 | | Qatari women set to launch fashion magazine |
MAKING
a foray into the fashion and lifestyle world, three young Qatari
women have joined hands to launch an English magazine from Doha.
Named HauteMuse, the magazine will be published quarterly. Talking
to Qatar Tribune, Fatma Hamad al Thani and Noor Rashid al Thani,
both owners of the magazine, said that each issue would be theme-based
with an innovative layout. "We will... |
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|  |  | | UK Monarchy: How Relevant? |
AMID
the flag-waving and the street parties to celebrate the marriage
of Prince William and Kate Middleton on Friday, bigger questions
about the relevance of the monarchy to modern Britain lurk like
uninvited guests. Extravagant living in a time of austerity
abrades public sensibilities; unearned privilege is resented,
while snobbery and elitism are seen as dangerously outmoded.
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|  |  | | THE PRICE OF
DELUSION |
| COL Moamar Qadhafi is a vain man. Like
the other Arab dinosaurs he has his dyed hair, his designer
shades, his spoiled children and his compound full of sycophants.
He doesn´t want, one day, to be dragged from a rat hole
like Saddam Hussein or hauled from a bunker like the Ivory Coast´s
Laurent Gbagbo. So what´s his calculation? Does he have
one at all? Here in liberated eastern Libya, where the tricolour
Qadhafi banished now flies... |
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Nepal ignores Krishna’s concern on telecom JV
IANS
KATHMANDU EVEN nine days after Nepal assuring visiting Indian External Affairs Minister SM Krishna that it would “amicably resolve” issues plaguing Indian telecom joint venture United Telecom Ltd (UTL), the government has made no move to fulfil its promise even as a deadline slapped on the JV ran out on Thursday.
UTL officials said they had appealed to the concerned committee of Nepal Telecom Authority (NTA), the stateowned telecom regulator, after a 35-day pay-up time slapped by NTA ended on Thursday and the Indian JV faced the threat of having its operating licence revoked.
UTL, a join venture between three Indian majors - Mahanagar Telephone Nigam, Telecommunications Consultants India and Tata Communications - and Nepali company Nepal Ventures, became the first private player in Nepal’s state-held telecom sector in 2003, running phone services on wave-based technology, which made UTL phones usable as mobile phones as well.
The JV suffered a crippling blow in 2005 when King Gyanendra took over power with the help of the army and cut down phone lines.
Even after the state-run Nepal Telephones was allowed to resume land phone services, UTL’s services remained blocked unduly to provide advantage to a new private mobile phone company chaired by the king’s son-inlaw.
With its business plan ruined and growth halted, UTL asked for its royalty dues to be waived and compensation.
Though the royal regime waived royalty dues under New Delhi’s pressure, the JV’s ordeals continued even under the governments that succeeded the king.
Its inter-connectivity, ISP services and other activities have been constantly delayed and recently, even billboards announcing the appointment of Nepali filmstar Rekha Thapa as its brand ambassador were taken down by traffic police, who however have allowed the private mobile company’s gigantic billboards to remain.
Last month, NTA brought up the issue of royalty once again, telling UTL to pay up a sum of nearly NRS 900 million by April 28 or face the termination of its licence.
With Mahanagar Telephone Nigam and T e l e c o m m u n i c a t i o n s Consultants India being public sector undertakings, the issue was taken up strongly by Krishna when he visited Nepal on April 20-22.
On the very day of his arrival, Krishna raised the issue of the JV’s plight with Nepal’s Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Bharat Mohan Adhikari, who assured him the matter would be resolved “at an early date in accordance with the earlier understandings between the two governments”.
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