Tag Archives: georgia
Saudi demands Qatar modify its policies: Report
Saudi demands Qatar modify its policies: Report (AFP, Wam) / 19 March 2014 UAE issues clarification on audience between Qatari Foreign Minister and acting UAE Charge d’Affaires in Doha. Saudi Foreign Minister Saud Al Faisal has warned there will only be rapprochement between Riyadh and Doha when Qatar “modifies” policies at the centre of their spat, a newspaper reported on Tuesday. Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and the UAE earlier this month recalled their ambassadors from Qatar after accusing the fellow Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) state of interfering in their internal affairs and of supporting the Muslim Brotherhood. “There will be detente if Qatar modifies the policies that are at the origin of the crisis” with its neighbours, Prince Saud said in a short statement published by pan-Arab newspaper Al Hayat on Tuesday. He added that there will be “no American mediation to put an end to the crisis”. Saudi Arabia at a March 5 meeting of the GCC demanded that Doha shut down the Qatari-owned television station Al Jazeera, an informed source said. Riyadh also called for the closure of two think-tanks based in Qatar, the Brookings Doha Centre and the Arab Centre for Research and Policy Studies. UAE clarifies Meanwhile, Maryam Al Falasi, Director of Media Department, UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs, issued a statement on a news story by Qatar News Agency on Monday night about an audience between Qatari Foreign Minister Khalid bin Mohammad Al Attiyah and the acting UAE Charge d’Affaires in Doha on Monday. Al Falasi said the UAE Embassy in Qatar had requested on January 5, 2014, the delivery of a message dated December 12, 2013, from His Highness Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai,to the Amir of Qatar, His Highness Shaikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, dealing with the UAE’s winning of the bid to host World Expo 2020 in Dubai. She added that the message was a courtesy the UAE sent to sisterly and friendly countries after the Dubai win of the Expo bid. She also clarified that both the note and meeting had nothing to do with the recent developments which led Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain to withdraw their ambassadors from Doha. For more news from Khaleej Times, follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/khaleejtimes , and on Twitter at @khaleejtimes Continue reading
National interests hamper complex Malaysia jet search
National interests hamper complex Malaysia jet search (Agencies) / 19 March 2014 Thailand’s failure to quickly share information about the plane raises questions about the degree to which countries are sharing their defence data. National self-interest and confusion about operational control looked Wednesday to be unsettling the already daunting 26-nation search for a missing Malaysia Airlines jet, with boats and planes sitting idle pending clear orders. Malaysia has underlined the importance of outside help in scouring two land and sea corridors equivalent in size to the entire land mass of Australia. But Indonesia acknowledged Wednesday it had only just provided clearance for surveillance aircraft from Australia, Japan, the United States and Malaysia to overfly its territory, while saying its own vessels await instructions from Kuala Lumpur. Latest: Maldives Police probe reports of MH370 sighting “It is not that Indonesia does not want to issue permits, but we have a mechanism to follow that we have to respect,” military spokesman Iskandar Sitompul said, insisting Jakarta was not trying to “slow down” the process. “It must go through the foreign ministry first before being submitted to the armed forces,” he told AFP. MH370 went missing early on March 8 with 239 passengers and crew, spawning a massive international search across Southeast Asia and the Indian Ocean. The hunt has turned up no trace of wreckage as the clock ticks down on the 30 days that the aircraft’s black box transmits a signal. The Thai air force revealed Wednesday that its military radar had picked up what appeared to be Flight MH370 on March 8, just minutes after investigators believe it was deliberately diverted from its intended flight path by someone on board. Read more: Information vacuum breeds wild theories over missing Malaysia plane Although the aircraft ID could not be 100 percent verified, the Thai data represents crucial corroborative evidence for the conclusions drawn from Malaysian radar tracking of MH370. But it went unreported by the Thai military for nine days after the plane disappeared and only emerged following a check of radar logs on Monday. According to Air Marshal Monthon Suchookornat, the same plane was picked up again later swinging north and disappearing over the Andaman Sea. Nothing was done before because the aircraft was not in Thai airspace “and it was not a threat to Thailand,” Monthon said. Malaysia has sought help from more than two dozen countries in the form of radar and satellite analysis, as well as surveillance vessels and aircraft. Acknowledging the “diplomatic, technical and logistical challenges” inherent in running such a multi-national task force, Transport Minister Hishammuddin Hussein said Tuesday that Malaysia was ceding some operational control. Hishammuddin said Australia and Indonesia had agreed to take the lead in the southern corridor across the Indian Ocean, with China and Kazakhstan doing the same in the northern corridor, stretching from northern Thailand into South and Central Asia. But many of the countries involved are not used to such close cooperation — especially when it comes to sharing possibly sensitive radar data. Many countries in the region, and beyond, have offered and provided technical and logistical support, but bureaucracy and lingering confusion appear to be delaying their operational deployment. Indonesia said it was facing delays in deploying its own resources as it waits for a green light from Malaysia. “Five navy warships temporarily halted their search of the Malacca Straits on Monday, as we await further information from Malaysia or elsewhere,” Sitompul said. India has similarly suspended search operations in the Andaman Sea for several days. “No instructions received. ANC (Andaman and Nicobar Command) on standby awaiting further instructions,” a navy spokesman said in a message sent to AFP. “It is not for us to take a call on this. It is between governments. We have to simply follow instructions. We are awaiting orders,” said a source in the Indian defence ministry in New Delhi. Paul Yap, an aviation lecturer at Temasek Polytechnic in Singapore, expressed sympathy for the Malaysian authorities, saying it was always going to be tough to steer so many countries in one direction. “Right now, I think it is out of Malaysia’s hands,”Yap said. For more news from Khaleej Times, follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/khaleejtimes , and on Twitter at @khaleejtimes Continue reading
Abu Dhabi to host first IPL match in UAE
Abu Dhabi to host first IPL match in UAE Adur Pradeep / 20 March 2014 Defending champions Mumbai Indians will take on Kolkata Knight Riders in the first match in the seventh edition of Indian Premier League. Defending champions Mumbai Indians will take on Kolkata Knight Riders in the first match in the seventh edition of Indian Premier League, one of the world’s richest Twenty20 cricket tournaments, at the Shaikh Zayed Stadium in Abu Dhabi on April 16. The UAE will host a total of 20 matches, with Abu Dhabi and Dubai having seven games each, while Sharjah will hold six matches. The second game, featuring Chennai Super Kings and Kings XI Punjab, will be held at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium on April 17, while Dubai International Cricket Stadium will enter the IPL action with two weekend matches on April 19. The IPL Governing Council announced the schedule for the first phase — from April 16 to 30 — of the tourney after a meeting in Chennai on Wednesday. The UAE is hosting the popular T20 tournament due to the Indian general elections, starting on April 7. pradeep@khaleejtimes.com For more news from Khaleej Times, follow us on Facebook at facebook.com/khaleejtimes , and on Twitter at @khaleejtimes Continue reading