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Thursday, October 20, 2011

UK Kuwait embassy suspends operations after threat

Sadr called for stern stand against Kuwait - MP
10/19/2011 2:51 PM

BAGHDAD / Aswat al-Iraq: White Iraqiya bloc MP called on Sadrist leaders to endeavor to terminate the sanctions imposed on Iraq, due to the insistence of the Kuwaiti side to punish the Iraqi people for previous regime policies.

In a statement received by Aswat al-Iraq, MP Alia Nsaif added that "the Kuwaiti government had not made any positive signs that it intends to develop its relations with Iraq during the past period, in addition to its insistence that Iraq should remain under UN Chapter VII terms."

She added that due to Muqtada al-Sadr's presence in Baghdad, "we call on him to discuss the Kuwaiti dossier and have a decisive stand towards Kuwait".

"Sadr's stand will be a step to implement Iraqi people aspirations that call for respecting Iraqi sovereignty," she added.

Iraq is under the terms of UN Chapter VII which were imposed on him following the invasion of Kuwait in 1991, which stipulated the use of force against it "as a threat to international security and peace".
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UK Kuwait embassy suspends operations after threat

20 Oct 2011 10:05
Source: Reuters // Reuters

(Adds foreign ministry comments, background)

KUWAIT, Oct 20 (Reuters) - The British embassy in Kuwait said it had temporarily suspended operations because of a security threat, and warned other British organisations in the Gulf Arab state they could also be at risk.

"Whilst the threat is targeted against the embassy itself, we cannot rule out threats against other British interests in Kuwait," the statement dated Wednesday, Oct. 19, and posted on the embassy website, said.

"We therefore advise that British organisations and businesses in Kuwait review the security procedures they have in place," it added.

OPEC member Kuwait hosts Camp Arifjan, a vast U.S. logistics base in the desert south of the capital that serves as a staging post for U.S. forces being deployed in neighbouring Iraq.

Kuwait said in April an Iranian spy cell uncovered last year had monitored the U.S. military presence and possessed explosives to attack "strategic" facilities.

A source at Kuwait's foreign ministry source said he did not know the precise nature of the security threat against Britain, but did not expect the measures to last for long.

"They (the embassy) will resume operations on Sunday," the source told Reuters.

The British embassy said there was a general threat from terrorism in Kuwait adding that "terrorists continue to issue statements threatening to carry out attacks in the Gulf region", including references to attacks on Western residential compounds, military, oil, transport and aviation interests.

No warning has been seen on the U.S. embassy website.

Kuwait's emir in June said the Gulf Arab state would show "zero tolerance" to anyone threatening the OPEC oil exporter's security, after the opposition held weekly rallies demanding that Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser al-Mohammad al-Sabah step down.

A generous welfare system has enabled Kuwait to avoid the mass protests that have forced out the rulers of Egypt and Tunisia.

But the Gulf Arab state has endured a long political stalemate, and opposition has built up against Sheikh Nasser, an influential member of the ruling family. Several hundred people have held weekly peaceful rallies to demand his resignation. (Reporting by Eman Gomaa, Writing by Sami Aboudi)

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