Wednesday, 28 September 2016

Public sector loses 11 days of salary after calendar switch in Saudi Arabia

Switch from Hijri calendar to Gregorian calendar costs employees 11 days of pay a year

Manama: Under a new decision to base public sector salaries on the Gregorian calender, employees will lose 11 days of payment, Saudi news site Sabq reported on Wednesday.
The decision to switch from the lunar-based Hijri calendar will take effect from October 1 and will bring the public sector in line with how private sector employees are paid.
The Hijri calendar is made up of 12 months of 29 or 30 days depending on the sighting of the moon, and the year is usually 354 days, 11 days shorter than the Gregorian calendar.
The change is part of a host of finance-related decisions announced by the Saudi government on Monday following the weekly cabinet session chaired by King Salman Bin Abdul Aziz.
At its meeting, the cabinet decided to curb some financial perks for public sector employees. The decision comes within a new policy to rein in lavish public spending.
The salaries of ministers will be cut by 20 per cent while Shura Council members will receive 15 per cent less.
No annual bonus will be given for the next Islamic year, due to start on October 2, and the renewal or extension of existing contracts will not include any salary increases.
The employees will have their bonuses, allowances and financial perks cancelled, amended or suspended according to their categories, the government added.
Annual holidays for ministers will also be reduced from 42 to 36 days.
Under the new rules, public sector employees will not receive transport allowance during their holidays and if they do not use their 60 off days during the year, they lose them.
The financial reductions will be applied to all public sector employees regardless of their nationalities, and to the military.
Government agencies have been given 60 days to amend their statutes to ensure full compliance with the new decree.

Free parking in Dubai on Sunday

Roads and Transport Authority also announces change in timings for public transport for Al Hijri New Year
Dubai: If you’re planning to go out on Sunday’s public holiday, there’s now one less thing to worry about since parking in Dubai will be free.
The Roads and Transport Authority (RTA) announced on Wednesday that all paid parking zones will be free of charge on the Islamic New Year 1438, which falls on October 2.
Earlier this week, the Ministry of Human Resources and Emiritisation announced that Sunday will be an official paid holiday for all public and private sector employees in the UAE.
"All paid parking zones in Dubai will be free of charge except for the parking lots of the [Deira] Fish Market and the multi-level parking terminal on Sunday, and fees will be reactivated on the Monday October 3, 2016,” said Moaza Al Marri, Director of Marketing and Corporate Communication, RTA Corporate Administrative Support Services Sector.   
However, parking fees will still be applicable at the Fish Market and multi-level parking lots.
In a statement, the RTA also said that the timings of public transport services will change during the long weekend.

Public transport timings

"On Saturday October 1, the Red Line of Dubai Metro will start service at 5:30am (Express Metro Service) and continue up to 1am (on the following day); and on Sunday October 2nd, from 5:30am to midnight," she said.
The Green Line will operate on Saturday October 1 from 5:50am and continue up to 1am (on the following day), and on Sunday, October 2 from 5:50am to midnight.
The Metro Stations Feeder Bus Service at Al Rashidiya, Mall of the Emirates, Ibn Battuta Mall, Abu Hail, Etisalat, and Dubai Mall-Burj Khalifa stations will operate from 5am to 12:20am.
On Friday, the Dubai Tram will start at 9am and continue up to 1am the following day.
“As for the working hours of service providers, all centres of partners and service providers will be closed during the holiday of the Al Hijri New Year on Sunday, and will be back in service on Monday,” said Al Marri.

Oman says helped with release of Montreal-based professor


Muscat: A Canadian-Iranian retired professor was released from prison on “humanitarian grounds” and flown out of Iran on Monday, Iran’s state-run news agency said, ending her months of detention alongside other dual nationals swept up by hardliners in the security services.
Dr Homa Hoodfar was flown to Oman, the brief report from the Irna news agency said. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hailed her release in a statement, thanking Italy, Switzerland and Oman for their help in the matter.
Oman said on Monday that it had helped with the release of a Canadian-Iranian professor, Dr Homa Hoodfar, who was detained in Iran since June.
“In response to the royal orders of His Majesty Sultan Qaboos Bin Saeed responding to a request from the Canadian government to assist in releasing Dr Homa Hoodfar, a Canadian national who was detained in the Islamic Republic of Iran, the respective organisations in the Sultanate communicated with the Iranian government which released her,” reported Oman News Agency (ONA).
Hoodfar, 65, was questioned and barred from leaving Iran in March after travelling to the country to visit family following the death of her husband. Her family said she has been held in Tehran’s Evin Prison since June. Hoodfar until recently taught anthropology and sociology at Montreal’s Concordia University.
Arrangements have been made to transport her from Tehran to Muscat on board a Royal Air Force of Oman (RAFO) aircraft in preparation for her return to Canada.
While the Sultanate appreciates the stance of the Islamic Republic of Iran, it hopes that this step will result in more rapprochement and resuming normal relations between Iran and Canada, the Omani statement said. In July, Iran announced indictments for Hoodfar and three others, without providing any details about the accusations. In recent weeks, Hoodfar’s supporters described her health as deteriorating while she was in solitary confinement, saying she was “barely able to walk or talk.”
Hoodfar’s supporters had pressed diplomats to discuss her case during the recent United Nations General Assembly in New York. Canadian Foreign Minister Stephane Dion met with Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif on the sidelines of the meeting on Wednesday, state television reported.
Kaveh Ehsani, a friend of Hoodfar’s in Chicago, said on Monday that her supporters asked for “a period of crucial privacy before Homa and her family can address the media.”
Hoodfar landed in Muscat on Monday evening on an air force jet and greeted by her niece.
Hoodfar, 65, is a teacher at Concordia University in Montreal, Canada, and an expert on gender and Islam.
Oman, maintains good relations with Tehran, has previously helped facilitate prisoner exchanges between Iran and the United States.
Canada shut its embassy in Iran and expelled all Iranian diplomats in Canada in 2012 after accusing Tehran of posing the biggest threat to global security, mainly over its nuclear program and military assistance to Syrian President Bashar Al Assad.
High-profile inmate killed in Manila jail 'riot'
Manila's 'king' of drug lords, Jaybee Sebastian, and other inmates Peter Co and Vicente Sy are among those injured



Manila: A prison riot killed a high-profile convict and seriously wounded another inmate due to testify in a congressional drug inquiry early Wednesday morning inside the New Bilibid Prison (NBP), a senior official said.
Bureau of Corrections officer-in-charge Police Supt. Rolando Asuncion said convicted drug lord Tony Co was killed, and three others were wounded when the jailhouse riot erupted inside Building 14 of the maximum security compound guarded by police special forces.
Building 14 is where high-profile convicts are held, according to Justice Undersecretary Erickson Balmes.
The so-called “king” of drug lords, Jaybee Sebastian, and other inmates Peter Co and Vicente Sy were among those injured, and were rushed to Medical Center Muntinlupa for treatment, said the jail official. 
Asuncion said seven to eight inmates were involved in the "rumble," adding an ice pick was recovered from the crime scene.
Balmes denied the riot was staged to kill Sebastian.
"It's just a plain riot. This is just a usual occurrence in prisons," Asuncion said.
The Bureau of Corrections is investigating the incident, including reviewing the CCTV footage.
Not just any prison riot?
House Speaker Pantaleon Alvarez on Wednesday morning raised suspicion over prison riot, saying it’s possible “some forces” do not want inmate Jaybee Sebastian to testify.
“That is sad because apparently there are forces who don't want Jaybee Sebastian to testify. We will see the motive of those who don't want the truth to come out. The intended resource person mentioned in the hearing was targeted,” the local media quoted Alvarez as saying.
Sebastian was initially slated to appear in the House probe, but Justice Secretary Vitaliano Aguirre said they can do away without Sebastian’s testimony
House committee probe on drugs
The House Committee on Justice is conducting a probe on the illegal drug trade inside Bilibid.
In their testimonies, the high-profile inmates at the Bilibid claimed they paid then Justice Secretary Leila De Lima millions of pesos so they could bring in illegal drugs and other banned items.
They identified Sebastian as the top drug lord inside the Bilibid.
He allegedly raised millions to fund the senatorial campaign of De Lima.
The 'Bilibid 19' at Building 14
The so-called “Bilibid 19” — drug lords who were found to be living high and continuing their illegal trade inside the national penitentiary — included  Tony and Peter Co, and Sy.
After a raid in December 2014 revealed drugs, cash, and luxury items inside the areas, also known as "kubols", of these convicts they were moved to Building No. 14
Equipment like closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras were installed in the building.
On Tuesday, two high-powered signal jammers were installed inside Building 14 to make sure inmates can no longer use their smuggled cellphones which they had been using to conduct business despite a ban on these devices.
The Philippine National Police-Special Action Force took over security operations at the NBP in July.
Aguirre earlier told a House probe that despite the SAF manning Bilibid, one cannot say it's completely contraband-free.
But he also said drug transactions at the Bilibid have decreased by 90 percent since SAF troopers were deployed.

Thousands of Saudis sign petition to end male guardianship of women

Prominent clerics have also signed the petition, to indicate.



Riyadh: Thousands of Saudis have signed an online petition calling for the government to abolish the country’s guardianship system, which prevents women from engaging in fundamental tasks without the permission of a male relative.
“Women should be treated as a full citizen,” said activist Aziza Al Yousuf who, along with other activists, has been fighting against the guardianship system for a decade.
“This is not only a women’s issue, this is also putting pressure on normal men ... this is not an issue for women only,” she told the Guardian. Under Saudi law, women require the permission of a male guardian to travel, marry, or exit prison and it may be needed to be granted employment or access to healthcare.
A guardian is typically a woman’s father or her husband if she is married; a widow may have to seek permission from her son if she has no other men of age in her life. But in recent years, a growing movement has sought to end the system. Yousef and other prominent activists started holding workshops and performing studies on the religious validity of the guardianship system five years ago. The campaign picked up steam this summer after a report was released on the system by an international rights group.
The report gave birth to a hashtag #IAmMyOwnGuardian, which spread awareness on the issue. Hala Al Dosari, researcher in women’s health, who wrote the petition and worked on the report, said the hashtag gained support among women of all ages and backgrounds.
On the two days leading up to the petition, an estimated 2,500 women sent direct telegrams to the Saudi King’s office imploring him to end the guardianship system. The petition racked up 14,682 signatures after promoting it on Twitter, Al Dosari said.
Saudi Arabia’s government agreed to revise the guardianship system twice - in 2009 and 2013. It instituted some reforms by, for instance, making it easier for women to work, appointing women to the King’s advisory board, and allowing women to vote and run as candidates in municipal elections. However, these reforms had limitations and stopped short of providing women some rights.
Earlier this year, the government outlined its Vision 2030, an economic plan to reduce the country’s dependency on oil, which called for more involvement of women in the labor market. However, the guardianship system runs counter to that, as some employers require women to submit permission from their guardians. Engaging Saudi women in the economy is vital as they currently outnumber men in higher education and will be key to weaning the country off oil.
According to Hamid M Khan, deputy director of The Rule of Law Collaborative at the University of South Carolina, many members of the Saudi royal family are open to the idea of reform but senior clerics in the country - whose approval would likely be needed to deconstruct the system - are averse to change.
According to Khan, the law stems from an understanding of the Quran which dictates classes of males which one is forbidden to marry. Some Islamic jurisprudence scholars have made the case that any woman should be accompanied by a guardian when in the presence of any man not on that list.
“This notion of guardianship is not necessarily embedded in the Quran but it’s based upon the jurist view that there are certain patriarchal understandings about the necessity of guarding a woman from these men,” Khan explained. Beyond laws dictating marriage contracts, no other Muslim majority country employs similar guardianship laws.
Yousef said some prominent Saudi clerics have also signed the petition, to indicate their belief that the system is not derived from Islamic law. Al Dosari said that many more clerics came out after the 26 October 2013 movement, where Saudi women pushed for the right to drive. “They all declared that this is not religion, this is all government rules and it should be changed,” Yousef said.

Monday, 26 September 2016

Drug lord Guzman ‘serene’ ahead of extradition ruling

If the judge approves the extradition, Guzman would have 10 days to appeal to a higher court of appeals
Drug Lord Guzman 'Serene' Ahead Of Extradition Ruling
Mexico City: A Mexican judge could rule on Monday whether Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman can be extradited to the United States, but the drug kingpin’s lawyers vow to appeal if he loses.
One of Guzman’s lawyers, Jose Refugio Rodriguez, said the Sinaloa drug cartel leader was “very serene” as he waits for the decision by a court in Mexico City.
The foreign ministry gave the green light to Guzman’s extradition in May, but the former most wanted man won a temporary injunction in June, which the judge must decide whether to make permanent or strike down.
“We hope that the result will be favourable,” Refugio Rodriguez said, adding that if the judge rules on Monday, Guzman’s defence team would only be notified the next day.
If the judge approves the extradition, Guzman would have 10 days to appeal to a higher court of appeals, which would take several weeks to rule, the lawyer said, warning that he would take the case to the Supreme Court if necessary.
A US government official said on condition of anonymity that Guzman could be in US custody before the end of the year. He faces charges ranging from murder to drug distribution in courts in Texas and California.
Guzman was captured in February 2014 after 13 years on the lam, but he escaped a year later from the Altiplano maximum-security prison near Mexico City under a 1.5-kilometre tunnel, humiliating President Enrique Pena Nieto.
After he was recaptured in January in his northwestern home state of Sinaloa, he was sent back to the same prison.
But he was abruptly transferred in May to another prison in Ciudad Juarez, a city bordering Texas that was once the scene of brutal turf wars between his gang and a local cartel.
Pena Nieto had balked at extraditing Guzman before his escape in July 2015, preferring to put him on trial in Mexico.
But after he was recaptured, the president ordered the attorney general’s office to speed up the extradition process.
Refugio Rodriguez said his client’s health has “deteriorated a lot” while in prison.
“He’s doing very badly. He’s isolated. He lost a lot of hair because he takes a lot of medicine. He lives in constant physical stress,” the lawyer said.
Guzman’s extradition would set up a major trial in the United States for a man whose cartel has been accused of murdering countless people in Mexico while providing tons of cocaine and other drugs to addicts in the United States.
But another Guzman lawyer, Andres Granados, said if his client is “judged according to the law, he won’t be extradited this year or during the six-year term” of Pena Nieto.

Coalition prefers final Yemen settlement to ‘short’ truce

Al Houthis offer truce and ‘pardon’ for fighters in exchange for halt in air strikes and lifting of siege


The Old City of Sana’a. Previous truces in Yemen’s 18-month war have collapsed, raising doubts about a new one.


Riyadh: The Saudi-led coalition fighting in support of Yemen’s government would prefer a broad political settlement to a ceasefire, its spokesman said on Monday.
“I think now it’s not a question of talking about a ceasefire,” Brigadier General Ahmad Assiri said.
Late on Sunday an Al Houthi rebel leader, Saleh Al Sammad, proposed a truce on the country’s border with Saudi Arabia and an amnesty for Yemeni fighters opposing the group if the kingdom stopped air strikes and lifted a near blockade on Yemen.
“[In exchange for] stopping the aggression against our country by land, sea and air, stopping the air strikes and lifting the siege imposed on our country, in return [we will] stop combat operations on the border,” Saleh Al Samad, the chief of an Al Houthi-backed political council, said in a speech.
For months, the Houthis have retaliated with attacks on Saudi Arabia from its mountainous strongholds in northern Yemen and has launched around a dozen ballistic missiles at the kingdom, all of which were intercepted.
Assiri said the coalition welcomes “any effort to have a genuine political settlement” under a peace initiative proposed last month by US Secretary of State John Kerry.
This is preferable to a “short ceasefire without any control, without any observation”, he said.
Previous truces in the 18-month war collapsed.“[We call] all fighters on the side of the aggression on the various fronts to respond to a general amnesty and come back into the national fold,” he said.

Samad said the group was prepared to pardon its foes.
After talks in Saudi Arabia with his Gulf counterparts, Kerry outlined a plan which offers the Al Houthis participation in government in exchange for an end to violence and a surrender of weapons.
The Al Houthis are allied with soldiers loyal to former Yemeni president Ali Abdullah Saleh.
“If they want to have a ceasefire they know what they have to do,” Assiri said, referring to terms of the Kerry plan which were to be refined under United Nations mediation among the parties.
The plan calls for a rebel withdrawal from seized areas including the capital Sana’a which they have held since late 2014.
The United States and Saudi Arabia say Iran, Riyadh’s regional rival, has supplied missiles and other weapons to the Al Houthis.
The coalition intervened in March last year after the rebels overran much of the country.

Calais refugee camp to be razed by year-end, Hollande says

Between 7,000 and 10,000 refugees are currently living in the ‘Jungle’
French President Francois Hollande (L) shakes hands with workers during a ceremony to mark the laying of the first stone of the extension of the port of Calais, on September 26, 2016, in Calais, northern France.

Calais, France: French President Francois Hollande said Monday the sprawling “Jungle” refugee camp in Calais would be dismantled by the end of this year under a plan to spread asylum seekers around the country.
“I have come to Calais to confirm the decision that I took with the government … to dismantle [the camp] definitively, entirely and rapidly, that means by the end of the year,” Hollande said on his first visit to Calais as president.
Hollande called on British authorities to help in assisting the migrants, most of whom are desperate to reach Britain.
“I am determined to see the British authorities play their part in the humanitarian effort that France is undertaking” in Calais, Hollande said, flanked by security forces.
Between 7,000 and 10,000 migrants are currently living in the “Jungle”, the launch pad for their attempts to stow away on lorries heading across the Channel to England.
Hollande met police, local politicians, NGOs and business leaders in the northern port city but was not expected to visit the camp itself.
The Socialist president has been under pressure from right-wing rivals to close down the “Jungle”.
A flurry of preparations in Calais suggest the operation to raze the collection of makeshift shelters may begin shortly.
The government has said the migrants, who are mostly from Sudan and Afghanistan, will be moved to 164 reception centres around the country “before winter”.
Hollande said Britain’s vote to exit the European Union did not diminish its responsibility for the refugees camped across the Channel.
“Just because the United Kingdom has taken a sovereign decision, it does not mean it is freed from its obligations towards France,” he said.
Hollande said the vote also had no effect on the bilateral Le Touquet agreement which effectively means that the British border extends to Calais’s ferry ports, where British immigration officials check passports and inspect vehicles.
Hollande’s visit comes just days after his conservative predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy — who is hoping to return as president in next year’s election — visited Calais to promote his tough line on migration.
Migration has been a low-key issue of Hollande’s four-year presidency.
But he has been forced to take a stronger stance on the issue, under pressure from Sarkozy and far-right leader Marine Le Pen.
Both Sarkozy and Le Pen have made immigration and national identity key themes in early campaigning for next year’s election, which has echoes of the US race for the White House.
On a visit to one of the new reception centres in the central city of Tours at the weekend Hollande said France would not be a “country of camps”.
Calais has become a symbol of Europe’s failure to resolve the migration crisis that continues to divide the continent, after people fleeing war and misery across the Mediterranean began pouring into Europe in unprecedented numbers.
Plans to relocate the Calais migrants have sparked controversy and protests, with residents in some parts of the country vehemently opposed to taking them in.
Several hundred people demonstrated at the weekend in Versailles, west of Paris, against plans to move a group of migrants there.
The “Jungle” camp has also become a sore point in relations between France and Britain.
Last week, building work began on a British-funded wall to clamp down on repeated attempts by migrants to stow away on trucks heading for Britain.
Rights groups have criticised the hardship and dangers facing the migrants living in the camp, particularly the hundreds of unaccompanied minors.
A 14-year-old Afghan boy was killed by a car earlier this month as he tried to climb aboard a truck.
Under EU rules, under-18s travelling alone are allowed join family in Britain.
Around half of the unaccompanied minors in Calais are estimated to have family across the Channel.
But the process of trying to reunite them with their relatives has been dogged by delays.

Saudi Arabia cuts public sector bonuses, ministers’ salaries

Decision comes as low oil prices have pushed energy-rich Gulf Arab states to rein in lavish public spending

King Salman Bin Abdul Aziz
Manama: Saudi Arabia’s government has decided to curb to some financial perks for public sector employees, the government said following its weekly session on Sunday chaired by King Salman Bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud.
A royal decree announced a cut to ministers’ salaries by 20 percent and to members of the appointed Shura Council by 15 percent.
The decision comes as low oil prices have pushed energy-rich Gulf Arab states to rein in lavish public spending.
No annual bonus will be given for the next Islamic year, due to start on October 2, and the renewal or extension of existing contracts will not include any salary increases.
The employees will have their bonuses, allowances and financial perks cancelled, amended or suspended according to their categories, the government added.
Annual holidays for ministers will also be reduced from 42 days to 36 days.
Previously, an employee would receive an additional 25 per cent of their salary for work performed outside of normal working hours. It would reach 50 per cent if the work is performed on official holidays.
Under the new rules, public sector employees will not receive transport allowance during their holidays and if they don’t use their 60 off days during the year, they lose them.
The financial reductions will be applied to all public sector employees regardless of their nationalities and if they are in the military.
Government agencies will be given 60 days to amend their statutes to ensure full compliance with the new decree.






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The editorial published in AAT is always projects various new trends in the overseas which helps many Indian professionals to locate their bright future. Day to day developments in the overseas employment market is updated regularly. Alterations and amendments in the rules pertaining to expatriates in different countries and Indian emigration rules are also high lighted in AAT.

DNA collection controversy resurfaces amid Kuwait’s shift to electronic passports

Authorities insist the information will only be used to target criminals and those who fraudulently obtain citizenship

Manama: Kuwait’s decision last year to collect DNA samples of its 1.2 million citizens and 2.3 million foreigners has stirred up a robust debate in the country over security versus personal privacy.
Parliament passed the DNA law in July 2015 as a way to combat cases where people fraudulently obtained the Kuwaiti citizenship, with some cases dating back to 40 years ago.
The DNA information will also be used to help build a database of convicted terrorists and criminals.
The issue has resurfaced recently as Kuwait’s decision to implement electronic passports has taken effect in September. Anyone applying for a new passport in Kuwait now will be forced to get an electronic passport which requires a DNA sample.
The sample is taken through a one-minute procedure collecting the person’s saliva.
Under Article 10 of the DNA law, “individuals forging DNA documents or knowingly using fake ones will be punished by a maximum of seven years in prison and/or a maximum KD5,000 (Dh60,957) fine.”
Kuwait has been engaged in a massive operation to unearth cases of forgery and falsifying records that enabled several foreigners, with the complicity of Kuwaitis, to acquire Kuwaiti citizenship.
Over 100 people last year were found guilty of fraudulently obtaining Kuwaiti citizenship.
Earlier this month, two men were arrested after it was discovered they illegally obtained citizenship over 50 years ago.
The two men, born to an Iraqi family, have been enjoying the benefits of Kuwaiti citizenship since 1965, when their father allegedly conspired with a Kuwaiti man to claim the boys were his own.
Authorities expect hundreds of similar cases to come to light as more DNA testing is conducted.
Critics of the DNA testing worry that the information will be used to go after Kuwaitis with dual-citizenship or those making lineage or paternity claims.
Authorities deny this is what they are after.
“Even if the General Directorate for Nationality receives information that a person has obtained Kuwaiti nationality fraudulently, robust evidence should be passed on to the judges. The general directorate will not make any move until it receives an official note from the judiciary. It is all well-stipulated in the law and carried out within the confines of the law,” Major General Shihab Al Shammari, the acting Assistant Undersecretary for Criminal Security Affairs in the Interior Ministry, said.
“The DNA will not be abused or misused in any way. Even when a citizen has doubts about his children and wants the results of the DNA, he will not receive anything. It is exclusively for the judiciary.”
Interior Ministry Assistant Undersecretary for Nationality and Residence Shaikh Mazen Al Jarrah has also assured the information would be confidential.
“It is a purely security measure to set up a database for every Kuwaiti and expatriate residing in Kuwait. There must be no concerns or worries about a possible leak of information because there is complete and utter secrecy to the point that the employee is dealing through barcodes and there are no names, which means he cannot identify the person who provided the sample since there are no names,” he told Kuwaiti daily Al Rai last month.
Despite the assurances, several human rights groups are calling for “amending the law and limiting the DNA collection to individuals suspected of having committed serious crimes.”

N. Korean defectors sold as brides in China want kids back

Experts say Chinese authorities aren’t likely to accept the appeals because the women were illegal residents and their relationships were not legally recognised marriages
Seoul, South Korea: After fleeing North Korea to avoid extreme poverty and oppression, the young woman allowed a stranger to arrange a marriage for her with a rural Chinese farmer because she had nowhere to go. An even more painful decision came later.
She said severe abuse by her husband, including once being tied to a post, and the constant fear police would send her back to the North to face torture and prison convinced her that she needed to flee to South Korea. She decided she had to make the risky journey alone, leaving behind the young daughter she had with her Chinese husband.
“My heart has been torn apart,” the 35-year-old said of the daughter she left in the northeastern Chinese town of Longjing nearly 10 years ago, when the girl was four. “I heard from my Chinese husband that my daughter cried herself to sleep and searched for me until she turned eight.”
She asked to be identified only by her surname, Kim, out of fear that publicity about her past would destroy her life in the South, where she has remarried and has two other children.
Kim has lost touch with her daughter and is afraid to return to China, but neither she nor other defectors in similar situations have given up. Deep shame and guilt about not seeing their children and worry about social stigma in the South kept them silent for years, but some have begun pushing publicly for international help to get back their children. Four defectors plan to travel to the US next month to seek help from US and United Nations officials.
It will not be easy.
Experts say Chinese authorities aren’t likely to accept the appeals because the women were illegal residents and their relationships were not legally recognised marriages. Their efforts to reunite with their children could be viewed as individual family problems, rather than human rights issues requiring international intervention.
“Is there any female defector who had registered their marital status in China?” said Yoon Yeo Sang, a co-founder of the Seoul-based non-profit Database Centre for North Korean Human Rights. “For China, they were the ones who were supposed to be repatriated, and I wonder if China would accept their common-law marital status and take necessary legal steps.”
China’s foreign ministry did not reply to questions about whether it would help the women. The defectors say they deserve international attention because their plight was primarily caused by the North’s abysmal rights conditions and by China’s policy of repatriating North Korean defectors who are caught hiding in the country.
“There are South Korean laws, Chinese laws and North Korean laws, but none of them can help us,” said Kim Jungah, 40, a North Korean defector living in the South who was separated from her child in China. Now an activist, she will lead three other women on a trip to Washington and New York from October 8-18.
The 35-year-old Kim from Longjing had initially planned to go the US as well but said she cancelled due to worries about the publicity.
The market for selling North Korean women into marriage in China heated up after the North suffered a devastating famine in the mid-1990s that’s thought to have killed hundreds of thousands. China has significantly fewer women than men, and the imbalance is particularly acute in rural farming areas because young women often migrate to big cities seeking better economic opportunities.
Bride trafficking of North Korean women may have eased in recent years, but thousands of North Korean women sold to Chinese men are believed to still live in China, most illegally, according to activists specialising in North Korea affairs.
In the early years of bride trafficking, most North Korean women were lured by brokers who promised food and jobs in China; some were abducted. But later on, many volunteered to be sold as brides because they lacked money to sneak across the border and believed living with Chinese men would decrease the danger of arrest and repatriation, according to Ahn Kyung-soo, a Seoul-based activist who has interviewed many defectors.
Kim — the woman who agreed to be identified only by surname — said she slipped into China on her own and managed to stay at an orchard for a few days in 2002. The orchard’s owner proposed that she marry one of his Chinese friends, 14 years her senior. Kim accepted because she had nowhere else to go. She later found that the orchard owner had essentially sold her to his friend as a way to clear a 6,000 yuan (Dh3,306) debt.
After arriving in China, many women are beaten or sexually abused before being sold to husbands.
Park Kyung-hwa, who escaped from her traffickers in 2000, said she saw brokers grope other trafficked women many times. She said brokers kicked and beat her with wooden clubs for about 20 minutes when her first attempt to escape failed.
“The brokers didn’t see [North Korean women] as human beings, but as products to sell,” said Park, 44.
Young women are sometimes sent to karaoke bars or brothels, or forced to work on adult video chat sites, according to defectors and activists.
Park said brokers tried to sell her twice to bars, although she asked to be sold as a bride. One bar owner in Shenyang examined her and two other North Korean women for 10 minutes before deciding not to buy anyone.
“If I was taller and a little prettier, I think I would have been sold,” said Park, who now works for a Seoul-based short-wave radio station targeting North Koreans. She said she came to South Korea in 2002.
Chinese looking for North Korean brides are often old and less well-off; some are disabled bachelors or widowers who work as farmers or manual labourers in rural villages. Some treat the women well, and even end up moving with their wives to South Korea. The four women travelling to the US next month include one whose husband allowed her and their child to come to South Korea and sent them money.
Other men, however, inflict horrible abuse.
When Kim once returned days after running away, she said, her husband tied her to a wooden post for several hours in the middle of the night. She said she was forced to urinate while standing. Days before she gave birth to their daughter, she said her husband beat her with a broom until she bled from her nose because she fought with his mother.
Many of the women flee their husbands in secret. Some tell them they are going to the South only to make money and will come back. Yet many are terrified of actually returning, out of fear they could be repatriated or even captured by North Korean secret agents.
Kim said she regularly sent money, clothes and other gifts to her husband in China, but he broke off contact several years ago after determining she would never return. In her last phone conversation with her daughter, the child complained about being abandoned.
Kim said life with her two South Korean children has helped her begin to understand the pain her daughter in China must have suffered.
When one of the children was four — the same age the child she left behind was when she left — he “became very anxious and made a big fuss whenever I went out or returned home late,” Kim said. “Think about how much more a four-year-old girl would cry when her mom disappeared suddenly.”

Britain’s Prince William and Kate visit Canada

The prince and his wife will take in the natural beauty of Canada’s Pacific coast, heading as far north as the rugged Yukon territory




George, 3, more interested in a helicopter hovering overhead than by protocol, and his year-old sister, wearing a smocked dress for her first foreign trip, climbed aboard a car with their parents headed for a gorgeous Victorian home where they are staying for the visit.
The royal family was received an hour later at a ceremony with military honours and a 21-gun salute under blue skies on the lawn in front of the westernmost Canadian province’s legislature on Vancouver Island.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau remarked that this visit would be quite different for the royals, now that they are parents of two young children, compared to their last trip to Canada five years ago.
“As any parent who has travelled with children knows, it’s a whole different experience when you bring your family with you,” said Trudeau, who has three young children of his own and joined many official visits when his father, Pierre Trudeau, was prime minister.
“Let me caution you from my own experience, if they’re anything like our kids, getting them back on a plane after a visit to our beautiful west coast will really be a challenge.”
Trudeau was received by the British and Canadian head of state, Queen Elizabeth II, at Buckingham Palace early this year.
“As Canada approaches its 150th anniversary next year, we’re excited to meet and interact with the young people who will lead this country into its next few decades,” William said, speaking to an enthusiastic crowd.
“And in the year of the queen’s 90th birthday, I feel very fortunate to have the opportunity to thank the people of Canada for the warmth and generosity they’ve extended to my grandmother throughout her reign.”
After a children’s chorus sang the Canadian national anthem, William and Kate exchanged greetings with locals.
The Duchess of Cambridge, sporting a blue dress and matching hat, her hair gathered in a bun, wore a brooch in the shape of a maple leaf, Canada’s national symbol.
This time, the prince and his wife will take in the natural beauty of Canada’s Pacific coast, heading as far north as the rugged Yukon territory, and will also meet with indigenous people.
George and Charlotte will stay with their nanny in Victoria, the capital of British Columbia.
Royal fever has taken hold in the city of Victoria, where the provincial parliament has been decorated to welcome the British couple.
Accompanied by the Trudeaus, the royal couple will begin their trip in earnest on Sunday in Vancouver by visiting a shelter for refugees and a home for children with mental disabilities.
Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, will also go with Sophie Trudeau to meet with women living at a drug rehabilitation residence. Vancouver has seen a spike in overdoses involving the powerful synthetic opioid fentanyl.
The rest of the visit will take William and Kate to the island of Bella-Bella for a traditional indigenous ceremony at the foot of a totem poll, then for a hike through a rainforest before heading north to the city of Whitehorse in the Yukon, a wild, mountainous territory with a sparse population.
Then they will stop off in Kelowna in the Okanagan Valley in the south of the province, near the US border.
For their fans, William and Kate have set aside time at the end of the trip for a big festival at which residents of Victoria will be able to snap photos of them and their kids.
The family will leave Victoria by seaplane on October 1, before returning to Britain on their official plane.
Some Canadians — mainly those who dislike the royal family’s expensive lifestyle — are complaining about the cost of the visit for taxpayers.
The cost of the trip to British Columbia and the Yukon will be disclosed after it is over.
But when the couple visited in 2011, two months after their wedding, the trip cost Canadian $1.2 million (Dh3.34 million; $0.91 million).

 Credit: AF

How foreign influences shaped Lebanon’s dynamism

Country’s cultural institutions reflect its deep exposure to foreign influence over the centuries
Beirut: Notwithstanding its many woes, Lebanon remains a cosmopolitan country with unprecedented dynamism that is the envy of many, promoting intercultural contacts.
The country survived two civil wars and continues to waddle through conflicts, which demonstrate resilience par excellence, even if the societies that inhabit it — and there are several — choose chaos over nation-building.
Despite this organised chaos, Lebanese continue to enjoy themselves.
Thousands have flocked to dozens of prestigious summer festivals like Byblos, Beiteddine or Baalbeck, to enjoy international-level performances. Many more partake in vigorous cultural exchanges that enrich their lives—mostly for free.
While much of Lebanon’s cultural prowess is locally produced — through a flourishing art scene, including theatre, film, music and arts in several languages (Arabic, English, French, Armenian and even Persian) some of it is available through the courtesy of foreign institutes that truly enrich the lives of those who seek such access.
More than a dozen foreign institutes organise a variety of year-long activities, including the teaching of foreign languages, concerts, and a variety of lectures by leading academics and journalists.
Several hold annual fairs and, in the case of the Alliance Francaise, promote a widely attended book fair.
Most excel in language training, and while their primary purposes hover around disseminating their own cultures, the Lebanese benefit from such exposures.
Long before Lebanon became a French colony, both the coastal as well as mountainous regions that make up the country experienced foreign rule.
The Assyrians, Babylonians, and Persians succeeded the Phoenicians and Canaanites, before Hellenistic and Roman occupations set-up shop.
These were followed by the Sassanids, Arabs and Ottomans, whose reign ended in 1918.
Britain and France walked in even before the infamous 1916 Sykes-Picot Agreement that divided the Arab world, while the US opted to deploy its sharpest weapon — education — when it created a college in 1866 that became the American University of Beirut.
America’s people-to-people diplomacy grew significantly in 1953 when Washington established a US Information Agency (USIA) branch in Beirut, whose mission was to “tell America’s story” and “promote mutual understanding” through English language teaching programs, library services, and Arabic-language publications.
Its “John F. Kennedy Cultural Centre and Library” had five branches throughout Lebanon, including in Zahleh and Tripoli.
Over the course of the 1975-1990 civil war, most public affairs activities came to a standstill, when the regional printing office was closed.
Although the US restored some of its cultural services, security concerns dominated its activities, which meant that little of what was once a superlative presence returned.
Other countries, including Spain, Germany, Britain and France, filled the cultural void.
The Instituto Cervantes [Cervantes Institute] was created in 1991 to promote the teaching of Spanish and to spread the culture of Spain.
Named after the great writer Miguel de Cervantes, and present in more than 70 cities around the world, the Beirut branch is one of the most active local institutions today.
The Cultural Center of the Safadi Foundation in Tripoli hosts Cervantes instructors too and similar classes are also held in Kaslik.
Naturally, while the main purpose is to help organize examinations for the Diploma of Spanish as a Foreign Language (DELE), and issue certificates and official diplomas to participants who plan to continue their higher education in Spain, the Cervantes Institute has a full and varied programme of cultural activities including lectures, film screenings, book presentations, exhibitions and dance performances, theatre as well as music. Its library has a collection of about 11,000 books, serial publications, videos, DVDs, cassettes, slides and CD-Roms, and access is free.
A few days ago, it organised a dance evening with the Tomasa La Macanita ensemble, and plans a flamenco concert with the renowned Grupo Pepe Habichuela at the Unesco Palace in a few weeks on a complimentary basis, which contrasts to the expensive tickets many Lebanese purchase during summer festivals.
Similarly, the Goethe-Institut furthers knowledge of the German language though, like its counterparts, it aims much higher. Interestingly, a broad spectrum of cultural events that present German culture are offered and, Beirut was one of the Arab stations for the recently established dialogue points that created a network of up-to-date information about Germany to a greater number of centres in the North Africa/Middle East region. These dialogue points are designed to interact with young Arabs and to provide with free access to information about Germany.
In a truly groundbreaking initiative, the Institut invited the Lebanese to discover “German Sentiments”, and uncover German traces in the country. Although many walk or drive past the Ashrafieh Protestant cemetery, few know that many German tombstones exist within it, a testament to German history in the Land of the Cedars. From the Crusaders to the Red Army Fraction, from the Kaiserswerther Deaconesses to a German steam locomotive, many lived in passed away here, all of which highlighted cultural inter-connectedness. Organizers of the initiative requested assistance from patrons to share photos and relics of German history to further document the incredibly wealthy heritages that exist in Lebanon.
This is the first of a two-part series on the impact of foreign institutes in Lebanon.