country:united arab emirates

  • Emirati Sent to Jail Over ’False Tweets’ - Al-Monitor : the Pulse of the Middle East
    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2013/05/uae-false-news-twitter-jail-sentence.html

    The conviction of Al Haddidi and the arrest of Al Shehhi sends a message to everyone in the United Arab Emirates: “Criticize the government at your own peril.”
    The verdict of the sedition trial — which some observers say stems from critical comments on social media — may send a much larger message. That decision is expected on July 2.

    Dans cet article, l’auteur dissèque un par un les tweets concernant le procès en ’tentative de coup d’état’- pour lesquels al Haddidi a été condamné à 10 mois de prison ferme (et perdu son appel le 22 mai). Pour lui, l’auteur ne faisait que remédier au manque absolu d’information venant contre-dire la seule version officielle sur ce procès tenu très secret.

  • Manuel Valls, admiratif, aurait demandé : « Ah bon, on a le droit d’expulser les grévistes et personne ne me l’a dit ? »
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/uae-deport-striking-workers

    The United Arab Emirates has slapped 43 migrant workers with deportation orders for demanding a salary hike and better conditions, media reported.

    Thousands of mostly Asian building workers employed by the Arabtec construction giant began a strike last weekend demanding their 350 dirhams ($95) food allowance paid with their wages rather than the three daily meals provided by the company, English-language daily The National said.

    Nearly all of them ended the strike on Wednesday after police and immigration officials entered their camps and threatened them with deportation. Those who refused to return to work may be sent back home.

  • Arabic language is losing ground - The National
    http://www.thenational.ae/thenationalconversation/comment/arabic-language-is-losing-ground

    Un sujet qui mérite plus ample développement.

    Headmasters and Arabic teachers in UAE private schools confirmed to a local newspaper last week that parents keep filing requests that their children be spared from Arabic-language lessons. They say that their children will be going on to English-language universities that do not require Arabic.

    ...

    While educators, students and parents have a shared responsibility, the problem is much bigger, he said.

    “In fact, the issue is closely linked to the moral value of the language, a value that is derived from the political, scientific, economic, industrial, intellectual, artistic, cultural and social reality of its speakers,” the writer observed.

    ...

    Swayed by this perceived sense of “belonging”, many Arab youth work hard to nurture their non-Arabic culture, by reading English-language books, watching English-language movies and listening to English music, according to the writer.

    “It makes them happy to see their interlocutor confused, unable to tell where they are from - the Arab region or elsewhere? It makes them even happier when the interlocutor concludes that they are foreigners.”

    Families also play a role in this, with relatives of a new graduate showing great pride in his or her perfect English accent, the author went on.

    Also, educators and the media have not done enough to generate positive attitudes about Arabic among students and other young people.

    “This generation did not come in touch with the beauty of Arabic. Educators and curriculum developers have not been able to present the language in catchy wrappings, nor did the local or pan-Arab media manage to highlight the graces of this language,” Al Suweihi noted.

    This issue is not just “a matter of letters, words and phrases”; the issue is about “a historical and decisive stance” that all Arabs must take to pump life back into Arabic, before it is too late, the author concluded.

  • La saison de la question parlementaire est rouverte à Koweit, avec le ministre du pétrole dans le retentissant scandale de Dow Chemicals (une rupture par Koweit d’un contrat de JV avec l’Aéricain DC qui lui a valu une amende de 2.2 milliards de $) et le ministre de l’intérieur, accusé -par des parlementaires chiites- de manque de coopération avec les EAU dans l’affaire du démantèlement des cellules des FM ...et mieux encore du vol de M16 automatiques +munitions dans un lieu de stockage du ministère

    "“The Dow Chemical deal is one of the biggest financial crimes in the history of Kuwait,” said the grilling."

    http://gitm.kcorp.net/index.php?id=648101

    Three MPs yesterday filed to grill Oil Minister Hani Hussein over a variety of violations and misconduct, mainly on the payment of the $ 2.2 billion penalty to US Dow Chemical after the government pulled out of a joint deal. Two other MPs meanwhile filed a second request to grill Interior Minister Sheikh Ahmad Al-Humoud Al-Sabah alleging his failure to cooperate with the National Assembly and attempting to cover up a Kuwaiti “terror” cell having links with Islamists under trial in the United Arab Emirates.

    The submission of the two grillings came after a morning of drama yesterday as MPs had initially planned to file three grillings against the oil minister, all focusing on the payment to Dow besides other alleged violations. But after a brief discussion, the three teams agreed to file one grilling to be signed by MPs Saadoun Hammad, Yacoub Al-Sane and Nasser Al-Marri, which highlighted four major violations with the Dow payment remaining the main issue. Besides the Dow issue, MPs also accused the minister of allowing commercial deals with Israel, not taking any action to prevent the sale of alcohol at Kuwait-owned petrol stations in Europe and approving illegal staff promotions at state-owned oil companies.

    The three MPs also accused the minister of failing to take action to stop the sale of alcohol at thousands of petrol stations in Europe owned by Kuwait Petroleum International, a subsidiary of Kuwait Petroleum Corp (KPC). He also failed to punish officials who were responsible for maintaining Kuwaiti investments in a company in Europe even after an Israeli company bought a stake in it. The three MPs also accused the minister of approving a large number of staff promotions at oil companies that were in violation of Kuwaiti laws. [...]

    Meanwhile, MPs Safa Al-Hashem and Youssef Al-Zalzalah filed to grill the interior minister over allegations he is not fully cooperating with the Assembly and over the theft of thousands of bullets from ministry stores. The two lawmakers called on the minister to resign because they have solid evidence about the accusations they made in the grilling. They charged that the minister failed to cooperate with MPs by first failing to implement a number of recommendations and also by not answering their questions as he only answered less than half of the questions.

    They held the minister responsible for the robbery of thousands of bullets and even M16 automatic rifles from Interior Ministry stores and that he has failed to maintain law and order in the country, besides failing to implement thousands of court verdicts. But the main issue the lawmakers highlighted are accusations that the minister has refused to supply UAE authorities with information about a number of Kuwaiti Islamists – members of the Muslim Brotherhood – who have links with a group of Emirati Islamists on trial on charges of plotting to overthrow the government.

    They said that the prime minister has acknowledged the information but the interior minister still told UAE authorities that there was no Muslim Brotherhood in Kuwait, thus undermining the security of Kuwait and its Gulf partner UAE. The two grillings are expected to be debated after two weeks unless the Assembly decides to delay the debate or for any other reason like a government resignation, the ministers’ resignations or others.

    • Et comme quand la chasse aux ministres est ouverte, les têtes tombent : démission du cabinet suite aux menaces de questions parlementaires

      Kuwaiti Cabinet ministers resign amid standoff with MPs
      Kuwait Times - 15 May, 2013

      In what appears to be the first confrontation with supposedly loyal MPs, the government boycotted the parliamentary session yesterday as all Cabinet ministers submitted their resignations to the prime minister a day after five MPs filed to grill the oil and interior ministers.

      National Assembly Speaker Ali Al-Rashed told reporters after a meeting with Justice Minister Shareeda Al-Maousherji that he has been informed that “Cabinet ministers submitted their resignation to the prime minister and accordingly they will not attend the Assembly session tomorrow (today)”.

    • La vie parlementaire a repris son cours normal avec un jeu à couteaux tirés entre pouvoir exécutif et législatif (même si le parlement élu en Déc. 2012 a la réputation d’être docile)

      Kuwaiti Speaker rules out postponement of ministers’ grilling

      Kuwait, May 15 (KUNA) - Speaker of the National Assembly Ali Fahad Al-Rashid on Wednesday [15 May] refuted recent press reports that he reached a deal with His Highness the Prime Minister Shaykh Jabir Al-Mubarak Al-Hamad Al-Sabah to put off the grillings of First Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior Shaykh Ahmad Al-Humud Al-Sabah and Minister of Oil Hani Husayn.

      “The allegations about the postponement of the two interpellations for three or four weeks are totally untrue and groundless speculations,” Al-Rashid told reporters.

      “If there is any agreement with HH the Prime Minister in this regard, I would announce it in person via the official channels of the Assembly,” he made clear.

      Al-Rashid urged the mass media which carried the reports citing what they called “a senior government official” to be more accurate and credible in their coverage.

      Source : Kuna news agency website, Kuwait, in English 15 May 13

  • British imperialism’s return to “East of Suez” - World Socialist Web Site

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/05/08/uaem-m08.html

    British imperialism’s return to “East of Suez”
    By Jean Shaoul
    8 May 2013

    Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the president of the United Arab Emirates, got the full treatment on his state visit to Britain last week.

    He was afforded a ride in a gilded horse-drawn coach to Windsor, complete with guards in bearskins and red tunics, a state banquet at Windsor Castle with Queen Elizabeth, and talks with Prime Minister David Cameron.

    #proche-orient #imperialisme #empire_britannique

  • Shell Beats Total To Become UAE’s Sour Gas Partner » Gulf Business
    http://gulfbusiness.com/2013/05/shell-beats-total-to-become-uaes-sour-gas-partner

    Shell Beats Total To Become UAE’s Sour Gas Partner
    The 30-year venture puts Shell in position to renew its role in the UAE’s largest onshore oil concession when that contract comes up for renewal next year.

    The 30-year venture to treat the potentially deadly gases in Bab also puts Europe’s largest energy company in a strong position to renew its role in the UAE’s largest onshore oil concession, on which the Bab field stands, when that contract comes up for renewal early next year.

  • Israel may join defense pact with Saudi Arabia, UAE- http://www.timesofisrael.com/israel-reportedly-may-join-defense-pact-with-saudi-arabia-uae

    Israel is working on joining an anti-Iran defense alliance with a number of moderate Arab states that would involve sharing Jerusalem’s newly developed anti-missile technologies, a British newspaper reported Sunday.

    The plan would see Israel join with Turkey, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, to create a Middle Eastern “moderate crescent,” according to the Sunday Times, which cited an unnamed Israeli official. Israel does not currently maintain formal ties with Riyadh or Abu Dhabi, and relations with Ankara have been strained since 2009.

    According to the report, Israel would gain access to radar stations in Saudi Arabia and the UAE and in exchange share its own early warning radar information and anti-ballistic missile defense systems, though it’s not clear in what form. The report details that Jordan would be protected by Israel’s Arrow long-range anti-missile batteries.

    The so-called 4+1 plan is being brokered by Washington, and would mark a sharp shift in stated policy for the White House, which has insisted the US is not interested in containing Iran but rather stopping it before it reaches nuclear weapon capability.

    The Sunni states of Saudi Arabia, UAE and Jordan are all opposed to Tehran shifting the regional power balance. Though Turkey maintains strong trade ties with Iran, it has found itself opposed to Tehran over the issue of Syria.

  • UAE’s Sheikh Khalifa Visits The UK’s Queen » Gulf Business
    http://gulfbusiness.com/2013/05/uaes-sheikh-khalifa-visits-the-uks-queen

    The president of the United Arab Emirates met Queen Elizabeth II on Tuesday on a visit to Britain where Prime Minister David Cameron is under pressure to raise allegations that UAE police tortured British citizens.

    Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nahayan’s visit poses a delicate diplomatic challenge for Cameron who has already expressed concern about the torture accusations but is keen to boost lucrative trade and strategically important diplomatic relations in the Gulf. The two men are due to meet on Wednesday.

    The three Britons, who were jailed in the UAE for four years on Monday for drug offences, said police beat them and threatened them with guns, allegations the police deny. Cameron has called for an inquiry.

    Making matters tricky for Cameron is the UAE’s status as a key destination for British arms and other exports.

    Hanging in the balance is the fate of a British bid to sell BAE Systems-backed Eurofighter Typhoon jets to the UAE, on which a decision is expected soon, and an energy deal expected to be signed on Wednesday with Emirati energy firm Masdar.

    Buckingham Palace declined to comment on the torture issue. The Foreign Office said in a statement: “We remain concerned by the allegations of mistreatment on arrest and continue to raise these with the UAE authorities.”

  • Abu Dhabi Plans Financial Free Zone, May Compete With Dubai » Gulf Business
    http://gulfbusiness.com/2013/04/abu-dhabi-plans-financial-free-zone-may-compete-with-dubai

    A federal decree was passed by the UAE President Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nahayan in February to create the area, known as the Abu Dhabi World Financial Market, on Al Maryah island, the sources told Reuters.

    Detailed regulations covering the zone will be outlined shortly, an Abu Dhabi government source said, declining to be named under briefing rules.

    “It will have all the offerings of a financial free zone – 100 per cent foreign ownership, tax and capital repatriation, internationally accepted laws and regulations and other things,” the source said.

    The UAE’s free zones are areas in which foreign companies can operate under light regulation, and where foreign investors are allowed to take 100 per cent ownership in companies; outside the zones, they generally need to have local partners.

    One of the country’s most successful free zones is the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC), established in 2004 with its own civil and commercial laws, its own courts and a financial exchange, NASDAQ Dubai.

    It has become the Gulf’s top financial centre, housing regional headquarters for many of the world’s biggest banks and finance firms. Others have tried to emulate its success; the Qatar Financial Centre was set up in 2005 in Doha, and the Bahrain Financial Harbour opened in 2009.

    • Décidémment, il ne faudrait pas qu’ils entrent trop en concurrence

      Abu Dhabi Launches New Port, May Compete With Dubai » Gulf Business
      http://gulfbusiness.com/2012/09/abu-dhabi-launches-new-port-may-compete-with-dubai

      Khalifa Port’s container terminal currently has an annual capacity of 2.5 million twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU). This can be raised to 5 million TEU according to demand over the next few years. Abu Dhabi has said its long-term goal is to increase it to 15 million by 2030, depending on demand.

      The port can also handle 12 million tons of general cargo annually in the first phase, including 4 million tons from an Emirates Aluminium berth that opened in 2010.

      Khalifa Port will gradually take over all container traffic from Abu Dhabi’s existing Mina Zayed port, which has reached its capacity of 1 million TEUs.

      In shipping, the obvious challenge to its growth comes from Dubai, whose much larger Jebel Ali port is only about 40 km (25 miles) north along the coast.

      Last December DP World , the world’s third-largest port operator and owner of Jebel Ali, said it would invest $850 million over three years to boost the port’s capacity by 4 million TEU to 19 million.

  • U.S. Nears $10bn Arms Deal With Israel, Saudi Arabia, UAE

    The United States is finalizing a complex $10 billion arms deal that would strengthen two key Arab allies while maintaining Israel’s military edge, defense officials said on Friday ahead of a trip to the Middle East by Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel.

    The deal, more than a year in the making through a series of coordinated bilateral negotiations, would result in the sale of V-22 Osprey aircraft, advanced refueling tankers and anti-air defense missiles to Israel and 25 F-16 Desert Falcon jets worth nearly $5 billion to the United Arab Emirates.[...]

    Sources familiar with the arms sales plans said Israel had asked to buy five or six V-22 Ospreys, built by Boeing Co and Textron Inc’s Bell Helicopter unit, at an estimated price of about $70 million apiece.

    The UAE also is interested in purchasing the tilt-rotor aircraft, which takes off and lands like a helicopter but flies like a plane, the sources said. But that sale is likely to be included in a separate deal.

    The United States sold Saudi Arabia 84 F-15 jets for $29 billion in 2010, planes that are now beginning to roll off the assembly line and undergo testing, officials said.

    GBN
    http://gulfbusiness.com/2013/04/u-s-nears-10bn-arms-deal-with-israel-saudi-arabia-uae

  • Human rights activists questions arrests in United Arab Emirates - UPI.com

    http://www.upi.com/Top_News/Special/2013/04/18/Doubts-cast-over-UAE-terror-arrests/UPI-97521366290644

    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates, April 18 (UPI) — A United Arab Emirates human rights activist said local claims of a terror arrest Thursday were likely a cover for a government act of repression.

    The Emirates News Agency, known also as WAM, said authorities arrested at least seven Arab nationals thought to be affiliated with al-Qaida.

  • UAE: Don’t Deport Tamil Refugees to Sri Lanka
    19 Sri Lankans, Including 6 Women, at Grave Risk of Torture if Returned

    United Arab Emirates (UAE) authorities should not deport 19 Tamil refugees to Sri Lanka because they would be at serious risk of torture and persecution upon return, Human Rights Watch said today. The United Nations refugee agency (UNHCR) has recognized all 19 as refugees, but the UAE authorities have told the group they must leave the country by April 11, 2013.

    “For the UAE to return recognized Tamil refugees to a grave risk of torture in Sri Lanka would signal a total disregard for their well-being – and the most basic principle of international refugee and human rights law,” said Bill Frelick, refugee program director at Human Rights Watch. “Sri Lanka’s treatment of Tamils they deem politically suspect is dismal and under no circumstances should the UAE deport this group there.”

  • Beijing’s westward pivot will make the Gulf a critical ally
    http://www.thenational.ae/thenationalconversation/comment/beijings-westward-pivot-will-make-the-gulf-a-critical-ally

    Where does the Arabian Gulf fit in China’s emerging new diplomacy? Based on the recent flurry of diplomatic activities involving the Gulf and China (Chinese premier Wen Jiabao visited three Gulf states in January last year and the speaker of the Federal National Council of the UAE, Mohammed Al Murr, met last week in Beijing the head of the Chinese parliament), the Gulf remains an essential part of China’s resource-focused diplomacy.
    China, already the world’s largest importer of crude oil, depends on the Gulf for 44 per cent of its oil imports.

    Given the worsening air-pollution in China, Beijing must also find the Gulf’s abundant natural gas supply attractive. To be sure, China has massive deposits of shale gas, but the geological challenges, lack of infrastructure, scarcity of water and uncertain property rights make it unlikely that China will start tapping into its shale gas as a source of energy any time soon.
    In the meantime, any sensible Chinese official in Beijing knows that he must get his hands on as much clean natural gas as possible. Compared with Russian gas, which will not start shipping until 2018, gas from the Gulf can be imported immediately.

    To some, Beijing may even have a long-term military design on the Arabian Gulf. With its growing military might, China will naturally want to protect its own energy sources. However, it is unlikely that Beijing would risk confronting the Americans by deploying its navy to the Gulf (at the moment, it simply does not have a blue water navy capable of being deployed far away from China). The Chinese are experienced free-riders. As long as the United States is keeping the international shipping lanes open for them, China needs not waste its own money duplicating the task.

  • Business oblige : rétablissement du régime de visa à obtenir à l’arrivée auxEAU pour les citoyens canadiens

    The United Arab Emirates has reinstated a visa waiver for Canadian citizens it withdrew amid a dispute over landing rights more than two years ago, a move suggesting the disagreement may be nearing a resolution.

    Canada was one of more than 30 countries, mostly Western, that benefited from a visa waiver the UAE offered to their citizens. But Canadians were told in November 2010 they had to obtain a visa in advance at a cost of as much as $1,000.

    Dubai carrier Emirates had been lobbying the Canadian government to boost its thrice-weekly direct flights to Toronto and more Canadian destinations, with support from the UAE government, but failed to gain greater access. Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Airways had also sought to increase its flights.

    Reuters

  • Fight against corruption in UAE. Dangerous place for dodgy businesses and expatriates loosing core supports, it seems.

    A US businessman who jumped bail in the United Arab Emirates only to be sent back for trial has been convicted of multi-million dollar embezzlement and sentenced to 15 years’ jail, court documents showed on Tuesday.

    Zack Shahin, former chief executive of Deyaar, one of Dubai’s biggest property developers, and three other men were fined Dhs28.5 million ($8 million) in the latest conviction since the emirate stepped up its fight against corruption after a 2009 financial crisis.

    Reuters
    http://gulfbusiness.com/2013/03/former-deyaar-ceo-shahin-sentenced-to-15-years-in-dubai-prison

  • UAE Opens World’s Largest Concentrated Solar Power Plant
    The 100-megawatt, grid connected power plant, Shams 1, will generate clean energy to power 20,000 homes in the UAE.

    Including Shams 1, Masdar’s renewable energy portfolio now accounts for almost 68 per cent of the Gulf’s renewable energy capacity and close to 10 per cent percent of the world’s installed CSP [concentrated solar power] capacity, the company said in a statement.

    Gulf Business news

  • Très intéressant article sur (l’échec journalistique de) The National, le quotidien d’Abu Dhabi : The National : Abu Dhabi’s brief experiment in press freedom
    http://www.newrepublic.com/article/112542/national-abu-dhabis-brief-experiment-press-freedom

    In May of 2011, The New York Times broke a big piece of news on The National’s turf: The U.A.E. had commenced with plans to raise a private army with the help of Blackwater founder Erik Prince. The purpose of the clandestine mercenary force was to “blunt the regional aggression of Iran” and “respond to terrorist attacks and put down uprisings inside the country’s sprawling labor camps,” the Times reported. At least two National reporters had been on the trail of that scoop, but were encouraged not to pursue the story, according to a former editor.

    But even seemingly innocuous subjects became highly taboo fare. In February of 2010, for instance, a piece about Emiratis “embracing blogs” to address topics such as free speech and human rights was spiked because it was “too dangerous,” as an editor put it to Fattah in an email that was shared with me by a source. Fattah and his two chief deputies, Tion Kwa and Bob Cowan, spend much of their time poring over page proofs for any such offending copy, according to people who worked alongside them in the newsroom.

    “The self-censorship was daily and severe,” said Nick Stout, who worked as a copy editor at The National until January of 2010. “There was just this pervasive paranoia. We avoided controversy at all costs and would shy from anything officialdom might find embarrassing or provocative in any way.”

    (Noter au passage que le scandale absolu de la présence de mercenaires d’Erik Prince financés par les Émirats, n’a reçu quasiment aucun traitement dans les médias internationaux en dehors du NY Times, et a été largement occulté dans les médias arabes – je n’ai réellement vu passer qu’un article de Youssef Ashkar dans le Akhbar.)

    Hé hé, Wikileaks au passage :

    (A payroll spreadsheet leaked to WikiLeaks in March 2009 revealed that the editor-in-chief was making $430,000; the business editor $300,000; $60,000 for a lowly features writer.)

  • Peurs de la shiisation aux Emirats Arabes Unis

    Sources have revealed to Al-Monitor that authorities in the United Arab Emirates recently informed approximately 125 Lebanese citizens residing there on work permits that they must leave the country. The officials refrained from telling the deportees the reasons behind their deportation.

    This action is part of a growing campaign being conducted by the UAE against Lebanese nationals, especially Shiites, out of the fear that they may have ties to Hezbollah or the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.

    Mais aussi en Libye

    Separately, Al-Monitor has learned that the September 11 attack on the US Consulate in Benghazi last year was almost replicated on the Iranian Embassy in the Libyan capital of Tripoli. Approximately three weeks ago, the Iranian Embassy in Tripoli was warned about unconfirmed information that Libyan Sunni Islamist militants were planning to storm the embassy, kill those inside, and set the premises ablaze. Embassy officials took the issue to Libyan government authorities, but were told that in the event of such an attack, the government would be powerless to protect the embassy given the Salafists sophisticated weaponry and popular support.
    The reason behind the planned attack can be traced to the widely held belief that the Iranian religious authorities have sent Lebanese and Iranians to spread the teachings of Shiite Islam in Libya, which is predominantly Sunni Muslim. Salafist sheikhs, led by the Association of Muslim Scholars, have been propagating these claims in Libyan newspapers and television programs. Sheikh Sadiq al-Ghariani, the mufti of Libya, has put his full weight behind the issue, having repeatedly warned in recent months of “a Shiite onslaught on Libyan minds.” He called this alleged campaign tashiiya`, which in Arabic means “Shiitization” (or “funeral”), and accused Iranian authorities for being “the group behind it all.” Iran’s ambassador to Libya, Hossein Akbari, is said to have recently scheduled an urgent meeting with Sheikh Ghariani to explain to him that the claims that Iran was conducting such a campaign in Libya were entirely baseless. He asked that he help defuse the charged atmosphere among Salafist in order to prevent an attack on the Tripoli embassy.

    Read more : http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2013/02/uae-deports-lebanese-expatriates.html#ixzz2MCayDHai

  • Bahrain thanks UAE for banning speaker

    Brian Whitaker’s blog, February 2013

    http://www.al-bab.com/blog/2013/blog1302.htm#gulf-golden-handcuffs

    Bahrain has expressed its appreciation to the UAE for turning away a British academic who was due to speak at a conference in the Emirates last Sunday.

    Bahrain’s foreign ministry said the UAE’s decision was “a true reflection of the strong bonds of fraternity between the UAE and Bahrain and an example of GCC co-operation in addressing such issues”.

    Dr Kristian Ulrichsen of the London School of Economics (LSE), had been scheduled to speak about Bahrain at a conference, “The New Middle East: Transition in the Arab World”, which was jointly organised by the LSE and the American University of Sharjah.

  • Brian Whitaker’s blog. Bahrain thanks UAE for banning speaker
    http://www.al-bab.com/blog/2013/blog1302.htm

    Bahrain has expressed its appreciation to the UAE for turning away a British academic who was due to speak at a conference in the Emirates last Sunday.

    Bahrain’s foreign ministry said the UAE’s decision was “a true reflection of the strong bonds of fraternity between the UAE and Bahrain and an example of GCC co-operation in addressing such issues”.

    Dr Kristian Ulrichsen of the London School of Economics (LSE), had been scheduled to speak about Bahrain at a conference, “The New Middle East: Transition in the Arab World”, which was jointly organised by the LSE and the American University of Sharjah.

    The title of Dr Ulrichsen’s talk was “Bahrain’s Uprising: Domestic Implications and Regional and International Perspectives”.

  • Mosques should warn UAE Muslims about Brotherhood, says Saudi expert

    At a seminar held at Zayed University by Al Mezmaah Studies and Research Centre, Qaynan Al Ghamidi, a former editor-in-chief of the Saudi Al Sharq newspaper, said mosques were the “best medium in our countries”.
    (...)
    Politics was important, he said. “We do not want chaos like in Egypt or Tunis,” he said. “Like the constitution - making everyone vote on it is not logical. But we want logical political solutions.”
    Foreign policy should be coordinated, too, he said. “The GCC is not unified in their foreign policy. There is no coordination.”
    "Now people follow all media, they know the differences around the GCC," he said. “There are no secrets. Governments should not think that people do not know about these contradictions.”

    http://www.thenational.ae/news/uae-news/politics/mosques-should-warn-uae-muslims-about-brotherhood-says-saudi-expert

  • Emirates now start targeting families of detained human rights defenders | Hans Thoolen on Human Rights Defenders
    http://thoolen.wordpress.com/2013/02/22/emirates-now-start-targeting-families-of-detained-human-rights-de

    The Gulf Centre for Human Rights (GCHR) on 16 February 2013 reported that it had received information that authorities in the UAE are targeting family members of human rights defenders (pictured above) currently in detention.

    In recent days the daughter of Dr Mohammed Al-Mansoori has been subjected to judicial harassment while the son of Saleh Al-Dhufairi has been intimidated by state authorities. Moza Al-Mansoori, 23-year-old daughter, has been sentenced on fabricated charges of endangering the lives of others, reportedly in an attempt to put pressure on her father to desist his human rights work. On 6 February 2013 the court of first instance in Abu Dhabi sentenced her to three months in prison. Her lawyer immediately appealed the sentence and a hearing date of 24 February 2013 was given for the appeal. However, on 11 February 2013 police arrived at the home of Dr Mohammed Al-Mansoori to arrest his daughter. She was not present at the house and it is reported that she may have gone into hiding as a result of the sentence.

  • Après le Koweït et l’Arabie qui ont déjà payé leur part...reste Qatar.

    The UAE on Monday signed an agreement with Bahrain under which it will donate $2.5 billion to its protest-hit neighbor as part of a Gulf aid program to it and Oman, the BNA state news agency said.

    Under the memorandum of understanding signed in Manama by the government of Bahrain and the Abu Dhabi Fund for Development, the oil-rich state will release the aid package over a period of 10 years, “$250 million annually,” BNA said.

    http://english.alarabiya.net/articles/2013/02/18/267039.html?PHPSESSID=qugkn7c81ermitrc6shjt2fub4

  • Philanthropie des pays du Golfe aux Etats-Unis. http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/united-arab-emirates-helps-joplin-think-big-in-rebuilding-tornado-scarred-schools/2013/02/17/ae6a5af0-7704-11e2-aa12-e6cf1d31106b_print.html

    JOPLIN, Mo. — Two weeks after a mile-wide tornado tore through this city, killing 161 people and rendering a landscape of apocalyptic devastation, the public school system here received a telephone call from a man working for the United Arab Emirates Embassy in Washington.

    “Tell me what you need,” the embassy staffer said.

    ...

    Today, the nearly 2,200 high school students in Joplin each have their own UAE-funded MacBook laptop, which they use to absorb lessons, perform homework and take tests. Across the city, the UAE is spending $5 million to build a neonatal intensive-care unit at Mercy Hospital, which also was ripped apart by the tornado.

    The gifts are part of an ambitious campaign by the UAE government to assist needy communities in the United States. Motivated by the same principal reasons that the U.S. government distributes foreign assistance — to help those less fortunate and to influence perceptions among the recipients — the handouts mark a small but remarkable shift in global economic power.

    ....

    Many other nations also spend money in the United States, but much of it is devoted to promoting their respective languages, traditions and national interests through educational grants, study-abroad programs and cultural centers, such as Germany’s Goethe-Institut and France’s Alliance Francaise.

    Courting public opinion

    The UAE’s unusual approach has its roots in the 2006 controversy that erupted when a firm based in Dubai, one of the seven emirates that make up the UAE, sought to take over the management of six U.S. ports. Intense congressional opposition, some of it resulting from misperceptions about the UAE’s relationship with the United States, scuttled the deal.

    Afterward, the embassy commissioned a survey of American attitudes toward the UAE. Although 30 percent of respondents had an unfavorable view, 70 percent said they had no opinion. When Otaiba became ambassador in Washington in July 2008, the survey results provided him with a critical mission: to persuade Americans, particularly those with no opinion of his country, to develop a favorable view of the UAE.

    ...

    In hallway conversations, students said they are happy to have the computers, but many of them did not know who provided the money to buy them. Unlike donations to other nations from the U.S. Agency for International Development, which often are emblazoned with stickers, there is nothing on the laptops that mentions the UAE.

    But city leaders know. So do state officials and Missouri’s congressional delegation. Sen. Roy Blunt (R), who had opposed the Dubai firm’s ports deal in 2006, joined Otaiba on a trip to Joplin last May and expressed appreciation for the UAE’s financial contributions.

    Huff said he sees no shame in accepting foreign aid to help his students. “Part of being a good neighbor is not just knowing how to give, but also how to receive,” he said. “It would be great if we had the money to pay for the laptops ourselves. But we didn’t. Sometimes you have to be willing to put pride in your pocket and accept gifts.”