Media Search:



Mercedes owned by King Faisal of Iraq up for sale in the US – Arab News

DUBAI: Football superstar Cristiano Ronaldo was greeted by hundreds of fans during a visit to Expo 2020 Dubai for a Q&A session at the sites Al-Wasl plaza, state news agency WAM reported.

The Manchester United forward and Portuguese international discussed his journey as a football player, and praised Dubai for being unique and different.

Dubai always brings something to the table, unique and different, he said.

Ronaldo is believed to be spending the international break in Dubai with his family, the WAM report said.

The five-time Ballon dOr winner was impressed by the expo, according to local media.

He said: It is unbelievably impressive. Bringing 192 nations with their culture and traditions under one roof is very exciting.

Ronaldo advised fans to take care of their physical and mental health. I am fit because I take care of my body. Do everything that makes your body and mind healthy, he said.

Original post:
Mercedes owned by King Faisal of Iraq up for sale in the US - Arab News

Staff shortages threaten Iraq’s health sector amid third Covid-19 wave – The National

Iraqs health sector is in dire need of training and support to ensure it can counter the third wave of the coronavirus pandemic, medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has said.

Health authorities have recorded a surge in Covid-19 cases in recent days. Medics are struggling to meet the publics healthcare demands following years of war and instability that has depleted the sector.

Iraq is better prepared when compared to previous waves but it isnt enough. The health sector has plenty of biomed equipment but they dont have enough trained medical staff, Dr Shazeer Majeed, MSF medical co-ordinator in Iraq told The National.

So there's no point in having so many machines, he said.

Daily rates have decreased in the past week, with 6,550 new cases reported on Tuesday and 16 new deaths.

The country has recorded a total of 2.2 million infected cases and above 24,000 deaths since the outbreak of the pandemic in 2020.

MSF has identified that anaesthetist doctors are the ones who are managing ICU departments in hospitals in Baghdad, but Mr Majeed said it required qualified medical doctors as well as highly trained nurses to manage complicated cases.

The ICU requires a multidisciplinary, patient-centred approach. Iraqs health sector needs highly trained nurses, physiotherapists and mental health support, he said.

Many Covid-19 patients come to hospital only when their condition is highly critical. They either receive some medical care or oxygen therapy, which, Dr Majeed said, required highly trained medical staff.

The late arrival of the patient or delay in seeking specialised medical care has been a real challenge, he said.

However, MSF is providing training for as many healthcare workers as possible in this regard.

Dr Hassan Ali, from Al Karkh General Hospital, said the lack of public awareness for health measures intensified the struggles of medics.

There is a limitation of health services in general but on top we have a population that doesnt really take into consideration any of the Covid-19 health measures, Dr Ali told The National.

This is one of the main reasons why there is a spike in cases recently, the 38-year-old said.

The surge was driven largely by public apathy towards the virus. Many routinely flout virus-related restrictions, refusing to wear face masks and continuing to hold large public gatherings.

We are struggling, we need support from all aspects, we have very little response from the government to preserve the health of individuals and society, he said.

Even though Iraq has a mandatory vaccination programme, the coverage is low with only a little more than 9 million of the 40 million population vaccinated.

There Is a lot of hesitancy in terms of vaccination, said Dr Majeed.

He said MSF was working in areas that had a low vaccination rate.

Each sub-district in Baghdad has its own reasons for this, he said, adding that it could be related to religious or cultural reasons.

MSF is attempting to identify the reasons for vaccine hesitancy in a given geographical area and trying to target the population with that reason, Dr Majeed said.

This makes it difficult to approach the problem and to overcome it, to open people's minds as to why they should get the vaccine basically, he said.

MSF will have to tailor the messages to the population of the sub-district or your target population, Dr Majeed said.

Iraqis do not understand how important it is to get vaccinated, Sura Al Rawi, a general practitioner at Baghdad Hospital said.

"We are not only trying to convince people to get the shot but we are attempting to inform them of its benefits but no one seems to believe us," she told The National.

Ms Al Rawi said the health ministry needed to do more to ensure public awareness was spread throughout the country.

"Everyone needs to know the necessity of this, we've lost many lives. but we have to do more to save the rest," she said.

Iraqs Health Ministry has repeatedly tried to reassure people that the vaccines are not harmful, but this has not convinced over half of the population who have long-standing distrust of the government.

Updated: February 2nd 2022, 5:59 PM

Read the rest here:
Staff shortages threaten Iraq's health sector amid third Covid-19 wave - The National

Sadr committed to forming Iraq’s first majority government – Al-Monitor

The days ahead will tell us if Iraqs difficult political process is to chart a new path by allowing the formation of a majority government, as promised by the electoral winners of the October parliamentary election, or continues its 17-year tradition of national unity governments that have proven ineffective, unmanageable and unpopular with the people.

The Sadrists, with 73 seats, scored a major victory in the Iraqi parliaments opening session on Jan. 9. Their quiet, behind-the-scenes work to form an ethno-sectarian alliance with Kurdish and Sunni parties bore fruit when the alliance easily elected its Sunni choice for the speakership of the parliament, Mohammed al-Halbusi.

A potentially second major victory was scored during the same session by registering the Sadrists as the biggest bloc with 90 seats after they drew to their bloc an additional 17 members of parliament. This effectively means that once the president of the republic is elected, most likely during parliaments second session on Feb. 7, he will have 15 days to charge Sadrists with the task of forming the new government, giving them 30 days to achieve this task.

But because of its highly fractious politics,all is not certain in Iraq.

Still, Sadrists have the best chance to maintain their position as the biggest bloc again if a new parliamentary session is needed to settle the issue.

The Coordination Framework (CF), a loose Shiite alliance, is calling for a national unity government and a delay in the formation of the majority government in the hope of pressuring Sadrists into accepting a deal allowing the CFs various blocs to join the government. The CF has been using these time-gaining tactics in various contexts since the initial results of the election were released in mid-October. The tactics failed to change Sadrists' insistence on a majority government. Now with the Sadrists in a better-placed position after forming their grand ethno-sectarian alliance and electing the parliamentary speaker and his two deputies, it is highly unlikely they will accommodate the CF.

Neither has Iranian intervention on behalf of the CF changed Muqtada al-Sadrs determination to go it alone in government formation without other Shiite partners if necessary. The sticking point seems to be the Sadrists' unwavering rejection to include in the next government the CFs biggest bloc, former Prime Minister Nouri al-Malikis State of Law Coalition, with 33 seats. The several visits to Najaf and Baghdad by Irans commander of the Quds Force Ismael Qani could neither broker a deal to bring all Shiite Islamist parties together in a grand alliance nor convince Maliki to go into the opposition.

The new fact is that the CF is still holding together after initial indications that some of its blocs, particularly Hadi al-Amiris Fatah Alliance with 17 seats, might join the majority government, basically breaking the CF whose main bargaining chip is to stick together to be able to pressure the Sadrists. In his latest TV appearance, Sadr said that Amiri stepped back from an earlier promise to join the government. With the CF still holding together, the goal seems to protect Maliki from future prosecution if he goes to the opposition. A source told Al-Monitor that the CF, with Iran's help, has been trying, unsuccessfully so far, to obtain guarantees from Sadr that Maliki and other CF members would not be pursued for past alleged misdeeds.

Sadrs ethno-sectarian alliance, on the other hand, projects confidence. Prior to a three-way meeting in Najaf with Sadr, the Kurdistan Regional Governments President Nechirvan Barazani and parliament speaker Halbusi, the latter tweeted that the time of outside intervention is over, taking a jab at Iran's influencing effort. It is unusual for a high-level Sunni official such as Halbusi to criticize Iran in such a thinly veiled manner. Sadrs tweet following the meeting was even more straightforward in setting the demarcation line between his alliance and the CF, stating, We are still pursuing a national majority government and welcome a dialogue with the national opposition. By calling for a dialogue with the opposition, Sadr seems to have closed the door on further negotiations with the CF about government formation, basically forcing it into parliamentary opposition. Seeing their hopes of being represented in the government dashed, some CF members may jump ship and join the Sadrist-dominated government. A source told Al-Monitor that 25 parliament members from Malikis bloc expressed their desire to leave the bloc and join the government.

Barring the unexpected, the path seems clear to a majority government. A possible challenge the CF can throw in the way is to break the quorum for the Feb. 7 parliamentary session to elect the president of the republic. The Iraqi Constitution requires the presence of at least two-thirds of all parliament members to conduct the first round of this election. The CF does not have the needed quorum-breaking third (109 parliament members), but if it draws enough parliament members from independents and smaller blocs, it may be able to pull it off. This is unlikely because many of the independents and small blocs hail from or support the October 2019 protest movement, which greatly distrusts the CF and accuses its armed wing of targeting protesters.

Continued here:
Sadr committed to forming Iraq's first majority government - Al-Monitor

Qatari delegation participates in Arab Forum for Talents and Innovations in Iraq – The Peninsula

Minister of Youth and Sports of Iraq, H E Adnan Dargal, with participants from Qatar during the honouring ceremony.

Doha: The Ministry of Sports and Youth, represented by Qatar Scientific Club, participated in the Arab Forum for Talents and Innovations held in Iraq from January 27 to February 1, 2022 as part of the events in Baghdad, the capital of Arab youth.

The event was held in coordination with the Technical Secretariat of the Council of Arab Youth and Sports Ministers, where the Qatari delegation was represented by Fatima Al Muhannadi as head of the delegation.

Both the member of the scientific club inventor Mohamed Ahmed Al Qasabi and member of the club inventor Sara Amir Al Baker participated. Al Qasabi participated by inventing the system of analysis of the performance of infiltration O Pass, a system that helps referees in football to detect violations of infiltration accurately using UWB marks on the ball and players to track their positions accurately during the game and in the event of any infiltration case is directly sent automatic notice to the referees hour.

The system also analyses the performance of players during the game and sends alerts to coaches about the possibility of any injury to any player, in addition to analysing the data of players to prevent injuries, and his innovation received many awards and centres including receiving third place as the best Arab inventor in the program Stars of Science in its thirteenth edition, as well as received first place in the category of startups within the idea award organized by QDB 2020.

He won the gold medal at the 11th International Inventions Exhibition in the Middle East in 2019, as well as fifth place in the 2021 Individual Innovation Competition at the Challenge and Innovation Forum.

Sarah Al Baker shared her creation of a child protection device from choking inside the car through a thermal sensor that monitors any movement inside the car after the engine is turned off so that it sends an alert at the same time, the driver avoids suffocation automatically by opening windows and giving an audio alarm.

Her innovation won the bronze medal at the 10th International Invention Fair in the Middle East, Sarah Al Baker is a student at Qatar University who specialises in architecture, holds the Gold Award in the preparatory stage of scientific excellence and the Platinum Award for High School, and also won first place in the National Scientific Research Competition in Qatar, and represented Qatar at the Intel International Science and Engineering Exhibition in the United States of American.

During the forum, Fatima Al Muhannadi delivered a speech in which she expressed Qatars thanks to the Iraqi Ministry of Youth and Sports and to the organising committees of the Arab Forum for Talent and Innovations for the hospitality in reception and good organisation and for having a real and sincere will seeking to make our Arab environments attractive and creating useful talents.

Fatima said: This important forum reflects the extent of interest in young Arab talents and how to create talent and build and develop to be an active and useful element in society, It meets the needs of our Arab societies to such meetings, which contribute to creating a fertile environment to support and root talent to be the source of the supply of active Arab cards and capabilities to countries.

She said: Our participation in this forum comes through a delegation that includes a model that we are proud of the young Qatari talents that have emerged in the field of innovation and excellence, and found the attention and care required thanks to a system based on nurturing talent and investing the best investment to be a living example of how keen we are to take care of talent from being a seed to become a good tree that enjoys its shadow. It reaps the benefits of society as a whole.

Qatari delegation participating in the forum was honoured with a shield and a certificate of participation in the forum in a ceremony attended by Minister of Youth and Sports of Iraq, H E Adnan Dargal; Director General of coordination and follow-up department at the Iraqi Ministry of Youth and Sports, Dr. Akram Naeem Atwan and Director General of Scientific Care at the Ministry, Dr. Ahmed Saad Aliwi.

Excerpt from:
Qatari delegation participates in Arab Forum for Talents and Innovations in Iraq - The Peninsula

The Stake Out (Seinfeld) – Wikipedia

2nd episode of the first season of Seinfeld

"The Stake Out" is the second episode of the first season of the NBC comedy Seinfeld.[1]

It aired as the second episode of the season on May 31, 1990.[2] The episode was written by Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David and directed by Tom Cherones. The narrative features Jerry Seinfeld agreeing to attend a birthday party with his ex-girlfriend Elaine Benes. During the party, Jerry tries to flirt with another woman, but fails to learn anything about her except her place of work. Jerry is reluctant to ask Elaine for the woman's number because he does not talk to her about other women. Jerry's father, Morty, suggests that he "stake out" the woman's workplace and pretend to meet her accidentally, which Jerry does. "The Stake Out" is the first episode to feature Jerry's parents.[3][4] The episode was nominated for a Writers Guild Award in 1991.[4]

Jerry and Elaine have just ended their relationship, but have chosen to remain friends. Elaine invites Jerry to a birthday party; he agrees to go on the condition that she accompanies him to a wedding that he and his parents have been invited to. At the party, Jerry meets an attractive woman named Vanessa. He wants to flirt with her, but is uncomfortable doing so in Elaine's presence. The woman leaves with another man before Jerry finds out her name; however, he learns that she works at a law firm called "Sagman, Bennett, Robbins, Oppenheim and Taft". During the party, Elaine tries to tell Jerry about a dream she had, which featured him. Jerry tries to end the conversation but this results in an argument after the party is over.

Back at his apartment, Jerry's parents, Morty and Helen, sleep over, with Jerry sleeping in Kramer's apartment. He talks about the party and claims that he cannot get the phone number of the woman from Elaine because he does not talk about other women with her; additionally, she is still angry with him. Morty suggests that Jerry "stake out" the woman by waiting outside her office, an idea which Jerry likes. The following day, Jerry and George Costanza perform the stake out, pretending that they are coming to see someone else in the building named "Art Corvelay", but under pressure, George insists that they make it "Art Vandelay". They meet the woman, who says the man she left the party with was her cousin. The two then decide to go out on a date.

Later that night, Jerry finds out from his mother that Elaine knows about the stake out. On the day of the wedding, Elaine tells Jerry that the reason that she was angry was because it was the first time she saw him flirt with another woman. They decide that they have to be able to talk more about their relationships if they wish to remain friends. Elaine then reveals that she has recently met a man using a stake out.

"The Stake Out" is based on a real life incident in which David was with a woman that he had dated previously named Monica Yates (daughter of author Richard Yates). They then went to a restaurant and David met another woman. However, he could not flirt as much as he wanted due to the presence of Yates. David did find out the name of the building where she worked at and staked her out. The names of the people in the title of the law firm are friends Larry David made at college.[5][6]

This episode prompted running gags that were used in later episodes. These were the importer-exporter, George's ambitions of becoming an architect and Art Vandelay. The character of Vanessa (named after a woman David once went out with) also reappears in a later episode from the first season, "The Stock Tip".[5][6]

"The Stake Out" is the first episode to mention the past relationship between Jerry and Elaine. Although it was the third episode to be filmed (after "The Seinfeld Chronicles" and "Male Unbonding"), it was the second episode to be broadcast. The episode order was changed because "The Stake Out" provided more background information about Elaine and her relationship with Jerry.[4] Julia Louis-Dreyfus commented that she liked the script for the episode because it made the character seem human. She also commented on the fact that it was racy due to the mention of a pornographic film.[7]

The opening scene caused some problems because it featured a woman walking off the set and taking one step down to get off it. Gleen Forbes, the set designer, thought that this made the show look cheap.[5] The scene in which Jerry and Elaine are in a taxi was filmed in a studio using a black background and moving a fake taxi, due to budget restraints, in a method known as "Poor Man's Process."[4]

This is the first episode to feature Jerry's parents. Only one casting session was performed to find the actors for the roles. Philip Sterling was originally cast to play the role of Morty Seinfeld, but was replaced with Phil Bruns.[4] Bruns was then replaced as well because Seinfeld and David wanted the character to be harsher. As a result, the role was recast and given to Barney Martin who had no idea that another actor had already established the part.[3][8][9] In this episode Kramer greets Morty by name. Unlike later episodes featuring recast characters, this episode featuring Phil Bruns' scenes were not re-filmed for syndication with Barney Martin substituting for Bruns, as the characters had aged too much in the show for that to be an option.[10]

When "The Stake Out" was first broadcast on May 31, 1990, the episode attracted a Nielsen rating of 16.2/24, meaning that 16.2% of American households watched the episode, and that 24% of all televisions in use at the time were tuned into it.[4] When the episode was first repeated, on December 2, 1992, a special introductory film was made featuring Louis-Dreyfus and Seinfeld, in which they stated that this episode was the first one they did together. Strictly speaking, though, it was just the first episode broadcast in terms of production order, "Male Unbonding" was the first episode in which the two characters both appeared.[4]

The episode was nominated for a Writers Guild Award in 1991.[4] Holly E. Ordway for DVD Talk Review commented positively on not just this episode, but the whole of the first season, saying, "What's not to like about an episode like 'The Stakeout,' in which (among other things) we are witness to the invention of George's alter ego, Art Vandelay (and his import/export business)?"[11] Mary Kay Shilling and Mike Flaherty of Entertainment Weekly also liked the episode but had some doubts, saying it was, "A painfully realistic take on the lovers-to-friends transition that should have been more comically fruitful."[12]

However, some reviews of the episode were critical, both now and at the time. When first broadcast, Matt Roush from USA Today wrote: "Lacking much in the way of attitude, the show seems obsolete and irrelevant. What it boils down to is that Seinfeld is a mayonnaise clown in the world that requires a little horseradish."[4]

Colin Jacobson for DVD Movie Guide criticized the writing, saying, "the show's rather bland. It provides the occasional chuckle, but the characters aren't formed yet, and that makes the program ring false. The ending reconciliation between Jerry and Elaine causes particular problems; it doesn't turn sappy, but it comes too close for Seinfeld."[13]

The rest is here:
The Stake Out (Seinfeld) - Wikipedia