country:kuwait

  • Kuwait upholds 10-year prison sentence for Twitter user, jails three ex-MPs
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/kuwait-upholds-10-year-prison-sentence-twitter-user-jails-three-e

    Kuwait’s supreme court upheld a 10-year prison sentence for a youth activist arrested in June 2011 over Twitter comments criticizing the emir, a report said on Tuesday.

    Separately on Tuesday, a court sentenced three former opposition lawmakers each to three years in jail for comments deemed offensive towards the ruling emir, the second such conviction in three days.

    Al-Jarida newspaper said the verdict against Lawrence al-Rashidi, who was also convicted of spreading false news about Kuwait to undermine the oil-rich country’s image, is final and cannot be challenged.

    Rashidi was accused of using the social networking sites Twitter and YouTube to publicly insult the emir, Sabah al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, who is described as “immune and inviolable” in the constitution.

  • Kuwait jails activist for five years over Twitter remarks
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/kuwait-jails-activist-five-years-over-twitter-remarks

    Kuwait’s lower court on Sunday sentenced an opposition youth activist to five years in jail “with immediate effect” for insulting the emir on Twitter, a rights group said.

    “The court passed the maximum jail term against Mohammad Eid al-Ajmi for insulting the emir on Twitter,” the director of the Kuwait Society for Human Rights, Mohammad al-Humaidi, told AFP.

    The ruling is not final as it will be appealed, but Ajmi will begin serving the sentence immediately, Humaidi said.

    Ajmi is the third opposition youth activist to be convicted for insulting the emir on Twitter. Last month the same court sentenced two tweeters to two years each in jail each on the same charge.

  • Kuwait’s Balancing Act - By Kristin Smith Diwan | The Middle East Channel
    http://mideast.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2012/10/23/kuwait_s_balancing_act

    Le Koweït à son tour « frappé » par la contestation. Le printemps arabe touche même les monarchies du Golfe

    On Sunday, Kuwaitis staged what is thought to be the largest protest in the country’s history. Tens of thousands responded to the call for a “March of Dignity” in rejection of an emergency decree issued by Emir Sabah al-Ahmed revising electoral laws. Chanting, “we will not let you” they were met by security forces equally determined to enforce the interior ministry ban on marches in Kuwait City. As the tear gas clears and the crowds disperse, Kuwaitis can agree that this was an unprecedented event. But oddly, after this dramatic show of brinksmanship there is no more clarity about where Kuwait is headed and how it will resolve its long political standoff.

  • Kuwaiti Gitmo detainee in limbo « freedetainees.org
    http://freedetainees.org/2012/10/05/kuwaiti-gitmo-detainee-in-limbo

    Kuwaiti Gitmo detainee in limbo

    Fayiz Al-Kandari

    PITTSBURG/KUWAIT: Lt Col Barry Wingard has spent four years fighting a losing battle. Col Wingard, a military attorney and Allegheny County public defender, represents Fayiz Al-Kandari, a Kuwaiti who has been held at Guantanamo Bay detention center since 2002.

    In June, the charges against Al-Kandari were dropped with no explanation. In just about any judicial realm, that’s a victory.

    In Guantanamo, it means instead that Col Wingard’s client is now in the group of prisoners on indefinite detention. Since the government planned no prosecution against his client, it saw no reason for Col Wingard to work on the case.

    Col Wingard’s access to Al-Kandari was reduced. He can no longer travel to Kuwait or elsewhere to investigate the case. His correspondence with his client is reviewed. Government translators/interpreters are no longer provided to enable him to communicate with his client. He has regularly traveled to Guantanamo since taking the case, spending a week of each month there. His most recent planned military transport flight was canceled.

    These restrictions began about the same time as a new protocol for civilian attorneys representing Guantanamo prisoners was put into effect. Lawyers were told they had to sign a memorandum of understanding in which they agreed to certain restrictions in order to continue to see their clients.

    Col Wingard, 45, long maintained that the charges against his client — material support of terrorism and conspiracy — were based on flimsy, third-hand evidence. But now that they have been dropped, his client’s situation is worse, since there is now no real hope of a judicial proceeding, and his ability to advocate for Al-Kandari is reduced.

    Air National Guard Col Wingard served in the Army and then as a US Air Force JAG (Judge Advocate General) attorney. He prosecuted more than 100 cases in Iraq involving more than 170 individuals who had attacked coalition forces in Iraq. He also investigated various crimes in Bosnia during the conflict there.

    Col Wingard, of Dormont, is married and has two children, ages 3 and 5. He lives mostly in Washington, DC, where he works in the Office of Military Commissions (the military judicial system in place to handle Guantanamo). He intends to return to his job as an Allegheny County public defender when his Guantanamo work is done. There is no set date for that, but the colonel hopes to finish next year.

    Government rationale
    Al-Kandari is one of the 166 men still held at Guantanamo Bay. The prisoners now fall into three rough groups: those the government says can be tried; those that are cleared for release, but have not been released because there is nowhere for them to go; and the 40-plus who are to be detained indefinitely.

    Since it opened as a detention center for terrorism suspects in 2002, Guantanamo has spurred a torrent of litigation. (“They litigate everything but the breakfast cereal down there,” one Department of Defense official said — off the record.)

    At the heart of much of it is the question of whether the US government can lawfully hold prisoners without charging them or giving them an opportunity to appear in a judicial proceeding to hear the evidence and defend themselves.

    Department of Defense spokesman David Oten gave the rationale for the government’s position: “The United States is detaining individuals at Guantanamo Bay pursuant to the Authorization for the Use of Military Force, as informed by the law of war. Detention in wartime has long been recognized as legitimate under international law. We hold at Guantanamo detainees we assess as continuing to pose a threat in our ongoing armed conflict. And we will continue to hold these individuals in a manner that complies with our domestic and international obligations, and is consistent with our values.”

    Though President Barack Obama came into office saying he would shut the facility down, in the end his administration has taken much the same stance as that of the Bush administration regarding the need for the facility and the practice of indefinite detention for prisoners. It has vigorously defended a raft of legal challenges. Although detainees won a number of them — gaining the right to make habeas challenges in US courts — the practical effect has been negligible. Only four men charged have been tried. Men cleared for release remain imprisoned. And the group of men the government says it doesn’t plan to charge have no clear path to trial or release.

    Of the review procedures for detainees, Oten of the Defense Department said, “As a discretionary matter, the United States has reviewed the cases of each individual at Guantanamo and determined that some could be eligible for transfer, pending appropriate, credible security assurances from receiving governments. Just as we do with prisoners of war in more traditional armed conflicts, we acknowledge that the threat they pose may change over time.

    “In today’s conflict, the threat posed by a particular detainee may be mitigated through participation in a reintegration program or through other focused measures to prevent re-engagement. That is why we have transfer policies in place and review mechanisms to ensure we only detain those whose threat cannot otherwise be mitigated.”

    Limiting access
    But in claiming it has the right to restrict access to prisoners by their lawyers, the government was saying that it had control of how legal review of cases was to go forward.

    The Memorandum of Understanding requirement was challenged and on Sept 5, US District Judge Royce Lamberth said the government has no right to deny counsel access to detainees, issuing a stinging rebuke in his ruling. Writing that the federal government is confusing “the roles of the jailer and the judiciary,” Judge Lamberth struck down the military’s assertion that it could veto meetings between lawyers and detainees.

    The judge said the government has the right to run the facility at Guantanamo, but that the courts have authority to make sure prisoners have access to the courts, and that can’t happen unless they have access to their lawyers.

    Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd said, “We have no comment on whether the Department plans to appeal the Lamberth decision on counsel access to GTMO detainees.”

    The nature of restrictions on military lawyers like Col Wingard is different, but the effect is the same.

    “They say, ‘We have no intention of prosecuting, so your request for travel is denied,’ ” he said.

    Similarly, translators and interpreters are denied. Though Col Wingard has top security clearance, his correspondence with his clients (he also represents an Afghani and a second Kuwaiti) is now being reviewed.

    Oten said the detention of Al-Kandari is legal — he filed a habeas corpus petition in federal court and the court ruled he was legally detained. The US Supreme Court declined further review of his case.

    “There is no precedent for indefinite detention,” said Col Wingard. However, he said, “if the government says it can hold prisoners forever, don’t they get a lawyer forever?

    “I take the position that I am still their attorney.”

    He acknowledges his ability to act in his clients’ behalf or take action to change his status is extremely limited. “It’s frustrating from our end. They are strangling our ability to do our jobs,” he said. “We’re pretty much on the ropes as far as defending these guys.” But, he said, he and other attorneys in the defense section of the Office of Military Commissions are close to one another and united in what they are trying to do.

    He has written opinion pieces for news organizations, including the Post-Gazette, and is active on social media in behalf of his clients and Guantanamo-related issues. What worries him most is what he sees as the acceptance within government and military circles of a situation that goes against basic American principles. “It has sunk in as the new norm.”

    Many people came into the military or into government positions after 9/11, he said. “For them Guantanamo, indefinite detention is the norm. They don’t know another system.”

    Once people accept the concept, “putting people away forever is the easy part.”

    He said the debate has moved from whether it’s legal or justified to detain foreign combatants on an indefinite basis to whether it’s acceptable to do so to US citizens.

    “The scariest development in the indefinite detention battle is that under the National Defense Reauthorization Act of 2012 recently signed, you as an American citizen can be detained forever without trial, while the allegations against you go uncontested because you have no right to see them.”

    On Sept 12, US District Judge Katherine Forrest of New York ruled against the administration and the National Defense Reauthorization Act on the basis that the practice of indefinite detention violates the First and Fifth Amendments. On Sept 17, Judge Raymond Lohier of the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals stayed the ruling until Friday, when a 2nd Circuit motions panel took up the government’s request for stay pending appeal.

    His work as a military defense attorney has put him at odds with the military. “Once I’m done here I will probably never get promoted. But what can you do? They hired me to represent these guys. I’m going to do it to the best of my ability,” said Col. Wingard. “In the big picture, it definitely looks like we’re losing. [But] here’s the deal: You don’t fight on issues in hopes you’ll win. You fight on whether they’re right.” – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

    Source

  • Embracing Crisis in the Gulf | Middle East Research and Information Project
    http://www.merip.org/mer/mer264/embracing-crisis-gulf

    Gulf regimes have responded harshly to the fresh challenges from below, turning quickly from efforts at cooptation to coercion. At first, when revolts broke out in Tunisia and Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Oman, Qatar and Kuwait hiked public-sector salaries, subsidies and other forms of patronage, literally trying to spend their way out of potential trouble. But there has been a surge in state violence as well, with thousands detained, disappeared and killed. Authorities in the Gulf are not known for their soft touch, but the present repression is both measurably greater and noticeably more out in the open. Typically concerned to hide unrest from view, out of fear of seeming weak or unpopular, the Gulf monarchies now seem disinterested in masking their violent response. In part, the states have lost control; activists can broadcast details of riot police assaults over social media. But the brutality on display is also intentional. The authorities wish to send the message that they can and will crush dissent with impunity.

    The repressive turn is collective. Save in Bahrain, where Saudi Arabia and the UAE dispatched troops in March 2011, there has been no obvious collaboration between Gulf militaries. There is, however, a regional pattern. Oman has arrested hundreds and sentenced dozens to jail, including prominent human rights activists, for participating in protests. The UAE has arrested pro-reform demonstrators and stripped them of their citizenship. Saudi Arabia has arrested thousands and killed a significant number of Shi‘i protesters in the Eastern Province. Kuwaiti authorities have deployed force against members of the opposition, as well as the bidun, native-born residents who do not enjoy the rights of citizenship. The Bahraini state has struck hardest of all, killing dozens, torturing hundreds and terrorizing the majority of the population with tear gas and birdshot. Major opposition and human rights figures, including ‘Abd al-Hadi al-Khawaja, Ibrahim Sharif and Nabeel Rajab, have been imprisoned.

    It is not just the vigor of local and wider Arab protest movements that accounts for the alacrity of the Gulf regimes’ campaign of violence and oppression. The effort is partly driven as well by anxiety, mixed with a sense of opportunity, related to the balance of power with Iran.

    Arab Gulf monarchs have summoned the specter of an Iranian threat ever since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Today, however, anti-Iranian hysteria is at an all-time high, whipped up by Iran’s perceived strategic benefit from the toppling of Saddam Hussein, the rise of Shi‘i Islamist parties to power in post-Saddam Iraq, Iran’s posture of “resistance” during Israel’s wars on Lebanon and Gaza, and now the Arab revolts. Riyadh and Manama have been particularly provocative, deliberately poking their rival across the Gulf. Theirs is a conscious effort to discredit Shi‘i empowerment — Bahrain’s population is majority-Shi‘i and Saudi Arabia’s some 15 percent Shi‘i — and to undermine popular support for domestic protest. For Saudi Arabia, in particular, stoking fear of Iran is one way to keep protests from spreading from the Eastern Province, where most of the Shi‘a live, to the rest of the country. No doubt the Saudis, Bahrainis and others also believe that heightened tensions with Iran help to secure the backing of their benefactors, chiefly the United States.

  • Dans le folklore local, le pays qui se charge de flinguer la saison touristique au Liban tous les ans (en général via un très médiatisé petit bombardement de camp palestinien), c’est Israël. Cette année, regarde un peu qui se charge de faire le sale boulot : Saudi warns against travel to Lebanon
    http://english.ahram.org.eg/NewsContent/2/8/46719/World/Region/Saudi-warns-against-travel-to-Lebanon.aspx

    The warning also coincides with the tourist season in Lebanon, a major summer destination for nationals from the oil-rich Gulf region.

    In May, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait issued similar warnings as clashes linked to the conflict in neighbouring Syria raged in Lebanon’s northern city of Tripoli.

  • International - Joanna Lillis - Confusing the Borat Theme with the National Anthem Can Get You Jail Time in Kazakhstan Now - The Atlantic
    http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/06/confusing-the-borat-theme-with-the-national-anthem-can-get-you-jail-time-in-kazakhstan-now/258576

    The new legislation was drafted after Kazakhstan made international headlines over a mix-up involving its national anthem at a March sporting event in Kuwait. Then, the hosts accidentally played a version of the spoof anthem that featured in the 2006 movie Borat (…)

    This new legislation is its response, and the penalties are tough: up to a year in jail and a maximum fine of 3.2 million tenge ($21,000). Bakytzhan Sagyntayev, the minister for economic development and trade, has said that the legislation came in response to the anthem mix-ups and to an incident where people were found to be using the national flag to transport garbage.

  • Borat anthem stuns Kazakh gold medallist in Kuwait
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-17491344

    Kazakhstan’s shooting team has been left stunned after a comedy national anthem from the film Borat was played at a medal ceremony at championships in Kuwait instead of the real one.

    The team asked for an apology and the medal ceremony was later rerun.

    The team’s coach told Kazakh media the organisers had downloaded the parody from the internet by mistake.

    The song was produced by UK comedian Sacha Baron Cohen for the film, which shows Kazakhs as backward and bigoted.

  • Destroy all churches in Gulf, says Saudi Grand Mufti
    http://www.arabianbusiness.com/destroy-all-churches-in-gulf-says-saudi-grand-mufti-450002.html

    The Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia has said it is “necessary to destroy all the churches of the region,” following Kuwait’s moves to ban their construction.
    Speaking to a delegation in Kuwait, Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah, stressed that since the tiny Gulf state was a part of the Arabian Peninsula, it was necessary to destroy all of the churches in the country, Arabic media have reported.

    (Rappel: ceux-là, c’est nos copains.)

  • Reporters sans frontières :
    http://angryarab.blogspot.com/2012/02/reporters-without-borders.html

    The annual list of press freedom rankings by Reporters without Borders really lacks credibility. It reminds me the ranking of freedom by Freedom House. According to the last ranking, Kuwait is ahead of Lebanon. I kid you not. In Lebanon, you may attack any member of the government and call for the change of government, imagine that in Kuwait. You can’t say a word against the Emir in Kuwait. Who prepares those lists and by what criteria?

  • Kuwait couple gets death for brutal Filipina murder
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/kuwait-couple-gets-death-brutal-filipina-murder-0

    A court has sentenced a Kuwaiti couple to death for beating and then murdering their Filipina domestic helper, newspapers in the Gulf state reported on Monday.

    The criminal court found the disabled husband and his wife guilty of “premeditated murder” after throwing the maid from their car and driving over her, Al-Rai and Al-Anbaa dailies reported, citing the verdict.

  • Angry Arab rappelle que les Forces libanaises (le parti de l’extrême droite chrétienne dirigé par le « docteur » Samir Geagea, qui fut la milice de Bachir Gemayel financée par Israël) sont désormais financées par les Émirats arabes unis, l’Arabie séoudite et le Koweit.

    Lebanese Forces heart UAE
    http://angryarab.blogspot.com/2011/12/lebanese-forces-heart-uae.html

    See this propaganda promotion of UAE on the website of Lebanese Forces, who are now funded by UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait. (thanks Mohammad)

  • Mona Kareem: Kuwait is SEGREGATING Health Care between Citizens and Non-Kuwaitis
    http://monakareem.blogspot.com/2011/12/kuwait-is-segregating-health-care.html

    Two weeks ago, a lecture entitled “Racist Segregation Hospitals” was held in the association of transparency in Kuwait to condemn this project and demand terminating it. The speakers said the project is a shameful mark in Kuwait’s history and is very much a racist project in a country that is known of its civil bodies and establishments. They found it nothing but a commercial project the government offered to companies robbing national funds. Speakers also emphasized that this can be considered, according to international laws, a project of racist segregation. They called on parliament members to be considerate of non-kuwaitis who have rights, as the constitution guarantees quality to all, and to stop this project that will be bad for Kuwait’s reputation internationally.

  • Protesters storm Kuwaiti parliament - Al Jazeera English
    http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2011/11/20111116204038300676.html

    Opposition lawmakers warned of a growing political crisis after dozens of anti-government protesters muscled their way into Kuwait’s parliament during debate over efforts to question the prime minister about corruption allegations.

    Local media reported the demonstrators briefly chanted before being forced out as hundreds of others protested outside on Wednesday.

    Opposition parliament members have sought to question Prime Minister Sheik Nasser Al Mohammad Al Sabah over claims that government officials illegally transferred money to accounts outside the Gulf country.

    Last month, Kuwait’s foreign minister resigned as the scandal grew.

    Pro-government lawmakers managed to vote down a request for the questioning, but opposition groups filed another motion to force another debate later this month.

  • Attention : c’était déjà franchement n’importe quoi, mais là… : la grotte de Jeita pourrait être exclue de l’élection des « 7 nouvelles merveilles du monde » pour… tricherie. (Et vive le Liban !)

    MTC Touch supports Lebanon’s Jeita Grotto as world natural wonder
    http://www.kuna.net.kw/NewsAgenciesPublicSite/ArticleDetails.aspx?id=2201603&Language=en

    Lebanese mobile provider, MTC Touch, a branch of the Kuwait-based Zain Group, said it would be donating 100,000 sms messages (worth USD 10,000) to a voting campaign aimed at making Lebanon’s Jeita Grotto one of the world’s seven wonders of nature.

    Lebanon’s Jeita Grotto, a compound of crystallized caves located 20km north of Beirut in the Valley of Al-Kalb river, is one of 28 global natural wonders nominated by international website, New7Wonders.

    Sauf que :

    MTC touch warned for violating New Seven Wonder competition rules
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Local-News/2011/Nov-10/153659-mtc-touch-warned-for-violating-new-seven-wonder-competition-rul

    MTC Touch received a warning from the organizers of the New Seven Wonders competition for violating competition laws over its donation of 100,000 votes for Lebanon’s Jeita Grotto. 

    Nabil Haddad, the general manager at Jeita, told LBC Thursday that MTC’s stunt was illegal, but said that the situation is being resolved to prevent the organizers from denying Jeita the right to remain in the race.

  • How CNN helped spread a hoax about Syrian babies dying in incubators | The Electronic Intifada
    http://electronicintifada.net/blog/ali-abunimah/how-cnn-helped-spread-hoax-about-syrian-babies-dying-incubators

    A disturbing story is circulating on social networks — especially in Arabic — and some news media that a number of premature babies died in their incubators when Syrian forces cut off electricity to hospitals during their assault on the city of Hama.

    Evidence suggests it is a cruel hoax, and the pictures of the “dead babies” widely circulated online are false.

    To me the story was immediately suspicious. First of all it sounded too much like the false reports of invading Iraqi troops throwing babies out of incubators in Kuwait in August 1990 — reports that were used to build public support and urgency for the 1991 Gulf War. These claims were part of an elaborate propaganda effort by the Washington PR consultancy Hill & Knowlton hired by the Kuwaiti government.

  • SPME : Ted Koppel : The Arab Spring and U.S. Policy : The View From Jerusalem
    http://spme.net/cgi-bin/articles.cgi?ID=7965

    The Israeli government is so concerned that America’s adversaries may miscalculate U.S. intentions that it is privately urging Washington to make it clear that the U.S. would intervene in Saudi Arabia should the survival of that government be threatened. That is, after all, what President George H.W. Bush did more than 20 years ago when Saddam Hussein ordered Iraqi forces into Kuwait and moved forces in the direction of Saudi Arabia. “This,” President Bush said on more than one occasion, “will not stand.” And it didn’t.

    Cet article du Wall Street Journal livre ici une information primordiale. La première préoccupation des israéliens, c’est l’engagement des Américains à protéger un régime qui n’est pas (du tout) une démocratie, qui lapide les femmes, prévoit de 2000 coups de fouet à la décapitation pour les homosexuels, et pratique l’une des formes les plus réactionnaires d’intégrisme islamiste de la planète.

    Tout ce qu’il se raconte d’habitude n’est donc, clairement, que foutaises.

  • C’est assez rassurant, au fond : le Huffington Post est parfaitement capable de publier des articles indignes.

    Raghida Dergham : Timing of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Initiatives
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/raghida-dergham/gulf-cooperation-council_b_838000.html

    With respect to Bahrain, the fact that Saudi, Emirati and Qatari forces have been deployed to Bahrain constitutes the first-of-its-kind activation of the security agreement — known as the Peninsula Shield — among the six countries, which are the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman and Bahrain. This deployment at the behest of Bahrain is neither an invasion nor foreign intervention, as the Islamic Republic of Iran sought to portray it. The concern by the GCC countries for the security and the regimes of one another is an institutionalized agreement within a regional framework.

    Oui, un régional frèmeoueurque, dans lequel on recrute des mercenaires pakistanais pour réprimer la population civile de #Bahreïn.

  • Libya’s Significance
    http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/741/libyas-significance

    On the other side of the ledger Libya is and will remain a rentier state, and such entities have a tradition of producing absolutism and the means to keep their populations quiescent. But that is precisely why the Libyan case is of such significance. It is not Syria or Morocco, but rather the “Kuwait” of the Maghreb. More to the point, and despite its huge resources and small population, socio-economic discontent appears to have played a prominent role alongside political fury in unleashing the uprising. True, Libya is not a Gulf state and unlike the latter proved incapable of resisting the winds of change during an earlier revolutionary period. But Bahrain is already on fire, and the implication is that the prospects for upheaval in some of the latter’s neighbours – particularly Kuwait and Saudi Arabia – is more than wishful thinking. Why, indeed, do the potentates of such islands of eternal stability feel suddenly obliged to gift their subjects billions if they are immune to the Tunisian virus that has become an Arab disease?

    #Libye

  • AFP : Western arms makers eye lucrative Mideast market
    http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gYuIbPZ40JULzDaBUMv4VHZjhmFg?docId=CNG.a0d7b7b8196bf0fd9798e07825395bd

    Une grande foire de vente d’#armes se tenait dans le Golfe en plein pendant la brutalissime répression des manifestants en #Libye et ailleurs.

    The six Gulf Cooperation Council countries — #Saudi_Arabia, #Bahrain, #UAE, #Oman, #Qatar, #Kuwait — along with Jordan are set to spend $68 billion (49.6 billion euros) on defence in 2011, according to research firm Frost & Sullivan. Their spending is expected to reach nearly $80 billion in 2015.

    “Undeniably, in the Gulf there are very big budgets that we don’t have in #Europe,” said Christian Mons, president of French Land Defence Manufacturers Association (GICAT).

    The dynamic market is a godsend for Western contractors as defence budgets at home are being curbed, particularly in the United States and in Western Europe. But they are faced with increasing competition from emerging economies. The #Chinese, #Ukrainian and #South_African stalls at the event expanded the most this year.

  • The Daily Star - Politics - Gulf may use military force in support of Bahrain’s regime
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_id=10&categ_id=2&article_id=125066#axzz1EOBIKZ4D

    Besides Bahrain and Qatar, the GCC groups Kuwait, Oman, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, together sit on 45 percent of global crude reserves.

    Analyst Ibrahim al-Khayyat believes that the “strong tribal alliance” among Gulf states could prompt a “Saudi military intervention” to help the Bahraini monarchy. Khayyat said fear of instability in Bahrain is not limited to Gulf states, and that the U.S. will not accept undermining the regime in Bahrain, home of the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet.

    #Bahreïn

  • Gulet Mohamed: On the no-fly list, but flying? | The Economist
    http://www.economist.com/blogs/gulliver/2011/01/gulet_mohamed

    GULET MOHAMED is an American teenager who has been detained in Kuwait for nearly a month. He says he was beaten by Kuwaiti authorities. He also says he was questioned by the FBI multiple times even though he repeatedly asked for his lawyer. (Under American law, custodial interrogations are supposed to stop in most cases as soon as the subject asks for counsel.) The US government could have good reasons to be suspicious of Mr Mohamed: after all, he did travel to Somalia and Yemen, two hotbeds of anti-American radicalism, in 2009. Mr Mohamed, his family, and his lawyer claim the teen was learning Arabic and getting in touch with his roots.

    Mr Mohamed, who grew up in Alexandria, Virginia, just outside Washington, DC, wants to return to the US. US officials told the New York Times that Mr Mohamed

    #Koweit #Gulet_Mohamed