Kuwait says government spending must be fixed to control budget growth

Minister of Finance and Minister of State for Economic Affairs and Investment Anwar Al-Mudhaf during his speech. (KUNA)
Minister of Finance and Minister of State for Economic Affairs and Investment Anwar Al-Mudhaf during his speech. (KUNA)
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Updated 14 July 2024
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Kuwait says government spending must be fixed to control budget growth

Kuwait says government spending must be fixed to control budget growth
  • Its statement added expenses were estimated at 24.5 billion dinars and revenues at 18.9 billion dinars

KUWAIT CITY: Kuwait's budget is projected to show a deficit of 5.6 billion dinars ($18.33 billion) for the 2024-2025 fiscal year, the Kuwait News Agency reported on Sunday citing the Ministry of Finance. 

Its statement added expenses were estimated at 24.5 billion dinars and revenues at 18.9 billion dinars.

Government spending must be fixed at 24.5 billion Kuwaiti dinars in the 2027-2028 budget to control budget growth, the ministry also said.

The liquidity of the General Reserve Fund, from which the budget deficit is financed, decreased to 2 billion dinars last March from 33.6 billion ten years ago due to increasing withdrawals, it added.


Turkish drone strike kills three PKK members in northern Iraq

Updated 21 sec ago
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Turkish drone strike kills three PKK members in northern Iraq

Turkish drone strike kills three PKK members in northern Iraq
BAGHDAD: A Turkish drone strike on Friday killed three members of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) on northern Iraq, Iraqi Kurdistan’s counter-terrorism service said.
The statement said a vehicle which belonged to the PKK was hit by the drone strike near the northern city of Sulaimaniya. A senior PKK member, his driver and a guard were killed in the attack, the statement added.
Turkiye regularly carries out air strikes on PKK militants in northern Iraq and has dozens of outposts in Iraqi territory. The PKK took up arms against the Turkish state in 1984.

Libya armed mobilization causes concern, UN says

Libya armed mobilization causes concern, UN says
Updated 24 min 24 sec ago
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Libya armed mobilization causes concern, UN says

Libya armed mobilization causes concern, UN says
  • Major fighting paused with a ceasefire in 2020 but efforts to end the political crisis have failed

TRIPOLI: The United Nations Libya mission said late on Thursday it was concerned about reports of forces mobilizing in Tripoli and threats of force to resolve a crisis over control of the central bank.
The mission’s deputy head, Stephanie Koury, told the UN Security Council on Monday that the political and military situations in Libya had deteriorated rapidly over the previous two months, including a series of mobilizations by armed factions.
“The display of military power and armed confrontations in densely populated neighborhoods is unacceptable and threatens the lives and security of civilians,” the mission said in its Thursday statement.
The latest round of tensions emerged after efforts by political factions to oust the Central Bank of Libya (CBL) head Sadiq Al-Kabir, with rival armed factions mobilizing on each side. Libya, a major oil producer on the Mediterranean, has had little stability since a 2011 NATO-backed uprising. The country split in 2014 between warring eastern and western factions, eventually drawing in Russian and Turkish backing.
Major fighting paused with a ceasefire in 2020 but efforts to end the political crisis have failed, leaving major factions in place, occasionally joining in armed clashes, and competing for control over Libya’s substantial economic resources.
The country’s political leaders are drawn from bodies elected a decade or more ago, or installed during periodic international peacemaking efforts to oversee repeated failed transitions. Diplomacy aimed at national elections to replace all Libya’s political bodies has stalled.
Eastern Libya, where the parliament sits, is controlled by commander Khalifa Haftar’s Libyan National Army (LNA).
Tripoli and the northwest, where the internationally recognized Government of National Unity (GNU) and most major state institutions are based, is home to rival armed factions that have repeatedly fought. In late July and early August rival groups in northwest Libya mobilized against each other, while the LNA moved a force into southwest Libya, prompting fears of east-west fighting.
Meanwhile there is stalemate in the High State Council, one of the internationally recognized legislative bodies, after a contested vote over its leadership. The eastern-based House of Representatives parliament has also renewed calls to unseat the GNU and Presidency Council.
Tensions over control of the central bank were increased after Presidency Council head Mohammed Al-Menfi issued a decision to replace Kabir and the board, a move rejected by the parliament.


Israel responsible for quarter of all water-related violence in 2023: Tracker

Israel responsible for quarter of all water-related violence in 2023: Tracker
Updated 35 min 13 sec ago
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Israel responsible for quarter of all water-related violence in 2023: Tracker

Israel responsible for quarter of all water-related violence in 2023: Tracker
  • Settler attacks in West Bank often sanctioned by or in tandem with Israel Defense Forces
  • Invasion of Gaza has led to destruction of most of enclave’s water infrastructure

LONDON: Israeli attacks on Palestinian water supplies accounted for a quarter of all water-related violence in 2023, according to the Water Conflict Chronology tracker.

Throughout the year, settlers — often sanctioned by or operating in tandem with the Israel Defense Forces — regularly carried out targeted attacks on water infrastructure across the occupied West Bank.

This included the contamination or destruction of wells, pumps and irrigation systems in more than 90 instances last year, the tracker found by monitoring news and UN reports as well as eyewitness accounts.

Last September, settlers from Shaarei Tikva used wastewater to poison Palestinian olive groves and crops east of Qalqilya, The Guardian reported.

An attack in November saw settlers demolish homes as well as a school’s water tanks and pipeline, in an attempt to make the area unlivable for Palestinian families.

As well as settler attacks, Israel’s invasion of Gaza has led to the destruction of most of the enclave’s water infrastructure.

Israel also struck energy sites that supplied a key wastewater treatment plant that served 1 million people in Gaza.

Peter Gleick, co-founder of the Pacific Institute, an independent research and policy organization that created the conflict tracker in 1985, said: “There was a massive uptick in violence over water in 2023, widely around the world, but especially in the Middle East.”


Border corridor becomes sticking point in Gaza truce talks

Border corridor becomes sticking point in Gaza truce talks
Updated 10 min 54 sec ago
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Border corridor becomes sticking point in Gaza truce talks

Border corridor becomes sticking point in Gaza truce talks
  • Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants his country to permanently control the Philadelphi — or Salaheddin — Corridor
  • Israeli negotiators hold talks in Cairo on a potential Gaza truce and hostage release deal

GAZA STRIP, Palestinian Territories: A narrow stretch of land along the Gaza Strip’s border with Egypt has emerged as the main stumbling block in negotiations for a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu wants his country to permanently control the Philadelphi — or Salaheddin — Corridor, which it seized during the war sparked by Hamas’s October 7 attack.
The patrol road protected by barbed wire runs for 14 kilometers (8.5 miles) along the border and is about 100 meters (330 feet) wide at its narrowest point, with tunnels said to be dug under it and used for smuggling.
It was built by the Israeli military when Gaza was under its direct occupation between 1967 and 2005, and has become a key target in Israel’s current offensive against Hamas.
As Israeli negotiators hold talks in Cairo on a potential Gaza truce and hostage release deal, the Philadelphi Corridor has become the primary sticking point.
Netanyahu contends that Israeli control is necessary “in order to prevent Hamas from rearming itself,” a statement from his office said on Thursday.
Hamas, which is not attending the latest round of talks in Egypt, demands a complete Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.
A high-ranking Egyptian official this week similarly called for a “complete withdrawal of Israeli troops from the Philadelphi Corridor and the Palestinian Rafah terminal” — a key crossing on Gaza’s border with Egypt.
A 2005 agreement between Israel and Egypt established the corridor as a buffer zone, as part of Israel’s unilateral withdrawal from the Gaza Strip that year.
It was meant to facilitate control over movement in and out of Gaza and discourage incursions and smuggling.
Some houses had to be demolished to make way for the corridor, which has also accentuated the division between the Gaza side of Rafah, in the territory’s far south, and the town’s Egyptian side — a remnant of British colonial policies.

Peace treaty
When Israeli troops withdrew from Gaza in September 2005, Egypt set up a force dedicated to guarding the border with around 750 personnel.
To avoid breaching demilitarization clauses in the 1979 Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty, the Egyptian force’s stated purpose was to fight “terrorism” in the area.
On the Gaza side, Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas — whose Palestinian Authority ruled the territory at the time — deployed guards to secure the Philadelphi Corridor.
But in June 2007, militant group Hamas seized control of the Gaza Strip after rivalry with Abbas’s Fatah party prevented the Islamist movement from assuming the leadership despite a landslide election win.
The border area subsequently became the focus of growing concern about arms trafficking, which fed the arsenal of local armed groups.
Hundreds of tunnels are said to have been dug under the Philadelphi Corridor that have been used for smuggling everything from weapons to cars, drugs and even food like Kentucky Fried Chicken.
According to international organizations, armed fighters have criss-crossed through these underground routes, while smugglers have facilitated the travel of civilians for varied reasons — including medical appointments and attending weddings.
For Palestinians, the tunnels have been a way of getting around the Israeli land, sea and air blockade imposed on the entire Gaza Strip when Hamas seized power.
When Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi came to power in 2013, Cairo moved to destroy many of the tunnels, accusing Palestinian militants of using them to smuggle arms and fighters to jihadist groups in the neighboring Sinai Peninsula.
Last week the Israeli military announced it had destroyed some 50 tunnels under the Philadelphi Corridor.
Since the start of the Israel-Hamas war after the October 7 attack, Netanyahu has stressed the strategic importance of the border area.
In May, the Israeli military said it had assumed “operational control” of the route.
Diaa Rashwan, head of the Egyptian government’s State Information Service, in January told pan-Arab news channel Al-Ghad that such an “occupation” was “forbidden by virtue of the agreement” between the two countries.
It would even constitute a “threat of violation of the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty,” Rashwan said.
The US-brokered 1979 agreement was the first peace treaty between Israel and an Arab country.


A baby evacuated from Gaza lost an eye and most of his family in the war

A baby evacuated from Gaza lost an eye and most of his family in the war
Updated 23 August 2024
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A baby evacuated from Gaza lost an eye and most of his family in the war

A baby evacuated from Gaza lost an eye and most of his family in the war
  • In a war that has claimed the lives of thousands of Palestinian children and injured more, Mostafa’s story is in many ways familiar to countless families in Gaza

CAIRO: When Mostafa Qadoura was a week old, an Israeli strike on his home in the Gaza Strip last October launched him and his crib into the air, sent shrapnel into his right eye that damaged it beyond repair and killed one of his brothers.
Mostafa was evacuated to Egypt weeks later when the hospital treating him came under siege by the Israeli army, and he has grown into a smiling and active 10-month-old with chubby cheeks. But he still faces huge challenges.
His mother and other brother were killed in a separate Israeli strike just days after he was evacuated. He will need a series of surgeries to adjust his artificial eye as his body grows. And it’s unclear whether he will return to Gaza before the war is over.
“I don’t know what to tell him when he grows up,” said his grandmother and guardian, 40-year-old Amna Abd Rabou, who was allowed in April to travel to Egypt to care for him. She and Mostafa flew to Malaysia last week for a surgery that is scheduled for Monday.
In a war that has claimed the lives of thousands of Palestinian children and injured more, Mostafa’s story is both uniquely gut-wrenching and, in many ways, familiar to countless families in Gaza devastated and displaced by the fighting between Israel and Hamas.
Mostafa is one of the roughly 3,500 Palestinians, mostly children, who have been evacuated from the Gaza Strip for medical treatment. Families there have submitted requests to have at least twice that number of injured children evacuated, according to the World Health Organization.
More than 12,000 children have been injured in the war, according to Palestinian health officials, and aid groups say many who have not been allowed to leave Gaza face health outcomes far less hopeful than Mostafa’s.
“We meet children whose lives are hanging by a thread because of the injuries of war or their inability to receive medical care for conditions like cancer,” said Tess Ingram, a spokesperson for UNICEF, the UN’s agency for children.
More medical evacuations would save lives and improve the futures of wounded children, Ingram said, “but above anything else, we need a ceasefire. It is the only way to stop the killing and maiming of children.”
The war began on Oct. 7, when Hamas fighters attacked southern Israel, killing some 1,200 people and taking roughly 250 hostages into Gaza. More than 40,000 Palestinians have been killed in the fighting since then, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not distinguish in its count between civilians and militants. At least a quarter were children, according to the ministry.
At the Administrative Capital Hospital in Cairo, Mostafa recently sat on his grandmother’s lap, playing with a rattle and grinning at the nurse who escorted him on his journey from Gaza to Egypt. His grandmother also smiled, saying she would take care of him as a promise to her deceased daughter.
After the late October strike that killed his 4-year-old brother, Ayes, and badly wounded his then 22-year-old mother, Halimah, Mostafa was found meters away from the destroyed home in Jabaliya in northern Gaza — and still inside his crib, according to his grandmother.
What followed was a familiar story of separation amid the chaos of the war, which has displaced close to 2 million Palestinians from their homes.
While Mostafa was receiving treatment for his injured eye and forehead at Shifa Hospital in Gaza City, his mother was having a leg amputated at a different hospital in northern Gaza, where she was also being treated for severe injuries to her neck, chest, and eyes.
“Relatives around me would tell me to pray and ask God to take her life to relieve her from pain, but I would tell them that she’s my daughter and I’ll take care of her and keep her the way she is regardless of her condition,” said Abd Rabou, who left two teenage children back in Gaza in the care of her husband.
While still recovering from her injuries, Mostafa’s mother moved to a large family home in Jabaliya, where a Nov. 22 strike killed her, her 6-year-old son, Bassam, and 50 other family members.
Abd Rabou said she doesn’t know what happened to Mostafa’s father, but she remembers what his mother said the day before she died.
“She grabbed my hand and told me she wanted to see Mostafa. She said she was afraid that she would never see him again,” Abd Rabou recalled.
The Qadoura family is not the only one in Gaza to have been nearly wiped out by the war.
The Israeli military, which rarely comments on individual strikes, has said it tries to avoid harming Palestinian civilians and blames their injuries and deaths on Hamas for operating in dense residential areas and sometimes sheltering in and launching attacks from homes, schools and mosques.
This month, the Israeli military acknowledged it struck a school-turned-shelter in central Gaza City, saying it hit a Hamas command center in the area without providing evidence.
In response to a query about the two strikes that hit the Qadoura family, a spokesman for the Israeli military said, “In stark contrast to Hamas’ intentional attacks on Israeli men, women and children, the (army) follows international law and takes feasible precautions to mitigate civilian harm.”
Mostafa’s family was unaware of his whereabouts after he and more than two dozen other babies were evacuated in November from Shifa Hospital. They thought he might have died until an uncle came across a local news story that mentioned an orphaned baby he suspected was Mostafa.
The uncle learned that Mostafa was first transferred to a hospital in Rafah, and that he was to be evacuated to Egypt along with 30 other sick and weak babies.
Bilal Tabasi, a nurse who traveled with Mostafa and the other evacuees, said they wrapped the premature babies who should have been in incubators in blankets to try to keep them warm. Three died before reaching the Egyptian border.
Mostafa was malnourished and dehydrated when he arrived at the border. He had also survived antibiotic-resistant bacteria that had infected his shrapnel wounds, Tabasi said.
“Mostafa was the most critical case I came across,” said Ramzy Mounir, director of the Administrative Capital Hospital in Cairo.
It’s unclear where Mostafa and his grandmother will go after his surgery in Malaysia, but she is hoping they can return to Egypt and stay there until the war ends. Wherever they land, Abd Rabou said she would never leave Mostafa’s side as she recalled some of his mother’s last words.
“She told me, ‘If anything happened to him, I’ll never forgive you,’” Abd Rabou said.