Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Parking spaces for MPs at Clem Labega Square

PHILIPSBURG--About 20 or more parking spaces have been secured for Members of Parliament (MP) and parliamentary staff at the public parking lot at the Clem Labega Square.
President of Parliament Gracita Arrindell announced the allocation of the spaces during a radio interview with Eddy Williams on ?For the Record? on Sunday.
In response to a question at a recent press conference National Alliance (NA) leader MP William Marlin had expressed concerns about the issue and had said that he understood that a letter had been sent to government on the matter.
Arrindell said Sunday that over the past seven to eight months she had been involved in the issue even though this is the task of the Parliamentary clerk. ?But that does not mean that at the end of the day I won?t make sure that it is [not] done. The fact remains that in this transition phase and when we acquired this new parliament building, no one thought about parking space and? up to today I have been on top of it to make sure that on Monday when we resume there is parking available.?
She said each MP will be receiving an email informing them that there is parking available in the parking lot on the Clem Labega Square opposite the government administration building.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/19460-parking-spaces-for-mps-at-clem-labega-square.html

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Pensions not indexed for period after 2008

�~ Discussions ongoing for solution ~

PHILIPSBURG--Talks are currently being held with Pension Fund representatives to discuss the indexation of the pensions for the years after 2008.

� The Windward Islands Teachers Union (WITU) had raised concerns about the matter in a letter to government and in a press release issued to the media recently.

� Prime Minister Sarah Wescot-Williams had said last week that after receiving concerns about this issue from the WITU, the matter was researched. Government has also responded to the WITU's letter.

� Wescot-Williams said information available shows that pensions of pensioners falling under the former APNA now General Pension Fund APS of St. Maarten have been indexed up to and including 2008. However, no indexation occurred for the period after 2008.

� The Prime Minister said the relevant departments are "currently in communication" with the pension fund "in order to come to an agreement regarding the period following 2008."

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/19761-pensions-not-indexed-for-period-after-2008.html

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Libya: Rebel leader fears of destabilization

The leader of Libya's rebel government warned on Thursday of dangerous destabilization in the country without urgent financial assistance from the West to restore services to the population. According to Reuters, Mahmoud Jibril spoke after meeting Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who said Rome had started unfreezing 350 million euros of Libyan funds in Italian banks to help the rebel government run the state affairs.

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/news/rebel-leader-fears-destabilization-389949

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Convoy of senior Libyans crossed into Algeria

A convoy of six armored vehicles that could be carrying senior Libyan officials, maybe even fugitive leader Moammar Gaddafi, crossed from Libya into Algeria on Friday, Egypt's official news agency reported quoting a Libyan rebel source.

The report said six armored Mercedes had Friday morning entered Ghadames, quoting a Libyan military council source in the town on the border with Algeria.

The source was quoted as saying the column had been escorted by pro-government troops until it entered Algeria.

Gaddafi
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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/news/convoy-senior-libyans-crossed-algeria-390063

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Rolls-Royce wins contracts for ship lifts from the Middle East

Rolls-Royce, the global power systems company, has won contracts to supply Syncrolift ship lifts to two shipyards in the Middle East.

One order, from Damen Shipyards Sharjah FZE (DSS) will see a Syncrolift designed and installed at Hamriyah Free Zone shipyard at Sharjah, in the United Arab Emirates. This installation, with a docking platform of 120 metres in length and a width of 26.5 metres will be the sixth Rolls-Royce Syncrolift installed in the UAE and it will be operational by the end of 2012.

Ship lift with a platform 102 metres long and 32 metres wide at a new shipyard
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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/business/pr/rolls-royce-wins-contracts-ship-lifts-middle-east-390284

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How the country runnin?

page4b072?How the country runnin?? Apparently nobody knows and none is on time. The two clocks on Frontstreet that were installed as part of the Frontstreet upgrading project a few years ago, has been out of service for quite some time. At approximately 2:25pm on Tuesday, the clock in front of the Philipsburg Methodist Church showed a time of 6:30pm and the clock in front of the St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church showed a time of 7:15pm. Since divine intervention has obviously been ineffective and no official could be reached on Tuesday to explain who is in charge of maintenance of these clocks and/or what?s wrong with them, residents and visitors alike will have to settle for the clocks being decorative pieces on Frontstreet until further notice.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/19534-how-the-country-runnin.html

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Ads in the UAE that tease but don't inform are a big irritant during Ramadan

Emirati and Arabic television networks have something very special to sell this month - the annual Ramadan Arabic sitcoms and other family programmes in what is a peak viewing time.

Emirati and Arabic television networks have something very special to sell this month of Ramadan
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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/ads-uae-tease-dont-inform-are-big-irritant-during-ramadan-387892

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Minister of Justice agrees to new trucks, guns for police

PHILIPSBURG--The Minister of Justice Roland Duncan has approved a "mobility plan" to provide the Police Force with an array of new vehicles and has kept up to speed with an initiative to obtain an entirely new arsenal for the Justice Department.

Police will have a say in both as the organisation puts a team in place to decide what firearm is the best choice, and have appointed an assembly to choose the vehicles' brands and equipment.

Police Chief Commissioner Peter de Witte said, "Police vehicles are essential to any police force and many factors like terrain and climate must be taken into account. We have a commission in place to take part in deciding what makes and models will adhere best to the department's needs, both for the vehicles and firearms. I am very thankful for the Minister's accord to supply the Police Force with the additions."

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/19394-minister-of-justice-agrees-to-new-trucks-guns-for-police.html

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KLM pays damages for delayed flights

ARUBA--It took KLM more than eighteen months to grant Evelin Pierre-Dumfries of Aruba damages caused by delayed flight KL 785 from Cura�ao to Amsterdam, on January 10, 2010.

In accordance with European regulations, the airline paid Pierre-Dumfries 600 euros this week, plus the 50-euro fee she had to pay to have her complaint handled by the Aviation Arbitration Board.

The Arbitration Board had already ordered KLM to pay damages earlier this year, but the airliner had failed to comply.

That was reason for the Board to send a formal letter of complaint concerning KLM's behaviour to the Board of Airline Representatives in the Netherlands (BARIN) this month.

According to Dutch consumer union Consumentenbond, KLM and other airlines such as Martinair, Transavia and ArkeFly are too easily referring to circumstances beyond their control to turn down requests for damages.

This also happened after Pierre-Dumfries' flight was delayed for 24 hours due to technical malfunction of the aircraft.

However, the European Court of Justice has established that technical defects are part of daily business risks and do not fall under the denominator "Acts of God," as weather conditions do.

According to director Hendrik Jan Noorderhaven of EU-claim, the organisation that supports duped passengers who are claiming damages, companies continue to disregard EU rules. "They will only pay when you sue them," he said.

EU-claim and Consumentenbond launched a joint Website last week with an up-to-date overview of delayed flights. With a couple of clicks, duped travellers can also submit their claims on this Website.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/19638-klm-pays-damages-for-delayed-flights.html

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VIVA provides customers the ultimate BlackBerry Eid Gift

Kuwait Telecommunications Company VIVA, is pleased to introduce to customers its new BlackBerry offers for Eid, as well as offer enhancements to its current BlackBerry subscriptions, for customers to enjoy full access to the world of BlackBerry, for less.

Viva
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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/business/pr/viva-provides-customers-ultimate-blackberry-eid-gift-390202

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Amazing Determination of the Yemeni People

By Mohamed El Mokhtar
 
The current stalemate in Yemen is not politically sustainable. The intransigence of the incumbent president/autocrat, Abdallah Saleh, is causing an unprecedented political standstill. Such paralysis is sucking up the energy of the whole country and creating an atmosphere of near-anarchy. And the responsibility of this mayhem lies squarely in the hands of the president given his lack of predisposition to seriously compromise or step-down.

Now the public administration is in shambles throughout the country. In effect, the already structurally fragile civil institutions are working far below their potential capacity, hence the limited access everywhere to public services or lack thereof. These constraining limitations in the delivery of vital services, deliberately engineered by the ruling regime, are exacting a high cost on ordinary citizens as evidenced by the scarcity of fuel, water, electricity and other basic commodities.

In spite of all this, the Yemeni people have shown a rare determination, in recent months, in continuing the peaceful fight for their human rights. Indeed, they have been able, owing to their courage, to show the whole world how they truly stand for their dignity. Their extraordinary poise and stunning patience have turned upside-down many deep-seated stereotypes and ill-conceived ideas about Arabs and Muslims.

In fact, the peaceful nature of their protest underscores, despite the many provocations of the government, the strong resolve of Yemenis to recover their legitimate civil rights without resorting to indiscriminate violence or illegal means. As epitomized in the slogan Silmeeya Ila Neehaya (peaceful till the end!), such attitude is meaningful in many respects. This collective sense of self-control is all the more admirable that Yemen is probably per capita the most heavily-armed country in the world. The incident involving the reaction of the tribal leader El Ahmar remains a parenthesis in the broader scale of things.

Thus, the Yemeni general revolt has taught us an invaluable lesson about the inaccuracy of anthropological presumptions and empirically unfounded sociological extrapolations of complacent scholarship. It is a good epistemological example revealing the limitations and lack of rigor of certain supposedly scientific tools of normative evaluation prevailing in many Western academic circles and think-tanks.

The Yemeni awakening clearly showcased that even in a land riven with sectarianism, tribalism and regionalism, people can still unite for a common ground; they are predisposed to transcend their narrow sense of identity provided they can identify with a common ideal. Therefore, when a national ideal is clearly defined or seems coherent to the majority, the solidarity of esprit de corps (El Assabiya) becomes ipso facto secondary. These circumstances, those parochial sensitivities become more or less irrelevant; in other words, they don’t constitute anymore an obstacle to democratic transformation.

Furthermore, this ongoing popular revolution proves once again that the murderous ideology advocated by AL Qeada and its like, contrary to certain Orientalist assumptions, doesn’t even remotely attract or inspire the majority of young Arabs. On the contrary, such deviationism, with the exception of few suicidal desperados bent on wreaking havoc, was and still is fortunately a repugnant cult to the eyes of the overwhelming majority. And that is what really matters to debunk prejudice and stereotypes.

Without downplaying the importance of an educated urban middle class to the anchorage of democracy, it is important to draw the following lesson from the citizen revolt in Yemen: the absence of a large middle class, or the prevalence of poverty, isn’t necessarily a major hurdle to political awakening. Indeed, if in a poverty-stricken country like Yemen people are so keen in exercising their political rights, this proves well that political consciousness isn’t the exclusive prerogative of a given social class.

Over the course of many decades, Abdellah Saleh has transformed what could have been a model of success in the Middle East into a near failed state. Under his prolonged reign the country became the very prototype of an Arab basket case.

Yet Yemen does not suffer from a shortage of resources or lack of manpower. Unlike the other countries of the Gulf, the country does have a potential other than oil. First of all Yemen has an important human capital in an otherwise under-populated region; it’s an ancient land endowed with a traditionally entrepreneurial merchant class; it has a rich cultural heritage, an old and successful diaspora; and enjoys a central geographic position in a major geostrategic zone.

But rather than utilizing those assets to build a functioning modern state, Abdellah Saleh has instead subverted the process of nation-building to fit his desire to stay in power. To do so he didn’t hesitate to pit regions against regions or cynically exploit sectarian tension or  profiteering from the US and other Western nations in their fight against radical Muslims by over-blowing the threat of Al Qaeda in Yemen. Worse, he cultivated corruption to unparalleled levels. To get a sense of the depth of nepotism under his ruling, these are few illustrative, albeit partial, examples:

• The Republican Guard is headed by Colonel Ahmed Ali Abdallah Saleh, the eldest son of the president.

• The deputy Chairman of the National Security Organization is Colonel Amar Mohamed Abdallah Saleh (a nephew)

• The Commander of the Security Central Forces is Colonel Yahaya Mohamed Abdellah Saleh (another nephew) and an important stakeholder in Almas Company for Petroleum Services and a Chinese cable company: Huaiwai.

• The president half brother Ali Saleh El Ahmar commands the Air force and is a stakeholder in the Hashdi Petroleum Company.

These are just few samples, for the domain of the president’s relatives spans all sorts of activities. From high offices in public sectors to important stakes in the private (oil companies, agriculture, telecommunications...), their monopolistic hegemony has no limit. But Saleh’s grip in power couldn’t have lasted so long without outside help.

The attitude of the Saudis has seldom been helpful toward their neighbors. With the exception of Qatar perhaps, the GCC’s investments have been until recently almost inexistent. They speak now of the need of a stable and united Yemen but have lobbied major oil companies not so long ago to prevent them from exploring or exploiting the country’s oil fields. They currently impose a draconian regime of visas entry to Yemeni citizens in dire need of work.

Instead of mediating between the government and the Houthis during their recent insurrection, they one-sidedly chose to support Saleh’s ill-advised strategy and hence helped entice sectarian tensions and the potential for instability. Because of the popular opposition to the first Gulf war, they financially squeezed Yemen for years halting almost all types of investments in the country; and that was in addition to expelling hundreds of thousands of Yemeni citizens from the Kingdom as a cynical retribution to the position of their government. Sudanese, Palestinians and Mauritanians suffered the same ordeal as did countless others Arabs.

Today the Saudis play an ambiguous ambivalence in the Yemeni crisis: on the one hand they call for a political smooth transition and on the other hand they wittingly encourage President Saleh to persist in his stubborn intransigence by providing him with the financial and military means to suppress the ongoing large scale citizen revolt.

Assuredly, the last thing the Al Saud royal dynasty wants to see at its doorsteps is an Arab people capable of freely expressing its will through the democratic mechanism of self-determination. In fact, there is no greater threat for a divinely-inspired monarchy than the sovereign power of the vox populi.

The security aid provided to Saleh by the US has also boosted his resilience and is now being used to delay political transition in Yemen.

Although the president Saleh has been supposedly helpful in providing the US with a launching base for its war against AQAP (Al Qaeda in the Arabic Peninsula), such support comes with a price; it is a double-edged sword used by the autocratic regime of Sana’a to crack down on political opponents or rivals. By over-blowing the threat of Al Qaeda, he was able to divert the aid provided to supposedly fight terrorism to achieve personal political goals.

Thus, he relied on the US support to suppress the Houthi insurrection, fight the Southern movement or settle old score with rival tribal factions. And that in turn helped exacerbate the problems at the source of the current instability.

The very timid appeals from Washington for Saleh to step down lacked the determination and forcefulness of the White house’s demands for allies like Ben Ali or Mubarak to step down following the popular revolts in Tunisia and Egypt.

Moreover, the over-reliance on security cooperation through the use of warplanes and drones attacks has greatly alienated popular support and hence made matters a lot worse. The duplication of the failed strategy employed in Pakistan will only inflame the situation and make the ground more fertile for extremism and radicalization. In the light of the recent changes taken place in the Arab World, a review of Washington’s policy toward the region is urgently needed. Such change is in the interest of Americans and the region as a whole.

The most important step the US can take, in this regard, is to support the advent of an independent and viable Palestinian state. There is no doubt that this will do more for the long term geostrategic interests and national security of the US than all the drone attacks in Pakistan and the Middle East and all the expensive CIA covert operations around the world. 

- Mohamed El Mokhtar Sidi Haiba is a political analyst. He contributed this article to PalestineChronicle.com.

Source: http://palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=17062

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Israel increases number of Occupation Force soldiers along Southern borders

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Bethlehem (Pal Telegraph)- Israel's army chief ordered extra troops to borders with Egypt and the southern Gaza Strip on Monday, citing a "concrete warning" of an impending attack by Islamic Jihad, a statement said.

Source: http://www.paltelegraph.com/palestine/gaza-strip/10000-israel-increases-number-of-occupation-force-soldiers-along-southern-borders.html

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Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Ali Farzat: A Pen of Damascus Steel

By Scott C. Davis

Damascus may not be the best base of operations for a political cartoonist.

Last Thursday morning at 4:30 AM (August 25), the renowned Arab caricaturist Ali Farzat (also "Ferzat" or "Firzat"), was leaving his studio after a night's work. He was apprehended by men with masks who forced him into an SUV, drove him into the desolate land in the direction of the airport, beat him, and threw him from the vehicle. Before ejecting him, they warned him against further criticism of the Syrian regime.

During the last five month's of protest in Syria, Farzat has been breaking the long-standing convention that banned the depiction of the Syrian president in the press. A recent drawing of Bashar Assad hitching a ride out of town from Muamar Gadhaffi apparently provoked the attack.

Farzat is a leading Arab political cartoonists, the head of the Arab Cartoonists' Union, an artist widely published in the Arab and European press, and the recipient of the prestigious Prince Claus Award (Holland).

At this moment, Farzat is in the hospital. His attackers mangled his hands and delivered other wounds designed to make it difficult or impossible for him to resume his career.

Most attribute the attack to out of control members of the security services. One Damascus-based political commentator who is sympathetic to the regime nevertheless reflected: "It is clear who is behind the attack. What is 'sick' is that the Interior Ministry said that it will 'investigate' the attack."

Among other supporters of the regime, however, many hold the view that this attack was a "false flag" operation designed to bring international condemnation on the regime.

Wherever the truth lies, we ask humanitarians within Syria and abroad to restore sanity and dialogue to Syria and to the world . . . as we have oft been encouraged to do by this fearless man with a pen.

- Scott C. Davis is a longtime friend of Ali Farzat who edited and published Farzat's book of political cartoons: A Pen of Damascus Steel: Political Cartoons of an Arab Master. This book is available direct from the publisher. He contributed this article to PalestineChronicle.com. Contact him at: cunepress@gmail.com and visit: www.alifarzat.com.

Source: http://palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=17068

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Elephant in the Holy Land

By Sherri Muzher
 
While the two-state solution is constantly raised, Israeli settlements are forcing a lot of people to confront the elephant in the room. That elephant is bi-nationalism -- the idea of two national groups living in one state.
 
It’s not a matter of being idealistic or singing Kumbaya. It’s about being a realist. Seriously, when was the last time you saw a nation exist on disconnected hills?
 
The settlements, which are strategically spread throughout East Jerusalem and the West Bank, have made physical separation impossible.
 
Israeli settlements have long been recognized as a thorn in the side of Middle East peace. They’ve been referred to as war crimes by the International Committee of the Red Cross since the Geneva Convention forbids resettling individuals on occupied lands. Even then-President Ronald Reagan proposed a peace plan in 1982 that required freezing such settlements. “The immediate adoption of a settlement freeze by Israel, more than any other action, could create the confidence needed,” Reagan said.
 
Decades later, settlements have continued to be built.  According to the Land Research Center, its March 2011 report stated “It is worth mentioning that since the end of the ten months settlement freeze on September 26, 2010 and until the date of this report, around 18,000 housing units (17,888) had been approved by the Israeli authorities to be built . . . Furthermore, during the year 2010, 32,055 housing units had been approved by the Israeli authorities to be built in the illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank, of which, 15453 units (48%) were issued in Israeli settlements in East Jerusalem.”

Numerous reasons have been cited by Israelis for the need to build Israeli settlements in the Occupied Territories, including the need for more housing to accommodate Jewish “immigrants.”
 
Jewish settlers will tell you that their presence in the West Bank, known as Judea and Samaria to religious Jews, is necessary because God said the land must belong to the Jews even if it means ridding the land of its inhabitants.
 
Some say that the settlements in the Occupied Territories are necessary to protect Israel’s security. However, Binyamin Begin, son of the late Prime Minister Menachem Begin and a prominent voice in the rightwing Likud party has stated that "In strategic terms, the settlements are of no importance."  Adding that, “they constitute an obstacle, an insurmountable obstacle to the establishment of an independent Arab State west of the river Jordan."
 
But nobody expressed the objective of settlements better than former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon who famously urged that, "Everybody has to move, run and grab as many hilltops as they can to enlarge the settlements, because everything we take now will stay ours."
 
Indeed, Netanyahu, Begin and other supporters of Israeli settlements are correct that a viable Palestinian Arab state cannot be established west of the river Jordan. The settlements and the exclusively Jewish bypass roads leading up to the settlements have left Palestinian areas looking like Swiss cheese.
 
It is doubtful that bi-nationalism was in the cards either. Bi-nationalism is perhaps the greatest fear of those who wish to maintain the Jewish character of Israel since Palestinians would become the majority.
 
However, short of transfer or the deportation of Palestinians from the Occupied Territories, there doesn’t seem to be any other way. And in 2011, it is difficult to imagine that the world would sit by while truckloads of Palestinians are transported to neighboring countries.
 
I would also like to raise one interesting thought once raised by a Jewish acquaintance. He said, "As long as there is a state which describes itself as ‘the state of the Jewish people,’ I cannot feel fully secure as a Jew elsewhere, and it is in my immediate interest to challenge this.”
 
Ultimately, there is no question that Israeli settlements have affected Palestinian daily life and impacted long-term Palestinian developmental needs.
 
And this much is known: Palestinians aren’t leaving and Israelis aren’t leaving. They share the same land and the same natural resources. Their economies are linked. Israeli settlements have made physical separation impossible.  The only long-term solution is a democratic bi-national state where Palestinians and Israelis live as equals. 
 
Until then, the elephant is going nowhere. 

- Sherri Muzher, JD is author of Escape to a World of Palestinian Surprises. She contributed this article to PalestineChronicle.com. Visit: www.palestiniansurprises.com.

Source: http://palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=17069

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Israel increases number of Occupation Force soldiers along Southern borders

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Bethlehem (Pal Telegraph)- Israel's army chief ordered extra troops to borders with Egypt and the southern Gaza Strip on Monday, citing a "concrete warning" of an impending attack by Islamic Jihad, a statement said.

Source: http://www.paltelegraph.com/palestine/gaza-strip/10000-israel-increases-number-of-occupation-force-soldiers-along-southern-borders.html

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In divided ballot Japan?s ruling party chooses new PM, the sixth in five years

From Finance to Prime Minister, Yoshihiko Noda faces a titanic challenge <br /> Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda was chosen Monday to become the sixth prime minister in five years, but he needs to overcome a divided parliament and deep rifts in the ruling party if he is to make more of a mark than his recent predecessors.

Source: http://en.mercopress.com/2011/08/30/in-divided-ballot-japan-s-ruling-party-chooses-new-pm-the-sixth-in-five-years?utm_source=feed&utm_medium=rss&utm_content=main&utm_campaign=rss

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European Investment Bank stops loans to Syria

Non-official data published recently by the Syrian media revealed that the European Union has stopped all loans from the European Investment Bank to Syria, valued at hundreds of millions of euros. Statistics revealed that most of the loans were earmarked for development projects or the support of development and modernization of infrastructure and transport, including financing  part of a European civilian aircraft deal to modernize the Syrian fleet.

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/business/european-investment-bank-stops-loans-syria-390273

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Pensions not indexed for period after 2008

�~ Discussions ongoing for solution ~

PHILIPSBURG--Talks are currently being held with Pension Fund representatives to discuss the indexation of the pensions for the years after 2008.

� The Windward Islands Teachers Union (WITU) had raised concerns about the matter in a letter to government and in a press release issued to the media recently.

� Prime Minister Sarah Wescot-Williams had said last week that after receiving concerns about this issue from the WITU, the matter was researched. Government has also responded to the WITU's letter.

� Wescot-Williams said information available shows that pensions of pensioners falling under the former APNA now General Pension Fund APS of St. Maarten have been indexed up to and including 2008. However, no indexation occurred for the period after 2008.

� The Prime Minister said the relevant departments are "currently in communication" with the pension fund "in order to come to an agreement regarding the period following 2008."

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/19761-pensions-not-indexed-for-period-after-2008.html

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Palestinian drama ?Pomegranates and Myrrh? opens in UAE at Eid

Having made its world premiere at the fifth Dubai International Film Festival (DIFF) as the opening film of the Arabian Nights gala, Palestinian director Najwa Najjar?s critically acclaimed film Pomegranates and Myrrh has now arrived for an exclusive theatrical run in the UAE.  

Najwa Najjar on the set of Pomegranates and Myrrh
� 2011 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/business/pr/palestinian-drama-%E2%80%98pomegranates-and-myrrh%E2%80%99-opens-uae-eid-390303

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Crisis budget in Morocco

The 2012 fiscal law may be ready before the early legislative elections which are expected to take place on 25 November. "The new budget will be a crisis budget; it's expected that it will use the same data as 2011", Abdul Salam Adib, an economic analyst said.

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� 2011 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/business/crisis-budget-morocco-390426

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L.B. Scott, Dutch Quarter Roads reopen tomorrow

~ Welfare Road to be closed for a week ~

PHILIPSBURG--L.B. Scott Road and Dutch Quarter Road will be re-opened on Sunday afternoon and the closure of Welfare Road has been pushed back a week.

Department of New Works head Kurt Ruan said L.B. Scott Road already was accessible in both directions, but some minor "touch-up" work still had to be completed. Dutch Quarter Road only requires some minor work and a layer of asphalt before it too can be opened.

Ruan toured the projects on Friday with Minister of Infrastructure Theo Heyliger to ensure that the roads were ready for the opening of the school year on Monday.

As for Welfare Road, which was scheduled to be closed on Monday, August 15, the work has been pushed back one week to avoid burdening the opening week of school. One lane of the road will be closed on August 22.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/19636-lb-scott-dutch-quarter-roads-reopen-tomorrow.html

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Convoy of senior Libyans crossed into Algeria

A convoy of six armored vehicles that could be carrying senior Libyan officials, maybe even fugitive leader Moammar Gaddafi, crossed from Libya into Algeria on Friday, Egypt's official news agency reported quoting a Libyan rebel source.

The report said six armored Mercedes had Friday morning entered Ghadames, quoting a Libyan military council source in the town on the border with Algeria.

The source was quoted as saying the column had been escorted by pro-government troops until it entered Algeria.

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

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/news/convoy-senior-libyans-crossed-algeria-390063

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Duncan says ?bogus employers? filed for 1,610 BTA applicants

~ Proposes real employers be given chance to step forward ~

PHILIPSBURG--Documents in support of some 1,610 applications for Brooks Tower Accord (BTA) residence permits were filed by ?bogus employers.? These fraudulent applications have been denied and the bogus employers will be prosecuted, Justice Minister Roland Duncan announced Wednesday.

The minister was reporting on the findings of the Inter-departmental BTA committee, which has just completed its review of nearly 2,600 applications and submitted its report and recommendations.

Duncan told reporters at the Council of Ministers Live Press Briefing Wednesday that the applications associated with the bogus employers could not be granted, under the current circumstances.

The Daily Herald understands that the bogus companies to which the minister referred are employment agencies that stood guarantee and filed for workers, most of whom are employed by real companies.

While the spectre of deportation now hangs over the 1,610 foreign workers whose applications have been rejected, Duncan is proposing that as ?a very last solution,? a period of two to three weeks be given to allow the genuine employers of these 1,610 persons to present themselves, so that these applicants may have a chance to have their status legalised.

Duncan said he would make the proposal to Labour Minister Cornelius de Weever, who is responsible for the granting of employment permits.

A total of 2,588 BTA dossiers were vetted by the interdepartmental committee. Some 447 applications had been handled prior to the start of criminal investigations into the BTA operations, earlier this year. This excludes the permits that were part of the review.

Duncan said 325 applications in Category One (immigrants in St. Maarten before December 31, 2001); 394 in Category Two (between 2002 and 2005) and 891 persons in Category Three (after December 2005) had been filed by bogus employers. Some fraudulent issues surrounded some of the 978 remaining applications and these will be passed to the Prosecutor?s Office for further handling.

This means that fewer than 978 applications have been found to be legitimate and will be granted, possibly by September 15. Announcements will be made when and where this will be done. The applications that were found to be legitimate include a total of 207 from Category One. Some applications were incomplete.

Bogus employers

The minister said that when the BTA dossiers were being reviewed, the committee had found that in some cases, so-called employers had filed for as many as 300 and 500 of the applicants. An applicant needed to show that he or she was gainfully employed to qualify for a BTA permit.

Duncan said it appeared as though the real employers of the applicants had refused or were not interested in filing for their employees, ?so they found persons [or-Ed.] companies willing to sign documents and give guarantees that they were employed.? Fewer than 10 bogus employers were discovered.

He said, ?Company X has 500 people working for them. When you go and look for company X, it is a small little office without any serious or existing operation and no real employees. Besides that, no taxes have been filed, no social security premiums have been paid, so the conclusion is very well and very quickly that it is a bogus situation. These people will not come into consideration for a permit.?

Duncan?s proposal is that should the real employers ?come forward? during a period to be proposed, they would not face any penalties or fines, but they will be required to settle their relevant taxes and social security obligations. The applications of those persons who cannot produce their real employers will be rejected.

The minister said once the period set has elapsed, ?there will be no more discussion and I can guarantee that action is going to be taken in terms of not just putting people off the island, but taking legal action against employers that we catch with illegal workers.?

He said employers who failed to step forward would face prosecution, if found with illegal employees. They will be dealt with legally or judiciously. ?We know who the bogus employers are and we are going to take action against them, because this is pure fraud that you?ve done.?

He said following the proposed period, government would resort to ?the good old days,? in which companies would be raided and guilty employers fined. Additional Immigration officers will be hired to ensure that this is done. ?We are going to either live by the law or we are going to be prosecuted by the law. In other words, we now know where the problem lies. We have the facts. We have the information,? Duncan said.

The cells in Simpson Bay that were constructed to house illegal immigrants pending deportation or repatriation are ready and should be delivered ?any day now? and everyone should ?understand that this is a serious matter.?

Employer organisations

He called on bodies representing businesses such as St. Maarten Hospitality and Trade Association (SHTA), St. Maarten Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Indian Merchants Association, St. Maarten Chinese Association and the Bankers Association to call on their members to do the right thing.

?If you have members with illegals working, please step forward. ... We have found that people have tried ? whether it?s illegal or fraudulent or not. We also have people who have benefited from the BTA, because they charged [the applicants-Ed.] to be the bogus employers, but we know who the bogus employers are.?

And, referring to recent concerns about the BTA process voiced by the SHTA, the Justice Minister said: ?It?s very nice to say, ?Yes, these poor illegals ? these poor people ? should be given legal status,? but the employers here need to step up and live up to their legal duties by signing for the people.

?It?s totally incomprehensible, and from my ministry?s position, totally unacceptable that any employer (and that includes government) should have anybody employed illegally knowingly. ...

?SHTA knows of its members who have people who are illegal. Here?s your chance.?

Fines

Employers with undocumented workers face a fine of up to NAf. 100,000. Government is in the process of revamping the admissions and expulsion law so that fines for such infringements will be administrative fines. This means that issuing such a fine will no longer have to go through the court.

Once the new system goes into effect, civil servants charged with the task will be authorised to issue fines that will be immediately due and payable. Such a system is already being used by the Bureau of Telecommunications and the Central Bank.

Duncan said this would facilitate and speed up the fining of persons who break the law.

He made it clear that his recommendation to handle the 1,610 applications that are in the rejection category was just a proposal and, if it was not agreed to by the labour minister, it could not be introduced.

The BTA interdepartmental committee concluded its work and presented its findings on August 17. (Judy H. Fitzpatrick)

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/20035-duncan-says-bogus-employers-filed-for-1610-bta-applicants-.html

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Contractor claims ships too large for pier caused damage

POINTE BLANCHE--Deputy Prime Minister/Harbour Affairs Minister Theo Heyliger says Dutch construction company Ballast Nedam is not accepting responsibility of the "significant structural damage" to Cruise Pier I and claims that the damage resulted from the berthing of cruise ships too large for the pier.

Heyliger said the contractor claimed "it was not a fault of their design, but us putting too large ships on the pier." He added, "The fact is no cruise ship was moored alongside the pier during any hurricane. It is not ship damage, but hurricane damage."

"St. Maarten Harbour Group of Companies and Ballast Nedam are in talks about the Cruise Pier I," said Heyliger during the Council of Ministers press briefing on Wednesday.

"It looks like the matter will become a long-drawn-out process that could take years to be resolved," said Heyliger. "The country cannot wait for the outcome of this matter, and other possibilities are being looked into to get the pier repaired and finding the right time to carry out the work."

Those talks also extended to the damage to the revetment of the mega-cruise ship pier that was built by Ballast Nedam in partnership with Danish firm Per Aarsleff. Unlike the situation with Cruise Pier I, the contractor has agreed to make those necessary repairs.

The almost 12-year-old Cruise Pier I came with a 15-year guarantee from the contractor and it is that guarantee that the Harbour Group wants to activate to cover the extensive repairs.

The damage to the country's main pier was uncovered during an engineering survey commissioned by the Harbour Group. That report has linked the damage to the under-section of the concrete deck and to the pier joints that allow it to move during heavy swells caused by successive hurricanes.

According to Heyliger, "Both piers are self-insured, because the cost of the insurance far exceeds the cost to replace the piers."

An agreement for an account to be set aside for the "insurance" was made with the bank financing the piers. However, that would only cover about 50 per cent of the amount needed to replace the pier. The cost of repairs to Cruise Pier I will be US $10-15 million, said Heyliger.

Cruise Pier I is the regular berth for Post-Panamax cruise ships that visit the country, excluding Oasis of the Seas and sister ship Allure of the Seas. Those two ships are accommodated on the mega-cruise ship pier designed for ships of more than 220,000 tonnes. Post-Panamax describes ships that can pass through the new Panama Canal locks and are comparable to Royal Caribbean's Voyager Class.

Voyager Class ship Adventure of the Seas, 137,276 tonnes, launched in 2001, and Carnival Dream, 130,000 tonnes, launched in 2009, are two of the larger cruise ships that berth at Cruise Pier 1.

Cruise Pier I, inaugurated in 2001, was designed to accommodate cruise ships of the size already on the seas at that time, and what were then considered the further larger vessels, ships of more than 130,000 tonnes.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/19346-contractor-claims-ships-too-large-for-pier-caused-damage.html

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Monday, August 29, 2011

Murdoch Press and the Fictional Jewish Chocolatier

By Samah Sabawi

The Murdoch press in its zeal to attack the Palestinian Boycott Divestment Sanctions (BDS) campaign has misrepresented facts and even ran an entire article quoting a fictional character that simply does not exist.  The invention of Max Brenner the Jewish chocolatier demonstrated the lack of integrity and journalistic ethics employed within the Murdoch press's campaign against the pro-Palestinian advocacy groups who have called for a boycott of the Israeli owned Max Brenner chocolate franchise.  
 
Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, senior reporter Cameron Stewart (The Australian:  August 20, 2011) still referred to the protests against the Max Brenner franchise as “marching on a Jewish-owned chocolate shop” and repeated the claim that BDS aim to “harm a legal Jewish business”.  This deliberate misrepresentation of the corporate Israeli franchise directly link to the military and of the BDS protests is part of a larger campaign by The Australian that is carefully orchestrated to play on Jewish stereotypes and to shamelessly manipulate the emotions of the Jewish community creating an atmosphere of fear, mistrust and hostility.
 
Most astounding was the article’s reference to Max Brenner as “the man whose real name is Oded Brenner”.  This is very revealing of the journalistic spin used to distract and misinform readers about these legitimate protests.  Putting the spotlight on the man behind the name behind the cooperation is a cheap tactic, a diversion meant to humanize a corporate entity for the purposes of adding to the demonization of the protestors.  But wait, there is more! 
 
The Australian pursuit of the Max Brenner story has indeed gone too far.  The same reporter Cameron Stewart (August 13, 2011) tried to further humanize the franchise by running an article entitled “Targeted chocolatier Max Brenner 'a man of peace'”. In this article Stewart wrote “it seems Max Brenner, the company's founder, is perplexed and dismayed at finding himself as an unwitting symbol of the Palestinian-Israel conflict.”  But, the missing truth from this heart wrenching story of a Jewish chocolatier trying to survive in the big anti-Semitic world is that the man doesn't exist. 
 
Max Brenner, the corporate entity, was founded in 1996 in Ra'anana Israel, by Max Fichtman and Oded Brenner, using a conjunction of their names. Max Fichtmann is no longer associated with the Max Brenner entity.  Oded Brenner remains.  Since 2001, the company has become a part of Strauss Group: a cooperation that supports Israel’s military.  There was never a Jewish chocolatier named Max Brenner yet the Australian senior reporter Cameron Stewart dedicated an entire article about this non-existent ‘man of peace’.
 
It seems The Australian will do what it can to paint the BDS advocates as “radical”  “anti-Semitic” and  “anti-Israeli bullies” while ignoring the reasons behind the boycott call – Israel’s atrocious treatment of the Palestinian people, its land and water theft, its violence and terror against the population it occupies and its system of discrimination which has been likened by leading human rights organizations and advocates to the apartheid system which once plagued South Africa.
 
The campaign for BDS is not “radical” unless in the views of The Australian calling for international law to be respected is a radical notion, but is affective and perhaps this is the greater danger and the reason why the right leaning newspaper The Australian is leading the fight against it.
 
In demanding equality for Palestinians and Jews, BDS poses a great danger for Israel, a state that defines itself along ethnocentric lines and considers all non-Jews, including citizens of the state, a demographic threat. 
 
It is worth mentioning that I had a lovely cup of coffee just yesterday in St. Kilda in an area surrounded by Jewish owned businesses where I enjoyed an environment that was peaceful and pleasant.  The good news is that there is no call to march on Jewish-owned businesses by any group of people.  But also worth knowing is that if indeed Jewish businesses were ever targeted by any group I would not be surprised to find the same human rights advocates who are marching against Israel today standing to defend the Jewish community’s right to live free of racism and intolerance.  These are the values held by the BDS movement:  non- violence, equality, justice for all and zero tolerance for all forms of racism and discrimination.  But you would never know that, if your primary source of information is The Australian newspaper.
 
- Samah Sabawi is a Palestinian writer and is Public Advocate for Australians for Palestine. She contributed this article to PalestineChronicle.com.

Source: http://palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=17063

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Grand Prize: The new Mercedes-Benz C-Class for a month

UAE student Marzouk Abu Madi?s wish to drive a brand new Mercedes-Benz C-Class for a month was granted last week, thanks to his @MercedesBenzME Twitter competition winning tweet on why he deserved to drive the latest version to graduate from the luxury German automotive manufacturer. 

UAE student Marzouk Abu Madi with the new Mercedes-Benz C-Class
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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/business/pr/grand-prize-new-mercedes-benz-c-class-month-390298

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OCI awarded US$ 181 million contract in Egypt

Orascom Construction Industries (OCI) has announced that it had been awarded the civil works package worth US$ 181 million for the 1,500 MW combined cycle power plant in Giza, Egypt. The project was awarded by the Cairo Electricity Production Company and is expected to be complete in approximately 32 months.

OCI is currently constructing several power plants in Egypt and Algeria with a total power generation capacity of 5,250 MW.

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/business/oci-awarded-us-181-million-contract-egypt-389564

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Heyliger breaks ground for storm water pump facilities

page1a084PHILIPSBURG-- Infrastructure Minister Theo Heyliger broke ground on Tuesday at one of the locations where one of three new storm water pump facilities will be stationed to handle flood water in the Philipsburg and surrounding areas.

Two of the new pumps will be located in a new pump house to be constructed at the Public Works work yard on Pond Island, and the third will replace the current pump in Sucker Garden. The first two pumps will be capable of pumping a maximum of 24,000 gallons of water per minute, and the third up to 50,000 gallons of water a minute.

When signing the NAf. 4.6 million contract with Smaal N.V. a few weeks ago, Heyliger stated that the primary goal of the project is to provide Sucker Garden, around the pond, Pond island and the Philipsburg area with a suitable and reliable storm water pumping facility within a relatively short period.

Heyliger said, "Although it is not ideal to be breaking ground in the middle of hurricane season, government has to contend with rules and regulations and had to wait until the 2011 budget was approved by the CFT [Committee for Financial Supervision-Ed.] before anything could be done."

He said that although he would prefer to spend 4.6 million on education and the like, protecting the community and in particular the capital, was of utmost importance considering the island's recent experiences with flooding.

The minister went on to commend the government personnel who keep the current pumps running, and singled out the late James Marlin who he said, "Kept St. Maarten safe for over 30 years."

Consultant and advisor to Smaal N.V. Willem Barendsen gave his assurance that the company would use local contractors on the project.

He encouraged schools and the community to make an effort to visit the project when the two main pipes are being welded together, he explained that a special welding machine, with a specialist, will be brought in to weld the major piping together, and that this would be quite an experience for the population to be part of.

Barendsen also told the gathering of an old tradition in Holland when the churches rang their bells when water levels were high. He presented Heyliger with a symbolic alarm bell, not to run around the island and ring, but rather as a gesture from Smaal in the effort to mitigate flooding with the new pumps.

The pumps will be manufactured overseas, and following that phase, the contractor will have 100 working days, after a mutually agreed upon starting date, to install the pipes and the pumps. The Sucker Garden pump will be the first to be installed as this area is priority.

It is expected that all pipes will be in place in three to four weeks when work starts. This will be followed by the construction of the building and basins. Two separate locations were selected for the pumps since moving water from the Western part of the salt pond to the Eastern side is always a challenge, because of the shallowness of the water and the fact that there exists minimal surface to run the water over.

Head of Maintenance at the Ministry of VROMI Claudius Buncamper said that with the start of the pump project, government is guaranteeing that all drainage water in the Great Salt Pond can be transported quickly to the sea.

"With the present upgrading of the various trenches in the various neighbourhoods, and the upgrading of the floodgate at the cottage roundabout, the movement of the run-off water will be able to be done smoothly," said Buncamper.

"With the additional upgrading plans to hard surface waterways, the transporting of the water from the fresh pond to the salt pond and into the sea must be guaranteed, and this will become reality once the pumps are operational in February 2012," he added.

Buncamper closed by thanking the engineers and personnel at VROMI who worked on the project, especially Olivia Lake, Davis Lejuez, Alfredo Pantophlet, chief diesel mechanic Marvin Brown and Edelmiro Jansen.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/19995-heyliger-breaks-ground-for-storm-water-pump-facilities.html

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Sarah urges community to help make school year ?a good one?

PHILIPSBURG--Prime Minister Sarah Wescot-Williams on Monday urged students to do their best and appealed to the community at large to help make the new school year "a good one."

In a back-to-school message, in which she described the start of this new school year as "a time of many emotions, in and out of school," she also made a special appeal to businesses to assist parents whenever possible to become more involved in their children's education.

"Allow me to firstly extend my best wishes to all students, teachers and parents for a very successful school year 2011-2012. While not everything is in our hands as a community, we can all contribute to making this school year a good one.

"For many students this will be a year of a new school or new classroom, new teacher(s) and some new acquaintances. In the case of the latter, you have the choice as students to choose who will be your friends. Do so carefully.

"Other students unfortunately are returning to repeat last year's programme. All students are encouraged to do their best, notwithstanding last year's results. If you closed off last year successfully, stay focused and do even better, if possible. If your results were discouraging, start the school year with a firm resolve to do better this year," she said.

The Prime Minister noted that parents are called on every year to make an extra effort to be involved in their children's education and she appealed to businesses to make this possible for their employees.

"Allow some flexibility in your workers' time, once it is for their children. I can't make this call without asking parents: If granted to use the time for the children, visit the school, talk to the teacher. I know most schools can be accessed online, but nothing like a personal visit or a call to your child's school," she said.

She continued: "School reopens at a time of several projects under execution. We are all inconvenienced, but it is a necessary inconvenience. It could mean adjusting your daily routine, leaving home earlier to reach to the school(s) and your work on time and planning your day with the traffic situation in mind."

"In addition to the work taking place on many of our main roads, government remains committed to spreading the concentration of schools we have in the St. Peters-South Reward area, as well as planning other road projects to and from that area of concentration.

"In the meantime, I ask that motorists show some consideration for fellow motorists, pedestrians and especially children, even if you are in a rush. If everyone 'gives a little,' we can reduce the individual frustrations that traffic inconveniences can create."

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/19722-sarah-urges-community-to-help-make-school-year-a-good-one.html

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Israel electricity prices rise over Egypt gas disruptions

Israel's finance ministry on Monday announced a 9.3 percent rise in the electricity price, citing disruptions in the gas supply from Egypt, even as Israelis protest nationwide over the cost of living. The treasury stressed that it had kept the increase as small as possible, cutting in half the 20 percent rise that had been expected. "Electricity will rise 9.3 percent primarily because of interruptions in the supply of Egyptian gas to electricity stations," finance ministry spokesman Boaz Stembler told AFP.

Israel's supply of gas from Egypt has been regularly disrupted since an uprising overthrew former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak in February
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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/israel-electricity-prices-rise-over-egypt-gas-disruptions-387913

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Rebel leader urges Gaddafi aides to kill him

The Libyan rebels on Wednesday declared a reward worth US$ 1.7 million to anyone who captures or kills Colonel Muammar Gaddafi. The offer was made by local businessmen, and the "Transitional National Council," the political body of the rebels, declared its support to this initiative.

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/news/rebel-leader-urges-gaddafi-aides-kill-him-389796

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8 dead in Peru after mini bus falls into canal

alt

8 people were killed and as many injured when a minibus toppled into a canal in Peru. Rescue personnel, divers and traffic police are on site.

Source: http://www.paltelegraph.com/world/world-news/9993-8-dead-in-peru-after-mini-bus-falls-into-canal.html

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Bombing outside of mosque rocks Baghdad

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Baghdad (Pal Telegraph) -- A suicide bombing rattled through a mosque in Iraq's capital Baghdad late on Sunday, killing 28 people and wounding at least 40 others, a local police source said.

Source: http://www.paltelegraph.com/world/middle-east/77-middle-east/9992-bombing-outside-of-mosque-rocks-baghdad.html

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Libya: Rebel leader fears of destabilization

The leader of Libya's rebel government warned on Thursday of dangerous destabilization in the country without urgent financial assistance from the West to restore services to the population. According to Reuters, Mahmoud Jibril spoke after meeting Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who said Rome had started unfreezing 350 million euros of Libyan funds in Italian banks to help the rebel government run the state affairs.

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� 2011 Al Bawaba (www.albawaba.com)

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Source: http://www.albawaba.com/news/rebel-leader-fears-destabilization-389949

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Positive outlook at MPC on first day

~ Students to be encouraged ~

SOUTH REWARD--Milton Peters College (MPC) officials had a positive outlook on the first day of the new school year on Monday with representatives of the school's three streams highlighting their intent to go the extra mile to motivate students to strive for excellence.

The island's largest high school welcomed more than 250 new students in the various streams on Monday. The students met their new teachers and mentors and some engaged in exercises to become familiarised with their peers as a means of starting the new year on the right track.

A total of 78 new students entered the PKL/PBL section. These former Sundial School students chose to follow the business or technical streams and were transferred.

PKL/PBL Head Vital Carty said that when his generation was growing up, self-motivation was high and youngsters in that generation saw excellence as the only option. However, he said that youths today needed to be motivated. He said there was a higher need today for educators to change their operating method and encourage youngsters to study more. "We have to show them that someone cares, because sometimes they don't get that at home," Carty told this newspaper shortly after welcoming his batch of students to the school.

"I want to encourage parents to also reach out to their kids and pull them up when it is needed. There are many students who just need that extra push."

Mark Soree, who heads the HAVO/VWO stream, said he would be maintaining the level of strictness in the stream and would encourage students to be more responsible.

He said students had to realise that the importance of adhering to deadlines and following rules, as this would help them when they left the school and embarked on their other challenges in life. He said students had to understand that, for example, there would be consequences if they didn't hand in a paper on time. A total of 51 new students joined HAVO/VWO this year.

He would also like students to become familiarised with the school and the relationships between the various subjects taught.

He also plans to continue to place heavy focus on the Dutch language, as this is always "a very difficult point." He said students generally spoke English in their home and social environments and only spoke Dutch while in the classroom. "They also have to sit their exams which are written in Dutch and they do it. We want to improve their Dutch, so students will be getting extra Dutch lessons and extra Dutch conversations."

With 125 new students joining the TKL stream, Head Silvia Carty has her hands full. "We are pretty maxed out," Carty said on Monday. "We are filled to the limit. We maybe have five more spaces," she said, referring to late registration.

An English teacher is still being sought for the TKL stream. Additionally three teachers are out on maternity leave and are expected back between this month and next month.

Silvia Carty remains positive in her outlook for the rest of the academic year. She said alternative arrangements had been made to alleviate the effects of the teacher shortage. "My expectations are positive. I expect to do better than last year," she stressed.

She plans to place emphasis on encouraging students to have a positive attitude towards themselves. "I want students to exude a positive attitude among themselves and we won't just be telling them this, but we also plan to show them. I want to create a sense of 'I want to achieve' among students," she said.

Silvia Carty said brainstorming sessions would be held on how this goal could be achieved and how everyone could support each other in the school and work as a team.

Source: http://www.thedailyherald.com/islands/1-islands-news/19723-positive-outlook-at-mpc-on-first-day-.html

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