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According to Al-Seyassah daily, the Public Authority for Manpower (PAM) has taken legal measures against five companies for violating the ban on working in open areas from 11:00 am to 4:00 pm during summer to protect workers from the extremely hot weather. From June 1-30, the National Center for Occupational Health and Safety carried out the inspection campaigns that led to this decision.
In total, 295 work sites were inspected by the team during this time period. A total of 250 companies erred for the first time, while 245 companies met the conditions upon re-inspection. It was found that 392 workers were on site during the banned hours, and 14 warnings were issued./Local Media
According to Al-Seyassah daily, the Court of Cassation sentenced a citizen working in the Ministry of Health to seven years in prison with hard labor for forging his academic certificates. According to the Public Prosecution, the defendant had forged a high school diploma supposedly issued by an educational institution in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia as well as an academic certificate stating he graduated from an Egyptian university with a bachelor's degree.
The defendant worked at the ministry based on these academic certificates, a crime involving embezzlement of public funds. The defendant forged official documents to gain employment, according to case files. In the Ministry of Education, the concerned staff discovered the forgery after verifying the authenticity of the defendant's academic certificates./Local Media
According to the Public Authority for Manpower, the authority is working with concerned authorities to expedite the process of issuing work permits for foreign workers. The new system of issuing a work permit will take no more than ten days instead of three months.Our team is working with Daman Health Insurance Hospitals Company, which coordinates with approved hospitals in labor outsourcing countries to develop a new procedure. During the medical period, 2 days are spent in the country of origin and 2 days are spent in the country of destination.
In order to speed up the medical examination process of foreign workers, the board of directors of the authority is in the process of studying a proposal. Al Rai reports that the goal is to eliminate long lines at the labor examination center. Labor examination centers have been crowded and stampeded in recent months. In addition, to avoid delays of a month in obtaining results. There will be a higher fee for this new service, and it will be optional./Local Media
The weekly cabinet on Monday hailed His Highness the Amir’s recent speech to the nation, in which he underlined the importance of adhering to the teachings of our religion, the constitution, and respect the rule of law. The remarks were made during a cabinet meeting, held this afternoon at Seif Palace, and headed by His Highness the Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah Khaled Al-Hamad Al-Sabah. After the meeting, the Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Oil and Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs Dr. Mohammad Abdullatif Al-Fares stated the following: The Council of Ministers began its meeting by reviewing the contents of the speech of His Highness the Amir Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, which he addressed to the citizens on Wednesday, June 22, in which His Highness the Crown Prince Sheikh Mishal Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah was commissioned to deliver on his behalf, describing all what is happening on the political scene. His Highness the Crown Prince stressed, in his speech, to adhere to the teachings of our religion, the constitution, respect the rule of law, and not engage in behavior and actions that contradict parliamentary customs and traditions to ensure the stability, progress and well-being of the nation.
The speech also noted on the preservation of national unity, rally around the political leadership, assume national responsibility in the next stage, choose competencies, activate accountability and take caution. The speech also cautioned to learn the lessons from the past, including from crises and challenges that the State of Kuwait is surrounded by from all sides, re-correcting the political scene, choosing who represents the people and reflecting their aspirations.The speech also included several directives to the Kuwaiti people and to the legislative and executive authorities.
Later, the cabinet decided to direct the ministers to implement the directives contained in the speech. The cabinet expressed its admiration and appreciation for directives included in the speech of His Highness the Amir and His Highness the Crown Prince, stressing its commitment to these directives and that they will be a guiding light for the legislative and executive authorities in their work, calling on the Almighty to preserve the State of Kuwait’s stability And its prosperity under the wise leadership of His Highness the Amir and His Highness the Crown Prince.
On the holy occasion of Eid Al-Adha, the Council of Ministers extends its warmest congratulations and blessings to His Highness the Amir and His Highness the Crown Prince, the Kuwaiti people, and the Arab and Islamic worlds. Then the Cabinet listened to an explanation given by the Minister of Health, Dr. Khaled Al-Saeed, on the latest developments in the health situation in the country, where he stated that despite the monitoring of an increase in the number of positive cases of COVID-19, the health situation is stable and there is no cause for concern. The cabinet called on citizens and residents to continue to adhere to preventive and precautionary measures in order to preserve their safety, asking the Allah Almighty to protect Kuwait and its people from all harm./KT
Kuwait University will accept 7,953 students in all its colleges for the 2022-2023 academic year, including foreign students for a fee. Kuwait University Council approved the numbers proposed by the admission and registration deanship, acting Kuwait University Secretary General and official spokesman Dr Murdhi Al-Ayyash said following a meeting held Monday under the chairmanship of Rector Dr Yousuf Al-Roumi.
Ayyash said the council accepted the proposed number of students, while authorizing the rector for any change in the numbers. He said the council also accepted a proposal of the office of the deputy rector for planning with regards to regulations for accepting foreign students in various specialties in exchange of fees.
This is one of the practical initiatives that aims at strengthening the ranking of Kuwait University, because it is one of the international ranking indicators required by higher education establishments. Ayyash said the basic rules for acceptance and transfer at Kuwait University were approved for the 2022-2023 academic year, besides amending articles 6 and 8 of its teaching faculty affairs rules.
Official sources said Kuwait University prepared a report on measures to improve its ranking among international universities, following criticism for a drop in its current ranking, which is not acceptable for a university that was established in 1966, while universities that were founded later are ahead of it. Sources said the remedial report included an item to increase the number of foreign students, as a lack of them is one of the reasons that caused the drop in the ranking.
They said Kuwait’s plan to build a new government university called Abdullah Al-Salem University may ease the burden on Kuwait University in accepting students and it can expand in accepting foreign students like other regional and international universities. Sources said the university is not likely to admit foreign students for free and is expected to charge fees from them, the value of which will be determined later. Sources added admitting foreign students will not be at the expense of Kuwaiti students who meet the conditions for admittance./KT
Kuwait on Monday said it appreciated Iraq’s efforts to ensure that national properties stolen from Kuwait during Iraq’s 1990 invasion are inevitably returned, citing continued progress on the matter.
Chief among these properties are national archives belonging to Kuwait’s Amiri Diwan and foreign ministry, Assistant Foreign Minister for Arab Affairs and Minister Plenipotentiary Nasser Al-Qahtani told KUNA, pointing out that his country had reclaimed a number of properties recently.
“I urge concerned bodies in Iraq to resolve pressing issues and to bring closure to the matter of stolen Kuwaiti properties,” he emphasized, saying the issue is of “paramount importance” to the Kuwaiti people.
Underling Baghdad’s commitment to the matter, Iraqi foreign ministry undersecretary for legal affairs Dr. Qahtan Al-Janabi said the issue would ultimately be resolved, looking forward to more progress in bilateral ties./KT
A Swedish independent politician who is a supporter of the YPG/PKK terrorist organization filed a criminal complaint Monday against Foreign Minister Ann Linde.
Sweden’s official news agency TT reported that Amineh Kakabaveh filed the criminal charges against Linde with the Constitutional Commission on the grounds of her attitude towards a tripartite memorandum signed between Türkiye, Finland and Sweden on the Nordic countries’ bids for NATO membership
The report said Kakabaveh was upset over Sweden's promise to export arms to Türkiye and she also wanted an article of the memorandum stating that Sweden would extradite criminals to Ankara to be examined.
Türkiye, Finland and Sweden signed the memorandum on June 28 during a NATO summit in Madrid after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Finnish President Sauli Niinisto, Sweden’s Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson and NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg met to discuss the issue and Ankara's related concerns.
The memorandum was signed by the foreign ministers of the three countries -- Türkiye's Mevlut Cavusoglu, Pekka Haavisto of Finland and Ann Linde of Sweden -- in the presence of all three leaders and Stoltenberg./aa
The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) said late Monday that at least 200 children in Somalia have died of malnutrition since January, with the country witnessing "catastrophic food insecurity" for the first time since 2017.
Drought conditions have deteriorated following an unprecedented fourth consecutive failed rainy season in eight regions of the country, up from six regions in May this year, bringing the affected families to the brink of famine, according to the UN.
"More than 7 million people are affected, up from 6.1 million in May, and over 805,000 are displaced,” said a statement issued by the UN humanitarian affairs agency.
In response to the drought, the UN said its humanitarian partners have launched the Drought Response and Famine Prevention Plan covering May to December 2022 to facilitate the scaling up of life-saving, life-sustaining assistance to prevent famine in the country.
The plan requires $993.3 million to implement and targets 6.4 million people, according to the UN.
"Since January, 3.9 million people have received lifesaving assistance. However, the scale of the ongoing response and funding from the international community is not sufficient to sustain the lives of all those at risk,” the statement said.
UN said in the current crisis, late and limited funding is impeding an appropriate increase in assistance.
"The current funding situation ($435.8 million, or 30% received), is comparable to 2011, when funding was slow to come in until the declaration of a famine with devastating consequences,” the UN said.
As of June 30, the severe drought had affected more than 7 million people, an increase from 6.1 million in May, with over 805,000 displaced.
The UN said the rapidly increasing humanitarian needs require a massive scale-up as its partners transition from a drought response to famine prevention.
Its statement comes hours after Somalia appealed for global aid to cope with the deadly drought.
Hunger is rising following a historical fourth consecutive failed rainy season since 2020, with 7.1 million people – 45% of the population – already acutely food insecure.
"For the first time since 2017, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) has confirmed pockets of catastrophic food insecurity affecting more than 213,000 people," the UN said.
Somalia is witnessing one of its worst climate change-related droughts in four decades that has devastated the country.
During the main period of a devastating famine between May and October 2011, there were more than 20,000 excess deaths per month in southern and central Somalia./aa
A wildfire that has been burning near the town of Amfissa in central Greece is out of control, the fire brigade said late Monday.
Winds up to 6 on the Beaufort scale, or 40-50 kilometers (25-31 miles) per hour, have pushed the fire towards the monastery of Profitis Ilias, which has already been evacuated.
The fire has burned its way through vast fields of olive groves and is moving fast towards the coastal town of Itea.
An evacuation text message was sent by civil protection via the 112 European emergency alert number to residents in the northern part of Itea in the Fokida region.
North Itea residents have already been transported to the nearby city of Delphi.
Another village in the burning front, Sernikaki, was also evacuated through the 112 emergency number.
More than 150 firefighters deployed with 48 fire engines and four ground teams are battling to control the flames with the help of municipal water tanks.
Meanwhile, another fire front on southern Greece’s Peloponnese Peninsula has been battling with flames.
Hotel guests in the town of Kranidi have been evacuated and transported to other hotels, according to Skai TV.
Around 63 firefighters with 18 fire engines and three ground teams are trying to control the fire.
A total of 52 wildfires were recorded throughout Greece in the last 24 hours./aa
The UN’s humanitarian coordinator for South Sudan appealed Monday for urgent funding to meet the needs of the South Sudanese people, who are suffering from multiple interconnected shocks.
According to a statement released by Sara Beysolow Nyanti, current estimates indicate that $400 million is urgently required to provide minimum humanitarian services.
Nyanti said that if these funding gaps are not addressed, it will leave millions of the most vulnerable people at risk of losing access to vital humanitarian assistance and protection.
“The humanitarian context in South Sudan is daunting and is the worst that it has ever been. Everything including protection of women and girls, food, nutrition and shelter is needed,” she said.
Nyanti noted that there are over 2 million people displaced in South Sudan, and the absence of funding means those in camps risk being left in critical need of water, sanitation and hygiene and health services, and the lack of safety and security will further deepen these risks.
“The resources have dwindled, but lives should not,” she added.
For over a decade, the people of South Sudan have faced multiple crises. People’s lives have been shattered by years of conflict, social and political instability, unprecedented climate shocks, ongoing violence, frequent displacements, the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, food insecurity and multiple disease outbreaks.
In South Sudan, some 8.9 million people -- more than two-thirds of the population -- are estimated to need significant humanitarian assistance and protection in 2022.
The Humanitarian Response Plan requests $1.7 billion to target 6.8 million people with life-saving assistance and protection services. Currently, the plan is funded only at 27%, almost 14% of which was funded by the OCHA-managed Pooled Funds Central Emergency Response Fund and South Sudan Humanitarian Fund. OCHA refers to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
“With such funding gaps, the vulnerable suffer more and humanitarian partners are forced to prioritize, making heart-wrenching choices between severe needs. We cannot give up because the cost of inaction is too high, and people in need cannot afford to pay this price. We need urgent funds and are appealing to the world to remember the most vulnerable in South Sudan,” Nyanti added.
An estimated 1.9 million people will not have access to clean water, sanitation and hygiene services without more funds.
South Sudan’s Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management, Peter Mayen Majongdit, said they are lobbying for funds to cater for their people.
He urged people of goodwill to extend a helping hand to the needy people in South Sudan./aa