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Beit Hale in northern Saudi Arabia showcases local heritage

yamazakiyi –  August 12, 20222 – WorldKam.com  

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spa

Fri, 2022-08-12 05:18

Hail: Beit Hail’s 15-day festival kicked off on Wednesday, showcasing local heritage such as incense burners, daggers, wicker baskets and embroidered garments of ancient thamuds and sadhus.
Place of Departure Hail Prince Faisal Bin Fahd Governor, along with Regional Undersecretary Adel bin Saleh Al-Sheikh and other officials, kicked off the event at Aja Park.
Prince Faisal toured the site and visited an exhibition of the late artist Youssef al-Shagdari.
The festival also showcases classic cars and popular colorful handicrafts made by local artisans.

 

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Pegasus: NSO Group Has Contracts with 22 EU Clients

Human rights organizations had previously only reported on non-Western countries’ usage of the spyware.

Oussama Aamari
Aug. 11, 2022 2:28 p.m. 
Morrocoworldnews.com


Pegasus: NSO Group Has Contracts with 22 EU Clients

Rabat – Israeli cyber warfare company NSO has been revealed to have contracts in 12 EU countries, with 22 different clients, according to Israel’s Haaretz.
The information was reportedly revealed during a visit to Israel by members of the European Parliament Committee of Inquiry on Pegasus Spyware, where they met with NSO officials, and experts in the field.
The discovery contrasts previous reports from organizations like Human Rights Watch and Forbidden Stories, whose reporting focused primarily on the software’s usage by non-Western countries in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia.
The implicated countries included Saudi Arabia, the UAE,  India, and Morocco among others.
Morocco has consistently denied the allegations, and has filed defamation lawsuits in multiple European countries over the affair.
European NSO customers
The visiting delegation demanded to know the names of NSO’s European customers, revealing that out of 14 countries that had signed contracts with the company in the past, 12 are still using the Pegasus program.
NSO revealed that its contracts were signed with 22 security agencies, intelligence departments, and law enforcement agencies, rather than signing with the states themselves.
Further details about which clients the company was dealing with, or which states it was still operating in, were not provided, although Haaretz reported that the company stopped working with Poland and Hungary, and was still operating in Spain.
Earlier this year, the EU said it found evidence that some of its senior officials were targeted by the spyware. The perpetrator of the espionage could be an EU member state, European lawmaker Sophie in ‘t Veld said.
Pegasus
The software is highly sophisticated, allowing advanced attacks such as “zero-click” exploits, which allow an attacker to gain access to the victim’s device without the need for them to click a link or download anything.
It can give the perpetrator access to listen in on conversations, read encrypted messages, access contacts, and even turn on the camera and microphone.
At the same time as these revelations, a larger cyber warfare industry was coming into light in Europe. Greece was one example as the country operated a program similar to Pegasus against an investigative journalist, as well as the head of the socialist party.
Pegasus and Morocco
Last summer, when Amnesty International and Forbidden Stories published their report, Morocco was implicated as one of the countries using the Israeli software to spy on high ranking officials and dissidents.
The Pegasus project posited that Morocco used the spyware to spy on French President Emmanuel Macron, with no evidence, pushing the kingdom to publicly demand that Amnesty show evidence for the allegations.
Since then, Morocco has continued to deny the claims. In the summer of 2021, the North African country filed a lawsuit in France against Amnesty International and Forbidden Stories for defamation, which is still being fought.
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Saudi Arabia aims to transform Riyadh into global fintech capital: Network Intl chief

A general view shows office buildings at al-Riyadh Digital City of the Saudi capital Riyadh on February 28, 2022. (File photo: AFP)
 

Al Arabiya English

Published: 11 August ,2022: 03:21 PM GSTUpdated: 11 August ,2022: 03:31 PM GST

“If you have somehow missed the happenings in Saudi Arabia’s fintech scene, now is the time to pay serious attention,” says Abdulaziz al-Dahmash, Managing Director – Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA), Network International.
“First, this isn’t just a market to watch for fintech; it’s ‘the’ market,” says al-Dahmash.
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Saudi Arabia is the largest market in the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), representing almost 50 percent of the region’s GDP, with a population where 65 percent are below 30 years old and the largest young population.
“They’re tech-savvy and high adopters of social media and new technologies,” he notes.

Abdulaziz al-Dahmash, Managing Director – Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA), Network International. (Supplied)

Secondly, the Kingdom’s population of nearly 35 million people has one of the highest rates of fintech adoption in the region.
Fintech Adoption Survey
According to Fintech Saudi’s National Fintech Adoption Survey, 74 percent of individuals have had experience in using at least one fintech solution and fintech transaction values have jumped by more than 18 percent between 2017 and 2019 year-on-year, reaching over $20 billion in 2019 and expected to surpass $33 billion in 2023.
And third, but most significantly, the Saudi government has recently announced plans to triple the number of fintech companies in the Kingdom by 2025 under a new national strategy with an aim to transform Riyadh into a global capital of fintech competing alongside London and Singapore.
The strategy seeks to increase the fintech sector’s contribution to the gross domestic product (GDP) to SAR 4.5 billion ($1.2 billion) and create nearly 6,000 jobs by 2025.
In addition, it aims to increase the share of non-cash digital transactions to 70 percent by 2025.
The FinTech Strategy is a new pillar in the Saudi Vision 2030 Financial Sector Development Program (FSDP) and the addition of an explicit independent FinTech Strategy is an unequivocal indicator of the weight and importance of fintech to the government from both a strategic and positioning perspective.
Adding a specific fintech pillar to the Saudi national vision furthers the country’s aim to diversify its economy away from oil and expand its financial sector to build and grow new revenue streams, and stimulate foreign investment.
The fintech industry worldwide has seen some of the fastest growth rates in venture capital (VC) investment over the past decade. The previous annual record for global venture activity in fintech was $53 billion in 2018. Global venture activity in 2021 has already crossed $80 billion.
Saudi Arabia, the fintech sector generated approximately $157.2 million in venture capital (VC) investments in the first eight months of 2021, up staggeringly from $7.8 million in 2020 and $18 million in 2019.
In 2022, the Saudi VC market witnessed a record funding of $584 million in the first half, which represents a remarkable 244 percent increase in comparison to the same period in 2021. Fintech was also the industry of choice by number of deals in Saudi Arabia, accounting for 22 percent of total transactions within the first six months of 2022.
Al-Dahmash who has worked with the Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) and is an active member in the fintech industry, says “in my experience from a government perspective, I have yet to see a clearer and more specific implementation plan dedicated to fintech in any other market.”
While governments across the globe are championing their fast-growing fintech sectors, most national visions just state high-level strategies without defined targets.
In Saudi Arabia on the other hand, al-Dahmash says” the plan’s specific and ambitious targets have been set to cascade down to different public entities, particularly by enabling financial institutions to support private sector growth, attract foreign investment, and enhance capital markets.”
“While the fintech strategy has been added as a pillar within the Financial Sector Development Program, I see this not as a vertical strategy but rather a horizontal one, “ he adds.
This strategy – which was collaboratively designed by the Saudi Central Bank (SAMA), the Capital Market Authority (CMA), the Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology, the Ministry of Investment, the Small and Medium Enterprises General Authority (Monsha’at), and Fintech Saudi – aims to highlight the Saudi identity globally, strengthen the regulatory framework, support the sector, develop local talent, advance technical infrastructure, and enhance cooperation at the local and global levels.
“To me, this means we can expect major changes in the processes, procedures, and regulations to attract foreign fintechs as well as encourage and facilitate the setup of local ones,” he adds.
“This also means we will see cooperation across all the different entities creating great dynamism, flexibility and agility in government. In fact, we, as Saudis, have begun feeling and living the positive changes from the government at a very fast pace.”
This fintech strategy will also be fundamental to accelerate the growth of the country’s overall digital economy.
Globally, the pandemic-induced accelerated digitalization has led to a massive demand forfintech solutions and a subsequent surge in their market share.
Developing tech-based financial services and solutions will contribute to enabling other sectors in the Kingdom including retail, hospitality, and real estate. Innovation in these sectors is expected to contribute to increasing assets under management to reach 50 percent by 2030.
Meanwhile, SAMA’s Regulatory Sandbox and CMA’s FinTech Lab, and the release of regulations for a number of different fintech activities, have helped boost confidence among investors to deploy more funds towards fintech firms.
“With all these elements in mind and considering the rapid pace at which Saudi Arabia is fuelling its fintech industry, there’s no doubt that the nation is advancing to become a global fintech hub,” says al-Dahmash.

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China Wades Into Nile Fued

China, a major investor in developing nations around the world, appears to be at a crossroads in the “water battle” brewing between Ethiopia, Egypt and the Sudan.  On one hand, China is financing a variety of projects in these nations (as well as other African nations), while on the other hand, China appears to be the only nation that can bring all parties to the negotiating table. In either instance, two questions arise: How will they balance their actions and neutrality for all partners, closely followed by “in whose favor will the balance tip”? The question I have is this: what impact will their actions have on the region? For more on this story, please click here

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Erdogan and Putin: Complicated Relations With Mutual Benefits

Turkey needs Russian cash, gas and business as Erdogan looks to a dicey election and a new incursion in Syria, while Moscow needs friends to try to evade Western sanctions.

President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia meeting with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey in Sochi, Russia, last week.Credit…Murat Kula/Turkish Presidential Press Service via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

By Steven Erlanger

Aug. 11, 2022 – The New York times

BRUSSELS — Turkey’s mercurial president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, is in political difficulty before elections next year, with his economy imploding, a central bank nearly out of foreign exchange and volcanic inflation running at about 80 percent annually.
President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia has his own troubles, with the war in Ukraine bogging down and tough economic sanctions hitting Russia’s industry and broader economy.
The mutual challenges have pushed the two men closer together than ever. They have met twice in the last three weeks, most recently last weekend in Sochi, Russia, hoping to lessen their vulnerabilities by expanding their partnership and agreeing, Mr. Erdogan said, on economic cooperation that he hoped would total $100 billion.

It is a relationship that raises the hackles of Mr. Erdogan’s NATO allies, as he provides Mr. Putin a sizable hole in the dam of sanctions the West has tried hard to build in its effort to stymie Mr. Putin’s war in Ukraine. Some wonder where Mr. Erdogan’s real loyalties lie, beyond his own self-interest.

There is little doubt that, for now, the bond is proving to be mutually beneficial, as details of their negotiations emerge in the aftermath. For Mr. Putin, the benefits include energy and arms sales, investment and a close connection to a member of NATO, which is trying to isolate him and help Ukraine defeat his invading army.

Mr. Erdogan and his foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, speaking with Prime Minister Mark Rutte of the Netherlands and President Biden at the NATO summit meeting in Madrid in June.Credit…Pool photo by Susan Walsh

Turkey, which is not a member of the European Union, has refused to apply Western sanctions against Russia. It is exploring ways to work with otherwise sanctioned Russian banks and accept payments through Russian credit cards. Russian gas flows unimpeded through the TurkStream pipeline. There are also reports that Russia is seeking Turkish help in providing “subsystems” for its weapons, which can no longer source Western components directly.
For Mr. Erdogan, the benefits involve cash infusions into the central bank, cheap energy, global importance, a large export market, renewed Russian tourism and, crucially, apparent Russian acquiescence to his politically popular efforts to crush Kurdish separatism in Syria, where Russia supports the Syrian government of Bashar al-Assad.

But the two leaders remain first-order frenemies, each a prickly strongman who has gathered up extraordinary powers to himself and keeps his own counsel. When they met in Tehran last month, Mr. Erdogan left Mr. Putin standing alone for nearly a minute, as the Russian leader, notorious himself for the waiting-game trick, shifted uncomfortably in front of whirring cameras.

The move was interpreted as a subtle reminder of the altering power balance between the them — Mr. Putin had kept Mr. Erdogan waiting before — as they work together, even while trying to maintain the upper hand. Increasingly, relations between the two countries come down to relations between the two men. The discussions between the two autocrats are also closely held, with the Turkish Foreign Ministry, let alone the public, largely kept in the dark.
“Turkish foreign policy has entered a very dangerous period,” said Ilhan Uzgel, a political scientist who taught international relations at Ankara University before being fired by presidential decree. “The two leaders come together and make a negotiation. But only the two leaders sitting in the palace alongside a few other people, a very small group, know the content of these negotiations.”

Construction work on an extension of Russia’s TurkStream gas pipeline in Bulgaria.Credit…Stoyan Nenov/Reuters

 

Mr. Erdogan has bought sophisticated Russian antiaircraft missiles that undermine NATO security and single-handedly moved to block NATO membership for Sweden and Finland, lifting his objections for now, but with the expectation that there will be more drama to come before the Turkish Parliament votes on whether to ratify their accession sometime this autumn.
The obstructionism could only delight Mr. Putin, who has long warned against the Nordic states joining the alliance.

Washington is watching carefully, stating officially that “we have urged Turkey to not become a safe haven for illicit Russian assets or transactions,” and urging Turkey to reduce its energy dependence on Russia. The statement also noted that Turkey supports Ukrainian sovereignty and territorial integrity, and that Mr. Erdogan has called the Russian invasion “unacceptable.”

Indeed, Turkey has opposed the Russian invasion of Ukraine, blocked Russian warships from entering the Black Sea and sold weapons to Kyiv, including sophisticated drones that have helped kill Russian soldiers.

For the West, Mr. Erdogan’s ability to deal with Mr. Putin has not been all bad. Turkey has kept close diplomatic ties to Moscow and is acting as the main mediator between Russia and Ukraine for grain deliveries and possible peace talks. Mr. Erdogan or his top aides speak to Mr. Putin and President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine several times a week.

Image 

Destruction from the war on the outskirts of Sloviansk in eastern Ukraine.Credit…Mauricio Lima for The New York Times

 

“Erdogan is keeping all his options open, which is what countries tend to do when they think only of their own self-interest, which is not what allies do,” said Ivo Daalder, a former U.S. ambassador to NATO. “He’s figured out a way to play his game, but he’s doing it at the expense of an alliance which is key to his own security.”
Having a NATO ally with good lines of communication to Mr. Putin is a good thing, Mr. Daalder added, “so long as he’s saying the right things, trying to resolve issues coherent with the goals of the alliance and not undermining it.”
Mr. Erdogan’s main goal, Turkish analysts agree, is his own re-election, and he is looking for help with both the economy and his effort to fight what he considers to be Kurdish terrorism in Syria and at home.
“The objective of the Erdogan government isn’t to relieve Putin, it’s to create the right conditions for itself on the way to the elections,” Professor Uzgel said.

“Erdogan has three worries,” he said. “One, to tell the West that he can do business with Putin. Second, he’s expecting the cash coming in from Russia to temporarily relieve the currency rates. Third, he wants to be on the same page with Russia for a possible incursion he wants to carry out inside Syria.”

Image 

Syrians burned tires in 2020 in protest ahead of joint Turkish and Russian military patrols in northern Syria agreed to as part of a security corridor.Credit…Omar Haj Kadour/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

 

Mr. Erdogan is doing badly in opinion polls with elections due by June next year. His major vulnerabilities stem from the ruinous economy and from popular exhaustion and resentment with the millions of refugees it hosts.
“On both issues Putin holds enormous leverage over Erdogan,” said Asli Aydintasbas of the European Council on Foreign Relations. Russia is a source of hard currency, cheap energy and jobs, she said, while it would take only a few Russian bombing runs over northern Syria to flood another two million refugees across the border into Turkey.
Regional security threats, which include a tentative peace settlement in the fight over Nagorno-Karabakh — Turkey supports Azerbaijan, while Russia intervened to save Armenia — mean that any Turkish government would want a balanced working relationship with Russia, said Sinan Ulgen, director of EDAM, a Turkish research institution.
“Turkey needs a diplomatic partnership with Russia in our neighborhood, given crisis areas like Syria or Nagorno-Karabakh, so it doesn’t have the luxury of isolating Russia,” Mr. Ulgen said.
Mr. Erdogan’s ability to bring Russian and Ukrainian foreign ministers together and to mediate the deal to get Ukrainian (and Russian) grain out of the blockaded Black Sea “validates Turkey’s balanced approach to Russia,” Mr. Ulgen said. “Turkey has been pro-Ukraine without being anti-Russia.”

Turkish officials, he said, “are also aware of the thin line between not implementing sanctions and giving the perception or acting as the country that helps Russia evade sanctions.”

A ship carrying Ukrainian grain through the Black Sea near Istanbul on Aug. 3.Credit…Mehmet Caliskan/Reuters

 

The Putin-Erdogan relationship is a strange one, with both countries “openly cooperating but also fighting proxy wars” in Syria and Libya, while Turkey needs Russian acquiescence to go after Syrian Kurds and preserve the tenuous cease-fire between Armenia and Azerbaijan, said Ms. Aydintasbas.
“No one in Ankara is happy that Russia is controlling parts of Turkey’s northern flank on the Black Sea and parts of its southern flank with Syria, but they understand they have to negotiate a relationship with Russia and establish a modus vivendi,” she said. “The only alternative is fighting.”
Returning Friday from his meeting with Mr. Putin in Sochi, Mr. Erdogan told reporters: “Mr. Putin holds a fair attitude toward Turkey.”
He added: “The mutual understanding we have built with Mr. Putin on trust and respect assures our relations.”
Reporting was contributed by Carlotta Gall in Kyiv, Ukraine, and Nimet Kirac in Istanbul.

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Türkiye, Sweden, Finland to hold talks under joint mechanism this month

August 11, 2022 – TRTworld.com

Senior officials from the three countries will meet on August 26 under the trilateral memorandum signed at the NATO Madrid summit to cooperate on Türkiye’s fight against terrorism.
 

 
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu says EU would’ve been global actor had it accepted Türkiye’s accession bid to bloc and taken recent steps together. (AA)
With Sweden and Finland agreeing to cooperate on Türkiye’s fight against terrorism, three countries are set to meet on August 26 at the permanent joint mechanism under the trilateral memorandum signed at NATO Madrid summit in June, the Turkish foreign minister has said.
Speaking to reporters on the final day of the 13th Ambassadors Conference in Ankara on Thursday, Mevlut Cavusoglu said Sweden and Finland are yet to deliver their commitments arising from the memorandum and that they are yet to take any solid step on Türkiye’s requests on extradition of terrorists.
On normalisation process with Armenia and ties with Azerbaijan, Cavusoglu said Türkiye is doing everything in this process very openly and transparently.
He called on Armenia to end “stalling tactics,” and urged sincerity from Yerevan.
He also commented on EU relations and his country’s bid to join the bloc, saying the EU would have been a global actor had it accepted Türkiye’s accession bid to the bloc and taken Türkiye’s recent steps together.

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Muslim Turkish-origin deputies should be spied on: Greek official

BY ANADOLU AGENCY
ANKARA AUG 12, 2022 – 9:10 AM GMT+3

Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis addresses the Hellenic Parliament in Athens, Greece, May 12, 2022. (AFP Photo)

Adeputy speaker of Greece’s parliament has advocated “the necessity of spying on” the country’s Turkish Muslim deputies, local sources reported on Thursday.
Charalambos Athanasiou, who has previously served as justice minister and is currently a deputy from the ruling conservative Nea Dimokratia (ND) party, was referring to the three Muslim Turkish deputies, who all hail from the country’s Western Thrace region, as potential agents of Türkiye, according to the Left.Gr news outlet, which cited an interview he gave Wednesday to the StoNisi news channel.
“Let’s suppose that a member of parliament who has a religious orientation completely different from Orthodox Christians gives information to a neighboring country, Türkiye, about where irregular immigrants can come in,” he said, adding that national intelligence would have to take precautions in such a scenario, according to the outlet.
Asked whether the deputies can be monitored, Athanasiou replied: “If the procedure provided for by the legislator is followed, of course.”
His remarks caused an uproar, particularly from the country’s leftist opposition parties
 
The main opposition party SYRIZA-PS, stressed in a statement that Athanasiou essentially claims that those who are not Orthodox Christians are national threats.
“However, in reality, Charalambos Athanasiou said unequivocally what (Prime Minister Kyriakos) Mitsotakis hinted at in a speech, attempting to cover up the dangerous actions of his government with references to national security and ‘dark forces,’” the statement said.
Calling on the prime minister to dismiss Athanasiou, the party argued that Mitsotakis would have shown that he was consenting to his comments.
The PASOK-KINAL party also said in its statement that Athanasiou’s remarks plunged Greece into intolerance and created a severe national rift by claiming that minority deputies can potentially betray national interests.
“We demand immediate intervention against the deputy parliamentary speaker by explicitly condemning the unacceptable, divisive statement by Athanasiou,” it added.
The Greek Communist Party (KKE) noted that Athanasiou proved that the term “national security” has become a band-aid that everyone and everything can fit in to legitimize and facilitate unacceptable practices of monitoring and eavesdropping.
Burhan Baran, a Turkish Muslim deputy with the PASOK-KINAL, also condemned Athanasiou’s remarks.
Referring to the minority deputies of parliament as potential suspects of national treason and therefore saying it would be “legitimate” to monitor them cultivates a spirit of dogmatism and intolerance, Baran stressed.

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NA passes Pakistan Tobacco Board Bill, Inter-Governmental Commercial Transaction Bill

August 15, 2022
Radio Pakistan
URL: https://www.radio.gov.pk/15-08-2022/na-session-underway-in-islamabad

The National Assembly resumed its session at the Parliament House in Islamabad on Monday evening with Speaker Raja Pervaiz Ashraf in the chair.
The House offered fateha for the departed souls of 13 people, who killed in a road accident in district Rahim Yar Khan, and four soldiers of Pakistan Army, who embraced martyrdom in recent incidents of terrorism.
Maulana Abdul Akbar Chitrali led the fateha.
The House on Monday passed two bills. These include; “The Pakistan Tobacco Board (Amendment) Bill, 2022” and “The Inter-Governmental Commercial Transaction Bill, 2022.”
The House has now been prorogued.

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Iraq PM calls on political blocs to make sacrifices to end deadlock

Security forces close parts of Green Zone in anticipation of large demonstrations on Friday

Supporters of Shiite cleric Moqtada Al Sadr protest outside Iraq’s Parliament in Baghdad on Thursday. AFP
 

Mina Aldroubi

Aug 12, 2022 – Thenationalnews.com

Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al Kadhimi urged all political factions to make “sacrifices” to break the deadlock blocking the formation of a new government as protesters continued a sit-in at Parliament on Friday.
Security forces began closing some entrances to Baghdad’s heavily fortified Green Zone in anticipation of large protests on Friday.
Supporters of influential cleric Moqtada Al Sadr occupied the Parliament building after storming barricades around the zone on July 31.
“I am willing to hand over power to any elected government,” Mr Al Kadhimi said in a statement issued by his office.
His remarks came after a call by Mr Al Sadr’s senior aide, Saleh Muhammad Al Iraqi, for supporters to prepare for “mass gatherings” across the country.

“Reformists should prepare by gathering in their governorates at 5 o’clock tomorrow, Friday,” Mr Al Iraqi said.
Mr Al Sadr has called on the judiciary to dissolve parliament by the end of the coming week, while asking his supporters to continue their sit-in outside the legislature.
Mr Al Kadhimi, who has been serving as caretaker prime minister since a general election last October, is pressing for political factions to meet and discuss difference that have delayed the formation of a new government.
“A thousand years of dialogue is better than a single moment in which there are clashes between Iraqis,” he said.
Iraq now has “a chance and is standing at a crossroads”, said Mr Al Kadhimi, after 17 years of underperforming elected governments since the US-led 2003 invasion ended the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein.
“The challenges we face are reflected in the performance of government and all state institutions,” he said.
He said his administration “stands in the middle but, at the same time, is distant from all other political factions. I hope they will support this government to accomplish its mission”.
Mr Al Kadhimi said on Twitter: “Political leaders are required to make sacrifices for the sake of the homeland, and for the sake of our children.”
The sit-in has made it impossible for politicians to convene and proceed with the formation of a new government.
Mr Al Sadr’s rivals, the Co-ordination Framework (CF) comprising mostly of Iran-backed militias and political parties, nominated a prime minister last month after the cleric told members of parliament from his political bloc to resign.

Mr Al Sadr said their nominee, Mohammed Al Sudani, was a “shadow” of his rival, former prime minister Nouri Al Maliki, one of the senior CF leaders.
The rivalry between Mr Al Sadr and Mr Al Maliki has been one of the key reasons behind parliament’s failure to install a new government for more than 10 months.
Mr Al Kadhimi, who took office in May 2020, said his caretaker government was facing a huge challenge in dealing with the crises facing the country.
“This government has spent only 28 months in power and has only had a budget for six months, so how can the state function in the absence of a budget?”

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Iraq’s Al-Sadr calls on judiciary to dissolve Parliament by next week

www.timesofoman.com
August 11, 2022

 Thursday 11/August/2022 09:11 AM

By: ANI

Baghdad: Influential Shia leader Muqtada al-Sadr on Wednesday called on the Iraqi judiciary to dissolve the parliament by the end of next week.

Baghdad: Influential Shia leader Muqtada al-Sadr on Wednesday called on the Iraqi judiciary to dissolve the parliament by the end of next week.

Al-Sadr in his tweet said that the Parliament will convene to dissolve itself citing that it has “blocs that adhere to the quota (system) and are involved in corruption and will not answer to the peoples’ demand of dissolving the Parliament.” In the last week of July, thousands of supporters of al-Sadr stormed the heavily fortified parliament building in Baghdad for the second time. And the protesters are continuing their sit-in outside the legislature.

 
 

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This move came in response to attempts by his rivals, mainly the Iran-backed Coordination Framework, to form a government with prime ministerial candidates of whom al-Sadr does not approve.
Al-Sadr went on to state that an alternative way to disband the assembly can be achieved through the judiciary, Anadolu Agency reported.
The leader expressed hope that the judicial authorities will “correct the path” after the constitutional deadline for the parliament to choose a president and assign a premier to form a government expires.
He urged the judiciary to “dissolve the Parliament… within a period that does not exceed the end of the next week.”
On July 30, supporters of Iraqi cleric stormed parliament for the second time in a week.
The protesters again breached the high-security Green Zone in Baghdad, as they oppose the nomination of a pro-Iran rival candidate for prime minister. Over 120 people were injured in the latest unrest.
Earlier also, Al-Sadr demanded for an early election and dissolution of parliament. “Dissolve parliament and hold early elections,” al-Sadr said in a televised address from Najaf on Wednesday, signalling a deepening power struggle with his rivals that may prolong the political deadlock.
Al-Sadr recently called for the dissolution of the assembly and holding early polls amid a nine-month-old political crisis that has stalled the government formation since the October 10, 2021 elections.
Notably, Al-Sadr’s bloc won 73 seats in Iraq’s October 2021 election, making it the largest faction in the 329-seat parliament but, ever since the vote, talks to form a new government have stalled, and Al-Sadr stepped down from the political process. A deadlock persists over the establishment of a new government.
In 2016 too al-Sadr’s supporters stormed the parliament in a similar fashion. They staged a sit-in and issued demands for political reform after then-Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi sought to replace party-affiliated ministers with technocrats in an anti-corruption drive.
Mass protests erupted in 2019 amid public anger over corruption and unemployment and this current protest poses a challenge for the oil-rich country.

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