• Kuwait News Agency - 28 December, 2014

    Turkey’s Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc denied on Saturday that he demanded Kuwait to support his country in accommodating the large numbers of Syrian refugees during his recent visit to Kuwait.

    During his meeting today with visiting Kuwaiti journalists, Arinc lauded the contributions of His Highness the Amir of Kuwait Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah and the Kuwaiti people and government to the humanitarian action.

    Turkey, a rich and powerful country, has provided aid to many countries, reaching USD 3.5 billion annually, Anadolu Agency (AA) quoted him as saying.

    “Turkey alone has spent more than USD 5 billion on more than 1.5 million Syrian refugees and aid actually received from the UN agencies and foreign doners represent only a tenth of the stated aid pledges,” the senior official added.

    Regarding his country’s relations with Egypt, Arinc expressed desire to improve them, saying that Egypt must take measures in this direction.

    He dismissed the calls by his country for Kuwait to intervene to settle the dispute with Egypt.

    On another front, Arinc stressed the importance of joint efforts to combat the terrorist groups such as ISIL, noting that the Turkish security services arrested dozens of foreign fighters who tried to cross Turkey into neighboring countries to join ISIL ranks.

  • Réélection d’Ali Salman à la tête du Wefaq et renouvellement du majliss al shoura

    الوفاق تنجح في عقد مؤتمرها العام وانتخابات هيئاتها الرئيسية بحضور الآلاف من أعضاءها - alwefaq
    http://alwefaq.net/cms/2014/12/27/34788

    الرئيسية / Slides / الوفاق تنجح في عقد مؤتمرها العام وانتخابات هيئاتها الرئيسية بحضور الآلاف من أعضاءها

    بحضور أكثر من 2380 عضواً وانتخاب 35 في المناصب القيادية للجمعية

    الوفاق تنجح في عقد مؤتمرها العام وانتخابات هيئاتها الرئيسية بحضور الآلاف من أعضاءها
    في Slides, أخبار الوفاق, الرئيسية 27 ديسمبر, 2014

    بحضور غير مسبوق، نجحت جمعية الوفاق الوطني الإسلامية في عقد مؤتمرها العام 2014 مساء الجمعة 26 ديسمبر 2014، إذ أنهت أعمال مؤتمرها العام وانتخابات هيئاتها الرئيسية وسط حضور لافت ومميز، انتهى بفرز الأصوات واعلان نتائج انتخابات شورى الوفاق وهيئة التحكيم.
    وحضر المؤتمر العام للوفاق 2388 عضواً، بنبسة 78.4% من أعضاء الوفاق المستكملين لشروط العضوية وعددهم 3046، كما شهد المؤتمر العام تسجيل المئات من طلبات العضوية الجديدة للإنضمام لجمعية الوفاق.
    وأعلن رئيس اللجنة العليا للمؤتمر العام علي الجبل اكتمال النصاب القانوني للمؤتمر، وشمل المؤتمر العام للجمعية تلاوة الأمين العام للوفاق سماحة الشيخ علي سلمان للتقرير السياسي، وصادق المؤتمر العام على التقرير بعد مناقشته.
    وعقب اكتمال النصاب القانوني وانعقاد المؤتمر العام، بدأت عملية التصويت لإنتخاب 30 عضواً لشورى الوفاق (الهيئة التشريعية والرقابية بالجمعية) و5 أعضاء لهيئة التحكيم (المرجعية القانونية وجهة الفصل)، وجاء ذلك بعد فوز الأمين العام ونائبه بالتزكية وفق ما أعلنت اللجنة العليا للمؤتمر العام وانتخابات الوفاق.
    ووفقاً للجنة الانتخابات في الوفاق، فقد فاز في انتخابات هيئة التحكيم كلاً من:
    جاسم حسن منصور حسن / 1,748 صوت
    السيد امين حسن محمد الموسوي / 1,449 صوت
    هاشم السيد عيسى السيد جعفر البحراني / 1,093 صوت
    ابراهيم جواد عبدالله سرحان / 902 صوت
    السيد عبدالمحسن محمد اسماعيل الموسوي / 825 صوت
    كما فاز في انتخابات شورى الوفاق (الهيئة الرقابية داخل الوفاق) كلاً من:
    السيد جميل كاظم حسن محمد / 1,690 صوت
    محمد جميل عبدالأمير الجمري / 1,491 صوت
    علي راشد حسن علي العشيري / 1,413 صوت
    عبدالجبار ابراهيم عبدالنبي حسين العصفور / 1,412 صوت
    علي عبد الله حبيب محمد / 1,204 صوت
    رملة عبدالحميد حسين / 1,157 صوت
    عبدالغني عبدالعزيز خليل إبراهيم / 1,154 صوت
    صادق عبدالمهدي حسن البصري / 1,138 صوت
    حامد محمد جعفر عبدالحسين خلف / 1,126 صوت
    السيد حسن السيد احمد علوي الغريفي / 1,103 صوت
    حسين منصور علي محمد الصغير / 1,054 صوت
    عبد الرضا محسن زهير محسن / 1,030 صوت
    سيد هاشم سلمان محمد الموسوي / 1,029 صوت
    محمد مهدي محمد العكري / 1,019 صوت
    عبدالكريم يوسف رضي محمد علي / 1,002 صوت
    عبدالناصر يوسف أحمد زليخ / 989 صوت
    جعفر شعبان علي محمد / 966 صوت
    جمشير فيروز غلوم فيروز / 955 صوت
    فاطمة عباس مهدي محمد / 892 صوت
    نزار محمد علي القارى / 841 صوت
    جاسم محمد حسن مهدي / 839 صوت
    حسين محمد علي حسن العريبي / 785 صوت
    محمود عباس الشيخ ال عباس / 785 صوت
    السيد كاظم احمد علي حسن الموسوي / 760 صوت
    كريمة عبدالله علي دهنيم / 744 صوت
    علي منصور عبدالله كاظم / 728 صوت
    عبدالعظيم عبدالهادي عبدالرسول رجب / 716 صوت
    محمد ميرزا أحمد عاشور / 712 صوت
    خديجة جواد عبدالله خميس / 693 صوت
    جعفر خليل ابراهيم عيسى / 691 صوت

  • A Boy in ISIS. A Suicide Vest. A Hope to Live. - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/27/world/middleeast/syria-isis-recruits-teenagers-as-suicide-bombers.html?emc=edit_th_20141227&

    BAGHDAD — Before war convulsed his hometown in Syria, Usaid Barho played soccer, loved Jackie Chan movies and adored the beautiful Lebanese pop singer Nancy Ajram. He dreamed of attending college and becoming a doctor.

    His life, to say the least, took a detour.

    On a recent evening in Baghdad, Usaid, who is 14, approached the gate of a Shiite mosque, unzipped his jacket to show a vest of explosives, and surrendered himself to the guards.

  • Some States See Budgets at Risk as Oil Price Falls - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/27/us/falling-oil-prices-have-ripple-effect-in-texas-louisiana-oklahoma.html?emc=

    HOUSTON — States dependent on oil and gas revenue are bracing for layoffs, slashing agency budgets and growing increasingly anxious about the ripple effect that falling oil prices may have on their local economies.

    The concerns are cutting across traditional oil states like Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Alaska as well as those like North Dakota that are benefiting from the nation’s latest energy boom.

    “The crunch is coming,” said Gunnar Knapp, a professor of economics and the director of the Institute of Social and Economic Research at the University of Alaska Anchorage.

    Experts and elected officials say an extended downturn in oil prices seems unlikely to create the economic disasters that accompanied the 1980s oil bust, because energy-producing states that were left reeling for years have diversified their economies. The effects on the states are nothing like the crises facing big oil-exporting nations like Russia, Iran and Venezuela.

    Continue reading the main story
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    But here in Houston, which proudly bills itself as the energy capital of the world, Hercules Offshore announced it would lay off about 300 employees who work on the company’s rigs in the Gulf of Mexico at the end of the month. Texas already lost 2,300 oil and gas jobs in October and November, according to preliminary data released last week by the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    On the same day, Fitch Ratings warned that home prices in Texas “may be unsustainable” as the price of oil continues to plummet. The American benchmark for crude oil, known as West Texas Intermediate, was $54.73 per barrel on Friday, having fallen from more than $100 a barrel in June.

    In Louisiana, the drop in oil prices had a hand in increasing the state’s projected 2015-16 budget shortfall to $1.4 billion and prompting cuts that eliminated 162 vacant positions in state government, reduced contracts across the state and froze expenses for items like travel and supplies at all state agencies. Another round of reductions is expected as soon as January.

    And in Alaska — where about 90 percent of state government is funded by oil, allowing residents to pay no state sales or income taxes — the drop in oil prices has worsened the budget deficit and could force a 50 percent cut in capital spending for bridges and roads. Moody’s, the credit rating service, recently lowered Alaska’s credit outlook from stable to negative.

    States that have become accustomed to the benefits of energy production — budgets fattened by oil and gas taxes, ample jobs and healthy rainy-day funds — are now nervously eyeing the changed landscape and wondering how much they will lose from falling prices that have been an unexpected present to drivers across the country this holiday season. The price of natural gas is falling, too.

    Continue reading the main story
    RELATED IN OPINION

    How Cheaper Oil Is Shaping the WorldDEC. 17, 2014
    “Our approach to the 2016 budget includes a full review of every activity in every agency’s budget and the cost associated with them,” said Kristy Nichols, the chief budget adviser to Gov. Bobby Jindal of Louisiana. “Nothing is off the table at this point.”

    Continue reading the main story
    A study published in 2013 by the Council on Foreign Relations suggested that job losses from a sharp decline in oil prices would be largest in Wyoming, Oklahoma and North Dakota.

    But Louisiana, which has a smaller and less diversified economy than Texas, is already feeling the sting of the price downturn because it relies on more oil and gas money for its operating budget. Louisiana loses $12 million for every $1 in decline in the annual average price of a barrel of oil, according to Greg Albrecht, the state’s chief economist.

    “From a strictly budgetary perspective, Louisiana is more sensitive to all of this,” said James A. Richardson, a Louisiana State University economist who serves on the state’s Revenue Estimating Conference, which estimates how much money will be available for the budget. “It shows up in our house much sooner.”

  • Finance Ministry to discuss deficit financing with SAMA | Arab News
    http://www.arabnews.com/economy/news/680216

    RIYADH: The Finance Ministry will discuss with the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA) its options for financing the large state budget deficit expected next year, and may cover some of the shortfall with borrowing, Finance Minister Ibrahim Al-Assaf said.
    Responding to the plunge of oil prices, the ministry has announced a 2015 budget plan which envisions a deficit of SR145 billion ($38.7 billion)
    A ministry statement said the government could cover the deficit with its huge fiscal reserves, but Al-Assaf told Al Arabiya television that borrowing might also be used.
    “There is also a chance to borrow at good rates — this topic will be discussed with colleagues at the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency at the appropriate time,” he said.
    Al-Assaf did not elaborate on the types of borrowing which might be used.
    Although Saudi state-run agencies and state-owned firms have occasionally issued foreign- and local-currency bonds in recent years, the government itself has not, preferring to pay down its debt.
    The minister noted that Saudi Arabia’s public debt had dropped to SR44 billion or about 1.6 percent of gross domestic product, which would make it easy to borrow.
    Both state-run and private financial institutions have big resources from which the government could borrow, he added.
    Al-Assaf said next year’s budget deficit would be slightly more than 4 percent of GDP, which he called low under current global conditions.
    Saudi Arabia did not reveal the oil price assumed in its 2015 budget, but analysts estimate it was about $55 a barrel or slightly higher; Brent crude oil is now at $60.
    In past budgets, the government made very conservative assumptions for oil revenues, resulting in much higher-than-projected revenues at the end of each year. That is unlikely to happen with the 2015 budget, Al-Assaf said.
    “We were realistic in our estimates for next year’s revenues in light of current and expected developments in the oil market. Maybe over the past years I agree we were conservative, but this year we were realistic,” he said.
    The ministry said on Thursday that Saudi Arabia’s inflation-adjusted GDP grew an estimated 3.6 percent this year, up from 2.7 percent in 2013. Al-Assaf said those calculations used the base year of 2010, when the oil sector’s contribution to the economy was unusually high.
    If the calculations had used 1999 for the base year, as the government did previously, growth in 2014 would have come in at 4.1 percent, Al-Assaf said.
    He called that rate healthy and said it was expected to be maintained next year.
    Private sector growth was estimated at 5.7 percent this year, showing the government’s efforts to diversify the economy beyond oil are on track, he added.

  • King says growth to continue as KSA unveils largest budget
    *Arab News - *26 December, 2014

    Saudi Arabia unveiled Thursday the largest budget in history for 2015, projecting spending at record SR860 billion, despite a sharp fall in oil prices. The budget projected revenue at SR715 billion showing a huge deficit of SR145 billion for the first time since 2011.

    Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah expressed optimism that the Kingdom would continue its economic growth, driven by private sector activity, integration of public and private sectors and improvement of private sector performance.

    Crown Prince Salman, deputy premier and minister of defense, chaired the Cabinet’s special budget session to approve the budget on behalf of King Abdullah.

    In his address to the nation on the occasion, King Abdullah said the expansionary budget was aimed at enhancing the citizens’ progress and prosperity and creating more job opportunities for them.

    In his keynote speech, which was delivered by the Cabinet’s Secretary-General Abdul Rahman Al-Sadhan, King Abdullah said the budget was aimed at boosting comprehensive and balanced development. “My brothers, you are well aware that the global economy is showing weakness in growth, in addition to what the global oil market is going through, which contributed to a significant drop in oil prices,” the king told citizens.

    “We have issued our directives to officials that the next year’s budget shall take into consideration these developments and rationalize expenditures, taking care of everything that serves citizens, improves services provided to them, implements strictly and efficiently the budget’s programs and projects.”

    King Abdullah said the Kingdom was seeking sustainability of strong public finances status, and giving priority in the next fiscal year for completing the implementation of projects approved in previous budgets, which are huge projects.

    King Abdullah said the government would continue to focus on education, address labor market imbalance to create more job opportunities for citizens and ensure optimal use of resources. The 2015 budget has allocated funds for three new universities.

    King Abdullah also urged citizens to preserve the country’s security and stability. He urged all ministers and officials to exert maximum efforts to implement the budget’s programs and projects efficiently and with quality to achieve its goals.

    Finance Minister Ibrahim Al-Assaf said the 2015 deficit would be covered by the country’s huge reserves from previous surpluses. Speaking to Saudi Television after presenting the budget, he said the government would continue spending actively on economic development projects “over the medium term.”

    Asked whether he meant three to five years, the minister replied: “Yes, over three to five years...The (economic) depth we have, God willing, will be enough until prices get better.”
    Al-Assaf said everybody expected prices to rise eventually but there was a difference over when; some people said the second half of next year while others said 2016.

    “We have the ability to endure low oil prices over the medium term,” he said. The Kingdom’s total cash reserves stood at SR1.492 trillion in October 2014 while its total reserves in assets amounted to SR2.78 trillion, enough to cover deficits of the size projected in 2015 for several years.

    The stock market reacted positively as the Tadawul All-Share Index rose 49.56 points or 0.57% to close at 8,749.34 points.

    The value of traded shares reached SR11.32 billion. Petrochemical industries index dropped 0.14% while industrial investment index rose 4.18% and hotel and tourism index was up 2.8%.

    Financial markets had feared the Kingdom might cut spending sharply, but the plan suggests Saudi authorities are confident of their ability to ride out a period of low oil prices and see no need for major austerity.

    Al-Assaf said the Kingdom would continue spending actively on economic development projects, social welfare and security despite the oil price slide and challenging conditions in the global economy.

    He said the Kingdom’s GDP was to reach SR2,821.7 ($ 752.5) billion by the end of 2014 with a growth rate of 1.09 percent compared to 2013. The nonoil GDP is estimated to grow 8.21 percent, whereas the nonoil public and private sectors 6.06 percent and 9.11 percent, respectively, and the oil sector to decline by 7.17 percent.

    Labor Minister Adel Fakeih said the new budget would accelerate growth and enhance welfare of citizens. “It also reflects the strength of Saudi economy and its ability to withstand challenges…It also gives the message that citizens are the real asset of the Kingdom and the driving force for growth.”

    Higher Education Minister Khaled Al-Sabti said the budget has allocated more than SR80 billion for higher education projects. “During the past 10 years there was 86 percent growth in number of universities, which has reached 28,” he said, adding that they accommodate over 1.5 million students.

    • D’autres réactions au budget saoudien

      New budget demonstrates strength of KSA economy | Arab News
      http://www.arabnews.com/economy/news/680211

      New budget demonstrates strength of KSA economy
      

      JEDDAH: ARAB NEWS
      Published — Saturday 27 December 2014
      Last update 26 December 2014 11:12 pm
      | | A A

      LATEST STORIES IN ECONOMY

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      The new budget demonstrates the strength of the Saudi economy to withstand the challenges posed by the global economic crisis, including the sharp drop in the crude prices, says Muhammad Al-Jaffri, deputy chairman of the Shoura Council.
      “The government of Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah has spectacularly succeeded in making use of the financial surplus accumulated by the Kingdom, thanks to the high oil prices during the past years, in a strong fiscal reserve after employing the revenues for development in various provinces,” Al-Jaffri said in a statement, commending the new budget.
      The general budget for 2015, with an estimated expenditure outlay of SR 860 billion, reflects the soundness of the economic policies of the government, which adopted all necessary measures to fortify the country’s economy against the upheavals of recent times, including the tumbling price of oil, a major source of revenue for the Kingdom, he was quoted as saying in an SPA report.
      The budget signified the continuation of the government‘s current policies to spend generously for the development of human resources, which is the foundation for sustainable growth.
      The budget also stressed the improvement of the government sector’s performance, and integration of the private and public sectors besides rectification of the anomalies in the job market to generate plenty of job opportunities for the Saudis, he added.
       
      إعلان
      -00:26What’s this? inRead™ invented by Teads.tv

      “Allocation of SR 217 billion for the education sector accounting for 25 percent of the total budget reflects the central role assigned to the youth with the aim of establishing an outstanding educational structure to suit the needs of the job market. The budget also stresses advanced health care for the people with the allocation of SR 160 billion to the health sector,” Al-Jaffri said.
      “A close examination of the new budget reveals Custodian of Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah’s keenness to promote the careers and welfare of Saudi youths,” he said.
      Under royal directives, the development schemes give priority to youth empowerment with a focus on education, employment, social welfare and sports.
      Commenting on the budget, Basil Al-Ghalayini, CEO of BMG Financial Group, told Arab News: “After much speculation, the Saudi leadership has ruled out its counter cyclical budget by continuing its expansionary spending irrespective of oil prices. With huge cushion of financial reserves, the government can afford to finance its projected 2015 deficits if not borrowing from the international markets at competitive rates considering its AA rating.”
      He added: “Having said that, looking long term, there should be serious concerted efforts to speed up preparing other sectors to be reliable income generating beside oil revenues.”
      Al-Ghalayini said: “Considering its unique status as the host of the two holy mosques, a well-managed Islamic tourism could be a sizable and sustainable revenue driver for the economy.”
      According to SAMA, surging oil prices over the past decade helped Saudi Arabia boost its net foreign assets to a record SR2.9 trillion in October.

  • Smuggling of housemaids from Bahrain ‘on the rise’ | Arab News
    http://www.arabnews.com/featured/news/679036

    There are at least 30 violations recorded on a daily basis involving the smuggling of maids into the Eastern Province from Bahrain and other Gulf nations, officials from local recruitment offices have said.
    They said that smuggling, aided by some recruitment companies, has increased because of the difficulty faced by Saudis in recruiting workers the legal route.
    Saad Baddah, head of the Council of Saudi Chambers’ national recruitment and investors committee, said some domestic workers enter with visit visas from other Gulf countries.
    They then renew these visas legally every three months. These workers cannot use labor visas from other Gulf nations, which are handled by the Saudi Ministry of Labor, to enter the Kingdom, he said.
    Taiseer Al-Mufrij, spokesman of the ministry, warned that violators face penalties for breaking the country’s laws, which “may involve withdrawing the licenses of recruitment offices, and cutting off all their e-services.”
    Ibrahim Al-Manshi, head of a local recruitment office, said many requests are submitted to bring the wives of drivers, mainly Indians, especially after recruitment from India resumed.
    “It costs less to bring the wife of a driver or worker on a visit visa to live here with her husband as a dependent, than it does to recruit her as a domestic worker with a new labor visa, particularly since Indian recruitment requirements are still difficult and complicated,” he said.

  • Après la Jordanie, le Koweit prend des mesures contre ses ressortissants frèristes qui critiquent les EAU

    Kuwait parliament takes action on UAE issue | GulfNews.com
    http://gulfnews.com/news/gulf/uae/government/kuwait-parliament-takes-action-on-uae-issue-1.1432154

    The Kuwaiti parliament has started legal procedures against those who offended the UAE leadership in a TV show broadcast on the official television channel of the legislature, the speaker said on Thursday.
    Addressing a press conference at Kuwait’s National Assembly, speaker Marzouq Al Ganem said: “In the morning after the programme, we started our legal procedures” with regard to the TV programme in which a former Kuwaiti MP and Muslim Brotherhood member Mubarak Al Duwailah insulted the UAE and its leaders over its policy which designated the Brotherhood and its affiliate groups as terrorist organisations.
    “Relations between Kuwait and the UAE are not the result of a diplomatic decision; rather, [the UAE and Kuwait] share common destiny and our history is as old as our existence as Emaratis and Kuwaitis,” he explained.
    [...]
    Al Ganem condemned the offending remarks that was mentioned in the show regarding General Shaikh Mohammad Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Abu Dhabi Crown Prince and Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, as “appalling and unacceptable”.

  • Bahrain : The regime takes revenge on peaceful activists - AhlulBayt News Agency - ABNA - Shia News
    http://www.abna.ir/english/service/bahrain/archive/2014/12/25/660551/story.html

    The authorities, represented in this case by the Ministry of Social Development, recently moved forward with new criminal charges against the activist and blogger Nader AbdelImam[2], because of his role in founding and working with the human rights organisation “Ensaf” without prior permission.

  • Bahrain, Kuwait sign cooperation accord | GulfNews.com
    http://gulfnews.com/news/gulf/bahrain/bahrain-kuwait-sign-cooperation-accord-1.1431949

    The two-day meeting on December 22 and 23 addressed several issues of interest to both countries and focused on ways to reinforce economic cooperation, improve commercial trade and consolidate Gulf citizenship, the two countries said in their communiqué.
    The two sides also reviewed financial, economic and investment cooperation and expressed their satisfaction with the steps taken towards economic integration between them in line with the GCC agreement.
    Both Bahrain and Kuwait agreed on deepening cooperation between the ministries of foreign affairs and intensifying the exchange of expertise and official visits.
    They also agreed on broadening cooperation in the economic, financial, investment, expert, commerce, industry, civil service, administrative development, information, justice, women, parliament, electricity, water, health, social insurance, culture, municipalities, urban planning, defence, oil, national guard, education youth, sports, social environment and national security areas.
    The meeting was the eighth held by the Bahrain - Kuwait high joint commission.

  • Manama : La chaîne d’informations Alarab lancée en février - L’Express avec L’Expansion
    http://lexpansion.lexpress.fr/actualites/1/actualite-economique/la-chaine-d-informations-alarab-lancee-en-fevrier_1632667.html

    Dans son communiqué, Alarab promet d’offrir « une plateforme pour une présentation transparente et un débat sur les questions et les défis les plus difficiles de la région ». 

    La nouvelle chaîne sera dirigée par Jamal Khashoggi, vétéran de la presse saoudienne et proche des Al-Fayçal, une branche de la famille régnante en Arabie saoudite. 

    En mai 2010, il avait dû démissionner de son poste de rédacteur en chef de l’influent quotidien saoudien Al-Watan, dont il avait fait une tribune progressiste, et ce après la parution d’un article critiquant le salafisme qui avait suscité des remous dans les milieux conservateurs.

  • Syrie : 300 sites historiques détruits ou endommagés par la guerre - 20minutes.fr
    http://www.20minutes.fr/monde/syrie/1506407-20141224-syrie-300-sites-historiques-detruits-endommages-guerre

    ix sites inscrits au patrimoine mondial
    Grâce à son Programme opérationnel pour les applications satellitaires (Unosat), cet institut a analysé 18 zones, où il a repéré 24 sites détruits, 104 ayant subi des dégâts importants et 84 des dommages partiels tandis que 77 autres sont probablement ravagés. C’est « triste pour la Syrie et pour le monde. L’Humanité est en train de perdre des milliers d’années de patrimoine », a affirmé Einar Bjorgo, le directeur de l’Unosat.
    Pour l’Unitar, il faut sans tarder « redoubler d’efforts pour sauver le plus possible cet important patrimoine de l’Humanité ». Parmi les 18 zones citées, six sont inscrites au patrimoine mondial de l’Unesco : les vieilles villes d’Alep (nord), de Bosra (sud) et de Damas (centre), les Villes mortes du nord, le Krak des Chevaliers (centre) et Palmyre (est).

  • NEW YORK, 22 déc 2014 (AFP) - La banque israélienne Bank Leumi a accepté lundi de payer deux amendes totalisant 400 millions de dollars et de livrer les noms de certains de ses clients afin d’échapper à des poursuites pour aide à l’évasion fiscale aux Etats-Unis

    L’établissement financier a plaidé coupable d’avoir aidé de riches Américains à dissimuler leurs avoirs dans des paradis fiscaux, selon un communiqué du département de la Justice américain.

    Le ministère évoque des rendez-vous secrets de 2000 à 2011 entre les employés de Bank Leumi Group et de riches Américains dans des hôtels, jardins publics et cafés aux Etats-Unis et à travers le monde pour mettre en place des procédés destinés à tromper le fisc américain.

    La banque, qui est une filiale d’une des plus grosses institutions financières israéliennes, Bank Leumi le-Israel, a aussi accepté de livrer plus de 1.500 noms de ses clients américains au DOJ.

    Pour échapper à des poursuites, elle versera 270 millions de dollars au ministère de la Justice américain et 130 millions au régulateur des services financiers de New York (DSF).

    « Alors que certaines banques suisses commençaient à mettre le holà à ce genre de pratiques, la banque Leumi, elle, appuyait encore plus sur l’accélérateur en voyant là une +chance en or+ de développer ses affaires », a commenté Benjamin Lawsky, le chef du DSF dans un communiqué.

    C’est la première fois qu’un établissement financier israélien reconnaît les faits en matière d’évasion fiscale aux Etats-Unis, souligne pour sa part le ministère de la Justice.

  • Saudi Arabia and UAE blame oil rout on countries outside Opec - FT.com
    http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/39472a66-88ee-11e4-ad5b-00144feabdc0.html?ftcamp=crm/email/20141223/nbe/MiddleEast/product&siteedition=intl#axzz3MbkLbOXF

    Ahead of last month’s Opec meeting in Vienna, Mr Mazroui told the Financial Times: “Yes, there is an oversupply but that oversupply is not an Opec problem.”
    He also said that non-Opec countries and high-cost production — such as oil from US shale fields — should play a role in balancing the market. Lower prices would help cut excess supplies from more expensive oilfields while preserving the share of lower-cost Opec producers as well as induce demand. The “market will fix it”, he said in November.

  • Egypt and Qatar inch towards detente after Saudi-brokered talks - FT.com
    http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/584ef90c-892f-11e4-ad5b-00144feabdc0.html?ftcamp=crm/email/20141222/nbe/WorldNews/product#axzz3MbkLbOXF

    “The Saudis are trying to narrow the gaps between Egypt and Qatar,” said Michael Wahid Hanna, an analyst at the Century Foundation in New York. “But they are not looking for a compromise, rather for a change in behaviour on the part of Qatar.”
    Qatar’s independent foreign policy and its support for Islamists constitute an attempt to escape Saudi hegemony in the region, Mr Hanna said. That would make it difficult for Doha to “swallow a Saudi-led plan” requiring a radical change to its stance on regional affairs.
    “We have seen some small steps, and the GCC policy is beginning to ease tensions but I think the Saudis and the Emiratis have expectations from Qatar which it may not be inclined to grant,” Mr Hanna added.
    Omar Ashour, a senior lecturer at the University of Exeter and a non-resident fellow at Brooking Doha Center, believes there may be “a truce without major consequences for the foreign policy of either Egypt or Qatar.”
    Qatar would like to see an end of “the smear campaign” against its royal family in the Egyptian press, Mr Ashour said, but he cast doubt on the prospect of Doha reining in Al Jazeera Mubasher Misr.

  • Rich Russians head for UK in record numbers - FT.com
    http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/62cc361a-892a-11e4-9b7f-00144feabdc0.html?ftcamp=crm/email/20141222/nbe/WorldNews/product&siteedition=intl#axzz3MbkLbOXF

    the number of Russians who were granted investor visas this year has soared by 69 per cent, according to Home Office statistics. The visas gave foreigners from outside the EU a fast track to residence and citizenship in return for buying gilts worth £1m to £10m.
    [...]

    Investor visas have proved particularly popular with Russians and Chinese, but the British government is — for the first time in two decades — making them harder to obtain. New rules that came into force last month raised the minimum amount needed to £2m from £1m, and brought in restrictions on the nature of the investment.
    Until the recent change, visa applicants had been permitted to spend a quarter of their total UK investment on property, but this is no longer allowed. Although the Home Office did not given a reason for its decision, it was widely considered to be a response to public anxiety about foreigners investing in London properties that remain vacant.

  • Gulf States and Qatar Gloss Over Differences, but Split Still Hampers Them - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/21/world/gulf-states-and-qatar-gloss-over-differences-but-split-still-hampers-them.h

    But the split is still festering, most visibly here in the place where it broke out over the military ouster of Egypt’s Islamist president. “Nothing has changed — nothing, nothing,” said a senior Egyptian official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss confidential diplomacy.
    [...]
    A senior Qatari official, also speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the joint communiqué supporting Mr. Sisi’s road map was merely a “press release” that carried little significance.

  • Kuwait threatens to expel Indians over diplomatic spat - ArabianBusiness.com
    http://m.arabianbusiness.com/kuwait-threatens-expel-indians-over-diplomatic-spat-574796.html

    Kuwait has threatened to impose an immediate ban on Indian expatriates moving to the country as the Asian nation refuses to back down on a plan to enforce a bank guarantee on foreign employers.

    India has said it will require a $2500 bank guarantee to recruit an Indian domestic worker overseas.

    Kuwait has disputed the move and on Wednesday it held high level diplomatic talks with the Indian ambassador to Kuwait.

    However, Kuwait Times reported the ongoing discussions had failed to resolve the issue, leading Kuwait to threaten a ban on new Indian workers in the country, which could become effective as early as Thursday.

    There are about 800,000 Indians in Kuwait, making them the highest non-citizen community in the Gulf state, according to government figures quoted by Kuwait Times.

    About one-quarter are domestic workers.

    The Indian embassy has said the bank guarantee was initiated in 2007 already has been applied in several countries, including all other Gulf states.

    It emphasised that the money would be returned to the employer as soon as the employment contract ended, pending any financial disagreements.

  • Kuwait set to allow expats to moonlight - ArabianBusiness.com
    http://m.arabianbusiness.com/kuwait-set-allow-expats-moonlight-574436.html

    Expats working in Kuwait’s private sector will soon be allowed to take up additional part-time work in a move designed to boost the labour force without increasing the population, the Manpower Public Authority has announced.

    The practice, known as moonlighting, also would allow low-paid workers to earn additional income.

    Scores of foreign workers already have informal second jobs, according to Kuwait Times, and the new rule will make it legal.

    Expatriates working in the public sector already can seek additional part-time jobs in the private sector or nongovernmental organisations.

    The decision is among several expected to be implemented in January under the country’s overhaul of labour laws.

    Private companies have been suspended from directly recruiting foreign labour for several years, with exceptions, while a new Manpower Public Authority was created, moving the labour department from the Ministry of Social Affairs to a separate body.

    The country has been attempting to rebalance it demography, with foreigners making up two-thirds of the country’s population of 4 million, and reduce pressure on ailing services and a housing shortage.

    However, efforts to encourage citizens into the private sector have had minimal success.

    Last year, the former social affairs minister declared Kuwait would cut the number of foreigners in the country by 1 million 2023.

    Parliament is presently debating a proposal to limit expatriate visas to 10 years and cap the proportion of the total population that comes from one country to 15 percent.

  • Kuwaiti union official accuses ministry of ’human trafficking’ - ArabianBusiness.com
    http://m.arabianbusiness.com/kuwaiti-union-official-accuses-ministry-of-human-trafficking--567

    A top official representing expatriates in Kuwait has quit his position in protest over what he says is the government’s involvement in the exploitation of expat labourers.

    Abdul Rahman Al Ghanim, the head of Kuwait Labor Union’s expat division, said more than 500 foreign labourers had complained of not receiving their salaries for months but government organisations were doing little to respond, Kuwait Times reported.

    He claimed the Ministry of Health had employed numerous expats who did not have the required work residency visas, “which [is] human trafficking”.

    The government department in charge of expatriates, the Manpower Authority, also had convinced some labourers to forfeit their overdue salaries in return for allowing them to transfer their visas to other sponsors – a promise that was not fulfilled once the labourers had signed papers to forfeit their money, Al Ghanim said.

    He claimed he had unsuccessfully raised the issues with the relevant authorities on numerous occasions.

    There are an estimated almost 2 million expatriates living in Kuwait, equal to about two-thirds of the population.

    Last week, a survey of 14,000 expats in 160 countries by InterNations found Kuwait was the worst state to be an expat. The survey measured quality of life, ease of settling in, working abroad, family life, personal finance, and overall satisfaction living abroad.

  • Britain to build first permanent Middle East military base in four decades | UK news | theguardian.com
    http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2014/dec/06/britain-first-middle-eastern-military-base-bahrain

    Foreign secretary Philip Hammond said the deal with Bahrain would guarantee the Royal Navy’s presence in Bahrain well into the future. He said: “The expansion of Britain’s footprint builds upon our 30-year track record of Gulf patrols and is just one example of our growing partnership with Gulf partners to tackle shared strategic and regional threats.”

    Defence secretary Michael Fallon said Britain would now be based in the Gulf again for the long term. The rise of Islamic State, fears over Iran and ongoing instability in the region contributed to the decision to establish the new naval base, which is adjacent to a more substantial US facility, home to the fifth fleet. Bahrain will contribute most of the £15m cost of construction, with the UK picking up the ongoing costs.

    Chief of the defence staff, general Sir Nicholas Houghton, said the deal was symbolic and strategically important. “Rather than just being seen as a temporary deployment to an area for a specific operational purpose, this is more symbolic of the fact that Britain does enjoy interests in the stability of this region,” he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

    “And the fact that the Bahraini authorities and government agreed to fund infrastructure within the country to base our maritime capability forward, both is a recognition from their perspective of the quality of the relationship with the United Kingdom, but also of our interest over time in maintaining the stability of this very important area.”

  • Turkey says Bahrain votes are important step to reform | Turkey | Worldbulletin News
    http://www.worldbulletin.net/news/149787/turkey-says-bahrain-votes-are-important-step-to-reform

    Releasing a statement on Wednesday, Turkey’s Foreign Ministry said the elections are an important step towards reform and national dialogue in the country and for building a consensus.
    “We congratulate the Bahraini people and would like to say that Turkey gives utmost importance to brother Bahrain’s peace, security and stability,” the statement added

  • Saudi Arabia forced to rethink ideology in fight against IS - Al-Monitor: the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/12/saudi-kingdom-versus-caliphate.html#

    A kingdom that prides itself on a pan-Islamic ideology such as Saudi Arabia should in theory embrace transnational links rather than fear them. However, Baghdadi does not only promise to eradicate the old colonial borders but also seeks to merge Muslims in a multi-ethnic military force where local culture, language and ethnicity are submerged in one Islamic identity and polity. In the IS media empire, the diversity of Muslim nationalities among their fighters is celebrated to appeal to Muslims everywhere. A kind of perverse cosmopolitanism seems to be very dominant among the young fighters who have joined IS. But IS tolerates them only if they quickly abandon this cosmopolitanism and embrace an Islam totally detached from their own local cultures and ethnicities.

    Isn’t this what the kingdom tries to do despite its rhetoric about pan-Islamism? Both the nascent caliphate and the Saudi kingdom offer models of transnationalism that are so similar with both reaching out to Muslims across cultures but with a view of homogenizing them and eradicating their difference. Both the kingdom and the recent caliphate are far removed from the ancient model of the caliphate that flourished in Damascus and later Baghdad. The kingdom and the caliphate are so similar that they are repulsed by each other. It seems that here similarity breeds contempt.

  • 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).