5.12.07

Research freedom?

In today's Kuwait Times...
Controversial research paper
KUWAIT: Officials from the Ahmadi security directorate summoned two students who wrote a controversial research paper stating that Kuwait was a part of Iraq. The two students were asked to make a research paper about Kuwait and the students wrote a paper about how Kuwait was part of Iraq. Upon reading the paper, the teacher handed it to the Ministry of Education who in turn handed it to the Ahmadi security directorate. The students told security officials that they had paid a man to write the paper for them and that they had no idea what was stated in the paper. The man who wrote the paper is now being summoned by security officials and the investigation is ongoing.
... where I come from the controversial bit would be the fact that students got someone else to write their research paper for them! Not so, in this part of the world... almost a fact of life I'm afraid, and its reflected in the Kuwaiti workplace.

So are security officials going to come after me if I were to research the pros and cons of Kuwait being a part of Iraq? This kind of reminds me of the (over)reaction of certain people to cartoons, or the recent naming of a teddybear...

21.9.07

Briton loses his cool - that's illegal!

Someone lost his cool recently when running into officialdom...

Briton vents fury on govt, Kuwaiti laws

KUWAIT CITY: A British citizen working for a local company allegedly abused and bad-mouthed a staff member of the Hawalli Pollution Testing Center after the latter told him that his car needed repairs.

Reportedly, the British man, accompanied by four semi-clad women, went to the Hawalli center to get his car checked. A staff member after checking the car told him that his car needed repairs and that he should come back after getting the repair job done.

This infuriated the British man and he started abusing the staffer, Kuwait and Kuwaiti laws loudly in public. Sources say the staffer warned that it was illegal to speak in such a manner but the accused did not heed him and drove off angrily.

The staffer noted the number plate of the car and reported the incident to his higher-ups. Securitymen found that the accused was working for a local company and sources say due legal action will be taken against him. 'Nobody is above the law and everybody should respect the laws of the country,' they added.

By Munaif Naif
Special to the Arab Times

Nobody is above the law... Yeah right. When the whole country runs on wasta it means that if you have the right wasta you are above the law. Period.

I don’t know any of the players in this incident, so this is just pure speculation, but I wouldn’t be surprised if there was nothing wrong with the car in question, and the Pollution tester was just being an ass and picking on someone to justify his existence. How many times in Kuwait do you see that? Maybe he was jealous of the four scantily clad ladies... what, they didn’t have abayas on? Maybe they were showing off some flabby white-skinned arms?

What exactly did the Britisher say that was illegal? That the jobsmith’s mother wore combat boots in bed? That corruption is so pervasive in Kuwait that you now have to bribe someone to pass a car pollution test? That Kuwait is a hell-hole, and that the Kuwaiti laws are an ass? Yeah, well there are probably lots of westerners that would agree with him on that. Not many would waste time on taking legal action... all it means is that the side with the biggest wasta wins. For the Britisher it means he better have a really good relationship with most senior Kuwaiti in his organisation if he wants to stay on in Kuwait. So either the Britisher will be fined/imprisoned/kicked out of the country, or it will be quietly swept under the carpet.

Round up all the expats and test 'em

That's right, blame the expats for the nation's ills. This was reported in the Arab Times, 18th September...
Rise in disease seen; ‘Check expats for AIDS, hepatitis’
KUWAIT CITY: The Ministry of Health (MoH) has instructed all ministries to send all their expatriate employees to the General Medical Board to ensure that they are free of AIDS, Hepatitis B and C and Pulmonary Tuberculosis, say reliable sources in the ministry. Reportedly, this precautionary measure is being taken to protect citizens and expatriates from contagious diseases as ministry employees come in direct contact with thousands of people daily.
Statistics compiled by the ministry show that there has been a rise of expatriates suffering from the aforesaid ailments despite the fact that they undergo necessary medical check-ups in their respective countries. Sources suspect that many expatriates produce fake medical reports before entering Kuwait.
By Abdul Rahman Al-Shimmari - Special to the Arab Times

What is this brainfart by the Ministry of Health? All expats coming to Kuwait for work undergo these tests on arriving in Kuwait anyway, even after they’ve already done the same tests in their home countries. Furthermore, the same tests are often undertaken if the expat changes employer. So whether or not the medical reports in the home countries are faked or not is irrelevant.

Do Kuwaiti staff have to undertake these tests??

I don’t disagree that there may be a huge problem with these diseases in Kuwait, but you have to look at the underlying reasons why that is so. The fact is that Kuwait is addicted to importing cheap foreign labour to do all the menial work in the country. The vast majority of this forced labour live in unsanitary conditions in labour camps, more akin to concentration camps - not really conducive to keeping a clean bill of health. And then as they are unable to lead normal family lives as they scrimp and save to send their earnings home to their families, if they get paid, many single men (or married men without their wives) may get involved in spending their spare dinars on “professionals” when they can’t resist their sexual urges, which would certainly not help the cause of restricting HIV cases. (And there’s always a ready supply of runaway maids that are eager to better their lot, or are forced into it – but that’s another issue).

So let’s see how we can solve this problem. Providing high quality labour accommodation is a start. Allowing foreign workers to bring their families is another basic human right. In fact, improving human rights of all imported workers and stopping the unscrupulous companies and agencies in the human trafficking trade would be beneficial in many ways. It would reduce the need to resort to crime for a start. How many labourers are either left on the streets to fend for themselves, or are treated from their employers in such a demeaning manner, that they don’t feel too bad at getting their own back on the employers or the country/system that allows this to happen!

21.8.07

Modern day slavery

Arab Times today has this wee gem reproduced below.

Expatriates bondsmen: ILO; End sponsorship system soon, GCC warned

KUWAIT CITY: The International Labor Organization (ILO) has criticized GCC countries for their sponsorship system and is planning to come up with an alternative procedure for the recruitment of expatriate workers, says Al-Rai. ILO described the sponsorship system as “an old model from the era of slavery,” saying “this allows sponsors to control their expatriate workers.” A reliable source said the existing sponsorship system has many negative points which make GCC countries a target of ILO’s criticisms, adding “although ILO has repeatedly asked GCC countries to change this system the latter have been remaining silent on this issue.” ILO has warned GCC states that the current system violates the rights of expatriate workers and leads to “Iqama trafficking” where expatriates are forced to buy residence permits to get jobs, he noted.

The source also said “ILO feels the sponsorship system is affecting the economy of GCC states by doubling the number of unwanted expatriate labourers who enter the job market by purchasing residence permits.” Claiming ILO has warned GCC countries that their membership in the organization will be suspended if they do not scrap the sponsorship system, the source said “the international organization has also cautioned GCC states that they will be placed in the list of countries which violate International Labor Law in the next ILO meeting scheduled to be held in Geneva in June 2008.”

Yes, the sponsorship system is "an old model from the era of slavery", but that's because slavery in everything but name still exists. Good to see that the ILO is getting a little closer to calling a 'spade' a spade.

Anyways, must toodle doo and buy me a maid...


Freedoms tested as journo jailed

Well it seems like the proverbial is hitting the fan - see article below reproduced from Kuwait Times today, and the word is out in the blogosphere. Hopefully the message is getting through that the State (In)Security Police need to toe the line and uphold the laws of the State... For Bashar and Jassem's sakes I hope the publicity of their experiences produces reform. It is worth noting that this is only one of many unpublicised cases. Bravo guys for standing up and not being intimated.
Headline News
Freedoms tested as journo jailed
Published Date: August 21, 2007
By Nawara Fattahova, Staff writer

KUWAIT: A Kuwaiti journalist remained in detention yesterday after being transferred from State Security to the Public Prosecution. Bashar Al-Sayegh was arrested by state security officials Saturday evening over comments insulting to HH the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmed Al-Sabah which were posted on Sayegh's personal website www.alommah.org. Late Monday evening, more than a hundred protestors comprising journalists, human rights activists, MPs and others converged at the premises of the National Democratic Coalition in Rawda in a unanimous show of solidarity against the actions of the state security forces.

The comments on Sayegh's were posted anonymously and according to reports, deleted by Sayegh 15 minutes after going live. Sayegh, a senior editor with Al-Jarida, provided the IP address of the anonymous poster to state security, but is now being investigated by the public prosecution. Sayegh is also a member the National Democratic Coalition. Rumors suggested that he had gone on a hunger strike but this could not be confirmed. Al-Jarida is owned by liberal MP Mohammad Al-Saqer.

A second Al-Jarida journalist, Jassem Al-Qames, was also taken into custody Saturday in front of the newspaper's headquarters. According to Al-Jarida, Qames tried to stop the arrest of -Sayegh, not knowing that the men, who were in civilian clothing, were from State Security. He then took photographs of the arrest, triggering his own detention. "When I took pictures, six detectives rushed to me and detained me. Then they pushed me towards three cars of state security," said Qames. He asked for their credentials, but according to him, they refused.

Qames claimed in the paper that the detectives assaulted him in the car on the way to state security headquarters in South Surra. He said the detectives took his mobile phone, camera, and wallet and before they arrived, one of detectives forced him to take off his shirt, then twisted it around his eyes and face. At the headquarters, he was taken into a room and interrogated, slapped and insulted and shouted at. Al-Qames said he was forced to sign a document with his fingerprints, even though he was blindfolded. He was released yesterday.

The speakers attending the protest in Rawda expressed their anger and dissent against the policies and maltreatment of the journalists by state security detectives. All of them demanded the immediate release of Sayegh and also agreed to unmask the person responsible for posting the insulting comment online.

MP Ahmad Al-Saadoun expressed his fears on the treatment meted towards young men involved in crimes at the hands of state security detectives. "I call for eliminating the State Security Department. We must find out who was behind this arrest, and he must be punished. We will not accept a repetition of this crime in the future. We must fight corruption," he charged.

Qames, the journalist who was released yesterday, didn't describe the details of his arrest at the gathering. "They released me in the heat without my mobile and just said "go". I was kidnapped by professional bandits who brought me to the State Security Department with my eyes blindfolded. They beat me up and told me that they had also brought Bashar's personal effects there. They thought they could threaten me so I wouldn't talk. They were wrong. I can now say whatever I want, and all these people here will support me," he said.

Qames also mentioned the plight of bedoons and even Kuwaitis arrested by the State Security Department. "They don't have anybody to ask about them. They have no protection and most of them are treated in the most inhumane way. I also was arrested in an illegal way, for just taking a photograph of the illegal arrest. We hope Bashar will be released tomorrow, and he will tell us the details," he added.

MP Ahmad Al-Mulaifi, who had just arrived in Kuwait, was shocked by the terrifying news of the arrest of the two journalists. "I'm disappointed with our present situation. Kuwait has always been known for its democracy and freedom of the media. We could criticize the parliament, the government and even our sheikhs. All our neighbors in the GCC countries used to look up on us as the ideal model of freedom. Now they consider us as a bad example," he pointed out.

He also highlighted the importance of punishing those responsible. "I know the detectives were employees and doing their work, but they will still be held responsible in the way they executed their duties. The Minister of Interior is to be held responsible for this action, and he must be held accountable for insulting Jassem and Bashar. Today I want to direct a message to the minister: Take care, you crossed the red line. We must all fight in upholding the respect of the constitution," he warned.

Kuwait's blogosphere was alive with debate and commentary about the arrests. In both Arabic and English, bloggers voiced fears of a crackdown on their freedoms of speech and protested the detentions.

The Kuwait Society for Human Rights (KSHR) issued a statement condemning the assault and detention of the journalists. "We live in a state that is governed by laws and has a clear and straightforward constitution that bans such practices, according to Article 31," said the statement, adding that the article states that, "no subject is to be arrested, detained, inspected nor his liberty to live or move around, should be violated unless in accordance to law".

The statement stressed that KSHR does not call for leniency with those jeopardizing the state's security nor violating its laws; it rather emphasizes adhering to rules, laws and regulations mentioned in Kuwait's constitution. "Law enforcers should stick to the authorities invested in them," the statement said. (Hussain Al-Qatari contributed to this report)

20.8.07

Kuwait State (In)Security Police at it again

Kuwait State Security Arrest, Assault Blogger And Journalist - Kuwait Constitution Violated... with highly intelligent people like these in the secret police, Kuwait is becoming a scarier place.

These links say it all really...
Hilaliya
She's still writing
Shaikha Bibi
K the Kuwaiti
Intlxpatr
248am

16.8.07

And the MoSA&L keeps their head firmly buried in the sand...

Whilst it's left to philanthropists and the Reverend to help those who have been pushed off the cliff, those who pushed them off the cliff don’t even get their names dragged through the press, and in a mishmash of metaphors, the band plays on (in this case the Ministry that could do something and take some responsibility, continues to do nothing). The latest instalment from this ongoing saga in today's Arab Times...

Stranded workers run into problems with ‘new firm’; ‘We are being exploited’

KUWAIT CITY: Some of the stranded Bangladeshi workers who were provided jobs by a local company on Wednesday claimed that the company was exploiting them by making them work around the clock without any benefits. According to the workers, two representatives of the new company assaulted some of the workers after the latter refused to work for more than 12 hours for KD 20 salary. It may be recalled some 90 Bangladeshi workers were given jobs as cleaners at a Co-op by a company and had promised to provide jobs for the rest of the workers in the next few days. On Wednesday, out of the 90 workers, 70 did not report to work and will continue to do so unless the company pays them overtime with a short break after every 7 hours.

Utilized
Expressing happiness over the donation of two drinking water coolers by a philanthropist on Wednesday, the workers thanked the donor and said that the coolers in question are now being utilized by workers from other companies as well. Some 1,300 Bangladeshi cleaners employed with a local company have complained of unpaid wages and deplorable living conditions at their accommodation in Hassawi. Of the 1,300 workers, some 200 female cleaners were evicted by a court order from their apartments on Monday, and have now been provided accommodation in Mahboula. On the other hand, the male workers continue to defy the eviction order and have vowed not to vacate their apartments unless all their dues are settled by the company.

According to the workers, the new company did not allow them to return to their accommodation to freshen up despite numerous requests and in stead made them work for 48 hours at a stretch. The crestfallen workers observed that the company was not giving them overtime for the extra hours worked, adding: “We were told by the new company officials that we would be given overtime but when we started work, the company officials refused and assaulted our fellow workers when they demanded their rights.” Elaborating further, the workers noted that many of the workers are ready to return home provided their company shoulders the repatriation cost in addition to paying fines in relation to their expired residencies.

Punches
Noting that the new company had embarked on a programme of harassment, a cleaner told the Arab Times that a supervisor at the company threw several punches at him for refusing to work for more than 12 hours. Articulating disappointment at the turn of events, the workers noted that they thought their saga had ended after starting work for the new firm and blamed the company for going back on its commitments. “We request the new company to treat us in a humane manner. A majority of the workers are disappointed and just want to return home. We request Reverend Andy Thompson to help us return home. He has done a lot for us and continues to do so and we will never forget his noble deeds.” Some 30 cleaners are awaiting deportation after the company had them arrested allegedly for inciting their colleagues to go on strike. The company has refused to bear the repatriation cost.

By Francis A. Clifford Cardozo
Arab Times Staff

Shares off limits to Expats!

According to today's Kuwait Times....

Shares off limits to expats

KUWAIT: The Ministry of Trade and Industry issued a legislation prohibiting expatriates from buying or selling shares listed at the Kuwait Stock Exchange. They said buying and selling shares listed on KSE could only be done by Kuwaiti citizens at the moment. A number of expatriates however expressed their regret over the decision as their interests and investments worth millions of dinars were frozen in the process. Officials meanwhile said that the decision had been taken a long time ago but was made effective just last Tuesday.

Well who's crazy enough to buy shares on the KSE anyway, unless you're participating in insider trading like everyone else! This country is a joke.

31.7.07

No comment

The long running saga continues...
Kuwaiti legal firm offers to help Bangladeshi cleaners; ‘Integrity being sacrificed for profit’

KUWAIT CITY: The stranded Bangladeshi cleaners have a reason to smile after weeks of gloom, as a local firm has offered them free legal assistance in an effort to help them secure their rights, including unpaid wages for eight months. Hashem Majed, the Chairman of Al-Huqooq International Company, accompanied by a team of lawyers visited the workers’ accommodation on Sunday and gave a patient hearing to the grievances of the cleaners before donating them food supplies. Expressing shock and outrage over the despicable living conditions of the workers, Majed went on to explain that he would make all-out efforts to resolve the problems of the workers in a speedy manner and that he has instructed his lawyers to immediately initiate the legal proceedings. Some 1,300 Bangladeshis employed with a local cleaning company are on an indefinite strike to protest non-payment of wages, inhumane living conditions in addition to their expired residencies. According to the workers, they will not call off the strike unless all their demands are met.

Majed told the Arab Times that integrity is being sacrificed by some at the altar of profit and that the authorities should be held accountable for having let things come to such a pass. Berating the mistreatment of the workers, Majed noted: “I am deeply disturbed to see the horrible living conditions of the workers, and it is equally disturbing to see a few unscrupulous local companies tarnishing the image of the country. These workers are being treated as if they are cattle.” “While we often brag about the rapid progress Kuwait is making in various fields...here are people who have no access to clean drinking water and living in quarters that are not even fit for animal habitation. How can some people be so cold-hearted?” Majed asked. Majed observed that during his meeting with some of the workers on Sunday he asked them to list their priorities. “I was touched when the workers told me that their most pressing need was legal assistance. I asked them to explain to me the logic behind this idea, and they said that the legal assistance was a priority because they wanted to put an end to this long-standing dispute as soon as possible and wanted to return home.” Majed said he has no magic wand to solve the dispute and that he would coordinate efforts with various authorities to address the problems of the workers in the shortest time possible. Al-Huqooq has been at the forefront in safeguarding rights of workers and has provided legal and other assistance to many stranded workers of various nationalities.

Responded
It may be noted that the Arab Times readers have responded positively to the food pleas of the workers published in the newspaper, and have been providing them food aid since then. Reverend Andy Thompson on Saturday accompanied by some volunteers visited the accommodation of the workers and delivered second batch of food aid. When the Arab Times contacted Majed to seek pro bono legal help for the workers, he immediately agreed to the proposal. Majed went on to explain that the Ministry of Social Affairs should establish courts wherein labour disputes involving large group of workers can be resolved in a quick fashion. He added that when a case is filed at the Ministry of Social Affairs by workers it often takes as many as two months to get a hearing date. “During this period, if a worker is arrested at a checkpoint, then he faces deportation. In short, it is very essential that both the ministry of social affairs and the interior ministry coordinate on this issue in order to help people who may be victims,” he added. According to Majed, domestic workers in the country are better off as compared to those employed as cleaners in the private sector. “The domestic workers have a minimum wage of KD 40, in addition to free food and accommodation, not to mention free air passage every two years,” he added.

He said often many cleaning companies stipulate higher salary in the work contract in order to secure contracts from the government and that when the worker arrives in the country he is only paid between KD 20 and KD 25 instead of KD 50 or KD 60 stipulated in the contract. Majed observed that the ministry of social affairs should step up efforts in order to stop such malpractices and take strong action against errant firms to set a precedent. He also went on to explain that the ministry of social affairs and labour should regularly inspect accommodation of workers to ensure that it is habitable. Noting that low-income workers were often being blamed for surge in crimes by the authorities, he said that this segment of workers cannot be blamed because factors such as poor salaries, unpaid wages, among others were turning them into criminals.

“I, for one, blame the government for not addressing the problems faced by cleaning workers. If workers are paid decent salaries and in a timely manner, then the crime graph will obviously witness a decline. How can you expect someone to survive with a monthly income of as low as KD 20?. The government should take concrete measures to tackle this issue at the grass root level.” To a question as to how long it would take for the Labour Court to issue a verdict in this particular case, Hashem said he cannot give a timeframe but would make efforts to secure the rights of the workers as soon as possible and that he has full faith the Kuwaiti legal system. He said that the company must pay the workers all their dues and renew their residencies or repatriate them at its own cost.

By Francis A. Clifford Cardozo
Arab Times Staff

Here, here! Kuwait could do with a few more Hashem Majeds.

4.7.07

Welcome to Hell

1300 unpaid Bangladeshi cleaners continue their stand for justice, as reported in today's Arab Times...

End strike or face ‘serious’ consequences, workers told; ‘Welcome to Hell’

KUWAIT CITY: The striking Bangladeshi cleaning workers have been asked by their company management to call off their strike forthwith failing which they would face serious consequences, workers informed the Arab Times on Tuesday. Some 1,300 workers employed with a leading cleaning company went on strike last
month to protest non-payment, their expired residencies, among other grievances.
The distressed workers observed that two officials of the company paid a visit to their living quarters in Hassawi a few days ago and asked them resume their duties immediately, thereby promising to pay them KD 10 each as temporary compensation. “We demanded to know from the officials whether the company would settle all our dues if we call off the strike, and they said the company would look into the matter and take a decision soon. The workers had earlier vowed that they would not go back to work unless all their demands were met. The workers said that the company officials also warned them that they would be thrown out of their accommodation if they do not end the strike in the next few days. Some 300 female Bangladeshi cleaners employed with a local company on Sunday complained of non-payment and ill-treatment by their company.
The workers, who have not received their salaries for over eight months are drawing a monthly salary of KD 25 each and came to Kuwait some three years ago. Another problem plaguing the workers is that their residencies have not been renewed by the company. “The company is trying to pull out all stops to compel us to go back to work. But we have informed the company about our demands and we reiterate that unless those demands are met in their entirety there is no chance of ending our strike,” the workers added. According to the workers, the embassy has been lackadaisical about their problem and was not doing enough to resolve the protracted and bitter dispute that has been plaguing the workers for the past few months. The embassy was quick to reiterate that it was doing everything in its capacity to resolve the problem of the workers in a swift manner. The First Secretary at the Bangladesh Embassy, Shariar Siddiky, told the Arab Times that the Assistant Undersecretary at the Ministry of Social Affairs and Labour has urged the Labour Court to expedite efforts to settle the case of the workers as soon as possible.

Help
The workers have called upon philanthropists and others to come forward and help them by donating food and other much needed items. “We do not seek monetary assistance but food items just to keep us going.
Some of us were eating only one meal a day and sometimes we go to sleep on empty stomachs.”Moved by the plight of the workers, a charitable organization had sent them rice, sugar, chicken etc but the supplies ran out last week. “Welcome to Hell,” That’s how some workers greeted this reporter when he visited their living quarters on Tuesday. Upon visiting some of the accommodation units, it was found that they were not equipped with air conditioners and most bathrooms were poorly maintained. One room was shared by 10 workers even as most rooms were infested with cockroaches. The staircases were filled with all sorts of filth while parts of the false ceiling of most rooms had fallen off. Some workers who were detained last month by police for allegedly inciting other workers to go on strike continue to languish in jails and the workers have expressed concern over their continued detention.


This ongoing saga is continuing with no end in sight. Surely, naming and shaming the businessman concerned, or at least threatening to name and shame, would have some impact here on seeing justice done. Or is he above the law, like Mr. Fawaz Khalid Al Marzouq, as the teacher, Katherine Phillips has discovered. Even if Sheikh Jaber Al-Mubarak Al-Hamad Al-Sabah, First Deputy Premier, Minister of Interior and Minister of Defence says nobody is above the law, when he talks of allowing police to arrest a fellow royal... Or maybe the 7,981 residence law violators who corrected their status and the 28,428 people who left the country during the recent two month amnesty period were not enough to rid Kuwait of Bangladeshis.

30.5.07

Kuwait restricts visit visas to wives and kids

Today's Kuwait Times...


Visit visas only for wives, kids

Published Date: May 30, 2007
KUWAIT: In a surprise decision, the Interior Ministry informed directors of Immigration Departments in the six governorates not issue visit visas to families of expatriates except for their wives and children, reported Al-Rai.

Informed sources said the new decision annuls all previous decisions that allowed an expat to invite his parents, siblings, children of siblings and in-laws on a visit visa for a month.

The sources said the verbal instructions also called for strict measures in
granting visit visas to the wives and children of residents of eight nationalities - Iraq, Iran, Syria, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Somalia, Pakistan and surprisingly, Egypt. Sources lamented the new decision is not in favor of economic revival.

Aaah, you see, the sources are making an assumption that economic revival is good. How many decisions in Kuwait are taken to bring about economic revival? Even the proposed change to a Friday/Saturday weekend is being opposed by the National Assembly because it's seen as imitating the Jews.

This press announcement is so typically rascist and sexist - what happen's if a female executive wants to bring her husband or children to Kuwait! (I guess that's viewed as haram - why would a women be allowed to travel or live elsewhere from her husband!)

So, sorry ma and pa, if you wanted to visit the tourist mecca of Kuwait! It is now official, Kuwait does not want tourists. And it was doing so well too... after abandoning the torturous process for obtaining tourist visas about 3 years ago and finally allowed some nationalities to be granted visas on arrival.

Is the Minister of Interior, Sheikh Jaber al Mubarak al Hamad al Sabah (also the First Deputy Prime Minister) aware what his underlings are doing to destroy what little credibility Kuwait has in the world?

28.5.07

Modern day slavery

Modern day slavery

Published Date: May 28, 2007 By Fouad Al-Obaid
In an era where slavery is supposed to have long been forgone as an acceptable practice, I am shocked at the fact that today in Kuwait, despite humanitarian practices and international laws, we are still confronted with this issue (forced labor and a modern form of slavery).

What many people here consider as domestic servants; drivers, maids, cooks, as well as other employees of the sort, end up being subjects to harsh living conditions and a meager pay, certainly not enough for the work they put in.

The fact is there are no laws to set a minimum wage nor one to deal with minimum working standards: standards that would precise the working condition, the hours, the pay, the rests, the holidays and the obligations of the employer.

With the latter being quasi non-existent, I sometimes wonder why other people have a hard time understanding the causes that lead many domestics to commit various vices, most of the time they are not out of pleasure, rather they are merely the result of the living conditions and treatment that the domestics are subject to.

Stories of maids taking out their anger on their "masters" weakest link -- their children -- are not unheard of for the single reason that the "masters" treat them as slaves and expect them to say thank you!

What is troubling is that in most of these cases, the domestic are always believed to be mad or happen to be suffering from psychological disorders and only commit such crimes out of madness! Yet I for one beg to question, what is it that pushed such domestics to commit such crimes?

My personal hypothesis on the matter is that if such domestics are at the receiving end of perhaps daily insults, of degradations of all sorts, of deprivations, of punishments, and of long working days with little breaks, then perhaps if the latter happens to be the case I understand that the end result of such treatment can only be a rage of outburst on the part of the domestic that would want to avenge the feeling of injustice that such a person has underwent.

I guess that it is perfectly natural to lose reason if one ends up being put under stress for a prolonged period of time. I certainly know that I would not tolerate such treatment without up one day ending going mad myself!

What many deplorably fail to understand is that we are all human beings. Albeit our skin color, race, and ethnicities differ, we are all fundamentally the same. We all have hopes, dreams and ambitions. Do people seriously think that people actually enjoy cleaning up after someone else's mess? Are people naïve or are they simply racist and believe in race superiority, or perhaps that due to our current wealth, we are above the domestics?

Have we forgotten that not so long ago, we were so dependent of the Asia Sub-continent? Have we forgotten that we used the Indian rupee for currency? Worse, do many of my fellow citizens who claim to be pious and devout Muslims forget that in the Quran, God made it clear that there is no difference between races, no difference between blacks, whites, brown and other?

It really saddens me to know that such action is slowly but surely degrading our image abroad. In the past, such treatment by some foreign diplomats landed them in major trouble yet their immunity from prosecution enabled them to avoid being sent to prison.

With time, such an issue will certainly end up being picked up by mainstream global media and in the long run, I wouldn't be surprised to hear that fellow nationals would be reclaimed by foreign courts in connection with human trafficking, forced work and even slavery charges. After all, Slavery happens to be one of seven crimes common to all civilized nations.

I hope that in the very near future, our dear parliamentarians who claim to be devout Muslims and who want to make the Sharia the prime source of legislation to maybe look into the matter. For it doesn't sound too Islamic. It clearly goes against all human laws and certainly against the law of God.

The "kafeel system" (a system whereby a sponsor needs to be the guarantor of the foreign worker) along with the retention of their passport by the sponsor in question, who in some instances use their documents to bare them from free movement in clear violation of numerous international treaties and charters that Kuwait is a signatory to, are simply wrong.

In a nutshell, the current system ensures that foreigners in our beloved country remain exploited without any rights to do anything about it. They end up being caught in a system where they end up having no legal rights.

The few foreigners that dare go to a police station to complain end up being abused by the police officers. At times, they even in some cases end up being beaten by the same individuals (police officers) who are supposed to uphold the laws of the land and to cater to those that are victims of crimes. In no case are they to be brutal to them and to treat them as sub-humans.

Had I not myself been the witness of such disregard to mainly Asian foreigners by law enforcers I would have not believed it, however it saddens me to admit to such a thing in a country that I believe has laws and a constitution. Furthermore, I encourage all those that might think that I am exaggerating to take the time to go and see for themselves what goes on in police stations.

Ending with a final note, I for one believe in karma; what goes around comes around. Those that abuse people will themselves one day be the victims of their crimes, if not on earth, perhaps in the thereafter. Justice and equalities are two factors necessary for civilizations to develop, people lose hope in either or, we will end up with a chaotic society where people will take it upon themselves to restore perceived injustices.

I hope that law and justice prevails, and those that dare traffic in human beings end up receiving exemplary sentences from international human rights courts. It is a shame that we, in the 21st century, still end up being confronted with demons of the past. Slavery is under no circumstance an acceptable trade. I would like to finish with this remark, what if the person being tampered, enslaved, and abused was you? Would you not want people to speak out and help you? Email me at fouad@kuwaittimes.net

27.5.07

Lots of well-paying jobs available at MoSA&L!

Today's chuckle courtesy of the Kuwait Times...
Excellent performance
Published Date: May 27, 2007
KUWAIT: A bolt of lightning struck a Kuwaiti man after he discovered recently that the Ministry of Social Affairs and Labor had promoted him due to his excellent performances in executing his duties, reported Al-Qabas. He wondered how he had been promoted when he had already resigned from the ministry three years ago and now worked for a private company. He is now in doubt that his monthly salary might be paid to or collected by somebody else.

Audit Bureau accuses Labor
KUWAIT: The Audit Bureau accused the Ministry of Social Affairs and Labor of squandering public funds by paying bonuses to staff for performing additional tasks in duties as well as paying allowances for attending certain sessions or meetings that take place after official duty hours, reported Al-Qabas. They also accused the ministry of permitting employees to work for other authorities and granting them leaves for various reasons such as sick leaves and paying bonuses to employees who didn't deserve them at all.
Nothing new then. And the Ministry of Social Affairs and Labour want to now manage the payment of all private sector salaries in Kuwait through the CSC? Yeah, right.

26.5.07

10% of Kuwait population wanted for crimes

Well, if today's Kuwait Times article is to be believed, around 10% of the population are wanted for crimes.

250,000 cases outstanding

Published Date: May 26, 2007

KUWAIT: The Ministry of Interior disclosed that the number of persons required to appear before the Ministry of Justice for financial cases has reached more than 100,000, reported Al-Watan. They said that this figure did not include persons wanted for criminal charges and if that would be taken into account, then the figures could reach almost 250,000.

Official sources said that there were 120,000 persons involved in financial cases, who have a travel ban against them out of which 90,000 persons were Kuwaitis and 30,000 Arabs and foreigners. Officials at the Ministry of Interior also said that they had 250,000 arrest warrants for people to be tried in the courts, adding that financial cases varied from as little as KD 50 to millions of Kuwaiti dinars.

Some of the wanted persons have evaded arrests for years after changing their places of residence several times and hence were never found at the addresses. Ministry of Interior officials said that they were exercising their best efforts to arrest the wanted persons. They also called upon all persons who had settled their outstanding debts to approach the courts to close their files and lift the travel bans issued against them.

This is a pretty amazing statistic, when you factor in that about 35% of the population is under 20 years of age and unlikely to have criminal charges registered against them, which then makes the proportion of wanted criminals about 15% of the population. And then if you account for the vast amount of unreported crime, the "wasta" affect and the dropping of criminal charges, well...

Or, how about the crimes of humanity and injustice that aren't even considered crimes here, such as the abuse and non-payment of salaries of maids or labourers.

One statistic I'd like to know is how many Kuwaitis have had criminal charges laid against them for the crime of rape? Sure, everyday there are cases reported in the newspapers, often in graphic details, but you never read of anyone being criminally charged for the crime. And this is just the tip of the iceberg. When you see or hear of the hundreds of cases of maids that have suffered this crime, and know for a fact that most of these cases go unreported...

When will the Kuwait policing and justice systems catch up with international standards?

9.5.07

Kuwait implicated in supplying arms to Sudanese regime

Major news yesterday was how Russia and China were given a good wrist slapping by Amnesty International for continuing to supply the Sudanese regime with military equipment and weapons in violation of the UN Security Council's mandatory arms embargo. In the news report, Kuwait, Saudi and Belarus were also mentioned.

So what exactly does Amnesty have to say about Kuwait? Here's the relevant excerpt from the report...
Kuwait has reportedly discussed military cooperation with the government in Khartoum in November 2006(26) and a Kuwaiti small arms trader has run a sales agency in Khartoum.

Footnotes:
(26) On 24 November 2006, it was reported that the Kuwaiti Chief of Staff Air Marshall Fahd Al Amir led a delegation to Sudan to discuss military cooperation and as a guest of Sudan Chief of Staff General Hal Ahmad Al Jili visited Sudanese army bases; Middle East Newsline 28 November 2006

Kuwait Times then gets a quote from Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Muhammad Sabah Al-Salem Al-Sabah who, given the benefit of the doubt, probably didn't get to read Amnesty International's report, but gives a typical knee-jerk response...
Amnesty charges 'astonish' Kuwait
Published Date: May 09, 2007 By Ahmad Al-Khaled, Staff Writer

KUWAIT: Kuwait's Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Muhammad Sabah Al-Salem Al-Sabah yesterday rejected allegations by a human rights organisation accusing Kuwait of supplying weapons to Sudan, which is using them in war-torn Darfur. "I'm greatly astonished," he said.

"This has no basis whatsoever to reality and I hope Amnesty International safeguards its reputation." The report released by Amnesty centered around Russia and China, both permanent members of the UN Security Council, and charged that they violated a 2005 UN embargo against selling arms to Sudan for use in its Darfur region, which has been embroiled in a civil war.

So a real storm in a teacup. But, given the standards of journalism (or the lack of not wishing to offend and be disrespectful to those in power who can easily have them jailed/deported/...) in this part of the world, you can't expect to much. Arab leaders can say whatever they like and it'll get reported verbatim, but no-one will challenge them to explain, or say that they're talking a load of nonsense.

To conclude:
1. Amnesty aren't making baseless accusations, and isn't even accusing Kuwait of supplying weapons to Sudan... only that it has discussed military cooperation. Which could just mean a junket for the Chief of Staff and some of his flunkies, or could be more serious; we don't know. Perhaps Sheikh Muhammad could elaborate on this?
2. A Kuwaiti small arms trader has been selling weapons in Khartoum. So who is this guy? Maybe Kuwaiti authorities could have a wee word to this guy for damaging it's countries reputation?

2.5.07

Deafult on your debt and enter the Lottery!

Here's an article from Kuwait Times I read a while back and thought would be worth sharing with any readers outside Kuwait. I thought I'd seen/heard it all, but was quite astonished to read this...

Grants possible for Kuwaiti debtors

Published Date: April 16, 2007

KUWAIT: A Ministry of Justice committee is studying case by case applications of Kuwaiti citizens seeking to receive a Kuwaiti philanthropist's grants to cover their mounting personal debts, a ministry official said yesterday. In press statements, president of the department of Sentence Enforcement at the Ministry of Justice Ali Al-Dhebibi said those who would be eligible for grants to cover their debts would include prisoners who have been accorded Amiri amnesty and those who have been charged with non-payment of debts up until Dec 31, 2006.

He said eligible citizens have been divided up into four categories, the first are those with unpaid debts ranging from KD 1 to KD 5,000. Among this group are 2,680 who owe KD 3,565,936 to individuals. Up to 9,538 debtors in this group owe KD 8,888,517 to companies.

The second category are those with unpaid debts ranging from KD 5,001 to KD 10,000. Among this group are 355 who owe KD 2,406,308 to individuals. Up to 1, 740 debtors in this group owe KD 11,977,240 to companies.

The third category are those with unpaid debts ranging from KD 10,001 to KD 20,000. Among this group are 181 who owe KD 2,481,372 to individuals. Up to 602 debtors in this group owe KD 8,846,070 to companies.

The fourth category are those with unpaid debts exceeding KD 20,000. Among this group are 126 who owe KD 28,169,834 to individuals. Up to 414 debtors in this group owe KD 335,493,975 to companies.

Al-Dhabibi explained that eligible debtor applications are
accepted through an Internet website (www.salemgive.com) which is open round the clock but only till April 23.

Up to 5,370 applications have been received via the website, he said, 2,870 of which have been considered for processing.

Information received at the website does not mean that a citizen's debt will be
automatically paid off, he cautioned. Once an applicant enters his civil ID at the website, the screen will display all his debt offences in the way of court sentences and other legal injunctions against him and amounts of money he owes, he said.

The Justice ministry committee looking into debtors' cases will have the right to either accept or reject any application, he said as he applauded the benefactor behind paying off these debts, His Highness Sheikh Salem Al-Ali Al-Sabah, chief of the national guards.

Once an applicant's case is accepted and thoroughly vetted and endorsed he will be notified and his debt will be paid off directly to his creditor. Afterwards the debtor's name will be taken off all court records.

Though the process of paying off applicants' debts has just started, almost 1,000 have seen their debts paid off free and clear, he said. Their collective debts amounted to KD 2 million, he specified. -- Kuna


And an update...

KD10 million to Zakat

Published Date: April 29, 2007

KUWAIT: KD10 million from the donation of Sheikh Salem Al-Ali will be transferred to the Zakat (alms) house this week in which the sum will end loans and financial cases of 9139 citizens. The priority of paying loans would be given to companies and
institutions that offer large discounts for citizens in debt. The adviser of the donation project, Mohammad Al-Mekhazeem indicated that the Zakat house paid sums ranging from KD 400 to KD 1000 to more than 5000 needy families.


So, for all citizens, if you haven't already applied for free money... tough! 23rd April was the deadline.

Does any other country in the world allow its citizens to spend like there's no tomorrow, and then bail them out when their debt burden gets a bit onerous?

Can't be seen to drive to work in a Toyota Corolla? Why not make it a Hummer H3 with this easy to pay back instalment plan of KDx per month.

Sure, the laws in Kuwait are also an ass, and if you suffer financial loss and don't have wasta, it can be a bit difficult to repay your debts from inside a prison cell. That’s another issue. But come on, what message are you sending to the masses, o wise ones?

We shall never give the truth!

Reported in today's Kuwait Times...

Kuwait will never disclose oil reserves

Published Date: May 02, 2007

KUWAIT: Kuwait will never disclose the size of its oil reserves for reasons of national security, Oil Minister Sheikh Ali Al-Jarrah Al-Sabah was quoted as saying after the state announced a new oil find. "Kuwait has not and will not disclose the size of its oil reserves," he told Al-Arabiya Television late on Monday. "The Kuwait people are not concerned with numbers. This is related to national security." Industry newsletter Petroleum Intelligence Weekly (PIW) said in January 2006 it had seen internal Kuwaiti records showing reserves were about 48 billion barrels - half the officially stated 99 billion, or some 10 percent of global oil reserves.

Kuwait's former oil minister, Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahd Al-Sabah, has said that PIW's report only paints a partial picture while other oil officials said the report was inaccurate. PIW said official public figures do not distinguish between proven, probable and possible reserves. Sheikh Ali told Arabiya that just because some fields were not proven it did not mean there was no oil there but that they were not being used. "All Kuwaiti lands are reserves and every day there are new discoveries that are not announced but that doesn't mean Kuwait does not know the size of its reserves," the minister said.

"The one to announce the size of Kuwait's reserves are independent parties like OPEC," he said, adding that "private companies like BP make announcements because they are listed and so this information affects their stock price." Sheikh Ali said on Monday Kuwait had made an "important" light oil and gas find in the Al-Dhabi region in the north but did not give the size of the field. - Reuters


Does anyone else think this is a bit odd? Why is Kuwait unwilling to declare in a transparent manner what its oil reserves are? What do you have to hide Sheikh Ali? Is PIW getting a bit too close to the truth? Is this common practice for regimes propped up by oil revenues?

Eventually the oil will run out and what for Kuwait then? ...it's just a matter of time. Will it be 50 years, 100 years, or 200 years? On a spectrum of the early demise to a late demise of the State of Kuwait, I envisage a scenario nearer the early end of the spectrum, not necessarily because the oil will run out, but more as a result of the global awareness of climate change and the momentum for doing something about it and seeking alternative fuels / energy sources. Of course this is being very optimistic – maybe they’ll be enough demand from regimes who don’t give a damn about the environment, to continue to prop-up the fossil-fuel producers.

When the shift away from oil eventually comes, where is the money going to come from to sustain the Kuwait lifestyle? Look what happened to Nauru.

When the times are good, be proactive. This is the time to invest wisely for future generations and diversify the economy. Not build up a great slush fund to continue a cradle to grave welfare system.

Enough ranting for now. Back to the day job.

20.4.07

Friday/Saturday weekend next year

Thursday's Arab Times...

Saturday off likely

KUWAIT CITY: Government is seriously considering the option of changing the weekend holidays from Thursday and Friday to Friday and Saturday “like other Gulf countries as it is affecting the economy,” reports Al-Anba daily. Sources say the government may approve the new weekend holidays but the change will come into effect from September when the schools start a new academic year. Also, the government may approve the suggestion of MPs to follow the ‘fall back’ and ‘spring forward’ timings, followed in many countries including England, France, Egypt and Lebanon.

MPs have suggested that Kuwait should put its clocks one hour ahead starting April till end of September every year. This way, residents can make most of the daylight and can save electricity.


Believe it when I see it.

17.3.07

Daylight saving time?

Well, it looks like we're going to have daylight saving time in Kuwait. The following item was recently reported in the Arab Times, but I haven't seen anything else published.

Civil Service nod to daylight savings time
KUWAIT CITY: The Civil Service Commission (CSC) has approved a proposal forwarded by MP Ahmad Baqer on implementing the daylight saving time (DST) in Kuwait starting from April until the end of Sept this year, reports Al-Anba. The CSC pointed out the system was enforced successfully in several countries around the world including England, France, Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon.

Does anyone know if this is for real? Or will it be chaos again, like when the Government announced that banks were to collect medical insurance fees, but had neglected to clear it with the banks. Or, is it just talk, like the changing of working days...

15.1.07

What to do about Iraq

President Bush says let me know a better proposal for Iraq, or shut up. Well, here's one from the International Crisis Group which seems rather sensible to me. The full report is here. The Executive Summary & Recommendations follow.

After Baker-Hamilton: What to Do in Iraq
Middle East Report N°60 19
December 2006

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS

Slowly, incrementally, the realisation that a new strategy is needed for Iraq finally is dawning on U.S. policy-makers. It was about time. By underscoring the U.S. intervention’s disastrous political, security, and economic balance sheet, and by highlighting the need for both a new regional and Iraqi strategy, the Baker-Hamilton report represents an important and refreshing moment in the country’s domestic debate. Many of its key – and controversial – recommendations should be wholly supported, including engaging Iran and Syria, revitalising the Arab-Israeli peace process, reintegrating Baathists, instituting a far-reaching amnesty, delaying the Kirkuk referendum, negotiating the withdrawal of U.S. forces with Iraqis and engaging all parties in Iraq.

But the change the report advocates is not nearly radical enough, and its prescriptions are no match for its diagnosis. What is needed today is a clean break both in the way the U.S. and other international actors deal with the Iraqi government, and in the way the U.S. deals with the region: in essence, a new multinational effort to achieve a new political compact between all relevant Iraqi constituents.

A new course of action must begin with an honest assessment of where things stand. Hollowed out and fatally weakened, the Iraqi state today is prey to armed militias, sectarian forces and a political class that, by putting short term personal benefit ahead of long term national interests, is complicit in Iraq’s tragic destruction. Not unlike the groups they combat, the forces that dominate the current government thrive on identity politics, communal polarisation, and a cycle of intensifying violence and counter-violence. Increasingly indifferent to the country’s interests, political
leaders gradually are becoming warlords. What Iraq desperately needs are national leaders.

As it approaches its fifth year, the conflict also has become both a magnet for deeper regional interference and a source of greater regional instability. Instead of working together toward an outcome they all could live with – a weak but united Iraq that does not present a threat to its neighbours – regional actors are taking measures in anticipation of the outcome they most fear: Iraq’s descent into all-out chaos and fragmentation. By increasing support for some Iraqi actors against others, their actions have all the wisdom of a self-fulfilling prophecy: steps that will accelerate the very process they claim to wish to avoid.

Two consequences follow. The first is that, contrary to the Baker-Hamilton report’s suggestion, the Iraqi government and security forces cannot be treated as privileged allies to be bolstered; they are simply one among many parties to the conflict. The report characterises the government as a “government of national unity” that is “broadly representative of the Iraqi people”: it is nothing of the sort. It also calls for expanding forces that are complicit in the current dirty war and for speeding up the
transfer of responsibility to a government that has done nothing to stop it. The only logical conclusion from the report’s own lucid analysis is that the government is not a partner in an effort to stem the violence, nor will strengthening it contribute to Iraq’s stability. This is not a military challenge in which one side needs to be strengthened and another defeated. It is a political challenge in which new consensual understandings need to be reached.

The solution is not to change the prime minister or cabinet composition, as some in Washington appear to be contemplating, but to address the entire power structure that was established since the 2003 invasion, and to alter the political environment that determines the cabinet’s actions.

The second is that it will take more than talking to Iraq’s neighbours to obtain their cooperation. It will take persuading them that their interests and those of the U.S. no longer are fundamentally at odds. All Iraqi actors who, in one way or another, are participating in the country’s internecine violence must be brought to the negotiating table and must be pressured to accept the necessary compromises. That cannot be done without a concerted effort by all Iraq’s neighbours, which in turn cannot be done if their interests are not reflected in the final outcome. For as long as the Bush administration’s paradigm remains fixated around regime change, forcibly emodelling the Middle East, or waging a strategic struggle against an alleged axis composed of Iran, Syria, Hizbollah and Hamas, neither Damascus nor Tehran will be willing to offer genuine assistance. Though they may indeed fear the consequences of a full-blown Iraqi civil war, both fear it less than they do U.S. regional ambitions. Under present circumstances, neither will be prepared to save Iraq if it also means rescuing the U.S.

In short, success in Iraq, if it still can be achieved at this late date, will require three ambitious and interrelated steps:
A new forceful multilateral approach that puts real pressure on all Iraqi parties: The
Baker-Hamilton report is right to advocate creation of a broad International Support Group; it should comprise the five permanent Security Council members and Iraq’s six neighbours. But its purpose cannot be to support the Iraqi government. It must support Iraq, which means pressing the government, along with all other Iraqi constituents, to make the necessary compromises. It also means agreeing on rules of conduct and red-lines regarding third party involvement in Iraq. This does not entail a one-off conference, but sustained multilateral diplomacy.

A conference of all Iraqi and international stakeholders to forge a new political compact: A new, more equitable and inclusive national compact needs to be agreed upon by all relevant actors, including militias and insurgent groups, on issues such as federalism, resource allocation, de-Baathification, the scope of the amnesty, and the timetable for a U.S. withdrawal. This can only be done if the International Support Group brings all of them to the negotiating table, and if its members steer their
deliberations, deploying a mixture of carrots and sticks to influence those on whom they have particular leverage.

A new U.S. regional strategy, including engagement with Syria and Iran, an end to efforts at regime change, revitalisation of the Arab-Israeli peace process, and altered strategic goals: Polite engagement of Iraq’s neighbours will not do; rather, a clear redefinition of Washington’s objectives in the region will be required to enlist regional, but especially Iranian and Syrian help. The goal is not to bargain with them, but to seek agreement on an end-state for Iraq and the region that is no one’s
first choice, but with which everyone can live.

There is no magical solution for Iraq. But nor can there be a muddle-through. The choice today could not be clearer. An approach that does not entail a clean break vis-à-vis both Iraq and the region at best will postpone what, increasingly, is looking like the most probable scenario: Iraq’s collapse into a failed and fragmented state, an intensifying and long-lasting civil war, as well as increased foreign meddling that risks metastasising into a broad proxy war. Such a situation could not be contained within Iraq’s borders. With involvement by a multiplicity of state and non-state actors and given that rising sectarianism in Iraq is both fuelled by and fuels sectarianism in the region, the more likely outcome would be a regional conflagration. There is abundant reason to question whether the Bush administration is capable of such a dramatic course change. But there is no reason to question why it ought to change direction, and what will happen if it does not.

RECOMMENDATIONS

STEPS TO INTERNATIONALISE CONFLICT-RESOLUTION

To the Five Permanent Members of the UN Security Council:
1. Establish an International Support Group, composed of the five permanent members of the Security Council, Iraq’s neighbours and the UN, represented by its Secretary General, with the objective of:
(a) agreeing on rules of the game for outside parties vis-à-vis Iraq;
(b) reaching agreement on broad goals and key compromises for Iraq;
(c) appointing an empowered UN special envoy to begin work with all Iraqi
constituents on a reconciliation process; and
(d) convening a conference of all of Iraq’s political stakeholders (including insurgent groups and other disenfranchised but politically significant elements of society).

STEPS TO ENSURE REGIONAL COOPERATION

To the U.S. Government:
2. Alter regional strategy, renouncing in particular ambitions to forcibly remodel the Middle East.
3. Refrain from referring to Iraq as a “model” for the region or the new “front” in the anti-terrorism war.
4. Engage in discussions with Iran and Syria in a direct and sustained manner that acknowledges they have legitimate interests in Iraq’s and the region’s future.
5. In the context of the Quartet, and together with Arab countries, revitalise the search for a comprehensive Arab-Israeli peace.

To the Government of Syria:
6. Enhance control at the Iraqi border.
7. Facilitate achievement of a national Iraqi compact by:
(a) using its extensive intelligence on and lines of communication with insurgent groups to facilitate negotiations; and
(b) drawing on its wide-ranging tribal networks to reach out to Sunni Arabs in the context of such negotiations.

To the Government of Iran:
8. Enhance control at the Iraqi border.
9. Facilitate achievement of a national compact by using its leverage to control SCIRI and its channels in southern Iraq to influence the Sadrists.

To the Government of Saudi Arabia:
10. Facilitate achievement of a national compact by using its influence with
insurgent groups, in particular by cutting off funding from private Saudi sources to those that refuse to cooperate.

To the Government of Turkey:
11. Facilitate achievement of a national compact by using its influence with all Iraqi actors, including insurgent groups.
12. Continue to develop peaceful economic and political relations with Iraqi
Kurdistan.

STEPS TO ACHIEVE A NEW IRAQI POLITICAL COMPACT

To the Iraqi Government, Political Parties, and Insurgent and Militia Groups:
13. Work with the UN special envoy and attend the International Support Group’s
conference to reach agreement on a political compact focused on power and wealth
sharing, including:
(a) an asymmetric federal system providing a separate status for the Kurdish region, as currently defined and with powers broadly described in the constitution, and an Arab Iraq divided into fifteen decentralised governorates that reflect present boundaries;
(b) acceptance of Kirkuk governorate as a decentralised governorate with an interim power-sharing arrangement to last at least ten years; and a UN envoy appointed to facilitate this arrangement and help create a mechanism to determine the governorate’s final status;
(c) a process for equitable revenue sharing, under which income from oil, gas and other natural resources would accrue to a federal trust fund operated by an independent federal authority and would be distributed according to each region’s demographic share;
(d) a relaxation of de-Baathification measures, with the principal criterion for
exclusion being past proven crimes, not past party membership;
(e) passage of a broad amnesty covering individuals who agree to put down their arms and subscribe to the national compact;
(f) reintegration of officers of the former army unless proven to have committed human rights abuses or other crimes;
(g) negotiation with the U.S. of a relatively rapid timetable for the full withdrawal in stages of its forces;
(h) agreement on a status of foreign forces, with rules of engagement focusing on the need to protect populations and respond to immediate threats against troop security, while requiring prior Iraqi command authorisation for any manoeuvres, offensives, arrest campaigns or other military actions outside this framework; and
(i) agreement on a new electoral law providing for direct, constituency-based elections.

To Members of the Recommended International Support Group:
14. Guide Iraqi participants in a peace conference towards accepting a national compact along the lines described above.
15. Condition further and augmented economic support on quick agreement on and implementation of elements of the national compact.

To the Government of Iraq:
16. Organise, assuming agreement on a national compact is reached and reflected in a revised constitution, a referendum for its approval.

URGENT STEPS TO STEM THE VIOLENCE

To the Government of Iraq:
17. Seek to reduce sectarian and ethnic polarisation and violence by:
(a) stating publicly its commitment to work toward a new, more inclusive national compact, as described in this report;
(b) condemning and seeking to halt the killing of civilians and torture by security forces, investigating allegations of abuse and prosecuting offenders;
(c) suspending police units suspected of serious human rights abuses and
participation in sectarian violence;
(d) urging all government officials to desist from ethnic, sectarian or otherwise inflammatory statements, and pressing members of the council of representatives to do the same;
(e) making a deliberate and widely announced effort to provide health services, opening bank branches and fixing power supply in predominantly Sunni Arab towns and neighbourhoods; and
(f) making a commitment to a peaceful solution to the Kirkuk question, and postponing referendums to determine its and other disputed areas’ status.

To the U.S. Government:
18. Adopt a less aggressive military posture in Iraq by:
(a) redirecting resources to a program of embedding U.S. troops in Iraqi units; and
(b) moving away from fighting the insurgency to focusing on protecting the civilian population, and in particular halting blind sweeps that endanger civilians, antagonise the population and have had limited effect on the insurgency.
19. Redeploy troops along the frontlines of the unfolding civil war, notably by filling in the current security vacuum in Baghdad.
20. Focus on limiting the militias’ role to protecting civilians in places where government forces cannot, rather than seek to forcibly disband them, while taking strong action against political assassinations, sectarian attacks, or attempts to overrun government offices.
21. Avoid steps to engineer a cabinet reshuffle aimed at side-lining Muqtada al-Sadr, which would further inflame the situation.
22. Shelve plans to hurriedly expand the Iraqi security apparatus and focus instead on vetting, restructuring, and retraining existing units.
23. Free and compensate Iraqi prisoners detained by the U.S. without charge.
24. Compensate Iraqis who have suffered as a result of the U.S.-led counterinsurgency campaign.
25. Condition short-term financial support on the government reversing its policy of serving certain constituencies at the expense of others (most notably with regard to salary payment and basic service delivery).
26. Abandon the super-embassy project and move a reduced embassy to a more neutral location.
27. Publicly deny any intention of establishing long-term military bases or seeking to control Iraq’s oil.

Baghdad/Amman/Damascus/Brussels, 19 December 2006

It all seems like a lot of hard work and a real change management job. My feeling is that USA doesn't have the political mentality or resolve to make it work, and if they can't the other parties certainly won't! With Bush and Cheney calling the shots and relying on worn slogans in their speeches that only show they still don't 'get it,' call me a pessimist, but I feel that Iraq is drifting into another Rwanda/Bosnia, and it will get a lot worse before it gets better. I hope that I'm wrong and all parties can come to the party and negotiate along the lines of the recommendations promulgated above.

Sending another 20,000 troops ain't gonna solve a lot. Total troop numbers in previous years were higher in the past than they will be with the extra 20,000 from what I've read elsewhere.