Arab Times

‘Toughen penalties on visa traders’

- By Saeed Mahmoud Saleh

KUWAIT CITY, April 7: MPs Omar AlTabtabae­i, Safa’a Al-Hashem, Khalid AlOtaibi and Khalil Abul submitted a bill on toughening penalties for visa and human trafficker­s.

In a press statement, Al-Tabtabaie disclosed the bill stipulates changing the category of this illegal act from misdemeano­r to crime. He said it is now time for the government, in cooperatio­n with the National Assembly, to solve the demographi­c imbalance. He stressed the problem does not lie in the expatriate­s, but the visa and human trafficker­s who must be held responsibl­e for the crimes they committed.

He also pointed out that many countries recently ignored the humanitari­an factor in dealing with the coronaviru­s crisis, but Kuwait will never do so. He emphasized that addressing the crisis must be in line with humanitari­an concepts.

On the other hand, MP Abdullah AlKandari forwarded queries to Minister of Social Affairs Mariam Al-Aqeel about the measures taken to reduce the number of workers in security guard companies and if the ministry utilized advanced technology in order to minimize the number of security guards in public institutio­ns.

Moreover, MP Muhammad Haif AlMutairi submitted a bill on organizing open and online education in the country. The bill allows public and private higher educationa­l institutio­ns to obtain a license for online and open education; especially for students with special conditions such as the disabled, prisoners and employees who cannot attend classes regularly.

According to the bill, the concerned educationa­l institutio­n should obtain the license from the Ministry of Higher Education after fulfilling all the conditions. It also stipulates that the institutio­n should have been operationa­l for at least five years since inception to qualify for the license. This is in addition to providing academic and administra­tive facilities, website, platforms, high quality servers, sufficient number of computers and Internet.

The curricula should be in the form of physical books with electronic copies or e-books, while 30 percent of lectures should be conducted in the traditiona­l manner -- classroom setting where the students meet their teachers. Students’ performanc­e will be evaluated according to the usual assessment mechanism with trainings and regular tasks.

Meanwhile, MP Muhammad Husain Al-Dallal presented a recommenda­tion for the Ministry of Higher Education -represente­d by Kuwait University, private universiti­es, and Public Authority for Applied Education and Training (PAAET) -- to ask professors and researcher­s to conduct studies on the consequenc­es of coronaviru­s in different specializa­tions.

Al-Dallal said such studies must focus on the legal, legislativ­e, economic, health and psychologi­cal consequenc­es of the crisis and its impact on society. He added that Kuwait Foundation for the Advancemen­t of Sciences (KFAS) should provide financial support for the researcher­s and it should publish their work.

 ??  ?? Al-Aqeel
Al-Aqeel

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait