Tag Archives: Oman

Kerry pushes $2.1 billion Raytheon deal in Oman

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry is talking with officials in Oman about their plans to buy a $2.1 billion air defense system from American manufacturer Raytheon.

Kerry was meeting Wednesday with the Arab country’s defense minister, a day after discussions with Oman‘s sultan.

Kerry thanked them for their decision to buy a ground-based air defense system from the Massachusetts company.

Omani Defense Minister Sayyid Badr al-Busaidi said his country was still in talks with Raytheon. He called Raytheon’s system the most effective of its kind.

The U.S. has pushed Persian Gulf countries to create an integrated defense network against the threat posed by Iran.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Iranian scientist returns after release from US

An Iranian scientist held by the U.S. since late 2011 has returned to Iran.

The scientist, Mojtaba Atarodi said U.S. authorities had treated him “generally well.”

The microchip expert at Tehran’s high profile Sharif University, Atarodi was in U.S. custody since December 2011 over allegations he bought high-tech equipment in violation of U.S. sanctions on Iran.

Atarodi arrived home via Oman, a Gulf state which has served as a mediator between Washington and Tehran before.

In 2012, the U.S. released Iranian national Shahrzad Mir Gholikhan after she spent five years in U.S. detention

The U.S. has a history of occasional arrest and release of Iranian citizens on similar charges.

In 2010 and 2011, three Americans convicted of espionage by Iran returned home through Oman.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Six Senses Zighy Bay Resort: Indulgence Amidst Oman's Rugged Landscape

By Lisa Loverro, Contributor

Zighy Bay, on the northern Musandam Peninsula in Oman, is perhaps one of the most remote resorts I have ever visited. Although it’s an easy two hour drive from Dubai (they’ll send a car for you), the mountain passes you’ll encounter after leaving the glitzy city of Dubai will have you wondering just where in the world you are. The landscape changes dramatically from flat, dusty roads to a rugged mountainous terrain with switchback roads that eventually will lead down into the resort. At one point, as you approach the property, you’ll have the option to make the ultimate entrance with a tandem paraglide jump off one of the many cliffs surrounding Zighy Bay.

From: http://www.forbes.com/sites/lisaloverro/2013/04/14/six-senses-zighy-bay-resort-indulgence-amidst-omans-rugged-landscape/

"Our best days are ahead of us" say three-quarters of Arab youth in 5th annual ASDA'A Burson-Marstel

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

“Our best days are ahead of us” say three-quarters of Arab youth in 5 th annual ASDA’A Burson-Marsteller Arab Youth Survey

  • Arab youth have a greater sense of national identity after the Arab Spring, with 87% saying they are “more proud to be an Arab”
  • Being paid a fair wage and home ownership remain their highest priorities, and rising living costs their top concern
  • UAE continues to be seen as a model nation, while France, Germany and China are regarded most favourably among countries outside MENA

DUBAI, UAE–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Representing a resounding vote of confidence in the Middle East and North Africa’s future outlook, three-quarters of Arab youth, the region’s largest demographic, say their best days are ahead of them in the fifth annual ASDA’A Burson-Marsteller Arab Youth Survey, released today. An overwhelming 74% of all Arab youth surveyed in 15 countries across MENA agree with the statement: “Our best days are ahead of us”.

A ground-breaking initiative of ASDA’A Burson-Marsteller, the leading public relations consultancy in MENA, the Arab Youth Survey is aimed at providing reliable data and insights into the attitudes and aspirations of the region’s 200 million-strong youth population, informing policy- and decision-making of both government and the private sector.

ASDA’A Burson-Marsteller selected international polling firm Penn Schoen Berland (PSB) to complete 3,000 face-to-face interviews with exclusively Arab national men and women aged 18-24 in the six Gulf Cooperation Council countries (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman and Bahrain), Iraq, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Tunisia, and in three new countries added this year: Morocco, Algeria and Yemen. The survey was conducted between December 2012 and January 2013.

In each of the 15 countries surveyed, a clear majority are optimistic about the future, with a nearly equal percentage of youth in the Gulf and non-Gulf states (76% and 72%, respectively) saying “our best days are ahead of us”. Likewise, more than half (58%) believe their country is “heading in the right direction” considering the last 12 months, while 55% say their national economy is also heading in the right direction.

In …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

UAE coup trial offers window into wider Gulf fears

One is a former judge. Another is a past president of the lawyers’ association in the United Arab Emirates. Among the more than 90 suspects are also teachers, civil servants, business owners and even a cousin of one of the UAE‘s ruling sheiks.

Prosecutors describe them as members of an Islamist network seeking to topple the leadership in one of the wealthiest and most stable corners of the Middle East.

Their defenders portray the group as victims of an Arab Spring-induced panic among Gulf Arab rulers who perceive threats from many directions, including Egypt‘s ruling Muslim Brotherhood and reformist chatter on social media.

But whatever emerges from the mass trial that began last month in Abu Dhabi also speaks to issues that reach well beyond the allegations and sullied reputations in the UAE‘s tight-knit professional communities. The case — from the arrests to the court sessions to the media controls on coverage — reflects a fundamental retooling of how the Western-allied Gulf states approach the business of using and keeping their power.

Once desperate to keep political crackdowns out of sight, Gulf authorities have increasingly used high-profile tactics to try to keep a lid on calls for reforms. Hardly a day goes by without some backlash in the Gulf Arab states, an arc of ruling families from Kuwait to Oman.

Dozens of online activists and social media contributors have been jailed for posts deemed offensive to rulers. Espionage allegations have been trumpeted, including Saudi Arabia‘s claims last month that officials broke up a suspected Iranian-linked spy ring.

Saudi officials, meanwhile, are considering linking social media accounts to national IDs in a move that critics fear could increase monitoring. The country’s top cleric, Grand Mufti Sheik Abdul-Aziz Al-Sheik, denounced Twitter users last month as being part of “a council of clowns.”

“There is a paradox in all this,” said Christopher Davidson, an expert on Gulf affairs at Britain’s Durham University. “There is nothing at the moment to suggest the Gulf regimes are in any immediate danger, but they are definitely acting like they are. This might even have the effect of accelerating dissent.”

Caught in between is Washington.

U.S. interests are deeply intertwined with the Gulf’s Sunni sheiks and kings, who allow American military bases, make major arms purchases and share …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Oman to shift weekend to Friday start

Oman will switch to a Friday-Saturday weekend to align its banking and business days with most other nations in the region.

Currently, Oman and neighboring Saudi Arabia follow a Thursday-Friday weekend. But other countries in the Gulf start their two-day weekends on Friday, the Muslim day of prayer.

The decree by Oman‘s ruler, Sultan Qaboos bin Said, also ordered private companies to give their employees the same number of religious holidays as civil servants in an effort to make non-state jobs more attractive.

Oman has faced sporadic Arab Spring-inspired protests demanding greater employment opportunities.

The new weekend decree, carried Sunday by the official Oman News Agency, will take effect May 1.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

NCR to Make Everyday Easier for Managers and Travelers at Oman Airports' New Terminals

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

NCR to Make Everyday Easier for Managers and Travelers at Oman Airports’ New Terminals

Largest NCR contract in the Middle East includes network, computing infrastructure, IT storage, information kiosks and web check-in solutions for the new Muscat International and Salalah Airports

DULUTH, Ga.–(BUSINESS WIRE)– NCR Corporation announced today it has been awarded the contract to provide the comprehensive networking and computing infrastructure, next-generation web check-in, information kiosks and unified telephony for the new Muscat International and Salalah Airports currently under development in the Sultanate of Oman. The contract, NCR‘s largest in the Middle East, was awarded by Ultra Electronics Ithra.

“The network and compute infrastructure is the backbone of Ultra’s work as a master systems integrator – I have no doubt that NCR will deliver state-of-the-art IT infrastructure in support of our delivery of world-class airport systems,” said Ultra Electronics Ithra Programme Director Grant Levy.

Work has already begun on the two new terminals and is scheduled to be completed in 2014.

Under terms of the contract, NCR will design, install, test and manage voice, data and wireless infrastructure; networks; archiving and storage solutions; compute infrastructure; web check-in solutions; and airport wayfinding solutions.

NCR‘s technology solutions and services will ensure maximum reliability, efficiency and systems uptimes of the IT infrastructure at the airports, making airport operations easier and helping to create exceptional travel experiences for passengers departing from, arriving at and connecting through the terminals.

The Middle East continues to grow as a destination for business and leisure travel and freight shipping. The International Air Transport Association projects that from 2012 to 2016, theMiddleEast will have the third fastest air passenger growth rate in the world at 6.6%. Meanwhile, air freight demand will grow at 4.9%, the strongest growth among the regions of the globe. To meet this growth, Gulf countries like Oman are spending billions on airport expansion and development. As a result, the Middle East presents major opportunities for travel and travel-related companies.

“There is tremendous opportunity for NCR to facilitate this anticipated growth in airport construction, leveraging our core competencies, self-service expertise and comprehensive services network to help airports in the region design and deliver an exceptional passenger experience,” said NCR Travel Vice President and General Manager Tyler Craig. “NCR is making everyday easier for airport managers and travelers by transforming the traveler experience at all points throughout the journey.”

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Rights groups praise Oman pardon for protesters

International rights groups and others are hailing Oman‘s decision to pardon all activists jailed for offending the nation’s ruler or joining protests.

The move by Oman‘s leader, Sultan Qaboos bin Said, runs counter to widening social media crackdowns by other Gulf Arab states.

Dozens of people have been charged in recent months across the Gulf for blogs, Twitter messages and other posts deemed insulting to rulers or threats to state security.

Amnesty International on Sunday called Oman‘s decision a positive step and urged authorities to further lift restrictions on freedom of expression. The Omani Lawyers Association also praised the blanket pardon announced last week.

The prisoners were expected to be freed beginning Sunday. No figures were given, but dozens have been jailed on Internet- or protest-linked charges since early 2011.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Video: Range Rover covered in coins is so money

By Seyth Miersma

Coin-covered Land Rover from the Middle East - video image screencap

Filed under:

Conspicuous consumption is a vice that wealthy Americans have down to a science, but it’s safe to say that the richest members of the Middle Eastern elite have elevated it to an art.

The latest example that we’ve seen of said artistry is a Range Rover that has been elaborately festooned with coinage from some of the most oil-rich nations of the region. The work has been done by an outfit called Coins Car – we’re hoping there’s some witticism there that just doesn’t translate into English – and has seen some 57,412 coins adhered to the surface of the SUV. Following the flag markers, we see that coins from Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman and Saudi Arabia have all been represented, and with United Arab Emirates getting more real estate than the rest of the crew.

Scroll down for a 360-degree video look at the Coins Car Land Rover, or take a moment to browse the gallery of images plucked from the company’s Facebook page.

Continue reading Range Rover covered in coins is so money

Range Rover covered in coins is so money originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 22 Mar 2013 14:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

This Oilfield Services Provider Packs a Wallop

By David Lee, Smith, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Let’s begin by searching for a company that sports a share price that has risen by more than 800% during the past three calendar years — compared with 18% for the New York Stock Exchange. It must also be the recipient of across-the-board strong buy ratings from all of the analysts who follow it. There is, in fact, such a company: Houston-based Flotek Industries , which reported its results for the final quarter of 2012 on Thursday.

For the quarter, Flotek posted per-share earnings of $0.44, significantly higher than both the $0.02 for the comparable quarter a year earlier and the $0.17 consensus expectation. Revenues for the final quarter of 2012 were $76.7 million, up 2.4% year over year from $74.9 million.

Since a look at the company’s full year appears to be warranted, especially amid vacillations in the North American drilling market, it’s worth noting that after items for the 2012 year, Flotek earned $37.9 million, or $0.71 per share, compared with $20.2 million, or $0.42 per share in 2011. Full-year gross margins were 42.1%, versus 40.9% for 2011.

Lifting the hood on Flotek
Flotek operates through three segments: its chemical and logistics division, its drilling products division, and its artificial lift unit. As Flotek CFO H. Richard Walton noted during the company’s post-release call, the chemicals and logistics unit and the drilling products division drove most of the growth in the quarter. He further said, “In those segments, revenue growth was a result of improved pricing and improved marketing efforts, which resulted in increased market share.”

The chemicals unit benefited from a sizable reduction in raw-materials costs and the effects of capital projects at the Marlow, Okla., chemical production facility. At the same time, given the importance of research in the chemicals unit, Flotek increased the scope of its research facility in The Woodlands, Texas, by 30% during the most recent year.

In the drilling products segment, rig count reductions in North America during the second half of 2012 were offset by a higher market share and increased work from existing customers. At the same time, continued increases in revenues from the company’s Teledrift measurement-while-drilling products and its Cavo motors operation offset the reduced drilling activity.

The artificial lift operation progressed during the year from a gas-centric emphasis toward an increased attention to liquids. Further, the Galleon manufacturing group, which produces drilling tools for base and precious metals mining, turned in a record year, including an expansion of its backlog for core mining tools.

International spread
If you’re an oilfield services aficionado, you recognize that, at least for now, international operations are of supreme significance for the sector. As such, its important to note that, also on Thursday, Flotek announced an agreement with Gulf Energy, an oil and gas concern based in Oman, involving the construction of an advanced oilfield chemistry production facility and the creation of a state-of-the-art research organization. These facilities …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Kerry talks Syria, Iran in Saudi Arabia

U.S. Secretary John Kerry is in Saudi Arabia for talks with Saudi and Gulf Arab officials expected to focus on the crisis in Syria and fears about Iran‘s nuclear program.

Kerry was meeting in Riyadh Monday with the foreign ministers of Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman as well as the Saudi crown prince and foreign minister. Saudi Arabia and several other Gulf states are believed to be involved in shipping weapons to Syrian rebels, who have yet to receive lethal aid from the West. They share deep U.S. concerns about Iran‘s nuclear ambitions and increasing assertiveness in the region.

Kerry is in Saudi Arabia as part of his nine-nation maiden overseas trip as secretary of state. He travels next to the United Arab Emirates and Qatar before returning to Washington Wednesday.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Bahrain Accuses Iran Revolutionary Guard Of Setting Up Terrorist Cell To Attack Government Buildings

By The Huffington Post News Editors

ABU DHABI, Feb 20 (Reuters) – Bahrain has accused Iran‘s Revolutionary Guard of setting up a militant cell to assassinate public figures in the Gulf Arab kingdom and attack its airport and government buildings.
Bahraini authorities said on Sunday they had arrested eight Bahrainis in the group, with links to Iran, Iraq and Lebanon.
The kingdom, base for the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet, has been in political turmoil since protests erupted there in 2011, led by majority Shi’ite Muslims demanding an end to the Sunni monarchy’s political domination and full powers for parliament.
Bahrain has accused Shi’ite Iran of fuelling the unrest, an accusation Tehran has consitently denied.
In a statement published by the official Bahrain News Agency late on Tuesday, Bahrain‘s head of public security said the cell was part of a group called the “Imam Army” which included Bahrainis at home and abroad and members of other nationalities.
“Investigation has also revealed that a member of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard codenamed ‘Abu Naser‘ masterminded the whole terror operation,” the agency quoted public security chief Major-General Tariq Hassan al-Hassan as saying.
Abu Nasser supplied the group with $80,000, Hassan said, and instructed it to gather information, recruit and obtain weapons storage in Bahrain.

“MISTAKEN PATH”
The cell’s planned targets included the Ministry of Interior and Bahrain International Airport, he said. The group attended training camps run by the Revolutionary Guard inside Iran, as well as some operated by Iraq‘s Hezbollah in Baghdad and the Iraqi city of Kerbala, Hassan added.
Five of the detainees were arrested in Bahrain and three in Oman, General Hassan said, adding another four Bahrainis were being sought by the authorities.
He said authorities had collected evidence in the form of papers and electronic documents, flashcards, phones, computers, cash and images of bank transactions. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Iran plans to establish new navy base

Iran‘s official news agency says the country’s navy plans to establish a new base near Pakistan‘s border in the Sea of Oman.

The plans are part of Iranian ambitions to exert its naval power outside the Persian Gulf, including sending warships to the Mediterranean and claiming it might someday have ships in the Atlantic.

The IRNA report on Sunday quotes Adm. Habibollah Sayyari as saying that the base will be built in Pasabandar, about 30 kilometers (100 miles) west of Pakistani major port of Gwadar.

Iran has conducted numerous naval drills in past years as it increases its presence in regional waterways.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Shell script to get Timezone

By ajayram_arya

Hi friends i need to writing a code to use the longitue and latitude to get a time zone. Example below

Code:

Logitude Latitude
OMAN 21.9 56.6
BRGHT 27.57 -89.4
BLUGL 26.25 -91.95


latitude lines run horizontally
Longitude are vertical lines

using below example of wget we get the +0400 which is a TIMEZONE . How can we write a program to create a table and put this information in another column.

Code:

wget -O test

1.0

21.9
56.6

4
D
14 Feb 2013 19:49:48
2013-02-14 19:49:48 +0400[/COLOR]
2013-02-14 15:49:48
Unknown


Appreciate your time and effort.

Moderator’s Comments:
Use code tags, thanks.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at The UNIX and Linux Forums

Should We Use the Arab League To Confront Russia?

By Mark Adomanis, Contributor In the course of a Freedom House report calling for a more bellicose, confrontational, and aggressive policy towards Russia, David Kramer and Susan Corke made a rather interesting suggestion (emphasis added): Similarly, with support from friends and allies, the United States should use regional forums such as the  OSCE and the Arab League to shine a spotlight on Russian policies that destabilize neighbors or support international pariah states. The Russian government should pay a high political price in the international community for such policies as its appalling support for the Assad regime in Syria. The United States cannot dictate to the Kremlin what policy course it should pursue on critical strategic issues, but the administration can increase the relevant costs and benefits to encourage Moscow to make the right choice. The idea of using the Arab League to name and shame the Russian government never occurred to me. Why? Well, primarily because most of the countries that are in the Arab League are even more dictatorial and abusive than Russia according to Freedom House‘s own methodology. Freedom House itself recognizes that the Arab League has some of the world’s most unsavory regimes, regimes that, if the United States were genuinely interested in spreading democracy, it would be forced to confront and destabilize. Think for a moment about the following Arab League countries, the United States‘ “friends and allies” to which Kramer and Corke allude and with which we’re supposed to work closely, that Freedom House scores equal to or worse than Russia‘s: Algeria, Jordan, Qatar, Yemen, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, IraqOmanDjibouti, Mauritania, and Bahrain. Does that sound to you like a promising roster for pushing the Kremlin in a more democratic direction? …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Pakistani plane has malfunction on landing in Oman

Oman‘s official news agency says a plane arriving from Pakistan had a tire malfunction on landing in the country’s capital.

The ONA report says one tire on the Pakistan International Airlines Boeing 737 suffered a “technical fault” late Monday after touching down at Muscat International Airport.

It says all 114 passengers and crew were safely taken off the plane.

Flights into the airport were temporarily disrupted, but were back to full operations Tuesday.

It was not immediately clear what had caused the tire malfunction.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Oman council backs wage-hike proposals

State television in Oman says the country’s highest advisory body has backed proposals for a steep rise in the minimum wage and curbs on foreign workers.

The move is seen as an attempt to ease worries over unemployment in the tightly ruled Arabian Peninsula nation, which has been hit by sporadic Arab Spring-inspired protests over the past two years.

The state TV report Saturday said the minimum wage would rise by 60 percent to 325 rials ($844) a month in July. Foreign workers — who come mainly from South Asia — would be limited to 33 percent of the population, down from an estimated 40 percent currently.

The backing by the Shura Council makes it all but certain the measures will be approved by Oman‘s ruler, Sultan Qaboos bin Said.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Gulf rulers take sharper aim at Web dissent

Something unusual happened on Kuwait‘s normally boisterous online universe after back-to-back convictions this week for insulting the emir on Twitter: There was hardly a mention in apparent fear of being next.

If the Arab Spring uprisings represented the coming of age for social media activism in the Middle East, then the Gulf Arab rulers who have ridden out the upheavals appear to be mounting their own counterrevolution.

Dozens of bloggers, online activists — and even a poet in Qatar — have been detained or prosecuted across the Western-allied Gulf in recent months as part of widening crackdowns on perceived cyber-dissent. The escalating pressures have brought widespread denunciations from free-speech groups and others, and could become an increasing point of friction with the U.S. and other Western backers in the Gulf.

At a November meeting in Dubai, the U.S. led Western opposition to new U.N. telecommunications regulations that critics fear could open the way for greater state oversight of the Net. The White House, meanwhile, has made Internet openness a centerpiece of its foreign policy goals and has sharply criticized Iran for Web clampdowns far wider — but still similar — to those waged in the Gulf.

Gulf authorities are hardly alone in efforts to chase suspected opposition across cyberspace. Syria’s President Bashar Assad virtually switched off the Internet briefly last month in apparent attempt to foil rebels, and officials in places such as Jordan closely monitor political content on the Web.

But the Gulf cyber-squeeze highlights the recognition by leaders that even the region’s extreme wealth is no buffer to the changes across the Middle East.

Gulf officials argue that opposition groups have used the Web to organize, and claim that Arab Spring-inspired Islamist factions and others could threaten the ruling fraternities from Kuwait to Oman. The six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council, anchored by Saudi Arabia, has pushed for increasing coordination on policies including intelligence and media rules.

“At some level, the Gulf rulers are all facing similar kinds of issues and insecurities, and are on the same page about what to do about it,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “With the Web, that means censorship.”

On Wednesday, a court in Bahrain extended the detention of a prominent human rights campaigner charged with posting false reports on Twitter about anti-government protests — part of a nearly two-year uprising by Shiites seeking a greater political voice in the strategic, Sunni-ruled kingdom, which is home to U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet.

Yousef al-Muhafedha, a senior figure with the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, was arrested last month on allegations he fabricated details about demonstrations in the capital, Manama. The next hearing is set for Jan. 17.

“Nothing says desperation like keeping peaceful human rights activists in jail,” said Brian Dooley, director of the human rights defenders program at U.S.-based Human Rights First. “Bahrain needs to engage with leading figures like (al-Muhafedha), not lock them away.”

But Gulf leaders have made it clear there are limits to what they will tolerate on the Net, including criticism of the rulers.

In November, the United Arab Emirates set stricter Internet monitoring and enforcement codes. They include giving authorities wider leeway to arrest Web activists for offenses such as mocking the country’s leadership or calling for demonstrations.

Bahrain‘s Interior Ministry also warned in September that full “legal measures” would be taken against any Internet posts that “defame and insult national icons and public figures.” Oman has arrested dozens of people in the past year, including journalists and popular bloggers, on charges that included insulting the ruling sultan.

Last year, a group of Saudi clerics and religious scholars urged bans against Western-oriented websites branded as “ideological deviations and delusions.”

In Kuwait, the sentences issued this week — separate two-year jail terms to a blogger and online journalists for posts deemed “insulting” to the emir — brought some questions in the press about how far Gulf leaders will go to muzzle critics. But there was little direct criticism among bloggers and others, apparently stunned by the severity of the verdicts.

“It’s no longer about being with or against. It’s much bigger than that, the price is much more costly than a tag or a label of being “with” the government or “against” the government,” wrote Waleed al-Rujaib, a Kuwaiti novelist, in a column Wednesday in the Al-Rai newspaper. “Is this the Kuwait that we once knew? Is this the Kuwait that once was a beacon for democracy among other countries in the region?”

Kuwait, which has the most politically empowered parliament among the Gulf Arab nations, is currently locked in showdowns between the government and opposition groups that include rare alliances of convenience between conservative Islamists and pro-reform liberals.

In a prison in Qatar, poet Muhammad ibn al-Dheeb al-Ajami is allowed only visits from family members and his lawyer as he hopes to overturn a life sentence for an Arab Spring-inspired verse that officials claim insulted the country’s emir.

Al-Ajami was jailed in November 2011, months after an Internet video was posted of him reciting “Tunisian Jasmine,” a poem lauding that country’s popular uprising that touched off the Arab Spring rebellions. In the poem, he said, “We are all Tunisia in the face of repressive” authorities — and he criticized Arab governments that restrict freedoms.

Qatari officials charged al-Ajami with “insulting” the Gulf nation’s ruler and “inciting to overthrow the ruling system.” The latter charge could have brought a death sentence.

“He is a poet. He lives in a world of words, not politics,” said his lawyer, Najib al-Naimi. “He loves his country and respects the emir. A society need not be afraid of words.”

___

Associated Press writer Hussain al-Qatari in Kuwait City contributed to this report.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News