Saturday, December 31, 2011

Middle East's Fragile Democracy in Danger

By Ramesh Jaura – Berlin

If the year 2011 appeared to be a beacon of hope for freedom and democracy in the Middle East and North Africa, indications are that 2012 will be marked by rough battles to protect the fruits of valiant revolts across Europe's Mediterranean frontiers.
 
In fact, the conflict brewing over the Strait of Hormuz bodes ill for peace – the spinal cord of freedom and democracy – in the region and beyond, unless it is prevented from turning violent and gory.

The curtain on the impending battles was raised on December 29 when the Egyptian security forces raided the offices of civil society and human rights organizations in Cairo. The aim, according to the Arabic Network for Human Rights Information (ANHRI), was "to intimidate activists and rights advocates, gag their mouths, and freeze their activities in support of human rights and against repression and torture."
 
ANHRI said: "Some police officers in military uniforms bearing the emblem of Commandos and men who claimed to be public prosecution personnel stormed the Arab Center for the Independence of the Judiciary and the Legal Profession (ACIJLP). All people present were held inside the center and prevented from exiting. Moreover, the files, documents, and computers were seized. There are even scattered news and talk about raiding 18 other organizations. . . (including) rights centers and international organizations."
 
Explaining the perturbing dimensions of the attack which it said was part of a "systematic campaign" against civil society organizations, ANHRI averred: "(President Hosni) Mubarak’s regime did not dare to undertake such practices prior to the uprising."
 
The U.S.-based International Freedom of Expression eXchange network (IFEX) said the offices raided by security offices included those of Freedom House, the International Republican Institute (IRI), the National Democratic Institute (NDI), and at least two Egyptian organizations, the ACIJLP and the Budgetary and Human Rights Observatory (BAHRO). German media reported that the office of Konrad Adenauer Foundation (KAS), named after the first West German chancellor, was also raided.
 
"Staff members present at the Freedom House offices during the raids were held incommunicado; cell phones, laptops, funds and documents found during the raids were confiscated; and the office was closed. The raid on Freedom House comes just three days after it formally submitted papers to register its offices in accordance with Egyptian law," IFEX informed.
 
Freedom House president David J. Kramer agreed with ANHRI that the raids "represent an escalation of repression unheard of even during the Mubarak regime." These come, he alleged, "in the context of an intensive campaign by the Egyptian Government to dismantle civil society through a politically-motivated legal campaign aimed at preventing 'illegal foreign funding' of civil society operations in Egypt."
 
Freedom House was founded in 1941 and had as its first chairperson Eleanor Roosevelt, wife of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR), a central figure in world events during the mid-20th century, leading the United States in times of worldwide economic crisis and world war.
 
The profound significance of the raid in the view of Freedom House's current president is that it is "the clearest indication" yet that the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), the military chiefs now ruling Egypt, "has no intention of permitting the establishment of genuine democracy and is attempting to scapegoat civil society for its own abysmal failure to manage Egypt's transition effectively."
 
Freedom House calls on the Egyptian government to return confiscated property; permit the re-opening of all offices of non-governmental organizations closed in the recent raids; and allow the free and unfettered operation of local and international NGOs in Egypt as they work to expand respect for human rights and help the Egyptian people in their efforts to form a more just, open and democratic political system.
 
It also urges the Obama Administration to scrutinize the $1.3 billion that the United States annually provides the Egyptian military to fund arms purchases and training.
 
"In the current fiscal environment, the United States must not subsidize authoritarianism in Egypt while the Egyptian government is preventing NGOs from implementing democracy and human rights projects subsidized by the US taxpayer," said Charles Dunne, director of Middle East and North Africa programs.
 
Journalists Jailed
 
In advance of the Cairo raids, ANHRI drew attention to the "arbitrary and degrading expulsion" of journalist Radwan Hifani from his office at the 'Assabah' newspaper on December 21, due to his public and continuing solidarity with Rachid Nini, the imprisoned editor-in-chief of 'el-Masaa' newspaper.
 
Despite being one of the founding members of the newspaper and having spent over 11 years working for it, ANHRI said, Hifani was denied access to his office after he returned from his annual leave. He was denied access on the grounds that he had been absent without prior permission.
 
"The real reason, however, relates to the strained relations between Hifani and Khaled al-Herry, the editor-in-chief of the newspaper, due to Hifani's solidarity with Nini, who has served six months of his one year sentence in the Okasha Central Prison in Casablanca," ANHRI said.
 
In addition to being the editor-in-chief of 'el-Masaa', 41-year old Nini is also the writer of a well-known column entitled "Look and Reflect". In June, the Court of First Instance in Casablanca convicted and upheld a one-year prison sentence and 1000 Dirham fine (approx. US$115) against him, for "contempt of a judicial entity" and "reporting false criminal circumstances". There have been calls for the release of Nini, especially after the drafting of the new constitution that was approved in July.
 
"Such arbitrary practices by the 'Assabah' newspaper's administrative board are unacceptable and antithetical to professional standards. They should have allowed room for negotiations and discussion if they truly found the matter to be purely administrative in nature and nothing to do with freedom of expression or Hifani's solidarity with Nini," said ANHRI.
 
Detailed descriptions of harassment highlight the manner in which normal life is made impossible for journalists who hardly have a room for manoeuvre.
 
The Committee to Protect Journalists reported that as of December 1, 2011 the number of journalists imprisoned worldwide shot up more than 20 percent to its highest level since the mid-1990s, an increase driven largely by widespread jailings across the Middle East and North Africa.
 
CPJ and IFEX condemned on December 28 the attacks on at least eight journalists on December 24-25 by armed forces loyal to outgoing President Ali Abdullah Saleh. "The clashes between pro-Saleh forces and protesters left nine people dead," a news agency reported.
 
"These attacks indicate how tenuous the situation remains for journalists to work in Yemen," said Mohamed Abdel Dayem, CPJ's Middle East and North Africa program coordinator. "Despite the political solutions being offered to address the crisis, journalists are still being attacked. We call on Yemeni authorities to allow journalists to carry out their work unharmed and without threat."
 
News reports stated that Ahmed al-Musebli, a presenter for the pro-opposition broadcaster Suhail TV, was beaten and arrested by security forces on December 24 at a protest in the neighborhood of Dar Slim in Sana'a, the capital. He was detained in an unknown location, but released the next day.
 
Ahmed al-Jabr, a journalist with the official Saba news agency, was attacked by pro-Saleh forces while covering the protests in Dar Slim on December 24, according to news reports. The journalist was injured under one eye, and his car windows were smashed, news reports said. Another freelance journalist, Walid Ablan, was also assaulted by pro-Saleh armed factions at the same protest, reports said.
 
On December 24, Suhail TV cameraman Kamal al-Mahfady was reporting on protests in Taiz, the country's third largest city, when he was attacked by a group of pro-Saleh armed forces, according to news reports. He sustained a head injury, news reports said. Another journalist, BBC reporter Abdallah Ghoraib, was also attacked by pro-Saleh forces.
 
Three journalists - Samia al-Aghraby, a reporter for the opposition weekly Al-Thawry, Marwan Ismail, with the news website Yemenat, and freelancer Arwa Abdo Othman – were attacked by Republican Guards at a protest in Sana'a on December 24. In a statement, the Yemeni Journalists Syndicate said the soldiers pulled at al-Aghraby's clothes, threatened to beat Othman, and confiscated three cameras.
 
CPJ has documented the ongoing stream of protest-related attacks against journalists in Yemen, including deaths, physical assaults, detentions, harassments, and attacks on news outlets. Suhail TV in particular has been targeted before, and the BBC's Abdallah Ghoraib was beaten while covering a protest in September.
 
"Yemeni troops appear to have unlawfully killed as many as 35 civilians in the city of Taizz since a United Nations Security Council resolution demanded on October 21, 2011 that Yemen stop attacks on civilians, Human Rights Watch said on November 25. Most of these civilians were killed in artillery shelling by the Yemeni army that indiscriminately struck homes, a hospital, and a public square filled with protesters, witnesses told Human Rights Watch.

- This article was provided by IDN-InDepthNews, Analysis That Matters. Visit: www.indepthnews.info.

Source: http://palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=17355

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Iran, US escalate war of words over Strait of Hormuz

Iran on Thursday dismissed the U.S. warning over the possible closing the Strait of Hormuz. The deputy general commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards was quoted as saying "our response to threats will be threats."

Gen. Hossein Salami added "We have no doubts in our ability to implement our defensive strategies to protect our vital interests - we will act firmly and unequivocally than ever before."

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� 2011 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/news/iran-us-escalate-war-words-over-strait-hormuz-407188

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New Spanish government announces draconian measures to balance the budget

Deputy PM Soraya Saenz Santamaria headed the table that made the announcements Spain's new government revealed on Friday that the public deficit for 2011 would come in at 8% of GDP, well above a target of 6%, and announced income and property tax hikes and a civil servant wage freeze in response.

Source: http://en.mercopress.com/2011/12/30/new-spanish-government-announces-draconian-measures-to-balance-the-budget?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss&utm_content=main&utm_campaign=rss

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Tourism council members face prosecution in the Jordanian ?casino file?

Prime Minister Awn Khasawneh on Tuesday referred violations by members of the National Tourism Council (NTC) in connection to the ?casino file? to the justice minister to be referred to the attorney general for necessary legal procedures.

The casino case is related to a deal the first government of former premier Marouf Bakhit signed with an investor in 2007 to build a casino on the shores of the Dead Sea
� Copyright The Jordan Times. All rights reserved.

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/tourism-council-members-face-prosecution-%E2%80%98casino-file%E2%80%99-407066

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Effective management of cash flows stressed

Entrepreneurs need to concentrate more on effectively managing cash flows, rather than making huge profit margins at a time when the global economy is struggling to tide over the current financial turmoil, said veteran Indian management professional Sunil Kumar Alagh.

Entrepreneurs need to look at customers? actual requirements while launching, rebranding or reintroducing a product
� Gulf Times Newspaper 2011

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/effective-management-cash-flows-stressed-407197

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The Vibrant Versace lands on Sukar.com

Hold nothing back- it?s time to burst into 2012 with a bang. What label could embody this spirit better than Versace? As arguably the comeback story of the decade, Versace is steadily regaining its place atop the lofty pyramid of fashion. Not since 1994, when Elizabeth Hurley popped out to the premiere of Four Weddings and a Funeral, has the Milanese house of fashion been making the sort of headlines it is today.

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� 2011 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/business/pr/vibrant-versace-lands-sukarcom-407180

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Syria should brace for a financial collapse

Syria?s economy began 2011 in a strong state of health. The International Monetary Fund predicted moderate but meaningful growth, tourism receipts at more than US$8 billion (Dh29.3bn) were at a record high and set to rise, exploration for new oil and gas fields was under way. Multimillion dollar international investment projects had started, including much-needed upgrades to dilapidated infrastructure.

Independent Syrian economists are now more inclined to ask not if the final collapse will come, but when and in what form?
Copyrights � 2011 Abu Dhabi Media Company, All rights reserved.

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/syria-economy-country-should-brace-financial-collapse-407196

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LG HW300Y Projector delivers compact, eco-friendly entertainment hub

LG Electronics (LG) launches the HW300Y, a WXGA Portable LED projector whose broadband and DLNA connectivity deliver outstanding entertainment options in a highly portable package. The HW300Y produces clear, exceptionally bright pictures, while it?s super long-lasting lamp should still be working two decades after the projector comes out the box.

LG Projector
� 2011 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/business/pr/lg-hw300y-projector-delivers-compact-eco-friendly-entertainment-hub-407118

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Meyers, Leonard, Rawtani elected to Chamber board

page1b169~ Large turnout amidst rumours of efforts to control chamber ~

PHILIPSBURG--Businesspersons turned out in large numbers to vote in the St. Maarten Chamber of Commerce elections on Friday amidst rumours that efforts are being made by a group to "control the Chamber."

A record number of 362 persons turned out to vote in the election, which was won by Abdul Meyers representing large businesses and Tamara Leonard and Ajay Rawtani representing small businesses.

Elections Committee Chairman Franklin Bryson said the turnout was the largest in history and was some four times more than the average number of persons who usually turned out to vote. Some 60-plus persons voted in last year's election and on a "good election year" close to 100 would turn out, Bryson said.

Of the 334 persons who voted in the small business category 103 voted for Leonard and 80 for Rawtani. Of the 28 who voted in the large business category 14 voted for Meyers. Other top candidates in the election were Ann Meyers and Eugene James, who pulled 75 votes each, and Rolando Bryson, who accumulated 48 votes.

A long queue was evident at the Chamber building from the opening of the polls yesterday until the polls closed at noon, when a large number of persons were still in line to cast their ballots.

Talk leading up to the election as well as on the scene was about efforts by a political party to control the Chamber by having its supporters occupy positions on the board. Asked about these reports, Bryson said he too had heard the rumours about efforts to control the chamber, but saw nothing, and the main task of the elections committee was to oversee the election process.

He said too that he did not understand why anyone would want to "control" the Chamber, as it "had nothing."

Other candidates in the election were Maria Mercedes "Elektra" Wyatt, Louis Bute, Bernardo de Castro, Michel Hodge, Patrick Muller, Kaishah Peters, Charlise Philips and Charles Thomas for small businesses, and De Castro, James, Ann Meyers, Philips, and Thomas for large businesses.

Chamber President Glen Carty commended the newly elected members. "The turnout was historic. I look forward to working with the new members. The Chamber and private sector can only benefit from their enthusiasm and drive," he said.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/23124-meyers-leonard-rawtani-elected-to-chamber-board-.html

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The Sad, Sad World of Israel's Big-time Liars

'A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes' -- attributed to Mark Twain

By Stuart Littlewood

Meet another of Israel's undesirables, Yuli Edelstein.

He is the regime’s Propaganda Minister (or to be more precise, Minister for Dis-information and Diaspora) and he runs the biggest lie machine in the world.

His task is to make the Israel 'brand' smell sweeter. The reason it stinks, of course, is the regime's putrid morals and murderous conduct, which the lie machine works overtime to try to justify and excuse. It will always fail. You cannot build a decent brand image on lies, obnoxious behaviour and a massive attitude problem.

Edelstein hit the headlines over Christmas when he told everybody that the Arabs are "a deplorable nation". He was speaking at a public diplomacy event (incredible as it may seem!) at Yor Yehuda, which I'm told means "light of Juda".

He said that “as long as the Arab nation continues to be a deplorable nation, which continues investing in infrastructure for terrorism, education to hate, and welfare for the families of shaheeds [martyrs], there will be no peace.”

The reporter asked Edelstein's office if the minister was aware that there are some 80 million Arabs in the world, from Sudan to Syria. A spokesman replied: “Yes, there are – and the minister meant them all.”

That's rich coming from someone whose own position doesn’t bear examination. I understand Edelstein lives in one of Israel's illegal settlements, Neve Daniel, which is built on stolen Palestinian land in wilful breach of Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention.

“Settlers” is too nice a word for such people. It suggests peaceful pioneers wishing to integrate with the locals. Israeli “settlers” are anything but. They are aggressive squatters, half a million of them in over 100 illegal colonies – ugly blots on an otherwise lovely landscape. They include gangs of armed delinquents and religious nutters who terrorise local villagers, vandalise their crops, pollute their land and harass their children.  The Fourth Geneva Convention forbids an occupying power to transfer parts of its own civilian population - and that includes Edelstein and his ministerial colleague the psychopath Avigdor Lieberman - into the territory it occupies. Which leaves these two charmers open to charges of war crimes.

Israel’s hasbara liars verge on the compulsive and pathological. Telling lies is routine; they are in denial of reality; they exaggerate; they come to believe their lies; they have no remorse; and they have no regard for the consequences. Despite this, the Western media lap up anything Tel Aviv’s liars spew out.

Edelstein’s capacity for silliness knows no bounds. When the US demanded that Israel suspend a planned project in East Jerusalem (which is Palestinian territory of course) and revoke planning permission, Ynet News reported Edelstein saying that such a demand to halt construction "proves how dangerous it is to get dragged into talks of a settlement freeze… Such talks will lead to a demand to completely freeze our lives in the entire State of Israel."

And he let his Stalinist tendencies (Edelstein’s from the Ukraine) get the better of him earlier this year when he wrote to Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook demanding the removal of a page that was calling for a third Intifada and had generated nearly 250,000 supporters.

How to do it (a teach-yourself primer)

It goes without saying that Israel's lie machine has an instruction manual for those it recruits into its vile business. See it here.

The manual’s general thrust is to win over the mass of “persuadables”, primarily in America but also in the UK. The strategy from the start is to isolate democratically-elected Hamas and to rob the resistance movement and the Palestinian people of their human rights. This quote at the beginning sets the tone: "Remember, it’s not what you say that counts. It’s what people hear."

The lie machine's top priority: demonise Hamas…

And this is how they try it on...

• “Clearly differentiate between the Palestinian people and Hamas. There is an immediate and clear distinction between the empathy Americans feel for the Palestinians and the scorn they direct at Palestinian leadership. Hamas is a terrorist organization – Americans get that already. But if it sounds like you are attacking the Palestinian people (even though they elected Hamas) rather than their leadership, you will lose public support. Right now, many Americans sympathize with the plight of the Palestinians, and that sympathy will increase if you fail to differentiate the people from their leaders.”

• "Draw direct parallels between Israel and America—including the need to defend against terrorism.... The more you focus on the similarities between Israel and America, the more likely you are to win the support of those who are neutral. Indeed, Israel is an important American ally in the war against terrorism, and faces many of the same challenges as America in protecting their citizens."

Note how Israel’s strategy is almost totally dependent on the false idea that they and America are victims of terror and all western nations need to huddle together with Israel for mutual protection. Fortunately, level-headed people are beginning to realize who the terrorists really are.

It is surely obvious by now that allowing parallels to be drawn between Israel and America only serves to increase the world’s hatred of America. US citizens are very belatedly waking up to this, as are British citizens, but many continue to fall ass-over-tit into the trap.
 
Next, inject with “core values” and repeat over and over and over again…

• "The language of Israel is the language of America: 'democracy,' 'freedom,' 'security,' and 'peace.' These four words are at the core of the American political, economic, social, and cultural systems, and they should be repeated as often as possible because they resonate with virtually every American."

If so fluent in this splendid language, why won’t Israel acknowledge their neighbours’ rights to democracy, freedom, security and peace and end their military oppression?

• "A simple rule of thumb is that once you get to the point of repeating the same message over and over again so many times that you think you might get sick—that is just about the time the public will wake up and say 'Hey—this person just might be saying something interesting to me!' But don’t confuse messages with facts.... "

Right, never let facts get in the way of a good message!  And, as George Dubya Bush, 43rd US President, said: "See, in my line of work you got to keep repeating things over and over and over again for the truth to sink in, to kind of catapult the propaganda."

• "The fight is over IDEOLOGY, not land; terror, not territory. Thus, you must avoid using Israel’s religious claims to land as a reason why Israel should not give up land. Such claims only make Israel look extremist to people who are not religious Christians or Jews.”

If the fight isn’t about land, why did Israel steal it at gunpoint? And why won’t they give it back when told to repeatedly by the UN?
 
Then there's the uncontrollable urge to possess the Holy City...

• "The toughest issue to communicate will be the final resolution of Jerusalem. Americans overwhelmingly want Israel to be in charge of the religious holy sites and are frankly afraid of the consequences should Israel turn over control to the Palestinians. Consider:

# 71% of Americans trust Israel most to protect the holy sites in Jerusalem, compared to 6.1% who trust the Palestinian authority most. 8.5% percent trust neither.

# 54% of Americans believe that “Jerusalem must remain united under Israeli sovereignty” while just 23.9% believe that ‘Jerusalem should be divided into Israeli controlled and Palestinian controlled areas’.

Given the choice between the two, Americans of all political and demographic stripes trust Israel to protect and have sovereignty over Jerusalem."

The Old City and east Jerusalem are Palestinian. Nevertheless, "Jerusalem must remain the united capital of Israel," says prime minister Netanyahu. Israel is in control right now and prevents Muslims and Christians from outside the City visiting the holy places. No way can Israel be trusted.

The UN's partition plan decreed that Jerusalem should become a ‘corpus separatum’ under international administration. It is unlikely that the UN would wish to see its resolutions torn up or international law re-written for Israel’s sole benefit or to suit America’s misinformed opinion.

Oh, and let's put the boot into the other demon, Iran...

• “Many on the left see an “Israel v. Palestinian” crisis where Israel is Goliath and the Palestinians are David. It is critical that they understand that this is an Arab-Israeli crisis and that the force undermining peace is Iran and their proxies Hezbollah, Hamas and Islamic Jihad. You must not call Hamas just Hamas. Call them what they are: Iran-backed Hamas. Indeed, when they know that Iran is behind Hamas and Hezbollah, they are much more supportive of Israel.”

By the same token we must call the racist regime what it is – US-backed Israel.

The plight of the Palestinians under Israel’s heel was of international concern long before Hamas appeared on the scene. Iran’s support for Hamas is difficult to quantify and probably less than we think. In any case it is peanuts compared to America’s support for Israel.

Hamas, as everyone knows, is an offshoot of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood and was founded in 1987 during the first Intifada. Hezbollah came into being in 1982 in response to US-backed Israel’s invasion of Lebanon. So the territorial ambitions of US-backed Israel provoked the rise of both. US-backed Israel’s problem is entirely self-inflicted and shouldn’t concern the rest of us at all.

The lie machine’s propaganda manual is indeed an evil document oozing poison. It shows better than anything else why the Israeli regime can never, never, never be trusted and is therefore no partner for peace.

Edelstein should reflect on how being a fabricator and dealer in lies, and a war criminal too, is about as low a thing as a man can be. But, Israel being Israel, creatures like him and that unprincipled mouthpiece Mark Regev are guaranteed a job.

- Stuart Littlewood’s book Radio Free Palestine can now be read on the internet by visiting www.radiofreepalestine.org.uk. He contributed this article to PalestineChronicle.com.

Source: http://palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=17353

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Two ?St. Maarten Stores? to be opened in the US

page1b171~ Meyers gives update on tourism initiatives ~

PHILIPSBURG--Minister of Tourism Franklin Meyers disclosed on Tuesday that St. Maarten will open two marketing facilities in the US market in 2012.

In discussing a range of tourism-related issues with The Daily Herald, the Minister said the first "St. Maarten Store" would be opened in New York in January 2012 and the other, slated for Florida, will open not long after that.

The Florida store will be located in Aventura or Sawgrass. The final location in the "Sunshine State" depends on upcoming meetings, discussions and site inspections.

The St. Maarten Tourist Bureau maintained an office in New York in the past, which served as an information portal for travel agents and consumers looking for information about St. Maarten, including brochure fulfilment and representation at trade shows nationwide.

That office has been closed for more than a year while the Tourist Bureau and its marketing firm Tambourine worked on a new modern concept to promote the destination in the US market.

At the centre of that concept is the opening of consumer-based store fronts ? not the customary office in a high rise building, but one at ground level, so that people walking down the street will be in contact with the brand of St. Maarten on a daily basis.

Establishing of the stores, similar to Apple iStores, is in keeping with St. Maarten's marketing strategy, which calls for a shift that departs from marketing with emphasis on tour operators and travel agents, who are becoming less and less important in the decision-making role for tourism and travel to the Caribbean, and going more directly to the consumer

The street level offices in New York and Florida conceptually will resemble small art galleries with a clean, simple environment, images of the island, a rack for showcasing hotel brochures, projected videos, and a space for interaction with St. Maarten's official Website.

Florida is an important market area for St. Maarten, considering strong trade activities and establishing a presence in the Southern US market.

Tourism Authority

Minister Meyers said tangible discussions on the long-awaited Tourism Authority also were underway, with the goal of having the Authority established in January 2012. He explained that meetings had taken place with "all partners" and a structure of seven persons/members to serve on the authority had been established.

Three members will be nominated by government, three will come from the private sector and those six will agree on a seventh. Government will appoint the Authority's director and chairperson.

Puerto Rico MOU

As for new airlift, the Minister said none was scheduled for the immediate future, but the pending MOU that would be signed between St. Maarten and San Juan would be beneficial in attracting European carriers like Air Berlin.

St. Maarten and Puerto Rico have been discussing the possibility of jointly accessing new air services from Europe, especially given the potential for a double stop due to some technical departure restrictions from Europe.

The MOU, in the short term, will cover the two islands pooling their resources to intensify air access development from various markets. It also will lead to promoting dual destination packages, for which a pilot project will be established using one or two properties from each island to spearhead the project.

Growth

Despite a decline in arrivals from North America, St. Maarten's main source market, Meyers said the situation was not alarming. Numbers have remained steady between 480,000 and 520,000 over the past five years, he explained.

"It still concerns me, however, because I always want to see more growth. Hopefully when we start to market more aggressively and put certain things in place, we will see some growth from that market," he said.

Hand-in-hand with these new marketing initiatives, Meyers continued, is providing the additional rooms through the attraction of boutique resorts. He said the plan still was to realise a few of these small-scale hotels over a four-year period, financed through St. Maarten's still-to-be-developed Development Bank.

Meyers said boutique hotels were attractive to European travellers, who tend to vacation longer than visitors from the US.

"As far as the economy goes, worldwide indicators show that we are now starting to stick our head above water, but as one economist put it, we still have to look out for the waves, since we are taking a mouthful of water every now and then," Meyers said.

"Realistically speaking, for St. Maarten I would tentatively project, based on all indicators, that we will remain stable, as we have been now, for the next two to three years before we see any real growth. But right now we have to prepare for that growth and make sure we are in a position to take advantage of it, which is exactly what we are doing."

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/23227-two-st-maarten-stores-to-be-opened-in-the-us-.html

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Effective management of cash flows stressed

Entrepreneurs need to concentrate more on effectively managing cash flows, rather than making huge profit margins at a time when the global economy is struggling to tide over the current financial turmoil, said veteran Indian management professional Sunil Kumar Alagh.

Entrepreneurs need to look at customers? actual requirements while launching, rebranding or reintroducing a product
� Gulf Times Newspaper 2011

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/effective-management-cash-flows-stressed-407197

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Friday, December 30, 2011

UK awards 46 offshore hydrocarbons exploratory licences in controversial areas

Energy minister Charles Hendry said oil and gas contribut3es 2% to UK’s GDP UK government has awarded 46 new offshore exploratory drilling licences to firms, including Shell and Centrica, looking for oil and gas. The awards were initially held back due to environmental concerns.

Source: http://en.mercopress.com/2011/12/31/uk-awards-46-offshore-hydrocarbons-exploratory-licences-in-controversial-areas?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss&utm_content=main&utm_campaign=rss

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Living statues adorn streets of Philipsburg

Page1a181PHILIPSBURG--A wide variety of statues adorned the heart of Philipsburg on Saturday and Sunday during the Caribbean Living Statues Festival 2011.

No less than 39 "statues" participated in the event, the first ever of its kind being organised in the Caribbean.

The statues depicted a wide variety of persons, ranging from historical and mythical figures, such as Columbus and the Arawak, Mahatma Gandhi and the Queen of Sheba, to their modern day counterparts of Michael Jackson, Tanny and the Boys and even Prime Minister Sarah Wescot-Williams and Queen Beatrix.

The event, organised by Beyond Writing Foundation in cooperation with Motiance Dance School, added extra flavour to the normal hustle and bustle in Philipsburg.

Holiday shoppers, tourists and visitors all enjoyed the special atmosphere created by the beautifully dressed and outfitted statues, which could be admired in Front Street, at Cyrus Wathey Square and in Kanaalsteeg in the vicinity of Greenhouse Restaurant.

Living statues are in fact mime artists posing during a long time like a mannequin and staging movements, dressed in the most stunning costumes.

Living statues have been a form of entertainment for at least 100 years, originally performing as a sideshow in a circus in the 1840s. Nowadays, the most famous festival of living statues takes place in Arnhem, the Netherlands.

The first Caribbean Living Statues Festival in St. Maarten also consisted of several workshop staged by several participating artists from the Netherlands.

The two-day event culminated in a prize-giving ceremony at Cyrus Wathey Square on Sunday afternoon, presented by radio personality Elektra.

The participating contestants were judged by a jury as well as by the general public, which could vote on their favourite statue.

Money prizes were awarded to "Simpson Bay Scene" for best make-up, "Stilt Walker Good" for best impression, "Columbus and the Arawak" for best actors, and "Grandmother Martha" for best idea. The Public Prize went to "Obeah Woman kidnaps Selina."

All prize winners also contested the overall-prize of Champion of the Festival. This prize went to Grandmother Martha, who will represent St. Maarten during the World Statues Festival 2012 in the Netherlands.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/23554-living-statues-adorn-streets-of-philipsburg-.html

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Maho comptroller?s detention suspended

MAHO--Fraud suspect D.M. was released from police custody last week Friday. D.M.'s lawyer Remco Stomp said the Judge of Instruction had suspended his client's pretrial detention on "personal grounds."

D.M. was arrested on suspicion of embezzling large sums of money from Sonesta Maho Resort on November 18. Resort management first learnt of D.M.'s alleged embezzlement scheme through an audit done by an independent accounting agency. The report showed several discrepancies that gave cause for further investigation. At that time it was also learnt that D.M. was making plans to leave the island.

The investigation into D.M.'s activities focused on finding the embezzled funds. Investigators believed his money was saved in Canada, his birth country.

D.M. had worked as comptroller for Sonesta Maho for more than 10 years prior to his arrest. He held a management level position and was responsible for supervising the quality of the resort's accounting and financial reporting.

Source: http://herald.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/23157-maho-comptrollers-detention-suspended-.html

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How the Gibraltar naval dockyard was saved from the axe back in 1981

Foreign Secretary Peter Carrington feared a major constitutional crisis British ministers feared the closure of Gibraltar?s naval dockyard would throw the local budget into ?chronic deficit? and precipitate a ?constitutional crisis? according to newly-released files, some of which were published by the Gibraltar Chronicle.

Source: http://en.mercopress.com/2011/12/30/how-the-gibraltar-naval-dockyard-was-saved-from-the-axe-back-in-1981?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss&utm_content=main&utm_campaign=rss

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Libya needs strong institutions to rebuild on Gadhafi?s ruins

With the creation of a new government, Libya?s leaders should finally be able to focus on organizing the transition from the authoritarian state that they inherited to the more pluralistic one that they envisage. But are they really able and willing to achieve that goal?

Today, Libya?s state institutions exist merely to extract the country?s vast oil wealth and distribute it via subsidies
Copyright � 2011, The Daily Star. All rights reserved.

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/libya-needs-strong-institutions-rebuild-gadhafi%E2%80%99s-ruins-406891

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Egypt: Islamist parties win second round of elections

Egypt's leading Islamist parties won 65 percent of votes for party lists in the second round of elections for a new parliament, the electoral committee said Saturday. The Muslim Brotherhoo's Freedom and Justice Party won 36.5 percent of the vote for party lists, with 4,058,498 out of 11,173,818 votes, according to figures provided by the electoral committee for the second round which was held on December 14.

Salaist Al-Nur party won 28.78 percent, with 3,216,430 votes.

Egypt
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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/news/egypt-islamist-parties-win-second-round-elections-406532

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Defamation/Disinformation in the service of Israel

altLondon, (Pal Telegraph) - Laura Stuart considers the use of defamation and disinformation by the Board of Deputies of British Jews – Britain’s leading Israel lobby group – as tools in its rear-guard defence of Zionism and the apartheid state of Israel.

Source: http://www.paltelegraph.com/opinions/views/10469-defamationdisinformation-in-the-service-of-israel.html

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No decision yet on request to terminate resort workers

~ Five months have elapsed ~

PHILIPSBURG--Although government is required by law to make decisions on termination requests within six weeks, the Labour Department has not yet issued a decision on a request made five months ago to terminate the services of 49 Simpson Bay Resort workers.

  The request was made in July and was part of an agreement signed among Simpson Bay Resort and Marina (formerly Pelican Resort), government and Workers Institute of Organised Labour (WIFOL) in April. The agreement paved the way for the reopening of the resort.

  That agreement stated that the resort would reopen its doors after a brief closure over a labour dispute, but would proceed with the termination of up to 50 workers. The resort opted at the time to file a request to dismiss 49.

  Windward Islands Chamber of Labour Unions (WICLU) President Theophilus Thompson told reporters at the chamber?s weekly press conference on Thursday, that the Labour Department?s inability to make a decision on the request after so many months showed that it was incapable of handling certain matters. It is also having a negative effect on the workers in question.

  Thompson said all the workers had received letters following the signing of the agreement in April, informing them that they would continue to receive their salaries pending a decision on the dismissal request. They were placed on inactive duty.

  However, Thompson said that although a decision had not yet been received from the Labour Department, the 49 workers, along with the 145 who had been dismissed recently by the resort?s General Manager Jules James, had not been paid at the last pay period, last week Thursday. Thompson said this was illegal on the part of the resort.

  He said the workers could have ?gotten on with their lives and possibly even found new jobs by now? if the Labour Department had made a decision on the request in a timely manner.

  The Chamber of Unions is worried about this matter, in particular about the state of these workers who will now have to spend Christmas without salaries and without a decision on a request made five months ago.

  The Chamber is also concerned about Simpson Bay Resort and Marina?s most recent action to stop payment to these workers although a decision has not yet been received from the Labour Department. 

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/23714-no-decision-yet-on-request-to-terminate-resort-workers-.html

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Resort workers stage protest as unions meet UP MPs, De Weever

page1c172~UP to give Minister ultimatum to call Tripartite Committee meeting~

PHILIPSBURG--A group of placard-bearing Simpson Bay Resort and Marina (former Pelican Resort) workers protested outside the Parliament House and the Government Administration Building at different times on Tuesday, while representatives of their union met separately with Members of Parliament (MPs) and Labour Minister Cornelius de Weever.

The workers, who sometimes sang in unison, carried placards which read, "Murder of people: 182 victims, MP Jules James;" "SXM open your eyes, today Pelican, tomorrow???;" "We want our jobs back;" "Justice for all" and "Salary is under US $1,000 per month and they say it's too much."

The workers stood outside the Parliament House for a portion of the morning, while the Workers Institute for Organised Labour (WIFOL) and representatives of three other unions under the Windward Islands Chamber of Labour Unions umbrella, the St. Maarten Hospitality and Trade Association (SHTA), Small Business Development Foundation (SBDF) and the St. Maarten Chamber of Commerce met with representatives of the United People's (UP) Party. UP leader MP Romain Laville had requested the meeting.

UP MP Jules James, who is also General Manager of the Simpson Bay Resort Management Company (SBRMC), was absent. Laville told reporters later that he had received an e-mail from James saying that he would be off island and unable to attend.

The workers moved to the Government Administration building in the afternoon, when WIFOL President Theophilus Thompson was meeting with Labour Minister Cornelius de Weever. Unlike the recently held Parliament Meeting on the Simpson Bay Resort matter, where workers had been furious and almost attacked two MPs (James and Roy Marlin of the Democratic Party), Tuesday's demonstration was peaceful. The workers were, however, firm in their positions that they were fighting for their rights and to get their job back with the full backing of the unions in St. Maarten.

Thompson had told reporters earlier in the day that he would be seeking a commitment from De Weever to "promptly" address and bring about a solution to the Simpson Bay Resort matter and, among other things, the non-functioning of the Labour Department.

"There is no way that we will continue to accept this from the perspective where you have employees being sent home without the proper procedure being followed. It's only because of the court cases that we haven't done differently. But if this Minister doesn't make a decision, then we will have no other choice but to send the workers back on the job, and they might have to stay there until they receive some kind of proper notification from management," Thompson said.

The union president, who described the meeting with the UP MPs as frank and open, said the union had raised a number of issues. He said the labour sector got a chance to vent its frustrations, while the businesses sector had expressed its desire to work with labour and government.

He said, above all, the union wants Parliament to enact legislation to protect workers and their rights. "The current climate on the island was felt [in the meeting ed.], with the trade unions expressing total lack of confidence in the politicians and the parliamentarians for not really portraying what the new St. Maarten should be looking like," Thompson told reporters after the meeting with the MPs.

He said under the former Netherlands Antilles constellation, where some tasks fell under the former central government, certain labour issues would have been resolved more proactively. Under the current system, however, Thompson said a "wait and see" attitude is adopted.

He said government needed to be more proactive in addressing issues that develop. The issues raised by the unions include the labour policy as it pertains to employment of local and immigrant workers, the non-functioning of the Tripartite Committee, working conditions and social issues. Thompson said the discussions with the UP are likely to continue.

UP's position

After listening to the social partners, UP Leader Romain Laville said his party would be sending a letter to Labour Minister Cornelius de Weever, expressing the party's concerns about the issues raised by the unions and business representatives.

He said the party will advise the Minister to work towards getting the Tripartite Committee up and running, as this was a common concern across the board. UP, he added, will be giving the Minister an ultimatum within which to call the first meeting of the Tripartite Committee, but he said the duration of the ultimatum will be decided on during a meeting with the UP faction.

He said parties at the meeting said the chairperson of the Tripartite Committee should be rotated on a regular basis and should be an independent person. "We will let the Minister know that these are the issues to deal with," Laville said.

The UP leader said Tuesday's meeting was a "down payment" to the workers of St. Maarten and meant to give them hope that the time has come for issues affecting them to be addressed.

He said while he doesn't pretend to know it all, he thinks the time has come for everyone to put differences aside and address pressing issues affecting the labour market.

Asked how the party intended to address the involvement of its MP James in the Simpson Bay Resort matter, Laville said this was an ongoing issue that the party had met on in the past and will continue to meet on in the future. He said he is in constant contact with the WIFOL President to get updates on the resort matter as it develops. He said, too, that Parliament did not have the power to overrule a court decision.

He said it is incumbent of Parliament to address this matter from the perspective of preventing a recurrence of a similar situation via the law.

Source: http://herald.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/23228-resort-workers-stage-protest-as-unions-meet-up-mps-de-weever-.html

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Parliament continues talks on CGC today

PHILIPSBURG--Parliament will continue its discussion on the Corporate Governance Council at 2:00pm today with Prime Minister Sarah Wescot-Williams present.

The National Alliance- (NA-) requested meeting began on November 25. The public meeting will focus on the functioning of the CGC in general and its letter to Parliament of October 25.

Wescot-Williams will answer questions posed by Members of Parliament (MPs) while Finance Minister Hiro Shigemoto has provided his answers in writing to Parliament based on questions that were asked during the November 25 session.

The meeting is open to the public and will be aired live on St. Maarten Cable TV Channel 20.

The Permanent Committee of Kingdom Affairs and Inter-parliamentary Relations will also be meeting in a closed session at 10:00am today, it was stated in a press release on Monday. The meeting is being held to prepare for the visit of parliamentarians in the setting of the inter-parliamentary Kingdom session that will take place from January 10 to 14, 2012.

Members of this committee are Roy Marlin (Chairman DP), Dr. Ruth Douglass (Vice Chairlady UP), Patrick Illidge (independent), William Marlin (NA), and Frans Richardson (independent).

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/23194-parliament-continues-talks-on-cgc-today-.html

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Court convicts two youngsters of rape

PHILIPSBURG--The Court of First Instance sentenced two teenagers Wednesday for having raped a 15-year-old girl on April 12.

The boys, 16 and 17, will both have to perform 200 hours of community service and will also be put under the surveillance of the Court of Guardianship.

The 16-year-old was also sentenced to one year and 39 days, one year of which was suspended, on three years' probation. His 17-year-old counterpart received one year and 45 days, one year of which was suspended, on three years' probation.

Both young men had denied they had been one of three boys that had raped the girl inside a car wreck in Dutch Quarter. They maintained that the sex had been consensual, but the girl said she had been forced to have sex with several boys.

Judge Monique Keppels stated in her explanation that she gave credibility to the girl's statement, because several suspects had also told the police that more than one boy had been involved in the incident.

In the meantime, the 16-year-old is seeing a psychologist and the 17-year-old a psychiatrist. The judge mentioned the mentorship programme of Victorious Living Foundation as a possible probation programme.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/23489-court-convicts-two-youngsters-of-rape-.html

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Flooding

flooding_mullet_bayRecent heavy rainfall that started Sunday and continued through Monday night caused several areas to suffer flood conditions. However, the floodwaters receded quickly. In photo: Residents driving through Mullet Bay were forced to navigate a flooded roadway.

 

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/23011-flooding.html

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Unions slam functioning of Labour Department

page3b167~ Tell of secret policies, say situation deteriorating ~

PHILIPSBURG--Five unions under the umbrella of Windward Islands Chamber of Labour Unions (WICLU) have criticised strongly what they see as the deteriorating labour situation in St. Maarten. One union has accused government of introducing "secret policies" in labour.

At a joint press conference on Wednesday the unions also slammed the absence of social dialogue and non-functioning of the tripartite committee and of the Department of Labour.

The unions also announced that they would be holding weekly press conferences to update the public about developing issues in the labour market.

Present at the press conference were Workers Institute for Organised Labour (WIFOL) and Association of Staff Employees of the Windward Islands (ASEWI) President Theophilus Thompson; Windward Islands Teachers Union (WITU) President Claire Elshot; St. Maarten Communications Union (SMCU) President Ludson Evers; and Windward Islands Health Care Union Association (WIHCUA) President Julian Lynch and Public Relations Officer (PRO) Gregory Arrindell.

New Windward Islands Civil Servants Union/Private Sector Union (WICSU/PSU) President Derie Leonard could not be present due to a conflicting appointment, said Elshot.

Thompson was critical of the functioning of the Department of Labour, saying this department was not functioning the way it should. He said the staff had not been trained on how to adapt to the new situation of Country St. Maarten and the department was still being run as in the Island Territory days.

He said there were workers in the department who were referring to employment agencies persons who went to register as unemployed. He said employment agencies were a major concern to unions.

Thompson also alleged that government had introduced a number of anti-labour anti-worker "secret policies" at the Labour Department that it had not made public.

One such policy, Thompson said, was the introduction of a number of regulations that he said made it practically impossible for anyone to obtain legal aid. He said any worker could have had access to legal assistance in the past to fight their employer if they had been unjustly dismissed or otherwise taken advantage of.

Thompson said government also was making it practically impossible for persons to come into consideration for social aid.

One of the common concerns of the unions was the absence of a functioning tripartite committee and social dialogue. Elshot and Thompson said social dialogue was an issue the unions had been raising for some time now.

Elshot said social dialogue among unions, government and labour in a tripartite setting was needed so that parties could give their input before decisions were taken by government. She said the advisory body to government GOA had been just "put aside." She said the absence of social dialogue could lead to unrest and people being dissatisfied.

Evers said the unions had submitted their representative for the tripartite committee to the Labour Minister three to four months ago, but no meeting had been called to date.

He said students and other persons returning to St. Maarten to work were being told that they were either over- or under-qualified for jobs, yet employment agencies seemed to be finding work for such persons. He said the message this was sending was that persons in search of jobs should go through an employment agency.

In Cura�ao, he said, there were persons attached to employment agencies who had been working for companies for as long as 20 years, which meant the positions they held were of a permanent nature. He said the system was being abused in Cura�ao and he saw St. Maarten headed down this route if the trend of using employment agencies continued. Unions, he added, were looking to put a stop to this situation.

Arrindell said employment agencies served one purpose: to have their temporary workers fill in for someone who was, for example, on maternity leave or out of her or his position temporarily.

He also was critical of the use of short term labour contracts, saying this practice was not legal. He said these agencies collected 35 per cent of the workers' salaries, a practice he called "scheming" and "scamming" of workers.

Several other concerns were raised by the unions.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/23041-unions-slam-functioning-of-labour-department-.html

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Gracita: Rules of Order provide no grounds for revote on motions

~ Governor has no role in process ~

PHILIPSBURG--The Constitution and Rules of Order of Parliament provide no option for a revote on a motion if a Member of Parliament (MP) votes on a topic deemed personally related to him/her, President of Parliament Gracita Arrindell told The Daily Herald on Sunday evening.

The issue of an MP voting on a motion that has a personal reference was raised by opposition National Alliance (NA) leader MP William Marlin during a Parliament session last week.

He queried whether it was correct and constitutional for MP Jules James (UP) to vote on the NA motion tabled against his verbal dismissal in October of workers of Simpson Bay Resort (formerly Pelican Resort), where James is the general manager. The motion sought to condemn his actions and to instruct government to seek an urgent remedy for the impasse with the workers and the resort management.

The motion was voted down with six votes from the NA and seven votes from the United People's (UP) party/Democratic Party (DP)/Illidge coalition in a public meeting of Parliament requested by NA in November.

Arrindell said Parliament's legal team comprising the three general secretaries, headed by Jozef Semelaar, had reviewed the legal situation and had come to the conclusion that there was no ground for a revote as requested by Marlin. "All that can be done is to take up what happened in the minutes."

A spinoff from this matter is a letter from Governor Eugene Holiday, who wrote to Parliament "asking about" a possible violation of article 53, subsection 1 of the Constitution. That article states: "The members of the Parliament shall abstain from voting on issues or appointments, including suspensions and dismissals, that personally affect them, their spouses, and their relations by blood or marriage up to and including the second degree, or in which they are involved as proxies."

Arrindell met with Holiday on Wednesday to discuss the subject. She explained that the governor's function of overseeing Parliament's work came in when a law was sent to him to sign and if there were issues with the way it had been passed. "This is a situation of a motion, not a law. The governor has no role at this point."

The issue of a revote also was explained in a meeting of the parliamentary group leaders at the end of last week. Arrindell said all the documents and information gathered by the legal team and the letter from Holiday had been provided to the leaders. "The only one missing from the discussions was the NA leader [William Marlin, ed.]. He came in late at the point when the meeting was ending," she said.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/23373-gracita-rules-of-order-provide-no-grounds-for-revote-on-motions-.html

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Lebanon banks? 2012 growth hinges on regional changes

When the financial crisis ravaged the global economy in 2009, Lebanon?s banking sector profited from relative domestic political stability to achieve record-high growth. However, 2011, unlike any year in the past decade, has put the country?s resilient banking sector under pressure on three fronts simultaneously.

The turmoil in Syria, which is weighing on Lebanese banks operating there, will have minimal impact on banks because the affiliates account for a small percentage of profits, Nassib Ghobril, head of Economic Research at Byblos Bank said
Copyright � 2011, The Daily Star. All rights reserved.

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/banks%E2%80%99-2012-growth-hinges-regional-changes-407127

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Two babies born minutes apart on Christmas Day

Page1A187CAY HILL--Two bouncing bundles of joy entered the world at St. Maarten Medical Center (SMMC) on Christmas Day.

The first baby, Vernicio Davon, was born to Damalee Connor and Vernon Prince at 8:25am. The second baby, Brianna Rachel, was born to Margarita Plasencia Hernandez and Alberto Smith 25 minutes later, at 8:50am.

Baby boy Vernicio, 2.554kg and 32 centimetres, is the third child for Connor and Prince. He was delivered by midwife Regina Janga.

Brianna was 3.368kg and 49.5cm when she was delivered by midwife Eveline Geerdink.

Connor told The Daily Herald she first had started feeling bouts of pain when she was in church on Friday evening while singing the song "A child is born" with the rest of the congregation. The pain eventually went away and returned when she was at home. Her partner wanted to take her to the hospital, but Damalee said the pain was bearable and she declined.

However, she started to feel unbearable pain around 4:00am and her boyfriend rushed her to the hospital. She was already somewhat dilated and was admitted. She did a few laps around the hospital, was dilated a bit more and baby Vernicio was born hours later.

Damalee said Vernicio had been scheduled to be born on January 1, but she always had thought he would be born on Christmas Day and she told this to everyone who asked her when she was due. She even made a bet to this effect with her boyfriend. She told this newspaper she was very happy with her Christmas gift and the new addition to her family.

Hernandez was admitted to the hospital on Friday evening and was in labour until baby Brianna was delivered. She too was happy with her bouncing bundle of joy. She couldn't take baby Brianna home right away, as the baby was placed in the incubator shortly after birth.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/23779-two-babies-born-minutes-apart-on-christmas-day-.html

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Head of Arab League monitor delegation says Homs situation "reassuring"

The head of Arab League monitor delegation who is visiting Syria in order to investigate if the regime is keeping its promise to implement a plan to end the crisis said on Wednesday the situation in the "Resistance Capital" of Homs was "reassuring so far."

"The situation seemed reassuring so far," Sudanese General Mustafa Dabi told Reuters. "Yesterday was quiet and there were no clashes. We did not see tanks but we did see some armored vehicles. But remember this was only the first day and it will need investigation. We have 20 people who will be there for a long time."

Syria
� 2011 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/news/head-arab-league-monitor-delegation-says-homs-situation-reassuring-407011

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GEBE grants reduction in fuel clause for December

PHILIPSBURG--The Supervisory Board of Directors of GEBE unanimously approved a 15 cents per kwh (kilowatt hour) reduction in the fuel clause for December bills. The charge will be reduced from 42 cents per kwh to 27 cents per kwh.

Interim Managing Director of GEBE Paul Marshall explained that the reduction was based on the projected financial figures for the 2011 financial year which shows room to grant consumers the relief on December bills.

Marshall said GEBE reviews its financials every fourth quarter to determine if relief is possible for consumers. He did not provide any specifics about company financials.

Ironically, the relief, based on GEBE's financials, comes after mid-October statements by Chairman of the Supervisory Board Julius Lambert to St. Kitts media that the actions of former Director William Brooks resulted in the company losing "millions and millions of dollars."

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/23300-gebe-grants-reduction-in-fuel-clause-for-december-.html

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