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Egypt violence builds, American among dead
Egypt violence builds, American among dead (Reuters) / 29 June 2013 Two people, one an American, were killed when protesters stormed an office of Egypt’s ruling Muslim Brotherhood in Alexandria, adding to growing tension ahead of mass rallies aimed at unseating Mohamed Mursi. A third man was killed and 10 injured in an explosion during a protest in Port Said, at the mouth of the Suez Canal. Police on Saturday said the cause was unclear but protesters, believing it was a bomb, attacked the party office in the city. Egypt’s leading religious authority warned of “civil war” after violence in the past week that had already left several dead and hundreds injured. They backed President Mohamed Mursi’s offer to talk to opposition groups ahead of Sunday’s protests. The United Nations, European Union and United States have appealed for restraint and urged Egypt’s deadlocked political leaders to step back from a confrontation threatening the new democracy that emerged from the Arab Spring revolution of 2011. The US embassy said in a statement it was evacuating non-essential staff and family members and renewed a warning to Americans not to travel to Egypt unless they had to. The Muslim Brotherhood said eight of its offices had been attacked on Friday, including the one in Alexandria. Officials said more than 70 people had been injured in the clashes in the city. One was shot dead and a young American man who was using a small camera died after being stabbed in the chest. A Brotherhood member was also killed overnight in an attack on a party office at Zagazig, in the heavily populated Nile Delta, where much of the recent violence has been concentrated. Mursi’s movement said five supporters in all had died this week. “Vigilance is required to ensure we do not slide into civil war,” said clerics at Cairo’s ancient Al Azhar institute, one of the most influential centres of scholarship. In a statement broadly supportive of Mursi, they backed his offer of dialogue and blamed “criminal gangs” who besieged mosques for the violence. The Brotherhood warned of “dire consequences” and “a violent spiral of anarchy”. It accused liberal leaders, including former UN diplomat Mohamed ElBaradei, of personally inciting violence by hired “thugs” once loyal to ousted dictator Hosni Mubarak. Opposition leaders condemned the violence. The army, which has warned it could intervene if political leaders lose control, issued a statement saying it had deployed across the country to protect citizens and installations of national importance. In the capital, Cairo, tens of thousands turned out for rival events some miles apart and there was little trouble. A rally included calls to reconciliation. On Tahrir Square, cradle of the uprising against Mubarak, there was a festive atmosphere and a determination to shake Mursi on Sunday. In Alexandria, as several thousand anti-Mursi protesters marched along the seafront, a Reuters reporter saw about a dozen men throw rocks at guards outside the Brotherhood office. They responded. Bricks and bottles flew. Guns were fired. Officials said dozens were wounded by birdshot. The party office was ransacked and documents were burned, watched by jubilant youths chanting against Egypt’s leaders. In Port Said, a bastion of police had suspected an accident but later said a device exploded among protesters. Canal traffic has not been affected by violence. Cairo Calm Protesters gathered round a Cairo mosque after weekly prayers to show support for Mursi. His opponents hope millions will turn out on Sunday to demand he step down, a year to the day after he was sworn in as Egypt’s first freely chosen leader. Mursi, backed by the Brotherhood, has dismissed such demands as an assault on democracy, setting up an angry confrontation. Some speakers reflected fear and anger among Islamists that opponents aim to suppress them as Mubarak did. But there was also talk from the podium of the need for dialogue – a concern also of international powers worried by the bitter polarisation. A few hundred opposition protesters gathered outside the presidential palace, a focus for Sunday’s rally. Mursi has moved elsewhere. Thousands turned out after dark in Tahrir Square, waving national flags and sampling street food. Abdelhamid Nada, a 32-year-old accountant, had come from the provinces with eight friends to camp out “until Mursi goes”. “The Muslim Brotherhood has no plan at all,” he said, standing by his white tent. “They don’t have any economic plan, they don’t have any social plan, they don’t have any political plan.” Strategic Importance The army, which heeded mass protests in early 2011 to push Mubarak aside, has warned it will intervene again if there is violence, and to defend the “will of the people”. Both sides believe that means the military may support their positions. The United States, which funds Egypt’s army as it did under Mubarak, has urged compromise and respect for election results. Egypt’s 84 million people, control of Suez and its peace treaty with Israel all contribute to its global strategic importance. UN chief Ban Ki-moon urged Egyptians to respect “universal principles of peaceful dialogue”. European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton called for peaceful protests, building trust and a “spirit of dialogue and tolerance”. In Alexandria, opposition marchers said they feared the Brotherhood was usurping the revolution to entrench its power and Islamic law. Others had economic grievances, among them huge lines for fuel caused by supply problems and panic buying. “I’ve nothing to do with politics, but with the state we’re in now, even a stone would cry out,” said 42-year-old accountant Mohamed Abdel Latif. “There are no services, we can’t find diesel or gasoline. We elected Mursi, but this is enough. “Let him make way for someone else who can fix it.” It is hard to gauge how many may turn out on Sunday, but even those sympathetic to Islamic ideas are frustrated by the economic slump and many blame the government. Previous protest movements since the fall of Mubarak have failed to gather momentum, however, among a population anxious for stability and fearful of further economic hardship. Continue reading
UAE residents do their bit for Indian flood victims
UAE residents do their bit for Indian flood victims Nivriti Butalia / 29 June 2013 Aid continues to pour in from local communities in the UAE for the victims of floods in the Indian state of Uttrakhand that have washed away hundreds and left thousands stranded. The Uttrakhand Association in Dubai has been working tirelessly to raise funds to send to the worst-affected areas, with Indian Home Minister Sushilkumar Shinde saying he expected the death toll to rise over the current 1,000 several days ago. More than 10,000 people remain stranded. Association general secretary Sanjay Singh Thapa said he was in constant touch with people from his hometown. Contact persons Those interested in contributing may contact the following representatives in the UAE: Dinesh Bhatt (055-9272318), Dubai Deepak Dhami (050-2454924), Abu Dhabi Devendra Singh Koranga (050-5103334), UAE Atul Tiwari (055-9029859), UAE Niraj Kumar Joshi (050-6669283), Ras Al Khaimah Sandeep Rautela (050-3506273), Fujairah Navin Singh Kathayat (050-6580214), Sharjah Girish Pant (050-9947548), Al Nahda, Sharjah Jaiprakash Kothari (050-3786112), Al Nahda, Sharjah Kailash Chandra Joshi (0506401142), Al Nahda, Dubai Sanjay Singh Thapa (050-4556736), Al Nahda, Dubai Vivek Bahuguna (055-6587322), International City Anup Jakhmola (056-1148479), JLT and Dubai Marina Capt Anil Agarwal (055-4560236), JLT and Dubai Marina Dharam Singh Rana (050-3501845), Al Ain “Dharchula is one of the worst hit by floods in the Kali river. Thousands of the people lost their homes and their property…it takes lot of time and money to build a good house. This calamity has swept everything; even land doesn’t exist anymore since it has all been washed away by the flood. Hundreds of people are stranded in the villages. At least around 60 villages that are high up in the Himalayas in the vicinity of Mount Panchachuli and Om Parvat and Kailash Manasarovar are cut off from the rest of the world.” From their members in the emirates, the Uttrakhand Association has collected over Dh25,000, with more still coming in. A social worker and mother of two college-going children, Geeta Chandola left Dubai for Delhi on Friday evening and will travel to the affected areas with Dh7,000 that had earlier been collected and handed over to her. She will spend a month in Uttrakhand helping out the victims and distributing clothes and medicines and blankets and footwear. As money pours in, it will be transferred to her Indian bank account and from that fund she will buy what the victims immediately need. In Abu Dhabi, Rahul Dutta, a 29-year-old employee of Emirates Aluminum, has collected Dh1,475 from 10-15 of his colleagues including locals who immediately responded with cash donations to his email plea for relief for flood victims. Uttrakhand Association president Devendra Singh Koranga said money and aid in the form of warm clothing and footwear was coming in every day. On Thursday, the day Khaleej Times printed an article on the subject, he received about 35 calls from people asking how they can help. nivriti@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading
About Dubai: There’s a garden out there
About Dubai: There’s a garden out there Staff Reporter / 29 June 2013 It’s a 10,000-square-foot oasis, right on Shaikh Zayed Road, close to the First Gulf Bank metro station. Not new to lovers of greenery — or bird houses or ornamental fountains or even barbecue grills — Dubai Garden Center is a one-stop-shop for anyone looking to renovate or adorn their balconies and gardens. In fact, it offers even more. Under a green canopy that blocks out some of the sun’s rays, there is everything from a potting shed, a carpentry workshop, a tree area, furniture for the home and outdoors and even a second-hand bookshop. Ideal to spend a Saturday morning browsing, the place offers a lot in terms of broadening horizons and increasing knowledge and awareness of plant names, gardening tools and even, unexpectedly, fishing equipment. As you walk into the garden area, the first thing you spot is a range of wood fire ovens, branded under Jamie Oliver. An entire section inside stocks his brand of ingredients, products and recipe books. The wood fire oven though – Valoriani Ovens from Italy – cost a small fortune: Dh65,000. Much more affordable are the other garden bric-a-brac. Figurines of laughing Buddhas in different poses — sleeping, curled up, reclining and, of course, laughing. The baby sleeping Buddha is Dh239, while a primitive statue of a cross-legged figure baring its teeth and wearing a skull and bones necklace is Dh495. Many of the wares carry a tag that reads “Take me to your home”. Wood masks surrounded by creepers of Jasmine are for Dh195. A dog house comes for Dh1,695. Terracota Lions cost Dh250 each and wheelbarrows double that price, Dh500. If you have money to spend, every corner at Garden Center is a little piece of paradise with the bougainvillea in full bloom and the purple scraggly creepers, a species of spiderwort called Tradescantia pallida for an easy Dh12. Little containers of Crassula come for Dh12. Even amateur gardeners, looking to start from somewhere, should come here to see their options and learn more about the delights and wonders of the soil. Near the potting shed, there are endless varieties of garden accessories available, lots of material to decorate flower pots with, from mulched wood chips to shiny pebbles. There is an enclosed air-conditioned space that stocks further supplies. There are books and DVDs on how to grow roses and flowers of the British Isles, also in the gardens of South Africa. Aficionados can spend hours browsing these aisles. A section on fishing has niche products like neon-coloured bait and fishing reels with “corrosion-resistant ball bearings”. There is a cafe that offers wi-fi and carrot cake and, provided you stay away from the arugula and feta pasta salad and the spinach and mushroom quiche, their deserts are quite nice. Roseleaf Cafe at this Dubai Garden Centre may just be the only place in Dubai that has fans. Ceiling fans, made mostly redundant in the rest of Dubai, are a delight to see — though air-conditioned, the presence of these fans is a throwback to a simpler time. For more, email them at garden-centre@desertgroup.ae. The centre is open from 8am to 10pm everyday. nivriti@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading




