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Strong earthquake kills one in central Taiwan

An earthquake rattled a province in the southern Philippines as people slept, injuring at least nine people, damaging dozens of houses and setting off a landslide that partially blocked a road with boulders, officials said on Sunday. The quake, which had a magnitude of 5.7, struck North Cotabato province and nearby regions late Saturday, causing the injuries, including to children, and damaging more than 30 houses, the approach to a bridge and water supply pipes in two villages, North Cotabato Governor Emmylou Tolentino-Mendoza said. It damaged a school in the hilly village of Kimadzil where many residents remained jittery because of continuing aftershocks, said Mendoza, who added she scrambled out of her home like other villagers when the ground started to shake and objects fell off from shelves. “It’s a big relief that no motorist was passing through our highway when boulders rolled down from the mountainside,” she said. The Philippine archipelago is located in the Pacific “Ring of Fire,” where earthquakes and volcanic activity are common. A magnitude-7.7 quake killed nearly 2,000 people on the northern island of Luzon in 1990. Continue reading

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Most Emirati students not motivated, says study

Most Emirati students not motivated, says study Sarah Young (Youth Spot) / 2 June 2013 New ways to motivate the generation of the electronic revolution and tackle the “female face of unemployment” are needed if Emiratis are going to be part of the workforce, experts say. Speaking recently at the Microsoft Regional Summit and Expert Group Meeting on Youth for Global Competitiveness on a panel discussing the youth labour market, Al Maskari Holding chairperson Dr Shaikha Al Maskari said a Dubai study done last year showed 60 per cent of Emirati high school students showed very little motivation, and “did not care what type of course they did, or career they chose”. “Our first priority is to find out why, and how we can reverse this.” Delegates at the Microsoft Youth for Global Competitiveness initiative at Jumeirah Beach Hotel, Dubai. — KT photo by Juidin Bernarrd Low motivation was also evident in the fact Abu Dhabi had reached a “unique status in the world” by paying high school students to perform, she said. “If they get grades over 90, they get Dh5,000 as a gift as well as a monthly salary … nowhere in the world do you pay high school students to attend. And did it work? No. Actually Abu Dhabi students are doing less well than anybody in the UAE.” While working for Adnoc in the early 1980s, a serious effort was made to provide career paths for UAE nationals, which resulted in many reaching senior manager status 20 years later — a concept almost unheard of back then, she said. “This was because they were motivated. Taking youth now and saying we will do this for you — it doesn’t ring a bell. Why? I don’t speak your language. The electronic revolution has created, as never in history, a generation gap. Anyone over 50 doesn’t speak their language. “When you go to high school those youngsters are literally light years ahead of us.” Instead, “humility” on the behalf of the employer was important, and she now tried to trust her younger employee,  as long as they performed, she said. Dr Leila Hoteit, Booz and Company principal Her company focused on providing “heart and compassion”, creating an ambience of belonging and trust, and asking young employees for input on policy making – something her generation was not equipped to do alone given the electronic revolution was changing  the way business was done, she said. The youth also needed to feel “energised, motivated and excited” at work. “Youth need thrill. If you put them in something very dull, they won’t stay.” However, Booz and Company principal Dr Leila Hoteit said it was difficult for this type of innovation to take place, given the country’s open immigration policy which stifled creativity on behalf of employers who were only acting ‘rationally’ in response. “If you have cheap abundant labour you use that. You’re not motivated to innovate, train your people or be an entrepreneur. If you have a problem, just throw more cheap labour at it and solve your problem.” This meant Emiratis were “stuck in the middle”. “They have the skills for low to medium level jobs, but they don’t desire those jobs, and those jobs don’t desire them because people can get cheaper labour. But for higher skilled jobs (Emiratis) are not as skilled, so there’s a need to … work on building skills of Emiratis. “But as long as you have an open immigration policy, you stifle innovation.” Emirati unemployment is estimated to be around 13 per cent, according to the UAE National Bureau of Statistics website. Meanwhile, the Middle East overall has one of the highest youth unemployment rates in the world, sitting currently at 30.3 per cent, compared with an estimated global rate of 12.6 per cent, according to the International Labour Organisation’s (ILO) Global Employment Trends for Youth 2013 report. And while women in the region were surpassing boys ‘by a long shot’ in education, their high levels of unemployment potentially highlighted a cultural issue of whether “(we are) spoiling our boys”, Hoteit said. Women often had more intrinsic motivation to work, because they had to prove themselves, while men did not. According to the ILO report, almost half of the female population in the region is unemployed, sitting at 43 per cent, compared to young males, of whom about 25 per cent are out of work. Dubai-based recent graduate Shaima Al Awadhi said she had been one of the 60 per cent of students who had not cared what they did for a career — until she did an internship with Pepsico where she worked under a “mentor” who helped her professionally and personally. She is still employed at the company and said she loved her work — but she was one of the lucky ones, she said. Many of her peers who did similar internships finished unhappy and unmotivated. Lack of career guidance was one of the biggest problems at university, meaning many students either ended up in the wrong jobs and stayed there just for the salary or a lack of other options, or were left confused and unable to choose, al Awadhi said. However, International Labour Office senior advisor Dr Zafiris Tzannatos said while information like this was important, private companies also had to be prepared to provide salaries and incentives good enough to stop highly-skilled Arabs leaving their home countries after university. sarah@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading

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Etisalat makes landline calls across UAE free of charge

Etisalat makes landline calls across UAE free of charge Amanda Fisher / 2 June 2013 In a move that is set to scale up the competition in the UAE’s telecom sector, etisalat is to make landline calls anywhere in the UAE free. The move will apply from July 1, with only local landline calls within each emirate currently free for subscribers. Having been the first telecom service provider in the UAE, etisalat is now upping the ante following the 2006 arrival of du. Both service providers are eyeing a stronger market share by offering new services. KT illustration by Rajendran Etisalat’s new initiative was welcomed by residents, though some said the offer would not make much difference to their telephone bills. “I make most of my calls on my mobile phone, so where is the value I get from free landline calls?” asked Raghav Varma, a sales manager, based in Dubai. “It is not even of use to my family because they use the landline to call me on my mobile, which again is charged.” Reena D’Silva, an Indian living in Dubai, disagreed: “I have several friends in Abu Dhabi, as well as relatives. This is a value deal for people who stay at home or those who monitor their landline usage well. The UAE authorities are giving a great opportunity with this new offer.” Ahmed Khan, a Pakistani entrepreneur, said he would not find much value from the new service. “I won’t be making my calls from home, so I don’t stand to benefit from it. It would have been of use if they made calls from landlines to mobile phones free, but I don’t think they will ever do that.  They should also consider making the calls free for commercial establishments too, which will benefit small businesses like ours.” Etisalat said the free national landline calls across the UAE would be applicable for both standalone and eLife subscribers. The company is also launching the region’s first high definition voice for eLife landlines, with a new lineup of High Definition telephones to be introduced in July. Mathew Kuruvila, an Indian finance professional, said the new services took the UAE’s telecom sector to world-class levels. “The two moves — to make national landline calls free and to introduce HD landlines — are complementary. I think there is a concerted effort by the authorities to encourage more landline usage.” While the new service is set to make landline usage more popular, the question is how it will affect mobile phone usage. According to estimates, the UAE has some 14 million mobile phone users — almost two mobile phones for every resident. This fact was instrumental in the country launching its mGovernment initiative recently, where all government services are to be provided by mobile phone within two years. “I appreciate the gesture of making landline calls within the country free, but I wish there were more such initiatives in the mobile scene, because obviously that is the future direction the government also wants to take,” said an analyst, who did not wish to be identified. Etisalat Home Services vice-president Rashed Al Abbar said the new service was a “tribute to our nation’s great leaders and the spirit of unity that binds all residents”. Etisalat said the new services would be provided to eLife customers without any change in monthly rental charges. “The charge for standalone landline customers, who are not elife subscribers, will be revised to Dh39 per month,” it said in a statement. Etisalat is also offering subscribers a “favourite country plan” which helps save money for customers who make frequent calls to a specific country. –  news@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading

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