Lots of news today:
US to Cut Iran in on Nabucco Pipeline
Outlet for Iranian Gas to Reach Europe via Turkey
This would be a windfall for Iran and a boost for Obama's grand design for a new pro-American Turkish-Syrian-Iranian bloc to supplant Egypt and Israel at Washington's Middle East center stage.
Who Killed The Hariri Trial?
Syria Gets away with a Lebanese Murder
An outrageous political assassination goes unpunished as Washington and Paris let the international Hariri tribunal be disempowered.
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UAE trying to deflect media pressure away from themselves onto neighbouring nations. Trying to show up to everyone that they aren't the only ones f'd up. Prostitution in Oman.
Countering the Illicit Rackets
Saleh Al-Shaibany
1 May 2009
Nanda Mohan, escorted by a policewoman, had bruises all over her face when her employer sent her to a local clinic last week. She said a taxi driver who demanded more money beat her up. Her employer knew better. He said she was part of a prostitution ring organised by an expatriate woman in the seedy parts of Muscat.
Mohamed Al Khair, the 34-year-old engineer employing Nanda as a housemaid, said he followed her that Friday after she climbed in the taxi at six-
thirty in the morning. She was the
only passenger.
“I received a tip from my neighbours that Nanda gets in the same taxi every Friday that was waiting a 100 metre from my house. So I followed her to Hamriya and saw her entering a house run by an Arab ‘madam.’ I called the police and they raided the place.”
Such occurrences are never reported in the local papers because editors have “unwritten guidelines” not to do so from the Ministry of Information.
“Prostitution is rife in Muscat. There is also a high quality prostitution racket in the classy hotels. It will never be published if we write about it. Editors know where not to transgress. It is as simple as that,” an Omani reporter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said.
“Most of these foreign women do it willingly to earn extra money but some are lured for jobs that never materialise. They have no choice but to engage in prostitution. They can’t leave because their passports, by law, are held by sponsors. They can’t go to the law because they would not be believed and may end up in prison,” Sanjeev Prabhu, a Muscat-based car tyre salesman said.
Smartly dressed young women from India, Philippines and some Arab countries like Morocco and Lebanon sit in the lobbies of Muscat hotels waiting for arranged corporate clients.
They come to Oman on a visit visa arranged by friends and even relatives. They offer sex for an average price of $300 a night.
“If they are smart, they can end up being long-term escorts of senior corporate managers,” Prabhu added, saying,” just go to these hotels and you can see these women sitting alone in the lobby just waiting for their clients. Hotel managers know that but they
put up a blind eye. To them, it is just a business….”
Many see this as part of human trafficking that the government is trying to crackdown but with little effect.
Under a new Omani law passed in September, people convicted of human trafficking can now face up to 15 years in prison and a fine of up to 100,000 rials ($260,000). There was previously no law against human trafficking. Earlier this year, Oman formally protested against a US State Department report that ranked the sultanate, along with fellow Gulf States Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Kuwait, among the worst in failing to combat human trafficking.
“It makes sense now to restrict the issuance of visiting visas to single women from certain countries. This class of sex offenders is rising since it caters
for high paying corporate people, “Khair said.
But Khair warned that the housemaid prostitution ring that caters for labourers and other lowly paid workers would be hard to clamp down.
Foreigners comprise about a quarter of Oman’s 3.2 million population, according to the Ministry of National Economy figures. There are over 100,000 housemaids in Oman and 250,000 labourers. But experts say the actual number of lowly paid foreigners is much bigger since they enter Oman illegally or overstay their visas.
Maryam Saif, a banker, said that many Omanis frequently complain about their housemaids offering sex for money in their family homes while their sponsors are out in their offices.
“My husband and I both work. Our children go to school. The house is empty in the morning and I have caught my housemaid with a man in bed a few months ago. According to the houseboy next door, it had been going on for a year. She was actually running a prostitution business in our house. It is
that bad!”
Many Omani families now opt for Muslim housemaids, mainly from Indonesia. But there are scandals about them, too.
“Don’t be fooled by the hijab (a Muslim dress worn by women from head to toe). My Indonesian housemaid was caught in one of those seedy places after a police raid one Friday.
Religion has got nothing to do with it or even marriage. Some of them are married with husbands in their countries,” Fathiya Khalfan, a computer IT engineer said.
Saleh Al-Shaibany is an Oman-based writer
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Possibly for the first time ever, The Govt owned The National paper in the UAE has published an article about the case involving the UAE royals torture, the human rights office in Abu Dhabi will be doing their own investigation into the incident! Now its shocking that this article actually criticizes the Royal and is going to conduct an inquiry into this. Probably a first in the GCC.
Rights body reviews abuse video claims
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The Launch of RISAT 2 by India was the fruit of the new Intelligence pact that India has signed with Israel post 26/11. Sudhir Chaudhry could also be involved in the deal, as he was the IAI liaison.
More on the intelligence agreement later
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On the Sunni attacks in Baghdad and the recent unrest in Iraq.
Deprived of wages, the Sahwa Forces men have also been banned from attending the Police Academy, which they must do if they want to join the regular army. They have responded by coming out openly against Iraq’s military. Hence the attacks.
The biggest fear of Arab and Western intelligence agencies is that the nascent insurrection could win backing from Iran.
Several figures behind the rise of the Sunni insurgency in Iraq and elsewhere, such as former Egyptian special forces officer Saif al Adl, are currently living in Iran, in camps run by the Revolutionary Guards at Mashaad in the north of the country near Afghanistan.
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The arrests of Hezbollah operatives additional points to my previous post on the topic:
On April 10 a secret, high level meeting was held in Amman between representatives of Israeli, Egyptian and Jordanian intelligence. Jordanian security services have already arrested and jailed several Hezbollah activists operating in their country.
Worse so far as Hosni Mubarak’s regime is concerned: the militants rounded up were mainly Sunni radicals and Egyptian citizens to boot. For some months, the Hezbollah movement and Iranian intelligence have been working to build up their contacts with Egypt and particularly with the Muslem Brotherhood . The Israel incursion into southern Lebanon in 2006 and specially the Cast Lead operation in Gaza last December
put the seal to a tacit alliance between the two organizations. While Hezbollah secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah railed against Mubarak’s failure to act in the crisis the leader of the Brotherhood, Mohammed Mahdi Akef, called for a campaign of civil disobedience.
The movement’s external operations are now overseen by a troika. They work in conjunction with general Faisal Bager Zadeh, who commanded the contingent of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (Pasdarans) in Lebanon.
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Covert Palestinian Authority-Iranian get-together in Caracas