Thursday, 5 March 2015

Another Saudi beheading adds to 'unprecedented' pace

Another Saudi beheading adds to 'unprecedented' pace
3:00 PM
5
March
2015

AFP/Riyadh
Saudi Arabia beheaded one of its citizens for murder on Thursday, adding to what Amnesty International has called an unprecedented pace of executions in the kingdom.
Manie bin Ali bin Muhsin al-Gahtani was convicted of gunning down another man, the Interior Ministry said in a statement reported by the official Saudi Press Agency.
Authorities carried out the sentence in the south-western city of Abha.
His beheading by the sword brings to 39 the number of Saudis and foreigners executed this year, according to an AFP tally.
That is more than three times the number during the first weeks of 2014.
From January 1 to February 26 last year Amnesty International recorded 11 executions, 17 for that period in 2013 and nine in 2012.
The current rate "has been truly unprecedented," said Sevag Kechichian, Saudi Arabia researcher for the London-based rights group.
There have been around 80 executions annually in the kingdom since 2011, with 87 last year by AFP's tally.
The interior ministry says the death penalty for murderers aims "to maintain security and realise justice", but rights groups have expressed concern about the dangers of the innocent being sentenced to death.
Drug trafficking, rape, murder, apostasy and armed robbery are all punishable by death under the Gulf kingdom's strict version of sharia law.

China lowers growth target for 2015 to 7%

China lowers growth target for 2015 to 7%
9:28 PM
5
March
2015

Reuters/Beijing


China plans to run its biggest budget deficit in 2015 since the global financial crisis, stepping up spending as Premier Li Keqiang signalled that the lowest rate of growth in a quarter of a century is the “new normal” for the world’s No.2 economy.
Speaking at the opening of the country’s annual parliamentary meeting yesterday, Li announced a growth target of around 7% for this year, below the 7.5% goal that was narrowly missed in 2014.
“The downward pressure on China’s economy is intensifying,” Li told around 3,000 delegates gathered at the Great Hall of the People to the west of Beijing’s Tiananmen Square.
“Deep-seated problems in the country’s economic development are becoming more obvious. The difficulties we are facing this year could be bigger than last year.”
Outlining the government’s policy priorities for 2015 in a Chinese equivalent of the US State of the Union address, Li said there would be no let-up in an anti-corruption drive and vowed to fight pollution, which he called “a blight on people’s quality of life and a trouble that weighs on their hearts”.
Stressing the need to put the economy on a more sustainable footing after three decades of breakneck growth, Li said priorities included pushing ahead with reforms of the giant state-owned enterprises that still bestride the economy and liberalising the banking system and financial markets.
“In order to defuse problems and risks, avoid falling into the ‘middle income trap’, and achieve modernisation, China must rely on development, and development requires an appropriate growth rate,” said Li. “At the same time, China’s economic development has entered a ‘new normal’.”
The annual full meeting of the largely rubber-stamp National People’s Congress is a colourful event, drawing delegates from all over China, some in traditional ethnic costumes, to the vast hall, a monument to 1950s Communist architecture.
Its role is largely to endorse policy decisions already agreed by the party hierarchy.
In the short-term, China’s top policymakers are grappling to sustain an economy weighed down by a cooling property market, high debt levels and excess factory capacity. Over the longer run, they are seeking to boost consumption to relieve overdependence on export markets and cut wasteful investment.
Underscoring the challenges faced in striking that balance, the People’s Bank of China cut interest rates at the weekend for the second time in three months.
Adding a fiscal boost to the central bank’s monetary support, Beijing plans to lift government spending to 17.15tn yuan ($2.74tn) in 2015, an increase of 10.6% on 2014.
That will mean raising the budget deficit to 1.62tn yuan, or around 2.3% of GDP, compared with 2.1% last year and the widest since 2009, when Beijing unleashed a stimulus splurge in response to the financial crisis.
Some of the extra money will be spent on railway and water projects and modernising agriculture, although the chairman of the government’s economic planning agency, Xu Shaoshi, said its investment plans should not be seen as a “massive stimulus”.
China’s economy grew 7.4% last year, robust by global standards but still the slowest in 24 years.
With deflationary pressures mounting after a tumble in commodity prices, Li said China would also lower its 2015 inflation target to around 3% from 3.5% in 2014.
A key plank of China’s reform agenda is tackling overcapacity in polluting heavy industries and moving its factories up the global value chain.
“Manufacturing is traditionally a strong area for Chinese industry,” said Li.
“We will implement the ‘Made in China 2025’ strategy, seek innovation-driven development, apply smart technology, strengthen foundations, pursue green development and redouble our efforts to upgrade China from a manufacturer of quantity to one of quality.”
Li promised a greater role for private business in the economy, which he said would be further opened up by halving the number of industries in which foreign investment is restricted.
A draft foreign investment catalogue issued in November trimmed the number of sectors where China limits foreign investment to 35 from 79, but foreign business lobbies said that cut fell short of expectations.
“We look forward to seeing details of the revised catalogue and streamlining measures, and share the premier’s hopes for a stable, fair, transparent and predictable business environment in China,” James Zimmerman, chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China, said in response to Li’s remarks.
With Communist Party leaders ever mindful of social stability, Li said China aimed to create more than 10mn new jobs in 2015 and would ensure the jobless rate does not exceed 4.5%. China targeted a registered urban unemployment rate of 4.6% last year.
The fight against pollution and corruption have contributed to the slowing economy, as Beijing has clamped down on dirty industries, and the fear of being caught in the anti-graft net has had a chilling effect on some business activity.
But in the longer term, the Communist Party leadership regards tackling the twin side-effects of China’s decades-long dash for growth as vital to maintaining its grip on power.
“Our tough stance on corruption is here to stay,” said Li. “Our tolerance for corruption is zero, and anyone guilty of corruption will be dealt with seriously.”

Exports seen roaring back, but deflationary risks still lurking

Exports seen roaring back, but deflationary risks still lurking
9:29 PM
5
March
2015
Trucks carry containers that were unloaded from a ship at a port in Qingdao, Shandong province. China’s exports likely recovered in February after a grim January reading, a Reuters poll showed yesterday.

Reuters/Beijing



China’s exports likely recovered in February after a grim January reading, a Reuters poll showed, but inflation remained anaemic, keeping pressure on policymakers to roll out more support measures to meet new economic targets.
Premier Li Keqiang said yesterday that the government would target growth of around 7% this year, down from 7.4% in 2014 and signalling the slowest expansion for a quarter of a century.
A cooling property market, excess manufacturing capacity, deflationary pressures and a continued crackdown on corruption are all expected to weigh on the economy in 2015, prompting further cuts in interest rates and bank reserve requirements.
The median forecast of 16 analysts showed annual export growth probably shot up to 14.2% on an annual basis in February, recovering from a 3.3% contraction in January that surprised analysts.
Imports are seen declining again, however, dropping 10% – an improvement compared to a plunge of 19.9% in January that shocked markets, but still highlighting stubborn weakness in domestic demand. The data will be released on Sunday.
Data out of China during January and February is typically skewed by the timing and impact of the Lunar New Year holiday, making it hard to assess the trends in the world’s second-largest economy.
The forecasts follow both official and private purchasing managers’ surveys earlier in March which showed February manufacturing activity recovering slightly but remaining weak.
“Activity growth since the start of 2015 has likely been weak - weak enough that despite the low base from early 2014 year-on-year growth of most activity indicators will likely fall,” said Goldman Sachs analysts in a research note.
Inflation estimates suggested that Chinese companies continue to struggle with sliding prices even as the real cost of capital remains high, a further disincentive to investment.
Annual consumer inflation is forecast to stay weak at 0.9% in February, up only slightly from February’s 0.8%, which was the lowest since 2009.
Underscoring the mounting deflationary pressures, producer prices are forecast to have fallen 4.3% year-on-year, identical to the slide in January, marking the 36th consecutive monthly decline.  Analysts saw new yuan loans falling back from January’s 1.4tn yuan spike to around 800bn yuan ($127.63bn).
Growth in broad M2 money supply was seen accelerating to 11.2%, up from a record low of 10.8% in January.

Ailing 1MDB to be dismantled under debt repayment plan

Ailing 1MDB to be dismantled under debt repayment plan
9:31 PM
5
March
2015
A woman walks past a 1MDB billboard in Kuala Lumpur. Under the aggressive
restructuring plan, crafted by new boss Arul Kanda and blessed by the government, the fund will sell 80% of its power unit Edra Energy via a stock market listing.


Reuters/Kuala Lumpur


Malaysia’s indebted and controversy-ridden state investor 1MDB will be left as a skeletal structure and possibly dissolved under a debt repayment plan in which most of its assets will be sold, sources with direct knowledge of the matter said.
The power and property fund, a pet project of Prime Minister Najib Razak with assets worth $14bn, was hit by losses last year and nearly defaulted on a loan payment. The near-miss drove down the ringgit currency and Malaysian government bonds and prompted calls from opposition leaders to make the fund’s accounts more transparent.
The state fund’s 42bn ringgit ($11.6bn) debt includes a $3bn bond sale in 2013 that was one of the largest global issues from Southeast Asia.
Under the aggressive restructuring plan, crafted by new boss Arul Kanda and blessed by the government, the fund will sell 80% of its power unit Edra Energy via a stock market listing, three sources with direct knowledge of the situation told Reuters.
More than 18bn ringgit of 1MDB’s debt linked to its power assets would go under Edra Energy ahead of the listing, which is due to be kickstarted in 6-9 months’ time, the sources said.
The fund, which has Najib as chairman of its advisory board, will also sell the bulk of its land assets and stakes in two high-profile property projects, Tun Razak Exchange (TRX) and Bandar Malaysia, after splitting them into separate entities, as already partially indicated in a strategic review unveiled last month.
The finance ministry, which is headed by Najib and is the sole owner of 1MDB, did not respond to a request for comment.  1MDB said in an email that Edra Energy would be “monetised” in 2015 and the TRX and Bandar Malaysia projects would be ultimately owned by the finance ministry.
This process would turn 1MDB into a skeletal structure that could eventually be dissolved completely, said one person, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue.
“It’s become a hot potato for the Malaysian government. It was just too much to handle,” said another source.
1MDB said on Wednesday that its plans to list Edra Energy were on track. It said
the fund would re-submit an application for an initial public offering after cancelling a submission made in November. It did not elaborate.
Arul, appointed in January to revamp the fund, has carried out a strategic review of 1MDB’s finances and announced last month the fund would monetise Edra Energy this year, run real estate projects as standalone entities and sell assets to repay lenders. He did not disclose any financial details.
A respected former investment banker who was previously at Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, Arul was brought in to see if it was possible to salvage the fund, but decided it was best to wind down its businesses after carrying out a thorough 6-week review.
1MDB, which analysts view as a cross between a sovereign wealth fund and a state-backed strategic fund, was established in 2008 as the Terengganu Investment Authority with 10bn ringgit to manage oil royalty payments to the resources-rich northern state of
Terengganu.
But as Najib came to power in 2009, he renamed it 1MDB and turned it into a fully-fledged investment fund.
1MDB expanded by purchasing pricey power assets from Malaysian tycoon Ananda Krishnan and gaming-to-plantation conglomerate Genting Bhd, and large plots of land in the capital and other regions of Malaysia, racking up debt in the process until it plunged to a loss last year.
Krishnan also lent 2bn ringgit to 1MDB last month, pulling the fund back from the brink of the possible default on a bank loan payment, sources said. Officials at Krishnan’s investment vehicle Usaha Tegas were not immediately available to comment.
Political leaders, including former prime minister Mahathir Mohamad, have demanded an inquiry into 1MDB’s finances and are also calling on the government to explain transactions that they allege resulted in siphoning off public funds.
Najib said on Wednesday he had instructed the Auditor General to independently verify 1MDB’s accounts after the allegations. But question marks remain on whether investors would be interested in the fund’s IPO and sale plans.
“On 1MDB, it really boils down to the lack of transparency which cements it as a known unknown,” said Weiwen Ng, an ANZ analyst based in Singapore.

25,000 undergo weight loss programme in Qatar

25,000 undergo weight loss programme in QatarVandana Luthra
9:46 PM
5
March
2015

By Joseph Varghese/Staff Reporter
At a time when Qatar has launched initiatives to curb obesity among the population, over 25,000 individuals have successfully undergone weight reduction in the country during the past four years.
“These individuals are from 39 nationalities out of whom 70% are Qataris,” Vandana Luthra, founder of VLCC, a leading beauty and wellness programme centre, told Gulf Times yesterday.
“They look completely transformed once they complete the process and there are people who have lost 30 to 40kg after joining the programme,” she explained while reiterating that sudden and drastic weight loss is not advisable.
“Our programme is a steady one that gives room for 4 to 5kg weight loss per month which amounts to 1 to 1.5kg per week. Once they complete the programme, the participants ought to lead a proper activity-based life and not a sedentary one.
“They must have physical activity for 45 minutes per day. They also must stick to a balanced diet, rich in fibre and low in fat with adequate amount of nutrients.”
There has been no case of complication with the programme, Luthra maintained. "Sometimes, the weight loss can be low. People who are depressed might be slow in losing weight. The programme has 85% success and the other 15% has slow progress. We counsel the participants as counselling is a very important part of the programme. Similarly, drop-out of the programme is also very low.”
The programme is tailor- made according to individual needs, stated the VLCC founder.
“We get an assessment about a person from various experts involved in the process. According to the body composition analysis, we decide on the length of the programme.”
“Now we are going to launch a new test called DNA fitness, a study about genes which tells what type of genes a person has and why people are prone to obesity and what type of food they must have and many more,” she said while stressing that VLCC’s is “a medically monitored and scientific programme."
“As per the latest international records, 60% women and 48% men are obese. About 30,000 to 40,000kg of weight is being reduced every month through VLCC centres.”
Luthra pointed out that VLCC is a strategic partner with Qatar Olympic Committee (QOC) in some of its programmes. QOC has a weight loss programme in connection with the National Sport Day and VLCC helps the organisation in this regard.
VLCC, operational in Qatar since 2011, currently has four centres and a fifth one is to be opened soon. Launched in 1989 in India, VLCC is present in 16 countries and produces 126 products in skin, body and haircare.
“In India alone, more than 10mn people have undergone VLCC’s weight reduction programme,” Luthra added.

Qatar Airways to extend its A350 XWB service

Qatar Airways to extend its A350 XWB service
12:22 AM
5
March
2015
Akbar al-Baker with Qatar Airways senior vice-president Jonathan Harding, and country manager Günter Saurwein, at the airline’s press conference at ITB 2015.

Qatar Airways Group chief executive Akbar al-Baker yesterday announced the extension of the A350 XWB service throughout 2015.
The announcement came during the airline’s press conference, the first to take place on the opening day of the world’s largest tourism fair, ITB Berlin.
The press meet also celebrated Qatar Airways’ strong connections with Germany and highlighted the 10th anniversary of the airline’s first flight to Berlin in 2005 with an A319 aircraft, a route now operated with an A330 wide-body aircraft.
The first flight of the Airbus A350 XWB took place on January 15 on the Frankfurt-Doha route and it will soon be joined by Qatar Airways’ second A350 XWB, taking this service to double-daily.
Al-Baker also announced that Qatar Airways will become the first airline to operate the A350 XWB to Singapore and the Asia-Pacific region from June, adding the airline’s third, fourth and fifth A350 XWB aircraft on the three daily flights to Singapore. There are a total of 80 A350 XWB aircraft on order.
Further expansion was also announced with the new routes of Durban, via Johannesburg, in South Africa, which will debut this December, alongside the inaugural flight to Amsterdam, which takes place this June. Pakistan was also cited as a key growth market for the airline, with three new routes launching this summer to Faisalabad, Sialkot and Multan, complementing the airline’s four existing gateways of Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad and Peshawar.
Al-Baker said: “The last 12 months have been characterised by significant fleet expansion for the airline, which is set to continue throughout 2015. This year, we are pleased to be able to offer our passengers additional innovative new products within our broad destination network, most notably with the introduction of the world’s newest aircraft, the A350 XWB.
“It is fitting that we are back in Germany today, celebrating not only the recent launch of the A350 XWB on the Frankfurt route and the fact that this destination will soon be the recipient of the world’s second A350 XWB, but also acknowledging the 10th anniversary of our Berlin route.”
Those attending the press conference were also updated on the latest amenities on board for first, business and economy class passengers.
First class passengers will now enjoy male and female sleeper suits from Italian designer Missoni, complemented by amenity kits by Giorgio Armani. Business class passengers will also enjoy Giorgio Armani amenity kits, tailored to male or female passengers and enjoy newly introduced Ladurée Parisian delicacies, available in both first and business cabins, while economy class passengers will also benefit from a newly designed amenity kit.
Qatar Airways is also doubling its movie content on board this spring with a selection of over 500 movies to enjoy, including the world’s latest premieres, while increasing its selection of TV programmes from 700 to over 1,500, including the latest box sets, complementing its range of over 200 CDs and 50 games that cater to all ages.
Visitors to the Qatar Airways booth would be able to experience first-hand the luxury of the A350 XWB, along with the airline’s new first class A380 seat.

Egypt interior minister replaced in reshuffle

Egypt interior minister replaced in reshuffle
5:26 PM
5
March
2015

AFP/Cairo
Egypt's presidency said on Thursday Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim, who spearheaded a deadly crackdown on supporters of ousted president Mohamed Morsi, had been replaced in a cabinet purge.
The removal of Ibrahim, who was appointed by Morsi, follows mounting criticism of the failure of security forces to prevent militant attacks that have surged since the Islamist leader's ouster in 2013.
Ibrahim himself survived an assassination attempt in September 2013 while on way to his office in the capital.
He was replaced by Magdy Mohamed Abdel Hamid Abdel Ghaffar, who previously served in the state security apparatus.
Also dropped from the cabinet were the ministers for agriculture, education, communication, culture and tourism.
The presidency also introduced a ministry of state for population and one  for technical education.
The new ministers were sworn in by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, his office said.