Author: kitayabi

  • Zain-Sudan Glorious Successes in 2009

    Al Barrak Praises Zain-Sudan Glorious Successes in 2009
    Posted on Sunday, January 24 @ 00:05:00 GMT by admin

    Press Release
    Dr. Saad Al Barrak, Zain Group’s CEO and Managing Director, praised Zain-Sudan employees for their soaring successes and honourable achievements during the hardships of the Global Economic Crunch throughout the year 2009.

    On his visit to Khartoum, Al Barrak expressed gratitude for what Zain-Sudan has accomplished and dubbed it “the jewel in Zain Group’s crown”.
    Dr. Saad Al Barrak commended Zain-Sudan employees, in a colorful and happy gathering, for achieving unprecedented growth in a difficult period when several global companies and economic establishments had been dreaming of just keeping “their heads above water”. Al Barrak further attributed the Group’s latest accomplishments to Zain-Sudan outstanding performance, and detailed their success in 2009 by: 50% growth in subscribers, 25% in operational revenues, 45% growth in total revenues and 37% increase in total profits. Al Barrak reminded the gathering that when Zain acquired the former MobiTel in 2007 there were then 1.8 million subscribers, and the number of subscribers has now reached 8.6 million, which represents an increase of 450% in less than 3 years.
    On conclusion of his interesting talk, Dr. Saad Al Barrak, requested of Zain-Sudan employees to continue this outstanding performance in order to achieve the Group’s strategic objectives of being within the Global Top Ten list of Telecom Providers by end of 2011. “This goal is insight, as Zain now ranks 14th in that list” as Al Barrak commented, and continuing to say: “Zain is competing to make history and re-brand the Arab Nation as the pioneer of Global Economic Development, and that is through the most important element of development, which is Communication, resurrect the glorious and honorable past of this Nation and restore its former remarkable image after long being stereotyped as the main exporter of: ignorance, backwardness and lately terrorism.
    Lieutenant General (Pilot) El Fatih Erwa, the Managing Director of Zain-Sudan, hailed Dr. Saad Al Barrak and his delegation visit, thanked Zain-Sudan employees for the bright successes in the past year of 2009, and reiterated commitment of successfully achieving the 2010 objectives of Zain-Sudan to exceed the expectations of subscribers, customers and stakeholders.
    Dr. Saad Al Barrak during the 3 days visit also met with the President of the Republic, Mr. Omer Al Bashir and a number of high Government Officials, and discussed the latest economic and investment development in the Sudan and the Region besides Zain latest strategies of expansion and advancement as the largest Company in the Country.

  • Eighty percent of Darfur conflict deaths due to disease

    LONDON (Reuters) – Nearly 80 percent of the 300,000 conflict-related deaths in Darfur were due to diseases like diarrhea, not violence, Belgian scientists said on Friday.

    WORLD

    An analysis of deaths dating from 2003, when rebels took up arms against the government of Sudan, showed that after an initial peak of violent deaths in the still-ongoing conflict, diseases associated with diarrhea became the major killers.

    The researchers said their results showed that any reduction in humanitarian aid can cause deaths rates to increase sharply, raising "serious concerns" about the consequences of last year’s expulsion of aid workers from Sudan by the country’s president.

    "We should fear the worst," they wrote in a study in The Lancet medical journal.

    Since the armed rebellion started in early 2003, the United Nations estimates 300,000 people have died and more than 2 million have been driven from their homes after a counter-insurgency campaign by Khartoum.

    "More than 80 percent of excess deaths were not a result of the violence," said Olivier Degomme and Debarati Guha-Sapir of the Center for Research on the Epidemiology of disasters in Brussels.

    They said a violent peak in early 2004 was followed by "protracted phase of increased disease-related" deaths caused by people living in conditions of unsanitary conditions with little or no healthcare infrastructure.

    Diarrhea kills some 1.5 million children each year around the world — more than AIDS, malaria and measles combined.

    There are three main forms — acute, bloody and persistent — all of which are potentially life-threatening.

    "Adequate humanitarian assistance to prevent and treat these potentially fatal diseases is essential," Degomme and Guha-Sapir wrote. "The full effect of the expulsion of non-governmental organizations from Darfur is still not known, but the increased mortality rate during a period of reduced humanitarian deployment in 2006 suggests that we should fear the worst."

  • Haiti’s curse is France

    In 1825, in return for recognising Haitian independence, France demanded indemnity on a staggering scale: 150 million gold francs, five times the country’s annual export revenue. The Royal Ordinance was backed up by 12 French warships with 150 cannon.

    The terms were non-negotiable. The fledgeling nation acceded, since it had little choice. Haiti must pay for its freedom, and pay it did, through the nose, for the next 122 years.

    Historical accountancy is an inexact business, but the scale of French usury was astonishing. Even when the total indemnity was reduced to 90 million francs, Haiti remained crippled by debt. The country took out loans from US, German and French banks at extortionate rates. To put the cost into perspective, in 1803 France agreed to sell the Louisiana Territory, an area 74 times the size of Haiti, to the US, for 60 million francs.

    Weighed down by this financial burden, Haiti was born almost bankrupt. In 1900 some 80 per cent of the national budget was still being swallowed up by debt repayments. Money that might have been spent on building a stable economy went to foreign bankers. To keep workers on the land and extract maximum crop yields to pay the indemnity, Haiti brought in the Rural Code, instituting a division between town and country, between a light-skinned elite and the dark-skinned majority, that still persists.

    The debt was not finally paid off until 1947. By then, Haiti’s economy was hopelessly distorted, its land deforested, mired in poverty, politically and economically unstable, prey equally to the caprice of nature and the depredations of autocrats. Seven year ago, the Haitian Government demanded restitution from Paris to the tune of nearly $22 billion (including interest) for the gunboat diplomacy that had helped to make it the poorest country in the western hemisphere.

    In the wake of last week’s earthquake, the effect of which has been so brutally magnified by Haiti’s economic fragility, there have been renewed calls for France to honour its moral debt. There is no chance that it will do so. The view from the Élysée is that the case was closed in 1885. In 2004 Jacques Chirac set up a Commission of Reflection under the left-wing philosopher Régis Debray to examine France’s historical relations with Haiti: it concluded blandly that the demand for restitution was “non-pertinent in both legal and historical terms”.

    As Haiti faces social breakdown, government paralysis and death on a shattering scale, the French finance minister has called for a speeding up of the cancellation of Haiti’s debt. This is grim irony: if France had not saddled the country with debt almost from its inception, Haiti would have been far better equipped to cope with nature’s spite.

    Bernard Kouchner, the French Foreign Minister, is calling for a “reconstruction and development” conference. “It is a chance to get Haiti once and for all out of the curse it seems to have been stuck with for such a long time,” President Sarkozy said.

    This seems uncomfortably close to Mr Robertson’s insulting suggestion that Haitian slaves made a “pact with the Devil” to free themselves from Napoleon’s grip. The original curse was economic, not religious, and laid on Haiti by imperial France.

    Haiti does not need more words, conferences or commissions of reflection. It needs money, urgently. So far, official donations from France are less than half of those from Britain.

    The legacy of colonialism worldwide is a bitter one, but in few countries is there a more direct link between the sins of the past and the horrors of the present. Merely a French acknowledgement that the unfolding catastrophe is partly the consequence of history, and not merely blind fate, would go some way to salving Haiti’s wounds.

    France does not pay for its history. But imagine what the reaction might be if, the next time you receive an outrageous bill in a French restaurant, you declare that payment is non-pertinent, set up a commission of reflection and walk out.

  • Haiti and the Dominican repubic

    he day after a 7.0-magnitude earthquake struck Haiti, Christian televangelist Pat Robertson sparked outrage with his comments on The 700 Club that the nation’s history of catastrophes was due to a "pact to the Devil" its residents had made some 200 years ago. How else to explain why Haiti suffers, while the Dominican Republic — which shares the 30,000 sq. miles of the Caribbean island of Hispaniola — is relatively well-off? "That island of Hispaniola is one island," Robertson said. "The Dominican Republic is prosperous, healthy, full of resorts, et cetera. Haiti is in desperate poverty."
    (Read why Pat Robertson is blaming Haiti.)
    Robertson’s rationale is more than suspect, yet the differences between the two nations are undeniable. The UN ranks the Dominican Republic 90th out of 182 countries on its human development index, which combines a variety of welfare measurements; Haiti comes in at 149th. In the Dominican Republic, average life expectancy is nearly 74 years. In Haiti, it’s 61. You’re substantially more likely to be able to read and write if you live in the eastern two-thirds of Hispaniola, and less likely to live on under $1.25 a day.
    (See TIME’s exclusive pictures from the aftermath of the Haiti earthquake.)
    Much of this difference is geographic. The mountains that lie across the island can cut off Haiti’s rainfall. The northeast trade winds, and so the rain, blow in the Dominican Republic’s favor. Haiti’s semiarid climate makes cultivation more challenging. Deforestation — a major problem in Haiti, but not in its neighbor — has only exacerbated the problem. Other differences are a result of Hispaniola’s long and often-violent history — even TIME called it a "forlorn, hate-filled little Caribbean island" in 1965. On the eastern part of Hispaniola, you’ll probably speak Spanish; in the west, it’s more likely to be French or Creole, a division that’s the result of centuries of European colonization and numerous power struggles. (Not to mention the decimation of Hispaniola’s indigenous Taino people — who, of course, spoke neither.)
    When Christopher Columbus arrived in 1492, he named the land La Isla Española; it served as a Spanish colony and base for the empire’s further conquests, though was never particularly profitable. In 1697 the Spanish formally ceded the western third of it to the French, already present and more heavily invested. The Hispaniolan outposts of both empires imported African slaves, though the latter did so to a much greater extent. The colonies — Santo Domingo and Saint-Domingue, respectively —subsequently developed vastly different demographics. According to a study by the American Library of Congress, by the end of the 18th Century there were about 40,000 white landowners, 25,000 black or interracial freedmen, and 60,000 slaves in the Spanish colony, compared with approximately 30,000 whites, 27,000 freedmen, and at least 500,000 black slaves in its French counterpart.
    As revolution raged in France in the 1790s, its colonial slaves in Hispaniola revolted; in 1804, they declared independence, and Haiti, which was named after the Taino word for "land of mountains," became the world’s first sovereign black republic. The Dominican Republic wasn’t established until 1844, after not just European rule but also 22 years of Haitian occupation. Strife between (as well as within) the neighbors, rooted in deep class, racial, and cultural differences, was constant. Interference by foreign powers was often the norm. The Spanish took back the Dominican Republic again in the early 1860s, and for periods during the twentieth century, the U.S. occupied both nations, supposedly to restore order but also, in the face of European threats, to assert its influence in the Western Hemisphere. Internal politics were characterized by multiple coups, revolts and dictators, the most infamous being Rafael Trujillo in the Dominican Republic and François and Jean-Claude Duvalier in Haiti. Juan Bosch, the first democratically elected president of the Dominican Republic in 1962, was almost immediately overthrown after taking office in 1963. Jean-Bertrand Aristide became the first freely-elected president of Haiti, in 1990; he was ousted as well, returned and was ousted again.
    But while both countries struggled with democracy, economically they began to diverge. Haiti had long been exploited, by foreign powers, neighbors and its own rulers. France not only milked its colony for coffee and sugar production, it also extracted an indemnity from Haiti: the young nation had to pay a burdensome sum to its former colonizer in order to achieve France’s diplomatic recognition. The lighter-skinned Dominicans looked down on the darker-skinned Haitians: in 1965, even as the D.R. was embroiled in civil war, Haitians were working in Dominican fields and not the other way around. And while Trujillo at least encouraged economic development in his country, Duvalier pere et fils essentially sold their own people as cheap sugar cane-cutters to the Dominican Republic.
    Today, with a lack of resources and a much higher population density than its neighbor, Haiti is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere. The UN has sent peacekeeping missions to maintain order there since the mid-1990s, but terrible conditions persist. Haiti’s dismal statistics have a long history; no Devil is necessary.
    See TIME’s full coverage of the Haiti earthquake
    See Haiti’s history of misery

    Read more: http://www.time.com/time/world/artic…#ixzz0d44gmgOf

  • Jordan explorer to tap 7-tonne Sudan gold site

    Jordan explorer to tap 7-tonne Sudan gold site

    January 19, 2010, 11:30 am

    KHARTOUM (Reuters) – Jordanian gold explorer Brinsley Enterprises has found an estimated 7 tonnes of reserves on a site in northeast Sudan and will start commercial production next year, Sudanese state media reported. The company’s general manager told Sudan’s state Suna news agency that Brinsley had found indications of another 10 to 15 tonnes of gold while exploring 14 other sites in Africa’s largest country. Suna said late on Monday that production would start on Brinsley’s concession in Sudan’s Red Sea state in mid-2011. Sudan’s energy and mining minister Al-Zubeir Ahmed al-Hassan told Reuters in October the country was witnessing a "gold rush" with an explosion of small-time prospecting and commercial concessions going to new companies. The minister said Sudan had also been handing out mining concessions in its Nile, Northern and Southern Kordofan states, adding one field alone had proven reserves of 30 tonnes.

  • كتمال الاستعداد لاستخراج النفط من البحر &#1575

    اكتمال الاستعداد لاستخراج النفط من البحر الحمر والنيل الأبيض

    smc
    أعلن وزير الطاقة الزبير احمد الحسن إكتمال الإستعدادات لإستخراج النفط من دارفور والنيل الأبيض والبحر الأحمر إلى جانب حقول للغاز الطبيعي في الدندر والسوكي مؤكداً التزام الحكومة بمنح الجنوب حقه كاملاً في الثروة.

    وأكد أن وزارته تسعى جادة لتوسيع استخراج النفط لتشمل كل أنحاء البلاد، مشيراً إلى اكتمال الاستعدادات لاستخراج النفط في مناطق كوستي والبحر الأحمر ودارفور، وحقول الغاز الطبيعي في الدندر والسوكي. وتعهد بخطوات سريعة للتنمية والنهضة الاقتصادية والزراعية خلال المرحلة المقبلة.

    آخر تحديث: قبل ساعتين و8 دقائق

  • بتمويل من شركة سعودية…التوقيع على انشاء م&#1

    بتمويل من شركة سعودية…التوقيع على انشاء مشروع زراعي متكامل بتكلفة (200) مليون دولار
    دشنت شركة فرص الدولية للاستثمار (السعودية) امس الجمعة نشاطها بالسودان بافتتاح مقر فرعها بالسودان وتوقيع اتفاق مبدئي لانشاء مشروع سباعي متكامل للانتاج الزراعي بولاية سنار بتكلفة اجمالية (200) مليون دولار، والموافقة على تمويل مشروع الشيخ صالح كامل للاسكان الاقتصادي بمدينة بحري والذي تنفذه مجموعة النحلة التي تترأسها وداد يعقوب وشرف تدشين انشطة شركة فرص الاستثمارية رئيس الغرفة الاسلامية للتجارة والصناعة التي تتبع لها الشركة د.الشيخ صالح كامل، وسفير الكويت بالخرطوم، والقنصل السعودي، والامين العام للمجلس الاعلى للاستثمار، السفير شاور ولفيف من رجال الاعمال والمال وشدد الدكتور الشيخ صالح كامل في كلمته في احتفال التوقيع على ان تهتم الشركة بتمويل مشاريع البنية التحتية، والتي بدونها لا يأتي الاستثمار الى السودان من مطارات وطرق، وموانئ وطاقة مؤكدا ان هناك اهتماما خاصا بمشروعات الامن الغذائي والمائي.
    وقال ان المشروعين التي بدأت بهما الشركة يحققان الامن الغذائي والسكني معلنا عن دعمه اللا محدود للسودان ووقوفه مع مشروعاته التنموية ووصف الرئيس التنفيذي لشركة فرص الدولية للاستثمار د.حاتم جميل مختار المشروع السباعي بانه من اكبر المشاريع المتكاملة للانتاج الزراعي في منطقة شرق افريقيا ويحظى بالدعم الفني والمالي من عدد من المساهمين والبنوك في السودان والعالم العربي منها البنك الاسلامي للتنمية (جدة) موضحا ان المشروع يمتد على مساحة (300) الف فدان.
    وتعهد بنقل التقنية وتوطينها عبر شركاء عالميين في مجال الانتاج الزراعي بشقيه النباتي والحيواني ومجال التصنيع والتسويق بجانب ادخال الزراعة الحديثة وتطبيق الحزم التقنية المتكاملة والملائمة للبيئة مؤكدا ان الشركة تضاعفت استثماراتها في السودان.
    واكد عبدالرحمن الطيب ابوبيه في كلمته انابة عن الامين العام للصندوق القومي للاسكان انهم بصدد انفاذ مشروع المأوى القومي وتوقع بتنقية (5) الاف وحدة سكنية خلال سنتين معددا الخطوات التي تمت بهذا المشروع ووصف تمويل انشاء المدن المقفولة بالخرطوم بانها خطوة جيدة تدفع المشروع مشيدا بدور الشركة فرص للتنمية المحدودة.
    واضاف د.رضوان محمد احمد وزير الزراعة بولاية سنار والموقع على الاتفاق ان المشروع يتيح فرص التوظيف والعمل لانسان المنطقة وتعظيم الفوائد الزراعية واحداث نقلة للولاية معتبرا المشروع بداية علاقة طيبة مع الشركة.

    صحيفة السوداني

  • Pat Robertson Disgusts me

    During a broadcast on his Christian Broadcasting Network, Mr Robertson suggested the Haiti’s earthquake was divine retribution.
    He said Haiti had sworn a pact with the devil when it freed itself from French colonial rule.
    The White House said the comments were completely inappropriate.
    "It never ceases to amaze, that in times of amazing human suffering, somebody says something that could be so utterly stupid," Mr Gibbs said.
    "But it, like clockwork, happens with some regularity."
    Mr Robertson, an 80-year-old former presidential candidate, made the comments on Wednesday on his programme, "The 700 Club".
    "They said, we will serve you if you will get us free from the French. True story. And so, the devil said, okay it’s a deal," the televangelist said during the broadcast.
    "Ever since, they have been cursed by one thing after the other," he added, comparing Haiti to its more prosperous neighbour, the Dominican Republic.
  • الصناديق العربية تمول مطار الخرطوم وتحدي

    الصناديق العربية تمول مطار الخرطوم وتحديث المشاريع الزراعية بمبلغ (780) مليون دولار

    تقرير(smc)

    برز اتجاه عام لدى الصناديق العربية التي تُعرف بمجموعة التنسيق في اجتماعها رقم (66) الذي يعقد بالخرطوم أنها ستساهم في سد الفجوة التمويلية لمشروع مطار الخرطوم الجديد بتكلفة (680) مليون دولار وتمويله بالكامل.
    وأكد الدكتور بشير عمر ممثل البنك الإسلامي للتنمية في الاجتماع أن الصناديق العربية ظلت تقف مع السودان في كل الظروف الاقتصادية، ولم تخضع لظروف المقاطعة التي تعرض لها السودان عالمياً ، وقال في تصريح لـ(smc) إن هذه الصناديق (مجموعة التنسيق) والتي تضم البنك الإسلامي للتنمية، الصندوق السعودي للتنمية، الصندوق الكويتي للتنمية الاقتصادية العربية، صندوق الأوفيد للتنمية الدولية، وصندوق أبوظبي للتنمية، صندوق النقد العربي وبرنامج الخليج العربي لدعم منظمات الأمم المتحدة الإنمائية بالإضافة إلى المصرف العربي للتنمية الاقتصادية في إفريقيا قد بحثت في اجتماعها بالخرطوم أربعة مشاريع للسودان هي مشروع مطار الخرطوم الجديد، مشروع مد مدينة بورتسودان بالمياه من النيل، مشروع مياه القضارف بتكلفة (68) مليون دولار، (47) مليون دولار على التوالي، ومشروع تقدمت به شركة السودان للأقطان، يتعلق بتحديث مشاريع الجزيرة، الرهد ، خور أبوحبل بكردفان بتكلفة مائة مليون دولار، وفيما أشار إلى طلب الاجتماع إخضاع مشروعي مياه بورتسودان والقضارف لمزيد من الدراسة أعلن التزام الصندوق السعودي للتنمية بالمساهمة في مشروع شركة الأقطان بمبلغ (25) مليون دولار، والبنك الإسلامي للتنمية بحوالي (20) مليون دولار.
    وأمنَّ الخبير الاقتصادي على أهمية المشروع لتحديث الري، وعمليات الإنتاج بإدخال تقنية الإنتاج والبذور المحسنة لسلع القطن، الذرة، القمح والفول السوداني، وما يتضمنه من إدماج الثروة الحيوانية ضمن الدورة الزراعية، مشيراً إلى أن أهميته تكمن في أنه يخاطب شريحة كبيرة من المزارعين ويساهم في محاربة الفقر.
    وأشاد بالخطوات الكبيرة التي قطعها الاقتصاد السوداني معرباً عن أمله في أن يتمكن السودان من الوصول إلى صيغة تضمن الاستقرار السياسي واستفادة كل ربوع الوطن من عائد التنمية والنمو الاقتصادي بشكل يحقق طموحات أقاليم السودان لاسيما المضطربة والفقيرة منها.
    وفي ربط بين الاقتصاد والسياسية الذين ولدا توأمين وفقاً لنظرية عالم الاقتصاد البريطاني جون كنيز، أكد ثقته في حكمة أهل السودان وقدرتهم على التوصل إلى صيغة تضمن الاستقرار المنشود ومشاركة الجميع في العملية السياسية بالتراضي مع الأخذ في الحسبان تطلعات المهمشين والذين يعتقدون أنهم تخلفوا عن ركب التنمية في الفترة الماضية مشيراً إلى أن عملية التحول الديمقراطي تعد خطوة في الاتجاه الصحيح.
    وتناول الدكتور بشير عمر في معرض حديثه لـ(smc) المقاطعة الاقتصادية للسودان مؤكداً عدم استغناء أية دولة عن الدعم الخارجي بشكل كامل، وقال ينبغي على الدول أن تضع المسائل المتعلقة بمصلحتها وسيادتها في المقدمة ، وأن تجد في نفس الوقت السبيل الذي يضمن لها التعايش مع العالم في حدها الأدنى، وعدّد الآثار السالبة للمقاطعة خاصة الأمريكية مشيراً إلى أن السياسة الحصيفة هي أن ترى كيف توفق بين المصلحة الوطنية وبين أجندات تلك الدول المعلنة أو غير المعلنة بما لا يضر بالبلاد. ورداً على سؤال حول الدور العربي للحد من الآثار السالبة للمقاطعة قال إن الدور العربي يستطيع أن يساهم بموارد مالية، إلا أن هناك مسائل تقنية متعلقة باستيراد آليات غير متوفرة في المنطقة العربية ، ولا تنتج في الدول الإسلامية، وطالب في ظل التشابك والترابط والتداخل في الاقتصاد العالمى بضرورة البحث عن صيغة لحل المشاكل المتعقلة بالمقاطعة، مشيراً إلى أن المجال متاح لإمكانية الوصول إلى الموازنة بين مصلحة الوطن والحفاظ على سيادتها والتعايش مع العالم.
    وأمنَّ على إمكانيات السودان الهائلة في تحقيق الأمن الزراعي العربي وقال إن مؤسسات التمويل العربية أدركت أكثر من ذي قبل دور السودان في إنتاج الغذاء، وأبدت رغبة أكيدة في دعم هذا القطاع، واستدرك أن دعم القطاع الزراعي لا يعتمد كلية على التمويل الخارجي منبهاً إلى الدور المهم التكميلي الذي لابد أن تقوم به الحكومة والمتصل بعضها بمسائل المسح الدقيق للأراضي الزراعية وتحديد خلوها من الموانع والاهتمام بالبنيات التحتية لضمان نجاح العملية الزراعية ونجاح الإنتاج الزراعي وأخرى تتعلق بالكهرباء، الطرق، الاتصالات وغيرها.
    وأضاف قائلاً: إذا لم تكتمل البنية التحتية الأساسية للقطاع الزراعي سيُواجه السودان بصعوبات في أن يقوم بدور سلة غذاء العالم العربي، مطالباً تشجيع القطاع الخاص للولوج في مجال الاستثمار والإنتاج الزراعي بشقيه بعد أن أصبح دورة مكملاً لدور الحكومات ودور مؤسسات التمويل.
    وتشير متابعات (smc) أن اجتماعات مجموعة التنسيق التي تم تأسيسها في عام 1975م لتعزيز جهود التنمية والتنسيق بينها في مجال تقييم المشروعات وتمويلها ومتابعتها ، قد بحثت في اجتماعها رقم (66) عدد من القضايا أبرزها المساهمات الجديدة للمجموعة في الدول المستفيدة من العون العربي، والتعاون مع البنك الدولي والوكالة الفرنسية للتنمية اللذين شارك وفديها في الاجتماعات
    يذكر أن مجموعة التنسيق تجتمع دورياً مرة كل ستة أشهر، ومن المقرر أن يلتئم اجتماعها رقم (67) في يوليو القادم بأبوظبي، فيما يستضيف البنك الإسلامي للتنمية اجتماعات الدورة (68) للمجموعة في ديسمبر من العام الجاري بجدة.

    آخر تحديث: قبل 5 ساعات و48 دقيقة

  • Turkey demands apology from Israel

    Turkey demands apology from Israel over envoy ‘slight’

    One newspaper captioned the picture "the height of humiliation" [Image: Lior Mizrahi/Israel Hayom]
    Turkey has demanded that Israel apologise over what it called the "discourteous" way its ambassador was treated during a diplomatic meeting.
    Israel summoned Turkey’s ambassador to rebuke him over a TV series but ensured he was photographed on a lower chair.
    In response, Turkey has summoned the Israeli ambassador to Ankara to express its "annoyance".
    The foreign ministry has also insisted it expects steps to be taken to compensate its envoy.
    In a statement, the ministry said it awaited "an explanation and apology" for the "attitude" of Israel’s Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon.
    "We invite the Israeli foreign ministry to respect the rules of diplomatic courtesy," the statement said.
    The television series that sparked the diplomatic row depicts Israeli intelligence agents as baby-snatchers.
    ‘Repeated provocation’
    Footage of Mr Ayalon urging journalists to make clear that the ambassador was seated on a low sofa, while the Israeli officials were in much higher chairs, has been widely broadcast by the Israeli media.
    He is also heard pointing out in Hebrew that "there is only one flag here" and "we are not smiling".
    In an interview with Israel’s Army Radio, Mr Ayalon was unapologetic.
    "In terms of the diplomatic tactics available, this was the minimum that was warranted given the repeated provocation by political and other players in Turkey," he said, according to Reuters.
    One Israeli newspaper marked the height difference on the photo, and captioned it "the height of humiliation".
    The meeting with the Turkish ambassador, Ahmet Oguz Celikkol, was called over the fictional television series Valley of the Wolves, popular in Turkey.
    It depicts Israeli intelligence operatives running operations to kidnap babies and convert them to Judaism.
    Last October Israel complained over another Turkish series, which depicted Israeli soldiers killing Palestinians. In one clip, an Israeli soldier shoots dead a smiling young girl at close range.
    The row comes ahead of a planned visit by Israeli Defence Minister Ehud Barak to Turkey on Sunday.
    Turkey has long been an ally of Israel, but relations have deteriorated as Ankara has repeatedly criticised Israel for its offensive in Gaza a year ago.

  • Somalia signs currency printing agreement with Sudan

    Somalia signs currency printing agreement with Sudan

    Tuesday 12 January 2010 06:21.
    Printer-Friendly version Comments…
    January 11, 2010 (KHARTOUM) – A batch of new Somali currency will be printed in Sudan following an agreement signed in Khartoum today, Sudan state media reported.

    The Managing Director of Sudan’s Currency Printing office Mohammed Al-Hassan Al-Bahi signed for Sudan Government while the Somali Finance Minister Sharif Hassan Sheikh signed for his government.

    The cost of the printing process will top $17 million, SUNA reported

    The Sudanese minister of Finance and national economy Awad Al-Jaz and the governor of Sudan’s Central Bank Saber Mohammed Al- Hassan were present at the ceremony.

    Al-Jaz noted the “historical relations” between the two countries adding that the printing of the currency can contribute in realizing stability and development in Somalia. He said that Sudan’s experience in as a country emerging from conflict can be a good experience for Somalia.

    The Somali minister hailed Sudan’s efforts in achieving peace saying that the presence of legal currency would contribute positively to the economy.

    Somalia has been seeking Sudan’s help in rebuilding its government’s institution and security forces in a bid to assert control over the lawless country. The issue of currency was discussed during the visit of Sharif Hassan to Sudan last year.

    Somalia has had no effective central government for 19 years. Regional and international efforts to install one have so far been undermined with rampant insecurity fueled by Al-Shabab Islamic insurgency.

    (ST)

  • Southern-most royal Kushite statues found in Sudan

    Southern-most royal Kushite statues found in Sudan
    Mon Jan 11, 2010 4:19pm GMT Email | Print | Share | Single Page [-] Text [+]
    By Opheera McDoom

    KHARTOUM (Reuters Life!) – Huge granite statues of a pharaoh and other kings have been found in Sudan, a discovery that has shocked archaeologists at how far south the expansive Kushite empire extended, the dig directors said Monday.

    The Pharaoh Taharqa, mentioned in the Bible for saving Jerusalem from the Assyrians, was a Kushite from north Sudan but ruled a wide empire through Egypt to the borders of Palestine. The southern borders are unknown. The Kushite civilization survived from 9th century B.C. to the 4th century A.D.

    "It’s an amazing shock that we’ve found the statues there particularly Taharqa," said Julie Anderson, co-director of the project in Dangail, about 350 km (217.5 miles) north of Khartoum.

    "This is the furthest south that we know of that a statue of Taharqa has ever been found," she added.

    The dig found four royal statues, of Pharaoh Taharqa (690-664 B.C.), kings Senkamanisken (643-623 B.C.) and Aspelta (593-568 B.C.) as well as part of a crown of a fourth royal who they have yet to identify.

    The granite life-size statues would weigh 1.5 tons but appeared to have been deliberately broken at the neck, knees and ankles in a ritual, which may have been due to internal dynastic disputes or an Egyptian pharaoh who came south to assert authority.

    The names of the kings were written in hieroglyphics on the backs of the statues, Anderson said.

    The Kushite empire ruled for so long because it had control of trade routes, the waters of the river Nile, gold and agriculture