publishedmedium:gulf daily news

  • Report : Iran-Backed Terror Plot Foiled In Bahrain - Breitbart
    http://www.breitbart.com/national-security/2015/07/27/report-iran-backed-terror-plot-foiled-in-bahrain

    Interior Minister Rashid Al Khalifa warned on Friday that Iran is opening up terror training camps for sympathizers within the country.

    “I tell them [Iran], you are implicated in subversive plots to disrupt Bahrain’s security. You train (terrorists) on the use of weapons and explosives. You export to us the culture of terrorism,” Al Khalifa told Gulf Daily News.

    Iranian regime officials have responded to the accusations, calling them “baseless.”

  • Bahrain’s Muharraq homes to be demolished and rebuilt - Construction - ArabianBusiness.com
    http://www.arabianbusiness.com/bahrain-s-muharraq-homes-be-demolished-rebuilt-588027.html

    Three neighbourhoods in the district – Bin Hindi, Hala and Amamra – have reportedly been earmarked for the scheme, although officials are understood to be considering additional locations.
    The intention is to build the new homes to original designs but using modern construction materials that are more durable, according to a report in Gulf Daily News.
    However, construction work is not expected to begin until compensation deals have been struck with current residents. It is understood that the homes would not be given back to their original owners and instead be distributed among ‘eligible’ families on the government’s social housing waiting lists. Families who were original inhabitants of the neighbourhood will be targeted, it was reported.

    “Many families originally from these neighbourhoods do not want to move to new housing projects in Galali, Busaiteen or Hidd and would like to stay in old Muharraq.
    “This project will help create more homes in other areas for people on the waiting list.”

  • Bahrain said to need $400m to finish major stalled projects - Banking & Finance - ArabianBusiness.com
    http://www.arabianbusiness.com/bahrain-said-need-400m-finish-major-stalled-projects-587910.html

    A study carried out by the Bahrain Chamber of Commerce and Industry (BCCI) found that it would cost between $350 and $400 million to complete work on six of the country’s biggest stalled projects.
    Gulf Daily News reports that the study says the money would allow the large-scale projects at Marina West, Amwaj Gateway, Villamar, Marina Reef, Riffa Views and an unnamed Al Areen Holding Company residential and commercial development could be completed for under $400 million.
    According to the report, the figure is four percent of the $10 billion GCC Development Fund that was set up in 2011 with funding from UAE, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Qatar with a view to financing development plans in Bahrain over the following 10 years.
    Work on many of the projects came to a halt, with little activity reported at Villamar, Amwaj Gateway or Marina West in recent years.

    In an effort to deal with the issue, Bahrain established the Ministerial Committee for Reconstruction and Infrastructure.

  • Gulf Daily News » Local News » NEW-LOOK CABINET
    http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=391292

    Bon et bien les "nouvelles figures" du cabinet bahreinien ne sont pas pour les portefeuilles régaliens...et encore les nouveaux Buainain et Kamal Ahmed ne font que changer de poste le premier était secrétaire d’état et le second ministre du transport passé à l’Economic Development Board...
    La grande question demeure : mais où est Samira Rajab ?

    Meanwhile, sources told our sister paper Akhbar Al Khaleej that there may be several new faces in the Cabinet.

    They said the Cabinet is likely to include Shaikh Mohammed bin Mubarak Al Khalifa, Shaikh Ali bin Khalifa Al Khalifa, Shaikh Khalid bin Abdulla Al Khalifa and Jawad Al Arrayed as Deputy Premiers; Mohammed Al Mutawa as Minister of State; Shaikh Rashid bin Abdulla Al Khalifa, Interior Minister; Shaikh Khalid bin Ahmed Al Khalifa, Foreign Minister; Shaikh Khalid bin Ali Al Khalifa, Justice and Islamic Affairs Minister; Shaikh Ahmed bin Mohammed Al Khalifa, Minister of Finance and National Economy; Majid Al Nuaimi, Education Minister; Ghanim Al Buainain, Minister of State for the Shura and Representative Assembly Affairs (new); Kamal Ahmed, Cabinet Affairs Minister (Minister of the Council of Ministers Affairs) new; Essam Khalaf, Minister of Works; Bassem Al Hamer, Housing Minister; Jameel Humaidan, Labour Minister; Zayed bin Rashid Al Zayani, Industry and Commerce (new); Abdulaziz Al Qassab, Municipalities (new); and Faeqa Al Saleh, Social Development (new).

  • Gulf Daily News » Local News » MPs nominate new chairman
    http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=391252

    states that Ahmed Al Mulla, who was former Military Appeals Court president, will be appointed parliament chairman, while the role of first vice-chairman will be given to newly-elected MP Ali Al Aradi, who was former Bahrain Chamber for Dispute Resolution chief registrar.

    It also says that the position of second vice-chairman will be given to veteran MP and Al Asala Bloc president Abdulhaleem Murad, who will serve his third term in public office.

  • Bahrain furious over exclusion from UK visa waiver - Culture & Society - ArabianBusiness.com
    http://www.arabianbusiness.com/bahrain-furious-over-exclusion-from-uk-visa-waiver-560982.html

    Bahrain has said it will fight a UK decision not to include it in a list of Gulf states whose citizens no longer require a visitor’s visa, Gulf Daily News has reported.
    The kingdom is furious passport holders from neighbouring states the UAE, Oman and Qatar no longer require a visa for a stay of up to six months, if they have completed an electronic visa waiver (EVW) form.
    Bahraini diplomats and holders of “special passports”, such as judges and government officials, are eligible for the EVW but average citizens are not.
    Shura Council chairman Ali Saleh Al Saleh said it was “incomprehensible” that citizens of other GCC states were eligible for visa-free travel while Bahrainis were not.

    According to figures compiled by the UK’s Office of National Statistics as part of its annual International Passenger Survey, Bahrain residents visited the UK an estimated 30,000 times last year spending £2,094 ($3510) per visit on average, GDN said.
    Meanwhile, residents of Qatar visited 61,000 times spending £2,930 per visit on average and UAE residents visited 262,000 times spending £2,008 per visit.
    About 18,000 visits by Omani residents were recorded, with an average spend per visit of £4,905.

  • Bahrain terminates 28,000 visas in 3mths - ArabianBusiness.com
    http://www.arabianbusiness.com/bahrain-terminates-28-000-visas-in-3mths-547216.html

    The number of visas terminated in Bahrain has soared by 40 percent, according to the latest government figures.
    More than 28,000 visas were terminated during the last three months of 2013, including 23,957 for regular workers, 32 for investors, 444 for temporary workers and 3579 for dependents, according to the Labour Market Regulatory Authority’s (LMRA) report quoted by Gulf Daily News.
    The report does not detail why the visas were terminated.
    The number of new work visas approved also fell during the quarter by 14.5 percent to 24,649.

  • Bahrain suspends 8 gov’t officials for corruption - Politics & Economics - ArabianBusiness.com
    http://www.arabianbusiness.com/bahrain-suspends-8-gov-t-officials-for-corruption-537477.html

    Eight government officials in Bahrain have been suspended in connection with 25 corruption cases under investigation, Gulf Daily News has reported.
    More suspensions may follow as the Interior Ministry’s Anti-Corruption and Economic and Electronic Security Directorate reviews another 33 claims resulting from an audit.

  • Gulf Daily News » Local News » VOW TO END TERRORISM
    http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=359155

    The Premier followed up the implementation of National Assembly recommendations and reviewed the security measures to deal with any emergency. He also reviewed the progress of the security and civil committees commissioned to implement the recommendations.

    The Premier said 17 out of 22 recommendations have been fully implemented and stressed the need to speed up security measures to preserve public and private interests.

    “These measures are aimed at protecting residents from militant groups, who are denying people their source of income by blocking roads and forcing them to close their businesses.”

    The Premier said he would personally follow up the implementation of anti-terror measures in order to provide citizens a safe and stable society that’s free from violence, terrorism and sectarian exploitation.

  • Au Bahreïn, le gouvernement tache de s’attirer les faveurs des étrangers, contre une minorité (sic) de sa population, tombée dans l’erreur

    Gulf Daily News » Local News » Expats ’crucial to Bahrain’s growth’
    http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=356417

    BAHRAIN’S expatriate community has contributed greatly to the country’s development, said a top official. They helped build the country’s infrastructure, institutions and enterprises making the bulk of Bahrain’s economic output, said Industry and Commerce Minister Dr Hassan Fakhro.

    “Today more than half of our population consists of non-Bahrainis, and I think that says a lot for the welcoming nature of Bahrain but also shows the importance of expatriates to the development process.”

    He called for the expatriate community to defend Bahrain from the foreign press and share the truth about what is happening in the country.

    He also urged all residents to ease social tensions caused by “misguided minority elements”.

    “We must all in our own way do what we can to ease the tensions that have arisen as the result of some misguided minority elements having lost sight of what the nation has achieved, failing to understand the extreme efforts that His Majesty King Hamad continues to take to return the country to that one-family spirit which he holds so dear,” he added.

  • Une nouvelle étude destinée à contrer l’allégation de l’opposition bahreinienne selon laquelle les chiites sont discriminés dans leur accès à l’emploi (texte 1) et sa critique scientifique par Justin Gengler sur son blog (texte 2).

    1)
    Gulf Daily News » Local News » Opposition’s ’lies’ bared
    http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=352829

    ALLEGATIONS that Bahrain’s Shi’ite community suffers from economic discrimination have been disputed in a report compiled by an independent expert, who accuses opposition groups of lying about the extent of hardships being faced.

    The study was carried out over 18 months by Prague-based Metropolitan University Department of International Relations and European Studies founder and head Dr Mitchell Belfer, who is putting together a book on Bahrain.

    He embarked on the project following opposition claims that the country’s Shi’ite community was underrepresented, excluded from economic life, experienced inequality in pay and was more likely to be unemployed.

    However, his results led him to accuse anti-government activists of engaging in “demographic slander” by twisting facts to suit their agenda, undermine the government and incite sectarianism.

    The “Demographic Warfare” report was compiled based on staff data at six government ministries, five government agencies, 17 high-income sectors, five banks, 10 major employers and 10 top Shi’ite-owned firms.

    Dr Belfer’s research indicated there was equal representation of Shia and Sunni in the economy, with Shi’ite staff massively outnumbering the Sunni workforce in several ministries and agencies, as well as in some of the country’s largest private organisations.

    He also alleged discrimination against Sunni Muslims by 10 major Shi’ite-owned companies, which he said employed 2,648 people in total.

    The study found that an average of 98.1pc of staff at those firms were Shi’ite, although the research did not document levels of Shi’ite employment in Sunni-owned companies.

    “Such statistics only seek to show that the theory of economic desperation and disempowerment is false,” says the report by Dr Belfer, who is also the editor-in-chief of the Central European Journal of International and Security Studies (CEJISS).

    The report also disputes allegations by opposition groups such as Al Wefaq National Islamic Society that Bahrain was trying to reduce the footprint of the Shi’ite population by granting Bahraini citizenship to expats - arguing that immigrants were being unfairly politicised by such claims.

    “Few have truly sought to learn about the people who are being politicised for nothing more than gaining Bahraini nationality through the many channels open to immigrants; asylum seekers, economic migrants, regular immigrants, etc,” says the report.

    "Despite the near deafening depiction that immigrants are mercenaries working to suppress the ’majority Shia’, most immigrants to Bahrain - over the past century - are hardly Sunni zealots seeking to eliminate the country’s Shia; they tend to be either the politically vanquished or the economically downtrodden.

    "They come from around the world; the Philippines, Kurdistan, Eritrea, Sudan, Turkey, Western Europe and the US and, for the past century, they have steadily come from India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Baluchistan and from throughout the Middle East.

    “It is on this last destination that pause for reflection is most needed since the cases of Palestinian and Syrian immigrants to Bahrain clearly demonstrate that Bahrain’s immigration policy is not intended to alter the demographic situation on the ground - it has already been widely acknowledged by the Bahraini government that Bahrainis, Shia and Sunni, are the minority in the country - but is designed in a way to provide political safety and economic opportunity for those that require it most.”

    Although Dr Belfer’s report does not cover staffing at the Defence Ministry and Interior Ministry, it describes allegations that the Shi’ite community is disenfranchised as false and states such allegations only serve to polarise society.

    “There is clear evidence that Shia Bahrainis enjoy the distribution of economic benefits from many of the country’s key sectors and industries,” it says.

    The report warns of the dangers of trying to misrepresent employment opportunities for the Shi’ite community in Bahrain and advises members of the public to challenge such claims by opposition groups.

    “It is not prudent to simply allow demographic slander to go unchecked, these lines of argumentation need to be openly challenged not for Bahrain as a state, but for the very people who live within it, those who found shelter, safety and security in the Kingdom, who call it home while Al Wefaq calls them strangers and mercenaries,” it says.

    It also highlights the dangers of assuming that all members of the Shi’ite community are opponents of the government, particularly since many Bahraini Shia of Persian descent (known as the Ajam) are loyal to the ruling family after their ancestors were welcomed in Bahrain.

    In addition, the report refutes the notion that Bahrain is a country divided between Sunni and Shi’ite Muslims.

    “The country is not a simple case of Sunnis and Shia Muslims competing for dominance of the political and economic resources of the state,” it says.

    "Sunnis and Shia are joined by many other identities, not least of Bahrainis.

    “Despite the manipulation of demographics to attempt to delegitimise Bahrain’s immigration policy, and the government by extension, Bahrain continues to be a vibrant society where the majority of all citizens and residents from the full spectrum of ethnic, religious, linguistic, social and political groups enjoy freedom of speech, of assembly, of worship, of association.”

    2) Bahrain Re-Opens to (Pseudo-) Academics

    the purpose of the Belfer paper is clear: to counter perceptions—local but probably mainly Western perceptions—of employment discrimination against Shi’a citizens. Of course, insofar as the main grievance of Shi’a is not simply employment discrimination per se but disproportionate exclusion from politically-important positions—indeed, from precisely those ministries (and security services) not included in Belfer’s report—it does not directly address this issue.

    Yet the bigger problem with the paper would seem to be one for the government itself. That is, what exactly is the lesson here? And to whom is it directed? Though the article’s main audience is obviously Western, still if I were the Bahraini government I don’t know if I would want to be advertising the fact that, in reality, Shi’a citizens seem to be doing better than Sunnis in many industries and agencies. For, as my own survey results showed, the political views and behavior of ordinary Shi’a Bahrainis are not systematically related to their economic status; those of Sunnis, by contrast, are, and one would think the state would be cognizant of this.

    Thanks may be in order, therefore, to Mitchell A. Belfer, who seems to have substantiated the primary complaint of many of the government’s fiercest critics: that Bahraini Sunnis are poorly rewarded for their staunch support of the government, which continues to patronize exactly those who oppose it.

    http://bahrainipolitics.blogspot.fr/2013/05/bahrain-re-opens-to-pseudo-academics.html

  • Le dialogue piétine, les esprits s’échauffent

    Gulf Daily News » Local News » Stop stalling...
    http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=352273

    A TOP minister has dismissed accusations of an “under the table” dialogue taking place in favour of certain political societies.

    Justice, Islamic Affairs and Endowments Minister Shaikh Khalid bin Ali Al Khalifa said opinions from different factions were welcomed, but serious claims that affects the National Dialogue process are unacceptable.

    He also accused certain groups of holding up talks by “back tracking” statements and endlessly debating principles of the dialogue’s mechanism.

    “We refuse this unprecedented audacity by some groups to come out and say there is one dialogue on the table and another happening under the table,” he said.

    “We are dealing with inexhaustible patience till date so that there is progress made to push for the final agenda that will shape these crucial talks.”

    Shaikh Khalid was speaking during a Press conference last night at the end of the 15th session of the National Dialogue that is being held at the Isa Cultural Centre in Juffair.

    He stressed that all outcomes of the dialogue should be agreed on by participants “on the table”.

    “If there are any meetings by the working teams it must be first approved on the dialogue table,” said Shaikh Khalid, who is representing the government in the talks along with Education Minister Dr Majid Al Nuaimi and Works Minister Essam Khalaf. [...]

    Opposition groups want the final outcome of the dialogue to be issued through public referendum and constitutional means.

    However, it is being strongly opposed by the National Coalition (Sunni contingent) and the National Assembly, who want the outcomes referred to His Majesty King Hamad without conditions. [...]
    “Constitutional amendments mean changes, deletions and/or additions to the constitution which are to be referred to His Majesty.” [Sunnis Coalition]

    Mr Abdulrahman said opposition groups also submitted an 11-point document that includes explanations of principles it presented on March 17. However, discussion on the document was postponed until further study.

  • Point de presse hebdomadaire avec les ministres bahreiniens : une mesure positive très certainement...mais la réforme par le haut continue, alors qu’une partie de la population ne suit plus...

    Gulf Daily News » Local News » OPEN DOORS
    http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=352257

    GOVERNMENT ministers will soon host a weekly open house in a bid to enforce transparency.

    The first meeting will be held on May 8 at the Cabinet in Gudaibiya, said Minister of State for Information Affairs and the government’s official spokeswoman Sameera Rajab.

    She said the move will create an open channel between ministers and the media, and promote transparency in government bodies.

    “Sunday’s Press conferences will be only concerned with what’s being discussed or approved during the Cabinet’s session,” she said during a Press conference following Cabinet’s weekly session.

    "Present will be the responsible minister whose projects, schemes or legislation are on schedule, besides myself as I will give an insight into what has been discussed and approved.

    “We will all work as a team complementing each other as I will give points and the responsible minister will give details.”

  • Les britanniques, maître de la danse au Bahreïn

    In an interview with local Gulf Daily News, parts of which were also carried by the official Bahrain News Agency, British ambassador in Manama, Iain Lindsay, was quoted as saying that there was “increasing evidence” that Iran was “providing support to people here who are bent on violence”. [...]

    He also had strong words for those behind recent attempts to plan bombs in the country. “I think people who plant bombs which are aimed at indiscriminately killing people are terrorists, full stop... If you plant a bomb in a rubbish bin and you don’t really care who is going to pick it up or who is going to be killed, that is by any international standards terrorism.” Lindsay told Gulf Daily News.

    Lindsay described a recent report by US-based Human Rights Watch that criticised the national dialogue that was recently launched in the kingdom as “deeply unhelpful, condescending and patronising”.

    “As far as the HRW report was concerned we would disagree with their conclusion that there had been no progress on reform,” he told the daily.

    Bahrain and the UK enjoy a long standing relationship. In December, Crown Prince Salman Bin Hamad Al Khalifa singled out Britain as a country he will be “personally eternally grateful” to for standing by Bahrain during difficult times.

    Gulf News
    http://gulfnews.com/news/gulf/bahrain/uk-points-finger-at-iran-in-bahrain-unrest-1.1162976