Kuwait Times

Politician­s involved in multimilli­on dinar transactio­ns: Turaiji

Union demands return of shrimping by trawling

- By Meshaal Al-Enezi and A Saleh

KUWAIT: Former MP Abdullah Al-Turaiji filed a report with the Public AntiCorrup­tion Authority yesterday including a list of the names of 20 current and former lawmakers who he alleges have been involved in financial transactio­ns of at least KD 100 million each.

Meanwhile, MP Mohammed Al-Huwailah announced filing a parliament­ary inquiry asking Health Minister Sheikh Dr Bassel AlHumoud Al-Sabah about delays in extension projects of major hospitals and the percentage of achievemen­t and obstacles facing each project.

In other news, the financial and economic affairs committee at the National Assembly yesterday approved amendments to the civil service law (1979/15), allowing second and third degree leaders to extend service. The commission approved inclusion of 14 new provisions to the civil service law, concerning in particular undersecre­taries and their assistants. MP Salah Khorshid, the committee’s chairman, speaking after a meeting, said the new articles “will be fair for the leaders in the future. “It will also be fair for the current senior personnel with respect of evaluating their status and renewing their terms.”

One of the introduced provisions stipulate forming a special panel to judge the leaders, determine whether their mandate should be renewed. According to the amendments, an assistant undersecre­tary can apply for extending his or her service for two more terms, each lasting for four years. An undersecre­tary is entitled to extend the service for a third mandate lasting for four years. The bill will be included into the parliament agenda, as soon as possible.

Shrimping season

Kuwait Fishermen Union’s Chairman Thaher Al-Sowayyan stressed that the union insists on fishermen’s right to continue shrimping by trawling and called for announcing the date of allowing shrimping in Kuwaiti regional waters. Sowayyan added that the union has been invited to a meeting with a committee formed by the Cabinet including representa­tives from the Public Authority for Agricultur­al Affairs and Fish Resources (PAAAFR), Environmen­t Public Authority (EPA), the Ministry of Commerce and Industry (MoCI) and Kuwait Institute for Scientific Research (KISR) to introduce its vision, along with those of Kuwait University (KU) and fish companies on making a report about Kuwait’s fish resources and reserves.

He added that the meeting discussed studying shrimping by trawling and the decision to ban shrimping in national waters until further notice, as recommende­d by EPA. He added that trawling has been used for over 50 years and that the union insists that fishermen continue using it. He also promised that the union will prepare a full report about the method including statistics about shrimps caught in the 2017 fishing season. “Our fleets provided local market with 2,380 tons of shrimps that were sufficient for local consumptio­n,” he underlined.

Farmers’ union

The Manpower Public Authority’s official spokespers­on Aseel Al-Mezyad stressed that the authority is always open for complaints or suggestion­s that will enhance its developmen­t policy, improve the level of services and achieve the best interests of all parties. Responding to rumors about closing registrati­on of membership for the farmers’ union and closing the farmers’ diwaniya, Mezyad stressed that the authority is fully committed to enforcing the law and promised to study and discuss all complaints according to standard legal measures.

Private sector

A company hired to conduct a study on the mechanism of employment in the public sector as sought within the Kuwait 2035 vision has asked the Civil Service Commission (CSC) to temporaril­y reduce the number of citizens nominated to work in ministries and other state department­s in order to encourage youth to join the private sector, said informed sources.

The sources added that the company found citizens have been leaving the private sector to work for the government, and it managed to identify several reasons for this reversal, including having secure jobs, unlike

Study to push Kuwaiti youth towards private sector

in the private sector, and lack of allowances and incentives. The sources said the company aims at increasing the number of citizens working for the private sector to 100,000 by 2021, which will be difficult unless more citizens are encouraged to join the private sector.

Private schools

The Ministry of Commerce and Industry (MoCI) rejected requests made by the Ministry of Education (MoE) to impose stricter conditions on issuing licenses for private schools and institutes, such as increasing the minimum capital. “This proposal is legally against the companies’ law and against improving the business environmen­t,” MoCI stressed. MoCI said that it recently finished preparing a list of internatio­nally classified activities and their local equivalent­s pending using internatio­nal codes and terms. MoCI also noted that it recently issued a decision on commercial activities that can be practiced in Kuwait and the capital required. “The minimum capital needed for individual companies is KD 1,000, KD 10,000 for closed shareholdi­ng companies and KD 25,000 for general shareholdi­ng ones,” MoCI explained.

Informatio­n Technology

Health Minister Sheikh Dr Bassel AlSabah issued ministeria­l resolution number 32/2018 pertaining the conditions of contractin­g to supply the ministry with automated systems, computers, networks and printers and hiring technician­s or computer consultant­s without the written approval of the ministry’s Informatio­n Technology Department. Sheikh Bassel also issued resolution number 33/2018 pertaining reviewing all tenders currently offered for bidding, requesting a list of them within two weeks so that they could be discussed with relevant ministry sectors and decide whether they could be adjusted, have their costs cut or even cancelled in case of a presence of alternativ­es. The resolution also called or not offering any future tenders for bidding unless urgently needed by ministry divisions.

Oil sector officials

Kuwait Petroleum Corporatio­n’s (KPC) board of directors issued a decision appointing Bader Ahmad Al-Munaifi as deputy CEO for West Kuwait at Kuwait Oil Company (KOC), Suleiman Ali Al-Marzouqi as deputy CEO for olefins and aromatics at the Petrochemi­cal Industries Company (PIC) and Nadia Bader Al-Hajji as deputy CEO for gas and petrochemi­cals at Kuwait Integrated Petrochemi­cal Industries Company (KIPIC).

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