeared in good health on Sunday as he travelled on the royal barge in chilly conditions during a 1,000-boat river pageant for the jubilee. But he was absent as the queen and several other members of the royal family attended Monday’s colourful concert featuring a raft of top pop stars and watched by hundreds of thousands of patriotic revellers. The British press praised the queen’s “brave” decision to attend the concert despite her husband’s ill health, with the Daily Telegraph, Daily Mail and Daily Express all carrying the headline: “The show must go on.” Tuesday marks a return to pomp and pageantry as the queen attends a thanksgiving service at St Paul’s before returning to the palace in a carriage procession down The Mall. The monarch, Prince Charles, Prince Harry, Prince William and his wife Catherine will then appear on the Buckingham Palace balcony for a Royal Air Force flypast. Broadcasters across the REUTERS LONDON BRITAIN needs separate accounting rules for banks to allow investors and regulators to properly evaluate risks, as trying to do so now was like trying to “pin the tail on a boisterous donkey”, a senior Bank of England official said. International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), which set accounting methodology, give a “hit and miss” view of the solvency of banks, Andrew Haldane wrote in this month’s edition of the accountancy and business magazine Economia. Haldane, the Bank’s executive director for financial stability, said Britain’s accounting rules were so badly flawed that getting an accurate view of a bank’s assets was like trying to “pin the tail on a bois- Younger of royals being groomed, says queen Commonwealth will air a twominute message of thanks from the queen, recorded before Monday’s concert, at 1700 GMT. The palace underwent an unprecedented makeover on Monday when it was turned into a giant screen, providing a spectacular backdrop for performances from some of pop music’s biggest stars. inger Robbie Williams kicked off the gala event and was followed by acts from throughout the queen’s 60year reign including ex-Beatle Paul McCartney, Elton John, Kylie Minogue and Stevie Wonder. The monarch appeared on stage after the final set to light a ceremonial beacon, the centrepiece of a chain of 4,200 spanning the Commonwealth, triggering a thunderous firework finale. Moments earlier, her son and heir Prince Charles took centre stage to celebrate the “life and service of a very special person”, drawing cheers from the crowd as he paid tribute to his “mummy”. Despite the informal good spirit of the occasion, the prince expressed regret over the absence of Prince Philip. Britain needs new accounting rules for bank, regulators terous donkey”. He said the uncertainty brought about by the financial crisis showed that the “flighty liabilities and uncertain assets” of banks made for a fragile mix. AFP LONDON BRITAIN’S Queen Elizabeth II has said she will never abdicate, but after the diamond jubilee there are signs that the younger royals will take on a growing number of roles for the 86-year-old, experts say. The nationwide celebrations marking her 60th year on the throne have boosted the popularity of the monarch and the rest of the royal family to their highest level for decades, after a difficult time in the 1990s. The queen herself appeared indefatigable as she headed a 1,000-boat flotilla on the River Thames, with every sign that she will beat the empress-queen Victoria’s record for the longest reign in 2015. “The Queen will never abdicate, she said very clearly on a number of occasions that she will not abdicate,” royal historian Kate Williams told AFP. “And if she gets something like Alzheimer’s or a very severe disease she will not abdicate then, Charles will be regent until she actually dies,” Williams added. Her children and grandchildren are increasingly shouldering some of the burden of the gruelling official schedule of Elizabeth and her 90-year-old husband Prince Philip, particu- larly on trips abroad. Heir to the throne Prince Charles, 63, has been playing a big role for years, but his sons William, 29, and Harry, 27, have taken on a far greater royal role in the past year since the wedding of William to Kate Middleton in April 2011. “The institution of monarchy relies upon a wider family. It’s not a pres- The queen has already started scaling down the number of official duties she performs, from 432 in 2010 to 370 in 2011. idential system, it’s not a one person operation. There is a triangle at the top of the tree.” The queen has already started scaling down the number of official duties she performs, from 432 in 2010 to 370 in 2011. All foreign trips to Commonwealth countries during the jubilee year have been left to the younger royals, with William and Harry representing the queen abroad for the first time, and the queen’s children Charles, Anne, Andrew and Edward all taking part. The queen and Prince Philip — who suffered a heart attack in December — have restricted themselves to a tour of the United Kingdom. Media Opportunities We are looking forward to your application to join our group of smart and savvy news professionals Reporters Copy Editors Secretarial Staff A graduate degree Fluent in English Good computer skills Systematic, methodical and hard working Work experience as a Print Journalist in an English language newspaper for 2-5 years Having sound knowledge of Quark Xpress 6.5 in Macintosh A graduate degree, preferably Journalism or English Literature or any social science Should have a good command over English grammar The ability to make pages with speed and accuracy 05 Work experience as a Print Journalist in an English language newspaper for 2-5 years A graduate degree, preferably in Journalism or English Literature or any social science Knowledge of Arabic an added advantage Good knowledge of Qatar and the region Possession of a valid Qatari driving licence preferable Attractive remuneration packages. Only shortlisted candidates will be contacted. Please email your resume to mediajobsqatar@gmail.com 06 Wednesday, June 6, 2012 www.qatar-tribune.com Indonesia coal group warns govt over hasty policy moves REUTERS NUSA DUA INDONESIA should avoid hasty policy announcements on coal that are hurting miners and fuelling perceptions of investment risk in the world’s top thermal coal exporter, an industry group said on Tuesday. The government on Monday said it was looking to impose controls on the industry in a bid to increase domestic revenue and better manage its natural resources. It also said an export tax on coal remains under consideration. Those comments drove down shares in the country’s top coal miners Bumi Resources and Adaro Energy by over 13 percent, versus a 4.3 percent drop in the broader Jakarta Index. “Drafting is okay, but not speaking in public,” Indonesian Coal Mining Association chairman Bob Kamandanu said on the sidelines of the Coaltrans conference in Bali. Southeast Asia’s largest economy has introduced a series of regulations aimed at squeezing extra state revenue from the mining industry, including limiting foreign ownership and a 20 percent tax on exports of unprocessed minerals. But the government has so far steered clear of coal exports, worth $27 billion last year, or 13 percent of the country’s total. No comprehensive details of regulations on coal have been released, but comments from officials since December indicate these could include increasing royalties, introducing an export tax and imposing divestment and domestic market obligations on mining license holders. In a straw poll of mostly coal producers at the conference, 55 percent of around 400 respondents said they expect the government to implement an export tax on coal. “The government has put the brakes on everyone,” said Fadjar Kandar, a partner at Jakarta-based law firm Soemadipradja & Taher, which specialises in advocacy for mining companies. “Investment will definitely be slowing down.” Financial advisor Hadyn Palliser, an associate at Corality Financial Group (Australia), also warned that the government must be clearer in making regulatory announcements. “A lot of our clients are private equity firms and they are particularly concerned about coming in without knowing what they are going to get hold of, what ownership they will have in a company, what are the ways they can structure a transaction,” Palliser said. Some cautioned investors against over-reacting. “Everyone’s got their hands thrown up saying this is the death of the mining industry,” said Edward Gustely, managing director of Penida capital advisors and a senior advisor to the Finance Ministry. A coal barge carries Adaro Energy’s coal on the Barito river, in South Kalimantan province, Indonesia, recently. (REUTERS) PHILIPPINES / EAST ASIA BUDDHIST VESAK DAY Devotees meditate during a ceremony on Vesak Day, an annual celebration of Buddha’s birth, enlightenment and death, at the Wat Phra Dhammakaya temple, in Pathum Thani province, Bangkok, on Monday. This year marks the 2600th anniversary of Buddha’s enlightenment. (REUTERS) Tensions with China over shoal on the ease: Manila AFP & DPA MANILA CHINA and the Philippines have repositioned some ships stationed at a disputed South China Sea shoal, easing tensions that have been building up since April, the Philippine government said on Tuesday. Following bilateral consultations, China moved out two government ships from a lagoon at the centre of the rock formation called Scarborough Shoal, and a Philippine fisheries bureau vessel did the same, the foreign department said. It is not clear when the consultations took place nor when the three vessels manoeuvred to their current positions. Two Chinese vessels joined six other Chinese ships just outside the lagoon, while the Philippine vessel was now with a second Philippine ship stationed outside, added foreign department spokesman Raul Hernandez. The coordinated pullback was a step in the right direction, President Benigno The coordinated pullback was a step in the right direction. This is an easing of tensions and we appreciate the gesture of both parties to de-escalate tension in Scarborough Shoal. EDWIN LACIERDA ‘The disputed area’ Aquino’s spokesman Edwin Lacierda said. “This is an easing of tensions and we appreciate the gesture of both parties to deescalate tension in Scarborough Shoal,” Lacierda said. “We continue the consultations to address the remaining issues in Bajo de Masinloc,” the department added, referring to the shoal by its Philippine name. The Philippines has also recalled a Bureau of Fisheries ship that was dispatched to replace a navy ship during the stand-off and to monitor Chinese fishing activities in the lagoon. “Outside the lagoon, there are eight Chinese government ships and two Philippine government ships,” he added. Hernandez said the reciprocal pullback left 30 Chinese fishing boats in the lagoon, adding there were no Filipino fishermen in the area. Chinese and Philippine government ships have been facing off around the Scarborough Shoal. The conflict began on April 10 when the two Chinese maritime ships blocked Philippine navy personnel from arresting the crew of eight Chinese fishing boats for alleged poaching. The Philippines claims the shoal, which lies near the main Philippine island of Luzon, falls within its exclusive economic zone while China claims it, along with nearly all of the South China Sea up to the coasts of Asian neighbours. The shoal is 230 kilometres west of the Philippines’ province of Zambales and 870 kilometres from the nearest coast of China in Hainan province. China claims nearly the entire South China Sea, which straddles key shipping lanes in the region and is believed to be rich in resources. The Philippines and China are continuing consultations to address the maritime dispute, he added. The Philippines, Malaysia, Vietnam, Brunei and Taiwan also have overlapping claims in the sea. The Philippines has long urged the international community to take a stand on the dispute, warning that China’s claim could be a potential threat to freedom of navigation and unimpeded commerce. Cambodian PM’s party triumphs in election test run REUTERS PHNOM PENH Supporters of Cambodian People’s Party carry a portrait of Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen during a campaign for the Cambodian local council elections, in Phnom Penh, recently. (EPA) CAMBODIA’S ruling party looks to have won a landslide win in local elections, putting authoritarian Prime Minister Hun Sen on course to remain one of the world’s longestserving leaders after parliamentary elections next year. Official results from Sunday’s elections for the chiefs of areas known as communes are not expected for several weeks but the major parties were in agreement that Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) had swept the polls, as it has in all national ballots in the past decade. The CPP claimed 72 percent of the seats in what it sees as a test of support ahead of the 2013 election. General elections take place every five years. “These results show a landslide victory,” top CPP member of parliament Cheam Yeap told Reuters. “This is a basic projection for the parliamentary election in the middle of next year.” Hun Sen, a former Khmer Rogue soldier who defected to eventual invaders Vietnam during the Khmer Rouge’s 1975-1979 reign of terror, has been in power for 27 of his 59 years and has said he plans to remain there until he dies. The CPP claimed 72 percent of the seats in what it sees as a test of support ahead of the 2013 election. General elections take place every five years. A shrewd political tactician with an image as a toughtalking strongman, Hun Sen’s supporters say he is popular among the millions of rural poor, having overseen unprecedented growth, stability and development since the decades of war that turned the former French colony into a failed state. Critics say Hun Sen is a ruthless leader who has intimidated his opponents into submission or frightened them out of the country. The latest polls did throw up some signs of discontent, with the CPP’s notable loss of seats in areas that have seen long-running land disputes and forced evictions from land leased to foreign companies. The government suspended new land concessions to foreign firms in May. The main opposition Sam Rainsy Party said early indications from monitors showed it took just 21 percent of the seats but it said there were irregularities in Sunday’s vote. Its self-exiled leader, Sam Rainsy, who fled Cambodia after being sentenced to 12 years for forgery and destruction of property, among other crimes, says the 2013 vote will be a sham unless he is allowed to take part without serving jail time. Philippines asks rebels to memorialise war horrors AP MANILA PHILIPPINE negotiators hoping to end a Muslim insurgency have proposed creating monuments to abuses committed on both sides. The monuments should help tell the full story of the decades-long Muslim rebellion in the country’s south and remind future generations of the brutality and blunders that helped perpetuate the violence, chief government negotiator Marvic Leonen said. “We have seen that future generations would not move on and heal unless we really tell the story,” Leonen said. Rebel negotiator Mohagher Iqbal said the proposal was acceptable, but that the government should first focus on resolving the rebellion, which has caused massive deaths and displacement of villagers, while stunting economic growth in the resource-rich region. The Philippine government and the 11,000strong Moro Islamic Liberation Front remain optimistic a peace pact can be reached under reformist President Benigno Aquino III’s term despite key differences that have stalled Malaysian-brokered negotiations. Those differences include the size of an expanded Muslim autonomous region in the southern Mindanao region and the powers to be accorded to Muslim officials, who would run it. Leonen also said a marker should be installed on southern Basilan island, where the guerrillas were accused of beheading 10 Filipino marines during a 2007 clash. Philippine officials said they were mulling whether to ask the National Historical Institute to start studying where the monuments and markers could be installed in what could be a joint project by the government and the rebels, Deles said, adding that versions by both sides would be considered in portraying violent events. Wednesday, June 6, 2012 SOUTH ASIA www.qatar-tribune.com 07 Karzai to sign strategic deal with China DPA KABUL AFGHAN President Hamid Karzai travelled to China on Tuesday to attend the 12th summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, his office said. Afghanistan is expected to sign an agreement to establish a strategic partnership with China, according to the statement. The Afghan president is heading a high-level team comprising foreign, mining, agriculture and security ministers. The pact would deepen Chinese role in Afghanistan as Western countries prepare to halt combat operations. Until now, China has only invested in the mining sector, and kept out of political and security issues in the war-torn country. Afghanistan has signed strategic partnership agreements with many Western nations including the United States, Germany and Australia. An agricultural cooperation agreement with Beijing is also expected to be inked, according to the statement. It said Karzai is also scheduled to hold separate meeting with the presidents of China, Russia, Pakistan and Iran to discuss regional peace and stability issues. Karzai is accompanied by his foreign minister, the mining and the agricultural ministers and the national security advisor among others, the statement said. Afghanistan’s decade-old insurgency is one of the priorities at the summit due to start on Wednesday. Last year, the country became an observer state in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, an intergovernmental security group founded in 2001 by China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. Meanwhile, three foreign militants were killed by a NATO airstrike early Tuesday in eastern Afghanistan, an official said. “We were informed that some Arab insurgents had entered a village in Sayed Abad district of Wardak province for terrorist activities. We shared the information with the NATO forces and they raided the area,” provincial governor’s spokesman Shahidullah Shaheed said. He said Afghan security forces seized some weapons and explosives in the area. It was not clear yet how many foreign insurgents were in the area. Arab fighters with Al Qaeda related groups fight alongside Bangladesh aims for 7.2% GDP growth this year REUTERS DHAKA BANGLADESH is aiming to boost economic growth to 7.2 percent economic growth in the year to June 2013, up from an estimated 6.32 percent in the current year, despite challenges such as soaring fuel prices and record inflation, Finance Minister Abul Maal Abdul Muhith said on Tuesday. “It (6.32 percent) is a primary estimation, but I am fully confident that at the end of the day when we get all facts and figures (in hand) the growth will be at least 6.7 percent,” Muhith told Reuters in an interview. Bangladesh had set a target of 7.0 percent economic growth for the current fiscal year. The main driver of growth in the next fiscal year beginning on July 1 will be expected higher income from exports, especially of ready-made garments, and increased remittances from migrant workers. Muhith will present next year’s budget in parliament on June 7, amid widespread criticism over its financial management and lacklustre investment flows. “The budget for 2012/13 fiscal year will aim at boosting growth, curbing inflation and creating more jobs,” the minister said. The main driver of growth in the next fiscal year beginning on July 1 will be expected higher income from exports, especially of ready-made garments, and increased remittances from migrant workers, said Muhith. “We (also) expect higher growth in the next fiscal year because of a strong farming sector, more earning by expatriates and also vibrant non-farm economic activities in rural areas.” The rice crop for the year to this June rose to a record of about 35 million tonnes from the previous year’s 34.25 million tonnes thanks to government efforts to improve productivity. Inflation remained elevated in the double digits through most of 2011/12, but the government has pledged to bring it lower in during the new budget year. The minister indicated that the size of the new budget might be 1.9 trillion taka, against 1.6 trillion taka for 2011/12, with bigger allocations for infrastructure, health, education, power and the rural economy. “The overall inflation rate in the coming fiscal year is expected to 7.5 percent, against 7.0 percent targeted for 2011/12, that was later revised up to 7.5 percent,” said Muhith. In 2011/12, inflation peaked at 11.97 percent in September, largely driven by large imports of fuel oil at high prices, officials said. Muhith said annual development spending during the next year would be 543 billion taka including 215 billion taka from foreign loan. This is 83 billion taka more than the present one. He expressed his dissatisfaction over the poor level of disbursement of foreign assistance, both in the form of loans and aid. “The share of foreign aid to the economy in the current (2011/12) fiscal year was around 0.6 percent, which should be, at least, 3.0 percent of GDP,” Muhith observed. “We are not capable enough to utilise external aid,” the minister lamented. He also said the subsidy bill on petroleum products, power and state-owned enterprises would decline to a marked extent in the next budget. Muhith said the government might waive duty on import of capital machinery for 100 percent export-oriented industries to encourage investment. Taliban insurgents against the Afghan government and international forces. “We are aware of the report that three Arab militants were killed by NATO airstrike. Unfortunately, at this time, the operational reporting can neither confirm nor deny the report,” NATO spokesman Major Martyn Crighton said. Taliban officials were not available for comment. Chinese state media quoted Sun Zhuangzhi, a Central Asian expert at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, as saying Afghanistan’s increasing participation would strengthen the group’s campaigns against drug-trafficking and terrorism. The bloc was founded in 2001 to enhance security cooperation between its six member states of China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. It has since expanded its discussions to cover economic, technological, cultural and other forms of cooperation. India, Iran, Pakistan and Mongolia are permanent observers to the group, while Belarus and Sri Lanka became dialogue partners in 2010. Afghanistan would be the first new observer nation since 2005. Liberal blogger stabbed in Maldives AFP COLOMBO AN outspoken Maldivian blogger known for his liberal views on religion was in intensive care on Tuesday after being stabbed by an attacker outside his home in the capital Male, police said. Ismail Rasheed, who is better known as “Hilath”, had his blog blocked late last year by the Maldivian telecommunications authorities who claimed it contained antiIslamic material. The 37-year-old, who has received death threats in the past, was later arrested following a rally he organised in December in support of religious tolerance and spent nearly a month behind bars. “We don’t know who attacked him. His condition is said to be stable now,” police spokesman Hassan Haneef told AFP by telephone, adding that they were trying to track down the assailant behind Monday evening’s attack. The Maldivian government condemned the stabbing, but said Hilath should have sought protection. Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai (left) at Beijing’s international airport, on Tuesday. (AFP) 16 arrested over Afghan ‘poisoning’ of schoolgirl AFP KABUL SIXTEEN people have been arrested over the alleged serial poisoning of schoolgirls in Afghanistan, although some doctors now suspect psychological stress could be behind the “attacks”, officials said on Tuesday. The sweeping arrests come as desperate authorities try to put an end to the mysterious illnesses — usually mass fainting episodes — that have struck scores of schoolgirls in northern Takhar province almost daily for the past two weeks. Among those held are Pakistani woman working in a clinic and a Taliban insurgent leader, provincial spokesman Mostafa Rasuli said. All have denied any involvement, and no proof of poisoning has been found, he said. An expert in the field is convinced that the incidents are classic examples of mass psychogenic illness, or mass hysteria, rather than poisoning. Some doctors in the area now share this belief, an edu- Afghan school girls receive first-aid after inhaling some mysterious poisonous gas, in Takhar, Afghanistan, recently. (EPA) cation ministry spokesman, Abdul Saboor Ghufrani, said on Tuesday — a day when 60 schoolgirls in two separate schools were affected. “There have been a number of suspected poisoning cases of schoolgirls in Takhar province recently, but initial investigation by health and security teams in the area have failed to detect traces of any poison,” Ghufrani said. “In some cases doctors in the area have reported they suspect a psychological cause behind these incidents, but we cannot yet definitely rule out the possibility of deliberate attempt by some group to sicken our students. “Some suspects have been detained in recent days and police are interrogating them. We have to wait for the outcome of the investigation.” Local officials regularly accuse Taliban insurgents, who banned schooling for girls while in power from 1996 to 2001, of poisoning school wells or using “gas” or “toxic powder” against the girls. Myanmar president, Suu Kyi urged to push reforms AFP YANGON Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi at Yangon’s international airport after her trip to Thailand, on Sunday. (AFP) MYANMAR’S state media hailed Aung San Suu Kyi on Monday as “the hope of Myanmar” and a leader alongside the president in a rare tribute to the democracy icon that urged the pair to “cooperate”. In an article entitled “To the leaders who are the hope of Myanmar”, state mouthpiece the New Light of Myanmar said the future of the fastreforming nation “depends completely” on Suu Kyi and President Thein Sein working together. “Realising that the future of our people depends on the two leaders, president and Daw Aung Suu Kyi, they should cooperate based on mutual trust and understanding,” the article said. But it urged them not to jeopardise a potential economic boom as the country opens up and to set aside “egoism and selfishness”. Suu Kyi, who with Thein Sein was referred to as “visionary”, was afforded an unprecedented amount of print space in the newspaper, which has given only muted coverage to the opposition leader since her release from house arrest days after a controversial 2010 election. The Nobel laureate, who was elected to parliament in April by-elections, returned to Myanmar on Sunday after travelling abroad for the first time in 24 years on a visit to Thailand that included addressing world business leaders in Bangkok and visiting Myanmar communities. Suu Kyi had previously refused to leave Myanmar because of fears the previous junta would not allow her to return. Her decision to travel overseas is seen as a key sign of confidence in changes that have swept the country under a new quasi-civilian government. But Thein Sein’s unexplained cancellation of an official visit to Thailand during the same week raised concerns of a rift. Addressing the Bangkok forum on Friday, Suu Kyi urged “healthy scepticism” over Myanmar’s dramatic reforms, saying only the rule of law can cement recent political progress and foster clean investment. The New Light author said he was “relieved” that Suu Kyi’s focus on job-creating industries in her speech at the World Economic Forum on East Asia echoed the priorities of Energy Minister Than Htay, who represented Thein Sein at the event. But the article raised concerns that Suu Kyi’s comments about Myanmar’s legal system and her exhortation to delegates not to be overly optimistic about the country’s progress, would “shut the door on purpose.” 08 Wednesday, June 6, 2012 OPINION www.qatar-tribune.com ESTABLISHED SEPTEMBER 3, 2006 HAMAD BIN SUHAIM AL THANI ADEL ALI BIN ALI DR HASSAN MOHAMMED AL ANSARI EDITOR -IN-CHIEF AJIT KUMAR JHA CHAIRMAN MANAGING DIRECTOR EDITOR Clinton In Caucasus America should engage with Georgia & Russia to prevent terrorism & war in the region PRINTED AT ALI BIN ALI PRINTING PRESS Westside Doping Scandal Regulators should rid horse racing industry of corruption T HE horse racing industry should be deeply shamed that extraordinary security measures had to be ordered to guard horses in next Saturday’s Belmont Stakes from the doping abuses engulfing thoroughbred racing. The horses will be kept in an isolated barn with visitors limited, feed and hay bales checked for drugs, and veterinarians and trainers under daily watch to ensure there is no manipulation of food or medication. If anyone thinks this is an overreaction, they should take a look at the record of Doug O’Neill. He is the trainer of I’ll Have Another, the horse primed for the chance to be a Triple Crown champion after winning the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes. O’Neill has a long history of racing sanctions and penalties for administering illegal and dangerous performance-enhancing concoctions. For all the pageantry of the Belmont, the race should be heard by the industry as a blaring call to reform its practices with more forceful anti-doping measures and penalties, including a lifetime ban on trainers who are multiple offenders. Andrew Cuomo last month replaced the quasipublic New York Racing Association with a special panel of appointees directed to put into place stronger anticorruption protections. Racing in other states suffers similar mismanagement, and they must either join to enact effective reform or face the prospect of federal control of the racing industry. O’Neill denies ever doping racehorses. But late last month he received a 45-day suspension by California’s racing association for using an enhancer to improve a horse’s performance. The regulators’ commitment to clean racing has clear and cynical limits: they also postponed O’Neill’s suspension until after the Belmont Stakes. Eastside An Honourable Campaign Volunteers’ action to help workers reflects badly on Saudi companies I T ought to be a matter of considerable pride that young Saudi volunteers have taken it upon themselves to give bottles of chilled water and fruit juice to workers laboring out in the sun in parks and on road and construction sites. This is a demonstration of caring and consideration which demonstrates Saudi youth at its very best. Unfortunately, what these young people are doing is also a cause for shame and indeed outrage. Put bluntly, it ought not to be necessary for these well-motivated individuals to be doing their cooldrink runs at all. It is the responsibility of the organisations that employ these workers to look after their welfare. Yet as one of the volunteer drink providers told Arab News this week, it appears that the majority of employers, most from municipalities and construc- tion companies, is simply not bothering to ensure that these expatriate workers are given refreshment and are protected from the very real dangers of dehydration. The majority of this water is recycled from human effluent and while it may be fit for gardening and building, is dangerous for human consumption. So, therefore, not only do many of these unfortunate labourers often lack proper drinking water but that which they have to hand could very well be carrying infections and diseases which will damage their own health, and if they prove contagious, the health of society as a whole. As the students have said themselves in their social media messages that appear to have turned this drink-provision service into a viral movement, this is indeed “an honourable campaign”. S ECRETARY of State Hillary Clinton’s visit to Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia this week is timely. The Caucasus holds risks of confrontation that could affect American and European interests, and it requires regular and high-level attention. Terrorism and insurgency are spreading in Russia’s North Caucasus region. Russian military occupation of Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and adjacent areas in Georgia heightens strains. Renewed hostilities are increasingly possible between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh in Azerbaijan. Vladimir Putin’s return to Russia’s presidency adds complexity. He seeks to increase Russia’s influence over former Soviet neighbours, counterbalancing the appeal of the NATO and the European Union. Last month, Putin skipped a G-8 summit but convened leaders from the Collective Security Treaty Organisation, whose other members are Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Russia is pushing for a widened Eurasian customs union, which Ukraine is resisting. The Kremlin is sceptical about democratic openings on its borders, such as the 2003 Rose revolution in Georgia and the one a year later in Ukraine. Russia’s invasion of Georgia in 2008 violated established precedent in seeking to change by force borders of the former Soviet states. Moscow engineered proclamations of independence by Abkhazia and South Ossetia, but they are effectively being integrated into Russia. Although last year Georgia agreed to allow Russia to join the World Trade Organisation, relationships remain tenuous. The Kremlin refuses to deal with President Mikheil Saakashvili, and most economic ties are suspended. Last month in Chicago, despite Moscow’s opposition, NATO reaffirmed that Georgia will become a member and noted its ‘’substantial contribution’’ – including in Afghanistan – to Euro-Atlantic security. Georgia’s holding of free and fair parliamentary elections this year and presidential elections in 2013 will influence NATO attitudes about membership. War over Nagorno-Karabakh in the early 1990s displaced about a million people and gave Armenia control of the enclave and another 9 percent of Azerbaijan’s territory. The Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe seeks a mediated solution, but negotiations are long stalled. A fragile cease-fire is frequently violated. Russia arms Armenia and maintains a military base there. Azerbaijan uses its oil wealth for an arms buildup, and its ally Turkey has closed the border with Armenia for more than a decade. The NagornoKarabakh conflict could suddenly become unfrozen. In the North Caucasus, popular DENIS CORBOY, WILLIAM COURTNEY AND KENNETH YALOWITZ | NYT NEWS SERVICE alienation and militant violence are increasing. Two dozen Russian soldiers died in an attack three days before Putin’s inauguration last month. Russia relies mostly on force and economic subsidies to quell resistance, but the strategy has not worked. Terrorism could be a real threat to the 2014 Winter Olympic games in Sochi. Terrorism and insurgency are spreading in Russia’s North Caucasus region. Russian military occupation of Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and adjacent areas in Georgia heightens strains. Moscow might again blame Azerbaijan and Georgia for aiding terrorists, as it did falsely in 1999 regarding Chechnya. How can the America and Europe lessen risks in the Caucasus? They should continue to stand firm for the independence of Georgia and against the illegal occupation of onefifth of its territory. Moscow ought not to be allowed to assert control over the export of Caspian energy through Georgia. Europe and America should importune Georgia not to stir antiRussian animosities in the North Caucasus. They ought to cooperate with Russia to prevent terrorist acts around the Olympics. America and Europe can no longer keep the Nagorno-Karabakh talks on the back burner. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev faces domestic pressures to act, but Europe and America should caution him about the adverse consequences, notably a broader regional war. Energy investment in Azerbaijan and a major new gas pipeline to Europe, Nabucco, could become casualties. OSCE members have largely stopped engaging Russia about tensions in the North Caucasus, but risks grow and could spill over into Azerbaijan and Georgia. Members should use the permanent council in Vienna to raise concerns and begin a dialogue. In her visit, Secretary Clinton should spotlight these tensions and offer reassurance that the West will work actively to prevent confrontation and conflict. Denis Corboy, a visiting senior research fellow at Kings College, London, served as European Commission ambassador to Armenia and Georgia. William Courtney served as US ambassador to Kazakhstan and Georgia and special assistant to the president for Russia, Ukraine and Eurasia. Kenneth Yalowitz served as US ambassador to Belarus and Georgia. (NYT/ Arab News) Wall Street And The Average Reader The shift of Facebook’s audience from computers to smartphones could mirror the shift from print to digital media U ntil May 18, the Facebook story seemed to ride an ever-higher wave of media attention. The number of mentions of Facebook in The New York Times over the previous 12 months had risen to heights never seen by other technology companies (with the exception of Twitter). In the weeks leading up to the initial public offering of Facebook stock on May 18, The Times repeatedly spoke of a “frenzy” around the company and strong demand for its stock, at one point even linking the company’s young founder and chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, to “a line of revolutionaries stretching back to Gutenberg.” We know what happened next. Facebook’s IPO bubble popped, and the company settled back to earth. But looking back, was The Times – like other news media – blinded by the mania surrounding the company before the IPO? Or did its coverage offer the right balance of enthusiasm and scepticism? My view is that, in the immediate runup to the IPO, the paper provided some appropriately sceptical coverage. But it certainly could have done more, espe- cially for the general reader who relies on The Times to explain the risks of the stock market. First, though, the positive: Several articles did raise questions about Facebook’s prospects. Among them: A Page 1 article on May 15, which was offered as a sweeping overview, pointed to Facebook’s slowing revenue growth – a real red flag for a company whose valuation appeared headed for a near-messianic 100 times its actual earnings. The article also noted that Facebook’s audience was rapidly moving from computers to mobile phones and that its ability to sell advertising on the mobile platform was unproven. Two days later, The Times published a piece on the front of Business Day reporting that Madison Avenue remained sceptical about Facebook’s suitability as an advertising medium. This came on the heels of an earlier article saying that General Motors had pulled its $10 million account with Facebook. And, finally, on Page 6 of Business Day on the day of the IPO, The Times addressed the small investor in an arti- ARTHUR S. BRISBANE | NYT NEWS SERVICE Facebook’s disclosure was a great opportunity to explore the implications of the mobile shift in depth, but that didn’t happen. cle headlined, “For Average Investors, the Odds Are Long on a Big Payday From Facebook.” The piece, accompanied by a terrific graphic, noted the uneven record of previous tech IPOs and ended with an expert’s quote: “Facebook, by just about any measure, is a great company. That doesn’t mean that Facebook will be a great investment.” But the paper could have done more to hold expectations in check. For example, The Times could have delved much more deeply into Facebook’s lastminute disclosure on May 9 about the challenges it faced with selling advertising on mobile phones. The shift of Facebook’s audience from computers to smartphones could mirror the shift of audiences from print to digital media. One of the clearest takeaways of that transition is that incumbent media struggle to retain ad dollars when the audience moves to a new platform. Facebook’s disclosure was a great opportunity to explore the implications of the mobile shift in depth, but that didn’t happen. Another thing The Times could have done, but didn’t, was wave a red flag prominently on the day of the IPO. As I mentioned, small investors were warned deep inside Business Day. But that article was overshadowed by one on the front of the section reporting that tech IPOs “often achieve double-digit gains in a one-day pop” – an article that glowed with phrases like “feverish anticipation,” “must-own stock” and “avalanche of orders.” Ryan Chittum, who writes for a blog, The Audit, on Columbia Journalism Review’s website, told me he thought the article should have taken careful note of Facebook’s decelerating revenue growth. Larry Kramer, who founded the MarketWatch business news website and became president and publisher of USA Today two weeks ago, offered some praise for The Times’ coverage but echoed the view that the paper could have done more to help the average investor understand the risks of the offering. She said the “fire hose of information” about Facebook made it very difficult for small investors to assess the company. But with its specialised finance blog, DealBook, plus its general-news mission overall, the paper is committed to two audiences, and that is a challenge. Larry Ingrassia, the business editor, told me the paper writes “for a broad and intelligent audience of generalists but also with sophistication for a more informed specialist audience so that they feel that they are learning something from what we are writing.” Doing both is clearly what is needed. In the case of the Facebook IPO, The Times tried to do both and delivered a good set of offerings. But closer attention to the needs of the average reader could have yielded more focus on the risks, more scepticism and an even better outcome. THE VIEWS EXPRESSED ON THE OPINION AND ANALYSIS PAGES ARE THE AUTHORS’ OWN. QATAR TRIBUNE BEARS NO RESPONSIBILITY. Wednesday, June 6, 2012 ANALYSIS Health is Wealth AMANDA GARDNER | NYT NEWS SERVICE Avastin May Help Fight Tough-to-Treat Ovarian Tumors F RENCH researchers report that a targeted therapy already enlisted in the fight against colorectal cancer, lung cancer and kidney cancer may also have a role to play in recalcitrant ovarian cancer. According to research being presented Saturday at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting in Chicago, Avastin (bevacizumab) doubled the time to cancer recurrence in women who were not responding to traditional chemotherapy. “This is the first time that there has been a significant advance in these difficult-to-treat patients,” said study author Dr Eric PujadeLauraine, head of medical oncology at Hopitaux Universitaires Paris-Centre site Hotel-Dieu, in France. “These data open a new era for biologics when chemotherapy is not doing its job in recurrent ovarian cancer.” According to Dr Elizabeth Poynor, a gynecologic oncologist and pelvic surgeon with Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, some physicians are already using Avastin in these settings. This trial, she said, “provides further evidence of benefit.” About one in five women with ovarian cancer is resistant to platinum-based chemotherapy or becomes resistant to it. Avastin was the first in a class of drugs developed to inhibit angiogenesis, or the formation of blood vessels, which helps fuel a tumor’s growth. This study is actually the fourth phase 3 trial finding some benefit to using Avastin for different stages of ovarian cancer, said Dr Jamal Rahaman, an associate clinical professor in the division of gynecologic oncology at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, in New York City. The current trial involved 361 women whose cancers had returned despite having undergone four or more cycles of platinum-based chemotherapy. Participants were randomly assigned to receive one of three platinum-based chemotherapy drugs alone or chemotherapy plus Avastin. Women in the combination group lived an average of 6.7 months before their malignancy returned, compared with 3.4 months among women getting chemotherapy alone. Women taking Avastin had more side effects, including gastrointestinal perforations, hypertension and abscesses, the study authors reported. Because of such side effects, the US. Food and Drug Administration recently revoked its approval of Avastin for the treatment of metastatic breast cancer. The challenge now is to select those patients for whom Avastin would be most beneficial, said Rahaman. A year’s worth of Avastin runs about $100,000 a year in the United States. Have your say Is there an issue you feel strongly about, or an article you want to comment on? QT will carry your voice to the public and to places where it matters. Write to us at ADDRESS PO Box 23493, Doha, Qatar TELEPHONE +974.44422077 FAX +974.44416790 EMAIL letters@qatar-tribune.com www.qatar-tribune.com Maraniss’ book depicts Obama on an intense odyssey of self-discovery, moving toward defining himself less as a half-white man with white girlfriends than as a black man who wanted to be part of a black community. Gender Bender MAUREEN DOWD | NYT NEWS SERVICE DREAMING OF A SUPERHERO Obama has not sold his signature legislations-stimulus and health care bills O N Friday night, the nation’s capital was under a tornado watch. And that was the best thing that happened to the White House all week. As the president was being slapped by Mitt Romney for being too weak on national security, he was being rapped by a New York Times editorial for being too aggressive on national security. A Times article by Jo Becker and Scott Shane revealed that the liberal law professor who campaigned against torture and the Iraq war now personally makes the final decisions on the “kill list,” targets for drone strikes. “A unilateral campaign of death is untenable,” the editorial asserted. On Thursday, Bill Clinton once more telegraphed that he considers President Barack Obama a lightweight who should not have bested his wife. Bluntly contradicting the Obama campaign theme that Romney is a heartless corporate raider, Clinton told CNN that the Republican’s record at Bain was “sterling.” Covering a humourous W at the unveiling of his portrait, the White House press actually seemed nostalgic for the president who bollixed up Afghanistan, Iraq, Katrina and the economy – a sure sign that the Obama magic is flagging. On Friday, an ugly job market report led to the stock market’s worst day of the year. As the recovery flat-lined, the president conceded to a crowd at a Honeywell factory in Golden Valley, Minn, that “our economy is still facing some serious headwinds” and getting sucked further into Europe’s sinkhole. In depressing imagery for the start of the summer campaign, cable channels carried the red Dow arrow pointing down while Obama spoke; the Dow wiped out all of its 2012 gains. The president who started off with such dazzle now seems inca- pable of stimulating either the economy or the voters. His campaign is offering Obama 2012 car magnets for a donation of $10; cat collars reading “I Meow for Michelle” for $12; an Obama grill spatula for $40, and discounted hoodies and T-shirts. How the mighty have fallen. Once glowing, his press is now burning. “To a very real degree, 2008’s candidate of hope stands poised to become 2012’s candidate of fear,” John Heilemann wrote in New York magazine, noting that because Obama feels he can’t run on his record, his campaign will resort to nuking Romney. In his new book, A Nation of Wusses, the Democrat Ed Rendell, the former governor of Pennsylvania, wonders how “the best communicator in campaign history” lost his touch. The legendary speaker who drew campaign crowds in the tens of thousands and inspired a dispirited nation ended up nonchalantly delegating to a Congress, disdaining the bully pulpit, neglecting to do any LBJ-style grunt work with Congress and the American public, and ceding control of his narrative. As president, Obama has never felt the need to explain or sell his signature pieces of legislation – the stimulus and health care bills – or stanch the flow of false information from the other side. If he wins the election, “the fever may break,” he said. “My hope, my expectation, is that after the election, now that it turns out that the goal of beating Obama doesn’t make much sense because I’m not running again, that we can start getting some cooperation again.” In his new biography, Barack Obama: The Story, David Maraniss writes that a roommate of the young Obama compared him to Walker Percy’s protagonist inThe Moviegoer: an observer of his life, one step removed. Obama’s boss at his community organising job in Chicago, Jerry Road Safety THERE are occasions when we don’t react in time when the traffic light turns green. When as drivers we knock down a pedestrian who crosses or walks down the road carelessly. Such negative driving occurs when we impose on ourselves what we call, ‘divided attention’ in driving. Attention is a mental and physical activity focused to ensure precision and accuracy. Attention gets divided when a person undertakes two or more activities which require the same or similar attention, at the same time. Driving is a sensitive and life-death situation which undoubtedly requires maximum attention or even an extra of it. Vigilance, focus, steadiness are some of the ingredients we need to have to ensure safety on our roads. The question is why drivers’ attention gets divided on roads? What are some of the unwarranted activities which divide our attention? Some of these activities, among others, include making and receiving phone calls, surfing on the internet on the phone, smoking cigarettes, over-relaxing. Such unsafe driving behaviours create divided attention and eventually result in fatalities on our roads. One comes across some weird activities on part of some drivers. In some instances, one finds a driver logged on to Facebook at traffic signals oblivious of the light turning green. Drivers who are not focused forget to correlate positively the dangerous relationship between smoke (fire) and fuel. Our attention on the roads should not get diverted. Let’s keep our lives in one piece, not pieces! FELIX OSEI OWUSU DOHA Kellman, observed: “He was not unwilling to take risks, but was just this strange combination of someone who would have to weigh everything to death, and then take a dramatic risk at the end. He was reluctant to do confrontation, to push the other side because it might blow up – and it might. Maraniss’ book depicts Obama on an intense odyssey of self-discovery, moving toward defining himself less as a half-white man with white girlfriends than as a black man who wanted to be part of a black community. His New York girlfriend, Genevieve Cook, told Maraniss that Obama confessed to her that “he felt like an impostor. Because he was so white. There was hardly a black bone in his body.” When she predicted that his future might be with a black woman. He wanted to get out of the corporate world he found so distasteful – he described himself as “a spy behind enemy lines” – and reimagine himself as a politician. A president focused on historic achievements? Imagine that. But in his lame way, Romney got at Obama’s problem: The Moviegoer prefers to float above, at a reserve, in grandiose mists. Cook told Maraniss that she thought Obama’s desire to “play out a superhero life” was “a very strong archetype in his personality.” But superheroes and mythic figures must boldly lead. Obama’s caution – ingrained from a life of being deserted by his father and sometimes his mother, and of being, as he wrote to another girlfriend, “caught without a class, a structure, or tradition to support me” – has restrained him at times. In some ways, he’s still finding himself, too absorbed to see what’s not working. But the White House is a very hard place to go on a vision quest, especially with a storm brewing. “Very glad that Kenyan expatriates in Qatar will be able to vote for first time in next general elections!” M ARIE J ONES D OHA “The world is changed by your example, not by your opinion” PAULO C OEHLO 09 Bloggers’ Borough CAITLIN KELLY | HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW Artists’ Rescue Funds Can Help In Times Of Crisis M ANY Americans – the out of work, the underwater, the plain fed up – have been asking that question since big banks and automakers received all those taxpayerfinanced rescues in 2008. But it turns out that a number of small, private rescue funds have been lending a hand to a group that is definitely not in the too-big-tofail camp: writers, artists and other creative types. Think of these funds as sort of a TARP for the arts crowd, only with much smaller dollar figures, and with little or no help from Washington. Consider the story of George Handy, a potter in Asheville, NC He didn’t know how he would get by financially after a Honda minivan barreled into his wood-walled studio on an October evening in 2008, about the time of Wall Street’s bailout. His work was destroyed, his livelihood imperiled. “I could have been picking glass out of my eyes with all the windows that shattered,” Handy said. “My file cabinet was smashed. Pots worth $1,000 apiece were gone.” Fortunately, Handy, 57, who has made his living as a potter since college, had bought home insurance for the first time a month earlier. But one claims agent dismissed his lost work as “a handful of clay,” Handy said, though the insurer would eventually give him just more than $37,000. Friends and neighbours lent a hand, but then more financial aid came from CERF(PLUS), the Craft Emergency Relief Fund, which helps artists in need with grants and long-term interest-free loans. CERF(PLUS) gave him $4,500 in all: a $3,150 loan and a $1,350 grant. That, in addition to what he received from the insurance claim, was enough to see him through. A run of bad luck – a car accident, an illness, the loss of a job by a spouse or partner – can mean financial disaster for many artists, who are often self-employed. And their numbers are huge: almost 2 million artists of various types are in the labour force, according to the National Endowment for the Arts. Unlike financial companies and automakers, which received a combined $700 billion from Washington in the Troubled Asset Relief Program, most artists don’t qualify for any bailouts. Personal savings, insurance, a generous relative or an emergency grant is often all that stands between them and financial ruin. “A lot of artists fall between the cracks, between FEMA and the Small Business Administration,” said Cornelia Carey, executive director of CERF(PLUS). The group has been working since 2006 with state, regional and federal agencies and foundations to help creative workers survive personal financial crises and to plan for possible disasters like hurricanes, tornadoes, floods or medical emergencies. Many can’t afford such preparations themselves. “They’re both high-need and very vulnerable,” Carey said. “They often have a low and erratic income, sporadic employment and most are not big enough to access a loan from the Small Business Administration. Preparedness is kind of the last thing that gets done.” Andy Nulman, president of Just for Laughs, the annual comedy festival based in Montreal, expressed similar sentiments. “An artist’s brain is just a different head space,” Nulman said. “They don’t necessarily plan for tomorrow. An artist is a dreamer. The next hit might be right around the corner.” Nulman has worked with comedians from around the world, including Mike MacDonald, a Canadian who is now living with his mother in Ottawa, while awaiting a liver transplant. MacDonald, 57, recently toured in British Columbia, netting $5,000, a small fraction of the income of his best years, which was as much as $22,000 a month. “I did 28 shows in 31 days playing really small venues,” MacDonald said of his recent tour. “Talk about the economic crunch.” Weakened by his illness, he spent four days in the hospital during the tour. Now too sick to work, his retirement savings gone and hoping to net $50,000 from the sale of his suburban Los Angeles home, he recently pleaded his case on the Internet – on GoFundMe.com, a donations site. Within three days, he had raised more than $26,000. “It’s amazing. I’ve never seen this,” said Howard Lapides, his manager of 30 years. MacDonald, at least, can live with his mother and, because of Canada’s government-run health care system, faces no continuing medial bills. Chrystle Fiedler, 54, a freelance writer in Greenport, NY, is not so fortunate. To Be Continued 10 Wednesday, June 6, 2012 PAKISTAN www.qatar-tribune.com Qaeda’s second-in-command was Monday’s drone attack target: US AFP WASHINGTON AL QAEDA’S second-incommand Abu Yahya al Libi was the target of a US drone strike that killed 15 people in Pakistan’s lawless tribal belt on Monday, US media reported. US officials confirmed to The New York Times that Libi had been the target of the missile attack in North Waziristan, a Taliban and Al Qaeda stronghold along the Afghan border, but could not say whether he had survived. “People are looking very closely to see whether he’s still alive,” a US official told Top rights activist fears threat to life from ISI the Times. “It’ll take some time for people to gain a high level of confidence that he’s dead. But he’s number two in Al Qaeda, and this would be a major blow.” A senior US official also told ABC News that Libi had been the target of the attack, the third drone strike in as many days and the deadliest this year. A senior Pakistani security source in Peshawar, meanwhile, told the Times that it “looks like he has been killed.” “This would be a major blow to core Al Qaeda — removing the number two Qaeda No 2 Abu Yahya al Libi leader twice in less than a year,” a senior US official told AFP, declining to con- firm whether Libi was dead or alive. “The degradation to core Al Qaeda during the past several years has depleted the ranks to such an extent that there is now no clear successor to take on the breadth of his responsibilities, putting additional pressure on (Ayman al ) Zawahiri to try to manage the group in an effective way.” The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, noted that Libi had served as “general manager” for Al Qaeda’s main branch, overseeing its daily operations in Pakistani’s lawless tribal regions and managing links to affiliates around the world. Libi, a Libyan citizen believed to be in his late 40s, has been an influential Al Qaeda commander. He became the international terror network’s deputy leader after the August death of Atiyah abd al Rahman, another Libyan national who was killed in a US missile strike in North Waziristan. The militant leader, who has a $1 million US bounty on his head, was falsely reported dead previously, after a December 2009 drone strike in South Waziristan. Pakistani officials said two missiles slammed into a compound in the village of Hesokhel, east of Miranshah, the capital of North COLLECTING GARBAGE Scavengers search for recyclable items from a garbage dump on the occasion of World Environment Day, in Lahore, on Tuesday. The day is celebrated every year on June 5 with the objective to raise global awareness for world environmental concerns. (AFP) Waziristan, before dawn. A security official in Miranshah told AFP that the bodies of those killed could not be identified and that there were unconfirmed reports that foreigners were among the dead, a possible reference to Al Qaeda fighters. Should his death be confirmed, Libi would be among the highest profile Al Qaeda militants killed by US forces since a Navy SEAL raid killed former leader Osama bin Laden in May 2011. Libi was captured in 2002 and was held at the US highsecurity prison at Bagram Air Base. But he escaped three years later. US stops funding for Sesame Street AP PTI KABUL LAHORE LEADING rights activist Asma Jahangir has said she has received information that Pakistan’s powerful security establishment is planning to carry out a “murderous attack” on her, prompting civil society groups to condemn the threat to her life. Jahangir, who is also a leading lawyer and campaigner for democracy, told TV news channels about the threats to her life late on Monday night. She said a credible source had informed her about a “murderous attack” planned on her by state agencies, following which she had restricted her movements and decided to remain at home. She contended that the plan to kill her had been hatched at the “highest level” of state agencies, which were apparently angered by her efforts to highlight human rights violation by security forces in the restive province of Balochistan. Jahangir also provided details of what she said were steps taken against her by Pakistan’s intelligence agencies. She alleged when a group of lawyers recently tried to book a venue for a meeting in which she was to participate, they were barred from doing so by the InterServices Intelligence agency. On another occasion, some lawyers detained two persons who were part of a group that tried to attack her at a court complex, Jahangir said. “One of these persons had an Intelligence Bureau identity card and the other had an ISI card,” she told a TV channel. The Human Rights Commission of Pakistan said a “highly credible source” had provided information about a serious threat to Jahangir. THE US has terminated funding for a $20 million project to develop a Pakistani version of Sesame Street, the US embassy said on Tuesday. The decision came as a Pakistani newspaper reported allegations of corruption by the local puppet theatre working on the initiative. The organisation in question is the Rafi Peer theatre Workshop, a group in the city of Lahore that jointly developed the show with Sesame Workshop, the creator of the American series. Officials at Rafi Peer allegedly used the US money to pay off old debts. US apology needed to open NATO supply routes: Khar AFP WASHINGTON THE United States should apologise for an air raid that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers if it wants Pakistan to reopen key supply routes into Afghanistan, Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar said in an interview published on Monday. Angered over the lethal November attack, Islamabad shut the supply routes vital for US and allied troops, forcing the alliance to rely on longer, more expensive northern routes through Russia and Central Asia. “A representative parliament of 180 million people has spoken on one subject,” Khar told Foreign Policy, referring to new guidelines for US-Pakistan ties approved by Pakistani law- makers which call for an apology. A US apology is “something which should have been forthcoming the day this incident happened, and what a partnership not only demands, but requires,” she said. The on-again, off-again relationship between Islamabad and Washington is at a new low, and with US elections looming in November, President Barack Obama is unlikely to say sorry to Pakistan and make himself vulnerable to attacks from his Republican challenger, Mitt Romney. A NATO summit in Chicago ended two weeks ago without a deal on the NATO supply lines. Khar, however, said that despite the political challenges, the United States should live up to its principles of doing “what we consider to be right rather than what is more popular.” She noted that Pakistan also has political obstacles of its own. “For us in Pakistan... the most popular thing to do right now is to not move on NATO supply routes at all. It is to close them forever,” she said. “If I were a political advisor to the prime minister, this is what I would advise him to do. But I’m not advising him to do that... because what is at stake is much more important for Pakistan than just winning an election.” The roads through Pakistan, now shuttered for over six months, are a crucial logistical link for NATO as it plans a large-scale withdrawal of combat troops and hardware by the end of 2014. Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar, in Islamabad, on Tuesday. (AFP) The show, which includes Elmo and a host of new Pakistani characters, first aired in December and was supposed to run for at least three seasons. The US hoped it would improve education in a country where one-third of primary school-age children are not in class. It was also meant to increase tolerance at a time when the influence of radical views is growing. US Embassy spokesman Robert Raines said the US Agency for International Development terminated funding for the programme, but declined to provide further details. The Pakistan Today newspaper reported on Tuesday that the cause was “severe” financial irregularities at Rafi Peer, citing unnamed sources close to the project. Officials at Rafi Peer allegedly used the US money to pay off old debts and awarded lucrative contracts to relatives, the sources claimed. Faizaan Peerzada, the chief operating officer of Rafi Peer and one of several family members who run the organisation, denied the corruption allegations. He said the US ended its participation after providing $10 million because of the lack of additional available funds. If the corruption allegations prove true, it would be an embarrassment for the multibillion-dollar programme. Nuclear-capable Hatf-VII cruise missile test-fired AGENCIES ISLAMABAD PAKISTAN on Tuesday tested a fifth nuclear-capable cruise missile since India launched last month a new long-range ballistic missile, Agni V, capable of delivering a one-ton nuclear warhead anywhere in China. The statement issued by the military said that indige- nously developed Cruise Missile Hatf-VII (Babur) having a range of 700 kilometers, is a low flying, terrain hugging missile with high maneuverability, pin point accuracy and radar avoidance features. It can carry both nuclear and conventional warheads and has stealth capabilities. “It also incorporates the most modern cruise missile technology of Terrain Contour Matching (TERCOM) and Digital Scene Matching and Area Co-relation (DSMAC), which enhances its precision and effectiveness manifolds,” the statement said. The missile was launched from a state-of-the-art multi tube Missile Launch Vehicle (MLV) which significantly enhances the targeting and The statement issued by the military said that indigenously developed Cruise Missile Hatf-VII (Babur) having a range of 700 kilometers, is a low flying, terrain hugging missile. employment options of Babur Weapon System in both the conventional and nuclear modes. “The test will consolidate Pakistan’s strategic deterrence capability, and further strengthen national security,” the statement said. The president and prime minister of Pakistan congratulated the scientists and engineers on the successful test of the latest cruise missile. The Hatf-VII (Babur) was the fifth missile tested by Pakistan since last month. On May 31, Pakistan test fired nuclear- capable HatfVIII cruise missile with a range of more than 350 km. On May 29, Islamabad tested its quick reaction tactical nuclear-capable Hatf-IX missile with a range of 60 km on May 29. Pakistan conducted a test of the nuclear- capable HatfIII ballistic missile with a range of 290 km on May 10. On April 25, six days after India tested the Agni-V missile with a range of 5,000 km, Pakistan tested an improved version of the nuclear-capable Hatf-IV intermediate range ballistic missile with the range of 1,000 km. Wednesday, June 6, 2012 INDIA www.qatar-tribune.com 11 UP, Kerala oppose common entrance test for engineering institutions PTI NEW DELHI US Secretary of Defence Leon Panetta (left) with Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, in New Delhi, on Tuesday. (AFP) US wants India to play more active role in Afghanistan REUTERS NEW DELHI US DEFENCE Secretary Leon Panetta will encourage India to take a more active role in Afghanistan as international forces draw down after a decade of war, US officials said on Tuesday as the Pentagon chief arrived in New Delhi for two days of talks. The officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, acknowledged the longstanding rivalry between India and Pakistan for influence in Afghanistan but insisted that both countries had an interest in working with the international community to ensure stability in their northern neighbour. “There is a risk that the tensions and histori- D K Joshi to be new Navy chief cal mistrust between India and Pakistan could lead them to view their respective roles in Afghanistan as being in conflict,” one official said. “This is not predestined. This does not have to be the case.” Pakistan wields considerable influence over neighbouring Afghanistan, while India is already one of its biggest bilateral donors, having pledged about $2 billion since the 2001 US led-invasion for projects from the construction of highways to the building of the Afghan parliament. In October, India and Afghanistan signed a wideranging agreement to deepen ties, including to help train Afghan security forces, a deal that angered Pakistan. Their remarks came as Panetta flew to India as part of his week-long Asia tour to explain a new US military strategy to allies and partners in the region. The strategy calls for a shift in US focus to the Asia- PTI NEW DELHI NEW DELHI NEW DELHI THE government on Tuesday cleared the appointment of Vice-Admiral D K Joshi, the present Western Naval Command chief, as the new Navy chief after Admiral Nirmal Verma retires on August 31. Vice-Admiral Joshi, a specialist in anti-submarine warfare, had assumed command of the Western Naval Command in May last year. Vice-Admiral Joshi, who has also commanded the triService Andaman and Nicobar Island command in the past, has commanded the guided-missile corvette INS Kuthar, guided-missile destroyer Ranvir and the country’s solitary aircraft carrier INS Viraat during his long career. A graduate of the Naval War College, USA, he is also an alumnus of the College of Naval Warfare, Mumbai and National Defence College, New Delhi. He takes over at a time when the Navy’s ongoing warship, submarine and maritime aircraft acquisition programmes as well as proposed projects in the pipeline are estimated to together cost well over Rs 3,00,000 crore over the next 15 years. Contracts for another 45 warships, including six new submarines and seven stealth frigates, are in the pipeline. United States views India as a logical partner to work with on security and stability issues. Pacific region. Panetta announced on Saturday during a speech at the Shangri-La Dialogue, a security conference in Singapore, that the US military would rebalance its military assets so that by the year 2020 60 percent of US warships would be in the region, versus 50 percent now. The officials said the United States views India as a logical partner to work with on security and stability issues in the Indian Ocean region and that India was singled out for its importance in the new strategy. Panetta is expected to elaborate on that theme during his meetings with senior defence and political leaders, as well as in a speech at a think tank on Wednesday. India has a long history of involvement in the country and its activities have often been viewed suspiciously by Pakistan, which is concerned about being diplomatically encircled by its longtime enemy. India has trained Afghan army and police over the past decade, but on a relatively small scale, the US officials said. It has also increasingly helped Afghanistan with its economic reconstruction, the officials said. “As we look to the future development of peace and stability in Afghanistan ... we know that the regional actors, Afghanistan’s neighbours and extended neighbours like India will play a greater role,” one official said. Almost all states also opposed the centre’s proposal to allow flexibility to prestigious IITs. It was explained that States would have the freedom to join in the common examination system and have the autonomy to determine their own relative weightages to normalised Class XII Board marks, performance in JEE-MAIN and JEEADVANCED. Almost all states also opposed the centre’s proposal to allow flexibility to prestigious IITs according to which they can adopt a methodology for selection and admission of students which is different from the same in NITs and IIITs. Led by Bihar, Education Ministers almost unanimously said they cannot agree with a provision in the centre’s proposal that the selection criteria for candidates for the IITs would be different even as all the aspirants or IITS, IIITs and NIT will have to appear in a common test under a new format. Modi blamed for New guidelines for SEZ in pipeline Joshi’s exit IANS PTI “India and Pakistan share an interest, the same interest that we have, of peace and stability in Afghanistan,” the official said. “That makes Pakistan more peaceful and stable and it makes India a lot more stable.” THE Centre’s proposal for a common entrance test for all engineering institutions, along with the tests for IITs and other central institutes like NITs and IIITs, met with stiff resistance from some Indian states at a meeting of education ministers on Tuesday. In the light of their opposition, states have been given the flexibility to opt out of the proposed common entrance test by conducting examinations for engineering institutions coming under their authority. Another proposal to allow flexibility to IITs to adopt a methodology of admission of students different from NITs and IIITs also met with opposition from almost all the states. While Congress-ruled Kerala and Samajwadi Party-ruled Uttar Pradesh on Tuesday opposed the government’s move on the common entrance test, some states including BJPruled Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat said that they would implement the centre’s proposal. Gujarat has also written to the Centre supporting the common test. Congress-ruled states of Haryana, Assam and Maharashtra also supported the Centre, sources said. However, HRD Minister Kapil Sibal claimed that “the overwhelming opinion” was in support of the common test. Kerala Education Minister P K Abdu Rabb said his state was agree for a common test for central government institutions like IIT, NIT and IIIT. “But a common test for engineering institutions under the jurisdiction of the state government is not acceptable,” he said. “That question does not arise,” he told reporters. Considering the strong opposition from Kerala and Uttar Pradesh, Sibal said flexibility is given to the states which are under no compulsion to join the common entrance test for institutes under their jurisdiction. NEARLY 10 days after Sanjay Joshi had to resign from the BJP’s national executive, posters appeared on Tuesday attacking Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi. Although the posters did not refer to Modi by name, they blamed his exit on the stubborness of “one leader” — a clear reference to the Gujarat chief minister. Modi agreed to attend last month’s national executive of the Bharatiya Janata Party in Mumbai only after BJP presi- dent Nitin Gadkari asked Joshi, Modi’s known foe, to leave the leadership panel. One of the posters appeared mysteriously outside the gates of the BJP national headquarters here and was quickly taken off. Another came up at the gate of BJP leader Murli Manohar Joshi’s residence. The multi-colour posters had a large image of Joshi. It described his forced exit from the national executive as “bullying”. Modi and Joshi have been at loggerheads for years. Modi stayed away from campaigning in UP.. THE Indian government will come out with new guidelines to revive export hubs, special economic zones(SEZs), which have lost sheen after imposition of certain levies and proposal to take away tax incentives. The government had imposed Minimum Alternative Tax (MAT) and Dividend Distribution Tax (DDT) on SEZs in 2010-11, which were earlier exempted from almost all levies. Admitting that due to imposition of MAT and DDT, there has been a “visible slowdown” in growth of export from SEZs, Commerce and Industry Minister of India Anand Sharma on Tuesday said a new set of guidelines would be announced to make the SEZ policy more buoyant. “We have undertaken a comprehensive assessment of the SEZ Scheme to re-visit certain aspects of the policy and operational framework and after concluding the inter- ministerial consultations, we will be able to come out with new guidelines to make the operation of the SEZ policy more buoyant,” he said, while announcing the supplementary Foreign Trade Policy. The Direct Tax Codes (DTC) being considered by Parliament proposes to do away with the income tax exemption given to them and instead link tax sops to investments made in them. Over 100 developers are seeking more time from the government to execute their projects and over 50 developers have surrendered the projects. Profit-linked benefits were the main attraction of the SEZ scheme. The initial phase of SEZ scheme, launched in 2006, saw developers lining up in big numbers for projects. It was also seen as a real estate opportunity. At present, over 100 developers are seeking more time from the government to execute their projects and over 50 developers have surrendered the projects. Exports from SEZs stood at Rs 3.65 lakh crore in 201112. With investment of Rs 2.02 crore, these zones provide employment to over 8.45 lakh. Overseas shipments from the 153 operational tax free havens have come down to 12 per cent in the country’s total exports from about 30 per cent in the previous years. No cause for alarm on economic front: Chidambaram PTI BHOPAL Home Minister P Chidambaram, in New Delhi, recently. (PTI) STEPPING out of the capital, the Group of Ministers (GoM) on Media on Tuesday held an interaction with journalists here to assuage concerns over the current economic situation, saying there is no cause for alarm or panic. “Just as we recovered after 2008-09, we are confident we can recover in 2012-13 and 2013-14. Kindly remember that we are subject to what is happening in the international arena,” Home Minister P Chidambaram said. Chidambaram said in the first of the media interaction programmes of the GoM in We are confident we can recover in 2012-13 and 201314. Kindly remember that we are subject to what is happening in the international arena P CHIDAMBARAM state capitals that he was in Bhopal to mark the completion of three years of UPA-II as “there is much to be satisfied about but there are also challenges.” Along with two other member of the group— Law Minister Salman Khurshid and Minister of State in the PMO V Narayanasamy, he said, “2011-12 has been a year of declining growth because of the eurozone crisis. While we recognise the challenges the economy faces, I want to say on behalf of the government that there is no cause for alarm or panic.” The ministers were in Bhopal to meet Bhopal gas victims and activists in the wake of the Supreme Court asking the government last month to take a decision on the disposal of toxic waste left in the aftermath of the disaster in 1984 which had claimed thousands of lives. “The centre had spoken to the governments of Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and Maharashtra but all of them refused to allow disposal of the toxic waste,” the home minister, who visited the Bhopal Memorial Hospital, set up for gas tragedy victims, said. “Before saying anything about the manner in which the present situation was being handled, one must remember that there were different contexts in which the UPA-I and UPA-II were functioning,” the former finance minister said . 12 Wednesday, June 6, 2012 SOUTH INDIA www.qatar-tribune.com CBI grills Jagan, two others in illegal assets case IANS HYDERABAD People living close to the Arabian Sea coast try to put sand bags to protect their house from big waves, in Kochi, on Tuesday. (AP) Monsoon hits Kerala coast IANS THIRUVANANTHAPURAM THE southwest monsoon, crucial for agriculture, hit Kerala on Tuesday, with a senior official saying that the four-day delay was not a cause for worry. Although moderate to heavy rains have been lashing most parts of Kerala for some days, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) made the monsoon announcement only on Tuesday. Kottayam, Alappuzha, Ernakulam and Kasargode have been lashed by rains. The sea turned rough in Alappuzha, with sea waters Karunanidhi backs BJP view on ECs, CAG PTI CHENNAI BACKING L K Advani’s suggestion for a collegium to appoint Election Commissioners and CAG, M Karunanidhi, chief of southern Indian party DMK, on Tuesday said the BJP leader’s views could not be ignored and expressed confidence that the Centre would accord due importance to it. “I am also in agreement with the contents in the letter (of Advani). It cannot be ignored just because it is the opposition view,” the DMK patriarch said writing in the party mouthpiece Murasoli. Advani had voiced concern over the present system of appointment. encroaching into land at a few places. But the dry weather continued in the southern districts of Kollam and Thiruvananthapuram. The monsoon accounts for 80 percent of the rainfall in India. Even a minor delay can adversely affect the economy as about half of India’s farm output comes from crops sown in the JuneSeptember rainy season. IMD director general L S Rathore told IANS in New Delhi that the monsoon was expected to advance rapidly into other parts of the country. Karnataka would be lashed by heavy rains within days. Kerala gets the annual monsoon rains June 1, marking the start of weeks of showers in the Indian mainland. Last year, however, the monsoon arrived in the state May 29. The monsoon accounts for 80 percent of the rainfall in India. Even a minor delay can adversely affect the economy. Rathore said there was nothing to panic as the fourday monsoon delay was well within the forecast limits. From 2005, the IMD has been issuing operational forecasts for the onset of the monsoon over Kerala using an indigenously developed statistical model with a model error of (+/-) four. The IMD has said that the 2012 southwest monsoon season (June-September) for the country as a whole was most likely to be normal. “The deviation in arrival of monsoon rains would have no adverse impact on sowing of kharif (summer) crops like paddy and pulses,” he said. The monsoon normally reaches Delhi by June-end. but according to IMD it is too early to say when the capital will get rains. “We can only make date specific forecast towards the end of this month by seeing the spread of monsoon in the rest of the country,” IMD director B P Yadav said. Agriculture expert Devinder Sharma was, however, cautious. “The delay in monsoon by a day or two is fine. But the most important thing is the spread of monsoon.” He said that in last few years, there have been cases when monsoon arrived before time but states like Rajasthan, Gujarat and Bihar did not receive sufficient rains, leading to crop failure. IMD official K Santhosh in Thiruvananthapuram said he was getting telephone calls demanding to know why the announcement of monsoon arrival was made when the city was yet to get rains. Special fertility treatment grant for tribal couples in Goa PTI PANAJI THE government in the Indian state of Goa has introduced a fertility treatment plan for economically weaker tribals of the state to take care of their medical expenses. Under the plan, Rs 1 lakh would be provided to couples for their medical expenses, state tribal welfare minister Ramesh Tawadkar said. “Government-run hospitals in the state do not offer fertility treatment. Many couples are childless as they do not have enough money to get treated in a private clinic,” he said. Government has also drafted a scheme for providing Rs 25 lakh each for tribal villages to have a community hall and moneitory help for the final rites. With the scheme, the couples could now seek treatment at private hospitals, he said. The new initiative also aims at providing tribals the financial help to tackle issues regarding problems of shelter. “Many tribal children cannot complete their education because dwellings in which they living are crumbling. They have no facilities to sit and study,” Tawadkar, a tribal rights campaigner himself, said. The state government is working on a scheme to give one time grant of Rs two lakh for the tribals, who have an annual income of less than three lakh, to repair their houses, he said, adding that a monitoring committee would be consti- tuted to oversee the repair works. The state government would constitute a special team to visit all the tribal villages and submit a roadmap giving detailed requirements, he said. “For the first year, target is to provide these schemes to 5,000 households, which are in dire need,” the minister added. Government has also drafted a scheme for providing Rs 25 lakh each for tribal villages to have a community hall and Rs 20,000 per poor tribals as a moneitory help for the final rites, he added. THE Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) grilled jailed MP Y S Jaganmohan Reddy for over six hours for the third day on Tuesday while his two aides were also questioned in an illegal assets case. The CBI took custody of Jagan, as the young leader is popularly known, from the Chanchalguda Central Jail in Hyderabad in the morning and after questioning him at the agency’s office at Koti shifted him back to the jail in the evening. Congress legislator D Chandrasekhar Reddy and Sakshi TV director S Ramakrishna Reddy also reached the CBI office in response to the notices served by the CBI. Chandrasekhar Reddy had reportedly worked as a nominee director in Janani Infrastructure owned by Jagan. He had recently called on Jagan’s mother Y S Vijayamma to express his solidarity. The CBI officials are believed to have questioned him and Ramakrishna Reddy in the presence of Jagan about the investments received by Janani Infrastructure and Jagati Publications. The CBI has so far questioned the Kadapa MP about the investments received from industrialist Nimmagadda Prasad in return for the land and other concessions given for his port project Vanpic. He is believed to have been grilled about the investments that flowed from some companies based abroad into his Sandur Power and other firms. Jagan, who was arrested by the CBI on May 27, allegedly conspired with his father and then chief minister Y S Rajasekhara Reddy to dole out favours to compa- nies which made investments into his businesses on quid pro quo basis. The CBI on Monday issued a notice to Information Technology Minister Ponnala Lakshmaiah, directing him to appear for questioning on June 7. Lakshmaiah, as the minister for major industries in Rajasekhara Reddy’s cabinet, had issued an order allocating water from the Krishna river for a cement company. Congress legislator D Chandrasekhar Reddy and Sakshi TV director S Ramakrishna Reddy also reached the CBI office in response to the notices served by the CBI. Chandrasekhar Reddy had reportedly worked as a nominee director in Janani Infrastructure owned by Jagan. The central agency on May 24 arrested Excise Minister Mopidevi Venkataramna, who as the then minister for infrastructure and investments, had issued orders allotting huge land and granting other concessions to Vanpic. Venkataramna along with Jagan, Nimmagadda Prasad and bureaucrat K V Brahmananda Reddy are currently lodged in Chanchalguda jail. Meanwhile, the CBI court posted to Thursday orders on the bail petition of Venkataramna. The CBI opposed his bail petition on the ground that he may tamper with the evidence. The agency also accused him of misleading the cabinet while allotting 24,000 acres of land to Vanpic. YSR Congress party Chief Y S Jaganmohan Reddy. Mani appeals Kerala HC to quash FIR against him PTI KOCHI Senior CPI-M functionary M M Mani. IN the eye of a storm over his controversial speech, senior CPI-M functionary M M Mani on Tuesday filed a petition in the Kerala High Court, seeking to quash the FIR registered against him by police in three cases on the basis of his recent disclosures in Idukki. Mani, CPI-M’s Idukki district secretary had stated at a public meeting at Thodupuzha that the party had eliminated at least three of its political foes in the 1980s, causing a huge embarrassment to the party. Police had registered cases against him on the basis of the disclosures. On Monday, a case pertaining to murder of a Congress worker Ancheri Baby, who was shot dead on November 13, 1982 was registered by police against Mani and five others under Section 120(b) (punishment of criminal conspiracy) and Sect 118 (concealing the design to commit the crime). Mani contended that the order of the Judicial First Mani alleged that registration of the crime was part of a state-level conspiracy hatched by Congress and that the Special Investigation Team controlled by the Home Minister. Class magistrate, Nedumkandam was without jurisdiction and sanction of law. Hence he was not justified in entertaining the petition by police, permitting the Investigating Officer to conduct further investigation in the case, he said. He alleged the First Information Report was ‘prepared’ in Thiruvananthapuram at the instance of the Chief Minster and Home Minister and handed over to the Idukki Superintendent of Police with a direction to register a crime. There is no material available warranting registration of three new crimes, he claimed. Due to “continuous intervention” of the Chief Minister and the Home Minister, police was registering new crimes in a “clandestine manner”, fabricating evidence and procuring witnesses who are inimical to him, he alleged. Mani alleged that registration of the crime was part of a state-level conspiracy hatched by Congress and that the Special Investigation Team, controlled by the Home Minister, was out to “destroy” CPI-M and the petitioner. Wednesday, June 6, 2012 WORLD Japan PM urged to be cautious on N-restarts REUTERS TOKYO NEARLY a third of Japan’s ruling party lawmakers are petitioning Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda to be cautious about restarting nuclear reactors given safety concerns after last year’s earthquake and tsunami, an organiser said on Tuesday. Noda, keen to restart two reactors in western Japan before electricity demand peaks this summer, could decide as early as this week to reconnect them to the grid despite the risk of a backlash that would weaken his already sagging voter ratings. “It is clear from surveys that the majority of the people think that we can survive this summer by conserving energy and transferring electricity among regions,” said the petition, to be presented to Noda’s government later in the day. Noda, keen to restart two reactors in western Japan before electricity demand peaks this summer, could decide as early as this week to reconnect them to the grid despite the risk of a backlash that would weaken his already sagging voter ratings. “We urge you to consider the fact that there is insufficient agreement within the party and among the people and the feelings of the 160,000 victims of the disaster, and be all the more cautious about a decision to restart the reactors.” Nuclear power supplied nearly 30 percent of Japan’s electricity needs before last year’s earthquake and tsunami crippled the Fukushima plant in northeast Japan. But all of the country’s 50 reactors have since been taken offline for checks. Noda on Monday stressed that restarting the idled reactors was vital not just to survive summer power shortages but also to avoid hurting the economy with higher electricity rates, a view commonly voiced by Japan’s struggling manufacturers. But Satoshi Arai, an exnational strategy minister sponsoring the petition, said Noda had failed to meet conditions for resuming operations at the two Kansai Electric Power Co reactors at its Ohi plant in Fukui, western Japan. www.qatar-tribune.com 13 China, Russia to boost UN ties AFP BEIJING RUSSIAN and China pledged on Tuesday to increase their cooperation in the United Nations, as the giant neighbours try to resist mounting pressure for international action to stop the bloodshed in Syria. China’s President Hu Jintao said closer cooperation would allow the two countries, whose stance has angered Western powers, to “set the global political and economic order in a more fair and rational direction”. He made the comments after talks with Vladimir Putin, who is in Beijing for a regional summit on his first visit to Asia since winning a historic third term as Russia’s president. “We plan to increase cooperation in the framework of leading international organisations — the United Nations, G20, BRICS and Shanghai Cooperation Organisation,” Putin told reporters after the talks, echoing similar comments by Hu. China and Russia — permanent members of the UN Security Council — have walked in lockstep on Syria to the anger of Arab and Western nations, and they both used their veto power earlier this year to block action against Damascus. EU president Herman Van Rompuy on Monday told Putin in Russia that world powers needed to “find common mes- sages on which we agree”. Known for confronting the West repeatedly during his 2000-2008 presidency, Putin pointedly skirted the issue of Syria during the briefing with EU leaders, noting only that “our positions do not coincide on every issue”. Putin has been keen to play up the importance of Russia’s at-times uneasy ties with China, which have grown stronger in the past year amid growing international pressure for action on Syria — an ally of both countries. China’s foreign ministry spokesman Liu Weimin told reporters earlier Tuesday that both Beijing and Moscow were united on Syria, opposing foreign intervention and forced regime change in the conflict-ridden country. “The position of both sides is clear to all — there should be an immediate end to violence and the political dialogue process should be launched as soon as possible,” he said. “China and Russia share the same position on these points and both sides oppose external intervention into the Syrian situation and oppose regime change by force.” Putin told Hu that China and Russia’s interests “align perfectly in a great many areas, including in cooperating on the world stage, in economic and financial cooperation, high-tech, people and culture and other areas.” “Through the sustained efforts of both sides, the Russia- Russian President Vladimir Putin (seated, left) and his Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao (seated, right) sign documents during a ceremony at the Great Hall of the People, in Beijing, on Tuesday. (AP) China overall strategic cooperative partnership relationship has attained new heights,” he said during his meeting with the Chinese leader. Putin, who will attend a regional security summit starting Wednesday in Beijing, is also due to meet with Hu’s likely successor Vice President Xi Jinping, as well as the presidents of Iran and Afghanistan. The two countries also signed 12 diplomatic and business agreements on Tuesday to support booming trade — which reached $80 billion last year — and finalised a deal to establish a joint $4 billion investment fund. The Russian fund and the Chinese sovereign wealth fund will each contribute $1 billion to the joint venture, while the rest will come from Chinese investors. Seventy percent of the fund’s investments will be in Russian projects, and the rest in China in the fields of auto manufacturing, timber processing, agriculture, transport and logistics. The Russian delegation includes six cabinet members, the heads of Russia’s energy giants Gazprom, Rosneft and Transneft, and other major Russian business people. While energy is high on the agenda, a long-awaited gas deal that could see Russia supply 70 billion cubic metres of gas a year directly to China was not signed on Tuesday. But in an article published in the state-run People’s Daily newspaper, Putin said Russia hoped to export “great quantities” of natural gas to China in the near future. “Our joint projects practically change the entire configuration of the global energy market,” he said. China rejects French demand on Australia probes gang of human Tiananmen prisoners’ release smugglers AFP BEIJING CHINA on Tuesday dismissed France’s demand for the release of political prisoners jailed after the 1989 crackdown on Tiananmen democracy protests, saying it was strongly opposed to such “interference”. France on Monday joined the United States in calling on China to release prisoners jailed 23 years ago after troops stormed central Beijing, ending six weeks of pro-democracy demonstrations. “We express our strong dissatisfaction and firm opposition to the French statement,” foreign ministry spokesman Liu Weimin told reporters Tuesday. “This is interference into China’s internal affairs.” China still considers the Tiananmen demonstrations a “counter-revolutionary rebellion” and has refused to acknowledge any wrongdoing or consider compensation for the hundreds, and perhaps thousands, killed. France on Monday joined the United States in calling on China to release prisoners jailed 23 years ago after troops stormed central Beijing. On Monday, French foreign ministry spokesman Bernard Valero said Paris “wants to see Chinese prisoners of conscience freed”. “We recall our unwavering commitment to the defence of human rights, including the fundamental right to freedom of expression, in China and around the world,” he said. “The European Union consistently brings the situation of Tiananmen prisoners to the attention of the Chinese authorities. “(The EU) has called numerous times for their early release, which would be a positive gesture,” he said. Rights campaigners and petitioners said on Monday that Chinese authorities had rounded up hundreds of activists in Beijing as they marked the 23rd anniversary of the June 3-4, 1989 crackdown. The United States had also called on China to release prisoners linked to the crackdown, and Liu gave Washington a similar rebuke on Monday. Meanwhile, China said foreign embassies were act- ing illegally in issuing their own air quality readings and that only the government could release data on the nation’s heavy pollution. China’s cities are among the world’s most polluted, but until recently, official air quality measurements regularly rated their air quality as good — even as data from the US embassy in Beijing showed off-the-chart pollution. The US embassy air quality Twitter feed gained a major following in Beijing, and later in Shanghai when it was introduced at the US consulate there. Beijing announced earlier this year it would change the way it measured air quality to include the smaller particles experts say make up much of the pollution in Chinese cities, after a vocal campaign. Nigerian plane crash toll rises to 159 AFP LAGOS Members of a rescue team carry the remains of a victim of a Dana Air plane crash at the site of the accident in Toyin Area of Iju Ishaga, near Lagos, on Tuesday. (AFP) A NIGERIAN passenger jet that crashed in the country’s largest city of Lagos killed at least six people on the ground, raising the confirmed death toll to 159, an official said on Tuesday. Rescue workers were using a crane to tear down the ruins of a two-story residential building, concerned it could collapse, but stopped when another corpse was spotted amid the wreckage. All 153 people on board the Dana Air MD83 were killed when it crashed on Sunday afternoon, and fears that death toll may rise are now centered on the residence with rescuers uncertain of how many people were in the building at the time of impact. “We have six victims from the building. Made up of four residents and two visitors,” said Femi Oke-Osanyintolu, who heads the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency. Chineyere Peace Eweh, 37, said she was at church when she received a call that her home was on fire. “When I came I saw my flat burning. This is the only thing I have left,” the mother of three explained, pointing to her clothes. “And my bible.” She said a member of her church congregation has arranged a place for her to stay temporarily. Officials from the Lagos state government have begun registering those whose homes were destroyed and have offered to pay for permanent resettlement. Earlier on Tuesday, other building residents were allowed onto the site to salvage property, including one who spoke of a narrow escape for himself and two others. AFP SYDNEY AUSTRALIA said on Tuesday it may revoke the visas of an alleged people-smuggling kingpin and six of his associates after reports they were granted asylum and continued arranging boat trips. An investigation by ABC Television claimed an Iraqiborn people-smuggler known as Captain Emad had travelled to Australia from Indonesia on a refugee boat in January 2010. Arriving under a false name, he was granted asylum within three months and began arranging smuggling operations from the Australian capital, according to the broadcast, which aired on Monday night. Emad was described as the “head of the smugglers, the head of the snake” by an informant who linked him to a powerful Indonesian ring behind two ill-fated boats which sank before reaching Australia, killing almost 150 people. He was sent as part of a plan to expand the ring’s operations in Australia, along with “at least” another six agents on board his ship who were also granted refugee status, the programme said. The wife of one agent was also reported to be working within the government’s immigration department. Opposition lawmakers condemned the revelations as a “catastrophic” failing by Australia’s intelligence agencies and an “extraordinary indictment” on the government’s border security capabilities. Tantowi Yahya, a member of the Indonesian parliament’s foreign affairs commission, expressed disappointment, describing people-smuggling as a serious crime whose victims were often “young innocent children”. “It’s ironic that Australia asks Indonesia repeatedly for help to eliminate peoplesmuggling networks and yet grants asylum to the perpetrators,” Yahya told AFP. “Australia should revoke their asylum status and visas. That’s the only right way.” Though they come in relatively small numbers by global standards, the issue of asylum-seekers is a political hot potato that dominated Australian national elections in 2010 due to a record number of boat arrivals from Asia. A fresh boat carrying 49 people was intercepted off Opposition lawmakers condemned the revelations as a “catastrophic” failing by Australia’s intelligence agencies and an “extraordinary indictment” on the government’s border security capabilities. northern Australia Tuesday, taking to 50 the number of vessels to arrive this year, carrying almost 3,800 asylumseekers — on track to rival the 2010 record of 6,555. Immigration Minister Chris Bowen said Australian police had “very considerable” investigations into smuggling activities locally and abroad, and denied the allegations undermined confidence in the system. Fourteen people-smugglers had already been caught in Australia and charged, Bowen said, but would neither confirm nor deny that Emad or his colleagues were under investigation prior to the programme being aired. “The Australian Federal Police takes these allegations seriously and will examine all information (including) information that was publicly aired last night,” he told Sky News. 14 Wednesday, June 6, 2012 www.qatar-tribune.com UNITED STATES US thought Taliban had nuclear bomb in 2009: Sanger AFP WASHINGTON US PRESIDENT Barack Obama confronted the ultimate security nightmare early in his administration — the possibility that the Taliban had acquired a nuclear bomb, according to a new book published on Tuesday. The book, Confront and Conceal by New York Times chief Washington correspondent David Sanger, says Obama was told in a dramatic Oval Office meeting in early summer 2009 of ‘ambiguous’ evidence supporting such a fear. Intercepted conversations between members of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan led intelligence agencies to warn the group could have a bomb, and the CIA picked up ‘chatter’ of possible attacks on US cities, the book said. But Sanger reports that no one in the intelligence community could be sure about the authenticity of the threat. Some seasoned analysts believed that any danger was more likely to be posed by nuclear material combined into a radiological or ‘dirty’ bomb. Other officials in US spy agencies believed that there were serious doubts about the intelligence, but no one was willing to ignore the fears, amid concern about the security of Pakistan’s fast growing nuclear arsenal. Senior Obama administration officials have previously confided that the fear of a terrorist or insurgent group acquiring nuclear materials is the national security threat most likely to keep them awake at night. Obama has made halting proliferation a signature of his presidency and was instrumental in the debut of a new global nuclear security summit, which took place for the second time in Seoul in March. “There are still too many Intercepted conversations between members of the Tehreek-eTaliban Pakistan led intelligence agencies to warn the group could have a bomb, and the CIA picked up ‘chatter’ of possible attacks on US cities, the book said. David Sanger bad actors in search of these dangerous materials and these dangerous materials are still vulnerable in too many places,” he said in Seoul, warning that it would take just a small amount “to kill hundreds of thousands of innocent people.” Senate panel chief to detail tax code vision REUTERS WASHINGTON Women cheer during a campaign rally of US President Barack Obama at the Iowa State Fairgrounds, in Des Moines, recently. (REUTERS) Obama pushes Congress on paycheck fairness for women REUTERS WASHINGTON PRESIDENT Barack Obama urged Congress on Monday to pass legislation to help women get equal pay for equal work, emphasising his support for an important issue among female voters even though it has little chance of becoming law. Speaking on the topic of gender equality, which Obama’s Democrats have used to highlight differences with his Republican rival Mitt Romney, the president said the bill could also help the economy. “This is more than just about fairness,” he told a conference call to urge the Senate to back the Paycheck Fairness Act. “Women are the breadwinners for a lot of families and if they’re making less than men do for the same Women are the breadwinners for a lot of families and if they’re making less than men do for the same work, families are going to have to get by for less money. BARACK OBAMA work, families are going to have to get by for less money.” The Senate will hold a procedural vote on a motion to debate the bill. Democratic leaders are not expected to get the 60 votes needed to proceed, a clear sign that the effort is more about electioneering than law-making. The White House, pointing to data that shows American women making 77 cents for every dollar earned by men, says that closing that gap is a necessity - not a luxury - and hopes to cement female support for Obama. Surveys show Obama has more backing among women than Romney and Democrats have aggressively sought to maintain that edge by advertising what they call a Republican ‘war on women.’ This came to the fore during the Republican party’s primary election process, which picked Romney to challenge Obama on November 6, high- lighting hot-button issues like abortion, women’s reproductive health and Obama’s policy on contraception. These are all topics that Democrats see as winners for Obama among this important group of voters, who favoured him heavily in 2008 and whom he needs to secure a second White House term. The Paycheck Fairness Act would update equal pay laws by barring employers from punishing workers who share information about their pay. It also would strengthen remedies for victims of sexbased pay discrimination. Employers would have to show that any pay disparities are based on work-related factors such as education, training and experience. THE chairman of the Senate tax-writing committee promised to spell out ideas for revamping the tortuous tax code next Monday, providing a glimpse of the influential lawmaker’s plan for major fiscal decisions looming at the end of the year. Senator Max Baucus, the Finance Committee chairman, will deliver “a vision for tax reform” on June 11 at the Bipartisan Policy Centre, his office said. Democratic President Barack Obama and most lawmakers from both major political parties say they want a tax code overhaul, generally defined as a lowering of rates coupled with a narrowing of specialised tax breaks. The devil will be in the details, such as how low to trim rates, which tax breaks to curb, and whether a revamp will raise revenue or not. While tax reform is expected to take years, several deadlines at the end of the year will force action on some items particularly expiring individual tax rates enacted under former president George W. Bush in 2001 and extended under Obama. Democrats and liberal groups are in a minor scuffle over that issue after House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi called for a vote on extending historically low individual tax rates for only those with income of less than $1 million. Obama and nearly all Democrats have taken the stance that the wealthy can afford to pay more in taxes, and have called for letting lower rates lapse for households earning $250,000 or more. “This could be meaningful if Baucus says where the red line is for him,” said Helen Fessenden, an investor analyst who watches Congress for Eurasia Group. All of the lower individual tax rates expire at the end of the year unless Congress acts. According to Sanger’s book, Obama decided that with the 2009 case, he could not take any chances and dispatched a nuclear detect and disablement team to the region, though not directly to Pakistan, in case it was needed. After several days of tension, Sanger wrote, the threat dissipated. Pakistan surveyed its arsenal and reported that no nuclear components were missing. One school of thought about the incident suggested that Taliban members had been hoaxed and bought material from a third party that was useless in the manufacture of nuclear weapons. Other officials believed that the US National Security Agency had misunderstood the dialect of Taliban members on the intercepts, and been mislead into believing their worst fears, the book said. However, Sanger quoted one official as saying that facing a possible nuclear crisis so early in Obama’s presidency “created a lasting impression on all of us.” Since the incident, US officials have held regular meetings with members of Pakistan’s nuclear establishment in neutral locations like London and Abu Dhabi to discuss nuclear safety, Sanger wrote. California vote set to kick off political scramble REUTERS SACRAMENTO CALIFORNIA voters head to the polls on Tuesday in a primary contest set to launch the biggest political scramble in the state in at least a decade following the redrawing of US Congressional boundaries and election rule changes. The changes could set the stage for head-to-head face-offs between longtime incumbents, potentially from the same party, in November after a decade of remarkable stability in the state’s majority Democratic delegation in the House of Representatives. That stability was a result of the deliberate creation of electoral districts to favour incumbents, a process known as gerrymandering. In 263 elections from 2002 to 2010, only one congressional seat changed political party. “California was totally locked in on this gerrymandered map,” said Kyle Kondik, political analyst at the Centre for Politics at the University of Virginia. This time the state put a non-partisan citizens commission in charge of most of the redrawing of congressional districts. The number of districts did not change, but the boundaries were adjusted to reflect population shifts since the previous national census in 2000. California will also see the two candidates who get the most votes advance to the general election in November, regardless of party. This means that two Democrats or two Republicans could be competing for the same congressional seat on November 6. “With nonpartisan redistricting and this new ‘top two’ primary system, California suddenly becomes very interesting and one of the more competitive states in the entire country,” Kondik said. A dozen districts that had once been predictable are now in play, according to California Republican Party Chairman Tom Del Beccaro, resulting in heavy spending as candidates, some of whom had to move into their new districts, introduce themselves to new constituents. “This is going to be a record year for campaign spending in California,” Del Beccaro said. “There’s going to be a dramatic rise in spending, not only for this primary but also this fall.” For first time since 1920, slowing population growth meant California did not add any seats to its 53member congressional delegation, adding even more uncertainty by matching incumbents against one another in some redrawn districts. “Short term, this is off the rails; this is crazy,” said Paul Mitchell, a Democratic consultant in California. Redistricting has created a ‘huge leap’ in the number of districts with more than 50 percent minority voters, Mitchell said. Majority-Hispanic legislative districts have increased from 19 to 29, and California now has the only majorityAsian district in the continental United States. Two congressional contests have attracted particular attention with two longtime Democratic incumbents running against each other. Disney to axe junk food ads, promote healthier fare REUTERS WASHINGTON WALT DISNEY Co will stop accepting some junk food advertising on its television, radio and online programmes intended for children and launch its own ‘Mickey Check’ label for food it deems to be nutritious. Disney Chief Executive Bob Iger and first lady Michelle Obama announced the moves on Tuesday in Washington, confirming details sources gave Reuters on Monday. The move by Disney, which owns the ABC-TV network and a host of cable channels, follows New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s proposal last week to ban sales of sugary drinks larger than 16 ounces (about half a litre) in most restaurants, theatres, delis and vending carts throughout the city to curb obesity. Nearly one-third of US children are overweight or obese, and a 2006 Institute of Medicine report said junkfood marketing contributed to childhood obesity. The media and entertainment conglomerate introduced voluntary guidelines in 2006 that prohibited licensing of Mickey Mouse and other Disney characters for foods that do not meet minimum nutritional requirements. Nearly one-third of US children are overweight or obese, and a 2006 Institute of Medicine report said junk food contributed to childhood obesity. “We’re taking the next important step forward by setting new food advertising standards for kids,” Iger said. “The emotional connection kids have to our characters and stories gives us a unique opportunity to continue to inspire and encourage them to lead healthier lives,” he said. Disney plans to cut junk food advertising during children’s programming on its networks, including ABC and Disney XD and its childfocused websites, for foods that fail to meet minimum nutrition requirements, the sources said. The new guidelines, which take effect in 2015, set limits on the number of calories and amount of fat and added sugar for main and side dishes and snacks. “Disney’s announcement is welcome news to parents and health experts concerned about childhood obesity and nutrition,” said Margo Wootan, nutrition policy director at the Centre for Science in the Public Interest. “This puts Disney ahead of the pack of media outlets and should be a wake-up call to Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network to do the same,” said Wootan, whose organisation has lobbied for better nutrition standards for food eaten by children. US first lady Michelle Obama during the programme at the Newseum, in Washington, on Tuesday. (AFP) Wednesday, June 6, 2012 US/ AMERICAS Obama pays tribute to Queen on diamond jubilee www.qatar-tribune.com Paraguay president confesses fathering second love-child AFP REUTERS WASHINGTON ASUNCION US PRESIDENT Barack Obama on Tuesday issued an unusually personal video tribute to Queen Elizabeth II on her diamond jubilee, saying he hoped she would continue to “reign supreme for many years to come.” In a video posted on the White House website, Obama said the 86-year-old British monarch was a “living witness” to the power and resilience of America’s “special relationship” with Britain in times of plenty and of hardship. “While many presidents and prime ministers have come and gone, Your Majesty’s reign has endured,” Obama said, speaking directly to camera. Since ascending to the throne in 1952, the Queen’s reign has spanned 12 US presidencies, and she has made repeated visits to the United States. “It is gratifying to know that the bonds between our nations remain indispensable to our two countries and to the world,” Obama said. “In honour of your sixty extraordinary years on the throne, communities across the Commonwealth have lit PARAGUAYAN President Fernando Lugo admitted on Tuesday fathering a second child when he was a Roman Catholic bishop, in an apparent effort to limit damage from the latest paternity scandal to emerge during his fouryear-old presidency. Lugo, 61, once known as the “bishop of the poor,” had confessed to fathering a child soon after he was elected in 2008. The boy, who is now about 5 years old, was also conceived before Lugo quit the church to launch a political career. The second case came to light when a 42-year old nurse told a newspaper Lugo was the father of her youngest child, a 10-year-old boy. She said she had sought advice from Lugo over marital problems when he was bishop in the city of San Pedro. Presidential Secretary Miguel Lopez Perito, a close aide to the left-wing leader, said the case could tarnish Lugo’s image and would likely be used by the opposition to criticise the government’s candidates in a presidential election next year. President Barack Obama speaks, in Newton, Iowa, recently. thousands of jubilee beacons. “May the light of your Majesty’s crown continue to reign supreme for many years to come.” Obama’s message was not without historical curiosity. The US president, born in Hawaii to a white American mother, was the son of a (AP) man from Kenya, the country where then princess Elizabeth was on holiday in 1952 when she learned her father, King George VI, had died and she was Queen. Obama and his wife Michelle appear to have forged a personal relationship with the Queen, which was displayed last year when Colombia, US seize 2.6 tonnes of cocaine DPA BOGOTA COLOMBIAN and US authorities seized 2.6 tonnes of cocaine in a joint raid in the Pacific Ocean, Colombian officials said on Tuesday. The Colombian Navy was told about the drug trafficking move by a US military ship and then proceeded to stop a fast-moving speedboat named La Frikitona. Four Colombians were arrested. Navy spokespersons noted that Coast Guard and Naval Aviation officers were deployed in the raid. When those on board saw the officials coming - in an area about 60 nautical miles off the Colombian province of Choco - those on board the boat started throwing packages overboard. The Navy managed to retrieve 130 such packages, which held a total of 2,637 kilogrammes of cocaine hydrochloride. The Navy said the drugs belonged to the leftist rebel group Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, whom Colombian authorities have long accused of engaging in drug trafficking. Colombia is the world’s biggest producer of cocaine. The owners apparently planned to take the drugs to Central America, and then on to the United States. The drugs that were seized have an estimated market value of 67 million dollars. Colombian female police officers show an assortment of tactical weapons during the 10th Regional Conference of the International Association of Chiefs of Police, in Medellin, on Monday. (AFP) she hosted a state visit for the US president in his wife and a sumptuous dinner at Buckingham Palace. “Your Majesty, on the historic occasion of your diamond jubilee, Michelle and I send you and all the British people and members of the Commonwealth, the heartfelt congratulations of the American people,” Obama said. The US leader sometimes uses video messages as a tool of diplomacy, for instance on issues such as Darfur, but it is highly unusual for him to mark a political or constitutional landmark in a foreign land by taking such a step. 15 President Fernando Lugo Lugo will not seek re-election because Paraguay’s constitution only allows for one presidential term. “The president told me it is his son and I think it’s good that he has immediately accepted the recognition,” Lopez Perito said. Lugo was also diagnosed with cancer, from which he has since recovered, since his election in 2008 ended six decades of rule by the conservative Colorado Party. His pledges to champion the needs of the poor raised hopes of change among lowincome Paraguayans. His reform agenda has stalled, however, in the face of s t iff resistance from the opposition-controlled Congress. Three Peruvian legislators abandon ruling party REUTERS LIMA THREE legislators have quit President Ollanta Humala’s Gana Peru party and more departures are possible as his crackdown on anti-mining protests and drift to the right erode his working majority in Congress. The departing lawmakers on Tuesday accused Humala of spurning traditional allies on the left, courting big business and - most importantly - using force instead of mediation to quell vexing social conflicts over the spoils of mineral wealth. Widespread conflicts over mineral resources threaten to delay some of the $50 billion in investments Peru has lined up for a sector that drives 60 percent of exports in one of Latin America’s fastest-growing economies. The president’s far-left father, Isaac Humala, known for ornery comments and conspiracy theories, has called his son a sellout and warned that his presidency will be a failure. The defections left Humala’s party with 43 of 130 seats in Congress. Though Humala has relied on 20 seats from the Peru Posible party for a working majority, he will now have to look to the right-wing party of former President Alberto Fujimori for help in passing bills. Humala won the presidency a year ago by shedding his hard-line image and recasting himself as a moderate leftist who could please foreign investors and spread the country’s growing wealth to help the poor. Critics say he has abandoned the left. “Promises made during the electoral campaign have been systematically ignored by the government,” Javier Diez Canseco, one of the three dissident lawmakers, said in Congress. Political analyst Fernando Tuesta said more defections were likely. “There will be more departures in the future if the government loses the political capital to manage severe social conflicts,” he said in a column in the newspaper La Republica. Despite the party’s tur- moil, Humala is still the most popular Peruvian president in decades, with an approval rating of more than 50 percent in a country where his predecessors plumbed lows of less than 10 Promises made during the electoral campaign have been systematically ignored by the government. JAVIER DIEZ CANSECO percent in polls. The economy is growing 6 percent a year, inflation is low, and the government says it is investing in poor rural areas that were overlooked in a decade-long boom. Public investments are on track to rise by 30 percent this year and social welfare spending by 60 percent. Relying on votes from Fujimori’s party would draw criticism from the left, but since taking office Humala has repeatedly said he has abandoned any political ide- ologies to try to lead as a pragmatist. Critics say the former military officer is too quick to rely on authoritarian tactics and has criminalised protests. His government has arrested local political heads for leading rallies against mines owned or planned by global miners Xstrata and Newmont. Prime Minister Oscar Valdes, also a former military officer, has blamed far-left ideologies for fomenting the protests, and some of those leftist leaders are widely expected to make their own presidential bids in 2016. Humala took office in July 2011, urging mediation to calm hundreds of disputes nationwide over the spoils of natural resources. Those efforts have averted some clashes with police who were sent in to clear roadblocks set by protesters. But at least 10 people have died in disputes over natural resources under his watch. Similar clashes killed at least 174 during the tenure of Humala’s predecessor, Alan Garcia. New US legislation aims to curb cancer drug shortages AFP CHICAGO A CRITICAL shortage of generic drugs in the United States, particularly in cancer care, could be curbed with legislation now being hammered out by the US House and Senate, doctors said on Monday. Similar versions have passed each chamber and may be reconciled in time for President Barack Obama to sign them this month or next, said a panel of experts at the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) annual meeting. The law would require generic drug makers to pay user fees to federal regulators for the first time — a payment that pharmaceutical companies already make for brand name drugs — in exchange for the promise of faster drug approval. It would also require manufacturers to notify the US Food and Drug Administration six months in advance of any potential shortage. However, a provision to impose cash penalties on companies that do not com- ply has gained little traction on Capitol Hill and is not likely to be included, said Richard Schilsky, chair of ASCO’s government relations committee. “We are never exactly sure when a generic drug is suddenly going to go out of supply and that creates a tremendous amount of uncertainty, anxiety for our patients, (and) great difficulty in planning if you are a physician,” said Schilsky, a medical oncologist at the University of Chicago. “We have concerns about the fact that if there are no teeth in that legislation some companies may decide not to report as required,” he said. But Schilsky said the addition of generic drug user fees The law would require generic drug makers to pay user fees to federal regulators for the first time. for the first time would likely “bring about 1.5 billion dollars to the FDA in additional resources over the next several years. “That should reduce the review time for a new drug application to market a generic drug from about 30 months to 10 months or less, which would be a huge step forward in terms of getting new manufacturers into the game and getting drugs onto the market.” While the shortage situation has improved slightly in recent months, experts say the market remains volatile due to economic concerns and manufacturing woes that can suddenly remove a muchneeded cancer drug from the US market. The FDA has said the num- ber of shortages of prescription drugs nearly tripled between 2005 and 2010. Often, the drugs affected are generics that have been on the market for many years, and some have no acceptable medical substitutes, which can threaten patient care. “Manufacturing and drug quality problems have accounted for and continue to account for the majority of drug shortages,” said Sandra Kweder, deputy director of the FDA’s Office of New Drugs. Kweder said the closure of a single facility due to quality problems can spark dozens of shortages at the same time. Popular chemotherapy drugs Mustargen, paclitaxel, and fluorouracil are among those recently affected by shortages, experts said. “There have been problems in many of these products with things like particles of glass or metal shavings in the vials. Those are not quality problems that can be tolerated on any large scale or for any individual patient,” she said. “No patient should ever be exposed to risks of those sorts. It is not acceptable.” 16 Wednesday, June 6, 2012 THE LAST WORD www.qatar-tribune.com Activists tell Bahrain court of ‘torture’ in custody QPO to perform at UN event in New York AFP TRIBUNE NEWS NETWORK DUBAI DOHA THREE leading Bahraini opposition activists, facing up to life in jail on charges of plotting to overthrow the monarchy, told their trial on Tuesday of how they were tortured in custody, their lawyers said. The three — Shiite clerics Abduljalil Muqdad and Saeed Mirza Mahroos, and the Sunni head of the secular Waed group, Ibrahim Sharif — all demanded that they be freed. “They all complained of torture during detention,” said a member of the defence team, requesting not to be identified. Sharif gave a lengthy account of the torture he said he endured along with other detainees after he was arrested on March 17 last year, in the wake of a deadly crackdown on Shiite-led pro-democracy protests. “We were made to stand in a line, blindfolded. I had to go through a complete body search after they stripped us naked,” he told the court, according to Radhi al-Mosawi, his deputy for political affairs at Waed, who tweeted Sharif’s account on Twitter. Sharif told the court that the torture “continued for weeks... including beating, kicking,” and that masked men spat at him and insulted and humiliated him, Mosawi tweeted. The three are part of a group of 13 activists who are being retried in a civil court after they were convicted, along with seven others who remain at large, of plotting to topple the Sunni ruling family. Another defendant was acquitted. The prosecution has dropped charges “related to the freedom of expression.” FEC Chairman Dr Saif Ali al Hajari (centre) and officials with winners at WED closing ceremony, in Doha, on Tuesday. (MANEESH BAKSHI) Awards, paintings, dance mark end of WED celebrations CATHERINE W GICHUKI DOHA AWARDS, painting exhibition and dance marked the closing ceremony of World Environmental Day (WED) at Souq Waqif on Tuesday. The celebrations were organised by Friends of the Environment Centre (FEC) in association with the International Academy for Intercultural Development (IAID). World Environment Day is observed every year on June 5 with focus on a special theme. This year’s theme was ‘Green Economy – does it include you?’ A painting contest was also held to commemorate the environment day which received over 2000 entries from 6 different age categories and from over 50 schools. The entries were divided into categories A to F and consisted of participants in the age group from four to adults. From each category, the first three positions received awards. Besides, 15 runners up positions were also given awards. Among the participating schools, Birla Public school received accolades as the best participating school. Speaking on the occasion, the chairman of the FEC Dr Saif Ali al Hajari said, “Today we have to be proud because we are here to take responsibility for the environment for the younger generation. We can’t solve our problems only through knowledge and technology; we have to transfer the knowledge to our children.” He further said, “This is a year of green economy and we have to invest in green ventures and it takes responsibility from families to the leaders and we have to work as a team.” he said. Those awarded for the first positions in the painting contest included A Maryam Sohail from Al Khor International School (category A), L Raman Kishore from DPS-IMS (category B), Deepak Sajikumar from MES Indian School (category C), Cut Izza Fildza Alyssa from Al Khor International School (category D), JM Soorya Narayan from MES Indian School (category E) and Sauman Pal in the category F. Thanking sponsors and partners, IAID Centre Manager and WED Project Manager Marianne G Indrinal said that this year was better compared to last year and the painting contest was a way to raise awareness on environment conservation. “We decided to come up with the painting contest so that we could be able to spread awareness about the environment. Through the painting contest we were able to spread awareness among families. This year’s contest theme was ‘Save the Environment’. This year the celebrations were bigger because we had over 2000 entries in painting contest alone. Last year we had 1500 entries,” she said. The WED celebration was sponsored by Al Khalij Commercial Bank (Al Khaliji), Oryx, GTL Limited, Gulf Agency Company and a number of partners including VCUQatar, ILoveQatar.net, Intercontinental hotel, besides others. Al Khaliji’s head of public relations Abeer al Kalla said “Everyone can play a role in environmental awareness. We must be conscious of the ecological footprints we leave behind. Although WED is only held once a year, environmental responsibility is a day-today affair and our lifestyles should reflect that”. THE Qatar Philharmonic Orchestra (QPO) will perform for the first time in New York as part of a special cultural event to empower women across the world. President of the United Nations General Assembly HE Nasser Abdulaziz al Nasser will be hosting the event in the General Assembly Hall at 7pm on Wednesday (June 6). The QPO, a member of Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development (QF), has delivered impressive performances by embracing both western and Arabic music. It serves as a cross-cultural bridge that unites people of all nations and seeks to highlight commonalities through music. QF is co-sponsoring this special evening along with the government of Qatar. It’s Chairperson Her Highness Sheikha Moza has consistently worked to improve the lives of women by facilitating their progress, and tackling a host of other critical issues such as eradication of poverty. Haya bint Khalifa al Nasser, QF director of communication, will deliver a speech to highlight the significant role that the Foundation has played to support women and promote culture under the guidance of HH Sheikha Moza. “Qatar Foundation seeks to unlock human potential and to strengthen the role of culture in all societies of the world through various channels, including music which is considered to be a universal language that creates dialogue between different cultures. Qatar Foundation’s participation through the Qatar Philharmonic Orchestra is a clear example of the Foundation’s desire to build bridges of cultural communication between Qatar and other countries around the world,” said Haya. “HH Sheikha Moza, has made it her priority to start cultural debate between communities in addition to facilitating the role of women and unlocking their potential with full belief that a woman is at the heart of family and society. Thanks to these efforts, women today are involved at all levels of human activities in the renaissance which is taking place in Qatar and the rest of the region.” The UN General Assembly president stressed the essential role of music and culture in bringing people together to realise a shared vision. “The participation of the QPO is very significant in showing that music can serve as a bridge of harmony that can be used to unite diverse cultures towards this great cause to help women and girls,” al Nasser said. The evening function will serve a dual purpose - to promote the role of UN Women (the entity tasked with increasing gender equality and women’s empowerment), as well as boosting support for the UN Trust Fund to End Violence Against Women.