Tag: Kuwait

  • Kuwait bans ‘Barbie’ over ‘public ethics’ concerns

    By AFP

    KUWAIT CITY: Kuwait has barred hit film “Barbie” from cinemas over concerns about “public ethics”, officials have said, also confirming a separate ban on a horror movie featuring a transgender actor.

    “Barbie” and “Talk to Me” both “promulgate ideas and beliefs that are alien to the Kuwaiti society and public order”, Lafy Al-Subei’e, head of Kuwait’s cinema censorship committee, told the official KUNA news agency.

    While deciding on any foreign movie, the committee usually orders “censoring of the scenes that run counter to public ethics”, Subei’e was quoted as saying late on Wednesday.

    “But (if) a film carries alien concepts, message or unacceptable behaviour, the committee decides to bar the stuff in question as a whole,” he said.

    Gulf Arab states including Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia — all of which outlaw homosexuality — routinely censor films that contain LGBTQ references.

    Most recently, they banned the latest Spider-Man animation in June, reportedly over a scene that includes a transgender pride flag.

    ALSO READ | Lebanon moves to ban ‘Barbie’ film as anti-LGBTQ sentiment rages

    However, “Barbie”, which has taken more than $1 billion worldwide, is being shown in Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain.

    In Lebanon, Culture Minister Mohammad Mortada said on Wednesday he had asked authorities to ban “Barbie” for purportedly “promoting homosexuality”, though the film does not contain any overt references to same-sex relationships or queer themes.

    “Talk to Me”, which is shown in Emirati and Saudi theatres, features Australian transgender actor Zoe Terakes but no explicit LGBTQ references.

    “Our film doesn’t have queer themes,” Terakes said in a statement posted on social media on Sunday, after the ban was first reported.

    “I am a trans actor who happened to get the role. I’m not a theme. I’m a person,” added Terakes who identifies as non-binary.

    KUWAIT CITY: Kuwait has barred hit film “Barbie” from cinemas over concerns about “public ethics”, officials have said, also confirming a separate ban on a horror movie featuring a transgender actor.

    “Barbie” and “Talk to Me” both “promulgate ideas and beliefs that are alien to the Kuwaiti society and public order”, Lafy Al-Subei’e, head of Kuwait’s cinema censorship committee, told the official KUNA news agency.

    While deciding on any foreign movie, the committee usually orders “censoring of the scenes that run counter to public ethics”, Subei’e was quoted as saying late on Wednesday.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    “But (if) a film carries alien concepts, message or unacceptable behaviour, the committee decides to bar the stuff in question as a whole,” he said.

    Gulf Arab states including Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia — all of which outlaw homosexuality — routinely censor films that contain LGBTQ references.

    Most recently, they banned the latest Spider-Man animation in June, reportedly over a scene that includes a transgender pride flag.

    ALSO READ | Lebanon moves to ban ‘Barbie’ film as anti-LGBTQ sentiment rages

    However, “Barbie”, which has taken more than $1 billion worldwide, is being shown in Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain.

    In Lebanon, Culture Minister Mohammad Mortada said on Wednesday he had asked authorities to ban “Barbie” for purportedly “promoting homosexuality”, though the film does not contain any overt references to same-sex relationships or queer themes.

    “Talk to Me”, which is shown in Emirati and Saudi theatres, features Australian transgender actor Zoe Terakes but no explicit LGBTQ references.

    “Our film doesn’t have queer themes,” Terakes said in a statement posted on social media on Sunday, after the ban was first reported.

    “I am a trans actor who happened to get the role. I’m not a theme. I’m a person,” added Terakes who identifies as non-binary.

  • 12K Indian engineers fear losing jobs as Kuwait demands NOC

    Express News Service

    MANGALURU: Around 12,000 engineers from India who are working in Kuwait are facing the risk of losing their jobs. Reason: The Kuwait Society of Engineers (KSE) is insisting on no objection certificate (NOC) clearance from engineers who have studied in colleges in India which do not have National Board of Accreditation (NBA) certification.

    According to the Indian engineers working in Kuwait, the engineering degree certificates issued by many Indian colleges were earlier recognised and are now suddenly being de-recognised for want of NBA certification. 

    The issue has been highlighted in a memorandum submitted to Dr Arathi Krishna, former deputy chairman, NRI Forum, Government of Karnataka, by Vaikunth R Shenoy, a mechanical engineer who works in M/s Bader Al Mulla & Bros. Co. 

    Shenoy said the issue is being consistently raised with the Indian embassy in Kuwait, but nothing has been done. “In 2018, the KSE brought up the issue of re-verification of engineering degrees. In 2020, it raised the issue of re-verification of the engineering degrees after re-stamping by Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Kuwait (MOFA).

    This year, they again brought up the issue of re-verification of engineering degrees through data flow (document verification by third party). Now, KSE is demanding NBA certification for 4 years of engineering studies,” said Shenoy.  

    ‘Indian edu system not given its due’

    “Indian education system, which is being acknowledged worldwide for producing the best engineers, doctors and chartered accountants among others is not being given its due by Kuwait. Ministry of External Affairs needs to take up the issue,” he said.

    The central government should make Kuwait understand that any full-time engineering degree awarded by colleges/ universities approved by AICTE, IITs and NITs do not require NBA certification. NBA should be made mandatory only for deemed universities in India to ensure that the education curriculum is at par with the norms of AICTE approved colleges/universities.

    Expressing concern, Mohandas Kamath, another engineer working in Kuwait, said, “The future of 12,000 Indian engineers and their families hangs in balance.” The NBA was established by AICTE in 1994 to assess the qualitative competence of courses offered by educational institutions from diploma level to post-graduate level in engineering and technology, management, pharmacy, architecture and related disciplines.

    MANGALURU: Around 12,000 engineers from India who are working in Kuwait are facing the risk of losing their jobs. Reason: The Kuwait Society of Engineers (KSE) is insisting on no objection certificate (NOC) clearance from engineers who have studied in colleges in India which do not have National Board of Accreditation (NBA) certification.

    According to the Indian engineers working in Kuwait, the engineering degree certificates issued by many Indian colleges were earlier recognised and are now suddenly being de-recognised for want of NBA certification. 

    The issue has been highlighted in a memorandum submitted to Dr Arathi Krishna, former deputy chairman, NRI Forum, Government of Karnataka, by Vaikunth R Shenoy, a mechanical engineer who works in M/s Bader Al Mulla & Bros. Co. 

    Shenoy said the issue is being consistently raised with the Indian embassy in Kuwait, but nothing has been done. “In 2018, the KSE brought up the issue of re-verification of engineering degrees. In 2020, it raised the issue of re-verification of the engineering degrees after re-stamping by Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Kuwait (MOFA).

    This year, they again brought up the issue of re-verification of engineering degrees through data flow (document verification by third party). Now, KSE is demanding NBA certification for 4 years of engineering studies,” said Shenoy.  

    ‘Indian edu system not given its due’

    “Indian education system, which is being acknowledged worldwide for producing the best engineers, doctors and chartered accountants among others is not being given its due by Kuwait. Ministry of External Affairs needs to take up the issue,” he said.

    The central government should make Kuwait understand that any full-time engineering degree awarded by colleges/ universities approved by AICTE, IITs and NITs do not require NBA certification. NBA should be made mandatory only for deemed universities in India to ensure that the education curriculum is at par with the norms of AICTE approved colleges/universities.

    Expressing concern, Mohandas Kamath, another engineer working in Kuwait, said, “The future of 12,000 Indian engineers and their families hangs in balance.” The NBA was established by AICTE in 1994 to assess the qualitative competence of courses offered by educational institutions from diploma level to post-graduate level in engineering and technology, management, pharmacy, architecture and related disciplines.

  • Shashi Tharoor’s retweet draws flak from Indian embassy in Kuwait

    By Express News Service

    THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: Senior Congress leader and MP Shashi Tharoor found himself in a spot after he retweeted a Pakistani national’s tweet which said Kuwaiti politicians had asked their government to ban the entry of BJP leaders from India following the hijab row.

    The Indian embassy in that Gulf country reacted quickly, saying the original tweet was from a Pakistani agent engaged in anti-India activities. “Sad to see an Hon’ble Member of Indian Parliament retweeting an anti-India tweet by a Pakistani agent who was recipient of a Pakistani Award ‘Ambassador of Peace’ for his anti-India activities. We should not encourage such anti-India elements,” the Indian embassy in Kuwait tweeted.

    Tharoor said he does not endorse the individual, but is concerned about the sentiment he (the Pakistani citizen) conveys on the hijab row and Muslim girls in India.