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The eighth edition of the Mercy to Universe International Short Film Festival (IMUFF) will take place in the Turkish metropolis Istanbul between Nov. 21 and 27, the organizers have announced.
Organized by the Fidan Art Foundation, the festival is supported by the Culture and Tourism Ministry with Anadolu Agency (AA) as its global communication partner.
The festival aims to introduce the teachings of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad to the world.
Abdülbaki Baser, chairperson of the Fidan Art Foundation, said the festival is important to spread the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad.
Cemil Nazlı, the festival's director, said they are trying to convey the life and goodness of Prophet Muhammad to the world through art.
Nazlı said that the six best works will be awarded in three different categories as "fiction," "animation" and "documentary" in two separate national and international sections this year as part of the festival. At the festival, applications are also being accepted in the "Final Draft" section of the competition, which aims to bring together the directors and producers in the field of short films, industry professionals and festivals of Turkish and world cinema, and to support the projects during the production phase.
In the competition this year, the "Best Short Fiction Film" will win TL 35,000, "Best Short Documentary" TL 25,000 TL, and "Best Short Animation" TL 15,000 in prizes in the national and international categories. Grants of TL 150,000 "Short Film Production Support" will be given to three projects in the "Final Draft" section, as well.
Entries for fiction, documentary or animated films are being accepted until Sept. 23 at the website of the festival. The festival will host screenings, talks, workshops, a master class and a panel. The gala and award ceremony of the festival will be held on Nov. 27./aa
Development of Turkey’s Siper high-altitude long-range air defense missile system continues successfully and a new test will be held soon, Ismail Demir, head of the Presidency of Defense Industries (SSB) said Sunday.
Demir was speaking to Anadolu Agency (AA) at the sidelines of Teknofest Azerbaijan, the first foreign edition of the leading Turkish aviation, space and technology festival.
"As Turkey puts forward ambitious projects and achieves them, we also ignite the spirit of unity, togetherness and success in the country," Demir said.
Along with that ignited spirit, the excitement, happiness, unity and solidarity among our young people is constantly developing, he said, adding: "As such projects increase, we see this in most of the defense industry projects, our project teams are working with all their strength for the happiness, welfare and security of our country. They are happy and proud to do this work."
Expressing that the tests in the Siper project continue one after another, Demir said that each test means testing a new capability, adding a new capability to the system, developing capabilities or taking it one step further.
"All of our tests have been very successful. The message that these tests give us is that we see with great pleasure that our Siper project is really on track, it is going very well," he explained.
Demir said that with such projects, Turkey will be completely excluded from "discussions such as 'Did they give the Patriots, did we buy SAMP/T, or whether an embargo was applied?'"
The Siper project is led by Turkey's defense giants Aselsan, Roketsan and the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TÜBITAK)'s Defense Industries Research and Development Institute (SAGE).
Developed to protect strategic facilities against enemy attacks within the scope of regional air defense, Siper will allow air defense at long range and in the protection of distributed architecture.
Besides Siper, which is expected to rival Russia's S-400, the Korkut, Sungur and Hisar air defense systems are also in place, systems set to outline a layered air defense for the country, as mentioned several times by the officials.
Turkey-Azerbaijan cooperation
Commenting on the Turkish defense industry products used by Azerbaijan, Demir stated that the "fraternity" and "one nation" approach is not just words, and that emotional intimacy and the brotherly attitude between Turkey and Azerbaijan must take action somewhere.
He pointed out that working together in such projects and using products together reinforces the spirit of brotherhood.
"Teknofest will spread to other brotherly countries, and it will lead to the cooperation of the youth of the country, people who ponder on technology and the creation of common products," he said.
Demir added that Turkey’s door is open to those countries that are eager to cooperate.
First held in 2018, Teknofest kicked off on Thursday in Azerbaijan’s capital Baku and will last through Sunday.
The expansion of the event to neighboring Azerbaijan marks the latest show of close links between the two nations and their determination to strengthen partnerships and develop advanced technologies.
Last year saw Azerbaijan take part in the festival for the first time with 11 local companies and startups.
At the Baku event, companies and entrepreneurs are set to showcase their products and technical solutions.
On the entertainment side, the festival includes aerobatic flight shows from the Azerbaijani Air Force, the Turkish Air Forces Command Turkish Stars and Solo Türk, a vertical wind tunnel, water attractions, flight simulators and robots./aa
The PKK terrorist group's Syrian branch YPG is building cells to hold civilian detainees in tunnels it is digging in northern Syria's Manbij and Ain al-Arab regions, according to local sources.
Despite promises by both the United States and Russia on the YPG/PKK terrorist group to withdraw 30 kilometers (18.6 miles) from Turkey's southern border, the terrorist group continues to dig tunnels in the cities of Manbij and Ain al-Arab, which it continues to occupy in northern Syria.
Footage by Anadolu Agency (AA) teams on the ground showed that tunnels were dug 4 meters (13 feet) under the ground.
The tunnels, about 2 meters deep and 1 meter wide, are connected to each other and have excavation tools, cells, crenelated doors, ventilation gaps and power lines.
The terrorists are also using civilians they detain to conduct the illegal tunnel excavation works, according to local sources.
The tunnels, running hundreds of kilometers in different regions that the YPG/PKK occupied in northern Syria, are also being reinforced with concrete against air attacks.
The YPG/PKK terrorists still threaten the secure atmosphere of the safe regions with their terrorist attacks in northern Syria.
The terrorist group mostly carries out attacks in Manbij, Ain Al-Arab and the Tal Rifaat district of Aleppo. The group even uses these regions as bases for its attacks.
The terrorist organization, which occupied around one-third of Syria's territory with support from the United States, often targets Azaz, Marea, al-Bab, Jarablus, Afrin, Tal Abyad and Ras al-Ain in northern Syria with heavy weapons.
The terrorists also often target Turkish security forces that provide security in the Euphrates Shield, Olive Branch, and Peace Spring operation areas, and try to infiltrate the positions of Syrian opposition fighters from regions that the terrorist group was supposed to withdraw from under the agreements with the United States and Russia.
After chairing a Cabinet meeting in the capital Ankara on Monday, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said: "We will soon take new steps on the incomplete portions of the project we launched on the 30-kilometer safe zone we established along our southern border."
Erdoğan said the operation would be launched as soon as the military, intelligence and security forces have completed their preparations.
Since 2016, Turkey has launched a trio of successful anti-terror operations across its border in northern Syria to prevent the formation of a terror corridor and enable the peaceful settlement of residents: Euphrates Shield (2016), Olive Branch (2018) and Peace Spring (2019).
In its more than 40-year terror campaign against Turkey, the PKK – listed as a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States and the European Union – has been responsible for the deaths of over 40,000 people, including women, children and infants./aa
Was it foul play, a double-cross, or just a dead-end? Several questions surround the mystery of a 2018 excavation in remote western Pennsylvania as a scientific analysis commissioned by the FBI shortly before agents went digging for buried treasure suggested that a huge quantity of gold was below the surface, according to newly released government documents and photos, deepening the arising questions.
The report, by a geophysicist who performed microgravity testing at the site, hinted at an underground object with a mass of up to 9 tons and a density consistent with gold. The FBI used the consultant's work to obtain a warrant to seize the gold – if there was any to be found.
The government has long claimed its dig was a bust. But a father-son pair of treasure hunters who spent years hunting for the fabled Civil War-era gold – and who led agents to the woodland site, hoping for a finder's fee – suspect the FBI double-crossed them and made off with a cache that could be worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
The newly revealed geophysical survey was part of a court-ordered release of government records on the FBI's treasure hunt at Dent's Run, about 220 kilometers (135 miles) northeast of Pittsburgh, where legend says an 1863 shipment of Union gold was either lost or stolen on its way to the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia.
Dennis and Kem Parada, who co-own the treasure-hunting outfit Finders Keepers, successfully sued the Justice Department for the records after being stonewalled by the FBI. Finders Keepers provided the FBI records to The Associated Press (AP). The FBI subsequently posted them on its website.
The technical survey data collected by geophysical consulting firm Enviroscan gave credence to the treasure hunters' own extensive fieldwork at the site – and prompted the FBI to excavate in a massive, secretive operation that lasted for several frigid days in late winter of 2018.
John Louie, a geophysics professor at the University of Nevada, Reno, unconnected to the dig, reviewed Enviroscan’s report at the request of the AP and said the firm’s "methods were very good," and "their conclusions represent a physically reasonable hypothesis" that gold was buried at the site.
However, he cautioned the subsurface gravity anomaly that Enviroscan identified did not definitively establish the presence of gold. There are other technical reasons why Enviroscan’s data could have turned out the way it did, Louie said.
"Thus, it is also entirely reasonable that the FBI did not find anything at the site, because there was not really any gold there," he said via email.
Enviroscan co-founder Tim Bechtel declined to comment about his work at Dent’s Run, saying the FBI has not given him permission to talk. The FBI would not discuss Bechtel this week but said that after the dig, agents "did not take any subsequent steps to reconcile the geophysical-survey findings with the absence of gold or any other metal."
Other documents in the just-released FBI case file raise still more questions.
A one-paragraph FBI report, dated March 13, 2019 – exactly one year after the dig – asserted agents found nothing at Dent’s Run. No "metals, items, and/or other relevant materials were found," the report said. "Due to other priority work ... the FBI will close the captioned case."
Anne Weismann, a lawyer for Finders Keepers, cast doubt on the FBI report’s credibility. She cited its brevity, as well as its timing – it was written after Finders Keepers began pressing the government for records.
"It does not read like one would expect," said Weismann, a former Justice Department lawyer. "If that is the official record in the file of what they did and why they did it, it says almost nothing, and it's crazy," she added.
She said that if the government does not produce a fuller, more contemporaneous accounting of its search for the gold, it "will heighten my view that this is not an accurate record and this was created as a cover-up. And I don't say that lightly."
In response, the FBI said the single-page document "is representative of the standard summaries filed when formally closing an FBI investigation."
The agency has consistently denied it found anything.
Agents acted on information that Dent’s Run "may have been a cultural heritage site containing gold belonging to the United States government," the FBI said in a statement, but "that possibility was not borne out by the excavation. The FBI continues to unequivocally reject any claims or speculation to the contrary."
The trove of documents turned over to Finders Keepers also included nearly 1,000 photos, in grainy black-and-white, that show some – but certainly not all – of what the FBI was doing at the dig site, according to the treasure hunters.
Residents have previously told of hearing a backhoe and jackhammer overnight between the first and second days of the dig – when the work was supposed to have been paused – and seeing a convoy of FBI vehicles, including large armored trucks.
The FBI denied any work took place at the site after hours, saying the "only nighttime activity was ATV patrols by FBI Police personnel, who secured the site around the clock for the duration of the excavation."
Parada suspects the FBI retrieved the gold in the middle of the night and then showed the treasure hunters an empty hole on the afternoon of the second day.
"It’s very curious why the FBI is going to such an extent to misdirect and be so obstructionist on this," said Warren Getler, who has worked closely with the treasure hunters. "They worked that night under cover of darkness to evade, escape our knowledge of something we’re supposed to be partners in," he claimed.
Many of the FBI photos are seemingly irrelevant, including the hundreds of images of random trees and a woodland road leading to the dig site, while others simply don't add up or raise additional questions, assert Parada and Getler, author of "Rebel Gold," a book exploring the possibility of buried Civil War-era caches of gold and silver.
FBI agents are shown standing around the hole in photos that appear earlier in the series, but they are absent from nearly all of the later images at the dig site.
Getler and Parada say the lead FBI agent told them the hole was filled with water the morning of the second day, but the low-quality images released by the government show only a small puddle or perhaps a bit of snow. They said that same agent spent most of the second day at base camp – where Getler and the treasure hunters say they were largely confined to their car – and not at the dig site.
The FBI said it's standard for photos to "document site conditions before, during and after FBI operations," Parada claims it all points to a clandestine overnight dig and a second-day excavation that was just for show.
"I think we were expecting a couple hundred photos of the night dig, and I think we were expecting pictures of metal coins or bars," Parada said. "I think there were pictures, but they disappeared."
The FBI records also show that several weeks before the excavation, an agent with the agency's art crime team approached Wells Fargo to ask whether it shipped gold by stagecoach for the U.S. Mint in 1863.
Wells Fargo historians turned up no evidence of it but said records from the era are incomplete. Wells Fargo did ship gold by stagecoach, a corporate archivist wrote in an email to the FBI, but large quantities of the precious metal, as well as gold that had to be carried long distances, were "better transported by ship or train."
Getler said the gold might have been transported by wagon, not stagecoach.
Additional FBI releases are expected over the coming months./Ap
The top United Nations human rights official said Saturday that she raised concerns with Chinese officials about the impact of the broad application of counterterrorism and deradicalization measures on the rights of Uyghurs and other predominantly Muslim groups in China's Xinjiang as she defended her contentious visit to the region where Beijing is accused of widespread human rights abuses, detaining over a million Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities, as well as carrying out forced sterilization of women and coerced labor.
Michelle Bachelet, who visited the northwestern region as part of a six-day trip to China, insisted the visit was "not an investigation" but a chance to have direct talks with senior Chinese leaders and pave the way for more regular interactions to support China in fulfilling its obligations under international human rights law, all the while Chinese officials boasted that the visit had achieved "positive concrete results."
"It provides an opportunity for me to better understand the situation in China, but also for the authorities in China to better understand our concerns and to potentially rethink policies that we believe may impact negatively on human rights," she said in a video news conference before leaving the country.
Bachelet's measured words, while expected, did not satisfy activists and likely will not sit well with governments such as the United States, which have been critical of her decision to visit Xinjiang. China’s ruling Communist Party, which has vehemently denied all reports of human rights violations and genocide in Xinjiang, showed no sign of being open to change in a government statement on the trip.
The statement, attributed to Vice Foreign Minister Ma Zhaoxu, accused some Western countries and anti-China elements of fabricating sensational lies about Xinjiang under the guise of human rights. It said that the government had adopted lawful measures to combat violent terrorism and brought security, stability and prosperity to the region in China's northwest.
"The Chinese side pointed out that essentially, Xinjiang is not at all a human rights issue, but a major issue concerning upholding national sovereignty, security and territorial integrity,” the statement said. "All ethnic groups of Xinjiang belong to the family of the Chinese nation," it added.
Agnes Callamard, the secretary general of Amnesty International, said that Bachelet should condemn human rights violations in Xinjiang, and call on China to release people arbitrarily detained and end systematic attacks on ethnic minorities in the region.
"The high commissioner’s visit has been characterized by photo opportunities with senior government officials and manipulation of her statements by Chinese state media, leaving an impression that she has walked straight into a highly predictable propaganda exercise for the Chinese government," Callamard said in a news release.
Bachelet, making the first visit by a U.N. high commissioner for human rights to China in 17 years, said she raised the lack of independent judicial oversight for a system of internment camps that swept up a million or more Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities, according to estimates by experts.
China, which describes the camps as vocational training and education centers to combat extremism, says they have been closed. The government has never publicly said how many people passed through them.
Bachelet, who visited a prison and a former center in the Xinjiang city of Kashgar, noted the reliance by police on 15 indicators to determine "tendencies toward violent extremism" that could result in detention, the allegations of use of force and reports of unduly severe restrictions on religious practices.
"It is critical that counterterrorism responses do not result in human rights violations," she said. "The application of relevant laws and policies, and any mandatory measures imposed on individuals, need to be subject to independent judicial oversight, with greater transparency of judicial proceedings. All victims must be able to seek redress," she added.
Bachelet described as "deeply worrying" the arrest of lawyers, activists, journalists and others under Hong Kong's national security law, noting the semi-autonomous Chinese city's reputation as a center for human rights and independent media in Asia.
She said it is important to protect the linguistic, religious and cultural identity of Tibetans and that they be allowed to participate fully and freely in decisions about their religious life. "I ... stressed the importance of children learning in their language and culture in the setting of their families or communities," she said.
Before her trip, Bachelet heard from Uyghur families living abroad that have lost contact with their relatives. In her meetings in China, she said she appealed to authorities to make it a priority to take steps to provide information to families.
"To those who have sent me appeals asking me to raise issues or cases with the authorities, I have heard you," she said. "Your advocacy matters and my visit was an opportunity to raise a number of specific situations and issues of concern with the government."
The U.N. and China agreed to set up a working group to hold follow-up discussions on a range of issues, including the rights of minorities, counterterrorism and human rights, and legal protection, Bachelet said./AP
Libya faces a serious security threat from foreign fighters and private military companies, especially Russia’s Wagner Group which has violated international law, U.N. experts said in a report obtained by The Associated Press (AP).
The experts also accused seven Libyan armed groups of systematically using unlawful detention to punish perceived opponents, ignoring international and domestic civil rights laws, including laws prohibiting torture.
In particular, "migrants have been extremely vulnerable to human rights abuses and regularly subjected to acts of slavery, rape and torture," the panel said in the report to the U.N. Security Council obtained by the AP.
The oil-rich North African nation plunged into turmoil after a NATO-backed uprising in 2011 toppled dictator Moammar Gadhafi, who was later killed. It then became divided between rival governments, one in the east, backed by putschist Gen. Khalifa Haftar, and a U.N.-supported administration in the capital of Tripoli. Each side is supported by different militias and foreign powers.
In April 2019, Haftar and his forces, backed by Egypt and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), launched an offensive to try and capture Tripoli. His campaign collapsed after Turkey stepped up its military support for the U.N.-recognized government.
An October 2020 cease-fire deal led to an agreement on a transitional government in early February 2021 and elections were scheduled for last Dec. 24 aimed at unifying the country. But they were canceled and the country now has rival governments with two Libyan politicians claiming to be prime minister.
The cease-fire agreement called for the speedy withdrawal of all foreign fighters and mercenaries but the panel said, "there has been little verifiable evidence of any large-scale withdrawals taking place to date."
The panel said it continues to investigate the deployment of Wagner fighters and the transfers of arms and related materiel to support its operations.
The Wagner Group passes itself off as a private military contractor and the Kremlin denies any connection to it. But the United States identifies Wagner’s financer as Yevgeny Prigozhin, an oligarch who is close to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The panel said it considers a Samsung electronic tablet left on a Libyan battlefield by a Wagner mercenary and obtained by the BBC in early 2021 to be authentic. It contained maps of the locations of 35 unmarked anti-personnel mines in the Ain Zara area of south Tripoli that was then a front line area under Haftar's control, supported by Wagner.
Several mines had never been reported as being in Libya before and their transfer, therefore, violated the U.N. arms embargo, the panel said. It added that a booby-trapped mine exploded during a mine clearance operation killing two civilian mine clearers.
Experts also received information about the recovery of anti-tank mines from positions primarily occupied by Wagner in south Tripoli.
The panel said the failure to visibly mark the anti-personnel and anti-tank mines and issue warnings of their locations to civilians in the areas was a violation of international humanitarian law by Wagner.
The Wagner tablet also contained a list of requested items including drones and tanks that would violate the arms embargo if delivered, the panel said, but it didn’t know if any of it had.
The panel said it identified 18 arms transfers and four examples of military training between March 2021 and late April 2022 that violated the U.N. arms embargo. Among the examples it cited was the Luccello, a ship flying the Comoros flag that delivered 100 armored vehicles to Haftar in Benghazi.
The experts said four migrants suffered human rights abuses in secret detention facilities controlled by human traffickers in the areas of Tazirbu in the Libyan desert and Bani Walid near the northwest coast. They said victims were enslaved, severely beaten, deliberately starved and denied medical care.
"Two former female detainees, who were 14- and 15-year-old girls at the time, further testified to the panel that multiple perpetrators repeatedly raped them, subjected them to sexual slavery and other forms of sexual violence during the period of over 18 months in a secret detention facility in Bani Walid," the report said.
The panel said it also found that guards responsible for protecting the most vulnerable migrants in the government-run Shara al-Zawiya detention center "took a direct part in or turned a blind eye to consistent acts of rape, sexual exploitation and threats of rape against women and girls" detained there between January and June 2021./AP
Kuwait’s Central Statistical Bureau showed an unprecedented increase in the monthly consumer price index, which amounted to about 4.36 percent during March 2021 on an annual basis. And despite the price increase on luxury items locally and the concerns of a global economic crisis, buying behavior in Kuwait continues to escalate on non-essential products.
Consumer Behavior Consultant Salah Al-Jemaz explained the reasons why local consumers keep spending their money on luxurious products despite the current global economic situation. “People in the Gulf region are not qualified to consume or spend their money with a studied step, especially with the stability of their income; they see that there is no reason to reduce their spendings and save money while the prices keep going up,” he said.
“GCC governments encourage this consuming behavior by constantly supporting its citizens financially, which has led to creating an environment in which the citizen does not take care of his responsibilities,” he argued. “Not to mention the cash flow from the supporting communities such as families, friends or charities institutes.”
Jemaz assured that the social appearance is one of the main problems that affect consumer behavior regarding reducing their spending on luxuries. “We are not telling people to deprive themselves, therefore saving money, good spending or investing in gold helps them avoid future financial crises, especially among the global economic concerns,” he explained.
“Educational institutes in Kuwait should start teaching the coming generation ways of managing their financials, which helps them to prevent inflation, price hikes or reduce the consuming culture,” he added. “When the ministry of finance announced during the pandemic that they will have a shortage regarding the salary disbursement, people, instead of stashing their money, went to malls and spent their money unconsciously.”
On the other hand, Jemaz mentioned that “changes of economic conditions are forcing us to keep pace with the global saving methods. Therefore, gold is the safest way to prevent economic swings, while increasing the monthly income helps to save the surplus.”
Inflation
Regarding inflation and its effect on consumer spending, economist Amer Al-Tamimi, said that “inflation in Kuwait is starting to exceed 4-6 percent, and since basic food commodities in Kuwait are subsidized by the government, inflation does not easily appear in Kuwait as it does in other global countries.”
He added, “In countries such as GCC states which depend on natural resources, consumer behavior will only change when their financial conditions start to be affected by the inflation, which is expected to start in the upcoming 6-12 months. However, if the inflation rate stays as it is, the amount of spending will keep going up.”
To explore more about this issue, Kuwait Times visited several shopping malls and asked people about their spending behaviors on non-essential products in the last three months. Some citizens said that they did not reduce their spending on luxurious items due to their high income, while others think that the global economic concerns are a great opportunity to learn how to manage their finances.
A Kuwaiti couple told Kuwait Times that they did not reduce their spending on luxury products, saying, “the price hikes are a normal result for the current global economic situation, while we are expecting that the economic issue will not be as bad as speculated.”
“After the prices of luxury items started to increase to more than 20 percent, I started to buy international brands so I won’t spend my money on perishable products,” a female citizen said, mentioning that the current economic crisis is “over-exaggerated.”
Spending less
Another citizen started to spend less on luxury products worrying about a potential crisis or price hikes especially on basic goods, adding that “prices have already started to increase, mostly on non-essential products such as make-ups, clothes, and perfumes.” An expat said that she started to spend less than before as prices on luxury products started to increase and, in some cases, “exceeded 15 percent of the original price”.
Regarding consumer spending, a salesman in a phone accessory shop confirmed that there is a notable increase in purchases by consumers in the last three months, according to the variety of products. Meanwhile, salesmen in a sports shop said that the demand for sportswear started to increase after the pandemic and the lockdowns and reached its highest in the last six months. “We noticed 15-20 percent increase in our profits for this year compared to last year,” they added.
On another hand, a business owner said that there was a decline in sales this year due to the price differences compared to markets abroad, noting that people started to save money by buying their luxury needs while traveling. Another shop owner said that his business sales are down by 20 percent due the recent global economic situation./KT
Moody’s Investors Service (“Moody’s”) has on Thursday affirmed the government of Kuwait’s long-term local and foreign currency issuer ratings at A1. The outlook remains stable. The decision to affirm the ratings is underpinned by Moody’s assessment that Kuwait’s balance-sheet and fiscal buffers will remain strong for the foreseeable future, which preserve macroeconomic and external stability and anchor the credit profile.
Balanced against this key credit strength is the persistently challenging political environment that limits the prospects for reforms that would reduce the vulnerability of the economy and government finances to long-term carbon transition risks. The stable outlook reflects balanced risks to the ratings. Effective implementation of measures to reduce the government’s exposure to oil revenue and diversify the economy, which Moody’s does not currently factor into its baseline assumptions for at least the next two years, may raise the resilience of Kuwait’s credit profile to oil price fluctuations. By contrast, accelerating global momentum towards carbon transition that lowers the demand for and price of oil, in the absence of reforms including the passage of legislation to expand the government’s financing options, may reintroduce liquidity risks and weigh on the credit profile longer term. Kuwait’s local and foreign currency country ceilings remain unchanged at Aa2.
The narrower-than-average two-notch gap between the local currency ceiling and the sovereign rating reflects the country’s stable balance of payments through episodes of oil price volatility, against the economy’s exposure to a key revenue source and a challenging domestic political environment that constrains reform and diversification prospects. The zero-notch gap between the foreign currency ceiling and local currency ceiling reflects very low transfer and convertibility risks, given the country’s very large net external creditor position that includes ample foreign exchange reserves held by the central bank.
Kuwait’s credit profile is supported by its large sovereign wealth buffers and very low debt level, and Moody’s expects the government’s balance sheet to remain extraordinarily strong for the foreseeable future. Furthermore, in the current environment of high oil prices and rising production agreed by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) with some other major oil exporting countries, Moody’s expects the government to reaccumulate liquid assets in its General Reserve Fund (GRF), which will eliminate liquidity risk – even if self-imposed – for at least the next two to three years. Moody’s estimates that liquid sovereign wealth fund (SWF) assets managed by Kuwait Investment Authority (KIA) far exceeded the size of its GDP at the end of 2021 and dwarfs the government’s debt of just below 6 percent of GDP at the end of fiscal 2021 (year ending March 2022). The size of Kuwait’s SWF assets as a share of GDP is one of the three largest globally, together with Norway and Abu Dhabi. With the sharp increase in oil prices this year driven by the Russia-Ukraine military conflict, coupled with higher oil production under the OPEC+ agreement, Moody’s expects Kuwait’s stock of SWF assets to grow over the next two years. This is driven by Moody’s forecast that Kuwait will run a fiscal surplus of 7-8 percent of GDP in fiscal 2022 and around 2-3 percent of GDP in fiscal 2023, based on the rating agency’s oil price assumptions of $105 and $95 per barrel on average in 2022 and 2023, respectively. Moreover, with very limited amounts of debt to repay and no requirement to transfer surpluses to the Future Generations Fund (FGF, which is at the discretion of the finance minister after the change in law in September 2020), Moody’s expects the surpluses to be accumulated in GRF as liquid buffers.
The reaccumulation of assets after seven consecutive years of drawdown because of fiscal deficits will bolster Kuwait’s credit profile and eliminate the need for government financing and any associated liquidity risk while the fiscal balance is in surplus. While these needs will return from fiscal 2024 onwards, when, based on Moody’s oil price assumptions, Kuwait will again run fiscal deficits, the near-term period of high oil prices provides time to the government to take some measures that would allow it to finance its deficits. Meanwhile, the large proportion of SWF assets invested in liquid, foreign currency assets help preserve macroeconomic and external stability. Moody’s estimates that Kuwait runs a very large net international investment position because of FGF and foreign exchange reserves are ample.
At the same time, Kuwait’s very high exposure to developments in the oil sector weighs on the resilience of its credit profile because of the long-term transition away from hydrocarbons. Moreover, compared to many hydrocarbon producing peers that are making progress in fiscal and economic diversification away from reliance on hydrocarbons, prospects for reforms and diversification will remain weak in Kuwait, hampered by the country’s political climate. In Kuwait, oil revenue accounts for around 90 percent of government revenue while hydrocarbon exports make up around 80 percent of total exports; the contribution of the hydrocarbon sector is among the largest across sovereigns that Moody’s rates. Although the government has sought to introduce fiscal reforms, it has yet to implement any nonoil revenue measure since the oil price shock in 2015, unlike other countries in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).
The country’s focus on welfare for citizens through wages and subsidies also implies limited scope for deep expenditure cuts as wages and subsidies account for around three-quarters of spending. As a result, Kuwait’s fiscal balance is significantly more volatile compared to GCC peers. As for economic diversification, the government has made some initial progress, but prospects remain limited. The completion of the Clean Fuels Project in 2021 and the likely completion of the Al-Zour refinery this year will provide some downstream diversification within the hydrocarbon sector. However, other projects aimed at spurring non-hydrocarbon sectors such as transport and logistics – including the Silk City and the Mubarak Al-Kabeer port – have faced delays, with the economic returns still uncertain. Economic diversification prospects are in part limited by Kuwait’s still weaker economic competitiveness compared to GCC peers. In Moody’s view, the inability to implement fiscal and economic reforms and lack of progress in diversification stem from the fractious relationship between the government and parliament.
In particular, the possibility of Kuwait’s balance-sheet strength significantly eroding over time will increase with the acceleration in carbon transition trends if institutions are unable to adjust to an environment of lower oil prices and demand. The stable outlook reflects balanced risks to the ratings. On the upside, the implementation of reforms to reduce the government’s reliance on oil revenue may raise the resilience of the credit profile to oil price fluctuations and longer-term carbon transition risks. The government has been considering various types of nonoil revenue but has yet to push any new tax through parliament. Moody’s does not currently factor any such measures into its baseline assumptions for at least the next two years. Moody’s expects Kuwait’s oil production to increase over 2022-23 and underpin real GDP growth of 8 percent this year and 5.5 percent next year.
Kuwait has the ability to increase oil production further if allowed by OPEC+, as its expected capacity for fiscal 2022 is 3.1 million barrels per day (mbpd), compared to an average production of around 2.7mbpd that is likely this year. On the downside, Kuwait is highly vulnerable to accelerating momentum towards carbon transition that may reduce the demand for and price of oil.— Moody’s Investors Service./KT
The Residency Affairs stated that residency holders of Article 20 (Domestic Workers) are not permitted to stay out of Kuwait for more than 6 months. Their residencies will be terminated as per regulations. The accounted period incudes any date before and to December 1st, 2021, which will be terminated on May 31st, 2022 regardless of validity of residence.
The department clarified that the sponsors could approach MOI (residency affairs) centers at their governorates to request extension before May 31st, 2022. The department took the initiative to issue a reminder to aid the public and encourage them to do the necessary at earliest./Arab Times
At least 31 people were reportedly killed during a stampede at a church charity event in southern Nigeria on Saturday.
According to local media, the charity program was held by the church to help needy people in Port Harcourt, the capital city of Rivers state.
Hundreds of people, who rushed to get giveaways, broke through a small gate behind the church, causing the stampede.
Many people were said to be injured in the incident./aa