Showing posts with label France 24. Show all posts
Showing posts with label France 24. Show all posts

Thursday, May 5, 2016

Hundreds of anti-govt protesters break into Baghdad 'Green Zone'


Hundreds of supporters of Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr on Saturday stormed Baghdad's Green Zone and some entered the parliament building after lawmakers failed to convene for a vote on overhauling the government.

There were no reports of clashes with security forces. But an army special forces unit was dispatched with armoured vehicles to protect sensitive sites, two security officials said. No curfew has been imposed, they said.

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Protests, layoffs and debt: Is the Bin Laden construction company in turmoil?

Saudi Binladin Group, founded by Osama bin Laden's father, is a giant of Saudi Arabia's construction industry. But with reports it has laid off 50,000 workers as it struggles under a mountain of debt, the once mighty company appears to be in turmoil.

In a video posted on YouTube Saturday, flames rise high from a row of blazing buses and light up the night sky. The footage reportedly shows the result of a protest by disgruntled workers of the Binladin Group, angered by months of unpaid wages and the layoff of tens of thousands of staff.
Local media said that a total of seven company buses were set on fire by the protesting workers. Major Nayef al-Sharif, the spokesman for the Civil Defense in the city of Mecca, told the Associated Press late Saturday that firefighters put out the blaze without any injuries reported.
The protests came a day after news broke that the company has let go some 50,000 workers – totaling a quarter of its workforce going by the 200,000 employees the firm claims to have on its LinkedIn page.
VIDEO PURPORTEDLY SHOWING BUSSES SET ON FIRE BY PROTESTING BINLADIN GROUP WORKERS
The sacked workers, apparently all foreigners, were given permanent exit visas to leave the kingdom, Saudi newspaper al-Watan reported, citing unnamed sources.
Protests are rare in authoritarian Saudi. But workers at the Binladin Group have been demonstrating outside Binladin's offices in the country almost daily over unpaid wages, the paper said. It said some had not received wages for more than four months.
The Binladin Group has not issued any statement about the lay-offs nor the allegations of unpaid wages. An emailed request for comment from FRANCE 24 went unanswered.
Tough times
It is the latest sign that all is far from well at the company – one of the biggest construction firms in the Middle East – as it struggles to deal with a major downturn in government spending on infrastructure along with falling out of favour with Saudi's powerful royal family.
Founded in 1931 by Sheikh Mohammed bin Laden, the Binladin Group has grown into a vast construction conglomerate but one that firmly remains a family-run business.
Its current chairman, Bakr bin Laden, is one of Mohammed's more than 50 sons. Several of his brothers sit on the company's board of directors.
Osama bin Laden owned shares in the company until 1993, when the former Al Qaeda leader was disowned by the family.
Despite the negative connotations of the Bin Laden name in the aftermath of the September 11th attacks, the Binladin Group prospered along with the petroleum-fuelled economies of Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern states.
Its close ties with the Saudi royal family helped it win contracts for some of the Gulf kingdom's biggest infrastructure contracts. It is one of the main contractors working on the Jeddah Tower in Jeddah, which when completed will be the world's tallest skyscraper at just over 1,000 metres high.
http://www.france24.com/en/20160502-saudi-arabia-osama-bin-laden-protests-layoffs-debt-construction-company-turmoil
But the Binladin Group, like many of the region's construction companies, has been hit by a dive in oil prices, which has seen the Saudi government significantly rein in its infrastructure spending as it looks to fill a near-$100 billion (87 billion euros) budget deficit.
The group suffered another setback in September last year when one of its cranes collapsed during construction work at Mecca's Grand Mosque, killing 111 people days before the start of the annual Hajj pilgrimage.
The Saudi government blamed the group for the accident and, despite their previously close ties, barred the firm from acquiring new contracts.
$30 billion in debt
The extent to which this downturn in fortune has impacted on the firm's finances is uncertain as the tight-lipped company issues no public financial statements.
But a report in March in the Wall Street Journal claimed that the Saudi Binladin Group was loaded with debt totalling more than $30 billion, citing regional and international bankers.
An unnamed executive at one of the group's subsidiaries told the newspaper that the parent company hadn’t provided any funding to the unit for more than six months.
Meanwhile, the job cuts at the Binladin Group and Saudi's wider economic woes are another blow to Saudis legion of foreign workers.
International Monetary Fund figures show 56 percent of the kingdom's workforce were expats as of 2013, the vast majority in low-skilled, low-wage jobs. But not only has Saudi frequently been accused of human rights abuses in its treatment of migrant workers, but the government has recently introduced measures to reduce its reliance on overseas labour and boost employment among Saudi Nationals.

Shelling by rebels in Syria's Aleppo kills more than a dozen people

http://www.france24.com/en/20160503-Shelling-rebels-Syrias-Aleppo-kill-more-dozen-people

Syrian opposition fighters on Tuesday shelled government-held parts of Aleppo, killing at least 12 people, as the army claimed it was repelling a wide offensive by the rebels in the country's largest city.

Activists, meanwhile, said government forces were also shelling rebel-held parts of the city, killing two people and wounding several.
The escalation came as the diplomatic focus moved to Moscow where the U.N. envoy for Syria started talks in efforts to restore a piecemeal cease-fire that would also include the contested northern city.
Staffan de Mistura is expected to push that the truce also cover Aleppo, which has seen an escalation in violence in recent weeks. De Mistura's meeting with Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov came a day after he met with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry in Geneva.
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In opening remarks in Moscow, de Mistura said "we need to make sure the cessation of hostilities is brought back on track."
Aleppo has been the center of violence over the past 12 days that left more than 250 civilians dead in the contested city. The city was excluded from a truce declared unilaterally by the Syrian military last week for the capital, Damascus, and its suburbs and the coastal province of Latakia.
Syrian state TV said shells hit a government-held area during morning rush hour, killing seven people and wounding at least 35, while activists reported two dead in a rebel neighborhood. Hours later, some rockets hit a hospital killing and wounding dozens of people, the TV said.
The TV said one of the rockets hit the Dubeet hospital in the central neighborhood of Muhafaza. The TV did not give a breakdown of the casualties.
"Shells and mortar rounds are raining down on every neighborhood [of] Aleppo," said Aleppo-based health official Mohammad Hazouri, speaking from Al-Razi hospital. He said four people were killed and more than 30 wounded in Dubeet hospital alone, adding that half the casualties at the hospital were women and children.
He said the rebel bombardment of government-held parts of Aleppo on Tuesday killed a total of 12 people and wounded more than 70.
The Lebanon-based Al Mayadeen TV that has reporters in the government-held parts of Aleppo showed damage on both sides of the street in front of the hospital, which also appeared heavily damaged.
Cars in the street were scorched and some were turned over. The shops on the other side of the street showed moderate damage as smoke still climbed out of the wreckage.
The Syrian military said in a statement it is repelling a wide scale attack on Aleppo launched by "terrorists" - a government term that includes all armed groups fighting President Bashar Assad's forces.
Tuesday's statement said the attack was preceded by heavy shelling of residential areas of the city, which caused civilian casualties, including at a hospital that was hit. The army said the multi-pronged attack on Aleppo was launched by armed terrorist groups, including al-Qaida's branch in Syria, the Nusra Front, Ahrar al-Sham and the Army of Islam.
"Our armed forces are currently working on repelling the attack and appropriately returning fire," it said.
Information Minister Omran al-Zoubi warned militants they will face harsh retaliation for the shelling of civilian areas, saying the government's "patience is running out and if they don't stop targeting civilians in the coming hours ... they will pay a high price."
The activist Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights confirmed the shelling of government-held parts of the city, and also said that seven were killed, including a child. The Observatory said more than 50 were wounded, including some who were in critical condition, which could raise the death toll.
The Observatory and another activist group, the Local Coordination Committees, said government forces also shelled rebel-held parts of the city on Tuesday, killing two people and wounding several.
Also in northern Syria, warplanes carried out intense airstrikes on the city of Raqqa, the de facto capital of the extremist Islamic State group, in the early hours Tuesday. Activist groups said it was not clear if the warplanes were Russian or those of the U.S.-led coalition.
The Observatory, which has a network of activists around the country, said there were more than 35 air raids and that 18 people were killed, including five members of the Islamic State group. It said dozens were wounded.
The anti-IS group Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently said the airstrikes killed 10 and wounded dozens - but different casualty figures are common in the chaos of Syria's civil war. The group said there were calls from mosque loudspeakers for the residents to donate blood.
IS suffered major setbacks over the past months in Syria against government forces and U.S.-backed Kurdish fighters including the loss of the central historic city of Palmyra.

Thursday, April 21, 2016

Syria peace talks stall as opposition leaders leave Geneva


The leaders of Syria's opposition delegation were leaving Geneva on Tuesday after the group suspended its formal participation in troubled peace negotiations, the opposition chief said.

Saudi-US ties strained by Iran deal, 9/11 probe as Obama visits Riyadh


Barack Obama met Gulf leaders on Thursday as part of a two-day visit to Saudi Arabia overshadowed by recent US overtures toward Iran and a push to declassify 28 pages that allegedly implicate Riyadh in the terrorist attacks on 9/11.

Largest-ever aid convoy arrives in Syria as hundreds evacuated



© Amer Almohibany, AFP | A Syrian family drives on a scooter alongside Syrian Arab Red Crescent lorries carrying aid as they arrive in the town of Saqba on April 19, 2016
Text by NEWS WIRES
Latest update : 2016-04-21

Aid groups launched their largest delivery of assistance yet in war-torn Syria on Thursday after the UN evacuated hundreds of besieged residents, intensifying relief efforts even as peace talks falter.

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Saudi King Salman announced Friday an agreement with Egypt to build a bridge over the Red Sea connecting the two countries, on the second day of his visit to Cairo.

The Saudi monarch made the announcement in televised comments after meeting Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.
"I agreed with my brother, his Excellency President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, to build a bridge connecting the two countries," Salman said.
"This historic step to connect the two continents, Africa and Asia, is a qualitative transformation that will increase trade between the two continents to unprecedented levels," he added.
A beaming Sisi, who had minutes before presented the king with the ceremonial Nile Collar, suggested they name the bridge "King Salman bin Abdel Aziz Bridge".
Following the announcement, representatives of both countries signed 17 investment deals and memorandums of understanding.
A government official had said the deals agreed with Saudi Arabia throughout Salman's visit would amount to about $1.7 billion (1.5 billion euros).
They included an agreement to set up a university and homes in South Sinai, and a power plant.
Sunni ties that bind
Saudi Arabia -- along with other Gulf kingdoms such as Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates – showered Egypt with billions of dollars in economic aid after Sisi ousted democratically-elected President Mohammed Morsi in 2013 following mass protests.
But falling oil prices have increased the pressure on Saudi Arabia and other oil-rich Gulf economies. Egypt is also struggling to jumpstart the country’s floundering economy.
Despite the countries precarious economic outlooks, Saudi-Egypt ties remain strong with the region increasingly split between Sunni powers and Iran, the world’s Shiite powerhouse.
With Iraq, Syria and Yemen immersed in civil war, and Saudi Arabia preoccupied by its region-wide rivalry with Iran, Riyadh is determined to stop the Egyptian state from failing. Saudi Arabia will likely continue giving aid to Egypt despite its own budgetary concerns, analysts say.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP, REUTERS)
Date created : 2016-04-08

Al Qaeda militants in southern Yemen on Saturday seized and executed 15 soldiers loyal to President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, local officials and residents said.

The soldiers were detained by militants while travelling from the southern port of Aden to al-Mahra province in eastern Yemen via Ahwar, a city in Abyan province under al Qaeda control.
The militants took them to a remote area and killed them by firing squad, local officials and residents said. They said 17 other captive soldiers were wounded in the incident but were believed to be still alive. Their current status was unclear.
The soldiers had been visiting family in Aden and were on their way back to base in al-Mahra to receive their salaries, security sources said. They were not dressed in military uniform and were not riding in military vehicles.
Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) has exploited the Yemeni war to expand areas under its control, seizing Mukalla, the capital of Hadramout province, last year and recruiting more followers.
The Saudi-led military intervention in Yemen, backed by the United States, has helped AQAP become stronger than at any time since it first emerged almost 20 years ago, a Reuters special report revealed last week.
Iran-allied Houthi forces have been battling forces loyal to Yemen’s Saudi-backed president Hadi since March 2015 in a conflict that has cost more than 6,200 lives.
(REUTERS)
Date created : 2016-04-09

A suicide bomber detonated an explosives-laden belt near a football stadium in the southern Yemeni port city of Aden on Tuesday, killing at least four people, witnesses and a security source said.

Ten people were wounded in the attack, which appeared to target young army recruits waiting for buses outside a military checkpoint in the city's north, the witnesses and source added.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack but jihadist militants have carried out similar suicide bombings in Aden in the past.
Such groups are not involved in a nationwide truce that started between the main warring parties in Yemen this week.

Thursday, March 31, 2016

Saudi Arabia and Yemen swap prisoners ahead of planned peace talks

© Ahmad Al-Basha, AFP | A Yemeni fighter loyal to Yemen's ousted president, Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, fires from a tank during clashes with Shiite Houthi rebels west of the city of Taiz, on March 21, 2016
Text by NEWS WIRES
Latest update : 2016-03-28

A Saudi-led military coalition on Monday said it had completed a prisoner swap in Yemen, exchanging nine Saudi prisoners for 109 Yemeni nationals ahead of a planned truce and peace talks aimed at ending the year-long war with Houthi rebels.

The statement did not say which group the deal was made with, but the Iran-allied Houthi movementsaid on Sunday it had exchanged prisoners with its enemy Riyadh, as a first step towards ending a humanitarian crisis prompted by the conflict.
The Iran-allied Houthis are battling Yemeni government forces backed by a Saudi-led military coalition.
Saudi Arabia received its nationals on Sunday, the coalition statement published on Saudi Arabia’s state news agency SPA said. The alliance “hopes to begin a truce in conflict areas of the Republic of Yemen,” it added.
Yemeni media said that the nine men were soldiers. The released Yemenis had been detained during operations in Yemen, SPA said.
News site Yemen Now published a photo of a group of smiling, waving men in white robes and keffiyeh head scarves, which it said was of the soldiers. Reuters was not immediately able to verify the image.
The agreement is one of several prisoner swaps between the two sides since late last year in a conflict which has killed more than 6,000 people and triggered a humanitarian crisis in the Arab world’s poorest country.
Last week the United Nations said the warring parties had agreed to a cessation of hostilities starting at midnight on April 10 and peace talks in Kuwait as part of a fresh push to end the crisis following two rounds of failed talks last year.
The leader of the Houthis said on Friday he wanted peace efforts to succeed but said his group was ready to confront its enemies if violence persisted.
The main battle between the Houthis and the Yemeni government backed by the coalition has led to a power vacuum in parts of the country, allowing al Qaeda and Islamic State-linked fighters to take advantage.
Air raids killed 14 men suspected of belonging to al Qaeda in southern Yemen on Sunday, medics and local residents said, in one of the largest U.S.-led assaults on the group since a civil war broke out a year ago.

The village of Al-Asriya, south of Baghdad, prepared Saturday to bury its sons, killed when a suicide bomber blew himself up after a football tournament.

The attacker, who himself looks like a teenager on a photo distributed by the Islamic State group that claimed the attack, cut through the crowd when trophies were being presented.
"There are 32 dead and also 84 wounded, 12 of whom are in critical condition," an official in Babil province health directorate told AFP.
"Seventeen of those killed are boys aged between 10 and 16," the official said.
The village of Al-Asriya lies near Iskandariyah, a town about 40 kilometres (25 miles) south of the capital.
The bomber detonated his suicide vest late afternoon on Friday as local officials were handing trophies to the players after a local tournament.
A video posted on social media shows a local official speaking in front of a table covered with trophies and calling out the name of a player before a huge blast.
The footage cuts off with a big flash of yellow light.
"The suicide bomber cut through the crowd to approach the centre of the gathering and blew himself up as the mayor was presenting awards to the players," Ali Nashmi, an 18-year-old eyewitness, told AFP.
The mayor, Ahmed Shaker, was among the dead, as was one of his bodyguards and at least five members of the security forces.
Pictures posted on social media of the blast site showed mangled goal posts smeared with blood.
The United States state department extended its condolences to the bereaved in a statement, as did the United Nations special envoy to Iraq.
IS has been losing territory steadily in Iraq for almost a year.
In the most recent operations, Iraqi forces have been gaining ground in the western province of Anbar and have just begun their reconquest of the province of Nineveh.
Observers have warned that, as their self-proclaimed "caliphate" shrinks towards extinction, IS fighters are likely to revert to their old guerrilla tactics and ramp up suicide attacks on civilian targets.
(AFP)