exterminate thembefore they exterminate you by ahmed al ...€¦ · raising the possibility that...

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THE FIRST ENGLISH LANGUAGE DAILY IN FREE KUWAIT Established in 1977 / www.arabtimesonline.com NO. 15950 44 PAGES 150 FILS emergency number 112 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2015 / SAFAR 4, 1437 AH Panel rejects bid to impose expat remittance fee cricket Page 40 People gather around the Monument a la Republique at the Place de la Republique in Paris, on Nov 15, two days after a series of deadly attacks. Islamic State jihadists claimed the series of coordinated attacks by gunmen and suicide bombers in Paris on Nov 13 that killed at least 129 people in scenes of carnage at a concert hall, restaurants and the national stadium. (Inset): This handout picture released in a ‘appel a temoins’ (call for witnesses) by the French Police information service (SICOP) on Nov 15, shows a picture of Salah Abdeslam, suspected of being involved in the attacks that occurred on Nov 13, in Paris. (AFP) Belgian connections to Paris Molenbeek district linked to past attacks BRUSSELS, Nov 15, (RTRS): Belgian police arrested three people on Saturday in raids in a poor, immigrant quarter of Brussels as they pursued emerg- ing links between the Paris attacks and an Islamist bastion in France’s northern neighbour. Prime Minister Charles Michel said at least one of those held from the inner Brussels neighbourhood of Molenbeek was believed to have spent the previous evening in Paris, where two cars registered in Belgium were impounded close to scenes of some of the violence, includ- ing the Bataclan music hall. “Police operations will go on,” Michel told RTL television after late-night police raids in Molenbeek, west of the city cen- tre, which is home to many Muslims, notably families origi- nally from Morocco and Turkey. His interior minister spoke impa- tiently of going in to “clean up” Molenbeek. “We’re talking about a net- work,” the borough’s mayor, Francoise Schepmans, said on Sunday, referring to a total of five arrests in Molenbeek. A French prosecutor said a car hired in Belgium was linked to the attacks and that a Frenchman living in Brussels rented it and was later stopped early on Saturday at the Belgian border. A parking ticket issued in Molenbeek was found in the hire car in Paris. Officials declined comment on reports that the attacks may have been largely plotted in Brussels, that one of three attack teams came from there and that at least three of the attackers were based in the European Union capital. Proportional to its 11 million population, of whom half a mil- lion are Muslim, Belgium has been the European country which has contributed the most foreign fighters to the civil war in Syria — over 300 by official estimates a year ago — and it has figured in many Islamist attacks Opinion By Ahmed Al-Jarallah Editor-in-Chief, the Arab Times WE said it before that division between Arabs was the first rea- son behind the spread of terror- ism. Today, we continue to say that global hesitance plays a major role in the spread of this plague (terrorism) which hit France recently. Before France, it hit the United States of America, Spain, Russia and it will continue as long as temporary interests are upheld at the expense of the rights of the people to life and peace. It will continue to kill the innocent in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Indonesia, Iraq, Lebanon, Yemen, Syria, Egypt, Libya and Tunisia. Indeed, an Arab and Islamic environment was formed by political movements that claim to be Islamic. However, the real ‘incubator’ is Europe itself — currently being burned by its own fire — which expounded on their human rights slogans and what is known as, “listening to voices of the Arab opposition”, which secured the survival of the extremists by giving them shel- ter, podium, protection and even their nationalities. In fact, the western countries helped these groups (extremists) rise to power in some Arab countries. The events that took place in recent years in France, and gen- erally in Europe, were what for- mer Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak warned about in Paris in 2007. However, instead of comprehending the message, the French decision-makers went on to describe what Mubarak saw as “global terrorism”, to be just “reactions to Egypt’s oppression of the opposition, especially the Muslim Brotherhood.” What happened after eight years was the outcome of the encouraging stance on terrorism. In fact, before all that, wasn’t France marketed as Imam Khomaini’s revolutionary scheme on the Shah under the pretext of Islamic Revolution by rendering him to practice politi- cal instigation and provided him support? Wasn’t France the first one to burn with the flame of ‘Iranian revolution terrorism’ through the assassination attempts on former Iranian offi- cials on its land? Didn’t the United Kingdom make its land a Brotherhood arena, followed by al-Qaeda and Taleban, among other terrorist groups whose elements reached a point of considering them- selves at war with the UK? Wasn’t in 2005 when London tasted the pain inflicted by these groups through an explosion which led to the loss of scores of innocent lives? Didn’t the United State of America call for listening to the voices of these people a long Details Page 4 Exterminate them ... before they exterminate you Brothers, Belgium ... 1 on-the-run, arrests as France pursues probe PARIS, Nov 15, (AFP): Belgium issued an international arrest warrant Sunday for one of three brothers linked to the brutal attacks in Paris that killed 129 people, as the probe spread across Europe. As thousands gathered in central Paris in mourning and solidarity, authorities in at least five European countries scrambled to tie together leads and hunt down possible accomplices. Security sources said one of the three brothers died in the Bataclan concert hall where the worst of the bloodshed took place, while another had been detained along with six other people in Belgium. Seven gunmen wearing sui- cide belts died during the attacks, which have been claimed by the Islamic State group — either at the Stade de France stadium, or in and around the Bataclan venue. The sports minister said at least one of the bombers who detonated their explosives near the stadium had tried to enter the venue where France were play- ing Germany in an international football match at the time. Prosecutors say they believe three groups of attackers were involved in the Paris carnage, raising the possibility that one group may still be at large. It is now known that three of the suicide bombers were French nationals, but two of the men had lived in the Belgian capital Brussels. Two cars used in the attacks were hired in Belgium. One was quickly found near the Bataclan venue, and one overnight on Saturday in the suburb of Montreuil east of Paris, with two AK47 rifles inside. Witnesses said the second car, a black Seat, was used by gun- men who shot dozens of people in bars and restaurants in the hip Canal St Martin area of Paris. The first attacker to be named by investigators is Omar Ismail Mostefai, a 29-year-old father and French citizen, who was identified from a severed finger among the carnage at the Bataclan, where 89 people were killed after heavily armed men in wearing explosives vests stormed into the venue. French police, meanwhile, released a photograph of a sus- pect in the Paris attacks, naming him as 26-year-old Salah Abdeslam, who is also under an international arrest warrant issued by Belgium. Asking for any information leading to his capture, the alert said Abdeslam “may have been involved in the Paris attacks” and warned that he is considered a “dangerous individual”. Police detained six people close to Mostefai, including his father, brother and sister-in-law, judicial sources said. Born in the modest Paris sub- urb of Courcouronnes, he had eight convictions for petty crimes but had never served a prison sentence. Paris mourns Continued on Page 5 Email: [email protected] Follow me on: [email protected] Kuwait Towers Saturday evening was seen lit in the French national colors of blue and red in solidarity with France after the terror attacks in Paris. Kuwaitis safe Kuwait Ambassador to France Sami Al-Sulaiman has confirmed no Kuwaiti citizens were among victims of Friday’s attacks in Paris, which left 129 people killed and 352 others injured. “The French authorities have con- firmed no Kuwaiti citizens among the victims of the Paris attacks,” Al- Sulaiman said in a statement to KUNA Saturday night. He said the “Embassy and the French health authorities were veri- fying if there are Kuwaiti citizens among the injured because of the large number of the wounded who were admitted in many hospitals.” Al-Sulaiman commended the coop- eration shown by the French authorities with the embassy. (KUNA) Suspect in beheading of Coptics F-15 kills head of IS Libya WASHINGTON, Nov 15, (AFP): An F-15 fighter jet strike killed the head of the Islamic State group in Libya, the Pentagon said Saturday, in another high-profile US hit fol- lowing the targeting of the most-wanted “Jihadi John.” The announcement comes as the extremist group said it was responsible for Friday’s attacks in Paris that killed at least 129 people during an onslaught of bombings and shootings on the French capital, though the Pentagon said the two events were not connected. Washington has orchestrated an air cam- paign going after the IS group and senior fig- ures in Syria and Iraq, but this is the first US strike against an IS leader in Libya. Abu Nabil, also known as Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al-Zubaydi, was the senior IS leader in Libya and may also have been the spokesman in a grisly video showing the execution of Coptic Christians, Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said in a statement. Cook described Abu Nabil as an Iraqi nation- al and al-Qaeda operative. The footage released by IS online earlier this year showed handcuffed hostages wearing orange jumpsuits being beheaded by black- suited captors in a coastal area the group said was in the Libyan province of Tripoli. “Nabil’s death will degrade ISIL’s ability to meet the group’s objectives in Libya, including recruiting new ISIL members, establishing bases in Libya, and planning external attacks on the United States,” Cook said. “While not the first US strike against terrorists in Libya, this is the first US strike against an ISIL leader in Libya and it demonstrates we will go after ISIL leaders wher- ever they operate.” The Pentagon spokesman said the oper- ation overnight against Abu Nabil was “autho- rized and initiated prior to the terrorist attack in Paris.” Oil-rich Libya descended into chaos after the fall of Muammar Gadaffi in its 2011 revolution. IS jihadists are killing more civilians than other warring factions in the North African country, but all sides are committing “large- scale crimes,” International Criminal Court chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has said. The UN has been brokering talks to create a new unity government to end fighting between the army and the militias that seized Tripoli, with the UN envoy to Libya voicing hope that an agreement is imminent. Saturday’s US announcement came two days after the US military conducted a strike target- ing the IS executioner known as “Jihadi John.” The US has said it is “reasonably certain” insight The Arab Times, continues its weekly series “Insight” which appears every Monday and takes a close look at Kuwait’s society, politics, sci- ence and technology. In today’s article, Jonathan King (left), art coordinator at British School of Kuwait, offers an insight into the teaching of Art. — Page 3 Newswatch KUWAIT CITY: The Public Prosecution has issued an inter- national arrest warrant against the former general director of the Public Institution for Social Security Fahad Al-Rajaan and a prison sentence in absentia against him on charges of manipulation with the institution’s funds. The prosecution said in a statement that it had concluded investigations into the case involving Al-Rajaan and an employee for “inflicting grave harm on the funds” of the insti- tution. Continued on Page 8 KSE -66.3 pts at closing Nov 15 See Page 35 Dow -202.83 pts at closing, Nov 13 Nasdaq -77.20 pts at closing, Nov 13 FTSE -60.40 pts at closing, Nov 13 Nikkei -100.86 pts at closing, Nov 13 NYMEX crude $40.83 per barrel Brent crude $44.50 per barrel 3-month $ LIBOR rate 0.36360% US$/KD 0.30375/85 Euro/KD 0.3272 Yen/KD 0.0025 British £/KD 0.4628 Gold $1,081.50 per oz (London) Continued on Page 8 Continued on Page 8 Continued on Page 8 Abu Nabil

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Page 1: Exterminate thembefore they exterminate you By Ahmed Al ...€¦ · raising the possibility that one group may still be at large. ... on the French capital, though the Pentagon said

THE FIRST ENGLISH LANGUAGE DAILY IN FREE KUWAITEstablished in 1977 / www.arabtimesonline.com

NO. 15950 44 PAGES 150 FILSemergency number 112MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2015 / SAFAR 4, 1437 AH

Panel rejects bid to impose expat remittance fee

cricketPage 40

People gather around the Monument a la Republique at the Place de la Republiquein Paris, on Nov 15, two days after a series of deadly attacks. Islamic State jihadistsclaimed the series of coordinated attacks by gunmen and suicide bombers in Parison Nov 13 that killed at least 129 people in scenes of carnage at a concert hall,

restaurants and the national stadium. (Inset): This handout picture released in a‘appel a temoins’ (call for witnesses) by the French Police information service(SICOP) on Nov 15, shows a picture of Salah Abdeslam, suspected of beinginvolved in the attacks that occurred on Nov 13, in Paris. (AFP)

Belgian connections to Paris

Molenbeek district linked to past attacksBRUSSELS, Nov 15, (RTRS):Belgian police arrested threepeople on Saturday in raids in apoor, immigrant quarter ofBrussels as they pursued emerg-ing links between the Parisattacks and an Islamist bastion inFrance’s northern neighbour.

Prime Minister CharlesMichel said at least one of thoseheld from the inner Brusselsneighbourhood of Molenbeekwas believed to have spent theprevious evening in Paris, wheretwo cars registered in Belgiumwere impounded close to scenesof some of the violence, includ-ing the Bataclan music hall.

“Police operations will go on,”Michel told RTL television afterlate-night police raids inMolenbeek, west of the city cen-tre, which is home to manyMuslims, notably families origi-nally from Morocco and Turkey.His interior minister spoke impa-tiently of going in to “clean up”Molenbeek.

“We’re talking about a net-work,” the borough’s mayor,Francoise Schepmans, said onSunday, referring to a total offive arrests in Molenbeek.

A French prosecutor said a carhired in Belgium was linked tothe attacks and that a Frenchmanliving in Brussels rented it andwas later stopped early onSaturday at the Belgian border.

A parking ticket issued inMolenbeek was found in the hirecar in Paris. Officials declinedcomment on reports that theattacks may have been largelyplotted in Brussels, that one ofthree attack teams came fromthere and that at least three of theattackers were based in theEuropean Union capital.

Proportional to its 11 millionpopulation, of whom half a mil-lion are Muslim, Belgium hasbeen the European countrywhich has contributed the mostforeign fighters to the civil warin Syria — over 300 by officialestimates a year ago — and it hasfigured in many Islamist attacks

Opinion

By Ahmed Al-JarallahEditor-in-Chief, the Arab Times

WE said it before that divisionbetween Arabs was the first rea-son behind the spread of terror-ism. Today, we continue to saythat global hesitance plays amajor role in the spread of thisplague (terrorism) which hitFrance recently.

Before France, it hit theUnited States of America, Spain,Russia and it will continue aslong as temporary interests areupheld at the expense of therights of the people to life andpeace. It will continue to kill theinnocent in Pakistan,Afghanistan, Indonesia, Iraq,Lebanon, Yemen, Syria, Egypt,Libya and Tunisia.

Indeed, an Arab and Islamicenvironment was formed bypolitical movements that claimto be Islamic. However, the real‘incubator’ is Europe itself —currently being burned by itsown fire — which expounded ontheir human rights slogans andwhat is known as, “listening tovoices of the Arab opposition”,which secured the survival of theextremists by giving them shel-ter, podium, protection and eventheir nationalities. In fact, thewestern countries helped thesegroups (extremists) rise to powerin some Arab countries.

The events that took place inrecent years in France, and gen-erally in Europe, were what for-mer Egyptian president HosniMubarak warned about in Parisin 2007. However, instead ofcomprehending the message, theFrench decision-makers went onto describe what Mubarak saw as“global terrorism”, to be just“reactions to Egypt’s oppressionof the opposition, especially theMuslim Brotherhood.”

What happened after eightyears was the outcome of theencouraging stance on terrorism.In fact, before all that, wasn’tFrance marketed as ImamKhomaini’s revolutionaryscheme on the Shah under thepretext of Islamic Revolution byrendering him to practice politi-cal instigation and provided himsupport? Wasn’t France the firstone to burn with the flame of‘Iranian revolution terrorism’through the assassinationattempts on former Iranian offi-cials on its land?

Didn’t the United Kingdommake its land a Brotherhoodarena, followed by al-Qaeda andTaleban, among other terroristgroups whose elements reacheda point of considering them-selves at war with the UK?Wasn’t in 2005 when Londontasted the pain inflicted by thesegroups through an explosionwhich led to the loss of scores ofinnocent lives?

Didn’t the United State ofAmerica call for listening to thevoices of these people a long

Details Page 4

Exterminate them...before they exterminate youBrothers, Belgium...1 on-the-run,arrests as France pursues probe

PARIS, Nov 15, (AFP):Belgium issued aninternational arrestwarrant Sunday forone of three brotherslinked to the brutalattacks in Paris thatkilled 129 people, asthe probe spreadacross Europe.

As thousands gathered incentral Paris in mourning andsolidarity, authorities in atleast five European countriesscrambled to tie togetherleads and hunt down possibleaccomplices.

Security sources said one ofthe three brothers died in theBataclan concert hall where theworst of the bloodshed tookplace, while another had beendetained along with six otherpeople in Belgium.

Seven gunmen wearing sui-cide belts died during the attacks,which have been claimed by theIslamic State group — either atthe Stade de France stadium, orin and around the Bataclanvenue.

The sports minister said atleast one of the bombers whodetonated their explosives nearthe stadium had tried to enter thevenue where France were play-ing Germany in an internationalfootball match at the time.

Prosecutors say they believethree groups of attackers wereinvolved in the Paris carnage,raising the possibility that onegroup may still be at large.

It is now known that three ofthe suicide bombers were Frenchnationals, but two of the men hadlived in the Belgian capitalBrussels.

Two cars used in the attackswere hired in Belgium. One wasquickly found near the Bataclanvenue, and one overnight onSaturday in the suburb ofMontreuil east of Paris, with twoAK47 rifles inside.

Witnesses said the second car,a black Seat, was used by gun-men who shot dozens of peoplein bars and restaurants in the hipCanal St Martin area of Paris.

The first attacker to be namedby investigators is Omar IsmailMostefai, a 29-year-old fatherand French citizen, who wasidentified from a severed fingeramong the carnage at theBataclan, where 89 people werekilled after heavily armed men inwearing explosives vestsstormed into the venue.

French police, meanwhile,released a photograph of a sus-pect in the Paris attacks, naminghim as 26-year-old SalahAbdeslam, who is also under aninternational arrest warrantissued by Belgium.

Asking for any informationleading to his capture, the alertsaid Abdeslam “may have beeninvolved in the Paris attacks” andwarned that he is considered a“dangerous individual”.

Police detained six peopleclose to Mostefai, including hisfather, brother and sister-in-law,judicial sources said.

Born in the modest Paris sub-urb of Courcouronnes, he hadeight convictions for pettycrimes but had never served aprison sentence.

Paris mourns

Continued on Page 5Email: [email protected]

Follow me on:

[email protected]

Kuwait Towers Saturday evening wasseen lit in the French national colors ofblue and red in solidarity with France

after the terror attacks in Paris.

Kuwaitis safeKuwait Ambassador to France SamiAl-Sulaiman has confirmed noKuwaiti citizens were among victimsof Friday’s attacks in Paris, which left129 people killed and 352 othersinjured.

“The French authorities have con-firmed no Kuwaiti citizens among thevictims of the Paris attacks,” Al-Sulaiman said in a statement toKUNA Saturday night.

He said the “Embassy and theFrench health authorities were veri-fying if there are Kuwaiti citizensamong the injured because of thelarge number of the wounded whowere admitted in many hospitals.”Al-Sulaiman commended the coop-eration shown by the Frenchauthorities with the embassy.(KUNA)

Suspect in beheading of Coptics

F-15 kills head of IS LibyaWASHINGTON, Nov 15, (AFP): An F-15fighter jet strike killed the head of the IslamicState group in Libya, the Pentagon saidSaturday, in another high-profile US hit fol-lowing the targeting of the most-wanted“Jihadi John.”

The announcement comes as the extremistgroup said it was responsible for Friday’sattacks in Paris that killed at least 129 peopleduring an onslaught of bombings and shootingson the French capital, though the Pentagon saidthe two events were not connected.

Washington has orchestrated an air cam-paign going after the IS group and senior fig-ures in Syria and Iraq, but this is the first USstrike against an IS leader in Libya.

Abu Nabil, also known as Wissam Najm AbdZayd al-Zubaydi, was the senior IS leader inLibya and may also have been the spokesmanin a grisly video showing the execution ofCoptic Christians, Pentagon spokesman PeterCook said in a statement.

Cook described Abu Nabil as an Iraqi nation-al and al-Qaeda operative.

The footage released by IS online earlier thisyear showed handcuffed hostages wearingorange jumpsuits being beheaded by black-suited captors in a coastal area the group saidwas in the Libyan province of Tripoli.

“Nabil’s death will degrade ISIL’s ability tomeet the group’s objectives in Libya, includingrecruiting new ISIL members, establishingbases in Libya, and planning external attacks

on the United States,”Cook said.

“While not the first USstrike against terrorists inLibya, this is the first USstrike against an ISILleader in Libya and itdemonstrates we will goafter ISIL leaders wher-ever they operate.”

The Pentagonspokesman said the oper-

ation overnight against Abu Nabil was “autho-rized and initiated prior to the terrorist attack inParis.”

Oil-rich Libya descended into chaos after thefall of Muammar Gadaffi in its 2011 revolution.

IS jihadists are killing more civilians thanother warring factions in the North Africancountry, but all sides are committing “large-scale crimes,” International Criminal Courtchief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda has said.

The UN has been brokering talks to create anew unity government to end fighting betweenthe army and the militias that seized Tripoli,with the UN envoy to Libya voicing hope thatan agreement is imminent.

Saturday’s US announcement came two daysafter the US military conducted a strike target-ing the IS executioner known as “Jihadi John.”

The US has said it is “reasonably certain”

insightThe Arab Times, continues

its weekly series “Insight”which appears every Mondayand takes a close look atKuwait’s society, politics, sci-ence and technology. Intoday’s article, Jonathan King(left), art coordinator at BritishSchool of Kuwait, offers aninsight into the teaching of Art.

— Page 3

Newswatch

KUWAIT CITY: The Public Prosecution has issued an inter-national arrest warrant against the former general director ofthe Public Institution for Social Security Fahad Al-Rajaanand a prison sentence in absentia against him on charges ofmanipulation with the institution’s funds.

The prosecution said in a statement that it had concludedinvestigations into the case involving Al-Rajaan and anemployee for “inflicting grave harm on the funds” of the insti-tution.

Continued on Page 8

KSE -66.3 pts at closing Nov 15See Page 35

Dow -202.83 pts at closing, Nov 13

Nasdaq -77.20 pts at closing, Nov 13

FTSE -60.40 pts at closing, Nov 13

Nikkei -100.86 pts at closing, Nov 13

NYMEX crude $40.83 per barrel

Brent crude $44.50 per barrel

3-month $ LIBOR rate 0.36360%

US$/KD 0.30375/85

Euro/KD 0.3272

Yen/KD 0.0025

British £/KD 0.4628

Gold $1,081.50 per oz (London)

Continued on Page 8

Continued on Page 8 Continued on Page 8

Abu Nabil