Dubai airport July passenger traffic hits 4.3 million record


Busiest travel hub in Middle East hits monthly record in July, up 14.3% from year earlier.

DUBAI - Dubai Airport, the busiest travel hub in the Middle East, said on Tuesday it hit a monthly record in July by handling 4.3 million passengers, up 14.3 percent from a year earlier.

This was the first time the airport broke the threshold of four million passengers in one month, Dubai Airports said.

It brought the total figure of passengers handled in the first seven months of this year to 26.9 million.

The airport had handled 3.77 million passengers in July 2009, while the total figure for 2009 was 42 million.

"This is an important milestone that reflects the consistent growth we have seen in recent years," said Paul Griffiths, chief executive officer of Dubai Airports.

In June, Dubai opened its second airport, the Dubai World Central-Al Maktoum International Airport. Touted to become the world's largest when completed, it will be confined to cargo in the first nine month of operation.

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Dying art of Karbala’s shroud-makers


Sales of mass-produced stenciled coverings outstrip traditional, hand-inscribed ones.
By IWPR trainee - Iraq

Razzaq Mustafa al-Katib inscribes holy verses on shrouds for Shia Muslims, dressing the dead for the life beyond.

Though he has done this work for decades, he says it still fills him with dread. To steady his nerves, he recites prayers from the Koran – the source for the verses he copies.

“I look at the shroud as a suit of armour that will protect the body in the grave, defending it from the worms,” he said.

Katib learnt his trade from his father, following a tradition dating back centuries in the shrine city of Karbala, south of Baghdad.

But while his verses may shield the dead, they provide scant protection from the market forces that are eating into his ancient profession.

The city’s shroud industry is increasingly relying on stencils to print verses that were once painstakingly applied by hand.

Merchants say their customers prefer the new, mass-produced shrouds because they are cheaper and can be made quickly to order. Skilled calligraphers say they are losing business as a result.

“In the past, I used to sell 20 shrouds in ten days. Now I sell ten in the same period,” said Katib, adding that the market had effectively been flooded by shrouds manufactured with the new technique.

Thousands of shrouds are manufactured in Karbala every year. Shia practice deems it holy for a body to be washed and prepared for burial in Karbala, before being interred in the nearby city of Najaf.

Both cities played a pivotal role in the history of Shia Islam and still dominate the spiritual lives of the majority of Iraqis, who are followers of the sect.

Karbala is home to the shrine of Imam Hussein, a revered Shia leader who was slain in the city in a decisive seventh-century battle.

The city’s soil is hallowed ground for the Imam’s followers and is used – occasionally with saffron – as an ingredient in the ink applied to the shrouds.

The choice of shroud can be a deeply personal affair for Shia Muslims, and need not wait until death. Many followers of the sect will buy their own shrouds to serve as a regular reminder of their own mortality, and as a spur to righteous conduct.

Many Shia customise their burial garb by choosing specific verses from the Koran, though readymade shrouds are also available in Karbala’s markets.

Hand-written shrouds can take several days to produce, while the ones stamped by stencils are usually ready in a few minutes.

The printed shrouds are cheaper too. At 7,000 Iraqi dinars (six US dollars) apiece, they cost at least half the price of a typical hand-written shroud.

High-end, hand-written shrouds, often made with saffron ink and covered entirely in Koranic verses, can take several weeks to produce and will sell for more than 100,000 Iraqi dinars (90 dollars).

Ibrahim Sayyid Zangani, the owner of a Karbala store specialising in shrouds, confirmed that the printed coverings were more popular with his customers.

Introduced in the late Nineties, the new type of shroud is only thought to have conquered the market after 2003, when demand began outstripping the supply of the old hand-written garments.

Zangani cited two factors behind this. Firstly, he said, the end of the rule of the former dictator, Saddam Hussein, led to a revival in Shia pilgrimages to Karbala. The city’s markets turned to the printed shroud to cope with the demands of thousands of pilgrims from other parts of Iraq and from neighbouring Iran.

Zangani said the makers of handmade shrouds were further over-stretched by the conflict that engulfed Iraq after the United States-led invasion in 2003.

“Many people were killed, so many more shrouds were needed,” he said. “Hand-writing could not satisfy such a high demand.”

Nevertheless, Zangani said he still made sure he stocked the hand-written shrouds, which some of his customers regarded as more authentic and accurate.

Critics of the printed shrouds say they are produced in haste and without close human supervisions, which increases the likelihood of errors. A mere slip of the stencil can alter the religious significance of the text.

Karbala residents appear to have mixed views on the subject.

“I prefer the hand-written shroud,” said Feras al-Tooma. “The printed one can contain mistakes or omissions which can change the whole meaning of a verse from the Koran.”

Saheb Musa Jafat, a shop-owner, said he too preferred the handwritten shrouds, “It is better in religious terms, because it does not contain spelling mistakes.”

However, Jumana Qasim, a housewife, said she would opt for the printed version, “Both are shrouds. The printed one can be bought anytime and it’s cheaper.”

Aqeel Jallob, a taxi driver, said he preferred the cheaper garment, “God will not look at the clothes a man is wrapped in but at his behaviour when he was alive.”

This story was produced by an IWPR-trained reporter in Karbala who did not wish to be identified.

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Sudan gold miners vie with archaeologists for desert riches


Archaeologists fear that crucial part of Sudan's heritage being effaced as gold miners pillage sites.

By Guillaume Lavallee - AL-SHIRIK, Sudan

Dust-covered miners criss-cross Sudan's Nubian desert, absorbed by the drone of the pan-shaped metal detectors with which they scour the ground in search of gold.

The desert, about 500 kilometres (310 miles) northeast of Khartoum, draws thousands of fortune seekers, some of whom have arrived in their 4X4 vehicles and set up tents equipped with water barrels and enough food for weeks.

But it is also home to ancient relics from the Nubian kingdom, one of the earliest civilisations in the Nile valley, and archaeologists and officials fear that a crucial part of Sudan's heritage is being effaced as the miners pillage or accidentally damage the sites.

Mukhtar Yussif, formerly a trader, pulled out a gold nugget from his truck's glove compartment. "I've gathered gold for about four months and I've already paid for two used cars," he said.

Family and friends he brought with him oscillated their detectors. Hatem unearthed a small nugget. "It must weigh a gram," he said.

The rise in gold prices over the past two years and an influx of metal detectors, which sell for about 6,000 dollars in Sudan, have spurred the gold rush.

"In Sudan we have at least 200,000 people working in this new activity. It's a gold fever now, just like in the old American style of the 19th century when everybody was hunting for gold," Mining Minister Abdelbaqi al-Jaylani told AFP.

But he also highlighted the problems the gold rush has brought with it.

"The danger is that sometimes we have some archaeological gold. We have to be very careful not to spoil the history and the civilisation of Sudan."

He said peasants have left their farm lands to hunt the desert for the precious metal, a gram of which fetches 90 Sudanese pounds (35 dollars), about a week's wages for a labourer.

At the end of a remote road, a tractor unearths a strip of red soil that is immediately pounced on by six miners.

"If we find gold, we will share the harvest with the driver," said one of the miners.

Others lured by the desert's riches use cheaper but more laborious technologies.

-- 'It's become a serious problem' --

In Al-Abidiya, a remote village near the Nile river, thousands of young men sift through tubs filled with mercury and ore ground by generator-powered mills.

The mercury envelops the gold, isolating it. It can also slowly poison the miners, damaging their nervous systems.

The UN's Environment Programme said in a 2008 report that mercury used by small-scale miners, favoured because it is cheap and effective, was a major source of poisoning in the environment.

But for the young men it offers the tantalizing chance to make a fortune.

"My brother and I came from the Gezira (Sudan's agricultural heartland along the Nile) to try our luck with gold," said 16-year-old Ibrahim.

Another danger linked to the exploitation of north Sudan's new-found mineral riches was highlighted last week with the interior ministry's announcement that 10 people had died when one of the makeshift gold mines collapsed.

The government says it cannot stop the artisanal miners, even though they are increasingly drawing the ire of the few mining companies in the region.

"We cannot stop the diggers, but we will regulate them," said Jaylani, acknowledging the difficult conditions for the workers and the threat of mercury pollution due to crude processing methods.

"The government has to intervene to regulate, and to help these people to make use of this fortune," he said.

"We have to take care of the environment because they are using mercury sometimes, and we have to tell them that mercury is very poisonous."

Meanwhile, the growing number of gold miners is a source of concern for archaeologists in Sudan which, though very much in Egypt's shadow, holds great promise because it has been far less explored.

"It's become a serious problem," said the country's deputy director of antiquities, Salah Mohammed Ahmed.

"They use their metal detectors and sometimes stumble across ancient artefacts in iron, like arrowheads, or bronze. Some miners hand them over to us, others keep them," said Ahmed.

The archaeological missions, which usually dig in the cooler months between October and February, are already losing their workforce to the gold mining.

In one site north of the city of Atbara, Ahmed says the expedition has lost half its workforce. They "left in search of gold," he said.

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Biden: Iran's influence in Iraq overstated


US Vice President says Iraqis voted for Maliki, Allawi, both 'persona non grata' by Iran.


WASHINGTON - Iran's influence in Iraq has been exaggerated and Tehran's efforts to shape parliamentary elections in the country "utterly failed," US Vice President Joe Biden said on Monday.

In a speech to veterans, Biden played down Iran's role in Iraq, defended the scaled-back US mission in Iraq and argued that the country was on the road to political stability.

"Iranian influence in Iraq is minimal. It's been greatly exaggerated," Biden told the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Indianapolis, Indiana.

"The Iranian government spent over 100 million dollars trying to affect the outcome of this last election to sway the Iraqi people, and they utterly failed," he said, referring to the March polls.

"And it's because politics and nationalism has broken out in Iraq. The Iraqi people voted for their desired candidates, none of whom, none of whom -- let me emphasize this -- none of whom were wanted by Iran."

Biden said that Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and his rival for the premiership, Iyad Allawi, were both deemed "persona non grata" by the authorities in neighboring Iran.

US officials and some lawmakers in Congress have previously voiced concern about Iran's role in Iraq.

Biden also offered an optimistic view on the aftermath of Iraq's inconclusive March 7 general election, even though political leaders so far have failed to form a new government amid disputes over power-sharing.

He said he was optimistic about the outcome of the negotiations in Baghdad.

"This process can sometimes be frustrating and there are ups and downs, but I'm here to tell you I'm absolutely confident that Iraq will form a national unity government that will be able to sustain that country," he said.

He said that he had urged party leaders to forge an accord and "made it clear to the leading politicians that it's time for them to match the courage of their citizens by completing this process."

Responding to critics who have warned against the US troop withdrawal, Biden said that violence was at lower levels compared to four or five years ago.

"Some said that our drawdown would bring about more violence. Well, they were wrong, because the Iraqis are ready to take charge," he said.

Al-Qaeda's network in Iraq and Shiite militants still posed a threat, "but they have utterly failed to achieve their objective, which was to inflame an additional round of sectarian conflict and undermine the election that just took place and stop the formation of a new government.

"They have failed," he said.

The last US combat brigade pulled out of Iraq last week, as the US military reduces troop levels to 50,000 by September 1 under a new "advise and assist" mission laid out by President Barack Obama.

Obama, who opposed the Iraq war from the beginning and promised as a candidate to withdraw US forces as quickly as possible, has insisted the drawdown is on schedule and will not be altered.

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