The English website of the Islamic magazine - Al-Mujtama.
A leading source of global Islamic and Arabic news, views and information for more than 50 years.
Ministry of Health on Wednesday allowed hospitals, health centers and private health clinics to purchase COVID-19 vaccines from the local agent or companies producing them after being licensed and approved by the ministry to provide vaccination service. In a statement, the ministry said that the permission was stated in the circular No. 5/2021 issued on wednesday through the Health Licenses Department, as they should complete the electronic connection with the electronic platform of the ministry before starting to provide the vaccination service.
The Ministry stressed the need for the data to match all the requirements of the automated COVID-19 vaccination at the Ministry of Health to issue vaccination certificates, indicating the need for hospitals, health centers and clinics to be located in a self-contained building and not shared with other treatment institutions and to have vaccination permits from the Health Licensing Department and the commitment to apply the precautionary measures recommended by the Ministry of Health.
The ministry also stressed the need to stick to the standards, specifications and guidelines related to transporting, storing and giving the vaccines to the domestic medical sector issued by the producer and from the drug and food control sector. The Ministry affirmed that the service provider bears full responsibility for the accuracy of the data, ensuring its privacy, and following up on the vaccination dates for recipients with the responsibility to inform them via sms messages of their scheduled dates for taking doses.
Travel measures
Precautionary travel measures are still implemented on all people, including those who have received coronavirus vaccine, for the protection of all categories in the society, Ministry of Health (MoH) spokesman Abdullah Al-Sanad said on Tuesday.
Speaking at a news conference, Al-Sanad stressed that authorities are still taking swabs from the arrivals who are also subjected to quarantine for the same purpose. The implemented measures include also individuals who received the vaccine so as to avoid a possible transmission of the virus from outside Kuwait, he added.
The step also aims to avoid the arrival of any new strains of the coronavirus pandemic from outside Kuwait, he elaborated. Those who received the first or dual dosage of the vaccine should react to the Ministry’s link to help monitor any side effects which may occur like high temperature, headache or pain on the part injected with the vaccine, he said.
He pointed out that medical teams would deal with any data in this regard. Asked about a safe vaccine for children below 15 years, Al-Sanad said the available vaccine in Kuwait is Pfizer-BioNTech used for people from 16 and above.
Oxford vaccine is given to people aged 18-64, he stated. The sixth batch of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine will arrive in Kuwait next Sunday, said an official at the Health Ministry Wednesday.
Speaking to KUNA, Assistant Undersecretary for Drug and Food Control Dr Abdullah Al- Bader said that Kuwait was keen on battling the coronavirus (COVID-19) spread by reinforcing its national immunization campaign. The ministry supplies of the Pfizer-BioNTech is made in direct contract with the drug company, affirmed the official who stressed that it vaccination was necessary to rid the world from this health menace.
President of Kuwait Directorate General for Civil Aviation (DGCA) Sheikh Salman Sabah Al-Salem Al-Humoud Al-Sabah on Wednesday examined anti-covid health precautions for arrivals at Kuwait International Airport.
A group defending human rights in Myanmar is calling on the UN is to impose an embargo on the Southeast Asian country to stop its military from using weapons against the public.
“The international community must strongly sanction military officials and military-owned companies, and impose a global arms embargo,” said a statement by the Burma Human Rights Network (BHRN), using another name for Myanmar.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Kyaw Win, the group’s executive director, touted the effectiveness of a non-violent civil disobedience movement (or CDM for short) in the country’s current situation.
“At least 70% of government employees and workforce joined the CDM movement. So I think this is getting stronger and stronger every day,” he said. “We hope that one day this will severely cripple the military rule.”
He added that they learned from previous mistakes as in a 1988 uprising, when nationwide pro-democracy protests were held in Myanmar but ended up with a military crackdown.
“Every night, government troops and security forces are raiding employees’ residences and houses to arrest them to take them to their jobs,” he said about the current situation, and called on the international community to support the resistance of Myanmar’s people.
‘Targeting their own people’
Win said the first step they expect from the UN is to impose an embargo on Myanmar, adding that the country's military is using its weapons not to protect the sovereignty of the country but to commit genocide, war crimes, and crime against humanity.
“They are using them against their own people,” he added.
Adding that a few days ago a 16-year-old humanitarian worker was shot dead by snipers in Mandalay city, he asked: “How could they become so ruthless as to use a sniper to target his head in such a way?”
He called the shooting “uncivilized and cruel.”
“Also the military equipment or any technologies, any items that are converted or indirectly can be used in the military and the security forces, also should be banned,” he stressed.
“The UN should impose targeted sanctions on the military and economic interests of the military and their money in Singapore, in Vietnam, in China, in Asian countries, in Western countries as well.”
Telling how the people of Myanmar are “risking their life to stand up against the ruthless regime,” Win said they “desperately need support” from the international community and especially the UN.
Although Win said the people of Myanmar know there will be violence and crackdown, they will continue protesting.
‘Misled on Rohingya issue’
He also accused Myanmar’s military regime of misleading the international community by telling them they will bring back the Muslim Rohingya people, about a million of whom fled the country in response to a 2017 genocidal campaign.
“Look who they appointed to the government,” Win said.
“They appointed all the dangerous people, those who hate Muslims and were involved in anti-Muslim pogroms and killing of Muslims in 2012 and 2013. Now they’re taking high positions in the government in the military,” he stressed.
He said that people from different sides, including Muslims and the Rohingya, stand together against the military regime at a time of urgency.
He added: “There are many young people coming out with posters, saying ‘We’re sorry to the Rohingya, we regret that we didn't stand up with you’.”
He again urged the international community: “Please do not accept or recognize this military illegal government.”
This week the Burmese Rohingya Community in the UK called on the international community to impose sanctions against Myanmar’s military and stand by the people of Myanmar who are resisting the military coup.
In a written statement this Tuesday, the Burmese Rohingya Organization UK said: “We support the General Strike on Monday 22/02/2021. We urgently call on military leaders to immediately end violence against protesters by police or military forces.”
Military takeover
Myanmar's military declared a state of emergency on Feb. 1, hours after detaining de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi and senior members of the ruling National League for Democracy (NLD).
The coup took place hours before the country's new parliament was set to convene following November elections in which the NLD made sweeping gains.
The military claimed it launched the coup due to "election fraud" resulting in the NLD’s dominance.
Shortly after the Feb. 1 coup, the junta declared martial law imposing a nightly curfew and a ban on gatherings of five or more people.
However, the junta has failed to quell popular protests by the people and a civil disobedience campaign initiated by government officials against military rule./aa
Since its establishment in 2016, the Public Authority for Combating Corruption (Nazaha) has referred 10 directors working in the public services and infrastructure field to the Public Prosecution Office, on charges that varied between misusing public money, and cases of neglect.
There were 25 suspicions of corruption in the bodies concerned with infrastructure, of which the authority detected 12 suspicions, while it dealt with the other 13, following the acceptance of reports in different ways.
A group of Kuwaiti men and women have been arrested for illegally receiving salaries for jobs that they did not actually hold, Al Qabas daily reported.
The salaries, which they had been receiving, were part of the financial support intended for national manpower working in the private sector.
The lawbreakers had registered fictitiously in a contracting company but without actually going to work or having an actual workstation.
According to the paper, the defendants had received salaries, estimated at KD 5,000 to up to KD 50,000 throughout the period they were registered under the company, such that their total salaries amounted to about KD 250,000.
Taking the operations of one of the Middle East’s biggest upstream projects into a new era, our Lower Fars heavy oil development project team has completed the successful integration of Kuwait Oil Company’s new Crude Oil Control Centre, where Petrofac’s expertise has been used to upgrade technology and equipment, improving the effectiveness of operations.
Extracting heavy oil can be more difficult than lighter crude because of its viscosity; however, the potential is huge. The new centre is now set to capitalise, utilising the latest state of art Orion operations and monitoring consoles. It also controls the blends of heavy oil from the Ratqa field in the north of the country with lighter crudes from the south, using a blending package provided by Petrofac.
The teams worked collaboratively to anticipate and solve the many challenges involved in connecting the new control centre with wider local control rooms, spread across southern Kuwait. Around 220 kilometres of new fibre optic cable were laid, with logistics including many major road crossovers and passing through live facilities.
Another major challenge the team overcame was in completing such complex work safely without any interruption to ongoing oil exports. Control equipment upgrades included multiple tank farms, manifolds and export facilities, without any process or operational shutdowns.
The merging of two huge control system legacy networks to form what is now one of the longest single legacy networks currently operational in the world, was a further critical challenge. Microplanning and fallback options were needed at every stage. Many steps were taken early on to identify and mitigate risks, including manual loading trials, meaning that auto operations were successfully resumed as planned without any issues.
Five EU countries called on the bloc Wednesday to ensure funding to reinforce COVID-19 vaccine production and to adapt vaccination programs to new variants.
A letter signed by the prime ministers of Spain, Belgium, Denmark, Lithuania and Poland calling for more production facilities was sent to European Council President Charles Michel and other EU leaders prior to an EU leaders summit to be held via videoconference from Feb. 25-26.
Noting the importance of working together with the European Commission to tackle the problems of production capacities, it said: "We need to work closely with all potential vaccine producers in Europe, boosting public-private partnerships across the entire value chain to increase R&D efforts, ramp-up and adapt supply capacity."
While EU countries, which started COVID-19 vaccination in December 2020, are far behind their targets so far, they are experiencing logistics, personnel and supply problems.
"We should be ready to look openly at the possible ways and the need to ensure funding to facilitate the efforts. The approach should reflect that we cannot afford to lose this battle," it said.
Stressing the urgency of reinforcement of the vaccine production capacities in Europe, it added: "We need to provide the right support to Europe-based producers in case unexpected problems emerge during the production process. Existing production facilities will need to be adapted."
The EU has so far received 40.7 million of the 106 million doses of vaccines it expects to obtain in the first quarter of the year. It has focused on vaccine production with 16 factories in the EU due to delays in vaccine delivery.
The EU had made agreements with six companies to receive approximately 2.3 billion vaccine doses.
The letter said the extraordinary EU summit this week comes at the right time.
“Europe's timely access to sufficient vaccine remains an unsolved challenge. In spite of the unprecedented speedy development of new high-quality vaccines, production difficulties are ongoing and lead to major delays," the letter said./aa
The US voiced concern Wednesday over Malaysia's deportation of nearly 1,100 Myanmar nationals and urged Kuala Lumpur to halt such moves.
Speaking at a press conference, State Department Spokesperson Ned Price recalled that the move came in spite of a Malaysian court order barring their deportation.
"We continue to urge all countries in the region contemplating returning Burmese migrants back to Burma to halt those repatriations until the UNHCR can assess whether these migrants have any protection concerns before being sent back to Burma," said Price, using another name for Myanmar.
He said as the Myanmar military "has a long documented history of human rights abuses against members of religious and ethnic minority groups," the US will continue lifesaving humanitarian assistance to the vulnerable population in need.
The 1,086 Myanmar nationals were sent back on three navy ships sent by Myanmar’s military, just hours after the Kuala Lumpur High Court ordered the Malaysian government to stop the process in response to a judicial review request by two rights groups.
Khairul Dzaimee Daud, director-general of Malaysia’s Immigration Department, said all of those returned had agreed to be sent back voluntarily without being forced by any party./aa
The perpetrators of a 1992 massacre by Armenian forces in the town of Khojaly in Nagorno-Karabakh which left over 600 people dead should be punished, the head of the World Azerbaijani Congress said Wednesday.
Asif Kurban said in a statement that Armenian armed forces, terrorist groups and the 366th Motorized Rifle Regiment of the Soviet Army committed an unprecedented genocide against civilians by violating all international legal norms and human rights.
Kurban said 613 people were killed and 87 were left disabled.
"The images that were taken at that time and the stories of the survivors of the massacre show that there was a real genocide in Khojaly.
“Also, a document presented by 30 members of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe signed on April 26, 2001, the report prepared by the Memorial Human Rights Organization on Khojaly and the reply letter of UN Human Rights Organization President Holly Cartner to the Armenian representative in 1997 prove that the Armenians committed genocide in Khojaly,” he added.
Underlining that the parliaments of 15 countries and 16 state assemblies in the US recognized the genocide, he called on all parliaments to do the same.
"The 'modern' world of the 21st century is still silent and ignoring the Khojaly massacre,” he said, adding Armenia violated its obligation to prevent genocide and the actions of its perpetrators since it had effective control over those who carried out the actions in Khojaly.
“As the World Azerbaijani Congress, we consider what was done in Khojaly a violation of many conventions such as the 1949 Geneva Conventions, the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide,” it said, demanding that the perpetrators be punished.
It said the failure to ensure that those responsible for the Khojaly genocide are held accountable before the law will pave the way for new genocides that may be committed by Armenians in the future.
Nagorno-Karabakh
On Feb. 26, 1992, with the Soviet Union just dissolved, Armenian forces took over the town of Khojaly in occupied Karabakh after battering it using heavy artillery and tanks, assisted by infantry.
The massacre is seen as one of the bloodiest atrocities by Armenian forces against Azerbaijani civilians in the Upper Karabakh region, which was liberated by Azerbaijan forces last fall after decades of occupation.
The two-hour Armenian offensive on Khojaly killed 613 Azerbaijani citizens – including 106 women, 63 children and 70 elderly people – and seriously injured 487 others, according to Azerbaijani figures.
Some 150 of the 1,275 Azerbaijanis that the Armenians captured during the massacre remain missing. In the massacre, eight families were completely wiped out, while 130 children lost one parent and 25 children lost both parents.
Relations between the former Soviet republics of Azerbaijan and Armenia have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Upper Karabakh, a territory recognized as part of Azerbaijan, and seven adjacent regions.
New clashes erupted on Sept. 27, 2020, and ended with a Russian-brokered truce six weeks later.
Baku liberated several strategic cities and nearly 300 of its settlements and villages from the Armenian occupation during this time.
Before this, about 20% of Azerbaijan's territory had been under illegal Armenian occupation for nearly three decades./aa
The US voiced concern Wednesday over Malaysia's deportation of nearly 1,100 Myanmar nationals and urged Kuala Lumpur to halt such moves.
Speaking at a press conference, State Department Spokesperson Ned Price recalled that the move came in spite of a Malaysian court order barring their deportation.
"We continue to urge all countries in the region contemplating returning Burmese migrants back to Burma to halt those repatriations until the UNHCR can assess whether these migrants have any protection concerns before being sent back to Burma," said Price, using another name for Myanmar.
He said as the Myanmar military "has a long documented history of human rights abuses against members of religious and ethnic minority groups," the US will continue lifesaving humanitarian assistance to the vulnerable population in need.
The 1,086 Myanmar nationals were sent back on three navy ships sent by Myanmar’s military, just hours after the Kuala Lumpur High Court ordered the Malaysian government to stop the process in response to a judicial review request by two rights groups.
Khairul Dzaimee Daud, director-general of Malaysia’s Immigration Department, said all of those returned had agreed to be sent back voluntarily without being forced by any party./aa