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MET: I assure you Qatar will see rain, possible thunderstorms today

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Waiting for rain

Ziad Hunesh/Flickr

Waiting for rain

Following a week of wet weather forecasts, Qatar’s Meteorology Department (MET) has once again warned residents that they may see possible thunderstorms and strong winds today.

The MET had been forecasting rain all week, but so far Qatar has only seen light drizzles in different parts of the country.

However, speaking to the Peninsula about the current outlook, forecaster Abdullah Al Mannai said:

“For today… I assure you, there are chances of scattered rains and all over. The rains will first lash central parts of the country and then spread.”

According to the MET, clouds are already moving over the country:

The overcast appearance of the sky also appears to indicate that we may actually see some rain today.

Earlier this week, Steff Gaulter, senior meteorologist at Al Jazeera English, told Doha News that the precipitation could be the last rain we see before a long dry summer.

As far as temperatures go, after a week of 40C and above, the winds today are expected to cool the high down to 36C (97F), and the low to 29C (84F).

Will rain affect your plans for the rest of the weekend? Thoughts?

(The post MET: I assure you Qatar will see rain, possible thunderstorms today is from Doha News.)


Travel search engine: Ticket fares from Qatar to Europe plunge 16%

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Qatar Airways

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Qatar residents flying to Europe have been spending an average of US$143 less for their summer flights than in 2014, but are still shelling out more than those flying from the UAE, new data shows.

Meanwhile, Doha travelers bound for the US are being forced to dig a little deeper into their pockets to pay for their plane tickets, after airfares inched up 3 percent over the last year.

That’s according to travel search engine Kayak, which analyzed search queries conducted through its website between January and April for travel in June in both 2014 and 2015 on its most frequent routes for Doha News.

It found that average airfares from Doha to Europe declined 16 percent from last year, from an average of $866 in 2014 to $743 in 2015.

While Kayak didn’t offer theories on what’s driving the decline, increased competition for travel to Europe may be one explanation.

Competition

Over the last year, Qatar Airways has added several new flights and more seats on several of its European routes.

Qatar Airways A380

Chantelle D'mello

Qatar Airways A380

That includes using bigger planes to fly to Milan, Venice and Rome, in addition to using the airline’s new double-decker Airbus A380s on flights to London and Paris.

Qatar Airways’ new direct service to Amsterdam, meanwhile, is scheduled to start operating next month.

Along with the additional competition, the decline in fares has also coincided with a steep drop in oil prices. Fuel typically represents a third or more of an airline’s operating expenses, according to Reuters.

Oil prices

In response to lower global oil prices, Qatar Airways CEO Akbar Al Baker said in January that the carrier would be scrapping its fuel surcharge, which made up nearly 18 percent of the total fare on a one-way ticket to London at the time.

However, no timeline was mentioned for eliminating the extra charge, which was still being levied on tickets this week.

And speaking at the Arabian Travel Market trade show in Dubai this week, Al Baker said the airline does not plan to cut fares.

“A lot of people think that because the oil price has dropped by 50 percent, so also our ticket prices should go down by 50 percent. They don’t realize that when the oil prices were high, our margins were absolutely eroded and we were in negative territory,” he said, according to Arabian Business.

Better deals for UAE residents

Like Qatar, fares between the UAE and Europe also declined 16 percent between June 2014 and June 2015, according to Kayak.

In absolute terms, however, it costs more to fly to Europe from Doha than the UAE, which is serviced by airlines such as Air France, Virgin Atlantic Airways, Austrian Airlines and several seasonal charters that do not operate at Hamad International Airport.

Hamad International Airport

Takahiro Hayashi/Flickr

Hamad International Airport

Kayak said the average fare between the UAE and Europe fell from $750 for travel in June 2014 to $620.

UAE residents are also now paying less for flights to the US. Average fares between the two countries declined to $1,442, down 14 percent from $1,680 in 2014.

Qatar residents headed to the US aren’t so lucky.

Fares from Doha to the US actually climbed to $1,612, up 3 percent from $1,578.

What trends are you seeing as you book your summer holidays? Thoughts?

(The post Travel search engine: Ticket fares from Qatar to Europe plunge 16% is from Doha News.)

Qatar expat moves into restaurant as he awaits exit papers

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For illustrative purposes only.

darkthirty / Flickr

For illustrative purposes only.

The Philippines embassy in Qatar has called upon a former restaurant owner to take responsibility for an employee who has been left homeless for the past eight months and is trying to leave the country.

The young Filipino man, who asked not to be named, is currently living in the Roti King at the Al Jazeera Petrol Station. The restaurant, which is undergoing renovations, has been his home since last September.

He told Doha News that he simply wants to return to his home country, preferably with the back pay that he says he’s owed.

“One day, my sponsor just said that he couldn’t provide me with any more accommodation or transport, so we had to live in a stockroom on the first floor of the restaurant. He told us that if Baladiya came, we had to lock the door, but that we could stay there for now,” he said.

Lekhwiya

Chantelle d'Mello

Lekhwiya

He added that he is not in possession of his passport and that his Qatar ID has expired. This leaves him vulnerable to being arrested if he’s stopped by the police and may create problems when he does eventually try to leave the country.

The Philippines embassy has “advised” the man’s sponsor to pay his employee his unpaid March salary, his end-of-service gratuity and “process his exit formalities.”

A spokesperson for the embassy told Doha News that it has not received any response to its letter, which was dated April 4. The spokesperson said he was waiting to discuss the situation with the man further before deciding on any additional action.

Contract swapped

The man said he came to Qatar in September 2012 under a contract seen by Doha News, to work for a cleaning and hospitality company. However, when he arrived in the country, the man said he was told that the company was not operating and that he’d work as a server at Roti King instead, despite holding a degree in restaurant management.

“I studied for four years, and to see where I’m working now. It’s sad. I didn’t work so hard to do this,” he said.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Business2community.com

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Along with being assigned a different job, the man said the QR1,500 monthly salary he was promised was reduced to QR1,000.

Contract substitution, where expats are promised a different salary and job in their home country than what awaits them in Qatar, is one of the most frequently documented issues by human rights advocates who study migrant rights.

This weekend, The Peninsula reported on the case of an expat who came to Qatar on a domestic cook’s visa, only to be forced to work on a livestock farm near the Saudi border.

Some expats have said they would not have come to Qatar if they knew how little money they’d actually be making, especially since many are forced to accumulate debts in their home country to pay illegal recruitment fees.

How to effectively police the issue from Qatar, however, is less than clear since many of the transgressions happen outside the country’s borders. Some labor-sending countries, such as Bangladesh, have responded by signing agreements with Qatar that force companies in this country to only hire nationals who are registered in a government database in their home country.

No way home

Despite the lower pay, the man said he continued to work at the restaurant to help support his family in the Philippines, where his father was undergoing dialysis treatment.

When his father passed away in April 2014, the man said he asked to return home and submitted a request for emergency leave. That was denied on the grounds that the restaurant was short-staffed, but the man said he was promised that he’d be allowed to take time off in January 2015.

He said he hasn’t left Qatar since arriving in 2012, despite being promised a free roundtrip ticket to Manila in his contract, which has since expired and not been renewed.

Even more serious problems emerged last fall when his sponsor told the man to vacate his accommodations near the Safari Hypermarket and relocate to the restaurant ahead of its sale to a new owner and closure for renovations.

The bed used by a former Roti King employee inside the restaurant, which is being renovated.

Submitted

The bed used by a former Roti King employee inside the restaurant, which is being renovated.

When Doha News visited Roti King on Thursday, the man’s pillows, mattress, clothes and cooking utensils were visible around the restaurant.

Cutlery and foodstuff were stored in a small dirt-laden room inside the bathroom, while an open stove was placed in the middle of what will be the restaurant’s seating area. Upstairs, the man’s thin mattress and pillow lay on a new marble floor.

He said that he’s occasionally able to shower and do laundry at a friend’s home and that he spends his days helping with the restaurant’s renovations, assisting and cleaning up after the construction contractors.

He said two of his coworkers found themselves in similar circumstances, but that one managed to transfer his sponsorship to the restaurant’s new owner.

However, the young Filipino man said he’s not interested in signing a new contract or remaining in Qatar after learning how the country’s sponsorship laws leave employees such as him at the mercy of their employer.

“All I want to do now is go back home,” he said.

Thoughts?

(The post Qatar expat moves into restaurant as he awaits exit papers is from Doha News.)

Report: Qatar hotels in for busy 2015, but room rates to remain low

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Damon Mcdonald

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Hotels in Qatar look set to have a relatively successful year, with occupancy rates for the rest of 2015 forecast to be the highest among its Gulf rivals, according to a new report.

Despite the high demand, room prices are expected to remain among the lowest in the region for the remainder of this year and through 2016, consulting and accountancy firm PwC said.

In its second annual hotel report for the Middle East, “Accommodating growth,” PwC noted that occupancy rates for Qatar hotels grew by 13.6 percent in 2014 over the previous year to stand at 73.8 percent, compared to just 65 percent in 2013.

Demand is expected to continue to rise this year and next year, albeit at a much slower rate, PwC said, adding that Qatar hotels will have the best occupancy rates among the six Gulf cities examined for the report: Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Muscat, Riyadh and Jeddah, as well as Doha.

What’s ahead

For 2015, it estimates that on average Doha hotels will be 77.9 percent full, showing a 5.5 percent increase on 2014.

Excerpt PwC Accommodating Growth 2015

PwC

Excerpt PwC Accommodating Growth 2015

Hotels in Dubai and Abu Dhabi are set to have occupancy rates of 77.4 percent and 77 percent respectively this year.

However, they will catch up in 2016 when hotels in all three cities are predicted to enjoy occupancy rates of 80.7 percent each. This equates to a rise of 3.7 percent for Doha hoteliers, the report said.

However, PwC cautioned hotels in the region that have previously based their business models on high occupancy rates.

“We’ve started to see some operators dropping their prices to maintain occupancy levels, and some may even be offering rooms at below break-even level. With over 54,000 rooms under construction and another 72,000 planned for the region, supply could well start to outstrip demand, putting ever greater pressure on both occupancy and ADR.

The key factor here will, of course, be tourist numbers. At present, visitor numbers are rising faster in the Middle East than in almost anywhere else in the world – Dubai, for example, is expecting to double its tourists over the next six to seven years. But if that proves over-optimistic, and growth slows or stagnates, operators may be forced to recalibrate their business model to reflect that new reality.”

In Qatar, average daily room rates remain one of the lowest of the cities studied for the report, although they are set to increase slightly this year and next.

Doha focus

PwC

Doha hotels’ performance

Last year, the report found that the ADR (average daily room rate) for Qatar hotels continued to decline for the sixth consecutive year, standing at US$181/night. This trend looks like it will change this year as rates gradually start to increase again.

The ADR forecast by PwC for 2015 shows a 1 percent growth to $183, while in 2016 it is predicted to rise to $184/night.

While heading in the right direction, it shows that hotel rooms in Qatar look likely to remain some of the cheapest in the region. Only Abu Dhabi hotels are predicted to have lower ADR, at $147 this year and $152 in 2016.

Expansion

While the report does not give detailed analysis behind the figures, it did highlight the fact that Qatar is expanding its hospitality sector, with 20 hotels and hotel apartments planned to open during this year alone, according to previously-issued figures by Qatar Tourism Authority.

This amounts to around 4,000 new hotel rooms, or an increase of 25 percent, which is significantly ahead of the 8.2 percent rise in visitor numbers Qatar enjoyed last year.

Under-construction Mondrian Doha Hotel

Ankita Menon

Under-construction Mondrian Doha Hotel

Qatar is planning to build approximately 80 new hotels and hotel apartments over the next five years as the country in advance of the surge of visitors expected during the 2022 World Cup.

Many analysts have warned that the country could face an oversupply of hotels, and in its report, PwC echoes this concern.

It said that a winter World Cup in 2022 may limit the number of families traveling to Qatar at the time, as school holidays are shorter than during the summer, when the tournament usually takes place.

“…The number of hotels now being built is likely to outstrip those required in Doha after the World Cup pending further work on legacy program and demand – the city currently has 16,000 rooms, but this is expected to rise to 60,000 by 2022. Already we see 722 recently opened rooms and almost 6,000 in construction.

The Qatari authorities may therefore face the challenge of what to do with all these rooms: stadiums can be dismantled, but hotels are tougher to re-purpose, and converting them to apartment blocks is expensive and  may simply shift the problem, by creating oversupply in housing, rather than hospitality,” the report states.

However, one of Qatar’s most prominent figures in hospitality has recently argued that he does not agree with the pessimistic forecast of analysts.

Alfardan Group president and CEO Omar Hussain Alfardan said in an interview with Oxford Business Group that he believes there will not be an oversupply of hotel rooms, Gulf Times reports.

He argued this will be in part due to the increasing number of high-profile international events the state is set to host in the coming years, including the World Athletics Championships in 2019.

“The market is still flexible enough to absorb new hotels and extra room keys, especially with Qatar scheduled to host international events.

“The property market will benefit from this event (World Athletics Championships), as more people coming to the country to watch the championships will boost demand for residential units and room keys,” he said.

Thoughts?

(The post Report: Qatar hotels in for busy 2015, but room rates to remain low is from Doha News.)

Customers return to Tea Time after driver crashes through window

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tea time crash tea time crash

Photos courtesy of Finayat on Twitter

A popular Tea Time shop near Ramada signal appears to be as busy as ever, despite an accident last night in which a Qatar resident crashed his car through the storefront’s window.

Speaking to Doha News, the karak shop’s manager said the incident happened around 11:30pm, when a customer left the restaurant, returned to his vehicle and accidentally accelerated forward instead of reversing his car.

The man was driving a Mitsubishi Lancer and was with his wife and child when the car ploughed about a meter into the shop, which is adjacent to the Jarir Bookstore plaza, witnesses said.

Tea Time

Peter Kovessy

Tea Time

No one was injured in the accident, and the customer was not arrested, the manager added.

This morning, all the broken glass appeared to have been swept away, and one of the large floor-to-ceiling windows was replaced with drywall and wooden boards.

Business appeared to be continuing normally, as several customers could be observed sitting inside the shop, while employees ran out to serve patrons in their cars.

Other crashes

While such car crashes are relatively rare in Qatar, they do appear to be happening more frequently and often gain a lot of public attention.

For example, in April, a car crashed into the front window of a Qatar Islamic Bank branch in Al Rayyan.

And in January, a shop worker sustained serious injuries after an SUV parked outside his Bin Omran store suddenly accelerated and drove into him, knocking him to the ground.

California Tortilla accident

IamRizk/Twitter

California Tortilla accident

Meanwhile, last February, a video of a silver sedan crashing through a Ferrari/Maserati showroom at the Pearl-Qatar went viral.

And a month before that, a large white SUV crashed into California Tortilla, shattering the restaurant’s front window and damaging a nearby car.

Such reckless driving incidents often spark renewed conversations about road safety in Qatar, where traffic accident are among the leading causes of death.

Thoughts?

(The post Customers return to Tea Time after driver crashes through window is from Doha News.)

Al Baker rules out US security pre-clearance for Qatar’s Hamad airport

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hia19

Hamad International Airport

Citing potential flight delays, Qatar Airways‘ CEO has said the airline is scrapping plans to adopt pre-clearance security procedures for passengers flying to the US through Hamad International Airport (HIA).

Akbar Al Baker ruled out establishing the system while speaking at last week’s Arabian Travel Market in Dubai, Arabian Business reports.

The idea behind the pre-clearance system is to enable passengers traveling to the US to finish customs procedures before boarding their flight, so they can avoid long queues when they arrive at their destination.

So far, the system is operational in just three cities outside of North America – Abu Dhabi, and Dublin and Shannon in Ireland.

Last year, Al Baker said that he was in talks with US authorities to establish the procedure at HIA as the airline expanded its service into America. A Qatar Airways spokesperson declined to comment to Doha News on the status of the carrier’s application for pre-clearance permissions.

Akbar Al Baker

Qatar Airways

Akbar Al Baker

But the CEO appears to have had a change of heart in any case, saying apparent delays incurred by rival Etihad in Abu Dhabi was one of a number of reasons Qatar Airways decided not to introduce the measures.

“I will not have pre-clearance in Doha and from what I know, Dubai will not have that,” he is quoted as saying.

The official added that he would prefer a smooth transition in Doha and that as an airline, his duty is to get passengers to their destinations on time, as “What happens there in the immigration is not my problem.”

He continued:

 “If I start doing pre-clearance in Doha and my aircraft constantly arrives late into the US, which is happening now with Etihad, I’m obliged to provide accommodation to my customers who misconnect, because they never asked us to pre-clear.

This is something we generated, so I would rather take the passenger on time to their destination and then what happens in immigration and customs is not my problem. I don’t want to create another confusion or delay by pre-clearing passengers.”

Delays

When Abu Dhabi airport adopted the procedures in January last year, the US-based Air Line Pilots Association, which has 50,000 members, protested at what they said amounted to an unfair advantage for the state-backed Gulf carriers over their competitors, the Wall Street Journal said.

Abu Dhabi airport

Alain Bourgoise/Flickr

Abu Dhabi airport

Since then, passengers have complained of enduring long delays.

Last May, UAE newspaper The National reported that there were plans to bring in new systems to improve efficiency. But months later, frequent fliers were still blogging about long queues.

In the blog Onemileatatime, Lucky described the facility as a “disaster,” saying it added time to the journey instead of shortening it.

And last November, Forbes quoted from FlightStats.com showing that in the previous two months, only 1 percent of flights from Abu Dhabi to Los Angeles arrived on time, with average delays of one hour. Meanwhile, only 10 percent of Etihad flights arrived on time between Abu Dhabi and Chicago.

The report quoted an unnamed source as saying that the delays were due almost entirely to queues at the pre-clearance facility.

HIA figures

Meanwhile, traffic at HIA continues to grow at a rapid clip. According to newly released passenger figures, a total of 7.3 million passengers passed through the airport in the first three months of this year – up 17 percent on the passenger numbers for the same period last year at Doha International Airport.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Jiseon Shin/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

January was the busiest month this year so far for travel, with 2,589,403 passengers departing, arriving and transiting through the airport. There were 2,285,221 passengers in February; and 2,485,684 for the month of March, HIA said.

HIA’s Chief Operating Officer Badr Mohammed Al Meer added that the airport is already gearing up to cope with a significant spike in travelers during the busy summer months, saying “HIA is fully prepared for the rise in aircraft movements and passenger traffic expected during the summer.”

As passenger traffic increases, the airport recently introduced parking fees for its long-term parking lot, which was previously free. It now costs QR45/day to park in the lot.

Thoughts?

(The post Al Baker rules out US security pre-clearance for Qatar’s Hamad airport is from Doha News.)

Donations sought after hundreds displaced in Qatar labor camp fire

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Friday's fire in the Industrial Area

Ijaz Khan

Friday’s fire in the Industrial Area

Volunteers in Qatar are appealing for food and clothing donations after a massive fire ripped through a labor camp in Sailiya on Friday, sending more than 400 expats fleeing to safety with little more than the clothes on their back.

Most of the men, who were primarily from Sri Lanka and Nepal, appear to have escaped without serious injuries.

Several sources, including a spokesperson from the Sri Lankan embassy in Qatar, told Doha News that no one was killed in the fire.

However, there have been unconfirmed reports that two men from Bangladesh died in the fire.

The cause of the blaze, which broke out in Sailiya camp 19 between 11am and 11:30am on Friday, is still under investigation. But one of the men living there told Doha News that it was sparked by an electrical fault.

Safety questions

He said he suspected the circuit was overloaded on Friday as most of the camp’s residents had the day off and “everyone was using power.”

He added that there were signs of problems before the fire as an electrical box had shorted out two days earlier.

After a camp supervisor was notified, an electrician was dispatched to inspect the problem. But he left without performing any repairs and said he’d return later to fix it, the man said.

“There was no fire safety,” he told Doha News, adding that most rooms housed between six and eight men.

Most of the men worked for Group Seven, which employees said contracts workers to clean and serve drinks in offices around Qatar. The company could not immediately be reached for comment.

Employees from several smaller firms were also said to be living in the same labor camp.

In the aftermath of the fire, the men were moved to temporary housing on Street 38 in the Industrial Area before being shifted again late last night to a new labor camp in Al Shahaniya in central Qatar.

Word of the fire had spread throughout Qatar’s Sri Lankan community by Saturday morning, said Hazim Hamza, one of the volunteers collecting donations for the men.

“They’ve lost (everything). All they have are the clothes they were wearing when they ran out,” he told Doha News.

He said the most pressing need is for dry food, toiletries and clothing, all of which can be dropped off at the Stafford Sri Lankan School off Salwa Road, near the Midmac Flyover.

What’s next

Speaking to Doha News, a spokesperson from the Sri Lankan embassy said he was going to the men’s new camp today to supervise the distribution of the expats’ April salary. He added that the employer had also promised a QR200 payment as compensation for their hardship.

He said that he is encouraging the men to return to work tomorrow, saying that fires can happen in any country.

“It’s a normal thing,” the spokesperson said. “They came here to work and earn money for their family.”

Friday's fire in the Industrial Area

via Hazim Hamza

Friday’s fire in the Industrial Area

However, one of the workers said some of the men involved are still on edge and want to return to Sri Lanka as they don’t trust the safety standards in Qatar.

The spokesperson said that while he never visited the Sailiya camp that caught fire, the embassy has inspected and approved the new accommodation, which he said included a fire extinguisher for every block.

Hamza described the new camp as “liveable.” He said he was thankful that casualties were minimized in this fire, but said the incident is nevertheless a reminder that some workers’ housing in Qatar is substandard.

“It should be a lesson for all other companies that house laborers (to ensure) all safety measures are in place,” he said.

Thoughts?

(The post Donations sought after hundreds displaced in Qatar labor camp fire is from Doha News.)

Closing argument date scheduled for Qatar’s Villaggio Mall fire appeal

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Villaggio Mall

Omar Chatriwala

Villaggio Mall

After months of delays, attorneys representing five people sentenced to jail after the deadly 2012 Villaggio Mall fire have dropped requests to call more witnesses and asked to present their closing arguments before Ramadan in June.

The move followed an outburst in court yesterday by a defense lawyer after the judge ordered him to limit the scope of his questions to keep the pace of the proceedings moving briskly.

Appeals court

Shabina S. Khatri

Appeals court

Sunday’s hearing took place nearly three weeks after Qatar’s Emir reportedly told the prime minister of New Zealand that he is “utterly committed to making sure those who are responsible will be held to account” for the deadly fire.

May 28 marks the third anniversary of the blaze, in which 19 people died, including two-year-old triplets from New Zealand, after being trapped inside the mall’s Gympanzee daycare center.

No explanation was given during the hearing for the abrupt change of pace in the proceedings. However, international legal experts have previously argued that Qatar’s justice system is susceptible to political influence.

Reaction

Yesterday’s session sparked mixed reactions from the family members of those who died in the fire. Many have previously expressed frustration with the slow-moving appeals process, which began in November 2013 following the criminal conviction of five individuals for involuntary manslaughter.

“I am content that the final arguments are scheduled to begin in less than a month,” Abdelmasseih Antonios, who lost his two-year-old daughter Evana, told Doha News. “This was a very pleasant surprise. I just hope that a verdict will be passed before the court recess, so we don’t have to wait until September.”

Others, however, said the previous delays had already tarnished the proceedings.

Louie Aban with his late wife and son, who now lives in the Philippines.

Louie Aban

Louie Aban with his late wife and son, who now lives in the Philippines.

“The fact that the trial is finally starting to move quickly does not make me happy,” said Louie Aban, whose wife was an accountant at Gympanzee.

“I am already very angry for having had to wait for almost two years for the Court of Appeal to make a decision … I just want to see the people responsible for (my) little boy losing his mother and me losing the love my life punished.”

Witness testimony

The three witnesses called Sunday all provided testimony that had largely been heard during the criminal trial.

A fire expert from the Ministry of Interior’s criminal laboratory said the fire started in a ceiling light fixture on the mezzanine level of a Nike store inside Villaggio. However, due to the extensive fire damage, he could not pinpoint a specific cause beyond determining that it was an electrical defect.

Villaggio Mall

Gadget Dan / Flickr

Villaggio Mall

His testimony was followed by a Civil Defense lieutenant who prepared an internal report in 2008 for his superiors that noted the decorations inside Villaggio were made in part from materials that may be flammable.

He also noted in his report that mall officials had not responded to his request made months earlier for engineering and architectural documents related to the shopping center’s windows, ceilings and decorations.

The defense lawyer representing Villaggio’s owner attempted to start his questioning by asking the witness about his credentials and how long he’s worked for Civil Defense, but was instructed by the judge to focus on the 2008 report.

Taken aback, the lawyer asked that the judge’s directions be noted in the official record of proceedings so “when it is time for this trial to go to the Court of Cassation, it can see that the appeal court was unjust.”

Those comments didn’t sit well with the prosecutor.

“This defense attorney is terrorizing the court and threatening to take the case to the Court of Cassation,” he said. “This is unacceptable.”

The judge ultimately allowed the lawyer to proceed with his line of questioning after getting in a shot of his own, saying the lawyer’s threat to take the matter to the Court of Cassation suggests “the lawyer does not trust his own ability to argue the defendant’s case.”

Nursery or play area?

The final witness to appear Sunday was a woman who used to take her children to Gympanzee prior to the fire.

She was called by the defense lawyer representing Gympanzee’s owners, who is trying to prove that the facility was a play area for children rather than a nursery.

Children's artwork at Gympanzee

Gympanzee/Facebook

Children\’s artwork at Gympanzee

The distinction is important, parents of the children who died in the fire have said, because if Civil Defense officials had known children were inside when the fire first broke out, they could have worked to get them out more quickly.

The witness said she took her children to Gympanzee for birthday parties, arts and crafts activities as well as for short-term babysitting while she shopped in the mall.

“For me, it was an entertainment center,” she said in response to a judge’s question.

However, the prosecutor challenged the credibility of the witness by noting that she had attended previous court sessions as a friend of Gympanzee’s co-owner, Iman Al-Kuwari. The prosecutor made a similar claim during the lower court hearing.

After missing several recent sessions, Al-Kuwari was present for Sunday’s hearing. Her husband, who is also Qatar’s ambassador to Belgium and also faces jail time for involuntary manslaughter, once again was not present for the court session.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

UAA Justice Center For Students

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

His lawyer has previously explained his absence by saying his job duties prevented him from attended. On Sunday, however, he said his client was unable to fly for medical reasons.

The prosecutor and the defense attorney representing Villaggio’s owner are scheduled to give their closing arguments on June 7.

They will be followed on June 15 – days before Ramadan begins – by the defense attorneys representing Gympanzee’s co-owners, the mall’s manager and an employee of the Ministry of Business and Trade who gave Gympanzee its permit.

It is not clear when a verdict will be issued. Legal sources said the Court of Appeal would likely begin its summer break at the end of June.

Thoughts?

(The post Closing argument date scheduled for Qatar’s Villaggio Mall fire appeal is from Doha News.)


Qatar Airways drops prices for pets traveling to most locations (updated)

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Stray Saluki dog in Qatar

Dogs in Doha/Facebook

Stray Saluki dog in Qatar

This story has been updated to reflect that the previously reported steep price hikes were the result of a currency conversion error on Qatar Airways site.

An apparent five-fold increase in the cost of flying pets from Doha to the Americas by Qatar Airways was in fact an “exchange rate error” and the price has gone up by hundreds, not thousands of riyals, the airline has said.

Meanwhile, the pricing scheme to travel with animals in other parts of the world dropped significantly.

Yesterday and earlier today, updated information posted on the airline’s website showed that the cost of transporting a large animal in the hold, such as a dog weighing between 25kg and 32kg from Qatar to the Americas, as well as Japan, Australia and Korea, had increased from around QR900 to QR4,500.

This spurred concern from animal lovers that more dogs and cats would be dumped on the streets of Qatar this summer by residents unwilling or unable to pay the fees.

Pet lovers due to fly with animals told Doha News that they had not been contacted by Qatar Airways to tell them about the fee increases, and only discovered the new prices while searching for information online.

Later this afternoon, the prices on Qatar Airways’ website changed, and a spokesman for the airline told Doha News that there had been an “exchange rate calculation error.”

In a statement, he said:

“The published prices were correct in USD, but an exchange rate calculation error meant the QAR prices were incorrectly showing. However, this has now been rectified and the new discounted prices are showing in both currencies.”

Under the latest pricing structure, this means that costs for sending pets to the Americas have increased nearly 40 percent, now standing at QR920 for a small animal (up to 15kg), QR1,100 for a pet up to 25kg and QR1,280 for a large pet, up to a maximum weight of 32kg.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Wikicommons

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Previously, the cost for sending a large dog to the US was around QR900, animal experts and volunteers told Doha News.

The spokesman added that the airline had recently revised its costs for flying animals in the hold, and made it simpler and more standard internationally.

Previously it had different ways of working out the cost, with animals heading for the Americas priced on a flat rate, while destinations in the rest of the world were measured by weight.

Meanwhile, under the new system, the cost for many pets traveling to destinations outside of the Americas has been reduced, the spokesman said.

“As part of this new structure, nine of the original 10 categories have had their prices reduced by between 25% and 40% – for example, shipping a 25kg pet to Australia previously cost QAR4,500. Now it will cost QAR2,700. Similarly, shipping a 32kg pet to Africa, Europe or the Far East previously cost QAR3,200 – now it will cost QAR2,500.

“The only increase is for pets traveling to the US, where the previous flat rate has been replaced by the new pricing structure to bring it into line with our overall global rates,” he added.

Abandoned pets

As summer approaches, many pet owners traditionally take their animals with them when they go on vacation. It is also a time when lots of residents who repatriate or move abroad to new postings travel with animals.

QAWS shelter

Chantelle D'mello

QAWS shelter

However, pet experts in Qatar had expressed concern that higher prices would discourage residents from exporting their pets, and choose to abandon them instead.

Stray animals, particularly cats and dogs, are a significant and ongoing issue in Qatar. Many volunteer groups have stepped in to provide foster care and shelters for them, but all appear to be operating at capacity and have said they cannot cope with taking in more abandoned pets.

Animal relocation expert Nicky Roffey, who runs the company Qatar Pet Travel, said that other airlines operating through Doha charge more moderate costs for animal travel.

For example, an initial online search of the cost of flying an animal in the hold on KLM from Doha to Houston showed a price of US$200 (approximately QR728) for a pet weighing up to 75kg.

Thoughts?

(The post Qatar Airways drops prices for pets traveling to most locations (updated) is from Doha News.)

Community urges restraint after man attacked for alleged religious insult

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Flag of India for illustrative purposes only.

Wallpaper

Flag of India for illustrative purposes only.

Qatar government and Indian community officials have called for calm after a weekend incident at Safari Mall in which a young man was attacked by a crowd of angry shoppers for allegedly insulting Islam.

Representatives of both groups met during an emergency meeting yesterday to discuss what happened.

Though no official account of the attack has been shared by authorities, video footage taken over the weekend shows a crowd of at least a hundred men gathered around someone crouching against a wall.

Several people can be observed shouting, hitting and punching the person, while a few others try to fend the crowd. Many on the scene were filming the attack.

According to community leaders, the young man has been hospitalized.

Mob mentality

Speaking to Doha News, an Indian expat said the victim was alleged to have posted inflammatory comments in Malayalam about Islam and the Prophet Muhammad.

When he was spotted at the mall, several people accosted him and began questioning him about the posts, Niyas Yusuf said.

Yusuf, who wrote an open letter to Qatar’s Indian community denouncing the attack, added:

“What he did is completely wrong but such acts of mob attack in name of religion should not be encouraged. (It was) just horrible (in a) way which never happened here before and should not happen again.”

Qatar’s Ministry of Interior and community leaders echoed that sentiment, urging residents not to take the law into their own hands.

Girish Kumar, the president of the Indian Cultural Center in Qatar, told Doha News:

“The government has some serious concerns… The message is that no one should, under any circumstances, intervene (in this manner).

The public should not punish someone… Instead, issues should be reported immediately to the authorities.”

Following yesterday’s meeting, which was organized by the Indian embassy and included representatives of several community groups and government officials, Kumar said the MOI may launch an investigation into the individuals who assaulted the man.

He added that it was unclear whether the victim was actually the person responsible for posting any inflammatory material online.

The community leader also denounced both the online insults and subsequent assault, calling on expatriates here to respect the rules of their host nation:

“Qatar is such a great country… (and itoffers) vibrant cultural platforms for all communities and expats.

We need to have strong, peaceful harmony.”

Treading carefully online

According to a US State Department report on religion in Qatar, insulting certain faiths here is punishable by up to seven years in prison.

For illustrative purposes only.

Article3

For illustrative purposes only.

That includes defaming, desecrating, or committing blasphemy against Islam, Christianity or Judaism. Additionally, the law stipulates a one-year prison term or a fine of QR1,000 ($275) for producing or circulating material containing slogans, images, or symbols defaming those three religions.

More generally, Qatar’s new cybercrime law has also made it illegal for residents to create and share online content that’s deemed harmful to the country’s “social values” or “general order.”

The law’s passage has prompted many to tread more carefully on social media, though this weekend’s incident is not the first time that Facebook comments have landed a Qatar resident in hot water.

In February, a teacher at an Indian school here resigned after sharing an inflammatory cartoon of the Indian prime minister Narendra Modi on her Facebook page.

Though her actions were not technically illegal, some parents objected to her post, and called the MES Indian School to complain, eventually resulting in her ousting.

Thoughts?

(The post Community urges restraint after man attacked for alleged religious insult is from Doha News.)

Marmara Istanbul staffers sentenced to jail in Doha food poisoning case

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Marmara Istanbul during October 2014 closure.

Elysia Windrum

Marmara Istanbul during October 2014 closure.

A Doha court has found a popular Turkish restaurant and five of its employees guilty of selling food unfit for human consumption and ordered the individuals to be jailed, fined and deported.

In a rare move, the Court of Environmental Misdemeanors also ordered that its verdict be published in Al Raya at the expense of the convicted individuals.

Marmara Istanbul

Elysia Windrum

Marmara Istanbul

The conviction stems from an October 2014 incident in which several residents became ill after eating at the Bin Omran branch of fast-food restaurant Marmara Istanbul.

That includes a woman who was seven months pregnant and, after experiencing severe abdominal pain, had to be rushed to hospital and gave birth prematurely.

The woman’s husband and two other children who ate at the restaurant also sought medical treatment after experiencing “intense” nausea followed by diarrhea.

Following the incident, the Ministry of Municipality and Urban Planning (MMUP) ordered the eatery to close for some two months after inspecting its facilities.

At the time, the ministry published photos of what appeared to be dirty and moldy chopping boards, unclean worktops, BBQ grills blackened with caked-on food deposits and food lying around the surfaces.

The restaurant, which is located near TV Roundabout, has since reopened.

Sentence details

The convicted individuals, who had all pled not guilty, include:

  • The restaurant manager, who was ordered to spend three months in jail and pay a fine of QR10,000;
  • Three employees were ordered to spend a month in jail and a pay a QR7,000 fine; and
  • Another employee responsible for obtaining health certification was given a harsher sentence totaling a month in jail and a fine of QR8,000.

All will be deported after serving their sentence. Additionally, the restaurant was fined QR32,000 and ordered to shut down for a further three months.

The defendants remain out of jail for now pending their appeal. It is not clear whether the closure is also dependent upon that outcome.

An image taken by inspectors of Marmara Istanbul.

Baladiya

An image taken by inspectors of Marmara Istanbul.

During the trial, which got underway last November, the court heard that inspectors from the Supreme Council of Health analyzed 41 food samples as well as swabs of surfaces inside the restaurant.

While most of the swabs came back negative, a half-dozen samples – including rice, corn salad, green salad, tabouleh, hummus and mayonnaise – tested positive for harmful levels of bacteria.

However, the samples were not taken until two days after the illnesses were reported.

While the apparent time gap was never explained during the trial, one of the lab technicians who took the swabs said the restaurant had been “cleaned up to perfection” by the time he arrived, according to his supervisor who testified during the trial.

Meanwhile, a defense lawyer told Doha News that the delay in testing meant any bacteria found on the food could have developed after it was removed from the restaurant. He repeated that argument outside court today.

An image taken by inspectors of Marmara Istanbul.

Baladiya

An image taken by inspectors of Marmara Istanbul.

The individuals and restaurant were convicted under a law that was amended in February 2014 to stiffen penalties for restaurants and food outlets caught breaching health and safety laws.

The trial also comes amid a push by the MMUP to further crack down on entries violating food regulations. That includes naming and shaming offenders by publicizing its enforcement actions against eateries.

All of the convicted individuals declined to comment after today’s verdict was read out, but their attorney said he will appeal the judgment in the next few weeks.

Thoughts?

(The post Marmara Istanbul staffers sentenced to jail in Doha food poisoning case is from Doha News.)

Ashghal upgrades roads around Qatar National Museum ahead of 2016 launch

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Under-construction National Museum (in 2014)

Damon McDonald/Flickr

Under-construction National Museum (in 2014)

The roads around the under-construction National Museum of Qatar have been redeveloped and widened to improve traffic flow and ease some of the congestion on the Corniche, the nation’s public works authority has said.

The work comes ahead of the tentative 2016 opening of the museum, which is located near the junction of the Corniche and Ras Abou Aboud Street.

Under the QR79 million redevelopment project, which is part of Ashghal’s local roads and drainage program, the surrounding roads were widened from one lane to two lanes in each direction and new entrances and exits to the museum have been created.

Redeveloped roads around National Museum of Qatar

Ashghal

Redeveloped roads around National Museum of Qatar

Additional street lighting, pedestrian crossings and cycle paths have also been added to the nearby roads, and utilities such as electricity, telecommunications lines and drinking water have been upgraded, Ashghal said in a statement.

A wastewater system has also been added, which will harvest storm water for use in irrigation, as landscaping works in the surrounding area is ongoing.

Last summer, a spokesperson for Qatar Museums said the National Museum is expected to open in 2016.

Museum progress

Once construction on the museum’s structure is complete, a further six months are needed for cement “off-gassing,” which allows for the release of emissions trapped in the structure. Fit-out of the interior would take a further year, a spokesperson previously told Doha News.

The 40,000 sq meter structure was designed by renowned French architect Jean Nouvel to resemble a desert rose growing out of the ground.

Rendering of National Museum

QMA

Rendering of National Museum

When complete, it will include 8,000 sq meters of permanent exhibition space and a further 2,000 sq meters for temporary, rotating exhibitions. There will also be two cafes, a restaurant, a shop and research laboratories, according to details on the architect’s firm’s website.

QM has previously said that the facility would represent the “past, present and future of Qatar.”

Speaking earlier this year at Georgetown University in Qatar, QM Chairperson Sheikha Al Mayassa bint Hamad Al Thani said that part of the museum’s remit would be to capture some of the oral history of Qatar, which has not previously been written down, Gulf Times reported.

The museum also previously said it would accept donations of items for display from members of the community.

Last summer, it announced that its collection would include pieces of jewelry donated by Sheikha Maryam bint Mohammed bin Hamad Al Thani on behalf of her late sister,  Sheikha Aisha bint Mohammed bin Hamad Al Thani, who died last year.

Thoughts?

(The post Ashghal upgrades roads around Qatar National Museum ahead of 2016 launch is from Doha News.)

Fire at Qatar Foundation continues to smolder 12 hours later

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Fire at Qatar Foundation

Peter Kovessy

Fire at Qatar Foundation

With reporting from Lesley Walker and Marium Saeed

An overnight fire has ripped through a construction office property on the western edge of Education City, destroying several buildings.

Officials say no one was injured in the blaze, which started at approximately 11:20pm on Monday evening. The cause is being investigated.

The site, located near Education City’s gate 15, was used by project management firm Astad.

This morning, Civil Defense firefighters appeared to still be working to completely extinguish the fire, as it continued to emit thick smoke that was clearly visible from other parts of campus.

Water tankers could be seen arriving on the site alongside additional firefighters and police officers.

Fire at Qatar Foundation

Marium Saeed

Fire at Qatar Foundation

The property appeared to house several low-rise buildings that were badly damaged in the fire. Many of the building’s metal roofs appeared warped and the steel supports buckled.

In a statement, Qatar Foundation said the building was empty when the fire started. Civil Defense brought the blaze under control, and a joint investigation is being carried out to determine how the fire started.

The company has been involved in more than a dozen projects in the vicinity, including the Qatar National Convention Center, Qatar Science and Technology Park, the Sidra Medical Research Center as well as several Education City buildings such as Texas A&M University, Georgetown University, Northwestern University and the Student Center, among others.

Speaking to Doha News, an Astad spokesperson said the company has a business continuity plan and would be able to relocate its operations “with minimal disruption.”

Last night’s blaze comes at the start of the so-called “busy fire season.”

During the hot summer months, the outbreak of fires are far more common here as electricity consumption skyrockets, leading to more short circuits, officials have previously said.

Did you see last night’s blaze? Thoughts?

(The post Fire at Qatar Foundation continues to smolder 12 hours later is from Doha News.)

Survey: Qatar salaries not keeping up with increasing living costs

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Omar Chatriwala

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Many employees working in Qatar believe their pay is failing to keep pace with ongoing increases in the cost of living, according to the results of a recent regional survey of workers’ salaries.

While a slim majority of expats still say they’re better off living and working in Qatar than their home countries, human resources experts say local employers need to address the perceived compensation gap if they want to recruit and retain talented professionals.

The latest study of salaries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) by online recruitment company Bayt.com and market research agency YouGov found that 85 percent of Qatar respondents said they felt the cost of living in this country rose during 2014.

However, more than a third (38 percent) said they did not get any increase in their salaries during the year to compensate.

Of those who felt their daily costs had gone up last year, more than a quarter (27 percent) said their expenses had increased by more than 20 percent.

Higher rent, food and utility bills were the key reasons for the increased costs, respondents said.

Excerpt from 2015 MENA salaries survey

Bayt.com

Excerpt from 2015 MENA salaries survey

Looking ahead, 80 percent of Qatar employees predicted their living costs would keep rising throughout this year, compared to slightly more than half (55 percent) who expected to receive a salary raise during the same period.

Residents across the Gulf appear to be expecting a more expensive year ahead, though not to the same extent as those in Qatar. The percentage of respondents in nearby nations who also forecast increased living costs in 2015 were:

  • Kuwait (80 percent);
  • UAE (79 percent);
  • Oman (77 percent);
  • Saudi Arabia (75 percent); and
  • Bahrain (71 percent).

Citing reasons for their static salaries, 21 percent said it was due to “poor corporate performance and decreased profitability of their company” while nearly a quarter (24 percent) attributed it to a “bad economy,” the survey found.

Economic impact

Falling global oil prices have affected companies in Qatar, particularly in the energy sector where some firms are reining in non-essential spending, laying off staff or implementing hiring freezes.

Meanwhile, Qatar’s cost of living keeps climbing, mainly due to increases in residential rent as the nation’s growing hospitality, healthcare and construction sectors fuel demand for housing.

Real estate experts previously told Doha News that the supply of quality housing is not keeping up with need, meaning residential rent is expected to continue climbing at a rate of 5 to 10 percent throughout 2015.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Patrick Gage/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

According to Bayt.com, higher living costs appeared to have had an impact on some employees’ savings, with nearly a fifth of Qatar respondents admitting they saved nothing from their monthly salaries last year.

However this is less than the regional average, where nearly a third (32 percent) said they saved nothing during 2014.

In contrast, nearly three-quarters (74 percent) of people working in Qatar said they managed to send some money home last month, and more than half of all respondents (53 percent) said they were better off in Qatar in terms of their quality of life than they would be if they were working and living in their home countries.

Suhail Al-Masri, vice-president of sales for Bayt.com, said the survey findings showed “a growing gap between the cost of living in Qatar and salary earnings and propensity to save.”

In a statement, he added:

“Most respondents (79 per cent) from across the Middle East and North Africa region are expecting a further increase in the cost of living in 2015. This means that employers must quickly address this widening disparity if they want to effectively tap into the local and regional talent pool.”

Data for the latest Bayt.com survey was collected online from March 30 to April 6. Results were based on a sample of 12,158 respondents from the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Bahrain, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Egypt, Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia.

Are you expecting a raise this year? Thoughts?

(The post Survey: Qatar salaries not keeping up with increasing living costs is from Doha News.)

Australia announces plans to open embassy in Qatar

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Lachlan Fearnley/Wikicommons

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

The Australian government has said it will open its first diplomatic office in Qatar in an effort to simplify the lives of the thousands of its citizens living here, as well as build upon the QR3.48 billion (A$1.2 billion) trading relationship.

The announcement was contained in Australia’s federal budget, which allocated QR285.44 million (A$98.3 million) to open new overseas missions in Qatar, Papua New Guinea, Indonesia, Mongolia and Thailand.

Pablo Kang

Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade

Pablo Kang

No timeline or location has been set for the new embassy, but officials said they expect the budgeted amount to be spent by the end of the government’s fiscal year in June 2016.

There are some 4,500 to 5,000 Australian expats living in Qatar, primarily working in professional fields including healthcare, education and construction management.

Currently, they receive consular service from the Australian embassy in Abu Dhabi and its ambassador, Pablo Kang, who also represents his country in Qatar.

Speaking to Doha News by phone today, Kang said:

“It’s a very welcome announcement … (that) reflects a growing bilateral relationship that we have with Qatar.”

Rachel Morris, who chairs the Qatar Australia New Zealand Business Association in Doha, said the community has been well-served by its representatives in the UAE, which regularly visited Qatar to hold passport clinics and attest documents.

However, she said having an embassy in Doha would offer logistical relief to many Australians in Qatar.

“We get a lot of questions on how one renews a passport … It’s a really exciting time because so many of us have been waiting for it,” Morris said.

Business and trade

The presence of an embassy is often viewed as a way of boosting trade between two countries.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

James Good / Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Australia sent more than QR1.48 billion (A$502 million) in goods to Qatar in 2013, an increase of nearly 1 percent over the previous year, according to that country’s government. Its exports to Qatar are dominated by live animals, motor vehicles, meat and wheat.

But its imports from from Qatar are growing at a faster pace, adding up to more than QR2.1 billion (A$724 million) in 2013, which was up nearly 12 percent over the previous year and consisted almost entirely of LNG products and fertilizers.

This country’s sovereign wealth fund, the Qatar Investment Authority, is also active in Australia. It has invested in Australia’s wheat, barley and other grain-producing farms, as well as sheep properties, in support of Qatar’s food security strategy.

Several Australian companies have a notable presence in Qatar, including engineering firm GHD and office provider Servecorp.

The country’s keenness to boost ties with the region was on display last month when Andrew Robb, Australia’s trade and investment minister, visited Qatar and several other Gulf states.

Before he departed Australia, Robb said in a statement he would use his visit to push for the resumption of free trade negotiations with the GCC.

“This will be my third visit to the Gulf in 12 months, which indicates the priority Australia places on further deepening trade and investment links with this dynamic region,” Robb stated.

Morris told Doha News that she was asked by Robb what the biggest barrier was for Australia to expand its business relationship with Qatar.

“The lack of an embassy,” Morris replied. “Having an embassy here is very important. It shows that Australia takes its relationship with Qatar very seriously.”

Thoughts?

(The post Australia announces plans to open embassy in Qatar is from Doha News.)


Children’s mini-city to open in Mall of Qatar in early 2016

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KidzMondo at Mall of Qatar

Mall of Qatar

KidzMondo at Mall of Qatar

With reporting from Peter Kovessy

A miniature city where children would be able to “work” as pilots, doctors or firefighters will be one of the key family attractions at Mall of Qatar when it opens its doors slightly later than planned in early 2016, its operators have announced.

The $824 million (QR3 billion) under-construction mall, situated west of Education City on the Dukhan Highway, has signed a deal with Lebanon-based Kidz Holding to bring children’s center KidzMondo to Doha.

The child-friendly $25 million (QR91 million) project will feature more than 70 scaled-down businesses in an 8,000 sq meter, two-story complex designed to resemble a town, including a central plaza, fire station, clock tower, police station and hospital theater.

KidzMondo at Mall of Qatar

Mall of Qatar

KidzMondo at Mall of Qatar

Children between the ages of two and 14 years old would be able to act out a variety of everyday jobs as well as some of the roles in space, technology or energy which might exist in the future. Supervised by staff, they can earn a salary in the complex’s dedicated currency, and use it to shop in some of the on-site stores.

Design of the mini-businesses is in the final stages and the play center is already under construction, Mall of Qatar said in a statement announcing the deal.

“We feel that allowing children to immerse themselves in a miniature version of the world around them will spark their imagination in a fun and interactive way,” Mall of Qatar’s Managing Director Shem Krey said.

For several of the massive shopping centers popping up in Qatar, such attractions are being seen as critical, with operators branding their ventures as retail, leisure and entertainment destinations.

The quality of the offerings is also being seen as a way for malls to differentiate themselves in a market that’s expected to have an oversupply of retail space in the coming years.

Kidz Holding already runs similar franchises throughout the region, including the UAE, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt. The Doha play center aims to attract 300,000 visitors in its first year, the company said on its website.

The concept of educational and role-play focused children’s entertainment centers is becoming increasingly popular internationally and similar facilities in the region are already established, such as a branch of KidZania in Dubai Mall.

Rivals

The KidzMondo center fills the void left after Mall of Qatar parted ways with an operator previously named to run the shopping center’s entertainment area.

Last year, the mall unveiled plans to open a Juniverse family entertainment zone, which was to include an Angry Birds theme park and Virtuosity, an e-gaming zone for teenagers and young adults.

However, in a surprise announcement earlier this year, rival shopping center Doha Festival City – which is also currently under construction – said it would be the home of Juniverse instead.

Separately, Mall of Qatar’s operators appear to have pushed back their opening date from the previously-announced fall of this year to “early 2016.” When it does launch to the public, it will be around one-third larger than Villaggio Mall and will be – briefly – Qatar’ biggest shopping complex until DFC opens next fall.

 Mall of Qatar

Mall of Qatar

Mall of Qatar

Mall of Qatar will have 195,000 sq meters of store space and more than 500 shops. The mall will also feature a 19-screen IMAX cinema, as well as a five-star fashion-themed hotel, the newly launched Curio by Hilton. Neither the mall or hotel will be licensed to serve alcohol.

There will also be a theater in an eight-story central glassed dome, with a resident performance troupe who will put on three or four shows daily on a circular stage. In a style similar to Cirque du Soliel, performers in bright circus-style costumes will combine acrobatics, tricks and traditional theater.

Place Vendôme

Meanwhile, another mega-mall under construction in Qatar has revealed the first component of its entertainment zone.

Place Vendôme - Lusail

United Developers

Place Vendôme – Lusail

Sean Kelly, the project director for Place Vendôme in Lusail, told Doha News this week at CityScape that he is in discussions with the developers behind the sound, light and water show in Singapore’s Marina Bay. The nightly performances use music, lasers and fountains to entertain residents and visitors in the popular tourist area.

Kelly added that other entertainment amenities would likely be added as the mall’s opening date approaches.

Place Vendôme is inspired by the French landmark of the same name and will feature a canal running around the mall and out to the sea. It is expected to have a built-up area of approximately 800,000 sq meters and some 230,000 sq meters of leasable retail space, nearly double the size of Villaggio mall.

It will also feature two luxury hotels and some 150 serviced apartments.

Kelly said the project remains on track to open in the third quarter of 2017.

Thoughts?

(The post Children’s mini-city to open in Mall of Qatar in early 2016 is from Doha News.)

Six things to do in Qatar this weekend (May 13-16)

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Woman's disqus competitor Sandra Perković

Doha Diamond League/Facebook

Woman’s disqus competitor Sandra Perković

Whether it’s watching a dozen Olympic athletes compete in the Diamond League, enjoying free movie screenings, taking in a concert or watching stunt drivers perform at the Drift Championship finals, there’s no shortage of things to check over around tower over the next few days. Here are our picks:

Diamond League competition

Some of the world’s best athletes will be in Doha this weekend to compete in the 2015 IAAF Diamond League athletics tournament, including double Olympic Champion Mo Farah and top sprinter and 2004 Olympic champion Justin Gatlin.

Mo Farah at London 2012 Olympics

Jon Connell/Flickr

Mo Farah at London 2012 Olympics

The tournament kicks off on Friday, May 15 from 6pm onwards at the Suhaim bin Hamad Stadium at the Qatar Sports Club in West Bay. Doors open at 4:30pm, and a live concert is scheduled later in the evening.

Men’s events include the 100m, javelin, 400m hurdles and more, while the women’s event also has steeplechase, long jump and discus among others. Children below six years old are free but must sit on parents’ laps. Tickets cost QR50, QR100 and QR200 and can be bought online here.

Comedy show

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Craig Piersma/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Alive Entertainment is hosting a “Whose Line Is It Anyway” comedy show tonight (May 13) from 8pm to 10pm at the Grand Hyatt Doha.

During the evening, comedians Stephen Frost, Steve Steen, Andy Smart, Ian Coppinger and guest star Joe Rooney will perform improv in the spirit of the Whose Line show.

Tickets cost QR150/person and can be bought online here, or at the concierge desk. Call 4448 1234 for more information.

Jazz at the park

Jazz at Lincoln Center in the park

JALC/Facebook

Jazz at Lincoln Center in the park

Jazz at Lincoln Center Doha will hold its last free outdoor concert of the season at the Museum of Islamic Art park tonight (May 13) from 6pm to 7pm.

The event is open to the public, and will feature award-winning jazz artists from around the world.

Attendees are invited to arrive at the stage near the MIA Park Cafe, and are encouraged to bring blankets, rugs and picnic baskets. There will also be fresh barbecue for purchase at the event.

DFI film screenings

A number of independent films will be shown this weekend by the Doha Film Institute at Katara Cultural Village, building 16, including a free screening of The Search.

The movie, which is about the Second Chechen War in 1999, will be shown at 4pm on Friday, May 15. Seating is limited because tickets are free. They can be reserved online here, or picked up at the venue, first come first served.

Other films that will be screened this weekend include award-winning Palestinian drama Omar, at 8pm tonight (May 13). A live feed of the Cannes Film Festival opening ceremony will be shown before the movie.

2014 Turkish drama Winter Sleep, which examines the divide between the rich and poor, will play on Thursday, May 14 at 7pm. And Inside Llewyn Davis, about a young folk singer who navigates the Greenwich Village folk scene in 1961, will be shown at 7:30pm on Friday, May 15.

Tickets cost QR35/person and can be bought online here.

‘Surprise’ symphony

The Qatar Philharmonic Orchestra will perform Haydn’s Surprise Symphony on Saturday, May 16 at the Katara Cultural Village Opera House. Doors open at 6:30pm for the 7:30 concert, which will be conducted by Elias Grandy.

Qatar Philharmonic Orchestra

QPO/Facebook

Qatar Philharmonic Orchestra

Tickets cost QR75, QR100, QR150 and QR200 and can be bought online here. Children over the age of six years old are welcome, provided they have their own tickets. The dress code for the concert is formal – audience members wearing shorts or beach wear will not be seated.

Qatar Drift Championship finals

Stunt show

Qatar Racing Club/Facebook

Stunt show

A winner will finally be crowned this weekend as the 2014-2015 Qatar Drift Championship comes to a close. Final rounds will commence on Friday, May 15 at the Qatar Racing Club.

Practice rounds will be held on Thursday until 9pm, and the finals will go until 8pm on Friday. There will also be a stunt show after the runs.

The event is free to attend, but fans are asked to RSVP online here.

What are your plans for the weekend? Thoughts?

(The post Six things to do in Qatar this weekend (May 13-16) is from Doha News.)

After assault in Qatar, Indonesian domestic worker returns home

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Meento

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

A 25-year-old woman working as house help in Qatar has returned to her home country of Indonesia after being badly beaten by her sponsor here and hospitalized for several days.

However, her departure only came after the woman was held for weeks in Qatar’s Search and Follow-Up Department, which is a detention center for expats awaiting deportation.

Indonesian domestic helper

Supplied

Victim says thank you

According to sources who spoke to Doha News, the woman said she “forgave” her sponsor, whose assault left her with a broken wrist, a gash on her skull requiring six stitches and numerous bruises and scars.

Through a friend, the woman sent a photo of herself this week holding a small sign thanking the Indonesian community and members of the Facebook group “When, Where and How in Doha” – where her story first came to light – for their support.

Last month, the woman’s case sparked outrage online as well as donation drive that raised some QR30,000, as well as clothes and toiletries for the woman.

Government documents shown to Doha News suggest the woman received QR8,500 for seven months of previously unpaid back wages and to cover the cost of her plane ticket home.

Questions remain

In April, the woman spoke to Doha News while she was recovering from her injuries at Hamad Hospital. She said she had been abused for nearly two years and fled her employer’s home after being beaten with the metal end of a hose used to siphon water.

Despite being in the hospital for three days, the woman said she had not been interviewed by police officers about the assault.

Bruises on the victim.

Chantelle D'mello

Bruises on the victim.

An embassy official, who could not be reached today, previously said authorities were following the case, but it remains unclear if an official investigation was ever launched.

However, because the victim is not pressing charges, any form of criminal prosecution is unlikely.

Human rights organization Amnesty International has previously said that complaints by domestic workers in Qatar of assaults rarely result in criminal convictions.

One reason for this may be because those who flee abusive employers can find themselves arrested and detained on so-called “absconding” charges in violation of Qatar’s sponsorship law.

Systematic problems

In a 2014 report on domestic workers in Qatar, Amnesty said the most common punishment in such cases was detention followed by deportation.

This policy was criticized by a UN envoy who visited Qatar in 2013, who said that such detention amounted to a violation of these women’s rights. For its part, Amnesty has called for “absconding” to be decriminalized.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Stephan Geyer/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

The human rights organization said it was told by deportation center officials that detainees who make complaints of physical or sexual abuse are transferred to the Qatar Foundation for Combating Human Trafficking or the hospital psychiatric unit for the appropriate support.

However, it also cited a Ministry of Interior official who appeared to have limited sympathy for domestic workers who have fled their employers. He told Amnesty that most women who flee to new employers are trying to earn higher salaries, rather than attempting to escape abuse.

François Crépeau

Peter Kovessy

François Crépeau

That’s at odds with the findings of the UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights of migrants, which stated that most women who were being held pending deportation had left their employers due to poor working conditions.

The vulnerability of domestic workers here is one reason why earlier this month, the Indonesian government announced that it would ban its nationals from working as domestic help in Qatar and 20 other countries in the Middle East.

The move, to protect “human values and the dignity of the nation,” is expected to come into effect in three months, and is being imposed on any new workers applying for employment overseas. Indonesians already working abroad would not be affected.

During his announcement, Indonesia’s Minister of Manpower and Transmigration Muhammad Hanif Dhakiri said that “the hard policy” was being implemented in countries where the rights of employers outweigh labor policies and protections for the domestic worker.

Qatar is home to around 20,000 Indonesians working in domestic roles, Amnesty International said last year, citing 2010 census data.

Thoughts?

(The post After assault in Qatar, Indonesian domestic worker returns home is from Doha News.)

PHOTOS: What a Qatari election looks like

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2015 CMC Elections 2015 CMC Elections 2015 CMC Elections 2015 CMC Elections 2015 CMC Elections 2015 CMC Elections

All photos by Marium Saeed

Despite predictions of a dismal voter turnout for Qatar’s only elected political body, some Qataris said they spent nearly two hours waiting to cast a ballot today.

Early indications suggested that participation in this year’s Central Municipal Council (CMC) elections – the nation’s fifth – would be the lowest in the political body’s 16-year history.

This was in part due to re-districting that required voters to register again for the polls. But the main reason appears to be a widespread apathy toward the CMC, which lacks legislative powers and is limited to making recommendations to government officials.

2015 CMC Elections

Marium Saeed

2015 CMC Elections

The CMC is made up of 29 members. Three candidates have won their districts uncontested, and some 114 candidates – five of them women – are vying for the remaining 26 spots.

Though voter registration was low, at least 50 women could be observed waiting around midday to cast a ballot inside the school gym of Al-Muthanna bin Haritha Independent School for Boys. It was being used as a polling station in district 13 which includes the area around Villaggio Mall.

Another 30 women were waiting outside the gym, which was partitioned into different areas for male and female voters.

“This is the least number of voters we’ve had all day – it was even more crowded in the morning,” said a young election volunteer who asked not to be identified.

How voting works

Things appeared to be much quieter in the Maymouna Primary Independent Girls’ School, a polling station for district eight, which includes the area around the old Doha International Airport.

Approximately 150 women, and a smaller number of men, turned up to vote between noon and 2pm.

2015 CMC Elections

Riham Sheble

2015 CMC Elections

Upon arriving, voters registered with a judge and received their ballots.

With the help of volunteers, citizens headed to voting stations set up on a counter against the wooden partition separating the male and female areas.

Privacy barriers ensured each ballot was secretly marked, and election workers made sure that voters – even family members – were not standing too close to one another.

Afterward, ballots were slipped through a slot in the lid of a transparent plastic bin, which will be emptied and counted by judges once polls close at 5pm today.

Standing in line aside, the entire voting process at Maymouna Primary Independent Girls’ School took about five to seven minutes.

Candidates were present at the polling station, but were instructed by judges not to talk to voters or journalists and refrain from doing any campaigning.

One candidate could be overheard talking on her mobile phone, encouraging citizens to come out and vote by giving directions to polling stations and refuting arguments that it was too hot outside or that the voting site was too far from home.

What’s at stake

Many of the candidates who spoke to Doha News while on the campaign trail last month listed civic issues such as the need for more street lights, recreational paths, health clinics, supermarkets and parks in their constituencies.

“I want to give back to the country and leave a mark in my neighborhood,” said Ismail Abdullah Taymur, who is running in district 20 in Al Wakrah.

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Tony Alter/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

His campaign platform also touched on the need to tackle Qatar’s growing obesity rate as well as ensure that senior citizens are adequately cared for and supported in their golden years.

Candidates were also conscious of the need to turn the CMC into a respected political body that’s capable of reflecting the wishes of residents.

Amal Isa Ali al-Muhannadi, who was running in district 17 – which includes Al Kharitiyat and northern Al Gharafa – said the CMC lacks power and authority because “it has not proven itself.”

“It’s been 16 years since the first CMC elections and nothing much has been achieved,” said al-Muhannadi, who is running for the second time after an unsuccessful 2011 campaign effort. “I expect the fifth term of CMC to witness radical changes.”

The CMC remains the only elected body in Qatar. Legislative elections were supposed to occur in 2013, but were postponed after the powerful Advisory Council had its term extended to 2016.

Al-Muhannadi said she hopes today’s polling shows that “there is definitely aspiration for (an elected) parliament and more elected bodies in Qatar.”

Thoughts?

(The post PHOTOS: What a Qatari election looks like is from Doha News.)

MET forecasts four days of wind and dust for Qatar

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Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Thasleem MK/Flickr

Photo for illustrative purposes only.

Just in time for the weekend, a high pressure front will move over Qatar, resulting in sandy, windy conditions and low visibility, the Meteorology Department has said.

Starting Friday night, windspeed will reach up to 35 knots (65km/hour) inshore, and 40 knots (74km/hour) at sea. The blowing dust/sand will cause visibility to drop to 2km at times, the MET added.

February 2015 sandstorm

santiago sanz romero/Flickr

February 2015 sandstorm

The weather warning comes at a time when residents have yet to forget the various sandstorms over the past few months that prompted school closures, airport delays and hundreds of people to fall ill with respiratory issues.

In a statement, forecasters said that the latest adverse conditions are expected to linger until midday on Tuesday, May 19.

One silver lining: temperatures are expected to fall from the searing 40Cs we’ve been seeing this week to between 37C (99F) and 39C (102F) over the next few days.

Thoughts?

(The post MET forecasts four days of wind and dust for Qatar is from Doha News.)

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