Arab Times

No MoE recommenda­tion

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In Kuwait, Minister of Education and Higher Education Dr Mohammed Al-Fares says the ministry has not yet received any recommenda­tions related to the decision taken by four countries — Saudi Arabia, Egypt, UAE and Bahrain – to add Professor of Sharia at Kuwait University Dr Hamed Hamad Al-Ali in the list of terrorists, reports Al-Rai daily.

He affirmed that he will handle such matters in accordance with the regulation­s and legal procedures allotted by Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Interior.

Dr Al-Fares explained that one of the alleged members of the Abdali cell is an employee of Ministry of Higher Education. That employee was dealt with based on procedures of Ministry of Interior.

He insisted that the ministry strongly prohibits such matters, monitors all educationa­l institutio­ns of the univerBrus­sels

sity, applied education institutes and schools, and takes legal actions against the violators.

Meanwhile, Qatar has turned down several requests by third-party traders to make fresh liquefied natural gas (LNG) supplies available to Egypt, raising concerns that a diplomatic row between the countries may curb regional energy trade, sources said.

Top LNG producer Qatar supplies around 60 percent of Egypt’s LNG but relations suffered after Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt cut ties and imposed sanctions on the gas-rich Gulf state last month, accusing it of supporting terrorism. Doha denies the charges.

Since then, requests by at least two companies to ship additional LNG from Qatar to Egypt have been rejected without explanatio­n, trade sources familiar with the talks have said.

Qatar’s reluctance to expand LNG trade with Egypt contrasts with a growing desire to sell more spot cargoes into Europe, one of the trade sources said, drawing a link to the diplomatic standoff between Qatar and Egypt.

A Qatar Petroleum spokesman denied this.

“It is business as usual for Qatar’s LNG, who continue to honour all their commitment­s and to actively engage with all counter-parties, regarding mutually beneficial LNG market opportunit­ies,” the spokesman said.

Egyptian Natural Gas Holding did not return requests for comment.

Any decision to restrict sales of new LNG to Egypt would be largely symbolic since the country has already locked in most of its deliveries for 2017 from Qatar and other producers.

And some traders suggested that Qatari producers may have simply come up against routine shipping or supply scheduling constraint­s for refusing to sell the cargoes.

The mounting logistical challenges of dealing with the country’s cashstrapp­ed government may have led Qatar to scale back its involvemen­t purely on a commercial basis, a second trade source familiar with the talks said.

After struggling to repay arrears owed to its LNG suppliers and extending payment terms, Egypt recently embarked on a policy to defer about 20 contracted shipments initially scheduled for delivery this year to 2018, as

rising domestic output began squeezing out demand for costly foreign imports.

Traders had to wrangle approvals from producers to rearrange shipping schedules, inconvenie­ncing Qatar.

Benefiting from several Egyptian multi-billion-dollar LNG buying sprees, commodity traders from Trafigura to Glencore, Vitol and Noble Group carved out a niche for themselves by shoulderin­g credit risks for producers, including Qatar, averse to supplying Egypt directly.

For example, in December Egypt launched a tender to secure 60 LNG cargoes for delivery in 2017, awarding most of its requiremen­t to Swiss trade houses backed in part by producer Qatar.

“Restrictio­ns would only apply to short positions which some of Egypt’s trade house suppliers had, all existing agreements are unchanged,” a trader said.

While most traders lined up LNG to cover their commitment­s, some held off, leaving limited open positions to fill nearer to the cargoes’ delivery date.

It is these open positions — or shorts — which Qatar has refused to fill, the trade sources said, potentiall­y opening doors for rival producers including Trinidad, the United States and Algeria to supply Egypt.

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