Gulf in the News – July 31, 2013

Two petitions filed against poll results

Source: Kuwait Times (Read full story)

Petitions against the results of parliamentary election began rolling yesterday with two candidates challenging the results as head of the judicial committee that supervised the polls insisted the election process was seamless. Candidates from the Fifth Constituency former MP Abdullah Mahdi Al-Ajmi challenged the results in his constituency on the grounds that his name was not printed on the list of candidates in the districts and that judges supervising the process had to write his name on the list. Newcomer Saud Al-Subaie also challenged the outcome on the basis of allegations that there were irregularities in counting the votes that allotted some of his votes to other candidates.

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The Way Forward in Egypt

July 19, 2013 briefing in the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington, DC on “The Way Forward in Egypt.”

On July 19, 2013, the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations and the U.S.-GCC Corporate Cooperation Committee hosted a briefing on “The Way Forward in Egypt” featuring Professor Karim Haggag, Visiting Professor, Near East South Asia Center for Strategic Studies and Former Director, Egyptian Press and Information Office in Washington, DC; Ms. Randa Fahmy Hudome, Board Member, National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations and General Counsel, American Egyptian Strategic Alliance; Dr. Marina Ottaway, Senior Scholar, Middle East Program, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars; and Dr. Diane Singerman, Associate Professor, School of Public Affairs, American University. Dr. John Duke Anthony, Founding President & CEO, National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations, served as moderator.

A podcast of the program is available through the link below as well as in iTunes with recordings of other National Council programs: http://bit.ly/itunes-ncusar.

“The Way Forward in Egypt” podcast (.mp3)

Gulf in the News – July 29, 2013

Cabinet resigns, new Assembly meets Aug 6

Source: Kuwait Times (Read full story)

The Cabinet yesterday submitted its resignation to HH the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah following the National Assembly election as required under the Kuwaiti constitution. The announcement came after the Cabinet held an extraordinary session to assess the outcome of the polls. It also approved an Amiri decree setting Aug 6 as the date for the Assembly to convene for the first time. The Amir later in the day issued the decree.

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Gulf in the News – July 26, 2013

Rockets hit UAE’s mission to Libya

Source: The National (Read full story)

The UAE Embassy in Libya was hit by two rocket-propelled grenades in a terror attack yesterday. The Assistant Foreign Minister for Security and Military Affairs, Faris Al Mazrouei, confirmed the incident to the state news agency Wam, but stressed no one was injured in the 5am assault. “An attack happened this morning on the Emirati embassy. There are no casualties,” Libyan interior ministry spokesman Rami Kaal said yesterday.  Mr Al Mazrouei said the embassy was helping Libyan investigators try to identify the culprits. Libyan security sources were quoted by Al Arabiya television as saying the rockets were aimed at the residence of the ambassador, Brig Gen Mohammed Al Kaabi.

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Gulf in the News – July 25, 2013

West-GCC alliance Tested in Syria as Iran-Syria Alliance Proves Firm

Source: INEGMA (Read full story)

The GCC has announced its full support to the Syrian revolution and some Gulf countries are providing funds and arms to the rebels. GCC assistance is what helped the rebels stay in the fight and not the empty promises from European capitals and Washington. Now the West speaks about the threat of Al-Qaeda and fundamentalist groups that infiltrated the Syrian rebels and caution about arms falling into the “wrong hands.” But they forget that the absence of genuine military aid from so-called allies to the rebels was what created the vacuum of support which the extremist groups where more than glad to fill in Syria.

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Gulf in the News – July 24, 2013

Congress, Obama at odds over new Iran sanctions

Source: Kuwait Times (Read full story)

Despite wide bilateral support in Congress for tougher sanctions, some Democrats and Republicans are embracing the administration’s cautious approach. In a letter last week to Obama, 18 GOP House members joined more than 100 of their Democratic colleagues in urging the president to “reinvigorate US efforts to secure a negotiated nuclear agreement” and give Rouhani a chance. Rouhani’s election clearly has bolstered hope of compromise. A former nuclear negotiator and relatively moderate cleric, Rouhani has suggested a more accommodating approach than his predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. However, Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has final say on nuclear issues.

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Gulf in the News – July 23, 2013

Oman marks Renaissance Day

Source: Gulf News (Read full story)

It has been a long 43-year journey in which Sultan Qaboos Bin Saeed has transformed Oman into a modern state. To mark the new beginning under Qaboos Omanis celebrate July 23 as Renaissance Day. When Qaboos, a graduate of the Sandhurst military academy, acceded to the throne on July 23, 1970, the country had only three schools, two hospitals and just about 10km of roads. He first changed the country’s name from the Sultanate of Muscat and Oman to the Sultanate of Oman and embarked on the task of ending the country’s isolation. Qaboos used the country’s oil revenues to modernise the nation while maintaining the country’s rich culture and heritage.  Today the country has over 1,000 schools and every region has a health centre and hospitals in every major town.

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Gulf in the News – July 22, 2013

Iran’s Bushehr nuclear plant a threat to Gulf water plans

Source: The Peninsula (Read full story)

In the near-absence of natural water resources, the GCC states depend almost entirely for potable water on the shallow sea, whose water they desalinate at huge costs. In that sense, and also because the GCC’s oil and gas exports are shipped through the Gulf, this shallow body of water is the lifeline of these countries and their people. The GCC states, with their economies collectively worth a whopping $1.5tn, are mulling a joint water supply system that takes seawater for desalination from outside the Gulf, media reports say. The Arabian Gulf is a relatively small body of seawater, 249 square kilometres in area; the widest stretch being 338km while the narrowest, the Strait of Hormuz, is barely 56km wide. The Gulf waters are deeper towards the Iranian coast — the average depth being 90 to 100 metres.

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