Doha

WTA bows to player pressure with selected tournament byes

WTA bows to player pressure with selected tournament byes

Islam sets limits on sensuality of female tennis

Islam sets limits on sensuality of female tennisDoha - Silhouettes instead of photographs, and computer manipulation to conceal thighs: that is how Qatar promoted this week's season-ending WTA Championship.

For years the WTA has appealed to sensuality to sell its stars, but the first experience of a Masters tournament in the Middle East left it with no alternative but to moderate its presentations.

British PM rules out possibility of talks with Taliban

gorden brownDoha, Nov 3 : British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has said that negotiations with the Taliban on the war in Afghanistan were unlikely.

In an interview with Al-Jazeera TV, Brown said that a dialogue with the Taliban to halt violence would be “very, very difficult”.

Growing concern about high rate of unemployment in the Gulf

Growing concern about high rate of unemployment in the Gulf Doha - Experts expressed their concern Thursday in Qatar over the increasing percentage of unemployed in the Gulf states.

Experts, who attended a meeting in Doha entitled Unemployment in the GCC Countries: Towards a Strategy to Reduce the Effects said that unemployment had reached 15 per cent in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries.

They expected the number to rise in the coming years, despite the fact that studies say the unemployment rate is still small compared to other countries.

Qatar to buy 20 per cent of local banks to ease liquidity

Qatar MapDoha - Amid the global financial crisis Qatar Investment Authority announced Monday that it is buying between 10 and 20 per cent of the capital of Qatar's native banks listed on the stock market, reported the Qatar-based al-Jazeera TV channel.

The decision came to enhance confidence in the Qatari stock market, noting that it will buy the banks shares at Sunday's closing price.

The announcement came at a meeting attended by the Prime Minister of Qatar, Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem al-Thani, representatives of the banks listed on the Doha Securities Market and the Deputy Governor of the Central Bank.

Early man’s hunting tools in Qatar challenges existing history of the country

Doha (Qatar), September 9 : A team of scientists working in the western region of Qatar has discovered evidence in the form of hunting tools of early man which challenges the existing history of the country and the Southern Arabian region.

According to a report in the Gulf Times, exploring under the patronage of the Qatar Museums Authority (QMA), the scientists found basic hunting tools which they believe date back 700,000 to 800,000 years.

If accurate, the discovery means early man lived in Qatar far earlier than was previously believed.

QMA CEO Abdullah al-Najjar said that this provided a remarkable picture of prehistoric migration.

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