MTC Official: “Kuwait Repels Investment”

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Saad Al-Barrak, MTC

  • The Kuwait Chamber of Commerce and Industry – publicly and privately – have been saying it for years.

  • The Parliament has been saying it for years.

  • Reformers and Economists (i.e. Jassim Al-Saadoun) have been saying it for years.

  • Kuwait companies have been saying it for years.

  • Foreign corporations have been saying it for years.

And now a major multinational corporation (MTC) is moving its headquarters out of Kuwait. Here’s a refreshingly candid and direct statement by Saad Al-Barrak, Deputy Chairman and Managing Director, MTC:

“The Kuwaiti business environment repels investment and the country’s laws are not good for a financial hub,”

Ouch.

Who is next? Agility? Global Investment?

Source: Arabian Business.


Technorati : Kuwait Commerce

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Quote Of The Day

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“It is better to deserve honors and not have them than to have them and not deserve them”

MARK TWAIN

State Security Arrest, Assault Blogger And Journalist – Kuwait Constitution Violated

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Jassim Al Qamis and Bashar Al-Sayegh (Still from Aljarida Newspaper)

21st August Update – Bashar Al-Sayegh was released this afternoon by the authorities. An English-language report can be found at Kuwait Times; Arab-language commentary and pictures can be found at Belkuwaiti Alfasih.
Yesterday was an ominous, dark day for Kuwait, its people and its Constitution.
Word has reached citizens that Kuwait State Security police have allegedly detained and assaulted Al Ommah blogger and Aljarida journalist Mr. Bashar Al-Sayegh, continuing to hold him accountable for an anonymous post lambasting HH The Amir (which Al-Sayegh quickly deleted from the Al Ommah domain before his arrest). Additionally, a journalist for Aljarida Newspaper, Mr. Jassim Al-Qamis was additionally arrested, attacked and detained for taking a picture of Al-Sayegh during his arrest at the premises of Aljarida Newspaper (owned by MP Mohamed Al-Saqer).
Writers and Bloggers are responsible for the content of their work. They should not and cannot be held responsible 24/7 for anonymous comments, however inflammatory or distasteful. Nevertheless, the issue is bigger than that, it is an arrest of a Blogger and his continued imprisonment, as well as any physical attacks that may have occurred on the Blogger and on the Al Jarida Journalist, clear violations of their individual and human rights, rights that should be guaranteed and protected by the Constitution.
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A Draft Of the Constitution Being Handed To It’s Architect, HH The Emir Sheik Abdulla Al-Salem (1962)

If the above information is factual then the actions of the State Security individuals were illegal, abhorrent to our principles and a clear violation of the following Kuwait Constitution clauses:

Article 31

No person shall be arrested, detained, searched or compelled to reside in a specified place, nor shall the residence of any person or his liberty to choose his place of residence or his liberty of movement be restricted, except in accordance with the provisions of law.

Article 32

No crime and no penalty may be established except by virtue of law, and no penalty may be imposed except for offences committed after the relevant law has come into force.

Article 34

An accused person is presumed innocent until proved guilty in a legal trial at which the necessary guarantees for the exercise of the right of defence are secured. The infliction of physical or moral injury on an accused person is prohibited.

Article 36

Freedom of opinion and of scientific research shall be guaranteed. Every person shall have the right to express and propagate his opinion verbally, in writing or otherwise, in accordance with the conditions and procedures specified by law.

Article 37

Freedom of the press, printing and publishing shall be guaranteed in accordance with the conditions and manner specified by law.

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The Kuwaiti Constitution guarantees our rights. It is the fabric that protects the community and its people, it is the fabric that guarantees basic human rights, individual rights and freedom of the press and it was the document that last year facilitated a peaceful transition of power from one ruler to the next. All of the Constitution must be respected and abided by at all times.
We are not a police state. We are not a violent country. What occurred should have never happened: two young Kuwaitis arrested without a warrant or court order and detained by State Security, with their families unaware of their surroundings, a horrible instance of deja-vu reminiscent of barbaric incidents during the Iraqi invasion, not the way Kuwait should be.
This is not an Islamist issue, this is not a Liberal issue, this is not a pro or anti-government issue. This is an issue that affects our rights as citizens, our identity and dignity and way of life.
We hope Mr. Sayegh returns to his family safe and sound.
Links:
The Kuwait Constitution (English)
Safat Square (Arabic)
Q8SWS (English)
K The Kuwaiti (English)

One Step Forward, Ten Steps Back

A bold initiative published in the local papers (“Kuwait To Grant Three Month Visit Visas“) was steamrolled by a smorgasbord of negative news this week, including the elimination of a clause requiring a foreign partner in helping establish the Third Telecom company (no BT, Etisalat or Verizon partner anytime soon); plans to scrap high school sex education curriculum (to be replaced with traffic courses!); potential plans for dozens of more roundabouts all over Kuwait (“to lessen accidents”, say the Traffic Czars – merde, I can barely deal with the Sheraton roundabout); tentative legislation disallowing foreigners from the right to invest in the stock market and real estate; the Ministry of Education’s continued resolve to push for the “Kuwaitization” of all private schools (thus dumbing them down to the level of government ones).

Oh, and Rush Hour 3 got thirty minutes chopped off at your local theatre. So basically you’re shelling out 2.500 KD to view a 1 hour film (no wonder piracy – including torrent downloads – are popular in Kuwait). Way to go people!

Old ‘Free Kuwait’ Poster

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It’s hard to believe it been almost 17 years since the invasion (and harder to believe it’s been that long since I was at University) but I found the above poster today – we were DC-based students working with Citizens For A Free Kuwait at the time.

We fought hard for the liberation, we went to war, we had high aspirations for rebuilding an even better Kuwait. We are still waiting.

‘Kuwait Health’ Blog

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The Kuwait Ministry Of Health

Anyone who has ever visited a hospital or health care institution in Kuwait knows we have serious issues that need to be dealt with as soon as possible: we don’t have enough beds, efficient doctors are quitting or going into exile, pharmacies run out of medicine, the ambulances are scarce, outdated and inneficient – and so on.

I would like to highlight an excellent Kuwaiti blog: Kuwait Health, which promotes constructive dialogue about health care in Kuwait via sharp and well-researched essays.

The website is run by Nadeem Al-Duaij, MD, Bibi Al-Ameeri, MD and Raed Hashem, MD.

They should be commended for focusing on this neglected sector.

Govt’s Attitude At Impending Water, Electricity Crisis

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‘A Call To Web Calls’ From Kuwait

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A CALL TO WEB CALLS
by Amer Al-Hilal
Reprinted from Arab Times (10th March, 2007)

The Kuwait Ministry of Communications apparently is not familiar with globalization, the shrinking ‘world village’ and the communications revolution sweeping the world. The bureaucratic, backward MOC mentality is stuck in a 1985 time warp. As reported the last few days, the Ministry of Communications has blocked Internet Telephony Services. One could see this particular train wreck coming ever since one of the MOC Under-Secretaries complained a few months ago of losing “20 million KD” in revenue per year due to the Net services.

But let us ponder the issue at hand what is KD 20 million to the MOC? Is this amount more important than allowing our expatriates and businesses to communicate in a swifter, less expensive manner via the net? The majority of citizens in Kuwait are expatriates, and many of them rely on services like Net To Phone because they cannot pay the exorbitant prices by the MOC. These tactics by the MOC are akin to Mafia extortion tactics (arrests, intimidation, blocked sites), forcing citizens to use high cost, sub par services. We are dealing with basic human rights here, the right to communicate with family and friends and not pay outrageous prices.

I am positive tens of millions more get wasted due to corruption and mismanagement at the MOC. The Kuwait international rates are among the highest in the Middle East and the world, technology is catching up; internet telephony services are one day going to make charges obsolete, so the MOC needs to ‘get with the program’ : preparing itself for its essential and eventual transformation from a traditional, bloated, pedantic government bureaucracy to an “Authority” that provides services and quality control.

Thousands of people are moving away from landlines (part of a global trend) and obtaining mobile numbers (they are the real MOC revenue-killer) – does the MOC intend to sue Wataniya and MTC as well?

Former MOC Minister Masouma Mubarak should have spent more time attempting to ‘fix’ Kuwait Airways (which is now being sued by 17 stranded passengers in Thailand) than trying to milk every last cent out of poor expatriates and citizens attempting to communicate with others via the Net (I sincerely look forward to a high-tech, pioneering technocrat being offered the MOC portfolio, not Ms. Mubarak again). I also hope expatriates and their representatives in Kuwait help pressure the MOC to revers its course.

For a ministry that has proclaimed its willingness to ‘reform,’ ‘modernize’ and avail Kuwait of the latest technological developments in the Communications field, it has failed miserably to keep up with modern trends, limit ISP charges and upgrade its digital and broadband services to be on par with most modern states. The MOC needs to move away from its bureaucratic, inefficient and intrusive Orwellian world into the 21st century.

The Return

Back from a one week trip (hence the dead blog – apologies to my regulars).

I decided during my trip this time to avoid wireless spots, avoid checking emails (work and personal) and to basically just shut everything out.

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I recharged my batteries: watched decent unedited movies in plush, state of the art theatres; enjoyed ethnic food at a multitude of establishments; stocked up on books and DVDs and enjoyed the casual coffee and a good read at places like “Borders.” (I used to take this stuff for granted when I lived in the West).

I arrive in Kuwait and find out we have Bird Flu cases and all hell is breaking loose (It doesn’t surprise me knowing how lax we are and how ‘wasta’ can facilitate the import of practically any type of bird).

I find out the government intends to resign.

I then encounter 350 emails, 85% of which deal with viagra, breast augmentation and enlarging cobblers.

I’m like…what else is new?

Oh, by the way,,,

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…It’s the one year anniversary of ‘Hilaliya.’